At the moorland
cross-roads Martin stood examining the sign-post for several minutes in
some bewilderment. The names on the four arms were not what he expected,
distances were not given, and his map, he concluded with impatience,
must be hopelessly out of date. Spreading it against the post, he
stooped to study it more closely. The wind blew the corners flapping
against his face. The small print was almost indecipherable in the
fading light. It appeared, however—as well as he could make out—that
two miles back he must have taken the wrong turning.
He remembered that turning. The path
had looked inviting; he had hesitated a moment, then followed it, caught
by the usual lure of walkers that it “might prove a short cut.” The
short-cut snare is old as human nature. For some minutes he studied the
sign-post and the map alternately. Dusk was falling, and his knapsack
had grown heavy. He could not make the two guides tally, however, and a
feeling of uncertainty crept over his mind. He felt oddly baffled,
frustrated. His thought grew thick. Decision was most difficult.
“I’m muddled,” he thought; “I must be tired,” as at length he
chose the most likely arm. “Sooner or later it will bring me to an
inn, though not the one I intended.” He accepted his walker’s luck,
and started briskly. The arm read, “Over Litacy Hill” in small, fine
letters that danced and shifted every time he looked at them; but the
name was not discoverable on the map. It was, however, inviting like the
short cut. A similar impulse again directed his choice. Only this time
it seemed more insistent, almost urgent.
And he became aware, then, of the
exceeding loneliness of the country about him. The road for a hundred
yards went straight, then curved like a white river running into space;
the deep blue-green of heather lined the banks, spreading upwards
through the twilight; and occasional small pines stood solitary here and
there, all unexplained. The curious adjective, having made its
appearance, haunted him. So many things that afternoon were
similarly—unexplained: the short cut, the darkened map, the names on
the sign-post, his own erratic impulses, and the growing strange
confusion that crept upon his spirit. The entire country-side needed
explanation, though perhaps “interpretation” was the truer word.
Those little lonely trees had made him see it. Why had he lost his way
so easily? Why did he suffer vague impressions to influence his
direction? Why was he here—exactly here?
And why did he go now “over Litacy Hill”?
Then, by a green field that shone like
a thought of daylight amid the darkness of the moor, he saw a figure
lying in the grass. It was a blot upon the landscape, a mere huddled
patch of dirty rags, yet with a certain horrid picturesqueness too; and
his mind—though his German was of the schoolroom order—at once
picked out the German equivalents as against the English. Lump
and Lumpen flashed across
his brain most oddly. They seemed in that moment right, and so
expressive, almost like onomatopœic words, if that were possible of
sight. Neither “rags” nor “rascal” would have fitted what he
saw. The adequate description was in German.
Here was a clue tossed up by the part
of him that did not reason. But it seems he missed it. And the next
minute the tramp rose to a sitting posture and asked the time of
evening. In German he asked it. And Martin, answering without a
second’s hesitation, gave it, also in German, “halb
sieben”—half-past six. The instinctive guess was accurate. A glance at
his watch when he looked a moment later proved it. He heard the man say,
with the covert insolence of tramps, “T’ank you; much opliged.”
For Martin had not shown his watch—another intuition subconsciously
obeyed.
He quickened his pace along that lonely
road, a curious jumble of thoughts and feelings surging through him. He
had somehow known the question would come, and come in German. Yet it
flustered and dismayed him. Another thing had also flustered and
dismayed him. He had expected it in the same queer fashion: it was
right. For when the ragged brown thing rose to ask the question, a part
of it remained lying on the grass—another brown, dirty thing. There
were two tramps. And he saw both faces clearly. Behind the untidy
beards, and below the old slouch hats, he caught the look of unpleasant,
clever faces that watched him closely while he passed. The eyes followed
him. For a second he looked straight into those eyes, so that he could
not fail to know them. And he understood, quite horridly, that both
faces were too sleek, refined, and cunning for those of ordinary tramps.
The men were not really tramps at all. They were disguised.
“How covertly they watched me!” was
his thought, as he hurried along the darkening road, aware in dead
earnestness now of the loneliness and desolation of the moorland all
about him.
Uneasy and distressed, he increased his
pace. Midway in thinking what an unnecessarily clanking noise his nailed
boots made upon the hard white road, there came upon him with a rush
together the company of these things that haunted him as
“unexplained.” They brought a single definite message: That all this
business was not really meant for him at all, and hence his confusion
and bewilderment; that he had intruded into someone else’s scenery,
and was trespassing upon another’s map of life. By some wrong inner
turning he had interpolated his person into a group of foreign
forces which operated in the little world of someone else. Unwittingly,
somewhere, he had crossed the threshold, and now was fairly in—a
trespasser, an eavesdropper, a Peeping Torn. He was listening, peeping;
overhearing things he had no right to know, because they were intended
for another. Like a ship at sea he was intercepting wireless messages he
could not properly interpret, because his Receiver was not accurately
tuned to their reception. And more—these messages were warnings!
Then fear dropped upon him like the
night. He was caught in a net of delicate, deep forces he could not
manage, knowing neither their origin nor purpose. He had walked into
some huge psychic trap elaborately planned and baited, yet calculated
for another than himself. Something had lured him in, something in the
landscape, the time of day, his mood. Owing to some undiscovered
weakness in himself he had been easily caught. His fear slipped easily
into terror.
What happened next happened with such
speed and concentration that it all seemed crammed into a moment. At
once and in a heap it happened. It was quite inevitable. Down the white
road to meet him a man came swaying from side to side in drunkenness
quite obviously feigned—a tramp; and while Martin made room for him to
pass, the lurch changed in a second to attack, and the fellow was upon
him. The blow was sudden and terrific, yet even while it fell Martin was
aware that behind him rushed a second man, who caught his legs from
under him and bore him with a thud and crash to the ground. Blows rained
then; he saw a gleam of something shining; a sudden deadly nausea
plunged him into utter weakness where resistance was impossible.
Something of fire entered his throat, and from his mouth poured a thick
sweet thing that choked him. The world sank far away into darkness. . .
. Yet through all the horror and confusion ran the trail of two clear
thoughts: he realised that the first tramp had sneaked at a fast double
through the heather and so come down to meet him; and that something
heavy was torn from fastenings that clipped it tight and close beneath
his clothes against his body. . . .
Abruptly then the darkness lifted,
passed utterly away. He found himself peering into the map against the
signpost. The wind was flapping the corners against his cheek, and he
was poring over names that now he saw quite clear. Upon the arms of the
sign-post above were those he had expected to find, and the map recorded
them quite faithfully. All was accurate again and as it should be. He
read the name of the village he had meant to make—it was plainly
visible in the dusk, two miles the distance given. Bewildered, shaken,
unable to think of anything, he stuffed the map into his pocket
unfolded, and hurried forward like a man who has just wakened from an
awful dream that had compressed into a single second all the detailed
misery of some prolonged, oppressive nightmare.
He broke into a steady trot that soon
became a run; the perspiration poured from him; his legs felt weak, and
his breath was difficult to manage. He was only conscious of the
overpowering desire to get away as fast as possible from the sign-post
at the cross-roads where the dreadful vision had flashed upon him. For
Martin, accountant on a holiday, had never dreamed of any world of
psychic possibilities. The entire thing was torture. It was worse than a
“cooked” balance of the books that some conspiracy of clerks and
directors proved at his innocent door. He raced as though the
country-side ran crying at his heels. And always still ran with him the
incredible conviction that none of this was really meant for himself at
all. He had overheard the secrets of another. He had taken the warning
for another into himself, and so altered its direction. He had thereby
prevented its right delivery. It all shocked him beyond words. It
dislocated the machinery of his just and accurate soul. The warning was
intended for another, who could not—would not—now receive it.
The physical exertion, however, brought
at length a more comfortable reaction and some measure of composure.
With the lights in sight, he slowed down and entered the village at a
reasonable pace. The inn was reached, a bedroom inspected and engaged,
and supper ordered with the solid comfort of a large Bass to satisfy an
unholy thirst and complete the restoration of balance. The unusual
sensations largely passed away, and the odd feeling that anything in his
simple, wholesome world required explanation was no longer present.
Still with a vague uneasiness about him, though actual fear quite gone,
he went into the bar to smoke an after-supper pipe and chat with the
natives, as his pleasure was upon a holiday, and so saw two men leaning
upon the counter at the far end with their backs towards him. He saw
their faces instantly in the glass, and the pipe nearly slipped from
between his teeth. Clean-shaven, sleek, clever faces—and he caught a
word or two as they talked over their drinks—German words. Well
dressed they were, both men, with nothing about them calling for
particular attention; they might have been two tourists holiday-making
like himself in tweeds and walking-boots. And they presently paid for
their drinks and went out. He never saw them face to face at all; but
the sweat broke out afresh all over him, a feverish rush of heat and ice
together ran about his body; beyond question he recognised the two
tramps, this time not disguised—not yet disguised.
He remained in his corner without
moving, puffing violently at an extinguished pipe, gripped helplessly by
the return of that first vile terror. It came again to him with an
absolute clarity of certainty that it was not with himself they had to
do, these men, and, further, that he had no right in the world to
interfere. He had no locus standi at
all; it would be immoral. . . even if the opportunity came. And the
opportunity, he felt, would come. He had been an eavesdropper, and had
come upon private information of a secret kind that he had no right to
make use of, even that good might come—even to save life. He sat on in
his corner, terrified and silent, waiting for the thing that should
happen next.
But night came without explanation.
Nothing happened. He slept soundly. There was no other guest at the
inn but an elderly man, apparently a tourist like himself. He wore
gold-rimmed glasses, and in the morning Martin overheard him asking the
landlord what direction he should take for Litacy Hill. His teeth began
then to chatter and a weakness came into his knees. “You turn to the
left at the cross-roads,” Martin broke in before the landlord could
reply; “you’ll see the sign-post about two miles from here, and
after that it’s a matter of four miles more.” How in the world did
he know, flashed horribly through him. “I’m going that way
myself,” he was saying next; “I’ll go with you for a bit—if you
don’t mind!” The words came out impulsively and ill-considered; of
their own accord they came. For his own direction was exactly opposite. He
did not want the man to go alone. The stranger, however, easily
evaded his offer of companionship. He thanked him with the remark that
he was starting later in the day. . . . They were standing, all three,
beside the horse-trough in front of the inn, when at that very moment a
tramp, slouching along the road, looked up and asked the time of day.
And it was the man with the gold-rimmed glasses who told him.
“T’ank you; much opliged,” the
tramp replied, passing on with his slow, slouching gait, while the
landlord, a talkative fellow, proceeded to remark upon the number of
Germans that lived in England and were ready to swell the Teutonic
invasion which he, for his
part, deemed imminent.
But Martin heard it not. Before he had
gone a mile upon his way he went into the woods to fight his conscience
all alone. His feebleness, his cowardice, were surely criminal. Real
anguish tortured him. A dozen times he decided to go back upon his
steps, and a dozen times the singular authority that whispered he had no
right to interfere prevented him. How could he act upon knowledge gained
by eavesdropping? How interfere in the private business of another’s
hidden life merely because he had overheard, as at the telephone, its
secret dangers? Some inner confusion prevented straight thinking
altogether. The stranger would merely think him mad. He had no
“fact” togoupon. . . . He smothered a hundred impulses . . . and
finally went on his way with a shaking, troubled heart.
The last two days of his holiday were
ruined by doubts and questions and alarms—all justified later when he
read of the murder of a tourist upon Litacy Hill. The man wore
gold-rimmed glasses, and carried in a belt about his person a large sum
of money. His throat was cut. And the police were hard upon the trail of
a mysterious pair of tramps, said to be—Germans.