“No; it is on my own account,” answered Durrance.
“I shall perhaps have to go into a home. It is better to be quite quiet and to see no one for a time.”
“You are sure?” Ethne asked. “It would hurt me if I thought you proposed this plan because you felt I would be happier at Glenalla.”
“No, that is not the reason,” Durrance answered, and he answered quite truthfully. He felt it necessary for both of them that they should separate. He, no less than Ethne, suffered under the tyranny of perpetual simulation. It was only because he knew how much store she set upon carrying out her resolve that two lives should not be spoilt because of her, that he was able to hinder himself from crying out that he knew the truth.
“I am returning to London next week,” he added, “and when I come back I shall be in a position to tell you whether I am to go to Wiesbaden or not.”
Durrance had reason to be glad that he had mentioned his plan before the arrival of Calder’s telegram from Wadi Halfa. Ethne was unable to connect his departure from her with the receipt of any news about Feversham. The telegram came one afternoon, and Durrance took it across to The Pool in the evening and showed it to Ethne. There were only four words to the telegram:—
“Feversham imprisoned at Omdurman.”
Durrance, with one of the new instincts of delicacy which had been born in him lately by reason of his sufferings and the habit of thought, had moved away from Ethne’s side as soon as he had given it to her, and had joined Mrs. Adair, who was reading a book in the drawing-room. He had folded up the telegram, besides, so that by the time Ethne had unfolded it and saw the words, she was alone upon the terrace. She remembered what Durrance had said to her about the prison, and her imagination enlarged upon his words. The quiet of a September evening was upon the fields, a light mist rose from the creek and crept over the garden bank across the lawn. Already the prison doors were shut in that hot country at the junction of the Niles. “He is to pay for his fault ten times over, then,” she cried in revolt against the disproportion. “And the fault was his father’s, and mine too, more than his own. For neither of us understood.”
She blamed herself for the gift of that fourth feather. She leaned upon the stone balustrade with her eyes shut, wondering whether Harry would outlive this night, whether he was still alive to outlive it. The very coolness of the stones on which her hands pressed became the bitterest of reproaches.
“Something can now be done.”
Durrance was coming from the window of the drawing-room, and spoke as he came, to warn her of his approach. “He was and is my friend; I cannot leave him there. I shall write tonight to Calder. Money will not be spared. He is my friend, Ethne. You will see. From Suakin or from Assouan something will be done.”
He put all the help to be offered to the credit of his own friendship. Ethne was not to believe that he imagined she had any further interest in Harry Feversham.
She turned to him suddenly, almost interrupting him.
“Major Castleton is dead?” she said.
“Castleton?” he exclaimed. “There was a Castleton in Feversham’s regiment. Is that the man?”
“Yes. He is dead?”
“He was killed at Tamai.”
“You are sure—quite sure?”
“He was within the square of the Second Brigade on the edge of the great gulley when Osman Digna’s men sprang out of the earth and broke through. I was in that square, too. I saw Castleton killed.”
“I am glad,” said Ethne.
She spoke quite simply and distinctly. The first feather had been brought back by Captain Willoughby. It was just possible that Colonel Trench might bring back the second. Harry Feversham had succeeded once under great difficulties, in the face of great peril. The peril was greater now, the difficulties more arduous to overcome; that she clearly understood. But she took the one success as an augury that another might follow it. Feversham would have laid his plans with care; he had money wherewith to carry them out; and, besides, she was a woman of strong faith. But she was relieved to know that the sender of the third feather could never be approached. Moreover, she hated him, and there was an end of the matter.
Durrance was startled. He was a soldier of a type not so rare as the makers of war stories wish their readers to believe. Hector of Troy was his ancestor; he was neither hysterical in his language nor vindictive in his acts; he was not an elderly schoolboy with a taste for loud talk, but a quiet man who did his work without noise, who could be stern when occasion needed and of an unflinching severity, but whose nature was gentle and compassionate. And this barbaric utterance of Ethne Eustace he did not understand.
“You disliked Major Castleton so much?” he exclaimed.
“I never knew him.”
“Yet you are glad that he is dead?”
“I am quite glad,” said Ethne, stubbornly.
She made another slip when she spoke thus of Major Castleton, and Durrance did not pass it by unnoticed. He remembered it, and thought it over in his gun-room at Guessens. It added something to the explanation which he was building up of Harry Feversham’s disgrace and disappearance. The story was gradually becoming clear to his sharpened wits. Captain Willoughby’s visit and the token he had brought had given him the clue. A white feather could mean nothing but an accusation of cowardice. Durrance could not remember that he had ever detected any signs of cowardice in Harry Feversham, and the charge startled him perpetually into incredulity.
But
