<h2 id="c20"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XIX</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">A FLIGHT AND WHAT CAME OF IT</span></h2>
<p>From the barrier of the aerodrome,
where the Minerva pulled up, Desmond
could see the machine destined for their night
journey. What a puny thing it looked,
stranded there, forlorn and solitary, in the
centre of the vast open space swept by the
glare of the lights of the night landing-station
and surrounded by the long, low sheds
whose roofs were now silvered by the effulgence
of the moon!</p>
<p>On their way to the flying-field the girl
had told Desmond her history. Her name
was Mary Brewster, and for two years she
had been acting as confidential secretary to
the head of one of the British missions in
Berlin. Her General had recommended her
to Bliss as a trustworthy German-speaking
messenger, and though she was fully aware
of the danger of the mission, she had jumped
at the chance of a trip home at Government
expense.</p>
<p>She was a funny little girl, Desmond decided.
Her work in Berlin had given her
some insight into the workings of the Secret
Service, and the grave seriousness with
which she took her mission amused Desmond,
grown blasé in eight years’ experience
of its ways. Her very conscientiousness
made her profoundly suspicious—even of
Desmond at first; and she subjected him to
a prolonged cross-examination as to the <i>bona
fides</i> of the chauffeur. When the last-named,
on their arrival at the aerodrome,
went off in search of the pilot, the girl
wanted to know whether he was sure that the
aviator was to be trusted.</p>
<p>“My dear child,” said Desmond, laughing,
“that’s not my responsibility. It’s the
Chief’s. Each of us has his job in this show.
The chauffeur’s is to bring me alongside
the aeroplane and hand me over to the
pilot . . .”</p>
<p>As he spoke they saw a hooded and muffled
figure detach itself from the knot of mechanics
gathered about the plane. It proved
to be the pilot, a swarthy young man, to
judge by as much as his helmet disclosed of
his features, short and stocky, in leather flying-kit.
He came up with the chauffeur to
the car.</p>
<p>“You’re my passenger, I think,” he said
to Desmond. “We’re all ready for you!”</p>
<p>He shot an enquiring glance at the girl.
Desmond remarked that she was to accompany
them on their journey. The pilot
seemed put out. The machine was a two-seater,
he protested; and he had been warned
to expect only the one passenger. Besides,
the girl couldn’t travel in evening dress;
she would perish of cold.</p>
<p>Desmond swept aside these objections.
The girl, he announced with a humorous
side-glance at her, would sit on his knee.</p>
<p>“As for the cold,” he went on, “that extra
coat on your arm, which is doubtless intended
for me, will do very well for her. I’ve
got my overcoat!”</p>
<p>And he tapped his ulster bulging with the
packet of precious stones.</p>
<p>The pilot made no further comment, but
led the way to the machine. Rather sullenly
he helped the girl into the belted leather
jerkin he had brought with him, while Desmond
swung himself up the short ladder into
the passenger’s seat, protected by a curving
shield of talc, behind the pilot.</p>
<p>The girl, helped from above and below,
clambered after, her hat in her hand. Almost
before they knew that the pilot was at
the joy-stick, the propellers began to roar,
the driver raised his hand, and all the world
except the lucent moon and the glittering
stars in the wide sky above them seemed to
slide away—the flares, the sheds, the trees,
the twinkling lights of Brussels in the distance.</p>
<p>Desmond gave a little sigh. “Safe!” he
murmured, and patted that comforting bulge
in his overcoat.</p>
<p>They had, indeed, he told himself, made
a clean escape, shaken old Clubfoot right
off their track. Since leaving the theatre
they had seen nothing of him or of any of
his men. If this were the last episode in the
master spy’s career, it had ended, the young
man reflected, in his signal discomfiture.
Desmond felt his heart swell within him as
the icy night air smote his cheek and, hundreds
of feet below, the dim chessboard of
the Low Countries swayed and heeled over
beneath the moon.</p>
<p>Perched demurely on his knee, the girl
remained very still. Speech was impossible;
the deafening roar of the propellers saw to
that—but Desmond’s quick intuitiveness told
him she was uneasy. Perhaps she was nervous,
he told himself; night-flying is always
something of an ordeal.</p>
<p>The channel was yet a silvery streak
below them when the pilot, crouched over
the wheel in front, turned and made a vague
gesture with his gauntleted hand. With
his huge goggles and furry helmet he looked
like some gesticulating goblin. He seemed
to be pointing downwards. At the same
moment the rush of air increased, a long
black ridge, far below at first, seemed to
rise and rise at them while, with a suddenness
that was pain, the roar of the propellers
abruptly ceased.</p>
<p>“Engine missing!”—the pilot’s voice came
to them in a muffled roar—“hang on!
Forced landing!”</p>
<p>Out of the blackness, sweeping up at them
with hideous velocity, a light winked and
blinked. Coughing and spluttering, the
engine picked up again. Suddenly they were
bumping wildly over the fleeting ground past
a handful of stunted trees and bushes and, in
hard, black silhouette against the moon,
the dark shapes of some scattered houses.</p>
<p>The engine was shut off again and they
careered to a standstill, the machine trembling
to the gentle jar of the earth. The pilot
heaved himself up in his cockpit and pushed
the goggles back from his eyes.</p>
<p>“Sorry,” he said, and began some technical
explanation to which Desmond Okewood
paid no attention. His thoughts were busy
with the next step. He did not relish the
idea of wandering about the country-side at
dead of night with some hundreds of thousands
of pounds’ worth of jewels in his overcoat
pocket. He looked at his watch. Its
hands marked ten minutes to one on the luminous
dial.</p>
<p>“Have you any idea where we are?” Desmond
asked. “I am positive,” he added,
“that I saw a light as we were planing down,
but there’s no sign of it now.”</p>
<p>The pilot, who had jumped down and was
fussing with the landing-wheels, turned
round.</p>
<p>“Distance is very deceptive at night,” he
said. “That light is probably five or six
miles away. It’s devilish fortunate,” he
went on. “I know exactly where we are.
This is the War Office rifle ground at Stoke
Bay, about six miles out of Lympne. I was
at Dover during the war and know the whole
of this country like my pocket. So, when
the engine started petering out over the
Channel just now, I steered straight for this
spot.”</p>
<p>“How long is it going to take you to put
things right?” asked Desmond.</p>
<p>The pilot shook his head sadly at the plane.
“Can’t say. At any rate, I’ll never get up
here again in the dark. We’d break our
necks most likely. You’ll have to go on to
London in the morning.”</p>
<p>Desmond swore under his breath. It
seemed to him that the airman was taking
things very lightly.</p>
<p>“That’s all very well,” he remarked with
some heat. “But I’m on duty, and it is
essential that I should get on to town without
delay. And in any case Miss Brewster can’t
spend the night in the open, you know.
What are we going to do about it? Isn’t
there anybody we can knock up?”</p>
<p>“It’s just occurred to me,” answered the
pilot, wiping his hands on a wisp of cotton
waste, “that I know a fellow who lives close
at hand. Magnus is his name, a very sound
chap. He has a bungalow a piece down the
beach road. We’ll knock him up. I’ve no
doubt when we’ve explained things to him
he’ll be pleased to give us a shake-down for
the night. He’s on the telephone, too. Just
let me turn off the juice!”</p>
<p>He clambered back into the cockpit and
busied himself with the engine. Desmond
and Miss Brewster alighted. Suddenly the
former felt his sleeve plucked. He turned
round to find Mary Brewster’s big eyes staring
at him. With an upward glance at the
machine, she drew her companion unobtrusively
aside.</p>
<p>“Don’t trust him!” she whispered. “He’s
. . . he’s got a dishonest face! How do
you know that this landing isn’t a plant? He
cut off the engine on purpose; I’m sure he
did. He meant to land here all along. Look
at the ground! It’s perfectly smooth. It’s
an aerodrome . . .”</p>
<p>“Aerodrome?” broke in the pilot. He
had descended from the machine and was
standing behind them. “Of course it’s an
aerodrome, an experimental ground. That’s
why I steered for it.”</p>
<p>Desmond looked at him. Certainly the
fellow had a shifty eye. Now that he
regarded the pilot more closely, he noticed
that he seemed to be labouring under some
excitement. The man saw that the other had
remarked his distress.</p>
<p>“It’s a nervy business, landing in the
dark!” he was quick to explain.</p>
<p>Desmond felt that his suspicions were
ungenerous. He knew how airmen loathe
night-flying.</p>
<p>“You made a devilish good landing!” he
said. “I’m afraid you must have thought us
very unappreciative. Now, what about your
friend Magnus?”</p>
<p>The girl said no more and they set off in
silence across the moonlit grass. In front of
them a black shape loomed immensely out of
the darkness. As they drew nearer, Desmond
saw, to his astonishment, that it was
an aeroplane, a huge machine with metal
wings on which the moonbeams glinted.</p>
<p>Desmond stopped. “What’s that plane
doing here?” he demanded.</p>
<p>The pilot shrugged his shoulders.
“They’re trying out machines all the time,”
he replied. “We’re getting too much to the
left,” he added. “We want to bear more to
the right or we’ll miss the gate!”</p>
<p>But Desmond was walking in the direction
of the machine.</p>
<p>“I say!” the pilot called out. “They don’t
like strangers monkeying about with . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond heard no more. He had reached
the machine. Mary Brewster was just behind
him. It was a tremendous machine and
its immense spread of wing quite dwarfed
them. A blast of warm air smote them on
the cheeks.</p>
<p>“Why,” cried Desmond, “the engine’s
warm. This machine has been out this very
night . . .”</p>
<p>He turned swiftly round to the girl. As
his eyes fell on her face, it blanched with
terror.</p>
<p>“Behind you! . . .” she gasped; but,
before he had time to defend himself, a cloth
fell across his face from the back and was
pulled taut, an iron grip clutched his throat
and he was borne to the ground. A guttural
voice said close to his ear: “A sound and I
blow out your brains!”</p>
<p>Out of the darkness rang a woman’s
scream.</p>
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