observing us.
Certain suspicions of his errand at Blackwater Park had already crossed
my mind. They were now increased by the gardener's inability (or
unwillingness) to tell me who the man was, and I determined to clear
the way before me, if possible, by speaking to him. The plainest
question I could put as a stranger would be to inquire if the house was
allowed to be shown to visitors. I walked up to the man at once, and
accosted him in those words.
His look and manner unmistakably betrayed that he knew who I was, and
that he wanted to irritate me into quarrelling with him. His reply was
insolent enough to have answered the purpose, if I had been less
determined to control myself. As it was, I met him with the most
resolute politeness, apologised for my involuntary intrusion (which he
called a "trespass,") and left the grounds. It was exactly as I
suspected. The recognition of me when I left Mr. Kyrle's office had
been evidently communicated to Sir Percival Glyde, and the man in black
had been sent to the Park in anticipation of my making inquiries at the
house or in the neighbourhood. If I had given him the least chance of
lodging any sort of legal complaint against me, the interference of the
local magistrate would no doubt have been turned to account as a clog
on my proceedings, and a means of separating me from Marian and Laura
for some days at least.
I was prepared to be watched on the way from Blackwater Park to the
station, exactly as I had been watched in London the day before. But I
could not discover at the time, whether I was really followed on this
occasion or not. The man in black might have had means of tracking me
at his disposal of which I was not aware, but I certainly saw nothing
of him, in his own person, either on the way to the station, or
afterwards on my arrival at the London terminus in the evening. I
reached home on foot, taking the precaution, before I approached our
own door, of walking round by the loneliest street in the
neighbourhood, and there stopping and looking back more than once over
the open space behind me. I had first learnt to use this stratagem
against suspected treachery in the wilds of Central America--and now I
was practising it again, with the same purpose and with even greater
caution, in the heart of civilised London!
Nothing had happened to alarm Marian during my absence. She asked
eagerly what success I had met with. When I told her she could not
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