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<h2> VI. THE HOLE IN THE WALL </h2>
<p>Two men, the one an architect and the other an archaeologist, met on the
steps of the great house at Prior’s Park; and their host, Lord
Bulmer, in his breezy way, thought it natural to introduce them. It must
be confessed that he was hazy as well as breezy, and had no very clear
connection in his mind, beyond the sense that an architect and an
archaeologist begin with the same series of letters. The world must remain
in a reverent doubt as to whether he would, on the same principles, have
presented a diplomatist to a dipsomaniac or a ratiocinator to a rat
catcher. He was a big, fair, bull-necked young man, abounding in outward
gestures, unconsciously flapping his gloves and flourishing his stick.</p>
<p>“You two ought to have something to talk about,” he said,
cheerfully. “Old buildings and all that sort of thing; this is
rather an old building, by the way, though I say it who shouldn’t. I
must ask you to excuse me a moment; I’ve got to go and see about the
cards for this Christmas romp my sister’s arranging. We hope to see
you all there, of course. Juliet wants it to be a fancy-dress affair—abbots
and crusaders and all that. My ancestors, I suppose, after all.”</p>
<p>“I trust the abbot was not an ancestor,” said the
archaeological gentleman, with a smile.</p>
<p>“Only a sort of great-uncle, I imagine,” answered the other,
laughing; then his rather rambling eye rolled round the ordered landscape
in front of the house; an artificial sheet of water ornamented with an
antiquated nymph in the center and surrounded by a park of tall trees now
gray and black and frosty, for it was in the depth of a severe winter.</p>
<p>“It’s getting jolly cold,” his lordship continued.
“My sister hopes we shall have some skating as well as dancing.”</p>
<p>“If the crusaders come in full armor,” said the other, “you
must be careful not to drown your ancestors.”</p>
<p>“Oh, there’s no fear of that,” answered Bulmer; “this
precious lake of ours is not two feet deep anywhere.” And with one
of his flourishing gestures he stuck his stick into the water to
demonstrate its shallowness. They could see the short end bent in the
water, so that he seemed for a moment to lean his large weight on a
breaking staff.</p>
<p>“The worst you can expect is to see an abbot sit down rather
suddenly,” he added, turning away. “Well, au revoir; I’ll
let you know about it later.”</p>
<p>The archaeologist and the architect were left on the great stone steps
smiling at each other; but whatever their common interests, they presented
a considerable personal contrast, and the fanciful might even have found
some contradiction in each considered individually. The former, a Mr.
James Haddow, came from a drowsy den in the Inns of Court, full of leather
and parchment, for the law was his profession and history only his hobby;
he was indeed, among other things, the solicitor and agent of the Prior’s
Park estate. But he himself was far from drowsy and seemed remarkably wide
awake, with shrewd and prominent blue eyes, and red hair brushed as neatly
as his very neat costume. The latter, whose name was Leonard Crane, came
straight from a crude and almost cockney office of builders and house
agents in the neighboring suburb, sunning itself at the end of a new row
of jerry-built houses with plans in very bright colors and notices in very
large letters. But a serious observer, at a second glance, might have seen
in his eyes something of that shining sleep that is called vision; and his
yellow hair, while not affectedly long, was unaffectedly untidy. It was a
manifest if melancholy truth that the architect was an artist. But the
artistic temperament was far from explaining him; there was something else
about him that was not definable, but which some even felt to be
dangerous. Despite his dreaminess, he would sometimes surprise his friends
with arts and even sports apart from his ordinary life, like memories of
some previous existence. On this occasion, nevertheless, he hastened to
disclaim any authority on the other man’s hobby.</p>
<p>“I mustn’t appear on false pretences,” he said, with a
smile. “I hardly even know what an archaeologist is, except that a
rather rusty remnant of Greek suggests that he is a man who studies old
things.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Haddow, grimly. “An archaeologist is a
man who studies old things and finds they are new.”</p>
<p>Crane looked at him steadily for a moment and then smiled again.</p>
<p>“Dare one suggest,” he said, “that some of the things we
have been talking about are among the old things that turn out not to be
old?”</p>
<p>His companion also was silent for a moment, and the smile on his rugged
face was fainter as he replied, quietly:</p>
<p>“The wall round the park is really old. The one gate in it is
Gothic, and I cannot find any trace of destruction or restoration. But the
house and the estate generally—well the romantic ideas read into
these things are often rather recent romances, things almost like
fashionable novels. For instance, the very name of this place, Prior’s
Park, makes everybody think of it as a moonlit mediaeval abbey; I dare say
the spiritualists by this time have discovered the ghost of a monk there.
But, according to the only authoritative study of the matter I can find,
the place was simply called Prior’s as any rural place is called
Podger’s. It was the house of a Mr. Prior, a farmhouse, probably,
that stood here at some time or other and was a local landmark. Oh, there
are a great many examples of the same thing, here and everywhere else.
This suburb of ours used to be a village, and because some of the people
slurred the name and pronounced it Holliwell, many a minor poet indulged
in fancies about a Holy Well, with spells and fairies and all the rest of
it, filling the suburban drawing-rooms with the Celtic twilight. Whereas
anyone acquainted with the facts knows that ‘Hollinwall’
simply means ‘the hole in the wall,’ and probably referred to
some quite trivial accident. That’s what I mean when I say that we
don’t so much find old things as we find new ones.”</p>
<p>Crane seemed to have grown somewhat inattentive to the little lecture on
antiquities and novelties, and the cause of his restlessness was soon
apparent, and indeed approaching. Lord Bulmer’s sister, Juliet Bray,
was coming slowly across the lawn, accompanied by one gentleman and
followed by two others. The young architect was in the illogical condition
of mind in which he preferred three to one.</p>
<p>The man walking with the lady was no other than the eminent Prince
Borodino, who was at least as famous as a distinguished diplomatist ought
to be, in the interests of what is called secret diplomacy. He had been
paying a round of visits at various English country houses, and exactly
what he was doing for diplomacy at Prior’s Park was as much a secret
as any diplomatist could desire. The obvious thing to say of his
appearance was that he would have been extremely handsome if he had not
been entirely bald. But, indeed, that would itself be a rather bald way of
putting it. Fantastic as it sounds, it would fit the case better to say
that people would have been surprised to see hair growing on him; as
surprised as if they had found hair growing on the bust of a Roman
emperor. His tall figure was buttoned up in a tight-waisted fashion that
rather accentuated his potential bulk, and he wore a red flower in his
buttonhole. Of the two men walking behind one was also bald, but in a more
partial and also a more premature fashion, for his drooping mustache was
still yellow, and if his eyes were somewhat heavy it was with languor and
not with age. It was Horne Fisher, and he was talking as easily and idly
about everything as he always did. His companion was a more striking, and
even more sinister, figure, and he had the added importance of being Lord
Bulmer’s oldest and most intimate friend. He was generally known
with a severe simplicity as Mr. Brain; but it was understood that he had
been a judge and police official in India, and that he had enemies, who
had represented his measures against crime as themselves almost criminal.
He was a brown skeleton of a man with dark, deep, sunken eyes and a black
mustache that hid the meaning of his mouth. Though he had the look of one
wasted by some tropical disease, his movements were much more alert than
those of his lounging companion.</p>
<p>“It’s all settled,” announced the lady, with great
animation, when they came within hailing distance. “You’ve all
got to put on masquerade things and very likely skates as well, though the
prince says they don’t go with it; but we don’t care about
that. It’s freezing already, and we don’t often get such a
chance in England.”</p>
<p>“Even in India we don’t exactly skate all the year round,”
observed Mr. Brain.</p>
<p>“And even Italy is not primarily associated with ice,” said
the Italian.</p>
<p>“Italy is primarily associated with ices,” remarked Mr. Horne
Fisher. “I mean with ice cream men. Most people in this country
imagine that Italy is entirely populated with ice cream men and organ
grinders. There certainly are a lot of them; perhaps they’re an
invading army in disguise.”</p>
<p>“How do you know they are not the secret emissaries of our
diplomacy?” asked the prince, with a slightly scornful smile.
“An army of organ grinders might pick up hints, and their monkeys
might pick up all sort of things.”</p>
<p>“The organs are organized in fact,” said the flippant Mr.
Fisher. “Well, I’ve known it pretty cold before now in Italy
and even in India, up on the Himalayan slopes. The ice on our own little
round pond will be quite cozy by comparison.”</p>
<p>Juliet Bray was an attractive lady with dark hair and eyebrows and dancing
eyes, and there was a geniality and even generosity in her rather
imperious ways. In most matters she could command her brother, though that
nobleman, like many other men of vague ideas, was not without a touch of
the bully when he was at bay. She could certainly command her guests, even
to the extent of decking out the most respectable and reluctant of them
with her mediaeval masquerade. And it really seemed as if she could
command the elements also, like a witch. For the weather steadily hardened
and sharpened; that night the ice of the lake, glimmering in the
moonlight, was like a marble floor, and they had begun to dance and skate
on it before it was dark.</p>
<p>Prior’s Park, or, more properly, the surrounding district of
Holinwall, was a country seat that had become a suburb; having once had
only a dependent village at its doors, it now found outside all its doors
the signals of the expansion of London. Mr. Haddow, who was engaged in
historical researches both in the library and the locality, could find
little assistance in the latter. He had already realized, from the
documents, that Prior’s Park had originally been something like
Prior’s Farm, named after some local figure, but the new social
conditions were all against his tracing the story by its traditions. Had
any of the real rustics remained, he would probably have found some
lingering legend of Mr. Prior, however remote he might be. But the new
nomadic population of clerks and artisans, constantly shifting their homes
from one suburb to another, or their children from one school to another,
could have no corporate continuity. They had all that forgetfulness of
history that goes everywhere with the extension of education.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, when he came out of the library next morning and saw the
wintry trees standing round the frozen pond like a black forest, he felt
he might well have been far in the depths of the country. The old wall
running round the park kept that inclosure itself still entirely rural and
romantic, and one could easily imagine that the depths of that dark forest
faded away indefinitely into distant vales and hills. The gray and black
and silver of the wintry wood were all the more severe or somber as a
contrast to the colored carnival groups that already stood on and around
the frozen pool. For the house party had already flung themselves
impatiently into fancy dress, and the lawyer, with his neat black suit and
red hair, was the only modern figure among them.</p>
<p>“Aren’t you going to dress up?” asked Juliet,
indignantly shaking at him a horned and towering blue headdress of the
fourteenth century which framed her face very becomingly, fantastic as it
was. “Everybody here has to be in the Middle Ages. Even Mr. Brain
has put on a sort of brown dressing gown and says he’s a monk; and
Mr. Fisher got hold of some old potato sacks in the kitchen and sewed them
together; he’s supposed to be a monk, too. As to the prince, he’s
perfectly glorious, in great crimson robes as a cardinal. He looks as if
he could poison everybody. You simply must be something.”</p>
<p>“I will be something later in the day,” he replied. “At
present I am nothing but an antiquary and an attorney. I have to see your
brother presently, about some legal business and also some local
investigations he asked me to make. I must look a little like a steward
when I give an account of my stewardship.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but my brother has dressed up!” cried the girl. “Very
much so. No end, if I may say so. Why he’s bearing down on you now
in all his glory.”</p>
<p>The noble lord was indeed marching toward them in a magnificent
sixteenth-century costume of purple and gold, with a gold-hilted sword and
a plumed cap, and manners to match. Indeed, there was something more than
his usual expansiveness of bodily action in his appearance at that moment.
It almost seemed, so to speak, that the plumes on his hat had gone to his
head. He flapped his great, gold-lined cloak like the wings of a fairy
king in a pantomime; he even drew his sword with a flourish and waved it
about as he did his walking stick. In the light of after events there
seemed to be something monstrous and ominous about that exuberance,
something of the spirit that is called fey. At the time it merely crossed
a few people’s minds that he might possibly be drunk.</p>
<p>As he strode toward his sister the first figure he passed was that of
Leonard Crane, clad in Lincoln green, with the horn and baldrick and sword
appropriate to Robin Hood; for he was standing nearest to the lady, where,
indeed, he might have been found during a disproportionate part of the
time. He had displayed one of his buried talents in the matter of skating,
and now that the skating was over seemed disposed to prolong the
partnership. The boisterous Bulmer playfully made a pass at him with his
drawn sword, going forward with the lunge in the proper fencing fashion,
and making a somewhat too familiar Shakespearean quotation about a rodent
and a Venetian coin.</p>
<p>Probably in Crane also there was a subdued excitement just then; anyhow,
in one flash he had drawn his own sword and parried; and then suddenly, to
the surprise of everyone, Bulmer’s weapon seemed to spring out of
his hand into the air and rolled away on the ringing ice.</p>
<p>“Well, I never!” said the lady, as if with justifiable
indignation. “You never told me you could fence, too.”</p>
<p>Bulmer put up his sword with an air rather bewildered than annoyed, which
increased the impression of something irresponsible in his mood at the
moment; then he turned rather abruptly to his lawyer, saying:</p>
<p>“We can settle up about the estate after dinner; I’ve missed
nearly all the skating as it is, and I doubt if the ice will hold till
to-morrow night. I think I shall get up early and have a spin by myself.”</p>
<p>“You won’t be disturbed with my company,” said Horne
Fisher, in his weary fashion. “If I have to begin the day with ice,
in the American fashion, I prefer it in smaller quantities. But no early
hours for me in December. The early bird catches the cold.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I shan’t die of catching a cold,” answered Bulmer,
and laughed.</p>
<p>* * *<br/></p>
<p>A considerable group of the skating party had consisted of the guests
staying at the house, and the rest had tailed off in twos and threes some
time before most of the guests began to retire for the night. Neighbors,
always invited to Prior’s Park on such occasions, went back to their
own houses in motors or on foot; the legal and archeological gentleman had
returned to the Inns of Court by a late train, to get a paper called for
during his consultation with his client; and most of the other guests were
drifting and lingering at various stages on their way up to bed. Horne
Fisher, as if to deprive himself of any excuse for his refusal of early
rising, had been the first to retire to his room; but, sleepy as he
looked, he could not sleep. He had picked up from a table the book of
antiquarian topography, in which Haddow had found his first hints about
the origin of the local name, and, being a man with a quiet and quaint
capacity for being interested in anything, he began to read it steadily,
making notes now and then of details on which his previous reading left
him with a certain doubt about his present conclusions. His room was the
one nearest to the lake in the center of the woods, and was therefore the
quietest, and none of the last echoes of the evening’s festivity
could reach him. He had followed carefully the argument which established
the derivation from Mr. Prior’s farm and the hole in the wall, and
disposed of any fashionable fancy about monks and magic wells, when he
began to be conscious of a noise audible in the frozen silence of the
night. It was not a particularly loud noise, but it seemed to consist of a
series of thuds or heavy blows, such as might be struck on a wooden door
by a man seeking to enter. They were followed by something like a faint
creak or crack, as if the obstacle had either been opened or had given
way. He opened his own bedroom door and listened, but as he heard talk and
laughter all over the lower floors, he had no reason to fear that a
summons would be neglected or the house left without protection. He went
to his open window, looking out over the frozen pond and the moonlit
statue in the middle of their circle of darkling woods, and listened
again. But silence had returned to that silent place, and, after straining
his ears for a considerable time, he could hear nothing but the solitary
hoot of a distant departing train. Then he reminded himself how many
nameless noises can be heard by the wakeful during the most ordinary
night, and shrugging his shoulders, went wearily to bed.</p>
<p>He awoke suddenly and sat up in bed with his ears filled, as with thunder,
with the throbbing echoes of a rending cry. He remained rigid for a
moment, and then sprang out of bed, throwing on the loose gown of sacking
he had worn all day. He went first to the window, which was open, but
covered with a thick curtain, so that his room was still completely dark;
but when he tossed the curtain aside and put his head out, he saw that a
gray and silver daybreak had already appeared behind the black woods that
surrounded the little lake, and that was all that he did see. Though the
sound had certainly come in through the open window from this direction,
the whole scene was still and empty under the morning light as under the
moonlight. Then the long, rather lackadaisical hand he had laid on a
window sill gripped it tighter, as if to master a tremor, and his peering
blue eyes grew bleak with fear. It may seem that his emotion was
exaggerated and needless, considering the effort of common sense by which
he had conquered his nervousness about the noise on the previous night.
But that had been a very different sort of noise. It might have been made
by half a hundred things, from the chopping of wood to the breaking of
bottles. There was only one thing in nature from which could come the
sound that echoed through the dark house at daybreak. It was the awful
articulate voice of man; and it was something worse, for he knew what man.</p>
<p>He knew also that it had been a shout for help. It seemed to him that he
had heard the very word; but the word, short as it was, had been swallowed
up, as if the man had been stifled or snatched away even as he spoke. Only
the mocking reverberations of it remained even in his memory, but he had
no doubt of the original voice. He had no doubt that the great bull’s
voice of Francis Bray, Baron Bulmer, had been heard for the last time
between the darkness and the lifting dawn.</p>
<p>How long he stood there he never knew, but he was startled into life by
the first living thing that he saw stirring in that half-frozen landscape.
Along the path beside the lake, and immediately under his window, a figure
was walking slowly and softly, but with great composure—a stately
figure in robes of a splendid scarlet; it was the Italian prince, still in
his cardinal’s costume. Most of the company had indeed lived in
their costumes for the last day or two, and Fisher himself had assumed his
frock of sacking as a convenient dressing gown; but there seemed,
nevertheless, something unusually finished and formal, in the way of an
early bird, about this magnificent red cockatoo. It was as if the early
bird had been up all night.</p>
<p>“What is the matter?” he called, sharply, leaning out of the
window, and the Italian turned up his great yellow face like a mask of
brass.</p>
<p>“We had better discuss it downstairs,” said Prince Borodino.</p>
<p>Fisher ran downstairs, and encountered the great, red-robed figure
entering the doorway and blocking the entrance with his bulk.</p>
<p>“Did you hear that cry?” demanded Fisher.</p>
<p>“I heard a noise and I came out,” answered the diplomatist,
and his face was too dark in the shadow for its expression to be read.</p>
<p>“It was Bulmer’s voice,” insisted Fisher. “I’ll
swear it was Bulmer’s voice.”</p>
<p>“Did you know him well?” asked the other.</p>
<p>The question seemed irrelevant, though it was not illogical, and Fisher
could only answer in a random fashion that he knew Lord Bulmer only
slightly.</p>
<p>“Nobody seems to have known him well,” continued the Italian,
in level tones. “Nobody except that man Brain. Brain is rather older
than Bulmer, but I fancy they shared a good many secrets.”</p>
<p>Fisher moved abruptly, as if waking from a momentary trance, and said, in
a new and more vigorous voice, “But look here, hadn’t we
better get outside and see if anything has happened.”</p>
<p>“The ice seems to be thawing,” said the other, almost with
indifference.</p>
<p>When they emerged from the house, dark stains and stars in the gray field
of ice did indeed indicate that the frost was breaking up, as their host
had prophesied the day before, and the very memory of yesterday brought
back the mystery of to-day.</p>
<p>“He knew there would be a thaw,” observed the prince. “He
went out skating quite early on purpose. Did he call out because he landed
in the water, do you think?”</p>
<p>Fisher looked puzzled. “Bulmer was the last man to bellow like that
because he got his boots wet. And that’s all he could do here; the
water would hardly come up to the calf of a man of his size. You can see
the flat weeds on the floor of the lake, as if it were through a thin pane
of glass. No, if Bulmer had only broken the ice he wouldn’t have
said much at the moment, though possibly a good deal afterward. We should
have found him stamping and damning up and down this path, and calling for
clean boots.”</p>
<p>“Let us hope we shall find him as happily employed,” remarked
the diplomatist. “In that case the voice must have come out of the
wood.”</p>
<p>“I’ll swear it didn’t come out of the house,” said
Fisher; and the two disappeared together into the twilight of wintry
trees.</p>
<p>The plantation stood dark against the fiery colors of sunrise, a black
fringe having that feathery appearance which makes trees when they are
bare the very reverse of rugged. Hours and hours afterward, when the same
dense, but delicate, margin was dark against the greenish colors opposite
the sunset, the search thus begun at sunrise had not come to an end. By
successive stages, and to slowly gathering groups of the company, it
became apparent that the most extraordinary of all gaps had appeared in
the party; the guests could find no trace of their host anywhere. The
servants reported that his bed had been slept in and his skates and his
fancy costume were gone, as if he had risen early for the purpose he had
himself avowed. But from the top of the house to the bottom, from the
walls round the park to the pond in the center, there was no trace of Lord
Bulmer, dead or alive. Horne Fisher realized that a chilling premonition
had already prevented him from expecting to find the man alive. But his
bald brow was wrinkled over an entirely new and unnatural problem, in not
finding the man at all.</p>
<p>He considered the possibility of Bulmer having gone off of his own accord,
for some reason; but after fully weighing it he finally dismissed it. It
was inconsistent with the unmistakable voice heard at daybreak, and with
many other practical obstacles. There was only one gateway in the ancient
and lofty wall round the small park; the lodge keeper kept it locked till
late in the morning, and the lodge keeper had seen no one pass. Fisher was
fairly sure that he had before him a mathematical problem in an inclosed
space. His instinct had been from the first so attuned to the tragedy that
it would have been almost a relief to him to find the corpse. He would
have been grieved, but not horrified, to come on the nobleman’s body
dangling from one of his own trees as from a gibbet, or floating in his
own pool like a pallid weed. What horrified him was to find nothing.</p>
<p>He soon become conscious that he was not alone even in his most individual
and isolated experiments. He often found a figure following him like his
shadow, in silent and almost secret clearings in the plantation or
outlying nooks and corners of the old wall. The dark-mustached mouth was
as mute as the deep eyes were mobile, darting incessantly hither and
thither, but it was clear that Brain of the Indian police had taken up the
trail like an old hunter after a tiger. Seeing that he was the only
personal friend of the vanished man, this seemed natural enough, and
Fisher resolved to deal frankly with him.</p>
<p>“This silence is rather a social strain,” he said. “May
I break the ice by talking about the weather?—which, by the way, has
already broken the ice. I know that breaking the ice might be a rather
melancholy metaphor in this case.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think so,” replied Brain, shortly. “I don’t
fancy the ice had much to do with it. I don’t see how it could.”</p>
<p>“What would you propose doing?” asked Fisher.</p>
<p>“Well, we’ve sent for the authorities, of course, but I hope
to find something out before they come,” replied the Anglo-Indian.
“I can’t say I have much hope from police methods in this
country. Too much red tape, habeas corpus and that sort of thing. What we
want is to see that nobody bolts; the nearest we could get to it would be
to collect the company and count them, so to speak. Nobody’s left
lately, except that lawyer who was poking about for antiquities.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he’s out of it; he left last night,” answered the
other. “Eight hours after Bulmer’s chauffeur saw his lawyer
off by the train I heard Bulmer’s own voice as plain as I hear yours
now.”</p>
<p>“I suppose you don’t believe in spirits?” said the man
from India. After a pause he added: “There’s somebody else I
should like to find, before we go after a fellow with an alibi in the
Inner Temple. What’s become of that fellow in green—the
architect dressed up as a forester? I haven’t seem him about.”</p>
<p>Mr. Brain managed to secure his assembly of all the distracted company
before the arrival of the police. But when he first began to comment once
more on the young architect’s delay in putting in an appearance, he
found himself in the presence of a minor mystery, and a psychological
development of an entirely unexpected kind.</p>
<p>Juliet Bray had confronted the catastrophe of her brother’s
disappearance with a somber stoicism in which there was, perhaps, more
paralysis than pain; but when the other question came to the surface she
was both agitated and angry.</p>
<p>“We don’t want to jump to any conclusions about anybody,”
Brain was saying in his staccato style. “But we should like to know
a little more about Mr. Crane. Nobody seems to know much about him, or
where he comes from. And it seems a sort of coincidence that yesterday he
actually crossed swords with poor Bulmer, and could have stuck him, too,
since he showed himself the better swordsman. Of course, that may be an
accident and couldn’t possibly be called a case against anybody; but
then we haven’t the means to make a real case against anybody. Till
the police come we are only a pack of very amateur sleuthhounds.”</p>
<p>“And I think you’re a pack of snobs,” said Juliet.
“Because Mr. Crane is a genius who’s made his own way, you try
to suggest he’s a murderer without daring to say so. Because he wore
a toy sword and happened to know how to use it, you want us to believe he
used it like a bloodthirsty maniac for no reason in the world. And because
he could have hit my brother and didn’t, you deduce that he did.
That’s the sort of way you argue. And as for his having disappeared,
you’re wrong in that as you are in everything else, for here he
comes.”</p>
<p>And, indeed, the green figure of the fictitious Robin Hood slowly detached
itself from the gray background of the trees, and came toward them as she
spoke.</p>
<p>He approached the group slowly, but with composure; but he was decidedly
pale, and the eyes of Brain and Fisher had already taken in one detail of
the green-clad figure more clearly than all the rest. The horn still swung
from his baldrick, but the sword was gone.</p>
<p>Rather to the surprise of the company, Brain did not follow up the
question thus suggested; but, while retaining an air of leading the
inquiry, had also an appearance of changing the subject.</p>
<p>“Now we’re all assembled,” he observed, quietly, “there
is a question I want to ask to begin with. Did anybody here actually see
Lord Bulmer this morning?”</p>
<p>Leonard Crane turned his pale face round the circle of faces till he came
to Juliet’s; then he compressed his lips a little and said:</p>
<p>“Yes, I saw him.”</p>
<p>“Was he alive and well?” asked Brain, quickly. “How was
he dressed?”</p>
<p>“He appeared exceedingly well,” replied Crane, with a curious
intonation. “He was dressed as he was yesterday, in that purple
costume copied from the portrait of his ancestor in the sixteenth century.
He had his skates in his hand.”</p>
<p>“And his sword at his side, I suppose,” added the questioner.
“Where is your own sword, Mr. Crane?”</p>
<p>“I threw it away.”</p>
<p>In the singular silence that ensued, the train of thought in many minds
became involuntarily a series of colored pictures.</p>
<p>They had grown used to their fanciful garments looking more gay and
gorgeous against the dark gray and streaky silver of the forest, so that
the moving figures glowed like stained-glass saints walking. The effect
had been more fitting because so many of them had idly parodied pontifical
or monastic dress. But the most arresting attitude that remained in their
memories had been anything but merely monastic; that of the moment when
the figure in bright green and the other in vivid violet had for a moment
made a silver cross of their crossing swords. Even when it was a jest it
had been something of a drama; and it was a strange and sinister thought
that in the gray daybreak the same figures in the same posture might have
been repeated as a tragedy.</p>
<p>“Did you quarrel with him?” asked Brain, suddenly.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the immovable man in green. “Or he
quarreled with me.”</p>
<p>“Why did he quarrel with you?” asked the investigator; and
Leonard Crane made no reply.</p>
<p>Horne Fisher, curiously enough, had only given half his attention to this
crucial cross-examination. His heavy-lidded eyes had languidly followed
the figure of Prince Borodino, who at this stage had strolled away toward
the fringe of the wood; and, after a pause, as of meditation, had
disappeared into the darkness of the trees.</p>
<p>He was recalled from his irrelevance by the voice of Juliet Bray, which
rang out with an altogether new note of decision:</p>
<p>“If that is the difficulty, it had best be cleared up. I am engaged
to Mr. Crane, and when we told my brother he did not approve of it; that
is all.”</p>
<p>Neither Brain nor Fisher exhibited any surprise, but the former added,
quietly:</p>
<p>“Except, I suppose, that he and your brother went off into the wood
to discuss it, where Mr. Crane mislaid his sword, not to mention his
companion.”</p>
<p>“And may I ask,” inquired Crane, with a certain flicker of
mockery passing over his pallid features, “what I am supposed to
have done with either of them? Let us adopt the cheerful thesis that I am
a murderer; it has yet to be shown that I am a magician. If I ran your
unfortunate friend through the body, what did I do with the body? Did I
have it carried away by seven flying dragons, or was it merely a trifling
matter of turning it into a milk-white hind?”</p>
<p>“It is no occasion for sneering,” said the Anglo-Indian judge,
with abrupt authority. “It doesn’t make it look better for you
that you can joke about the loss.”</p>
<p>Fisher’s dreamy, and even dreary, eye was still on the edge of the
wood behind, and he became conscious of masses of dark red, like a stormy
sunset cloud, glowing through the gray network of the thin trees, and the
prince in his cardinal’s robes reemerged on to the pathway. Brain
had had half a notion that the prince might have gone to look for the lost
rapier. But when he reappeared he was carrying in his hand, not a sword,
but an ax.</p>
<p>The incongruity between the masquerade and the mystery had created a
curious psychological atmosphere. At first they had all felt horribly
ashamed at being caught in the foolish disguises of a festival, by an
event that had only too much the character of a funeral. Many of them
would have already gone back and dressed in clothes that were more
funereal or at least more formal. But somehow at the moment this seemed
like a second masquerade, more artificial and frivolous than the first.
And as they reconciled themselves to their ridiculous trappings, a curious
sensation had come over some of them, notably over the more sensitive,
like Crane and Fisher and Juliet, but in some degree over everybody except
the practical Mr. Brain. It was almost as if they were the ghosts of their
own ancestors haunting that dark wood and dismal lake, and playing some
old part that they only half remembered. The movements of those colored
figures seemed to mean something that had been settled long before, like a
silent heraldry. Acts, attitudes, external objects, were accepted as an
allegory even without the key; and they knew when a crisis had come, when
they did not know what it was. And somehow they knew subconsciously that
the whole tale had taken a new and terrible turn, when they saw the prince
stand in the gap of the gaunt trees, in his robes of angry crimson and
with his lowering face of bronze, bearing in his hand a new shape of
death. They could not have named a reason, but the two swords seemed
indeed to have become toy swords and the whole tale of them broken and
tossed away like a toy. Borodino looked like the Old World headsman, clad
in terrible red, and carrying the ax for the execution of the criminal.
And the criminal was not Crane.</p>
<p>Mr. Brain of the Indian police was glaring at the new object, and it was a
moment or two before he spoke, harshly and almost hoarsely.</p>
<p>“What are you doing with that?” he asked. “Seems to be a
woodman’s chopper.”</p>
<p>“A natural association of ideas,” observed Horne Fisher.
“If you meet a cat in a wood you think it’s a wildcat, though
it may have just strolled from the drawing-room sofa. As a matter of fact,
I happen to know that is not the woodman’s chopper. It’s the
kitchen chopper, or meat ax, or something like that, that somebody has
thrown away in the wood. I saw it in the kitchen myself when I was getting
the potato sacks with which I reconstructed a mediaeval hermit.”</p>
<p>“All the same, it is not without interest,” remarked the
prince, holding out the instrument to Fisher, who took it and examined it
carefully. “A butcher’s cleaver that has done butcher’s
work.”</p>
<p>“It was certainly the instrument of the crime,” assented
Fisher, in a low voice.</p>
<p>Brain was staring at the dull blue gleam of the ax head with fierce and
fascinated eyes. “I don’t understand you,” he said.
“There is no—there are no marks on it.”</p>
<p>“It has shed no blood,” answered Fisher, “but for all
that it has committed a crime. This is as near as the criminal came to the
crime when he committed it.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“He was not there when he did it,” explained Fisher. “It’s
a poor sort of murderer who can’t murder people when he isn’t
there.”</p>
<p>“You seem to be talking merely for the sake of mystification,”
said Brain. “If you have any practical advice to give you might as
well make it intelligible.”</p>
<p>“The only practical advice I can suggest,” said Fisher,
thoughtfully, “is a little research into local topography and
nomenclature. They say there used to be a Mr. Prior, who had a farm in
this neighborhood. I think some details about the domestic life of the
late Mr. Prior would throw a light on this terrible business.”</p>
<p>“And you have nothing more immediate than your topography to offer,”
said Brain, with a sneer, “to help me avenge my friend?”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Fisher, “I should find out the truth about
the Hole in the Wall.”</p>
<p>* * *<br/></p>
<p>That night, at the close of a stormy twilight and under a strong west wind
that followed the breaking of the frost, Leonard Crane was wending his way
in a wild rotatory walk round and round the high, continuous wall that
inclosed the little wood. He was driven by a desperate idea of solving for
himself the riddle that had clouded his reputation and already even
threatened his liberty. The police authorities, now in charge of the
inquiry, had not arrested him, but he knew well enough that if he tried to
move far afield he would be instantly arrested. Horne Fisher’s
fragmentary hints, though he had refused to expand them as yet, had
stirred the artistic temperament of the architect to a sort of wild
analysis, and he was resolved to read the hieroglyph upside down and every
way until it made sense. If it was something connected with a hole in the
wall he would find the hole in the wall; but, as a matter of fact, he was
unable to find the faintest crack in the wall. His professional knowledge
told him that the masonry was all of one workmanship and one date, and,
except for the regular entrance, which threw no light on the mystery, he
found nothing suggesting any sort of hiding place or means of escape.
Walking a narrow path between the winding wall and the wild eastward bend
and sweep of the gray and feathery trees, seeing shifting gleams of a lost
sunset winking almost like lightning as the clouds of tempest scudded
across the sky and mingling with the first faint blue light from a slowly
strengthened moon behind him, he began to feel his head going round as his
heels were going round and round the blind recurrent barrier. He had
thoughts on the border of thought; fancies about a fourth dimension which
was itself a hole to hide anything, of seeing everything from a new angle
out of a new window in the senses; or of some mystical light and
transparency, like the new rays of chemistry, in which he could see Bulmer’s
body, horrible and glaring, floating in a lurid halo over the woods and
the wall. He was haunted also with the hint, which somehow seemed to be
equally horrifying, that it all had something to do with Mr. Prior. There
seemed even to be something creepy in the fact that he was always
respectfully referred to as Mr. Prior, and that it was in the domestic
life of the dead farmer that he had been bidden to seek the seed of these
dreadful things. As a matter of fact, he had found that no local inquiries
had revealed anything at all about the Prior family.</p>
<p>The moonlight had broadened and brightened, the wind had driven off the
clouds and itself died fitfully away, when he came round again to the
artificial lake in front of the house. For some reason it looked a very
artificial lake; indeed, the whole scene was like a classical landscape
with a touch of Watteau; the Palladian facade of the house pale in the
moon, and the same silver touching the very pagan and naked marble nymph
in the middle of the pond. Rather to his surprise, he found another figure
there beside the statue, sitting almost equally motionless; and the same
silver pencil traced the wrinkled brow and patient face of Horne Fisher,
still dressed as a hermit and apparently practicing something of the
solitude of a hermit. Nevertheless, he looked up at Leonard Crane and
smiled, almost as if he had expected him.</p>
<p>“Look here,” said Crane, planting himself in front of him,
“can you tell me anything about this business?”</p>
<p>“I shall soon have to tell everybody everything about it,”
replied Fisher, “but I’ve no objection to telling you
something first. But, to begin with, will you tell me something? What
really happened when you met Bulmer this morning? You did throw away your
sword, but you didn’t kill him.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t kill him because I threw away my sword,” said
the other. “I did it on purpose—or I’m not sure what
might have happened.”</p>
<p>After a pause he went on, quietly: “The late Lord Bulmer was a very
breezy gentleman, extremely breezy. He was very genial with his inferiors,
and would have his lawyer and his architect staying in his house for all
sorts of holidays and amusements. But there was another side to him, which
they found out when they tried to be his equals. When I told him that his
sister and I were engaged, something happened which I simply can’t
and won’t describe. It seemed to me like some monstrous upheaval of
madness. But I suppose the truth is painfully simple. There is such a
thing as the coarseness of a gentleman. And it is the most horrible thing
in humanity.”</p>
<p>“I know,” said Fisher. “The Renaissance nobles of the
Tudor time were like that.”</p>
<p>“It is odd that you should say that,” Crane went on. “For
while we were talking there came on me a curious feeling that we were
repeating some scene of the past, and that I was really some outlaw, found
in the woods like Robin Hood, and that he had really stepped in all his
plumes and purple out of the picture frame of the ancestral portrait.
Anyhow, he was the man in possession, and he neither feared God nor
regarded man. I defied him, of course, and walked away. I might really
have killed him if I had not walked away.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Fisher, nodding, “his ancestor was in
possession and he was in possession, and this is the end of the story. It
all fits in.”</p>
<p>“Fits in with what?” cried his companion, with sudden
impatience. “I can’t make head or tail of it. You tell me to
look for the secret in the hole in the wall, but I can’t find any
hole in the wall.”</p>
<p>“There isn’t any,” said Fisher. “That’s the
secret.” After reflecting a moment, he added: “Unless you call
it a hole in the wall of the world. Look here; I’ll tell you if you
like, but I’m afraid it involves an introduction. You’ve got
to understand one of the tricks of the modern mind, a tendency that most
people obey without noticing it. In the village or suburb outside there’s
an inn with the sign of St. George and the Dragon. Now suppose I went
about telling everybody that this was only a corruption of King George and
the Dragoon. Scores of people would believe it, without any inquiry, from
a vague feeling that it’s probable because it’s prosaic. It
turns something romantic and legendary into something recent and ordinary.
And that somehow makes it sound rational, though it is unsupported by
reason. Of course some people would have the sense to remember having seen
St. George in old Italian pictures and French romances, but a good many
wouldn’t think about it at all. They would just swallow the
skepticism because it was skepticism. Modern intelligence won’t
accept anything on authority. But it will accept anything without
authority. That’s exactly what has happened here.</p>
<p>“When some critic or other chose to say that Prior’s Park was
not a priory, but was named after some quite modern man named Prior,
nobody really tested the theory at all. It never occurred to anybody
repeating the story to ask if there <i>was</i> any Mr. Prior, if anybody
had ever seen him or heard of him. As a matter of fact, it was a priory,
and shared the fate of most priories—that is, the Tudor gentleman
with the plumes simply stole it by brute force and turned it into his own
private house; he did worse things, as you shall hear. But the point here
is that this is how the trick works, and the trick works in the same way
in the other part of the tale. The name of this district is printed
Holinwall in all the best maps produced by the scholars; and they allude
lightly, not without a smile, to the fact that it was pronounced Holiwell
by the most ignorant and old-fashioned of the poor. But it is spelled
wrong and pronounced right.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean to say,” asked Crane, quickly, “that there
really was a well?”</p>
<p>“There is a well,” said Fisher, “and the truth lies at
the bottom of it.”</p>
<p>As he spoke he stretched out his hand and pointed toward the sheet of
water in front of him.</p>
<p>“The well is under that water somewhere,” he said, “and
this is not the first tragedy connected with it. The founder of this house
did something which his fellow ruffians very seldom did; something that
had to be hushed up even in the anarchy of the pillage of the monasteries.
The well was connected with the miracles of some saint, and the last prior
that guarded it was something like a saint himself; certainly he was
something very like a martyr. He defied the new owner and dared him to
pollute the place, till the noble, in a fury, stabbed him and flung his
body into the well, whither, after four hundred years, it has been
followed by an heir of the usurper, clad in the same purple and walking
the world with the same pride.”</p>
<p>“But how did it happen,” demanded Crane, “that for the
first time Bulmer fell in at that particular spot?”</p>
<p>“Because the ice was only loosened at that particular spot, by the
only man who knew it,” answered Horne Fisher. “It was cracked
deliberately, with the kitchen chopper, at that special place; and I
myself heard the hammering and did not understand it. The place had been
covered with an artificial lake, if only because the whole truth had to be
covered with an artificial legend. But don’t you see that it is
exactly what those pagan nobles would have done, to desecrate it with a
sort of heathen goddess, as the Roman Emperor built a temple to Venus on
the Holy Sepulchre. But the truth could still be traced out, by any
scholarly man determined to trace it. And this man was determined to trace
it.”</p>
<p>“What man?” asked the other, with a shadow of the answer in
his mind.</p>
<p>“The only man who has an alibi,” replied Fisher. “James
Haddow, the antiquarian lawyer, left the night before the fatality, but he
left that black star of death on the ice. He left abruptly, having
previously proposed to stay; probably, I think, after an ugly scene with
Bulmer, at their legal interview. As you know yourself, Bulmer could make
a man feel pretty murderous, and I rather fancy the lawyer had himself
irregularities to confess, and was in danger of exposure by his client.
But it’s my reading of human nature that a man will cheat in his
trade, but not in his hobby. Haddow may have been a dishonest lawyer, but
he couldn’t help being an honest antiquary. When he got on the track
of the truth about the Holy Well he had to follow it up; he was not to be
bamboozled with newspaper anecdotes about Mr. Prior and a hole in the
wall; he found out everything, even to the exact location of the well, and
he was rewarded, if being a successful assassin can be regarded as a
reward.”</p>
<p>“And how did you get on the track of all this hidden history?”
asked the young architect.</p>
<p>A cloud came across the brow of Horne Fisher. “I knew only too much
about it already,” he said, “and, after all, it’s
shameful for me to be speaking lightly of poor Bulmer, who has paid his
penalty; but the rest of us haven’t. I dare say every cigar I smoke
and every liqueur I drink comes directly or indirectly from the harrying
of the holy places and the persecution of the poor. After all, it needs
very little poking about in the past to find that hole in the wall, that
great breach in the defenses of English history. It lies just under the
surface of a thin sheet of sham information and instruction, just as the
black and blood-stained well lies just under that floor of shallow water
and flat weeds. Oh, the ice is thin, but it bears; it is strong enough to
support us when we dress up as monks and dance on it, in mockery of the
dear, quaint old Middle Ages. They told me I must put on fancy dress; so I
did put on fancy dress, according to my own taste and fancy. I put on the
only costume I think fit for a man who has inherited the position of a
gentleman, and yet has not entirely lost the feelings of one.”</p>
<p>In answer to a look of inquiry, he rose with a sweeping and downward
gesture.</p>
<p>“Sackcloth,” he said; “and I would wear the ashes as
well if they would stay on my bald head.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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