"I'm Annalice Mallory," I told him.
"At last you have come," was his answer.
"I ... I don't understand. What does this mean?"
"You know who I am," he replied. "So there is a great deal we have to say to each other."
We both seemed to have forgotten John Everton who was standing by looking puzzled and uncertain—as well he might.
"Come into the house," said Magnus Perrensen.
We walked up a slope. I was trying hard to grapple with common sense. I am dreaming, I thought. I must be. How could he be Magnus Perrensen. He must have died years ago.
The house was magnificent. It was dazzlingly white in the shimmering heat and brilliantly coloured flowers bloomed in the gardens which surrounded it and my mood of bewilderment touched it all with an air of unreality.
He led us through a door into a cool paved hall.
John Everton who had not spoken so far said in awed tones: "It is splendid."
"You should have brought Miss Mallory before," said Magnus Perrensen.
"The idea that we should see the island only came to Mr. Everton this morning," I said, and as I spoke I felt more normal. The memory of meeting John Everton outside the hotel and discussing the trip brought me back to reality.
We went into a room with tall windows looking over the sea.
Magnus Perrensen turned to John Everton. "By a strange coincidence," he said, "Miss Mallory's family and mine were in contact years ago. We have a great deal to discuss. It was a stroke of good fortune that you brought her here today. Thank you."
"I'm glad of that," said John Everton rather awkwardly.
"We don't have many visitors here. We don't encourage it. It's by way of a retreat for my family. When we are here we like solitude."
"Perhaps," I began, "we should not have disturbed you ..."
He looked at me reproachfully. "You are welcome ... welcome indeed."
A servant appeared and he asked for cool drinks to be brought. His order was immediately obeyed.
I could not stop looking at him. I was taken right back to that night when I had sat up in bed reading Ann Alice's diary. Something had happened to me then ... when I sat in that room ... when I had tended her grave... and now here I was on a remote island ... sitting face to face with Magnus Perrensen.
I was aware of course that this was not the young man who had worked in our shop and had planned to marry Ann Alice and take her in search of the island, any more than I was the girl who lay in that grave at Little Stanton. But some part of those people lived on in us, and I believed that I was on the verge of a great discovery.
At length Magnus Perrensen said: "Mr. Everton, you would like to see the island. Miss Mallory and I have a great deal to talk about because of our family connections. You will need a horse. I will arrange for someone to take you round. Luncheon will be served at one o'clock."
"I shall have to go back," I explained. "I have a friend at the hotel. She is ill and will be wondering what has become of me."
"If you go back immediately after luncheon it will mean being on the sea in the heat of the day."
"Then I must get back before," I insisted.
He smiled at me. "Very well. Just an hour... leave in an hour's time. I will tell them to bring you back, Mr. Everton, in one hour. That will give us a little time to talk and next time it shall be longer."
So I was alone with him.
"I see that you are bewildered," he said.
"I am indeed."
"You know something of what happened years ago?"
I explained about the night of the storm and our finding the journal.
"That Magnus Perrensen was my greatgrandfather."
"So you know the whole story of what happened?"
It is a story which has been passed down through my family. My greatgrandfather told it to my grandfather, and he in his turn to my father and so to me. We were all named Magnus. It makes a kind of continuity. And you are Annalice ... which is a little different from Ann Alice ... and yet similar though."
I said: 'This is not the island ..."
He shook his head.
"Please tell me what you know," I begged.
"As I said the story has been passed down through my family. When my greatgrandfather returned to Little Stanton it was to find his bride-to-be dead. She had died, he was told, of the plague which was raging nearby. At least that was the story. He didn't believe it. The matter was wrapped in such secrecy and there was the room. People talked a great deal about that. It was walled up by the local carpenter and builder who prospered from that time. My greatgrandfather believed that it was because this carpenter had seen something in the room which must never be known and the price of his silence was money to enable him to prosper in his business."
"What did he see in the room?"
"My greatgrandfather believed that Ann Alice was murdered. Her stepmother and her lover murdered her. She was probably shot. There would be bloodstains all over the room. Shooting is not a neat way of disposing of people. They daren't let what was significant in that room be seen. They were able to conceal the evidence of their crime because of the plague. There was a case of some tailor's rooms having been walled up because of the goods in them. They got away with that. They never would but for the plague and the bribable carpenter."
"It sounds very plausible."
"I believe when you saw me you thought for a moment that I was that Magnus Perrensen. Did you perhaps think you had become Ann Alice?"
"I had read her journal and it is still very vivid in my mind. Something seemed to happen to me after I had read it. I just felt part of her, and for a moment when I saw you on the beach and you told me your name ... I felt strange and quite bewildered. Yes. for a moment I did feel that I had stepped back in time."
"Nothing so strange, I assure you. There is a logical explanation to everything that happens on Earth I feel sure. I suppose we all have something of our ancestors in us. Isn't that proved? Traits of character handed down from generation to generation ... There must be something of that Magnus in me and something of Ann Alice in you. It seemed like a miracle to me when you came along this morning. R>r a moment I thought it was a fusion of the past and present."
"You said: 'At last you have come.'"
"I did, did I not? It was involuntary, as though someone was speaking through me. You felt it too."
"Yes, it was a very strange moment."
"Now calm reason is here."
"Tell me everything that happened. There was no island, was there?"
He shook his head.
"Let me tell you what I know and you shall tell me. This is the story we heard in our family. My greatgrandfather, Magnus Perrensen, came back to Great Stanton. He had been to London to make arrangements for the journey back to his family. He was going to take Ann Alice with him."
I nodded. This was exactly what I had read in the journal.
"He came back to learn that she was dead. Died of the plague, they said. She was already buried, as people were quickly in such circumstances. They had walled up her room because of the fear that things might be infected. He would not believe it. He was highly suspicious of the stepmother and the man whom he suspected of being her lover. He was heartbroken. He wanted to know the truth and he wanted vengeance. There were no more cases of the plague. There had been only two men apparently and Ann Alice who were alleged victims. The men were tailors who had been buying materials somewhere in the Middle East. He could not rest. He wanted to know. He became suspicious. He questioned the carpenter and he was not satisfied. But there was nothing else he could do. He was young and a foreigner and the people at the Manor were rich and powerful. In time he gave up and came back to his family. He could not rest though. He wanted to go back and find that island."