"I'm going to take the covering off your head, do you understand?"
I stood perfectly still, petrified.
"Listen to me, Flavia, and listen carefully. If you don't do exactly as I say, I'll kill you. It's that simple. Do you understand?"
I nodded my head a little.
"Good. Now keep still."
I could feel him tugging roughly at the knots he had tied in his jacket, and almost at once its slick silk lining began to slide across my face, then dropped away entirely.
The beam of his torch hit me like a hammer blow, blinding me with light.
I recoiled in shock. Flashing stars and patches of black flew alternately across my field of vision. I had been so long in darkness that even the light of a single match would have been excruciating, but Pemberton was shining a powerful torch directly—and deliberately—into my eyes.
Unable to throw up my hands to shield myself, I could only wrench my head away to one side, squeeze my eyes shut, and wait for the nausea to subside.
"Painful, isn't it?" he said. "But not half so painful as what I'm going to do if you lie to me again."
I opened my stinging eyes and tried to focus them on a dark corner of the pit.
"Look at me!" he demanded.
I turned my head and squinted at him with what must have been a truly horrible grimace. I could see nothing of the man behind the round lens of his torch, whose fierce beam was still burning into my brain like a gigantic white desert sun.
Slowly, taking his time about it, he swung the glaring beam away and pointed it at the floor. Somewhere behind the light he was no more than a voice in the darkness.
"You lied to me."
I gave something like a shrug.
"You lied to me," Pemberton repeated more loudly, and this time I could hear the strain in his voice. "There was nothing hidden in that clock but the Penny Black."
So he
"Mngg," I said.
Pemberton thought this over for a moment but could make nothing of it.
"I'm going to take the handkerchief out of your mouth, but first let me show you something."
He picked up his tweed jacket from the floor of the pit and reached into the pocket. When his hand came out, it was holding a shiny object of glass and metal. It was Bonepenny's syringe! He held it out for my inspection.
"You were looking for this, weren't you? At the inn
He laughed through his nose like a pig and sat down on the steps. Holding the torch between his knees, he held the syringe upright as he rummaged once more in the jacket and pulled out a small brown bottle. I barely had time to read the label before he removed the stopper and swiftly filled the syringe.
"I expect you know what this stuff is, don't you, Miss Smart-Pants?"
I met his eye but gave no other sign I'd heard him.
"And don't think I don't know precisely how and where to inject it. I didn't spend all those hours in the dissecting room at the London Hospital for nothing. Once I'd knocked out old Bony, the actual injection was almost ridiculously simple: angle in a bit to the side, through the
Just as I had deduced! But now I knew
"Now listen," he said. "I'm going to take that hand kerchief out of your mouth and you are going to tell me what you've done with the Ulster Avengers. One wrong word. one wrong move and."
Holding the syringe upright, almost touching my nose, he squeezed the plunger slightly. A few drops of the carbon tetrachloride appeared for an instant, like dew, at the point of the needle, then dripped onto the floor. My nose caught the familiar reek of the stuff.
Pemberton put the torch on the steps and adjusted its position to illuminate my face. He placed the syringe beside it.
"Open," he said.
This is what rushed through my mind: He would stick a thumb and forefinger into my mouth to remove the handkerchief. I would bite down with all my might—bite them clean off!
But then what? I was still bound hand and foot, and even badly bitten, Pemberton could easily kill me.
I opened my aching jaws a little.
"Wider," he said, holding back. Then quick as a wink he darted in and fished the sodden handkerchief from my mouth. For a single instant the light of the torch was blocked by the shadow of his hand, so that he did not see, as I saw, the slightest flash of orange as the wet ball dropped in darkness to the floor.
"Thank you," I whispered hoarsely, making my first move in the second part of the game.
Pemberton seemed taken aback.
"Someone must have found them," I croaked. "The stamps, I mean. I put them in the clock—I swear it."