CHAPTER XXXVI
THE AFFAIR UP AT RANNOCH
"AND the crew?" I asked, after a pause.
"They were, of course, well paid, and were kept in ignorance of what the supposed owner and his friends did ashore."
"But Oberg's connection with it?" I asked, surprised at those revelations.
"Ah!" exclaimed Muriel. The ingenuity of that crafty villain is fiendish. Before he got into the Czar's favour he owed my father a large sum, and then sought how to evade repayment. By means of his spies he discovered the real purpose of the cruises of the Iris — for I was often taken on board with a maid in order to allay any suspicion that might arise if only men were cruising. Then he not only compelled my father to cancel the debt, but he impressed the vessel and those who owned and navigated it in the secret service of Russia. A dozen times did we make attempts to obtain secret papers from Italian, French and English dockyards, but only once in the case of Malta and once at Toulon did we succeed. Ah! Mr. Gregg," she added, "you do not know all the anxiety I suffered, how at every hour we were in danger of
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