She saw his face hard with anger.
“How do you know that? She was there, wasn’t she- came along with the lantern just as soon as I’d pulled you up.”
She shook her head.
“She loves me. It couldn’t be Louie any more than it could be you.”
He nodded slowly.
“Yes-I was there too-wasn’t I? Sure it couldn’t have been me?”
Their eyes met. Time stayed. Then she said,
“You see. That’s all I’ve got-the people I love. That’s something secure. When that is shaken I can’t bear it. Outside that it’s all suspicion-no one trusting anyone else-Louie trying to make me believe it was Caroline, or Richard, or both of them-Cosmo trying to make me believe it was you-and I, God forgive me, only too ready to believe it might be Maurice or Ernest, because, you see, I don’t love them.”
He put the Wadlows aside with an odd sweeping gesture.
“So Cosmo thinks it was me. I’d like you to tell me why.”
He caught the flicker of a smile.
“Revenge of course-because of your father and my father-the real full-dress, old-fashioned feud-”
She had the feeling of having stepped over the edge of an unseen drop. She got a quite unmistakable jolt. It stopped her. She saw his face harden. There was as sudden an effect of change as if she had looked from him to his presentment cut in stone. The light was bad. It might have been an illusion, for before she could draw a breath it was gone and he was saying.
“So I pushed you over. But why did I pull you up again?”
She said rather breathlessly, “Because you saw Louisa’s lantern of course. Or you might have had a brain-storm and then felt sorry about it.”
“I see-”
He looked up and down the road. Three young men on bicycles flitted noiselessly by, bodies stooped, heads down, hands gripping. Gloom swallowed them.
Gale Brandon said roughly.
“That’s enough about that. I haven’t kissed you yet.”
Chapter Thirty-two
Rachel drew away at last. She had not known that she could feel like this-to be two people and yet one, to have a double strength and a double joy, to be the giver of joy and the giver of love to someone whose only thought was to give and give again. A line of Browning’s came to her and stayed: “Men have died, trying to find this place which we have found.” She felt the triumph of that, and its disregard of death.
She wrenched herself as from a dream, putting him away with her two hands.
“Gale, we must go on-we must.”
He said reflectively, “I don’t know what you want to go on for, honey.”
She shook his arm.
“I’ve got to find Caroline.”
“And you don’t know where she is, so how are you going to find her? See here, if she left while you were at lunch, that would be somewhere before two o’clock.”
“We went down to lunch at a quarter past one. Her tray went up about five minutes after that. She wasn’t undressed- she could have got away easily by half past one. She had had a note telling her to go. It said, ‘Better get away while we’re all at lunch-you’ll get a good start,’ and something about Miss Silver being a detective. And then, ‘They’ll make you speak if you don’t get away. We can talk things over and decide what had better be done.’ And a bit half torn off, with, ‘I’ll make an excuse and-’ I thought it meant I’ll make an excuse and come after you.”
“How do you know all this?”
“Miss Silver found the bits all torn up. Some of the pieces were missing, Richard’s name was on one piece- just the name by itself. That doesn’t mean he wrote it. It was typed-on his machine. But that doesn’t mean he wrote it. We don’t know who wrote it, and we don’t know who she’s gone to meet, because just those bits were destroyed. I suppose she took care about that.”
“But Treherne followed her. He did just what the note said-he made an excuse and followed her.” He was starting the car as he spoke. “Would you worry about her if you thought she was with Treherne?”
Rachel looked at him.
“I’m frightened,” she said. “I’ve been frightened all the time. But what frightens me most is that I can see Miss Silver is frightened too. And I oughtn’t to be frightened if Caroline is with Richard, because he loves her.”
Gale Brandon looked straight ahead of him. Visibility was not too good. He thought, “There’s a fog coming up. It’s a bad business.” He said out loud,
“I liked Treherne a good deal, but I don’t know him. Miss Silver said two things to me, and I’m going to tell you one of them. She said not to let you out of my sight, so I’d like you to bear that in mind.”
“What was the other thing?”
“I’m not telling you that yet. Let’s get back to Caroline. If she got off by half past one, she wouldn’t be far off getting to London now. It’s after three, and I suppose she’d make it in two hours at the outside.”
“Not if she had to wait for the person who wrote that letter. And if it was Richard, he-it must have been quite two o’clock before he got away.”
“And you don’t know where he would take her?”
“No-Cosmo thought…She has the key of Cosmo’s flat. We thought-”
“But wasn’t that when you were thinking she had gone alone? Would Treherne take her there? That’s the point.”
Rachel hesitated.
“He might-if they wanted to talk-if he wanted to get her away. She knows something-my poor Caroline-and she’s frightened of being made to speak. Oh, if I could only find her! She needn’t be frightened-she needn’t be frightened about anything. She’s got such a tender heart, and she’s easily hurt. I’m blaming myself terribly, because I’ve seen for some time that she was upset. But I thought that it was Richard, and I didn’t like to interfere.”
“And he’s in love with her you say?”
“But she has refused him. That is what I can’t make out. I’ve been so sure that they cared for each other.” Gale Brandon was thinking of the second thing which Miss Silver had said to him-the thing which he had refused to tell Rachel. “Miss Caroline is in great danger.” That was what she had said, and that was what had made him wonder if she was crazy. If she was, then they could have the laugh on her. But if she wasn’t-well, in that case things didn’t look too good. And one of the people they didn’t look too good for was Richard Treherne. He said abruptly,
“Are you sure she’s not crazy, that Miss Silver?”
“Quite, quite sure.”
He accelerated sharply. The hedgerows became a mere streak on either side, with the fog smudging them.
They came to the ugly outskirts of Ledlington, and had to drop again to thirty. Rows and rows of little new houses, with names like Happicot and Mon Abri. Then the older streets, with the older, dingier houses. And ultimately the narrow High Street with a big new multiple store or a cinema crammed in here and there among the relics of an Elizabethan, a Georgian, or a Victorian day.
Right through the town and out on the other side to the London road. Away from the lights of the shop windows dusk and the fog darkened the landscape. Flat fields, cropped hedges, a row of bare elm trees marching on either side of a lane, a signpost with the words “To Slepham Halt.”
They were five miles out of Ledlington, and in that five miles neither of them had spoken. Rachel said suddenly,
“Stop, Gale!”
He glanced round at her, his foot on the brake.
“What is it?”
She said, “I don’t know. I feel as if we were going the wrong way. Do you believe in that sort of feeling?”
“I should call it a hunch.” The car slowed down and stopped. “Well, I don’t know. They’re very unreliable things hunches. I’ve had them and I’ve acted on them and they’ve come off, and I’ve had them and I’ve acted on them and they’ve let me down flat. The only sure thing about them is that you never can tell. What’s your hunch?”