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Authors: Nevil Shute

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BOOK: Marazan
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It was about half-past four. The girl drove and I sat with Compton in the back seat. He was deep in his own thoughts; for a while he tried absently to make conversation, but soon relapsed into a silence that stretched unbroken through the miles. I remember he asked me if I had any ties in particular, if I was married or engaged.

‘Lord, no,’ I said. ‘Nothing like that about me.’

I think he may have learned more from the tone in which I spoke than from my words, because he nodded slowly.

‘There’s safety in numbers,’ he said. ‘And it’s really
the happiest way, I suppose. Just take what you can get, and be thankful.’ He relapsed into silence again, but something in the way he said that had given me a nasty start. It may have been that I was tired. It may have been that it was the sanest, most horrible hour of the twenty-four, when the cold grey dawn comes creeping up over the fields and means the beginning of another blasted day. I only know that my whole life was summed up in those words of his. I only know that they’ve come back to me time after time, and always with the same bitter ring in them. ‘Take what you can get,’ he said, ‘and be thankful.’

A little later I said: ‘It’s getting quite light.’

He smiled. ‘Hassan,’ he said, and I wondered what on earth he was talking about.

‘Thy dawn, O Master of the world, thy dawn;

The hour the lilies open on the lawn,

The hour the grey wings pass behind the mountains,

The hour of silence, when we hear the fountains,

The hour that dreams are brighter and winds colder,

The hour that young love wakes on a white shoulder——’

He stopped short, it seemed to me in the middle of a sentence. I didn’t remember all this stuff, of course, but long afterwards Joan built up the quotation from my garbled memories, and she wrote down a copy of the lines and gave it to me. I kept that carefully and I have it still—not for the poem, but for another reason.

It was very cold. The rush of cold air made my head sing and throb painfully; I wanted to concentrate on my plans, but couldn’t focus my mind at all. Then I realised that I’d made a slip; I should have brought a flask of that whisky with me. I was sobering up. That
meant that I should be no good at all until I had been to sleep; indeed, it was imperative that I should get some sleep soon. I was frightfully done. I had intended to lay my first red herring that very morning and clear off out of the neighbourhood; I saw now that that was impossible. I must lay my red herring after I had slept, or I should be an easy mark.

We went through Stokenchurch, down the Aston Rowant hill, and on over the plain through Tetsworth and finally by Wheatley. I should have gone on through Oxford, but the girl knew a trick worth two of that, and we turned off in Wheatley and for half an hour went wandering through lanes that seemed to lead to nowhere in particular. Presently she stopped the car by the side of the road and pointed to a spire about a couple of miles away.

‘That’s Abingdon,’ she said.

I took my rucksack and got out of the car. She gave me the map that was kept in the pocket of the car; it was a fine large road map covering the whole of the south of England. We bent over it together and she showed me where I was, about two miles to the west of Abingdon.

‘Right you are,’ I said. ‘Now you’d better get along back.’ She was to drop Compton at a railway station; it was his business to lie low till the hue and cry was finally established after me. Then she was to get back to Stokenchurch before the servants got downstairs, and be ready to make an excuse and start for Salcombe after breakfast.

She turned to the car, and for a minute we stood together in the road, unwilling to separate. Then I shook hands with them and wished them luck. The girl got in and I started up the car for her, wondering if I should ever see either of them again. Then they drove off. The last I saw of them was Compton looking back at me,
white and impassive as he had been all the time. It worried me, that look of his.

Well, there I was. It was about half-past five in the morning, and to all appearance it was going to be as hot a day as the day before had been before the rain. I picked up my rucksack and trudged along the road, only half awake, looking for somewhere to sleep.

And then I saw the haystack. It stood by itself in the corner of a field; it was a fairly low one with a tarpaulin pitched over it like a tent. There was nobody about; I summoned up the last of my strength and climbed up on top of it. There was a space about two feet high beneath the tarpaulin. I took off my boots, dug myself a nest, made myself thoroughly comfortable, and fell fast asleep.

CHAPTER THREE

I
T
must have been about midday when I awoke. I opened my eyes and lay blinking at the tarpaulin above me. It was getting very hot beneath the covering. I lay for a little collecting my thoughts; then I put on my boots, collected my things, and crawled to the edge of the stack.

It wasn’t long before my troubles began. I looked round and didn’t see anybody about, so I dropped the rucksack down on to the ground and half-slid, half-fell down after it. I reached the ground more or less inverted in a flurry of hay, and sat there for a bit trying to get it out of my ears.

At that point somebody shouted: ‘Oy!’

I looked round, and there was a stocky-looking young man in breeches and gaiters striding up the field. From the first I disliked the look of him. He was one of those flamboyantly sharp young fellows that you sometimes find in the bar of a country pub; I suppose every village has one or two like him. He would be the local Don Juan, the crack billiard-player, the acknowledged authority on last year’s musical comedy, the smart lad of the village. I looked at him with misgiving.

‘Here comes trouble,’ I thought. And I wasn’t ready for trouble. I hadn’t made any plans.

‘Oy!’ he said again. ‘Coom on aht of that.’

I got to my feet and picked up my rucksack. By this time he was quite close.

‘Coom on,’ he said. ‘You git on aht o’ this. What the ruddy ’ell’s the game? Hey? I seen you. You was up on top o’ the stack. Hey?’

‘Right you are,’ I said. ‘I’ll move on.’

He stepped in front of me. ‘No, you don’t,’ he said. ‘You don’t catch me like that.’ He laughed. ‘Not likely. What’s the game? Hey?’

‘All right,’ I said. ‘I’ve been sleeping here. That’s all.’

He took me up at once. ‘No, you wasn’t,’ he said. ‘You was up on top o’ that stack. I seen you slide down.’

‘Damn it,’ I said, ‘I was sleeping on top of the stack.’

That seemed to amuse him. ‘Oh,’ he said. ‘You was, was you. You can’t come it over me like that.’ Then, as luck would have it, he caught sight of the rucksack. ‘What’s that you’ve got there?’ he said. ‘Coom on. Let’s ’ave a look.’

I stepped back a pace. ‘You can leave that alone,’ I said. ‘It’s no business of yours.’ I didn’t want him to see the convict clothes in the bag.

‘Ho,’ said he, ‘so that’s it. D’you reckon I don’t know what you’ve got in that bag? Hey? D’you think I don’t know the game. I’ll tell you what you’ve got there. One o’ my Plymouth cockerels. That’s what you got there. One o’ my Plymouth cockerels. The one as had his leg trapped, so’s you got him easy. That’s what you got there. Hey?’

It was absurd. To show that I was not responsible for the missing cockerel I had only to open my bag, and that was precisely what I could not do. It became evident to me that I was in a corner; that I could only get out of this absurd situation by laying a red herring. I must see that it was a good one.

I moved over to pick up my cap; as I did so it occurred to me to walk with a pronounced limp.

‘Hey …’ he cried, and stopped short. I thought I
could detect a note of uncertainty in that ‘Hey’, and smiled to myself. I crammed the cap on my head and turned to him again. He looked undecided and furtive; the colour was not so high in his beastly face as it had been. For a moment I felt quite sorry for him. Then I dropped my bag.

‘What do you mean by that?’ I said.

The stuffing seemed to have fallen out of him all of a sudden. ‘I didn’t mean nothing,’ he said.

I moved a little closer to him. ‘Oh yes, you did,’ I said. ‘Now suppose you think a bit, and tell me just what you did mean.’ I eyed him carefully. He was a bigger man than I, but I could see that he wasn’t going to give me much trouble.

He didn’t answer, so I asked him again.

‘I seen about you in the paper,’ he muttered. ‘I didn’t mean you no harm.’

‘That’s as it may be,’ I said very softly. ‘But you weren’t very hospitable, were you?’

Then I hit him. Looking back upon it now, I think that was the dirtiest thing I did in the whole business, if not in my life. He hadn’t a notion what was coming to him. He was peering forward at me as they always do when you suddenly drop your voice. It’s a trick I learned when I was a boy; I suppose that shows the sort of school I went to better than any words of my own. He was leaning forward; I caught him fairly on the point of the chin with the whole weight of my body behind it. His teeth came together with such a crack that for the moment I thought I must have broken his jaw, then he crumpled up at the knees and fell backwards in a heap at my feet.

As I say, I think it was about the dirtiest blow I ever struck. At the same time, I dare say I should do it again. I was four miles from a railway station; with this village
Sherlock on my trail I’d never have got away. I owed it to Compton to make a better show than that.

There were a lot of tag-ends of bindings lying about on the ground, little thin bits of rope about the thickness of a pencil, but quite strong. Before he came to I had got him well trussed up, with his hands behind his back and his feet tied. Then I took him and laid him in the ditch by the haystack and covered him up with hay all except his face. I sat down beside him and waited for him to wake up, occupying my time and inventive capacity in devising a gag from his handkerchief and a bit of stick.

He came to himself presently, and when he was moderately clear I talked to him like a father.

‘Now look here,’ I said. ‘You’ve got to stay here for the next five or six hours I’m afraid—and just to make sure that you do, I’m going to gag you. I don’t suppose you’ll be able to untie those knots. I see you know who I am; I’m Compton, the convict from Dartmoor. Nobody knows I’m in this part; if you hadn’t come interfering with me I’d have let you alone. As it is, I’ve got to protect myself. Now, I’m going to gag you and leave you in this ditch covered over with hay; then I’m going up to London by train. When I get there I’ll send a telegram to your home to tell them where you are.’

He began to swear in a perfectly dreadful manner, so I gagged him and nearly got my finger bitten off in the process.

‘If you do that again,’ I said angrily, ‘I’ll give you such a clip on the ear as’ll send you to sleep again.’ I got out my note-case and a bit of pencil and waited till he had done struggling. ‘Now, what’s your address? You’d better tell me quickly: it’s your best chance of getting loose this evening.’

I untied the gag and he told me his name, Fred
Grigger, and the name of his farm. I noted that down and gagged him again well and truly. Then I turned him over on his face and put another lashing on his hands for luck. Finally, I turned him right way up again, made him as comfortable as I could with a bundle of hay under his head, covered him over with hay, and left him to his own devices.

It was about half-past one. I studied my map for a little and decided to make for Culham station, which I judged to be about four miles away. I picked up my rucksack, slung it over my shoulders, and set off down the road munching a sandwich as I went.

It took me some time to find the station and I had to ask more people than I liked. However, I was lucky in my train, which came along about ten minutes after I arrived. I booked a ticket to Reading, meaning to change there and get along down west after I had telegraphed about Grigger.

At Didcot an engine-driver got into my compartment with his mate. It struck me that I might get a little information out of them, and sounded them about trains for the west. It appeared that the next Exeter train was the 5.10 from Paddington, getting to Exeter at about half-past eight. It stopped at Reading. I considered this information carefully. The train that I was in was due at Paddington at 3.34; it seemed to me that it would be wiser to go on up to Town and send my telegram from there rather than to risk identification by hanging about on Reading station for three hours.

We got to Paddington at about twenty minutes to four. I dived straight down into the Tube and took a ticket for Waterloo. At Waterloo I came up into the daylight again and plunged at random into a labyrinth of mean houses and squalid streets. After walking for five minutes I found a post office and sent the following telegram:

‘Grigger will be found in a ditch by a haystack near the Dorchester Abingdon road tied up and covered over with hay.’

I put a false name and address on this and passed it across the counter; the girl looked at me curiously as she gave me the change, but didn’t make any comment. I impressed myself on her memory by asking the way to St. Pancras Station, and being so dense that she had to explain it all to me twice. Then I got away, found my way back to Waterloo and so to Paddington again. I had a quarter of an hour to spare, so I went out and bought a cheap suitcase, into which I put the rucksack without unfastening it. It made me a little too conspicuous for my liking.

I got down to Exeter without any further incident, though I must say I was glad the train didn’t stop at Didcot. It seemed to me that I shouldn’t run much risk in going to a hotel for the night so long as it was one in keeping with my clothes and general appearance. I wasn’t exactly tired, but I had the feeling that the chance of a good night in bed wasn’t one that I could afford to despise.

I had stayed in the town once or twice when I had been flying in the neighbourhood, but I didn’t want to go to the sort of hotel that I had stayed at then. For one thing, they might remember me, and that would tend to spoil any dramatic effects that I might want to produce when I left the town. I took my bag and walked from the station up to the High Street, and then down the hill towards the river. I crossed the bridge and a little farther on I saw exactly the sort of place I was looking for, a ‘family and commercial’ hotel of a definitely middle-class type. I went in there and booked a room, signing myself in the register as E. C. Gullivant.

BOOK: Marazan
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