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One Maid's Mischief
The faint pungent odour of a good cigar still pervaded the room, and the extinct end was yet between Neil Harley’s white teeth, as he lay there dreaming about Helen Perowne, seeing her admired and followed by all the single men at the station, while he was the only one who made no sign.
He sighed in his sleep, and then uttered a low moan, as if in spite of his placid face and show of indifference he suffered deeply on Helen’s account; but a calm smile, well resembling indifference, rested upon his features, and seemed to say that, come what might, he was patiently waiting his time.
Then came a change, for the calmness seemed to be swept away by a gust of passion, and the strong man’s hands clenched, his brow grew rugged, and as if suffering from some acute agony, the white teeth of the sleeper closed tightly with a sharp click, and a portion of the bitten-through cigar rolled from his lips on to the floor.
Then all was very still. The heat seemed to grow more intense, and the faint ripple of the river, as it glided by the island, could be distinctly heard. Now and then from the distant jungle some wild, uneasy cry rose upon the still air, riding as it were across the river like a warning to tell the slumbering Europeans that the savagery of the primeval forest lay close beside their civilisation; while the wakeful might have pondered on the fact that their safety rested solely upon the British prestige, and that a spark might ignite a train that would result in a terrible conflagration sufficient to sweep them all away.
Some such thoughts crossed the sleeping brain of Neil Harley that night, and his sleep grew more and more troubled as he thought how love-blinded he had been, and the risks they had run from Helen’s treatment of the young Rajah.
The trouble had passed away now, but such another affair might result in ruin to them all; and yet he had allowed her to go on and trifle, looking on with assumed indifference, though his heart was stung the while.
Neil Harley’s sleep again grew restful and calm; for in a pleasant dream he fancied that Helen, more beautiful than ever, had bidden him to her side, telling him that all her weak and wilful coquetry was but to try him. That she had loved him from the first, for he was the only man who had really touched her heart; and that, though she had fought against the restraint he had placed upon her, and told herself that she hated him and the way in which he had mocked at her trifling, she was his – his alone – that she resigned herself to his keeping – his keeping – that of the only man who could ever sway her heart.
The night grew hotter still, and the faint breath that was wafted between the open laths that covered the window seemed to have passed from the mouth of some furnace. A harsh roar came from the jungle, and then a loud plash or two echoed over the surface of the stream, as some great reptile plunged in from the muddy bank.
Then all was very still once more for a time, till suddenly the faint plash-plash of oars was heard, seeming now to be coming nearer, now to be fading away, drowned by the shrill insect hum. Again it sounded nearer, and all doubt of its proceeding from a boat bound for the Residency island was ended by the loud challenge of the sentry at the landing-place.
Then came voices in reply, and once more the hum of the mosquitoes was all that could be heard: now low and deep, now shrill and angry.
The faint lapping of the river and the plash of oars had died away, and the silence and heat were painful enough to draw a low sigh from the sleeper, just as the bedroom door was softly opened, and a dark figure glided in, crept over the matting floor without making a sound, and bent over the bed.
For the moment it seemed as though he was there upon some errand of ill; and one who watched would have been ready to raise an alarm, the insecurity of the station life being sufficient to warrant such a supposition; but the idea of the dark figure being bent on an evil errand was at once destroyed, for after waiting for a moment, he cried, softly:
“Master – master!”
The Resident started lip with the sudden awakening of a man accustomed to suspect peril at every turn, and his hand darted beneath his pillow even as he raised himself, to be withdrawn grasping the butt of a loaded revolver.
“Ah, you Ling,” he said, with a sigh of relief, as he lowered his hand. “What is it? Someone ill?”
“Mr Perowne has come across in his boat, sir.”
“Mr Perowne? at this time! what does he want?”
“To see you, sir.”
“Tell him I’ll be there directly.” The Chinese servant glided away as silently as he had come, and the Resident hastily dashed some water in his face to clear away the sleepy feeling.
“I hope nothing serious!” he muttered. “Has Helen been taken ill?”
A pang shot through him at the thought, and the reckless behaviour of the night, that had stung him again and again during the course of the evening, was forgiven.
“Poor child!” he muttered. “I believe she loves me, and bird-like, is fluttering and timorously striving to escape from the string that holds her.” He glanced at his watch as it hung upon a stand. “Two o’clock. I have not been in bed above an hour. What can be wrong?”
The next minute he was in the dining-room, where he found Mr Perowne agitatedly walking up and down; but as soon as the Resident entered he advanced and caught him fiercely by the arm. “Harley, do you know anything of this?” he cried.
“Of this? Of what?”
“Helen! Where is she?”
“Helen? In bed and asleep I hope. What do you mean?”
“I missed her somewhere about eleven. I have not seen her since.”
The Resident looked curiously at Mr Perowne, whose flushed face and excited manner seemed to suggest that he had been playing the host too freely during the evening, and to his own deterioration in balance.
“Tired, and gone to bed. A bit peevish with weariness,” suggested the Resident, who drove back a curious sense of uneasiness that troubled him.
“No,” said Mr Perowne, hoarsely; “she has not gone to bed, and the house and the gardens have been searched again and again. Do you know anything of this?”
“I? Absurd! I left in good time. I bade her good-night when she was talking to the chaplain; he was trying to persuade her to let him cover her shoulders with the shawl he carried.”
The Resident ceased speaking to dwell for a moment upon the luminous look he had seen Helen bestow upon the chaplain – a look meant, he told himself, to annoy him, while he knew that it would give poor Rosebury food for sweet reflection during weeks to come.
“It is very strange,” said Mr Perowne excitedly; and his haggard gaze was directed about the place, as if he half expected to find that Helen was there. “Where did you see her last, do you say?”
“Talking to Rosebury, and before then she was with Hilton. I fancy they were having words. Well, perhaps I ought hardly to say that; but Hilton was certainly remonstrating angrily.”
“When was that?”
“Half-past ten or eleven; I cannot say for certain.”
“Let us go and see Hilton,” said Mr Perowne; “but stay. Am I to believe you, Harley?”
“As you please, Mr Perowne,” said the Resident, with dignity. “Why should you doubt my word?”
“I do not doubt it!” cried Mr Perowne, catching his hand. “Pity me, Harley. I seem cold and strange; but I love that girl, and she is gone.”
He gasped painfully as he spoke, but smiled sadly directly after as the Resident warmly grasped his hand.
“One minute,” said the Resident; and hastily adding something to his clothing, he joined his visitor again, and the two sallied forth into the still, hot night, to make their way to the little fort, which was stronghold and barracks in one.
Here they were challenged by another sentry, for, peaceful times as they were, the military arrangements were always kept upon the sternest war footing.
“We want to see Captain Hilton,” said Mr Harley, in his quick, commanding way.
“Captain’s ashore, sir. He went to Mr Perowne’s party.”
“Yes, yes,” said that gentleman; “we know: but he has come back.”
“No, sir; not while I’ve been on guard – three hours, sir.”
“Call the sergeant,” said Mr Harley, sharply.
He needed no calling, for, hearing voices, he had come out to see who came so late.
“Where is Captain Hilton?”
“I thought he was stopping to sleep at Mr Perowne’s, sir,” said the sergeant, saluting. “Hasn’t been back. Beg pardon, sir; didn’t see it was Mr Perowne.”
“But he left my house hours ago,” said that gentleman.
“Gone to stay at Dr Bolter’s, perhaps, sir,” suggested the sergeant.
“Are you sure he did not return while your back was turned?” said Mr Harley.
“Quite sure, sir. Still, he might, sir; it’s no use to be too sure. Like to go to his quarters, sir?”
“Yes, we’ll go in,” said the Resident, quickly; and following the sergeant, after exchanging glances, the two gentlemen entered Hilton’s room.
The bed had not been pressed, and everything was in order, just as the regimental servant had placed it after his master had dressed to attend the evening fête.
“Mr Chumbley hasn’t come back neither,” said the sergeant.
“Not come back!” said the Resident, wondering. “This is strange. I don’t know, though. They have gone to smoke a cigar with someone, and then decided to stay all night.”
Mr Perowne shook his head, and the Resident felt that his explanation was not good, and both were silent as they walked back towards the entrance of the fort.
“What does this mean?” said Mr Perowne, at last.
“Can’t say yet,” replied the Resident, sharply. “Sergeant, have a look round, and make sure that Captain Hilton and Mr Chumbley have not come back.”
“Yes, sir, I’ll look round,” said the sergeant; “but they couldn’t have landed without the sentries knowing.”
“Go and see,” said the Resident, sternly; and the sergeant saluted and walked away.
“They must be staying somewhere,” said the Resident, who suffered from the desire to keep back the question that so agitated his breast. “Depend upon it, they have gone to the doctor’s to smoke a cigar.”
He felt as he spoke that this was impossible; for he was sure that the hours kept at the doctor’s were too regular for such a relapse.
“And my daughter?” said Mr Perowne, in a cold, stern voice.
“I’ll have the men out to search if it is necessary,” said the Resident, eagerly; “but before we proceed to such an extreme measure, had we not better make more inquiries? Yours is a large house and grounds. She may be back by now.”
Neil Harley felt a strange choking sensation as he spoke, and he knew that his words were weak; but he clung to the hope that there was some mistake, and that Helen was by now safely at home.
“She may,” said Mr Perowne, bitterly. “But it seems to me that there is some trick here. I gave you the credit of it at first.”
“Am I a man so wanting in respect for Helen that I should insult her and you?”
“I – I can’t help it, Harley!” groaned the father. “There seems to be no end to my troubles!”
The Resident looked at him sharply, for that evening he had seemed all life and gaiety.
“Yes, you may look!” groaned the unhappy man; “but everything goes wrong with me. There is, I am sure, some planned affair here; and I believe that Hilton is at the bottom of it.”
“Do not be so ready to condemn, Perowne,” said the Resident, quickly. “I feel sure that Hilton would be guilty of no rash, foolish escapade like this. It is absurd! Good heavens, man! do you think that Helen would degrade herself by eloping? I will not believe it!”
“I wish I could feel you were right,” groaned the unhappy father.
“Why Chumbley is away too. It is like saying that he is implicated.”
“He is Hilton’s chosen companion,” said Mr Perowne, sadly.
“Tut, man; we shall have to look farther afield than that.”
“Then why are they not here to speak for themselves?” cried Mr Perowne, in a querulous, excited way. “Hilton has been constantly hanging about my place a great deal more than Helen liked, and she showed it to-night by completely turning her back upon him.”
“But surely you do not think that Hilton – ” began the Resident.
“I do not think anything,” said Mr Perowne, angrily. “But here is the fact before us: my daughter is missing, and Captain Hilton has not returned to his quarters.”
“Neither has Chumbley,” said the Resident, uneasily.
“Neither has Chumbley,” assented Mr Perowne.
“A man who, beneath his languid indifference, is the soul of honour,” said the Resident; and he led the way to the boat by which Mr Perowne had come across.
The men were lying in the bottom asleep; but they roused up directly as the two gentlemen entered and were rowed to the landing-stage at the foot of Mr Perowne’s garden, where the swift stream was lapping the stones placed to keep it from washing the lawn away.
As they were rowed across Neil Harley found himself looking thoughtfully down into the water time after time, and a curious shuddering sensation came upon him, one which he strove hard to cast off.
He could not, he would not believe it possible, he told himself; but in spite of his efforts, and the mastery he generally had over self, the thought would come.
They found the servants ready with the answer that nothing had been seen of their young mistress, though they had continued searching ever since their master had gone away.
“Shall we look round ourselves?” said Mr Perowne.
“No, if you say the house has been searched.”
“I have been in every room myself.”
“Then let us go on to the doctor’s. We may find Hilton and Chumbley there, and they perhaps can throw some light upon the matter.”
Mr Perowne bowed, and they hurried off to the doctor’s pretty bungalow, a short distance away.
“They are not here, unless they are stopping to sleep.”
“How do you know?”
“There is no light.”
All the same the Resident tapped sharply at the door, and his summons was followed by a thump on the floor, as if someone had leaped out of bed.
The next moment a window was thrown open, and the doctor’s voice was heard.
“Now then: who’s ill?”
“Don’t be alarmed, doctor,” said the Resident.
“Oh, it’s you, Harley. Had too much supper?”
“No, no. Tell me quickly. Did Hilton and Chumbley come home with you?”
“No; they went away ever so long before.”
“Did you see them go?”
“No. Can’t say I did.”
“They have not been back to their quarters.”
“Stopped to have a cigar somewhere.”
“Perhaps so; but tell me, when did you see Hilton last?”
“I don’t know. Oh, yes, I do. He went down towards the river, with a cigar in his mouth.”
“When did you see my daughter?” said Mr Perowne.
“Oh! are you there, Perowne? Well, I don’t know. Not for an hour before we came away.”
“An hour and a half,” said Mrs Bolter’s voice. “We didn’t see her when we came away.”
“Did she go away with anyone, Mrs Bolter?” exclaimed Perowne, eagerly.
“No; I saw her walk towards the house by herself. I’ll get up and dress directly. Perhaps I can do some good. The poor girl has been overcome by the heat, Bolter, and fainted away somewhere in the grounds. We’ll both dress and come on directly, Mr Perowne. Have the shrubberies searched again. Henry, go and rouse up Arthur; he may be useful.”
“Yes, call him,” said the Resident; “he was seen with her last, and may know where she went.”
Volume Two – Chapter Three.
In the Middle of the Night
All Mrs Bolter’s dislike to Helen vanished now that there was trouble on the way; and dressing hastily, she ran across the little bamboo landing to knock at her brother’s door, but without receiving any answer, and knocking again sharply, she ran back to her own room to continue dressing.
She threw open the window to admit a few breaths of fresher air, and in the silence of the night she could hear the receding steps of their late visitors. Then turning sharply she found Dr Bolter yawning fearfully.
“Don’t be so unfeeling, Henry!” she cried; “who knows what may have happened?”
“Unfeeling be hanged!” he said, tetchily. “I only yawned.”
“And very rudely, Henry. You did not place your hand before your mouth.”
“A yawn, Mrs Bolter,” he said didactically, “is the natural effort made for ridding the system – ”
“Of the effects of too much smoking and drinking,” said Mrs Doctor, quickly. “There, do make haste and dress, and then call Arthur again. He does not seem to be moving. How soundly he sleeps. He did not hear us when we came home or he would have spoken.”
“Oh, dear!” yawned the doctor. “I was just in my beauty sleep, and this calling me up is the heigh – hey – ho – ha – hum! Oh! dear me! I beg your pardon, my dear.”
“Are you nearly ready, Henry?” said the lady, who would not notice the last most portentous yawn.
“Where the – ”
“Henry!”
“I mean where are my studs? Oh! all right.”
“Go and see if Arthur is awake, and tell him to get up directly.”
The doctor went slowly and sleepily out of the door, fumbling with his studs the while; and without pausing to knock, walked straight into his brother-in-law’s room.
“Here, Arthur, old man, rouse up!” he cried. “We’re going on to – hullo! Here, Mary, he hasn’t been to bed!” he shouted.
“Not been to bed!” cried the little lady. “Why, Arthur, you foolish – ”
“He isn’t here, my dear,” said the doctor.
“But – but he was here when we came back, was he not?” said Mrs Bolter.
“I don’t know; I only knocked at his door. I was too sleepy to speak, my dear.”
“Oh! Henry,” exclaimed Mrs Bolter, excitedly, “something must have happened, or dear Arthur would not have stopped away like this.”
“I – I hope not,” said the doctor. “There, be calm, my dear; we know nothing yet.”
“Yes – yes, I will be calm,” said the little lady, fighting hard to master her excitement; “but, Henry, if we have brought my poor brother over here to be the victim of some terrible accident, I shall never forgive myself.”
“Oh, stuff – stuff!” cried the doctor, as they looked round the room to find that the bed had not been touched. “Don’t jump at conclusions. What did Harley say?”
“That Arthur was seen last with Helen Perowne – in the garden, I suppose.”
“What? Our Arthur was seen with her last? She missing – he missing – why, by jingo, Mary, that handsome puss has run away with him!”
The doctor burst into a hearty, chuckling laugh.
“Is this a time for jesting, Henry?” said Mrs Bolter, angrily.
“Not at all, my dear,” replied the doctor, “only it looks as if Arthur had made up his mind to do something startling.”
“Arthur – something startling! What do you mean?”
“That he seems to have bolted with Helen Perowne!”
“Henry!”
“Well, my dear, they were seen together last, and they are now missing. What is one to say?”
“If you cannot say words of greater wisdom than that, Henry, pray be silent.”
“All right, my dear – come along.”
But if the doctor was disposed to be silent, so was not his lady, who began to find out cause after cause for her brother’s absence.
“Someone is ill, I’m sure, Henry, and Arthur has been summoned to the bedside.”
“Nonsense! If anyone were ill,” said the doctor, testily, “I should be sent for; and there is no one ill now, though we shall have half a dozen poorly to-morrow after that supper of Perowne’s.”
“Then some terrible accident has happened,” said Mrs Bolter. “Arthur would never have stopped away like this without some special reason.”
“Well, we shall see,” said the doctor.
“Henry,” said the lady, suddenly; and she came to a full stop.
“Yes, my dear.”
“Do you think it likely that Helen Perowne – poor foolish girl – would do such a thing?”
“What, as to run off with Arthur?” chuckled the little doctor.
“For shame, Henry! I say do you think she is likely to have walked down to the river-side because it is cool and slipped in? There is not the slightest protection.”
“No, my dear, I do not think anything of the sort,” replied the doctor, angrily. “She is a deal more likely to be courting some coxcomb or another in a shady walk, and they have forgotten all about the time.”
“Absurd!” exclaimed Mrs Bolter. “Absurd, eh? Why, that’s what she is always thinking about. How many fellows has she been flirting with since we knew her?”
“I am waiting for you, Dr Bolter,” said the lady, austerely, “and I must say that I think your words are very unfeeling indeed.”
“I’ll bleed her if she has fainted!” said the doctor, grimly. “I should like to bleed that girl, old-fashioned as the notion is! If I don’t, I’ll give her such a dosing as she shan’t forget in a hurry – calling a fellow up like this!”
They hurried out into the star-lit night, with everything seeming hushed and strange. The trees whispered low from time to time; then came a sullen splash from the river, as if some huge creature had just plunged in. Once or twice came a peculiar, weird-sounding cry from the jungle – one which made Mrs Doctor forget her annoyance with her husband and creep close to his side. Just then they heard hurried footsteps. “Did you bring your pistols with you, dear?” whispered Mrs Bolter.
“No,” he said, sharply; “I’ve got a rhubarb draught, a bottle of chlorodyne, the sal-volatile, and a lancet. That will be enough. Think I meant to shoot the girl?”
“Don’t be absurd, dear! Take care, there is someone coming.”
“Another call for me!” grumbled the doctor, sleepily. “That’s the effect of giving parties in a hot climate. Hullo!”
“Yes, doctor,” said a familiar voice.
“Oh! it’s you two. Well have you found her all right?”
“We’ve been to Stuart’s,” said the Resident, sharply.
“Well, what news?”
“They have not seen or heard of either of them,” replied the Resident.
“Do you know that my – ”
“Oh, hush!” whispered Mrs Doctor, excitedly, “you had better not – ”
“Why, they must know it, my dear,” he whispered back. “It is of no use to hide anything.”
“I did not understand you, doctor,” said the Resident.
“I say that my brother-in-law, Rosebury, has not been home.”
“The chaplain!” cried Mr Harley, and he stopped short upon the path.
“Hasn’t been home,” continued the doctor. “They’ve all gone in somewhere. Who else is away?”
“Hilton and Chumbley.”
“Oh, it’s all right. They’re somewhere; but it’s very foolish of them to frighten some people and rouse others up like this,” said the doctor.
“I hope we shall find a pleasant solution of what is at present a mystery,” said the Resident. “Mrs Bolter, it is very kind of you to come,” he added, warmly.
“Yes; I thank you too,” said Perowne, in a dreamy, absent way. “It is very strange; but where is Miss Stuart?”
“Stuart said she was asleep,” said the Resident.
“Oh, to be sure. Yes; I remember,” said Mr Perowne.
“We took her safely home,” said Mrs Bolter, quickly.
They had not far to go to the gates of the merchant’s grounds, but it seemed to all to be a long and dreary walk past the various dark houses of the European and native merchants, not one of which gave any token of the life within.
The gates were open, and they walked over the gritting gravel to where the door stood, like the windows of the bungalow, still open, and a lamp or two were yet burning in the grounds, one of which paper lanterns, as they approached, caught fire, and blazed up for a moment and then hung, a few shreds of tinder, from a verdant arch.
It was a mere trifle, but it seemed like a presage of some trouble to the house, seen as it was by those who approached, three of the party being in that unreal, uncomfortable state suffered by all who are roused from their sleep to hear that there is “something wrong.”
The servants looked soared as they entered, and announced that they had been looking, as they expressed it, “everywhere” without success.
Lanterns were lit and a thorough exploration of the grounds followed, the only result being that a glove was found – plainly enough one that had been dropped by someone walking near the river.
That was all, and the night passed with the searchers awaking everyone they knew in turn, but to obtain not the slightest information; and daybreak found the father looking older and greyer by ten years as he stood in his office facing the Resident, the doctor, and Mrs Bolter, and asking what they should do next.