That nature has her moments of sympathy
with man has been noted often enough, and
generally as a new discovery; to us, who had never
known any other condition of things, it seemed entirely
right and fitting that the wind sang and sobbed in
the poplar tops, and in the lulls of it, sudden spirts
of rain spattered the already dusty roads, on that
blusterous March day when Edward and I awaited, on
the station platform, the arrival of the new tutor.
Needless to say, this arrangement had been planned
by an aunt, from some fond idea that our shy, innocent
young natures would unfold themselves during the walk
from the station, and that on the revelation of each
other’s more solid qualities that must then
inevitably ensue, an enduring friendship springing
from mutual respect might be firmly based. A
pretty dream, nothing more. For Edward,
who foresaw that the brunt of tutorial oppression would
have to be borne by him, was sulky, monosyllabic,
and determined to be as negatively disagreeable as
good manners would permit. It was therefore evident
that I would have to be spokesman and purveyor of hollow
civilities, and I was none the more amiable on that
account; all courtesies, welcomes, explanations, and
other court-chamberlain kind of business, being my
special aversion. There was much of the tempestuous
March weather in the hearts of both of us, as we sullenly
glowered along the carriage-windows of the slackening
train.
One is apt, however, to misjudge the
special difficulties of a situation; and the reception
proved, after all, an easy and informal matter.
In a trainful so uniformly bucolic, a tutor was readily
recognisable; and his portmanteau had been consigned
to the luggage-cart, and his person conveyed into
the lane, before I had discharged one of my carefully
considered sentences. I breathed more easily,
and, looking up at our new friend as we stepped out
together, remembered that we had been counting on
something altogether more arid, scholastic, and severe.
A boyish eager face and a petulant pince-nez, untidy
hair, a head of constant quick turns like
a robin’s, and a voice that kept breaking into
alto, these were all very strange and new,
but not in the least terrible.
He proceeded jerkily through the village,
with glances on this side and that; and “Charming,”
he broke out presently; “quite too charming and
delightful!”
I had not counted on this sort of
thing, and glanced for help to Edward, who, hands
in pockets, looked grimly down his nose. He had
taken his line, and meant to stick to it.
Meantime our friend had made an imaginary
spy-glass out of his fist, and was squinting through
it at something I could not perceive. “What
an exquisite bit!” he burst out; “fifteenth
century, no, yes, it is!”
I began to feel puzzled, not to say
alarmed. It reminded me of the butcher in the
Arabian Nights, whose common joints, displayed on the
shop-front, took to a startled public the appearance
of dismembered humanity. This man seemed to see
the strangest things in our dull, familiar surroundings.
“Ah!” he broke out again,
as we jogged on between hedgerows: “and
that field now backed by the downs with
the rain-cloud brooding over it, that’s
all David Cox every bit of it!”
“That field belongs to Farmer
Larkin,” I explained politely, for of course
he could not be expected to know. “I’ll
take you over to Farmer Cox’s to-morrow, if
he’s a friend of yours; but there’s nothing
to see there.”
Edward, who was hanging sullenly behind,
made a face at me, as if to say, “What sort
of lunatic have we got here?”
“It has the true pastoral character,
this country of yours,” went on our enthusiast:
“with just that added touch in cottage and farmstead,
relics of a bygone art, which makes our English landscape
so divine, so unique!”
Really this grasshopper was becoming
a burden. These familiar fields and farms, of
which we knew every blade and stick, had done nothing
that I knew of to be bespattered with adjectives in
this way. I had never thought of them as divine,
unique, or anything else. They were well,
they were just themselves, and there was an end of
it. Despairingly I jogged Edward in the ribs,
as a sign to start rational conversation, but he only
grinned and continued obdurate.
“You can see the house now,”
I remarked, presently; “and that’s Selina,
chasing the donkey in the paddock, or is
it the donkey chasing Selina? I can’t quite
make out; but it’s them, anyhow.”
Needless to say, he exploded with
a full charge of adjectives. “Exquisite!”
he rapped out; “so mellow and harmonious! and
so entirely in keeping!” (I could see from Edward’s
face that he was thinking who ought to be in keeping.)
“Such possibilities of romance, now, in those
old gables!”
“If you mean the garrets,”
I said, “there’s a lot of old furniture
in them; and one is generally full of apples; and the
bats get in sometimes, under the eaves, and flop about
till we go up with hair-brushes and things and drive
’em out; but there’s nothing else in them
that I know of.”
“Oh, but there must be more
than bats,” he cried. “Don’t
tell me there are no ghosts. I shall be deeply
disappointed if there aren’t any ghosts.”
I did not think it worth while to
reply, feeling really unequal to this sort of conversation;
besides, we were nearing the house, when my task would
be ended. Aunt Eliza met us at the door, and in
the cross-fire of adjectives that ensued both
of them talking at once, as grown-up folk have a habit
of doing we two slipped round to the back
of the house, and speedily put several solid acres
between us and civilisation, for fear of being ordered
in to tea in the drawing-room. By the time we
returned, our new importation had gone up to dress
for dinner, so till the morrow at least we were free
of him.
Meanwhile the March wind, after dropping
a while at sundown, had been steadily increasing in
volume; and although I fell asleep at my usual hour,
about midnight I was wakened by the stress and cry
of it. In the bright moonlight, wind-swung branches
tossed and swayed eerily across the blinds; there
was rumbling in chimneys, whistling in keyholes, and
everywhere a clamour and a call. Sleep was out
of the question, and, sitting up in bed, I looked
round. Edward sat up too. “I was wondering
when you were going to wake,” he said. “It’s
no good trying to sleep through this. I vote
we get up and do something.”
“I’m game,” I replied.
“Let’s play at being in a ship at sea”
(the plaint of the old house under the buffeting wind
suggested this, naturally); “and we can be wrecked
on an island, or left on a raft, whichever you choose;
but I like an island best myself, because there’s
more things on it.”
Edward on reflection negatived the
idea. “It would make too much noise,”
he pointed out. “There’s no fun playing
at ships, unless you can make a jolly good row.”
The door creaked, and a small figure
in white slipped cautiously in. “Thought
I heard you talking,” said Charlotte. “We
don’t like it; we’re afraid Selina
too. She’ll be here in a minute. She’s
putting on her new dressing-gown she’s so proud
of.”
His arms round his knees, Edward cogitated
deeply until Selina appeared, barefooted, and looking
slim and tall in the new dressing-gown. Then,
“Look here,” he exclaimed; “now we’re
all together, I vote we go and explore!”
“You’re always wanting
to explore,” I said. “What on earth
is there to explore for in this house?”
“Biscuits!” said the inspired Edward.
“Hooray! Come on!”
chimed in Harold, sitting up suddenly. He had
been awake all the time, but had been shamming asleep,
lest he should be fagged to do anything.
It was indeed a fact, as Edward had
remembered, that our thoughtless elders occasionally
left the biscuits out, a prize for the night-walking
adventurer with nerves of steel.
Edward tumbled out of bed, and pulled
a baggy old pair of knickerbockers over his bare shanks.
Then he girt himself with a belt, into which he thrust,
on the one side a large wooden pistol, on the other
an old single-stick; and finally he donned a big slouch-hat once
an uncle’s that we used for playing
Guy Fawkes and Charles-the-Second up-a-tree in.
Whatever the audience, Edward, if possible, always
dressed for his parts with care and conscientiousness;
while Harold and I, true Elizabethans, cared little
about the mounting of the piece, so long as the real
dramatic heart of it beat sound.
Our commander now enjoined on us a
silence deep as the grave, reminding us that Aunt
Eliza usually slept with an open door, past which we
had to file.
“But we’ll take the short
cut through the Blue Room,” said the wary Selina.
“Of course,” said Edward,
approvingly. “I forgot about that.
Now then! You lead the way!”
The Blue Room had in prehistoric times
been added to by taking in a superfluous passage,
and so not only had the advantage of two doors, but
enabled us to get to the head of the stairs without
passing the chamber wherein our dragon-aunt lay couched.
It was rarely occupied, except when a casual uncle
came down for the night. We entered in noiseless
file, the room being plunged in darkness, except for
a bright strip of moonlight on the floor, across which
we must pass for our exit. On this our leading
lady chose to pause, seizing the opportunity to study
the hang of her new dressing-gown. Greatly satisfied
thereat, she proceeded, after the feminine fashion,
to peacock and to pose, pacing a minuet down the moonlit
patch with an imaginary partner. This was too
much for Edward’s histrionic instincts, and
after a moment’s pause he drew his single-stick,
and with flourishes meet for the occasion, strode onto
the stage. A struggle ensued on approved lines,
at the end of which Selina was stabbed slowly and
with unction, and her corpse borne from the chamber
by the ruthless cavalier. The rest of us rushed
after in a clump, with capers and gesticulations of
delight; the special charm of the performance lying
in the necessity for its being carried out with the
dumbest of dumb shows.
Once out on the dark landing, the
noise of the storm without told us that we had exaggerated
the necessity for silence; so, grasping the tails
of each other’s nightgowns even as Alpine climbers
rope themselves together in perilous places, we fared
stoutly down the staircase-moraine, and across the
grim glacier of the hall, to where a faint glimmer
from the half-open door of the drawing-room beckoned
to us like friendly hostel-lights. Entering,
we found that our thriftless seniors had left the
sound red heart of a fire, easily coaxed into a cheerful
blaze; and biscuits a plateful smiled
at us in an encouraging sort of way, together with
the halves of a lemon, already once squeezed but still
suckable. The biscuits were righteously shared,
the lemon segments passed from mouth to mouth; and
as we squatted round the fire, its genial warmth consoling
our unclad limbs, we realised that so many nocturnal
perils had not been braved in vain.
“It’s a funny thing,”
said Edward, as we chatted, “how; I hate this
room in the daytime. It always means having your
face washed, and your hair brushed, and talking silly
company talk. But to-night it’s really quite
jolly. Looks different, somehow.”
“I never can make out,”
I said, “what people come here to tea for.
They can have their own tea at home if they like, they’re
not poor people, with jam and things, and
drink out of their saucer, and suck their fingers
and enjoy themselves; but they come here from a long
way off, and sit up straight with their feet off the
bars of their chairs, and have one cup, and talk the
same sort of stuff every time.”
Selina sniffed disdainfully.
“You don’t know anything about it,”
she said. “In society you have to call
on each other. It’s the proper thing to
do.”
“Pooh! You’re
not in society,” said Edward, politely; “and,
what’s more, you never will be.”
“Yes, I shall, some day,”
retorted Selina; “but I shan’t ask you
to come and see me, so there!”
“Wouldn’t come if you did,” growled
Edward.
“Well, you won’t get the
chance,” rejoined our sister, claiming her right
of the last word. There was no heat about these
little amenities, which made up as we understood
it the art of polite conversation.
“I don ’t like society
people,” put in Harold from the sofa, where he
was sprawling at full length, a sight the
daylight hours would have blushed to witness.
“There were some of ’em here this afternoon,
when you two had gone off to the station. Oh,
and I found a dead mouse on the lawn, and I wanted
to skin it, but I wasn’t sure I knew how, by
myself; and they came out into the garden and patted
my head, I wish people wouldn’t do
that, and one of ’em asked me to pick
her a flower. Don’t know why she couldn’t
pick it herself; but I said, ’All right, I will
if you’ll hold my mouse.’ But she
screamed, and threw it away; and Augustus (the cat)
got it, and ran away with it. I believe it was
really his mouse all the time, ’cos he’d
been looking about as if he had lost something, so
I wasn’t angry with him; but what did she
want to throw away my mouse for?”
“You have to be careful with
mice,” reflected Edward; “they’re
such slippery things. Do you remember we were
playing with a dead mouse once on the piano, and the
mouse was Robinson Crusoe, and the piano was the island,
and somehow Crusoe slipped down inside the island,
into its works, and we couldn’t get him out,
though we tried rakes and all sorts of things, till
the tuner came. And that wasn’t till a week
after, and then ”
Here Charlotte, who had been nodding
solemnly, fell over into the fender; and we realised
that the wind had dropped at last, and the house was
lapped in a great stillness. Our vacant beds seemed
to be calling to us imperiously; and we were all glad
when Edward gave the signal for retreat. At the
top of the staircase Harold unexpectedly turned mutinous,
insisting on his right to slide down the banisters
in a free country. Circumstances did not allow
of argument; I suggested frog’s-marching instead,
and frog’s-marched he accordingly was, the procession
passing solemnly across the moonlit Blue Room, with
Harold horizontal and limply submissive. Snug
in bed at last, I was just slipping off into slumber
when I heard Edward explode, with chuckle and snort.
“By Jove!” he said; “I
forgot all about it. The new tutor’s sleeping
in the Blue Room!”
“Lucky he didn’t wake
up and catch us,” I grunted, drowsily; and both
of us, without another thought on the matter, sank
into well-earned repose.
Next morning we came down to breakfast
braced to grapple with fresh adversity, but were surprised
to find our garrulous friend of the previous day he
was late in making his appearance strangely
silent and (apparently) preoccupied. Having polished
off our porridge, we ran out to feed the rabbits,
explaining to them that a beast of a tutor would prevent
their enjoying so much of our society as formerly.
On returning to the house at the fated
hour appointed for study, we were thunderstruck to
see the station-cart disappearing down the drive,
freighted with our new acquaintance. Aunt Eliza
was brutally uncommunicative; but she was overheard
to remark casually that she thought the man must be
a lunatic. In this theory we were only too ready
to concur, dismissing thereafter the whole matter from
our minds.
Some weeks later it happened that
Uncle Thomas, while paying us a flying visit, produced
from his pocket a copy of the latest weekly, Psyche:
a Journal of the Unseen; and proceeded laborously
to rid himself of much incomprehensible humour, apparently
at our expense. We bore it patiently, with the
forced grin demanded by convention, anxious to get
at the source of inspiration, which it presently appeared
lay in a paragraph circumstantially describing our
modest and humdrum habitation. “Case III.,”
it began. “The following particulars were
communicated by a young member of the Society, of
undoubted probity and earnestness, and are a chronicle
of actual and recent experience.” A fairly
accurate description of the house followed, with details
that were unmistakable; but to this there succeeded
a flood of meaningless drivel about apparitions, nightly
visitants, and the like, writ in a manner betokening
a disordered mind, coupled with a feeble imagination.
The fellow was not even original. All the old
material was there, the storm at night,
the haunted chamber, the white lady, the murder re-enacted,
and so on, already worn threadbare in many
a Christmas Number. No one was able to make head
or tail of the stuff, or of its connexion with our
quiet mansion; and yet Edward, who had always suspected
the man, persisted in maintaining that our tutor of
a brief span was, somehow or other, at the bottom
of it.