There was only one really palatial
mansion in Gartley, and that was the ancient Georgian
house known as the Pyramids. Lucy’s step-father
had given the place this eccentric name on taking
up his abode there some ten years previously.
Before that time the dwelling had been occupied by
the Lord of the Manor and his family. But now
the old squire was dead, and his impecunious children
were scattered to the four quarters of the globe in
search of money with which to rebuild their ruined
fortunes. As the village was somewhat isolated
and rather unhealthily situated in a marshy country,
the huge, roomy old Grange had not been easy to let,
and had proved quite impossible to sell. Under
these disastrous circumstances, Professor Braddock who
described himself humorously as a scientific pauper had
obtained the tenancy at a ridiculously low rental,
much to his satisfaction.
Many people would have paid money
to avoid exile in these damp waste lands, which, as
it were, fringed civilization, but their loneliness
and desolation suited the Professor exactly.
He required ample room for his Egyptian collection,
with plenty of time to decipher hieroglyphics and
study perished dynasties of the Nile Valley. The
world of the present day did not interest Braddock
in the least. He lived almost continuously on
that portion of the mental plane which had to do with
the far-distant past, and only concerned himself with
physical existence, when it consisted of mummies and
mystic beetles, sepulchral ornaments, pictured documents,
hawk-headed deities and suchlike things of almost
inconceivable antiquity. He rarely walked abroad
and was invariably late for meals, save when he missed
any particular one altogether, which happened frequently.
Absent-minded in conversation, untidy in dress, unpractical
in business, dreamy in manner, Professor Braddock lived
solely for archaeology. That such a man should
have taken to himself a wife was mystery.
Yet he had been married fifteen years
before to a widow, who possessed a limited income
and one small child. It was the opportunity of
securing the use of a steady income which had decoyed
Braddock into the matrimonial snare of Mrs. Kendal.
To put it plainly, he had married the agreeable widow
for her money, although he could scarcely be called
a fortune-hunter. Like Eugene Aram, he desired
cash to assist learning, and as that scholar had committed
murder to secure what he wanted, so did the Professor
marry to obtain his ends. These were to have someone
to manage the house, and to be set free from the necessity
of earning his bread, so that he might indulge in
pursuits more pleasurable than money-making.
Mrs. Kendal was a placid, phlegmatic lady, who liked
rather than loved the Professor, and who desired him
more as a companion than as a husband. With Braddock
she did not arrange a romantic marriage so much as
enter into a congenial partnership. She wanted
a man in the house, and he desired freedom from pecuniary
embarrassment. On these lines the prosaic bargain
was struck, and Mrs. Kendal became the Professor’s
wife with entirely successful results. She gave
her husband a home, and her child a father, who became
fond of Lucy, and who considering he was
merely an amateur parent acted admirably.
But this sensible partnership lasted
only for five years. Mrs. Braddock died of a
chill on the liver and left her five hundred a year
to the Professor for life, with remainder to Lucy,
then a small girl of ten. It was at this critical
moment that Braddock became a practical man for the
first and last time in his dreamy life. He buried
his wife with unfeigned regret for he had
been sincerely attached to her in his absent-minded
way and sent Lucy to a Hampstead boarding
school. After an interview with his late wife’s
lawyer to see that the income was safe, he sought
for a house in the country, and quickly discovered
Gartley Grange, which no one would take because of
its isolation. Within three months from the burial
of Mrs. Braddock, the widower had removed himself
and his collection to Gartley, and had renamed his
new abode the Pyramids. Here he dwelt quietly
and enjoyably from his dry-as-dust point
of view for ten years, and here Lucy Kendal
had come when her education was completed. The
arrival of a marriageable young lady made no difference
in the Professor’s habits, and he hailed her
thankfully as the successor to her mother in managing
the small establishment. It is to be feared that
Braddock was somewhat selfish in his views, but the
fixed idea of archaeological research made him egotistical.
The mansion was three-story, flat-roofed,
extremely ugly and unexpectedly comfortable.
Built of mellow red brick with dingy white stone facings,
it stood a few yards back from the roadway which ran
from Gartley Fort through the village, and, at the
precise point where the Pyramids was situated, curved
abruptly through woodlands to terminate a mile away,
at Jessum, the local station of the Thames Railway
Line. An iron railing, embedded in moldering
stone work, divided the narrow front garden from the
road, and on either side of the door which
could be reached by five shallow steps grew
two small yew trees, smartly clipped and trimmed into
cones of dull green. These yews possessed some
magical significance, which Professor Braddock would
occasionally explain to chance visitors interested
in occult matters; for, amongst other things Egyptian,
the archaeologist searched into the magic of the Sons
of Khem, and insisted that there was more truth than
superstition in their enchantments.
Braddock used all the vast rooms of
the ground floor to house his collection of antiquities,
which he had acquired through many laborious years.
He dwelt entirely in this museum, as his bedroom adjoined
his study, and he frequently devoured his hurried meals
amongst the brilliantly tinted mummy cases. The
embalmed dead populated his world, and only now and
then, when Lucy insisted, did he ascend to the first
floor, which was her particular abode. Here was
the drawing-room, the dining-room and Lucy’s
boudoir; here also were sundry bedrooms, furnished
and unfurnished, in one of which Miss Kendal slept,
while the others remained vacant for chance visitors,
principally from the scientific world. The third
story was devoted to the cook, her husband who
acted as gardener and to the house parlor
maid, a composite domestic, who worked from morning
until night in keeping the great house clean.
During the day these servants attended to their business
in a comfortable basement, where the cook ruled supreme.
At the back of the mansion stretched a fairly large
kitchen garden, to which the cook’s husband
devoted his attention. This was the entire domain
belonging to the tenant, as, of course, the Professor
did not rent the arable acres and comfortable farms
which had belonged to the dispossessed family.
Everything in the house went smoothly,
as Lucy was a methodical young person, who went by
the clock and the almanac. Braddock little knew
how much of his undeniable comfort he owed to her
fostering care; for, prior to her return from school,
he had been robbed right and left by unscrupulous
domestics. When his step-daughter arrived he simply
handed over the keys and the housekeeping money a
fixed sum and gave her strict instructions
not to bother him. Miss Kendal faithfully observed
this injunction, as she enjoyed being undisputed mistress,
and knew that, so long as her step-father had his
meals, his bed, his bath and his clothes, he required
nothing save the constant society of his beloved mummies,
of which no one wished to deprive him. These he
dusted and cleansed and rearranged himself. Not
even Lucy dared to invade the museum, and the mere
mention of spring cleaning drove the Professor into
displaying frantic rage, in which he used bad language.
On returning from her walk with Archie,
the girl had lured her step-father into assuming a
rusty dress suit, which had done service for many
years, and had coaxed him into a promise to be present
at dinner. Mrs. Jasher, the lively widow of the
district, was coming, and Braddock approved of a woman
who looked up to him as the one wise man in the world.
Even science is susceptible to judicious flattery,
and Mrs. Jasher was never backward in putting her
admiration into words. Female gossip declared
that the widow wished to become the second Mrs. Braddock,
but if this was really the case, she had but small
chance of gaining her end. The Professor had
once sacrificed his liberty to secure a competence,
and, having acquired five hundred a year, was not inclined
for a second matrimonial venture. Had the widow
been a dollar heiress with a million at her back he
would not have troubled to place a ring on her finger.
And certainly Mrs. Jasher had little to gain from such
a dreary marriage, beyond a collection of rubbish as
she said and a dull country house situated
in a district inhabited solely by peasants belonging
to Saxon times.
Archie Hope left Lucy at the door
of the Pyramids and repaired to his village lodgings,
for the purpose of assuming evening dress. Lucy,
being her own housekeeper, assisted the overworked
parlor maid to lay and decorate the table before receiving
the guests. Thus Mrs. Jasher found no one in
the drawing-room to welcome her, and, taking the privilege
of old friendship, descended to beard Braddock in
his den. The Professor raised his eyes from a
newly bought scarabeus to behold a stout little lady
smiling on him from the doorway. He did not appear
to be grateful for the interruption, but Mrs. Jasher
was not at all dismayed, being a man-hunter by profession.
Besides, she saw that Braddock was in the clouds as
usual, and would have received the King himself in
the same absent-minded manner.
“Pouf! what an abominal smell!”
exclaimed the widow, holding a flimsy lace handkerchief
to her nose. “Kind of camphor-sandal-wood
charnel-house smell. I wonder you are not asphyxiated.
Pouf! Ugh! Bur-r-r
The Professor stared at her with cold,
fishy eyes. “Did you speak?”
“Oh, dear me, yes, and you don’t
even ask me to take a chair. If I were a nasty
stuffy mummy, now, you would be embracing me by, this
time. Don’t you know that I have come to
dinner, you silly man?” and she tapped him playfully
with her closed fan.
“I have had dinner,” said Braddock, egotistic
as usual.
“No, you have not.”
Mrs. Jasher spoke positively, and pointed to a small
tray of untouched food on the side table. “You
have not even had luncheon. You must live on
air, like a chameleon or on love, perhaps,”
she ended in a significantly tender tone.
But she might as well have spoken
to the granite image of Horus in the corner.
Braddock merely rubbed his chin and stared harder than
ever at the glittering visitor.
“Dear me!” he said innocently.
“I must have forgotten to eat. Lamplight!”
he looked round vaguely. “Of course, I remember
lighting the lamps. Time has gone by very rapidly.
I am really hungry.” He paused to make
sure, then repeated his remark in a more positive manner.
“Yes, I am very hungry, Mrs. Jasher.”
He looked at her as though she had just entered.
“Of course, Mrs. Jasher. Do you wish to
see me about anything particular?”
The widow frowned at his inattention,
and then laughed. It was impossible to be angry
with this dreamer.
“I have come to dinner, Professor.
Do try and wake up; you are half asleep and half starved,
too, I expect.”
“I certainly feel unaccountably
hungry,” admitted Braddock cautiously.
“Unaccountably, when you have
eaten nothing since breakfast. You weird man,
I believe you are a mummy yourself.”
But the Professor had again returned
to examine the scarabeus, this time with a powerful
magnifying glass.
“It certainly belongs to the
twentieth dynasty,” he murmured, wrinkling his
brows.
Mrs. Jasher stamped and flirted her
fan pettishly. The creature’s soul, she
decided, was certainly not in his body, and until it
came back he would continue to ignore her. With
the annoyance of a woman who is not getting her own
way, she leaned back in Braddock’s one comfortable
chair which she had unerringly selected and
examined him intently. Perhaps the gossips were
correct, and she was trying to imagine what kind of
a husband he would make. But whatever might be
her thoughts, she eyed Braddock as earnestly as Braddock
eyed the scarabeus.
Outwardly the Professor did not appear
like the savant he was reported to be. He was
small of stature, plump of body, rosy as a little Cupid,
and extraordinarily youthful, considering his fifty-odd
years of scientific wear and tear. With a smooth,
clean-shaven face, plentiful white hair like spun
silk, and neat feet and hands, he did not look his
age. The dreamy look in his small blue eyes was
rather belied by the hardness of his thin-lipped mouth,
and by the pugnacious push of his jaw. The eyes
and the dome-like forehead hinted that brain without
much originality; but the lower part of this contradictory
countenance might have belonged to a prize-fighter.
Nevertheless, Braddock’s plumpness did away
to a considerable extent with his aggressive look.
It was certainly latent, but only came to the surface
when he fought with a brother savant over some tomb-dweller
from Thebes. In the soft lamplight he looked
like a fighting cherub, and it was a pity in
the interests of art that the hairless
pink and white face did not surmount a pair of wings
rather than a rusty and ill-fitting dress suit.
“He’s nane sa dafty
as he looks,” thought Mrs. Jasher, who was Scotch,
although she claimed to be cosmopolitan. “With
his mummies he is all right, but outside those he
might be difficult to manage. And these things,”
she glanced round the shadowy room, crowded with the
dead and their earthly belongings. “I don’t
think I would care to marry the British Museum.
Too much like hard work, and I am not so young as I
was.”
The near mirror a polished
silver one, which had belonged, ages ago, to some
coquette of Memphis denied this uncomplimentary
thought, for Mrs. Jasher did not look a day over thirty,
although her birth certificate set her down as forty-five.
In the lamplight she might have passed for even younger,
so carefully had she preserved what remained to her
of youth. She assuredly was somewhat stout, and
never had been so tall as she desired to be.
But the lines of her plump figure were still discernible
in the cunningly cut gown, and she carried her little
self with such mighty dignity that people overlooked
the mortifying height of a trifle over five feet.
Her features were small and neat, but her large blue
eyes were so noticeable and melting that those on whom
she turned them ignored the lack of boldness in chin
and nose. Her hair was brown and arranged in
the latest fashion, while her complexion was so fresh
and pink that, if she did paint as jealous
women averred she must have been quite
an artist with the hare’s foot and the rouge
pot and the necessary powder puff.
Mrs. Jasher’s clothes repaid
the thought she expended upon them, and she was artistic
in this as in other things. Dressed in a crocus-yellow
gown, with short sleeves to reveal her beautiful arms,
and cut low to display her splendid bust, she looked
perfectly dressed. A woman would have declared
the wide-netted black lace with which the dress was
draped to be cheap, and would have hinted that the
widow wore too many jewels in her hair, on her corsage,
round her arms, and ridiculously gaudy rings on her
fingers. This might have been true, for Mrs. Jasher
sparkled like the Milky Way at every movement; but
the gleam of gold and the flash of gems seemed to
suit her opulent beauty. Her slightest movement
wafted around her a strange Chinese perfume, which
she obtained so she said from
a friend of her late husband’s who was in the
British Embassy at Pekin. No one possessed this
especial perfume but Mrs. Jasher, and anyone who had
previously met her, meeting her in the darkness, could
have guessed at her identity. With a smile to
show her white teeth, with her golden-hued dress and
glittering jewels, the pretty widow glowed in that
glimmering room like a tropical bird.
The Professor raised his dreamy eyes
and laid the beetle on one side, when his brain fully
grasped that this charming vision was waiting to be
entertained. She was better to look upon even
than the beloved scarabeus, and he advanced to shake
hands as though she had just entered the room.
Mrs. Jasher knowing his ways rose
to extend her hand, and the two small, stout figures
looked absurdly like a pair of chubby Dresden ornaments
which had stepped from the mantelshelf.
“Dear lady, I am glad to see
you. You have you have” the
Professor reflected, and then came back with a rush
to the present century “you have
come to dinner, if I mistake not.”
“Lucy asked me a week ago,”
she replied tartly, for no woman likes to be neglected
for a mere beetle, however ancient.
“Then you will certainly get
a good dinner,” said Braddock, waving his plump
white hands. “Lucy is an excellent housekeeper.
I have no fault to find with her no fault
at all. But she is obstinate oh, very
obstinate, as her mother was. Do you know, dear
lady, that in a papyrus scroll which I lately acquired
I found the recipe for a genuine Egyptian dish, which
Amenemha the last Pharaoh of the eleventh
dynasty, you know might have eaten, and
probably did eat. I desired Lucy to serve it
to-night, but she refused, much to my annoyance.
The ingredients, which had to do with roasted gazelle,
were oil and coriander seed and if my memory
serves me asafoetida.”
“Ugh!” Mrs. Jasher’s
handkerchief went again to her mouth. “Say
no more, Professor; your dish sounds horrid.
I don’t wish to eat it, and be turned into a
mummy before my time.”
“You would make a really beautiful
mummy,” said Braddock, paying what he conceived
was a compliment; “and, should you die, I shall
certainly attend to your embalming, if you prefer
that to cremation.”
“You dreadful man!” cried
the widow, turning pale and shrinking. “Why,
I really believe that you would like to see me packed
away in one of those disgusting coffins.”
“Disgusting!” cried the
outraged Professor, striking one of the brilliantly
tinted cases. “Can you call so beautiful
a specimen of sepulchral art disgusting? Look
at the colors, at the regularity of the hieroglyphics why,
the history of the dead is set out in this magnificent
series of pictures.” He adjusted his pince-nez
and began to read, “The Osirian, Scemiophis
that is a female name, Mrs. Jasher who ”
“I don’t want to have
my history written on my coffin,” interrupted
the widow hysterically, for this funereal talk frightened
her. “It would take much more space than
a mummy case upon which to write it. My life
has been volcanic, I can tell you. By the way,”
she added hurriedly, seeing that Braddock was on the
eve of resuming the reading, “tell me about
your Inca mummy. Has it arrived?”
The Professor immediately followed
the false trail. “Not yet,” he said
briskly, rubbing his smooth hands, “but in three
days I expect The Diver will be at Pierside, and Sidney
will bring the mummy on here. I shall unpack
it at once and learn exactly how the ancient Peruvians
embalmed their dead. Doubtless they learned the
art from ”
“The Egyptians,” ventured Mrs. Jasher
rashly.
Braddock glared. “Nothing
of the sort, dear lady,” he snorted angrily.
“Absurd, ridiculous! I am inclined to believe
that Egypt was merely a colony of that vast island
of Atlantis mentioned by Plato. There if
my theory is correct civilization begun,
and the kings of Atlantis doubtless the
gods of historical tribes governed the whole
world, including that portion which we now term South
America.”
“Do you mean to say that there
were Yankees in those days?” inquired Mrs. Jasher
frivolously.
The Professor tucked his hands under
his shabby coattails and strode up and down the room
warming his rage, which was provoked by such ignorance.
“Good heavens, madam, where
have you lived?” he exclaimed explosively “are
you a fool, or merely an ignorant woman? I am
talking of prehistoric times, thousands of years ago,
when you were probably a stray atom embedded in the
slime.”
“Oh, you horrid creature!”
cried Mrs. Jasher indignantly, and was about to give
Braddock her opinion, if only to show him that she
could hold her own, when the door opened.
“How are you, Mrs. Jasher?” said Lucy,
advancing.
“Here am I and here is Archie. Dinner is
ready. And you ”
“I am very hungry,” said
Mrs. Jasher. “I have been called an atom
of the slime,” then she laughed and took possession
of young Hope.
Lucy wrinkled her brow; she did not
approve of the widow’s man-annexing instinct.