chapter 24


conflagration

“But these all night,

Like candles, shed

Their beams, and light

Us into bed.

They are indeed our pillar-fües,

Seen as we go;

They are that City’s shining spires

We travel to.”

henry vaughan: Cheerfulness.

« ^ »

As soon as tea was over, George drove Mrs. Bradley and Ulrica Doyle towards Hiversand Bay to spend the night again at the hotel, but before they had gone very far it was fairly obvious that they were being followed. Acting on instructions, therefore, murmured by his employer down the speaking-tube, George accelerated, and drove on to the main road to Kelsorrow. He swung left just before they reached a bridge over the river, skirted the town, found a by-pass road, and then drove along it at fifty miles an hour. Mrs. Bradley looked back. About a hundred yards behind them on the straight, wide road, a red sports car was bursting along at a speed great enough to overtake them, at their present rate, before the wide road ended at the entrance to the next town.

“Better pull up, George. I don’t recognise the car,” said Mrs. Bradley. “They may not be following us, but if they are I think we’d better see what they want.”

George pulled in to the grassy edge of the road. The sports car drew up ten yards in front of them, and out of it got a man whom Mrs. Bradley had never seen before. Ulrica, however, recognised him, and leaving Mrs. Bradley and George, who were standing by the roadside, she walked to meet him.

“Why, Uncle Percival! Is anything wrong?” she said. Mr. Maslin took hold of her hand as though she had been a small child. He did not answer, but walked up to Mrs. Bradley and addressed her by name.

“Mrs. Bradley, my little girl! Will you please return at once to the convent? Mary has gone! I know it’s unreasonable to ask you to do any more. My wife has confessed that you urged her to take the child home, but—will you come back with me, please?”

“I am concerned with Ulrica’s safety. That is my first responsibility,” Mrs. Bradley told him. “But, of course, I will do what I can. George, take Miss Doyle as before, and I’ll telephone you, later on. Remain there until you hear from me.”

“Very good, madam.” He walked to the car, and returned with a small revolver. “I have a licence for this, madam. Please take it. I have another.”

“Good heavens, George!” said Mrs. Bradley.

“There’s such things as put-up jobs,” said George, glowering solemnly at Mr.Maslin, “and the party of the second part might just as well know exactly where they get off.”

With these admirable sentiments he went back to the car and opened the door for Ulrica. Then he took his place at the wheel, turned the car in the wide road in one magnificent arc, and drove back towards Hiversand Bay.

“Now, Mr. Maslin,” said Mrs. Bradley, when her own car was out of sight, “don’t worry too much. How much is known about the disappearance?”

“Nothing. Nothing at all. Look here, jump in, do you mind?—I’d like to get back to the convent. I’ve rung up the police, so that’s something. I don’t know the district, unfortunately, but I’ll comb out every inch—” The car shot away.

It was obvious, from the moment of their arrival, that something was seriously wrong. Mrs. Bradley clearly remembered the last occasion on which she had searched for Mary Maslin. This time (she was informed by the white-faced sister portress at the gate) Miss Bonnet, who had actually got into her car to drive back to Kelsorrow, had got out of the car again, put on her trousers, borrowed a hoe from the gardening shed, and had gone off, followed by the ironic applause of Bessie and the hysterical giggles of Kitty, to conduct a search on her own.

“Which way did she go?” asked Mrs. Bradley.

“Quick, I’ll show you,” said Bessie. “Lor’, she didn’t half look a cutie!”

“You run off and find Sister Geneviève and ask her to get hot blankets ready,”said Mrs. Bradley, turning away from Bessie towards Mrs. Maslin. “I suppose the buildings here and the grounds and the garden have been searched?”she said. “When was the girl first missed?”

“She was to have had tea with her father and me in the guest-house,” said Mrs. Maslin, more foxy-looking than ever with fright and anxiety. “It was all arranged, and when she didn’t turn up I thought she must have been kept after school or something. How was I to know that they don’t keep the children in? We were always kept in!”she added, peevish with fear.

“And at what time did you become anxious?”

“At half-past five, just after you had gone off with Ulrica, and now I find that she hasn’t been seen since the end of afternoon school.”

“Let’s see—she would have been having a games lesson with Mother Saint Benedict,” said Mrs. Bradley rapidly, “Go and find Mother Saint Benedict, Mrs. Maslin, and ask whether Mary had a fall or sustained any injury during the game. That might help a little, do you see?”

“Oh, dear, oh, dear! This violence! And all this dreadful secrecy about Ulrica! Whatever shall we do? It’s too terrible,” said Mrs. Maslin, going off to find Mother Saint Benedict.

It was too terrible for Mr. Maslin, as Mrs. Bradley could see. He had been pale when she had first met him; he was now a dreadful grey colour; his nostrils were pinched and his cheeks seemed to have fallen in.

“For God’s sake,” he kept muttering. “For God’s sake! For God’s sake!”

“Mr. Maslin,” said Mrs. Bradley, “I want you, please, to drive me to the village, and not to worry. Everything is going to be all right.”

At the village post office there was a telephone. The post office itself was closed, but the shop was still open, and there was no difficulty about calling up the hotel at Hiversand Bay.

“Here, madam, right in the entrance lobby,” George’s voice responded. “Nobody can come either in or out without I see them. The young lady went straight to her room on arrival, and says she doesn’t want any food. The other young lady has had a dinner sent up, madam, so the head-waiter tells me. It’s a homely little hotel, madam, and I am already in fairly close touch with most of the staff. I don’t think we need have much fear, madam, but what the young ladies will be safe.”

“Excellent, George. As soon as the inspector arrives, you can come on here and have your own supper. I’m telephoning him now.”

She telephoned the inspector, and went back, grimly smiling, to the almost frantic Mr. Maslin.

“The inspector thinks his men are well on the trail. Probably a bare-faced bit of kidnapping, he says,” she observed. “Somebody who’s heard that she’s Timothy Doyle’s granddaughter, I suppose.”

“They may kill her!”

“They won’t kill her. The police know where she is. ”

“Know where she is? Why the devil don’t they get hold of her, then?”

“All in good time,” said Mrs. Bradley. “Back to the convent, please.”

The convent had been searched from the attics in the Orphanage to the cellars beneath the frater. The nuns were in groups in the Common Room, the frater, the children’s refectory and the cloister. The guests had congregated miserably in the guest-house parlour; the orphans, under the jaundiced eye of Mother Saint Ambrose, were sitting in close rows in the Orphanage playroom, doing needlework with hands that were sticky with the sweat of excitement; the boarders, let off preparation, had been given freedom to help in the search of the school and the grounds. Mother Saint Francis was shut away in her room, because she and the Mother Superior (calm among her daughters, as behoved the head of the house) were the only members of the Community who knew that Mary Maslin was safe at Hiversand Bay, and while Mrs. Bradley knew that nobody would suspect that the benignity of the Reverend Mother Superior hid anything but an anxiety that was natural and general to everybody, she had not the same faith in the dramatic abilities of the volatile Mother Francis.

Meanwhile, the object of all the care and suffering was sitting at a small bedside table eating a four-course meal with every appearance of appetite, breaking off occasionally to observe in rapturous tones:

“I say, isn’t this a rag! I say, won’t the girls be sick!”

“I should think you’ll be the one to be sick,” her cousin coldly observed. “And I refuse to go to sleep with a policeman in the room.”

It turned out to be a policeman’s wife, however, a young and cheery creature, whose husband, a large, young sergeant, was posted on the landing outside the bedroom door, with a chair, a bottle of beer, some tobacco, a tumbler, a large ash-tray, a book and a plate of cold beef, cold ham, mustard pickles and bread. He was there unofficially, having been, however, officially released from duty so that he could be “lent” to Mrs. Bradley as a watchdog.

George, whose task was done, took his leave, and at a leisurely twenty-eight miles, drove over to Blacklock Tor, and garaged the car at the inn. He had a half-pint, went out for a walk on the moor, had another half-pint before they closed, then went up to his room. He was on the second floor, and his window looked over the sloping hill-side of moor towards the convent. He went to the window and looked out, but except for the steady light of Saint Peter’s Finger which shone from the church tower lantern, there was nothing else on the landscape visible except the dark stretch of the moor.

He went to bed at a quarter to eleven, gave a last glance at his watch before he put out the light, turned his face towards the window and closed his eyes. At five minutes to eleven he went to sleep.

He did not know what woke him. No light was shining on to his face, and no sudden noise had startled him, but through the uncurtained window he could see that the sky was alight with a deep, red glow. He got out of bed very quickly, and went to look out. A minute later he was putting on his flannel trousers, a lounge jacket and his boots, and a minute later still he was running downstairs to get the car.

The garage was a lock-up, and he had a key of his own. He switched on his lights, drove carefully on to the road, and then put the car at the moorland track at such a breakneck pace that it bounded over the ruts, the heather and the boulders like a car in a comic film. ( 2 )

Of all the searchers for Mary Maslin, the most feverish, apart from the Maslins themselves, who had been into Kelsorrow to interview the police and then had scoured the country-side in the fast red sports car for clues, were Mother Benedict and Miss Bonnet. Fortunately, the useful rule of obedience could be brought into play to prevent the nun from continuing the useless search, but not even the news that the police were on the track of the missing child (brought back from Kelsorrow police-station by a greatly-relieved Mr. Maslin as additional information to that supplied by Mrs. Bradley) could abate Miss Bonnet’s ardour or allay her obvious anxiety. In the end, even she gave up, and a bed was found for her in the Orphanage on the top floor where Sister Bridget, now practically recovered, lay attended, as usual, by the Infirmarian, in the large infirmary ward.

On the floor below slept the orphans, some thirty-six of them, their ages ranging from three to seventeen or eighteen. They were in five dormitories, and in each dormitory slept a nun. Mother Ambrose and Mother Jude were always on duty, and the rest of the Community slept week by week in the Orphanage dormitories by rota, with the exception of Mother Francis, who remained in charge of the private school children in their cubicled dorters on the west side of the cloister.

Before the attack with the hammer Sister Bridget had been a heavy sleeper, but her sleep had been fitful during her sojourn in the Infirmary. Since she had recovered consciousness she had thought a good deal, in her rambling non-consequential way, about her mouse, and had mentioned it once or twice to Mrs. Bradley. Mrs. Bradley had soothed her with accounts of its well-being, and had suggested to Mother Ambrose that it should be imported into the Orphanage. Mother Ambrose, however, with courtesy and finality, had declined to have the mouse brought anywhere near the house of which she was in charge.

“It will breed,” was her last and unarguable dictum. So the mouse remained in Mrs. Bradley’s room, and she fed it and grew accustomed to its company and to finding it on her pillow, in her shoe, climbing the curtains, and almost drowned in the ewer. On the Tuesday night, when Mary Maslin was missed, the general excitement even penetrated to the Infirmary, for its guardian had joined in the search with everyone else, and had come back, tired and flushed, to sleep a good deal more soundly than usual.

Sister Bridget was wakeful and excited. She was aware of vague cravings, and these crystallised themselves, at about half-past eleven, into a violent desire for the companionship of her mouse. She knew that it was of no use to call her mouse, as she had been wont to do when she slept in her bedroom at the guest-house, for, although she was extremely vague as to where she was, she did know that she had called it, and called it in vain, a good many times just lately, so she made up her mind to go and look for it.

She had managed to steal and secrete two boxes of matches since the accident. She crept from her bed, leering happily, since, childishly, her happiness was rooted in action, not contemplation, and, opening the window, put her hand out between the bars—for all the second- and third-floor windows in the Orphanage were barred—and brought in a box of matches.

Then she waddled, bare-footed, to the door, and went to look for her mouse. She began on the bottom floor —not for any reason, but because she forgot, half-way, what it was she was going to do, and the endless stairs, from the third floor down to the ground, became a kind of pilgrimage which could be undertaken without thought. There were exactly the same number of stairs in each flight, and there were two flights, with a turn, between each floor. She sat down, as a baby will, and shifted her seat from stair to stair, clutching hold of the banisters in the darkness to reassure herself, and so that she did not fall.

When she got to the bottom and found there were no more stairs, she began to whimper. Then she remembered what she had-come for, and, striking matches and dropping them, began to look for her mouse. ( 3 )

Mrs. Bradley had given up her room in the guesthouse to Mr. Maslin, for the guest-house had no double rooms. She herself had received accommodation, as before, in the Orphanage, and had gone to bed at eleven, happy in the belief that her responsibilities for the night were over, and that Mary Maslin and Ulrica Doyle were safe at Hiversand Bay.

It was with a feeling of unaccountable anxiety, therefore, that she woke at about midnight, and sat up in bed. She listened, but there was nothing to be heard. She got out of bed and walked to the window, but there was nothing to be seen. She went back to bed again, lay down and tried to go to sleep. It was useless.

She went to the door, which she had locked, and turned the key. Then she knew what had awakened her. Somewhere, lower down in the house, was a muffled crackling and roaring. Mrs. Bradley took George’s revolver from under her pillow, put on her peacock dressing-gown and a pair of stout shoes which she used when she walked on the moors, and descended the stairs to find out the cause of the noises.

Fire! The gust of hot air struck against her as she reached the first-floor landing. Fire! The whole of the ground floor appeared to be in flames. As she arrived at the top of it, the whole of the last flight of stairs collapsed almost under her feet.

She raced for the children’s dormitories, found Mother Ambrose awake, and told her, quickly but quietly, what had happened. Mother Ambrose got up at once, and—interesting reaction, Mrs. Bradley thought —clothed herself fully and then prayed before she began to make the rounds of the various dormitories and wake the children. Mrs. Bradley left her, and made a systematic tour of the two top floors of the house.

She first roused Miss Bonnet, who immediately pulled over her pyjamas the inevitable pair of trousers, shoved her arms into a blazer, and her feet into brogues. She was as calm as Mother Ambrose had been, Mrs. Bradley noted with relief.

Little Mother Jude knelt and prayed, then put on her habit—perhaps this was part of the rule, Mrs. Bradley thought—and also began to go the round of the beds. Mother Benedict and old Mother Bartholomew, the two nuns who happened to be on duty at the Orphanage that night, placed themselves under the direction of Mother Ambrose.

All this was accomplished with the greatest rapidity and quietness, but, by the time all the children had been roused, the fire had gained ground, and the bottom floor of the house was an inferno. The children were kept in the rooms whilst Mrs. Bradley and Mother Jude went to survey the chances of escape by the staircase. The position, as Mrs. Bradley had known it must be, was hopeless.

“Never mind,” said Mother Ambrose, who had lined up the orphans and put each section in charge of one of the eldest, “there’s a fire escape from the top storey. Let us all go up there.”

So up the stairs they mounted to the Infirmary, and found Sister Bridget, the cause of all the mischief, asleep in her bed. She had run away from the fire, and, by the time she was back in the Infirmary, had forgotten both the danger and her mouse.

They left her asleep for the moment, whilst Miss Bonnet took it upon herself to investigate the chances of escape down the outside ladder.

She opened the Infirmary window, which ended in a broad, perforated iron platform, the top of the fire escape, and lowered herself into the darkness. Suddenly a great tongue of flame leapt out of a window, and in a minute Miss Bonnet came back into view at the top of the ladder.

“No go,” she muttered in Mrs. Bradley’s ear.

“Smoke?”

“Flames, too. The blinking thing’s red hot on the floor below the upper dormitory. I blistered my hands on the metal. We might risk it, but these kids will never face it. What are we going to do?”

“Tell the others,” said Mrs. Bradley. “The decision, I suppose, must rest with Mother Saint Ambrose.”

“Right. You tell ’em. I’ll stay here with the kids and quell any riot,” Miss Bonnet officiously observed.

Mrs. Bradley drew back from the window to let Miss Bonnet climb in. The girl was trembling, but her voice was steady and her eyes were clear and brave. Mrs. Bradley walked towards the door and gave the nuns a glance to get them to follow. There, away from the children, she told them Miss Bonnet’s opinion.

“I’ll go down myself, just to confirm what she says, but I’m certain she’s right,” she added. So, with a jest as she passed the children, who were all assembled in straight, mute lines behind their leaders, she opened the window and crawled out. The dressing-gown was a nuisance, so she shed it, and pushed it back over the sill. Then she began to climb backwards down the ladder.

The air got hotter and hotter. She could hear the roaring of the fire. Soon she was coughing, her lungs full of acrid smoke. Then the metal became hot to the touch, and she imagined that she could feel the heat through her shoes. She tried to get farther down the ladder, but felt herself being suffocated by the smoke which now was billowing in great thick clouds about her. The heat against the palms of her hands was unbearable, and another tongue of flame shot out of a window, this time above her head, and singed her hair.

As quickly as she could she mounted again, pulled herself over the sill, walked, smoke-grimed, to the door, and went outside on the landing to clear her lungs. She leaned against the stair-head, eyes streaming and throat like a rasp, coughing from effects of the smoke.

The children, by this time, could hear the roaring of the fire, and see the smoke drifting past the window, and had become terrified. Some were crying, others were whimpering pathetically for the mothers who had either died or deserted them. One began to scream, and Mother Ambrose, to prevent a general panic, seized the child quickly, muffled her head in her habit, and almost suffocated her into silence.

“Now all of you children sit down on the beds,” she said calmly, “and Mother Saint Bartholomew will tell you a nice, quiet story whilst we are waiting. Not a long story, please, Mother. We shall not have to stay here very long.”

Old Mother Bartholomew, owing, Mrs. Bradley supposed, to her former profession, was a gifted raconteuse.

She began to tell the children, not stories of saints and angels, but racy tales of a pantomime that she had taken part in as a child. Mrs. Bradley looked at the group; at Mother Ambrose, justifying gloriously her military habit and address; at little Mother Jude, cherubically smiling in death’s face, as though she saw God’s face behind it, as a man may show his own expression through a mask; at Mother Benedict, who had never looked more beautiful than she did at that moment, serene, calm and courageous; at old wrinkled Mother Bartholomew, suddenly returned for inspiration to her first love, her eyes sparkling with amusement, her gestures free and occasionally vulgar, as with a flow of anecdote, reported repartee, descriptions of scenes and “business,” stories of quarrels, generosity, poverty, travel, she turned once more to take Rosa Cardosa from limbo, and exhibit, in God’s name, the former idol of five capitals and two continents.

Last Mrs. Bradley looked sideways at Miss Bonnet’s hard young face.

“Take it pretty well, don’t they? I suppose they do know there’s not an earthly?” said Miss Bonnet, meeting her glance.

“And that being so,” said Mrs. Bradley, “I suppose that you and I can take it that our short but interesting game of cat and mouse is now at an end?”

“What I can’t make out,” said Miss Bonnet, drawing away to the farthest corner of the room, so as not to interrupt the pantomime story, “is how you tumbled to it all.”

“Well, there was nobody else. I couldn’t see for a time how you stood to gain, until, of course, the business of the paten and the chalice came up. Then I remembered that the children’s grandfather had made an offer for them to the convent some time previously. It also transpired that he was an unscrupulous old man who had not the slightest objection to purchasing stolen goods as long as they were what he desired, and I heard about you and the pictures—”

“Oh, damn!” said Miss Bonnet, dismayed. “How did that come out?”

“You appear to have overlooked the fact that your reputation followed you to Kelsorrow, and from Kelsorrow to the convent.”

“But I didn’t think the nuns could know, when they let me come here and teach in the private school.”

“Well, they did know. And the next thing which occurred to me was that you had killed the child because she was the heiress, and would be certain to go to New York at some time when she would immediately identify the stolen property.”

“It’s quite true that the confounded kid had caught me measuring the beastly things once, before the copies were made. I was really sneaking them then, but she interrupted the good work. However, the rest of your suspicions—”

“I supposed,” said Mrs. Bradley, “that you had inserted a cigarette holder in the end of the gas-flex, so that the teeth marks would not show on the rubber nozzle.”

“How did you get on to that? It doesn’t act, of course, because I don’t use a holder. But I can see that it must very soon have dawned on you that all the times fitted in rather well with the days that I came to the convent, and I admit, of course, that I lobbed the hammer at your head that night you sat in the Common Room after the nuns had gone. In fact, it struck me pretty soon that you were altogether too hot. I began to feel beastly unsafe. I tried to get you, too, by firing that room in the guest-house, but only knocked out the poor old lay-sister, and I meant to lay for you on the following Thursday, and then at the pub.”

She walked over to the window and looked out. There was nothing to see except smoke. She returned to Mrs. Bradley’s side.

“It’s all right to discuss the thing, I suppose. Our chances appear to be nil. How did you think you could prove the murder on me? Or mustn’t I ask?”

“Well, you could have been the girl on the guesthouse roof. She was wearing a tunic. Then, you did not know that the children here are always bathed under a wrap. You knew where to find a guest-house towel— a thing I was pretty sure that scarcely any of my suspects would have known—for you had been offered a bath in the guest-house before! Then, you were almost the only person who insisted that the suicide verdict was the right one, so, naturally, I wondered whether you had anything to gain from it!”

“I believe,” said Mother Jude, breaking in as Mother Bartholomew came to the end of her tale, “that it might be better to move a floor higher, Mrs. Bradley.”

So the children, very difficult now to control, were marched up the next flight of stairs, those behind pushing hard against those in front, and one poor creature murmuring, “Mummy! Mummy!” in heart-breaking accents of fear.

“Not too good a move,” said Miss Bonnet quietly. “I see her point, but these rooms are so beastly cheerless, and there’s nowhere on earth to sit in these beastly attics except on the floor.”

She sat on it, and, taking no further notice of Mrs. Bradley, made the children into two concentric circles, feet to the middle, and started some sitting-down physical exercises to occupy the attention of the party.

“She is a good girl. She has a good heart,” said Mother Jude. “Is there any chance, do you think?”

Mrs. Bradley beckoned her, and the two of them, followed by Bessie’s anxious eyes, went out on to the landing. They crossed it, and entered the room on the opposite side of the house. The attic windows, being set in the slope of the roof, did not give a very good view, so they went down the next flight of stairs to the Infirmary landing, and stood at the window again, but at the one in a small room on the opposite side of the house where the smoke was not blowing. A great crowd of people, lighted by the flames that now belched luridly forth from the lower part of the Orphanage, waved to them and shouted. Mrs. Bradley waved, and scanned the crowd anxiously for George. He was not to be seen. There was a sudden movement, and then a struggle, and two of the nuns could be seen holding back another nun who was trying to rush into the building. It was too uncertain a light in which to distinguish one habited figure from another. Suddenly there was another commotion, however, and, hatless, there stood George. He cupped his hands and bellowed —for he could see his employer silhouetted against the light which she had turned on in the little room:

“O.K., madam! Hang on! I’ve been and dug out the brigade!”

“Good heavens, George!” Mrs. Bradley returned, with a sudden screech of laughter. She withdrew her head, and addressed her companion, Mother Jude.

“But the job will be to get these children out in time, even so. It won’t be much good to carry them one by one down a ladder, I imagine, even if a ladder can be set up. The fire is gaining rapidly, and the firemen aren’t here yet, because George is only just back.”

They mounted to the attics again. Miss Bonnet had concluded her table of exercises and the children seemed a little more controlled. It was only a matter of time, though, Mrs. Bradley decided, before there was screaming panic. Suddenly Bessie, grim-eyed, set up the languishing theme song of a film. She kept one eye on Mother Ambrose, but the nun made no objection, and after a bit the other orphans joined in.

Taking advantage of this timely assistance from Bessie, Mrs. Bradley explained the position to the nuns.

“Have to chuck ’em out into a sheet, I’d say,” said Miss Bonnet. “They won’t like it, poor little brutes, but it can’t be helped. Even if there were time to get ’em down one by one, I doubt whether the men could climb past that red-hot stuff.”

The position was now truly terrifying, and the children were kept from the windows. A sentry—Mother Benedict—was posted outside on the landing to keep watch on the progress which the fire was making up the stairs, and Mrs. Bradley herself went back to the floor below—which was burning hot to her feet and might, she knew, at any moment fall through in a rush of flame—to shout down orders to George.

The brigade, she saw, had arrived. She went back to the attics to report.

“These blasted bars!” said Miss Bonnett, tugging with maniac strength at the bars which covered the window. All the upstair Orphanage windows were barred, except for the one which opened on to the useless fire escape.

Mrs. Bradley and Mother Ambrose helped Miss Bonnet to pull. Mrs. Bradley had brought Sister Bridget upstairs with her this time, for the half-witted creature had continued to sleep through the danger. She now sat in a corner whimpering, until Mother Ambrose told her to be quiet. So she squatted down obediently, to Mrs. Bradley’s relief, and did not give any more trouble.

“I think,” said Mother Ambrose, “that we should all pray.”

“Pray, nothing!” said Miss Bonnet, from the window. “They want us to climb on the roof! I’ll go up first, if you like, and help haul the kids up. Lord, what a leap in the dark!”

“It’s an impossible jump,” said Mrs. Bradley, under her breath; but, before she could make any other suggestion, Miss Bonnet was out on the landing and had made a cat-like leap to catch at the edge of the open trap-door. She pulled herself up by her arms—a gymnast’s movement—swung her legs, and then was up and through. She lay on her stomach and stretched an arm through the opening.

“Come on, next!” she said. “Make a straight line, you girls, and nobody is to shove! Big ones first, Mother Saint Ambrose. There’ll be no one to mind the babies, else, up here. quiet!” she added, in a bellow which silenced even the terror-stricken orphans.

“They’ll never be able to jump from such a height. It’s four stories,” said Mrs. Bradley, who, assisted by Mother Ambrose, had swung herself up beside her.

“Ladder in a slant from the gatehouse roof,” said Miss Bonnet. “It’s your man. He’s a sensible feller. Push us up some of those kids, and hats off to Casabianca!” she added, with good-humoured roughness, for she was really, it was obvious, horribly frightened.

The little children were carried down first by the firemen. Miss Bonnet and Mrs. Bradley descended again through the trap-door to assist the nuns through the opening on to the roof. It was easy enough to lift Mother Benedict up, and Annie and Bessie, strong girls both, soon hauled her to safety; Mother Jude, too, was not much trouble. But lay-sister Bridget, heavy Mother Ambrose and old Mother Bartholomew taxed the strength and ingenuity of the party, who were now augmented, however, by George and one of the firemen.

In the end, the last of the orphans, children of twelve or thirteen, had to be made to jump. Most of them hung back, and it was pretty to see Miss Bonnet, obviously in her element, lobbing them into the sheet held out by the firemen on the roof of the gatehouse.

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