Old House of Fear

By Russell Kirk

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Title: Old House of Fear

Author: Russell Kirk

Release date: January 28, 2026 [eBook #77800]

Language: English

Original publication: New York: Fleet Publishing, 1961

Credits: Tim Lindell, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD HOUSE OF FEAR ***




What was happening on Carnglass, that “Heap of Gray Stones” beyond the
Outer Islands of the Hebrides? Old Lady MacAskival, the proprietress,
had brought in a queer lot of people from England, and the hostility
toward outsiders seemed to emanate from the frowning cliffs of
Carnglass. Anyone who tried to land, it was rumored, might be fired
upon. On a black night at sea, five MacAskivals from the neighboring
island of Daldour had seen a pillar of flame rise near Askival Harbor,
and had heard something like gunfire. And away in Michigan, old
Duncan MacAskival, the retiring head of the MacAskival Iron Works,
had encountered but stony silence in his many attempts to communicate
with Lady MacAskival concerning his desire to purchase the home of his
ancestors.

When Duncan, for all his pains, receives an odd water-stained note in
an unsigned, hastily-scrawled female hand, requesting “confidential
agents” and “immediate action,” he sends young Hugh Logan, his legal
counsel, to investigate. The adventure that unfolds is calculated to
transform the most comfortable armchair into a veritable bucket seat of
suspense.

In his efforts to reach Carnglass and the Old House, where Lady
MacAskival resides, Logan is confronted by the sinister agents of a
puzzling conspiracy--a baleful Glasgow “commission agent,” a cashiered
British officer, an Irish terrorist on the run, and, behind the stone
mass known as the Old House, the chilling man with the Third Eye.




old house of fear




  OLD
  HOUSE
  OF
  FEAR

  BY RUSSELL KIRK

  FLEET PUBLISHING CORPORATION
  230 PARK AVENUE
  NEW YORK 17, N.Y.




  COPYRIGHT © 1961
  BY FLEET PUBLISHING CORPORATION
  230 Park Avenue, New York 17, New York

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  Protected under International Copyright Convention
  and the Pan American Copyright Convention

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 61-7627

  PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA




  This Gothick tale, in unblushing line
  of direct descent from _The Castle of
  Otranto_, I do inscribe to Abigail Fay.




CONTENTS


  Chapter  1      _11_

  Chapter  2      _26_

  Chapter  3      _42_

  Chapter  4      _58_

  Chapter  5      _78_

  Chapter  6      _95_

  Chapter  7      _111_

  Chapter  8      _136_

  Chapter  9      _153_

  Chapter 10      _173_

  Chapter 11      _187_

  Chapter 12      _201_

  Chapter 13      _218_

  Chapter 14      _230_

  Chapter 15      _248_




old house of fear




1


On this shrouded night, five men tossed in a boat off the island of
Carnglass, where the sea never is smooth. So thick about them hung the
fog that they could not see the great cliffs. Knowing, though, every
rock and reef, they sensed where the island lay.

Of a sudden, a tall flame shot up from Carnglass, fierce and unnatural.
Across the swell there came to the men in the boat the crash of some
explosion. Clinging to their oars, they stared silent toward the land;
the oldest man crossed himself. The flame, surging and waving for some
minutes, soon sank lower. In a little while they heard faint distant
sounds, several of them, like gunshots. The younger men looked to the
old helmsman, who pulled hesitantly at his white beard.

Then he signed to them to put the boat about. Glancing fearfully at the
distant flame as they heaved, two men hauled at the sail. In a minute
they had changed course, and the fire in the night glowed at their
backs as they pulled away from the uneasy neighborhood of silent and
invisible Carnglass.

       *       *       *       *       *

Three thousand miles away, two men sat in a handsome office. “That’s
our island,” Duncan MacAskival said: “Carnglass.”

Across the Ordnance Survey map his thick forefinger moved to a ragged
and twisted little outline, away at the verge of the Hebrides, which
even upon the linen of the map seemed to recoil from the Atlantic
combers. “The tattered top of a drowned mountain. And that’s the
castle, by the bay to the West, Hugh: Old House of Fear. I like
the names. You’re to buy Carnglass for me, cliffs and clachans and
deer-forest and Old House and all; and price is no object.”

Hugh Logan smiled at the heavy old man in the swivel chair. “Why send
me to the Western Isles to haggle for a speck of rock I know nothing
about, Mr. MacAskival? Why do you need Carnglass? And why not have a
Glasgow solicitor do the business for you? I’d enjoy the trip, right
enough, but I don’t need to tell you that my time costs you bona-fide
money. Any junior clerk could buy an island for you.”

“Look out there, Hugh.” MacAskival swung round his chair to the big
window at the back of his teak-panelled office. Far below, stretching
eastward for a quarter of a mile along the river, the stacks and
coke-ovens and corrugated-iron roofs of MacAskival Iron Works sent up
to heaven their smoke and flame and thunder. “Look at it all. I made
it. And what has it given me? Two coronary fits. I’m told to rest.
But where could a man like me fade decently? I’m not made for quiet
desperation. There’s just one place, Hugh, where I might lie quiet; and
that’s Carnglass.”

MacAskival peered at his map. “I haven’t seen Carnglass,” he went on,
“except in pictures, and no more did my father, or his father. But the
MacAskivals came out of Carnglass to Nova Scotia in 1780, and they
didn’t forget the little croft below Cailleach--that’s the sharp hill
north of the Old House, Hugh. Their Nova Scotia farm was sand and
stumps, and yet not so barren as that Carnglass croft. Still, they’d
have traded ten farms in Nova Scotia for that wet little plot in
Carnglass. And after two strokes, I think I’d give the mills and all
for that croft--with the island thrown in.”

Logan had walked to the window, and now stood looking toward the glare
of the coke-ovens; the flames went hotly up into the Michigan twilight,
that April evening, and the incandescent masses of coal fell roaring.
“Why, I think we might make a better bargain than that, Mr. MacAskival.
Peat bogs and tumbledown castles go cheap nowadays. But why do you mean
to send a man like me to buy you a few square miles of dripping misery?”

“Cigar, Hugh?” MacAskival pushed a box toward him. “The doctor says I
can have just one of these a day. Well, I’m not so crazy as I seem,
and you know it. Under your veneer, you’re like me--sentimental as a
sick old ironmaster. Don’t tell me you’ve never thought of having an
island all to yourself. So I’d like to see you hunt this dream of mine;
you work too hard for your age. ‘Getting and spending, we lay waste
our powers.’ I don’t plan to bare my bosom to the moon in Carnglass,
but it should do you good to play at being a pagan suckled in a creed
outworn--for a few days, anyhow.”

Old Duncan MacAskival was a trifle vain of his quotations and
allusions, Logan thought. But Logan liked MacAskival, a self-made
man, a good deal better than the average product of the big
business-administration schools. It came to Logan that he, Hugh Logan,
rapidly was growing into an old man’s young man. It had been more than
a dozen years since he had led a battalion in Okinawa. He knew much
of Scotland, born in Edinburgh as he had been, though his parents had
taken him to America when he was nine; and he had gone back to take
a degree at Edinburgh University. A slackening of pace, for a week
or two, might do no mischief. All his life he had hurried: schools,
the university, the war, and the firm: in too much of a hurry, either
side of the water, to laugh, to marry, or even to dream. “No, Mr.
MacAskival,” Logan said, “I’m not the man to laugh at you. But you’re
a canny Scot, though five generations removed. Do you need to pay my
price just to draw up a deed to an island?”

“You’re more of a Scot than I am, Hugh, though you look American enough
nowadays.” MacAskival leant back in his heavy chair. “Well, yes, you’ll
be worth your price in this business. You know something of Scots law
and tenures. And you can wheedle odd customers; Lady MacAskival is one
of that breed, they tell me. Here, look at yourself in that mirror.”
MacAskival nodded toward the baroque glass against the teak panelling.

Logan saw reflected a mild-seeming, amiable face--or so most people
would call it, probably--almost unlined; still a young man’s face.
Sometimes, when he had been a major of infantry, that face had tended
to mislead people, and then Logan had to rectify impressions. He had a
spare body. “Do I look like a fool?” he asked MacAskival.

“Not exactly a fool, boy, but close enough. You’re innocent: that’s the
word, Hugh. What a face to set before a jury--or a crazy old creature
like Lady MacAskival! Anyone signing a contract with you assumes
that he’s had the better of the bargain. Now I’ve tried before this
to buy Carnglass; I’ve been at it more than three years. I’ve tried
those Glasgow solicitors. They’re too sharp: what we need with Lady
MacAskival is babyish innocence.”

“All right: I’ll take my innocence to Carnglass.” Smiling, Logan turned
back to the map on the big desk. “There still are MacAskivals in the
island, then? And what sort of cousin of yours is this Lady MacAskival?”

“Call me Duncan, Hugh,” MacAskival said, “if you’ll really take
up the business for me. No, there’s not a real MacAskival left in
Carnglass, so for as I can learn. Lady MacAskival was born Miss Ann
Robertson; her family owned distilleries, money-makers. It was a
queer match when she married Colonel Sir Alastair MacAskival, Indian
Army, who was old enough to be her father, or more. Sir Alastair had
scars and medals, but nothing besides. Though he was chief of the
MacAskivals--and there’s precious few of that little clan left--he
was born in a but-and-ben in North Uist. I get all this from an
Edinburgh genealogist. Sir Alastair’s great-grandfather ran through his
property so as to keep up a fine show in London. The Great Clearance
of Carnglass was in 1780--that’s when my people were booted out, you
remember--and it was the work of that old reprobate Donald MacAskival,
our Sir Alastair’s great-grandfather: he turned the whole island into
two big farms and a sheepwalk, on the chance of squeezing more money
from the rents, and told all the crofting MacAskivals to go to Hell or
Glasgow. A few had the money for steerage passage to Nova Scotia, which
eventually made me president of MacAskival Iron Works. My father was a
pushing Scot, and so am I--and you, too, Hugh.”

“So Ann Robertson brought money back to the MacAskivals more than a
hundred years after the Clearance?”

“Not simply money, Hugh, but Carnglass itself. What little extra
Donald MacAskival contrived to wring out of the rents after the Great
Clearance did him no good. He died bankrupt; and the creditors took
Carnglass. His son sank down to being the factor for a small laird
in North Uist, and there the family lived on, hand to mouth, until
young Alastair went out to India and got some reputation for himself
along the Northwest Frontier. When he was past forty, he sailed home
to Edinburgh on leave. There he met Ann Robertson, and married her,
and they bought back Carnglass with Robertson money, and restored Old
House of Fear.”

Logan bent over the map to find the tiny square that marked the Old
House. “That’s an uneasy name, Duncan, for an ironmaster who wants
peace and quiet.”

“But it’s a brave old house, Hugh. And the name is Gaelic, not English:
‘fear’ is spelled ‘fir’ or ‘fhir,’ sometimes, and it means ‘man.’ Old
House of Fear is Old House of Man. Old! Why, the foundations of the
oldest tower go back to Viking times. The Norsemen took Carnglass in
799 or thereabouts. But there was some sort of chiefs house--Picts or
whatever they were--before then. There’s a tale in the island that
Carnglass was Eden: man started there, and woman too, I suppose. But
Carnglass hasn’t many living souls today. Old Donald MacAskival swept
off five hundred people--MacAskivals and MacLeods and MacDonalds--in
the Great Clearance, which left only thirty or forty souls, all named
MacAskival, in the whole island. There still were twenty or thirty of
their descendants living in Carnglass when Alastair and Ann bought it
back. But Ann, Lady MacAskival, isn’t much of a hand for company, it
seems; because when Sir Alastair died, in 1914, she got rid of what
MacAskival crofters were left. Off they went to a smaller island,
Daldour, three miles south across the Sound of Carnglass, one soaking
peat-bog: if Carnglass was Eden, Daldour was Hell. And there they are
still, for all I know, if they haven’t starved. Our Lady MacAskival,
who’s over eighty now, lives alone at the Old House with only a handful
of Lowland and English servants, according to what I could learn from
Edinburgh. She never leaves Carnglass. And she doesn’t often answer
letters.”

“Then she’s not even a cousin of sorts to you?”

“Not she. The chiefs of MacAskival were of Norse stock--the name’s
Norse, at least. And she’s from the Lowlands. Sir Alastair and she
never had children--I gather, besides, there wasn’t much love lost
between them--and she has no heirs, so far as I can find. And anyway,
Hugh, the odds are that I’m a Pict or a Scot, not a Viking. The island
people generally took the chief’s name for a surname, though they might
have no blood connection. I don’t mean to set up for chief of Clan
MacAskival: my people were fishermen or crofters who got themselves
killed, now and then, in MacAskival’s feuds. Old Donald MacAskival’s
father was out for the Pretender in ’45, which is one reason why Donald
went so deep in debt and made the Clearance. No, all I want is to live
in the Old House and look across the Sound of Carnglass, Hugh. That’s
the dream that I want you to buy for me.”

“The Old House is liveable, then, Duncan?”

“Sound enough, they say, though hardly anyone but Lady MacAskival and
her servants has seen the inside of it since 1914. That Edinburgh man
couldn’t find any photographs for me later than 1914.” MacAskival
pulled open a drawer. “There they are: not very good pictures, taken
the year Sir Alastair died. It seems to have been foggy that day.”

“I presume it usually is foggy in your tight little island, Duncan,”
Logan said as he took up the half-dozen old prints. “There’s no
inhabited island further out into the Atlantic.” Foggy, yes; and yet
the great bulk of Old House of Fear loomed distinctly enough in the
middle ground of the photograph. Carnglass meant “gray stone,” and
the whole stern mass of masonry was of a gray that blended into the
outcrop of living rock upon which the Old House was built. But the
castle was not of a single period. The first photograph showed, on the
left, an enormous square tower of rubble, capped by a high-pitched
roof apparently sheathed with stone slabs. At one corner of this
tower, a little turret stood up, perhaps covering the top of a stair
in the thickness of the wall; Logan knew something about Scottish
medieval architecture. To this great tower was joined a range of
domestic buildings, three stories high, with dormers and crowstepped
gables, also built of gray rubble: early seventeenth-century work,
Logan thought. A smaller square tower closed the range. And then,
abruptly tacked upon the right side of the smaller tower, commenced
a mansion-house of ashlar, with small barred windows on the ground
floor but very large windows of plate glass above; this was in the
Scottish “baronial” style of Victorian times, yet carried out with
some taste and not altogether disharmonious with the medieval and
seventeenth-century buildings. A large door in the middle of this
latter-day façade seemed wide enough for a carriage to pass through;
perhaps it led to an interior courtyard. “All this on the right is Sir
Alastair’s addition?” Logan asked.

“Yes,” said MacAskival, “and the place is bigger even than it looks:
there’s a courtyard behind, with buildings all round. The Robertson
distilleries paid for it. When Sir Alastair and his wife bought back
the island, the original castle hadn’t been lived in for seventy years
or more, and the roof was collapsing; but they put everything in shape
and made the place twice as big. I suppose old Lady MacAskival rattles
about in it now. Even though she’s one of the richest old women in
Britain, income tax and surtax won’t let her keep much more than five
thousand pounds’ income; and that probably only pays the servants she
has left, and for her food. She has trouble finding help, by the way, I
hear. It’s not everyone who wants to scrub floors in Old House of Fear.”

“And you want a white mastodon?”

“Only to die in,” MacAskival told him, cheerfully. “Every man to his
own humor, Hugh. I have the money to keep the place as long as I live;
and if I stay there only from time to time, I can keep clear of British
income tax. I may as well spend a few million, because the Treasury
and that foundation you set up for me will take all that’s left when I
die, anyway. I might leave you the Old House, though: it shouldn’t take
you long to acquire a taste for that style of living.”

Hugh was turning over the other photographs. “One of the clachans:
one of the two villages in Carnglass. These are what they call black
houses, because the peat smoke just goes out of a hole in the roof,
after circulating round the room--but I suppose you know all this,
Hugh. Snug, anyway. And I don’t suppose any one of these is lived in
now, except possibly by a gamekeeper or two. Now have a look at this
other picture. What do you make of it?”

In the foreground, Hugh saw a desolate graveyard, a low drystone wall
enclosing it; some tall white monuments showed above the wall, and in
the center stood, at a perilous angle, an immense Celtic cross. Beyond
the monuments was what seemed to be an ancient chapel with a modern
roof. And away in the background there hulked, dimly, a tall circular
building, rather like a vast beehive.

“It all looks like something from before the Flood,” Logan murmured.

“Well, much of it is nearly as old as anything in Iona,” MacAskival
observed. “That’s the chapel of St. Merin. She was stoned to death, I
think, in the days of St. Columba. Sir Alastair restored the chapel
as the family burial-vault. And that’s the famous Cross of Carnglass,
tenth-century; or it would be famous, if Lady MacAskival ever let
archeologists ashore. I don’t know what the thing beyond can be. Do you
feel more like becoming Laird of Carnglass?”

“It’s a strange island,” Logan said, unsmiling.

“Yet it can’t be so strange as the rumors make it.” MacAskival was
pleased, clearly, at having shaken Logan out of his commonsensical
ways. “Except for a few friends from London, the old lady’s let nobody
poke about since her own little clearance of 1914. They say that boats
trying to put into the harbor have been shot at. And they say there
are more bogles stalking through the heather than there are live folk.
And servants who’ve left the Old House have told people in Oban and
Glasgow that some of the London visitors are worse than the bogles.”

“Scotland has no law of trespass--only acts of interdict after damage
has been done to property.”

“You can tell that to our old lady, Hugh. If we do get Carnglass, I’ll
let the archeologists and the naturalists browse. I’m told there are
rare plants and birds, and a few fallow deer still. Nearly the whole
island has become deer-forest. One of the farms--the one closer to the
old house--seems to be kept in fair order; they have Highland cattle. I
learned that from Lagg, the factor, a Galloway man.”

“You’ve corresponded with him, Duncan?”

“In a unilateral way. First, three years ago, I wrote to Lady
MacAskival herself: no answer. Then I found out the names of her London
solicitors. I sent them an offer, and they wrote that they’d refer
it to Lady MacAskival. Then silence. I wrote again. The solicitors
answered that Lady MacAskival would give me a reply after reflection.
More silence. I wrote to the solicitors a third time, a year ago
yesterday, and got a letter back promptly: Lady MacAskival no longer
did business with them, they said, and I should write to her factor
in Carnglass, Thomas Lagg. I did. Ten months ago, Lagg replied that
Lady MacAskival was indisposed, but would communicate with me after
some interval. She never has said no--mind that, Hugh. Then still more
silence. I wrote to Lagg three times; no reply. But yesterday this
letter came.” From under his blotter MacAskival drew a sheet of cheap
notepaper, which curled up as he tried to lay it before Logan.

“I told you she was odd,” MacAskival said, as Logan smoothed the sheet.
“The envelope was curled, too, and only partly straightened by having
been in a mail-bag.” Also the paper seemed water-stained, and the
writing in one corner had run badly. Though it was in a clear feminine
hand, it appeared to have been written very hastily:

                                                         “3rd March
    “Duncan MacAskival, Esq.

    “Sir:

  Lady MacAskival desires to discuss with you at once the proposal
  which you have set forth. She requests that you come in person to
  Carnglass without delay, or send confidential agents. Immediate
  action is imperative.”

There was no signature. “Lady MacAskival’s own hand?” Logan inquired.

“Presumably,” MacAskival said. “The doctor tells me that I’m not
quite fit for ocean cruises just now. So Hugh Logan, Esquire, is my
confidential agent. Do you think you can act properly conspiratorial? I
saw you as Cassius in the Players’ Club performance of _Julius Caesar_
last month, you remember, Hugh; and you were the best man in the cast.
You’d have done as well as a professional actor as you have with the
law. Well, I’ve cabled both the old lady and Lagg. I’ve told them that
you’ll arrive this week.”

“This week, Duncan? Next month, at the soonest.”

MacAskival’s thick eyebrows lowered. “Hugh Logan, I’ve given you a
boost for your firm, now and then. I’m not a man who enjoys being
crossed--you know that. Now this business is something that matters to
me. Who knows how much longer the old lady will live? I don’t intend to
miss this chance, after three years of trying. If you think anything of
me, you’ll fly to Prestwick tomorrow; and it will do you good, Hugh:
an easy bit of work in a charming quiet place. We can’t delay. Notice
the date of that letter. It’s been stuck somewhere en route; and it
came by ordinary surface mail, which took a week or more. I don’t want
the old lady to change her mind. In my cables, I asked to have Lady
MacAskival’s yacht--I suppose she must own something of the sort--put
into Glasgow or Greenock for you. You’ve a room reserved at Todd’s
Hotel, Glasgow, and Lady MacAskival’s people should get in touch with
you there. Will you go, or do I have to send some fool? I want to use
your innocence-mask, Hugh.”

“Needs must when the devil drives,” Logan said in his easy way. “Give
me those plane tickets. I usually humor madmen. Besides, I mean to find
out what that beehive building is.”

“Then it’s my Carnglass.” Duncan MacAskival slapped his hand against
the desk. “Here”--he fetched out a manila envelope--“here’s my
correspondence with the old lady’s people. And here’s some estimate
of what the island ought to cost, kit and kaboodle, that I got from
solicitors in London and Glasgow. And this, too--this will interest
you, Hugh.”

It was a slim old pamphlet, the covers nearly ripped away. “It’s rare,
Hugh. Thin’s of Edinburgh found a copy for me. Take it along to read on
your plane.” MacAskival opened to the title page: “A Summary History of
the Islands of Carnglass and Daldour, in the Western Isles of Scotland;
with some Account of the Traditionary Tales of those Parts. By the
Reverend Samuel Balmullo, sometime minister of the Parish of Carnglass
and Daldour. 1818.” MacAskival was something of a book-collector. “I
know you’re wanting dinner, Hugh,” MacAskival said, “and I’ll take you
to the club in a minute or two, but let me read you a bit of this:

“‘Among the surviving peasantry of Dalcruach village, on the eastern
strand of Carnglass, superstition exerts an influence as powerful
as it is debasing. In this clachan are said to reside four or five
Sgeulaiche, or narrators of traditionary tales of an extravagant
character, many of which antedate the arrival of Christian evangels
from Ireland in the sixth century. These relations often reflect, and
endeavor to excuse, the lingering of heathen and impious practices
among this ignorant folk. They speak, for example, of a “Third Eye,”
said to appear afresh, from generation to generation, among the
inhabitants of Carnglass, whether native-born or newcomers; and such
a spot upon the forehead is said to confer amatory powers, and is
regarded by these children of the twilight with a respect not far
removed from veneration. To labor among parishioners possessed by such
delusions is weary work; it has been said that to preach the Gospels
among the Pequots or Narragansetts is a facile undertaking by the side
of any endeavor to redeem from heathen error these denizens of the
furthermost Hebrides.’”

MacAskival turned the page. “The Reverend Samuel Balmullo--he was
from the Lowlands, Hugh--tends to be long-winded, but rewarding.
Balmullo seems to have been a sour old fellow. He was interested in the
MacAskivals, though--give me a moment more.” Duncan MacAskival leafed
through the pamphlet.

“‘Indubitably,’” he read, “‘a family of the first antiquity in the
Isles, the chiefs of MacAskival, though at present reduced to mean
estate, are said to be a sept of the MacDonalds, Lords of the Isles,
early parted from their headship by internecine conflicts. These
MacAskival chiefs themselves maintain, however--and with some show of
reason--that they descend from a stock older still. As their ancestor
and the founder of their fortunes, they claim a certain Sigurd Askival,
a Viking adventurer, who espoused the Pictish heiress of Carnglass, one
Mary or Merin. This noble lady of Carnglass was a woman of remarkable
beauty, despite her flowing mane of red hair, which the refined taste
of modern days would disapprove. In passing, it is necessary to notice
a tale, germane to the genealogical claims of MacAskival, that one
Mary or Merin, saint and princess, at a remote period was redeemed
from captivity to a bestial creature, described as the Gabharfear,
Firgower, or man-goat; and that her rescuer was Sigurd Askival, a Norse
freebooter.

“‘One single substantial proof of the venerable lineage of MacAskival
is reputed to have survived well into the last century: a set of
chessmen carven from a blue stone, the “Table-Men of Askival,”
exhibiting the weird handiwork of a ferocious epoch, which objects
long continued the proudest possession of the chieftain of MacAskival.
These, however, no longer are to be found in the Old House of Fear,
their asserted repository; nor have they been transferred to the
elegant New House by the quay, although the present proprietor made
close search for the pieces. According to one fabrication of the aged
men of Carnglass, these “Table-Men” were immured in a tomb by the last
chieftain, to propitiate the Fiend. Once more the author apologizes
to his gentle readers for this trespass upon their hours of serious
reflection.’”

“Old Mr. Balmullo,” Logan broke in, “seems to have taken a fearful joy
in recording superstitions. He protests too much.”

“Yes, I think Carnglass bewitched Samuel Balmullo, Hugh. ‘Glamour’ is
an old Scots word, you know. Watch out, boy, that some Hebridean witch
doesn’t catch you: three days in Carnglass might turn the trick.”

“Never fear, Duncan,” Logan told him, with his slow smile. “The Harding
case comes up next month, and I’ll be back for it.”

“Fear? Why, there’s no danger of any sort in Carnglass, I suppose.”
MacAskival turned again to the window overlooking the plant. Now it was
dark, and the coke-ovens glowed against the night like the flaming City
of Dis. “Danger? Probably Carnglass is one of the few tolerably secure
places on earth. Sometimes I think we’ll turn the world into one final
hell of a coke-oven, Hugh. There may be some islands, though, left in
that fire. And Carnglass, where man began, ought to endure when man has
put an end to himself. I hope you can put this MacAskival back into his
island, Hugh.”

“You’re really going to give me dinner at your club, Duncan?”

Nodding, MacAskival reached for their coats. As they went out of the
office, he turned quizzically toward the younger man. “Speaking of
witches and bogles and man-goats, Hugh, why hasn’t any woman ever
captured you?”

“Probably because there’s no romance in me,” Logan murmured,
straightfaced.

“Why, there’s a good deal in you, Hugh. You’re canny, but have a
certain way with you.”

“Don’t forget this, though, Duncan--

  “‘You can grave it on his tombstone, you can cut it on his card:
    A young man married is a young man marred.’”

“Well! Hugh, you’re full of surprises. I thought only aged creatures
like me still read Kipling. I can match you--

  “‘Down to Gehenna or up to the Throne,
    He travels fastest who travels alone.’

Which way are you travelling, Hugh, with that innocent face of yours?”

“Judging by what you tell me of the warlocks of Carnglass, down to
Gehenna, Duncan.” Then the elevator came, and the club, and the dinner,
and the brandy. That night Logan dreamed of a Carnglass Cutty Sark
capering round Carnglass Cross. And the next night he was aboard the
plane to Prestwick.




2


On a wet and windy morning, Logan descended from the plane at
Prestwick. Once past the immigration officers, he took a taxi across
the moors to Glasgow. Now and then they sped past rows of white-harled
Scots cottages, some empty and far gone in decay. The heather and
gorse by the roadside called to Hugh Logan. He had walked the Pentland
Hills, and the Lammermuirs, in his Edinburgh years--sleeping in the
open, sometimes, when he had been a university student. The law-office
and the courtroom seemed remote in time and space, as he sat in this
speeding Rolls; and he indulged the fancy that perhaps he ought never
to have taken the bar-examination.

In some ways, those savage months of pushing northward in Okinawa had
been the best of his life. The law was safe, and might make him famous;
yet there came hours, now and again, when Logan thought he ought to
have settled for a life of risk, a life lived as if every moment might
be the last.

The cab-driver was saying something. “A foul day, sir. There’ll be
a storm out tae sea, sir. Spring’s late to Scotland this year.” The
driver never had heard of Carnglass, Logan found. Now they were coming
into the ugly sprawl of outlying Glasgow council-houses. And then
the great grimy city closed upon them, and soon Logan was getting out
before Todd’s Hotel in India Street, a building of blackened white
granite.

At Todd’s Hotel, the taffy-haired little receptionist in the tight
black dress never had heard of Carnglass. Having left his suitcase in
his room, Logan came down again to inquire of the manager. That civil
gentleman, indeed, had heard of Carnglass; but he never had known
anyone to go there. And no messages from Lady MacAskival or Mr. Lagg
were awaiting Logan. He was not altogether surprised: eccentricity and
delay were to be expected in that quarter; he suspected that he might
have to make his way independently to the island.

He might telephone or telegraph, though, to learn whether the yacht
or launch had been sent for him, and whether he would be welcome at
the Old House. It was no use, he soon discovered: the information
operator on the telephone, after lengthy consultation with someone at
the Glasgow central exchange, informed Logan that there was no cable
laid to Carnglass, and that no way of sending messages to the island
was known, there being no wireless there recorded in the exchange’s
books, except by post. Logan called the central postoffice. Letters
and parcels for Carnglass, it appeared, and Daldour too, were sent
by MacBrayne’s steamer to Loch Boisdale, in South Uist, where they
were called for as anyone from those islands, or their agents, might
happen to put into Loch Boisdale. How long would an express letter
take? It was impossible to say: it might not reach Carnglass for some
days, depending upon whether any boat should happen to call at Loch
Boisdale. Also, however, letters for those islands sometimes were left
with an agent of the Carnglass factor, here in Glasgow, depending upon
instructions from Carnglass. Who was this agent of the factor? That
information the postal authorities were not authorized to give out.

But Logan was a patient man. After lunch, he returned to his room
and dressed in a heavy suit that had been made for him during his
university years: of indestructible Harris tweed, the suit still fitted
tolerably well. Rain was coming down heavily now, so this suit was
made for the climate. He had with him a thorn stick, a memento also
of Edinburgh days; it might be useful for hill-walking in Carnglass,
should there be time for that. The little receptionist, who smiled
fondly upon Logan, recommended a travel-agent in Argyle Street; so
Logan took a cab there.

Before entering the door of Moore Brothers, Travel Agents, Ltd.,
Founded 1887, he stopped at a shop adjacent and bought an oilskin cape,
which probably would be the thing to wear in Carnglass; he had it sent
to Todd’s Hotel. Then he went up to the counter in Moore’s, where an
eager youth--with a manner the British call “smarmy”--proceeded to set
his hand on a pile of tour-folders.

But the eager youth had no notion of how a gentleman might find his
way to Carnglass. He had special de luxe tours to Iona and Skye to
offer; these were much better-known islands than Carnglass, he told the
gentleman. No one ever went to Carnglass. Logan asked for the manager.

This old man with steel spectacles at the end of his nose could suggest
only that the gentleman take MacBrayne’s steamer to Loch Boisdale. From
South Uist, drifters and trawlers sometimes coasted off Daldour; there
was no harbour in Daldour, but he had heard that the islanders--“verra
queer folk, sir”--sometimes launched a boat and came alongside a
drifter. He did not know how anyone contrived to live in Daldour; it
was Ultima Thule. As for Carnglass, he had been told landing never was
permitted. Oh, the gentleman was invited? An American? Then no doubt it
would be possible. Perhaps the people in Daldour could take him across
the sound in their boat. The manager would be glad to sell the American
gentleman a first-class steamer ticket to Loch Boisdale, but he could
do no more. And a first-class railway ticket from Glasgow to Oban: that
was where one boarded MacBrayne’s steamers. This month, ordinarily,
there were plane flights three times a week to South Uist; but the
weather had been so wretched for the past week that flights had been
cancelled, and it might be two or three or four days before they could
resume.

Logan bought his railway and steamer tickets. As he turned to go, the
manager had an afterthought. “One moment, sir. Meg, d’ye mind the
card that man left? The man that spoke with me concerning Carnglass?”
Aye, Meg--a stocky red-faced lass in her teens--minded it; she put it
bashfully into the young American gentleman’s hand. “Aye, sir, I had
near forgot,” the manager said, “but this man came in a month gone and
said that should any gentleman inquire after Carnglass, he might put
him in the way of a passage.”

It was a soiled card with crumpled corners, cheaply printed, and it
read, “James Dowie, Commission Agent. 5 Mutto’s Wynd, Gallowgate.”

“How far is Gallowgate?” Logan asked.

The old manager drew in his lower lip and then protruded it
meditatively. “Why, sir, the Gallowgate’s far above the Tron. And it’s
late in the day. Would tomorrow do as well, sir?”

“No,” said Logan, “I’m usually in a hurry. Surely a taxi could take me
there in ten minutes?”

The manager fumbled with his spectacles. “Between ourselves, now, sir,
the Gallowgate’s not the place for an American gentleman by himself,
with the night coming on. Mind ye, sir, I’ve had no trouble of my
own in the Gallowgate. But this Mutto’s Wynd will be some wee vennel
or passage, and dark. Ye’ve heard tell of Teddy Boys and such? Aye.
Well, if ye must go, take a cab, sir; and make the driver wait for ye.
The man that left this card--he would be a bookie, I think. Nothing
against him, sir, nothing whatsoever. And the chief constable has done
fine work in the Gallowgate and the Gorbals, verra gude work. They
were worse when I was a lad. But were I yourself, sir, I wouldna stop
in a pub there. In the Gallowgate, the folk think all Americans are
millionaires. Would it were true, sir? Ha, ha. Aye, would it were true.”

Going into the washroom at the travel-agency, Logan took out of his
pockets his passport, his traveller’s checks, and most of the pound
notes he had got at the hotel desk. He put them into the leather
money-belt he wore beneath his shirt. Logan had been around, though
most people wouldn’t credit it, apparently, when they looked at his
face; and he had the thorn stick with him. Then he took a cab to
Mutto’s Wynd, in the Gallowgate.

Mutto’s Wynd turning out too narrow for any motorcar, the driver
parked the cab at the mouth of the entry. In Mutto’s Wynd, most of the
buildings were derelict, and some unroofed, since the Scots pay no
taxes on roofless buildings. Even for smoke-grimed Glasgow, Mutto’s
Wynd was very black. The dreary little building that was No. 5 stood
near the mouth of the vennel, and the cab would be almost within call.

Although the windows of No. 5 seemed not to have been washed this
decade, a freshly-painted sign nailed above the door read “J. Dowie,
Commission Agent.” Logan gave the driver a pound note. “Keep the
change,” Logan said, “but wait for me.” The driver sighed, looking
uneasily down the wynd. Three doors beyond, there projected the sign of
a public house, the Dun Stirk. “But stay near the cab.”

“O aye,” the driver grunted, “ye needna teach this auld dog new
tricks.” Logan rapped at the battered door of No. 5.

Quite promptly, a heavy-jowled little man in a sagging business-suit
and a soiled old cap opened that door. “Come in, mon,” he said. “Ye’ll
be thinkin’ o’ the pool?” The little low room--this building, elderly
for rebuilt Glasgow, seemed once to have been a stable--contained a
decrepit desk and three straight chairs; the walls, long ago, had been
painted cream-color. The little man spoke the thickest Glasgow speech,
with its clipped words and rolled r’s.

“Mr. Dowie?” Aye, he was Mr. Dowie. “Mr. Dowie, I’ve been told you
might know of a way to get to Carnglass.”

Dowie, sucking in his fat cheeks, looked long and slyly at Logan. “Tak’
a chair, mon. Ye’ll no be frae these parts?”

Logan sat. “I’m an American, Mr. Dowie, with business in Carnglass.”

Dowie leaned against the desk. “An’ what wud that business be?”

“I’m representing my principal.”

“Weel, then, Mr. American, ye’ll no object if I draw the curtains.”
Dowie pulled heavy blanket-drapes across the filthy glass; he bolted
the door. Logan sat easily on the rickety chair. “If it be Carnglass,”
said Dowie, “that ye mean tae see, then ye’ll ken Tam Lagg?”

“The factor. Yes, we’ve corresponded with him.”

“Aye, just so. And ye’ll ken Dr. Jackman?” Here Dowie, stooping
slightly, looked Logan in the eyes.

“No, Mr. Dowie, I don’t know any Dr. Jackman.”

“Ye dinna ken Jackman? Noo think o’ this, Mr. American: I’m official
agent o’ Tam Lagg. Ye’ve no need to keep matters frae me. What might
your name be?”

“Hugh Logan. I’m to see Lady MacAskival.”

“O aye. Lady MacAskival. She’s no keepin’ verra weel, ye ken.”

“So I understand.”

“No weel enough for chit-chat, Mr. Logan.” Dowie nodded mournfully.
“And noo ye’re in auld Scotland, ye’ll tak’ a trip to Rabbie Burns’
country?”

“I’ve only time for a Carnglass trip.”

“Rabbie Burns’ country is Alloway and Ayr, ye ken, Mr. Logan. A braw
poet, Rabbie Bums. ‘A mon’s a mon for a’ that’--eh, Mr. Logan?” An
unconvincing smile came suddenly over Dowie’s sodden face, and he
clapped a dirty hand on Logan’s shoulder, in token of comradeship.
Logan did not move or smile.

“I suppose what Burns meant, Mr. Dowie, is that worth and genius matter
more than rank--or as much, anyway. I don’t know that he had Glasgow
bookies in mind.”

“O aye,” Dowie muttered, removing his hand. He scowled uneasily, and
then brightened artificially again. “O aye. I see ye’re a card, Mr.
Logan. Aye, a poet o’ the first water, Rabbie Burns. But ye’ve fine
writers in the States, too. Political writers. Ye’ll ken are or twa o’
them?”

Logan shook his head. “I don’t know a single political writer, Mr.
Dowie.”

“And ye’ll no ken Dr. Jackman?”

“This literary conversation is very pleasant, Mr. Dowie,” Logan said.
“But do you know of a ship or a launch that will take me to Carnglass?”

Dowie sat down at the desk and pulled open a drawer. “Noo your
principal, Mr. Logan--he’ll be Mr. Duncan MacAskival?”

Over the edge of the open drawer, a cablegram form was just visible.
“Then you’re the agent for forwarding the post to Carnglass, Mr. Dowie.”

“Wha’ loon told ye that?”

“Has Lady MacAskival received our cables?”

“Wud I be a miracle-mon, Mr. Logan? I canna send word tae Carnglass by
Tellie--by TV, ye Yanks say. And wha’ wi’ the high seas, there’s no
boat that wud put oot for Daldour nor Carnglass these three days syne.”

“Then I suppose Lady MacAskival’s not expecting me?”

“Ye can suppose wha’ ye like, Mr. Logan.”

“When can I get passage from Glasgow to Carnglass?”

“Na, na, mon, I’m thinkin’ there’ll be no boat for Carnglass.” Dowie
rested his chin in his pudgy hand. His eyes swept over Logan with
that look of low cunning Logan had seen, so often, in malingering or
thieving soldiers. “But bide a wee, Mr. Logan: we’ll fetch a cup o’
tea for ye while ye’re here. Jeanie! Jeanie!” He shouted toward a back
room. “Dinna fret, Mr. Logan: Jeanie’s my auld wifie. Jeanie! A cup o’
tea for a Yank gentleman!”

Around a door-jamb peered a worn face. Logan rose. “Na, na, Mr. Logan,
sit ye doon: it’s but Jeanie. Jeanie, chat wi’ the Yank gentleman while
I see wha’ can be done to obleege him.” Dowie slipped into the back
room at the moment Jeanie entered. Taking a chair, she sat staring
dully at the grimy floor, quite silent.

“Rather a clammy day, Mrs. Dowie.” Mrs. Dowie, who had a scarf tied
round her head, said nothing at all. Dowie seemed to be telephoning
from the back room; and Logan, an old hand at snapping up scraps of
whispered evidence, contrived to make out a few words:

“Aye, Jock, a Yank, but no in Yank’s clothes. Quick, noo.” The phone
was hung up, and Dowie returned, that fixed smile across his face.
“Jeanie! Hae ye no been entertainin’ the gentleman? Fetch the tea,
lass.”

Jeanie went. “Well, now, Mr. Dowie,” Logan said, “have you found
something for me?”

“Ye wudna wish to go where they’ll no be expectin’ ye, wud ye, sir?
And Lady MacAskival’s ower auld for company. Tak’ the plane home, Mr.
Logan. Ye’ll do no business in Carnglass.”

“If you’ll do nothing for me, Dowie, I’ll go elsewhere. It’s getting
late.”

The look of triumphant cunning was back in Dowie’s eyes. “Aye, but the
tea, Mr. Logan; bide for the tea.” Jeanie returned with a wooden tray,
a teapot under a cozy, and three cups. Logan stood up.

“I’m always in a hurry, Dowie. Thank you, Mrs. Dowie, but I haven’t
time for tea.” There seemed to be voices raised outside in the wynd,
now, and a heavy thud, rather as if someone had kicked the side of an
automobile. “Good day to you.”

“But first, man,” said Dowie, sidling between Logan and the street
door, “we’ll shake hands a’ roun’, should auld acquaintance be forgot.”
Logan briefly took Dowie’s hand, and then Jeanie’s. “And ye’ll confess,
Mr. Logan, that ye came here o’ your ain free will, an’ no invitation.”
Logan agreed. “Ye heard, Jeanie,” Dowie muttered. “Ye’re a witness.”
In the street beyond the mouth of the wynd, a motor started, and Logan
thought he heard a car drive away.

“That may be my taxi leaving,” Logan said. He had his stick in his hand.

“Weel, noo, Mr. American,” Dowie told him, with what possibly was
intended for a convivial smile, “I’m sorry I couldna serve ye. Cheerio
the noo. I’ll open the door for ye.” He did. And the second Logan
stepped out, the door was slammed behind him and bolted.

Mutto’s Wynd was shadowy. Yes, the taxi had gone; and lounging against
the wall of No. 5 were four men. Logan faced them. They were very young
roughs, three of them, with the greasy sideburns and the pimpled faces
that went, in their sort, with a diet of fish and chips. The fourth
man, a big lank fellow, older, wore a wide leather belt round his
waist, and he had a very nasty smirk. By way of obstacle, the lank man
thrust out a long leg.

“Hello, Yank,” the lank man said. The other three came slowly round
Logan.

“Good evening, friend,” Logan answered. No one else was in the wynd.

“This is the auld Gallowgate, Yank,” the lank man went on. “This was
where they hangit the gallows-craws. We’re gallows-craws, Yank.” He
gave a short, harsh whiskey-laugh, and the three young roughs cackled
in echo. “Ye’ll stand us a dram at the Dun Stirk, Yank?”

“I’m sorry, friend, but I’m in a hurry.” It was quiet and dark in
Mutto’s Wynd.

The lank man smirked. “Damn ye, Yank, ye’ll no be in sic a hurry noo!”
He flung himself toward Logan, one foot going out to trip him.

Logan was ready. He thrust the point of the thorn stick into the lank
man’s belly, and the lank man screamed and stumbled back. But one of
the greasy youngsters had his arm round Logan’s throat, from the back.
Taking the boy’s fingers, Logan bent them backward: the rough yelled
and let go. And now they were on him, all four.

Someone had a long razor. Logan caught the wrist that held it, striking
with the point of his stick at the face behind; the razor dropped to
the cobblestones, but someone else got Logan’s legs out from under him.
He fell heavily on the wet stones, and took a kick in the ribs. Another
razor flashed. Someone had a hand inside Logan’s coat. The mackintosh
he wore hampered him. There came a kick at his head, though a glancing
blow. He had hold at last of someone’s thighs, and was struggling
upward. A kick in the back; and a razor slashed one sleeve of the
mackintosh. All that saved him for the second, Logan knew, was that
they were so close about him as to get in one another’s way.

This was no simple robbery: they meant to slash or cripple him, or
something worse. Another fierce kick in his ribs. The man he had got
by the thighs slipped and fell upon him. And as Logan fought clear, he
heard steel-plated heels running over the cobbles. Someone was helping
him up: a tall policeman. Another policeman was chasing four dim
figures down the wynd.

The policeman who had lifted Logan had a bruise over one eye. “That
was Jock Anderson’s lads, Donald,” he panted to the other policeman,
returned from the unsuccessful chase. “Jock gie me the bash over the
eye.” Logan was getting his breath back. “If ye’ll prefer charges,
sir,” the policeman said to him, “we’ll have warrants out for these
chaps; we know them.”

“There’s small harm done, constable, and I’m leaving Glasgow tomorrow.”

“Did they not take your money, sir?”

Logan felt inside his coat and discovered no billfold. “Yes, but I
hadn’t much with me.”

If the gentleman would come to the station and swear to a complaint,
the second constable told him, they might not have to trouble him
further. “Your cabbie found us, sir; they forced him awa’.” Logan left
a five-pound note with the policeman for the driver. “Were ye in No. 5
yonder, sir?”

Though the constable named Donald knocked hard at the door of No. 5, no
one answered, and the building showed no light. “By this time,” Donald
said, “Jim Dowie’s flitted, and his wife Jeanie with him. And I dinna
think we could charge them. But we’re keepin’ watch on Dowie, sir: a
slippery one.”

Then, in the Gallowgate, they found him another taxi to take him back
to the hotel. And in India Street, Logan washed the grime of Mutto’s
Wynd from himself. Stiff and bruised: but no ribs broken, and the razor
had slashed only the mackintosh. There still was time to go down to
dinner. Afterward, Logan had promised, he would go round to the station
and swear to a statement.

In his hot tub, Logan tried to make sense of what had happened. The
policemen took it for a simple case of pocket-picking, perhaps abetted
by Jim Dowie, Commission Agent. But Logan thought that Dowie had meant
to keep him out of Carnglass--possibly. Who was this Jackman that Dowie
had mentioned? Lady MacAskival’s private physician, or merely some
crony or invention of Dowie’s? And what interest had Dowie, or anyone
else, in keeping him out of Carnglass? And why should Thomas Lagg the
factor have a friend, and mail-forwarder, like J. Dowie? Logan felt
full of fight. He would take the morning train to Oban, and there, no
matter what the price, he’d find passage to Carnglass.

On going down to dinner, Logan stopped at the reception-desk to see if
there might be a message from Carnglass. There was none. Presumably
Dowie really had Duncan MacAskival’s cables in his desk. But also it
was likely that Dowie, during this weather, had no way of getting word
to Carnglass. If so, Logan would be quite unexpected when he landed.
That might be just as well, supposing that Lagg had some connection
with the queer business in Mutto’s Wynd.

As he turned away from the reception-counter, Logan felt himself being
watched. Or were his nerves on edge? He glanced to the right, and a
man’s eyes met his, but dropped away hastily. It was like looking into
the eyes of a bird: little black eyes, darting and quick to flee. The
man, he thought, had been looking at the top leaf of the open hotel
register. As Logan went into the dining room, he looked back; the man
was going out into the street. But he had a good view of him.

Birdlike? The man’s body was anything but birdlike, unless one thought
of a stork. Tall, with shoulders thrown back; a heavy, rather clumsy
torso, protruding in front; but the legs extremely thin. The man wore
a bowler and a good worsted town-suit, dark gray; he was getting
into a raincoat as he passed out of Logan’s sight into India Street.
He carried a long malacca stick. Even in these brief glimpses, Logan
had the impression that this fellow meant to be taken for a country
gentleman or a retired officer. Yet somehow the effect did not quite
come off. Logan told himself not to be edgy: it wouldn’t do to suspect
every hotel-guest of dark designs. Perhaps the man had only been
glancing at a raw spot on Logan’s cheek, where Jock Anderson’s boot had
scraped.

Yet after dinner, and just before he took a cab to the police station,
the receptionist with the taffy hair spoke to Logan. “Did the gentleman
find you, sir?”

“What gentleman?”

“He didn’t leave his name, sir; he only asked after you--if you were
staying in the hotel--and waited a moment by the counter. I thought he
would have seen you when you went into dinner. A military gentleman,
perhaps.”

Yes, that would have been the man with the bird’s eyes: a military, or
pseudo-military, gentleman. Logan made up his mind to remember that
gentleman.

Of that gentleman, and of his business in Carnglass, however, Logan
said nothing to the Glasgow police, who took his deposition and
promised action. Already they had been looking for Jock and his lads,
but with no luck. It was odd, the constable named Donald said: to get
out of town, or to find some snug hidie-hole, Jock and his gang would
have required more money than they took from the gentleman. Yet somehow
they had gone to earth, and so had Dowie.

Logan told the sergeant that he was touring Scotland, and would be in
Oban a few days, at the Station Hotel. “Never place money with lads
like Jim Dowie,” they told him.

An hour later, in bed at Todd’s Hotel, and tired though he was, Logan
took up “A Summary History of Carnglass and Daldour.” Balmullo, the old
minister, might have been a bigot; yet he had a keen eye and ear. There
was a page of description of the New House of Fear, built down by the
harbor by Donald MacAskival--one of the extravagances that had ruined
him--in 1777.

“It had been the MacAskival’s design,” Balmullo wrote, “to have
demolished _in toto_ the Old House. But the chieftain’s means did
not permit of this undertaking. Accordingly,--and to the chagrin of
every connoisseur of the arts who sets foot upon the mole of Askival
harbour,--the rude Gothic construction has been permitted to loom
intact upon its ruder eminence, denuded of its plenishing save for the
gigantic carven chimneypieces. There remains also, above the principal
entrance to the Old House, a tremendous escutcheon, its bearings in
some part defaced, but yet displaying the graceless figure of a Wild
Man, armed with a dirk, which Wild Man the vulgar name Askival, the
reputed founder of the fortress; and beside the Wild Man a female
figure in a state of undress, whom, with still less authority, the
folk of the island call Marin or Merin. Below these sculptures, in the
letters of a later period, is inscribed the legend, ‘They have said and
they will saye. Let them be saying.’

“Of baseless rumor and frantic conjecture, the island of Carnglass has
no stint. In contempt, I must record that the natives of this island,
blind to the perfections of the New House, continue to allege that
Donald MacAskival built afresh not out of an elevated taste, but rather
because, in the Old House, he had dwelt in dread of the wraiths of his
fathers, said to have waxed wroth with their descendant for his prudent
decision to expel from Carnglass the superfluous population. A gaunt
and bearded spectre, to which is given the appellation of Old Askival,
is reputed to stalk the empty corridors and chambers, in particular
the subterranean portions of the oldest tower. An obscure tradition
asseverates that a hidden passage leads from these cellars to a recess,
and thence to the outer world. Yet the Old House having been builded
upon the living rock, as has been observed elsewhere in these pages,
this supposition can have no more substance than the Kingdom of the
Fairies.”

Here Logan turned out the light. For all his aches and pains, he never
had slept sounder in his life.

On his second Scottish morning, Hugh Logan took the train for Oban. The
wind had gone down somewhat, and the rain was over, though grim gray
clouds still lay to the west. Through Larbert and Stirling, past the
Castle high on its rock, the train puffed up to Callender. Logan sat
in a compartment where two old ladies dozed over their knitting. Half
the time he looked at the hills and villages, and half the time he read
in Balmullo’s “Summary History.” And so the train swept into the West
Highlands.

As they approached Loch Awe, someone paused outside the glass door of
Logan’s compartment. Looking up, Logan saw the man clear: the man in
the bowler, the “military gentleman” with the little black bird-eyes.
That military gentleman was observing him; but the furtive look moved
on to the two somnolent old ladies opposite. For a moment, Logan
thought the man was about to pull back the door and enter. Yet the face
turned away, and the military gentleman was gone from the corridor.
Logan had enjoyed a thorough look at his face: the swollen long nose;
the red and purple veins that bulged against the coarse skin; and those
tiny, frightened, frightening black eyes, sunk into the skull. About
fifty years old, Logan estimated, though seeming older. And a cashiered
British officer, some intuition suggested.

Cashiered, yes. Logan made almost a hobby of collecting clippings from
newspapers about curious cases of criminal law, strange points of
evidence, failures to convict despite strong testimony. It was power
of memory, as much as anything else, that had brought Logan success
at the bar while he still was young. Now he tried to dredge up from
memory that repugnant face of the military gentleman. Cashiered,
cashiered. Hadn’t he read of a captain or major cashiered in India,
and subsequently tried by a criminal court for some separate, though
related, offense--and got off by a very clever barrister? A barrister
with somewhat unsavory political connections? The case had been nasty,
remarkably nasty--and the officer’s acts nastier still. Hadn’t some
London friend, years ago, sent Logan the penny-press clippings about
the case, with a picture or two of the accused? What had the fellow’s
name been? Something short? Gale, or Hare? No, even Logan’s trained
memory could not recall the details. Yet the face of the military
gentleman at the hotel and in the corridor, Logan felt, was curiously
like the nasty face he half-recollected from the smudgy newspaper
photograph. Had there been espionage hinted at the military hearings?
The man had been a bad lot in many ways. But Logan couldn’t feel quite
sure he had not fancied the resemblance.

By Ben Cruachan, through the Pass of Brander; across the river at
Bridge of Awe; then Connel Ferry. The mountains loomed nobly as the
train approached the coast. The military gentleman did not return. A
few minutes more, and the train swung into the resort and fishing-port
of Oban, on the Firth of Lorn. Now the Western Isles were in plain
sight--Kerrera, at least, right opposite Oban. Logan could see its
treeless bulk from the window of his hotel. Of the military gentleman,
no trace. Logan looked for him in the railway station, but he must have
got off hurriedly from a forward coach and have gone into the town. Not
that Logan much desired to see the military gentleman again.




3


“You might inquire at the North Pier, Mr. Logan,” said the Reverend
Andrew Crawford, “but I do not believe any fisherman will undertake
to set you ashore in Carnglass. All the boats will be gone from the
harbour until sunset: the storm kept them in port for three days,
and they won’t wish to waste another day in carrying a passenger to
Carnglass.”

The Reverend Andrew Crawford, minister of St. Ninian’s Church, was a
knowledgeable man. The people at the Station Hotel had sent Logan to
him, not knowing themselves how he might get to Carnglass. Mr. Crawford
had set foot in most of the Outer Isles that still were inhabited. Now
he and Logan stood at the door of the manse, looking down the hill to
Oban town and the piers, with the dim gray Hebrides far beyond the blue
sea.

“I’d pay whatever they might ask,” Logan told him.

“It’s not wholly a matter of _l.s.d._, Mr. Logan. The swell round
Carnglass and Daldour always is heavy. I had difficulty in getting
ashore in Daldour, the day I visited, and I never have seen Carnglass,
except from Daldour or a boat. Lady MacAskival does not let even the
minister or the priest ashore. She has her own style of religion.
And these trawlers from the mainland aren’t popular with the island
folk. Once the keepers fired at an Oban boat that tried to put into
Askival harbour; nor are the men in Daldour much more hospitable. No, I
think you’d best take MacBrayne’s steamer to Loch Boisdale: the South
Uist fishermen know the Carnglass waters. The reefs off Carnglass are
murderous.”

“Who lives in Daldour, Mr. Crawford?”

“There is but one name in Daldour--MacAskival. An inbred folk. In
Daldour there is a little machair--that’s the sandy land of the
Island--and the island people fertilize it with seaweed, and grow
potatoes. Also they gather seaweed and sell it; in the season, a
drifter puts close into shore, and the Daldour men bring out the
seaweed in their lobster-boats and load it aboard, and it is sold on
the mainland. On the day I visited Daldour, all the folk were at the
beach with their carts, running straight into the surf to gather the
tangle. Theirs is a poor life. The Daldour women weave a few decent
rugs and sweaters. They speak a strange Gaelic, with some Norse words
in it. For a month, one of our missionaries lived in Daldour, but he
was half daft when he left. ‘Mr. Crawford, I have served my time among
the Mau Mau,’ he said to me. And that though he was a Highlander and a
Gaelic speaker.”

“Can you tell me anything about Lady MacAskival, Mr. Crawford?” Logan
asked. But--after a slight discreet pause--Mr. Crawford could not.
Logan, leaving him, went down to the North Pier to make inquiries after
any boat that might carry him to Carnglass.

He had no luck. It would have to be MacBrayne’s steamer to Loch
Boisdale in the morning, he thought, for already it was late afternoon.
If the sea should be calm tomorrow, even a big motor-launch ought to be
able to carry him from South Uist to Carnglass. After a stroll along
the esplanade to the cathedral, Logan went back to his hotel at the
other end of the town and had dinner. The trawlers were in the harbor
now, unloading their catch upon the quay. But the fishermen were too
busy to be bothered with eccentric Americans that wanted passage to
Ultima Thule, Logan suspected. A light rain was coming down. Despite
that, after dinner Logan put his oilskin cape over his shoulders, took
up his stock, and--for lack of anything better to do--climbed the hill
behind the town.

At the summit there was a strange building, Logan had noticed as soon
as he had come out of Oban railway station: a circular roofless affair,
like a ruined temple. This, according to the hotel people, was called
McCaig’s Folly, and had been built long ago as an observation-tower,
but never finished. Now, in the gloaming, Logan found himself close
beside the Folly. The season being too early for tourists at Oban,
the area round the Folly was deserted, so that Logan walked alone in
the drizzle, thinking idly of the Old House of Fear and old Duncan
MacAskival and his own solitary and work-laden life. A scrap from Scott
came into his head:

  “Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife!
     To all the sensual world proclaim
   One crowded hour of glorious life
     Is worth an age without a name.”

Was that the way it went? Even leading his battalion, Logan never
had known that crowded hour. And as he thought of how some men are
drunken with drink, and others drunken with work, he heard steps in the
darkness behind him.

Looking over his shoulder, Logan made out a familiar figure, a few
paces distant: the military gentleman. When Logan slackened pace, the
military gentleman hesitated for a moment, and then strode on toward
him. “Captain Gare!” the military gentleman called out, by way of
introduction.

“Good evening, sir,” Logan said. Captain Gare, coming very close up to
him with a swagger of sorts, looked down from his stork-height upon
Logan. Flickering from side to side, the disconcertingly mobile little
black bird-eyes never paused for more than a fraction of a second to
meet Logan’s stare. The man struck his long stick against his own
trousers-leg. He opened his mouth, paused, gripped his stick more
firmly, and then spoke in a reedy educated voice.

“Look here,” said Captain Gare. “I say--I.... That is, cigarettes--yes,
cigarettes....” There was an aroma of whiskey about Captain Gare,
but Logan did not think he was drunk. Certainly Gare was exceedingly
nervous, and he seemed disposed toward bullying.

“I’m sorry,” Logan told him mildly, “but I don’t have any cigarettes
about me.”

“No, no.” Captain Gare, scowling, paused afresh, perhaps trying to
take a new tack. “No, I don’t require cigarettes, not really. I don’t
smoke--nor drink, either. I say: you’re an American, are you not?”

“Why should you think so, sir?”

“Don’t take offense,” said Captain Gare. “Are you ashamed of being an
American? I’m not a chap people can take liberties with. You’re an
American chap, I know. Your name is Logan.”

“I saw you at Todd’s Hotel,” Logan observed.

“Did you? Did you really? I travel a great deal, Mr. Logan: private
means, you know. Yes, that’s it: I saw your name in the hotel register,
and thought we might have something in common.”

“What might we have in common, Captain Gare?” Logan spoke evenly.
Captain Gare swept his bird-eyes across Logan’s face again, seeming
to gain heart. He slapped the stick against his leg, below the short
mackintosh he wore.

“I say--don’t know India, I suppose? Never tried pig-sticking? No, I
suppose not; not you American chaps. True sport, you know. I was rather
good.” He towered belligerently above Logan. “There’s nothing like
steel. See here.” Captain Gare tugged at the head of his stick, and it
came away from the wood. It was a sword-stick, two or three inches of
blade showing above the cane. Logan had an amusing momentary vision of
a fencing-match there in the rain, complete with cries of “touché!”
Captain Gare, glowering upon him, rammed the blade back into its
stick-scabbard.

“I take it that you know the world, Captain Gare,” Logan said, smiling
slightly.

“Rather better than you do, I fancy, Logan.” It was clear that Captain
Gare now felt himself master of the situation. “I say, we needn’t beat
about the bush, eh? I’m told you’ve been at the pier inquiring after
passage to Carnglass.”

“You’re an astute man, Captain Gare.”

“That’s as it may be.” Captain Gare’s swollen features bent toward
Logan. “Look here: it’s quite pointless for you to go to Carnglass, you
know--quite. I suppose you’re a solicitor-chap, are you not?”

“That’s as it may be,” said Logan. “My father and grandfather were
Writers to the Signet. You have an interest in Carnglass, Mr.--that is,
Captain--Gare?”

“One of my friends has an interest there, sir. He knows Lady MacAskival
very well. Handles her affairs, as a matter of fact. Saves her
annoyance. She never welcomes callers, you understand.”

“I’m afraid my business is with Lady MacAskival herself.”

Captain Gare edged still closer. “Lady MacAskival is not competent to
transact business, Mr. Logan. I mean to say that she’s infirm. Quite
old, you know. No taste for American trippers.”

“She has been in correspondence with my principal.”

“Nonsense!” Captain Gare brandished his stick. “Mean to say, that’s
rubbish, you know. Lady MacAskival never writes. Infirm, a very elderly
party. Come, now, Logan: I dare say you’ve gone to moderate expense in
this fool’s errand. You’ll never see Carnglass. My friend is a liberal
man, and very close to Lady MacAskival. Money’s little object to him or
her. Suppose, now, on their behalf, I give you three hundred pounds, if
you like? Simply by way of reimbursement, we may put it, Logan. Fair
enough, eh? And then back to Brooklyn with you, eh?”

“You have the money in your pocket?” Logan inquired.

“Of course not.” Captain Gare gave him a supercilious smile. “A man
doesn’t carry such sums on his person, you know. Come back into town
with me, like a good chap, and I’ll write a cheque in your favor.”

“I do happen to carry such sums on my person, Captain Gare,” Logan told
him.

The military gentleman’s little eyes widened and flickered. His left
hand stole nervously along the sword-stick. “Not really? Hundreds of
pounds in notes in your pocket? I say....”

“Not in notes, Captain Gare: in traveller’s cheques.” Here Captain Gare
sighed slightly, and his grip on the stick slackened. “Now could you be
interested, Captain Gare, in some such sum as six hundred pounds?”

“Six hundred pounds?” Captain Gare drew a sudden breath. “Really, my
dear fellow, are you suggesting that you might pay me six hundred
pounds? Whatever for?”

“For certain information.”

“What manner of information, my dear sir?” Captain Gare turned
slightly, there in the dark, as if to make sure no one was at hand.

“For instance,” Logan said, “detailed information concerning the past,
present, and future of Jackman.”

That bow, drawn at a venture, sent its arrow home. On Gare’s unpleasant
face the mottled veins seemed to swell; the man stepped back. “Who the
devil are you?” cried Captain Gare, with a quaver in the reedy voice.

“I take it that you know now what I am,” said Logan, still quietly.
“Whatever made you think I might accept money?”

“I beg your pardon, sir; really, I ...” Captain Gare was stumbling over
his words. “That is, you did not seem precisely an American. All a
pose, eh? I say, you don’t mean that you’re ... that I’m....”

“If you tell me about Jackman,” Logan went on, “we need say no more of
all this, so far as you are concerned. We already know a great deal
about Dr. Jackman, of course, but conceivably you might add something
or other. You’re the fellow who was cashiered, I take it. We know
enough about you.”

“I swear it was a miscarriage of justice, Mr. Logan--or whatever your
name is, sir. I mean that affair in Madras.” Gare was almost panting.
“But Jackman--no, really, I can’t say anything, not for six thousand
pounds. My life wouldn’t--but you know that quite as well as I do.”

The swollen face had gone deathly pale. Even had he been able to probe
deeper without giving away his game, Logan reflected, this man would
have been too frightened to be of any real help. It had been a good
random thrust, that mention of Jackman, whoever Jackman might be.

“Very well, Gare,” Logan said. “If you don’t choose to clear yourself,
that’s not my concern. Very likely you’d be of no use to us. We’ll
have Dowie and Anderson any hour now.” Gare shivered. That shot, too,
had gone home. “As for you, Gare, you understand that if you don’t
sever all connection with this business, we’ll see that you’re taken
into custody? Perhaps the Continent would be a safer place for you at
present. And throw away that silly sword-stick: you couldn’t frighten
babies with it.” Logan snatched the thing from Gare’s hand and flung
it toward the lip of the hill; the steel flashed in the moonlight, and
then blade and stick were lost in the gorse. “Be off, now; I’ve tired
of you.”

Gare, backing further away, muttered pitifully, “Then you’re.... Then
I’m not under...?” Logan gestured impatiently toward the town below.

“You can go to the devil, Gare.”

Captain Gare turned with clumsy haste, all his swagger gone, and
scuttled heavily down the path toward town; after he had gone a few
paces in the dark, Logan thought he heard him break into a run. Yes, it
had been a thoroughly satisfying random shot. He did not think he would
see Captain Gare again.

Yet whoever thought it worthwhile to offer Logan three hundred pounds
to steer clear of Carnglass? Gare had bungled the business badly; he
must have been acting without instruction from his principal, Logan
thought--whoever that principal might be. Dowie? Or Lagg? Or this
fellow Jackman? There were depths in this business, surely, unplumbed
by old Duncan MacAskival. Trying to piece the thing together, Logan
walked slowly back to the Station Hotel. There the night porter gave
him tea and biscuits, and afterwards Logan went up to his rather chilly
high-ceilinged room, and stared at the plaster cornice for half an hour
before he went to sleep. But he could form no clear picture of what he
had begun to call to himself the Carnglass Case.

       *       *       *       *       *

As he dressed, next morning, Logan saw from his window the steamer
“Lochness” at the pier: it would take him to Loch Boisdale, and
he hurried into his clothes and gulped down tea at 5:45. This was
Wednesday, his third morning in Scotland. Thus far, only frustration:
and yet the sort of frustration which roused Logan’s energies. To
judge from the impromptu and ineffectual measures that Dowie and Gare
had adopted, he was dealing only with an ill-organized and eccentric
opposition--though with adversaries sufficiently unscrupulous. And it
seemed to be an ill-informed opposition. Either that, or else Dowie and
Gare were out of touch with the real intelligence at work, for some
reason, supposing that they _had_ principals for whom they were acting.
Certainly neither of those two had seemed quite the man to concoct a
scheme to keep an American from his prospective purchase of Carnglass.
If there were a principal, would he be in the island? Lagg, the factor?
The storm of two days ago might have kept the people in Carnglass from
communicating with the mainland; but presumably messages now could be
sent and received by boat. Whatever messages might be sent, it scarcely
was possible that he should receive in Carnglass the sort of rude
welcome he had got in Mutto’s Wynd. Even if Carnglass was Ultima Thule,
still it was part of Britain, the most law-abiding of nations; and
there would be Lady MacAskival for surety.

At six o’clock the “Lochness” steamed away from the pier toward the
Sound of Mull. They crossed the Firth of Lorne; and then, to the south,
they skirted the great rocky mass of Mull, while the wild shores of
Morven frowned upon them from the north. Several islanders were among
the passengers, and for the first time in years Logan heard the Gaelic
spoken naturally, that beautiful singing Gaelic of the Hebrides. It
went with the cliffs, the sea-rocks, the ruined strongholds of Mull and
Morven, the damp air, the whitewashed lonely cottages by the deep and
smoothly sinister sea.

As the hours passed, the steamer put into Tobermory, and later touched
at the flat islands of Col and Tiree. It crossed the broad rough waters
of the Little Minch, with the romantic line of the Outer Isles before
them, and the round bulk of Barra drawing closer. After Castlebay, in
Barra, the “Lochness” steamed north past Eriskay, and into the splendid
dark anchorage of Loch Boisdale, in South Uist, that sprawling low
island of peat.

It was nearly midnight now. Going ashore, Logan got himself a room at
the homely, cordial inn above the harbor. There was a schoolmaster
in Loch Boisdale village, the hotelkeeper said, who might know of a
drifter that could put Logan ashore in Carnglass.

Once more alone in a rented room with only conjectures for company,
Hugh Logan settled himself in bed and took up that battered pamphlet by
the Reverend Samuel Balmullo. Mr. Balmullo’s taste certainly had run to
old bones. Here was a tidbit:

“Even in the fierce chronicles of the Western Isles, the chieftains
of MacAskival are distinguished by a repute for deeds of blood and
passion exceedingly disproportionate to the wealth and power of their
sept. In the last century, upon the removal of the plenishing of the
Old House to the New House of Fear, there were discovered in a curious
pit or oubliette in the crypts the skeletal remains of a human being,
still bearing the marks of violence. This pit long had been put to the
office of a brine-tub, and it is supposed, accordingly, that the bones
had lain hid at the bottom for a great while, perhaps some centuries.
By any person inured to the sorry superstitions of the people of
Carnglass, it might have been anticipated--as, indeed, it befell--that
the vulgar peasantry, upon the exhibition of these sad relics of
mortality, would allege the bones--some of which were curiously injured
or deformed--to be those of a Firgower, or Man-Goat. A legend less
incredible, however, relates that the skeleton is that of an illicit
lover of a lady of MacAskival, seized by stealth at his abode in North
Uist, transported to Carnglass, subjected to indescribable torments,
and at length drowned in the brine of the oubliette. What the Duke
of Clarence suffered in a butt of Malmsey, some obscure chieftain of
the barbarous Hebrides, about the same period of antiquity, may have
endured in a darksome pit filled to its brink with pickled herring.”

At the close of this charming paragraph, Logan settled himself to sleep.

In the morning, on his way to seek out the schoolmaster who might
help him to a passage to Carnglass, Logan was surprised to find Loch
Boisdale and its neighborhood bursting with activity. Navvies were
unloading enormous crates from a freighter; two new bulldozers rumbled
down the road toward the interior of the island; recently-built huts of
corrugated iron, an age away from the primitive thatched Uist cottages
of field-stone that stood scattered over the oozy plain, shouldered one
another near the pier. The hotelkeeper had said briefly that something
important, in a military way, was in progress in the heart of South
Uist. A range for guided missiles, perhaps; and perhaps something even
newer. Idle policemen, the hotelkeeper had said, lounged about the
approaches to the construction-area. He did not like it. It would spoil
the snipe-shooting, and also evict honest families from their crofts.
“Those men in London are spoiling the best places and the best people.”

About the middle of the morning, Logan plodded up the soggy road to the
schoolhouse. The sky was very gray again, and a fairly heavy rain was
falling; but even the guidebook confessed that the climate of South
Uist was the worst in Britain. MacLean, the rawboned schoolmaster,
would do what he could to assist the gentleman. Leaving the schoolroom
in charge of a senior boy, he went back with Logan toward the harbor.
Yes, Mr. MacLean knew the master of a drifter, now in Loch Boisdale,
who might conceivably engage to land Mr. Logan in Carnglass. This
fisherman, though akin to the schoolmaster, was a very remote cousin,
mind, and in need of money, to pay a fine. A fine for what? For
poaching. Logan wanted to know what sort of poaching--fishing in
forbidden waters?

“No,” said MacLean, shortly, “sheep. Judge not that ye be not judged.
My cousin Colin knows all the shore of all the lonely islands, and on
some of the islands there are sheep, and deer. Whatever Colin is or is
not, there is no better pilot in all the Outer Isles.”

Although Colin’s boat was in the harbor, the man himself was not in
sight when the schoolmaster and Logan got down to the pier. “He will be
drinking somewhere,” the schoolmaster said. “But here are some people
to interest you: people from Daldour.”

Seated on the clammy pier, eating bread and butter in the drizzle,
were three men in rough island dress and rubber boots--or, rather, two
men and a bright-eyed boy. All three had about them a twilight look.
Their bodies were lean, their cheeks were hollow, their teeth protruded
slightly; a Lowlander might have said that they were not canny.

They seemed so much alike that, but for differences in age, they might
have been triplets. “MacAskivals,” the schoolmaster murmured. “A dying
breed. In Daldour, now, most are old bachelors and old maids; they have
seen too much of one another, and will not marry. The last of an old
song. That big lobster boat by the pier is theirs; the MacAskivals have
but a naked beach at Daldour. I will speak the Gaelic to them, for they
will speak no English, although this boy knows the English well enough.
Among themselves, Mr. Logan, they speak a dialect as strange to me as
the Gaelic is to you.”

Except for the boy’s bright glance, the three MacAskivals had given
no sign of recognition as the schoolmaster and Logan approached. Now,
as Mr. MacLean spoke to the three in Gaelic, there came very faint
shy smiles to all three narrow faces; the two men nodded, and the boy
replied in the slow flowing Gaelic. Presently, in a cautious tone, the
schoolmaster seemed to say something significant. The boy turned to the
elder of the two men, who spoke curtly, and the boy translated for him
to the schoolmaster. As he finished speaking, over the boy’s eyes came
a kind of glaze, and the two men turned again to munching bread and
butter, as if they had forgotten the existence of everyone else.

“I asked them,” the schoolmaster told Logan, “whether they would take
you with them to Daldour, and then to Carnglass. They are in Loch
Boisdale for this day only, to buy what few things they do buy, from
month to month. They said they would not take you to Carnglass; it is
not a good place for a man to go.”

“Not for fifty pounds?” Logan asked.

“For no price, I believe. But if money speaks, my cousin Colin is the
man for you. And here he comes.” A squat man was sauntering along the
pier. “Colin is not overly civil, and he is fond of the drink; but
he knows the waters and the coasts.” They turned away from the three
silent MacAskivals and walked to meet the fisherman-poacher.

What is uncommon among the people of the Isles, Colin MacLean seemed
surly. He did not acknowledge the schoolmaster’s introduction of Logan.
“Colin,” said the schoolmaster, “Mr. Logan asks you to set him ashore
in Carnglass. I will leave you to make your bargain.” Logan shook his
hand, and the schoolmaster strode up the hill.

Colin MacLean gave Logan a long hard look from under the brim of his
sou’wester. “Carnglass, is it?” The only polish about Colin was his
careful English speech, no doubt learned from the British Broadcasting
Company, and uttered with a musical Gaelic intonation. Colin MacLean
spat upon the pier. “Carnglass: and so Lagg and his keepers would shoot
holes in my boat. You may go to hell, Mr. Logan.”

Logan drew from his billfold ten big colorful notes of the Royal Bank
of Scotland: five-pound notes. “This is yours, Mr. MacLean,” he said,
“if you’ll set me ashore anywhere in Carnglass. It needn’t be Askival
harbor. Is there no other spot where a boat might put in?”

Colin stared at the notes. “There is a place, Dalcruach, in the east,
where at high tide a boat--a small boat--can pass over the reefs, if
the sea is calm. All the rest is cliff. But I would not risk my drifter
among the rocks. You would need to row over the reefs alone. Here: I
have an old dinghy. For twenty pounds more, I would sell it to you. I
would bring you as close to Dalcruach as I could, and then you would
take the dinghy and fend for yourself, Mr. Logan. Are you a seaman?”

“I’ve rowed before,” Logan said. “Here’s another twenty pounds for the
dinghy.”

“The swell about Carnglass is a fearful thing,” Colin went on, shaking
his heavy head in doubt, “and the reefs are like knives. Now would you
sign a paper to say that Colin MacLean would be in no way responsible
for the possible drowning of Mr. Hugh Logan?”

“I would,” Logan answered. “Take me aboard your drifter, and I’ll write
it now.”

Colin tucked the five-pound notes into his pocket. “Midnight, Mr.
Logan: come aboard at midnight, and we will make for Carnglass. It is
not good to be seen landing in Carnglass; there might be a keeper with
a rifle, even at Dalcruach. I will land you at Dalcruach early in the
morning, with the tide in flood, the weather permitting. And then I
wash my hands of it.”

That afternoon, Logan borrowed from the hotelkeeper an old knapsack,
into which he put some socks and underclothing, a shirt, sandwiches and
chocolate, and a thermos of coffee. He would leave his suitcase at the
hotel. He put on heavy waterproof boots and an old cap, and wore his
oilskin and carried his stick. And he was ready long before midnight.

Colin MacLean, with two less dour South Uist men who made up his crew,
received him solemnly aboard the drifter. They puffed out of Loch
Boisdale into the sea, with only two lights showing; and after that,
for hours, Logan could perceive nothing but the obscurity of the night
sky, clouds shutting out moon and stars. Before dawn, they stopped
the engine, and Logan thought he could make out, vaguely, an enormous
land-mass to the south. The drifter rolled heavily in a menacing swell;
and there came the noise of that swell breaking upon rocks. “I will
give you back your money for this dinghy,” said Colin, with a sour
grin, “if you have changed your mind.”

“Let me into the dinghy,” Logan told him, “and I’ll cast off.”

“The more fool you,” Colin growled. They picked their way over the
uneasy little deck to the stern, where the dinghy was in tow. MacLean
let down a rope ladder into the little boat; he held an electric torch
to light Logan’s descent. “Here,” said Colin, in a last-minute access
of charity, “I will make you a present of the torch, Mr. Logan. And
here is something else for you.” Colin took a bottle of whiskey from
a jacket-pocket and thrust it into Logan’s canvas pack. “You will be
wetted in beaching the boat, and the sea is cold. Row straight for the
cliff ahead. The tide will carry you over the reef, but you must watch
sharp for the needle-rocks. At Dalcruach clachan there is a keeper’s
cottage, and perhaps you can dry yourself there.” Under his breath,
Colin muttered something like “God help you.”

Then Logan cast off and took the dinghy’s oars. The drifter receded
into the night.

For a moment, breaking through the pall of cloud, the moon showed him
the cliff-head above Dalcruach. What with oars, tide, and a slight
breeze at his back, Logan swept in toward Carnglass, the Heap of Gray
Stones.




4


At Logan’s back, as he rode the crest of that grim darkling swell, the
forlorn hope of sunrise was fighting upward in the sky. By that pallid
light, diffused through a gray mist, he saw that he was in perilous
waters. Had the breeze been higher, he could have had no hope for
making shore, amateur oarsman that he was. Sweeping round the reefs
toward the sheer cliffs just visible in the west, a current tugged in
ugly mood at the oars; and he pulled hard against this current, for
it would have hurried him against that fearsome wall. Still coming in
toward shore, the tide helped him against the current. And now he was
among rocks.

From the white heave of the water, he perceived that he was passing
over skerries which would be dry at low tide. What was worse to the
eye, here and there stuck up sharp rocks like swords menacing the sky,
the “needles” of which Colin had spoken. Had it not been dawn, surely
he would have run straight upon one. All about them--they lay all too
close, and suddenly he was passing some by--were wicked immense swirls
and eddies, enough to bring a man’s heart into his mouth. And Logan’s
heart did come into his mouth.

Once only, in all his life before, had he been so frightened; and that
had been in a place very different, though equally eerie--a broken
tomb in Okinawa, where he had crouched with two other cut-off soldiers
while the Japanese scouts shuffled and whispered in the dark all about.
This fearsome coast was worse than the tomb had been, for here he was
utterly alone, in a hostile element. The mind-picture of the Okinawan
tomb, hurrying through his brain in this horrid wet moment, vanished
when the dinghy swung toward one of the smaller needles as if drawn by
a magnet. Logan thrust the tip of an oar hard against the rock, and
the boat slipped past. A wild scraping sound and a trembling assailed
him then: the dinghy hesitated, in the flood of the tide, right upon a
reef barely submerged. Yet her bottom held; and next she was off that
rasping bed and hurtling on toward the dim line of the beach.

Logan was nearly powerless. What a fool he had been! This one crowded
hour of glorious life he would have exchanged, gladly, for a lifetime
of servitude in the law-office. Yet there seemed to be sand dead ahead;
and if he could pull hard enough against the weakened current, he might
yet get ashore.

In the growing light, the island of Carnglass loomed like one
tremendous barrier of naked and sheer precipice, except for a kind of
fissure or den which was his goal, vague beyond the whitecaps. The
needles were gone now; the swell was full and heavy, as if the skerries
were past; and he could make out the waves flinging themselves upon a
dark beach, fighting high toward some grass and stunted trees, and then
retreating to the terror of the abyss. Two minutes more, and the dinghy
was tossed by those waves right upon the sand.

Leaping out, Logan tugged with all his remaining strength at a line
attached to the bow, to draw the boat as high upon the shore as he
might, the water swirling about his waist. Back came the surf, flinging
the dinghy higher yet, and blinding and drenching Logan, almost taking
his feet from under him. Yet, persisting, he dragged the little boat
over the sand with a power he had not known was in him; and when he
thought she might be safe, he reached over the gunwale, grasped the
heavy chunk of rusted iron that was her anchor, and flung it into the
oozing sand. More he could not do; if the waves swept her out again,
that was beyond his power to remedy. He staggered from the boat toward
the tide-line and the grass beyond. When the sand grew firm under his
feet, he fell nerveless to the beach, a spent man. And there he lay
perhaps five or ten minutes, like a stranded jellyfish.

It was done. The thing was done. He was ashore in Carnglass, and a
whole man, though shivering and shaking with the reaction from his
fright among the needles. Perhaps the game, after all, might be worth
the candle.

As some strength returned to him, his first thought was for the
dinghy, in which his knapsack lay. Her anchor having held, the little
boat rested askew upon the sand; he must have come in at the very
flood of the tide, for already the combers broke further out, and the
dinghy’s bows were altogether out of the water. Reeling to the boat’s
side, Logan hauled out the knapsack and then plodded up the beach to
the place where the heather and the gorse began to grow. He was in
a kind of cove or pocket between thousand-foot cliffs, a triangle
of land sloping steeply upward toward a third range of cliff at the
back; and upon the face of that rearward cliff, not so beetling as
its sea-neighbors, he thought he could make out the faint line of an
ancient path.

Something more welcome, however, now huddled close before him: a line
of low rubble walls, the work of man. These were primitive cottages,
no doubt the clachan of Dalcruach. They were larochs, roofless ruins,
deserted these many years.

All but one. Toward the end of the row of forlorn dwellings, a single
thatched roof remained, kept secure against the Hebridean gales by a
wide-meshed net spread over the rough thatch and anchored by big stones
lashed to the net-ends. The hut had no chimney, but only a hole in the
middle of the thatch; it had no windows, and a single door; this must
be the “black house” of the Isles, one of those Viking-age cottages
still inhabited, squat, thick-walled, snug, out of the childhood of the
race. People dwelt in them still, Logan had been told, here and there
in Uist and Barra. And this one might be the cottage of the keeper or
gillie that Colin MacLeod had mentioned. Incautious in his weariness,
Logan limped to the heavy door and pounded. No one answered: the
hut seemed to be as empty as its roofless neighbors. And then Logan
observed that the door had been secured by a padlock and hasp, but
the hasp had been ripped away from the door-frame, the screws hanging
impotent in their holes. Lifting the latch, Logan entered.

Yes, it was a black house. Lacking proper fireplace or chimney, the
peat smoke had eddied round the single room for centuries, perhaps,
turning stone walls and beams and thatch to ebony. But it was dry,
and it was furnished. There were a table and shelves, and a chair or
two, and a heap of dry peats by the rough hearth below the gap in the
thatch. And in a corner stood that rare object, the old-fashioned
cotter’s closet-bed, built of boards up to the roof to keep off the
draughts, with only a wide hole for the occupant to crawl in upon his
mattress, and a curtain over that aperture. Logan pulled back the
curtain. There was no one inside, but there were decent blankets upon
the bed. Feeling like Goldilocks in the house of the Three Bears, Logan
flung down his pack.

Some dry bits of driftwood lay by the peats. Logan tested the
cigar-lighter he had kept in an inner pocket of his jacket, to see
if it would work; it still would. Making a little heap of kindling
upon the hearth, he banked peats about it, and lit a fire; in three or
four minutes, some of the brown and springy squares of peat had begun
to smoulder, and Logan piled more peat upon them to keep the fire
going while he slept. Only then did he throw off his drenched clothes,
laying them upon a chair near the fire, and drag himself naked into the
venerable bed, rolling deep into its blankets. Swiftly Logan sank into
unconsciousness.

       *       *       *       *       *

The sea-water having affected his watch, Logan could not tell what time
it was, precisely, when at length he woke; but surely it was well into
the afternoon. Some vigor had returned to his body. The slow-burning
peats still glowed upon the hearth; the house was warm, and thick with
the sweet smoke; daylight--the sun must be free of the clouds for a
time--came through the smoke-gap in the thatch. There was no sound
but the unending wash of the sea upon the beach, deadened here by the
thickness of the walls of rubble. His clothes, still very damp but
wearable, lay faintly steaming on the chair by the fire. This was the
loneliest spot Logan ever had known.

Having dressed, Logan turned out the contents of his knapsack, which
had not suffered badly from the sea. A pair of binoculars he had bought
before leaving America was intact, and he had his shaving-things, and
the ordnance-map and old Balmullo’s pamphlet, and what mattered most
to him, the thermos of coffee, Colin’s bottle of whiskey, and the big
parcel of sandwiches from the hotel. Of those sandwiches, he promptly
ate all but a reserve of two. Pouring the coffee into a pan he found
upon the shelves, he set it to warm by the peats. Life was liveable
again. And opening the door with the broken hasp, Logan went out into
the Carnglass afternoon.

The ghostly clachan of Dalcruach lay silent in a cul-de-sac formed
by the sea, the two sea-cliffs, and the inland cliff. Just now the
sun was peeping through the gray blanket above. Everywhere water was
running: little torrents foamed from the lip of the cliffs, and springs
sent tiny streams down to the rocky bay, through gorse and heather
and bracken. Between cliffs and tide, this bit of lowland must have
been cultivated intensively for centuries, but now a towering forest
of green bracken, high as Logan’s head, came right down to the backs
of the ruined cottages. Except for some gulls, the only animate thing
which Logan could see was a shape high up the face of the landward
cliff: a goat, or perhaps a deer. Primroses already flowered upon the
cliff-face. Upon these scanty and isolated acres, a little village of
MacAskivals had subsisted from time out of mind. But they were gone,
and Logan stood in this wet green desolation as if he were the last man
on earth.

He went down to the dinghy. The receding tide had left her high enough,
but soon the sea would return; so he took off shoes and stockings and
tried to drag her to a more sheltered place by a shelf of rock that ran
up from the skerries into the silver sands of the beach. But though he
bailed her out, she was too heavy for him; only the tide could budge
her. Her oars he carried back to the black house. And now he would make
his way across the island to the Old House, before evening came. The
sun had withdrawn again, but surely he could find his way up the cliff,
despite the mists, and so across brae and valley and hill to the Old
House and Lady MacAskival. Already he had been nearly six days on the
way.

Sitting on a boulder by the door of the black house, he examined
the ordnance survey map of Carnglass, Daldour, and the waters round
about. Carnglass really was a peculiar island. A ring of tremendous
cliffs seemed to guard her from the sea at all points, except here
at Dalcruach and at Askival harbor, a larger opening at the opposite
extremity of Carnglass, away to the southwest. To judge by the
contour-lines, these sea-cliffs also had an inner face, standing some
five hundred feet high above a kind of central valley or moor. Halfway
between Dalcruach and the Old House by Askival harbor, this valley was
interrupted by a tall, sharp hill, ridges from which extended across
the valley to the cliffs on either side of the island, a sort of
watershed.

As the gull flies, it could not be more than three miles from Dalcruach
to the Old House. But there was the hard climb of the landward cliff
behind Dalcruach; then the valley or moor would be boggy; and the ridge
in the middle of the island must be surmounted; and between that ridge
and the Old House were some markings which Logan took to indicate a bad
bog. The trip would require some hours, and he had best set off. The
dotted line of a minor path, on the map, suggested that some track ran
across the island, but surely nothing like a road. Then Logan took up
his thorn stick and began the ascent of the landward cliff.

Up this dim path, surely little but sheep, goats, and deer had gone
for many years. Here and there a hazel bush clung to the cliff’s edge.
Though the day was cool, that sharp climb made Logan pant. After half
an hour, he was at the summit, and much of Carnglass spread out before
him--or would have been visible, had not the mist been growing thicker.
He could make out the big hill--on the map it was called Mucaird--in
the middle of the island, but the ridge and hill would have shut off
Old House and New House, even had the day been clear. As a gust of wind
in this high place dissolved the fog for a few moments, he glimpsed
a derelict farm or sheep-steading nestled against Mucaird. And the
valley between him and the high hill was not an even plateau, but
rugged and broken with spurs of rock, though the bracken waved over
the higher parts of it. He turned his glasses toward the south. There,
across the deep blue of the Sound of Carnglass, lay the low isle of
Daldour.

Now he would have to descend the inner face of the cliff, perhaps four
hundred feet high, to the green valley: a descent more precarious than
the climb from Dalcruach, for boulders lay tumbled upon the inner face,
as if ready to fall to the valley floor, and their shapes were hidden
by a dense growth of fern. He must step with care. Down he started.

But about three boulders down, he halted again. The mist--here it hung
cloud-like--lay just over his head, the sunlight coming through in a
dim religious way. At the moment, the valley beneath him, nevertheless,
was quite clear of fog. And almost straight down, in the part of the
valley at the foot of his cliff, men were moving. Logan turned his
binoculars upon them.

Away to his left, a small puppet that must be a very big man was
running frantically across the valley floor, just here rocky and bare.
Some two hundred yards behind him, three other men trotted. These were
armed men: it was rifles they seemed to be carrying. None of them were
looking upward toward Logan. One of the three halted, knelt, brought
his gun to his shoulder, and fired. The report echoed uncannily from
the cliffs. He had shot at the big man leaping toward the further
rocks: there could be no doubt of it.

But the big man was not hit. He had reached some boulders near the
southern cliff, and now crouched behind one of them, drawing something
from the long cloak or coat he wore. As his three pursuers came on--the
man must have been hidden from their view, Logan thought--a report
came from behind the cluster of boulders: the big man had a pistol.
Immediately after firing, the man in the coat darted on to the next
clump of boulders, and waited there. Stooping and taking what cover
they could in the bracken, his three adversaries cautiously pushed
forward, about ten yards from one another. The big man held the
advantage of higher ground. As the three neared the rocks he had just
left, and so came within range of his pistol, the big man fired a
second time. Now the three pursuers fell flat on their faces, for the
bullet seemed to have ricocheted against a boulder perilously close to
the foremost rifleman. And taking advantage of their discomfiture, the
big man scrambled on toward the mouth of a small ravine that appeared
to twist into the southern cliff.

Swinging his glasses toward the three riflemen, Logan thought he caught
some movement to _their_ rear. He focused the binoculars. Though he
could not be sure, it seemed to him that someone or something was
stealthily drawing closer, through bracken and gorse, to the three
men. Whatever it might be--and if it was not an optical illusion--it
kept hid in the green stuff; no head ever showed. If there, it must be
moving on all fours, beast-like; what one detected was not a form, but
a trail of movement through the dense bracken, to be discerned only by
an observer who, like Logan, was perched high above.

Logan looked back toward the big man, who was just disappearing into
the gully or den at the southern cliff. Two of the pursuers, who
now had got to their feet, fired at him as they stood. The big man
stumbled, recovered, and was gone into the recess. And the riflemen
resumed, at a walk, their tracking. Then the bank of mist settled over
Logan’s head and lower into the valley, cutting Logan off from sight
of whatever was happening below. He heard two more shots, though; and
then silence followed. Through all this, no human voice had drifted up
to him.

Logan clung astonished to his perch. Here in Carnglass were wheels
within wheels. He had suspected something was amiss in the island: but
to discover, as if he were an Olympian looking down upon the follies
of humankind, this curious sport of island man-hunting was bewildering
even to Hugh Logan, who had been around. This, after all, was a
small corner of Great Britain, in the year of Our Lord one thousand
nine hundred and sixty. In Mutto’s Wynd, his own struggle with Jock
Anderson’s gang conceivably might have been only a chance encounter;
and even if it had been part of someone’s design, no more had been
meant, perhaps, than a brutal robbery. The sinister-ludicrous figure of
Captain Gare had come to him at Oban through no chance encounter, but
that insubstantial personality had vanished before a little chaffing.
This affair in the valley of Carnglass was deadly serious--this
stalking of a man as if he were a rabbit. And Logan had not the
faintest notion of what pursuers and pursued might be.

So what should he do now? The mist, reinforced by a light rain, had
become so dense below him that the remaining descent of the cliff,
in these conditions, would be almost foolhardy until some sunlight
worked its way through. In any event, what with this delay, it seemed
improbable that he could make his way to the Old House before sunset.
And, judging from the silent hunters far below, to knock at the gate
of the Old House after sunset might be highly imprudent. Logan did not
relish the thought of being taken for the big man with the pistol,
supposing that person still to be in the land of the living. Besides,
the quarry might be doubling back across the valley by this time,
and for Logan to descend unknown into that scene from the Inferno,
with bullets flying, wasn’t the best policy for a rising man of law.
Everything considered, he had better creep back along the dim path
to Dalcruach, and there spend another night in the black house,
even though this must mean he had taken a full week to reach Lady
MacAskival. He could make a safer start early in the morning; perhaps
Lady MacAskival’s demoniac gillies did not hunt before breakfast. And
there was a queasy feeling at the pit of his stomach. It was thoroughly
improbable that any man would try to make his way over the cliff to
Dalcruach this evening, what with fog, wind, and the clammy emptiness
of the dead clachan in the cul-de-sac.

So Logan, still marvelling, shuffled carefully back toward Dalcruach,
where he could enjoy the peat fire, and eat his remaining sandwiches,
and write some memoir of this past week to post to Duncan MacAskival
when the business was accomplished. He had found a kerosene lamp on one
of the shelves, with fuel still in it. He might even read a bit in old
Balmullo, for the sake of settling his nerves. Though the hasp was torn
loose, the heavy door could be barred from within by a balk of sea-worn
timber that fitted into holes on either side of the door-frame; and
Logan did bar it. Now no one could get at him suddenly except through
the thatch of the roof. And if folk outside did not know Logan to be
unarmed, they would think twice about bursting blindly through the
roof. Lighting the lamp, Logan took some sheets of paper--somewhat
blurred and dampened by water--from a pad in his pack, settled himself
at the table, and began to write with his ball-point pen.

He would save the sandwiches until he had finished writing. He was
hungry, though; and despite the moist air, his throat felt dry. Logan
put down his pen, threw his oilskin over his shoulders, and went out
to the spring that bubbled only ten yards from the door. Coming back
with a full pail, he drank deep and put the rest of the water--tasting
faintly of peat--by the shelves. He drew up the chair and resumed his
writing.

Then a deep voice spoke behind him. “Will you be a writer, or a
philosophist?” the voice said.

Upsetting his chair, Logan sprang nimbly round to face the voice. He
saw a very big man in a drenched ragged overcoat; and in the man’s
massive fist was a little old pistol, held steadily. The big man was
bareheaded and bald-headed: a sloping dome of a head, with strong
flattish features, battered and seared, and a broad, full-lipped mouth.
Blood was caked all down one cheek of that hard face, and seemed still
to be oozing from a gash high on the bald skull, where a little flap of
skin fell away from the bone.

Logan’s visitor stood gigantic in the shadows, close by the boxed
bed; probably he had hidden there. “Don’t move your hands,” the deep
voice said. “I’m Seamus Donley: so don’t move your hands. I said to
you, ‘Will you be a writer, or a philosophist?’ Or, now, will you be a
police-detective?”

Immobile, Logan thought he detected some humor in that wide mouth.
“Good evening, Mr. Donley,” Logan said. “Put away that toy, and eat a
sandwich with me.”

“Turn round, Mr. Police-Detective,” Donley told him, “and hold your
hands high.” There was nothing else Logan could do; besides, if the man
had meant to shoot him in the back, he could have done that already.
Donley’s rough hands ran over and into Logan’s pockets. “Now where
might your gun be, Mr. Police-Detective? Your friend Seamus has looked
in your rucksack and in the bed already.” This was a wild Irishman: the
brogue was pronounced, and possibly a little exaggerated, as if Donley
strove for effect.

“I have no gun, Mr. Donley.”

“Swing round again and let me look at you,” Donley grunted. He had
stepped back a pace, by way of precaution, but in the lamp-light Logan
saw clearly enough the reckless, not ill-natured face of a man in late
middle age; and below that face an immense barrel-chest and powerful
arms. The gun man must stand nearly six feet six. “Faith,” Donley went
on, “I come near to believing you. You’ve the look of innocence. But
whatever were they thinking of to send an acolyte of a police-detective
after Jackman’s fellows? Now listen to me, Mr. Police-Detective: if
you’ve a gun about you, fetch it out, for you need it as much as yours
truly, Seamus Donley. Would the lads in the Republican Army ever have
believed that old Seamus should be asking a police-detective to help
him? Sure, it’s your life, man, as much as mine. We can’t tell but
Jackman’s chaps might be at the door this living minute.”

“I don’t understand you, Mr. Donley, and I didn’t bring a gun.”

Donley scowled. “Saints in heaven! Now’s no time for playing little
games, Mr. Police-Detective. This is not London. Those fellows would
put you over the cliff as quick as myself. That’s what they did with
Lagg; but you can’t know that. You know me: any police-detective knows
Seamus Donley, that lay in Derry gaol four hard years, breaking out
last Christmas. Do you think it’s myself would be telling you my own
name, and showing you my own face, if we’d no need for standing back to
back? A fine young police-detective you are! Here, now: I’ll send Meg
to bed.” He thrust the gun back inside his coat. “There, I’m trusting
you, Mr. Police-Detective, and you must be after trusting me. We’ll
put out the light, for ’tis a standing invite to Jackman and his bully
boys.” Donley blew out the wick. “And we’ll trample the turfs.” Donley
crushed under his boots most of the peats, and tossed ashes over the
rest of the fire, leaving only a faint glow. “These three days gone,
Mr. Police-Detective, Jackman’s gang have let me be after dark, but
they might change; and there’s others might come.”

Logan groped about the table in the dark. “I’m afraid I can’t offer you
much refreshment, Seamus Donley, but there are two sandwiches left, and
most of a bottle of whiskey. Why do you take me for a detective?”

“I’d have eaten and drunk your victuals before now, Mr.
Police-Detective, but you gave me no time. I’d but a moment to slip
through your door and into your bed while you were at the well. A fine
young police-detective you are! But Donley’s not the man to let his
host go hungry.” He handed back half a sandwich to Logan, wolfing the
others. “And the poteen: that’s the medicine for myself when I’ve been
three days and nights in caves and bogs. One morning I caught a rabbit
and ate it raw, and another time I cut a sheep’s throat and had a
supper of the bloody ribs; but for the rest, it was birds’ eggs got on
the cliffs and sucked on the run, and a few shellfish I pulled from the
rocks on this very beach.”

Logan--his eyes had adjusted fairly well to the dark now--brought two
tumblers from the shelves and filled them with whiskey. “Your health,
Mr. Seamus Donley.”

The Irishman chuckled. “There’s this to be said, young fellow my
lad: you’re a cool police-detective. And how do I know you’re a
police-detective? Why, what else might you be? It’s not an Englishman
that you are, though--there’s that for you. I’m thinking you’ll be an
Edinburgh man.”

He might get more information out of Donley, Logan reflected, if he did
not try to dispel this illusion. “More whiskey, Mr. Donley? Of course.
And what is it I can do for you?”

Donley drained at a gulp his second tumbler of whiskey. He had taken
a chair opposite Logan, and sat relaxed, though watchful: a hardened
customer. “Why, just this, Mr. Police-Detective: first we’ll take
those oars of yours out of this hovel, and then we’ll launch that boat
of yours between the two of us, with myself inside, and then it’s
Seamus for Scotland and Mr. Police-Detective back to his but-and-ben in
Carnglass--back to Hell, that is.”

Upon the thatch the rain fell heavily now, and the wind has risen. “You
have turned daft, Seamus Donley,” Logan said. “Listen to that wind.
You’d never get over the skerries in that little old boat this night,
let alone row to the mainland. Daldour would be the best you might hope
for.”

“Daldour?” Donley snorted. “And land among the heathens? Why not the
Cannibal Isles? Besides, there I would rot in Daldour till you, Mr.
Police-Detective, might choose to come for me in the police-launch. No,
it’s not Derry gaol for Seamus. It’s a Kerry man I am, and as good a
boatman as any in these islands--born by Bantry Bay. No, I’ll be hid
in Glasgow or Birmingham or Liverpool before you report to the Chief
Constable, my boy--supposing that ever you get clear from Carnglass,
which I do very much misdoubt.”

“If you must be fool enough to go boating this night, Mr. Donley, then
wait an hour on the chance of the wind falling. The boat’s light enough
for you and me to get her afloat, even so: the tide must be up beyond
her now. The risk of this wind is greater than the risk of low water on
the skerries.”

Bending forward, Donley gave Logan a light approving tap on the
shoulder. “For a police-detective, you’re a decent sort. What would
your name be?”

Logan told him.

“See here, Mr. Detective Logan: I’ll wait that hour, but no more.
Never would I have guessed a police-detective would have a regard for
Seamus Donley’s skin. And see here: you’d best come with me. If you’ll
give myself your word of honor bright--you’re no Englishman, that
I’ll say--to grant myself twelve hours pursuit-free once we set foot
ashore, then it’s Seamus who’ll set you in Scotland safe, Mr. Scots
Detective, and shake your hand at parting.”

“No, thank you, Seamus Donley,” Logan answered, “but I’ve business in
Carnglass. Lady MacAskival will see that I get to Oban or Glasgow, when
the business is done.”

“Lady MacAskival! Do you think they’d let you see her, or that
the Old One gives orders today? And even were they all saints in
Carnglass, they’ve no boat to put at the service of one Mr. Logan,
Police-Detective, with a face like the cherubim. Was it not my fire
that fetched you here?”

“What fire?”

A note of pique came into Donley’s voice. “Then you will have known of
Jackman’s doings earlier, and I’ve had half my labor in vain. I might
have told Jackman that what with his crew, the police were sure to find
him out. ’Tis this: I burnt the yacht and wrecked the launch three
nights gone. That was for spiting and hindering Jackman. And I had
hopes of folk spying the fire and sending word to shore.”

“Then they’ve had no communication with the mainland for three days?”
This, Logan thought, could explain the confusion of Dowie and Gare.

“Three days? What with the storm, Jackman’s sent no messages, nor got
any, all this week. The wireless is a wreck. Jackman will be raging
like an imp from the Pit, that oily limb of Satan. Oh, he’ll be cursing
the day he crossed Seamus Donley.”

He might worm the whole story gradually out of Donley, Logan hoped: it
was clear enough that Donley assumed he already knew a good deal of it.
“Tell me this, Mr. Donley, while we’re waiting here: what state are
matters in at the Old House?”

“Do you take me for an informer?” The heavy voice, there in the smoky
darkness, took on an ominous tone. It never would do to forget that
Donley must be a thoroughly dangerous man.

“I take you for a man who’s been tricked, Mr. Seamus Donley, and who
needs what aid he can find. While we’re on that topic, I’ll do what
I can for that bloody spot on your head. Did a bullet come close to
finishing you?” A little light shone from the peats, and by it Logan
set to washing the wound and bandaging it with two clean handkerchiefs
from his knapsack. Donley, gritting his teeth, seemed to trust Logan
sufficiently to let him do the job, though he kept one hand upon the
pistol within his coat. Logan put back the flap of skin upon the skull
and improvised a kind of scarf-bandage that probably would not endure
long; he washed the caked blood from Donley’s lined face.

“No, that was a damned fall this afternoon, when Ferd was shooting at
me, Mr. Detective Logan. In all my years with the I.R.A., I never came
so close to my end. But I’ll even scores, trust Seamus for that.”

The man had not winced much during the bandaging. “Keep your hand in,
my boy, and in no time you’ll be as fine a doctor as any at Dublin, or
as Jackman himself. Jackman will be no true physician, but I’ll not
need to be telling you that, Mr. Police-Detective. ’Tis a doctor of
philosophy he’ll be, University of Leningrad, or Moscow. Yet I’m not
the man to be stinting anyone of his praise: Jackman’s clever with
splints and medicines, and all else under the sun. A clever child,
Edmund Jackman. Jackman it was that drew me out of Derry gaol, he
having use for me. Jackman it was, sure, but not for Seamus’ sake. For
doing the Devil’s work, there’ll be none better than Jackman.”

“And what,” Logan continued as he adjusted the clumsy bandage, “is life
like at the Old House?”

“Well, now, Mr. Detective Logan, do you mind that bit in Dante’s
Inferno where old Dante and Vergil observe the stewing of the frauds
in the chasms? That’ll be your reception at the Old House, and if
you’ve a brain in your skull, Mr. Logan, you’ll be jumping into the
little boat with Seamus and making for your headquarters. You’ll
require a dozen constables with rifles, or more, to take Jackman’s
gang.”

Despite his brogue--which, Logan suspected, was in part the affectation
of a virulent Irish nationalist, or of whimsy--Donley had not spoken
like an unschooled man; and this literary allusion confirmed Logan’s
surmise. “I think you’re what you Irish call a ‘spiled praist,’ Seamus
Donley.”

“Sure, never a praist,” Donley answered, grinning, “not myself. Yet I
had some inclination after being a monk, and a lay-brother I was for
nine praying months, in Sligo, till the love of the drink and the love
of the girls undid me. Jackman was after calling me ‘Father Seamus’:
he’s eyes in his head, more eyes by one than most men. His boy Ferd
was for giving me a third eye for myself.” Here the gunman gingerly
touched his bandaged forehead. “Ferd will be the deadliest of Jackman’s
imps, as you’ll find to your sorrow; do you watch sharp for him. ’Tis
the Maltese Cat I call him. Swift with a gun, and swift with a knife.
And Jackman sent him to the Old One for a cook at the Old House! Ferd
has virtue as a cook, no denying: the father of him keeps a little
eating-house in Soho. But Ferd’s better at murthering than cooking.”

“How many others are in the Old House?”

Again Donley filled his tumbler of whiskey. “Jackman himself, and that
walking cadaver Royall, that he calls his secretary--the only other
political man in the lot. Then there will be five manservants, or a
set of cutthroats that Jackman pawned off on the Old One for servants:
butler, footman, gardener, gardener’s boy (a broth of a boy!) and a
fellow that passes for stableman or cowman. I was the keeper or gillie.
Then there are three men for the yacht and the launch, all Jackman’s
pick: I singed the whiskers of one of them, Harry Till, a Liverpool
longshoreman, and he may be at death’s door, praise be to the saints.
Because Jackman told them so, the Old One and the Young One turned off
all the old servants, even the laborers at the farm; Lagg sent his
wife back to Galloway, and at the end, he was living in a room or two
by himself at the New House. Except for the Old One and the Young One,
there’s but one woman in Carnglass, and that’s a poor shawlie, old
Agnes with the arthritis, fit for no better than scrubbing floors and
carrying trays to the Old One. So the odds will be ten or eleven to
one against Mr. Police-Detective, as they’ve been against myself these
three days past. Come away, Mr. Detective Logan: yourself would last
two days less than Seamus has.”

“Do you mean that Lagg is dead?”

Donley shifted uneasily. “Mind this, Mr. Logan: ’tis no doing of mine.
What could be done to help Lagg, the old toad, I did. Nor did I see him
die. They took him beyond the Chapel, to the highest of the cliffs,
and they did not bring him back. ’Twas Seamus was meant to do the job,
but I was one too many for even Dr. Edmund Jackman. Should ever there
be a trial, and should yourself and myself come alive out of this, Mr.
Logan, you’ll bear that in memory.”

“If I’m to bear witness for you, Seamus, perhaps you’ll tell me the
details of your part in the business.”

Donley sighed. “Never did I think myself would turn informer, but that
comes of the keeping of ill company. Not that Jackman and Royall will
be common criminals: they’re uncommon enough. The rest will not be
politicals, only hard cases that Jackman has some clutch upon. As for
myself, Mr. Detective Logan, I never took a penny that was not mine,
unless on Army orders.”

Getting up abruptly, Donley went to the door and put his ear against
it. “The wind is high still,” he said, “and sure they never will come
to us in such dark as this--not Jackman’s town crew. But ’tis my nerves
that are on edge, Mr. Logan: three days with next to nothing in my
belly, mind, so that there have been times when I thought more people
than Jackman’s were walking in Carnglass. A damned island. Well, then,
my autobiography, or a bit of it, Mr. Police-Detective. Much good may
the telling of it do you, or myself.” Thrusting his chair toward the
smouldering fire, Donley warmed his boots. What little light there was
played upon his scarred face. And Hugh Logan listened.




5


“Belfast it was where I met with Davie Anderson,” Donley began, “a
Glasgow razor-slasher of blasphemous conversation. Taking up with
him was folly, Mr. Logan, but I’d small choice. The Republican
Army--mollycoddles they are these days, to a man--would do nothing for
me but hide me a week or two, and that with ill grace.

“‘You’re impulsive, Donley,’ said they to me. I do believe they wished
me back in Derry gaol. And who was it that blew the bridge ten years
past? And who was it that was at the lighting of the fires in Belfast,
to show the Luftwaffe where to drop their bombs? Why, Seamus Donley,
none other. The Germans were nothing to myself, nor Jackman and his
politics, neither; but it was enough for me that the English would
catch it.

“No, the I.R.A. never sent the files that took me out of Derry gaol,
nor the money, nor the motorcar, though at the time I took it for their
work. Jackman it was: Jackman knew Seamus Donley for a man to handle
the explosives.” He poured more whiskey.

“When Davie Anderson came to me, I said I would do Jackman’s work for
Jackman’s pay. A month ago it was that they brought me to Carnglass,
and made me gamekeeper, and showed me the explosives, and told me the
work I was to do, when the time came. Davie Anderson! Davie Anderson!
Once let me come in reach of you, Davie Anderson, and you’ll seduce no
more honest rebels.”

“Does Davie Anderson have a brother Jock, in the Gallowgate of
Glasgow?” Logan put in.

“That has he, Mr. Detective Logan. I perceive you’re not so innocent
as you seem, not by half. A bad case, either Davie or Jock, like all
Jackman’s lot. Nine-tenths criminals, and but one-tenth politicals.
And that political tenth not my patriotic politics. ’Tis a rough life
I’ve led, Mr. Logan, and I’m no man for small scruples. But needless
murthering, unpolitical murthering, never suited my fancy. And in the
murthering of women I will have no part, not even the murthering of old
witches. And Jackman’s plan it was, or I’m a Black and Tan, to lay the
slaughter to Seamus Donley’s account.”

“What good would killing women be to Jackman?” Logan asked.

“There’s no need for you to play the cherub with me, Mr.
Police-Detective. ’Twas the money, of course: all that money. ’Tis not
for his own self’s sake Jackman seeks the money, but to ingratiate
himself again with his party. Sure, and didn’t they cast him out for
a premature deviationist, and for the wild things he’d done? But the
money, and the spying about the islands, and the explosives under the
new installations--faith, if that thing might be done, the party would
take him back, soon enough. A risky work it is, but if Jackman does it
well, all’s kisses. And the party is all Jackman’s life, he being a
political through and through: that I’ll say for him. Jackman and his
boys never told me, for never did they trust me, nor I them. But I’ve
eyes in my head, Mr. Detective Logan, and a brain for right reasoning.
When the time came, the women must die. And if ever it came to the
prisoner in the box, who would they have for scapegoat? Why, old
Seamus Donley, that’s a fugitive from English justice.”

“And did Lagg know of this?”

“Tam Lagg took Jackman’s money two years and more. Yet the murthering
never came into Lagg’s thick wits, I do believe, until a month ago.
To help Jackman to bully the Old One into making him her heir was one
thing; to plot murther was another. And treason, too. Lagg’s was no
stomach for such tactics. But where could Tam Lagg turn? He could not
get ashore, nor even post a letter, without Jackman’s leave. When Lagg
saw what I had seen, and thought the thoughts I had thought--concerning
the plot for murther, I mean--he took fright. Jackman sees through a
man as if flesh were glass, and Jackman will have known this month past
that Lagg could be trusted no more.

“Then Jackman was the cat, and Lagg the mouse. And Jackman and his boys
watched Lagg by day and by night. When they caught Lagg lighting the
fire behind the hill, they made an end of him.”

“What sort of fire, Donley?”

“Why, the fire that might have been seen by folk in Daldour, to bring
them over from curiosity; but it never came to a blaze. That afternoon
I sat by my cottage at the New House, mending rabbit-snares--for they
had lodged me in the keeper’s cottage, as if they feared to have
me much about the Old House, near the gelignite--when Jackman came
striding up, and with him Royall and Davie Anderson and Rab, that holy
terror of a boy. Three days ago it was, but for old Seamus it seems
like three years, what with the hiding and the running and the starving
since.

“‘Donley,’ Jackman says to me, in his quiet wicked way, ‘come along.
We’re hunting today.’

“‘Then I’ll be wanting my shotgun, Dr. Jackman,’ I say to him. But he
shakes his misbegotten head.

“‘No, Donley, you old ruffian,’ says he, ‘we’ve guns enough for this
hunting of ours.’ And I see that Rab and Davie have rifles slung over
their shoulders. Jackman himself carries no weapon ever, they say; and
sure I’ve not seen him with any. ’Tis terror that he carries.

“So up I get, as you see me now, bareheaded and in my coat, and tramp
round with Jackman and his boys to the shoulder of the hill they call
Mucaird, and over the shoulder till we come close up to the broken
farmhouse there. And from within the house, smoke is beginning to rise.

“‘Hush, gentlemen,’ whispers Jackman. ‘We must not disturb the factor
at his little games.’ In through the empty doorway we creep; and there
crouches that fat toad Lagg, his back to us, feeding a fire in a
corner, pouring petrol on a heap of trash, so as to set the whole ruin
ablaze. A noble beacon it would have made.

“Jackman grins his devil-grin. ‘Good day, Mr. Lagg,’ says he. ‘You’re a
warm friend, Mr. Lagg.’

“Tam Lagg squeals like a pig when you come with the butchering-knife,
and jumps round: a gross ugly man in corduroys, his face red and puffy
always, but now white as a cadaver’s. ‘Dr. Jackman!’ he squeals. ‘Dr.
Jackman!’ And he can say no more, for there is no more to be said.

“‘Yes, your old patron, Dr. Jackman,’ that Beelzebub tells him. ‘I
assume that you’re weary of our company, Mr. Lagg.’ Davie and Rab tramp
out the fire in the damp roofless room, while Lagg crouches by the wall
like a trapped hare.

“‘Even the fondest of friends must part, Mr. Lagg,’ says Jackman,
cheery as a cat with a rotten mackerel, ‘and you’re come to the end of
your tether, my good and faithful servant.’ Then Davie and Rab take
Lagg by the arms and fling him upon the rubbish, and Davie unslings his
rifle.

“‘For God’s sake, Dr. Jackman,’ says Lagg, puffing and weeping, ‘I’ve
an auld wifie in Galloway, by Gatehouse of Fleet, and four bairns. And
this is a civilized land.’

“‘Why, Donley’s compatriots have a phrase that fits your situation,
Mr. Lagg,’ smiles Jackman. ‘“What’s all the world to a man,” the Irish
say, “when his wife’s a widdy?” You’ll never be missed, Lagg. You’ll
have been lost at sea, merrily fishing. These are wild waters round
Carnglass. And as for civilized lands--why, “had ye been where I ha’
been, and seen wha’ I ha’ seen”--eh, Thomas Lagg? This is the end of
an old refrain for you. I never took to your red face. And even if I
wished to spare you, still there would be the problem of morale among
my associates here, wouldn’t there? There’s nothing like an execution
or two to encourage the others. And Lady MacAskival will be so obliging
as to write to the police concerning your sad disappearance at sea.’
He’s in love with dying--other men’s dying--is Jackman.

“It came to me then, Mr. Logan, that when my usefulness to Jackman
was done, Jackman and his boys would crowd old Seamus into some such
corner. There’s no honor among the lot of them. Lagg and Seamus were
outsiders. And that man Lagg did cry so, lying there in the smouldering
rubbish. David pokes him with the muzzle of his rifle, and Jackman
gloats, like a sloat down a rabbit’s burrow. I was standing behind
the crowd of them. ‘Though the creature’s a Presbyterian,’ I say to
Jackman, ‘at the least you’ll grant him a moment for his prayers.’ And
that said, I whisk out Meg here.” Donley patted the revolver inside his
coat. “Jackman’s lot never had known I kept Meg under my arm.

“They all turn to face me, Davie with the rifle half raised. ‘Davie
Anderson,’ say I, ‘drop it!’ And Davie lets the gun fall, for he
knows the reputation of Seamus Donley. Rab’s rifle is slung over his
shoulder; Royall’s pistol is in his pocket. Yet it is four to one.
Jackman’s devil-grin never changes.

“‘Why, Father Seamus,’ he says, genteel as Brian Boru, ‘I presume you
aspire to the role of confessor.’

“‘No, I’m no priest, Jackman,’ say I. ‘Yet you’ll have the grace to
grant Lagg a moment for repentance, or ’tis myself will have another
Englishman’s life on my conscience.’

“‘I’ll humor your piety, Father Seamus,’ Jackman says, though his black
eyes are like hell-coals. ‘Mr. Lagg, to your devotions.’

“Lagg grovels in the dirt, moaning; and if he prays, the words run all
together; and as for myself, I am too bent on watching Jackman and the
rest to listen to him. A long minute it was, Mr. Logan.

“Jackman looks at his wrist-watch. ‘_Pax vobiscum_,’ says he, ever so
sneering. ‘And now, Father Seamus, seeing that you have your little
gun conveniently in your Fenian paw, perhaps you will be so kind as to
administer the _coup de grace_ to our old comrade here.’ The eyes of
those four murtherers are turned on myself like dogs round a badger.

“‘Jackman,’ I tell him, ‘may I screech in Hell if I lift a finger in
this bloody business.’

“‘Perhaps, in any event, Mr. Lagg would prefer a cold plunge,’ Jackman
says, smoothly. Lagg does no more than look at me, gasping and choking,
as if I were the king of glory. But the odds are four to one, Mr.
Logan, and Seamus has himself to think of, and Lagg was a tricky old
toad.

“‘Being but one man, Jackman,’ say I, ‘I cannot hinder you. Yet you’ll
not harm the rascal in my sight.’

“‘As you wish, Reverend Father.’ And Jackman nods to Rab and Davie.
They take Lagg by the arms, he screaming out my name the while, and
drag him through the doorway; and Royall picks up Davie’s rifle, though
careful not to lift it high nor point it toward old Seamus. ‘Donley,’
Jackman murmurs, as he follows them out the door, ‘go back to your
cottage. You and I must have a serious conversation later.’

“And they lead Lagg along the hill toward St. Merin’s Chapel and the
cliffs, he weak as water, while I watch them from an empty window,
being cautious not to show much of myself, lest Rab or Davie be
inclined toward a lucky shot. And soon the bracken swallows them.
Seamus has given Tam Lagg his minute of grace, and now Lagg must give
Seamus Donley his hour for action.

“Jackman is cunning, think I to myself; but this once he’s reckoned
without his man. There were two things that I might try: first, to get
clean away from Carnglass, which would leave Jackman with no good hand
for the explosives, and no scapegoat; or second, to send up a signal
like the signal Lagg meant to make of that farmhouse, to call heed to
strange doings in Carnglass. Now being a runaway gaolbird, I preferred
the first method, Mr. Logan; and besides, ’tis the surer method; and it
might save the women, since what with Seamus gone to the mainland and
talking with whom he might, sure Jackman would think twice before doing
more murther.

“So soon, then, as Jackman and the rest were out of sight, I ran down
the track toward the New House and Askival harbor--and the boats. Two
craft there were in the harbor, both Lady MacAskival’s, though she’d
scant need of them for her own self: a sixty-foot sailing yacht,
old but with an auxiliary engine, and a fast motor-launch, half
decked. Could I but get aboard either, and take it out of harbor--the
motor-launch would be the better--I might make land somewhere and be
out of sight before either Jackman or you darling police might say
Daniel O’Connell.

“But somewhere there would be seven more of Jackman’s boys: Sam
Tompkins, a Cockney, with the grand title of butler--though he’s little
better than a pickpocket, and not to be dreaded; Ferd, the Cat o’
Malta; a tinker-like fellow called Niven, that they’d made gardener; a
Lancashire rough, Simmons, the stableman. Then the three boatmen, all
out of Liverpool: Jim Powert, Harry Till, and Bill Carruthers. If the
gang should be at the Old House, all of them, well and good: I never
would try for the Old House, that being a strong place with but one
gate. And if there should be but a man or two at the harbor, my little
Meg and myself, between the two of us, might do their business. Now I’d
a shotgun at my cottage, and like enough Lagg had a gun or two in the
New House, unless Jackman had taken precautions. A shotgun or a rifle
in the hands of such a one as myself is worth half a dozen men, Mr.
Detective Logan, as I fancy you’ve heard tell. So it was to my cottage
that I ran first, not looking back toward St. Merin’s Chapel, nor
liking to think what might be done there on the cliffs.

“All the way, I met no man. And my cottage was empty; but the shotgun
was gone. ‘Oho,’ say I to myself, ‘then Jackman will have a suspicion
of old Seamus, and will have left orders to keep a weather eye on him.’
I stuffed my coat pockets with biscuits from a tin, for there was no
saying when I might dine again; and then, very quiet, I had a look
about the New House, which has a little fir-plantation between it and
the gamekeeper’s cottage.

“As bad cess would have it, three men--Ferd, and Niven, and
Simmons--came out of the back gate of the New House when I looked that
way from the firs. They not spying me, I knelt there silent, and they
walked on toward the Old House, having locked the door behind them.
Simmons was carrying my own shotgun. These are dull dogs, Mr. Logan,
with no talent for hide-and-seek--though Ferd is sharp enough, but
being a Soho spiv, he’s out of his element in Carnglass. Once they were
gone, I trotted on to the harbor, just beyond the New House; they would
have taken the guns from the New House, for Ferd and Niven, too, had
been carrying weapons. Now it must be the boats for Seamus Donley,
with no help but little Meg. The night was coming down, praise be, and
I might creep along the quay safe enough, keeping behind a little low
breakwater that has a walk between it and the outer edge of the quay.

“On the yacht a light was burning, and she lay hard up against the
stone quay, with the launch moored just beyond her. Two men were on
deck, worse luck, and there might be a third below; I thought I heard
his voice. And one of the men--Powert, I thought--had a rifle across
his knees as he sat there. ‘Seamus,’ say I in my head, ‘this must be
neatly done, if ’tis to be done at all.’ So back along the quay to
the harbor-head I make my way, like a mouse, and to the shed by the
quayside. They had forgot to lock the door.

“Now if I might keep the men aboard the yacht with their hands full of
work, I might hope to take the launch; or, failing that, I might burn
both boats, making a beacon to be seen in Daldour or out to sea, and
vexing Jackman’s damned soul. In the shed, along with ropes and paints
and such, I found what I had hoped for, a tin of petrol and a brace of
empty bottles. And there were some oily bits of waste and rags on the
floor. You’ll have made a Molotov cocktail, Mr. Detective Logan? Now
that would have been a fine present for Dr. Jackman, considering his
political tastes; but I hadn’t the proper ingredients. And the real
explosives were tucked away at the Old House, beyond my reach. So the
bottles filled with petrol, and the waste and rags stuffed into the
mouths, would have to serve me. The matches I already had in my pocket.

“With the bottles in my coat, back I go along the quay, keeping out of
sight. But close to the yacht, my foot strikes a stone, that tumbles
into the harbor with a splash. Powert and Carruthers, sitting on deck,
seem to be nervous as pregnant cats, for Powert springs up with his
rifle and calls out, ‘Who’s there?’ And he catches a glimpse of my
bald head above the dyke. ‘Donley,’ he sings, ‘if that’s you, show
yourself.’

“What with Powert’s rifle in his hands, it was a risky stratagem. Yet I
bob up from behind the dyke and lob the first burning bottle right for
the open hatch, Powert firing at me on the moment. Powert misses, but
the bottle sails true. Right down the companionway it falls, and in a
second flames come bursting up. And up comes another thing: Till, who
has been below decks. I see him as I toss the second bottle. His hair
and shirt are all afire, and him screaming like a mad thing.

“The second bottle goes down the hatch, too, and more flames shoot
up; and then Carruthers takes panic and dives over the side into the
harbor, for I have lugged out Meg and sent a shot across the deck.
Powert runs aft for a fire-extinguisher, while Till rolls screaming
by the deck-house; but I try another shot at Powert, and he follows
Carruthers over the side, rifle and all, though I do not think I hit
him. If those three had kept their heads about them, they could have
put out the flames, but now it is too late. And now Seamus will have
his try at the launch; for below decks in the yacht, the fire from
the spattered petrol is gaining fine. Powert and Carruthers will have
struck out for the far side of the harbor, not liking the bark of
little old Meg in my paw.

“It was down the slimy old quayside steps and into the launch I went
then. Ferd and the rest from the Old House would be upon me in a
matter of minutes, seeing the fire from the yacht; and then, too, the
yacht might explode, if there were fuel in her tanks, though she did
not burn so hard and fast as I might have liked. The mist being heavy
that night, it was odds against the fire being seen from land, unless
from Daldour, for Askival harbor lies snug among the cliffs; and the
weather was too much for any chance aircraft.

“I tried the engine of the launch, but she was as dead as Lagg must
be. It may be they had taken the plug, or tampered with the wires,
Jackman being a man of forethought. Be it whatever, Mr. Logan, I could
do nothing with her. If there had been even oars, I would have put to
sea with no motor; but the launch was too big for rowing. One thing I
did find in the bows, for all that: a spanner. ‘Well, Seamus,’ I think,
‘if you’re not to have her, no more shall they.’ And with that spanner
I did abuse the engine so that no man might mend it, paying no heed to
the noise I made.

“On the yacht’s deck, Till had made an end of his moaning, and I could
not see him; like enough he had fallen overboard, which he should have
done the moment my bottle set him afire. But I could hear feet running
and voices near the harbor-head.

“With the tide ebbing, it came to my mind that if I were to cast off,
the current might carry the launch toward the harbor-mouth, perhaps
close enough to the other side of the harbor that I might leap ashore
dry. So I cut the painter with my clasp-knife, and no sooner than was
needful. The tide began to take the launch the few rods between me and
the harbor-mouth. But now four or five men were on the quay I had left,
and two rifles were firing. They hit the launch sure enough, and put
holes in her, like enough--but not in Seamus Donley. The blessed dark
that preserved me! In no time at all the launch had drifted right up
against the further quay, on her way to the harbor-mouth, and I had
hold of an iron ladder that’s fixed in the stones, and up I went.

“As for the launch, she will have drifted out with the tide, and sunk,
what with the holes in her, for when I looked down toward the harbor
from the cliffs the next morning, there was no trace of her. You can
trust Seamus for a job of sabotage.

“But there was no time for self-congratulations, Mr. Logan. They would
have seen me get ashore again, even in the fog, and would be at my
heels. The best route for myself was the low ground between the Old
House and the empty cottages at Duncambus, and then up to the caves
in the cliffs. Oh, I knew the island of Carnglass, what with shooting
rabbits and birds over the best part of it, while I played at keeper.
There was but one hope for Seamus left, and that was the coming of some
one in a boat, such as yourself.

“A man or two set out after me, I think, and there was shooting in the
dark; but I showed them my heels, and made my way up the north cliffs;
yet a climb it was that none but a drunken man, or a desperate one,
would undertake. And before I had got to the foot of the cliffs, there
came a great _boom!_ behind me, and I looked round, and the yacht was
blazing worse than ever, for her petrol-tanks had blown up. Yet they
had been half drained earlier, so the explosion was not all I had hoped
for. When I got to the cliff-head, the fire in the yacht was out, so
they must have got pumps to working on the quay; Jackman will have been
back with his boys by that time, and what he told the boatmen could not
have been fit for decent ears. At dawn, when I risked a look at the
harbor, I could see the wreck of the yacht settled into the harbor mud,
with the water up to her gunwales even at low tide; she must be all
awash at high tide, and I doubt she’ll ever sail again. Sure, Jackman
can’t repair her.”

Logan had interrupted seldom; that seemed the best policy, when Donley
was full of whiskey. Now he asked, “Do you mean you’ve bottled up
Jackman’s people altogether, Mr. Donley?”

“And myself with them, Mr. Detective Logan. Even had Jackman means for
sending messages to the mainland, he’d say nothing concerning the yacht
and the launch, for fear of police coming to investigate. And he has no
such means, public or private. There was a wireless in the yacht, but
that’s lost; and there was an old wireless in the Old House, but that’s
been broken for a fortnight, how no one knows.

“In a matter of days, sure, his agents in Glasgow will begin fretting
after Jackman, what with no word from Carnglass, and will send out some
boat with trusty men to see what’s wrong. Until he has another big
launch, though, Jackman can do no more spying among the islands, under
pretext of pleasure-cruising, nor get word from men that he pays in
South Uist and other places. And now there’s no Seamus Donley to handle
his explosives for him, though Royall and Jackman himself might make
shift, if ever they find a good time and place to use them. And Jackman
will be fearing that the fire was seen, and that inquiries will be
made.”

“How is it, Seamus Donley,” Logan asked him, “that you’ve contrived to
keep clear of Jackman on this little island for three whole days?”

Donley chuckled with a deep gratification. “There’ll be a dozen caves
in Carnglass; and faint cliff-paths that only a Kerry man could follow;
and two ruined villages, and the two empty farmhouses, and the barns
and outhouses and the rest. And the mist, the blessed mist. Would you
believe, Mr. Logan, that I’m sixty-four years of age? No more would
they. But old Seamus is three times the man that the best of them ever
was. Oh, I can lay false scents: I broke a window at night in the New
House, so they might think me hid inside, though I never entered; and
I smashed the lock on the door of this black house--it was kept for
a hunting-lodge on this shore--though I’ve not slept inside, to fool
them again; and they cannot tell where I lay my head. After dark, they
give up the hunt, huddling together in the Old House, for fright of
Seamus. And in the day, they dare not seek me in packs of less than
three, though I’ve but little Meg here against their rifles. Twice
they’ve come near to finishing me, the last time only this evening; but
the mist saved me again, and I climbed down the sea-face of the cliffs,
and came round to this hut of yours when the tide was low. They’ll be
on the scent again so soon as there’s daylight. For if Seamus got away
from Carnglass with a whole skin, their game would be played out.

“What they hope, Mr. Detective Logan, is that old Seamus will be worn
down by lack of victuals and broken sleep and being run like a hare all
day; and then they’ll bag him. And so they might have done, in a day
or two more, had you not brought your dinghy to Dalcruach sands, Mr.
Logan. But now I’ll take French leave of them.”

In his wild and ruinous way, this was a wonderful man, Logan thought.
“I’ve another plan, Seamus Donley,” he said. “It’s this: I suggest that
you and I go up to the Old House together, in the morning, and face
them down.”

Donley slapped his hand upon the table, approvingly; and then,
remembering his situation, glanced uneasily toward the door. “By St.
Patrick and St. Merin--whoever _she_ was--you’ve a heart in your body,
Mr. Logan! You’d do honor to the Republican Army. Get thee behind me,
Satan Logan. ’Tis a temptation: and I might yield, if only we had a
brace of rifles. Mr. Detective Logan to stand for the majesty of the
law, and Mr. Seamus Donley for justice outraged! Ah, the pleasure of
seeing Jackman’s face, under the circumstances. Now tell me true: have
you no gun hid anywhere?”

“I’ve nothing but a walking-stick and a long razor,” Logan said.

Donley shook his bald head. “No, the thing won’t do, sir. Look
here: there’s but three bullets left in old Meg.” He swung open the
revolver’s cylinder. “The rest were spent, though I had a pocketful
of cartridges, in keeping off Jackman’s boys when they came within my
range. Fine figures you and I would cut, Mr. Detective, with one little
gun to the pair of us, tossing a sixpence for who might have the third
shot at Jackman. No, they call me a reckless Irishman, but I’m not the
fighting fool you seem to be. ’Tis away in your boat I must be tonight;
and if you’ve mind as well as heart, Mr. Logan, you’ll come away with
me, and let me set you ashore in safety, to fight another day.”

“I’m thinking of the women’s safety,” Logan said. Donley nodded. “But
you can do one thing for me, Seamus Donley: let me write a note or two,
and you can carry them with you, and post them the moment you reach a
postbox; for I take it that I’ll need help.”

“That I will do,” Seamus Donley said. “And more: the moment I reach a
telephone-kiosk, Mr. Detective, I will telephone your damned police,
and tell them there is trouble in Carnglass. But promise this much to
me, that you’ll not put my name into your letter. And you must hurry,
for midnight’s near, and I’ll need the ebbing of the tide to take me
clear of the skerries.”

“Give me five minutes,” Logan told him, “and your leave to light the
lamp again, and you’ll have my word. You can read the note, for that
matter. And then I’ll see you launched in the dinghy. But unless you’re
a better boatman than any I’ve met, I can’t understand how you expect
to keep clear of the rocks, and fight the currents, let alone cross
open water, in an open boat.”

“Seamus Donley,” that modest man said, “is as skilled with boats as
with explosives. Trust me, Mr. Logan: I’ll bring your message to land.”

In haste, Logan scribbled a few words to the chief constable, Glasgow,
or any police-officer into whose hands the note might come, saying that
a man probably had been murdered in Carnglass, and that more trouble
might be expected, and that immediate action was required. He put the
paper into a soggy envelope, and Donley thrust it into an inner pocket.
“Now,” Logan said, “I’m your man, Seamus Donley. But watch for that
current just beyond the needle-rocks: with the wind we’ve had for these
past four or five hours, the odds are that it may be too strong for
you, and smash the boat against the western cliffs.” Logan stripped
off shoes, stockings, and trousers, for it would be drenching work to
launch the dinghy. And then the two of them went cautiously out of the
black house. So far as they could tell, they stood alone on the dark
beach.

Though the wind had gone down an hour earlier, and the tide was flowing
back toward that lonely sea, still two strong men would be needed to
launch even a light boat in that surge on the beach. Neither moon nor
stars showed through the blackness. Between them, with much panting and
heaving, they dragged the dinghy to the water’s edge, and then pulled
her along the beach to a more sheltered spot behind an outcrop of gray,
weed-shrouded stone, where there was a good chance of getting her
really afloat. They staggered in water up to their waists; once Logan
fell, taking in a mouthful of salt water. The dinghy having shipped
some sea, Donley bailed her as best he could with her rusty bucket. Now
the trial must be made, and they would thrust her against the surf.

Donley flung his overcoat into the boat. “If you’ve no strong
objection, Mr. Detective Logan,” he growled, “I’ll take with me the
remnant of your good whiskey: I slipped the bottle into my coat pocket
as we left the hut. You’ve a brave heart, but no eye for sneak-thieves.
Yet I’ll give value for value.” He handed to Logan something dark and
weighty: it was the little gun called Meg, in a shoulder-holster with a
strap.

Logan fitted the holster under his arm. “That’s generous of you, Seamus
Donley.”

“She’s a well-balanced weapon, Mr. Detective, and never was meant for
a free gift to a policeman. But how three bullets will prevail against
Jackman’s boys, I cannot advise you.”

“Give me your hand,” Logan said. The tremendous grip of the Irishman
almost made him cry out.

“We should have been Dominicans together, Mr. Logan,” Donley grinned.
He let go Logan’s hand. “Now put your shoulder to the dinghy.”

They forced her bow against the comber, and Donley, rolling his great
body over the gunwale, seized the oars. Logan flung his strength
against the stern, running up to his nose in the receding wave. Now
Donley was plying his oars: the shelter of the rocks helped him; yet
only a man of his vast strength could have made head against that surly
swell.

Then, suddenly, the crest of a wave was carrying the little boat
outward; Donley got her round the rocks that had helped her launching.
If he called out anything to Logan at the last, his voice was lost in
the noise of waves smashing against stone and sand. The dinghy passed
into the Hebridean night, and Logan wished that fierce man good fortune
upon his nocturnal sea. A minute later, Logan caught one final glimpse
of the boat passing over the inner reef, Donley rowing mightily. After
that, the mist settled upon the face of the waters.




6


Some strange bird, perhaps a shearwater, swept high above Logan as he
made his way back to the hovel: it shrieked like nothing canny. That
cry was a fitting farewell to Seamus Donley.

How much might Logan credit of the gunman’s story? While Donley had
sat before him, sinister and humorous, talking in his Kerry way, even
the more amazing parts of the tale had seemed fairly credible. But
now Logan felt grave doubts. Donley was a terrorist, his hand against
every man’s. That someone named Jackman should have designs upon Lady
MacAskival’s money was not improbable; but Donley’s assertion that
Jackman meant sabotage, espionage, and murder would not quite go down:
not in a quiet Scottish island owned by an old lady.

Yet there had been Logan’s own encounter with violence in Mutto’s Wynd,
and that unnerving scene in the valley just back of the cliff, with the
three men firing at Donley. And Donley’s account of Lagg’s end had the
ring of truth.

Logan barred the cottage door behind him. Whatever measures Jackman’s
people had taken with an escaped convict, surely they would not deal
similarly with an American lawyer, known by several people to have
been bound for Carnglass. Yet the feel of Donley’s pistol Meg, snug
under his arm, was a comfort. Well, he must spend five hours more in
the black house, though he had risen from his long sleep only ten hours
ago, and did not feel in the least tired, even after the launching of
the dinghy. There could be no climbing the cliffs until dawn. He let
the fire expire altogether, and did not re-light the lamp: Donley’s
warnings had that much effect upon him. Lying on the old bed with a
blanket about him, Logan thought of what he must do as soon as the sun
began to rise.

The odds were that Donley’s pursuers would be out in force when light
came; they had nearly caught or shot Donley the previous evening,
and they would know that he was tired, and probably almost out of
ammunition. And if those men with rifles were even half so rough a crew
as Donley had suggested, it would be more prudent for Logan to avoid
a sudden encounter with them--particularly since they would take any
moving figure to be Donley himself. The best course, it seemed, would
be for Logan to keep to the cliff-tops, if possible, until close to the
Old House; and then to descend and go straight up to the door. If they
wouldn’t let him see Lady MacAskival, at least they could not mistake
him for Donley; and he could lay his cards before this Dr. Jackman--or
as many of his cards as might seem prudent. In Jackman, at least, Logan
took it, he would confront a rational being.

It was inconceivable that any such man could persist in plans of
violence--supposing he contemplated any schemes of that character--once
he knew that he was facing a responsible person who had come to
Carnglass on legitimate business. And if Mr. Lagg should be alive
still--Donley, after all, had admitted that he had not seen Lagg
die--presumably Logan would find an ally in him. Yet it might be wise
to reconnoitre the Old House before knocking at the gate.

It was possible to half-believe Donley’s tale because of the deathly
solitude that enveloped Carnglass. The island was like a great bony
corpse. Even here within the thick walls of the black house, the whole
drowned mountain seemed dehumanized--perhaps hostile to humanity. Small
non-human night noises drifted through the hole in the thatch: the
rustle of bracken, unpleasantly like sepulchral whispering; the cry,
again, of that nocturnal bird of prey: the surge of the devouring sea
against the cliffs. Listening to these, Logan fell into a restless
doze, now and then rousing himself with a start. Fragments of nightmare
beset him during the sporadic periods when consciousness drifted away.
And one of those fragments was deeply disturbing.

       *       *       *       *       *

He found himself in some place utterly dark, and made all of stone,
without door or window; and his hands, when he extended his arms, could
touch the cold walls on either side. Whether he was lying or standing,
it was hard to guess: time and space and gravity and equilibrium had no
meaning here. Something was belted to his side--a sword. And he was not
alone.

Something else, foul and malign, existed there in that oppressive dark
space. Of this, he could perceive nothing but its eyes; and there were
three of its eyes. It was a devouring thing. In that cramped dead
place, he drew the sword, and he hacked at those eyes. Yet the sword
rebounded, as if he were striking feebly with a blade of grass against
some enormous hard-shelled insect. “Strike through the sham!” a voice
cried within him. “Strike through the sham!” Frantically he thrust
against the blackness below the eyes. He was in terror not so much
for himself as for someone else; but the name and face of that other
someone would not come to him. And then, trembling and suffering from
cramp in one leg, Hugh Logan woke.

       *       *       *       *       *

Outside the black house, birds were singing at the first feeble
gleam of light in the east. Still shaken by the vividness of that
nightmare vision, Logan flung on his clothes and strapped his knapsack
on his back and took up his stick. It would be well to vacate this
cottage before the man-stalkers of Carnglass were up and about; for,
considering the direction in which Donley had fled the previous
evening, Dalcruach was the most likely target for them this morning.
Donley’s pistol, in its holster, Logan fixed round his shoulder under
his tweed jacket; it seemed adequately concealed.

He climbed the landward cliff more easily than he had the previous
afternoon, now knowing the neglected path; and when he reached the
summit, and saw the valley empty before him, he turned to his left
along the ragged crest of those titanic cliffs.

The cliff-top was no narrow ledge: rather, it constituted an irregular
plateau, in some places only a few feet wide, but in most twenty or
thirty yards, and here or there a good deal wider. Broken by great
boulders and dotted with springs or pools--some of them almost little
ponds--this summit was rough going; surely it would take Logan almost
twice as long to reach the Old House by this route. Up here, no doubt,
Donley had lurked much of the time. When the mists were dense, it would
be next to impossible to track down a solitary man at the top of this
little world.

This was one of those high places in which Satan offers the kingdoms of
the earth, Logan thought. Because of the winds, and the lack of soil,
nothing grew here except occasional clumps of heather and little ferns
and rock-plants. For the most part, the summit-plateau sloped inward
toward the valleys of the island; the sea-face seemed to be sheer
drop, almost everywhere. Today the wind was fairly strong, sweeping the
spring fog out to sea, and Logan had clear glimpses, half the time,
of the interior of Carnglass. The island was much better wooded than
are most of the Hebrides: thick plantations were dotted here and there
below the screes, doubtless the work of old Sir Alastair MacAskival.
Twice, as he made his precarious way over the windswept rocks, Logan
saw red deer grazing near the cliff-foot. And everywhere was trickling
water. Early spring in the Western Isles has its charms, but it made
the rocks treacherous for Logan, and soaked his boots through. He used
his binoculars when he came to a bold promontory of cliff, looking
northward, though he lay down to avoid making a mark of himself. Near
the ruined farmhouse at Mucaird, a small flock of sheep was browsing,
some straying upward upon the hill itself; yet there was no sign of any
man.

But a quarter of an hour later, as he drew near to a jumbled mass of
living rock and broken boulders covered with lichens, something moving
against the heather of Mucaird caught his eye. Half sheltering himself
behind a rock, he took out the binoculars again. Yes, it was three men
with rifles, close to the derelict farmhouse and sheilings, and walking
in the direction of Dalcruach. Something in their movements suggested
that they were very ill at ease. And at that moment Logan felt himself
to be in peril.

For only fifty yards away, and scrambling toward him, came two armed
men. Their attention was fixed upon the scene in the valley, as his
had been, and apparently they did not see Logan. He slid quickly down
behind his boulder. It scarcely was possible that this cliff-patrol
should fail to detect him. Should he stand up and call out to them now,
or wait until they should be right upon him? Either course had its
perils. Then the decision was taken out of his hands.

Down in the valley, one of the men flung his rifle to his shoulder and
fired into the bracken on his left. The other hunters in that party
knelt and fired also. Having put his binoculars back into their case,
Logan could not see whether there was any movement in that brush.
Whatever could they be firing at? Mere nerves, probably, since they had
no idea Donley had escaped from the island; or possibly a stray sheep
or a deer, which they in their tension mistook for a man.

“Ferd!” one of the men on the cliff called out to the other. “Ferd!”
They were so close to Logan now that they sounded almost on the other
side of his rock. “They’ve flushed him!” Then the voices of his
neighbors receded, and Logan risked a peek around the boulder. The two
had turned about and were retracing their steps, apparently looking for
some way down the cliff to the screes, and so to the valley floor. It
had been a close call. As the two riflemen scrambled round a rock shelf
and began a tentative descent, Logan crept toward the seaward side of
the cliff and so on toward the west, sometimes on hands and knees,
until he felt safe from their sight.

When next he ventured toward the inland side of the cliff and took out
his binoculars, the party of three men in the valley was vanishing
behind a knoll toward the northern cliffs, and the other two, who had
so nearly stumbled upon him, were nowhere to be seen; presumably they
still were groping for a way down. Now, Logan guessed, he would be
secure from such patrols until he came close to the Old House. Likely
enough, two or three men had been sent to search the northern line of
cliffs, so as to drive the elusive Donley like a wild beast toward
Dalcruach; and that would leave only a handful of men about the Old
House, the New House, and the harbor--if, indeed, even these last, or
most of them, were not out searching elsewhere. He ought to be able to
get very close up to the Old House before being noticed.

Soon he was past the ridge or saddle that joined the cliffs to the hill
of Mucaird; and now he could look down upon the further valley. Broader
than the first, it also was less stricken by the plague of bracken;
there were cattle grazing--yes, the shaggy Highland beasts, he could
see. The ring of cliffs was lower here than at the other end of the
island. At the southwestern extremity, those gray walls dipped down to
the ocean, forming the neck of Askival harbor. On the northern side of
the harbor, the cliffs rose again and merged into a steep hill, which
must be the one called Cailleach, The Nun. At its foot he could make
out the scanty ruins of an ancient village: here Duncan MacAskival’s
crofting ancestors had lived.

Askival harbor was a good deep anchorage. On either side of its mouth,
an old pier of rubble ran out to narrow the entrance still further
against the ravenous ocean. And at the quay nearest to him, the burnt
yacht lay lurched against the rocks; it was low tide again now, and her
deck, or what remained of it, was just awash. The New House, rather a
modest and neat eighteenth-century mansion, stood close by the harbor,
surrounded by plantations and overgrown gardens. Further up the valley,
in the shelter of the southern cliffs on which he stood, there was
another farmhouse, apparently empty, but in better condition than the
one by Mucaird; and near it some cottages and sheilings.

All this, Logan took in through a long, low sweep of the binoculars.
Then he focused upon the object of this troubled journey of his, the
Old House of Fear. A quarter of a mile back from the harbor, the stark
gray walls of the Old House rose upon a massive outcrop of rock: a
place of great strength once. No man was stirring about it.

Fine old trees grew at the very foot of the living rock on which
the Old House was built; but the castle defied the wind in its naked
power, showing no touch of greenery except a glimpse of leaves at
the back, possibly in a small walled garden. The late-Victorian wing
blended fairly harmoniously with the mass of the ancient tower, and
seemed to close off the original entrance from the present exterior of
the complex; the modern gate must front toward the harbor, and so lie
hidden from Logan’s view, from his present position upon the cliffs.
Talk of castles in Spain! The Old House of Fear, here upon the desolate
verge of civilization--at the limits, indeed, of human existence
itself--had a brooding glamour denied to Roman and Saracen lands.

Here toward the harbor, the cliff-face was easier than the precipices
toward the northeastern end of the island. If he were cautious, he
might make the descent without alarming anyone at the Old House. Having
climbed several summers both in the highlands of Perthshire and in the
Rockies, Logan could avoid sending boulders thundering before him.
Supposing no one chanced to make a target of him, he might reach the
Old House about noon.

Now how might he descend toward the Old House unobserved? Coming down
the cliff-face and the screes, if he should try it just now, he must
make a fair mark; although when he should reach the cliff-foot, he
might pass to the back of the New House through the plantations and
then slink along a belt of aspens and firs which stretched from the
New House to the wood round the base of the rock where stood the Old
House. First, however, he must make his way along the cliffs until he
should come nearly abreast of the New House, and then seek for a way
down. And the thing might be done, in this mistiest of islands, in
this mistiest of seasons. For the breeze was subsiding again, and the
sky had darkened; and once more the fog might settle over cliffs and
hill-tops, though possibly it would not sink low into the valley.

It took Logan half an hour to discover--always taking advantage of
cover--a tolerable fissure in the cliff down which he might make his
way. Still no one was to be seen between him and the Old House. Twice
he thought he heard gunshots in the distant northeastern valley; but,
the wind being eccentric and generally against him, he might have been
mistaken. And presently, as he had hoped, the mist began to settle like
a shroud upon the cliffs. His tweeds blended with rock and heather. For
twenty minutes more, he crouched at the summit, the fog slowly shutting
off his view of harbor and New House and Old House. Then, carefully, he
began the slippery descent. When he reached the talus-slope, he walked
gingerly, lest he start a warning slide of rock debris.

Still he saw no one, nor heard anything. At length he was in the firs
of the outlying plantations of the New House, and moving swiftly toward
the Old House. It was midday, on a Wednesday, a full week since he had
left Michigan. And now he stood, sheltered by old trees, right below
the Old House of Fear.

Immediately above him, nearly thirty feet up the steeply-sloping gray
outcrop, was the little walled garden he had glimpsed from the cliffs;
and a stout stone dyke about eight feet high enclosed it. The garden
was set against the rear wall of the great ancient tower, the windows
of which looked upon the wood, so that the moment Logan should emerge
from the cover of the trees, he must be fully visible to anyone at
those windows. Most of the apertures in the tower-wall--from this
position below, it seemed like a skyscraper--were the original or at
least medieval windows, perhaps a foot square, though now closed with
glass panes; but the windows of the third story had been much enlarged,
perhaps at the end of the seventeenth century, so that they were
taller than a man, and fitted with double sashes of nine panes each.
Crouching near the northeastern angle of the tower as he did, Logan
could see the range of seventeenth-century buildings that extended
to the smaller medieval tower, and beyond that the jutting bulk of
the late-Victorian additions, which covered the whole surface of the
seaward part of the rock. So long as he kept to the rear of the old
tower, he could not be observed from the later portions of the mansion.
And it stood to reason that some sort of postern-door must open from
the old tower into the walled garden.

There drifted to him a sound of voices. Lying flat in the wood, Logan
made out two men with guns, striding from behind the façade of the
Victorian building in the direction of the hill called Cailleach; thus
their backs were to him, or soon would be. The leader was a tall gaunt
gawky creature, possibly Donley’s “walking cadaver,” Royall. So Logan
knew that he had not yet been seen; and there were two less snipers to
fret about for the moment. He let them go out of sight downhill. By
hooking the handle of his stick over the lip of the garden dyke, he
thought, he should be able to scramble up and into the little garden.
It had best be now.

But at that moment, as he rose to step out of the wood and clamber upon
the rock, he perceived someone at the nearest third-story window of the
old tower. “Saints be praised,” Donley would have said; for it was a
woman’s shape. If this should be Lady MacAskival herself, Logan’s work
might be made easier for him. He stepped into the open.

From high above, she saw him; and though perhaps she started a little,
she gave no sign of real dread. This was the first calming thing that
Logan had observed in Carnglass. Unhurried, the woman lifted the sash.
Surely she could not be Lady MacAskival, for she was slim and graceful
and apparently young; that much Logan could make out, though she stood
so high above him. Could this be the “Young One” to whom Donley had
referred vaguely? There had not been much time for asking incidental
questions of Donley. Then she spoke, with a gentle lilt to her voice,
and very low, so that her words just carried to Logan. “If you can come
over the dyke,” she said, “I will open the little door for you.” Her
shape vanished from the window.

Logan skipped up the great rock and hooked his stick upon the dyke,
putting his feet against the wall; and up he went, and grasped the
top--luckily there was no broken bottle-glass set into it--and pulled
himself over, and sprang into the square of garden, which must have
been wearisomely established by patient labor in this unlikely spot.
There were a half-dozen flowering shrubs, and some small yews, and two
neat beds of flowers. And beyond these lay a small heavy iron door set
into the great wall. Logan waited a long minute before bolts grated
back and the door swung inward.

“Quickly, now,” that soft voice said, “and please take off your boots
once you are inside.” The foundation-wall into which the doorway had
been cut must be at least ten feet thick. Logan slipped past the woman,
who bolted the door behind him, and he had unlaced and removed his
boots almost before she turned to him. They stood in an enormous empty
vaulted chamber, in the earliest days of the stronghold a stable and
storehouse, no doubt. At one angle, a stone stair wound upward into the
blackness of the great wall itself. Though the only light came from
slits three feet above their heads, he saw her fairly plain.

“Really, sir,” she was saying, ever so quietly, but with an undertone
of amusement, “you seem to have scrambled over the worst of Carnglass.”
Logan became conscious of his rock-bruises and his two-day beard. “Now
what is your name, please, and who sent you?”

She was young, less than twenty, and a tiny beauty: her shapely head
came scarcely above Logan’s shoulder. The oval face with the high
cheek-bones was a charming pink-and-white; the firm lips had an
infinite grace and mobility, and the dreamy wide eyes were green. The
nose, perhaps, was a trifle masculine in so small a face, straight and
strong. And the flaming glory of her red hair, which descended to her
supple waist! She wore a close-fitting simple suit, of the green tweed
of the Islands. Blood tells, Logan thought: this girl is of the old
line. She made him stammer.

“I’m Hugh Logan,” he said, “representing Mr. Duncan MacAskival.”

She clapped her slender hands noiselessly. “I knew you must come from
him! It was I that sent for you, you know. Are there others just
outside?”

Logan shook his head. This would be the Young One. But who was she?

“And I am Mary MacAskival,” she told him. “Come away, and make no
noise. I do not think we shall be long alone together. Carry your
boots.” She sprang to the twisting dark stair in the wall, with Logan
at her heels. They were naked delicate heels, Logan saw, as they
scampered up into the wall: she wore no shoes and stockings, as if
the chill stones of the Hebrides were warm sand to her. The bare feet
of Scottish girls, it came to him incongruously, had been one of the
principal attractions of the land for French visitors in the eighteenth
century.

In silence, they passed a shallow landing and a massive door; and
hurried up another corkscrew flight, she pausing to whisper, “Do watch
your feet here; it is the bad step--the place they made to trip enemies
in the fighting with claymores, you know.” Yes, the single step was
two inches higher than the rest, to throw off balance a man leaping
upward. They passed a second recessed landing and a second heavy door;
and then Mary MacAskival swung open the door opening upon the third
story, ushering Logan into a noble ancient vaulted chamber. “This is my
very own parlor,” she told him, with just a hint of vanity.

The square room had a ceiling painted in faded reds and browns,
geometrical designs by men long dead; and there were a few good
pieces of furniture, principally eighteenth century, and a crimson
Victorian sofa. A door in the further wall gave entrance, probably, to
the seventeenth-century domestic range of the Old House; and another
led, presumably, to a sleeping-closet. “Do sit down,” the girl said,
gesturing toward the sofa, “and you may put on your boots, if you like.
I did not wish them to hear us on the stair.” For herself, she settled
nimbly into a window-nook opposite him, her tiny feet hid by her skirt.
“Now tell me truly,” she went on. “Are you a real American? I thought
all Americans wore synthetic suits, and carried great cameras over
their shoulders, and smoked cigars incessantly, and said ‘You bet’ and
‘I guess,’ and wore their hair sheared ever so close. Do you know, Mr.
Logan, you could pass muster for a Scot? Now wherever are the others?”

“There’s no one with me,” Logan said. She still had him nearly
tongue-tied, like an adolescent.

A little charming ripple of dismay passed over that lively face of
hers. “No others? Then where are Mr. Duncan MacAskival and all his
people?”

“I came alone from America, Miss MacAskival, and it was all I could do
to make Carnglass by myself.”

“No!” That sweet mouth rounded to give force to the negation. “No!”
She threw back from her forehead a lock of red hair, bewildered. “Mr.
Logan, I’m afraid I have made a serious error. You must understand
that I am not very worldly; I’m sorry for it. I thought any American
millionaire would come in his own grand yacht, and servants beside
him, and perhaps policemen and soldiers and cabinet-ministers. I never
guessed that you, or anyone else, might come all alone. I do fear
that I may have fetched you into a dangerous plight.” Her musical
island English--and yet she must have been to a good school somewhere,
too--was so pleasant to the ear that Logan almost neglected the warning
in her words. “Now look here, Mr. Logan.” A quality of decision came
into her soft voice that had some connection with that high-bridged
nose of hers. “Do you think you could pretend--successfully, I mean--to
be an Edinburgh man? A young bank-clerk? The British Linen Bank, shall
we say?” Despite the girl’s childish look, in some respects she was in
advance of her years; just now she might have been a dowager duchess.
“You can? Then you must do precisely that. I do hope you studied
play-acting once upon a time. I did, you know, at the convent-school.
You’re very young, Mr. Logan--I had expected a very rich and very fat
old man--but really, you must contrive to carry it off. Everything
depends on it.”

“Just a question or two, please,” Logan said. “I met a man named Donley
at the other end of the island.”

“Of course.” She smiled. “A great cheerful ruffian. And he said some
things to you? They will not have caught him yet?”

“I don’t believe they’ll ever catch that man, Miss MacAskival. He told
me that matters are dangerous here in the Old House.”

“He told you truly. What else did he tell you?”

“He said that Dr. Jackman intends to--to have Lady MacAskival die.”

Her eyebrows lifted. “O, no! Donley was mistaken. Lady MacAskival would
not have been alive these past two months had not Dr. Jackman tended
her with all his skill. He has been a good nurse. It’s to his own
interest that she should live.”

Logan looked her compassionately in the eyes. “And Donley hinted that
you, too, were to die.”

The girl shook her bright head impatiently. “Donley did not understand.
Dr. Jackman does not mean to have me die--not now, and perhaps never.
Dr. Jackman means to marry me.”

Logan had cultivated a calm courtroom presence, but now he blinked.
“You’re not joking?”

Mary MacAskival smiled ever so slightly. “Do you think Dr. Jackman
shows bad taste? Hush, now!” She sat listening intently, her head
inclined toward the door that opened upon the body of the Old House.
Logan could hear nothing, but of course this girl’s ears would be
attuned to every footfall in that strange place.

“Stand up, please,” she said; and then, silent on her nimble naked
feet, she approached him. “I do hope you’ll forgive me, Mr. Logan, but
I am about to do something rude. I’ve done it seldom, and I may do it
badly.” There came a light tap at the door. “Hold me, if you please,”
she whispered, and pressed that lithe body against him, flinging her
arms about his neck. Logan heard the door creak open, but he could
not see, for the moment, who entered; and this was because Mary
MacAskival’s red lips were thrust upon his, and the glory of her red
hair was all about his face. Then, as she let him go a trifle, over her
shoulder he saw a man standing in the doorway.

It was a small man, sturdy enough, but with an indescribable air
of deformity about him--perhaps a curious thrusting forward of the
shoulders. With his forehead, too, there was something faintly wrong.
But the eyes were splendid: black, and piercing, piercing. The man’s
face was one of those faces which never were young and never will be
ancient. The face tightened, as if resisting shock, and Logan thought
the man’s right hand strayed toward the back of his coat; but it
returned gently to his side.

The man’s voice was controlled and well modulated. “I am surprised to
find you have a visitor, Miss MacAskival.”

Mary MacAskival let go her arms from Logan’s neck and turned on her
toes to face the man, with a wonderfully convincing air of surprise and
embarrassment. “Oh, Dr. Jackman!” she murmured. “We must have looked
dreadfully silly. Dr. Jackman, may I present Mr. Hugh Logan, of the
British Linen Bank, Edinburgh? Mr. Logan and I are to be married.”




7


“Why, then,” Dr. Jackman said, “Mr. Logan is a fortunate young man.”
The note of irony was faint. “I seem to recollect, Miss MacAskival,
your mentioning that you met a young man at an Edinburgh party, last
Christmas: I suppose this is he. And however did your betrothed
contrive to come into this house, in this season?”

Whatever game the girl was playing, Logan thought, he too would have
to play it now. And possibly he might carry it off. Jackman he took
for an Englishman. Logan had some talent for languages and dialects;
his courtroom years had taught him dissimulation; and since the war he
had been in several amateur performances of the Players’ Club. Now for
his present role: he had best play the part of a rather callow, but
ambitious, clerk from the Lothians. His speech ought to have a strong
suggestion of Scots, but to seem an imitation of public-school English,
and with a touch of what people called “la-de-da.” A small moustache
might have gone well with the part; it was a pity he hadn’t been given
time to cultivate one.

So Logan stepped forward rather stiffly, offering his hand to Jackman.
“Now the fat is in the fire, isn’t it? Rather. It’s grand to make your
acquaintance, Dr. Jackman, but really, I must apologize for coming
informally this way. It’s my fortnight’s holiday, and I had promised
Mary to come for a holiday as soon as ever I could. Somehow my letters
hadn’t reached her. The post is beastly nowadays, is it not? Some
fishing-johnnies brought me over from North Uist, and set me ashore
at the other end of your wee island. Now I must see Lady MacAskival
today and ask her approval. For Mary and I do not mean to wait another
quarter, do we, Mary, darling?”

The girl had stepped forward with him; and now Logan, putting an arm
about her waist, gave her an overdemonstrative squeeze, in keeping with
his new character. She did not seem disconcerted. “No, Hughie,” she
said, “we mustn’t wait a day longer than necessary.”

Dr. Jackman’s thin lips contracted, but he took Logan’s hand briefly.
“You and I will have much to discuss soon, Mr. Logan,” he said, “but
just now, tell me this: if you came from the shore at Dalcruach, did
you meet no one on your way?”

“Indeed I did see some men hunting,” Logan replied, easily, “but
they were away down in the glen, and their backs to me, so they did
not see me when I waved.” He was doing well enough with his assumed
pronunciation, he thought; he threw just a suggestion of “awa’ doon”
into his words. “Then there were two sportsmen on the cliffs, and I
called after them, but the mist came up and hid them. I kept to the
cliffs, the better for finding the castle. And Mary here”--he squeezed
her again--“had told me her rooms were at the back of the house, so I
went round, and Mary saw me and let me in.” He felt sure that Jackman
disliked him intensely. Who wouldn’t, in his present role? He hoped he
was convincing as a pushing, canny, and unmannerly junior clerk.

Jackman looked vexed, though not especially with him. “Mr. Logan,”
Jackman said, “did you ever dream that you were the commander of a
garrison, for instance, with Red Indians all about your fort; but that
the moment you turned your back, your troops would vanish like shadows;
and any shot that was fired at the enemy, would have to be fired by
yourself?”

“No, sir,” Logan replied, with what he trusted was a properly oafish
perplexity, “I never did. The fact of the matter is, I never do dream.”

“I should have thought of that,” Jackman observed. “No, I’m sure you
never dream. But to return to the heart of the matter: I dream a great
deal. And the conduct of Lady MacAskival’s servants is like a nightmare
to me. What incompetence! Yet several of them saw service during the
late war. If none of them spied you on the cliffs, they must be even
duller than I thought. I suppose that Miss MacAskival has told you a
very dangerous man is at large in the island?”

“She has, sir; and I am thankful I did not meet with him on my way. An
Irishman, she says.”

“Yes, Donley: an Irishman, and a homicidal maniac. Our people have been
seeking to arrest him for more than three days, but he always escapes
their net. Those were not sportsmen you saw, Mr. Logan, but our people
tracking this Donley. Neither Miss MacAskival nor anyone else in this
house will be able to set foot outside while that man is at large,
unless accompanied by an armed guard. I regret to say, Miss MacAskival,
that I must forbid you to visit your garden until the man is caught.
And please have the goodness to remember to keep back from the windows.
The man is armed, Mr. Logan, and a crack shot. Only Ferd Caggia, our
cook, is his peer with a gun. To be defended by a Maltese cook in one’s
own castle! Ludicrous, isn’t it, Mr. Logan? I suppose you wonder why
we haven’t summoned the police. But possibly Miss MacAskival has had
time to tell you that the madman destroyed our boats, and we have been
quite out of communication with the mainland. Presumably, however, our
agents in Glasgow will send a launch to us in a day or two, by way of
inquiry, and then we can call in the police. That launch, by the way,
can give you passage back to the mainland, Mr. Logan.”

“That’s very thoughtful, I’m sure, sir,” Logan said innocently, “but
it’s my plan to stay the best part of a fortnight, if Lady MacAskival
will permit me.”

“Lady MacAskival is in no condition to make decisions of any nature.
As for your remaining here--why, we’d best go upstairs to my study
and discuss certain matters, Mr. Logan. Will you excuse me, Miss
MacAskival?”

That barefoot little girl stepped forward like a princess. “Dr.
Jackman: surely you remember my Airedale, Tyke?”

“Yes,” Jackman said with a frosty smile, “I do. A great pity, that
rabbit-hunting accident.”

“You took Tyke for a walk, Dr. Jackman,” Mary MacAskival went on,
dispassionately, “and never did you bring him back. I wish you to bring
Hugh back to me. I intend to give him tea here in my parlor, one hour
from now.”

“Of course, my dear young lady.” Jackman bowed slightly. “I shall bring
him back safe in wind and limb: eh, Logan?” He clapped Logan lightly
on the back. “And now, be so good as to follow me up these stairs.
Mind the worn stone treads: they’re treacherous. No one knows how many
generations of MacAskivals have trodden that granite through. There’s
a legend that the ghost of Old Askival snatches at one’s ankles on
those stairs. Eh, Miss MacAskival? I’m sure he’d snatch at yours, and
small blame to him.” Jackman nodded at the girl with a kind of paternal
gallantry.

Mary MacAskival stood in the doorway as Logan and Jackman began to
ascend. “I believe it was my ankles that you noticed first, wasn’t it,
Hughie?” Though the stair was dark, Logan thought that Jackman almost
winced. “I suppose I really ought to tell you how it was that Hugh
and I came to meet, Dr. Jackman. You’ve already guessed that it must
have been during that wonderful fortnight Lady MacAskival and you let
me spend in Edinburgh in December with Anne Lindsay, who had been at
school with me. I happened to go into the Lawnmarket office of the
British Linen Bank to change a five-pound note; and Hugh was so very
helpful; and we found that he knew the Lindsays of George Square;
and....”

“Quite,” said Dr. Jackman, “quite. Perhaps we had best leave the rest
to my fertile imagination? Really, I am not in the least surprised; if
you will pardon my saying so, Miss Mary MacAskival, the little episode
is part and parcel with the traditional impulsiveness of ladies of your
family. You understand what I mean. The inscription by the door of the
old tower, for instance--we’ll show you that incised slab later, Mr.
Logan. Just now, I’ve only one thing to say to you, Miss MacAskival. I
advise you to go in to Lady MacAskival and tell her that a young man
has come to call upon you. As for any mention of marriage, the shock
might put an end to your aunt; and you know as well as I do the certain
consequence to your own prospects. Yet you had best mention Mr. Logan’s
coming, because old Agnes would tell her soon enough, in any event. I
advise you to be extremely gentle and prudent in the telling. And while
you are having your little chat with Lady MacAskival, I shall have my
little chat with your Mr. Logan.”

Mary MacAskival sent a glance from her disturbing green eyes at Hugh as
he followed Jackman up the dark stair; and she gave him a demure wink.
Whatever else the girl had or lacked, she had sufficient courage in
adversity. Then she was gone, and Jackman led him round and round the
twisting stair in the thickness of the wall, past several shut doors,
to the topmost chamber of the tower. Upon three sides were windows,
not so large as those of Miss MacAskival’s room, but still big and
handsome; and on the fourth wall was an immense fireplace, perhaps
fifteenth-century work, with a ponderous chimney-piece carved crudely
from basalt. On one side of the mantel, and standing two feet high,
carved almost in the round, was the effigy of a naked man holding an
axe; and on the other, a naked woman clutching a cross to her breast.

“A ponderous quaint affair, isn’t it?” Jackman observed, nodding toward
the fireplace. “There are similar figures set into the outer wall, by
the door of this tower: Askival and Merin, they say. The Old House is
so well preserved only because it stood empty, but not a ruin, nearly
the whole of the nineteenth century: the proprietors lived in the New
House. They used the ground floors of the Old House for byres and
rubbish-rooms. Sir Alastair MacAskival, the present old lady’s husband,
restored the Old House--with his wife’s money. It’s far too large for
such a household as she has now. The block that Sir Alastair added
is all great drawing-rooms and dining-rooms and billiard-rooms and
ball-rooms, with the kitchens below; and the present servants sleep in
the upper rooms of that wing. Lady MacAskival has a grand bedroom hung
with Spanish leather, in the Renaissance range; and I have rooms in
that building. But I spend much of my time in this study. For centuries
it was the private chamber of the chiefs of MacAskival. There’s a fine
prospect; but I’ll show you that later, Mr. Logan. And have you noticed
the ceiling? But I presume you’re no antiquarian.”

Indeed, the ceiling was a wonder. Though the colors in which its panels
were painted were much like those of the ceiling in Mary MacAskival’s
parlor, here geometrical designs alternated with scores of stiff
representations of queer men and beasties: kings, perhaps, and knights,
and ladies, and lions, and leopards, and griffins, and water-horses,
and unicorns, and things for which Logan knew no name--no two alike.
“Late fifteenth century, perhaps,” Jackman said, “and almost unique in
the islands, this ceiling.”

At the center of all these painted ceiling-panels was a panel with
a dull red background; and on it, little faded, was depicted a very
odd creature. It had the body of a man; but there were cloven hoofs
instead of feet, though it showed human hands; and the head was
the narrow malign head of a goat. The face itself seemed to be a
dismaying blend of human and animal features, in which the cunning
slit goat-eyes dominated. “I see you are looking at the Firgower--the
central panel,” Jackman went on. “A beast peculiar to Carnglass, it
seems, the Firgower: half goat, half man. There’s still a ruinous
building upon the cliffs called the Firgower’s house. I take it to
have been the house of the last Pictish chief of Carnglass, before the
Vikings came. There’s some remote Pict strain, as well as Norse, in
your own Miss MacAskival, Mr. Logan. She is of the old family, true
enough--not that she has the faintest legitimate claim to the property,
you understand. But I suppose you have little interest in fictions like
the Firgower. These legends sometimes have meaning, all the same. Once
an archeologist told me that the Firgower may be some island memory
of the last Pict chieftain himself: an ugly brute, to judge from this
portrait. The old islanders used to say that the Firgower never died,
but lives on from age to age. And that’s true enough, Mr. Logan, after
a fashion--the goat strain, I mean. I don’t scruple to say that a
goatish strain has run through the line of MacAskival, from beginning
to end. Gallant men and handsome women; but concupiscent, Mr. Logan,
concupiscent. You understand me? There are vessels for honor, and
vessels for dishonor.”

“I can’t say that I do understand, precisely, sir.” The two of them
were seated in leather chairs now, and Jackman was pouring sherry from
an eighteenth-century decanter. What with Mary MacAskival absent,
Logan could spend his time studying this unnerving Dr. Jackman. As
Donley had told him, the fellow was clever, immensely clever; and
more than that, wise, perhaps; and voluble. He made Logan uneasy to a
degree Logan never had experienced with that gunman Donley. The little
deformed man had a commanding presence. And still Logan was unsure of
the nature of Jackman’s deformity: it was something about the spine and
shoulders, though not crippling or really noticeable. Yet Jackman’s
lean face had about it just a suggestion of that look of suffering
and humiliation which one sometimes sees on the faces of congenital
hunchbacks. And there was something dismaying about the man’s forehead.
Right at the middle of his brow existed a small and shallow depression,
about the size and shape of a sixpence; and there seemed to be no bone
behind the skin at that spot. Now and then the place seemed to stir a
little, as if the skin lay upon the quick brain. In an unpleasant way,
it was fascinating.

“Very good old sherry, this,” Jackman was saying. “Sir Alastair kept
an admirable cellar, and much of it still is below stairs. One has to
watch the servants. There’s a quantity--perhaps two bins--of Jamaica
rum of 1800 or earlier, commencing to lose its savor now, alas. Another
drop, Mr. Logan? You’ve been looking at the hole in my head: not that
I mean to reproach you, for you’d have to be blind to ignore it. It’s
a souvenir of Spain. In the lines outside Teruel, a spent bullet went
right through the bone. But there was a Russian surgeon in Teruel
that day, luckily, and he got the bullet out, and now there’s a bit
of plastic set into my poor skull. I call the place my third eye.
You’ve read the Hebridean legends of third eyes, Mr. Logan? No? I
suppose you’ve little time for general reading, what with the getting
and spending of your vocation. For that matter, I presume you know
next to nothing of the Spanish trouble, more than twenty years ago:
a youthful indiscretion of mine. But possibly that’s just as well.
Every man to his last. You will be twenty-seven years old, Mr. Logan,
or perhaps twenty-eight? And earning seven pounds a week, like as
not. And you aspire to marry the sole survivor of the old, old line
of MacAskival. Not that I blame you, not in the least. In the coming
world, Mr. Logan, there will be no rank and no class. And intellect
will have its rewards. No, so far as social status is concerned, I
offer no objection. ‘A man’s a man for a’ that,’ as you Scots say, Mr.
Logan. Yet I would be no friend to you if I neglected to give you some
description of the difficulties in your way.”

His face and his facility of speech had served him well, Logan
thought: Dr. Jackman had no doubt, it appeared, that Logan was indeed
an Edinburgh clerk; and astute though Jackman obviously was, he had
underestimated Logan’s age by nearly a decade. The man could make
mistakes. Logan intended that Jackman should continue to make mistakes,
at least until he could discover more about Lady MacAskival and Mary
MacAskival and Jackman himself. “Difficulties, Dr. Jackman?” Logan
said, leaning forward and acting the pushing clerk, at once brash and
smarmy. “Difficulties? Mary has told me more than once that there will
be no financial problem, for she says she’s money to burn. And look
at this grand house. Aye, I’ll take more sherry, and I thank you.
Would Lady MacAskival raise difficulties, do you think, Dr. Jackman?
Look here, sir: I ask you as a son to his dad. If Lady MacAskival’s
incapacitated, would it be asking too much for you to give away the
bride, sir?”

That twist of the knife had been felt, Logan could tell: the skin
twitched about the strange spot in Jackman’s forehead; but the man’s
expression did not change, nor the tone of his voice alter. “Why,”
Jackman said, “before you and I speak of marrying and giving in
marriage, there is some history I must tell you, Mr. Logan. And I fear
I have been neglecting my duties as host in Lady MacAskival’s absence.”
He put his hand on a old-fashioned velvet bell-pull, and jerked it.
“Among the difficulties of life in Carnglass, Mr. Logan, is the problem
of staff. We take men where we find them, and try to be thankful for
small mercies. Life in the remotest of the Hebrides isn’t to the taste
of modern servants. Our butler, however, is rather a jewel; you’ll see
him in a moment. The footman is a diamond, though rough. We may have
to let the footman, Anderson, go; for he has involved us in all this
trouble, doubtless with the best of intentions. It was on his urging
that we engaged that Irish brute of a gamekeeper, Seamus Donley, who
was some connection of Anderson’s. I could see that Donley was three
parts savage, but in a lonely island like Carnglass, savagery may be a
virtue in a keeper. What I failed to detect was his insanity. For a man
of his age, Donley is astonishingly strong and quick--for a man of any
age, so far as that goes. And quite out of his head. He concealed his
madness with a certain Kerry wheedling wit. I must confess that I knew
Donley had been in gaol at one time, in Belfast or Derry; but I mistook
him for a mere simple-minded Irish rebel, relatively harmless. I’ve
still some fellow-feeling for rebels: in my younger days I was rather
a radical--almost an activist. I still have many acquaintances in the
labor movement. You are not a Socialist, by any chance, Mr. Logan?”

“Oh, no, sir,” Logan demurred wholeheartedly, “that never would do at
the British Linen Bank. The manager never would allow it.”

“Quite.” Dr. Jackman nodded approval, with the merest suggestion of a
pucker about the corners of his mouth. “Quite right. Socialism is a
snare and a delusion, at least as socialism is understood in Britain.
Hold fast by your principles, Mr. Logan.”

A tap at the door, then; and a small gray-haired man in a neat velvet
jacket entered. He almost stumbled upon Logan, and his mouth fell
open. “Blimey!” he cried; and then, to Jackman, “Begging your pardon,
that is, sir.” This must be the Cockney butler Donley had mentioned,
Sam Tompkins; and he certainly did not look like a ruffian or a
conspirator, though there was a shiftiness about the little eyes. South
of Mason’s and Dixon’s Line, Logan reflected, such a servant would be
given to “totin’ victuals.” Yet, the times and the place considered, a
very decent-looking butler.

“Tompkins,” Dr. Jackman said, “this gentleman is Mr. Hugh Logan, a
friend of Miss MacAskival. He was landed from a boat this morning.
We shall put him in the brown room, opposite mine, and you are to
see that everything is in order. Take his sack and stick and cape
with you. And you’d best tell the others as they come in, for fear of
misunderstanding. Niven is standing guard at the door just now? Very
well. Make sure he gets nothing to drink. And tell Miss MacAskival that
Mr. Logan will be late for tea; he and I are having a very interesting
talk.”

As Tompkins went out, Jackman smiled at Logan. “Your arrival will be
a nine-days’ wonder below stairs. If you observe some surliness or
fecklessness below, please accept my apologies in advance. I never
tolerate deliberate rudeness; report anything of that sort to me.
Whatever the deficiencies of these fellows, I suppose they make up a
better staff than the mob of Anguses and Annies that must have slept on
the stairs and in the kitchens of the Old House in the grand old days
of the MacAskivals--before Donald MacAskival was sold up, I mean. Miss
MacAskival has told you something of the history of the family? Quite
so. And speaking of old Donald MacAskival, who died raving in the New
House, I have a curiosity to show you.” Jackman, going to a cupboard
set in the wall, carefully drew out a heavy box and set it on the table
before Logan.

The big box, or rather casket, seemed to be carved from a single block
of stone, almost blue in color, but here and there shading into gray.
The lid was of the same polished stone. “If the servants had the
slightest notion of the value of these,” Jackman remarked, “I should
have to put the casket under lock and key.” He lifted the lid and
began to lift out strange stone figures, each some five inches high.
“You play chess, Mr. Logan? I have a marble chessboard here--modern,
I regret to say. But these chessmen are ancient, and Norse. They are
called the Table-Men of Askival.”

The little statuettes were marvellously carved by some master of the
Viking age. Each was wrapped in cotton-wool, and Jackman put them
deftly in place on the marble board. They were of the same blue stone
as the casket in which they had lain; and, after a thousand years, they
remained almost perfect, only three or four being badly chipped. “The
chiefs of MacAskival would have slit a hundred throats rather than have
parted with these toys,” Jackman went on. “For more than a century,
it was thought they were lost altogether, but Sir Alastair MacAskival
discovered them when he was restoring the family tombs by St. Merin’s
Chapel. The casket was resting, of all places, in the stone coffin
that is said to be Askival’s own tomb. Perhaps Donald MacAskival hid
them there when his creditors were hard at his heels, for even in the
eighteenth century these things would have brought a pretty price. If
so, they are all he left to his descendants. Sir Alastair died less
than a month after the finding of these, and Lady MacAskival has told
no one of them, so far as I am aware; so you are looking at works of
art never photographed or catalogued by the museum-people. Do you ever
go to the Queen Street Museum in Edinburgh? No? A pity. There they
have walrus-ivory chessmen from Lewis, also Norse work, and perhaps
as old as these. And there are others in the British Museum. You have
not visited the British Museum? Once, like Marx, I went there daily.
But I presume it is all _l.s.d._ with you, Mr. Logan. ‘Put money in thy
purse, and yet again, put money in thy purse.’ So the world goes. Shall
we make a game of it as we talk?”

Yes, fearfully and wonderfully made, these chessmen. The kings held
drawn swords across their knees, and stared stonily out of bulging
merciless eyes; the queens, with long wild faces, held daggers; the
rooks were berserkers, biting on their shields; and all the other
pieces, even the pawns, were modelled from the life of the age of the
Sea-Kings. One set of men had been saturated in some reddish dye or
paint; the other retained its natural blue hue. To play with these
priceless and timeless things was to sink into a remote past. “They’re
very nice, I’m sure,” Logan the bank-clerk said, with what he trusted
was a Philistine indifference. “Aye, I’ll play you a game, sir, if
you’ll promise me I sha’n’t miss my spot of tea with Miss Mary.”

“Miss MacAskival will excuse you; and it occurs to my mind, Logan, that
perhaps we can discuss certain delicate matters more easily in the
progress of a match. But I warn you, Mr. Logan, that I rarely lose.
Here: I submit to a handicap.” Jackman removed his own queen from the
board. “No protests: I think you’ll find me an old hand at chess.”

Logan advanced the pawn before his queen’s bishop. “I’ve had many a
grand match at the West End Young Men’s Society for the Advancement of
Chess, Dr. Jackman.”

“Indeed.” Jackman made a similar move with his king’s bishop’s pawn.
“Now the question of marriage aside, Mr. Logan, I don’t suppose you’d
choose to live in a great rambling ill-lit place such as the Old House
of Fear is, would you?”

“Oh, never in the world, sir.” Logan moved again, and lost a pawn
to Jackman. “No, sir, give me a nice semi-detached villa beyond
Bruntsfield Links, any day. Even the New Town of Edinburgh is too old
and stuffy for my taste, Dr. Jackman. I like a bit of a rockery in the
front garden, and an Aga cooker, and a fridge, and a parlor with a pair
of Portobello china dogs by the hearth.” He advanced his king’s knight.

Jackman shot a sharp glance at him. Had he overplayed his role a
trifle? Logan wondered. The Aga cooker and the Portobello dogs were
spreading the butter rather thick. He smiled ingenuously at Dr.
Jackman; and apparently the smile was fatuous enough to convince that
alarming gentleman.

“That is precisely the sort of man I took you to be, Logan: my
congratulations. And do you think Miss MacAskival would share these
reasonable ambitions?” He took Logan’s knight.

Logan captured one of Jackman’s pawns. “I don’t see why Mary shouldn’t,
sir; she’s a canny lass, and the day of grand houses like this one is
long past.”

Having sent a bishop on a raid deep into Logan’s territory, Jackman
leaned back in his armchair. “Canny, Mr. Logan? Sensible? Miss
MacAskival? Charming, certainly; beautiful, at least in many eyes; but
canny is the last word I should apply to her. I consider her my ward
_de facto_, you understand, and what I say now is for her good and your
own, and is to be held in confidence.”

Logan took one of Jackman’s knights. “Perhaps you’ll take the trouble
to enlighten me, Dr. Jackman.” He hunched forward, the picture of the
respectful and hopeful young man on the rise.

Jackman frowned at the chessboard. “I take it that Miss MacAskival
has given you to understand that she has large expectations, or
possibly that she already has ample independent means? That she is Lady
MacAskival’s heiress?”

“Why, sir, we’ve not discussed the matter in detail, but I have assumed
that Mary was to have her due.”

“Her due, Mr. Logan? To be quite frank, Miss MacAskival is very little
better than a waif. Her grandfather was first cousin to Sir Alastair
MacAskival--though the closest male relative left to Sir Alastair, at
the end of his life. But Sir Alastair and his cousin were on bad terms;
and, in any event, Miss Mary MacAskival was born nearly a generation
after old Sir Alastair died. This is a most tenuous family bond, you
see, although it is true that the old line of MacAskival being almost
extinct altogether, Mary MacAskival has a better claim than anyone else
to be the head of her little dispersed and forgotten clan. Our Mary’s
father was a ship’s second mate, and drowned off Naples in the late
war. The girl, who cannot remember her father, was left with the widow
at a village in North Uist. Had matters followed their usual course,
probably she would have grown up knitting sweaters and milking cows,
and have married some crofter. But then her mother died. The girl was
left quite alone.

“Lady MacAskival is an old friend of mine, but I cannot say she has
been known for openhandedness. A minister in North Uist wrote to
her, however; and, oddly enough, Lady MacAskival agreed to take the
child into her own household and provide for her schooling. Perhaps
Lady MacAskival felt she owed some debt to her husband’s name; she is
oppressed by a sense of guilt where her husband is concerned, but I
sha’n’t enter into that. Whatever her reason, she took the girl Mary,
and sent her to good schools--to the convent-school at Bridge of Earn,
most recently. I must make it clear here, Mr. Logan, that she did not
adopt Miss MacAskival, nor make any provision for her future.”

Jackman’s narration did not take his mind altogether from the
chess-match. He played with assurance and even arrogance, while Logan
lost three more pieces to him. Logan set his face in an expression
meant to suggest alarm at both the account of Mary MacAskival and the
match.

“What’s in a name, Mr. Logan,” Jackman continued, “or in the
inheritance of family traits? The scientists have been at work on these
things for a century and better, but nothing is settled. Possibly
you followed the course of the Lysenko affair in the Soviet Union?
No, I didn’t suppose that was an especial interest of yours. As I
said, these problems of hereditary traits are not settled, though for
my part I feel confident that the Russians will give us the answers
before 1965. Well, our Miss Mary MacAskival seems to offer some
decided evidence that a certain type of character is conveyed from
generation to generation within a family, whether the cause is genetic
or environmental. Since time out of mind, the MacAskival men and
women--the family of the chiefs, I mean--have been rash, spendthrift,
fearless, and--why, promiscuous, shall we say. Sir Alastair was an
exception, true, going to the contrary extreme. It has been a family
exceedingly inbred. I think I am not venturing too far when I suggest
that the stock is worn out. The qualities I mentioned just now were
dominant in both Mary’s father and mother. The beauty and the daring
may survive long after the strength and the wits are gone.”

“Dr. Jackman, what are you telling me?” Logan deliberately threw a
strong burr into his words, to simulate dismay; and his disturbance was
not altogether feigned. But he did not neglect to take Dr. Jackman’s
other knight.

Jackman compressed his mouth, as if pained at the necessity for
speaking out. “Lady MacAskival, while she was still in full possession
of her faculties, gave me a detailed account of the girl’s
conduct--sometimes she calls Mary her niece, out of kindness--from the
age of seven upward. I have made some serious study in the realm of
psychiatric disturbances, if I may say so, Mr. Logan. From the month
Lady MacAskival took the child under her patronage, there was trouble
with the girl. The reports from the schools--she changed schools a
number of times--were disturbing. Mary was haughty, full of notions
of her family’s importance; shy, at the same time; and sometimes what
I must call ferocious. Compensation, perhaps; no doubt she was very
lonely. Lady MacAskival is not a cordial woman, and, besides, Mary saw
her ‘aunt’ very seldom; and she did not make many friends at school.
And now I am about to tell you something that may shock you, Logan, or
may not. Did it ever occur to your mind that sexual overindulgence,
like drunkenness, often is a retreat into a world of fantasy, caused by
a deep unhappiness in this real world? Our Mary has fed on fantasies of
one sort or another, it seems, ever since she was a baby. For her, the
legends of Carnglass, for instance, are real: real in the most literal
sense of that word. She might happen to identify you with her legendary
ancestor, Sigurd Askival; and herself with his bride, Merin or Marin;
and me with--why, the monster, the man-goat, the tyrant: the Firgower,
that pleasant creature we see overhead.”

“Check,” said Logan. Jackman retrieved his situation promptly. “Aye,
sir,” Logan said, “I know Mary is dreamy; but that’s small harm, if
we’ve money enough for the whole of our lives.”

“I scarcely think you understand how extremely and dangerously fanciful
Miss MacAskival is, Mr. Logan; nor what consequences that sort of
mental sickness may lead to. She may have let you think, for instance,
that she’s a great heiress, or rich already. In plain fact, she hasn’t
a shilling of her own, and I may have difficulty in persuading Lady
MacAskival to leave her two or three thousand pounds. My old friend
says she has given the girl--who is no kin of hers really--schooling
and breeding enough to make her a governess or schoolmistress; and
she owes her no more. What is worse, perhaps, Mary lives in her
own irrational private world of gods and devils. And that way lies
... why, extreme eccentricity, at the least. And then there is the
concupiscence, which may be an inherited tendency, or at least the next
thing to a biological characteristic.”

Logan took another pawn. “Oh, surely now, Dr. Jackman, you don’t mean
to say that my Mary’s a wild girl?”

Jackman reached gently across the board and gave Logan a pat on the
shoulder. “It’s best to know these things early, Logan. I do mean just
that. When our Mary was scarcely thirteen, there was--well, what I
really must call an affair with a farm laborer here in Carnglass, in
the summer. The man was dismissed as soon as the thing was discovered;
he could have been sent to prison, I suppose. And yet he does not seem
to have taken the initiative. Then there was a report from school that
the girl was found with an hotel porter. I sha’n’t say more concerning
that. There have been two lesser incidents of the same nature--two that
we know of. And finally, your case.”

“Dr. Jackman!” Logan had half convinced himself that he really was
a decent, ambitious bank-clerk, and threw corresponding indignation
and bewilderment into his outcry. “Dr. Jackman! I’d never think of
anything--anything not proper with Mary. I mean the girl to be my wife,
Dr. Jackman.”

Jackman raised his eyebrows. “Frankly, now: would you care to begin
married life with a young woman of these tendencies? Possibly you don’t
quite believe what I’ve told you, though I could show you letters.
Yet you’d discover the truth after marriage, if you refused to credit
it before. So far as your own conduct is concerned, Mr. Logan, I’m
satisfied that you have behaved decently. But look at the matter from
another point of view. Here is a girl who throws herself at the head
of a young man she encounters casually in a bank, because he is bold
enough to say he likes her ankles. She invites him to her house without
even informing her guardians. She conducts, I suppose, some clandestine
correspondence with him. She rushes into his arms after not having seen
him for three months. Really, Lady MacAskival ought not to have allowed
Mary that Christmas holiday in Edinburgh.”

“Dr. Jackman,” Logan said, “I trust you, and I see you’re an educated
man. As for me, I never attended the varsity; it was not my line. But
cannot this be all rumor and misunderstanding about Mary?”

“I don’t mean to be harsh upon the girl; after all, she is as much of
a daughter as I possess, Logan. Oh, check again, by the way. I am not
condemning--only explaining. I doubt if the girl can help herself.
I suspect the concupiscence is in the blood. And her loneliness
contributes: as I suggested, sexual promiscuity sometimes is more a
symptom of a disorder than a disorder itself. I will be entirely blunt,
if you will allow me, Mr. Logan: in the legal meaning of the phrase,
and in other meanings, Mary MacAskival is not sane. She is not sane
where men are concerned, nor in certain other matters. She suffers from
a variety of delusions--I give you my word. She might suddenly tell
you, for instance, that I, Edmund Jackman, desire to marry her--an
absurdity, because it would be almost as if I were to marry my own
granddaughter, of course. At times she has even come to me with--well,
shall we say hints and invitations? That was when no younger man was
available. It has been necessary to forbid her very strictly ever to
be alone even with the servants; Mr. Royall and I take care, one or
the other of us, to be in this house whenever she is. I’m sorry, Mr.
Logan. But to tell you all this is the best service I can render you.”

“I had no notion, sir,” Logan told him. He took Jackman’s king’s rook.
And Logan had no difficulty in looking perplexed. Jackman was a very
different sort of being from the charlatan or bully he had thought
he might be. Those fine black eyes of Jackman’s looked candidly into
Logan’s.

“And I confess I am somewhat surprised, Logan,” Jackman was saying,
“that you got yourself engaged to the girl while she is a minor.”

“Oh, surely, Dr. Jackman, Mary’s old enough to choose for herself.”

“I fear she already has chosen quite often, Logan; she began at a
tender age, to put it somewhat coarsely. You do know just how old she
is, I take it?”

“Not precisely, sir; she would not tell me her birthday. She said I
ought not to spend the money for a present. Nineteen, nearing twenty, I
suppose?”

“Then I have been unjust to you, Logan. If you had known ... Miss Mary
MacAskival is barely fifteen. She prevaricates on that topic, as on
many others. Of course, as any man with eyes in his head can see, Mary
is a well-developed girl. Again, it runs in her family, I am told.
Physically mature, yes; but emotionally and morally immature; and
always will be.”

Why this disclosure affected Logan so deeply, he hardly could explain
to himself. It was as if he actually had turned himself into the
fictitious bank-clerk he was impersonating. In this matter, as in
related matters, he might have been on the verge of making a great fool
of himself. He had begun to fancy himself in the role of Galahad--or of
Sigurd Askival--rescuing a beautiful maiden from a wicked enchanter.
And it seemed to be turning out that the maiden was no maid, nor right
in the head; and that the enchanter was by no means thoroughly wicked.
He had listened to a drunken Irish terrorist spreading scandals
about an unknown Dr. Jackman. He had not the least proof, indeed,
that Jackman had any real connection with J. Dowie, Commission Agent,
or with Captain Gare of the frightened eyes; they might be someone
else’s agents, perhaps in the pay of those London connections of Lady
MacAskival. It remained possible, and even probable, that this Dr.
Jackman had aspirations after some of Lady MacAskival’s money; but he
doubted very much whether Jackman was a conspirator, or a saboteur, or
even a charlatan. Some sort of political radical, likely enough; and a
dabbler in odd learned subjects; but a keen and even likeable man. And
for what had Logan been paid to come to Carnglass? Not to criticize
Dr. Jackman’s character, or to carry off young women--or children--of
doubtful morals, but merely to buy a piece of real estate for his
principal. He might have made a thoroughgoing fool of himself. Indeed,
he had done so already. He had put himself in a ridiculous light with
Jackman by accepting the role of suitor which Mary MacAskival, in her
madcap childish way, had thrust upon him. He had sent a silly note to
the police in Glasgow--though that would do no real harm, since surely
Donley had no intention of delivering it. He may have helped a murderer
escape from the island--almost surely he had done just that. He was
almost an accomplice, what with the Irishman’s gun hidden in a sling
under his arm. Yes, he was a damned fool; and he might have to play the
fool a while longer, if only to extricate himself from this folly. He
moved at hazard on the chessboard; the glaring eyes of a berserker-rook
confronted him. One misgiving, however, did come into his head.

“Dr. Jackman,” he said, “I understand there was a factor, a Mr. Lagg.
Where is he?”

Jackman seemed taken aback at this _non sequitur_. “Surely Mary has
told you....”

“No, we had only a moment together before you came into the parlor,
sir. She had simply mentioned a puzzle of sorts, with Mr. Lagg
involved.”

Jackman was solemn and troubled. “I am virtually certain, Mr. Logan,
that Lagg has been murdered. We have searched every nook in the island
for him, these three days; but not a trace. As I have pieced matters
together, Donley drank too much and broke into Lagg’s house in search
of money. Lagg was very much of a Scot--if you’ll pardon me, Mr.
Logan--and the servants talked of how he hoarded five-pound notes in
his kitchen. Perhaps Lagg returned from a visit to the farm while
Donley was doing his mischief. From the wreckage inside the New House,
we can only conjecture that there was a struggle. Donley, we know to
our sorrow, was armed. He may have forced Lagg, at the point of his
pistol, to the cliff’s edge. But we cannot find the body. Then, after
Lagg had disappeared and we had begun to question Donley, that Irishman
broke away and ran into the bracken. In the evening he came down and
burnt our boats, to keep us from reaching the police or in an attempt
to get a boat for his escape; and we have been after him ever since.
Presumably he is short of ammunition by this time. In the fight at the
harbor, he threw burning petrol into the boats, and one of our boatmen
was terribly burnt, poor fellow, and probably will lose the sight of at
least one eye; I must dress his face again tonight. But Lagg? A gone
gosling, I am very much afraid. And an efficient factor, for years.”

This account of Lagg’s end held together much better than did Donley’s.
And Logan had told Donley he might bear witness for him at any trial!
No whisper of this Carnglass episode, he hoped, would filter back to
America. At this moment, Jackman took Logan’s queen. Yes, Hugh Logan
had made a fool of himself through and through.

“But to return to a topic almost equally difficult for me, Logan: I
think you will perceive that your marrying Miss MacAskival is wholly
out of the question. To begin with, she simply isn’t of age. Besides,
the shock of an announcement of that sort might put an end to Lady
MacAskival, who is very old and very sick. And for your own sake,
Logan--and I rather like your face and your ways--don’t be rash. If
you still care for the girl after what I’ve told you, give her time to
reach moral womanhood, if ever she can. I don’t say you need to break
off the affair altogether. Be gentle with her; go back to Edinburgh;
exchange letters now and then, if you like. But marriage, for the next
two or three years, would be a catastrophe, I assure you.”

“Perhaps you’re right, Dr. Jackman,” Logan replied, still in his
bank-clerk role.

“I usually am right,” Jackman told him, smiling. “And there’s this: it
is worth something to Lady MacAskival to have a decent young man treat
her ward decently. My recommendations happen to carry considerable
weight with Lady MacAskival. Mary does not need a husband or a lover,
but she does need a friend. And I can see that you mean to move ahead
in the world; and you deserve to, Logan. So if you can contrive to act
as I suggest, where our Mary is concerned, I think I can guarantee that
Lady MacAskival will give you a cheque for fifteen hundred pounds. I
have no intention of bribing you: I know you’re above that. But you
deserve some compensation for the disappointment you’ve had, and for my
part, I’d not be sorry to give you a leg up in the world. Don’t feel
insulted, Logan. I put it to you plainly: will you do us the honor of
accepting that cheque?”

What Logan might have done had he truly been the fictitious bank-clerk,
he did not know. But as an experienced lawyer, he was disturbed by this
offer. It was too much money for no real service. If once he had been
inclined to mistake Dr. Jackman for a thorough scoundrel, it would
not do now to make a model philanthropist of him. Of course he could
not really take the money, being Hugh Logan; yet he could accept the
cheque as the fictitious Logan and destroy it later. What he said was,
“If you’ll allow me, sir, I’ll sleep on your offer and give you my
answer tomorrow.”

“A sound policy.” Jackman lightly tapped his shoulder again. “And
I believe I know already what your decision will be, Logan. Ah:
checkmate.” Jackman had won the match with the thousand-year-old
chessmen, despite his handicap.

Dr. Jackman rose. “We dine at seven, here in my study, Mr. Logan. In
the Old House we have neither electricity nor running hot water--Lady
MacAskival does not care for modern comfort--but old Agnes will bring
hot water and a lamp to your room. I’ll show you there in a moment. But
before the sun goes down, shall we enjoy the view from the battlements?
I think the mist has lifted a trifle, though you come to us in a
clouded month. By the way, Miss MacAskival will be at dinner with us.
I ask you to say as little as possible to her about my observations,
should you talk with her alone before dinner, or later--for her own
interest, you understand, Logan. A personality as unbalanced as hers
might be permanently affected by imprudent reproaches. I trust to your
Scottish discretion. Just up the stair, now.”

They emerged upon the lead of the roof from under the conical-capped
turret. A narrow walk led round the gabled cap of the great tower,
between the stone slabs of the gable itself and the machicolations
of the battlements. Before them was Askival harbor, the sunken yacht
black against the pier; and beyond, across the foggy ocean, the sun was
descending in a diffused glory. Despite its climate, Carnglass was a
beautiful island. A corncrake flew low above the tower. Far below, in
the policies, a jungle of rhododendrons was in bloom. And five armed
men were walking up to the gate in the Edwardian block of the Old House
of Fear.

“Mr. Royall!” Jackman called. The five looked up, and the leader,
that “walking cadaver,” formed his thin hands into a trumpet. Even at
this distance, his pallid face and protruding teeth were ugly in the
extreme: a queer sort of secretary, this skeleton-like man with a rifle
slung over his shoulder. “Mr. Royall!” Jackman cried out. “What luck?”
The five men below stared in astonishment at Logan, beside Jackman at
the battlements. The four hangdog faces behind Royall aroused a vague
discomfort at the back of Logan’s mind.

“Rab and Carruthers have strayed, Dr. Jackman,” Royall called back.
“Can you see them from the tower?” Though Jackman and Logan looked to
north and east, there was not a sign of the other two men.

“Is there no trace of Donley?” Jackman shouted. Gesturing dispiritedly,
Royall shouted back, “I’ll explain when I come up.”

“I doubt whether we can give you a decent dinner, Mr. Logan,”
Jackman said as they turned back to the turret-stair. “Our cook, you
understand, has been out with the searching-party, and we have had to
press the butler into service in the kitchen. Have you ever lived in a
state of siege? A mad island, this Carnglass.”

“Fish and chips would do nicely, thank you,” Logan told him. “I’ve not
had a bite these twenty hours.” He still was the bank-clerk; it might
be difficult to abandon this play-acting.

“Really, I scarcely think Miss MacAskival would care for fish and chips
week in and week out, Logan.” Dr. Jackman said it drily. The man, after
all, was doing no more than his duty in sheltering his friend’s ward
from an unpromising suitor. Suppose, Logan thought, I were to tell
him what I really am: how would he act then? Yet an impulse cautioned
Logan to play this little deception according to its rules until he had
talked with Miss Mary MacAskival, the girl of fifteen with the green
eyes, the red hair, and the spotted past.




8


On those cold and dark stairs, Miss Mary MacAskival met them, her quick
and rounded little body, her rosy cheeks and lively eyes defying the
barbarous spell of the old tower. She sent Logan a darting, inquiring
glance, but it was to Jackman she spoke. “I heard the men outside,” she
said. “Really, you ought to let me lead the search. I know every bush
and cranny of Carnglass, but they’re stupid townfolk.”

Jackman frowned. “I may have to lead them myself, Miss MacAskival:
Rab and Carruthers seem to have lost their way. I’ll have a word
with Royall. Will you be good enough to take Mr. Logan to see Lady
MacAskival for a moment? And then bring him to the study for dinner.
Don’t be long.” He sent out a hand as if to touch her lightly
on the shoulder, but the girl drew back cleverly, almost as if
unintentionally, against the curving stair-wall, and Jackman passed by
her, ignoring the repulse. “Don’t forget the advice I gave you, Mr.
Logan,” he said softly, disappearing down the spiral of the stair.

At that instant, a most unpleasant recollection came into Logan’s head.
An hour earlier, in the painted study, he had given his rucksack to
Tompkins to be carried to his room. And in that pack were his passport
and other papers. That man Tompkins, by the look of him, would pry
into everything, even had he been only butler in a normal country
house; and this was no normal place. The moment Jackman talked with
Tompkins, Logan’s real identity would be known; and then there would be
trouble--though just what sort of trouble, Logan was not quite sure.
His dismay showed in his face.

Mary MacAskival was looking at him in concern. “What is it, Hugh?” (So
it was “Hugh” even in private now, Logan thought, and on very short
acquaintance, which seemed to confirm Dr. Jackman’s account of this
odd little girl’s very forward ways with men.) Whatever else she was,
she had a quick mind, though; for she added, after a moment’s pause,
“Are you thinking of your rucksack? You needn’t. I met Tompkins on the
stair and took it from him before he had any chance of a look into it.
And I took your papers and put them into a hidie-hole--the Old House is
mostly hidie-holes--where only I could possibly find them again. Then I
put the rest of your things into your room. Do you mind? I can get the
papers for you whenever you like, but we mustn’t let Dr. Jackman know
you’re from America. You’d not be safe then. You’re not particularly
safe even now. I’m sorry.” Those mobile red lips framed the “sorry”
with a pathetic beauty. Indeed, it was a pity that Mary MacAskival was
what she was.

“Thank you, Miss MacAskival,” Logan said. “Probably I’ll need the
papers after dinner. Shall we go down to Lady MacAskival now?” His
voice sounded cold even to himself. He needed a little time to think.
The girl’s charm--her glamour, literally--was too near to him on this
clammy sepulchral stair. How did those rosy little feet of hers endure
the damp, attractively bare as they were? But he must get his mind off
the girl: she was only fifteen, and bad medicine.

“Hugh!” Mary MacAskival spoke his name reproachfully, and now a little
haughtily. “Hugh! It’s not only your papers you’re thinking of. What is
it? This is a house of secrets, but you and I mustn’t have secrets from
each other. You weren’t sent to me to keep secrets from me. What is
it?” Logan hesitated, and the girl’s mind leaped swiftly to the usual
conclusion any woman reaches when two men have been talking seriously
in her absence. “What is it? Were you and Dr. Jackman talking of me?”
In this instance, the woman’s instinct spoke truly.

Logan looked her full in the face. “Yes, we were.”

Over the girl’s delicious heart-shaped face, with its high cheek-bones
and rather deep-set green eyes, spread a crimson flush, suffusing all
the delicate white skin. It would have been a beautiful thing to watch,
Logan thought, if it had not been a mark of guilt. The finely-moulded
nose and chin went up. “Then you heard nothing good,” said Mary
MacAskival, deliberately. She turned, as if to avert her telltale young
face, and led the way down the stairs. “Dr. Jackman is the father of
lies. But now I will take you to my aunt.”

A doorway in the immense thickness of the medieval tower-wall led into
the Renaissance range of the Old House. Here the plaster ceiling of a
great book-lined corridor was moulded into baroque shells and swags and
Lord knows what fantastic designs. An odor of damp and musty leather
came from the shelves; this library could have been used little since
Sir Alastair’s time. The little barefoot beauty walked beside him,
still a trifle flushed and defiant, but apparently not hopeless of
winning him over; Logan thought for a moment she actually meant to
take his hand; but if she did have that impulse, she thought better
of it. “After dinner,” she murmured, “if we can be alone, there are
things that must be told you. Not here: there’s not enough time, and we
could be overheard.” She noticed his glance at her exquisitely narrow
bare feet, which here trod upon Oriental carpet, in utter silence; she
smiled a trifle coquettishly, and said, “I was reared barefoot, and
don’t like shoes and stockings in the house. Besides, when I’m this
way, I can scamper all over the house, and _they_ don’t know where I
am--nor when I’m listening to them. Do you mind? I know it’s not the
way to receive foreign guests; but you are our first foreign guest,
and I don’t think you stand on ceremony. Here’s my aunt’s bedroom; she
never leaves it now. Only Agnes will be with her.” The girl pushed open
a heavy carven door, and they entered an immense gloomy room.

There the walls were hung from cornice to floor with square panels of
leather, stamped in gold leaf with some intricate pattern of dancing
figures; Logan thought he made out the figure of a capering goat
in this design, but could not be sure in the twilight of the room.
These hangings must have been long neglected, for splotches of white
water-stain showed here and there, and some of the panels had pulled
almost loose from the stitching that held them one to another, so that
the stone of the walls showed through the gaps. Nearly in the middle
of the room stood a vast ancient canopied bed, the curtains drawn
back. Beside it, huddled on a stool, an old serving-woman looked with
lacklustre eyes at Logan, cringing aside to let him approach the bed:
this would be Agnes, the shawlie. Certainly she was timid--could she be
trembling, or was it a slight palsy? Then he made out the shape under
the rich covers upon the bed.

Lady MacAskival lay with closed eyes, and she was very nearly a corpse:
almost bloodless, and her face and hands grotesquely wrinkled. Could
this pallid immobile thing once have been a beautiful woman of fashion,
no better than she should have been--like little Mary MacAskival,
perhaps? At their best, Logan suspected, the features must have been
slightly vulgar. Mary MacAskival slid between him and the bed-rail.
“Aunt!” she whispered, very low. “Aunt, Mr. Logan has come.”

The wrinkled eyelids slid back, snakelike. The fingers of the
desiccated left hand stirred slightly. The withered lips writhed,
almost as if the ancient creature would have burst into a scream, but
no sound came forth.

“Aunt,” said Mary MacAskival, “he may be trusted.”

Those purblind eyes of the failing woman flickered, for a moment or
two, with intelligence. But Logan could not have meant much to her;
possibly he was but a dream within a dream, drifting through limbo,
less unpleasant than the terrors that often clustered round the
bedstead. For either this old woman was drugged, Logan thought, or
else she existed, tortoise-like and impotent, in a realm of perpetual
terror. In those weary eyes was frozen fright, fright grown so familiar
that it was almost identical with consciousness. What kept her alive?
Surely she would have been happy to escape from this terror--unless she
fancied that worse horrors lay in wait for her beyond the grave.

Now her lips moved, and very faint sounds came forth. “Not Alastair,”
Lady MacAskival whispered. “Not Alastair. Good. Go--go with him, Mary.
When I am done. He is not the goat, no. Is he Askival? Is he flesh?
In Carnglass it is all mist.” The lids slid back again; the left hand
ceased to claw at the covers; one would have thought the woman dead,
had not nostrils and chest stirred ever so slightly with her labored
breathing. Mary MacAskival drew Logan through the still room to the
door.

They were back in the book-lined corridor. “Is she under drugs?” Logan
asked.

“No,” said the girl, calmly enough, “only hypnotism--and terror. If
you had seen the chairs rise up of themselves in this house, and eyes
glowing in the dark where no living thing could be, and heard the
footsteps in this hall, and if you were very old--why, I think even
you would lie there like my aunt, Hugh.”

“Who did these things?”

“Dr. Jackman and Mr. Royall--who else? They have come near to putting
me out of my wits. And now and then they put Dr. Jackman himself out of
his wits. He believes, in part at least, though Mr. Royall does not, I
think. Dr. Jackman has said he will call old Sir Alastair from under
the stone by St. Merin’s Chapel. He has said he has made Sir Alastair
walk down this very passage where you and I stand.”

Logan looked involuntarily over his shoulder: but of course there was
nothing but mouldy books and hangings and family portraits. In this
strange place, minds might scamper after any vagary. “Does your aunt
wish to see her dead husband?”

“Not she. She feared him while he lived, and she feared him more once
he died; and things lie heavy on her conscience. She will give Dr.
Jackman anything he wants, so long as he keeps Sir Alastair this side
of her bedroom door.” The girl was almost conversational about it all:
surely she was either quite mad, or had a grip upon her nerves stronger
than that of any woman Logan had known. What lay at her heart, Logan
could not even guess; what could be seen was delectable enough, but
Logan put no trust in her. Yet, trollop though she might be, Logan
resolved to play his masquerade a little while yet, so far as Jackman
was concerned, for her sake and his own.

“Now tell me this, Miss MacAskival,” said Logan, “just how old....”
Then he heard something in the passage, toward the tower; and so
did the girl; and they turned simultaneously. Logan felt tempted to
reach for the little gun under his tweed jacket, but refrained. And,
after all, it was only that shifty butler. “Dinner is served. Miss
MacAskival,” Tompkins murmured, quite deferentially, and withdrew back
toward the tower.

“Later,” Mary MacAskival said, very low, as they followed Tompkins.
“Later I’ll tell you everything that can be told. Now you must meet
Mr. Royall.” They went up the ancient stairs again, and passed into
the study. It was dark now, but the study was cheerful enough. Many
candles, in eighteenth-century silver candlesticks, had been lit; a
square table was laid with a cloth and good china; there was soup being
kept warm by a paraffin lamp on a sideboard. Tompkins had gone down
somewhere to the kitchen, assisted by a footman whose grumbling voice
Logan could hear below--Anderson, perhaps; and Jackman and Royall were
not yet in the room: doubtless the two of them were discussing Hugh
Logan thoroughly. Mary MacAskival, leaning gracefully against the piano
which occupied a corner, pointed a little finger toward the painted
ceiling.

“Do you know what _that_ is?” She meant the painted monster called
the Firgower, only dimly visible by the candlelight, away up there in
the shadows. “Oh, Dr. Jackman told you? He should: for he _is_ the
Firgower, you know. Why do you look at me so queerly? Of course Dr.
Jackman is the Firgower; he’d tell you so himself, if he were candid.
He has told me so. You saw the hole in his forehead: that’s his third
eye. He sees Sir Alastair MacAskival with his third eye, and tells my
aunt.” She took a candlestick from the table, and, standing on tiptoe,
lifted it as high toward the ceiling as her little body could reach.
“Now come here, Hugh Logan, and look close.”

The painted horrid goat-face of the Firgower stared down at Logan; it
seemed to smirk and leer and scowl all at once. “Its forehead--look,”
the girl went on.

Now Logan could make out that in the middle of that painted forehead,
with horns sprouting above it, was a third eye, faintly visible. It
was much less distinct than the two normal goat-slit eyes, but it
was very like them. “I don’t know whether it was painted so,” Mary
MacAskival murmured in Logan’s ear, leaning a pretty hand on his
shoulder, “or whether that nasty third eye wore on the nerves of Sir
Alastair or someone else, so that perhaps someone put a trifle of
white paint over it. It’s no less an eye than Dr. Jackman’s. Do you
understand? That’s Dr. Jackman’s portrait, so to speak. I’m ever so
glad _you_ do not have a third eye.”

Logan turned his head to look at this queer little lovely creature. Was
she lunatic, coquette, or infinitely subtle? They two stood so close
together that his nose touched hers. His right arm almost went round
her, as she stood there on tiptoe; but just then boots sounded on the
stair, and Miss MacAskival drew away. “My poor bare feet!” she said.
“I’m forgetting my manners. Whatever would they say at the convent?
They never let young ladies dine there barefoot, you know. I leave you
to Dr. Jackman and his secretary, but I’ll be back before the soup has
gone quite cold.” With a little swirl of her skirt, she sprang, rather
than stepped, through the heavy doorway, and was gone.

She must have passed Jackman and Royall on the stair, for they came in
immediately. “Mr. Logan,” Jackman said, “Mr. Royall, my secretary.”
The death’s-head secretary nodded curtly. Once the man began to speak,
Logan perceived with relief that he was an Englishman, like Jackman,
though probably from Yorkshire; had he been a Scot, he might have seen
through Logan’s masquerade. Logan would talk as little as possible to
the Scots among the servants, lest he give himself away.

Royall made some perfunctory observations about the hunt for Donley,
the weather, and all that. A cold fish, but a keen one, Logan hazarded.
He was well educated, surely; Logan suspected that he might once have
been a fairly high-ranking civil servant; somehow there was the
mark of Winchester school upon him. Yet now he was secretary to this
pseudo-doctor, in an island at the back of beyond. Why? Had Royall been
dismissed from some civil post--for unreliability of sorts? The man was
sick; the signs of a gnawing illness were plain upon his pallid face;
and yet Logan guessed--though perhaps he was becoming fanciful, in this
house of shadows--that the real cause of his trouble was some sickness
not of the body, but of the spirit. Could one trust Royall? If one were
of the same faith, undoubtedly; on the man’s grim features was set
fanaticism, not simple criminality.

“Do you have a taste for letters, Mr. Logan?” Royall inquired abruptly,
in his hoarse voice. Jackman had said very little, but stood back in
the shadows, watching, as if he had agreed to let his secretary do the
prying this night. Tompkins came round with a tray of sherry-glasses,
and Logan sipped before he replied.

“Why, now, Mr. Royall,” Logan said, “I must admit I am fond of Rabbie
Burns. Burns, sir, is the poet of the Scottish nation. No nonsense for
Rabbie Burns. I don’t mind saying, Mr. Royall, that at the British
Linen Bank, Lawnmarket Branch, we know an honest man’s the noblest work
of God. How does Burns express it, sir? ‘The rank is but the guinea’s
stamp....’”

Here Mary MacAskival returned, with neat shoes on her feet, and cotton
stockings. Jackman and Royall bowed to her slightly, and the four of
them sat down to dinner, Tompkins putting the soup before them. Without
bothering to taste his soup, Royall pursued the topic.

“I suppose you know, Mr. Logan, that Burns is perhaps the most popular
English writer in the Soviet Union today.” Royall’s sunken eyes seemed
to expect some significant response to this.

“Indeed, sir?” Logan said, ingenuously. “Why, now, I would have
thought there would be difficulties in doing Rabbie Burns into the
Russian tongue.”

“The Soviet Russians, Mr. Logan, are masters of translation. Yes, they
appreciate Burns. At a conference in the Crimea, not so very long ago,
I had the honor to be asked to read Burns aloud, in English, to a group
of intellectuals. I found they especially enjoyed the final stanza of
‘For a’ That and a’ That.’ How does it go--

  ‘For a’ that, and a’ that,
     It’s comin’ yet, for a’ that,
   That man to man, the warld o’er,
     Shall brothers be for a’ that.’

Do I have it quite right, Mr. Logan?” Royall gave him another long
stare.

“Aye, as I mind it, it goes so, Mr. Royall. Very sound
sentiments--brothers the world o’er.” Logan smiled at him.

Royall hesitated; then, “Would you care to give me a gloss on those
lines, Mr. Logan?”

Logan looked puzzled, as indeed he was. “A gloss, sir? Now how do you
mean? A commentary?”

“Mr. Royall thought some remarks might occur to your mind, Mr. Logan,”
Jackman put in. “Concerning international brotherhood, perhaps.”

“Why, no, Dr. Jackman, I do not believe I could add anything.” Logan
turned, simpering, to Mary MacAskival. “Do you think of a proper
commentary, Mary, darling?” The girl shook her head slowly; her eyes,
their lids half lowered, moved uneasily from Jackman to Royall.
“Nevertheless, gentlemen,” Logan went on, still very much the Edinburgh
clerk, “we’ve had many a serious discussion of Rabbie Burns in the West
End Young Men’s Discussion Club. There’s profound meaning in Rabbie
Burns. Profound.”

Royall’s eyes never had ceased to stare at Logan. Now Royall said, “An
acquaintance of mine who sometimes visits Edinburgh is an admirer of
Burns. Possibly you have met him: a Captain Gare.”

Logan’s training as a lawyer served him well at that moment, for his
fatuous smile did not fade, nor did he start. “No, sir,” he told
Royall, “I don’t believe I’ve had the honor of making the gentleman’s
acquaintance.”

“And then,” said Royall, “I think of a commission agent in Glasgow,
a man of the people, who often has Burns on the tip of his tongue.
Perhaps you have encountered him. His name is Dowie, Jim Dowie.”

“Dowie? I know a solicitor’s clerk of that name in Dalkeith; but he
reads only American thrillers, sir.”

“So, Royall,” Dr. Jackman interjected, “it seems that our Mr. Logan
here is not a member, after all, of the little circle you had in mind.
You were quite mistaken, I fear; I told you he wouldn’t be. Mr. Logan
is a very honest and industrious rising young bank-clerk, I’m sure. But
speaking of your national poet Burns, I call to mind a verse you might
take to heart--

  ‘My love she’s but a lassie yet,
   My love she’s but a lassie yet,
   We’ll let her stand a year or twa,
   She’ll no be half sae saucy yet.’

Apropos, Mr. Logan?”

The butler brought the main course, boiled mutton and potatoes, before
Logan had to reply. Logan noticed, as Tompkins served, that Mary
MacAskival’s face had gone crimson at Jackman’s quotation, and then
white again.

“Tompkins,” Jackman said as the butler served him, “I take it that
Carruthers and Rab have returned by this time?”

“No, Dr. Jackman.” Logan saw that Tompkins’ hands trembled slightly.
“Neither of them, sir. Not hide nor hair.”

Jackman bit his lip. “Royall, where do you suppose they’ve got to? It
has been quite dark for more than an hour.”

“Ah, well, sir,” Royall answered, “so long as the pair of them hang
together, no harm can come to them. They’re both armed with good
rifles, and they weren’t reared in ladies’ boudoirs. Rab knows rough
country well enough, and something of this island. I suppose they may
have been hot on Donley’s scent when the sun set, and bedded down in
one of the farmhouses or keepers’ cottages. I last saw them toward St.
Merin’s Chapel. No doubt they’ll report in the morning.” But Royall
seemed to have no appetite for his mutton.

Jackman shrugged. “No doubt, no doubt.” That unpleasant patch on his
forehead twitched, almost as if he were trying to lift the lid of the
third eye. He turned toward Logan. “As you were about to say...?”

“Why, Dr. Jackman”--but Logan smiled toward Mary MacAskival--“I had
thought of another verse from Rabbie Burns, that I like better than
yours; and it is this, sir--

  ‘Gaist nor bogle shalt thou fear;
   Thou’rt to Love and Heaven sae dear,
   Nocht of ill may come thee near,
     My bonnie dearie.’”

“I think that’s very pretty, Hugh,” Mary MacAskival told him. She
looked toward Dr. Jackman: “‘Gaist nor bogle....’ A good phrase for the
Old House, is it not, Dr. Jackman? But whatever can have become of Rab
and Carruthers?”

Jackman looked blacker still. “Leave that to us, if you please, my
dear.” He seemed about to add something when Mary MacAskival rose and
walked to the piano.

“How very slow Tompkins is in bringing the sweet tonight! May I play
until he comes? Hugh, will you sing with me?”

“You know I’ve no voice, Mary, darling,” Logan said, also rising, “but
I’ll play to your singing.” He did, indeed, play the piano reasonably
well. Miss MacAskival behaved as if she had always known it: wondrously
clever, that girl, for fifteen years.

“I’ll set you the tune, Hugh,” she told him, seating herself at the
piano, “and then you can take my place here, and I’ll sing you a song
from Burns, if you like. Dr. Jackman, can you endure it? Mr. Royall?”

“Of course,” Jackman told her, somewhat absently. He ran his lean hand
slowly over his forehead. Royall said nothing: he had stalked to a
window, opened it, and was staring uneasily into the night below.

Miss MacAskival played pleasantly--an air Logan knew well, “Charlie
He’s My Darling.” Logan took her place at the piano then, and she stood
and began to sing. Her young voice was full and tolerably trained, and
very sweet.

  “An’ Charlie he’s my darling,
   My darling, my darling,
   Charlie he’s my darling,
     The young Chevalier.”

The night air of Carnglass crept into the ancient room through Royall’s
open window. There came the cry of some night bird, winging past the
Old House, and the heavy beat of the sea upon the pier of Askival
harbor. Mary’s voice swelled up:

  “Sae light’s he jimped up the stair,
     And tirled at the pin;
   And wha sae ready as hersel,
     To let the laddie in.”

Then, above the noise of the ocean, there came an unnatural sound,
echoing perhaps from the other side of the Old House. It was a burst
of horrid laughter, or so it seemed, ending in a desperate sob; then
silence; then the high dreadful cackle again. “The devil!” cried
Jackman, and leaped to join Royall at the window. Mary MacAskival
shivered, but sang the last verse:

  “It’s up yon hethery mountain,
     And down yon scroggy glen,
   We daur na gang a milking,
     For Charlie and his men.”

To Logan, the girl’s relative composure was as strange as the dreadful
yelling outside, but he played loyally on until “Charlie and his men”
died away. Then Mary swept from the piano to the window, and Logan was
right behind her. The laughter, if laughter it was, had ceased; and
nothing at all was to be seen through the mist. But in a moment, a shot
was fired; and then three more shots, in quick succession, seemingly
not far outside the Old House. Jackman and Royall ran for the stairs,
and Mary and Logan after them.

Through that great chill hodgepodge old house, past Lady MacAskival’s
room, through an interior courtyard that had been roofed over, into
the enormous Victorian block they ran, stumbling through passages and
down flights of stairs, until at last the four of them burst into a big
Victorian entrance-hall. About the closed door were clustered Tompkins
and Ferd and Anderson and a fourth man whom Logan took to be Niven.
They all had rifles at the ready, but no one had ventured to open the
door. Jackman dashed among them and flung back the bolts: “See what
it is, you fools.” None of the four seemed eager to investigate, but
they followed Jackman and Royall a little way into the dark, and Mary
MacAskival and Logan tagged after. A massive knob of the great rock on
which the Old House stood jutted up close by the door, and Logan urged
the girl toward it.

“If anyone fires from out there,” he whispered to her, “we’ll be so
many sitting ducks.”

“No one will fire at us,” the girl said; but, obediently, she crouched
behind the rock, peering round in the direction the men were looking.

There came one more screech of hysterical laughter, and then a figure
came into view, reeling, stumbling, slipping, but still holding a
rifle. Only a few yards from the Old House, the man swung round to
face the darkness from which he had emerged, brought his gun to his
shoulder, and fired three more shots, wildly, toward nothing visible.
There was as much chance of his hitting the moon, with the aim he took,
as of winging any living thing in Carnglass. Then the man dropped his
rifle altogether and came lurching on toward the entrance of the Old
House, falling at last in a heap right at Jackman’s feet, giggling,
moaning, choking.

“Rab!” cried Jackman. “What the devil, Rab?” It was a very young man,
thick-set and heavy-featured, with a great shock of hair. He was
covered with little cuts, and his clothes were in rags. To judge by his
gasping and gulping, he had run for miles. And he was quite out of his
head. He squirmed at Jackman’s feet, and mumbled obscenities, and then
burst once more into his screaming and terrified laugh.

“Something has run him like a hare,” Royall said. “The wits are gone
out of the man.” The four servants, hard cases though they looked,
bunched together like so many rabbits. Stooping, Jackman took Rab by
the shoulders and shook him mercilessly.

“Rab!” Jackman hissed. “Rab! Speak, man, or I’ll give you worse than
you’ve had already.” But Rab only sobbed for breath. “Pick up his
rifle, Mr. Royall,” Jackman said, prodding Rab with his foot. Logan
suspected that he gave the order to Royall for fear that none of the
servants would obey it. Stooping, Royall slipped into the heather,
groped for the gun, found it, and hurried back, glancing over his lean
shoulder.

“Anderson and Ferd, lift this lump,” Jackman called out, “and drag
him inside.” The whole party retreated through the wide doorway into
the Victorian courtyard, and then back into the formal entrance-hall,
barring the gates behind them; Anderson was left as sentry inside the
great door. “Now you, Niven and Ferd, hold up this thing before me.”
They supported the muttering Rab between them. Jackman slapped Rab’s
bleeding face with his open palm, terribly hard. The young man ceased
to moan; his eyes rolled. “Rab,” said Jackman, slowly and distinctly,
“where the devil is Carruthers?”

“O, it took him, it took him!” cried Rab, and lapsed into incoherence.

“I’ll have the heart out of you, Rab, if you don’t speak up. What took
Carruthers?” Jackman slapped him again.

Rab’s dull eyes widened. “It took Carruthers! Lagg took him, auld, wet
Lagg! Lagg it was!” With that, Rab sank into a kind of fit, and Ferd
and Niven pushed him down upon the floor.

Dr. Jackman stood rigid. “No,” he said, perhaps to Royall, perhaps
to himself. “No. Not Lagg.” Then he looked round, his face stiff and
white, upon the little ring of men, and upon Logan and Mary MacAskival
beyond them. “Get this creature to bed,” he said to Niven and Ferd.
“Tie him in, if you must. Ignore his ravings. The fellow’s lost his
nerve; Donley must have been after him. Royall, post someone atop the
tower, and tell him to fire at anything that moves. Miss MacAskival,
this is no scene for you. See if your aunt has been disturbed, and then
get to your room. Logan, Tompkins will show you up. Stay in your rooms
until I have you called for breakfast.” Then Jackman went out into the
courtyard again, calling to Anderson.

Tompkins, carrying a petrol lantern, led the girl and Logan through
the passages toward the Renaissance block. Outside Lady MacAskival’s
room, Mary paused. “I’d best look in here, Hugh,” she said, “so I tell
you good-night now.” Tompkins moved discreetly a few feet further down
the passage, but Logan only pressed the girl’s hand. She contrived to
smile at him. “Do you recollect that last stanza I sang?” she asked:

  “‘It’s up yon hethery mountain,
      And down yon scroggy glen,
    We daur na gang a milking,
      For Charlie and his men.’

Take care this night, Hugh.” Then she was gone into the bedroom hung
with Spanish leather.

Tompkins led him to a decent smallish chamber on the floor above Lady
MacAskival’s room, wished Logan a civil good-night, and slid away.
There was no key in the lock upon the door, and no bolt. To shove
furniture against the door, Logan felt, might seem unduly suspicious
to Dr. Jackman; but he did it, all the same, jamming a chair-back
under the doorknob, and reinforcing it by a small chest. He looked out
his two windows; they were high and small, and almost impossible for
anyone to reach even with very long ladders, for the rock fell sheer
away below this portion of the Old House. The bed, if rather damp, was
tolerable. He slid his pistol Meg under the pillow, and was dozing off
in short order, with only the wind at the panes to break the stillness,
and the distant growl of the combers. Logan was too tired to think of
Rab, or Lagg, or Jackman, or Royall, or even of the green-eyed girl--to
whom, in a fit of sympathy at the dinner-table, he had promised that
she need fear neither ghost nor bogle while he was near. It was an
unsecured pledge of questionable validity to an insecure girl of
questionable antecedents.




9


Much later--it must have been past three in the morning--Logan was
waked from his troubled sleep by a curious sound. His nerves on
edge, he sat up in bed, scarcely knowing where he was, and befuddled
by finding himself tangled in an old-fangled nightshirt, until he
remembered that Tompkins had laid out for him this antique garment.
The only source of light in the room was the extinguished candle, of
course; and Logan reached for the candlestick, but thought better of
it, and listened.

The noise was the sound of slow sliding. Blinking, he looked toward the
door. So far as he could see anything at all, it seemed to him that
the door was very slightly ajar. And then he knew the source of the
sliding-sound: someone must have dislodged slightly the chair he had
used as barrier, must have got a hand round the edge of the door, and
must be quietly shoving chair and reinforcing chest inward, so that
whoever was outside might squeeze within.

Logan snatched his pistol from under the pillow. It wouldn’t do to use
the gun except in the last extremity, though. He slid silently out of
bed to the floor, and rolled under the bedstead. If someone meant to
cut his throat, there in the blackness, whoever it was would stab an
empty bed.

That sliding-noise had ceased now; what had wanted to enter presumably
had glided in. To Logan, taut on the floor under the bed, came the
thought of Old Askival, who was supposed to walk the narrow passages
of the Old House, and had driven the wastrel Donald to the New House.
Whatever had entered surely made no noise at all: a thrill ran through
Logan’s body. Holding his breath and straining his sight, after
what seemed like a quarter of an hour--really some five seconds,
probably--he made out the dimmest of dim shapes bending over the bed,
its legs right before Logan’s nose. Gripping the pistol in his left
hand, Logan seized an ankle of the intruder and gave a mighty tug.

A stifled cry, and the thing was on the floor beside him, and Logan
flung himself upon it in a tangle of arms and legs, thrusting the
pistol against the thing’s head. The shape made very little resistance.
Shape? The body under Logan was not a man’s shape. And most certainly
it was not Lady MacAskival or old Agnes. “You’ve hurt my head,” the
shape murmured, resentful and panting. In the faintest of whispers--
“Really! Are men always so violent when they’re waked in the middle of
the night?”

It had been a near thing; that little pistol, thrust against the girl’s
temple, might have gone off. “Oh!” said Logan, shocked and embarrassed.
“Did I cut you?” He ran his hand through the mass of her hair,
searching for a wound.

“I think not,” the girl said, brushing aside his hand. “You were good
enough merely to stun me. Now do you mind sitting somewhere else than
on me? I’m rather out of breath. Sit on the bed. How queer you look in
that nightgown! It must have been one of Sir Alastair’s, who was twice
your size; I wonder it hangs together still. And keep your voice low,
for Dr. Jackman walks the passages at all hours, like a wraith, and
he _would_ put an end to Hugh Logan if he found me with you. I’m ever
so sorry to put you in danger--or more danger--and to wake you from
a sound sleep, and to invade your bedroom; but you and I must talk
tonight. There, that’s much better! You do look silly, perched in that
old nightgown on that old bed, but it can’t be helped. Oh, you have a
little gun? That’s clever of you. I wish I had one of my own. I have
keys--although Dr. Jackman doesn’t know it--to nearly every room in
the house except the gunroom, and the cellars where they keep those
explosives: Dr. Jackman put new locks on those. Do you mind if I sit on
the other end of the bed? The floor’s rather hard. Thank you: now we
can make matters clear.”

The minx--Logan’s eyes, adjusted to the dark, could make her out
vaguely--was fully dressed, except that she was barefoot, as usual.
Either she was an idiot, which he doubted, or else she was the bravest
woman he ever had come upon. “Miss MacAskival,” he said, “what is
outside this house? What drove Rab out of his mind? It may be, I
suppose, that Donley was forced back to land, after he took my boat;
but he was a tired man when I saw him last, and I can’t imagine him
knocking Carruthers on the head and chasing Rab right up to the door.”

“Now that you have knocked _me_ on the head,” said Mary MacAskival,
“and have sat on me, you may as well commence calling me Mary, Hugh
Logan. We’ve not time, just now, to talk of what may be outside; for
I must tell you of what’s within. You have no faith in me, have you?
You’ve been talking with Dr. Jackman. What did he tell you of me?”

He had no faith in anyone in the Old House, Logan thought; indeed, he
had begun to doubt his own sanity. But he would be blunt with this
girl, and see if she could make a case for herself. “He told me, Mary
MacAskival,” Logan said, “that you were eccentric.”

There in the dark, the girl laughed softly; she was a cool one.
“Why, that’s true enough, Hugh Logan: all the MacAskivals have their
oddities. I fancy that old Mr. Duncan MacAskival, who sent you to me,
has his peculiarities.”

“That he has. But he’s no girl of fifteen.”

“Fifteen?” She sounded startled. “Whatever do you mean?”

“You are fifteen, aren’t you?”

“Fifteen!” She stifled her merriment. “I’m past twenty, Hugh Logan,
though it’s little I am. Whatever possessed Dr. Jackman to tell you
such a thing?” Her voice rang true.

“And he said you were too fond of men.”

“Fond of men? I’m not fond of Dr. Jackman, I can tell you. I never
see any men to be fond of, here in Carnglass, Dr. Jackman’s crew
are half afraid of me--particularly Niven the tinker, who knows I
am a witch--and I’m thoroughly afraid of them, although I never let
them guess it. With whom am I supposed to be infatuated?” A tone of
suppressed anger had come into her voice.

“When you were thirteen, Jackman said, you--why, you loved a gardener
here in Carnglass.”

At first Logan thought she had begun to sob; but then he realized she
was choking in an endeavor to keep from breaking into imprudent shrieks
of laughter. “Malcolm Mor MacAskival,” she managed, at last. “Malcolm
Mor! Of course I loved him. I do still. He carried messages for me and
contrived to get them posted in Loch Boisdale, and so they discharged
him. And he worships the ground I tread, because I am The MacAskival.
He has a great white beard, and is upward of seventy. Are you jealous
of him?”

It was impossible not to believe her: Jackman was plausible, but Mary
MacAskival was all candor. “What a consummate liar Jackman is!” Logan
played with Donley’s little gun.

“To be sure he is; didn’t I tell you so, Hugh? He lives by lies. But
into nearly every lie he works a tiny grain of truth, for the sake
of appearances. Well, then: what other mischief have I been working,
according to your friend Dr. Jackman?”

“He implied, Mary MacAskival, that you suffer from delusions of
grandeur. He said you must have told me--by ‘me’ he means our
fictitious bank-clerk, of course--that you were to inherit Carnglass
and all the rest from your aunt, while in truth you are a pauper.”

“Would it matter to you if I were a pauper?” She was serious now; he
thought her firm chin went up.

“Not in the least.”

“Well, then, as a matter of fact, Hugh Logan, I have more money than
has Lady MacAskival. She never has loved me, but she has no one else
who signifies; and so, more than five years ago, she gifted Carnglass
to me, and more than half her securities. She told me that would
baffle the Exchequer; for in this country, you know, one can escape
death-duties by giving away one’s property, so long as one does it
five years before one’s death. Five years ago my aunt still had her
wits about her--enough to make a lawful will, at any rate; and she put
Carnglass and the rest into trust for me; and six months from now, when
I am twenty-one, I can do what I like with my own.”

This revelation reminded Logan of his proper business in Carnglass,
which the troubles of the past few days had almost driven out of his
head. “Then Lady MacAskival couldn’t sell Carnglass to my principal
even if she chose? It’s yours? And will you sell?”

“Hugh Logan! Here we sit whispering, with a gang of murderers and
conspirators in the house, and The MacAskival honoring you with a
call at four in the morning in your bedchamber, and you talk of
title-deeds! You _are_ a man of law. But no, I wouldn’t sell: Carnglass
is my world. Yet Duncan MacAskival being an old man, and a kinsman,
and having his heart set on the matter, I might arrange for him a
life-tenure of the Old House. And I, and any husband I might choose to
have, could live at the New House. When I wrote Duncan MacAskival that
last letter--the note that brought you here, Hugh--I made up my mind
that I would not bring him here upon a wild-goose chase altogether. If
a lease of the Old House will satisfy him, he shall have it. But Dr.
Jackman will be a nasty tenant for us to evict, Hugh Logan.”

And then, in part volunteering the story and in part prompted by
Logan’s questions, the girl gave him her account of Dr. Edmund
Jackman. Three years before, when Mary still had been at school,
old Lady MacAskival had gone to London for a month, in winter. For
half a century, Lady MacAskival had been very odd; and now whatever
rationality remained to her was giving way. On her infrequent London
visits, she had tended more and more to surround herself with peculiar
company: Indian pseudo-mystics, and fortune-tellers with pretensions to
decent manners, and mediums of various sorts. Lady MacAskival detested
anything resembling orthodox religion, but rejoiced in any oddity which
flirted with faces that glowered up from the abyss; and she believed,
or half believed. She was ignorant, superstitious, vain, and rich--and
she had a bad conscience. Moreover, she was extremely lonely. To her,
in time, was presented a Dr. Edmund Jackman, “a scholar, my dear, and
a progressive politician, and a diplomat, and a man who knows _all_
about the occult. He has just come back from a trip to Roumania.” Dr.
Edmund Jackman spent a great deal of time in Lady MacAskival’s London
drawing-room, that winter three years gone. In the spring, he was
invited to Carnglass, and came for a visit of two months. And then
there was another visit, lengthier; and another.

By the end of the year of lengthy visits, Edmund Jackman was wholly
master of Lady MacAskival’s mind, or what remained of it; and master,
too, of her money, and of Carnglass. Dr. Jackman was useful in many
ways. He kept her avaricious London kinsfolk from troubling her. He
took her affairs out of the hands of her ineffectual solicitors, and
gave them his personal attention. Gradually he dismissed her feckless
Island servants, even the farmhands, and reduced household costs, and
brought in some hard-featured, but doubtless dependable, men from
London and Glasgow, until only old Agnes remained of the former staff.
He spent much of her income, too, on “schemes for political education.”

This Mary MacAskival had learnt from the mumbling lips of her old aunt,
in that darkened room hung with Spanish leather, listening to the
ramblings of that stricken brain, convinced sometimes that she was near
to madness herself. This she whispered to Hugh Logan, curled at the
other end of the bed. And she had learnt other things from Dr. Jackman
himself, and from Royall, and from scraps of servants’ conversation
overheard in the passages.

Her solitary years with Lady MacAskival had given the girl an insight
into the old woman’s mind and soul, Logan perceived, so complete
that she could speak almost for, rather than of, her dying aunt. She
understood, and nearly shared, the terrors of that room hung with
Spanish leather. And she knew what talents gave Jackman his power over
the old woman.

More than all his other services, what made Dr. Jackman indispensable
to Lady MacAskival was this: he kept Sir Alastair away from the door
of her room. Lady MacAskival always had suspected that Alastair was
lurking outside that door, even though she had buried him under the
great stone in St. Merin’s Chapel so many years ago. Every day she
sent the footman with a message for Alastair to be placed in the tomb
at St. Merin’s Chapel, imploring Alastair to forgive her, and to stay
up there at the top of Carnglass where he belonged. Yet twice she had
glimpsed Alastair, unrelenting, in the narrow passages. He _would_ come
back, and gobble at her bedroom door on windy nights, and she lay in
dread that one night he might cross the threshold.

Dr. Jackman had saved her from that: he had bound Sir Alastair by a
mystical chain, he told Lady MacAskival, and so long as she possessed
the loyalty of Dr. Jackman, no tall stern old man, who ought to be
in his tomb, would cross the threshold. Of course it was essential
to retain the wholehearted loyalty of Dr. Jackman, and that could
be secured by agreeing with him in all things. Once or twice, when
she had demurred from some plan of his, Dr. Jackman had come to her
bedside, with Mr. Royall beside him, and had described in awful detail
what would be the consequences if Sir Alastair made his way in. She
had fallen into a fit, and old Agnes had been too terrified to speak.
At all costs, Dr. Edmund Jackman must be kept in a good humor; and
sometimes the costs ran very high. It was a great pity that willful
girl Mary did not take to Dr. Jackman.

For months now, Dr. Jackman and Mr. Royall had lived at the Old House
all the time, except for brief cruises about the islands. Dr. Jackman
demonstrated to Lady MacAskival his control over the risen dead by
certain seances in her room. Tables rose, and chairs fell over, and
horrid white shapes loomed up--but never, Dr. Jackman promised, the
shape of Alastair. And presently Dr. Jackman revealed to her that he
always had been in Carnglass; and had been there infinitely long before
she, as Miss Ann Robertson, had been married to Colonel Sir Alastair
MacAskival. For Dr. Jackman was not simply human. He was a part of
Carnglass, and its master from time out of mind. He had been there
before the Viking rovers came. He was the Firgower, the Goat-Man.
And he saw all things, past, present, and future, through his Third
Eye, which quivered in the middle of his forehead. By watching Lady
MacAskival with his Third Eye, he could relieve her of all pain, and
put her to sleep at will.

Yet it did not seem quite right that Dr. Jackman should marry her
niece. He had told Lady MacAskival many times that he must do so; that
the thing was ordered by the Presences under the rocks of Carnglass;
that thus Carnglass would be his in the eyes of the puny law of men,
as well as by the decree of nature. Still, it did not seem right. Mary
belonged to the living, not to be a being beyond good and evil. Lady
MacAskival dared not deny Dr. Jackman, however; she said only, in great
fear and pain, “Then you must ask Mary herself.”

Dr. Jackman did not neglect Miss Mary MacAskival. Upon her he bestowed
much valuable time, endeavoring to instruct her in progressive social
views and in a proper understanding of occult lore. He had compelled
her to come to him in his study at least an hour a day, to listen to
his peculiar talk. Almost always he had been quite civil; but once or
twice he had threatened her, and then he had been ghastly. He talked
politics and necromancy to her, a queer mixture. The one, she thought,
was as mad as the other, or perhaps the politics was a little the
madder.

“If I had known the least little bit about politics and economics and
all that,” she said to Hugh, “Dr. Jackman would have converted me.
But I was utterly ignorant, so he could make no impression. I was
altogether too stupid.” The politics, so far as Logan could determine
from Mary’s imperfect exposition, were Marxist, or a variant thereof.
“He has been so eager to have me serve the Party,” she said. “But the
Party, so far as I could make out, meant to destroy a great many
people to bring about peace everywhere, and meant to make everybody
precisely alike so everyone could be perfectly happy, forever and ever.
That’s nonsense. You’re a solicitor--or is it a barrister, Hugh?--and
you know. I don’t at all want to be like Dr. Jackman, or like Niven the
tinker; and I don’t want them to be like me. So after a time I simply
stared at Dr. Jackman, and said ‘Indeed?’ now and then, and he grew
discouraged. My tactics worked like a bomb.”

“Like a bomb?” asked Hugh Logan, startled.

“Oh, you know--that’s one of the things we said at school, ‘like a
bomb.’ Everything good or successful is like a bomb. You know, don’t
you?” Sometimes this astounding girl seemed old as the hills, and at
other times younger than the fifteen years Jackman had assigned to her.
She was a hoyden of sorts, but quite innocent. “Don’t you ever say
‘like a bomb,’ Hugh? But then, I suppose you never attended a girls’
school.”

So Jackman had abandoned his endeavor to enlist Miss MacAskival in
The Cause. Yet he had persisted in his instruction in the occult.
“He really believes in it all, Hugh. Mr. Royall doesn’t believe, or
believes only a little; but Dr. Jackman is stranger than my old aunt.
He was shot in the head in Spain--oh, did he tell you that?--and I
think that he has been more clever and more dangerous in various ways
since he came from the hospital; but also he sees things that no one
else sees, and hears sounds that no one else hears. And he has become
a part of Carnglass. I mean that. He has read everything that may be
read concerning Carnglass; and all the old tales have got into his
brain the way romances got into Don Quixote’s head: but so evilly,
Hugh. He did not say he was the Firgower simply to frighten my aunt;
he believes it. He frightens even Mr. Royall. And then, of a sudden,
he will drop that weird talk and begin discussing politics. Or he may
become quite sensible, and make plans to scout round the islands, and
to keep in touch with people on the mainland, and to send messages to
the Continent, and to set off gelignite when he’s ready.”

“Explosives?”

“Oh, yes, he has a crypt full of it; but I’ll tell you of that
presently. He didn’t mean me to hear about the explosives, but there
are places in my Old House where I can eavesdrop, if I must.” She
seemed to take a schoolgirl satisfaction in that art.

Royall, to judge by Mary MacAskival’s description, was what someone
once called “the humanitarian with the guillotine.” Wholly devoted
to Jackman, he was forever talking of the sufferings of the working
classes. But he spoke of the men who served him and Jackman, and
sometimes of people in general, as “that scum.” Systematic and
humorless, once upon a time he had been a successful civil servant.
Then, however, political fanaticism had swallowed him, and there
remained of the man only an emaciated body and a hatred of life, which
he disguised from himself as hatred of the “expropriating classes.”
Mary MacAskival thought that Royall would have snuffed out her life,
if it had served his interest--or the Party’s interest--with no more
scruple than as if she had been a mouse.

Edmund Jackman was more subtle and interesting. Possibly, Logan thought
as he listened to the girl, Jackman once had known the good and had
deliberately chosen the evil--and ever after had been haunted by that
memory. “Evil, be thou my good.” Fearless and very clever, somewhere
early in life he must have taken the sinister track. And never had he
contrived to turn back.

“When the horror is upon Dr. Jackman,” Mary was whispering, “I think I
would faint, only that he reminds me of Rumpelstiltskin in the fairy
tale, and that makes me laugh inside, even though the rest of me is
shaking.” The horror came upon him once or twice nearly every day, and
then he looked like a damned soul. “I think he is remembering things
he has done. Once, when he meant to break my will, he hinted at what
he had to do in Spain. I think he killed patients in hospitals with
doses of poison, so that they would not tell tales. Perhaps, in the
beginning, the people who gave him his orders saw the streak of good
in him, and so they hardened him by ordering him to do all the worst
things that could be done.” The girl shivered.

After the civil war in Spain, it seemed, Jackman had vanished into
eastern Europe; and had reappeared in England for a time during the
second World War; and next had turned up in Roumania. There, somehow,
he had fallen into disfavor with the people who gave him his orders.
Possibly he had gone too far in his measures, having come to love
terror for its own sake. Or perhaps he had been chosen as a scapegoat,
during a period when there were official pretences of moderation. In
any event, he had fled out of Roumania, four years ago, returning to
London; and then he had come to Carnglass. Royall, it seemed, had been
with Jackman in Roumania, and the two of them had done things there of
which they preferred not to speak even to each other. “Royall is like a
ghost: I mean that he has no conscience left. But Jackman, I think, has
memories of the difference between wrong and right, and so the horror
comes upon him.”

Suddenly the girl leaned closer to Logan, who had been about to speak,
and put her little hand upon his mouth. “Hush!”--this scarcely more
than a hiss. Her ears, attuned to the creaks and echoes of the place,
had detected something his had not. Yes: now there were stealthy
footfalls in the passage. Someone moved outside the door of the room;
seemed to hesitate there; passed on. The girl’s fingers were gripping
Logan’s shoulder, and his hand shook as he held his pistol ready. But
whatever had been outside was gone elsewhere in the labyrinth of the
Old House.

How ever had Mary MacAskival endured, in her solitude, the dread strain
of this perilous ordeal, month on month? “I say,” she asked him,
abruptly, as if she had read his mind, “do you think I’m mad myself?”
He squeezed her little hand for answer. “Sometimes I wonder if I am,”
she went on, “for it seems like one unending nightmare: until you came,
that is.”

Once Jackman had said to her, “Miss MacAskival, I felicitate you on
your strength of mind.” Considering what the man was, he had been
almost gentle with her; probably his admiration was genuine. He
tolerated no rudeness toward her from any of his rough men.

“I don’t think he is interested in women as most men are,” Mary
MacAskival went on. Did she blush in the darkness? “He is in love
with power and terror. He wants me only because with me he could have
Carnglass a while longer, and because I have money. And, I suppose,
because he enjoys crushing other people’s minds. He has tried to crush
mine. Had he not been so busy with other things, I believe he would
have defeated me long ago.”

So long as her aunt continued to live, Jackman had no urgent motive to
compel the girl to marry him: his ascendancy over Lady MacAskival gave
him Carnglass and enough money. But as Lady MacAskival sank, now rarely
rising from her bed, the day grew near when Jackman must marry the
girl, or else run the danger of exposure and ruin.

“Once I was rash,” Mary said. “I told him and Royall that I had
tolerated them only because they held my aunt’s life as security. I
said that when she was gone, I’d tell everything I knew to the police.

“Dr. Jackman smiled a horrid smile. ‘Who would believe a mad girl?’
was what he said. And then he told me that if he should fail to
persuade me to remain loyal to him, he and Royall might do things to
me--‘painful measures, Miss MacAskival, painful for all of us’--that
would make me into a different person, so that I could never be the
same again. There were ‘special mental disciplines,’ he told me, and
‘certain shock treatments.’ It would be ever so much pleasanter if I
simply did as he told me to. And he could be sure that I would do as he
wished if I were to marry him. That was once when the horror came upon
him.”

Here, at last, the girl burst into suppressed sobs. Logan’s arm went
round her shoulders. “Sometimes I have thought,” she mumbled, “that I
ought to give way. So much easier! But I suppose I was too proud.”

The fierce old blood of the chieftains of MacAskival, Logan thought,
was strong in her; she was a sport in more ways than one. It would be
a pleasure for him, if ever he got the chance--which, at the moment,
seemed slim--to settle accounts on her behalf with Edmund Jackman.

Why, until she wrote to Duncan MacAskival, had she made no attempt
to expose Jackman, or to escape? Because it was only gradually she
had come to understand what Jackman and Royall were after; and she
had known, too, that her aunt’s life was in their hands, and that
they would not hesitate to snuff it out if they were pushed. From the
moment Jackman established himself in the Old House, it had become
increasingly difficult to send any message out of the island; a
fortnight ago, it had become virtually impossible; and since Donley’s
flight, she had not been permitted even to leave the house.

And there was another reason: that room in the cellars full of
explosives. She thought that Jackman was eager to use them, if there
were any chance for it, to destroy certain mysterious things that the
government was building in the Outer Isles; but Royall was trying to
restrain him. “Dr. Jackman,” she had overheard him say once, “you know
what exceeding instructions has brought us already. Until word comes
from Bruhl....” Royall was willing, she suspected, to rest content with
gathering what information they could about those mysterious projects,
and transmitting it to someone in London. But in Jackman there was
some terrible compulsion to blow everything apart. “If he could, I do
believe, he would explode all the world into little bits.”

So there was this: if Jackman were brought to bay, and had the
opportunity, very probably he would set off the gelignite in the crypt.
The Old House would go, and everyone in it; and for Mary MacAskival,
the Old House and Carnglass were the center of the universe. “I know
nothing about politics,” she told Logan, rather apologetically. “I
suppose Jackman and Royall are traitors, and might do terrible harm
to the country. But Carnglass is my country. I think of the Old House
first.” Jackman would destroy himself and everyone in the Old House,
almost certainly, if he despaired. “What was it the old Greek said:
‘When I am dead, let earth be mixed with fire’? I learnt that at
school. Well, that is how Dr. Jackman thinks.”

She had lived with the terror, hoping vaguely that Jackman’s plans
might alter and he and his men go away; that the authorities in London
or Glasgow might discover the scheme and descend before Jackman could
act. It was only as her aunt had sunk toward her end that the girl had
been roused to some plan of action, what with her own imminent danger.
And so she had got off the note to Duncan MacAskival, a schoolgirl’s
design; yet it had succeeded so far as to bring Logan to her. “Until
you came, I had no one at all to talk with.” Her sobbing broke out
again.

Jackman and Royall, she was convinced, had no notion of what she had
done or of Logan’s real identity. Once Logan had told her of his
encounters with Dowie and Gare, she said that Duncan MacAskival’s
cablegrams could not have reached Carnglass. The storms, and the
fortunate burning of the boats, had prevented that. There was a
wireless in the Old House, and Jackman sometimes used it, cautiously,
in sending messages in code to people on the mainland; but some ten
days before Lagg and Donley disappeared, part of the wireless set had
slipped out of sight. “They thought Lagg, who was acting strangely,
must have stolen it,” she said. “He didn’t. I did.” This girl was a
paragon. “I do believe that if they knew who you are,” she went on,
“they would make away with you, just as they did with Mr. Lagg”--for
Logan had told her, hurriedly, what Donley had said of Lagg’s end.

In a very little while, Logan realized of a sudden, it would be dawn;
and Mary MacAskival must be gone from his room before then. “Mary,” he
said, “what is this about Lagg? Could he be alive? Could that fellow
Rab really have seen him? Who is outside this house? Is it Donley, or
is it only these fellows’ imagination?”

She hesitated. “I do not know,” she said. Was she concealing something?
“Perhaps I ought to--but there isn’t time now. Listen: someone’s
stirring already, somewhere below. There’s so much more to tell you,
but it must wait. Jackman will keep us apart if he can, but perhaps
he’ll be out with the men today, hunting for Donley. Now I must run.”
There were, indeed, the first faint flushes of the Hebridean spring
dawn visible through the windows. She leaned toward Logan. “You may
kiss my cheek, if you like, for being a brave man.” Logan did that,
but he said, “You seemed to be friendlier yesterday.” She sprang up,
averting her face, and went to the door, and pressed an ear against
it; then she opened it a crack, and peered out; then waved a little
hand, and slipped through, and was gone. With this sudden vanishing,
Logan almost doubted that the strange little creature ever had crouched
sobbing beside him.

       *       *       *       *       *

Logan lay awake on his bed after that, as the sun came up, full of
dreads--more, perhaps, for the girl than for himself, but sufficiently
concerned for Number One. About seven, there was a rap at his door, and
Tompkins, that pillar of varnished iniquity, brought him morning tea.
Logan would not have been surprised to be knifed as he took the tray,
but Tompkins said only, “Foggy again today, sir,” and closed the door
behind him. Leaving the tea untasted, Logan shaved with the hot water
Tompkins had brought, hurriedly dressed, and found his way downstairs
to the book-lined corridor, where for a few minutes he idled about,
with a feeling of complete helplessness. Then Royall appeared from
somewhere, glancing at him suspiciously; but Royall was civil enough,
in his deathly way, and told him that he could breakfast in the study
in the tower.

He breakfasted alone. Of Mary, there was no sign; and Tompkins told
him that “Dr. Jackman and Mr. Royall and some of the men have gone
out, sir, hunting that Donley person.” The breakfast was meagre,
porridge and a scrambled egg of sorts--powdered egg, Logan thought. In
a besieged house, supplies soon ran low. Outside the small windows,
the mist clung to the gray stone. He would have liked to pry into the
drawers of desk and table, but Tompkins or someone else might enter at
any moment. His pistol was invisible under his heavy tweed jacket; that
was something. How would it all end? He was a pawn in this deep game,
and presently some one would sweep him off the board, unless Donley had
got to the mainland and delivered his note to the police. And even if a
police-launch should put in at Askival harbor, could that devil Jackman
be prevented from sending everyone in the house up in smoke? To ponder
these things, in a deceptive calm, really was the strangest part of the
nightmare into which he had got himself.

About half-past eight, Mary MacAskival ran into the study--shod, for a
change, and her face glowing with excitement. The nerves that girl must
have! Logan put down his pipe, not knowing whether he was expected to
shake hands or to kiss her; but she gave him time for neither. “Hugh,”
she said, “Hugh Logan, I saw them from my window! Jackman and Royall
and the others: they’re bringing something up from the shore, dragging
it. Come down with me, and we’ll go out to meet them.”

Through that immense house they ran, out into the enclosed courtyard
of the Victorian block. By the big door, or rather gate, three of the
men were standing: Tompkins, and Anderson the footman (who looked
unpleasantly like his Gallowgate brother), and a dark grinning man,
supple and compact, who must be Ferd Caggia, the cook. A rifle lay at
an angle against the wall by the door, back of Anderson. Caggia had
just passed an odd green bottle--was it the old rum?--to Anderson,
who took a swig from it. The three men stared at Logan and the girl,
Anderson leering as he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.

Mary MacAskival marched straight up to the door, Logan by her side,
she quite ignoring the men until she stood right before Anderson, who
barred the way. Yes, it was rum Anderson smelt of. “Open the door,” she
said, calmly. “Mr. Logan and I are going out to meet Dr. Jackman.”

“What’ll ye gie me if I do?” Anderson’s words came thickly; the man was
drunk. Anderson winked at Tompkins and Ferd for approval.

“Be good enough to open it.” Mary MacAskival’s green eyes glittered.

“Not for a young hizzie, not me.” Anderson laughed harshly, leaning
against the door. Mary MacAskival reached past him and pulled at the
bolt; it slid back.

Then Anderson took her round the waist, staring defiantly at Logan.
“Ye’ll gie me something, whether I let ye oot or no, ma fine leddie.”
With one raw fist, he pulled at the girl’s jacket. Logan took a step
forward and gave Anderson the back of his hand.

Caught off balance, Anderson crashed against the door. His big head
jerked back, his arm flew away from the girl, and he fell.

The next second, Anderson was up from the flagstones, and everything
happened at once. “Davie, you know what Dr....” Tompkins began, in
mild remonstrance. Ferd Caggia glided to one side, still grinning, as
if he were a spectator at a match for his especial amusement. And tall
Davie Anderson, rising, had grasped the rifle; already its muzzle was
swinging upward, toward Logan, and there was killing in Anderson’s
tipsy eyes.

Logan’s reaction was instinctive and the product of his army years, not
prudential. Very swiftly, he sent his hand into his armpit and flashed
out the little pistol. “Anderson,” he said, distinctly, “don’t move.
Don’t move at all.” The girl stood fixed by the unbolted door, her eyes
wide, very pale.

Anderson’s mouth opened; the rifle in his grip sank toward the ground.
Out of the corner of his eye, Logan saw Caggia glide smoothly toward
his back, and saw Caggia’s hands slip down toward something protruding
just above his belt; but still Caggia smiled. “Caggia,” said Logan,
“bide where you are, man.” Tompkins quivered.

Then, behind Anderson, the big door opened, and Dr. Jackman stepped
softly in, his eyes sweeping across the little tableau. Without
hesitation, Jackman snatched the rifle from Anderson’s hands and dealt
the footman a terrible blow in the jaw with the butt of it. The man
fell, stunned, and a tooth flew out of his mouth as he struck the
flagstones. Behind Jackman, Royall entered; and after him, two more
men, dragging something, and staring at the tableau as they came.

Jackman kicked Anderson in the face. “I told you, you ape, to mind
your manners. Caggia, get this fellow to his quarters. Powert, relieve
Anderson on duty at the door”--this to one of the men behind him. “Mr.
Logan, I was not aware that junior bank-clerks carried revolvers on
their social calls.” Jackman’s words were smooth, but his face was
twisted cruelly. Rumpelstiltskin, Logan thought. “Mr. Logan,” Jackman
went on, even more suavely, “now that I have disposed of Anderson, you
have no more need for that pistol. Be good enough to give it to me.”
Jackman held out his hand.

Royall was beside Jackman now, carrying a rifle; and Caggia was out of
Logan’s line of vision, probably right at his unprotected back; and the
girl, surrounded by men, was exposed to any shooting; and the odds were
too great. Logan extended his palm, with the little pistol lying upon
it, toward Jackman.

Then Royall drew in his breath. “Dr. Jackman,” he said, hoarsely, “see
what gun that is!”

Plucking the pistol deftly out of Logan’s hand, Jackman examined it.
“Quite right, Royall,” he observed. “It’s Donley’s gun Meg, isn’t it?
Mr. Logan, my apologies: I was quite deceived by you--an excellent
performance on your part. You are a young man of talents. After you
took the gun from Donley, did you shoot him or drown him?”

Only then did Logan see what the men had dragged into the courtyard.
It was the battered dead body of Donley, still streaming with water.
“Don’t look, my dear,” said Jackman to Mary, considerately. “A bit of
flotsam, washed up near the pier.”




10


Two more men had come into the courtyard, and stood staring. “Simmons,”
said Dr. Jackman to one of them, “help Niven to get this body into the
cellars, for the time being. Miss MacAskival, be so good as to go to
your rooms and remain there until I send word. Well, Rab! Up and about?
I take it that Donley here wasn’t on your heels last night? No, of
course not. We haven’t yet found your friend Carruthers, but I trust
that we will. Caggia, _do_ get Anderson to his bed, for he’s sprinkling
blood all over the flags, and there’s a lady present.”

The sight of blood seemed to put Edmund Jackman into excellent form.
Shock-headed Rab gazed at him vacantly, as if still dazed by his last
evening’s encounter with shadowy pursuers. “Well,” Jackman went on
cheerfully, “poor Till--he’s lost the sight of one eye forever, I’m
sure--is quits with Seamus Donley now. Go up and tell him the news,
Tompkins.”

Mary, in the midst of this hard crew, was looking at Logan with dismay
in her eyes. “Hugh,” she said, “Hugh ...” and stretched out a hand
toward him. Jackman shot a malign glance at her.

“You’d best go, Mary,” Logan told her, with what assurance he could
summon up. She turned and fled into the Old House.

Logan could conjecture the fate of Donley. Tired and wounded, the old
terrorist must have been flung on the skerries by that cruel sea; the
boat would have broken up; and his body, beaten against the rocks,
had washed round to the harbor at the other end of Carnglass. In this
grim moment, Logan had little time to pity Donley. It could not have
been Donley, then, returned, who hunted Rab and Carruthers through the
night. Rab might have fired only at imaginary stalkers, in this eerie
island. But then what had become of Carruthers? Lagg had taken him, Rab
had screamed in his hysteria last night. Was it possible that, after
all, Lagg had not been killed? But if he had not, how could he have
existed alone and invisible these several days; and how could a sly fat
Galloway factor have made away with one seasoned ruffian and driven
another out of his wits?

Except for Powert, standing sentry at the gate, Logan now was left
alone in the courtyard with Jackman and Royall. “Well, Mr. Logan,”
Jackman was saying to him, “there are few things in this vale of tears
more interesting than an accomplished adversary. I prize you.” He was
playing with that little pistol Meg. “Royall, we’ll take Mr. Logan
up to my study, and there he’ll supply us with valuable information,
I’m sure. He should be able to tell us, for instance, who disposed of
Carruthers. He has done us one service already, in evening our score
with the late lamented Seamus Donley; now we’ll discover just who sent
Mr. Logan to us, and why.”

It might be folly to go on pretending he was an Edinburgh bank-clerk,
Logan thought: Meg had given him away. Under the circumstances, and
considering the habits of Jackman’s gang, naturally Dr. Jackman assumed
that Logan had disposed of Donley. But what new role could Logan play?
To have lapsed into his American speech would have suggested to the
quick mind of Jackman that this young fellow had been sent to manage
the purchase of Carnglass. And, having learnt too much about Jackman
and Company, Logan then would be a candidate for extinction.

He dared not pretend to be an Englishman, for his mastery of English
accents was not up to it, and Jackman would have detected him at once.
Their French, too, might be better than his own. There seemed to be
nothing for it but to keep speaking in a genteel Scots, though he
might expand his vocabulary beyond the usual range of a fictitious
junior clerk. “Well, Dr. Jackman,” Logan said--he made the word almost
“weel”--“I confess I do find myself in a predicament.”

“Really,” said Jackman, “really now, my dear fellow, you needn’t
continue to talk as a Lothians counter-jumper would. You didn’t ring
quite true in that role, but yours was a valiant try. You’re a cut or
two above that sort of thing, eh? I doubt whether you’re a Scot at all.
An Englishman, possibly? Or even a German? A university man, probably.
Just walk on the other side of our Mr. Logan, if you will be so good,
Royall. We shall have Mr. Logan resident in Carnglass for some time
now: permanently, perhaps, depending on his degree of co-operation with
us. Among the many things about you which puzzle me, Logan, is how you
contrived to become acquainted with Miss Mary MacAskival. We shall have
to interrogate the young lady on that point, eh, Royall--unless Mr.
Logan is so gallant as to save us the trouble? I hadn’t guessed that
Miss MacAskival numbered among her friends any person formidable enough
to do in Seamus Donley, late I.R.A. Well, up to my study, if you don’t
mind. On the stair, Mr. Royall, pray walk directly behind Mr. Logan,
with your gun at the ready. We mustn’t underestimate his talents a
second time.”

For all the gravity of this situation, Hugh Logan felt more confidence
in himself than he had known since he landed in Carnglass. He had begun
to understand matters, and to struggle against the tide of events;
his ineffectuality of an hour ago had given way to action of a sort.
And time was running out for Jackman. A few more days of silence from
Carnglass, at most, and someone--the police, or a passing ship or
plane--would suspect that things were amiss in the island, and there
would be investigations highly embarrassing to Jackman. They would not
be so embarrassing, however--sobering thought--if Hugh Logan somehow
should have vanished from Carnglass before any official inquiries
might be made. It was some comfort to reflect that Duncan MacAskival,
if no one else, soon would begin to wonder where he was; and there
was the faint possibility that the Glasgow police, desiring him for a
witness in the affair of Mutto’s Wynd, might commence to look for him.
Everything, conceivably, would depend upon how the next few minutes
with Dr. Jackman happened to go.

In the study, Jackman indicated that, as on the first occasion, Logan
was to sit at the chess-table. “I don’t think you’ll be needed,
Royall,” Jackman said to that cadaverous secretary, “but you might
look in within the hour. We have a very clever guest here: devilish
clever. It’s as well I have Donley’s pistol in _my_ pocket now.” Royall
hesitated, as if to offer some objection; but, at a dark glance from
Jackman, went out.

Once again Jackman poured sherry for Logan, and set out the Table-Men
of Askival. “Really, Logan, I think you were pulling my leg at our
last game of chess, as you were in so many other matters. I’ll not
accept any handicap in this match. It’s rather pleasant to play during
a casual discussion like ours, don’t you think? We never may have an
opportunity for another match. That depends upon you, of course,
Logan.” Jackman showed every sign of being in good spirits, as if he
enjoyed this contest with an able adversary; but well below his urbane
surface, Logan suspected, a gnawing disquietude was at work in Jackman.
He knew the man much better after Mary’s account of him.

As for Logan, he made his first move in the match with seeming
indifference, smiling at Jackman. The only thing that could suffice to
save him, Logan felt, was to dismay Jackman by a show of complacency
and mysterious assurance. He had this sole advantage, that Jackman had
not the faintest glimmer as to who Logan really was. “Oh, no, sir,” he
said to Jackman, still with his assumed Scottish burr, “I fancy that
the question of our future encounters, Dr. Jackman, already is settled
by people from beyond Carnglass.”

Jackman scowled. “I told you you needn’t play at little games with me,
Logan, or whatever your name is. It’s pointless now for you to talk
like a smarmy bank-clerk that never existed. Why not out with it all?
Who are you?” He advanced a rook.

“That, Dr. Jackman, you’ll learn in the fullness of time. Lest you grow
rash, let me remind you of one thing: you may be sure that I’d not have
come to Carnglass, knowing you and your men were here, without having
taken precautions. There are a dozen people who know precisely where I
am, and why, and who will come looking for me if I don’t return when I
ought.” He let that observation sink in as he meditated his next move.
He wished there were any truth in it; but Jackman could not know its
hollowness.

“As for that, Logan”--here Jackman castled--“it would be entirely
possible for you to be lost, accidentally, in these wild waters.
No witnesses would swear to your having met with any harm in
quiet old Carnglass. Not one. You might, for instance, have gone
mackerel-fishing in a small boat with Lagg and Donley; and the three
of you might have been caught in a squall--there are mishaps enough
in these waters--and drowned; and two of the bodies might have been
recovered, Donley’s and yours. A death by drowning is quite natural. A
quarter of a mile off the western shore of Carnglass is a ragged reef
that would offer a wholly convincing explanation.”

Logan extricated a bishop from a tight corner. “But suppose, Dr.
Jackman, that my friends ashore are not the sort to be satisfied by
the formalities of a coroner’s jury, or, indeed, by Scottish courts of
law? Suppose they might hold you privately accountable, and presume you
guilty until proved innocent?”

Jackman stared at him. “Logan, I put it to you bluntly now. Royall was
sounding you out last night, of course, with his bits from Burns, and
our other signals. You evaded him. Now tell me out and out, for I’ve no
time to waste: are you one of us? If you are, why cannot you say so and
have done with it, and transmit your instructions to me, if you’ve any
to give? Perhaps you’re from London; perhaps from Paris; perhaps from
further East. I’ve been expecting some such inquiry, of course. Why
this cat-and-mouse rubbish, if you are one of us?”

Jackman’s nerves were wearing thin. To assume the new role of a member
of Jackman’s conspiratorial circle would be much the safest dodge
for him just now, of course--if only Logan knew how to play it. But,
lacking knowledge of the ring, all he could undertake was to cast out
dark hints from time to time. “Why, I’ll tell you merely this, Dr.
Jackman: I am not authorized to make any regular communication to you
until certain events have taken place, and until a certain time has
elapsed. Until then, consider me simply as your casual guest.” He took
a rook of Jackman’s.

“You _are_ a cool chap, Logan. I needn’t tell you I have ways of
extracting a statement from you. I know all the ways, Logan.”

“Of course you know them. But suppose I am the sort of person I may be:
if you did me any hurt, it might be awkward for you afterward, eh? I
have a long memory, Jackman.”

Jackman bit his lip, and lost another pawn. “There are other ways
of getting round you, Logan. Have you ever heard a lady scream? A
full-throated scream, from exquisite agony, I mean. It’s rather
distressing for a gentleman who happens to like the lady in question.
And it is the ladies, the gently-bred, soft-skinned ladies, who scream
loudest, Logan, and talk soonest and most. Imagine a young lady
accustomed all her life to deference, who hadn’t had a hand laid upon
her in anger since she was a naughty small child; and then think of
her, to her surprise and chagrin, abruptly treated to the worst that
the human body can stand. How she would scream, Logan, and babble all
she knew, and beg to be let off; and you would have the interesting
experience of watching the process, though unable to intervene. Suppose
Miss Mary MacAskival were the young lady? I’m sure she could tell us
a great deal about you.” Jackman’s marvellous eyes glinted. “Torment
is the great leveller, Logan: in torment, the colonel’s lady and Judy
O’Grady are sisters under the skin. There are no class distinctions
in agony; our Miss MacAskival would behave like the lowest trull from
Piccadilly, except that she would scream louder and talk sooner.”

It required a considerable effort, but Logan kept a smiling
countenance. If he protested, or showed any sign of weakness, Jackman
would take precisely this course; he was being sounded. Indifference on
his part, just now, was the chief hope for Mary.

“Ah, well, Dr. Jackman, you and I are playing for higher stakes than
a slip of a girl, aren’t we? If you must, you must; but I may as well
tell you that you’d be wasting the time of both of us. Miss MacAskival
knows only just what I found necessary to tell her, which is precious
little. As for my being racked vicariously by her discomforts--why, you
and I got past that a good time ago, didn’t we, Jackman? ‘O had ye been
where I ha’ been, and seen wha’ I ha’ seen....’ When fellows like us
have supped long on horrors, another squeal or two doesn’t much matter.
Besides, I doubt whether you have much taste for twisting ladies’ arms,
Jackman. I know you did your share of the disagreeable business, that
very sort of business, in Barcelona and Bucharest--oh, I know all about
you, Jackman”--here Jackman grimaced, taken aback--“but really, though
you make such operations sound jolly, they aren’t very good fun, are
they, now? One never quite grows accustomed to them; they stick in the
craw; and what’s worse, they stick at the back of the brain, don’t
they? Even our friend Royall, I suspect, doesn’t relish that business
as he should.”

“Even so, Logan, I wouldn’t have to turn my own hands to the work, you
know. Those strapping fellows downstairs would jump at the chance.
They’ve been somewhat inhibited from their accustomed earthy pleasures
here in Carnglass, poor chaps, and some haven’t had their way with a
woman for months. Your recent little _contretemps_ with Anderson, for
instance--I’m certain Anderson would perform the task with enthusiasm.
They’re a trifle coarse-fibred, my men, and to apply the _peine fort et
dure_ to a young lady would be quite their cup of tea.”

“No doubt, no doubt, old chap.” Here Logan took a knight from Jackman.
“I have limitless confidence in their aptitude for such work, if for no
other. But the powers that be still would tend to hold you personally
responsible, wouldn’t they, now? And suppose the interrogation should
all be in vain--why, however could you explain? Nothing does a
diligent man’s reputation more serious damage than an unauthorized and
unnecessary atrocity. _You_ ought to know that by this time, Jackman.”

“The things I did, others told me to do, Logan.” Jackman’s lips worked.
He lost another pawn.

“Quite. But you went rather beyond specific instructions, didn’t you? I
don’t advise you to exceed instructions here in Carnglass.”

Jackman ran a hand lightly across his forehead, distractedly touching
the little round soft patch in the middle with a forefinger. He
ventured out a rook too far, and lost it to Logan. Then he looked,
silent, into Logan’s eyes. The gaze of those great glowing pupils of
Jackman’s was hard to bear. Into Logan’s mind came the sentence, “And
if thy light be darkness, how great shall be that darkness.” It was
just possible that he might prove a match of Edmund Jackman now, though
the odds were against him. The man’s brain must be damaged, and under
Jackman’s outward imperiousness, Logan suspected, vacillation was
gnawing away. Logan thought also that had he encountered Jackman at the
height of the man’s powers, Mary would have had a sorry knight-errant.
But now the merciless energy and talent which had been Jackman’s were
flickering in the socket, like enough, and Logan had to deal only with
the remnant of a bad man. In Jackman’s ears sounded the wings of the
Furies, and his mind sank further into doubt and dread. Or so Logan
surmised, looking into those splendid, troubling eyes. It was just
barely conceivable that Logan might defeat this failing master of
deceit.

Logan started, and shook his head to rouse his consciousness. Had
Jackman been attempting to mesmerize him? If so, the attempted
paralysis of will had not succeeded, what with Logan’s own mind
being full of plots and stratagems. Yet Jackman might have come near
successful hypnosis; Logan had a feeling that the man had been asking
him questions, in a low, almost friendly voice, to which Logan had
given no answers as yet.

Just now Jackman was saying, ever so softly, “Who _are_ your friends
outside the Old House, out there in the wet and the dark?”

“Friends?” Logan spoke shrilly, alarmed at his own near-slip into
reverie or trance. “Friends? Whose friends? If anyone’s outside,
they’re no people of mine.” Logan regretted this admission as soon as
he had made it; it would have done no harm to keep Jackman wondering
whether he had an accomplice or two hidden in the bracken. Indeed,
perhaps Jackman had begun to extract the truth from him by hypnosis,
and Logan had escaped from the domination of those black eyes only in
the nick of time.

But Jackman shook his head slowly, in disbelief; and his eyes went to
the window of that room high in the tower, almost as if he feared to
see some face pressed against the pane, far above the living rock of
the Old House’s foundation. It was borne in upon Logan that Jackman’s
unease was greater than his own fears.

Jackman licked his thin lips. “Why, Logan, who do you expect me to
believe they are?” If the mystery back there behind the bracken had
shaken Jackman this much, the panic must be worse among the men below
stairs, with Rab’s hysteria to work upon them. “If they were police
or intelligence people,” Jackman said, almost as if he expected to be
overheard by some presence in that dusky painted chamber, “they would
have swooped upon us long ago; they wouldn’t skulk about, picking off
first one man and then another.”

“Rab told you that it was Tam Lagg: old Lagg, Dr. Jackman, that you
sent over the cliffs a thousand feet down to the rocks and the sea,
while he screamed of his wife and his bairns.”

Jackman looked at Logan astonished. “You, Logan--were you watching
then? But no, you’ll have had that from Donley, before you finished
with him. Lagg? What are you talking of? I saw him strike a crag half
way down, and bounce off like a ball, and then fall to the sea. Such a
thing doesn’t walk again.”

“Not alive,” Logan replied. “No, not alive.” Jackman’s eyes dilated.
Yes, he could sound this note, Logan decided: the black beast was upon
Jackman’s shoulders, and the conjuror was bewitched. If ever a man
was haunted, it was Jackman, stalked by Spanish victims and Roumanian
spectres, and now with the wraith of Lagg at his heels. “See here,
Jackman: you raise sham bogles to frighten old women, and you laugh
up your sleeve. But when you play with things from the abyss, you
run risks. In this dead island of Carnglass, all round us things are
ready to stir, if they’re called. I felt them in Dalcruach clachan. In
Carnglass the dead are more than the living. And why shouldn’t Tam Lagg
rise? You gave him the death that he feared most to die. If ever you
set a spirit to walk the night, it was when you tossed that screaming
man from the headland at the back of St. Merin’s Chapel.”

As Logan spoke, a nasty change came over Jackman. His face went a sick
white, and his eyes closed, and he slumped in his chair. The horror
must be on him. His breath came hard. Logan began to think of closing
with him as he sat motionless across the table. But after a moment,
Jackman gasped, blinked, and fumbled for the pistol in his pocket; he
drew the gun and laid it before him, beside the chessboard.

“Then you feel it, too,” Jackman muttered, very low. “All about us, eh?
Oh, this is a damned house, a place of dreams, horrid dreams. Listen:
last night I walked the passages, for I didn’t dare to sleep, until I
was worn out. In the end, I lay on my bed, not closing my eyes. And
then it was not a bed, but a long, close tunnel or cave, and I was
stumbling along it. Away at the end, I could see something standing.
And it came to me that I myself was standing there, even though I
walked toward the thing. The Edmund Jackman at the end of the cave was
the Edmund Jackman that I might have been, if--if I had taken another
turn at the beginning. And as I came up to myself, wanting to see the
face, and the beauty of what I might have been, the thing turned, and
looked at me. Its face was the face of a goat. Ah, the slit eyes! And I
became one with it, and woke, and the horror still was on me.”

Infected by the man’s loathing of himself, and his fright, Logan also
lowered his voice to a whisper. “Would you rather have died in the cave
than have become one with the goat?”

“Yes,” said Jackman, “yes. It would be better to lie dead, dead like
Lagg. I thought then of the gelignite, and I think of it every day and
every night.” At this, Jackman shuddered, seemed to collect his wits,
scowled at Logan, and glanced dully at the Table-Men of Askival on the
board before him.

“Your move,” Logan reminded him. Edmund Jackman moved almost at random.
“So!” Logan shifted his queen. “Checkmate, Dr. Jackman.”

“Hell!” cried Jackman, reaching out his hand as if to sweep the pieces
to the floor.

“Easy!” Logan said, intercepting Jackman’s hand with his own. “There’s
but this one set in the world, you know.”

Once more their eyes met in a long, strange stare; then Jackman, to
Logan’s surprise, glanced down at the table. “Logan, or whatever
you are,” he said, almost pleadingly, “I don’t know whether you can
understand me. You’re a Party intellectual, I think, and the Party
believes it knows all things. Yet in some matters the Party is blind.
Just now I said ‘Hell.’ In Carnglass, I have learned that Hell is real.
That’s heresy in the Party; but I have looked on Hell. There is no
Heaven, but there is Hell.”

Jackman’s eyes were vacant now; he seemed to have forgotten to whom he
spoke. “Hell endures,” he went on. “I have been in Hell always. This
Carnglass is Hell. Don’t you know you were here in Carnglass before,
infinitely long ago? We fought here then--and I lost. In Carnglass
there is no time. Eternity is real here, and change is the delusion.
I know this in the nights, when I walk the corridors. It is only in
the day I can pretend that I am alive, or that what things I do can
possibly save me from the torment. In the nights it is Hell that is
real, and the Party is a sham. Do you understand that? And I know that
you came here to send me to the torment, as you did before.”

Many times, Logan had heard the phrase “possessed of a devil.” But
not until this moment, as he sat opposite Jackman with the chessmen
between them, had he perceived the full and dreadful meaning of the
words. The dark powers had claimed Edmund Jackman long since, and what
sat opposite him was only the husk of a human being. Even the husk
was crumbling now. Yet out of that desiccated scrap of mortality, dry
and empty as the armor of last summer’s locust, there echoed now and
again cries of anguish, the vain contrition of the damned. Whatever
traditionary spectres might throng round the Old House of Fear, here
right before Logan sat the ghost of what once might have been a vessel
for honor.

Again Jackman’s eyes had closed, and the man or devil did not stir in
the chair. What visions came and went behind those fallen eyelids,
Logan preferred not to think. Jackman had drifted somewhere beyond this
world of sense, for the moment. In the middle of that pallid forehead,
the nasty round spot, the Third Eye, seemed to pulsate faintly, as if
keeping night watch upon Logan.

Hugh Logan fought clear of the contagion of madness. Minutes, precious
minutes, were slipping away. By a heap of chessmen lay the little
pistol. Should he make a try for it? Or was this some sort of trap
that Jackman had set? No, the damned man’s trance was genuine. If he
chose, Logan could leap up, snatch the pistol, and make for the stairs.
But that gang of murderers was below. And where might Mary and he run
to? Well, let him get his hands on a rifle, and he might hold the old
tower against them for a time. It might be possible to keep Jackman a
hostage. The scheme was fantastic, but the only probable alternative
was torture and death for Mary MacAskival and himself. Rising silent
from his chair, Logan stretched out a hand toward the gun.

“As you were!” It was Royall’s harsh voice, at Logan’s back. A
revolver-muzzle pressed into his spine. Royall’s long, almost skeletal
arm reached past him and snatched up the little pistol by the chessmen.
“Over to the wall,” Royall said, “and stand there till I tell you to
turn round. I’ve been behind the screen these ten minutes past, Logan.”




11


It would have been a lunatic try anyhow, Logan thought as he faced the
wall. Behind him, Royall was ministering to Dr. Jackman, but Logan felt
sure that if he swung round, Royall would not miss.

“Here, a little brandy,” Royall was saying, rather in the tone of a
nurse. “Come round now, Dr. Jackman. It’s no time for fancies.” There
was a sound as if Royall were gently slapping Jackman’s cheeks. “That’s
it, sir: are you quite awake now, Dr. Jackman?”

Jackman’s voice came choked and faint, but grew in power after the
first few words. “Askival,” Jackman was saying. “Askival--where is he?
And Lagg?”

“Take hold of yourself, Dr. Jackman. We’ve this fellow Logan to deal
with. Very well, Logan: come over here and sit down.”

For the present, Royall had assumed command. With his revolver
he gestured toward the chair in which Logan had sat during the
chess-match, and Logan took it without protest. Royall continued to
stand. On the other side of the table, Jackman seemed in possession of
his faculties again.

“We’d best search this man,” Royall said. He slipped a hand inside
Logan’s jacket, still standing at Logan’s back, and found his wallet.
Logan did not move: Jackman was watching him keenly, his hand on the
pistol. They would find no identification in the wallet, for Logan
had put his passport and anything else with his name on it into the
knapsack.

“No, sir, there’s nothing with a name, worse luck,” Royall murmured.
“Stand up and take off your jacket, Logan.” Logan did as he was told.
In a moment Royall thrust the jacket back to him. “And no labels, Dr.
Jackman. The man must be an old hand at his game.”

“Tompkins searched his room this morning?” Jackman asked.

“Yes; and he found nothing but a razor and the like. No papers--and not
even the canvas sack this man brought with him. I suppose he burnt it
in the fireplace, or else flung it out of the window and down the cliff
to the sea.”

“Have a man look along the rocks at low tide,” Jackman said. “Yes, our
friend Logan undoubtedly has had experience as an agent of some sort.”

“You needn’t bother to have a man risk his bones on those weedy
ledges,” Logan told them. “I burnt the sack on the coals, last night.”
He trusted that Mary had tucked away the pack in some really secure
hidie-hole.

“For your circumstances, Logan,” Royall muttered, “you seem
unreasonably cheerful. I shouldn’t care to find myself in your present
situation.” Royall ran his hands carefully along Logan’s trousers and
into his pockets. “No, Dr. Jackman--no knife, and no papers stitched
into the linings.”

“Why,” said Logan, “I suppose a man might as well laugh as cry. And
then, don’t you know, it’s not I who need to fash--as we true-born
Scots say. It’s you gentlemen who will have to make your peace, if you
can, with the men that will be here all too soon for your comfort.”

“Sit down again, Logan,” Royall ordered. “You needn’t sing that tune
for us. If you had any people at your back, we’d have seen them before
this.”

“Oh?” Logan answered, amicably. “And who do you suppose took
Carruthers? Donley was dead hours before you missed Carruthers,
remember.”

Jackman and Royall stared at each other, silent. In that moment, Logan
almost felt a touch of pity for them. Both must have been reared and
educated well enough--very well, indeed. What flaws of character
or intellectual false turnings had brought them into this ruthless
business, he could not tell. They might have commenced, like others,
full of humanitarian sentimentality. And then, perhaps, demon ideology,
with its imperatives and its inexorable dogmas, its sobersided
caricature of religion, had swept them on to horrors. Ideological
fanaticism had made of Jackman the goat-man, mastered by lust: but not
the lust for women’s bodies. Jackman’s was the _libido dominandi_, the
tormented seeking after power that ceases not until death. And in the
flame of that lust for power, Jackman and Royall would be burnt up,
today or next week or next month: they were at the end of their devil’s
bargain, and the fiend would claim his own.

Now, in this oppressive silent moment, the conviction came to Logan
that these two artists of disintegration were more frightened than
he. He felt surprised to find himself thinking clearly enough, almost
ruminating, in this tension that made electric the ancient room with
the painted ceiling. Because frightened, Jackman and Royall were the
more dangerous; but also their brains were stagnant with dread.

Fear, it crossed Logan’s mind, is the normal condition of man, after
all. Quiet ages and safe lands are the rare exceptions in history.
Nowadays the tides of disorder were gnawing at whatever security and
justice still stood in the world, quite as the swell round Carnglass
sought to bring down that heap of gray stones to the mindless anonymity
of the ocean. With growing speed, the brooding spectre of terror,
almost palpable in Carnglass, was enveloping the world. This island was
the microcosm of modern existence.

And here in the haunted stronghold of the Old House of Fear, Jackman
and Royall and their gang found themselves caught in their own snare.
Even the dull criminals below stairs, huddled tipsily by the kitchen
fire, were unmanned by a dim sense of catastrophe, caught up in a
horror of the empty island, where mist and silence seemed to have made
away with time, so that Glasgow and Liverpool and London were fancies
out of an illusory past.

Jackman himself, with his distraught imagination, his ruined talents
once near to genius, fancied himself snared here by destiny, condemned
to give reality to a myth. And was he wrong? In the Old House, Logan
doubted where the realm of spirit ended and the realm of flesh began.

In this dead island, all Jackman’s cleverness lay frustrated, and the
strange chance or power that had brought Logan to Carnglass on this day
seemed to fill the close air in that forgotten tower-room. For Edmund
Jackman, Logan might be something not quite canny, at once a man and
an occult agent. Even for Royall, Hugh Logan must seem a retributive
figure, from Party or police, mercilessly calm with the knowledge that
others were not far behind him.

For all their effort to behave as if they still were masters of the
island, a tautness almost hysterical had crept into Jackman and Royall,
and their voices were strained. What for years they had dealt out to
others, now waited for them; and they had forgotten the meaning of
mercy. There was no justice to which they could appeal. By fear they
had lived; and now the fear which they and their sort had carried
throughout the world was claiming them also. Having murdered order,
these two at last were cast into the outer darkness.

Jackman was speaking. Had something like a quaver crept into that
urbane and sardonic voice? “Well, Royall,” he was saying, “what will we
do with this Logan?”

Royall shifted uncertainly behind Logan’s chair. This man, it occurred
to Logan, saw the growing madness in his leader, and yet was loyal--his
last link with old-fangled human affections.

“Dr. Jackman,” Royall said, “I have a theory concerning our friend
Logan. I believe he’s one of Vlanarov’s people.”

Jackman now spoke with his old decisiveness, as if another spirit had
entered into that sinister body, and as if what had happened during the
preceding half hour had quite washed away from his memory. “Possibly,”
Jackman commented. “Quite possibly. The thought had crossed my mind,
too. If he should be, perhaps we can arrive at satisfactory terms.
Well, Logan?”

Logan devoutly wished, at this juncture, that he had studied more
attentively the recent history of Eastern Europe. If he had fought in
Europe, rather than in the Pacific, that might have been of some help;
or had he been in intelligence, rather than the infantry. As it was,
the name Vlanarov told him a little, but not enough. If memory served
him aright, Vlanarov was such a one as Jackman, but a much bigger
fish. Logan rather thought that Vlanarov had been at Bela Kun’s side
in Hungary, a generation ago, and in Madrid during the Civil War,
and after 1945 a terror in Poland. Through all the vicissitudes of
Party feuds and all the eddies of ideology in the buffer states, the
shadowy but formidable figure of Vlanarov had glided scatheless. No
one ever saw a photograph of the man. It had been his peculiar talent
to anticipate the triumph of particular factions within the Soviet
states, and to shift masterfully in precisely the proper moment from
one interpretation of Marxist doctrine to the corrected version.
Whenever a vanquished clique fell to its ruin, Vlanarov sorted through
the wreck for such survivors as might still do mischief to the new
Party orthodoxy, and clipped their claws and their wings for them--or
something worse. Certain Trotskyites called Vlanarov “The Vulture.”

This much, Logan recalled. And he could see that conceivably the pose
of being one of Vlanarov’s people, at watch upon Jackman’s schemes,
might save his neck. But the great difficulty was that he knew far
too little of Party intrigues to play this role to the full. For that
matter, he was not precisely sure that Vlanarov still was alive: Royall
might be setting a trap for him.

“Yes,” Royall was saying, “I fancy that he’s a Vlanarovite, sent over
by Bruhl from Brussels, to report on our work. Only one of that sort
could have made away with Donley so efficiently.”

Jackman, now tense and erect in his chair, nodded. “Logan,” he said,
“if you come from Bruhl or Vlanarov, with instructions for us or
perhaps for a survey--why, tell me now. After all, you can’t expect to
remain anonymous much longer, because tomorrow or next day I should
receive word from Glasgow, and perhaps from Paris.”

“No, Jackman, I don’t think you will.” Logan had resolved to sound as
much like a Vlanarovite as possible, without being expected to furnish
proof positive. “You’ve contrived to get your boats burnt for you by a
stupid old Irishman. You’ve had part of your wireless stolen”--Jackman
started at this--“and you’ve no way of sending word to shore. And you
saddled yourself with the clumsiest set of agents that ever I set
eyes upon. Gare, that drunken incompetent; Dowie, who’s fit only for
filching sixpences from slum boys; Jock Anderson, all swagger and no
nerve. We gobbled the lot of them.” Logan opened his right hand wide
and closed it hard, as if crushing something within. “They’re awa’
doon the water, Jackman. An old hand like you! One would think you had
turned to drink. But you’ve turned to old wives’ tales, instead.”

Jackman bit his lip. “Do you mean--do you mean they’ve been taken?”

“Liquidated is our word, Dr. Jackman. They were, after all, depreciated
assets. And were I you, Jackman, I’d look sharp. What have you
accomplished here in Carnglass? The rags and tags of information you’ve
collected in foraging round the islands are next to worthless. We have
better ways of mapping those missile sites. And playing with gelignite,
like a boy with firecrackers! You’d never get the stuff past the guards
at the installations, if you seriously tried: these hangdog fellows
you’ve collected here in Carnglass haven’t the heart or the mind for
it. You drove out your only experienced man, Donley, so that he had to
be liquidated for fear he’d talk. Unauthorized enthusiasm! It will be
your ruin, Jackman.”

“But after all,” Royall put in eagerly, “Bruhl himself gave his consent
to this project.”

“Tentative consent is one thing,” Logan said; “approval of blunders in
operation is another.”

Jackman ran his fingers across his forehead in his old gesture
of incertitude. “Logan,” he said, “I believe you really are from
Vlanarov’s people. You’re a Party intellectual: you’ve the look and
tone of it. In short, you’re a man we can talk with. You must know as
well as we do what has gone wrong with this scheme. The people in the
Continent want action from me, but they’ll take no risks nor spend any
money. For that matter, they’ll give me no men. I am expected to extort
the funds from old women, conscript a set of criminals and hold them
together by blackmail and intimidation, and pay the penalty by myself,
with my own neck, if everything falls in pieces.

“For years those people have used Royall and me in this way. Edmund
Jackman, who ought to be forming policy at the upper levels, set to
leading a gang of banditti at the back of beyond! It’s enough to craze
a man. As one intellectual to another, do you see any justice in that?
Bureaucracy on the one hand, fanatic ideological rigidity on the other;
and the best minds in the Party, like yours and mine, fallen between
the stools. In my situation, what would you have done differently?” He
was almost wheedling.

“I’m not authorized to offer any opinion on that subject, as yet,”
Logan said, with what he hoped was an enigmatic smile.

“Perhaps I had better make it clear, Logan,” Royall put in, “that Dr.
Jackman’s association with Beria arose solely from necessity, and from
his obedience to Party discipline. We regret as much as anyone does
what happened to Vlanarov’s father.”

“Do you have a cigarette?” said Logan. “I suppose lunch will be ready
soon.”

“Logan,” Jackman demanded, intensely, “are you here to supplant me?
If you are, why this shilly-shallying? Can’t you have the decency to
present your instructions?”

“Why, I’m in no position as yet to give definite orders, Jackman. The
decisions must be yours; I decline any responsibility. But this I will
suggest: disarm your men, lock up the guns, and give me the keys to the
gunroom and the cellars where you keep the gelignite. Send all the men
down to the New House except Tompkins and Royall. Light a beacon, or
send up flares, and put Carnglass in communication with the mainland
through ordinary channels. Leave me in charge of the Old House. Then
wait the turn of events. If you do this, I’ll put in my good word for
you with my superiors.”

This was spreading it perilously thick, Logan thought, but one might as
well be taken for a tiger as for an alley-cat.

Jackman sucked in his breath. “You ask too much, Logan, whoever
or whatever you are. Is this some plan to make Royall and me the
scapegoats? To hand us over to the police or intelligence, possibly, by
way of covering some one else’s blunders? I’ve been treated that way
before, Logan, and I’ll not endure it again. Sooner than that--sooner
than the gaol or the gallows--I’d walk into the cellars and detonate
the gelignite. I’d rather blow Carnglass into pebbles than be the dupe
once more.”

“You asked for suggestions, Jackman. I told you I’d assume no
responsibilities.” Logan had not dared to hope that Jackman actually
would fall into his impromptu snare; but at least it served to bewilder
Jackman and Royall.

“And if we did disarm the men,” Royall volunteered, “who would keep
off your friends outside? The ones that made away with Carruthers,
and sent Rab mad? What’s your scheme, Logan--to liquidate all of us
in Carnglass? To send us to join Gare and Dowie and Jock Anderson
and Donley? To make sure that no one here ever has an opportunity to
furnish evidence to the government?”

Inadvertently, he might have carried the game too far, Logan saw: he
might get himself drowned for a commissar instead of a police-agent.

“Damn it,” Jackman almost shouted, the patch in the middle of his
forehead twitching, “are you really from Vlanarov? Do you have another
name?”

“I’ll tell you when there’s need for it,” was all Logan answered him.
For Jackman was losing control of himself, and it was conceivable that
he might shoot Logan where he stood.

“Now, now, Dr. Jackman,” Royall murmured, “if he _is_ from Vlanarov,
we’d best not....”

“No!” Jackman cried, his air of power returning to him. “No, you’ll
tell me soon enough. If you’re sent by that mutual-admiration circle
in the Continent, I’ll have that news out of you, and make you pay
for it. And if you’re something worse, I’ll twist that truth from you.
I know your medicine, Logan. You’re going into the Whiskey Bottle;
there’s no man who can endure that place long. You’ll talk with me, and
thank me for the chance.”

“Dr. Jackman, I really do think ...” Royall began, uneasily. But
Jackman cut him off.

“Mr. Royall, get Anderson and Caggia. We’ll put our friend Logan away
below stairs. The responsibility is mine. And while I’m at the Whiskey
Bottle, you make the rounds of the house, Royall, and make sure all the
men have ammunition enough.”

It never would do to let Jackman see any sign of weakness in him, for
the man subsisted on others’ dread, and was most merciless, Logan
guessed, when they were most piteous. Deliberately Logan gathered up
the Table-Men and set them in their casket. “I thought you had a taste
for sherry, Jackman,” he said, “but you seem to have whiskey in mind
for me.” Jackman answered nothing. Then Anderson and Ferd entered.
Anderson’s jaw was bound up in a bloody handkerchief, and the man
looked murder at Logan.

In silence, Jackman and Anderson and Ferd Caggia took Logan down the
worn stair in the thickness of the wall. They took him to the ground
floor of the old tower, where first he had met Mary MacAskival only
yesterday about this hour, though it seemed an age ago. And they shoved
him toward one corner of that great vaulted empty room. In that corner,
flush with the flagstones, a small stair twisted downward, below the
level of the rock on which the Old House stood. Anderson thrust him
forward with a curse, so that Logan staggered down the short flight,
the three men behind him.

The place below was wholly dark. Caggia carried a petrol lantern, and
he lit it and swung it round. This crypt, hollowed from the rock,
apparently contained nothing but what looked like a broken windlass in
a far corner, and what seemed to be a coil or heap of rope in a near
corner. And in the middle of the floor was a circular lid or cover of
stone, with an iron ring set into it. Caggia and Anderson commenced to
drag back this lid.

This being, perhaps, his last appearance above ground, Logan thought
he ought to improve the shining hour. “I do hope, Anderson,” he said,
“that your jaw doesn’t pain you.” Anderson responded with an obscenity.
“I am acquainted with your brother Jock in the Gallowgate,” Logan went
on. “A lively man, Jock. He kicked me in the jaw not long ago.”

“Gude for Jock,” growled Anderson. “I’ll soon gie ye anither.”

“But we caught him, Davie Anderson,” Logan continued, “and put him
where he’ll kick no more. We caught Jim Dowie and his wife Jeanie,
too, and the others. And now all the world knows of the criminals of
Carnglass.”

“Enough of that, Logan,” Jackman put in. Anderson and Ferd were
standing by the open mouth of a pit or cistern, staring attentively at
Logan. Jackman pressed the muzzle of the little pistol into Logan’s
back and urged him toward the gulf. This must be the pit, for dead
herring or dead men, described in Balmullo’s account of the Old House.

“Dr. Jackman,” Logan said in some haste, “I do trust that when,
tomorrow or the next day, you decide in despair to blow up the Old
House, yourself, and everyone round about, you will allow these two
fine fellows to join me in this well of yours. It will probably be the
safest place for some miles round. I doubt whether Anderson and Caggia
are so ready to die as you are.”

Ferd Caggia’s perpetual grin diminished. He glanced appraisingly at Dr.
Jackman. “Ferd,” said Logan, “presumably you will be brought to trial
for treason, at the least, even if you escape Dr. Jackman’s gelignite.
They tell me that you are an excellent shot. If I were you, I should
endeavor to persuade Dr. Jackman to remain a comfortable distance from
the crypt where he keeps the explosives.”

“Logan,” Jackman muttered in his ear, “do you want a bullet in your
spine?”

“By no means, Dr. Jackman. And try not to forget that there will be
people asking after me, very soon.” Would they try to throw him into
the pit that stood open right by his feet?

“Kneel down,” Jackman told him, “and you may have a glimpse of the
Whiskey Bottle. Do you know the Mamertine prison in Rome? This is very
like, Logan, but deeper.”

Caggia had tied a long cord to the lantern, which now he lowered into
the hole and swung in a circle, slowly, so as to show the interior of
the place. Kneeling reluctantly, Logan made out an immense dry depth.
The pit was shaped roughly like a bottle, narrow at the mouth and
gradually widening, and going down, down. It was irregular, however,
with bulges and depressions here and there in its sides, as if more
the work of nature than of man. From the mouth, one could not get a
clear view of the whole interior. The lantern sank lower and lower
into the abyss, and still Logan could not perceive the bottom; then
Caggia hauled it up. In this place, according to Balmullo’s history of
Carnglass, had been found the deformed skeleton that the crofters had
called the Firgower. If ever the pit had been filled with salt herring,
it must have enabled the Old House to withstand a siege of months,
supposing there was fresh water enough to drink.

Logan stood firm upon the lip of the Whiskey Bottle. Nothing but
audacity, he felt, would discourage Jackman from indulging in a new
atrocity at this moment. “Look sharp that our friend Dr. Jackman
doesn’t put you, too, down this well, Caggia,” he remarked. “It must
tell on one’s nerves to have a lunatic bent upon self-destruction for
an employer.”

“There you’ll stay, Logan, until you feel inclined to talk with us,”
Jackman said, rolling the words thickly. “If I don’t forget you. You’ll
not eat or drink until we let you out--if we do. I won’t say when we’ll
come back to inquire after you: it may be hours, or it may be days. A
man does not stay sane very long in the Whiskey Bottle. If you come out
in time, there’s no harm done. Scream when you wish to come out, and
perhaps we will hear you. Better men than you have gone down and not
come up alive. Down with you, now.”

Anderson had dragged from the corner a long rope ladder. He made it
fast to two iron rings sunk in the floor of the crypt, and let the rope
fall into the pit. “There you go,” said Jackman. “Goodnight to you, Mr.
Logan.”

“I think I’ll not go,” Logan told them. They scarcely could carry him
down the swaying rope ladder.

“In that event,” Jackman remarked--and Anderson sniggered--“we would
have to pitch you in, and it’s nearly fifty feet to the bottom, so you
would be broken. Or we would have to lower you in at a rope’s end, head
first, with risk to your skull. I advise you to choose the ladder.”

There was nothing else for it. Logan set his feet and hands on the
swaying ladder, and began to descend. As he went down, the feet of the
three men disappeared from view, and presently he was in blackness.
After what seemed eternity, swinging and twisting about on the ropes,
he felt no rung-slat under his foot, and halted, twirling back and
forth like a top in space. Did they mean him to fall and break his legs
or back? “It doesn’t reach,” he called up. The echo was melancholy.

“Jump for it,” Jackman’s voice sounded ever so faintly above.

“I’ll be damned if I do,” Logan roared back.

“You’ll be damned if you don’t,” called Jackman, “for we’ll loose the
ladder at this end, and you’ll fall anyhow, and there’ll be no way
back.”

Waiting was no comfort. Logan relinquished his hold on the ladder,
expecting his end. But he fell only six or seven feet, bruising his
back on the jagged stone floor, which was quite dry. He could hear
the rustle of the ladder being hauled up. The light of the lantern
glimmered at the top of the Bottle, and a head was thrust over the
mouth of the shaft, silhouetted against the petrol glare.

“Should auld acquaintance be forgot,” Jackman said, “shriek when you
care for our company.” He laughed. Then he said something else, more
faintly; but Logan thought it was, “Once you put me here, Askival.”
There came a scraping sound from above, and the lid was dragged back
over the Bottle’s mouth, cutting off Logan from the world. He was shut
into the tomb now, as in his dream on the second night in Carnglass.
As if the stone cover had not been coffin-lid enough, an iron door had
stood ajar, Logan remembered, at the entrance to the crypt, a big key
in the lock. No doubt they would turn the key. Goodbye, Mary MacAskival.




12


In the Whiskey Bottle, it would not do to brood more than a man might
help, for that way lay despair: especially when one thought of what
might be done to Mary MacAskival, high above. So Logan busied himself,
at first, in creeping round the circumference of the Bottle’s floor,
feeling everywhere. There was nothing to feel but lumpy naked rock,
everywhere gouged by ancient chisels.

The batter of the circular sides made it impossible for him even to
think of climbing, fly-like, toward the mouth. These pleasures soon
were exhausted. His watch had not worked well since he splashed ashore
in Carnglass, and perhaps that was to the good. Already he was hungry
and thirsty; but this last must be chiefly a psychological oppression,
as the damp air of Carnglass made it unnecessary for a man to drink
much water a day.

Although he had been in the place but a quarter of an hour, probably,
the problem of fresh air began to worry Logan. It was silly to think
about it so soon, of course: the immense cubic capacity of the Bottle
would give him oxygen enough for a long time, and conceivably enough to
support life leaked beneath the rude stone at the mouth, anyway. But
one thought about such things in the Bottle, for lack of aught else to
do.

In all that dead island, the Whiskey Bottle was the deadest place. Not
even an insect could live here; and the place was so dry that, perhaps,
not even a lichen could cling to the sloping walls. One could think
only of dead things: of the deformed skeleton found on this floor, and
the presences that drifted through Jackman’s guilty brain. It wouldn’t
do for a man to think such thoughts: not for a man who meant to keep
his wits about him. If ever they let him out of the Bottle, he would
need all the wits and all the strength he could muster. The best thing
to do, then, was to sleep. Luckily, Logan was very tired from the
strain of the past several days, and from having had so little sleep
last night, what with his colloquy with Mary MacAskival. And sleep
never had come hard to him, in the worst of times and places. He groped
about the rough floor until he found a tolerable area upon which to
stretch himself, and there he lay down, his head on his arm, and soon
drifted off. Dreams came, hideous dreams; but afterward they were all a
blur to him. Now and then he tossed and woke imperfectly; then, like a
sick man, he sank back into the sanctuary of the unconscious.

How many hours later it was that a noise woke him, he could not say.
What could make a noise in the Bottle? Nothing living. It was a faint
dragging noise. Then high overhead, he could perceive the faintest
half-moon of light. Someone was dragging back the stone lid of the
Bottle, slowly.

Would Jackman and Royall pull him out and put him to more direct
torture? If they had tormented the truth about him out of Mary
MacAskival, the odds were that they would put him into the sea, as a
man who knew too much of them, and whose death might be explained with
tolerable ease. It might be easier for him to refuse to come up, and
hope that aid might come from the mainland in time. They could descend,
of course, and tie him, and haul him to the top; but that would mean a
fight. If they shot him, that would be evidence of foul play, supposing
his body ever were washed up.

Now something scraped and rustled, and barely brushed the top of his
head: it must be the rope ladder. Reaching up, he grasped the thin
strip of wood that was the bottom rung. Still Jackman, if he were
above, said nothing. But a light probed downward toward Logan; someone
up there held an electric torch. He had might as well take this
dubious chance. Although it had been long since Logan had gone in for
gymnastics, he had strong arms, and so contrived to pull his chin up to
the level of the bottom rung, get a fresh grip, and bring up his legs.
And then he commenced the swaying climb toward the Bottle’s mouth.

As he neared the top, the torch dazzled him. Then a hand caught his,
helping him over the edge to the floor of the crypt. No sooner had
Logan got to his feet than a pair of arms was flung around his neck,
and a small body hung for a moment upon his, in fright and delight.
“They’ve broken no bone of you, Hugh?” said Mary MacAskival. Before he
could reply, she kissed him, and then flashed the electric torch the
length of his body, as if to be sure he were all there. “Don’t speak
above a wee whisper,” she murmured in his ear, “and come over here, for
we must be off.” Taking his hand, she led him through the dark toward a
corner of the crypt.

“One glimpse of you, anyway,” said Hugh. Taking the torch, he sent the
beam over and behind her. She was barefoot, but with a pair of little
walking-shoes slung round her neck. On her back she had Logan’s own
rucksack, looking as if it were crammed with things. Her back was to
what seemed to be the low circular coping of a well, with a derelict
windlass above it.

“We daren’t talk now,” the girl said, “for we’ll have but a quarter
of an hour, at best, before Niven gives the alarm. He’s sentry at the
garden door on the floor above. I told him I was taking you food and
water, which you’re not supposed to have, and he let me pass, for he
knows I am a red-haired witch. Jackman will thrash the poor fellow
within an inch of his life when he finds we’re gone. Niven never
thought I could get out with you, of course. If he’d known that, even I
couldn’t have seduced him.”

“Seduced him?”

She chuckled. “Oh, don’t be silly. Has Dr. Jackman been telling you
more lies about me? I mean, subverted his loyalty to Jackman. I gave
Niven five pounds and nearly a full bottle of rum. All right now, Hugh:
take off your trousers.”

He was bemused. “Whatever for?”

“Why, silly, we’re going down the cistern, and there’s water in it, and
you might catch your death of cold outside, with wet trousers. I think
you may keep your shirt on; we sha’n’t go so deep, I hope. Here, take
the pack, and carry it, and stuff your trousers in it. I can kilt up my
skirt once we’re at the level of the water, but you could hardly slip
off your trousers in the middle of the shaft. You’d best take off your
shoes and stockings, and sling them round your neck, the way I have,
too. You needn’t be shy: I’ll go down first, and I’ll point the torch
the other way.”

Logan stared into the cistern. In the beam of the torch, he could see
rusted iron rungs set into the masonry, leading downward; but they
ended in still water. “If we’re to drown, Mary,” he said, “it had might
as well be in the sea.”

“What with the gutters of the tower being half clogged,” she went on,
“the water level down there is very low nowadays--twelve or fifteen
feet, at best--and I feared they might find the arch, but they haven’t.
It’s perfectly feasible: Malcolm Mor and I did it four years ago,
like a bomb. Why, it’s a lark, Hugh; come along. The last one down
is an old maid.” Hiking her skirt halfway up her white thighs, Mary
MacAskival stepped over the well-coping, swung round, and began to
descend the slimy iron rungs. “I locked the crypt door on the inside,
for I have keys, you know,” she whispered up, “but Niven may be
pounding on it any second, so be quick with you.”

There was nothing for it but to obey this madcap. Down Logan went into
the cistern; he hoped the old rungs would hold. Once his foot caught
the girl’s fingers, and she suppressed a cry. He heard a faint splash
of water below, and turned the torch downward, looking between his
bare legs. Mary MacAskival, her skirt held up almost to her shoulders,
was more than waist-high in the black water. “There is nothing in the
world,” she volunteered, “quite like a cold tub. Now do as I do, and
mind your head, for from floor to ceiling is scarcely more than four
feet.” She vanished.

Dismayed, Hugh Logan descended to his waist in the cold water. Then,
on his left, he saw the arch of which Mary had spoken: a round-headed
masonry arch, very old. The cistern water came to within two feet of
the crown of it. Gingerly, Logan stretched out a leg, found the floor
of a passage under the arch, gripped Mary’s outstretched hand thrust
back from the passage, and swung himself from the iron rungs to a low
tunnel nearly filled with water; he had to stoop so that his face
cleared the surface by only a few inches, and his little pack, strapped
to his back, scraped against the roof.

Squeezing his hand, Mary MacAskival pulled him along the black passage,
the torch-beam gleaming on the water. She had her skirt twisted round
her neck. “One thing’s certain,” she panted, “they’ll not hear us here.
In the old days, this place was flooded altogether, except when The
MacAskival let water out of the cistern so that men could enter the
passage. Malcolm Mor--he was the old gardener, remember?--told me
that his father’s father’s father’s uncle knew of this place, though
no living man had seen it for a hundred years and more. Malcolm and I
found it out together. We had grand larks.”

After six yards or so, the floor began to slope upward, fairly sharply;
and after a dozen yards, they were free of the water. “No trousers
for you yet, modest Hugh,” Mary said, though she had let her skirt
fall into place. “There is water still to come.” A moment later, they
entered a small square rock chamber, beyond which loomed another narrow
passage. “The Picts made this, as they made the Whiskey Bottle, Hugh.
Look there.” She pointed the torch toward one wall, and by it Hugh
made out a faint band of carving on the wall: little hooded and caped
figures, faceless, some riding on queer little ponies. “This was a
chapel, I think, or a tomb; but we haven’t a moment to spare just now.”
She led the way into the further passage, the floor of which sloped
downward again. “We’re far beyond the Old House now, Hugh.”

The passage shot abruptly downward, and then ended in a solid barrier
of living rock. Did the girl mean them to crouch here indefinitely, on
the chance that help might come from the mainland before they starved?
“I think the Picts dug all this for a temple,” she was saying, “or a
king’s tomb; but the MacAskivals used it as a sortie-port in time of
siege, or a way of escape if worst came to worst. Oh, I’m not strong
enough. Tug at it, Hugh!” She was kneeling on the rough floor. Handing
the torch back to her, Hugh Logan felt under his hands a thick stone
slab, roughly rectangular. He tugged. It could be slid to one side, far
enough to allow them to squeeze through to whatever lay beneath. And
beneath was more water. But this water splashed and sucked, and the
strong stench of seaweed came up from it; and from beyond came the roar
of the wild Carnglass tide.

“We’re to go into that, Mary?” But Mary MacAskival already had swung
her handsome bare legs through the gap. The water just below snarled
and surged in the cave, as if full of murderous desire. “It’s past
midnight, Hugh, and the tide has ebbed.” She jumped down.

After all, Logan found when he followed her, the water came only
to their knees. At high tide, the passage would be impossible. He
scratched a foot on some sharp submerged stone. Roof and floor of the
cave now angled downward, and the water deepened; but by the time they
reached the entrance, it was no higher than their waists. “In the old
days,” Mary said, “little coracles came into this at low tide. There
is another cave like this on the northern shore, but larger, and far
harder to reach from the land.” She plucked a bit of seaweed from a
rock. “This is the carrageen. In a better time, I will make you a
pudding of it.” Then she ducked through the low mouth of the cave, Hugh
Logan behind her, and they were in the night, by the ocean, a cliff at
their backs, a splendid moon overhead.

For the first time in many days, the mist and drizzle had lifted from
Carnglass altogether; and for these islands, the sea was calm. But the
clear beauty of the night was small comfort to these two fugitives:
Jackman and his gang might hunt them down by that round moon. Mary
splashed through a rock pool toward the relatively low cliff of gray
stone that met the ocean at this point. “I think, Hugh, that by this
time they will have searched the Old House for us, and Jackman will
know we have got out. But they will not know the way that we have gone,
and perhaps Jackman cannot make the men follow him out of the house
this night, for they are afraid of every shadow now. Here we’re too
close to the Old House for safety. We’ll pass between Cailleach and the
sea-cliffs, and so up to St. Merin’s Chapel; that’s best.” When the two
of them had got to the foot of a faint path that seemed to wind up the
cliff, Mary put on shoes and stockings. “Now, Mr. Barrister Logan, you
pillar of respectability, you may wear trousers again.”

They climbed; they scrambled; they trotted; when they could, they
ran. From the cliffs they descended into the glen that twisted
round the hill of Cailleach, and hurried through heaps of stones
along a forgotten trail; here, once, had been a village, and Duncan
MacAskival’s people had lived under the thatch of one of these ruins.
The girl was agile as a deer; it was all Logan could do to keep up with
her, for his rucksack was curiously heavy. The moonlight helped them
to make speed, but also it would leave them naked unto their enemies,
should Jackman and the rest come this way. For more than an hour they
hurried, until they had crossed a valley and saw before them the steep
way up to the highest point of Carnglass, the headland on which stood
St. Merin’s Chapel, with the graveyard round it. Then Mary flung
herself exhausted on the heather, and Logan sank down panting beside
her. Two or three strange white shapes scurried away from them; Logan
started. “Are those things deer or goats?”

The tired girl laughed at him. “Carnglass sheep, like no other sheep
on earth. Long legs and long necks, and great leapers, and altogether
wild.” Everything in this forgotten island, it seemed, defied the tooth
of time.

But it was no hour for philosophical observations. So soon as they had
got a little strength back, they must be away to the top of the island.
And what they could hope for there, aside from a brief respite, was
more than Logan could see. Unarmed, they would be much easier game
than Donley had been. Jackman and the rest would have their blood
up. This girl, it might be, had destroyed herself by trying to save
him. “Here, Hugh,” Mary said, “you’ll want this.” She took from the
rucksack a paper in which were wrapped some scraps of meat, two boiled
potatoes, and a piece of bread, all this salvaged furtively from Lady
MacAskival’s dinner-tray. Logan, indeed, was ravenous, and he ate the
lot, Mary insisting that she had got down a late supper. As he ate, she
told him what had passed since he went down the Whiskey Bottle.

When Jackman and Royall had taken Logan to the study at gun-point, Mary
MacAskival had run to her room and locked herself in. It was only much
later in the day, when Jackman and most of the men were searching for
Carruthers, that she had bullied out of Niven the fact that Logan was
shut in the Whiskey Bottle. In her room, she had taken out of a chest
the only weapon she had, the ancient dirk that was said to have been
Askival’s, and had sat with it in her lap, expecting all the time to
have Jackman and Royall turn upon her next. But Jackman had only tried
her door; and, not being able to enter, had called out that he would
deal with her later. And then he had gone out to comb the island for
Carruthers, whom they did not find; nor did they find anyone else. The
men returned after sunset, Jackman and Royall going back to the study,
where they sat talking for hours. The girl had crept to the study door
and had caught fragments of their argument.

No, they had not found Carruthers; but they had turned up something
else. When Donley’s body was searched in the cellar, one of the men
discovered in a pocket a water-soaked note. It was nearly illegible;
but they could make out Logan’s signature, and that it was addressed to
the police. On this evidence, Jackman and Royall abandoned their notion
that Logan was an agent of Vlanarov; they now took him for a detective.
The question remained as to what they ought to do with the man in the
Whiskey Bottle. Royall thought it best to hold him there until they
could get some boat, and then to run for it, abandoning their whole
project. But Jackman was for death: Logan knew too much, and must go
over the cliff. The two exhausted fanatics still were debating when the
girl slipped away, but she believed they would dispose of Logan in the
morning, if not sooner.

So she took Logan’s pack, with what food she could get her hands upon,
and a pint bottle of paraffin, and Askival’s dirk; and she bullied
and wheedled Niven, on guard in the old tower; and to her immense
satisfaction, she had got Logan clean away. Jackman and his people had
no notion of the existence of that passage out of the cistern; Lady
MacAskival herself had not known of it. When she ran, Mary knew that
she left her aunt in danger, but Jackman’s fanatic voice behind the
study door convinced her she dared not delay; Jackman would act before
his time ran out altogether. And here she was, lying beside Hugh Logan
on the heather.

Behind them hulked the northern heights where St. Merin’s Chapel stood.
They could hear a little waterfall tumbling, in that still night, from
the cliff-tops. The burn ran through the heather and bracken close
by them, lower down joining a stream that entered the sea by Askival
harbor. Now they must climb to their last forlorn refuge. First they
drank from the peaty burn; then Logan shouldered the rucksack, and up
they started. They hardly spoke in the course of that hard nocturnal
climb.

From the summit, nearly an hour later, most of Carnglass was dimly
visible to them in the moonlight. They could make out specks of light
away to the southwest: lamps burning in the Old House. “Hugh,” Mary
said, laying a hand on his arm, “Carnglass is the oldest place in the
world, and the loveliest. Do you hate it? You’ve seen only fright and
death here. But it was Dr. Jackman that brought the terror. If--if we
live, Hugh, I’ll show you Carnglass as you ought to see it. Can you
forgive me for having drawn you into this terror?”

“One crowded hour of glorious life,” Logan told her, “really is worth
an age without a name. And if I’d not come, I’d never have met Miss
Mary MacAskival, would I?”

“No,” she said, with a little sob, “no. But we can’t loiter here.” She
took Askival’s dirk from the rucksack. “Hugh, take this, and cut some
branches off the trees around the chapel, as quickly as you can; and
I’ll scrape together some dead sticks and bits of dry heather; I made
a little pile of them here weeks ago, on the chance that I might need
to light them one day. We can burn the rucksack, too, and my jacket.
They’ll make no grand beacon, but we can do no more. The paraffin I
brought will start them blazing.”

Logan stared at her. “Who’d see the fire, except Jackman’s boys?”

“There’s a chance, Hugh. The night is clear. Besides, what other scheme
is there? And my people will come. They may not come soon enough, but
they will come.”

“Your people?” The girl must be sunk in a Carnglass fantasy.

“Hurry, Hugh,” was all she said. “It won’t be long before dawn.”

They built their poor futile beacon, with what fuel they had on that
hilltop, and they poured the paraffin upon it, and they set it alight
with one of Logan’s matches, and they added to it the rucksack and
Mary’s tweed jacket and Hugh’s coat. It flared somewhat better than
Hugh had expected. But what possibility existed of this being seen by
any vessel passing in the night, or of being acted upon? And it was
almost certain that it would guide Jackman.

“We’re only targets here,” Logan said. “At the chapel, we’d have some
shelter.” They climbed still higher on that cliff-plateau, until
they came to a low drystone dyke. Beyond it were tombstones, white
in the moonlight. This was Carnglass graveyard; and in the middle
of the graveyard stood a long, low medieval building, St. Merin’s
Chapel, battered by five centuries. Away to their right, a tall ruin,
infinitely older than the chapel, round, nearly forty feet high,
windowless and roofless, loomed at the brink of the cliff.

On its rough stones flickered the light of their little impromptu
beacon. “They call that the Pict’s House,” said Mary, “or sometimes
the Firgower’s House.” The tower’s circular wall slanted slightly
inward, all round, for some twenty feet of its height; then it shot
perpendicularly to its summit. It was what was called a broch, a strong
place, Pictish work beyond question. “I do not think that really
the Pictish chief lived here,” Mary went on, “for that room and the
passages under the Old House have the look of his palace. The Picts
lived underground, you know. This was a watchtower, and a place of
refuge.”

She turned toward the chapel. The firelight was reflected, between them
and the medieval building, upon a great Celtic cross, perhaps fifteen
feet high, carved with grotesques and convoluted interlacing bands;
and it leant heavily to one side. This was the Cross of Carnglass,
set up by the missionaries of St. Columba in the dim Irish age, St.
Merin’s Cross. Mary led Logan toward it; and, as they came close up,
she pulled from one of the stunted rowan trees which brooded over that
windswept graveyard a little twig, on which the first leaves of spring
had opened. She thrust it into the topmost buttonhole of Logan’s shirt.
“The rowan keeps off wraiths and evil spirits, Hugh,” she said, “and
St. Merin’s kirkyard is famous for them. Niven thinks I am the chief of
them. Look at me: am I a witch?”

Mary MacAskival stood before the Cross of Carnglass, her red hair
brushing the white stone, her haughty nose and firm chin marking her as
the last of an old, old, fierce line: perhaps, truly, the descendant
of the Merin whose bones lay beneath one of these grass-grown grave
mounds. “If anyone could call spirits from the vasty deep, you could,
Mary,” Hugh told her.

She smiled queerly. “It may be I will do just that, Hugh Logan.
But here, I’ll show you the chapel.” She took him through a Gothic
doorway--the wooden door, ajar, sagged on its hinges--and flashed
the torch-beam over the tombs within. A grotesque stone face, rudely
carved, stared at them from a niche. Directly before them stood up an
ornate modern tomb of marble. “Sir Alastair is beneath that. And here’s
his postbox.” She pointed to a slot in the marble, surrounded by a
carved funerary wreath; and she slid her hand into the opening. “Oh,
there’s nothing within now!” she said, as if really disappointed. “For
years, you know, my aunt used to send letters by the butler or footman
to Sir Alastair in his tomb. And I used to post my letters here, too,
when I wasn’t watched.”

Post her letters there! Mary must have read the amazement on his face,
for she added, as if to reassure him of her sanity, “Oh, yes. The
letter I sent Duncan MacAskival, that brought you here, was posted
here in Sir Alastair’s postbox.” Was this some macabre witticism of
the uncanny little beauty, or a delusion grown out of dreams and
isolation? “But we daren’t linger here, Hugh. If Dr. Jackman sees our
fire, he’ll come up the cliff straight away.” She pointed to the old
dirk, which Hugh Logan had thrust into his belt. “That was Askival’s.
You must be my Askival, Hugh. I am Merin, you know: Merin of Carnglass,
who’s haunted this place since time began.” She was half playful, half
in earnest. The dirk, Logan thought, might be small use against the
guns of Jackman’s men, but it was some comfort. Then he followed Mary
MacAskival out of the silent chapel, and toward the towering broch by
the precipice. Their fire still leaped against the night sky of lonely
Carnglass, but in a few minutes only embers would remain.

“The Pict’s House,” Mary was saying, “is the best place we can hide.
By the sea, away below these cliffs, is a great cave; but even I could
not lead you down the path to it in darkness; and besides, the tide is
coming in now, and the cave will be full almost to the top. It must be
the Pict’s House for us. One still can climb the stair to the top of
it.” She was quite calm, as if, having done all that she could do, she
abandoned herself to fate and fortune. “And from the Pict’s House, we
can see nearly all of Carnglass, once the sun is up.”

They entered the tower through a square doorway ten feet above the
ground; a worn timber, sea-drift, propped against the wall just below
the door, made this scramble possible. The doorway was capped, by way
of lintel, by a great stone slab; the Picts had not known the arch.
Empty and roofless, the round interior cavern of the broch was before
them, but Mary turned into the wall itself: a circling stair led
upward, its steps vast rude slabs. By it they came to the crumbling
summit of the broch, and Logan observed, while they climbed, that no
mortar lay between the cunningly-placed stones of the tower; this was
the work of men in the dawn of history, and beside it the Old House
across the island was a thing of yesterday.

Round the top of the broch ran a stone platform. “Stoop down behind
the parapet, Hugh,” the girl told him, “so Jackman won’t see us, if he
comes this way.” The earliest hint of a spring dawn glimmered in the
east; a corncrake fluttered up from the parapet. Right below them, the
tremendous cliffs, the cliffs over which Lagg had gone, fell sheer away
to the ocean. From this point, the last Pict chieftain may have watched
the long ships of the Vikings as they swept inexorably out of the
sea-mist to the north. On that sea, nothing was visible this morning
but whitecaps breaking on a submerged reef.

“No, there’s nothing, no sail,” Mary MacAskival said anxiously, almost
as if she had expected one. “Do you know the tale of the fairy boat,
Hugh, that sails through the mists? If a girl glimpses it, she vanishes
before nightfall. I wish one could carry me off--and you. Now you see
my Carnglass, Hugh Logan.”

He looked landward. Far to the west-southwest, beyond Cailleach, the
Old House stood grim on its rock; lower down, the New House, among its
plantations. Between them and the Old House stretched glen and hill,
heather and bracken, boulder and peat-bog, waterfall and burn. On this
lovely morning, the mists were quite gone, and there was revealed
to him the unearthly beauty of the forgotten island. The girl took
his arm. “Hugh, were it yours, would you live here always--or almost
always?”

“That I would, Mary MacAskival.” Carnglass, for good or evil, set its
mark on men.

She faced him squarely, putting her hands on his shoulders. “We may be
under that sea tonight, Hugh Logan. But if we are not, why shouldn’t
Carnglass be yours? I’ve known you but thirty-six hours, Hugh. You’re
all the man I need to know. Do you fear me? Some men do, though I’m so
little.” She kissed him then, and said, “Hugh Logan, I have kissed you
more times than I have kissed all other men in all my life. Do you mean
to ask me to marry you?”

Torn between love and doubt, in that high place, Logan looked long
into her green eyes. “They would say, Mary, that I took advantage of a
lonely girl who had barely met me, for the sake of her money.”

She tossed her bright hair at that. “Don’t be so canny, Hugh! Do you
know the MacAskival motto, over the door of the old tower? ‘They have
said and they will say; let them be saying.’ The MacAskivals, man or
woman, have no concern for what they say in Glasgow or Edinburgh or
London or all the wide world.” Then a look of fright came into her
flashing eyes. “Is it that you are married already, Hugh?”

“No,” he said, “but I will be, if we get alive out of this.” And as the
sun rose, he took her in his arms. Rash, proud, and strange that girl
was, perhaps a little mad; but in that moment he loved her more than
all the kingdoms of the earth.

She clung to him, sobbing and laughing softly in her moment of triumph
and surrender. But abruptly he thrust her back, and pulled her below
the level of the parapet. “Mary, Mary! They’ve come!” For three armed
men were climbing the slope toward the chapel, and Jackman was the
first of them. Logan thought that they two had not been seen. No shots
were fired, at least.

His arm around the girl’s waist, he ventured a second glance between
two heavy stones that teetered precariously on the parapet’s brink.
Yes, Jackman and Anderson and Powert. The men got over a low wall that
ran round the graveyard, close by the remnants of the burned-out futile
beacon. Then they entered the chapel.

“Mary, girl,” he whispered, “they’ll be on us in three or four minutes,
I think.” She did not cry, but kissed him once more, and then composed
her young face, as if the MacAskival ought to meet enemies without
flinching.

“Hugh,” she said, “every second we can delay may help us.” He did not
see why, but she gave him no time to dissent. “Back down the stair,
Hugh, and if they try to come in, we’ll cast down the timber by the
door.” Yes, they could do that, though without guns they could do no
more than delay Jackman briefly. Back down the stair they went, and
crouched by the empty archaic doorway. It wouldn’t do to push away the
timber-gangplank that led up from the ground unless they must, for the
noise of its fall would bring Jackman and his men.

Now they heard Jackman’s voice; he was coming right round the broch
from the chapel. Anderson’s sullen Gallowgate mutter replied to
Jackman. And in a moment the hunters stood just below the broch’s door,
though Logan dared not look out. “All right, Powert,” Jackman said,
“up with you.” At that, Logan and Mary MacAskival shoved against
the timber with all their strength. It slid sideways and fell to the
ground. They showed themselves for an instant as they pushed, and
someone fired, but the bullet passed over their heads into the broch.

“Ah, well,” came Jackman’s voice from below, “you _did_ lead us a
chase, didn’t you? Anderson, Powert, take hold there.” The timber was
heaved back into place; Logan could not risk rising again to push it
off, for Jackman would have a gun trained on the doorway. “Powert, Mr.
Logan is not armed,” said Jackman. “Quick, now!” A man sprang up the
timber and through the door.

Thrusting at him with the dirk, Logan got home to Powert’s upper arm,
and the man cried out and grappled with him. Before he could slash
Powert again, Jackman was up, and poked the little pistol Meg right
into Logan’s face. “Gallant, Logan, very gallant; but drop that.” Logan
flung down the dirk. Mary MacAskival was struggling in Anderson’s arms.
“A pleasant morning, eh, Logan?” Jackman said. “You’ll not see another.”




13


They took Hugh Logan and Mary MacAskival out of the Pict’s House.
Anderson tied Logan’s wrists together, behind his back, with a length
of heavy cord, pulling the knots savagely tight. Jackman held the
girl by the arm meanwhile; and when Anderson had finished with Logan,
under Jackman’s instructions he tied a cord to Mary’s right wrist, and
retained the other end of the cord in his hand while Jackman removed
Powert’s jacket and bandaged the flesh-wound with a strip torn from the
tail of Powert’s shirt. This done, Jackman had Anderson tie the other
end of Mary’s cord to Jackman’s own left wrist.

“There!” Jackman said, contentedly, “a brisk morning’s run, and no harm
done. Anderson, Powert and I will take this charming couple to the Old
House while you trot down the brae and call back Ferd and Niven; I
think they should be near the sheiling this side of Cailleach.”

Anderson glowered at Logan. “Ye said I wud hae the thrashin’ o’ that
clot, Doctor.”

“That you shall, Anderson, my man, that you shall--once we’re at the
Old House. I do believe Anderson will learn all we need to know from
you, Logan, in short order. Our treatment of you, Miss MacAskival, will
need to be rather more laborious: the washing of the brain, as our
Chinese friends say. But it will all come out in the wash, won’t it?
And Powert, too, will be given his fair turn at you, Logan: fair shares
for all, eh?” Jackman ran his tongue over his thin lips. “In one thing,
at least, you seem to have told me the truth, Logan: you’ve no people
in Carnglass, for you’d not have been cowering in that ruin if there
were any. There’s Carruthers to be accounted for; but I suppose he may
have missed his footing in the dark and have gone over the cliffs. I
must confess that my estimate of your abilities has diminished, Logan.
Whatever possessed you to light that fire here by the chapel? You might
have eluded us four or five hours longer if you hadn’t done that. Well,
drive him along, Powert.”

With his unwounded arm, Powert gave Logan a fierce shove in the back,
setting him stumbling in the direction of the Old House; and Jackman
tugged on Mary’s cord, pulling her with him behind Logan and Powert.
The girl’s face was quite drained of color, but very haughty. “My
dear,” Jackman said to her, casually, “how changed you are going to be
within a few days! How very changed!”

Then, from somewhere below in the nearer valley, there came to them the
crack of a rifle-shot. It was answered by another, apparently from a
different gun. Next was a burst of firing, and then a faint cry.

Jackman’s satisfied smile altered horribly; he was Rumpelstiltskin
again. “Logan,” he muttered, “is there a man of yours in Carnglass,
after all? Or is that only Niven’s or Caggia’s nerves playing them
tricks? Anderson, you and I must go down to see. Powert, we’ll leave
you with Logan; he can’t do you harm. The girl will come with me. We’ll
send back a man to help you get Logan to the Old House, Powert.”

Powert most obviously did not relish the plan. “Coom, Dr. Jackman, I’ve
a bad arm, and this cove’s a queer one.”

“Nonsense,” Jackman said, “we’ll bind his feet, too, until we send
Anderson or someone else for you.” Away below, there was only silence,
but Jackman ran his hand across his forehead uneasily. “Here: we’ll put
him inside the chapel with you, and you can watch the door, with your
back to the wall: that’s safe enough.” Powert scowled, but shoved Logan
toward the door of St. Merin’s Chapel. Jackman herded the four of them
inside.

Now that the dawn came through the broken tracery of the chapel’s
pointed windows, Logan could see that the single room contained seven
or eight tombs raised above the floor, some of them very old; and a
number of the flagstones, deeply incised by some rude stonecarver,
apparently covered other graves. “Wha’ in hell’s yon!” cried Anderson,
abruptly, pointing.

Near the northeast corner of the room, one of the flagstones had
been raised, and now was leant against the wall. Where it had lain,
a little mound of earth, freshly dug, protruded above the floor; and
in the earth was thrust a curiously primitive wooden spade. The mound
was about six feet long. They all crowded close to it. An earthenware
dish had been set atop the mound, and the dish was filled with, of all
things, nails and what looked like salt. Across the dish lay a branch
from a rowan tree. “That,” Mary MacAskival said softly to Dr. Jackman,
“is how the spirits of the newly dead are laid in these islands.”

“Wha’ fule’s been diggin’ graves?” Anderson growled, looking back over
his shoulder toward the empty doorway.

Jackman stood rigid; then, “I think Carruthers must be under that clay.
Anderson, take the spade and uncover him.” Mary MacAskival shivered
slightly.

Anderson cursed, but under Jackman’s hard eye he began to shovel. The
grave was very shallow. In a minute or two, a heavy shape could be made
out, wrapped in a big piece of tarred canvas. “That will be the head
at the far end,” Jackman whispered. “Powert, draw the canvas from the
face.”

Mary had turned away, but Logan, dreadfully fascinated, saw clearly
the smashed and fallen face of a man he never had looked upon before.
And Jackman screamed: he screamed twice, and so terribly that his men
shook, for the screams were worse than the ruined face in the grave.
“Lagg! It’s Lagg!”

Quivering, Anderson dropped the spade. “Aye,” he said, “Tam Lagg, that
we pit ower the cliff into the sea. For the love o’ God, Powert, cover
his mug.”

Powert, his teeth chattering, let the canvas drop back over the corpse.

“Logan,” shrieked Jackman, turning a frantic face on him, “Logan, what
are you? What are you? Do you make dead men rise from the sea? Was
it you that put this thing here?” He had the pistol in his hand, and
thrust it against Logan’s middle.

He will fire now, Logan thought, for he’s quite out of his head.
There was the sound of a shot. But I’m not hit, Logan realized; I
feel nothing. Jackman sprang away and looked out the doorway; the
shot, after all, had come from outside, though in his tension Logan
had thought, for an instant, that Jackman had pulled the trigger. Yet
surely a gun had gone off fairly close at hand.

“Anderson, watch this door,” Jackman ordered; he had a measure of
control over himself. “Powert, give me that rope.” He forced Logan
to sit, and tied his ankles together. “We’ll return for you in a few
minutes, Powert.”

“Me? I’ll not sit here by the dead man.” Powert scarcely could hold his
rifle.

Jackman sent him a deadly look from those glowering black eyes of his.
“You’ll be another dead man yourself, Powert, if I hear another word
from you. Now, Anderson, we’ll look into this. Miss MacAskival, if you
cry out, I’ll be forced to put a bullet through your head.” He shoved
her through the doorway.

“Hugh,” Mary called back, reckless of Jackman, “Hugh, I love you!” Then
she and Jackman and Anderson were out of sight.

Powert, left with Logan and the corpse, still shook; and he cursed
Logan and Jackman and Carnglass while he made his preparations as if
for siege. He pushed the helpless Logan roughly against Sir Alastair’s
tomb, facing away from the doorway, and parallel with the open grave
and the awful thing under the canvas. Then he pulled shut the sagging
door of the chapel, so that some force would be required to budge
it; and he himself leaned against a tombstone that came up to his
shoulders, with his face toward the door, and his rifle in his hands,
the barrel resting upon the head of another tombstone. So situated,
Powert could watch the door, keep an eye on Logan and the sheeted
thing, and have the comforting feel of stone at his back.

Logan himself, after the repeated shocks of that fair morning, was in
little better state than Powert. Silent, he lay motionless against
the tomb of Sir Alastair MacAskival, his brain dull, dull, dull.
There were no more shots outside: only the rustle of a breeze in the
rowan trees. The stillness was a trying thing. Powert was mumbling to
himself: obscenities, blasphemies, scraps of nearly-forgotten prayer.
The sunlight was pouring into the chapel through the unglazed Gothic
windows. Five or six minutes passed thus.

Then a faint sound came. Was something stirring in the high graveyard
grass, just outside the closed door? Did the door itself creak, as if
very gently tried? “Anderson,” Powert cried out, choking, “is it you,
man? Dr. Jackman?” Nothing answered. Did the door creak again, ever
so slightly, or was it the breeze? “Sing out,” Powert shouted, glaring
wild-eyed at the flimsy door, “or I’ll shoot!”

High in the wall behind Powert was one of the pointed windows, its
stone tracery for the most part broken away. It must be at least eight
feet above the level of the graveyard. Though Logan could see this
window, Powert, intent on the doorway, could not. And as something rose
cautiously above the windowsill, from outside, Logan bit his lip to
keep back a cry.

It was a man’s head that cut off the morning light: a lean man,
keen-eyed; and there was a long white beard on his chin; and there was
a little black knife between his teeth. His eyes took in the room.
Steadying himself by clutching the broken tracery with his left hand,
stealthily he rose until his shoulders came above the window-ledge. In
his brown right hand he held a large stone.

As if someone had thrust tentatively against it, the rotten door
creaked shrilly. “Damn you,” Powert was crying, “speak up, or I’ll
shoot.” The white-bearded man outside the window drew back his arm and
flung the stone with great force, as if letting fly at a rabbit. The
rock caught Powert at the back of his head; he fell to his knees, the
rifle clattering on the flagstones. At that the door burst open, and
two men tumbled into the room, and were upon Powert before he could
recover. A boy followed them, and, kneeling by Logan, looked shyly into
his face. These were the two men and the boy, MacAskivals from Daldour,
that Logan had seen in Loch Boisdale, four days before.

Then there strode through the doorway a very tall old man, erect and
vigorous and bearded to his chest, with a shotgun in his hand. He
was worth looking at; but another man, hard on his heels, was still
stranger. This was a burly, broad-shouldered fellow, with a heavy,
jolly face, and mild eyes that were exceedingly odd, though it would
have been difficult to say why. Something in the look of his face was
queer enough. Yet it was his clothing that made him conspicuous. The
other men wore the caps and canvas cloaks and rough homespun tweeds
of the crofters and fishermen in the remoter Isles. This burly man,
in strong contrast, was dressed in what seemed to be the garments
of a laird or prosperous farmer: green tweed jacket, green corduroy
breeches and long stockings, good heavy shoes. Under the open jacket
was a soiled yellow waistcoat; and on his head was a battered porkpie
hat. These clothes were in wretched repair, with dark stains here and
there upon them. The breeches, seemingly split at the seams, were
held together by pins. One sleeve of the jacket was ripped open from
shoulder to wrist. And although the clothes had been got on, they did
not fit the man who wore them.

Resting a hand on the boy’s shoulder, the tall old man bent over Logan
and spoke in Gaelic. Logan shook his head: “I know only English.”
Frowning, the old man muttered through his splendid beard to the boy
beside him.

The boy stammered a little, as if overwhelmed with shyness; but there
was no fear in him. He spoke to Logan in good, if careful, English.
“Malcolm Mor MacAskival of Daldour asks what is your name, and what do
you do in Carnglass.” The pirate-like old man looked hard at Logan.

These, then, were Mary MacAskival’s people! She had not been
woolgathering when she spoke of them. How she had summoned them, Hugh
Logan did not know; but the five of them--two had gagged Powert, and
were sitting on the man--were staring at Logan intently. This was no
time for long explanations. “Untie me,” Logan said. “I am Hugh Logan,
and I am to marry Miss Mary MacAskival.”

There was a murmur from the men, and all five MacAskivals of Daldour
took off their caps deferentially, and then put them back on again.
With a fisherman’s deftness, old Malcolm Mor undid the cords about
Logan’s wrists and ankles, and the two men who looked like twins
promptly bound Powert with them. As he released Logan, Malcolm Mor
said, in decent English, “Then I am your man, sir, and so are my sons
and my grandson, and my nephew Angus, and my nephew Kenneth who is not
here. We saw the man with the third eye lead the lady away. Will we
go after her?” Malcolm Mor tapped his shotgun. Malcolm Mor’s two sons
had old rifles; the boy and Angus, the queer burly man in the queerer
clothes, were unarmed. One of the sons, almost bowing, handed Powert’s
rifle to Logan as he stood up and tried to get the blood to circulate
in his tingling wrists and ankles.

Hugh Logan surveyed his little army. “Yes, we will,” he said, “if they
don’t come after us first. Just now they’re down in the valley hunting
someone; but some of them will come back to the chapel.” These men,
he thought, would be good shots; and to live in Daldour, they must be
hardy and probably courageous, though he doubted whether they had much
experience at man-killing.

“It is my nephew Kenneth that they are hunting,” Malcolm Mor observed.
“I sent him to watch them from the bracken. It was Kenneth who shot his
gun to lead them away from the chapel. They will not find him. We have
watched them for a week, but we did not understand what they did, and
there was no gentleman to lead us. We would have shot the man with the
third eye when he took the lady away, but we were afraid that she might
be hurt. Is it so that they are robbers and murderers?”

“That they are,” Logan said, emphatically.

“Then,” Malcolm Mor went on, in the slow, gentle Island English, “it
would be lawful for us to hunt them?” Logan suspected that the people
of Daldour were extremely shy of the law.

“It would,” Logan told him. “I am a lawyer, and I give you my
authority.”

Malcolm Mor MacAskival’s old eyes lit up, and he smiled as some Norse
rover might have smiled. “Then, sir,” he said, “we will go after the
lady, and take the Old House of Fear.” He seemed to have no doubt
whatsoever of the success of this undertaking by five or six men and a
boy. “There are three more able-bodied men in Daldour, but we have no
time to fetch them. Kenneth, my nephew, will come to us soon. Will we
go down into the valley now, Mr. Logan?”

“Let’s have a look about,” Logan said. The men followed him through the
chapel doorway. When Logan had thrown his rucksack on the fire, he had
stuffed his binoculars into a trouser-pocket; and now he pulled them
out and stared through them in the direction of the Old House; but,
what with hills, rocks, and clumps of trees and thickets of bracken, he
could see no one moving.

Then, a hundred yards away, and ascending toward the chapel, Anderson
came into view. Logan dropped the binoculars and snatched up his rifle,
but Anderson had seen them before he could get the gun to his shoulder.
For a second, Anderson stared aghast; then, flinging himself around,
he leaped downhill, vanishing into bracken, reappearing on a knoll,
slipping, almost rolling down a talus-slope, merging with the blur of
gray rock and purple heather and green bracken. Logan fired twice, but
could not have hit him. At that, Malcolm Mor and his two sons brought
up their guns and fired also. They did not really take aim, and Logan
thought they meant to frighten, rather than to wound; but also he
thought that they could be brought to shoot to kill if they must.

“We can catch him,” Malcolm Mor said, like a dog eager for the word
from his master. “He is a town man, and we are faster.”

“No,” Logan decided, shaking his head, “no, there’ll be three others
down there, and they have Miss MacAskival with them, on a rope. We’ll
go down and after them, but together; and no one must shoot if the lady
might be hurt.” This deliberation was agony to Logan himself, but he
had been an officer, and he knew something of tactics.

The MacAskivals nodded. “My nephew Kenneth will be watching them from
the bracken,” Malcolm Mor said. “We will go down, and he will join us;
and if they take the lady to the Old House, then we will follow them
into the house.”

Malcolm Mor’s nephew Angus, the burly man in the dirty yellow
waistcoat, was nodding and smiling at every word his old uncle uttered.
“Do you have a gun?” Logan said to him. The man opened his mouth, but
words did not come out: only mouthed grunts, rather horrid. Malcolm Mor
seemed somewhat embarrassed.

“He can not speak,” the boy--Malcolm Gille was his name--said
apologetically. “He is called”--here the boy seemed to seek the English
equivalent of a Gaelic term, and emerged triumphantly--“he is called
Dumb Angus.” Dumb Angus nodded enthusiastically at the mention of his
name. “And,” the boy went on, “he is simple. Dumb Angus is simple, and
does not have a gun, but he is very strong, and he is honest, and he
makes many jokes.” Dumb Angus bowed and smiled, and tapped himself on
the head to prove that he knew he was simple. “He cannot speak,” the
boy said, “but he makes jokes in other ways.”

Logan checked Powert’s rifle, and reloaded; one of Malcolm’s
sons--their names, it turned out, were John and Robert--brought him
a cartridge-pouch that Powert had worn. What ought they to do with
Powert? Malcolm Mor, now assured that the majesty of the law sheltered
the persecuted sept of MacAskival, speculatively fingered the little
black knife in his belt. “No,” said Logan, “we’ll bring them all to
trial, if we can.”

“There is one already taken and locked away,” Malcolm Mor offered. “His
name, I think, is Carruthers. We took him the night before last night,
and carried him to Daldour, and locked him in a byre, and he is afraid,
for he thinks that we will eat him. Dumb Angus made him think so; that
is one of the jokes of Dumb Angus. It is pleasant to have Dumb Angus
in Daldour. We could carry this man, too, to Daldour, but there is not
time.”

Dumb Angus was gesturing and beckoning, and pointing upward. At the
east end of the chapel, behind the altar, ran a kind of low loft or
gallery, of wood, probably built when the chapel was re-roofed by Sir
Alastair MacAskival. “Yes,” said Logan, “that will do. Put Powert
there, at the back, and no one is likely to notice him until we need
him.” The sons of Malcolm carried Powert up the short flight of wooden
steps, and tightened the cords and his gag. Dumb Angus might be simple,
but he had eyes in his head.

And now they could start in pursuit of Jackman, for Mary MacAskival’s
sake. Anderson probably would have warned Jackman and the others by
this time; but the warning might do no mischief, for those four guns
going off at his heels must have sounded to Anderson as if half the
constabulary of Scotland were after him. They could not catch Jackman
and the rest before they reached the Old House, the odds were, nor
would it have been safe to fire at the retreating gang with Mary
MacAskival in their midst. But by night, Logan was resolved, he and
the Daldour people would make their try. “Well, gentlemen,” he said to
Malcolm Mor and the others, “if you’re ready, I am.” And they started
down the brae.

As they trotted and scrambled toward the valley, the boy running by
Logan’s side, Logan said to Malcolm Gille, “Why does Dumb Angus wear
such clothes?”

“Those clothes were not his.” The boy smiled broadly. “It is one of the
jokes of Dumb Angus. They are the clothes of Mr. Lagg, the factor, that
we found broken below the cliffs and buried in the chapel of St. Merin.
For Dumb Angus, it is always Hallowe’en.”

The humor of Daldour, Logan took it, had its grisly side. Dumb Angus it
must have been that Rab had encountered two nights before. If even the
simpletons of Daldour--and the whole band of Daldour MacAskivals was
a remarkably odd-looking lot--were this resourceful, it might be just
possible for Logan to get Mary alive out of the Old House.




14


On the flank of Cailleach, a little ferret-like man rose out of the
heather to join Logan and the MacAskivals: Kenneth MacAskival. Like the
rest of his family, he really understood English, when he chose, and
could speak it tolerably well when he had to. On learning from Malcolm
Mor that this gentleman was the betrothed of The MacAskival, Kenneth
gave Logan his report.

After firing twice that morning to draw Jackman away from the chapel,
Kenneth MacAskival had contented himself with creeping through the
bracken and spying on the retreating party. The lady, Kenneth said,
never spoke, so far as he could hear; though the men thrust her roughly
along when, led on a cord as she was, she stumbled. They would be at
the Old House within a few minutes, the man with the third eye and the
rest, and could not be intercepted.

Logan and his men did not move toward the Old House so fast as they
could have. For Jackman might have laid an ambush, which had to be
watched for among the rocks and dens of rugged Carnglass. Once, through
his binoculars, Logan caught a glimpse of a hurrying figure, very close
to the Old House; then it was hidden again by a low intervening ridge.

Either of two courses he might take, Logan thought. He might send
the MacAskivals in their lobster boat to Loch Boisdale or whatever
other port they could reach that had a police station, and ask for
prompt help. But this would take hours, many hours, and meanwhile
Jackman would have Mary MacAskival in the Old House. And Jackman would
be thinking of the ruin of his scheme, and of the gelignite in the
cellars. Besides, would any police constable believe such a story, from
such a crew as the MacAskivals, without telegraphing to Glasgow or
Edinburgh for orders, which would mean delays? No, that plan wouldn’t
do.

So there remained to Logan only the storming of the Old House. Briefly,
he thought of trying to enter through the passage in the rock by which
Mary and he had escaped; but that was no go, since one of Jackman’s
riflemen at the cistern-mouth could kill anyone who tried to ascend.
They would have to rush the place from outside.

The thing could not be tried until evening, for Jackman had more men
within the Old House than Logan had without, and Jackman’s men were
desperate, well armed, and probably experienced in killing. By day,
it would have been mad. The oldest tower, with its little windows and
iron bars, would have been impossible to take even if defended by only
one or two riflemen, unless the attackers had mortars. The Renaissance
block was nearly as strong. But the Victorian addition was another
matter. The gate was stout, and the ground-floor windows were small,
covered by iron grills, and shuttered within. The plate-glass windows
of the first floor, however, were immense and undefended, and could be
reached with a long ladder--after dark. Even supposing Logan and his
men got inside the Old House, they still would be outnumbered. Their
hope was that before they should make their rush, they might be able
to demolish the morale of Jackman’s people, already badly shaken.

To help Mary, Logan would have taken any risk: if getting himself shot
would have saved her, he would have rushed the Old House that hour.
But the best chance for saving her, it seemed to him, lay in keeping
Jackman’s people very much on edge, and busy--and in praying that
Jackman himself might not go mad altogether. And this meant that some
eight hours, eight intolerable hours for Logan, must pass before he
could act.

But meanwhile he could prepare. Giving the Old House a wide berth, he
led the MacAskivals to the farm steading nearest the castle. Before
the troubles had begun, Simmons had kept the steading in some order,
though there were only two animals about the place: two shaggy and
ill-tempered little Barra horses, grazing in a small field. Having
caught the horses, the MacAskivals harnessed them to a farm cart.
This they loaded with straw, and with what loose lumber they could
find; also they put two gallon tins of paraffin, discovered in the
farmhouse, into the cart. In a shed they came upon a long ladder, which
they piled atop straw and lumber. Then, keeping out of range of fire
from the Old House, Dumb Angus and Malcolm Gille took the horses and
cart circuitously round to the wooded policies of the New House, which
was as close to the Victorian wing of the Old House as they could get
without being fired upon.

While this operation was going forward, Logan sent Kenneth and John
MacAskival to the rocky and bracken-covered hillsides that were barely
within extreme firing range of the Old House. And there the two
veteran poachers commenced a desultory fire against the windows of the
Old House. Logan gave Powert’s rifle to Kenneth, as the best weapon
available, taking Kenneth’s shotgun for himself. Concealed as they were
by dense bracken, and shifting position after every shot, there was
little danger of the MacAskivals being hit by retaliatory fire from
the Old House. For their part, the MacAskivals were instructed not
really to attempt to hit anyone, but to spend their time shattering
panes and nerves. The windows of Mary’s room in the old tower they
left untouched. Lady MacAskival’s room was on the seaward side of the
Old House, and so safe. For that matter, the whole garrison of the Old
House could retreat to the seaward rooms and temporary security, except
for what luckless sentinels Dr. Jackman might leave to guard against a
sudden rush. By early afternoon, every pane on the eastern side of the
Old House had been shattered, except those in Mary MacAskival’s windows.

For the first hour of this, three or four marksmen replied from the
Old House. But they could have seen almost nothing to shoot at, and
their risk of being struck by flying windowglass, if not by bullets,
was considerable. The return fire slackened perceptibly in the second
hour, and after that there came only infrequent shots from a single
rifle on the second floor, as if to demonstrate that the defenders were
still awake. Another rifleman on the roof of the old tower was driven
below early in the game. What all this did to the nerves of Jackman’s
men--this sniping by an unknown body of enemies, who had not even made
a formal demand for the surrender of the Old House--Logan could only
surmise. The loss of Powert, too, coming on the heels of Carruthers’
disappearance and the discovery of Lagg’s body, must have made an
impression.

Logan sent Robert MacAskival round to keep an eye on the back of the
old tower, to make sure no one slipped out by the garden gate; the
man hid himself behind an outcrop of rock and bided his time, leaving
the shooting to the others. Accompanied by Malcolm Mor, Logan himself
watched the main entrance from the plantation that stretched from the
New House nearly to the rock of the Old House. And from Malcolm Mor, as
they lay on their bellies under cover, that warm and fatal spring day,
Logan pieced together a good deal more of the history of the recent
troubles in Carnglass.

       *       *       *       *       *

Poaching in Carnglass the shy twilight folk of Daldour took for a
natural right. The older people of the Daldour MacAskivals, like
Malcolm Mor, had been born in Carnglass and looked upon it as Eden;
several of them, from time to time, right down to the coming of Dr.
Jackman as Lady MacAskivals guest and master, had been servants at the
Old House or on the two farms. Life in that windswept peat-bog Daldour
was precarious at best, and the dwindling race of the MacAskival
crofters and fisherfolk had considered the killing of a sheep or a
deer in Carnglass as no more than getting back a bit of their lost
patrimony. That the sheep and the deer nominally belonged to old Lady
MacAskival was little to them: she was a mere Lowlander, a MacAskival
only by marriage--a bad marriage at that--and their enemy.

So whenever they dared--especially in the early morning or the evening,
when the gamekeepers might be in their cottages--the Daldour men, for
years, had landed in Carnglass under cover of darkness or fog, most
commonly mooring their lobster-boats in a great cave under the headland
on which St. Merin’s Chapel stood. The cave was known to very few;
and though the ascent was precarious even for MacAskivals, still the
descent was so risky as to daunt even the boldest hired gamekeeper,
most of the time.

And it seemed that the taking ways of the Daldour MacAskivals, in
recent years, had been winked at by The MacAskival herself, Miss Mary.
For she had been a little girl on a barren island croft, and knew the
rigors of the Daldour life. Besides, she was adored by, and adored, old
Malcolm Mor, the chief man in Daldour, who for some years turned from
fishing and poaching to being the gardener at the Old House, until Lagg
gave him the sack. Malcolm Mor told her tales of the vanished glories
of the MacAskivals, and of the witcheries of Carnglass, and showed the
schoolgirl, during her Carnglass summers, the secrets of the Old House
and of the Carnglass caves. What Malcolm Mor’s kith and kin did, Mary
MacAskival overlooked when overlooking was discreet. Now and again,
on lonely rambles to the further reaches of the deserted island, Mary
would meet with the furtive deer-stalkers and sheep-stealers from
Daldour, who blended with gorse and heather and bracken when anyone
else showed his face; and they would tip their caps, and offer the girl
strange things washed up from the sea, such as “Mary’s Nut,” a Molucca
bean, come by the Gulf Stream all the way from the Caribbean--for it
brought good fortune, if worn on a chain round the neck.

As for Malcolm Mor, even after canny and tight-fisted Tam Lagg
discharged the old pirate, Mary MacAskival kept in touch with him by a
sepulchral line of communications. Their system was this: on her walks,
Mary would slip a note into the receptacle in Sir Alastair’s tomb at
the chapel, and Malcolm would pick it up when next he climbed over the
cliff-head from his boat moored in the cave far below. Malcolm Mor,
though he was ashamed of the accomplishment as a decadent concession
to modern civilization, could write a primitive English, and he
would scrawl in his crabbed hand brief and respectful replies to The
MacAskival’s communications, giving news of his family to the lonely
girl, and of how the fishing had gone. So long as she was permitted to
ramble at will in Carnglass, Mary MacAskival could send letters to the
outer world through this tomb postbox, for old Duncan would post them
in Loch Boisdale on the few occasions when the lobster boat crossed the
rough waters to South Uist. Thus she had contrived to send her last
message, the unsigned note, crumpled and water-stained, which reached
Duncan MacAskival in Michigan. After that she had been too closely
watched by Jackman and his men to make the attempt, and toward the end
she had not been able to leave the Old House at all.

Before the coming of Jackman, and while Lady MacAskival retained some
vigor and Lagg had the management of the island in his hands, two or
three reasonably zealous gamekeepers made the poaching by the Daldour
men a career of danger and daring, which they dared not attempt more
than once a month, at best. The keepers’ shotguns had wounded two or
three of old Malcolm’s sons and grandsons, and once the keepers almost
had seized the boat moored in the cave.

But after Jackman’s men replaced the old servants, the people at
the Old House scarcely visited the hinterland of Carnglass. Donley,
nominally the new keeper, ordinarily stuck fairly close to his cottage
near the Old House, and the regions round Dalcruach and St. Merin’s
Chapel, especially, became safe ground for the poachers. More and
more of the queer, long-legged, long-necked, soft-fleeced sheep of
Carnglass, and now and then a deer, were borne off triumphantly in the
lobster boat to hungry Daldour.

Only one aspect of the new regime in Carnglass troubled the Daldour
MacAskivals: Dr. Jackman and his ways. They spied upon him from the
bracken, and sometimes crept close enough to perceive the curious
spot in his forehead--which, among these misty folk who told legends
over their peat fires and never saw the penny press and never heard
a wireless, was at once recognized as the supernatural Third Eye of
a Carnglass warlock. They saw the rough crew of town toughs he had
gathered round him, too, and their suspicions grew. And Mary MacAskival
rarely came forth from the Old House; at last she did not come at all,
though they could glimpse her sometimes at the summit of the tower
or in the little walled garden. For the people of Daldour, Miss Mary
MacAskival was the symbol of their identity, and the hope of their
salvation: for she had told old Malcolm, more than once that, when she
was mistress in the island, she would bring back the MacAskivals to
the farms and the crofts from which her aunt had expelled the last of
them in 1914. The man with the third eye, they told one another, meant
Mary MacAskival no good. They continued to watch. None of them were
cowards, but they were shy of the law, for the law had expelled them
from Carnglass; and besides, they were poachers, and in Daldour secret
distillers of whiskey on which they paid no duty.

There were not many of them in Daldour, and few of the men were
young. Of the men who should have been in their thirties, several had
died during the war as naval or merchant seamen; and nearly all the
rest, acquiring new tastes during their military service or unable to
find places for themselves in the island, had gone off to Glasgow or
America. The old and middle-aged MacAskival men in Daldour, for lack of
young blood, withdrew more and more from the modern world, so far as
modernity ever had touched them at all. They were shy of the law, shy
of people from the mainland, shy of townsfolk, shy even of crofters and
fishermen from the other islands.

A week ago, four MacAskivals, Malcolm Mor leading them, had put out in
their boat, cloaked by fog and the setting of the sun, to land again at
the foot of the cliffs below St. Merin’s Chapel. Only the MacAskivals
of Daldour could sail those treacherous waters in such weather. As
they had been about to moor the boat in the cave under the cliff, Dumb
Angus had taken Malcolm by the shoulder and pointed excitedly. Caught
between two rocks near the cave’s mouth, and awash in the ebbing tide,
was the body of a man. They drew the corpse into their boat. It was Tam
Lagg, who had been factor of Carnglass, and his corpse was terribly
battered; he must have fallen from the cliffs. His hat they found a
little later, lodged in a clump of ferns a few yards up the cliff.

“The sea casts its dead upon Carnglass,” a proverb of the Islands runs.
Many men have drowned on the reefs in those waters, or have been caught
in the currents and hurled against the cliffs in their boats; but it
is a strange truth that the whirlpools and eddies in that merciless
sea seem to bring up drowned men from miles round, and lodge what is
left of them among the rocks or on the narrow beaches of the island
called the Heap of Stones. The four men in the Daldour lobster boat
had looked often upon drowned corpses; and they never failed to give
those derelicts decent burial, that they themselves might one day need
in their turn. The graveyard round the chapel in Carnglass, and the
smaller graveyard by the bare beach in Daldour, were dotted with little
wooden crosses marking the graves of seamen and soldiers from torpedoed
transports that had gone down between Uist and Carnglass.

Bury Tam Lagg, then, the MacAskivals must. But they were afraid of
the man with the third eye, at the Old House of Fear, who might lay
the blame of this strange death upon them, since they had enjoyed an
old vendetta with the factor of Carnglass; so they made no attempt to
report the discovery of the body to the people in the Old House. They
thought it best not to bury Lagg in Daldour, lest the body be found by
strangers there and the MacAskivals be accused of foul play. So they
wrapped Lagg in an old piece of canvas and, with great difficulty, got
the body to the top of the cliffs, where they buried it in St. Merin’s
Chapel. On the grave they left a saucer of salt and nails, with a
rowan twig atop it, to keep Lagg’s wraith from wandering, should it be
restless; for they thought it strange that a man so long familiar with
Carnglass should fall to his death.

They were not sorry that Lagg was dead: they had detested him. And Dumb
Angus, who dug the grave, took Lagg’s clothes by way of compensation,
and put them on, so that he looked for all the world like a stout
scarecrow in those torn and stained garments. Malcolm Mor feared that
this act might bring ill luck, but did not interfere, for they were
accustomed to let poor Angus have his way in all reasonable things. And
besides, Angus looked wonderfully comic in Lagg’s clothes, and made the
MacAskivals laugh, and so was happy. Many of the jokes of Dumb Angus
were no stranger than this.

Logan learned these matters from Malcolm Mor there on the edge of the
New House plantation of firs and aspens, while every ten minutes or
so a rifle went off on the landward side of the Old House; Kenneth
and John firing at the windows. Logan’s men had no great supply of
ammunition, but it was necessary to keep Jackman’s people in constant
uneasiness, so that the final rush on the Old House might have some
chance for success. As Logan and Malcolm lay talking, Dumb Angus
crawled up to join them, having finished his work of loading the farm
cart and getting it into the New House plantations.

“Dumb Angus is simple,” Malcolm Mor said, smiling at the burly man,
“but also he is clever. He made the joke better by a doing all his own.
Show Mr. Logan what it was you made, Angus.”

Very cheerfully, Angus took off the injured green porkpie hat he had
inherited from Thomas Lagg. Then he reached into a little leather bag
that hung suspended from one of his shoulders, and drew out a thing
seemingly shapeless. He pulled the thing all the way over his head,
as if it had been a rubber mask, and clapped his hat back on. Then,
gobbling unintelligibly, he looked Logan full in the face.

The effect was the more horrid because at first Logan could not
recognize the origin of this dreadful mask Dumb Angus had assumed. It
was not human, and yet had a semblance of humanity. It hung loosely on
the head. It had nostrils, but no true nose, and a drooping dreadful
mouth, and holes where its eye-sockets should be, with Dumb Angus’s
eyes glowing behind them. Angus wriggled with happiness at the effect
he produced upon Logan. It was the face of one of the peculiar sheep of
Carnglass, painstakingly skinned from the whole skull of the beast and
made a loathsome mask by Angus MacAskival.

If this was what Rab had seen in the gloaming, with the dead Lagg’s
clothing on the heavy body below it, it was no wonder that dull-witted
Rab had gone frantic with dread. “Poor Angus makes this on every
Hallowe’en,” Malcolm Mor was saying, “but this time he made it in the
spring, because he had taken Mr. Lagg’s clothes, and wished to make us
laugh.”

On the same evening that the MacAskivals buried Lagg, they had caught
a glimpse of Donley skulking among boulders near Dalcruach, and they
had hurried back to their boat and returned to Daldour, thinking that
Donley might have seen them as well. But they had found they could
not restrain their curiosity, and so sailed to Carnglass early the
following morning, and from the bracken had seen Donley pursued by
men from the Old House. They had debated among themselves whether
they ought to reveal themselves to Donley and carry him off safely to
Daldour; but they did not know the right and wrong of the feud between
Donley and his pursuers, and also they had an ancient grudge against
all gamekeepers; so they let the chase continue, only watching it from
a fairly safe distance. Two or three times both Donley and the men
from the Old House seemed to suspect that they were being tracked and
watched, and to be correspondingly nervous. This tickled the fancy
of the MacAskivals, especially Dumb Angus, and, without showing
themselves distinctly, they dogged the Carnglass men like bogles.

These MacAskivals had seen Donley and Logan together on the shore, the
night Donley had taken the dinghy. They had watched Logan for a part
of the way as he followed the line of cliffs to the Old House. They
had lingered near the searching parties that went out of the Old House
in pursuit of Donley while Logan had been inside. And on one of these
occasions, three of the MacAskivals--Robert, John, and Dumb Angus--had
been imprudent. Carruthers and Rab, cautiously poking through the
bracken near the ruined farmhouse where Lagg had been caught, had
stumbled upon the Daldour men. Carruthers, in the lead a few yards,
had found himself right in the midst of the three MacAskivals, and
had shouted in astonishment to Rab. Instantly, Malcolm’s two sons had
dragged him down and begun to bind him, snatching away his gun; they
were old hands at such fights with keepers. Rab had come running up,
and Dumb Angus, wearing his sheep-mask and Lagg’s clothes, had risen
out of the bracken to confront him. Turning tail, the shocked and
screaming Rab had run all the way back to the Old House, now and then
firing into the bracken, but never hitting the delighted Angus, who had
followed at a prudent distance. Logan knew the rest.

By this time, Malcolm Mor had become convinced that something was
gravely wrong at the Old House, and was bent on helping Mary MacAskival
if only he could determine what to do. He and the others took
Carruthers back to Daldour in their boat, at the risk of a prosecution
for kidnapping, and locked him in a byre, where they fed him well and
asked him questions quite civilly; but the man was so terror-stricken
that they could get nothing sensible from him. The day after the
capture, the MacAskivals spent in Daldour asking these fruitless
questions of their prisoner. Three hours before dawn on the present
day, they had sailed once more toward Carnglass, with the intention of
going straight up to the Old House, if necessary, and demanding to see
Miss MacAskival.

Then, when almost under the northern headland of Carnglass, the
MacAskivals had seen flaming against the night sky the fire which Logan
and the girl had kindled. That beacon must be close by St. Merin’s
Chapel; and at the chapel Malcolm Mor had collected Mary MacAskival’s
letters, and the Cross of Carnglass had been the point of rendezvous
when Malcolm, now and then, had met with the girl face to face. The
odds were that this fire was a sign from Mary herself. Mooring the
boat, the MacAskivals went warily up the cliff, reaching the summit
just after dawn.

All the time, then, Logan realized, the girl must have entertained hope
of the MacAskivals’ coming. Why she had given him only hints, never
speaking out, he could not say. In part, perhaps, she had hesitated to
speak because she feared that, after all, nothing would come of this.
And in part, likely enough, her pride as The MacAskival had prompted
her to make the decision herself, without consulting even the man she
loved. But most of all, Logan suspected, a certain lingering schoolgirl
love of secrets had been at work. From the time Carruthers was missed
and Rab ran shrieking into the Old House, Mary MacAskival must have
been sure that the MacAskivals of Daldour were in the island. Her only
chance of finding them hurriedly if they were in the island the next
night, or of attracting their attention away in Daldour or out at sea,
was to light the beacon, whatever the risk of attracting Jackman’s
notice. That act had saved Logan, but not yet Mary herself.

Well, Malcolm Mor and the others had got their heads over the summit
of the sea-cliff just as Logan had been fighting with Jackman and his
men at the door of the broch. The men of Daldour had crouched behind
the tumbling drystone wall at the brink of the cliff, unnoticed by
Jackman’s gang during the scuffle. In that moment, Malcolm had sent
his nephew Kenneth scurrying stealthily round the kirkyard wall and
down the brae, to create a diversion. And Kenneth, seeing two more of
Jackman’s men in the valley below, had fired on them to draw Jackman’s
party off at the time Logan and Mary MacAskival were held prisoners
in the graveyard and the chapel. When Malcolm had watched the girl
led away on a rope, he was ready to fight, law or no law. So he and
the others had surrounded St. Merin’s Chapel, stunned Powert, and
discovered, to their astonishment, the betrothed of Mary MacAskival.

“Mr. Logan,” said old Malcolm Mor, apparently quite confident of the
issue of the fight that was coming, “when Carnglass is the lady’s and
yours to do with as you will, Dumb Angus would be a good gardener for
you. It is a keeper that I myself would rather be. Dumb Angus is wise
with animals and plants”--here he patted Angus approvingly on a burly
shoulder--“and he would keep you always laughing.”

Dumb Angus had put the animal-mask back into his bag. He also had
slung over his shoulder, on a strap, the wooden spade that Logan had
seen thrust into the earth in the chapel; Angus had forgotten it there
when he dug Lagg’s grave, but now had retrieved it as the only weapon
ready to his hand. The wearing of such masks, Malcolm had remarked,
was common among the few remaining MacAskival children, in Daldour and
formerly in Carnglass, about Hallowe’en. Covered by that dead animal
face, Angus had looked mightily like the picture of the Firgower on the
ceiling of Jackman’s study in the old tower. Whether this custom was
some dim survival of a practice older than the Christian rites at the
Cross of Carnglass, Logan could not tell. It might have been that the
dead Pictish chiefs of Carnglass had worn such masks in heathen times,
at ceremonies in the chamber within the rock beneath the Old House, or
by the great broch on the cliff, the Pict’s House. Be this as it might,
the horrid false face that was Angus’s delight, like so much else in
Carnglass and Daldour, came as the last faint echo of an old Gaelic
song.

       *       *       *       *       *

All that long afternoon Logan lay in wait hidden by the fir trees,
outwardly calm to hearten the MacAskivals, inwardly in torment at Mary
MacAskival’s danger within the Old House. As the sun began to set, he
dispatched the boy to Kenneth and John, still sniping on the landward
side of the Old House, with the word that they were to join him under
the trees close to the gate of the Victorian block, the moment it was
fairly dark.

When the light was almost gone, Malcolm and Angus harnessed the
Barra horses--which had been tethered behind the New House--to the
straw-loaded farm cart. The long ladder was carried to the edge of the
plantation; the run with it to the first-story windows of the Victorian
wing would be very risky, even if Logan’s whole plan went smoothly, but
the thing was possible. Climbing up the straw, the boy poured the tins
of paraffin over the loaded cart. Angus crept under the cart, to urge
on the horses so far as they dared use them. Kenneth, John, and Robert
were to be stationed behind the cart. When the cart had been drawn to
the edge of the trees, the horses must be cut out of their harness, and
the men, keeping their heads down, must push the cart the remaining
distance across naked rock to the gate of the Old House.

Malcolm Mor, Malcolm Gille, and Logan himself took position at the
edge of the trees, prone, with guns ready to fire into the windows
above the gate. These movements seem to have attracted attention from
whomever was on duty at those windows, for one shot was fired from the
Old House. But Logan’s men did not reply, and as the dark descended,
the great gray bulk of the castle of the MacAskivals lay still and
ominous, with not one light showing. Now, Mary, Hugh Logan thought,
I’ll go to you. The MacAskivals beside him knew what they had to do,
and none of them had shown much sign of fear.

The cart would be set afire against the gate, and Logan and the two
Malcolms would blaze away at the adjacent windows, as if the assault
were to come there. That was, after all, a venerable Highland and
Island military device, especially beloved by Rob Roy; and though if
the cart burned well it might char through the gate, there was no
danger of the great house, which was all stone, catching fire. But
Logan did not intend really to rush the gate. The true attack would be
on the flank, around the corner: while the attention of the defenders
was concentrated on the gate, Logan and his men would carry the ladder
to the windows of the landward side and break in, if they could. And
then, presumably, there would be shooting within the house; and the
odds were not in Logan’s favor. But this was the best he could do. It
was all he could do for Mary MacAskival, and it might be too late.

Now the cart had been pulled by the horses to the edge of the trees.
Someone inside the house must have heard the jingle of harness and the
whinnying of horses, for a shot fired at a venture passed through the
branches above their heads. “Now, Kenneth MacAskival, Angus!” Logan
said. They cut the horses out of the harness, and four men commenced,
shoving with all their strength, to run with the cart across the little
plateau of rock to the door of the Old House. As yet, the straw was not
alight, for they would need the advantage of darkness so long as they
could keep it.

Into the quiet night came a hoarse shout of alarm from the house:
Royall’s voice, Logan thought in that instant. Two rifles fired at the
cart, and then a third. Logan and his companions fired as fast as they
could into the windows above the gate, and Logan heard a man scream.
Still the cart ran on, and then crashed into the gate itself. The
riflemen in the house were firing straight down into the cart now, and
three of the MacAskivals ran out from behind it, leaping and rolling
for the shelter of the trees; Logan and the Malcolms covered them with
the best barrage they could contrive. That left Dumb Angus under the
cart.

Logan had given Angus careful instructions, through Malcolm Mor. Angus
had been handed a length of charred rope, and a supply of matches.
Crouching under the cart, he was to light the frayed rope, throw it
into the straw, and run for it. For Angus was very quick of body. Now
Logan saw a tiny flame spring up beneath the cart; it grew; still Angus
lingered. Next a flaming coil was flung upon the dry straw, which
caught. Two or three minutes passed, the firing from the house--were
there only two rifles now?--sporadic. Then a mass of flame roared up
from the cart, kindling the lumber among the straw also, and the light
from it shown fiercely across the empty windows of the façade. Angus
scooted from under the cart and down across the rock, Logan and the
others firing to cover him; but there was no answer from the windows by
the gate.

Now for the worst part. John MacAskival was useless, shot in one arm,
and dazed with shock; Logan flung his gun to the boy, telling him to
fire at will, for three minutes, into the windows by the gate; the boy
was utterly delighted. The rest of them, seizing the ladder, swung out
of the plantation toward the right, veered round the corner of the
Victorian block, and set the ladder against a first-story window,
Angus holding it firm at the bottom. Someone fired a shot from above
them, but no one seemed to be hit.

Logan leaped up, the others behind him, and in two seconds was smashing
out of the window-frame the shattered remnants of the plate glass,
using his gun-butt, and expecting any moment to get a bullet in his
chest. But the room within was silent. He flung himself into that room,
and the four MacAskivals were at his heels. And now, indeed, there were
gunshots; but they came from deep within the house, and no one opposed
Logan as they burst into the corridor.




15


Someone yelled in the corridor as Logan entered. But it was only a
little paper-white man, dragging a rifle feebly as if it were a ball
and chain: Tompkins. At sight of Logan, the butler dropped the rifle
altogether, falling to his knees, and cried, “O Gawd! Mr. Logan, sir,
don’t ’urt me, don’t! I’m your slaive, Mr. Logan! O Gawd, Jackman’s
mad, and they’re murderin’ heach hother below stairs.”

Clutching at Logan’s legs, Tompkins babbled on as to how he was only
an honest butler and part-time burglar, unaccustomed to killing. Logan
jerked him to his feet and forced him in the direction of the gunfire
within the house. “In the billiard room, Mr. Logan, sir!”

Urging Tompkins before them, Logan and the MacAskivals ran to the end
of the passage, rounded the corner to the left, and came to the door
of the billiard room. Dead or dying, Royall lay face down across the
threshold. Reckless, Logan strode over him. The big room, with its
long windows looking toward the harbor, had three more men in it. One
was Anderson, shot through the belly, writhing with his back against a
leg of the billiard table. One was Rab, sprawled in the middle of the
red Victorian carpet, a bullet hole between his eyes. The third was a
man Logan had not seen before, lying on a sofa, his eyes bandaged,
sightless, moaning in fear--Till, of course, the burned boatman. Where
was Jackman? Two or three more shots, in quick succession, sounded
within the house, somewhere below.

“Tompkins, tell me where Jackman’s gone, or I’ll finish you,” Logan
said. The butler, stammering and choking, could only point toward the
cellars below. Malcolm Mor ran in.

“In the room above the gate,” Malcolm said--he slipped here into
Gaelic, and with difficulty found his English again--“there is a
man with long hair, like a gypsy, and he has been shot through the
shoulder, and can do no harm.” That would be Niven; and that left
Jackman and Simmons and Ferd Caggia. And Mary, Mary.

“Tompkins,” Logan said, taking the man by the throat, “show me where
the crypt with the explosives is.” The butler reeled in Logan’s grip
along the passage, and down a flight of stairs, and then pointed to an
open doorway, from which stone steps led into shadows. Angus was behind
Logan; the other MacAskivals were poking into the rooms.

Releasing Tompkins, Logan went down those steps to a little landing,
and started to turn to the remaining flight that would take him to the
crypt. A rifle cracked, and the bullet ricocheted from the wall. Logan
flung himself back, nearly upsetting Angus.

“Jackman,” Logan called down, “drop your gun and come up, and I’ll
promise you a trial. Otherwise we’ll promise nothing.”

But it was not Jackman that answered from the crypt. “Ah! Meester
Logan, that is you?” The voice was rather faint.

“Who’s there?”

“Fernando Caggia, your fren’. Meester Logan, you owe me a pardon for
what I do.”

“Drop your gun, Caggia, and come up.”

A rifle was flung to the foot of the stairs. “Meester Logan, I can not
come up, for Dr. Jackman, he shoot me twice. But I save you.”

Logan leaped down those stairs. A barricade of boxes and chairs stood
before a little iron door, and between door and barricade lay Caggia,
covered with blood. “In this room,” Caggia said, trying to grin, “is
the gelignite. Dr. Jackman, he try to reach it, but I, Fernando Caggia,
do not let him. He shoot, I shoot, he shoot. I hit him once.”

“Where is he?”

Caggia gave a weak shrug. “One minute ago, he runs.”

Leaving Angus to watch the iron door, Logan dashed back up the stairs,
and at the top Malcolm met him. “We can not find that man,” Malcolm
said. “Will he be in the old tower?”

“Mary?”

“The door of the room of Lady MacAskival is locked, but there are
people inside.”

Now the boy had joined them, and as they ran into the Renaissance
building, Kenneth and Robert came out of a passage and followed. They
were at the door of the room which was hung with Spanish leather. Logan
tried the knob fiercely; it would not turn. He smashed at the door with
his rifle-butt, using all the strength that was in him, and it burst
inward. Someone leaped for him. “Hugh, Hugh!” Before them all, Mary
MacAskival covered him with kisses.

       *       *       *       *       *

Later, from Mary and Tompkins and Till, Logan got an understanding of
what had passed within the Old House since morning. Wild with fury and
bewilderment, Jackman had dragged her back to the Old House from the
chapel, the three men with him as much afraid of their master as of the
shadowy armed men whom Anderson had seen before the chapel. According
to Anderson, there were twelve or fifteen of them, armed to the teeth.
At the moment of his triumph, of his taking of Logan, suddenly Jackman
had been undone. There was no way out.

Like a man in the grip of nightmare, Jackman scarcely could speak.
For a few moments, just after they had got back within the shelter
of the Old House, a flash of his old power returned to him. Seeing
Jackman bemused, Anderson and Rab and Caggia and Simmons made for the
girl: they would beat out of her the truth about those armed men by
the chapel. But turning on them, “like Rumpelstiltskin again,” Jackman
broke that mutiny, and hurried Mary MacAskival through the passages to
her aunt’s room. Thrusting her inside, he gave her a long look. “Well,”
Jackman said, passing his hand across his forehead, “I wish I had known
you long ago. Now you are going to die. We all are about to die.” He
went out, locking the door behind him.

All that day, Mary knelt praying in the room hung with Spanish leather.
Lady MacAskival, wasted beyond belief, lay motionless in her big bed,
not seeming to hear the bullets striking the walls in the rooms across
the gallery. Old Agnes sobbed in a corner. From the windows of this
room, Mary could see only the harbor, with the burned yacht, and the
empty sea beyond. And she prayed for Hugh Logan and for Carnglass.

It was Tompkins who told Logan much of what followed. Jackman,
uncertain in movements and speech, as if half paralyzed, stationed
Anderson, Rab, and Caggia in rooms on the landward side of the Old
House, to reply to the sniping from the bracken. Simmons he put into
the study, guarding the door of the old tower. He ordered Niven and
Tompkins to duty in the rooms above the gate. For a time he went
himself to the roof of the old tower and fired at the riflemen slinking
among the distant rocks and heather and bracken; but all this was
done as if he were sleep-walking. Then he went down to the billiard
room, which was safe from gunfire, and sat at a table with his head
in his hands. Royall tried to talk with him, but Jackman would not
reply. Thereafter Royall conducted the defense, so far as there was any
organized resistance.

Caggia, who had gone below stairs to get the men food, did not
reappear. Rab and Anderson, driven from the landward rooms by the
sniping, got at the rum. They drank it in the billiard room where
Jackman sat, and cursed at Jackman, and Jackman did not answer. And the
hours passed.

Royall, left alone in the landward rooms, had his cheek laid open by
a splinter of glass, but he kept on firing. When the sniping ceased
on that side, he went to the billiard room and again tried to rouse
Jackman. At gun-point, Royall ordered Rab up to the room over the
gate, to reinforce Niven and Tompkins. Anderson went below stairs,
and Tompkins heard him crying defiantly to Royall--something about
explosives.

When the attack on the gate came, and the cart was burning under the
windows, Niven was hit by a bullet. In panic, Rab fled to the billiard
room, screaming out, “The hoose! They’re burnin’ a’ the hoose!” Royall
and Anderson hurried in. This was told to Logan by the blinded boatman
Till, who had lain helpless during the billiard-room fight.

“O aye, we’re done!” Anderson roared. “Gie it ower, Jackman, we’ve had
it!”

Then Jackman rose from his chair. “Royall,” Jackman said, “keep the men
here.”

“Gude God,” Till heard Anderson say, “the auld de’il’s for the
explosives! Jackman, damn ye, dinna open that door.”

“Rab,” cried Royall, “drop your gun.” Shooting began then, Till
cowering on the sofa. There must have been four or five shots, and
after them running steps. Till could hear Anderson groaning and
cursing. After that, Logan and his men came.

Edmund Jackman had made for the cellars and the gelignite. Down there,
Ferd Caggia crouched behind a little barricade in front of the iron
door; for Ferd had remembered Logan’s words about Jackman’s madness,
and he, cat-like, had been watching Jackman. “Dr. Jackman,” Caggia had
said, “you don’ blow me to hell.” Jackman had fired at him promptly,
and had hit him, but Caggia had fired back. After a minute’s exchange
of shots, the Maltese, wounded, still gripped his rifle behind the
boxes and chairs. Jackman had leaped back up the stairs and was gone
through the passages. Even his try for annihilation had failed.

       *       *       *       *       *

Simmons they found still in the study in the old tower, and took him
without difficulty. But Dr. Edmund Jackman they did not find. The door
to the garden was open, and Simmons said that from the window he had
seen Jackman go over the garden wall, favoring one side as if he were
slightly wounded.

“I think, Mr. Logan,” Malcolm Mor said, “that because he is a clever
man, he will have gone to look for our boat below the chapel.”

Yes, he would have, Logan thought. In the course of the fight, Jackman
must have recognized some of the attackers, perhaps old Malcolm; and,
having seen them that morning near the chapel, he would guess that the
boat was below those cliffs. That the wounded man could find his way
down, Logan doubted. Yet so long as Jackman was at large, no one in
Carnglass could be safe. The hound had become the fox now.

“Mary,” Hugh Logan said, “I must be after him.” She had an arm around
him.

“I know the island best,” she told him, “and from this night I am going
to stay with you always, Hugh.”

He looked down at her. “And who would guard the Old House, then, and do
something for the men who’ve been shot, and put out the embers at the
gate, and give the MacAskivals something to eat?”

Knowing that this was no moment for argument if Jackman were bound
for the boat, Mary MacAskival looked proudly into Logan’s eyes. “Then
take Malcolm Mor,” she said, “for he will know where to search, and I
will send other men so soon as I can.” The MacAskivals, having locked
Simmons and Tompkins in a cellar, crowded round her deferentially for
instructions. “Dr. Jackman shot my dog, Hugh, to hurt me. But do you
come back to me, forever.”

One last kiss, and then he left her in her strength and beauty, as the
tears were starting down her cheeks. “Before sunrise, Mary girl, I’ll
be with you.” Logan and Malcolm Mor went through the garden--for the
great gate still was a charred and smoking hulk--and over the garden
dyke below the old tower, the way that Jackman had gone, and they
strode toward St. Merin’s Chapel. Now and then Logan stumbled: he had
been without sleep for twenty-four hours.

“If he can go down the cliffs,” Malcolm Mor panted, “then the man with
the third eye is more than man.” Malcolm was a wonder: he had been on
his feet nearly as long as Logan, and he was past seventy.

Beyond Cailleach, they flung themselves down for a brief rest. Their
rifles seemed immensely heavy. Carnglass, in its nocturnal beauty, was
at peace. The bleating of sheep, disturbed by the men, echoed from the
heights where the chapel stood. “Malcolm Mor,” Logan said, “I believe
you think Jackman really is something not human.”

“It would be well to have silver bullets for our guns.” The old man
muttered something in Gaelic. “But devil or not, he will have climbed
up there.” Malcolm Mor gestured toward the headland. They took up their
guns again, and in less than an hour made out the shape of St. Merin’s
Chapel, and of the Pict’s House, the Firgower’s House, beyond it.

“If he has tried the path here,” Malcolm said very low, “he will
not reach the shore alive, not knowing the way, and having a bullet
in him.” Both Logan and Malcolm Mor moved slowly now; Logan doubted
whether even Malcolm, while so weary, could descend this precipice, and
he was certain that he himself could not. They climbed over the ruinous
drystone wall close by the broch; from the dyke to the crumbling
cliff-edge was less than a yard. A thousand feet and more below, the
ocean heaved northward to the pole.

Then something rose from behind the dyke. Malcolm Mor tried to bring
up his rifle, but a bullet struck the stock and sent the gun spinning
from his hand. Logan had his rifle over his shoulder. He pulled at it
desperately. And Jackman shot Hugh Logan.

Logan fell backward, and his head struck nothing at all, for he lay
right on the cliff’s edge, with only infinite space at the back of his
head. There was a fierce pain in his right thigh, where the bullet
from the little pistol had caught him. Edmund Jackman stepped over
the broken dyke and stood only seven or eight feet distant from them,
his left arm pressed hard against his side. The moonlight was full on
Jackman’s face, and the eyes were slits, and the face was that of a man
lost in a nightmare. Malcolm Mor stood fixed by the spot where Logan
lay.

“Young Askival and Old Askival,” Jackman said. “I have the two of you.”
He pointed the pistol at Malcolm. “Put him over the edge, Old Askival.”

Malcolm Mor bent slowly over Logan. He took Logan by the shoulders, and
drew him back from that terrible cliff-lip, and propped him against
a stone fallen from the dyke. Silent, Malcolm stared at Jackman. I am
done, Logan thought, but if I can catch his ankle, Jackman may go over
the edge with me, and Mary will be safe.

“Both of you at once, then,” Jackman said dismally. “Old Askival and
Young Askival.” He took aim at Malcolm. Hugh Logan tried to hurl
himself forward, but his smashed thighbone failed him.

There came, at that instant, a kind of gurgling cry, and a sound
of running, of something hurrying right along the cliff’s edge, at
Jackman’s back. Edmund Jackman turned his head. Malcolm and Logan and
Jackman saw all at once the thing that was coming.

It was a burly man in tattered corduroy breeches, a long green jacket,
and a yellow waistcoat, with a porkpie hat on his head, his arms
flapping as he ran. He mouthed as he came, but what noise he uttered
was not speech. And his face was a dead mask, and not human. The thing
made straight for Jackman.

Mary had sent Angus after Logan. And, with the heroism of children and
simpletons, Angus sought to put his body between Logan and his enemy.

But what Edmund Jackman saw in that dreadful masked figure, Logan knew:
the shape of his victim, and the face of his nightmare horror. With a
moan, Jackman turned to run. He took one bound in that high place, and
upon the brink the heather gave beneath him; and where Lagg had gone
down, there Jackman fell.

Though they say that the ocean yields up all its dead upon the skerries
of Carnglass, no man found Jackman after. As from the cliff-head at
Gadara, the unclean spirit was cast into the sea. And Logan, with
Malcolm Mor kneeling beside him and Dumb Angus shivering with fright
against the dyke, heard no sound from below but the suck of the tide
upon the weary stones.




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