“I know it well.”
“Can’t say what fancy takes him there, sir. Perhaps he doesn’t know hisself.”
“In any case, let me know when he next walks in his sleep. I have no further instructions for you to-night, Dobbs.”
“Thank you, sir. I have the honour to wish you a very good night, sir.”
“Good-night, Dobbs. Keep your eyes open, and report everything to me.”
“Yes, sir, yes. You may trust me for doing that, sir.” And Dobbs the obsequious bowed himself out.
In his cousin’s valet Lionel had found an instrument ready to his hand, but it was not till after long hesitation and doubt that he made up his mind to avail himself of it. The necessities of the case at length decided him to do so. No one appreciated the value of a bribe better than Dobbs, or worked harder or more conscientiously to deserve one. There was a crooked element in his character which made whatever money he might earn by indirect means, or by tortuous working, seem far sweeter to him than the honest wages of everyday life. Kester St. George was not the kind of man ever to try to attach his inferiors to himself by any tie of gratitude or kindness. At different times and in various ways he suffered for this indifference, although the present could hardly be considered as a case in point, seeing that it was not in the nature of Dobbs to resist a bribe in whatever shape it might offer itself, and that gratitude was one of those virtues which had altogether been omitted from his composition.
Late one afternoon, a few days after the interview between Lionel and Dobbs, Kester St. George had his horse brought round, and rode out unattended, and without leaving word in what direction he was going, or at what hour he might be expected back. The day was dull and lowering, with fitful puffs of wind, that blew first from one point and then from another, and seemed the forerunners of a coming storm. Buried in his own thoughts, Kester paid no heed to the weather, but rode quickly forward till several miles of country had been crossed. By-and-by he diverged from the main road, and turned his horse’s head into a tortuous and muddy lane, which, after half an hour’s bad travelling, landed him on the verge of a wide stretch of brown treeless moor, than which no place could well have looked more desolate and cheerless under the gray monotony of the darkening February afternoon. Kester halted for awhile at the end of the lane to give his horse breathing time. Far as the eye could see, looking forward from the point where he was standing, all was bare and treeless, without one single sign of habitation or life.
“Whatever else may be changed, either with me or the world,” he muttered, “the old moor remains just as it was the first day that I can remember it. It was horrible to me at first, but I learned to like it—to love it even, before I left it; and I love it now—to-day—with all its dreariness and monotony. It is like the face of an old friend. You may go away for twenty years, and when you come back you know that you will find on it just the same look that it wore when you went away. Not that I have ever cared to cultivate such friendships,” he added, half regretfully. “Well, the next best thing to having a good friend is to have a good enemy, and I can thank heaven for granting me several such.”
He touched his horse with the spur, and rode slowly forward, taking a narrow bridle path that led in an oblique direction across the moor. “This ought to be the road if my memory serves me aright,” he muttered, “but they are all so much alike, and intersect each other so frequently, that it’s far more easy to lose one’s way than to know where one is.”