heard footsteps close behind me. The little man with the big nose was a champion sprinter. I
foresaw that I should be stopped before I got to the platform I was in search of. I looked up
to the clock—one minute to eleven. I might just do it if my plan succeeded.
I had entered the station by the main entrance in Adderley Street. I now darted out again
through the side exit. Directly opposite me was the side entrance to the post office, the main
entrance to which is in Adderley Street.
As I expected, my pursuer, instead of following me in, ran down the street to cut me off
when I emerged by the main entrance, or to warn the policeman to do so.
In an instant I slipped across the street again and back into the station. I ran like a lunatic.
It was just eleven. The long train was moving as I appeared on the platform. A porter tried
to stop me, but I wriggled myself out of his grasp and sprang upon the foot-board. I mounted
the two steps and opened the gate. I was safe! The train was gathering way.
We passed a man standing by himself at the end of the platform. I waved to him.
“Good-bye Mr. Pagett,” I shouted.
Never have I seen a man more taken aback. He looked as though he had seen a ghost.
In a minute or two I was having trouble with the conductor. But I took a lofty tone.
“I am Sir Eustace Pedler’s
secretary,” I said haughtily. “Please take me to his private
car.”
Suzanne and Colonel Race were standing on the rear observation platform. They both
uttered an exclamation of utter surprise at seeing me.
“Hullo,
Miss Anne,” cried Colonel Race, “where have you turned up from?
I thought
you’d gone to Durban. What an unexpected person you are!”
Suzanne said nothing, but her eyes asked a hundred questions.
“I must report myself to my chief,” I said demurely. “Where is he?”
“He’s in the office—middle compartment—dictating at an incredible rate to the
unfortunate Miss Pettigrew.”
“This enthusiasm for work is something new,” I commented.
“H’m!” said Colonel Race. “His idea is, I think, to give her sufficient work to chain her
to her typewriter in her own compartment for the rest of the day.”
I laughed. Then, followed by the other two, I sought out Sir Eustace. He was striding up
and
down the circumscribed space, hurling a flood of words at the unfortunate secretary
whom I now saw for the first time. A tall, square woman in drab clothing, with pince-nez
and an efficient air. I judged that she was finding it difficult to keep pace with Sir Eustace,
for her pencil was flying along, and she was frowning horribly.
I stepped into the compartment.
“Come aboard, sir,” I said saucily.
Sir Eustace paused dead in the middle of a complicated sentence on the labour situation,
and stared at me. Miss Pettigrew must be a nervous creature, in spite of her efficient air, for
she jumped as though she had been shot.
“God bless my soul!” ejaculated Sir Eustace. “What about the young man in Durban?”
“I prefer you,” I said softly.
“Darling,” said Sir Eustace. “You can start holding my hand at once.”
Miss Pettigrew coughed, and Sir Eustace hastily withdrew his hand.
“Ah, yes,” he said. “Let me see, where were we? Yes. Tylman Roos, in his speech at—
What’s the matter? Why aren’t you taking it down?”
“I think,” said Colonel Race gently, “that Miss Pettigrew has broken her pencil.”
He took it from her and sharpened it.
Sir Eustace stared, and so did I. There was
something in Colonel Race’s tone that I did not quite understand.