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"Not hard enough, I'm afraid," she said calmly. "I'm afraid he'll live."

He shrugged.

"The second mate can navigate, though he hasn't a ticket, and Maggs will revive later. Au re-voirPatricia."

In a moment she was alone, and she heard the key turn in the lock and his footsteps receding toward the companion.

She had no means of telling the time, for she had left her watch in the Pill Box. She spent a little while searching for a weapon, but she did not expect that he would have overlooked anything like that, and was not surprised when she failed to find one. Then she turned her attention to the porthole, but the opening was far too small for her to squeeze through, slight as she was. And that was all about it she was fairly trapped.

She sat down and coldly reviewed the situation.

There had been no uproar of any sort, and so it seemed that Orace was safe. By that time he would be searching for her, and if she were lucky she might be able to communicate with him. She held herself motionless, to eliminate any sound inside the cabin, and strained her ears for any stealthy creeping past the door. She dared not run the risk of calling out, for it would be fatal to let the enemy suspect that she was not alone.

And, while she listened intently, she went on thinking. If Orace found her, what could he do? He couldn't release her, though perhaps he would be able to pass her a gun with which she could deal with Bittle on his return. But the onus of the adventure would rest almost entirely with Orace and Algy, and, regarded even in the most optimistic light, the odds against them were terribly heavy. She found herself daydreaming of wild farfetched possibilities of victory, and pulled herself together with a kind of mental violence, for she knew that that was a forerunner of despair when practical schemes for winning out seemed so hopeless that one was forced, in a final effort to stave off panic, to imagine help falling from the skies. And, after a sternly practical inspection of the facts as they stood, the girl was compelled to admit that the chance of .beating the Tiger now was pitifully small.

Then came the feeling of unreality the feeling that the whole thing was too fantastic to be true. And that, too, she recognized for a false comfort, and lashed herself out of it. That way also defeat lay to sink into a torpid reverie and wait for awakening to put an end to the horror. No this was no ordinary nightmare. She'd entered the regatta in earnest, and the tide was running all against her. But she must must mustkeep on hoping against hope, whipping all her wits into service, refusing to surrender. That was the only alternative to accepting her fate as Bittle or the Tiger dictated it.... Resolutely she shut out of her mind the contemplation of an end too horrible to vision in cold blood.

Time passed she could not tell how long she sat there, listening for Orace and waiting for Bittle, wrapped up in her thoughts. But Orace did not come. Had he been caught? But there had been no sounds of excitement, even since her capture, and so it seemed that Orace was still at large, whatever he was doing about her disappearance. That was some consolation. By that time, too, Algy should have recovered, and perhaps even then he and Orace were at work.... So she brooded, until, it seemed hours since Bittle had left her.

Then there stole in upon her senses a low humming noise, not so much heard as felt. For a moment she was at a loss to account for it, and then she realized that it was the vibration of the ship's motors.

So the cargo was all aboard, and the Tiger was preparing to make his getaway.... But by now she had forced herself into a sort of dreadful passiveness. Abstractedly she sought for, and found, all the concurrent tokens of departure. She looked down through the open porthole, and saw two men standing by the small winch in the bows. Someone below her called an order, and the winch rattled into action. She listened to the clanking of the anchor chain, and the jangle of each link as it grated over the teeth of the winding drum hammered into her brain like the tolling of a knell.... Then she heard men crossing the deck outside. The footsteps ascended the companion, and she heard them moving about the bridge overhead. There were two men, and Bittle was one of them. He called down a perfunctory query "All clear?" and one of the men forward looked back and said, "Aye, aye, sir!"

"Let her go, said Bittle, and she heard the tinkle of the engine-room telegraph.

The vibration swelled to a drone, and she saw the black contours of the coast begin to slide across her field of vision. Coincidently came the soft lapping of disturbed waters.... Another ring from the bridge, and the sea to port boiled whitely away in a growing smudge of moonlit milkiness.... Again the tinkle of the telegraph, and the ship commenced to forge ahead as the last glimpse of land slipped away and left her staring dully at the wide horizon.... The churning and splashing of their passage became more insistent.

They were off the Tiger had ^aopieaA^fae pool....

The girl sank on to the bunk and covered her eyes. In that moment she tasted the dregs of defeat.

Bittle came down from the bridge. He went to the door of the other cabin and thumped on the panels. He shouted "Maggs!" several times, without, apparently, getting a reply. Then he crossed the deck and she heard his key in the lock.

She had composed herself by the time he had opened the door. He met the same acid, defiant stare, and felt a certain admiration,

"Still just as sure of yourself? he asked, and she nodded.

"Quite thank you."

He eyed her twisiedly.

"You're plucky, but I'm afraid it's wasted. You know Templar's dead?

"Mr. Templar's dead yes. But the game goes on." She looked up at him steadily. "Even I may die. But there are others you will never be able to say you're safe as long as there is a law, and decent people to fight for it. For a little while, you're winning, but in the end you can't win. Mr. Templar, after all, was only a pawn, and I'm no more than that myself. But even though you kill both of us, there are plenty of others to take our places men who will never rest until they have led you to the gallows. Think of it, Bittle! Years will pass, and you will travel thousands of miles; perhaps you will change your name, and settle down at the other end of the earth; you will play your part, make yourself a respected and important man with all this money, and try to believe that the past can be forgotten. But inyour heart you will know that nothing can be wiped out, and you will always be haunted by your fear. If you call that a victory, Bittle, you've won but I wouldn't change places with you!"

He was not impressed.

"D'you really think you can scare me so easily?" he said. "If you like, you can come out on deck and watch England fall behind us. You will never see England again we have vanished into thin air, for all Baycombe knows. Only one dangerous man has been left, and by now he will have been shot Templar's servant. Where is help coming from?"

"When did you shoot Orace?" she inquired. "He was very much alive when I left him."

She was wondering if Orace had, after all, been captured but she was giving nothing away until she knew, and Bittle's reply reassured her.

"The Pill Box will be raided at two o'clock, and Orace will be killed that has been arranged."

"Then you might give me a cigarette."

He proffered his case and watched her tap the gasper on her thumbnail, and he marked that her hands did not shake.

"And a match, please."

He held the light for her, and then she leaned back again and puffed a cloud of smoke toward the ceiling.

"Have you also arranged to kill Carn?" she questioned.

"Carn that old fool? Why?"

"Detective Inspector Carn, of Scotland Yard-that old fool. He went into Ilfracombe this afternoon to collect his posse. He knows the Tiger! ... They must have had a breakdown somewhere, and that stopped him arriving in time but that only means that by dawn the Atlantic fleet will be scouring the seas for you. I'll bet that surprises you. Bittie!"