tries to chase that dry old stick.'

The gig was loaded up, ready to go. Ben stood at the door with Mrs. Winn. The old lady looked very tired, he

hugged her affectionately. 'You go back inside and have a nice nap, Miz Winn. Leave this to us. I promise we'll come

back here with anything we find, straightaway!'

She kissed Ben's cheek. 'I'll have breakfast ready for you.'

The dog was obviously holding a mental conversation with Horatio. As they climbed into the gig, Ben eyed the

Labrador. 'What was going on between you two, Ned?'

The black Labrador laid his chin on Ben's lap. 'I told him to keep an eye on things while we were gone.'

The boy scratched the back of his dog's ear. 'I suppose he gave you a lot of nonsense about sardines, butterflies,

and mice. Poor old Horatio, he's got a bit of a one-track mind.'

Ned shook his head. 'No. Surprisingly, he said he'd watch over the house and if anything happened he'd track us

down and let me know. I think that Horatio's finally come to his senses. Just in time—can't go around with a headful

of sardines and butterflies all his life!'

Delia trotted dutifully through the darkened village, passing the almshouse and heading up the overgrown path.

It became very dim, overshadowed by an archway of overhanging trees. Ben was imagining what it had been like all

those years ago: stagecoaches laden with passengers and mail, carriages bearing merchants and gentry, carts laden

with produce. All of them fearful to be traveling such a lonely and shaded path, where highwaymen and thieves might

lurk. The strange boy glimpsed the crescent moon, struggling to cast its light through the leafy canopy. Unwittingly

his mind wandered back to the Flying Dutchman, Vanderdecken, and his villainous crew—they would probably have

reveled in the highwayman's trade.

Amy bumped against him as the gig lurched to a stop. 'Don't go to sleep, Ben, I think we've arrived at the

place!'

Three lanterns had been brought, the seaman lit them and gave one to each of his young friends. 'Here y'are,

mates. You're in charge of lightin' and the maps. Stay close to 'em, Mr. Mackay. Me an' Will can do the digging.

Where is Will?'

Eileen had unharnessed Delia from the shafts, allowing her to rest and crop the grass. She pointed. 'Over

yonder, t'other side o' the path, with Hetty.' She raised her voice. 'You found it yet, Will?'

The dairyman called back to his wife. 'No, not yet, my dear. Ouch!'

The maidservant Hetty could be heard giggling. 'You found it now, Will. Tripped straight over it. Like as not

sprained your ankle again!'

Will was thankful the darkness hid his furious blushes. 'No harm done. Bring some light over here, you young

'uns!'

A massive ancient oak tree overshadowed the path at that point. Beneath the shade of its outstretched limbs a

half-buried milestone had been standing for centuries. Ben held his lamp close to the stone. 'This is it! Look.

'Chapelvale One Mile.' See, beneath the letter M of Mile, there's the arrow pointing downward!'

The Labrador passed him an observant thought. 'Or is it supposed to point outward, like the one on the tree at

the ruined smithy?'

Ben looked up at the lawyer. 'What d'you think, sir, do we dig down, or is the arrow meant to point outward to

another spot?'

Adjusting the glasses on his nose, the solicitor peered at the stone. 'D'you know, I'm not too sure. What's your

opinion, Jon?'

The old seaman put down the spades and pickax he had brought from the gig. 'Who's to say, sir. There ain't no

clues tellin' us what number o' paces we should tread if we were to dig in another place.'

Hetty settled the argument by taking a penny from her apron pocket. 'Trust to luck, sez I. Toss a coin, Tails, we

digs down, 'cads, we digs somewheres outward from the arrow.' She spun the coin, Alex held the lantern over where

it fell. 'It's tails!'

44.

MORNING SUNLIGHT FILTERED INTO THE bedroom as Maud Bowe sat at the bedroom mirror, inserting a

last clip into her elaborate hairdo. The Smithers household had grown peaceful and quiet since that young horror

Wilfred had departed for boarding school, accompanied by his mother. Mrs. Smithers would take up lodgings close to

the school, until her dear Wilfred was settled in, as she put it. Maud smiled at her reflection in the mirror. Today was

the last day she would have to spend in Chapelvale, dreadful rural backwater!

'Hetty! Hetty! Where the blazes are you, I want my breakfast!'

Arriving downstairs, Maud found Mr. Smithers red-faced and irate. 'Ah, Miss Bowe, have you seen the maid, is

she dusting upstairs?'

Maud swished by him on her way to the kitchen. 'No, she's not, though if she'd been anywhere within a mile of

the house, she'd have heard you bellowing, sir!'

Smithers followed her out, watching as she put the kettle on and buttered a slice of brown bread. 'What're you

doing, miss?'

Cutting the bread into triangles, she placed it on a plate.

'Making my breakfast, obviously. It must be clear, even to you, that Hetty can't come for some reason.'

Smithers waved his hands uselessly. 'But the table isn't laid, my dress clothes haven't been brought out of the

wardrobe. Nothing's been done—wineglasses, sherry decanters, side trays, and clean linen. Where are they? I'm sup-

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