That day was destined to be an eventful
one, for when I entered the house and found Eliza
ensconced in the upper hall on a chair, with Mary
Anne doing her best to stifle her with household ammonia,
and Liddy rubbing her wrists whatever good
that is supposed to do I knew that the
ghost had been walking again, and this time in daylight.
Eliza was in a frenzy of fear.
She clutched at my sleeve when I went close to her,
and refused to let go until she had told her story.
Coming just after the fire, the household was demoralized,
and it was no surprise to me to find Alex and the
under-gardener struggling down-stairs with a heavy
trunk between them.
“I didn’t want to do it,
Miss Innes,” Alex said. “But she
was so excited, I was afraid she would do as she said drag
it down herself, and scratch the staircase.”
I was trying to get my bonnet off
and to keep the maids quiet at the same time.
“Now, Eliza, when you have washed your face
and stopped bawling,” I said, “come into
my sitting-room and tell me what has happened.”
Liddy put away my things without speaking.
The very set of her shoulders expressed disapproval.
“Well,” I said, when the
silence became uncomfortable, “things seem to
be warming up.”
Silence from Liddy, and a long sigh.
“If Eliza goes, I don’t
know where to look for another cook.” More
silence.
“Rosie is probably a good cook.”
Sniff.
“Liddy,” I said at last,
“don’t dare to deny that you are having
the time of your life. You positively gloat
in this excitement. You never looked better.
It’s my opinion all this running around, and
getting jolted out of a rut, has stirred up that torpid
liver of yours.”
“It’s not myself I’m
thinking about,” she said, goaded into speech.
“Maybe my liver was torpid, and maybe it wasn’t;
but I know this: I’ve got some feelings
left, and to see you standing at the foot of that
staircase shootin’ through the door I’ll
never be the same woman again.”
“Well, I’m glad of that anything
for a change,” I said. And in came Eliza,
flanked by Rosie and Mary Anne.
Her story, broken with sobs and corrections
from the other two, was this: At two o’clock
(two-fifteen, Rosie insisted) she had gone up-stairs
to get a picture from her room to show Mary Anne. (A
picture of a lady, Mary Anne interposed.) She
went up the servants’ staircase and along the
corridor to her room, which lay between the trunk-room
and the unfinished ball-room. She heard a sound
as she went down the corridor, like some one moving
furniture, but she was not nervous. She thought
it might be men examining the house after the fire
the night before, but she looked in the trunk-room
and saw nobody.
She went into her room quietly.
The noise had ceased, and everything was quiet.
Then she sat down on the side of her bed, and, feeling
faint she was subject to spells ("I
told you that when I came, didn’t I, Rosie?”
“Yes’m, indeed she did!") she
put her head down on her pillow and
“Took a nap. All right!” I said.
“Go on.”
“When I came to, Miss Innes,
sure as I’m sittin’ here, I thought I’d
die. Somethin’ hit me on the face, and
I set up, sudden. And then I seen the plaster
drop, droppin’ from a little hole in the wall.
And the first thing I knew, an iron bar that long”
(fully two yards by her measure) “shot through
that hole and tumbled on the bed. If I’d
been still sleeping” ("Fainting,” corrected
Rosie) “I’d ‘a’ been hit on
the head and killed!”
“I wisht you’d heard her
scream,” put in Mary Anne. “And her
face as white as a pillow-slip when she tumbled down
the stairs.”
“No doubt there is some natural
explanation for it, Eliza,” I said. “You
may have dreamed it, in your ‘fainting’
attack. But if it is true, the metal rod and
the hole in the wall will show it.”
Eliza looked a little bit sheepish.
“The hole’s there all
right, Miss Innes,” she said. “But
the bar was gone when Mary Anne and Rosie went up
to pack my trunk.”
“That wasn’t all,”
Liddy’s voice came funereally from a corner.
“Eliza said that from the hole in the wall a
burning eye looked down at her!”
“The wall must be at least six
inches thick,” I said with asperity. “Unless
the person who drilled the hole carried his eyes on
the ends of a stick, Eliza couldn’t possibly
have seen them.”
But the fact remained, and a visit
to Eliza’s room proved it. I might jeer
all I wished: some one had drilled a hole in the
unfinished wall of the ball-room, passing between
the bricks of the partition, and shooting through
the unresisting plaster of Eliza’s room with
such force as to send the rod flying on to her bed.
I had gone up-stairs alone, and I confess the thing
puzzled me: in two or three places in the wall
small apertures had been made, none of them of any
depth. Not the least mysterious thing was the
disappearance of the iron implement that had been
used.
I remembered a story I read once about
an impish dwarf that lived in the spaces between the
double walls of an ancient castle. I wondered
vaguely if my original idea of a secret entrance to
a hidden chamber could be right, after all, and if
we were housing some erratic guest, who played pranks
on us in the dark, and destroyed the walls that he
might listen, hidden safely away, to our amazed investigations.
Mary Anne and Eliza left that afternoon,
but Rosie decided to stay. It was about five
o’clock when the hack came from the station to
get them, and, to my amazement, it had an occupant.
Matthew Geist, the driver, asked for me, and explained
his errand with pride.
“I’ve brought you a cook,
Miss Innes,” he said. “When the message
came to come up for two girls and their trunks, I
supposed there was something doing, and as this here
woman had been looking for work in the village, I
thought I’d bring her along.”
Already I had acquired the true suburbanite
ability to take servants on faith; I no longer demanded
written and unimpeachable references. I, Rachel
Innes, have learned not to mind if the cook sits down
comfortably in my sitting-room when she is taking the
orders for the day, and I am grateful if the silver
is not cleaned with scouring soap. And so that
day I merely told Liddy to send the new applicant in.
When she came, however, I could hardly restrain a
gasp of surprise. It was the woman with the
pitted face.
She stood somewhat awkwardly just
inside the door, and she had an air of self-confidence
that was inspiring. Yes, she could cook; was
not a fancy cook, but could make good soups and desserts
if there was any one to take charge of the salads.
And so, in the end, I took her. As Halsey said,
when we told him, it didn’t matter much about
the cook’s face, if it was clean.
I have spoken of Halsey’s restlessness.
On that day it seemed to be more than ever a resistless
impulse that kept him out until after luncheon.
I think he hoped constantly that he might meet Louise
driving over the hills in her runabout: possibly
he did meet her occasionally, but from his continued
gloom I felt sure the situation between them was unchanged.
Part of the afternoon I believe he
read Gertrude and I were out, as I have
said, and at dinner we both noticed that something
had occurred to distract him. He was disagreeable,
which is unlike him, nervous, looking at his watch
every few minutes, and he ate almost nothing.
He asked twice during the meal on what train Mr.
Jamieson and the other detective were coming, and
had long periods of abstraction during which he dug
his fork into my damask cloth and did not hear when
he was spoken to. He refused dessert, and left
the table early, excusing himself on the ground that
he wanted to see Alex.
Alex, however, was not to be found.
It was after eight when Halsey ordered the car, and
started down the hill at a pace that, even for him,
was unusually reckless. Shortly after, Alex reported
that he was ready to go over the house, preparatory
to closing it for the night. Sam Bohannon came
at a quarter before nine, and began his patrol of the
grounds, and with the arrival of the two detectives
to look forward to, I was not especially apprehensive.
At half-past nine I heard the sound
of a horse driven furiously up the drive. It
came to a stop in front of the house, and immediately
after there were hurried steps on the veranda.
Our nerves were not what they should have been, and
Gertrude, always apprehensive lately, was at the door
almost instantly. A moment later Louise had burst
into the room and stood there bareheaded and breathing
hard!
“Where is Halsey?” she
demanded. Above her plain black gown her eyes
looked big and somber, and the rapid drive had brought
no color to her face. I got up and drew forward
a chair.
“He has not come back,”
I said quietly. “Sit down, child; you are
not strong enough for this kind of thing.”
I don’t think she even heard me.
“He has not come back?”
she asked, looking from me to Gertrude. “Do
you know where he went? Where can I find him?”
“For Heaven’s sake, Louise,”
Gertrude burst out, “tell us what is wrong.
Halsey is not here. He has gone to the station
for Mr. Jamieson. What has happened?”
“To the station, Gertrude? You are sure?”
“Yes,” I said. “Listen.
There is the whistle of the train now.”
She relaxed a little at our matter-of-fact
tone, and allowed herself to sink into a chair.
“Perhaps I was wrong,”
she said heavily. “He will be
here in a few moments if everything is
right.”
We sat there, the three of us, without
attempt at conversation. Both Gertrude and I
recognized the futility of asking Louise any questions:
her reticence was a part of a rôle she had assumed.
Our ears were strained for the first throb of the
motor as it turned into the drive and commenced the
climb to the house. Ten minutes passed, fifteen,
twenty. I saw Louise’s hands grow rigid
as they clutched the arms of her chair. I watched
Gertrude’s bright color slowly ebbing away, and
around my own heart I seemed to feel the grasp of a
giant hand.
Twenty-five minutes, and then a sound.
But it was not the chug of the motor: it was
the unmistakable rumble of the Casanova hack.
Gertrude drew aside the curtain and peered into the
darkness.
“It’s the hack, I am sure,”
she said, evidently relieved. “Something
has gone wrong with the car, and no wonder the
way Halsey went down the hill.”
It seemed a long time before the creaking
vehicle came to a stop at the door. Louise rose
and stood watching, her hand to her throat. And
then Gertrude opened the door, admitting Mr. Jamieson
and a stocky, middle-aged man. Halsey was not
with them. When the door had closed and Louise
realized that Halsey had not come, her expression changed.
From tense watchfulness to relief, and now again to
absolute despair, her face was an open page.
“Halsey?” I asked unceremoniously,
ignoring the stranger. “Did he not meet
you?”
“No.” Mr. Jamieson
looked slightly surprised. “I rather expected
the car, but we got up all right.”
“You didn’t see him at
all?” Louise demanded breathlessly.
Mr. Jamieson knew her at once, although
he had not seen her before. She had kept to her
rooms until the morning she left.
“No, Miss Armstrong,”
he said. “I saw nothing of him. What
is wrong?”
“Then we shall have to find
him,” she asserted. “Every instant
is precious. Mr. Jamieson, I have reason for
believing that he is in danger, but I don’t
know what it is. Only he must be found.”
The stocky man had said nothing.
Now, however, he went quickly toward the door.
“I’ll catch the hack down
the road and hold it,” he said. “Is
the gentleman down in the town?”
“Mr. Jamieson,” Louise
said impulsively, “I can use the hack. Take
my horse and trap outside and drive like mad.
Try to find the Dragon Fly it ought to
be easy to trace. I can think of no other way.
Only, don’t lose a moment.”
The new detective had gone, and a
moment later Jamieson went rapidly down the drive,
the cob’s feet striking fire at every step.
Louise stood looking after them. When she turned
around she faced Gertrude, who stood indignant, almost
tragic, in the hall.
“You know what threatens
Halsey, Louise,” she said accusingly. “I
believe you know this whole horrible thing, this mystery
that we are struggling with. If anything happens
to Halsey, I shall never forgive you.”
Louise only raised her hands despairingly
and dropped them again.
“He is as dear to me as he is
to you,” she said sadly. “I tried
to warn him.”
“Nonsense!” I said, as
briskly as I could. “We are making a lot
of trouble out of something perhaps very small.
Halsey was probably late he is always
late. Any moment we may hear the car coming up
the road.”
But it did not come. After a
half-hour of suspense, Louise went out quietly, and
did not come back. I hardly knew she was gone
until I heard the station hack moving off. At
eleven o’clock the telephone rang. It
was Mr. Jamieson.
“I have found the Dragon Fly,
Miss Innes,” he said. “It has collided
with a freight car on the siding above the station.
No, Mr. Innes was not there, but we shall probably
find him. Send Warner for the car.”
But they did not find him. At
four o’clock the next morning we were still
waiting for news, while Alex watched the house and
Sam the grounds. At daylight I dropped into
exhausted sleep. Halsey had not come back, and
there was no word from the detective.