Page 81 - A Hero of Liége
P. 81
shall be particularly disgusted if he gets off."
"What led to the row? You weren't rash enough to attack them?"
"No; but I wasn't so careful as I ought to have been, I'm afraid. You see,
hearing no knives and forks going, I thought they had finished their meal,
and everything was cleared away, and didn't expect any danger from the
kitchen. As soon as I knew there was something preparing for Hellwig I
backed, straight into the old woman with a tray. It was all up then, of
course."
"You've had a lucky escape. But we have saved the bridge."
"One of the fellows dashed to an electric push," said Kenneth, smiling. "I
was too busy to notice how he looked when the explosion he expected
didn't happen, but I've no doubt it was the surprise of his life."
"We'll have a look round. I'll give the old woman a soothing explanation,
and borrow a lamp."
Their investigation added little to their knowledge. The luggage of the spies
contained no papers bearing on espionage. But the wireless installation,
carried up inside the chimney, was very powerful. The electrical apparatus
for firing the mine was in perfect order.
"There is nothing amateurish about it," said Pariset. "This is spying reduced
to a science."
It was some time before the lancers returned. They brought with them the
man who had been wounded as he sprang through the window. The others
had got away. The man who had fired at Kenneth was dead; his comrade, to
whom he owed his death, Kenneth had wounded.
After consultation with the captain of lancers, it was decided to leave a
dozen men to occupy the mill, pending the receipt of instructions from
headquarters. Kenneth and Pariset begged a lodging for the night from the