<p><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XVI <br/> THE PENDULUM OF FATE </h3>
<p>The next day, Thursday, was one of hectic
excitement for Gibraltar. Focus of the
concentrated attention of town and Rock was
the battle fleet, clogging all the inner harbor
with its great gray hulks. Superdreadnaughts,
like the standing walls of a submerged Atlantis,
lay close to the quays, barges lashed alongside
the folded booms of their torpedo nets.
Behind them, battle cruisers and scouts formed
a protecting cordon. Far out across the
entrance to the harbor, the darting black shapes
of destroyers on constant guard were shuttles
trailing their threads of smoke through the
blue web of sea and sky. Between fleet and
shore snorting cockleshells of launches
established lanes of communication; khaki of the
Rock's defenders and blue of the fleet's officers
met, passed, and repassed. In wardroom and
club lounge glasses were touched in pledges to
the united service. The high commander of
the Mediterranean fleet paid his official visit
to the governor of Gibraltar, and the governor,
in, turn, was received with honors upon the
quarterdeck of the flagship. But under the
superficial courtesies of fanfare and present
arms the stern business of coaling fleet
progressed at high tension. It was necessary that
all of the fighting machines have their bunkers
filled by noon of the following day. Every
minute that the Channel up under the murky North
Sea fogs lay without full strength of her fleet
protection was added danger for England.</p>
<p>That morning, Captain Woodhouse went on
duty in the signal tower. Major Bishop, his
superior, had summoned him to his office
immediately after breakfast and assigned him to
his tasks there. Sufficient proof, Woodhouse
assured himself, with elation, that he had come
through the fire in General Crandall's library,
tested and found genuine. Through this pretext
and that, he had been kept off duty the day
before, denied access to the slender stone tower
high up on the Rock's crest which was the
motor center of Gibraltar's ganglia of defense.</p>
<p>The small office in which Woodhouse was
installed was situated at the very top of the
tower—a room glassed on four sides like the
lantern room of a lighthouse, and provided with
telescope, a telephone switchboard, range
finders, and all the complicated machinery of
gunfire control. On one side were trestle boards
supporting charts of the ranges—figured areas
representing every square yard of water from
the nearer harbor below out to the farthest
reaching distance of the monster disappearing
guns. A second graphic sheet showed the
harbor and anchorages and the entrance to the
straits; this map was thickly spotted with little,
red, numbered dots—the mines. Sown like a
turnip field with these deadly capsules of
destruction were all the waters thereabouts;
their delicate tendrils led under water and
through conduits in the Rock up to this slender
spire called the signal tower. As he climbed
the winding stairway to his newly assigned
post, Woodhouse had seen painted on a small
wooden door just below the room he was to
occupy the single white letter "D."</p>
<p>Room D—where the switches were, where a
single sweep of the hand could loose all the
hidden death out there in the crowded
harbor—it lay directly below his feet.</p>
<p>Captain Woodhouse's duties were not arduous.
He had as single companion a sergeant of
the signal service, whose post was at the
window overlooking the harbor. The sergeant
read the semaphore message from the slender
signal arm on the flagship's bridge—directions
for the coal barges' movements, businesslike
orders to be transmitted to the quartermaster
in charge of the naval stores ashore, and such
humdrum of routine. These Woodhouse recorded
and forwarded to their various destinations
over the telephone.</p>
<p>He had much time for thought—and much
to think about.</p>
<p>Yesterday's scene in the library of Government
House—his grilling by the two suspicious
men, when a false answer on his part would
have been the first step toward a firing squad.
Yes, and what had followed between himself
and the little American—the girl who had
protected and aided him—ah, the pain of that trial
was hardly less poignant than had been the
terror of the one preceding it. She had asked him
to prove to her that he was not what she
thought him. Before another day was past she
would be out of his life and would depart,
believing—yes, convinced—that the task he had
set himself to do was a dishonorable one. She
could not know that the soldiers of the Hidden
Army have claim to heroism no less than they
who join battle under the sun. But he was
to see Jane Gerson once more; Woodhouse
caught at this circumstance as something
precious. To-night at Government House Lady
Crandall's dinner to the refugee Americans on
the eve of their departure would offer a last
opportunity. How could he turn it to the
desire of his heart?</p>
<p>One more incident of a crowded yesterday
gave Woodhouse a crust for rumination—the
unmasking Jaimihr Khan, the Indian, had
elected for himself at that critical minute when
it lay in his power to betray the stranger in
the garrison. The captain reviewed the incident
with great satisfaction—how of a sudden
the wily Indian had changed from an enemy
holding a man's life in his hand to that "friend
in Government House," of whose existence the
cautious Almer had hinted but whose identity
he had kept concealed. Almer had said that
this "friend" could lay his hand on the
combination to Room D in the signal tower when the
proper moment arrived. Now that he knew
Jaimihr Khan in his true stripe, Woodhouse
made no doubt of his ability to fulfill Almer's
prophecy.</p>
<p>And the proper moment would be this night!
To-night, on the eve of the great fleet's
sailing, what Woodhouse had come to Gibraltar
to do must be accomplished or not at all.</p>
<p>The man's nerves were taut, and he rose to
step to the bayward window, there to look
down on the embattled splendor of England's
defense. Steel forts ranged all in rows, awaiting
but the opportunity to loose their lightnings
of obliteration against the ships of an enemy.
Cardboard ships! Shadows of dreams! In
Room D, just below his feet, a hand on the
switches—a downward push, and then——</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Lady Crandall's dinner in Government House
was in full tide of hilarity. Under the heavy
groined ceiling the spread table with its napery
and silver was the one spot of light in the
long shadowed dining-room. Round it sat the
refugees—folk who had eaten black bread and
sausage and called that a meal; who had dodged
and twisted under the careless scourge of a
war beyond their understanding and sympathies,
ridden in springless carts, been bullied
and hectored by military martinets and
beggared by panicky banks. Now, with the first
glimpse of freedom already in sight and
under the warming influence of an American
hostess' real American meal, they were swept off
their feet by high spirits almost childlike.
Henry J. Sherman, Kewanee's vagrant son
returning from painful pilgrimage, sat at the
right of Lady Crandall; his pink face was
glowing with humor. To Consul Reynolds, who
swore he would have to pay for thus neglecting
his consulate for so much as two hours,
had fallen the honor of escorting Mrs. Sherman
to table. Willy Kimball, polished as to shirt
bosom and sleek hair, had eyes and ears for
none but the blithe Kitty. Next to General
Crandall sat Jane Gerson, radiant in a dinner
gown of tricky gauze overlaid on silk. At her
right was Captain Woodhouse, in proper
uniform dinner coat faced with red and gold. Of
the whole company, Woodhouse alone appeared
constrained. The girl by his side had been
cool in her greeting that evening; to his
conversational sallies she had answered with
indifference, and now at table she divided her
favors between General Crandall and the perky
little consul across the table. It seemed to
Woodhouse that she purposely added a lash of
cruelty to her joy at the approaching departure
on the morrow.</p>
<p>"Oh, you must all listen to this!" Kitty
Sherman commanded the attention of the table,
with a clapping of hands. "Go ahead, Will;
he had the funniest accident—tell them
about it."</p>
<p>Young Kimball looked conscious and began
to stammer.</p>
<p>"You're getting us all excited, Willy," Henry
J. boomed from the opposite side of the table.
"What happened?"</p>
<p>"Why—ah—really quite ridiculous, you
know. Hardly a matter to—ah—talk about." Willy
fumbled the rose in the lapel of his
jacket and searched for words. "You see, this
morning I was thinking very hard about what
I would do when I got back to Kewanee—oh,
quite enthusiastic I am about the little town,
now—and I—well, I mean to say, I got into
my bath with my wrist watch on."</p>
<p>Shouts of laughter added to the youth's
confusion. Sherman leaned far across the table
and advised him in a hoarse whisper:</p>
<p>"Buy a dollar Ingersoll, Willy. It floats!"</p>
<p>"Well, you might give him one of yours,
father," Kitty put in, in quick defense.
"Anybody who'd carry two watches around——"</p>
<p>"Two watches?" Lady Crandall was interested.</p>
<p>Henry J. beamed expansively, pulled away
his napkin, and proudly lifted from each
waistcoat pocket a ponderous watch, linked by the
thick chain passing through a buttonhole.</p>
<p>"This one"—he raised the right-hand
time-piece—"tells the time of the place I happen to
be in—changed it so often I guess the works'll
never be the same again. But this one is my
pet. Here's Kewanee time—not touched since
we pulled out of the C., B. & Q. station on the
twentieth of last May." He turned the face
around for the others to read. "Just three in
the afternoon there now. Old Ed Porter's
got the <i>Daily Enterprise</i> out on the street,
and he's tilted back in his office chair,
readin' the <i>Chicago Tribune</i> that's just got in
on the two-five train. The boys at the bank are
goin' out to the country club for golf—young
Pete Andrews wearin' the knickerbockers his
wife cut down from his old overcoat; sort of a
horse-blanket pattern, you might say. The
town's just dozin' in the afternoon sun and—and
not givin' a hang whether Henry J. Sherman
and family gets back or not."</p>
<p>"You're an old dear!" Lady Crandall bubbled.
"Some day Kewanee will erect a statue
to you."</p>
<p>The talk turned to art, and the man from
Kewanee even had the stolid general wiping
the tears from his eyes by his description and
criticism of some of the masters his wife had
trotted him around to admire.</p>
<p>"Willy, you'll be interested to know we got
a painter in Kewanee now," Henry J. cried.
"'Member young Frank Coales—old Henry
Coales' son? Well, he turned out to be an
artist. Too bad, too; his folks was fine
people. But Frank was awfully headstrong about
art. Painted a war picture about as big as
that wall there. Couldn't find a buyer right
away, so he turned it over to Tim Burns, who
keeps the saloon on Main Street. Been busy
ever since, sorta taking it out in trade, you
might say."</p>
<p>Table talk was running at a gay rate when
Mrs. Sherman, who had sent frequent searching
glances at Captain Woodhouse over the
nodding buds of the flower piece in the center
of the board, suddenly broke out:</p>
<p>"Ah, Captain Woodhouse, now I remember
where I've seen you before! I thought your
face was familiar the minute I set my eyes on
you this evening."</p>
<p>Jaimihr Khan, who stood behind the general's
chair, arms folded and motionless,
swiftly lifted one hand to his lips, but
immediately mastered himself again. General
Crandall looked up with a sharp crinkle of interest
between his eyes. Captain Woodhouse, unperturbed,
turned to the Kewanee dowager.</p>
<p>"You have seen me before, Mrs. Sherman?"</p>
<p>"I am sure of it," the lady announced, with
decision. The other diners were listening now.</p>
<p>"Indeed! And where?" Woodhouse was
smiling polite attention.</p>
<p>"Why, at the Winter Garden, in Berlin—a
month ago!" Mrs. Sherman was hugely satisfied
with her identification. She appealed to
her husband for confirmation. "Remember,
father, that gentleman I mistook for Albert
Downs, back home, that night we saw
that—er—wicked performance?"</p>
<p>"Can't say I do," Sherman answered tolerantly.</p>
<p>Woodhouse, still smiling, addressed
Mrs. Sherman:</p>
<p>"Frightfully sorry to disappoint you,
Mrs. Sherman, but I was not in Berlin a month ago.
I came here from Egypt, where I had been
several years." Woodhouse heard Jane at his
elbow catch her breath.</p>
<p>"See, mother, there you go on your old hobby
of recognizin' folks," Sherman chided. Then,
to the others: "Why, she's seen all Kewanee
since she came here to Europe. Even got a
glimpse of the Methodist minister at Monte
Carlo."</p>
<p>"I have never been in Berlin in my life,
Mrs. Sherman," Woodhouse was adding. "So, of
course——"</p>
<p>"Well, I suppose I am wrong," the lady
admitted. "But still I could swear."</p>
<p>The governor, who had kept a cold eye on
his subordinate during this colloquy, now
caught Woodhouse's glance. The captain
smiled frankly.</p>
<p>"Another such unexpected identification,
General, and you'll have me in the cells as a
spy, I dare say," he remarked.</p>
<p>"Quite likely," Crandall answered shortly,
and took up his fork again. A maid stepped
to Lady Crandall's chair at this juncture and
whispered something. The latter spoke to
Woodhouse:</p>
<p>"You're wanted on the telephone in the
library, Captain. Very important, so the
importunate person at the other end of the wire
informs the maid."</p>
<p>Woodhouse looked his confusion.</p>
<p>"Probably that silly ass at the quay who lost
a bag of mine when I landed," he apologized,
as he rose. "If you'll pardon me——"</p>
<p>Woodhouse passed up the stairs and into the
library. He was surprised to find Jaimihr
Khan standing by the telephone, his hand just
in the act of setting the receiver back on the
hook. The Indian stepped swiftly to the double
doors and shut them behind the captain.</p>
<p>"A thousand pardons, Cap-tain"—he spoke
hurriedly—"the cap-tain will stand near the
telephone. They may come from the dining-room
at any minute."</p>
<p>"What is all this?" Woodhouse began. "I
was called on the telephone."</p>
<p>"A call I had inspired, Cap-tain. It was
necessary to see you—at once and alone."</p>
<p>"Tactless! With the general suspecting
me—you heard what that woman from America
said at the table—she has eyes in her head!"</p>
<p>"I think he still trusts you, Cap-tain," the
Indian replied. "And to-night we must act.
The fleet sails at noon to-morrow."</p>
<p>"We?" Woodhouse was on his guard at once.
"What do you mean by 'we'?"</p>
<p>Jaimihr Khan smiled at the evasion.</p>
<p>"Yesterday in this room, Cap-tain, I burned
a roll of plans——"</p>
<p>"Which I had good reason to wish saved,"
Woodhouse caught him up.</p>
<p>"No matter; I burned them—at a moment
when you were—in great peril, Cap-tain."</p>
<p>"Burned them, yes—perhaps to trap me further."</p>
<p>The Indian made a gesture of impatience.
"Oh, excellent discretion!" he cried in
suppressed exasperation. "But we waste time that
is precious. To-night——"</p>
<p>"Before another word is spoken, let me have
your card—your Wilhelmstrasse number,"
Woodhouse demanded.</p>
<p>"I carry no card. I am more discreet
than—some," the other answered insinuatingly.</p>
<p>"No card? Your number, then?"</p>
<p>Jaimihr Khan brought his lips close to the
white man's ear and whispered a number.</p>
<p>"Is that not correct?" he asked.</p>
<p>Woodhouse nodded curtly.</p>
<p>"And now that we are properly introduced,"
Jaimihr began, with a sardonic smile, "may I
venture a criticism? Your pardon, Cap-tain;
but our critics, they help us to per-fection.
Since when have men who come from the
Wilhelmstrasse allowed themselves to make
love in drawing-rooms?"</p>
<p>"You mean——"</p>
<p>"You and the young woman from America—when
I found you together here yesterday——"</p>
<p>"That is my affair," was Woodhouse's hot
response.</p>
<p>"The affair on which we work—this night—that
is my affair, be veree sure!" There was
something of menace in the Indian's tone.</p>
<p>Woodhouse bowed to his demand for an
explanation. "That young woman, as it happens,
must be kept on our side. She saw me in
France, when Captain Woodhouse was
supposed to be in Egypt."</p>
<p>"Ah, so?" Jaimihr inclined his head with a
slight gesture craving pardon. "For that
reason you make a conquest. I did not
un-derstand."</p>
<p>"No matter. The fleet sails at noon."</p>
<p>"And our moment is here—to-night," Jaimihr
whispered in exultation. "Not until
to-day did they admit you to the tower, Cap-tain.
How is it there?"</p>
<p>"A simple matter—with the combination to
the door of Room D."</p>
<p>With a single stride the Indian was over
before the door of the wall safe. He pointed.</p>
<p>"The combination of the inner door—it is
in a special compartment of that safe, protected
by many wires. Before dawn I cut the
wires—and come to you with the combination."</p>
<p>"At whatever hour is best for you," Woodhouse
put in eagerly.</p>
<p>"Let us say three-thirty," Jaimihr answered.
"You will be waiting for me at the Hotel
Splendide with—our friends there. I shall come to
you there, give you the combination, and you
shall go through the lines to the signal tower."</p>
<p>"There must be no slip," Woodhouse sternly
warned.</p>
<p>"Not on my part, Cap-tain—count on that.
For five years I have been waiting—waiting.
Five years a servant—yes, my General; no, my
General; very good, my General." The man's
voice vibrated with hate. "To-morrow, near
dawn—the English fleet shattered and ablaze
in the harbor—the water red, like blood, with
the flames. Then, by the breath of Allah, my
service ends!"</p>
<p>Voices sounded in the hallway outside the
double doors. Jaimihr Khan, a finger to his
lips, nodded as he whispered: "Three-thirty,
at the Splendide." He faded like a white
wraith through the door to General Crandall's
room as the double doors opened and the
masculine faction of the dinner party entered.
Woodhouse rose from a stooping position at the
telephone and faced them. To the general, whose
sharp scrutiny stabbed like thin knives, he
made plausible explanation. The beggar who
lost his bag wanted a complete identification
of it—had run it down at Algeciras.</p>
<p>"I understand," Crandall grunted.</p>
<p>When the cigars were lit, General Crandall
excused himself for a minute, sat at his desk,
and hurriedly scratched a note. Summoning
Jaimihr, he ordered that the note be despatched
by orderly direct to Major Bishop and given to
no other hands. Woodhouse, who overheard his
superior officer's command, was filled with
vague apprehension. What Mrs. Sherman had
said at table—this hurried note to Bishop;
there was but one interpretation to give to the
affair—Crandall's suspicions were all alive
again. Yet at three-thirty—at the Hotel
Splendide——</p>
<p>But when Crandall came back to join the
circle of smokers, he was all geniality. The
women came in by way of Jane Gerson's room;
they had been taking a farewell peek at her
dazzling stock of gowns, they said, before they
were packed for the steamer.</p>
<p>"There was one or two I just had to see
again," Mrs. Sherman explained for the benefit
of all, "before I said good-by to them. One of
them, by Madam Paquin, father, I'm going to
copy when we get home. I'll be the first to
introduce a Paquin into little Kewanee."</p>
<p>"Well, don't get into trouble with the minister,
mother," Henry J. warned. "Some of the
French gowns I've seen on this trip certainly
would stir things up in Kewanee."</p>
<p>Jaimihr served the coffee. Woodhouse tried
to maneuver Jane into a tête-à-tête in an angle
of the massive fireplace, but she outgeneraled
him, and the observant Mrs. Sherman cornered
him inexorably.</p>
<p>"Tell me, Captain Woodhouse," she began, in
her friendly tones, "you said a while ago the
general might mistake you for a spy. Don't
you have a great deal of trouble with spies in
your army in war time? Everybody took us
for spies in Germany, and in France they
thought poor Henry was carrying bombs to
blow up the Eiffel Tower."</p>
<p>"Perhaps I can answer that question better
than Captain Woodhouse," the general put in,
rising and striding over to where Mrs. Sherman
kept the captain prisoner. "Captain
Woodhouse, you see, would not be so likely to
come in touch with those troublesome persons
as one in command of a post, like myself." The
most delicate irony barbed this speech, lost to
all but the one for whom it was meant.</p>
<p>"Oh, I know I'm going to hear something
very exciting," Mrs. Sherman chortled. "Kitty,
you'd better hush up Willy Kimball for a while
and come over here. You can improve your
mind better listening to the general."</p>
<p>Crandall soon was the center of a group. He
began, with sober directness.</p>
<p>"Well, in the matter of spies in war time,
Mrs. Sherman, one is struck by the fact of
their resemblance to the plague—you never can
tell when they're going to get you or whence
they came. Now here on the Rock I have reason
to believe we have one or more spies busy
this minute."</p>
<p>Jane Gerson, sitting where the light smote
her face, drew back into the shadow with a
swift movement of protectiveness. Woodhouse,
who balanced a dainty Satsuma coffee cup on
his knee, kept his eyes on his superior's face
with a mildly interested air.</p>
<p>"In fact," Crandall continued evenly, "I
shouldn't be surprised if one—possibly two
spies—should be arrested before the night is
over. And the point about this that will
interest you ladies is that one of these—the one
whose order for arrest I have already given—is
a woman—a very clever and pretty woman,
I may add, to make the story more interesting."</p>
<p>"And the other, whose arrest may follow, is
an accomplice of hers, I take it, General!" Woodhouse
put the question with easy indifference.
He was stirring his coffee abstractedly.</p>
<p>"Not only the accomplice, but the brains for
both, Captain. A deucedly clever person, I'm
frank to admit."</p>
<p>"Oh, people! Come and see the flagship,
signaling to the rest of the fleet with its funny
green and red lights!" It was Jane who had
suddenly risen and stood by the curtains screening
the balcony windows. "They look like little
flowers opening and shutting."</p>
<p>The girl's diversion was sufficient to take
interest momentarily from General Crandall's
revelation. When all had clustered around the
windows, conversation skipped to the fleet, its
power, and the men who were ready to do battle
behind its hundreds of guns. Mrs. Sherman
was disappointed that the ships did not send
up rockets. She'd read somewhere that ships
sent up rockets, and she didn't see why these
should prove the exception. Interruption came
from Jaimihr Khan, who bore a message for
Consul Reynolds. The fussy little man ripped
open the envelope with an air of importance.</p>
<p>"Ah, listen, folks! Here we have the latest
wireless from the <i>Saxonia</i>. 'Will anchor about
two—sail six. Have all passengers aboard by
five-thirty.'" Excited gurgles from the
refugees. "That means," Reynolds wound up, with
a flourish, "everybody at the docks by five
o'clock. Be there myself, to see you off. Must
go now—lot of fuss and feathers getting
everybody fixed." He paused before Jane.</p>
<p>"You're going home at last, young lady," he
chirped.</p>
<p>"That depends entirely on Miss Gerson
herself." It was the general who spoke quietly but
emphatically.</p>
<p>Reynolds looked at him, surprised.</p>
<p>"Why, I understood it was all arranged——"</p>
<p>"I repeat, it depends entirely on Miss Gerson."</p>
<p>Woodhouse caught the look of fear in Jane's
eyes, and, as they fell for the instant on his,
something else—appeal. He turned his head
quickly. Lady Crandall saved the situation.</p>
<p>"Oh, that's just some more of George's eternal
red tape. I'll snip it when the time comes."</p>
<p>The consul's departure was the signal for the
others. They crowded around Lady Crandall
and her husband with voluble praise for the
American dinner and thanks for the courtesy
they had found on the Rock. Woodhouse, after
a last despairing effort to have a word of
farewell with Jane, which she denied, turned to
make his adieu to his host and hostess.</p>
<p>"No hurry, Captain," Crandall caught him
up. "Expect Major Bishop in every minute—small
matter of official detail. You and he can
go down the Rock together when he leaves."</p>
<p>Woodhouse's mind leaped to the meaning behind
his superior's careless words. The hastily
despatched note—that was to summon Bishop
to Government House; Crandall's speech about
the two spies and the arrest of one of
them—Louisa, he meant—and now this summary order
that he wait the arrival of Bishop—would the
second arrest be here in this room? The man
who carried a number from the Wilhelmstrasse
felt the walls of the library slowly closing in
to crush him; he could almost hear the whisper
and mutter of the inexorable machine moving
them closer—closer. Be alone with the man
whose word could send bullets into his heart!</p>
<p>"A very pleasant dinner—Lady Crandall's,"
Woodhouse began, eager to lighten the
tenseness of the situation.</p>
<p>"Yes, it seemed so." Crandall offered the
younger man his cigarette case, and, lighting a
smoke himself, straddled the hearth, his eyes
keenly observant of Woodhouse's face.</p>
<p>"Rather odd, Americans. But jolly nice." The
captain laughed in reminiscence of the
unspoiled Shermans.</p>
<p>"I thought so—I married one," Crandall retorted.</p>
<p>The ear of Woodhouse's mind could hear more
plainly now the grinding of the cogs; the
immutable power of fate lay there.</p>
<p>"Oh—er—so you did. Very kind she has
been to me. I got very little of this sort of
thing at Wady Halfa."</p>
<p>"By the way, Woodhouse"—Crandall blew a
contemplative puff toward the ceiling—"strange
Mrs. Sherman should have thought she saw you
at Berlin."</p>
<p>"Odd mistake, to be sure," Woodhouse admitted,
struggling to put ease into his voice.
"The lady seems to have a penchant, as her
husband says, for finding familiar faces."</p>
<p>"Major Bishop!" Jaimihr Khan announced at
the double doors. The major in person followed
immediately. His greeting to Woodhouse was
constrained.</p>
<p>"Woodhouse will wait for you to go down the
Rock with him," Crandall explained to the
newcomer. "Captain, excuse us for a minute, while
we go into my room and run over a little matter
of fleet supplies. Must check up with the fleet
before it sails in the morning." Woodhouse
bowed his acquiescence and saw the door to the
general's room close behind the twain.</p>
<p>He was not long alone. Noiselessly the
double doors opened and Jaimihr Khan entered.
Woodhouse sprang to meet him where he stood
poised for flight just inside the doors.</p>
<p>"The woman's prattle of Berlin——" the
Indian whispered.</p>
<p>"Yes, the general's suspicions are all aroused
again."</p>
<p>"Listen! I saw the note he sent to Bishop.
The major is to be set to watch you to-night—all
night. A false step and you will be under
arrest." Jaimihr's thin face was twisted in
wrath. "One man's life will not stand in our
way now."</p>
<p>"No," Woodhouse affirmed.</p>
<p>"Success is veree near. When Bishop goes
with you down the Rock——"</p>
<p>"Yes, yes! What?"</p>
<p>"The pistol screams, but the knife is dumb.
Quick, Cap-tain!" With a swift movement of
his hand the Indian passed a thin-bladed dirk to
the white man. The latter secreted the
sheathed weapon in a pocket of his dinner
jacket. He nodded understanding.</p>
<p>"One man's life—nothing!" Jaimihr breathed.</p>
<p>"It shall be done," Woodhouse whispered.</p>
<p>Jaimihr faded through the double doors like
a spirit in a medium's cabinet. He had seen
what the captain was slower to notice. The
door from Jane Gerson's room was opening. The
girl stepped swiftly into the room, and was by
Woodhouse's side almost before he had seen
her.</p>
<p>"I could not—go away—without—without——"</p>
<p>"Miss Gerson—Jane!" He was beside her
instantly. His hand sought and found one of hers
and held it a willing prisoner. She was trembling,
and her eyes were deep pools, riffled by
conflicting currents. Her words came breathlessly:</p>
<p>"I was not myself—I tried to tell myself you
were deceiving me just—just as a part of this
terrible mystery you are involved in. But when
I heard General Crandall tell you to wait—that
and what he said about the spies—I knew you
were again in peril, and—and——"</p>
<p>"And you have come to me to tell me as
good-by you believe I am honest and that you
care—a little?" Woodhouse's voice trembled with
yearning. "When you think me in danger, then
you forget doubts and maybe—your heart——"</p>
<p>"Oh, I want to believe—I want to!" she whispered
passionately. "Every one here is against
you. Tell me you are on the level—with me, at
least."</p>
<p>"I am—with you."</p>
<p>"I—believe," she sighed, and her head fell
near his shoulder—so near that with alacrity
Captain Woodhouse settled it there.</p>
<p>"When this war is over, if I am alive," he
was saying rapturously, "may I come to
America for you? Will you—wait?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps."</p>
<p>The door to General Crandall's room opened.
They sprang apart just as Crandall and Bishop
entered the library. The former was not blind
to the situation; he darted a swift glance into
the girl's face and read much there.</p>
<p>"Ready, Captain?" Bishop chirped, affecting
not to notice the momentary confusion of the
man and the girl.</p>
<p>Woodhouse gave Jane's hand a lingering
clasp; mutely his eyes adjured her to remember
her plighted troth. In another minute he was
gone.</p>
<p>The general and his guest were alone. Jane
Gerson was bidding him good night when he
interrupted, somewhat gruffly:</p>
<p>"Well, young woman, have you made up your
mind? Do you sail in the morning—or not?"</p>
<p>"I made up my mind to that long ago," she
answered briskly. "Of course I sail."</p>
<p>"Then you're going to tell me what I want
to know. Sensible girl!" He rubbed his hands
in satisfaction.</p>
<p>"What is it you want to know, General
Crandall?" This almost carelessly from her.</p>
<p>"When did you meet Woodhouse before—and
where?"</p>
<p>"How do you know I met him before?" She
attempted to parry, but Crandall cut her short
with a gesture of impatience:</p>
<p>"Please don't try that tack again. Answer
those two questions, and you sail in the morning."</p>
<p>Jane Gerson's eyes grew hard, and she lifted
her chin in defiance.</p>
<p>"And if I refuse——"</p>
<p>"Why should you?" Crandall affected
surprise not altogether unfelt.</p>
<p>"No matter—I do!" The challenge came
crisp and sharp-cut as a new blade. Gibraltar's
governor lost his temper instanter; his face
purpled.</p>
<p>"And I know why!" he rasped. "He's got
round you—made love to you—tricked you! I'd
swear he was kissing you just the minute I
came in here. The German cad! Good lord,
girl; can't you see how he's using you?"</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I can't."</p>
<p>Crandall advanced toward her, shaking a
menacing finger at her.</p>
<p>"Let me tell you something, young woman:
he's at the end of his rope. Done for! No use
for you to stand up for him longer. He's under
guard to-night, and a woman named Josepha,
his accomplice—or maybe his dupe—is already
under arrest, and to-morrow, when we examine
her, she'll reveal his whole rotten schemes or
have to stand against a wall with him. Come,
now! Throw him over. Don't risk your job,
as you call it, for a German spy who's tricked
you—made a fool of you. Why——"</p>
<p>"General Crandall!" Her face was white, and
her eyes glowed with anger.</p>
<p>"I—I beg your pardon, Miss Gerson," he
mumbled. "I am exasperated. A fine girl like
you—to throw away all your hopes and ambitions
for a spy—and a bounder! Can't you see
you're wrong?"</p>
<p>"General Crandall, some time—I hope it will
be soon—you will apologize to me—and to
Captain Woodhouse—for what you are saying
to-night." Her hands clenched into fists, whereon
the knuckles showed white; the poise of her
head, held a little forward, was all combative.</p>
<p>"Then you won't tell me what I want to
know?" He could not but read the defiance in
the girl's pose.</p>
<p>"I will tell you nothing but good-by."</p>
<p>"No, by gad—you won't! I can be stubborn,
too. You shan't sail on the <i>Saxonia</i> in the
morning. Understand?"</p>
<p>"Oh, shan't I? Who will dare stop me?"</p>
<p>"I will, Miss Gerson. I have plenty of
right—and the power, too."</p>
<p>"I'll ask you to tell that to my consul—on the
dock at five to-morrow morning. Until then,
General Crandall, au revoir."</p>
<p>The door of the guest room shut with a spiteful
slam upon the master of Gibraltar, leaving
him to nurse a grievance on the knees of wrath.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />