uttered a stream of expletives as he dusted himself down, while Rollison backed further into the yard, and other men arrived.
None of the newcomers saw him. He kept close to the wall, trying to estimate the chances of climbing into the next yard if they should start to search for him. In the darkness, climbing would not be easy, but there were at least three newcomers, and odds of five to one were too heavy.
He crept further away, although he could hear their heavy breathing. There was a furtive air about them all, and they spoke in whispers.
âWho was he?â asked the man with the cultured voice.
âSome fool who fancies himself,â muttered the other. âI didnât think Kemp would ask any of his posh friends to come and help him. Weâll have to put a stop to that.â
âI never see no one,â one of the newcomers said.
âI think I seed him go Jupe Street way,â volunteered another.
âHeâs scared stiff,â said the man with the gruff voice. âLetâs get away.â
âOughtnât we to look for him?â asked the man with the cultured voice.
âOn a night like this? Have some sense!â
They moved off, two of the newcomers going ahead of the couple whom Rollison had met and the third following. Rollison waited until their footsteps had faded, then pushed a hand through his hair, looking very thoughtful as he walked to the back door of the Whitingsâ house, and tapped.
After a long pause, the door opened. A faint glow of light shone from another room. A thin man was outlined against it, but Rollison could not see his face.
âW â what do you want?â His voice was unsteady.
âIf youâre Mr. Whiting, I want to see you,â said Rollison. He pushed his way past and closed the door. He heard the hissing and popping of a lighted gas jet, and widened the doorway from which the light came. It shone on a weedy looking young man with thin hair, pale features, a harassed expression.
âWho â who is it, Erny?â asked a woman from another room, in a quavering voice. âAr â are they back again?â
âI donât know,â muttered Erny Whiting. âI â No! Theyâre not!â His voice rose and his troubled expression cleared. âWhy, itâs theââ
âHush!â urged Rollison.
Whiting stood and gazed at him in silence, while a little anxious â and tired looking â woman came from the other room. She stopped abruptly when she saw Rollison, a gleam of recognition in her eyes.
âThe others might be listening outside,â said Rollison, âIâll make sure. You let Mr. Kemp in â heâs at the front.â
Mrs. Whiting turned to obey after only a momentâs hesitation. Rollison went into the yard again, but found no one. He returned to the house and was ushered into the tiny parlour. Kemp was inside, stooping slightly because the ceiling was so low. In an armchair in one corner sat a very old woman, her hair drawn tightly back from her forehead. Her face was so thin that her skin was a mass of lines and wrinkles. She looked at Rollison with bright, beady eyes â both suspicious and wary.
âWho is he?â she squeaked.
âIt â itâs Mr. Rollison,â said Whiting, nervously. âI â I somehow didnât think you would come, Mr. Rollison.â
âWe can go on from there,â smiled Rollison, leaning against a piano which took up most of one wall. âWhy didnât you open the front door as soon as we knocked?â
Whiting licked his lips.
âThey â the men told me not to.â
âDo you know who they were?â
âNo, Iâve never seen them before,â answered Whiting. âThey came about ten minutes before you â came the back way.â He licked his lips again. âThey said we wasnât to help Mr. Kemp, or go to the church â if we did, they said,