heard the street door close behind him.

       I picked up the telephone book and looked up the number of his house.

       We were connected at once, and I heard a servant’s voice. “Is his Lordship at home?” I asked.

       “His Lordship returned half an hour ago,” said the voice, “and has gone to bed. He is not very well to- night. Will you leave a message, sir?”

       I rung off and almost tumbled into a chair. My part in this business was not yet ended. It had been a close shave, but I had been in time.

       Not a moment could be lost, so I marched boldly to the door of that back room and entered without knocking. Five surprised faces looked up from a round table. There was Sir Walter, and Drew the War Minister, whom I knew from his photographs. There was a slim elderly man, who was probably Whittaker, the Admiralty official, and there was General Winstanley, conspicuous from the long scar on his forehead. Lastly, there was a short stout man with an iron-grey moustache and bushy eyebrows, who had been arrested in the middle of a sentence.

       Sir Walter’s face showed surprise and annoyance.

       “This is Mr Hannay, of whom I have spoken to you,” he said apologetically to the company. “I’m afraid, Hannay, this visit is ill-timed.”

       I was getting back my coolness. “That remains to be seen, sir,” I said, “but I think it may be in the nick of time. For God’s sake, gentlemen, tell me who went out a minute ago?”

       “Lord Alloa,” Sir Walter said, reddening with anger.

       “It was not,” I cried, “it was his living image, but it was not Lord Alloa. It was some one who recognized me, some one I have seen in the last month. He had scarcely left the doorstep when I rang up Lord Alloa’s house and was told he had come in half an hour before and had gone to bed.”

       “Who—what—” someone stammered.

       “The Black Stone,” I cried, and I sat down in the chair so recently vacated and looked round at five badly scared gentlemen.

CHAPTER NINE

The Thirty-Nine Steps

“Nonsense!” said the official from the Admiralty.

       Sir Walter got up and left the room while we looked blankly at the table. He came back in tell minutes with a long face. “I have spoken to Alloa,” he said. “Had him out of bed—very grumpy. He went straight home after Mulross’s dinner.”

       “But it’s madness,” broke in General Winstanley. “Do you mean to ten me that that man came here and sat beside me for the best part of half an hour and that I didn’t detect the imposture? Alloa must be out of his mind.”

       “Don’t you see the cleverness of it?” I said. “You were too interested in other things to have any eyes. You took Lord Alloa for granted. If it had been anybody else you might have looked more closely, but it was natural for him to be here, and that put you all to sleep.”

       Then the Frenchman spoke, very slowly and in good English.

       “The young man is right. His psychology is good. Our enemies have not been foolish!”

       He bent his wise brows on the assembly.

       “I will tell you something,” he said. “It happened many years ago in Senegal. I was quartered in a remote station, and to pass the time used to go fishing for big barbel in the river. A little Arab mare used to carry my luncheon basket—one of the salted dun breed you got at Timbuctoo in the old days. Well, one morning I had good sport, and the mare was unaccountably restless. I could hear her whinnying and squealing and stamping her feet, and I kept soothing her with my voice while my mind was intent on fish. I could see her all the time, as I thought, out of a corner of my eye, tethered to a tree twenty yards away . . . After a couple of hours I began to think of food. I collected my fish in a tarpaulin bag, and moved down the stream towards the mare, trolling my line. When I got up to her I flung the tarpaulin on her back . . .”

       He paused and looked round.

       “It was the smell that gave me warning. I turned my head and found myself looking at a lion three feet off . . . An old man-eater, that was the terror of the village . . . What was left of the mare, a mass of blood and bones and hide, was behind him.”

       “What happened?” I asked. I was enough of a hunter to know a true yarn when I heard it.

       “I stuffed my fishing-rod into his jaws, and I had a pistol. Also my servants came presently with rifles. But he left his mark on me.” He held up a hand which lacked three fingers.

       “Consider,” he said. “The mare had been dead more than an hour, and the brute had been patiently watching me ever since. I never saw the kill, for I was accustomed to the mare’s fretting, and I never marked her absence, for my consciousness of her was only of something tawny, and the lion filled that part. If I could blunder thus, gentlemen, in a land where men’s senses are keen, why should we busy preoccupied urban folk not err also?”

       Sir Walter nodded. No one was ready to gainsay him.

       “But I don’t see,” went on Winstanley. “Their object was to get these dispositions without our knowing it. Now it only required one of us to mention to Alloa our meeting to-night for the whole fraud to be exposed.”

       Sir Walter laughed dryly. “The selection of Alloa shows their acumen. Which of us was likely to speak to him about to-night? Or was he likely to open the subject?”

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