The BOLT falls.
All the way home on that long journey
from Cape Town, as the two half-brothers lounged on
deck together in their canvas chairs, Granville Kelmscott
was wholly at a loss to understand what seemed to
him Guy Waring’s unaccountable and almost incredible
levity. The man’s conduct didn’t
in the least resemble that of a person who is returning
to give himself up on a charge of wilful murder.
On the contrary, Guy showed no signs of remorse or
mental agony in any way; he seemed rather elated,
instead, at the pleasing thought that he was going
home, with his diamonds all turned at the Cape into
solid coin, to make his peace once more with his brother
Cyril.
To be sure, at times he did casually
allude to some expected unpleasantness when he arrived
in England; yet he treated it, Granville noticed,
as though hanging were at worst but a temporary inconvenience.
Granville wondered whether, after all, he could have
some complete and crushing answer to that appalling
charge; on any other supposition, his spirits and
his talk were really little short of what one might
expect from a madman.
And indeed, now and again, Granville
did really begin to suspect that something had gone
wrong somewhere with Guy Waring’s intellect.
The more he thought over it, the more likely did this
seem, for Guy talked on with the greatest composure
about his plans for the future “when this difficulty
was cleared up,” as though a trial for murder
were a most ordinary occurrence—an accident
that might happen to any gentleman any day. And,
if so, was it possible that Guy had gone wrong in
his head before the affray with Montague Nevitt?
That seemed likely enough; for when Granville remembered
Guy’s invariable gentleness and kindness to himself,
his devotion in sickness and in the trials of the
desert, his obvious aversion to do harm to any one,
and, above all, his heartfelt objection to shedding
human blood, Granville was constrained to believe
his newly found half-brother, if ever he committed
the murder at all, must have committed it while in
a state of unsound mind, deserving rather of pity
than of moral reprehension. He comforted himself,
indeed, with this consoling idea—he could
never believe a Kelmscott of Tilgate, when clothed
and in his right mind, could be guilty of such a detestable
and motiveless crime as the wilful murder of Montague
Nevitt.
Strangely enough, moreover, the subject
that seemed most to occupy Guy Waring’s mind,
on the voyage home, was not his forthcoming trial
on a capital charge, but the future distribution of
the Tilgate property. Was he essentially a money-grubber,
Granville wondered to himself, as he had thought him
at first in the diamond fields in Barolong land?
Was he incapable of thinking about anything but filthy
lucre? No; that was clearly not the true solution
of the problem, for, whenever Guy spoke to him about
the subject, it was generally to say one and the self-same
thing—
“In this matter, I feel I can
speak for Cyril as I speak for myself. Neither
of us would wish to deprive you now of what you’ve
always been brought up to consider as your own.
Neither of us would wish to dispossess Lady Emily.
The most we would desire is this—to have
our position openly acknowledged and settled before
the world. We should like it to be known we were
the lawful sons of a brave man and an honest woman.
And if you wish voluntarily to share with us some
part of our father’s estate, we’ll be willing
to enter into a reasonable arrangement by which yon
yourself can retain Tilgate Park and the mass of the
property that immediately appertains to it. I’m
sure Cyril would no more wish to be grasping in this
matter than I am; and after all that you and I have
gone through together, Granville, I don’t think
yon need doubt the sincerity of my feelings towards
you.”
He spoke so sensibly, he spoke so
manfully, he spoke so kindly always, with a bright
gleam in those tender eyes, that Granville hardly
knew what to make of his evident confidence. Surely
a man couldn’t be mad who could speak like that;
and yet, whenever he alluded in any way to his return
to England, it was always as though he ignored the
gravity and heinousness of the charge brought against
him. It was as though murder was an accident,
for which one was hardly responsible. Granville
couldn’t make him out at all; the fellow was
an enigma to him. There was so much that was good
in him; and yet, there must be so much that was bad
as well. He was such a delicate, considerate,
self-effacing gentleman—and yet, if one
could believe what he himself more than once as good
as admitted, he was a criminal, a felon, an open murderer.
Still, even so, Granville couldn’t
turn his back upon the brother who had seen him so
bravely across the terrors of Namaqua land. He
thought of how he had misjudged him once before, and
how much he had repented it. Whether Guy was
a murderer or not, Granville felt, the man he had
saved, at least, could never forsake him.
The night before their arrival at
Plymouth, Guy was in unusually high spirits.
His mirth was contagious. Everybody on board
was delighted at the prospect of reaching land, but
Guy was more delighted and more sanguine than anybody.
He was sure in his own mind this difficulty must have
blown over long before now; Cyril must have explained;
Nevitt must have confessed; everything must have
been set right, and his own good name satisfactorily
rehabilitated. For more than eighteen months
he had heard nothing from England. To-morrow
he would see Cyril, and account for everything.
He had money to set all right—his hard-earned
money, got at the risk of his own life in the dreary
deserts of Barolong land. All would yet be well,
and Cyril would marry, and Elma Clifford would be the
mistress of nearly half the Tilgate property.
“It was all so different, Granville,”
he said to his friend confidentially, as they paced
the deck after supper, cigar in mouth, “when
you first went out, and we didn’t know one another.
Then, I distrusted you, and you distrusted me.
We didn’t understand one another’s characters.
But now we can settle it all as a family affair.
Men who have camped out together under the open sky
on the African veldt, who have run the gauntlet of
Korannas and Barolong and Namaqua, who have stood
by one another in sickness and in fight, needn’t
be afraid of disagreeing about their money matters
in England. Cyril will meet us to-morrow and talk
it all over, and I’m not the least troubled
about the result, either for you or for him.
The same blood runs in all our veins alike. Whatever
you propose, he’ll be ready to agree to.
He’s the very best fellow that ever lived, and
when he hears what I have to say about you, he’ll
welcome you as a brother, and be as fond of you as
I am.”
Next morning early they reached Plymouth
Harbour. As they entered the mouth of the breakwater,
the tender came alongside to convey them ashore.
Guy looked over the bulwarks and saw Cyril waiting
for him. In a fervour of delight at the sight
of the green fields and the soft hills of old England—the
beautiful Hoe, and the solid stone houses, and the
familiar face turned up to welcome him—Guy
waved his handkerchief round and round his head in
triumph; to which demonstration Cyril, as he fancied,
responded but coldly. A chill fell upon his
heart. This was bad, but still, after all, he
could hardly expect Cyril to know intuitively under
what sinister influence he had signed that fatal cheque.
And yet he was disappointed. His heart had jumped
so hard at sight of Cyril, he could hardly believe
Cyril wasn’t glad to see him.
As he stepped into the tender from
the gangway, just ready to rush up and shake Cyril’s
hand fervently, a resolute-looking man by the side
of the steps laid a very firm grip on his shoulder
with an air of authority.
“Guy Waring?” he said interrogatively.
And Guy, turning pale, answered without flinching—
“Yes, my name’s Guy Waring.”
“Then you’re my prisoner,”
the man said, in a very firm voice. “I’m
an inspector of constabulary.”
“On what charge?” Guy exclaimed, half
taken aback at this promptitude.
“I have a warrant against you,
sir,” the inspector answered, “as you
are no doubt aware, for the wilful murder of Montague
Nevitt, on the 17th of August, year before last, at
Mambury, in Devonshire.”
The word’s fell upon Guy’s
ears with all the suddenness and crushing force of
an unexpected thunderbolt.
“Wilful murder,” he cried,
taken aback by the charge. “Wilful murder
of Montague Nevitt at Mambury! Oh no, you can’t
mean that! Montague Nevitt dead! Montague
Nevitt murdered! And at Mambury, too! There
must be some mistake somewhere.”
“No, there’s no mistake
at all, this time,” the inspector said quietly,
slipping a pair of handcuffs unobstrusively into his
pocket as he spoke. “If you come along
with me without any unnecessary noise, we won’t
trouble to iron you. But you’d better say
as little as possible about the charget just now,
for whatever you say may be used in evidence at the
trial against you.”
Guy turned to Cyril with an appealing
look. “Cyril,” he, cried, “what
does all this mean? Is Nevitt dead? It’s
the very first word I’ve ever heard about it.”
Cyril’s heart gave a bound of
wild relief at those words. The moment Guy said
it his brother knew he spoke the simple truth.
“Why, Guy,” he answered,
with a fierce burst of joy, “then you’re
not a murderer after all? You’re innocent!
You’re innocent! And for eighteen months
all England has thought you guilty; and I’ve
lived under the burden of being universally considered
a murderer’s brother!”
Guy looked him back in the face with
those truthful grey eyes of his.
“Cyril,” he said solemnly,
“I’m as innocent of this charge as you
or Granville Kelmscott here. I never even heard
one whisper of it before. I don’t know
what it means. I don’t know who they want.
Till this moment I thought Montague Nevitt was still
alive in England.”
And as he said it, Granville Kelmscott,
too, saw he was speaking the truth. Impossible
as he found it in his own mind to reconcile those
strange words with all that Guy had said to him in
the wilds of Namaqua land, he couldn’t look
him in the face without seeing at a glance how profound
and unexpected was this sudden surprise to him.
He was right in saying, “I’m as innocent
of this charge as you or Granville Kelmscott.”
But the inspector only smiled a cynical
smile, and answered calmly—
“That’s for the jury to
decide. We shall hear more of this then.
You’ll be tried at the assizes. Meanwhile,
the less said, the sooner mended.”