Butย that night, going to sleep, he did consider it. Not as a prospect, but with speculation. What would it be like to retire? To retire while he was still young enough to begin something else? If he began something else what would it be? A sheep-farm like Tommyโs? That would be a good life. But could he make a success of an entirely country existence? He doubted it. And if not, then what else could he do?
He played with this nice new toy until he fell asleep and he took it to the river with him next morning. One of the really charming facets of the game was the thought of Bryceโs face when he read his resignation. Bryce would not merely be short of staff for a week or two; he would find himself deprived for good and all of his most valued subordinate. It was a delicious thought.
He fished his favourite pool, below the swing bridge, and conducted delightful conversations with Bryce. Because of course there would be a conversation. He would give himself the ineffable delight of laying that written resignation on the desk in front of Bryceโs nose; laying it there himself, in person. Then there would be some really satisfying chat, and he would walk out into the street a free man.
Free to do what?
To be himself, at the beck and call of nobody.
To do things he had always wanted to do and had had no time for. To mess about in small boats, for instance.
To get married, perhaps.
Yes, to get married. With leisure there would be time to share his life. Time to love and be loved.
This lasted him very happily for another hour.
About noon he became aware that he was not alone. He looked up and saw that a man was standing on the bridge watching him. He was standing only a few yards from the bank, and since the bridge was motionless he must have been there for some time. The bridge was the usual trough of wire floored with wooden slats, a structure so light that even the wind was capable of moving it. He was grateful to the stranger for not walking into the middle of the thing and swaying about there so that he distracted every fish in the neighbourhood.
He nodded to the man by way of expressing his approval.
โYour name Grant?โ asked the man.
After the circumlocutions of a people so devious-minded that they had no word for No, it was pleasant to be asked a straight question in simple English.
โYes,โ he said, and wondered a little. The man sounded as if he might be an American.
โYou the guy who put that advertisement in the paper?โ
There was no doubt about the nationality this time.
โYes.โ
The man tipped his hat further back on his head and said in a resigned way: โOh, well. Iโm crazy too, I guess, or I wouldnโt be here.โ
Grant began to reel in.
โWonโt you come down, Mrโโ?โ
The man moved off the bridge and came down the bank to him.
He was youngish, well-dressed, and pleasant-looking.
โMy name is Cullen,โ he said. โTad Cullen. Iโm a flyer. I fly freight for OCAL. You know: Oriental Commercial Airlines Ltd.โ
It was said that all you needed to fly for OCAL was a certificate and no sign of leprosy. But that was an exaggeration. Indeed, it was a perversion. You had to be good to fly for OCAL. In the big shiny passenger lines, if you made a mistake you were on the carpet. In OCAL, if you made a mistake you were out on your ear. OCAL had an unlimited supply of personnel to draw upon. OCAL cared nothing for your grammar, your colour, your antecedents, your manners, your nationality, or your looks, as long as you could fly. You had to be able to fly. Grant looked at Mr Cullen with a double interest.
โLook, Mr Grant, I know that that thing, those words in the paper, I know they were just some kind of quotation that you wanted identified, or something like that. And of course I canโt identify them. I was never any good at books. I havenโt come here to be any use to you. Quite the opposite, I guess. But Iโve been very worried, and I thought even a long shot like this might be worth trying. You see, Bill used words like that one night when he was a bit highโBillโs my buddyโand I thought, maybe, it might be a place. I mean the description might be a place. Even if it is a quotation. Iโm afraid Iโm not making myself very clear.โ
Grant smiled a little and said No, not so far, but suppose they both sat down and straightened it out. โAm I to understand that you have come here looking for me?โ
โYes, I actually came last night. But the post-office place was shut, so I got a bed at the inn. Moymore, they[127]ย call it. And then I went to the post-office this morning and asked them where I could find the A. Grant who had a lot of letters. I was sure youโd have had a lot, you see, after that advertisement. And they said Oh, yes, if it was Mr Grant I wanted I would find him on the river somewhere. Well, I came down to look and the only other person on the river was a lady, so I guessed you must be it. You see it wasnโt any good writing to you because I really hadnโt anything that seemed worth putting on paper. I mean, it was just a daffy kind of hope. And you mightnโt have bothered answering it anywayโwhen it had nothing to do with you, I mean.โ He paused a moment, and added in a half-hopeful half-hoping-for-nothing tone: โIt isnโt a night-club, is it?โ
โWhat isnโt?โ Grant asked, surprised.
โThat place with talking beasts at the door. And the odd scenery. It sounded like a fun-fair place. You know: the kind of place where you go in a boat through tunnels in the dark and see ridiculous and frightening things unexpectedly. But Bill wouldnโt be interested in a place like that. So I thought of a night-club. You know: one of those got up with oddities to impress the customers. That would be much more Billโs mixture. Especially in Paris. And it was in Paris that I was to meet him.โ
For the first time a gleam of light appeared.
โYou mean that you were due to meet this Bill? And he didnโt keep the appointment?โ
โHe didnโt show up at all. And thatโs very unlike Bill. If Bill says heโll do a thing, or be in a place, or remember a thing, believe you me heโll deliver. Thatโs why Iโm so worried. And not a word of explanation. Not a message left at the hotel or anything. Of course they may have forgotten to put down the message, hotels being what theyย [128]are. But even if they did forget, there would have been some follow-up. I mean, when I didnโt react, Bill would have telephoned again saying: What are you up to, you old so-and-so, didnโt you get my message? But there wasnโt anything like that. Itโs funny, isnโt it, that he would book a room and then not turn up to occupy it and not send a word in explanation?โ
โVery strange indeed. Especially since you say your friend was a dependable type. But why were you interested in my advertisement? I mean: in connection with Bill? Billโโ, what, by the way?โ
โBill Kenrick. Heโs a flyer like me. With OCAL. Weโve been friends for a year or two now. The best friend I ever had, I donโt mind saying. Well, it was like this, Mr Grant. When he didnโt turn up, and no one seemed to know anything about him or to have heard from himโand he had no people in England that I could write toโI thought about what other ways there were of communicating with people. Other than telephones and letters and telegrams and what not. And so I thought of what you call the Agony Column. You know: in the newspapers. So I got the Paris edition of theย Clarionโthe files, I mean, at their Paris officeโand went through them, and there was nothing. And then I triedย The Times, and there was nothing there either. This was after some time, of course, so I had to go back through the files, but there was nothing. I was going to give it up because I thought that that was all the English papers that had regular Paris editions, but someone said why didnโt I try theย Morning News. Well, I went to theย News, and there didnโt seem to be anything from Bill, but there was this thing of yours that rang a bell. If Bill hadnโt been missing I donโt suppose I would have thought twice about it, but having heard Bill gabble something along[129]ย those lines made me notice it and be interested. Are you with me, as Bill says?โ
โEntirely. Go on. When was it that Bill talked about the odd landscape?โ
โHe didnโt talk about it at all. He just babbled one night when we were all a little drunk. Bill doesnโt drink, Mr Grant. I donโt want you to get the wrong idea. I mean: drink as a habit. A few of the boys in our lot do, I admit, but they donโt last long in OCAL. They donโt last long anyway. Thatโs why OCAL heaves them out. They donโt mind them killing themselves, but it gets expensive in crates. But now and then we have a night-out like other people. And it was on one of those nights out that Bill got going. We were all a little high so I donโt remember anything in detail. I know we were drinking toasts and we were running out of subjects by that time. And we were taking it in turn to think up unlikely things to toast. You know: like โThe third daughter of the Lord Mayor of Bagdadโ, or โJune Kayeโs left little toeโ. And Bill said: โTo Paradise!โ and then gabbled a piece about talking beasts and singing sands and what not.โ
โDidnโt anyone ask about this Paradise of his?โ
โNo! The next fellow was just waiting to get his word in. No one was paying any attention to anything. Theyโd just think Billโs toast pretty dull. I wouldnโt have remembered it myself if I hadnโt come across the words in the paper when my mind was full of Bill.โ
โAnd he never mentioned it again? Never talked about anything like that in his sober moments.โ
โNo. He isnโt much of a talker at the best of times.โ
โYou think, perhaps, if he was greatly interested in something he would keep it to himself?โ
โOh, yes, he does that, he does that. Heโs not close, youย [130]know; just a bit cagey. In most ways heโs the most open guy you could imagine. Generous with his roll, and careless with his things, and willing to do anything for anyone. But in the things thatโin personal things, if you know what I mean, he sort of shuts the door on you.โ
โDid he have a girl?โ
โNot more than any of us can be said to have one. But thatโs a very good sample of what I mean. When the rest of us are out for an evening we take whatโs going. But Bill will go off by himself to some other quarter of the town where he has picked something more to his fancy.โ
โWhat town?โ
โAny town we happen to be in. Kuwait, Masquat, Quatif, Mukalla. Anything from Aden to Karachi, if it comes to that. Most of us fly scheduled routes, but some fly tramps. Take anything anywhere.โ
โWhat didโdoes Bill fly?โ
โHeโs flown all sorts. But lately heโs been flying between the Gulf and the South Coast.โ
โArabia, you mean.โ
โYes. Itโs a damned dreary route but Bill seemed to like it. Me, I think he was too long on it. If youโre too long on one route you get stale.โ
โWhy do you think he was too long on it? Had he changed at all?โ
Mr Cullen hesitated. โNot exactly. He was just the old Bill, easy-going and nice. But he got so that he couldnโt leave it behind him.โ
โLeave his work behind, you mean?โ
โYes. Most of usโall of us, in factโdrop work when we turn the bus over to the ground staff. We donโt remember it until we say hullo to the mechanic in charge nextย [131]morning. But Bill got so that he would pore over maps of the route as if he had never flown the hop before.โ
โWhy this interest in the route, do you think?โ
โWell, I did think maybe he was figuring out a way to avoid the bad weather areas. It did beginโthe interest in maps, I meanโone time when he came in very late after being blown out of his way by one of those terrific hurricanes that come out of nowhere in that country. We had nearly given him up that time.โ
โDonโt you fly above the weather?โ
โOn a long hop, of course. But when youโre flying freight you have to come down at the oddest places. So youโre always more or less at the mercy of the weather.โ
โI see. And you think Bill changed after that experience?โ
โWell, I think it left a mark on him. I was there when he came in. In the plane, I mean. I was waiting for him, on the field. And he seemed to me a bitโconcussed, if you get me.โ
โSuffering from shock.โ
โYes. Still back there, if you know what I mean. Not really listening to what you said to him.โ
โAnd after that he began to study maps. To plan his route, you think.โ
โYes. From then on it was in the forefront of his mind instead of being something that you drop with your working clothes. He even began to come in late as a habit. As if he went out of his way to look for an easier route.โ He paused a moment, and then added in a quick warning tone: โPlease understand, Mr Grant, Iโm not saying Bill has lost his nerve.โ
โNo, of course not.โ
โLost nerves donโt take you that way at all, believe me.ย [132]You get quite the opposite. You donโt want to think of flying at all. You get short in the temper, and you drink too much and too early in the day, and you try to wangle short hops, and you go sick when thereโs nothing wrong with you. Thereโs no mystery about lost nerve, Mr Grant. It announces itself like a name on a marquee. There was nothing like that about Billโand I donโt think there ever will be. It was just that he couldnโt leave the thing behind.โ
โIt became an obsession with him.โ
โThatโs about it, I suppose.โ
โDid he have other interests?โ
โHe read books,โ Mr Cullen said, in an apologetic way; as one confessing a peculiarity in a friend. โEven in that, it showed.โ
โHow: showed?โ
โI mean, instead of the books being the usual story affairs theyโd as likely as not be about Arabia.โ
โYes?โ Grant said, thoughtfully. Ever since this stranger had first mentioned Arabia, Grant had been altogether โwith himโ. Arabia to all the world meant one thing: sand. And what was more, he realised that when he had had the feeling, that morning in the Scoone hotel, that โsinging sandsโ did actually exist somewhere, it was with Arabia that he should have connected them. Somewhere in Arabia there were in fact sands that were alleged to sing.
โSo I was glad when he took his โleaveโ earlier than he meant to,โ Mr Cullen was saying. โWe had planned to go together, and spend our leave in Paris. But he changed his mind and said he wanted a week or two in London first. Heโs English, you know. So we arranged to meet at the Hotel St Jacques in Paris. He was to meet me there on the 4th of March.โ
โWhen?โ said Grant; and was suddenly still. Mind andย [133]body still, like a pointer with the bird in sight; like a man with the target in his sights.
โThe 4th of March. Why?โ
Singing sands were anyoneโs interest. Men who fly for OCAL were two a penny. But the wide, vague, indefinite affair of Bill Kenrick who was obsessed with Southern Arabia and did not turn up to his appointments in Paris narrowed suddenly to one small focused point. To a date.
On the 4th of March, when Bill Kenrick should have turned up in Paris, the London mail had come into Scoone bearing the dead body of a young man who was interested in singing sands. A young man with reckless eyebrows. A young man who, on looks, would have made a very likely flyer. Grant remembered that he had tried him, in imagination, on the bridge of a small ship; a fast small ship, hell in any kind of a sea. He had looked well there. But he would look just as well at the controls of a plane.
โWhy did Bill choose Paris?โ
โWhy does anyone choose Paris!โ
โIt wasnโt because he was French?โ
โBill? No, Billโs English. Very English.โ
โDid you ever see his passport?โ
โNot that I can remember. Why?โ
โYou donโt think that he might have been French by birth?โ
It wouldnโt work out, anyway. The Frenchman was called Martin. Unless his English upbringing had made him want to adopt an English name?
โYou donโt happen to have a photograph of your friend, do you?โ
But Mr Cullenโs attention was on something else. Grant turned to look, and found that Zoรซ was approaching them along the river bank. He looked at his watch.
โHell!โ he said. โAnd I promised to have the stove going!โ He turned to his bag and fished the primus from it.
โYour wife?โ asked Mr Cullen, with that refreshing frankness. In the Islands it would have taken five minutes conversation to have elicited that information from him.
โNo. Thatโs Lady Kentallen.โ
โLady? A title?โ
โYes,โ Grant said, busy with the stove. โShe is Viscountess Kentallen.โ
Mr Cullen considered this in silence for a little.
โI supposed thatโs a sort of marked-down Countess.โ
โNo. On the contrary. A very superior kind. Practically a Marchioness. Look, Mr Cullen, letโs postpone this matter of your friend for a little. Itโs a matter that interests me more than I can say,ย butโโโ
โYes, of course, Iโll go. When can I talk to you again about it?โ
โOf course you will not go! Youโll stay and have some food with us.โ
โYou mean you want me to meet this Marchioness, thisโwhatyoumaycallit, Viscountess?โ
โWhy not? She is a very nice person to meet. One of the nicest persons I know.โ
โYes?โ Mr Cullen looked with interest at the approaching Zoรซ. โSheโs certainly very nice to look at. I didnโt know they came like that. Somehow I imagined all aristocrats had beaky noses.โ
โSpecially provided for looking down, I take it.โ
โSomething like that.โ
โI donโt know how far back in English history one would have to go to find an aristocratic nose that was looked down. I doubt if youโd find one at all. The only place to[135]ย find a looked-down nose is in the suburbs. In what is known as lower-middle-class circles.โ
Mr Cullen looked puzzled. โBut the aristocrats keep themselves to themselves and look down on the rest, donโt they?โ
โIt has never been possible in England for any class to keep themselves to themselves, as you call it. They have been intermarrying at all levels for two thousand years. There never have been separate and distinct classesโor an aristocratic class at all in the sense that you mean it.โ
โI suppose nowadays things are even-ing up,โ Mr Cullen suggested, faintly unbelieving.
โOh, no. It has always been a fluid thing. Even our Royalty. Elizabeth the First was the grand-daughter of a Lord Mayor. And youโll find that Royaltyโs personal friends have no titles at all: I mean the people who are on calling-terms at Buckingham Palace. Whereas the bold bad baron who sits next you in an expensive restaurant probably started life as a platelayer on the railway. There is no keeping oneself to oneself in England, as far as class goes. It canโt be done. It can only be done by Mrs Jones who sniffs at her neighbour Mrs Smith because Mr Jones makes two pounds a week more than Mr Smith.โ
He turned from the puzzled American to greet Zoรซ. โIโm truly sorry about the stove. Iโm afraid I got it going too late to be ready. We were having a very interesting conversation. This is Mr Cullen, who flies freight for Oriental Commercial Airlines.โ
Zoรซ shook hands, and asked him what kind of plane he flew.
From the tone of his voice when he told her Grant deduced that Mr Cullen thought that Zoรซ was merely takingย [136]a condescending interest. Condescension was what he would expect from an โaristocratโ.
โTheyโre very heavy in hand, arenโt they?โ Zoรซ remarked sympathetically. โMy brother used to fly one when he was on the Australia run. He was always cursing it.โ She began to open the packets of food. โBut now that he works in an office in Sydney he has a little runabout of his own. A Beamish Eight. A lovely thing. I used to fly it when he first bought it; before he took it to Australia. Davidโmy husbandโand I used to dream of having one too, but we could never afford it.โ
โBut a Beamish Eight costs only four hundred,โ Mr Cullen blurted.
Zoรซ licked her fingers, sticky from a leaking apple tart, and said: โYes, I know, but we never had four hundred to spare.โ
Mr Cullen, feeling himself being washed out to sea, sought some terra firma.
โI oughtnโt to be eating your food this way,โ he said. โTheyโll have plenty for me back at the hotel. I really ought to go back.โ
โOh, donโt go,โ Zoรซ said with a simplicity so genuine that it penetrated even Mr Cullenโs defences. โThere is enough for a platoon.โ
So to Grantโs pleasure in more ways than one, Mr Cullen stayed. And Zoรซ, unaware that she was providing the United States with a revised view of the genus English Aristocrat, ate like a hungry schoolboy and talked in her gentle voice to the stranger as if she had known him all her life. By the apple tart stage, Mr Cullen had ceased to be on his guard. By the time that they were handing round the chocolates that Laura had included he had surrendered unconditionally.
They sat together in the spring sunshine, full-fed and content. Zoรซ lying back against the grassy bank with her feet crossed and her hands behind her head, her eyes closed against the sun. Grant with his mind busy with Bย Seven, and the material that Tad Cullen had brought him. Mr Cullen himself perched on a rock looking down the river to the green civilised strath where the moors ended and the fields began.
โItโs a fine little country, this,โ he said. โI like it. If you ever decide to fight for your freedom, count me in.โ
โFreedom?โ said Zoรซ, opening her eyes. โFreedom from whom or what?โ
โFrom England, of course.โ
Zoรซ looked helpless, but Grant began to laugh. โI think you must have been talking to a little black man in a kilt,โ he said.
โHe had a kilt, yes, but he wasnโt coloured,โ Mr Cullen said.
โNo, I meant black-haired. Youโve been talking to Archie Brown.โ
โWho is Archie Brown?โ asked Zoรซ.
โHe is the self-appointed saviour of Gaeldom, and our future Sovereign, Commissar, President or what have you, when Scotland has freed herself from the murderous burden of the English yoke.โ
โOh, yes. That man,โ Zoรซ said mildly, identifying Archie in her mind. โHe is a little off his head, isnโt he? Does he live around here?โ
โHe is staying at the hotel at Moymore, I understand. He has been doing missionary work on Mr Cullen, it seems.โ
โWell,โ Mr Cullen grinned a little sheepishly, โI did just wonder if he wasnโt over-stating things a bit. Iโve metย [138]some Scots in my time and they didnโt seem to me to be the kind of people to put up with the treatment Mr Brown was describing. Indeed, if youโll forgive me, Mr Grant, they always seemed to me the kind of people to get the best of whatever bargain was going.โ
โDid you ever hear the Union better described?โ Grant said to Zoรซ.
โI never knew anything about the Union,โ Zoรซ said comfortably, โexcept that it took place in 1707.โ
โWas there a battle, then?โ Mr Cullen asked.
โNo,โ Grant said. โScotland stepped thankfully on to Englandโs band-wagon, and fell heir to all the benefits. Colonies, Shakespeare, soap, solvency and so forth.โ
โI hope Mr Brown doesnโt go lecture-touring in the States,โ Zoรซ said, half asleep.
โHe will,โ Grant said. โHe will. All vociferous minorities go lecture-touring in the States.โ
โIt will give them very wrong ideas, wonโt it?โ Zoรซ said mildly. Grant thought with what a blistering phrase Laura would have expressed the same idea. โThey have the oddest ideas. When David and I were there, the year before he was killed, we were always being asked why we didnโt stop taxing Canada. When we said we had never taxed Canada they just looked at us as if we were telling lies. Not very good lies, either.โ
From Mr Cullenโs expression Grant deduced that he too had had โoddโ ideas about Canadian taxation, but Zoรซโs eyes were closed. Grant wondered if Mr Cullen realised that Zoรซ was quite unaware that he was an American; that it had not occurred to her to consider his accent, his nationality, his clothes or any personal thing about him. She had accepted him as he stood, as a person. He was just a flyer, like her brother; someone who had turnedย [139]up in time to share their picnic and who was pleasant and interesting to talk to. It would not occur to her to pigeon-hole him, to put him in any special category. If she was conscious at all of his narrow aโs she no doubt took him for a North-countryman.
He looked at her, half asleep there in the sun, and thought how beautiful she was. He looked across at Mr Cullen and saw that he too was looking at Zoรซ Kentallen and thinking how beautiful she was. Their glances met and ran away from each other.
But Grant, who last night could imagine no greater felicity than to sit and look at Zoรซ Kentallen, was conscious now of a faint impatience with her, and this so shocked him that he took it out, in his self-analytical way, to examine it. What flaw could there be in this divinity? What imperfection in this princess from a fairy-tale?
โYou know very well whatโs wrong,โ said that irreverent voice in him. โYou want her to get the hell out of here so that you can find out about Bย Seven.โ
And for once he did not try to contradict the voice. He did in brutal fact wish that Zoรซ would โget the hell out of hereโ. The Zoรซ whose very presence had made magic of yesterday afternoon was now an encumbrance. Tiny prickles of boredom chased each other up and down his spine. Lovely, simple, heavenly Zoรซ, do get a move on. Creature of delight and princess of my dreams, go away.
He was rehearsing phrases for taking his own departure, when she gave the abrupt half-sigh half-yawn of a child and said: โWell, there is a seven-pounder in the Cuddy Pool that must be finding life dull without me.โ And with her usual lack of fuss or chat she took her things and departed into the spring afternoon.
Mr Cullen looked after her approvingly, and Grantย [140]waited for comment. But it seemed that Mr Cullen too had been waiting for the departure of his โmarked-down Countessโ. He watched her out of earshot and then said immediately:
โMr Grant, why did you ask me if I had a photograph of Bill? Does that mean that you think you know him?โ
โNo. No. But it would eliminate people who could not be Bill.โ
โOh. Yes. Well, I havenโt one in my pocket but I have one in my grip at the hotel. It isnโt a very good one, but it would give you the general idea. Could I bring it to you sometime?โ
โNo. Iโll walk down to Moymore with you now.โ
โYou will? Youโre certainly very kind, Mr Grant. You think youโve got a line on this thing? You havenโt told me what those words were. That quotation or whatever it was. Thatโs really what I came to ask you. What the talking-beasts thing was all about. If it was a place he was interested in, you see, he might have gone there, and I could go there too and cross his trail that way.โ
โYouโre very fond of this Bill, arenโt you?โ
โWell, weโve been together quite a time and though weโre opposites in most ways we get along fine. Just fine. I wouldnโt like anything to happen to Bill.โ
Grant changed the conversation and asked about Tad Cullenโs own life. And while they walked down the glen to Moymore he heard about the clean small town back in the States, and what a dull place it seemed to a boy who could fly, and how wonderful the East had seemed in the distance and how unexciting close up.
โJust Main Street with some smells,โ Mr Cullen said.
โWhat did you do in Paris during your long wait for Bill to turn up?โ
โOh, I helled around some. It wasnโt much fun without Bill. I met a couple of chaps Iโd known in India, and we went places together, but I was impatient all the time for Bill to be there. I let them go, after a bit, and went to look at some of the places in the tourist folders. Some of those old places are pretty nice. There was one place built right over the waterโa castle, I meanโon stone arches, so that the river flowed underneath. That was fine. It would have done very well for the Countess. Is that the kind of place she lives in?โ
โNo,โ Grant said, thinking of the difference between Chenonceaux and Kentallen. โShe lives in a grim, flat, grey house with tiny windows and poky rooms and narrow stairs and a front door as welcoming as the exit of a laundry chute. It has two little turrets on the fourth-storey level, next the roof, and in Scotland that makes it a castle.โ
โSounds like a prison. Why does she stay?โ
โA prison! No Prison Committee would consider it for a moment; questions would be asked in the House immediately about its lack of light, heating, sanitary conveniences, colour, beauty, space, and what not. She stays because she loves the place. I doubt if she can stay much longer, however. Death duties have been so heavy that she will have to sell.โ
โBut will anyone buy it?โ
โNot to live in. But some speculator will buy it, and cut down the woods. The lead on the roof would probably fetch something; and theyโd have to take the roof off anyhow to avoid paying tax on the house.โ
โHah! Dust-bowl stuff,โ remarked Mr Cullen. โIt hasnโt a moat, by any chance?โ
โNo. Why?โ
โI must see a moat before I go back to OCAL.โ Andย [142]then, after a pause, โIโm really very worried about Bill, Mr Grant.โ
โYes, it is certainly very odd.โ
โThat was nice of you,โ Mr Cullen said unexpectedly.
โWhat was?โ
โNot to say: โDonโt you worry, heโll turn up all right!โ I can hardly keep my hands off people who say: โDonโt you worry, heโll turn up.โ I could strangle them.โ
Moymore Hotel was a tiny version of Kentallen, without the turrets. But it was whitewashed and cheerful, and the trees behind it were coming into leaf. In the little flagged entrance-hall Mr Cullen hesitated.
โIn Britain I notice people donโt ask you up to their hotel bedroom. Would you like to wait in the sitting-room, perhaps?โ
โOh, no; Iโll come up. I donโt think we have any feeling about hotel bedrooms. It is probably just that our hotel sitting-rooms are so near our bedrooms that there is no need to go up, and so we donโt suggest it. When a public lounge is a dayโs journey from your own room it is easier to take a guest with you, I suppose. That way you are at least in the same hemisphere.โ
Mr Cullen had a front room, looking across the road to the fields and the river and the hills beyond. With his professional eye Grant noticed the log fire ready-laid in the hearth and the daffodils in the window: Moymore had standards; with his personal mind he was concerned for this Tad Cullen, who had interrupted his leave and come to the wilds of Caledonia to find the friend who meant so much to him. A foreboding that he could not shake off had grown in him with every step of the way to Moymore, and now it filled him to the point of nausea.
The young man took a letter-case from his travelling-bag and opened it on the dressing-table. It contained practically everything but the wherewithal for writing letters. Among the mess of papers, maps, travel folders and what not, there were two leather articles: an address-book and a pocket-book. From the pocket-book he took some photographs and riffled through the feminine smiles until he found what he was looking for.
โHere it is. Iโm afraid it isnโt a very good one. Itโs just a snapshot, you see. It was taken when a crowd of us were at the beach.โ
Grant took the proffered piece of paper, almost reluctantly.
โThatโsโโโ Tad Cullen was beginning, lifting his arm to point.
โNo, wait!โ Grant said, stopping him. โLet me see if Iโif I recognise anyone.โ
There were perhaps a dozen young men in the photograph, which had been taken on the verandah of some beach-house. They were clustered round the steps and draped over the rickety wooden railing in various stages ofย deshabille. Grant swept a swift glance over their laughing faces and was conscious of a great relief. There was no one there that he hadย everโโ
And then he saw the man on the bottom step.
He was sitting with his feet pushed away from him into the sand, his eyes screwed up against the sun and his chin tilted back a little as if he had been in the act of turning to say something to the men behind. It was just so that his head had been tilted back against the pillow in Compartment Bย Seven on the morning of the 4th of March.
โWell?โ
โIs that your friend?โ Grant said, pointing to the man on the bottom step.
โYes, thatโs Bill. How did you know? Have you met him somewhere, then?โ
โIโIโm inclined to think that I have. But of course, on that photograph, I could hardly swear to it.โ
โI donโt want you to do any swearing. Just give me a general weather report. Just tell me roughly when and where you saw him and Iโll track him down, donโt you be in any doubt about it. Do you know where you met him? I mean, do you remember?โ
โOh, yes. I remember. I saw him in a compartmentโa sleeping-berth compartmentโof the London mail when it was running into Scoone early in the morning of the 4th of March. That was the train I came north on.โ
โYou mean Bill cameย here? To Scotland? What for?โ
โI donโt know.โ
โDidnโt he tell you? Did you talk to him?โ
โNo. I couldnโt.โ
โWhy not?โ
Grant put out his hand and pushed his companion gently backwards so that he sat down in the chair that was behind him.
โI couldnโt because he was no longer alive.โ
There was a short silence.
โIโm truly sorry, Cullen. I wish I could pretend to you that it might not be Bill, but short of going into a witness-box on oath I am prepared to back my belief that it is.โ
After another little silence Cullen said: โWhy was he dead? What happened to him?โ
โHe had had a fair load of whisky and he fell backwards against the solid porcelain wash-basin. It fractured his skull.โ
โWho said all this?โ
โThat was the finding of the coronerโs court. In London.โ
โIn London? Why in London?โ
โBecause he had died, according to the post-mortem, very shortly after leaving Euston. And by English law, a sudden death is investigated by a coroner and a jury.โ
โBut all thatโs justโjust supposition,โ Cullen said, beginning to come alive and be angry. โIf he was alone, how can anyone tell what happened to him?โ
โBecause the English police are the most painstaking creatures as well as the most suspicious.โ
โPolice? There were police in on this thing?โ
โOh, assuredly. The police do the investigating and report in public to the coroner and his jury. In this case there had been the most exhaustive examination and tests. They knew in the end almost to a mouthful how much neat whisky he had drunk, and at what intervals before hisโhis death.โ
โAnd that about his falling backwardsโhow could they know that?โ
โThey went prowling with microscopes. The oil and broken hair were still evident on the edge of the basin. And the skull injury was consistent with a backwards fall against just such an object.โ
Cullen calmed down at this, but he looked disorientated.
โHow do you know all this?โ he asked, vaguely; and then with growing suspicion: โHow did you come to see him anyway?โ
โWhen I was on my way out I came across the sleeping-car attendant trying to rouse him. The man thought he was just sleeping it off, because the whisky bottle hadย [146]rolled all over the floor and the compartment smelt as if he had been making a night of it.โ
This did not satisfy Tad Cullen. โYou mean that was the only time you saw him? Just for a moment, lyingโlying dead there, and you could recognise him from a snapshotโa not very good snapshotโweeks later?โ
โYes. I was impressed by his face. Faces are my business; and in a way my hobby. I was interested in the way the slant of the eyebrows gave the face a reckless expression, evenโeven as it was, without any real expression whatever. And the interest was intensified in a way that was quite accidental.โ
โWhat was that?โ Cullen was not giving an inch.
โWhen I was having breakfast, in the Station Hotel at Scoone, I found that I had picked up by accident a newspaper that had been tumbled off the berth when the attendant was trying to waken him, and in the Stop Pressโthe blank space, you knowโsomeone had been pencilling some lines of verse. โThe beasts that talk, the streams that stand, the stones that walk, the singing sandโโโ then two blank lines, and then: โthat guard the way to Paradise.โโ
โThat was what you advertised about,โ Cullen said, his face growing momentarily blacker. โWhat was it to you that you went to the trouble of advertising about it?โ
โI wanted to know where the lines came from if they were lines from some book. If they were lines in the process of being made into a poem, then I wanted to know what the subject was.โ
โWhy? What should you care?โ
โI had no choice in the matter. The thing ran round and round in my head. Do you know anyone called Charles Martin?โ
โNo, I donโt. And donโt change the subject.โ
โIโm not changing the subject, oddly enough. Do me the kindness to think of it seriously for a moment. Have you ever, at any time, heard of or known a Charles Martin?โ
โIโve told you, no! I donโt have to think. Andย of courseย youโre changing the subject! What has Charles Martin got to do with this?โ
โAccording to the police, the man who was found dead in Compartment Bย Seven was a French mechanic called Charles Martin.โ
After a moment Cullen said: โLook, Mr Grant, maybe Iโm not very bright, but youโre not making sense. What youโre saying is that you saw Bill Kenrick lying dead in a compartment of a train, but he wasnโt Bill Kenrick at all; he was a man called Martin.โ
โNo, what Iโm saying is that the police believe him to be a man called Martin.โ
โWell, I take it they have good grounds for their belief.โ
โExcellent grounds. He had letters, and identity papers. Even better, his people have identified him.โ
โThey did! Then what have you been stringing me along for! There isnโt any suggestion that that man was Bill! If the police are satisfied that the man was a Frenchman called Martin, why in thunder should you decide that he wasnโt Martin at all but Bill Kenrick!โ
โBecause Iโm the only person in the world who has seen both the man in Bย Seven and that snapshot.โ Grant nodded at the photograph where it lay on the dressing-table.
This gave Cullen pause. Then he said: โBut thatโs a poor photograph. It canโt convey much to someone who has never seen Bill.โ
โIt may be a poor photograph in the sense that it is a mere snapshot, but it is a very good likeness indeed.โ
โYes,โ Cullen said slowly, โit is.โ
โConsider three things; three facts. One: Charles Martinโs people had not seen him for years, and then they saw only a dead face; if you are told that your son has died, and no one suggests that there is any doubt as to identity, you see the face you expected to see. Two: the man known as Charles Martin was found dead on a train on the same day as Bill Kenrick was due to join you in Paris. Three: in his compartment there was a pencilled jingle about talking beasts and singing sands, a subject that on your own showing had interested Bill Kenrick.โ
โDid you tell the police about the paper?โ
โI tried to. They werenโt interested. There was no mystery, you see. They knew who the man was, and how he died, and that was all that concerned them.โ
โIt might have interested them that he was writing verse in English.โ
โOh, no. There is no evidence that he wrote anything, or that the paper belonged to him at all. He may have picked it up somewhere.โ
โThe whole thingโs crazy,โ Cullen said, angry and bewildered.
โItโs fantastic. But at the heart of all the whirling absurdity there is a small core of stillness.โ
โYes?โ
โYes. There is one small clear space on which one can stand while taking oneโs bearings.โ
โWhat is that?โ
โYour friend Bill Kenrick is missing. And out of a crowd of strange faces, I pick Bill Kenrick as a man I saw dead in a sleeping-compartment at Scoone on the morning of the 4th of March.โ
Cullen thought this over. โYes,โ he said drearily, โI suppose[149]ย that makes sense. I suppose it must be Bill. I suppose I knew all the time that somethingโsomething awful had happened. He would never have left me without word. He would have written or telephoned or something to say why he hadnโt turned up on time. But what was he doing on a train to Scotland? What was he doing on a train anyhow?โ
โHow: anyhow?โ
โIf Bill wanted to go somewhere he would fly. He wouldnโt take a train.โ
โLots of people take a night train because it saves time. You sleep and travel at the same time. The question is: why as Charles Martin?โ
โI think itโs a case for Scotland Yard.โ
โI donโt think the Yard would thank us.โ
โIโm not asking for their thanks,โ Cullen said tartly, โIโm instructing them to find out what happened to my buddy.โ
โI still donโt think they would be interested.โ
โTheyโd better be!โ
โYou have no evidence at all that Bill Kenrick didnโt duck of his own accord; that he isnโt having a good time on his own until it is time to go back to OCAL.โ
โBut he was found dead in a railway compartment!โ Cullen said in a voice that was nearly a howl.
โOh, no. That was Charles Martin. About whom there is no mystery whatever.โ
โBut you can identify Martin as Kenrick!โ
โI can say, of course, that in my opinion that face in the snapshot is the face I saw in Compartment Bย Seven on the morning of March the 4th. Scotland Yard will say that I am entitled to my opinion, but that I am without doubt misled by a resemblance, since the man in Compartment Bย Seven is one Charles Martin, a mechanic, and a nativeย [150]of Marseilles, in the suburbs of which his parents still live.โ
โYouโre very smooth in the part of Scotland Yard, arenโt you! All theย sameโโโ
โI ought to be. Iโve worked there for more years than I care to think about. I shall be going back there a week Monday, as soon as my holiday is over.โ
โYou mean thatย youย are Scotland Yard?โ
โNot the whole of it. One of its minor props. Props in the support sense. I donโt carry cards in my fishing clothes but if you come up to my hostโs house with me he will vouch for my genuineness.โ
โOh. No. No, of course I believe you,ย Mrโerโโโ
โInspector. But weโll stick to Mr, since Iโm off duty.โ
โIโm sorry if I was fresh. It just didnโt occur to meโโYou see, you donโt expect to meet Scotland Yard in real life. Itโs just something you read about. You donโt expect them toโtoโโโ
โTo go fishing.โ
โNo, I guess you donโt, at that. Only in books.โ
โWell, now that you have accepted me as genuine, and you know that my version of Scotland Yardโs reaction is not only accurate but straight from the horseโs mouth, what are we going to do?โ





