Dangerous Days - Page 217/297

After that, for days she was a prisoner. Herman moved his bed

down-stairs and slept in the sitting-room, the five or six hours of

day-light sleep which were all he required. And at night, while he was

at the mill, Rudolph sat and dozed and kept watch below. Twice a day

some meager provisions were left at the top of the stairs and her door

was unlocked. She would creep out and get them, not because she was

hungry, but because she meant to keep up her strength. Let their

vigilance slip but once, and she meant to be ready.

She learned to interpret every sound below. There were times when the

fumes from burning food came up the staircase and almost smothered her.

And there were times, she fancied, when Herman weakened and Rudolph

talked for hours, inciting and inflaming him again. She gathered, too,

that Gus's place was under surveillance, and more than once in the

middle of the night stealthy figures came in by the garden gate and

conferred with Rudolph down-stairs. Then, one evening, in the dusk

of the May twilight, she saw three of them come, one rather tall and

military of figure, and one of them carried, very carefully, a cheap

suitcase.

She knew what was in that suitcase.