She slept well, helped on her way by half the contents of a bottle of whisky that some thoughtful person had left in her little room when she returned to it. She had seldom drunk so much in such a short period of time, and when - just about dawn - she was woken by a light tapping on her door, her head felt swollen, and her tongue like a suede glove. It took her a moment to orient herself, during which time the rapping was repeated, and the small window in the door opened from the other side. An urgent face was pressed to it: that of an old man, with a fungal beard and wild eyes. 'Mrs Jape,' he hissed. 'Mrs Jape. May we have words?'
She crossed to the door and looked through the window. The old man's breath was two-parts stale ouzo to one of fresh air. It kept her from pressing too close to the window, though he beckoned her.
'Who are you?' Vanessa asked, not simply out of abstract curiosity, but because the features, sunburnt and leathery, reminded her of somebody.
The man gave her a fluttering look. 'An admirer,' he said. 'Do I know you?'
He shook his head. 'You're much too young,' he said. 'But I know you. I watched you come in. I wanted to warn you, but I didn't have time.'
'Are you a prisoner here too?'
'In a manner of speaking. Tell me ... did you see Floyd?'
'Who?'
'He escaped. The day before yesterday.'
'Oh,' Vanessa said, beginning to thread these dropped pearls together. 'Floyd was the man they were chasing?'
'Certainly. He slipped out, you see. They went after him - the clods - and left the gate open. The security is shocking these days -' He sounded genuinely outraged by the situation.' - Not that I'm not pleased you're here.' There was some desperation in his eyes, she thought; some sorrow he fought to keep submerged. 'We heard shots,' he said. 'They didn't get him, did they?'
'Not that I saw,' Vanessa replied. 'I went to look. But there was no sign -'
'Ha!' said the old man, brightening. 'Maybe he did get away then.'
It had already occurred to Vanessa that this conversation might be a trap; that the old man was her captor's dupe, and this was just another way to squeeze information from her. But her instincts instructed otherwise. He looked at her with such affection, and his face, which was that of a maestro clown, seemed incapable of forged feeling. For better or worse, she trusted him. She had little choice.
'Help me get out,' she said. 'I have to get out.'
He looked crest-fallen. 'So soon?' he said. 'You only just arrived.'
'I'm not a thief. I don't like being locked up.'
He nodded. 'Of course you don't,' he replied, silently admonishing himself for his selfishness. 'I'm sorry. It's just that a beautiful woman - ' He stopped himself, then began again, on a fresh tack. 'I never had much of a way with words ...'
'Are you sure I don't know you from somewhere?' Vanessa inquired. 'Your face is somehow familiar.'
'Really?' he said. 'That's very nice. We all think we're forgotten here, you see.'
'All?'
'We were snatched away such a time ago. Many of us were only beginning our researches. That's why Floyd made a run for it. He wanted to do a few months' decent work before the end. I feel the same sometimes.' His melancholy train halted, and he returned to her question. 'My name is Harvey Gomm; Professor Harvey Gomm. Though these days I forget what I was professor of.'
Gomm. It was a singular name, and it rang bells, but she could at present find no tune in the chimes.
'You don't remember, do you?' he said, looking straight into her eyes.
She wished she could lie, but that might alienate the fellow - the only voice of sanity she'd discovered here - more than the truth; which was:
'No... I don't exactly remember. Maybe a clue?'
But before he could offer her another piece of his mystery, he heard voices.
'Can't talk now, Mrs Jape.'
'Call me Vanessa.'
'May I?' His face bloomed in the warmth of her benificence. 'Vanessa.'
'You will help me?' she said.
'As best I may,' he replied. 'But if you see me in company -'
' - We never met.'
'Precisely. Au revoir.' He closed the panel in the door, and she heard his footsteps vanish down the corridor. When her custodian, an amiable thug called Guillemot, arrived several minutes later bearing a tray of tea, she was all smiles.
Her outburst of the previous day seemed to have born some fruit. That morning, after breakfast, Mr Klein called in briefly and told her that she would be allowed out into the grounds of the place (with Guillemot in attendance), so that she might enjoy the sun. She was further supplied with a new set of clothes - a little large for her, but a welcome relief from the sweaty garments she had now worn for over twenty-four hours. This last concession to her comfort was a curates' egg, however. Pleased as she was to be wearing clean underwear the fact that the clothes had been supplied at all suggested that Mr Klein was not anticipating a prompt release.
How long would it be, she tried to calculate, before the rather obtuse manager of her tiny hotel realized that she wasn't coming back; and in that event, what he would do? Perhaps he had already alerted the authorities; perhaps they would find the abandoned car and trace her to this curious fortress. On this last point her hopes were dashed that very morning, during her constitutional. The car was parked in the laurel-tree enclosure beside the gate, and to judge by the copious blessings rained upon it by the doves had been there overnight. Her captors were not fools. She might have to wait until somebody back in England became concerned, and attempted to trace her whereabouts, during which time she might well die of boredom.
Others in the place had found diversions to keep them from insanity's door. As she and Guillemot wandered around the grounds that morning she could distinctly hear voices - one of them Gomm's - from a nearby courtyard. They were raised in excitement. 'What's going on?'
'They're playing games,' Guillemot replied.
'Can we go and watch?' she asked casually.
'No-'
'I like games.'
'Do you?' he said. 'We'll play then, eh?'
This wasn't the response she'd wanted, but pressing the point might have aroused suspicion.
'Why not?' she said. Winning the man's trust could only be to her advantage.
'Poker?' he said.
'I've never played.'
'I'll teach you,' he replied. The thought clearly pleased him. In the adjacent courtyard the players now sent up a din of shouts. It sounded to be some kind of race, to judge by the mingled calls of encouragement, and the subsequent deflation as the winning-post was achieved. Guillemot caught her listening.
'Frogs,' he said. 'They're racing frogs.'
'I wondered.'
Guillemot looked at her almost fondly, and said, 'Better not.'
Despite Guillemot's advice, once her attention focussed on the sound of the games she could not drive the din from her head. It continued through the afternoon, rising and falling. Sometimes laughter would erupt; as often, there would arguments. They were like children, Gomm and his friends, the way they fought over such an inconsequential pursuit as racing frogs. But in lieu of more nourishing diversions, could she blame them? When Gomm's face appeared at the door later that evening, almost the first thing she said was: 'I heard you this morning, in one of the courtyards. And then this afternoon, too. You seemed to be having a good deal of fun.'
'Oh, the games,' Gomm replied. 'It was a busy day. So much to be sorted out.'