<h2 id="c21"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XX</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">IN WHICH MISS MARY BREWSTER SPEAKS HER MIND</span></h2>
<p>Blind and helpless, gagged and bound,
his eyes bandaged, Desmond felt himself
lifted up and carried swiftly along.
Presently he heard the sound of the sea and
his bearers’ feet grinding on shingle. Then
through his bandage he was conscious of a
brilliant light. He was flung violently down
and the cloth removed from his face.</p>
<p>Silhouetted against the garish light of an
acetylene hurricane lamp in the cheaply
furnished living-room of a seaside bungalow,
Clubfoot stood before him. A hideous tweed
cap pulled down until it rested on the tips of
his large projecting ears lent him a horribly
grotesque appearance. He looked like a
great ape dressed in man’s clothes. Mary
Brewster, trussed up even as Desmond was,
reclined in a chair. She had lost her hat and
her soft brown hair was disordered by the
wind. Her small face, pale and piquant, was
enigmatic in its absolute serenity.</p>
<p>“He has not got the jewels, either, Herr
Doktor!” said a voice.</p>
<p>Desmond could not turn to see the speaker.
He glanced down at the pocket of his overcoat
where the packet had been. The parcel
had vanished. It had certainly been there
when they had set out to walk to the bungalow.
Had that rascally pilot stolen it? It
didn’t matter much now what had become
of it.</p>
<p>Clubfoot snarled out an order in German.
Rough hands brutally searched the Englishman’s
clothes. Clubfoot looked on impassively.</p>
<p>“Nothing!” reported the voice.</p>
<p>“It must be there!” thundered Grundt,
“unless one of you has stolen it.”</p>
<p>“The Herr Doktor was himself present
when we seized the Englishman,” the voice
protested. “The Herr Doktor knows that
nothing was found.”</p>
<p>“Ungag them!” ordered Clubfoot. “And
clear out! Warn the pilot to have the
machine ready for instant departure!”</p>
<p>The order was obeyed, a door was softly
closed, and Desmond nerved himself to face
what he divined was to be the crucial ordeal
of his career. Never had he been in so tight
a place. It wanted hours to daylight, and
he was bound and helpless in a lonely district
in the hands of a ruthless and remorseless
enemy.</p>
<p>“A false trail, eh?” said Grundt slowly,
his nostrils twitching ominously. “You’d
play tricks with me, would you, you dog?
Do you know what I’m going to do with you,
Okewood? I’m going to kill you, yes, and
the girl as well!”</p>
<p>Desmond felt his throat grow dry. “Not
the girl,” he said in a low voice. “She’s not
even of the Service, Grundt!”</p>
<p>“It shall be a lesson to her to mind the
company she keeps!” said Grundt grimly,
and produced an automatic from his pocket.
He bent to examine the magazine. Slowly
he raised the pistol.</p>
<p>Then the girl spoke. “I shouldn’t do anything
hasty!” she said. “Kill us and your
career is at an end. You speak of retiring
voluntarily. One shot and your retirement
will be compulsory. And Stauber takes your
place!”</p>
<p>Clubfoot recoiled. “Stauber!” he muttered,
frowning.</p>
<p>“You’ve made a mess of things in England,
Grundt,” the girl continued serenely.
“Your employers, the big industrialists,
granted you this last chance. It rests with
you whether you give your employers your
own version of this affair, or whether they
take it from the English newspapers. Do
you understand me?”</p>
<p>Clubfoot stared at her like a man hypnotized.</p>
<p>In the same business-like manner Mary
Brewster proceeded: “Kill us and there’ll
be such a rumpus that the echoes of it are
bound to reach Germany. You can’t suppress
murder in England, Grundt. You’ve
missed your chance of getting the jewels,
and what you’ve got to do now is to put up
the best explanation you can. I know that
you have the reputation of being the man
that commands success. If you touch us,
that reputation is gone forever, for, you can
take it from me, the whole story, the true
story, will then come out and you’ll be saddled
with the greatest failure of your career.
And your rival, Stauber, gets your job . . .”</p>
<p>“That Schafskopf!” muttered Grundt.
He seemed half dazed by the vigour of the
girl’s onslaught. Then, “What have you
done with the jewels?” he roared suddenly,
recovering himself.</p>
<p>“They’re out of your reach!” said Mary
Brewster.</p>
<p>“But you’re not!” snarled Clubfoot.
“And you shall tell me where they are. Herr
Gott! You’re not the first woman whose
tongue I’ve loosened!”</p>
<p>But it seemed to Desmond that, for all his
bluster, much of Clubfoot’s wonted assurance
had disappeared.</p>
<p>The girl never flinched. “Make the best
of a bad job, Grundt,” she said. “Leave
things as they are and return to Germany
and you will hear no word from us to dispute
or disprove any story you like to tell
those who sent you. I repeat: You can kill
us, you can torture us, but you’ll never recover
the jewels. Make up your mind to that
and go—while you can!”</p>
<p>The hairy hand that clutched the pistol
faltered and slowly dropped to the cripple’s
side. Of a sudden he seemed to have grown
older. For a full minute he stood and
glowered at Desmond—the girl he ignored.
As the two men faced each other, it seemed
to the Englishman as though the scroll of
the years were unrolled and that, like him,
Grundt was telling over in his mind the many
bouts which these two had fought out between
them. Then slowly, listlessly, the
great hand went up and he thrust the Browning
into his breast pocket.</p>
<p>“I told your Chief, Okewood,” he said in
his deep, stern voice, “that this would be
my last case. Though he has taken this trick,
I think I may let my decision stand. But
tell him this from me—that, though he has
gained this trick, he has not won the game.
The cards have been against me throughout.
I have played a losing hand, dealt me by the
blinded, besotted fools”—his voice hissed
with anger—“who, in overthrowing my
master, destroyed our country. But do not
forget that in politics nothing is stable, that
the enemies of to-day may be the friends of
to-morrow, and vice versa, Okewood—vice
versa!”</p>
<p>He broke off, and for an instant the dark,
expressive eyes rested on the young man’s
face.</p>
<p>“Do not fall into the error of believing
that I am grown sentimental in my old age,
my young friend,” he resumed. “I have
always been a Realpolitiker, and in this
instance I have bowed my head to the unanswerable
logic of your companion just
as in different circumstances, should my
interest, or the interest of those I serve, have
required it, I should have had no hesitation
in putting the pair of you to death. Your
luck is in to-night, Herr Major. You can
tell your Chief that you owe your life to a
woman’s tongue!”</p>
<p>On that he turned and left them, and
limped, a lonely defiant figure, to the door,
where the night received him and swallowed
him up.</p>
<p>“My dear,” cried Desmond when the door
had closed behind him, “you’re a marvel!
In all the years I’ve known him such a thing
has never happened before. You beat him
fair and square! It was like a miracle the
way you laid him low! How on earth did
you come to think of it?”</p>
<p>“The man’s a mass of vanity like the rest
of you,” little Miss Brewster ejaculated
scornfully. “A little knowledge, a little
intuition, a little bluff”—she smiled rather
wanly. “You men take each other too
seriously, anyway . . .”</p>
<p>“But what has become of the chamois
leather packet with the jewels?” demanded
Desmond.</p>
<p>“It is in a rabbit-hole by that German
aeroplane,” said Miss Brewster. “When you
would not heed my warning about that
odious-looking pilot, I took the packet out of
your overcoat pocket—I thought the jewels
would be safer with me than with you. And
as that man attacked you from behind, I let
the packet slide into a rabbit-hole at my feet
and they saw nothing in the dark. It seemed
to me it was time I took charge. They’ll
never find that packet in the dark. But I
know the spot, and when it’s light and we’re
free, we’ll . . .”</p>
<p>Her head drooped suddenly forward. She
had fainted. Out of the night resounded,
loud and challenging, the roar of propellers . . .</p>
<p class="tb">At noon next day the Chief received
Desmond Okewood and Mary Brewster.
They found Francis Okewood in the office
with a grey-haired man of distinguished appearance
who was in the last stage of restless
anxiety. It was to him that the Chief, having
received it from the hands of Mary
Brewster, presented the chamois leather
packet sodden with damp and stained with
Kentish marl. With trembling hands he examined
the seal, and, having found it intact,
muttered a broken phrase of thanks and
fairly bolted from the room, carrying the
packet under his arm. The Chief shook his
head and laughed.</p>
<p>“Cabinet Ministers have great responsibilities,”
he remarked, “only they are too
fond of shoving them off on other people’s
shoulders. And now, Miss Brewster, to hear
your story.”</p>
<p>But Mary Brewster, who had faced The
Man with the Clubfoot unabashed, was
tongue-tied in the Chief’s rather forbidding
presence. It was Desmond who ultimately
narrated their adventures of the night ending
with their release at dawn by an astonished
fisherman who, on his way to inspect his lobster
pots, had answered Desmond’s cries for
help.</p>
<p>“They drugged and kidnapped the pilot
I had engaged for you,” the Chief said after
Miss Brewster had taken her leave, “and
slipped their man in his place. I have here a
telegram from Brussels about it. There’s
been a leakage somewhere which,” he added
grimly “is being investigated. In the mean
time, thanks to you, Okewood, and to this
young lady, with whom I intend to hold
some converse regarding her future career,
we’re rid, it would seem—for the present at
any rate—of Clubfoot and his gang.”</p>
<p>His manner grew reflective. “I wonder,”
he said, “when and where we shall see him
again!”</p>
<p>A silence fell on the three men. Each felt
that a fourth was present, invisible save in
the mind’s eye—a vast figure of a man who,
with misshapen foot drawn up beside him,
leaned on his crutch-stick and glared at them
defiance from savage, cruel eyes . . .</p>
<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">THE END</span></p>
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