“Edward Maltby, of the Royal Psychical Society,” nodded David.
“He was such an old man! What’d we feel like if we read in to-morrow’s papers that he’d been found buried in snow!”
“To-morrow’s Christmas, and there won’t be any papers,” her brother pointed out.
“That doesn’t reduce his chance of being buried in the snow, my darling,” Lydia retorted.
Jessie chimed in, now seeking her own excuse:
“Yes, one does almost feel as if one almost ought to go after him, doesn’t one?”
“This one doesn’t,” replied the bore, unconsciously adding a point in favour of departure.
Jessie’s real excuse was that on the morrow a theatrical manager would have left Manchester, taking the chance of an engagement with him, and the possibility of missing both was emphasised by the voice of the guard when he returned along the corridor, answering questions that were flung at him as he went: “I’m sorry, sir, I can’t say.” “No, madam, nothing yet.” “Yes, sir, it may be all night.”
“Oh, let’s!” cried Lydia.
“I’ll—I’ll join you, if I might,” added the clerk with stammering boldness. “Make up a party, you know.”
The tide of adventure was flowing fast. Lydia was already on her feet, bringing down her small suitcase. Had she known the suitcase’s destination she would have hesitated. Only the elderly bore frowned.
“You’re not really going, are you?” he asked the chorus girl.
“Why not, if they are?” she replied.
“Well, you take my advice, and stay here—with me?”
With the blindness of egotism, he was quite unconscious that his remark settled the matter.
Glad to be rid of his company, and armed with their small luggage, the four adventurers lowered themselves to the thick carpet of snow. Then David reached up and banged the door to—the corridor was fast filling with interested spectators—and the journey through strange fairyland began.
It began with disarming ease. Had difficulties arisen at once they might have returned, although pride would have rebelled against retreat at this early stage, and the vision of the bore’s triumphant expression was another deterrent factor. Following Mr. Maltby’s deep footprints for a few yards along the track, they came to a path bearing away from the line into the white distance. The line of the path was almost obliterated, but they identified it by a fence and a signpost: “Footpath to Hemmersby.” This was evidently a point at which, in normal times, pedestrians crossed the railway.
The fence soon came to an end. The path lost its identifying boundary, and presumably continued diagonally across a field. Maltby’s footprints and something that looked like a road beyond a distant hedge maintained the party’s hope, but when they reached the thing that looked like a road to find that it belied its appearance, hope grew a little less.
“I—I suppose we’re right?” queried Jessie.
“We must be,” replied David cheerfully. “Follow the footprints!”
“The footprints mightn’t be right,” said the clerk.
“What depressing logic!” exclaimed David. “By the way, I suppose you’ve all noticed that we’re following more than one set?”
“Yes, so the other man couldn’t have been Charles the First,” added Lydia, “because ghosts don’t have footprints. Come on! I want to get somewhere!”
They continued on their uncertain way. While crossing a second field the snow began again. Each of the four travellers wondered whether to suggest going back, and each lacked the moral courage to put the wonder into words.
The second field sloped down into a small valley. Suddenly David gave a shout. He had ploughed a little way ahead.
“The road, people, the road!” he called.
They overtook him to find him staring disconsolately at a long, narrow ditch. Camouflaged by the snow, it had continued the story of deception.
“When you and I are all alone, David,” said Lydia, “I’ll tell you what I think of you!”
“Which way now?” asked Jessie, struggling against panic.
They stared around. The increasing snow had almost obliterated the marks of their predecessors. Just beyond the ditch they were being rapidly wiped out.
“What about back?” proposed David, voicing sense at last.
They turned. The slope they had descended was scarcely visible through the curtain of whirling white, and while they stood hesitating their own footprints became lost in the new covering.
“Yes, back!” cried Lydia. “That beastly bore was right!”
She began running. A voice hailed her immediately.
“Hey! Not that way!” called David.
Then they started arguing about the direction, while the thickening flakes blotted out all but themselves.
In the end they decided that it was as hopeless to attempt to return as to go forward. They skirted the ditch, blundered through an area of trees, crossed another field, descended into another valley, and walked into another ditch. Three breathless figures scrambled out on the farther side unaided. The fourth, Jessie, had to be lugged out.
“I say, are you hurt?” asked David anxiously.
“No, not a bit,” answered Jessie, swaying.
He caught her unconscious form just before it slid to the ground, and a situation which had been bad enough already became suddenly worse. Lydia hurried to his side.
“What’s the matter?” she exclaimed.
“The poor thing’s conked out,” he replied. “I say, Lydia, now we’ve just got to find somewhere!”
“Can you carry her?”
“She’s light.”
“Then come along. It won’t help standing here. Where’s that other man?”
His voice sounded as she spoke. The clerk had vanished, but now a muffled shout came through the white curtain.
“Hi! A gate!”
Lifting the unconscious figure in his arms, and telling his sister to take the suitcase she had dropped, David hastened towards the voice. He searched in vain for the origin.
“Where’ve you got to?” he called. “Shout again!”
The next instant the clerk loomed before him, and they almost collided.
“Good Lord!” gasped the clerk, staring at David’s burden. “Is she bad?”
“Hope not; she just went off,” answered David. “Where’s this gate?
“Just behind me. I think it leads somewhere.”
At another time David would have commented that gates generally did lead somewhere, but he was not in a mood now for sarcasm or badinage.
“Shove it open,” he said.
“It won’t open,” returned the clerk. “The snow’s half-way to the top.”
“Damn! Well, we’ll have to climb it. Get over first, will you, and I’ll pass her over to you. Think you can manage?”
“Yes, of course.”
“You hop over, too, Lydia, and help him.”
They managed somehow. Beyond the gate, David