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The Zeppelin Destroyer: Being Some Chapters of Secret History
I was on the point of telling her what had been discovered – the purport of the cipher-message and the suspicion which rested upon her. Yet, would that induce her to be frank and tell me the truth? I decided that it would not, therefore I said nothing. Instead, I remarked in a low, sympathetic voice: “I really think, darling, that it is due to me – to your people also – that you should tell us the truth of what happened to you, and of the identity of your enemies.”
“I have already told you, Claude,” was her quiet response. “If you really love me, then you should at least trust me.”
“I do trust you, darling!” I protested quickly. “You surely know that! You are in possession of all the secrets of our invention, and – ”
“Ah! the invention —the invention!” she cried and, as she suddenly recollected it, her whole manner instantly changed.
She started from her chair crying: “Yes – yes! Now I remember! I remember! It was awful – terrible – ugh! Ah! my poor brain!” and again she drew her hand across her brow. “My poor head!”
She paused but, next second, she turned to me, exclaiming in a tone quite unusual to her:
“No! I shall tell you nothing – I shall say nothing! I do not want to remember – I pray only to forget – yes, to forget all – everything. It is too horrible! Too cruel!” and I saw that my reference to our secret apparatus had stirred another chord in her memory – one that caused her both fierce anger and bitter remorse.
That fact, in itself, revealed to me quite plainly that her tragic experiences, whatever they might have been, had some curious connexion with our invention for the destruction of Zeppelins. Thus, arguing with myself further, I became more than ever convinced that she, in all her innocence, had fallen defenceless into the unscrupulous grip of the terrible but relentless Invisible Hand.
Why did she so persistently withhold from me the truth? What more natural than, knowing the identity of her enemies, she should seek to denounce and justly punish them? Now she was back at my side she surely could not fear them!
Certainly her demeanour was most mysterious, and I stood there, facing her, utterly bewildered. The expression in her dear face was quite uncanny.
Once again I begged her to tell me something – however slight – regarding what had occurred to her. I told her of our tireless search; of the eager hue and cry; of the publication of her portrait, and of the offered reward for any information.
“Ah!” she replied, with a strange, faint smile, as though of triumph almost. “All that was to no effect. The precautions taken were far too complete. Nobody could have found me – for I was in a living grave.”
“Yes,” I said, hoping that she would reveal to me something more, however vague. “Tell me about it, darling. Do, Roseye.”
“Tell you!” she echoed with angry resentment, putting me from her firmly and staring at me. “No, never!” Then a second later she turned towards the curtained window and shrieked:
“Ah! look! – that accursed woman again! Why do you allow her to come here – if you love me, Claude!”
“She is not here,” I declared firmly. “It is all your silly imagination!”
“She is!” cried my love wildly. “You are lying to me! She’s there! Over there! Kill her – Claude – or she will kill you – ah! that Woman with the Leopard’s Eyes!”
Chapter Fourteen
False or True?
One bright crisp afternoon in mid-December, Roseye, wrapped warmly in her furs, sat beside me in the car as we sped through Leatherhead on our way out to Burford Bridge, where we had decided to have tea.
In the grey wintry light the landscape had become gloomy and depressing. Yet my love chatted merrily as we sped along.
Since that well-remembered evening at my rooms when she had made her sudden reappearance on my threshold from nowhere, the days had been very dark and terribly anxious ones.
After her refusal to tell me anything, I had taken her home, where her sudden arrival had been as a thunderbolt to her parents. But alas! her overstrained brain had then given way, and for three weeks she had remained in bed under the care of Sir Charles Needham, one of the greatest mental specialists in Harley Street.
Thanks to his skill, she had slowly recovered – very slowly it seemed to me.
A dozen times I had chatted with Sir Charles, and he had admitted to me that the case was not only most unusual, but almost unique. He could not obtain from her any lucid account of what had occurred after she had left home on that fatal morning. She had contradicted herself so many times.
Any reference to inventions, to electricity, to trains, to Zeppelins, or to women, sent her into fierce paroxysms of anger. Her attitude was most mysterious. In fact her adventures during the time she had been missing were enveloped in a dark cloud of mystery which, even Barton himself, was unable to penetrate.
Captain Pollock, of course, had been informed and had repeated his red-taped suspicions. But, having no reliable or actual evidence upon which to base his assertions, Barton seemed inclined to disregard them.
I noticed this, putting it down to the usual disagreement which exists in officialdom the world over. No one official has ever been known to be in actual accord with another in another Department. That’s why the clock of State creaks on so rustily in every civilised community.
Arrived at that motoring rendezvous, the Burford Bridge Hotel, we took a stroll in its picturesque grounds on the slope of Box Hill, leafless and deserted on that December afternoon.
Having walked some distance along the gravelled paths, we sat together upon a seat, when her sudden silence caused me to ponder. Since we had been walking she had scarcely uttered a word, and had appeared utterly absorbed.
At last she exclaimed:
“I shall be so very glad when they let me fly again, Claude. I feel ever so much better now – quite my old self again.”
“I’m delighted to hear that,” was my reply. “But you must wait another week or two before you take out your machine. Your man is overhauling it thoroughly. When I was at Hendon yesterday I saw that he had taken down the engine.”
“Yes. I’m most anxious to help you, dear, with your great invention. How is it getting on?”
“Famously,” I replied. “Teddy and I have been working hard for the last four days, and have made progress in both lightening the weight of the outfit, and increasing its power. I’ve ordered a big new dynamo to be constructed on such lines that it can be placed on my machine with a second engine. This engine will either run the dynamo, or the propeller.”
“Of course, I quite see,” she exclaimed. “You must have a second engine for night-flying. How long will it be, do you think, before you can make a trial flight?” she asked anxiously.
“Early in January I hope, darling.”
“And you will let me come with you – won’t you? Now promise me. Do,” she urged, placing her gloved hand upon my arm, and looking earnestly into my face.
“Yes. I promise,” I answered laughing. “Teddy will, no doubt, be very anxious to come, but you shall make the first flight, darling. It is your privilege.”
“May I come out to Gunnersbury and help you?” she asked. “I’m quite all right again, I assure you.”
“When Sir Charles gives his consent, then you may come,” I replied.
“I’ll ask him to-morrow,” she cried gladly. “I’m so horribly tired of leading an idle life at home. Lionel lunched with us yesterday, and took me out to a matinée. It was quite jolly to have such a change. We had tea at the Piccadilly afterwards.”
“Lionel!” I exclaimed in surprise.
“Yes. Why? Are you jealous – you dear old thing?”
I drew a deep breath, and she evidently noticed my displeasure.
“Jealous!” I cried with affected nonchalance. “Why should I be?”
“Well – I ought, of course, to have told you before,” she answered. “But he’s such a good friend of ours, you know.”
Good friend. All the suspicions I held regarding him flashed across my mind. Why had he pretended to be an invalid on that day I had sat at his bedside, and yet afterwards had dined at Hatchett’s? Why was he ever inquisitive regarding our secret experiments, and why did he appear to possess such unusual knowledge of coming events?
“Yes,” I remarked after a pause. “He is, no doubt, a good friend.”
I saw that I could learn more by disarming suspicion than by appearing ungenerous.
“You don’t mind me going to a matinée with him, do you, Claude?” she asked frankly. “Of course, if it has annoyed you, I won’t go again. But mother said she thought a theatre would be a pleasant relaxation for me, now that we can’t go out at night on account of the darkened streets and the bad winter weather.”
“The darkened streets seem to make no difference to pleasure-going,” I said bitterly, and purposely disregarding her first question. “Though we are at war – though thousands upon thousands of our poor brave fellows have been killed or maimed in the defence of their homes and their loved ones, yet the London public are still the same. Nothing seems to disturb them. Bond Street, with all its fripperies, is still in full swing: the drapers everywhere are paying big dividends – money is being squandered in luxuries by those who have never previously known such things; jewellers are flourishing, and extravagance runs riot through the land. Men and women go nightly to revues and join in rollicking choruses, even while the death-rattle sounds in the throats of Britain’s bravest sons. Ah! Roseye,” I said. “It is all too awful. What I fear is that we are riding gaily for a fall.”
“No,” she said. “I agree in a sense with all you say. But we are not riding for a fall, so long as we have brave men ready to sacrifice their lives in Britain’s cause. You, Claude, are one of those,” she added, looking straight into my face with an open, frank expression – that love-look which can never be feigned, either by man or by woman.
In that second I realised that at least my suspicion that she had any secret affection for Lionel Eastwell was groundless.
Yet I was, nevertheless, annoyed that he should still mislead her parents by expressions of friendship. True, when I came to examine and to analyse my doubts, I could discover no real and actual foundation for them. Perhaps it was an intuition that possessed me – a strange half-formed belief that Eastwell, though such a cheerful companion, such a real good fellow, and so popular with all the flying-boys, was not exactly of the truly patriotic type which he represented himself to be.
For that reason alone I inwardly objected to Roseye associating with him, yet as he was such a warmly welcomed friend of the family, it was extremely difficult for me to move in any antagonistic spirit.
Within myself I had a fierce and desperate struggle, yet long ago I had realised that if I intended to win I must not show the slightest sign of anger or of suspicion.
So, as we sat there together – gazing across the sloping lawn, so melancholy in that falling December twilight, yet so picturesque and gay on those summer evenings as I had often known it – I crushed down the apprehension that had arisen within me, and laughed gaily with my dainty well-beloved.
Still the facts – the mysterious inexplicable facts – remained. Was it possible that my love desired again to assist in the completion of our experiments in order to know the result of them – and perhaps to betray them?
No. I could not – even in my inward anger at the knowledge that she had spent the previous afternoon with the man I suspected – bring myself to believe that she was really acting in contradiction to the interests of the country.
Somebody has truly said that love is blind. Well, I loved Roseye. And my blindness had been a very pleasant and delightful affliction up to that tragic day of her disappearance.
Through those weeks when her mind had remained unbalanced and unhinged, she had never once made any statement nor had she ever inadvertently admitted anything which might reveal the truth as to where she had been, or the identity of the person whom she held in greatest terror – that Woman with the Leopard’s Eyes.
With all the cunning I possessed I had sought to glean from her some fact, any fact however vague, concerning those weeks when she had been missing, but beyond what I have written in these pages, I could gather no single incident.
I was but an ordinary man – one whose father had risen in the medical profession to grasp one of its plums. From being a ne’er-do-well and idler, I had taken up aviation and, after much perseverance, had learned to fly. I suppose I was gifted with ordinary intelligence, and that intelligence had shown me that, now we were at war, the enemy had placed upon the whole country that secret Hand, eager and clutching, to effect and secure our undoing. Its finger-prints, indelible and unmistakable, remained wherever one sought them.
That Hand had been upon me when I had crashed to earth with a wooden bolt in my machine in place of one of steel.
But whether the Hand had really been placed upon Roseye was a problem which utterly defied solution.
That she had suffered had been vividly apparent, yet her absolute and fixed refusal to say anything, to admit anything, or to make any charge against anyone, was, in itself, an astounding feature of what was an extremely curious situation.
I remained that afternoon at Burford Bridge just as dumbfounded and mystified as I had been at that moment when Theed had opened the door of my sitting-room and she had returned from what, in her own words, had been a living tomb.
Why a living tomb? Who had prepared the trap – if trap there had been? Who was the unknown woman, the very mention of whom terrified her – the Woman with the Leopard’s Eyes?
Though we sat there and laughed together – for I had affected, I hope successfully, an utter disregard of any suspicion or jealousy of Eastwell – I gazed upon her, and I saw that she had grown nervous and anxious.
Why?
It seemed to me that, with her woman’s innate cleverness and cunning – which by the way is never outmatched by that of the mere man – she was reading my own innermost thoughts. She knew my suspicions, and her intention, at all hazards, was to conceal from me some bitter and perhaps disgraceful truth.
This thought aroused within me a relentless hatred of the fellow Eastwell. Nevertheless, once again when I came to examine the actual facts, I could discover really nothing tangible – nothing which ought to lead me, with any degree of right or justice, to an adverse decision.
I had revealed much to Inspector Barton before Roseye’s disappearance. I had told him of my suspicions of Eastwell, but I suppose he had – as natural to, an investigator of crime – regarded those suspicions as the natural outcome of a man’s jealousy. But they were not, because I had never been jealous of the man – not until we sat there on the lawn before the hotel, and she had told me how she had spent an afternoon at the theatre in his company.
As a matter of fact jealousy had never entered my head. Previously I had always regarded Eastwell as quite a good fellow, full of the true stamina of a patriot. He had been, I knew, full of schemes for the future of aviation in England ever since he had taken his first flap at the aerodrome. Once, indeed, he had serious thoughts, in the pre-war days, of putting up as Parliamentary candidate for a Yorkshire borough. But the matter fell through because the Opposition, on their part, ran a man whose chances were assured – an Anglo-Indian colonel who had passed through every local distinction, from being a member of the local Board of Guardians to becoming a DL. Against such odds Eastwell could not fight. In the great game of politics it has ever been that the local man who spends his money with the local butcher, baker and candlestick-maker, is usually returned with a thumping majority.
The man from afar, the man with a mission, the man who knows his job and will dare to raise his voice in the House to declaim his country’s shortcomings, will usually be jeered at as a “carpetbagger” and hopelessly outpaced and outvoted.
I knew this. I had seen it long ago.
As I sat there at Roseye’s side I fell to wondering – wondering whether she had actually played an open, straightforward game.
Or was she deceiving me!
Which?
Chapter Fifteen
Concerns Harold Hale
Christmas came, but it brought no relaxation to Teddy, or to myself.
We were working hard at our scheme out at Gunnersbury, making experiment after experiment, many being failures, with a few successes.
Of Eastwell we saw nothing, for he had flown up to the north-east coast in order to watch some evolutions being carried out by the anti-aircraft corps, and had not returned.
Sir Charles had now given Roseye permission to assist us in our work and, indeed, one morning in the first week of the New Year she made her first flight since that day of her disappearance.
My mind, however, was by no means at rest. After my own experiences I was careful to examine and to fly her machine several times around the aerodrome before I would allow her to go up. If my machine had been tampered with in the way it had, then there was but little doubt that an attempt might be made against her.
She had gone for about an hour when I saw her returning, a tiny speck in the clear sky coming from the south-west, and flying very high. When at last she landed and I handed her out of the pilot’s seat, she put up her big goggles and, flushed with satisfaction, cried:
“I’ve had such a splendid wind behind me! The weather is quite perfect. How good it feels to be out once again, Claude!”
“Yes, dear,” I answered, as we strolled together over towards the hangars, whence one of the school-buses had just begun to flap. “I should like to go up but, as you know, they are busy putting in my second engine for night-flying, and to drive the dynamo. I fear it won’t be ready for quite another fortnight yet.”
“What speed do you really expect to develop?” she asked, much interested.
“In order to overtake a Zeppelin I must, at least, be able to fly eighty miles an hour,” was my reply. “And I must also be able to fly as slowly as thirty-five in order to economise fuel and to render the aim accurate as well as to make night-landing possible.”
“Are you certain that you will be able to do it?” she asked, a little dubiously I thought. She knew that, as far as our apparatus for the direction of the intense electric current was concerned, it was practically perfect. Yet she had, more than once, expressed her doubt as to whether my monoplane, with its improvements of my own design, would be able to perform what I so confidently expected of it.
“Of course one can be certain of nothing in this world, dear,” was my reply. “But by all the laws of aerodynamics it should, when complete, be able to do what I require. I must be able to carry fuel for twelve hours cruising at low speed, so as to enable me to chase an airship to the coast, if necessary. Further, I must, in order to be successful, be able to climb to ten thousand feet in not more than twenty minutes. You see,” I explained, “I am trying to have the engines silenced, and I am fitting up control-gear for two pilots, so as to allow one to relieve the other, and, further, I have designed the alterations whereby either Teddy or myself can have equal facilities to work the searchlight as well as the deadly current.”
“I do hope it will be a success. You have had so many failures, dear,” she said, as we stood together, watching Teddy make a descent, for he was up testing his engine.
“Yes, that first magnetic wave idea proved a failure,” I said regretfully. “And why, I can’t yet discover. My first idea was to create an intensified magnetic wave which would have the effect of ‘seizing’ the working parts of the Zeppelin engines, and putting them out of action. For instance, from your aeroplane you would direct this wave against the Zeppelin and bring its engines gradually into a state of immobility. The natural act of the Zeppelin engineer, on finding that his engine was slowing down, would be to admit more fuel for a few moments. On the sudden release of the arresting medium the engine would ‘pick-up’ violently and blow the heads out of the cylinders, thereby causing the explosion which we desire to create.”
“Your experiments were all in secret,” Roseye remarked. “The theory seems sound enough. Curious that it did not work!”
“Yes. Even now I can’t, for the life of me, discover the reason,” I replied. “Yet we have, happily, tested this new apparatus of ours, and we know it is feasible as soon as ever we can get its weight further reduced, and the ray intensified.”
“And the sooner you can do that, the better,” my well-beloved declared. “Before very long, at the present rate of increase, we shall, I expect, see Zeppelins of a much greater size.”
“True,” I remarked, as I watched Teddy spring out of his bus, and make his way across the aerodrome in our direction. “No time should be lost. To be effective the aeroplane will have to be able to climb to 18,000 feet, and even remain aloft at that height for hours to lie in wait for the airship. The airship of one year hence will inevitably be a much more formidable machine than the present Zeppelin.”
“But we must be most careful to keep the secret, Claude,” she urged. “The enemy must not know it, or they may combat us!”
I was silent for a few moments. Across my mind there flashed the recollection of that strange enemy message in cipher that had been found in her card-case.
What could be the explanation of that mystery? It was plain that the enemy were in possession of some facts and, further, that at all hazards, and regardless of all risks, they intended to discover our secret.
I disregarded her remark, merely answering:
“I fear the Zeppelin menace will be serious in the North Sea before many months. It is only the bad weather which protects us.”
The alterations to my machine were being carried on by a first-class firm at Willesden, therefore, at Teddy’s suggestion, all three of us ran over in the car in order to inspect the work, which we found progressing most favourably.
The foreman engineer, a big fat, elderly man, just as we were about to leave the premises, called me aside and, in a confidential tone, exclaimed:
“Excuse me, sir. But did you send a gentleman named Hale here?”
“Hale?” I repeated, looking at him in surprise. “I know nobody of that name!”
“Well – here’s his card,” said the engineer. “He called yesterday afternoon, and told me that you’d sent him, and that he had your authority to look at your machine.”
I took the rather soiled card, and saw upon it the name: “Harold Hale – National Physical Laboratory.”
I held it in my hand in surprise.
“A Government official!” I exclaimed in wonder. “I gave no such permission!” I declared. “As I have repeatedly said, these alterations you are making are strictly in secret.”
“That’s what I told him, sir.”
“You didn’t let him see the work, I hope?” I asked anxiously.
“Not very likely, sir,” was the man’s reply. “I asked him for a written authorisation, but he said he’d left it in his office. There was a good deal of swank about him, I thought. He seemed to have a swelled head.”
“Well – what happened?” I inquired.
“Oh! He became very officious-like – said he was a Government inspector of aircraft, and demanded to see what alterations you were making in your machine. My reply was to tell him that when he brought a letter from you, I’d show him – and not before.”
“Excellent!” I said. “Then he didn’t produce any credentials?”
“None. But he argued with me for a long time – told me that I had no right to deny him access to information required for official purposes; that I was liable under the Defence of the Realm Act, and all sorts of other bunkum. In reply, I merely told him to go along to the office and see Mr Smallpiece, our manager – whom I knew to be up at the London office,” added the foreman with a grin.
“What kind of man was he? Describe him,” I urged.
“Well – he was about forty I should say – round-faced, with a little close-cropped black moustache. He was well dressed – a dark-blue overcoat with velvet collar, and a grey plush hat. He came in a taxi.”
“Ah! If we could find the driver, we might perhaps discover who he was,” I exclaimed.