strange doings here, and I know well that there is a man who
watches this place by day and by night. He has discovered nothing, but
it is because he has not known where to look."
"What do you mean?" Jeanne asked hoarsely.
"Wait!" her companion said.
They passed through the wooden gate. They were now in a little weedy
plantation of undersized trees. The ground was full of rabbit holes,
and Jeanne stumbled more than once.
"How much farther?" she asked. "We are getting toward the house."
"Not yet," Kate answered. "There are the gardens first, but we are not
going there. Wait a moment."
She felt for one of the trees, and passed her hand carefully round its
trunk. Then she took a few steps forward and stopped short.
"Wait!" she said.
She lay flat down upon the grass and was silent for several minutes.
Then she whispered to Jeanne.
"Don't turn on your torch," she said. "Lie down here by my side, put
your ear to the ground, and tell me whether you can hear anything."
Jeanne obeyed her breathlessly. At first she could hear nothing. Her
own heart was beating fast, and the boughs of the trees above them were
creaking and groaning in the wind. Presently, however, she gave a
little cry. From somewhere underground it seemed to her that she could
hear a faint hammering.
"What is it?" she asked.
Kate sat up.
"There is no animal," she said, "which makes a noise like that. It is
somewhere there underground. It seems to me that it is some one who is
trying to get out."
"Some one underground?" Jeanne repeated.
Kate leaned over and whispered in her ear.
"There is a passage underneath here," she said, "which goes from the
Hall to the cliffs, and a room, or rather a vault."
"I know," Jeanne declared suddenly. "Mr. De la Borne showed it to us.
It was the way the smugglers used to bring their goods up to the
cellars of the Red Hall."
"We are just above the room here," Kate said slowly, "and I fancy that
there is some one there."
A sudden light broke in upon Jeanne.
"You think that it is Lord Engleton!" she declared.
"Why not?" Kate answered. "Listen again, with your ear close to the
ground. Last night I was almost sure that I heard him call for help."
Jeanne did as she was told, and her face grew white as death.
Distinctly between the strokes she heard the sound of a man moaning!
CHAPTER XIV
Once more the two men sat over the remnants of their evening meal. This
time the deterior
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