<h2>CHAPTER XXXI<br/> <span class="f8">MARJORY’S ADVENTURE</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">As</span> I felt that time, in which I had the passage all
to myself, was precious, I turned back to the
main way down. The path was very steep and
low and the rock underfoot was cut in rude steps; as I
held the lantern before me I had to droop it so that I
could smell the hot metal where the flame touched the
back. It was indeed a steep and difficult way, made for
others than men of my own stature. As I went, I felt
my first fears passing away. At first I had dreaded a
lack of air, and all sorts of horrors which come to those
who essay unknown passages. There came back to my
recollection passages in Belzoni’s explorations in the
Pyramids when individuals had got lost, and when whole
parties were stopped by the first to advance jamming in
a narrow passage as he crawled along on his belly. Here,
though the roof came down in places dangerously low,
there was still ample room, and the air came up sweet
and cool. To any one unused to deep burrows, whether
the same be natural or artificial, there is a dread of being
underground. One is cut off from light and air; and
burial alive in all its potential horrors is always at hand.
However, the unexpected clearness and easiness of the
way reassured me; and I descended the steep passage
with a good heart. All distance underground seems
extravagantly long to those unaccustomed to it; and to
me the mere depth I had descended seemed almost impossible
when the way before me became somewhat level<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
again. At the same time the roof rose so that I could
stand upright. I guessed that I must be now somewhere
at the foot of the hillock and not far from the old chapel;
so I went forward carefully, keeping my hand ready to
cover up the front of the lamp. As the ground was fairly
level, I could in a way pace it; and as I knew that there
was only about two hundred feet distance from the foot
of the hill to the chapel, I was not surprised when after
some eighty paces I found the passage end in a sort of
rude chamber cut in the rock. At right angles to the place
of my entry there was a regular stairway, partly cut in
rock and partly built, leading upward. Before I ascended
I looked around carefully and could see that sections of
the walls of the chamber were built of great blocks of
stone. Leaving further investigation for the future I
went upward with a beating heart.</p>
<p>The stair was rudely circular, and I had counted thirty
steps when I saw the way blocked by a great stone.
For a few seconds I was in fear lest I should find this
impossible; then I looked carefully for any means of
moving the obstacle. I thought it more than likely that
something of the same process would be adopted for
both ends of the passage.</p>
<p>Luck was certainly on my side to-day! Here were two
iron handles, much the same as those with which I had
been enabled to move the monument from within. I
grasped them firmly, and began to experiment as to which
way the stone moved. It trembled under my first effort;
so exerting a very little of my strength in the same direction
the great stone began to move. I saw a widening
line of open space through which a dim light shone in
upon me. Holding the stone in poise with one hand, I
covered the front of the lamp with my cap, and then resumed
the opening process. Slowly, slowly, the stone
rolled back till a clear way lay abreast of me through<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</SPAN></span>
which, doubled up, I could pass. From where I stood
I could see part of the wall of a building, a wall with
long low windows in massive stone; and I knew that at
last I had reached the old chapel. A joyous feeling
rushed over me; after the unknown perils of the cavern
passage at last I had reached safety. I bent low and
began to step out through the narrow opening. There
was fully four feet in the circumference of the stone
so that two such steps as were possible to me were necessary
to take me out. I had taken one and my foot was
lifted for the second when a clear firm voice said in a
whisper:</p>
<p>“Hands up! If you move you are a dead man!” I
stopped of course, and raising my face, for my head
was bent low in the necessary effort of stooping, I found
myself opposite the muzzle of a revolver. For an instant
I looked at it; it was firm as the rock around me, and
I felt that I must obey. Then I looked beyond it, to the
hand which held it, and the eyes which directed. These
too were inflexible; but a great joy came over me when I
recognised that the hand and eyes were those of Marjory.
I would have sprung forward to her, but for that
ominous ring of steel in front of me. I waited a few
seconds, for it seemed strange that she did not lower the
revolver on seeing who it was. As, however, the pistol
still covered me unpleasantly, I said:</p>
<p>“Marjory!” In an instant her hand dropped to her
side. I could not but notice with an admiration for her
self-control and the strength of her resolution, that she
still held the revolver in her grasp. With a glad cry
she leaped towards me with a quick impulsive movement
which made my heart bound, for it was all love and spontaneity.
She put her left hand on my shoulder; and as
she looked into my eyes I could feel the glad tremor that
swept through her.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>For several seconds she stood, and then with a sigh
said in a voice of self-reproach:</p>
<p>“And <em>I</em> did not know <em>you</em>!” The way she spoke the
words “I” “you” was luminous! Had I not already
known her heart, she would in that moment have stood
self-revealed.</p>
<p>We were manifestly two thoroughly practical people,
for even in the rapture of our meeting—to me it was
no less than rapture to come from so grim an aperture in
the secret cavern passage—we had our wits about us.
I think she was really the first to come to a sense of
our surroundings; for just as I was opening my mouth
to speak she held up a warning finger.</p>
<p>“Hush! Some one may come; though I think there
is no one near. Wait dear, whilst I look!” she seemed
to flit noiselessly out of the doorway and I saw her
vanish amongst the trees. In a few minutes she returned
carrying carefully a wicker basket. As she opened it
she said:</p>
<p>“Some one might suspect something if they saw you
in that state.” She took from the basket a little bowl of
water, soap, towel and a clothes-brush. Whilst I washed
my face and hands she was brushing me down. A very
short time completed a rough toilet. Then she poured
the water carefully into a crack in the wall, and putting
the things together with my lamp, back in the basket,
she said:</p>
<p>“Come now! Let us get to the Castle before any one
finds us. They will think that I have met you in the
wood.” We went as unobtrusively as we could to the
Castle; and entered, I think, unobserved. I had a
thorough clean up before I let any one see me; our
secret was too precious to risk discovery by suspicion.
When I had seen Mrs. Jack, Marjory took me to her
boudoir in the top of the castle, and there, whilst she sat<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</SPAN></span>
by me holding my hands, I told her every detail of my
adventure. I could feel how my story moved her; when
there was any passage of especial interest the pressure of
her clasp grew tense. She, who had seemingly no fear
for herself, was all in fear for me!</p>
<p>Then we talked matters over. We had now a good clue
to the comings and goings of the kidnappers; and we
felt that by a little thoughtful organisation we might
find their hours, and be able to trace them one by one.
By lunch time we had decided on our plan of action. We
took our idea from one of the old “Tales of the Genii”
where the conquered king was brought by his faithful
vizier into a cavern and asked to cut a rope which was
stretched before him, and which he soon discovered released
the great rock which roofed the pavilion specially
built by the vizier to be seen and occupied by the conqueror.
We would fix a fine thread to the top of the
monument and bring it secretly to the castle, where its
breaking would apprise Marjory of the opening of the
passage; thus she would discover the hour of the coming
of the kidnappers to the chapel. We arranged another ingenious
device, whereby a second thread, fastened to the
stone in the old chapel, would be broken by the opening
of the stone, and would cause a book to fall on Marjory’s
bed and wake her if she were asleep. The better part
of the afternoon was taken up by us carrying out these
ideas, for we went slowly and cautiously to work. Then
I went home.</p>
<p>I was early at the monument in the morning, and getting
behind the stone signalled to the Castle roof in case
Marjory should happen to expect me and be there. But
there was no answer. So I sat down to wait till it would
be decent time to go to the Castle for an early breakfast.</p>
<p>As I sat waiting I thought I heard a sound, either close
to me and muffled, or else distant; I could hardly tell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</SPAN></span>
which. Matters might be lively if I were discovered; so
I got my revolver ready. With my heart beating so
heavily that I mistook it at moments for the foreign
sound, I listened and listened, all ears.</p>
<p>It was as I had suspected; the sound came from the
tunnel beneath me. I hardly knew whether to stay or
go. If I waited I could see who came from the opening;
but on the other hand I should at once be known to
have discovered the secret. Still as the stone might roll
back at any moment, it was necessary that I should make
up my mind; I should either go or stay. I decided that
I would stay and make discovery at once. In any case
should I succeed in capturing a blackmailer, or even in
discovering or partially discovering his identity, I should
be aiding in Marjory’s safety. So I got my revolver
ready; and standing back so that I could not be seen at
once by any one emerging, waited.</p>
<p>No one came; but I could still hear a slight sound.
Filled with a growing unrest, I determined to take the
initiative, and began to move close to the stone. As I
looked, it began to quiver, and then to move slowly. As
it rolled softly back I kept behind it so that I might not
be seen; and waited with revolver ready and what patience
I could.</p>
<p>There was dead silence; and then a hand holding a revolver
rested a moment on the edge of the opening.</p>
<p>I knew the hand, and I knew the revolver, and I knew
the quickness of both. I did not say a word or make a
sound, till Marjory with an alert movement seemed to
sweep up out of the opening and whirled round with
ready pistol, as though suspecting an enemy on every
side.</p>
<p>Marjory, all covered with dust, her cheeks as white as
snow, so that the smears of dust lay on them like soot;
and eyes with pupils distended as in coming from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span>
dark. For a few seconds she seemed hardly to recognise
me; but when she did she sprang gladly into my arms.</p>
<p>“Oh! Archie, I am glad to see you. It was so terrible
and lonely in the dark. I began to fear I might never find
my way out!” In the dark! I began to fear, and asked
her:</p>
<p>“But, dear one, how did you come; and why? Hadn’t
you got a light with you? Surely you didn’t come unprepared,
if you did venture into the cave!” Then in a
rush she told me the whole story. How before dawn she
had been waked by the dropping of the book and had
hurried to the castle roof to watch the stone. With her
field glass she had presently seen it move. She was then
satisfied that the watchers had gone home; and had determined
on a little adventure on her own account.</p>
<p>“I put on a grey tweed dress, and taking my revolver
and bicycle lamp, stole out of the castle and reached the
old chapel. Having lit my lamp, I rolled back the stone
and set out to explore the tunnel. I followed from your
description, the passage to its bifurcating, and determined
to explore the other arm to the reservoir. I easily found
it, a deep, dark tank cut in the rock and seemingly fed
by springs which bubbled up from patches of fine sand,
the accumulation of years of wasting rock. Whilst I
was trying to look into the depth of the reservoir, holding
my bicycle lamp so as to throw its light downwards,
I saw something white at the bottom. Just then the
lamp from its inverted position began to smoke, but as I
looked in that last moment through the crystal pure
water I recognised that the white object was a skull. In
the sudden shock of the discovery, the lamp dropped
from my hand and disappeared hissing and bubbling in
the last flicker of light.” As she told me this, I took her
hand for I feared that the memory of such an appalling
moment must have unnerved her; but to my surprise<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span>
her nerves were as firm as my own. She let her hand
remain in mine; but she had evidently understood my
thought for she said:</p>
<p>“Oh! it’s all right now, Archie. For a moment or
two I do believe I was frightened. You can have the
laugh on me there if you like! But then common sense
came to my aid. I was in a tight place, and it would
need all I knew to get out. I thought the matter over as
coolly as I could; and do you know that coolness seemed
to grow with the effort! I was in the dark, in a cave,
deep underground, the entrance to which was secret; I
had no means of getting a light even for an instant, for
though I had taken plenty of wax matches they were all
in my lamp. The only thing I could do was to try to
grope my way out. I had noted the passage as I came
along, but I found so soon as I had felt my way out of the
reservoir chamber, how little use an abstract recollection
is when every second there is a new detail. I found, too,
the astonishing difference between sight and touch; what
I had remembered had been with my eyes and not with
my fingers. I had to guard all round me, my head,
my feet, my sides. I am amazed, now when I think of it,
how many different kinds of mistakes and calculations I
made in a few yards. It seemed a terribly long time
till I came to the place where the passage forks. There
I weighed up the matter of whether it would be better
to go back by the way I had come to the old chapel, or
to go up the other passage to the monument of which
you told me. Somehow the latter seemed to me the
more feasible. I think it must have been that I trusted
you more than myself. You had not shrunk from going
into that passage; and I would not shrink from going
out.”</p>
<p>I squeezed her hands hard, I had got both by this time.
She blushed a little and looked at me fondly and went on:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“There was something cheering in the mere fact of
going up instead of down. It was like coming towards
the air and light again; and the time did not seem so
long till I came to the end of the passage, for so far as
I could feel there was nothing but solid rock all round
me. For a little bit my heart sank again; but I soon
bucked up. I knew that this must be the way out;
and I felt around for the iron handles of which you had
told me. And then, Thank God for His goodness! when
the stone began to turn I saw the light, and breathed
fresh air again. They seemed to give me back all my
courage and caution. Up to this I had not troubled
about kidnappers; there was quite enough to think of
in getting along the passage. But now I was my own
woman again, and I determined to take no chances.
When I saw it was your gun that was aimed at me I was
glad!”</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span></p>
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