Sarah Brown was not long left alone that night to look at the strip of moonlight on the cold ashes of her fireplace. The Shop below shook suddenly with many footfalls, and the metallic officious barking of the Dog David rent the still air of her cell.
A man’s voice at the foot of the stairs said: “I can hear a dog barking.” And a woman’s voice followed it: “Angela, dear, is that you?”
Sarah Brown was only aware of a vague and irksome disturbance. She groped to her door, opened it, and shouted miserably: “Go away, policeman, go away. She is not here.”
Lady Arabel came up, flashing an electric torch.
“My dear, you look dretfully ill. Why look, you are trembling. Why look, your little dog is making your counterpane muddy. Don’t be afraid for Angela, we are all here to try and help her.”
“All here?”
“Yes, Meta and the Mayor and Mr. Tovey and Mr. Frere. Let me help you into bed, and then you shall tell me what you know of her. You have had a dretfully trying time.”
“I am well,” said Sarah Brown ungraciously. “You are none of you going to help the witch without me.”
“Ah, this is all very dretful,” sighed Lady Arabel. “Most foolish of us to come here all together like this, after the policeman took our names and addresses, and was dretfully impertinent and suspicious. But Meta insisted. I quite expect to spend the next twenty-four hours in gaol, or else to be shot for Offence of the Realm. In fact, speaking as a ratepayer, I think the police ought to have done it before. Still, Meta thought we might perhaps be able to help Angela.... Meta has many friends who seem influential ... but so talkative, my dear.”
She led the way downstairs. Mr. Tovey and the Mayor were talking at the foot of the stairs, Mr. Frere was listening sardonically. As Sarah Brown went past them into the Shop, she smelt the unflower-like scent that always denoted the presence of Miss Ford. Sarah Brown herself was accompanied by nothing more seductive than a faint smell of gasoline, showing that her clothes had lately been home-cleaned. In the darkness of the Shop she saw Miss Ford stooping, trying to shut the big difficult drawer in which the witch kept her magic.
“It is frightfully explosive,” said Sarah Brown.
Miss Ford started and straightened her back. “Ah, Miss Brown.... I was just looking about....”
Sarah Brown sat gasping on the counter, and the rest of the party re-entered the Shop, bringing the lantern.
“How very absurd all this is,” said Miss Ford nervously,—“taking such a great deal of trouble about a necessitous case.”
“America is in my mind,” said Lady Arabel. “If we could get her there. Anybody who has done anything silly goes to America. Indeed, if I remember rightly, America is entirely populated with fugitives from somewhere else. So dretfully confusing for the Red Indians. They say the story of the Tower of Babel was only a prophecy about the Woolworth Building—”