<p><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XIV <br/> THE CAPTAIN COMES TO TEA </h3>
<p>Jane Gerson, alone for the first time
since the incident of the cigarette on the
parade ground a few hours back, sat before a
narrow window in her room at Government
House, fighting a great bewilderment. The
window opened on a varied prospect of blooming
gardens and sail-flecked bay beyond. But
for her eyes the riot of color and clash of
contrast between bald cliff and massed green had
no appeal. Her hands locked and unlocked
themselves on her lap. The girl's mind was
struggling to coordinate scattered circumstances
into a comprehensible whole, to grapple
with the ethical problem of her own conduct.</p>
<p>What she knew, or thought she knew—and
what she should do—those were the two saber
points of the dilemma upon which she found
herself impaled.</p>
<p>Could there now be any doubt of what she
felt to be the truth? First, she had met
Captain Woodhouse on the Express du Nord—an
officer in the English army, by his own
statement, returning from leave in England to his
post in Egypt. Then, the encounter of last
night at the Hotel Splendide, Captain Woodhouse
first denying his identity, then admitting
it under the enforced pledge that she should
not reveal the former meeting. Captain
Woodhouse, not in Egypt, but at Gibraltar, and, as
she had soon learned, there with papers of
transfer from an Egyptian post to the garrison
of the Rock. Following this surprise had come
General Crandall's dogged examination of that
morning—his blunt declaration that a serious
question as to the captain's position at
Gibraltar had arisen, and his equally plain-spoken
threat to have the truth from her concerning
her knowledge of the suspected officer.</p>
<p>To cap all, the message on the cigarette! An
informer—she guessed the prefix to the
unfinished word—had denounced "you and Louisa"
to General Crandall. To whom the pronoun
referred was unmistakable—Almer's eagerness
to insure Captain Woodhouse's receiving the
cigarette case plainly defined that. As to
"Louisa," involved with Woodhouse, the girl
from Hildebrand's was sensible only of a passing
flash of curiosity, made a bit more piquant,
perhaps, by a little dart of jealousy, hardly
comprehended as such. A hotel keeper warns
an officer in the Gibraltar garrison that he has
been denounced, but in the same message
adjures him to "play your own game." That was
the single compelling fact.</p>
<p>Jane Gerson flushed—in anger, or was it
through guilt?—when she found her lips
framing the word "spy"!</p>
<p>Now she understood why General Crandall
had put her on the grill—why he, informed,
had leaped to the significance of the gift of
roses and deduced her previous acquaintance
with their donor. Her host was not, after all,
the possessor of magical powers of mind reading.
He was, instead, just the sober, conscientious
protector of the Rock on whom rested
responsibility for the lives of its defenders and
the maintenance of England's flag there. His
duty was to catch—and shoot—spies.</p>
<p>Shoot spies! The girl's heart contracted at
the thought. No, no! She would not—she
could not reveal to the governor the knowledge
she had. That would be to send death to a
man as surely as if hers was the finger at the
trigger.</p>
<p>Jane Gerson was on her feet now, pacing
the room. Over and over again she told herself
that this man who had come into her life,
obliquely enough, had no claim on her; had
brought nothing to her but distress. He had
deceived her even, and then, when caught in
the deception, had wrested from her a promise
that she would help him continue further
deception against others. Against her will he
had made her a party to some deep and audacious
plot, whose purpose she could not guess,
but which must be but a part of the huge
mystery of war.</p>
<p>And soon this Captain Woodhouse was to
come to his trial—the purpose of his invitation
to tea that afternoon flashed clear as white
light. Soon she would be in the same room
with him; would be forced to witness the
spinning of the web set to trap him. He would
come unwarned, unsuspecting. He might leave
that room under guard and with guns at his
back—guns soon to be leveled at his heart. Yet
she, Jane Gerson, possessed the power to save
him—as the warning of the cigarette surely
would be saving, once a clever man were put on
his guard by it.</p>
<p>Would she speak—and betray General Crandall,
her kindly host? Would she lock her lips
and see a man walk blindfolded to his death?</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>A few minutes before five o'clock, Major
Bishop was announced at Government House
and received by General Crandall in the library.
Before Jaimihr Khan, who had preceded the
visitor through the double doors from the hall,
could retire, his master stopped him.</p>
<p>"One minute, Jaimihr! Have a seat, Bishop;
glad you've come a bit early. Come here, Jaimihr!"</p>
<p>The tall reedlike figure of the Indian glided
to General Crandall's side. His thin ascetic
features were set in their usual mold of
unseeing detachment; only his dark eyes showed
animation.</p>
<p>"Yes, my General," he said, as he stopped
before the Englishman.</p>
<p>"I have a little commission for you, Jaimihr,"
General Crandall began, weighing his
words with care. "The utmost discretion—you
understand?"</p>
<p>"The utmost. I understand." Jaimihr
Khan's lips moved ever so slightly, and his eyes
looked steadily ahead.</p>
<p>"In the course of a few minutes, Captain
Woodhouse, of the signal service, will be here
to tea," the general began. The Indian
repeated mechanically: "Cap-tain Wood-house."</p>
<p>"As soon as you have ushered him into this
room, you will go as quickly as you can to the
West Barracks. His room will be No. 36, on
the second gallery. You will enter his room
with a key I shall give you and search it
from end to end—everything in it. Anything
that is of a suspicious nature—you understand,
Jaimihr, what that might be—you will bring
here to me at once."</p>
<p>"It shall be done, General Sahib."</p>
<p>"No one, officer or man, must suspect your
errand. No one must see you enter or leave
that room."</p>
<p>"No one," the Indian repeated.</p>
<p>General Crandall went to a wall safe set by
the side of the double doors, turned the
combination, and opened it. He took from a drawer
therein a bunch of keys, selected one, and
passed it to Jaimihr Khan.</p>
<p>"The utmost care, remember!" he warned again.</p>
<p>"Is it likely I should fail you this time,
General Sahib, when so many times I have succeeded?"</p>
<p>"Make the search complete." General Crandall
ignored his servant's question. "But return
as quickly as you can. I shall keep Captain
Woodhouse here until you do so. You must
report to me before he leaves this house."</p>
<p>"When the moment arrives, your servant
shall fly, General Sahib," the Indian replied,
and withdrew.</p>
<p>"I say, General, you have a great deal of faith
in your Indian," Bishop ventured, accepting a
cigarette from his superior's case. "Rather a
delicate commission you've given him."</p>
<p>"Absolute faith, yes. Been with me five
years—picked him up in Rangoon—have tried
him many times, and found him loyal as any
officer in the service." General Crandall put
in his words enough emphasis to carry slight
rebuke for the other's implied criticism. But
the pursy little major was too sure of the fine
terms of personal friendship between himself
and his superior to feel embarrassment.</p>
<p>"About that girl, General—that cigar girl,
Josepha, concerning whom your beach-comber
friend sent that warning this morning from
the safe ground of Spain——"</p>
<p>"Obvious thing would have been to clap her
in a cell," the governor answered. "But I have
not, for the very good reason that if there's
anything in this fellow's accusations against
her, as well as against Woodhouse, the game
will be to keep her watched and give our
captain an opportunity to communicate with her.
Minute he does that—why, we've got our proof
against both."</p>
<p>"Then I take it you've put a trailer on the
girl?"</p>
<p>"At eight o'clock to-night I'll know where
she's been every hour of the day," the general
returned confidently. "She can't leave the
town without being arrested. Now, as to our
plan for Woodhouse's reception—this affair of
Craigen's wife; we might as well agree on
points, so that——" He heard his wife's
voice in the room off the library, and broke off
abruptly. "Confound it; the women are
coming! Just step into my room with me, and
we'll go over this little matter, Major."</p>
<p>General Crandall held open a small door at
the left of his desk and followed Bishop
through. Lady Crandall and Jane entered the
library almost at the same time.</p>
<p>"This tea of George's is preposterous," the
lady of Government House was grumbling.
"Said we must have this man from Egypt here
at once."</p>
<p>"If you were English, no tea could be
preposterous," Jane countered, with a brave
attempt at lightness. She felt each passing
moment a weight adding to the suspense of the
inevitable event.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm going to get it through with just
as soon as I can," Lady Crandall snapped.
Then Jaimihr Khan threw open the double
doors and announced: "Cap-tain Wood-house,
my lady!"</p>
<p>"Show him up!" she commanded; then in
complaint to Jane: "Now where do you
suppose that husband of mine went? Just like
him to suggest a tea and forget to make an
appearance."</p>
<p>Captain Woodhouse appeared between the
opened doors in khaki and trim puttees. He
stood very straight for an instant, his eyes
shooting rapidly about the room. Lady
Crandall hurried forward to greet him, and his
momentary stiffness disappeared. The girl
behind her followed slowly, almost reluctantly.
Woodhouse grasped her extended hand.</p>
<p>"It was good of you to send the flowers," she
murmured. The man smiled appreciation.</p>
<p>"Do you know," he said, "after I sent them
I thought you'd consider me a bit—prompt."</p>
<p>"I am learning something every day—about
Englishmen," Jane managed to answer, with a
ghost of a smile.</p>
<p>"Always something good, I hope," Woodhouse
was quick to retort, his eyes eagerly trying
to fathom the cause of the girl's restraint.</p>
<p>Lady Crandall, who had been vainly ringing
for Jaimihr Khan, excused herself on the
necessity of looking after the tea things. Jane
experienced a quick stab of dread at finding
herself alone with this man. Unexpected
opportunity was urging a decision which an hour
of solitude in her room had failed to bring.
Yet she trembled, appalled and afraid to speak,
before the very magnitude of the moment's
exigency. "A spy—a spy!" whispered austere
duty. "He will die!" her heart cried in protest.</p>
<p>"Miss Gerson, it's good to see you again and
know by your handclasp you have forgiven me
for—for what was very necessary at the
moment—last night—our meeting in the
Splendide." Captain Woodhouse was standing before
her now, his grave eyes looking down into hers.
The girl caught a deep note of sincerity and
something else—something vibrantly personal.
Yet her tongue would not be loosed of its burden.</p>
<p>"A very pretty speech," she answered, with
attempted raillery. "I shall think of it on the
boat going home."</p>
<p>"I say, I wish you weren't always in that
horrid state of mind—on your way home
mentally," Captain Woodhouse challenged.</p>
<p>"I shall be so in reality day after to-morrow,
I hope," she replied. "Away from all this
bewildering war and back in comfortable little
New York." The man seemed genuinely
grieved at her announcement.</p>
<p>"New York must be worth while; but I
imagine you have nothing picturesque—nothing
old there. I'll wager you haven't a single
converted monastery like Government House in all
your city."</p>
<p>"Not many things in New York have been
converted," she answered, with a smile. "Our
greatest need is for a municipal evangelist."</p>
<p>False—all false, this banter! She knew it
to be, and so she believed he must read it. And
the man—his ease of manner was either that
of innocence or of supreme nerve, the second
not less to be admired than the first. Could it
be that behind his serious eyes, now frankly
telling her what she dared not let herself read
in them, lay duplicity and a spy's cunning?</p>
<p>"I fancy you New Yorkers suffer most from
newness—newness right out of the shop," she
heard him saying. "But the old things are the
best. Imagine the monks of a long-ago
yesterday toasting themselves before this ancient
fireplace." He waved toward the massive
Gothic mantel bridging a cavernous fireplace.
An old chime bell, green with weathering, hung
on a low frame beside the firedogs.</p>
<p>"You're mistaken; that's manufactured
antiquity," Jane caught him up. "Lady Crandall
told me last night that fireplace is just five
years old. One of the preceding governor's
hobbies, it was."</p>
<p>Woodhouse caught at her answer with a
quick lifting of the brows. He turned again
to feast his eyes on the girl's piquant face,
even more alluring now because of the fleeting
color that left the cheeks with a tea rose's
coldness.</p>
<p>"Miss Gerson, something I have done or
said"—the man was laboring after words—"you
are not yourself, and maybe I am respon——"</p>
<p>She turned from him with a slight shudder.
Her hand was extended in mute appeal for
silence. He waited while his eyes followed the
heaving of her shoulders under the emotion that
was racking her. Suddenly she faced him
again, and words rushed from her lips in an
abandon of terror:</p>
<p>"Captain Woodhouse, I know too much—about
you and why you are here. Oh, more
than I want to! Accident—bad luck, believe
me, it is not my seeking that I know you are
a—a——"</p>
<p>He had started forward at her outburst, and
now he stood very close to her, his gray eyes
cold and unchanging.</p>
<p>"Say it—say the word! I'm not afraid to
hear it," he commanded tensely. She drew back
from him a little wildly, her hands fluttering up
as if to fend him off.</p>
<p>"You—you are in great danger this minute.
You were brought here this afternoon to be
trapped—exposed and made——"</p>
<p>"I was fully aware of that when I came, Miss
Gerson," he interrupted. "The invitation,
coming so suddenly—so pressing—I think I read it
aright."</p>
<p>"But the promise you made me give last
night!" Sudden resentment brushed aside for
the instant the girl's first flood of sympathy.
"That has involved me with you. Oh, that was
unfair—to make me promise I would not allude
to—to our first meeting!"</p>
<p>"Involved you?" He closed one of her hands
in his as if to calm her and force more rational
speech. "Then you have been——"</p>
<p>"Questioned by General Crandall—about
you," she broke in, struggling slightly to free
her hand. "Questioned—and even bullied and
threatened."</p>
<p>"And you kept your promise?" The question
was put so low Jane could hardly catch it. She
slowly nodded.</p>
<p>"Miss Gerson, you will never have cause to
regret that you did." Woodhouse pressed her
hand with almost fierce intenseness, then let it
go. Her face was flaming now under the stress
of excitement. She knew tears stood in her
eyes, and was angered at their being there; he
might mistake them. Woodhouse continued, in
the same suppressed tone:</p>
<p>"You were on the point of using a word a
minute ago, Miss Gerson, which was hard for
you to voice because you thought it an ugly
word. You seemed sure it was the right word
to fit me. You only hesitated out of—ah—decency.
Yet you kept faith with me before General
Crandall. May I hope that means——"</p>
<p>"You may hope nothing!" Quick rebellion at
what she divined to be coming flamed in Jane's
eyes. "You have no right to hope for more from
me than what you forced by promise. I would
not be saying what I have to you if—if I did not
feel I—that your life——"</p>
<p>"You misunderstood," he broke in stiffly. "I
was on the point of saying I hoped you would
not always believe me a——"</p>
<p>"Not believe!" Her hand went to the broad
ribbon belt she wore and brought out the silver
cigarette case. This she passed to him with a
swift gesture.</p>
<p>"Almer, the Hotel Splendide man, gave me
this to-day at parade, urging that I deliver it to
you." She was speaking hurriedly. "By a
miracle—the strangest circumstance in the
world—I learned the message this cigarette case was
to carry to you. Oh, no, innocently enough on
my part—it came by a chance I must not take
the time to explain."</p>
<p>"A message from—Almer to me?" Woodhouse
could not conceal the start her words
gave him. He took a step toward her eagerly.</p>
<p>"Yes, a message. You must have it to
protect yourself. The message was this:</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"Informer has denounced you and Louisa
to——"</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Her voice died in her throat. Over Captain
Woodhouse's shoulder she saw a door open.
General Crandall and a short fat man in
officer's uniform entered the library.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
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