<h2>CHAPTER XXIX<br/> <span class="f8">THE MONUMENT</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">For</span> the remainder of that night, whether rushing
home on my bicycle, preparing for rest, lying
awake, or even in my sleep, I thought over the
mystery of the disappearance of the speakers in the old
chapel. Certainly I went to sleep on the thought, and
woke with it. It never left me even after breakfast as I
rode out towards Crom. It was manifest that there must
be some secret vault or hiding place in the chapel; or it
might be that there was some subterranean passage. If
the latter, where did it lead to? Where else, unless to the
castle; such would be the natural inference. The very
thought made my blood run cold; it was no wonder that
it overspread my mind to the exclusion of all else. In
such case Marjory’s enemies were indeed dangerous, since
they held a secret way to her at all times; once within
the castle it would not be hard to work evil to her.</p>
<p>I thought that this morning I would do a little prospecting
on my own account. Accordingly I left my bicycle
in the wood and went a long circuit, keeping in the
shadow of the woods where possible, and elsewhere stealing
behind the hedgerows, till I got to the far side of the
hill or spur which came nearest to the old chapel. This
was one of the hills up whose base the trees ran in flame-shaped
patches. Half way up, the woods ceased, and
there was a belt of barrenness—outcropping rock fringed
with green grass. The top, like most of the hills or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</SPAN></span>
mounds around the castle, was covered with woods, close-growing
masses of pine which made a dusk even in the
noonday.</p>
<p>I took my way up the back of the hill and stole through
the wood, carefully keeping a watchful look out all round
me, for I feared the presence of either of the sets of spies.
At the very top I came upon a good sized circle of
masonry, low but heavily built of massive stones completely
covered with rich green lichen. The circle was
some fifteen feet diameter, and the top was slightly arched
as though forming a roof. Leaning over it I could hear
a faint trickle of water; this was evidently the source of
the castle supply.</p>
<p>I walked round it, examining it carefully; anything
which had any direct communication with the castle was
at present of possibly the supremest importance. There
was no flaw or opening anywhere; and from the unbroken
covering of the stones by the lichen, it was apparent that
there had been no disturbance for years.</p>
<p>I sat down on the edge of the stonework and for a long
time thought over matters of probability. If underneath
me, as was almost to be taken for granted, lay the reservoir
of the castle, it must have been made coevally
with Crom itself, or even with the older castle on whose
ruins it was built. It must be fed by springs in the rock
which formed the base of the hill and cropped out all over
it; and if it was not approachable from without, there
must be some way of reaching the water from within.
It might be that the chamber which contained the reservoir
had some other entrance from the hill top, or from
some lower level. Accordingly I made as I conceived a
bee line for the castle, till I came to the very base of the
hill, for I knew that in matters of water conduit the
direct way is always chosen where work has to be done.
As I went, I conned the ground carefully; not merely the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</SPAN></span>
surface for that was an uniform thick coating of brown
pine needles, but the general conformation. Where a
trench has been made, there is ever after some trace of it
to be found. Even if the workmen level the trench most
carefully there and then, the percolation of rain through
the softer broken earth will make discovery of the change
by shrinkage. Here, however, there was no such sign;
the ground, so far as one could judge, had never been
opened. The trees grew irregularly, and there was no
gap such as would be, had one ever been removed. Here
and there particles of rock cropped out amongst the pine
needles just as anywhere else. If any opening existed it
was not on the direct line between the reservoir and the
castle.</p>
<p>Back again I went to the reservoir, and, using it as a
base, began to cast around for some opening or sign. I
made circles in all directions, just as a retriever does
when looking for a fallen partridge in a dry stubble when
the scent is killed by heat.</p>
<p>At last I came upon something, though whether or no
it might have any point of contact with my purpose, I
could not at once decide. It was a rude monument of
some kind, a boulder placed endwise on a slab of rock
roughly hewn to form a sort of square plinth. This again
was surrounded on the outside, for the whole monument
was on the very edge of a steeply-dipping crag, by a few
tiers of rough masonry. The stones were roughly cut and
laid together without mortar; or if mortar or cement there
had ever been, time and weather had washed it away.
In one respect this structure was in contrast to that above
the reservoir, there was not a sign of moss or lichen
about it. The trees of the wood came close up behind it;
in front it was shut out from view below by the branches
of a few pine trees which grew crookedly from a precarious
foothold amongst the ledges of rock beneath. As<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</SPAN></span>
I stood in front of it, I could see nothing immediately
below me; however, when I had scrambled to a ledge a
few feet lower down, the back wall of the old chapel
became visible, though partly obscured by trunks and
branches of intervening trees. I searched all over the
monument for some inscription, but could see none. Then
I stood on the plinth to see if there might be any inscription
on the top of the boulder. As I stood, looking over
the top of it from the bank, I could just see through a
natural alleyway amongst the tree tops, the top of one
corner of the castle, that on the side of, and farthest from
the old chapel. As I looked, a bright thought struck me.
Here was a place from which one might correspond with
the castle, unseen by any one save at the one spot. I determined
then and there, that Marjory and I should
arrange some method of signalling to one another.</p>
<p>Somehow this place impressed me, possibly because it
was the only thing, except the reservoir, which seemed to
have a purpose in the whole scheme of the hill top.
Where there was labour and manifest purpose, there must
surely be some connection. I examined all round the
place minutely, scrambling down the rocks below and on
either side, but always keeping a bright look out in case
of spies. The only thing I noticed was that there seemed
a trace of some kind of a pathway through the wood here.
It was not sufficiently marked to allow one to accept it
with certainty as a pathway; but there is something
about a place which is even occasionally trodden, which
marks it from its surroundings virgin of footsteps. I
could not find where the path ended or where it began.
It seemed to grow from the monument, but here underfoot
was stone and hard gravel; and the wind coming over
the steep slope swept the fallen pine needles back amongst
the shelter of the trees. After a few hundred yards any
suggestion of a pathway disappeared, lost in the aisles of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</SPAN></span>
the pine trees spreading round on every side. There
was no need of a pathway here where all was open.
Once or twice as I searched the thought came to me that
there might be some opening here to a secret way or
hiding place; but look how I would, I could not find the
faintest trace or suggestion of any opening. In the end
I had to take it that the erection was merely a monument
or mark of some kind, whose original purpose was probably
lost in time.</p>
<p>At last, as the day was well on, I made my way back
to where my bicycle was hidden, always taking care to
keep from observation. Then emerging on the road,
I went as usual through the old ruined gateway and
the long winding avenue to the castle.</p>
<p>Marjory met me with an anxious look, and hung on to
my arm lovingly as she said:</p>
<p>“Oh, you are late! I have been quite nervous all the
morning lest anything should have happened to you!”
Mrs. Jack, after we had greeted, discreetly left us alone;
and I told my wife of all that I had thought since we had
parted, and of what I had seen on the hill top. She was
delighted at the idea of a means of signalling; and insisted
on my coming at once to the roof to make further arrangements
and discoveries.</p>
<p>We found the spot which I had indicated admirably
adapted for our purpose. One could sit on the stone roof,
well back from the wall, and through one of the openings
in the castellation see the top of the monument amongst
the tree tops; and could yet be unobserved oneself from
any other spot around. The angles of the castellation of
the various walls shut out the tops of the other hills or
mounds on every side. As the signs of our code were already
complete we had only to fix on some means of signalling
‘A’ and ‘B’. This we did by deciding that by
daylight A should be signified by red and B by white<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</SPAN></span>
and at night A by red and B by green. Thus by daylight
two pocket handkerchiefs of red and white or two flowers
of white and red; or a piece of paper and a red leaf or
flower would suffice. We fixed on colour as the best
representative, as the distance made simplicity necessary.
By night an ordinary bicycle lamp with the lens covered
could be used; the ordinary red and green side lights could
be shown as required. Then and there we arranged that
that very afternoon when I had left the castle I should
steal back to the monument and we should make a trial of
our signalling.</p>
<p>Then we talked of other things. Alone there on the
roof we could talk freely; and the moments flew swiftly
by in a sweet companionship. Even if the subjects which
we had to discuss were grim ones of danger and intrigue;
of secret passages and malignant enemies; of spies and
possibilities of harm to one or both of us, still mutuality of
our troubles and dangers made their existence to us sweet.
That we shared in common even such matters was dear
to us both. I could not but be conscious of Marjory’s
growing love for me; and if I had to restrain myself now
and again from throwing my arms round her and pressing
her beautiful body close to me and sweeping her face with
kisses, I was repaid when, as we descended she put both
her hands in mine and said:</p>
<p>“Oh Archie! you are good to me! and—and—I love
you so!” Then she sank into my arms and our mouths
met in a long, loving kiss.</p>
<p>We decided that as there must be some hidden opening
in the old chapel, we should make search for it the
next day. I was to come soon after sunrise, for this
we judged would be the time when the spies of both kinds
would least expect movement from the castle. I was to
come by the grass path between the trees into the old<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</SPAN></span>
chapel where she would meet me and we should make
our investigations together.</p>
<p>After tea I came away. Marjory came out on the steps
with me to see me off. As we bade each other good-bye
she said aloud in case any one might be listening:</p>
<p>“Remember, you are to come to tea to-morrow and to
bring me the book. I am quite anxious to know how it
ends. It is too bad of the librarian not to send us all
the volumes at once!”</p>
<p>When I got to the road I hid my bicycle in the old
place, and took my way secretly to the monument. Marjory
had been much struck by the suggestion of the footpath,
and, woman-like, had made up her mind on the
subject. She had suggested that we should test whether
any one came or went by it, and to this end gave me a
spool of the finest thread so that I might lay a trap. Before
I should leave the place I was to stretch threads
across it here and there between the tree trunks. If on
the next visit I should find them broken, we might take
it that some one had been there.</p>
<p>From the top of the boulder I made signal and was
immediately answered. My own signal was simply the
expression of my heart’s feeling:</p>
<p>“I love you, my wife!” The answer came quickly
back filling me with joy:</p>
<p>“I love you, my husband! Don’t forget me! Think of
me!”</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</SPAN></span></p>
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