Tales of Mysteries & Espionage - John Buchan Edition. Buchan John
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Название: Tales of Mysteries & Espionage - John Buchan Edition

Автор: Buchan John

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

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isbn: 9788075833488

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СКАЧАТЬ faun-like creature, and whither was he taking her? She felt desperately solitary, cut off from all that was normal and dear.

      The plane lifted from the water, and turned seaward to ain elevation. Then it circled round, and steered for the wall of mountain.

      VIII

       Table of Contents

      Janet’s pistol-shot, and the answering shots from the sentries, awakened the camp effectually, but in the thick night, with a volleying wind, it was hard to locate the trouble. Grayne, who was in command, naturally assumed that the danger lay in the neighbourhood of the Gobernador’s hut, but Castor was discovered sleeping the heavy sleep of one dosed with aspirin, and Barbara, who slept next door, had heard nothing. The big arc lamps showed everything normal, and, since the light had been promptly switched off in Janet’s hut by the raiders, it was presently decided that it had been a false alarm. The arrival of Geordie Hamilton and his garrison from the head of the ravine complicated matters, and it was the better part of an hour before peace was restored. No one doubted that the whole thing had been a blunder of a nervous sentry who had taken a whimsy of the wind for a shot. Barbara went back to bed.

      She woke about dawn with an uneasy feeling. Why had Janet not been awakened by the noise—Janet, the lightest sleeper of them all? It was a mild blue morning after the rain, so she slipped on a dressing-gown and ran across to Janet’s hut. To her surprise the door stood open, unlatched. The bed had been slept in, but the occupant had clearly got up and dressed. There was a faint smell which puzzled her, till she realised that it was powder; a shot had been fired in the place during the night. Then she noticed that the floor around the doorway was muddied, and that some of the furniture looked as if it had been violently pushed aside. Lastly, on one of the rafters she observed a jagged splinter which could only have been done by a bullet.

      With terror in her heart she hurried to find Roger Grayne and in five minutes the camp was astir. The tracks of the raiders were clear on the road to the sea, except when they had been overlaid by those of Hamilton’s men. The Indian trailers had no difficulty in pointing to the very place where they had taken cover, and in deciding that there had been three men in the business, three men who, in departing, had been encumbered with a burden… The very spot was found where they had circumvented Hamilton’s garrison on their way up. At Post No. 1 it was discovered that one of the scouts had not come back, and his body was presently found in the thicket at the turn of the road. Down on the shore Corbett reported the absence of one of the mestizos who had gone on patrol to the head of the gulf. The section where the cliffs dropped straight to the sea was searched, and blood was found on the reef by the water’s edge. The Indians scattered among the shore thickets, and soon reported that they had discovered the tracks of the raiders, both those going and those returning, and across the gulf evidence was found that a petrol-driven vessel had landed recently. The story was plain in all its details. Their base had been raided, and Janet had beer carried off.

      “They did not come for her.” Barbara with tragic eyes clutched Grayne’s arm.

      “I guess they didn’t. They came for the Gobernador. Some swine has double-crossed us and given away his exact location, only he didn’t know that his Excellency was sick. They were certainly fooled about that… But, my God! Miss Babs, we can’t sit down under this. It’s maybe bad strategy, but I’d rather they’d taken twenty Gobernadors than that little lady. Say, what do they want with her? A hostage, I guess. Who’d have thought Lossberg would be so bright?”

      “But where is she?” Barbara cried. All the colour had gone out of her cheeks, and her face was a waxen mask of misery.

      “Olifa, maybe. Yes, I guess she’s in Olifa. Don’t worry, Miss Babs. She can’t come to any hurt. We’re not fighting with savages who torture their prisoners. I wonder what Lossberg’s next move will be?”

      Grayne went off to give orders for the strengthening of the guards at the sea-ravine, since there lay their Achilles-heel, and Barbara bathed her face and tidied herself to meet Castor. This awful thing must be faced with a stiff lip, at any rate in the presence of the enemy. She was possessed with a cold fury against him. The enemy—his side—had made war on women and stolen that woman whom she had come to love best in the world.

      Some rumour had already reached him, for he was in the mess-hut, evidently dressed in a hurry, since he had a scarf round his neck instead of a collar. She did not know what she expected to find in him—triumph perhaps, or a cynical amusement. Instead she found a haggard man with bleared eyes—no doubt the consequence of his feverish chill. He startled her by his peremptoriness. “Have you found her?” he cried. “Lady Roylance?… What has happened?… Tell me quick, for God’s sake.”

      To her amazement he appeared to be suffering.

      “No news—except that Janet has gone. We found the track to the water’s edge, and there must have been a launch… They murdered two of the guards… “

      She stopped, for something in his eyes took away her breath. It was suffering, almost torment. She had never known him as Janet knew him, and had regarded him as a creature of a strange and unintelligible world, though she had reluctantly admitted his power. Now the power remained, but the strangeness had gone. He had suddenly become human, terribly human. She had come to upbraid and accuse; instead she wanted to pity. She found one who shared to the full in her misery.

      “Oh, Mr Castor,” she cried, “where have they taken her?”

      “How can I tell?” he asked fiercely. “Have you sent for her husband?”

      She nodded. “Sir Archie is at Loa. He will be here before luncheon.”

      “And Lord Clanroyden?”

      “He is at the other end of the Gran Seco. He is busy with a big movement. He will be told, but I do not think he can come.”

      “But he must. What does his imbecile war matter?… Oh, you miserable children! You have played with fire and you will be burned.”

      There was so much pain in his voice that Barbara tried to comfort him. “But surely in Olifa she can come to no harm?”

      “Olifa! Why do you think she is there?”

      “She was carried off by sea. Where else could General Lossberg… ?”

      “Lossberg! What has he to do with it? Lossberg is not the man to waste time on such a business. He has no desire for my company.”

      “But who?”

      “There are others besides Lossberg—a far more deadly foe than the Olifa army. I warned Lord Clanroyden. I warned him that the true danger was not in the field… Lossberg is not the man for midnight escapades. He is too stiff. Regular soldiers do not climb ravines by night and stick knives between the shoulders. That is another kind of war. That is the way of the Conquistadors. Remember that D’Ingraville, who first found us out, is one of them.”

      Barbara’s face had become as haggard as his own.

      “Then where can they have taken her?”

      “I do not know,” he said, “but not to Olifa—no, not to Olifa.”

      Archie arrived a little after midday. He looked suddenly much older, and Barbara noticed that his limp had grow heavier. He was very quiet, so quiet that it seemed СКАЧАТЬ