“No,” said Margaret. “I’m sure you did right. Have you told Aunt Anne, Uncle Peter?”
“None of your business!” he shouted, so she knew he hadn’t. “He talks about we —we did this, we’re planning that. You're in it!”
“Oh no, Uncle Peter! You can’t think that. I don’t know anything about machines — I hate them and I wouldn’t understand them anyway. Don’t you think he might mean Lucy and Tim?”
Uncle Peter peered for a moment at the paper, too
dazed with anger to read or think. Then he shoved his face close against Margaret’s, so that she could smell his cabbagy breath, and stared into her eyes.
“Maybe,” he growled deep in his throat, “maybe not — we’ll know the morning. He says he’s not planning to be off these two days, so likely he’ll be back by dawn. Till then I’ll just lock you in while I go and rout Davey Gordon out. Rosie can watch out of the parlor window, so there’ll be no nonsense like you tying your sheets together and climbing down, see!”
“Of course not!” said Margaret.
He took his face away and stood brooding for a moment at the lantern.
“Dear Lord in Heaven,” he said softly, “have I not been tried enough?”
When he’d gone, followed by Rosie, she sat in the dark pierced through and through with pure despair. First she thought, if I stay where I am it’ll look as though I had nothing to do with it. Second, and much stronger, came the thought, I must warn them — if I dress I might just be able to get down from the window and run to Scrub before Rosie catches me. I’ll have to ride him bareback, because there’ll be no time to harness him, and I doubt if he’ll like that, but it’s the only chance.
She was putting a big jersey on and still trying to think of a way to distract Rosie from the parlor window when the door scraped faintly — the bolt was being drawn back. Margaret stiffened at the creak of the hinges; now she was going to be caught fully dressed, with no possible lie to account for it.
“Marge, Marge,” whispered Aunt Anne’s voice, “get dressed as quick as you can.”
“I am dressed.”
“Oh, thank heavens. He was too angry to think of locking your pony up. You’ve just time to saddle up and ride to warn Jo. I’ll keep Rosie busy while you get through the kitchen.”
“No,” said Margaret, “I’ll climb down from Jo’s window — she can’t see that side of the house. Then you can bolt the door after me and go back to bed and seem too sick to move, and they won’t know what’s happened.” “Marge, please, Marge,” said Aunt Anne, “if the Changes ever end, bring him home.”
“He’ll come anyway,” said Margaret. “I’m sure.”
“And Marge, remember Pete’s a good man, really. A very good man.”
“I know. I like him too.”
As she tiptoed down the passage she heard a noise like sobbing, but so faint that the grate of the closing bolt drowned it.
Scrub was waiting for her at the paddock gate, as if there was nothing he wanted more than a midnight gallop. As she tightened the girth of the heavy sidesaddle she heard a new noise in the night — men’s excited voices. That meant the lane was blocked, so she swung herself into the saddle and set Scrub’s head to the low place in the far wall, which she’d often eyed as a possible jump if it hadn’t meant going over into Farmer Boothroyd’s land. But tonight she didn’t care a straw for old and foolish feuds.
Scrub must have thought about the jump too, for he
took it with a clean swoop, like a rook in the wind. Then came a good furlong down across soft and silent turf to the far gate; then the muddy footpath along the bottom of Squire’s Park; a steep track up, and they were out in Edge Lane.
Potholed tarmac, unmended through five destroying winters, is a poor surface for a horse to hurry over in the dark, especially when it tilts down like a slate roof between tall hedges. In places Margaret could risk a trot, for they both knew the road well by now, but mostly there was nothing for it but a walk. Luckily Scrub had sensed the excitement and urgency of the journey, so he didn’t loiter; but the dip to the stream was agonizingly slow and the climb beyond slower still. Then they could canter along the old main road — though they nearly fell from over-confidence in the pitchy blackness beneath the trees; the descent to the Vale was slow again, before they could hit a really fast clip along the bottom.
Margaret did sums. Caesar was a slower pony, and Jonathan wouldn’t be hurrying as much as she was. But he’d left at least an hour before she had — probably two hours. Suppose he spent half an hour at the docks, making arrangements (he’d have thought it all out in his head on the way down, and would know exactly what he wanted) — she’d gain at least half an hour on him on the journey, almost a whole hour; so they’d meet on the big road at the bottom, or the bridge, or the towpath if he’d dallied. She began to strain her ears for distant hooves. The far cry of a dog made her shiver with sudden terror, but it might have been miles away.
The iron bridge rang beneath Scrub’s shoes, but that was the only sound in the wide night. She must have missed him; he’d found some clever way home, across fields. Desperately she hurried Scrub along the matted grass of the towpath, leaning low over his neck and peering forward for the place where they turned up past the deserted house into the road.
“Marge!” called a voice out of the shadows behind her. She reined back; hooves scuffled, and a small shape led a larger shape out into the unshadowed path behind her.
“I thought it must be you,” said Jonathan. “What’s happened?”
“Rosie found your letter and took it to Uncle Peter.”
“But I hid . . . Oh, never mind. It all depends what they do. We’d best go back to the tug and talk to the others.”
They led the ponies through the ruined garden.
“If they come down here and find us,” mused Jonathan, “we’ll be done. We could run away, but we’d have to leave Otto, and Tim will be hard to hide. We could turn the horses loose and all hide in the city, but then we’d be worse off than before. But if we can start the engine, and if the canal is deep all the way down, we can get clear away, provided they don’t try to cut us off. In a chase we’ll go faster than they do, and keep going, and that should give us about two hours at Sharpness. That would be enough if the tide’s right, and Otto’s worked a tide table out. We’ll have to see.”
“Couldn’t we start to tow her down while you’re working on the engines?” said Margaret. “That would save time.”
“Not worth it. We’ve got to run the auxiliary for at least an hour before we can start the main engine, and if we try to do that while we’re towing through the countryside people will come swarming out and catch us helpless. Once we go, we must go fast, because of the noise. But you’ll still be useful, you two.”
She could hear from his voice that he was grinning in the dark.
“You’ll have to ride ahead and open the bridges,” he said.
“Yes, I think I can do that; nobody lives near them, except for the two at that village down at the far end.”
“It’s called Purton on the map. We might be able to stop and tow her past there. You’re going to have to ride fast, Marge — she does nearly ten miles an hour, flat out, Otto thinks.”
“That’s too fast. We could do it for a bit, but we’d never keep it up.”
“I’ll talk to Otto,” said Jonathan.
The tug lay still and lightless, a dull black blob on the shiny black water, but Davey yapped once, sharply, as they came along the quay. They heard a quick scuffle as Jonathan crossed the ladder — Tim, presumably holding the muzzle of a struggling pup.