<h2><SPAN name="chXVI" id="chXVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
<h3>THE UNEXPECTED</h3>
<p>Miss Berengaria's servants had been with her for a
long time and were all eminently respectable. She was—needless
to say—very good to them, and they adored
and obeyed her in quite a feudal manner. When at
supper in the servants' hall—all old and all sedate—they
might have been a company of Quakers from the
sobriety of their demeanor. The head of the table was
taken by the cook, and the foot by James the coachman.
Those two were married and were both fat, both devoted
to Miss Berengaria, and both rulers of the other
servants. The coachman swayed the little kingdom of
domestics with his stout wife as queen.</p>
<p>On the very evening Miss Plantagenet came back
from Cove Castle, the servants were enjoying a good
supper, and James was detailing the events of the day.
After this his wife narrated what had taken place during
his absence. And at the side of the table sat Jerry,
looking the picture of innocence, occupied with his
bread and cheese, but taking everything in. The information
conveyed to James by the cook related to several
tramps that had called, and to the killing of two fowls
by a fox terrier that belonged to a neighbor.</p>
<p>"And a nice rage the missus will be in over them,"
said cook.</p>
<p>"You should have set Sloppy Jane on the terrier,"
said James. "Our poultry is prize birds and worth a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page209" id="page209"></SPAN>[pg 209]</span>
dozen of them snappy dogs as bite the heels of respectable
folk."</p>
<p>"Sloppy Jane was with me," said a sedate housemaid.
"A tramp came to the gate asking for Miss Alice, and
I couldn't get him away."</p>
<p>"What did he want with Miss Alice?" demanded
James, aggressively.</p>
<p>"Ah, what indeed!" said the housemaid. "I told
him Miss Alice wouldn't speak to the like of him. But
he looked a gentleman, though he had a two days' beard
and was dressed in such rags as you never saw."</p>
<p>"Did he go, Sarah?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, he went in a lingering sort of way, and I
had to tie Jane up in case she'd fly on him. I didn't
want that."</p>
<p>"Why not?" said the coachman, dictatorially.
"Tramps is tramps."</p>
<p>Sarah pondered. "Well, cook and James, it's this
way," she said, with some hesitation. "This murder of
old Sir Simon—" Jerry pricked up his ears at this and
looked more innocent than ever.</p>
<p>"Go on," said the cook, wondering why Sarah
stopped.</p>
<p>"They said his grandson done it."</p>
<p>"And that I'll never believe," cried James, pounding
the table. "A noble young gentleman Mr. Bernard,
and many a half-crown he's given me. He never
did it, and even if he did, he's dead and gone."</p>
<p>Sarah drew back from the table. "I really forgot
that," she whimpered. "It must have been his ghost,"
and she threw her apron over her head.</p>
<p>"What's that, Sarah? A ghost! There's no such
thing. Whose ghost?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page210" id="page210"></SPAN>[pg 210]</span>
"Mr. Bernard's," said Sarah, looking scared, as she
removed her apron. "Oh, to think I should have lived
to see a ghost. Yes, you may all look, but that tramp,
ragged and torn, was Mr. Gore. Don't I know him as
well as I know myself?"</p>
<p>"Sarah," said James, while the cook turned pale and
Jerry listened more eagerly than ever, "you rave in a
crazy way."</p>
<p>"Oh, well, there's no knowing," cried Sarah, hysterically,
"but the tramp was Mr. Gore, and I forgot he
was dead. His ghost—it must have been his ghost. No
wonder Jane wanted to fly at him."</p>
<p>"Mr. Bernard's ghost wanting to see Miss Alice!"
said cook. "Get along with you, Sarah! He must be
alive. I don't believe all the papers say. Perhaps he
wasn't drowned after all."</p>
<p>"We must inquire into this," said James, magisterially
and feeling for his glasses. "Oh, by the way"—he
drew a dirty envelope out of his pocket—"here's
something for you, young shaver." He threw it across
to Jerry. "I was sitting in the kitchen in his lordship's
castle and being waited on by a dark-eyed wench. I told
her of us here and mentioned you. She said she knew
you and asked me to give you that. And, to be sure,
she would know you," added James, half to himself,
"seeing Mrs. Moon is your grandmother, and a fine
figure of a woman. But touching this here ghost——"</p>
<p>Jerry rose from the table and retreated to a corner of
the warm room to read his note. But he kept his ears
open all the time to the coachman's investigation of
Sarah's doings with the tramp. The note was from
Victoria asking Jerry to come over and see her, and
stating that there was a gentleman stopping at the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page211" id="page211"></SPAN>[pg 211]</span>
castle. "There's something queer about him, Jerry, as
he keeps himself very much to himself. Also he knows
your whistle as you whistles to me, which is funny.
Can't you come over and see me?" This, with all allowance
for mis-spelling, was what Jerry deciphered. Then
he thrust the note into his pocket and returned to the
table.</p>
<p>"He had an awful cough, this tramp," said Sarah.</p>
<p>"Ghosts don't cough," remarked cook.</p>
<p>"This one did awful, and he looked that pale and
thin as never was."</p>
<p>"He went away in broad daylight?" asked James.</p>
<p>"It was getting dark—about five maybe. I was
sorry for him, and I would have let him in to see Miss
Alice, he seemed so disappointed."</p>
<p>"Ah, Sarah, it's a pity you didn't let him in."</p>
<p>"But, Mr. James, you can a-bear tramps."</p>
<p>"Or ghosts," added the cook, fearfully.</p>
<p>"It were no tramp and no spectre," said the coachman.
"I see it all." He looked solemnly round the
company. "This was Mr. Bernard come to see if Miss
Alice will help him. He's alive, God be praised!"</p>
<p>"Amen," said the cook, bowing her head as though
in church.</p>
<p>"And if he comes again, we will let him in and say
nothing to the police."</p>
<p>"I should not," said Sarah; "he looked so sad and
pale. Oh dear me! and such a fine, handsome young
gentleman he was, to be sure."</p>
<p>"We will swear to be silent," said James, solemnly,
"seeing as we are all sure Mr. Bernard never killed old
Sir Simon."</p>
<p>"I'd never believe it if a jury told me," said the cook.</p>
<p>"Young Jerry, swear to be silent."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page212" id="page212"></SPAN>[pg 212]</span>
"Oh! I'm fly, Mr. James," said Jerry, easily; "but
who is Mr. Bernard? and why did he kill Sir Simon?"</p>
<p>"He didn't, and he's the present baronet at the Hall,
young Jerry. You don't chatter or I'll thrash you
within an inch of your life."</p>
<p>"Oh, he won't talk," said the good-natured cook.
"He's an angel."</p>
<p>Sarah snorted. She was not so impressed with
Jerry's angelic qualities as the rest of the company.
However, Jerry, who had his own reasons to retire,
slipped away unostentatiously and read Victoria's letter
for the second time. Then he talked to himself in a
whisper.</p>
<p>"He's alive after all," he said, "and he's stopping at
that castle. I daresay the old girl"—he thus profanely
described his mistress—"went over to there to see him
with Miss Alice. And they brought him back, dropping
him on the way so that he could get into the house
quietly. He knows my whistle. No one but him could
know it, as he heard me on that night. What's to be
done? I'll go out and have a look round. He may come
back again."</p>
<p>Jerry was too young to be so exact as he should be.
There were several flaws in his argument. But he was
too excited to think over these. It never struck him
that Miss Plantagenet could have smuggled Gore easier
into the house by bringing him in her carriage after
swearing James to secrecy, than by letting him approach
the house in the character of a tramp. But it
was creditable to the lad's observation that he so quickly
conjectured the mysterious stranger at the castle should
be Bernard. Jerry knew that Conniston was a close
friend of Gore's, and saw at once that Bernard had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page213" id="page213"></SPAN>[pg 213]</span>
sought the refuge of the castle where he would remain
undiscovered. But for Victoria's hint Jerry would
never have guessed this. It was his duty to communicate
this knowledge to Beryl, but for reasons of his own
connected with the chance of a reward or a bribe to
hold his tongue, from someone who could pay better
than Beryl—say Lord Conniston—Jerry determined to
wait quietly to see how things would turn out. Meanwhile
he strolled round to the fowls, where he thought
it likely the tramp—if he was a tramp—might come.
If not a tramp he might come this way also as the
easiest to enter the grounds.</p>
<p>The poultry yard was carved out of a large meadow
by the side of the gardens. It ran back a considerable
distance from the high road, and at the far end was
fenced with a thin plantation of elms. Wire netting
and stout fences surrounded the yard, and there was a
gate opening on to the meadow aforesaid. Jerry hovered
round these precincts watching, but he did not expect
any luck. However, the boy, being a born bloodhound,
waited for the sheer excitement of the thing.</p>
<p>Now it happened that Miss Berengaria had left the
house of a pair of Cochin fowls unlocked. She would
have gone out to lock it herself but that she was so
weary. All the same, she would not delegate the duty
to her servants, as she considered they might not execute
the commission properly. Finally Alice offered
to go, and, after putting on a thick waterproof and a
large pair of rubber boots which belonged to Miss Plantagenet,
she ventured out. Thus it was that she paddled
round to the yard with a lantern and came into the
neighborhood of Jerry. That suspicious young man immediately
thought she had heard of Bernard's coming
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page214" id="page214"></SPAN>[pg 214]</span>
and had come out to meet him. He snuggled into a
corner near the gate and watched as best he could in the
darkness.</p>
<p>It was pouring rain, and the sky was black with
swiftly-moving clouds. These streamed across the face
of a haggard-looking moon, and in the flaws of the wind
down came the rain in a perfect drench.</p>
<p>Alice, with her dress drawn up, a lantern in one hand
and an umbrella of the Gamp species extended above
her head, ventured into the yard, and locked up the
precious fowls. Then she came back round by the gate
to see if it was barred. To her surprise it was open.
Rather annoyed she closed it again, and put up the bar.
Then she took her way round by the side of the house
to enter by the front door.</p>
<p>Jerry followed with the step of a red Indian. He was
rewarded.</p>
<p>Just as Alice turned the corner of the house, she
heard a groan, and almost stumbled over a body lying
on the flower-bed under the wall of the house. At first
she gave a slight shriek, but before she could step back
the man clutched her feet—"Alice! Alice!" moaned
the man. "Save me!—it's Bernard."</p>
<p>"Bernard here," said Alice, with a shudder, and
wondered how he had come from the castle. She turned
the light on to his face, and then started back. This
was not Bernard.</p>
<p>In the circle of light she saw—and Jerry slinking
along the side of the fence saw also—a pale, thin face
with a wild look on it. The hair was long and matted,
there was a scrubby growth on the chin, and the eyes
were sunken for want of food. Still it was Bernard's
face, and but that she had seen him on that very afternoon,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page215" id="page215"></SPAN>[pg 215]</span>
she would have been deceived, until she had made
a closer acquaintance with the tramp. But Alice, having
heard the story of Mrs. Gilroy's son, knew at once
that this miserable creature was Michael. He was
representing himself to her as Bernard, and, mindful
of Durham's advice, after the first start of alarm she
determined to treat him as though she believed he was
her lover.</p>
<p>"Can you get to your feet?" she said, touching him,
although her soul shuddered within her when she
thought what the man had done.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Michael, hoarsely, and tried to rise.</p>
<p>She assisted him to his feet but his weight almost
made her sink. "I must get the servants," said she,
trying to disengage herself.</p>
<p>"No! no!" said the man in a voice of hoarse terror.
"They will give me up. Remember what I have done."</p>
<p>Alice did remember indeed, and shuddered again.
But it was needful for the clearing of Bernard that she
should carry on the comedy so as to detain the man.
A word from her, that she knew who he really was,
and he would fly at once—when all chance of saving
Gore would be at an end. Therefore she half led, half
dragged him round the corner of the house in the driving
rain. Jerry waited till the two disappeared and the
last gleam of the lantern vanished. Then he went back
to the kitchen unconcernedly.</p>
<p>"Where have you been?" asked James, sternly.</p>
<p>"Looking to see if the poultry gate was all right,"
said Jerry. "You see, Mr. James, a tramp might come
in there."</p>
<p>"It was your duty to shut it."</p>
<p>"I have shut it," said Jerry, with assumed sulkiness.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page216" id="page216"></SPAN>[pg 216]</span>
"Now don't you give me your lip, young sir, or I'll
knock your head off—do you hear? Any tramps
about?"</p>
<p>"No," said Jerry, mendaciously, "all's safe." And,
with a wonderful sense in a lad of his age, he said no
more. Then he sat down to cards with the cook, and
never made a solitary mention of what was going on in
the front of the house. As he quite expected, Miss
Plantagenet never sent for any of the servants.
"They'll manage the job themselves," thought Jerry,
playing cheerfully. When he retired to bed he had a
wonderful lot to think about, and more than ever he
determined to watch which way the wind blew so as to
make as much money out of his knowledge as possible.
Jerry was a marvellously precocious criminal and knew
much more than was good for him. Miss Berengaria
would have fainted—unaccustomed as she was to indulge
in such weakness—had she known the kind of
youth she sheltered under her roof.</p>
<p>But poor Miss Berengaria had her hands full. She
left the front door open for the return of Alice, and
heard it close with a bang. At once she started from
her seat before the fire in the drawing-room to rebuke
the girl for such carelessness, but her anger changed to
astonishment when Alice appeared at the door streaming
with wet and supporting a man. "Aunt!" cried
Alice, dropping the man in a heap and eagerly closing
the door. "Here's Bernard!"</p>
<p>"Bernard!" exclaimed Miss Plantagenet, staring.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes!" said Alice, passing over and pinching
her aunt's arm. "See how pale he is and hungry. He
escaped, and has come for us to save him. If the
police——"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page217" id="page217"></SPAN>[pg 217]</span>
The man on the floor, who was in a half stupor, half
rose. "The police—the police!" he said thickly, and
his wild eyes glared. "No. I will confess everything.
Alice, I am—I am—" He dropped again.</p>
<p>By this time Miss Plantagenet, accepting the hint of
Alice's pinch, was beginning to grasp the situation. She
scarcely relished having a murderer under her roof, but
for the sake of Bernard she felt that she also must aid
in the deception. But she could not conceive how
Michael could have the audacity to pass himself off as
Bernard to one who knew him so intimately as Alice.
At the same time, she saw the wonderful likeness to
Gore. He and Michael might have been twins, but
Michael had not the mole which was his brother's distinguishing
mark. Still, unless Michael knew all about
Bernard's life, unless he was educated like him, unless
he knew his ways and tricks and manners, it was impossible
that he should hope to deceive Alice or even
Miss Berengaria herself.</p>
<p>Also there was another thing to be considered. How
came the man in this plight? He had received one
thousand pounds from Sir Simon in the beginning of
October, and therefore must have plenty of money.
Yet here he was—thin, haggard, in squalid rags, and
evidently a hunted fugitive. It was not a comedy got
up to deceive them, for both women saw that the man
really was suffering. He was now lying in a stupor,
but, for all that, he might have sense enough to know
what they said, so both were cautious after a glance exchanged
between them.</p>
<p>"We must take Bernard up to the turret-room," said
Miss Berengaria, promptly. "He'll be all right to-night
and then we can send for Payne to-morrow. Help
me with him, Alice."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page218" id="page218"></SPAN>[pg 218]</span>
"But, aunt, the servants—"</p>
<p>"They will hold their tongues. I'll see to that."</p>
<p>"Bless you," murmured the half stupefied man. "I
can't thank you for—Oh! if you only knew all! I want
to tell you something."</p>
<p>"Never mind just now," said the old lady, sharply.
"Try and get up the stairs supported by Alice and myself.
Then we'll put you to bed and give you something
to eat."</p>
<p>"Will I be safe?" asked the man, looking round
anxiously.</p>
<p>"Quite safe. Do you think I would let you be taken,
Bernard?" said Alice, although her soul sickened in her
at the deception.</p>
<p>"I—trust—you," said Michael, with a strange look
at her. "I am ill and dirty, and—and—but you know
I am Bernard," he burst out in a pitiful kind of way.</p>
<p>"Yes, of course you are. Anyone can see that," said
Miss Berengaria, as Alice didn't answer. "Help him
up, Alice."</p>
<p>The two dragged the man up the stairs painfully, he
striving his best to make his weight light. Miss Berengaria
approved of this. "He's got good stuff in him,"
she said, when they led him into the small room, which
took up the whole of the second floor of the turret.</p>
<p>"He always had," said Alice, warmly, and for the
sake of the comedy.</p>
<p>But Miss Berengaria frowned. She applied what she
said to Michael.</p>
<p>Then Miss Berengaria sent Alice downstairs to heat
some wine, and made Michael go to bed. He was as
weak as a child, and simply let her do what she liked.
With some difficulty she managed to put him between
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page219" id="page219"></SPAN>[pg 219]</span>
the sheets, and then washed his face and hands. Finally,
on Alice returning with the wine and some bread, she
fed him with sops of the latter dipped into the former.
After this, as Michael displayed symptoms of drowsiness,
she prepared to leave him to a sound sleep. "And
Payne shall see you to-morrow."</p>
<p>"But I'll be safe—safe," said the sick man, half
starting up.</p>
<p>"Of course. Lie down and sleep."</p>
<p>Michael strove to say something, then sank back on
his pillows. The two hurried out of the room and down
the stairs feeling like conspirators. Not until they were
safe in the drawing-room with the door closed did they
venture to speak, and then only did so in whispers.
Alice was the first to make a remark.</p>
<p>"If I hadn't seen Bernard this very day, I should
have been deceived, aunt. Did you ever see so wonderful
a likeness?"</p>
<p>"Never," admitted Miss Berengaria. "But how the
deuce"—she was always a lady given to strong expressions—"does
the man expect to pass himself off to you
as Bernard? There's lots of things Bernard has said
about which he must know nothing."</p>
<p>"I can't understand it myself. Perhaps he came to
tell the truth."</p>
<p>"Humph!" Miss Berengaria rubbed her nose. "I
don't think a man who would commit a murder would
tell the truth. My flesh creeped when I touched him.
All the same, there's pluck in the fellow. A pity he is
such a scamp. Something might be made of him."</p>
<p>"Do you think he has got himself up like this to—"</p>
<p>"No, no!" snapped Miss Plantagenet, "the man's
illness is genuine. I can see for myself, he's only skin
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page220" id="page220"></SPAN>[pg 220]</span>
and bone. I wonder how he came to be in such a
plight?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps he will tell us."</p>
<p>"He'll tell lies," said the old lady, grimly. "And
for the sake of Bernard we'll pretend to believe him.
Wait till I get Durham on to him. He won't lie then.
But the main point is to keep him. He is the only person
who can get Bernard out of the trouble."</p>
<p>"What shall we do, aunt?"</p>
<p>"Nurse him up in that room, telling the servants
that we have a guest. They need not see him. And
Payne can cure him. When he is cured we will see
what Durham says. That young man's clever. He
will know how to deal with the matter. It's beyond me.
Now we must go to bed. My head is in a whirl with
the excitement of this day."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page221" id="page221"></SPAN>[pg 221]</span></p>
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