<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
<h3>PRISONERS</h3>
<p>It was not until the evening was fairly far advanced that the opportunity
of speaking to Dollops alone was afforded Cleek. He took it when the "Pig
and Whistle" was filled to overflowing, and hardly a man who worked at
the factory was not inside it or standing outside near the little quay,
holding the usual evening's confab on the affairs of the day. Cleek
caught hold of Dollops as he was making his way into the little bar.</p>
<p>"Come fer a turn up the road, matey," he said loudly. "It's a fine
evenin' wot mykes yer 'omesick fer a sight uf yer own fireside. 'Ave
another drink later, mebbe. Come on."</p>
<p>Dollops linked arms with him, and, smoking and talking, the two men went
off up the dark lane which led from the quayside, and of a night-time was
as black as a pocket. Cleek's torch showed them the pathway, and as they
walked they talked in rapid whispers.</p>
<p>"Now, lad, let's hear all you've got to say!" he rapped out at length, as
the distance grew between themselves and the crowded little pub, and they
were safely out of earshot.</p>
<p>Dollops gulped with pent-up excitement.</p>
<p>"Lor! sir, there's summink wrong, any'ow; I've discovered that much!" he
broke out enthusiastically. "Chummed up with ole Black Whiskers I did,
and promised 'im a 'and ternight at twelve o'clock ter do some loadin'
on ter the fishin' boats wot's on their way ter Belgium. 'You're a
nice-seemin' sort er lad,' he tole me after we'd bin chattin' fer ten
minutes or so. 'Want ter make a bit of extra money by 'oldin' of your
tongue?' I was on it like a knife. 'Ra-<i>ther!</i>' I ses. 'Orl right,' ses
'e. 'Come along ter the quayside ternight at twelve o'clock. There's
a bit uf loadin' up ter be done, an' only a few uv the men are required.
I don't choose none wot I don't cotton to.' 'You'll cotton ter me all
right, matey,' I ses, with a sort uv a larf that seemed ter tickle 'im.
'I'm as close as the devil 'imself. Anythink yer doesn't want me ter see,
just tip me the wink.' 'I will that,' ses 'e, and then went off. An' so
'ere I am, sir, fixed up for a busy evenin' along uv ole Black Whiskers.
An' if I don't learn summink this night, well, my name ain't Dollops!"</p>
<p>"Good lad!" said Cleek, giving the boy's arm a squeeze. "That's the way
to do it! And is that all you've got to tell me? I've done a bit myself,
and chummed up with a chap called Jenkins, the tall, thin man who works
on the left of me, and he's let me into the secret of the fishing boat
business. But he's a close-mouthed devil. Either doesn't know anything,
or won't tell. I'm not quite sure which. But he wasted a good deal of
valuable breath endeavouring to teach me to keep my mouth shut. Gad! I'd
give something to have a few moments alone with your friend Black
Whiskers! There's a ripped pillow-case in my portmanteau which ought
to interest him. And what else did you learn, Dollops?"</p>
<p>"Only that what they ships is electric tubin's ter perfect flexible
electric wirin's wot is used for installations, sir," returned Dollops.
"That's what most of the things were wot I set eyes on after
workin'-hours, stacked up all ready ter be loaded on ter the boats. Long,
thin things they were, an' ought ter be easy work, judgin' from their
contents. But why they make all this mystery about it fair beats <i>me</i>!"</p>
<p>"And me into the bargain, Dollops," interposed Cleek, with a little sigh.
"But there's an old saying, that there's no smoke without fire, and
ordinary people don't make such a devilish fuss about others knowing
their business if they're on the straight. What all this has got to do
with the 'Frozen Flame' business I must confess somewhat puzzles me to
discover. But that it <i>has</i> something to do with it is proved by that
fishy character Borkins, and the amiable attempt of his friend to murder
so humble a person as myself. Now it's up to me to find the missing link
in the chain.... Hello! here's a gap in the hedge here. Looks like it had
been made on purpose. Let's go and investigate."</p>
<p>He whipped his little torch round and the circle of light flashing over
the ground, revealed to their searching eyes something vastly unexpected
in such a place and yet which, after all, seemed to fit into a place
where so much mystery and secretiveness was in the air. They themselves,
disguised as such rough characters, fitted into the strange picture,
which struck Cleek, even in spite of his many peculiar cases, as very
much out of the ordinary.</p>
<p>A gap in the hedge there was, right enough. And through the gap—someone
must have been working here a very short time before—a square of turf,
cut carefully out and laid upon one side, revealed to their astonished
eyes a wooden trap-door, exactly suggestive of the pirates' den of a
child's imagination, and with a huge iron ring fastened to the centre of
it.</p>
<p>Cleek whistled inaudibly, and turning round upon Dollops a happy light in
his eyes and a smile, almost of amusement on his lips.</p>
<p>"Gad!" he exclaimed softly. "Game to try this, Dollops. I am going to
have a shot at it myself."</p>
<p>"But you ain't got no firearms on yer, sir, in case o' h'accidents,"
returned the literal minded Dollops, "and no man in 'is senses would
attempt to go down that thing without 'em."</p>
<p>"Well, I've been called a lunatic before this, lad. And going down it I
am, this minute. And if you've the least qualms at following me, you can
just watch up here and warn me with the old signal if you hear any one
coming. But I'm going down, to find out where this thing leads to, and a
dollar to a ducat it'll lead to a good deal that means the unravelling of
a riddle. The fellow who tangled the threads in the first place has a
head any one might admire. But what I want to know is what he's taking
all this trouble for. Coming, Dollops?"</p>
<p>Dollops sent a reproachful look into Cleek's face and sniffed audibly.</p>
<p>"Of course I'm comin', guv'nor," he made answer. "D'yer think I'd be such
a dirty blighter as ter let you go dahn there—p'raps ter your very
death—alone? Not me, sir. Dollops is a-follerin' wherever you lead, and
if you chooses 'ell itself, well, 'e's ready ter be roasted and fried in
the devil's saucepan, so long as 'e keeps yer company."</p>
<p>Without waiting for the end of this gallant, if rather prolonged speech
Cleek knelt down, set his two hands upon the iron ring and pulled for all
he was worth. But the ease with which the door lifted came as something
of a surprise. It came up silently, almost sending Cleek over backward,
as indeed it would have done a man with less poise, but he easily
recovered himself. He and Dollops cautiously approached the edge, and in
the half-light which the moon shed upon it (they did not use Cleek's
torch) saw that a flight of roughly-made clay steps led down into
darkness below. They sat back upon their heels and listened. Not a sound.</p>
<p>"Coming?" whispered Cleek in a low, tense whisper.</p>
<p>"Yes sir." Dollops was beside him in an instant. Cleek took the first
step carefully, and very slowly descended into the darkness, with Dollops
close behind him. Down and down they went, and on reaching the bottom,
found the place opened out into a sort of roughly-made tunnel, just as
high as a man's head, which ran on straight into the darkness in front of
them.</p>
<p>"Gawd! gives yer the fair creeps, don't it?" muttered Dollops as they
stood in the gloom and tried to take their bearings. "What yer goin' ter
do, sir?"</p>
<p>"Find out where it leads to—if there's time," whispered Cleek rapidly.
"We've got to find out what these human moles are burrowing in the earth
like this for. I'd give a good deal to know. Hear anything?"</p>
<p>"Not a blinkin' sound, sir."</p>
<p>"All right. We'll try the torch, and if any one turns up we'll have to
run for it. Now." He touched the electric button, and a blob of light
danced out upon the rough clay floor, revealing as it swung in Cleek's
swift fingers the whole circumference of the place from ground to
ceiling.</p>
<p>"Cleverly made," muttered that gentleman in an admiring whisper. "It
reminds me of the old 'Twisted Arm' days, Dollops, and the tunnels that
ran to the sewers. Remember?"</p>
<p>"I should just jolly well think I do, guv'nor! Them were days, if yer
like it! Never knew next minute if yer were goin' ter see daylight
again."</p>
<p>"And this little adventure of ours seems a fair imitation of them!"
returned Cleek, with a noiseless laugh. "Let's move a bit farther on and
get our bearings. Hello! here's a little sort of cupboard without a door.
And ... look at those sacks standing there against that other side in
that little cut-out place, Dollops. Now I wonder what the devil <i>they</i>
contain. Talk about the Catacombs! They aren't in it with this affair."</p>
<p>Dollops crept up noiselessly and laid a hand upon one of the great sacks
that stood one upon the other in three double rows, and tried to feel the
contents with his fingers. It gave an absolutely unyielding surface, as
though it might be stuffed with concrete.</p>
<p>"'Ard as a ship's biscuit, sir," he ejaculated. "Now I wonder what the
dickens?..."</p>
<p>His voice trailed off suddenly, and he stood a moment absolutely still,
every nerve in his slim young body taut as wire, every muscle rigid. For
along the passage—not so very far in front of them, from where it seemed
to terminate—came the thud of men's feet upon the soft clayey ground.
The torch went out in an instant. In another, Cleek had caught Dollops's
arm and drawn him into the narrow aperture, where, with faces to the
wall, they stood tense and rigid, listening while the steps came nearer
and nearer. They waited in the darkness, as men in the <i>Bonnet Rouge</i>
days must have waited for the stroke of Madame Guillotine.</p>
<p>... The footsteps came forward leisurely. The intruders could hear the
sound of muffled voices. One, brief, concise, clipping its words short,
and with a note of cool authority in the low tones; the other—Dollops
huddled his shoulders closer and contrived to whisper "Black Whiskers"
before the two men came abreast of them. Strange to be walking thus
comfortably in the dark! Either they were sure of their way that it
didn't matter about having a light, or else they were afraid to use a
torch.</p>
<p>"You will see that it is done, Dobbs, and done properly to-night?"
sounded the brisk tones of "Black Whiskers'" companion. And then the
reply: "Yes, it'll be done all right. We're sending 'em off at one
o'clock sharp. Loadin' at twelve. No need to worry about that, sir."</p>
<p>"And these two newcomers? You can vouch for their reliability to keep
their mouths shut, Dobbs? We wouldn't have chanced taking them on if we
hadn't been so short-handed, but ... you're sure of them, eh?"</p>
<p>They could hear "Dirty Jim's" ugly little chuckle. It seemed laden with
sinister purpose.</p>
<p>"They're sound enough, master, I promise yer!" he made reply.
"Ugliest-lookin' pair er cut-throats yer ever laid yer peepers on. Seen
dirtier business than this, I dare swear. And Piggott's on to the right
kind, all right. Good man, Piggott."</p>
<p>The two came opposite them, and stopped a moment, as though they might
be wishing to investigate the contents of the sacks that stood nearby,
hidden by the enveloping darkness. The tension under which Cleek and the
youthful Dollops laboured was tremendous. Not daring to breathe they
stood there hugging the wall, their every muscle aching with the strain,
and then the two strangers walked on again, still talking in low, casual
voices, until they had reached the end of the passage where the steps
started abruptly upward. Then a patch of light showed suddenly.</p>
<p>"Steps here; be careful. They're none too easy," came the cautious voice
of Black Whiskers. "I'll go up first, so's you kin follow in my steps.
What's this? The door been left open, eh? I'll 'ave a few words with that
chap Jenkins afore I'm many days older. I'll larn 'im to disobey 'is
orders! Any one might come along 'ere and drop in casual-like!... The
unreliable swine!"</p>
<p>The light grew less and less as the bearer of it climbed the rude stairs,
and finally vanished altogether. And as it disappeared Dollops clutched
Cleek's arm, his breath coming in little gasps.</p>
<p>"The door, sir—" he gasped. "If they close that, we're—" And even as he
spoke there came a sound of sliding bolts and a thump which told the
truth only too well.</p>
<p>"Did you 'ear, sir?" he almost moaned.</p>
<p>The trap door had been closed.</p>
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