<h2><SPAN name="XXX" name="XXX"></SPAN>XXX</h2>
<p>Then Dale lived again for the hundred thousandth time in the thoughts and passions
of that distant period.</p>
<p>The forest glade grew dim, vanished. He was lying on the grass in a London park,
and Mavis' confession rang through the buzzing of his ears, through the chaos of his
mind. It seemed that the whole of his small imagined world had gone to pieces, and
the immensity of the real world had been left to him in exchange—crushing him
with an idea of its unexplored vastness, of its many countries, its myriad races. And
yet, big as it all was, it could not provide breathing space for that man and
himself.</p>
<p>Soon this became an oppressive certainty. Life under the new conditions had been
rendered unendurable. And then there grew up the one solid determination, that he
must stand face to face with his enemy and call him to account. It must <i>at
last</i> be man to man. He must tell the man what he thought of him, call him filthy
names, strip him of every shred of dignity—and strike him. A few blows of scorn
might suffice—a backhander across the snout, a few swishes with a stick, a kick
behind when he turned. He was too rottenly weak a thing to fight with.</p>
<p>His mind refused to go further than this. However deeply and darkly it was working
below the surface of <SPAN name="Page_362" name="Page_362"></SPAN>consciousness, it gave him
no further directions than this.</p>
<p>He got rid of his wife. That was the first move in the game—anyhow. He did
not want to think about her now; she would be dealt with again later on. At present
he wished to concentrate all his attention on the other one.</p>
<p>He took a bed for himself in a humbler and cheaper house farther west, a little
nearer to the house of his enemy; and almost all that day he spent in thinking how
and where he should obtain the meeting he longed for. He understood at once that it
would be hopeless to attempt such an interview at Grosvenor Place. In imagination he
saw himself escorted by servants to that tank-like room at the back of the
mansion—the room where the man had treated him as dirt, where his first
instinct of distrust had been aroused, where all those photographs of girls had
subtly suggested the questioning doubts that led him on to suspicion and discovery.
The man would come again to this room, with his tired eyes and baggy cheeks and
drooping lip; would stare contemptuously; and at the first words of abuse, he would
ring a bell, call for servants, call for the police, and have the visitor
ignominiously turned out. "Policeman, this ruffian has been threatening me. He is an
ill-conditioned dog that I've been systematically kind to, and he now seems to have
taken leave of his senses and accuses me of injuring him. For the sake of his wife,
who is a good respectful sort of person, I do not give him in charge. But I ask you
to keep an eye on him. And if he dares to return to my door, just cart him off to the
police station." No, that would not do at all. He and Mr. Barradine <SPAN name="Page_363"
name="Page_363"></SPAN>must meet somewhere quietly and comfortably, out of reach of
electric bells, butlers, and police officers.</p>
<p>That first night after the confession he slept sound and long. In the morning when
he woke, feeling refreshed and strengthened, his determination to bring about the
interview had assumed an iron firmness, as if all night it had been beaten on the
anvil of his thoughts while he lay idle. But he was no nearer to devising a scheme
that should give effect to the determination.</p>
<p>Mr. Barradine had said that he was going down to the Abbey to-morrow, or next day,
Friday, at latest; and in the course of this Wednesday morning Dale decided that the
interview must be delayed. It was impossible up here. It would be much easier to
arrange down there. He must wait until Mr. Barradine went down to Hampshire, and go
down after him. He could call at the Abbey, where the man would be more accessible
than up here; and, by restraining himself, by simulating his usual manner, by lulling
the man to a false security, he could lure him out of the house—get him out
into the open air, away from his servants, perhaps beyond the gardens and as far off
as the park copses. Then when they were alone, they two, at a distance from the
possibility of interruption, Dale could drop the mask of subservience, turn upon him,
and say "Now—"</p>
<p>No, that would not do. It was all childish. For a thousand obscure reasons it
would not do at all.</p>
<p>Then, brooding over his wife's confession—the things she had merely hinted
at as well as the things she had explicitly stated—he remembered how in the
beginning the wood near Long Ride was their <SPAN name="Page_364"
name="Page_364"></SPAN>meeting-place, how the man had met her there, and led her slowly
beneath the trees to the cottage of the procuress. And then an inspiration came. A
note to be sent in his wife's name, as soon as Mr. Barradine got home to the Abbey.
"Meet me in the West Gate copse. I want to show my gratitude"—or—"I want
to thank you again"—something of that sort. "Meet me at the end of North Ride
by the Heronry. I will be there if possible four o'clock to-morrow. If not there
to-morrow, I will be there next day. Mavis."</p>
<p>He wrote such a letter, in a hand sufficiently like his wife's. Yes, that would
fetch him. The old devil would have no suspicions.</p>
<p>Then a cold shiver ran down his spine. It was a thought rising from the depths,
warning him, terrifying him. The note would remain <i>afterward</i>. If Mr. Barradine
did not destroy it—and very likely he would not do so—the note would be
found afterward. But after what?</p>
<p>He tore up the note, tore it into tiny pieces. It seemed to him that he had
escaped from a danger. His plan had been the idea of a madman. But why? With his skin
still cold and clammy, he found himself whispering words which sounded explanatory,
but which did not explain: "Suppose a mistake occurred. Yes, suppose a mistake
occurred." Then trying to think quietly and sensibly, instead of in this fluttered,
erratic way, he forced himself to interpret the real significance of the whisper.
Well, suppose he struck too hard, and too often. But again there came the
blankness—an abrupt check to thought—the depths refusing to give anything
more to the surface.</p>
<p>He decided that he would go down to Hampshire <SPAN name="Page_365"
name="Page_365"></SPAN>secretly, letting no one know of his movements; and, stationing
himself at some likely spot near the Abbey, he would wait till chance brought them
face to face. Yes, that would do. Almost immediately he chose Hadleigh Wood as the
place to hide in. Instinct seemed to have suggested the wood rather than any point
nearer to the Abbey, and instinct now ordered him to go there and nowhere else. It
was a likely road to so many parts; it was full of good hiding-places; and, although
it was tricky, with its close thickets suddenly terminating on the edge of unexpected
open spaces, he knew it all as well as the back of his right hand. He could lie snug,
or range about cautiously, seeing but unseen; and he would not have long to wait
before the grand gentleman passed by on his way to or from the Abbey park.</p>
<p>He had got it now. This was right; and he laid all his plans accordingly. First he
pawned his silver watch and chain, so obtaining a little money without bothering
anybody. The pawnbroker's shop was in Chapel Street, and he went on along the Edgware
Road and up a narrow street in search of a shop where he could procure a suit of old
clothes. Here again it was as though instinct guided him, because he had no knowledge
of London and did not know where to look for a slop-shop; but he pushed on, noticing
that the houses were shabby, and feeling sure that he would soon find what he wanted.
And this happened. All at once he was among the second-hand clothes; every shop on
both sides of the street invited him—the whole street at this sordid end of it
was trying to help him. For a very few shillings he bought just the garments that he
had imagined—loose and big made of drab <SPAN name="Page_366"
name="Page_366"></SPAN>canvas or drill, the suit of overalls that had been worn by some
kind of mechanic, with two vast inside pockets to the jacket, in which the wearer had
carried tools, food, and his bottle of drink. Dale also bought a common soft felt
hat, a thing you could pull down over your eyes and ears, and make into any shape you
pleased.</p>
<p>When he put on the suit and the hat in his bedroom, he felt satisfied with their
appearance. He said to himself, "After I have slept out a night, and got plenty of
earth stains and muck on this greasy old canvas, I shall look just a tramp wandered
from the highroad, and no one will recognize me if they do chance to see
me—that is, unless I take my hat off. And I don't do <i>that</i>, until I take
it off for the purpose of being recognized by <i>him</i>."</p>
<p>He locked the suit of overalls and the slouch hat safely in his bag. But next day
he brought out the hat, and wore it while making a very careful tour of inspection in
the neighborhood of the Grosvenor Place mansion. Approaching it from the western side
he spied out the lie of the land, found a mews that had an entrance in the side
street, and judged that this mews contained Mr. Barradine's horses and carriages.
This proved to be true. Sauntering up and down, and lurking at corners on the side
street, Dale waited and watched. Always seeming to be strolling away from the house,
but glancing back over his shoulder now and then, he saw Mr. Barradine's brougham
come out of the mews and stand at Mr. Barradine's door. No luggage was brought down
the steps: Mr. Barradine was merely starting for a drive about town. Dale came in the
evening and observed the house as he <SPAN name="Page_367" name="Page_367"></SPAN>strolled
along the main thoroughfare of Grosvenor Place. There were lights in several rooms,
and the window of the porch showed that the hail was lighted up. Mr. Barradine had
said that he hoped to be able to get home to-day, but evidently his journey had been
postponed until to-morrow. He had said he would go on Friday at the latest.</p>
<p>He did not, however, go on Friday. Dale kept the house under observation off and
on all day, and again in the evening. Mr. Barradine went out driving twice; but the
carriage brought him back each time. How many more postponements? Would he go
to-morrow? Yes, he would go to-morrow; but this involved more delay. It would be
useless to follow him to-morrow, because he would never pass through the wood on
Sunday. No, he would spend Sunday inside his park-rails, going to the Abbey church,
walking about the garden, looking at the stables and the dairy. Moreover, Sunday
would be the one dangerous day in the woods—nobody at work, everybody free to
wander; young men with their sweethearts coming off the rides for privacy; cottagers
with squoils hunting the squirrels all through church time perhaps. Dale ground his
teeth, shook his fist at the lighted windows, and thought. "If he does not go
to-morrow—I can't wait. My self-control will be exhausted, and I shall
certainly do something fullish."</p>
<p>But Mr. Barradine went home that Saturday. Between ten and eleven in the morning
the brougham stood at the door, a four-wheeled cab was fetched and loaded with
luggage, and the two vehicles drove off round the corner southward on their way to
Waterloo. And Dale felt his spirits lightening and a fierce gaiety <SPAN name="Page_368"
name="Page_368"></SPAN>filling his breast. The time of inaction was nearly over; this
hateful sitting down under one's wrongs would not last long now; soon he would be
doing something. He took quite a pleasant walk through Chelsea, and over the river to
Lambeth, where, after a snack of lunch, he read the newspapers in a Public Library.
The Library was a quiet, convenient resort; and yesterday he had written a letter
there, to Mr. Ridgett at Rodchurch Post Office—not because he really had
anything to communicate, but because it seemed necessary, or at least wise, to send
off a letter from London.</p>
<p>He enjoyed a good night's rest, and lay in bed till late on Sunday afternoon. He
intended to travel by the mail train—the train that left Waterloo at
ten-fifteen, and went through the night dropping post-bags all the way down the line;
and it was extremely improbable that he would meet any Rodchurch friends in this
train, but he understood that the dangerous part of his proceedings would begin when
he got to Waterloo, and he was a little worried, even muddled, as to how and where to
change his clothes—or rather to put on that canvas suit over his ordinary
clothes. If he made the change here, and any one saw him going out, it might seem a
bit odd.</p>
<p>But then his confusion of ideas passed off, and all became clear. He must change
at the last possible moment, of course; and he thought, "Why am I so muddled about
such simple things? I must pull myself together. Of course I don't mind being seen in
London; it is down there that I don't wish to be seen. Anybody is welcome to see me
till I'm started, an' perhaps the more people that see me the better."<SPAN id="Page_369" name="Page_369"></SPAN></p>
<p>He therefore shaved, and dressed neatly and carefully; packed his valise with the
bowler hat in it, turned up the brim of the common slouch hat and wore it jauntily.
The overalls were rolled in an unobtrusive brown-paper parcel to be carried under the
arm; and, having paid for his bedroom, he went out at about eight o'clock, walking
boldly through the streets—just as Mr. Dale of Rodchurch, dressed in blue serge
and not in his best black coat—Mr. Dale dressed for the holidays, with a rakish
go-as-you-please soft hat instead of the ceremonious hard-brimmed bowler, and not too
proud to carry his bag and parcel for himself.</p>
<p>All straightforward now. It would be still Mr. Dale at Waterloo, depositing the
bag at the cloak-room, buying a ticket, and getting into the train with his
brown-paper parcel. Only Mr. Dale would get lost on the journey, and a queer shabby
customer would emerge at the other end.</p>
<p>But he allowed himself to modify the plan slightly. It was necessary that he
should have a good meal and also procure food to take with him, and for these
purposes he went to an eating-house in the York Road. This turned out to be just the
place he required—a room with tables where diners could sit as long as they
chose, a counter spread out with edibles to be absorbed standing, and the company
consisting of cabmen from the station ranks, some railway porters, and a few humble
travelers.</p>
<p>He ordered a large beef-steak; and he ate like a boa-constrictor, thinking the
while: "This ought to stick to my ribs. I can't put away too much now, because it may
come to short commons if the luck's against me." Then after the meal there came a
temptation to hurry <SPAN name="Page_370" name="Page_370"></SPAN>up his program, and get
through some of the little difficulties at once. He observed his surroundings. The
place was fuller now than when he came in; the atmosphere was thick with tobacco
smoke and the steam of hot food; the kitchen was at its busiest; and at the counter
the stupid-looking girl in charge was handing over refreshments so fast that it
seemed as if soon there would be none left.</p>
<p>He paid a waitress for his supper, and then went into the dark little lavatory
behind the room and put on his canvas suit. Coming out into the room again, he
intended to say something about having slipped on his overalls for a night job; but
nothing of the kind was necessary. Nobody cared, nobody noticed. His difficulty was
to make the counter girl attend to him at all. He spoke to her bruskly at last; and
then she sold him slices of cold meat, cheese, biscuits, a lot of chocolate and some
nuts, with which he filled those two inner pockets of his jacket. They had become his
larders now.</p>
<p>There were not more than a dozen passengers in the whole train, and no one on the
platform at Waterloo took the faintest notice of him.</p>
<p>No one noticed him three hours later when he left the train at a station short of
Manninglea Cross; and soon he was far from other men, striking across the dark
country, with the stars high over his head, and his native air blowing into his
lungs. He came down over the heath on the Abbey side of the Cross Roads, and reached
Hadleigh Wood just before dawn.</p>
<p>He felt at home now, alone with the wild animals, on ground that he had learned
the tricks of when he was like a wild animal himself. He knew his wood as <SPAN id="Page_371" name="Page_371"></SPAN>well as any of them. He could make lairs beneath
the hollies, glide imperceptibly among the trees, crawl on his belly from tussock to
tussock, and startle the very foxes by creeping quite close before they smelled
peril. So he hid and glided as the sun climbed the sky, and then waited and watched
when the sun was high, now here, now there, but always very near the open rides along
which people would be passing. And that day many passed, but not the man he
wanted.</p>
<p>He was three days and nights in the wood; and on the morning of the fourth day
somebody saw him.</p>
<p>He had moved stealthily to the stream to drink, and while creeping back on hands
and knees among some holly bushes by a glade, he paused suddenly. Out there on the
grass, so small that she had not shown above the lowest bushes, there was a little
girl—a child of about five, in a tattered pinafore, picking daisies and making
a daisy chain. Breathless and with a beating heart, he watched her, and he dared not
move forward into the sunlight or backward into the shade. She had not seen him yet.
She was playing with the chain of flowers—a small wood goblin sprung out of
nowhere, a little black-haired devil fired up from hell through the solid earth and
out into this empty glade to squat there right in his track. Then she stood upon her
feet, and admired the length of the chain as she held it dangling.</p>
<p>Then she dropped the chain, gave a little cry like the note of a frightened bird,
and scampered away—never looking back.</p>
<p>Never looking back. But she had seen him. He tried to hope that she had not seen
him.</p>
<p>He was hungry now. His provisions were exhausted; he had eaten nothing since last
night, and he <SPAN name="Page_372" name="Page_372"></SPAN>felt excited and fretful. He said
to himself: "If to-day my enemy is not delivered into my hands, I must go out into
the open and seek him at all risks, at all costs." It was a dominant idea now.
Nothing else mattered.</p>
<p>But that day the man came. When the day was almost over, when the whole wood was
fading to the neutral tints of dusk, he came. He was on horseback, sitting easily and
proudly, and his chestnut horse paced daintily and noiselessly over the moss.</p>
<p>Dale took off his hat. Then presently he came out of the bracken into the ride,
gripped the horse by its bridle, and spoke to the rider.</p>
<p>"Halloa! Dale? But, my good fellow, what the deuce—Damn you, let go. What
are you trying to—"</p>
<p>"I'll show you. Yes, you"—and violent, obscene, incoherent words came
pouring from Dale in a high-pitched querulous voice. All his set speeches had been
blown to the clouds by the blast of his passion. All his plans exploded in flame at
the sight of the man's face—the eyes that had gloated over Mavis' reluctant
body, the lips that had fed on her enforced kisses. But what did the words matter?
Any words were sufficient. They could understand each other without words now.</p>
<p>He was holding the bridle firmly, pulling the horse's head round; and he grasped
Mr. Barradine's foot, got it out of the stirrup, and jerking the whole leg upward,
pitched him out of the saddle. The horse, released, sprang away, jumping this way,
that way, as it dashed through the brake to the rocks—the clatter of its hoofs
sounded on the rocks, and the last glimpse of it showed its empty saddle and the two
flying stirrup-irons.<SPAN name="Page_373" name="Page_373"></SPAN></p>
<p>Dale was mad now—the devil loose in him—only conscious of unappeasable
rage and hatred, as he struck with his fists, beating the man down every time he
tried to get up, and kicking at the man's head when he lay prostrate.</p>
<p>Then there came a brief pause of extraordinary deep quiet, a sudden cessation of
all perceptible sounds and movements. Dale was confused, dazed, breathing hard. That
was a dead man sprawling there—what you call a corpse, a bleeding carcass. Dale
looked at him. Beneath his last kick, the skull had cracked like a well-tapped
egg.</p>
<p>As abruptly as if his legs had been knocked from under him Dale sat down, and
endeavored to think.</p>
<p>Then it was as if all his thought and the action resulting from his thought were
beyond his control. In all that he did he seemed to be governed by instinct.</p>
<p>At any minute some one might pass by. He must drag the body out of sight. And the
instinctive thoughts came rapidly, each one as the necessity for it arose. He must
leave no foot-prints, or as few as possible. He unlaced and pulled off his boots,
and, noticing the blood on them, made a mental note to wash them as soon as he could
find time to do so.</p>
<p>He took the dead man by the heels, and dragged him cautiously toward the
rocks—seeking the zigzag line taken by the galloping horse. That was the
chance. Instinct directed and explained the task—to make it seem that the horse
had dragged him, and battered his life out over the rocks. A good chance. Those
stirrups didn't come out. He might truly have been dragged by one of them.</p>
<p>The track of the horse was lost directly the rocks <SPAN name="Page_374"
name="Page_374"></SPAN>began. Dale left the body, and cautiously clambered upon the
rocks to see if any living thing observed him.</p>
<p>Then he took the corpse by the heels again, and hauled it over the jagged surfaces
and through the hollows—conscious all the while of great pain—and finally
left it in a cleft, staring stupidly upward. He hurried back to the ride, and sat
down by the rank-smelling bracken where he had left his boots. He was startled when
he looked at his feet—their soles were covered with blood. He thought it was
the dead man's blood, but then discovered it was his own. He had torn his feet to
pieces on the rocks. He put on his boots in agony, picked up his hat, and limped away
through the hollies into the gloom of the pines. Down in the stream, with the water
rippling over his ankles, he stood and listened.</p>
<p>What to do next? They had not yet discovered the dead man; but it seemed to him
that they would do so in another minute or two. He tried to think logically, but
could not. It seemed now necessary to get clear away before the body was
seen—get as far off as possible. Vaguely it occurred to him that he should wait
here till night, and it was still only dusk. But then he had a clear vision of the
wood at night—lanterns moving in every direction, men's voices, a cordon of men
all round the wood. Yes, that would be the state of affairs when they had found the
body and were beginning to look for the murderer. This wood was a death-trap. He
forgot the pain in his feet, and began to run with the long trotting stride of a
hunted stag, careless now of the crash of the bushes and fern as he swung through
them.<SPAN name="Page_375" name="Page_375"></SPAN></p>
<p>He paused crouching on the edge of the wood, then came out over the bank, across a
road, and into the fields. With arched back he went along the deep ditch of the first
field, through a gap, and into the ditch of the next field. To his right lay
Vine-Pits Farm; to his left lay the Cross Roads, the Barradine Arms, the clustered
cottages. He ran on, in ditch after ditch, under hedges and banks, swinging
left-handed in a wide detour till he came to the last of the fields and the highroad
to Old Manninglea.</p>
<p>But he had to wait here. He saw laborers on the road, and waited till they were
gone. Then he crept through the gap where the ditch went under the road culvert,
crossed this second road, and ran stooping on the open heath.</p>
<p>The sky was red, with terrible clouds; and a wind followed him, keeping his spine
cold, although all the rest of him was burning. When he looked back he fancied that
he saw men moving, and that he heard distant shoutings from Beacon Hill. Rain
fell—not much of it, just showers, wetting his hands, and mingling with the
perspiration in front, but making him colder behind; and he muttered to cheer
himself. "That's luck. That'll wash away the blood. Yes, that's luck. Yes, I must
take it for a good sign—bit o' luck."</p>
<p>He walked and ran for miles—over the bare downs, through the fertile
valleys, and alongside the other railway line; and late that night he got into a
feeding train for Salisbury, where, he was told, he would catch a West of England
express for London.</p>
<p>There was delay at Salisbury, and he ate some food and drank some brandy.<SPAN id="Page_376" name="Page_376"></SPAN></p>
<p>Then at last he found himself in the London train, in an empty compartment of a
corridor coach. He sat with folded arms, his hat pulled low on his forehead, his eyes
peering suspiciously out of the window, or at the door of the corridor. Whenever
anybody went by in the corridor, he stooped his head lower and pretended to be
asleep.</p>
<p>There were strange people in this train—soldiers and sailors from Devonport;
some foreigners too, or people dressed up to look like foreigners; numbers of men
also who kept their heads down as he was doing, as if for some jolly good private
reason. Who the hell were they really? Detectives?</p>
<p>The train was going so fast now that it rocked to and fro, and hummed and sang;
but it seemed to Dale to be standing still—to be going backward. This illusion
was so strong for some moments that he jumped up and went out into the corridor, to
look down at the permanent way on that side also. The lamplight from the train showed
on both sides that the sleepers, the chairs, the gravel, slipped and slid in the
correct direction. The train was flying, simply flying along the inner up-track of
the four sets of metals.</p>
<p>"I mustn't be so fullish," he kept saying to himself. "I'm all safe now."</p>
<p>A sudden noise of voices drew him to the corridor; and he stood holding a
hand-rail, watching the leather walls and the gangway that led into the next coach
leap and dance and bob and sink, while he listened eagerly. The roar of the train was
so great here that he could not catch what the hidden men were saying, but he
understood that they were sailors making too much noise and a railway guard rebuking
them. "It's <SPAN name="Page_377" name="Page_377"></SPAN>nothing to do with me," he said to
himself. "Why <i>am</i> I so fullish?"</p>
<p>He returned to the compartment, sat with his shoulder to the corridor, and brooded
dully and heavily. All that fiery trouble about Mavis and her being dishonored had
gone out of his mind as if forever; the grievance and the rage and the hatred had
gone too; temporarily there was nothing but a most ponderous self-pity.</p>
<p>"What a mess this is," he thought. "What a hash I've made of it. What a cruel
thing to happen to me. What an awful hole I've put myself into."</p>
<p>The train swept onward, and he began to doze. Then after a while he slept and
dreamed. He dreamed that he was here in this train, not fettered, but spell-bound,
unable to move and hide, only able to understand what was happening and to suffer
from his perception of the hideous predicament that he was in. Another train, on
another of the four tracks, was racing after this train, was overhauling it, was
infallibly catching it. Mysteriously he could see into this following, hunting
train—it was a train full of policemen, magistrates, wardens, judges, hangmen:
all the offended majesty of the law.</p>
<p>He woke shivering, after this first taste of a murderer's dreams. His punishment
had begun.</p>
<p>It was daylight at Waterloo, and he slunk in terror; but things had to be done. He
washed himself as well as he could, took off his dirty canvas, got his bag from the
cloak-room and hurried away. No questions were asked, no bones made about giving him
a room at a house in Stamford Street; and he at once went to bed and slept
profoundly.<SPAN name="Page_378" name="Page_378"></SPAN></p>
<p>When he woke this time he was quite calm, and able to think clearly again.</p>
<p>He went out late in the afternoon, and saw a message for him on newspaper bills:
"Fatal Accident to ex-Cabinet Minister." Then, having bought a paper, he read the
very brief report of the accident. He stood gasping, and then drew deep breaths. The
<i>Accident</i>. Oh, the joy of seeing that word! No suspicion so far. It was working
out just as one might hope.</p>
<p>And it seemed that his courage, so lamentably shaken, began to return to him. He
felt more himself. He marched off to a post office, and sent his telegram to Mavis:
"Evening paper says fatal accident to Mr. Barradine. Is this true?" The main purpose
of the telegram was to prove that here he was in London, where he had been last
Friday, and where he had remained during all the intervening time; its secondary
purpose was to put on record at the earliest possible moment his
surprise—surprise so complete that he could scarcely believe the sad news. He
gave his utmost care to the wording of the telegram and was satisfied with the
result. The turn of words seemed perfectly natural.</p>
<p>Then, having despatched his telegram, he hurried off to call at Mr. Barradine's
house in Grosvenor Place—to make some anxious inquiries.</p>
<p>There were people at the door, ladies and gentlemen among them, and the servants
looked white and agitated as they answered questions. Dale pushed his way up the
steps almost into the hall, acting consternation and grief—the honest, rather
rough country fellow, the loyal dependent who forgets his good manners in his sorrow
at the death of the chieftain. He would not go <SPAN name="Page_379"
name="Page_379"></SPAN>away, when the other callers had departed. He told the butler of
the services rendered to him by Mr. Barradine. "Not more'n ten days ago."</p>
<p>"Don't you remember me? I came here to thank him for his kindness."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes," said the agitated butler, "he was a kind gentleman, and no
mistake."</p>
<p>"<i>Kind!</i> I should think he was. Well, well!" And Dale stood nodding his head
dolefully. Then he went away slowly and sadly, and he kept on nodding his head in the
same doleful manner long after the door was shut—just on the chance that the
servants might look out of the hail windows and see it before he vanished round the
corner.</p>
<p>He could think now, as well as he had ever done. It was of prime importance that
no outsiders should ever learn that Everard Barradine had injured him. This guided
him henceforth. It settled the course of his life there and then. He must return to
Mavis; he must by his demeanor cover the intrigue—or so act that if people came
to know of it, they would suppose either that he was ignorant of his shame or that he
was a complaisant husband, taking advantage of the situation and pocketing all gifts
from his wife's protector. No motive for the crime. That was his guide-post.</p>
<p>In the night he got rid of the canvas suit and slouch hat. Next day he went home
to Rodchurch Post Office, and, speaking to Mavis of Mr. Barradine's death, uttered
that terrific blasphemy. "<i>It is the finger of God.</i>"<SPAN name="Page_380"
name="Page_380"></SPAN></p>
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