TROUBLE AT WINDLES
Se
Mr. Rufus Bennett stood at the window
of the drawing-room of Windles, looking out.
From where he stood he could see all those natural
and artificial charms which had made the place so
desirable to him when he first beheld them. Immediately
below, flower beds, bright with assorted blooms, pressed
against the ivied stone wall of the house. Beyond,
separated from these by a gravel pathway, a smooth
lawn, whose green and silky turf rivalled the lawns
of Oxford colleges, stretched to a picturesque shrubbery,
not so dense as to withhold altogether from the eye
of the observer an occasional silvery glimpse of the
lake that lay behind it. To the left, through
noble trees, appeared a white suggestion of old stable
yards; while to the right, bordering on the drive as
it swept round to a distant gate, nothing less than
a fragment of a ruined castle reared itself against
a background of firs.
It had been this sensational fragment
of Old England which had definitely captured Mr. Bennett
on his first visit to the place. He could not
have believed that the time would ever come when he
could gaze on it without any lightening of the spirits.
The explanation of his gloom was simple.
In addition to looking at the flower beds, the lawn,
the shrubbery, the stable yard, and the castle, Mr.
Bennett was also looking at the fifth heavy shower
that had fallen since breakfast. This was the
third afternoon of his tenancy. The first day
it had rained all the time. The second day it
had rained from eight till twelve-fifteen, from twelve-thirty
till four, and from five till eleven. And on
this, the third day, there had been no intermission
longer than ten minutes. It was a trying Summer.
Even the writers in the daily papers seemed mildly
surprised, and claimed that England had seen finer
Julys. Mr. Bennett, who had lived his life in
a country of warmth and sunshine, the thing affected
in much the same way as the early days of the Flood
must have affected Noah. A first startled resentment
had given place to a despair too militant to be called
resignation. And with the despair had come a
strong distaste for his fellow human beings, notably
and in particular his old friend Mr. Mortimer, who
at this moment broke impatiently in on his meditations.
“Come along, Bennett. It’s
your deal. It’s no good looking at the rain.
Looking at it won’t stop it.”
Mr. Mortimer’s nerves also had
become a little frayed by the weather.
Mr. Bennett returned heavily to the
table, where, with Mr. Mortimer as partner he was
playing one more interminable rubber of bridge against
Bream and Billie. He was sick of bridge, but there
was nothing else to do.
Mr. Bennett sat down with a grunt,
and started to deal. Half-way through the operation
the sound of rather stertorous breathing began to proceed
from beneath the table. Mr. Bennett glanced agitatedly
down, and curled his legs round his chair.
“I have fourteen cards,”
said Mr. Mortimer. “That’s the third
time you’ve mis-dealt.”
“I don’t care how many
cards you’ve got!” said Mr. Bennett with
heat. “That dog of yours is sniffing at
my ankles!”
He looked malignantly at a fine bulldog
which now emerged from its cover and, sitting down,
beamed at the company. He was a sweet-tempered
dog, handicapped by the outward appearance of a canine
plug-ugly. Murder seemed the mildest of the desires
that lay behind that rugged countenance. As a
matter of fact, what he wanted was cake. His name
was Smith, and Mr. Mortimer had bought him just before
leaving London to serve the establishment as a watch-dog.
“He won’t hurt you,” said Mr. Mortimer
carelessly.
“You keep saying that!”
replied Mr. Bennett pettishly. “How do you
know? He’s a dangerous beast, and if I had
had any notion that you were buying him, I would have
had something to say about it!”
“Whatever you might have said
would have made no difference. I am within my
legal rights in purchasing a dog. You have a dog.
At least, Wilhelmina has.”
“Yes, and Pinky-Boodles gets
on splendidly with Smith,” said Billie.
“I’ve seen them playing together.”
Mr. Bennett subsided. He was
feeling thoroughly misanthropic. He disliked
everybody, with perhaps the exception of Billie, for
whom a faint paternal fondness still lingered.
He disliked Mr. Mortimer. He disliked Bream,
and regretted that Billie had become engaged to him,
though for years such an engagement had been his dearest
desire. He disliked Jane Hubbard, now out walking
in the rain with Eustace Hignett. And he disliked
Eustace.
Eustace, he told himself, he disliked
rather more than any of the others. He resented
the young man’s presence in the house; and he
resented the fact that, being in the house, he should
go about, pale and haggard, as though he were sickening
for something. Mr. Bennett had the most violent
objection to associating with people who looked as
though they were sickening for something.
He got up and went to the window.
The rain leaped at the glass like a frolicking puppy.
It seemed to want to get inside and play with Mr.
Bennett.
Se
Mr. Bennett slept late on the following
morning. He looked at his watch on the dressing
table when he got up, and found that it was past ten.
Taking a second look to assure himself that he had
really slumbered to this unusual hour, he suddenly
became aware of something bright and yellow resting
beside the watch, and paused, transfixed, like Robinson
Crusoe staring at the footprint in the sand. If
he had not been in England, he would have said that
it was a patch of sunshine.
Mr. Bennett stared at the yellow blob
with the wistful mistrust of a traveller in a desert
who has been taken in once or twice by mirages.
It was not till he had pulled up the blind and was
looking out on a garden full of brightness and warmth
and singing birds that he definitely permitted himself
to accept the situation.
It was a superb morning. It was
as if some giant had uncorked a great bottle full
of the distilled scent of grass, trees, flowers, and
hay. Mr. Bennett rang the bell joyfully, and
presently there entered a grave, thin, intellectual-looking
man who looked like a duke, only more respectable.
This was Webster, Mr. Bennett’s valet. He
carried in one hand a small mug of hot water, reverently,
as if it were a present of jewellery.
“Good morning, sir.”
“Morning, Webster,” said Mr. Bennett.
“Rather late, eh?”
“It is” replied Webster
precisely, “a little late, sir. I would
have awakened you at the customary hour, but it was
Miss Bennett’s opinion that a rest would do
you good.”
Mr. Bennett’s sense of well-being
deepened. What more could a man want in this
world than fine weather and a dutiful daughter?
“She did, eh?”
“Yes, sir. She desired
me to inform you that, having already breakfasted,
she proposed to drive Mr. Mortimer and Mr. Bream Mortimer
into Southampton in the car. Mr. Mortimer senior
wished to buy a panama hat.”
“A panama hat!” exclaimed Mr. Bennett.
“A panama hat, sir.”
Mr. Bennett’s feeling of satisfaction
grew still greater. It was a fine day; he had
a dutiful daughter; and he was going to see Henry Mortimer
in a panama hat. Providence was spoiling him.
The valet withdrew like a duke leaving
the Royal Presence, not actually walking backwards
but giving the impression of doing so; and Mr. Bennett,
having decanted the mug of water into the basin, began
to shave himself.
Having finished shaving, he opened
the drawer in the bureau where lay his white flannel
trousers. Here at last was a day worthy of them.
He drew them out, and as he did so, something gleamed
pinkly up at him from a corner of the drawer.
His salmon-coloured bathing-suit.
Mr. Bennett started. He had not
contemplated such a thing, but, after all, why not?
There was the lake, shining through the trees, a mere
fifty yards away. What could be more refreshing?
He shed his pyjamas, and climbed into the bathing-suit.
And presently, looking like the sun on a foggy day,
he emerged from the house and picked his way with
gingerly steps across the smooth surface of the lawn.
At this moment, from behind a bush
where he had been thriftily burying a yesterday’s
bone, Smith the bulldog waddled out on to the lawn.
He drank in the exhilarating air through an upturned
nose which his recent excavations had rendered somewhat
muddy. Then he observed Mr. Bennett, and moved
gladly towards him. He did not recognise Mr. Bennett,
for he remembered his friends principally by their
respective bouquets, so he cantered silently across
the turf to take a sniff at him. He was half-way
across the lawn when some of the mud which he had inhaled
when burying the bone tickled his lungs and he paused
to cough.
Mr. Bennett whirled round; and then
with a sharp exclamation picked up his pink feet from
the velvet turf and began to run. Smith, after
a momentary pause of surprise, lumbered after him,
wheezing contentedly. This man, he felt, was
evidently one of the right sort, a merry playfellow.
Mr. Bennett continued to run; but
already he had begun to pant and falter, when he perceived
looming upon his left the ruins of that ancient castle
which had so attracted him on his first visit.
On that occasion, it had made merely an aesthetic
appeal to Mr. Bennett; now he saw in a flash that
its practical merits also were of a sterling order.
He swerved sharply, took the base of the edifice in
his stride, clutched at a jutting stone, flung his
foot at another, and, just as his pursuer arrived
and sat panting below, pulled himself on to a ledge,
where he sat with his feet hanging well out of reach.
The bulldog Smith, gazed up at him expectantly.
The game was a new one to Smith, but it seemed to
have possibilities. He was a dog who was always
perfectly willing to try anything once.
Mr. Bennett now began to address himself
in earnest to the task of calling for assistance.
His physical discomfort was acute. Insects, some
winged, some without wings but through Nature’s
wonderful law of compensation equipped
with a number of extra pairs of legs, had begun to
fit out exploring expeditions over his body. They
roamed about him as if he were some newly opened recreation
ground, strolled in couples down his neck, and made
up jolly family parties on his bare feet. And
then, first dropping like the gentle dew upon the
place beneath, then swishing down in a steady flood,
it began to rain again.
It was at this point that Mr. Bennett’s
manly spirit broke and time ceased to exist for him.
Aeons later, a voice spoke from below.
“Hullo!” said the voice.
Mr. Bennett looked down. The
stalwart form of Jane Hubbard was standing beneath
him, gazing up from under a tam o’shanter cap.
Smith, the bulldog, gambolled about her shapely feet.
“Whatever are you doing up there?”
said Jane. “I say, do you know if the car
has come back?”
“No. It has not.”
“I’ve got to go to the
doctor’s. Poor little Mr. Hignett is ill.
Oh, well, I’ll have to walk. Come along,
Smith!” She turned towards the drive, Smith
caracoling at her side.
Mr. Bennett, though free now to move,
remained where he was, transfixed. That sinister
word “ill” held him like a spell.
Eustace Hignett was ill! He had thought all along
that the fellow was sickening for something, confound
him!
“What’s the matter with
him?” bellowed Mr. Bennett after Jane Hubbard’s
retreating back.
“Eh?” queried Jane, stopping.
“What’s the matter with Hignett?”
“I don’t know.”
“Is it infectious?”
“I expect so.”
“Great Heavens!” cried
Mr. Bennett, and, lowering himself cautiously to the
ground, squelched across the dripping grass.
In the hall, Webster the valet, dry
and dignified, was tapping the barometer with the
wrist action of an ambassador knocking on the door
of a friendly monarch.
“A sharp downpour, sir,” he remarked.
“Have you been in the house all the time?”
demanded Mr. Bennett.
“Yes, sir.”
“Didn’t you hear me shouting?”
“I did fancy I heard something, sir.”
“Then why the devil didn’t you come to
me?”
“I supposed it to be the owls,
sir, a bird very frequent in this locality. They
make a sort of harsh, hooting howl, sir. I have
sometimes wondered,” said Webster, pursuing
a not uninteresting train of thought, “whether
that might be the reason of the name.”
Before Mr. Bennett could join him
in the region of speculation into which he had penetrated,
there was a grinding of brakes on the gravel outside,
and the wettest motor car in England drew up at the
front door.
Se
From Windles to Southampton is a distance
of about twenty miles; and the rain had started to
fall when the car, an open one lacking even the poor
protection of a cape hood, had accomplished half the
homeward journey. For the last ten miles Mr.
Mortimer had been nursing a sullen hatred for all
created things; and, when entering the house, he came
upon Mr. Bennett hopping about in the hall, endeavouring
to detain him and tell him some long and uninteresting
story, his venom concentrated itself upon his erstwhile
friend.
“Oh, get out of the way!”
he snapped, shaking off the other’s hand.
“Can’t you see I’m wet?”
“Wet! Wet!” Mr. Bennett’s
voice quivered with self-pity. “So am I
wet!”
“Father dear,” said Billie
reprovingly, “you really oughtn’t to have
come into the house after bathing without drying yourself.
You’ll spoil the carpet.”
“I’ve not been bathing! I’m
trying to tell you....”
“Hullo!” said Bream, with
amiable innocence, coming in at the tail-end of the
party. “Been having a jolly bathe?”
Mr. Bennett danced with silent irritation,
and, striking a bare toe against the leg of a chair,
seized his left foot and staggered into the arms of
Webster, who had been preparing to drift off to the
servants’ hall. Linked together, the two
proceeded across the carpet in a movement which suggested
in equal parts the careless vigour of the cake-walk
and the grace of the old-fashioned mazurka.
“What the devil are you doing,
you fool?” cried Mr. Bennett.
“Nothing, sir. And I should
be glad if you would accept my week’s notice,”
replied Webster calmly.
“What’s that?”
“My notice sir, to take effect
at the expiration of the current week. I cannot
acquiesce in being cursed and sworn at.”
“Oh, go to blazes!”
“Very good, sir.”
Webster withdrew like a plenipotentiary who has been
handed his papers on the declaration of war, and Mr.
Bennett, sprang to intercept Mr. Mortimer, who had
slipped by and was making for the stairs.
“Mortimer!”
“Oh, what is it?”
“That infernal dog of yours. I insist on
your destroying it.”
“What’s it been doing?”
“The savage brute chased me
all over the garden and kept me sitting up on that
damned castle the whole of the morning!”
“Father darling,” interposed
Billie, pausing on her way up the stairs, “you
mustn’t get excited. You know it’s
bad for you. I don’t expect poor old Smith
meant any harm,” she added pacifically, as she
disappeared in the direction of the landing.
“Of course he didn’t,” snapped Mr.
Mortimer. “He’s as quiet as a lamb.”
“I tell you he chased me from
one end of the garden to the other! I had to
run like a hare!”
The unfortunate Bream, whose sense
of the humorous was simple and childlike, was not
proof against the picture thus conjured up.
“C’k!” giggled Bream helplessly.
“C’k, c’k, c’k!”
Mr. Bennett turned on him. “Oh,
it strikes you as funny, does it? Well, let me
tell you that if you think you can laugh at me with with er with
one hand and and marry my daughter
with the other, you’re wrong! You can consider
your engagement at an end.”
“Oh, I say!” ejaculated Bream, abruptly
sobered.
“Mortimer!” bawled Mr.
Bennett, once more arresting the other as he was about
to mount the stairs. “Do you or do you not
intend to destroy that dog?”
“I do not.”
“I insist on your doing so. He is a menace.”
“He is nothing of the kind.
On your own showing he didn’t even bite you
once. And every dog is allowed one bite by law.
The case of Wilberforce v. Bayliss covers that
point thoroughly.”
“I don’t care about the case of Wilberforce
and Bayliss....”
“You will find that you have to. It is
a legal precedent.”
There is something about a legal precedent
which gives pause to the angriest man. Mr. Bennett
felt, as every layman feels when arguing with a lawyer,
as if he were in the coils of a python.
“Say, Mr. Bennett....” began Bream at
his elbow.
“Get out!” snarled Mr. Bennett.
“Yes, but, say...!”
The green baize door at the end of
the hall opened, and Webster appeared.
“I beg your pardon, sir,”
said Webster, “but luncheon will be served within
the next few minutes. Possibly you may wish to
make some change of costume.”
“Bring me my lunch on a tray
in my room,” said Mr. Bennett. “I
am going to bed.”
“Very good, sir.”
“But, say, Mr. Bennett....” resumed Bream.
“Grrh!” replied his ex-prospective-father-in-law,
and bounded up the stairs like a portion of the sunset
which had become detached from the main body.
Se
Even into the blackest days there
generally creeps an occasional ray of sunshine, and
there are few crises of human gloom which are not
lightened by a bit of luck. It was so with Mr.
Bennett in his hour of travail. There were lobsters
for lunch, and his passion for lobsters had made him
the talk of three New York clubs. He was feeling
a little happier when Billie came in to see how he
was getting on.
“Hullo, father. Had a nice lunch?”
“Yes,” said Mr. Bennett,
cheering up a little at the recollection. “There
was nothing wrong with the lunch.”
How little we fallible mortals know!
Even as he spoke, a tiny fragment of lobster shell,
which had been working its way silently into the tip
of his tongue, was settling down under the skin and
getting ready to cause him the most acute mental distress
which he had ever known.
“The lunch,” said Mr.
Bennett, “was excellent. Lobsters!”
He licked his lips appreciatively.
“And, talking of lobsters,”
he went on, “I suppose that boy Bream has told
you that I have broken off your engagement?”
“Yes.”
“You don’t seem very upset,”
said Mr. Bennett, who was in the mood for a dramatic
scene and felt a little disappointed.
“Oh, I’ve become a fatalist
on the subject of my engagements.”
“I don’t understand you.”
“Well, I mean, they never seem
to come to anything.” Billie gazed wistfully
at the counterpane. “Do you know, father,
I’m beginning to think that I’m rather
impulsive. I wish I didn’t do silly things
in such a hurry.”
“I don’t see where the
hurry comes in as regards that Mortimer boy. You
took ten years to make up your mind.”
“I was not thinking of Bream. Another man.”
“Great Heavens! Are you
still imagining yourself in love with young Hignett?”
“Oh, no! I can see now
that I was never in love with poor Eustace. I
was thinking of a man I got engaged to on the boat!”
Mr. Bennett sat bolt upright in bed,
and stared incredulously at his surprising daughter.
His head was beginning to swim.
“Of course I’ve misunderstood
you,” he said. “There’s a catch
somewhere and I haven’t seen it. But for
a moment you gave me the impression that you had promised
to marry some man on the boat!”
“I did!”
“But...!” Mr. Bennett
was doing sums on his fingers. “Do you mean
to tell me,” he demanded, having brought out
the answer to his satisfaction, “do you mean
to tell me that you have been engaged to three men
in three weeks?”
“Yes,” said Billie in a small voice.
“Great Godfrey! Er ?”
“No, only three.”
Mr. Bennett sank back on to his pillow with a snort.
“The trouble is,” continued
Billie, “one does things and doesn’t know
how one is going to feel about it afterwards.
You can do an awful lot of thinking afterwards, father.”
“I’m doing a lot of thinking
now,” said Mr. Bennett with austerity. “You
oughtn’t to be allowed to go around loose!”
“Well, it doesn’t matter.
I shall never get engaged again. I shall never
love anyone again.”
“Don’t tell me you are still in love with
this boat man?”
Billie nodded miserably. “I
didn’t realise it till we came down here.
But, as I sat and watched the rain, it suddenly came
over me that I had thrown away my life’s happiness.
It was as if I had been offered a wonderful jewel
and had refused it. I seemed to hear a voice reproaching
me and saying, ‘You have had your chance.
It will never come again!’”
“Don’t talk nonsense!” said Mr.
Bennett.
Billie stiffened. She had thought she had been
talking rather well.
Mr. Bennett was silent for a moment.
Then he started up with an exclamation. The mention
of Eustace Hignett had stirred his memory. “What’s
young Hignett got wrong with him?” he asked.
“Mumps.”
“Mumps! Good God!
Not mumps!” Mr. Bennett quailed. “I’ve
never had mumps! One of the most infectious ...
this is awful!... Oh, heavens! Why did I
ever come to this lazar-house!” cried Mr.
Bennett, shaken to his depths.
“There isn’t the slightest
danger, father, dear. Don’t be silly.
If I were you, I should try to get a good sleep.
You must be tired after this morning.”
“Sleep! If I only could!”
said Mr. Bennett, and did so five minutes after the
door had closed.
He awoke half an hour later with a
confused sense that something was wrong. He had
been dreaming that he was walking down Fifth Avenue
at the head of a military brass band, clad only in
a bathing suit. As he sat up in bed, blinking
in the dazed fashion of the half-awakened, the band
seemed to be playing still. There was undeniably
music in the air. The room was full of it.
It seemed to be coming up through the floor and rolling
about in chunks all round his bed.
Mr. Bennett blinked the last fragments
of sleep out of his system, and became filled with
a restless irritability. There was only one instrument
in the house which could create this infernal din the
orchestrion in the drawing-room, immediately above
which, he recalled, his room was situated.
He rang the bell for Webster.
“Is Mr. Mortimer playing that that
damned gas-engine in the drawing-room?”
“Yes, sir. Tosti’s ‘Good-bye.’
A charming air, sir.”
“Go and tell him to stop it!”
“Very good, sir.”
Mr. Bennett lay in bed and fumed.
Presently the valet returned. The music still
continued to roll about the room.
“I am sorry to have to inform
you, sir,” said Webster, “that Mr. Mortimer
declines to accede to your request.”
“Oh, he said that, did he?”
“That is the gist of his remarks, sir.”
“Very good! Then give me my dressing-gown!”
Webster swathed his employer in the
garment indicated, and returned to the kitchen, where
he informed the cook that, in his opinion, the guv’nor
was not a force, and that, if he were a betting man,
he would put his money in the forthcoming struggle
on Consul, the Almost-Human by which affectionate
nickname Mr. Mortimer senior was generally alluded
to in the servants’ hall.
Mr. Bennett, meanwhile, had reached
the drawing-room, and found his former friend lying
at full length on a sofa, smoking a cigar, a full
dozen feet away from the orchestrion, which continued
to thunder out its dirge on the passing of Summer.
“Will you turn that infernal
thing off!” said Mr. Bennett.
“No!” said Mr. Mortimer.
“Now, now, now!” said a voice.
Jane Hubbard was standing in the doorway
with a look of calm reproof on her face.
“We can’t have this, you
know!” said Jane Hubbard. “You’re
disturbing my patient.”
She strode without hesitation to the
instrument, explored its ribs with a firm finger,
pushed something, and the orchestrion broke off in
the middle of a bar. Then, walking serenely to
the door, she passed out and closed it behind her.
The baser side of his nature urged
Mr. Bennett to triumph over the vanquished.
“Now, what about it!” he said, ungenerously.
“Interfering girl!” mumbled
Mr. Mortimer, chafing beneath defeat. “I’ve
a good mind to start it again.”
“I dare you!” whooped
Mr. Bennett, reverting to the phraseology of his vanished
childhood. “Go on! I dare you!”
“I’ve a perfect legal
right.... Oh well,” he said, “there
are lots of other things I can do!”
“What do you mean?” exclaimed Mr. Bennett,
alarmed.
“Never mind!” said Mr. Mortimer, taking
up a book.
Mr. Bennett went back to bed in an uneasy frame of
mind.
He brooded for half an hour, and,
at the expiration of that period, rang for Webster
and requested that Billie should be sent to him.
“I want you to go to London,”
he said, when she appeared. “I must have
legal advice. I want you to go and see Sir Mallaby
Marlowe. Tell him that Henry Mortimer is annoying
me in every possible way and sheltering himself behind
his knowledge of the law, so that I can’t get
at him. Ask Sir Mallaby to come down here.
And, if he can’t come himself, tell him to send
someone who can advise me. His son would do, if
he knows anything about the business.”
“Oh, I’m sure he does!”
“Eh? How do you know?”
“Well, I mean, he looks as if
he does!” said Billie hastily. “He
looks so clever!”
“I didn’t notice it myself.
Well, he’ll do, if Sir Mallaby’s too busy
to come himself. I want you to go up to-night,
so that you can see him first thing to-morrow morning.
You can stop the night at the Savoy. I’ve
sent Webster to look out a train.”
“There’s a splendid train
in about an hour. I’ll take that.”
“It’s giving you a lot
of trouble,” said Mr. Bennett, with belated
consideration.
“Oh, no!” said
Billie. “I’m only too glad to be able
to do this for you, father dear!”