A CROWDED NIGHT
Se
If there is one thing more than another
which weighs upon the mind of a story-teller as he
chronicles the events which he has set out to describe,
it is the thought that the reader may be growing impatient
with him for straying from the main channel of his
tale and devoting himself to what are, after all,
minor developments. This story, for instance,
opened with Mrs. Horace Hignett, the world-famous writer
on Theosophy, going over to America to begin a lecturing-tour;
and no one realises more keenly than I do that I have
left Mrs. Hignett flat. I have thrust that great
thinker into the background and concentrated my attention
on the affairs of one who is both her mental and her
moral inferior, Samuel Marlowe. I seem at this
point to see the reader a great brute of
a fellow with beetling eyebrows and a jaw like the
ram of a battleship, the sort of fellow who is full
of determination and will stand no nonsense rising
to remark that he doesn’t care what happened
to Samuel Marlowe and that what he wants to know is,
how Mrs. Hignett made out on her lecturing-tour.
Did she go big in Buffalo? Did she have ’em
tearing up the seats in Schenectady? Was she a
riot in Chicago and a cyclone in St. Louis? Those
are the points on which he desires information, or
give him his money back.
I cannot supply the information.
And, before you condemn me, let me hastily add that
the fault is not mine but that of Mrs. Hignett herself.
The fact is, she never went to Buffalo. Schenectady
saw nothing of her. She did not get within a
thousand miles of Chicago, nor did she penetrate to
St. Louis. For the very morning after her son
Eustace sailed for England in the liner “Atlantic,”
she happened to read in the paper one of those abridged
passenger-lists which the journals of New York are
in the habit of printing, and got a nasty shock when
she saw that, among those whose society Eustace would
enjoy during the voyage, was “Miss Wilhelmina
Bennett, daughter of J. Rufus Bennett of Bennett,
Mandelbaum and Co.”. And within five minutes
of digesting this information, she was at her desk
writing out telegrams cancelling all her engagements.
Iron-souled as this woman was, her fingers trembled
as she wrote. She had a vision of Eustace and
the daughter of J. Rufus Bennett strolling together
on moonlit decks, leaning over rails damp with sea-spray
and, in short, generally starting the whole trouble
all over again.
In the height of the tourist season
it is not always possible for one who wishes to leave
America to spring on to the next boat. A long
morning’s telephoning to the offices of the Cunard
and the White Star brought Mrs. Hignett the depressing
information that it would be a full week before she
could sail for England. That meant that the inflammable
Eustace would have over two weeks to conduct an uninterrupted
wooing, and Mrs. Hignett’s heart sank, till
suddenly she remembered that so poor a sailor as her
son was not likely to have had leisure for any strolling
on the deck during the voyage on the “Atlantic.”
Having realised this, she became calmer
and went about her preparations for departure with
an easier mind. The danger was still great, but
there was a good chance that she might be in time
to intervene. She wound up her affairs in New
York, and on the following Wednesday, boarded the
“Nuronia” bound for Southampton.
The “Nuronia” is one of
the slowest of the Cunard boats. It was built
at a time when delirious crowds used to swoon on the
dock if an ocean liner broke the record by getting
across in nine days. It rolled over to Cherbourg,
dallied at that picturesque port for some hours, then
sauntered across the Channel and strolled into Southampton
Water in the evening of the day on which Samuel Marlowe
had sat in the lane plotting with Webster, the valet.
At almost the exact moment when Sam, sidling through
the windows of the drawing-room, slid into the cupboard
behind the piano, Mrs. Hignett was standing at the
Customs barrier telling the officials that she had
nothing to declare.
Mrs. Hignett was a general who believed
in forced marches. A lesser woman might have
taken the boat-train to London and proceeded to Windles
at her ease on the following afternoon. Mrs. Hignett
was made of sterner stuff. Having fortified herself
with a late dinner, she hired a car and set out on
the cross-country journey. It was only when the
car, a genuine antique, had broken down three times
in the first ten miles, that she directed the driver
to take her instead to the “Blue Boar”
in Windlehurst, where she arrived, tired but thankful
to have reached it at all, at about eleven o’clock.
At this point many, indeed most, women
would have gone to bed; but the familiar Hampshire
air and the knowledge that half an hour’s walking
would take her to her beloved home acted on Mrs. Hignett
like a restorative. One glimpse of Windles she
felt that she must have before she retired for the
night, if only to assure herself that it was still
there. She had a cup of coffee and a sandwich
brought to her by the night-porter whom she had roused
from sleep, for bedtime is early in Windlehurst, and
then informed him that she was going for a short walk
and would ring when she returned.
Her heart leaped joyfully as she turned
in at the drive gates of her home and felt the well-remembered
gravel crunching under her feet. The silhouette
of the ruined castle against the summer sky gave her
the feeling which all returning wanderers know.
And, when she stepped on to the lawn and looked at
the black bulk of the house, indistinct and shadowy
with its backing of trees, tears came into her eyes.
She experienced a rush of emotion which made her feel
quite faint, and which lasted until, on tiptoeing
nearer to the house in order to gloat more adequately
upon it, she perceived that the French windows of the
drawing-room were standing ajar. Sam had left
them like this in order to facilitate departure, if
a hurried departure should by any mischance be rendered
necessary, and drawn curtains had kept the household
from noticing the fact.
All the proprietor in Mrs. Hignett
was roused. This, she felt indignantly, was the
sort of thing she had been afraid would happen the
moment her back was turned. Evidently laxity one
might almost say anarchy had set in directly
she had removed the eye of authority. She marched
to the window and pushed it open. She had now
completely abandoned her kindly scheme of refraining
from rousing the sleeping house and spending the night
at the inn. She stepped into the drawing-room
with the single-minded purpose of routing Eustace out
of his sleep and giving him a good talking-to for
having failed to maintain her own standard of efficiency
among the domestic staff. If there was one thing
on which Mrs. Horace Hignett had always insisted it
was that every window in the house must be closed at
lights-out.
She pushed the curtains apart with
a rattle and, at the same moment, from the direction
of the door there came a low but distinct gasp which
made her resolute heart jump and flutter. It was
too dark to see anything distinctly, but, in the instant
before it turned and fled, she caught sight of a shadowy
male figure, and knew that her worst fears had been
realised. The figure was too tall to be Eustace,
and Eustace, she knew, was the only man in the house.
Male figures, therefore, that went flitting about
Windles, must be the figures of burglars.
Mrs. Hignett, bold woman though she
was, stood for an instant spell-bound, and for one
moment of not unpardonable panic tried to tell herself
that she had been mistaken. Almost immediately,
however, there came from the direction of the hall
a dull chunky sound as though something soft had been
kicked, followed by a low gurgle and the noise of
staggering feet. Unless he were dancing a pas
seul out of sheer lightness of heart, the nocturnal
visitor must have tripped over something.
The latter theory was the correct
one. Montagu Webster was a man who, at many a
subscription ball, had shaken a gifted dancing-pump,
and nothing in the proper circumstances pleased him
better than to exercise the skill which had become
his as the result of twelve private lessons at half-a-crown
a visit; but he recognised the truth of the scriptural
adage that there is a time for dancing, and that this
was not it. His only desire when, stealing into
the drawing-room he had been confronted through the
curtains by a female figure, was to get back to his
bedroom undetected. He supposed that one of the
feminine members of the house-party must have been
taking a stroll in the grounds, and he did not wish
to stay and be compelled to make laborious explanations
of his presence there in the dark. He decided
to postpone the knocking on the cupboard door, which
had been the signal arranged between himself and Sam,
until a more suitable occasion. In the meantime
he bounded silently out into the hall, and instantaneously
tripped over the portly form of Smith, the bulldog,
who, roused from a light sleep to the knowledge that
something was going on, and being a dog who always
liked to be in the centre of the maelstrom of events,
had waddled out to investigate.
By the time Mrs. Hignett had pulled
herself together sufficiently to feel brave enough
to venture into the hall, Webster’s presence
of mind and Smith’s gregariousness had combined
to restore that part of the house to its normal nocturnal
condition of emptiness. Webster’s stagger
had carried him almost up to the green baize door leading
to the servants’ staircase, and he proceeded
to pass through it without checking his momentum,
closely followed by Smith who, now convinced that
interesting events were in progress which might possibly
culminate in cake, had abandoned the idea of sleep,
and meant to see the thing through. He gambolled
in Webster’s wake up the stairs and along the
passage leading to the latter’s room, and only
paused when the door was brusquely shut in his face.
Upon which he sat down to think the thing over.
He was in no hurry. The night was before him,
promising, as far as he could judge from the way it
had opened, excellent entertainment.
Mrs. Hignett had listened fearfully
to the uncouth noises from the hall. The burglars she
had now discovered that there were at least two of
them appeared to be actually romping.
The situation had grown beyond her handling.
If this troupe of terpsichorean marauders was to be
dislodged she must have assistance. It was man’s
work. She made a brave dash through the hall
mercifully unmolested; found the stairs; raced up
them; and fell through the doorway of her son Eustace’s
bedroom like a spent Marathon runner staggering past
the winning-post.
Se
At about the moment when Mrs. Hignett
was crunching the gravel of the drive, Eustace was
lying in bed, listening to Jane Hubbard as she told
the story of how an alligator had once got into her
tent while she was camping on the banks of the Issawassi
River in Central Africa. Ever since he had become
ill, it had been the large-hearted girl’s kindly
practice to soothe him to rest with some such narrative
from her energetic past.
“And what happened then?” asked Eustace,
breathlessly.
He had raised himself on one elbow
in his bed. His eyes shone excitedly from a face
which was almost the exact shape of an Association
football; for he had reached the stage of mumps when
the patient begins to swell as though somebody were
inflating him with a bicycle-pump.
“Oh, I jabbed him in the eye
with a pair of nail-scissors, and he went away!”
said Jane Hubbard.
“You know, you’re wonderful!”
cried Eustace. “Simply wonderful!”
Jane Hubbard flushed a little beneath
her tan. She loved his pretty enthusiasm.
He was so genuinely stirred by what were to her the
merest commonplaces of life.
“Why, if an alligator got into
my tent,” said Eustace, “I simply
wouldn’t know what to do! I should be nonplussed.”
“Oh, it’s just a knack,”
said Jane, carelessly. “You soon pick it
up.”
“Nail-scissors!”
“It ruined them, unfortunately.
They were never any use again. For the rest of
the trip I had to manicure myself with a hunting-spear.”
“You’re a marvel!”
Eustace lay back in bed and gave himself
up to meditation. He had admired Jane Hubbard
before, but the intimacy of the sick-room and the
stories which she had told him to relieve the tedium
of his invalid state had set the seal on his devotion.
It has always been like this since Othello wooed Desdemona.
For three days Jane Hubbard had been weaving her spell
about Eustace Hignett, and now she monopolised his
entire horizon. She had spoken, like Othello,
of antres vast and deserts idle, rough quarries,
rocks and hills whose heads touched heaven, and of
the cannibals that each other eat, the Anthropophagi,
and men whose heads do grow beneath their shoulders.
This to hear would Eustace Hignett seriously incline,
and swore, in faith, ’twas strange, ’twas
passing strange, ’twas pitiful, ’twas wondrous
pitiful. He loved her for the dangers she had
passed, and she loved him that he did pity them.
In fact, one would have said that it was all over
except buying the licence, had it not been for the
fact that his very admiration served to keep Eustace
from pouring out his heart. It seemed incredible
to him that the queen of her sex, a girl who had chatted
in terms of equality with African head-hunters and
who swatted alligators as though they were flies,
could ever lower herself to care for a man who looked
like the “after-taking” advertisement
of a patent food.
But even those whom Nature has destined
to be mates may misunderstand each other, and Jane,
who was as modest as she was brave, had come recently
to place a different interpretation on his silence.
In the last few days of the voyage she had quite made
up her mind that Eustace Hignett loved her and would
shortly intimate as much in the usual manner; but,
since coming to Windles, she had begun to have doubts.
She was not blind to the fact that Billie Bennett
was distinctly prettier than herself and far more
the type to which the ordinary man is attracted.
And, much as she loathed the weakness and despised
herself for yielding to it, she had become distinctly
jealous of her. True, Billie was officially engaged
to Bream Mortimer, but she had had experience of the
brittleness of Miss Bennett’s engagements, and
she could by no means regard Eustace as immune.
“Do you suppose they will be happy?” she
asked.
“Eh? Who?” said Eustace,
excusably puzzled, for they had only just finished
talking about alligators. But there had been a
pause since his last remark, and Jane’s thoughts
had flitted back to the subject that usually occupied
them.
“Billie and Bream Mortimer.”
“Oh!” said Eustace. “Yes, I
suppose so.”
“She’s a delightful girl.”
“Yes,” said Eustace without much animation.
“And, of course, it’s
nice their fathers being so keen on the match.
It doesn’t often happen that way.”
“No. People’s people
generally want people to marry people people don’t
want to marry,” said Eustace, clothing in words
a profound truth which from the earliest days of civilisation
has deeply affected the youth of every country.
“I suppose your mother has got
somebody picked out for you to marry?” said
Jane casually.
“Mother doesn’t want me
to marry anybody,” said Eustace with gloom.
It was another obstacle to his romance.
“What, never?”
“No.”
“Why ever not?”
“As far as I can make out, if
I marry, I get this house and mother has to clear
out. Silly business!”
“Well, you wouldn’t let
your mother stand in the way if you ever really fell
in love?” said Jane.
“It isn’t so much a question
of letting her stand in the way. The tough
job would be preventing her. You’ve never
met my mother!”
“No, I’m looking forward to it!”
“You’re looking forward...!” Eustace
eyed her with honest amazement.
“But what could your mother
do? I mean, supposing you had made up your mind
to marry somebody.”
“What could she do? Why,
there isn’t anything she wouldn’t do.
Why, once....” Eustace broke off.
The anecdote which he had been about to tell contained
information which, on reflection, he did not wish to
reveal.
“Once ...?” said Jane.
“Oh, well, I was just going
to show you what mother is like. I I
was going out to lunch with a man, and and ”
Eustace was not a ready improvisator “and
she didn’t want me to go, so she stole all my
trousers!”
Jane Hubbard started, as if, wandering
through one of her favourite jungles, she had perceived
a snake in her path. She was thinking hard.
That story which Billie had told her on the boat about
the man to whom she had been engaged, whose mother
had stolen his trousers on the wedding morning ...
it all came back to her with a topical significance
which it had never had before. It had lingered
in her memory, as stories will, but it had been a
detached episode, having no personal meaning for her.
But now.... “She did that just to stop you
going out to lunch with a man?” she said slowly.
“Yes, rotten thing to do, wasn’t it?”
Jane Hubbard moved to the foot of
the bed, and her forceful gaze, shooting across the
intervening counterpane, pinned Eustace to the pillow.
She was in the mood which had caused spines in Somaliland
to curl like withered leaves.
“Were you ever engaged to Billie Bennett?”
she demanded.
Eustace Hignett licked dry lips.
His face looked like a hunted melon. The flannel
bandage, draped around it by loving hands, hardly supported
his sagging jaw.
“Why er ”
“Were you?” cried
Jane, stamping an imperious foot. There was that
in her eye before which warriors of the lower Congo
had become as chewed blotting-paper. Eustace
Hignett shrivelled in the blaze. He was filled
with an unendurable sense of guilt.
“Well er yes,” he
mumbled weakly.
Jane Hubbard buried her face in her
hands and burst into tears. She might know what
to do when alligators started exploring her tent, but
she was a woman.
This sudden solution of steely strength
into liquid weakness had on Eustace Hignett the stunning
effects which the absence of the last stair has on
the returning reveller creeping up to bed in the dark.
It was as though his spiritual foot had come down
hard on empty space and caused him to bite his tongue.
Jane Hubbard had always been to him a rock of support.
And now the rock had melted away and left him wallowing
in a deep pool.
He wallowed gratefully. It had
only needed this to brace him to the point of declaring
his love. His awe of this girl had momentarily
vanished. He felt strong and dashing. He
scrambled down the bed and peered over the foot of
it at her huddled form.
“Have some barley-water,”
he urged. “Try a little barley-water.”
It was all he had to offer her except
the medicine which, by the doctor’s instructions,
he took three times a day in a quarter of a glass
of water.
“Go away!” sobbed Jane Hubbard.
The unreasonableness of this struck Eustace.
“But I can’t. I’m in bed.
Where could I go?”
“I hate you!”
“Oh, don’t say that!”
“You’re still in love with her!”
“Nonsense! I never was in love with her.”
“Then why were you going to marry her?”
“Oh, I don’t know. It seemed a good
idea at the time.”
“Oh! Oh! Oh!”
Eustace bent a little further over
the end of the bed and patted her hair.
“Do have some barley-water,” he said.
“Just a sip!”
“You are in love with her!” sobbed
Jane.
“I’m not! I love you!”
“You don’t!”
“Pardon me!” said
Eustace firmly. “I’ve loved you ever
since you gave me that extraordinary drink with Worcester
sauce in it on the boat.”
“They why didn’t you say so before?”
“I hadn’t the nerve.
You always seemed so I don’t know
how to put it I always seemed such a worm.
I was just trying to get the courage to propose when
I caught the mumps, and that seemed to me to finish
it. No girl could love a man with three times
the proper amount of face.”
“As if that could make any difference!
What does your outside matter? I have seen your
inside!”
“I beg your pardon?”
“I mean....”
Eustace fondled her back hair.
“Jane! Queen of my soul! Do you really
love me?”
“I’ve loved you ever since
we met on the Subway.” She raised a tear-stained
face. “If only I could be sure that you
really loved me!”
“I can prove it!” said
Eustace proudly. “You know how scared I
am of my mother. Well, for your sake I overcame
my fear, and did something which, if she ever found
out about it, would make her sorer than a sunburned
neck! This house. She absolutely refused
to let it to old Bennett and old Mortimer. They
kept after her about it, but she wouldn’t hear
of it. Well, you told me on the boat that Wilhelmina
Bennett had invited you to spend the summer with her,
and I knew that, if they didn’t come to Windles,
they would take some other place, and that meant I
wouldn’t see you. So I hunted up old Mortimer,
and let it to him on the quiet, without telling my
mother anything about it!”
“Why, you darling angel child,”
cried Jane Hubbard joyfully. “Did you really
do that for my sake? Now I know you love me!”
“Of course, if mother ever got to hear of it...!”
Jane Hubbard pushed him gently into
the nest of bedclothes, and tucked him in with strong,
calm hands. She was a very different person from
the girl who so short a while before had sobbed on
the carpet. Love is a wonderful thing.
“You mustn’t excite yourself,”
she said. “You’ll be getting a temperature.
Lie down and try to get to sleep.” She kissed
his bulbous face. “You have made me so
happy, Eustace darling.”
“That’s good,” said
Eustace cordially. “But it’s going
to be an awful jar for mother!”
“Don’t you worry about
that. I’ll break the news to your mother.
I’m sure she will be quite reasonable about
it.”
Eustace opened his mouth to speak, then closed it
again.
“Lie back quite comfortably,
and don’t worry,” said Jane Hubbard.
“I’m going to my room to get a book to
read you to sleep. I shan’t be five minutes.
And forget about your mother. I’ll look
after her.”
Eustace closed his eyes. After
all, this girl had fought lions, tigers, pumas,
cannibals, and alligators in her time with a good deal
of success. There might be a sporting chance
of victory for her when she moved a step up in the
animal kingdom and tackled his mother. He was
not unduly optimistic, for he thought she was going
out of her class; but he felt faintly hopeful.
He allowed himself to drift into pleasant meditation.
There was a scrambling sound outside
the door. The handle turned.
“Hullo! Back already?” said Eustace,
opening his eyes.
The next moment he opened them wider.
His mouth gaped slowly like a hole in a sliding cliff.
Mrs. Horace Hignett was standing at his bedside.
Se
In the moment which elapsed before
either of the two could calm their agitated brains
to speech, Eustace became aware, as never before, of
the truth of that well-known line “Peace,
perfect peace, with loved ones far away.”
There was certainly little hope of peace with loved
ones in his bedroom. Dully, he realised that
in a few minutes Jane Hubbard would be returning with
her book, but his imagination refused to envisage
the scene which would then occur.
“Eustace!”
Mrs. Hignett gasped, hand on heart.
“Eustace!” For the first
time Mrs. Hignett seemed to become aware that it was
a changed face that confronted hers. “Good
gracious! How stout you’ve grown!”
“It’s mumps.”
“Mumps!”
“Yes, I’ve got mumps.”
Mrs. Hignett’s mind was too
fully occupied with other matters to allow her to
dwell on this subject.
“Eustace, there are men in the house!”
This fact was just what Eustace had been wondering
how to break to her.
“I know,” he said uneasily.
“You know!” Mrs. Hignett stared.
“Did you hear them?”
“Hear them?” said Eustace, puzzled.
“The drawing-room window was
left open, and there are two burglars in the hall!”
“Oh, I say, no! That’s rather rotten!”
said Eustace.
“I saw them and heard them!
I oh!” Mrs. Hignett’s sentence
trailed off into a suppressed shriek, as the door
opened and Jane Hubbard came in.
Jane Hubbard was a girl who by nature
and training was well adapted to bear shocks.
Her guiding motto in life was that helpful line of
Horace Aequam memento rebus in arduis
servare mentem. (For the benefit of those who
have not, like myself, enjoyed an expensive classical
education, memento Take my tip servare preserve aequam an
unruffled mentem mind rebus
in arduis in every crisis). She had
only been out of the room a few minutes, and in that
brief period a middle-aged lady of commanding aspect
had apparently come up through a trap. It would
have been enough to upset most girls, but Jane Hubbard
bore it calmly. All through her vivid life her
bedroom had been a sort of cosy corner for murderers,
alligators, tarantulas, scorpions, and every variety
of snake, so she accepted the middle-aged lady without
comment.
“Good evening,” she said placidly.
Mrs. Hignett, having rallied from
her moment of weakness, glared at the new arrival
dumbly. She could not place Jane. From the
airy way in which she had strolled into the room,
she appeared to be some sort of a nurse; but she wore
no nurse’s uniform.
“Who are you?” she asked stiffly.
“Who are you?” asked Jane.
“I,” said Mrs. Hignett
portentously, “am the owner of this house, and
I should be glad to know what you are doing in it.
I am Mrs. Horace Hignett.”
A charming smile spread itself over Jane’s finely-cut
face.
“I’m so glad to meet you,” she said.
“I have heard so much about you.”
“Indeed?” said Mrs. Hignett
coldly. “And now I should like to hear a
little about you.”
“I’ve read all your books,” said
Jane. “I think they’re wonderful.”
In spite of herself, in spite of a
feeling that this young woman was straying from the
point, Mrs. Hignett could not check a slight influx
of amiability. She was an authoress who received
a good deal of incense from admirers, but she could
always do with a bit more. Besides, most of the
incense came by post. Living a quiet and retired
life in the country, it was rarely that she got it
handed to her face to face. She melted quite
perceptibly. She did not cease to look like a
basilisk, but she began to look like a basilisk who
has had a good lunch.
“My favourite,” said Jane,
who for a week had been sitting daily in a chair in
the drawing-room adjoining the table on which the authoress’s
complete works were assembled, “is ‘The
Spreading Light.’ I do like ‘The
Spreading Light!’”
“It was written some years ago,”
said Mrs. Hignett with something approaching cordiality,
“and I have since revised some of the views I
state in it, but I still consider it quite a good text-book.”
“Of course, I can see that ‘What
of the Morrow?’ is more profound,” said
Jane. “But I read ‘The Spreading Light’
first, and of course that makes a difference.”
“I can quite see that it would,”
agreed Mrs. Hignett. “One’s first
step across the threshold of a new mind, one’s
first glimpse....”
“Yes, it makes you feel....”
“Like some watcher of the skies,”
said Mrs. Hignett, “when a new planet swims
into his ken, or like....”
“Yes, doesn’t it!” said Jane.
Eustace, who had been listening to
the conversation with every muscle tense, in much
the same mental attitude as that of a peaceful citizen
in a Wild West Saloon who holds himself in readiness
to dive under a table directly the shooting begins,
began to relax. What he had shrinkingly anticipated
would be the biggest thing since the Dempsey-Carpentier
fight seemed to be turning into a pleasant social and
literary evening not unlike what he imagined a meeting
of old Girton students must be. For the first
time since his mother had come into the room he indulged
in the luxury of a deep breath.
“But what are you doing here?”
asked Mrs. Hignett, returning almost reluctantly to
the main issue.
Eustace perceived that he had breathed
too soon. In an unobtrusive way he subsided into
the bed and softly pulled the sheets over his head,
following the excellent tactics of the great Duke of
Wellington in his Peninsular campaign. “When
in doubt,” the Duke used to say, “retire
and dig yourself in.”
“I’m nursing dear Eustace,” said
Jane.
Mrs. Hignett quivered, and cast an
eye on the hump in the bedclothes which represented
dear Eustace. A cold fear had come upon her.
“‘Dear Eustace!’” she repeated
mechanically.
“We’re engaged,” said Jane.
“Engaged! Eustace, is this true?”
“Yes,” said a muffled voice from the interior
of the bed.
“And poor Eustace is so worried,”
continued Jane, “about the house.”
She went on quickly. “He doesn’t
want to deprive you of it, because he knows what it
means to you. So he is hoping we are
both hoping that you will accept it as
a present when we are married. We really shan’t
want it, you know. We are going to live in London.
So you will take it, won’t you to
please us?”
We all of us, even the greatest of
us, have our moments of weakness. Only a short
while back, in this very room, we have seen Jane Hubbard,
that indomitable girl, sobbing brokenly on the carpet.
Let us then not express any surprise at the sudden
collapse of one of the world’s greatest female
thinkers. As the meaning of this speech smote
on Mrs. Horace Hignett’s understanding, she
sank weeping into a chair. The ever-present fear
that had haunted her had been exorcised. Windles
was hers in perpetuity. The relief was too great.
She sat in her chair and gulped; and Eustace, greatly
encouraged, emerged slowly from the bedclothes like
a worm after a thunderstorm.
How long this poignant scene would
have lasted, one cannot say. It is a pity that
it was cut short, for I should have liked to dwell
upon it. But at this moment, from the regions
downstairs, there suddenly burst upon the silent night
such a whirlwind of sound as effectually dissipated
the tense emotion in the room. Somebody appeared
to have touched off the orchestrion in the drawing-room,
and that willing instrument had begun again in the
middle of a bar at the point where Jane Hubbard had
switched it off four afternoons ago. Its wailing
lament for the passing of Summer filled the whole
house.
“That’s too bad!”
said Jane, a little annoyed. “At this time
of night!”
“It’s the burglars!”
quavered Mrs. Hignett. In the stress of recent
events she had completely forgotten the existence of
those enemies of Society. “They were dancing
in the hall when I arrived, and now they’re
playing the orchestrion!”
“Light-hearted chaps!”
said Eustace, admiring the sang-froid of the criminal
world. “Full of spirits!”
“This won’t do,”
said Jane Hubbard, shaking her head. “We
can’t have this sort of thing. I’ll
go and fetch my gun.”
“They’ll murder you, dear!”
panted Mrs. Hignett, clinging to her arm.
Jane Hubbard laughed.
“Murder me!” she said amusedly.
“I’d like to catch them at it!”
Mrs. Hignett stood staring at the
door as Jane closed it softly behind her.
“Eustace,” she said solemnly, “that
is a wonderful girl!”
“Yes! She once killed a
panther or a puma, I forget which with
a hat-pin!” said Eustace with enthusiasm.
“I could wish you no better wife!” said
Mrs. Hignett.
She broke off with a sharp wail.
Out in the passage something like a battery of artillery
had roared.
The door opened and Jane Hubbard appeared,
slipping a fresh cartridge into the elephant-gun.
“One of them was popping about
outside here,” she announced. “I took
a shot at him, but I’m afraid I missed.
The visibility was bad. At any rate he went away.”
In this last statement she was perfectly
accurate. Bream Mortimer, who had been aroused
by the orchestrion and who had come out to see what
was the matter, had gone away at the rate of fifty
miles an hour. He had been creeping down the
passage when he found himself suddenly confronted
by a dim figure which, without a word, had attempted
to slay him with an enormous gun. The shot had
whistled past his ears and gone singing down the corridor.
This was enough for Bream. He had returned to
his room in three strides, and was now under the bed.
The burglars might take everything in the house and
welcome, so that they did not molest his privacy.
That was the way Bream looked at it. And very
sensible of him, too, I consider.
“We’d better go downstairs,”
said Jane. “Bring the candle. Not you,
Eustace darling. You stay where you are or you
may catch a chill. Don’t stir out of bed!”
“I won’t,” said Eustace obediently.
Se
Of all the leisured pursuits, there
are few less attractive to the thinking man than sitting
in a dark cupboard waiting for a house-party to go
to bed; and Sam, who had established himself in the
one behind the piano at a quarter to eight, soon began
to feel as if he had been there for an eternity.
He could dimly remember a previous existence in which
he had not been sitting in his present position, but
it seemed so long ago that it was shadowy and unreal
to him. The ordeal of spending the evening in
this retreat had not appeared formidable when he had
contemplated it that afternoon in the lane; but, now
that he was actually undergoing it, it was extraordinary
how many disadvantages it had.
Cupboards, as a class, are badly ventilated,
and this one seemed to contain no air at all; and
the warmth of the night, combined with the cupboard’s
natural stuffiness, had soon begun to reduce Sam to
a condition of pulp. He seemed to himself to
be sagging like an ice-cream in front of a fire.
The darkness, too, weighed upon him. He was abominably
thirsty. Also he wanted to smoke. In addition
to this, the small of his back tickled, and he more
than suspected the cupboard of harbouring mice.
Not once or twice but many hundred times he wished
that the ingenious Webster had thought of something
simpler.
His was a position which would just
have suited one of those Indian mystics who sit perfectly
still for twenty years, contemplating the Infinite,
but it reduced Sam to an almost imbecile state of boredom.
He tried counting sheep. He tried going over
his past life in his mind from the earliest moment
he could recollect, and thought he had never encountered
a duller series of episodes. He found a temporary
solace by playing a succession of mental golf-games
over all the courses he could remember, and he was
just teeing up for the sixteenth at Muirfield, after
playing Hoylake, St. Andrew’s, Westward Ho, Hanger
Hill, Mid-Surrey, Walton Heath, and Sandwich, when
the light ceased to shine through the crack under
the door, and he awoke with a sense of dull incredulity
to the realisation that the occupants of the drawing-room
had called it a day and that his vigil was over.
But was it? Once more alert,
Sam became cautious. True, the light seemed to
be off, but did that mean anything in a country-house,
where people had the habit of going and strolling
about the garden to all hours? Probably they
were still popping about all over the place. At
any rate, it was not worth risking coming out of his
lair. He remembered that Webster had promised
to come and knock an all-clear signal on the door.
It would be safer to wait for that.
But the moments went by, and there
was no knock. Sam began to grow impatient.
The last few minutes of waiting in a cupboard are always
the hardest. Time seemed to stretch out again
interminably. Once he thought he heard footsteps
but they led to nothing. Eventually, having strained
his ears and finding everything still, he decided to
take a chance. He fished in his pocket for the
key, cautiously unlocked the door, opened it by slow
inches, and peered out.
The room was in blackness. The
house was still. All was well. With the
feeling of a life-prisoner emerging from the Bastille,
he began to crawl stiffly forward; and it was just
then that the first of the disturbing events occurred
which were to make this night memorable to him.
Something like a rattlesnake suddenly went off with
a whirr, and his head, jerking up, collided with the
piano. It was only the cuckoo-clock, which now,
having cleared its throat as was its custom before
striking, proceeded to cuck eleven times in rapid
succession before subsiding with another rattle; but
to Sam it sounded like the end of the world.
He sat in the darkness, massaging
his bruised skull. His hours of imprisonment
in the cupboard had had a bad effect on his nervous
system, and he vacillated between tears of weakness
and a militant desire to get at the cuckoo-clock with
a hatchet. He felt that it had done it on purpose
and was now chuckling to itself in fancied security.
For quite a minute he raged silently, and any cuckoo-clock
which had strayed within his reach would have had
a bad time of it. Then his attention was diverted.
So concentrated was Sam on his private
vendetta with the clock that no ordinary happening
would have had the power to distract him. What
occurred now was by no means ordinary, and it distracted
him like an electric shock. As he sat on the
floor, passing a tender hand over the egg-shaped bump
which had already begun to manifest itself beneath
his hair, something cold and wet touched his face,
and paralysed him so completely both physically and
mentally that he did not move a muscle but just congealed
where he sat into a solid block of ice. He felt
vaguely that this was the end. His heart had stopped
beating and he simply could not imagine it ever starting
again, and, if your heart refuses to beat, what hope
is there for you?
At this moment something heavy and
solid struck him squarely in the chest, rolling him
over. Something gurgled asthmatically in the
darkness. Something began to lick his eyes, ears,
and chin in a sort of ecstasy; and, clutching out,
he found his arms full of totally unexpected bulldog.
“Get out!” whispered Sam
tensely, recovering his faculties with a jerk.
“Go away!”
Smith took the opportunity of Sam’s
lips having opened to lick the roof of his mouth.
Smith’s attitude in the matter was that Providence
in its all-seeing wisdom had sent him a human being
at a moment when he had reluctantly been compelled
to reconcile himself to a total absence of such indispensable
adjuncts to a good time. He had just trotted
downstairs in rather a disconsolate frame of mind after
waiting with no result in front of Webster’s
bedroom door, and it was a real treat to him to meet
a man, especially one seated in such a jolly and sociable
manner on the floor. He welcomed Sam like a long-lost
friend.
Between Smith and the humans who provided
him with dog-biscuits and occasionally with sweet
cakes there had always existed a state of misunderstanding
which no words could remove. The position of the
humans was quite clear; they had elected Smith to
his present position on a straight watch-dog ticket.
They expected him to be one of those dogs who rouse
the house and save the spoons. They looked to
him to pin burglars by the leg and hold on till the
police arrived. Smith simply could not grasp
such an attitude of mind. He regarded Windles
not as a private house but as a social club, and was
utterly unable to see any difference between the human
beings he knew and the strangers who dropped in for
a late chat after the place was locked up. He
had no intention of biting Sam. The idea never
entered his head. At the present moment what he
felt about Sam was that he was one of the best fellows
he had ever met and that he loved him like a brother.
Sam, in his unnerved state, could
not bring himself to share these amiable sentiments.
He was thinking bitterly that Webster might have had
the intelligence to warn him of bulldogs on the premises.
It was just the sort of woollen-headed thing fellows
did, forgetting facts like that. He scrambled
stiffly to his feet and tried to pierce the darkness
that hemmed him in. He ignored Smith, who snuffled
sportively about his ankles, and made for the slightly
less black oblong which he took to be the door leading
into the hall. He moved warily, but not warily
enough to prevent his cannoning into and almost upsetting
a small table with a vase on it. The table rocked
and the vase jumped, and the first bit of luck that
had come to Sam that night was when he reached out
at a venture and caught it just as it was about to
bound on to the carpet.
He stood there, shaking. The
narrowness of the escape turned him cold. If
he had been an instant later, there would have been
a crash loud enough to wake a dozen sleeping houses.
This sort of thing could not go on. He must have
light. It might be a risk; there might be a chance
of somebody upstairs seeing it and coming down to
investigate; but it was a risk that must be taken.
He declined to go on stumbling about in this darkness
any longer. He groped his way with infinite care
to the door, on the wall adjoining which, he presumed,
the electric-light switch would be. It was nearly
ten years since he had last been inside Windles, and
it never occurred to him that in this progressive age
even a woman like his Aunt Adeline, of whom he could
believe almost anything, would still be using candles
and oil-lamps as a means of illumination. His
only doubt was whether the switch was where it was
in most houses, near the door.
It is odd to reflect that, as his
searching fingers touched the knob, a delicious feeling
of relief came to Samuel Marlowe. This misguided
young man actually felt at that moment that his troubles
were over. He positively smiled as he placed
a thumb on the knob and shoved.
He shoved strongly and sharply, and
instantaneously there leaped at him out of the darkness
a blare of music which appeared to his disordered
mind quite solid. It seemed to wrap itself round
him. It was all over the place. In a single
instant the world had become one vast bellow of Tosti’s
“Good-bye.”
How long he stood there, frozen, he
did not know; nor can one say how long he would have
stood there had nothing further come to invite his
notice elsewhere. But, suddenly, drowning even
the impromptu concert, there came from somewhere upstairs
the roar of a gun; and, when he heard that, Sam’s
rigid limbs relaxed and a violent activity descended
upon him. He bounded out into the hall, looking
to right and to left for a hiding-place. One
of the suits of armour which had been familiar to him
in his boyhood loomed up in front of him, and with
the sight came the recollection of how, when a mere
child on his first visit to Windles, playing hide
and seek with his cousin Eustace, he had concealed
himself inside this very suit, and had not only baffled
Eustace through a long summer evening but had wound
up by almost scaring him into a decline by booing
at him through the vizor of the helmet. Happy
days, happy days! He leaped at the suit of armour.
Having grown since he was last inside it, he found
the helmet a tight fit, but he managed to get his head
into it at last, and the body of the thing was quite
roomy.
“Thank heaven!” said Sam.
He was not comfortable, but comfort just then was
not his primary need.
Smith the bulldog, well satisfied
with the way the entertainment had opened, sat down,
wheezing slightly, to await developments.
Se
He had not long to wait. In a
few minutes the hall had filled up nicely. There
was Mr. Mortimer in his shirt-sleeves, Mr. Bennett
in blue pyjamas and a dressing-gown, Mrs. Hignett
in a travelling costume, Jane Hubbard with her elephant-gun,
and Billie in a dinner dress. Smith welcomed them
all impartially.
Somebody lit a lamp, and Mrs. Hignett
stared speechlessly at the mob.
“Mr. Bennett! Mr. Mortimer!”
“Mrs. Hignett! What are you doing here?”
Mrs. Hignett drew herself up stiffly.
“What an odd question, Mr. Mortimer! I
am in my own house!”
“But you rented it to me for the summer.
At least, your son did.”
“Eustace let you Windles for
the summer!” said Mrs. Hignett incredulously.
Jane Hubbard returned from the drawing-room,
where she had been switching off the orchestrion.
“Let us talk all that over cosily
to-morrow,” she said. “The point now
is that there are burglars in the house.”
“Burglars!” cried Mr.
Bennett aghast. “I thought it was you playing
that infernal instrument, Mortimer.”
“What on earth should I play
it for at this time of night?” said Mr. Mortimer
irritably.
“It woke me up,” said
Mr. Bennett complainingly. “And I had had
great difficulty in dropping off to sleep. I
was in considerable pain. I believe I’ve
caught the mumps from young Hignett.”
“Nonsense! You’re
always imagining yourself ill,” snapped Mr. Mortimer.
“My face hurts,” persisted Mr. Bennett.
“You can’t expect a face like that not
to hurt,” said Mr. Mortimer.
It appeared only too evident that
the two old friends were again on the verge of one
of their distressing fallings-out; but Jane Hubbard
intervened once more. This practical-minded girl
disliked the introducing of side-issues into the conversation.
She was there to talk about burglars, and she intended
to do so.
“For goodness sake stop it!”
she said, almost petulantly for one usually so superior
to emotion. “There’ll be lots of time
for quarrelling to-morrow. Just now we’ve
got to catch these....”
“I’m not quarrelling,” said Mr.
Bennett.
“Yes, you are,” said Mr. Mortimer.
“I’m not!”
“You are!”
“Don’t argue!”
“I’m not arguing!”
“You are!”
“I’m not!”
Jane Hubbard had practically every
noble quality which a woman can possess with the exception
of patience. A patient woman would have stood
by, shrinking from interrupting the dialogue.
Jane Hubbard’s robuster course was to raise
the elephant-gun, point it at the front door, and
pull the trigger.
“I thought that would stop you,”
she said complacently, as the echoes died away and
Mr. Bennett had finished leaping into the air.
She inserted a fresh cartridge, and sloped arms.
“Now, the question is....”
“You made me bite my tongue!” said Mr.
Bennett, deeply aggrieved.
“Serve you right!” said
Jane placidly. “Now, the question is, have
the fellows got away or are they hiding somewhere
in the house? I think they’re still in
the house.”
“The police!” exclaimed
Mr. Bennett, forgetting his lacerated tongue and his
other grievances. “We must summon the police!”
“Obviously!” said Mrs.
Hignett, withdrawing her fascinated gaze from the
ragged hole in the front door, the cost of repairing
which she had been mentally assessing. “We
must send for the police at once.”
“We don’t really need
them, you know,” said Jane. “If you’ll
all go to bed and just leave me to potter round with
my gun....”
“And blow the whole house to
pieces!” said Mrs. Hignett tartly. She had
begun to revise her original estimate of this girl.
To her, Windles was sacred, and anyone who went about
shooting holes in it forfeited her esteem.
“Shall I go for the police?”
said Billie. “I could bring them back in
ten minutes in the car.”
“Certainly not!” said
Mr. Bennett. “My daughter gadding about
all over the countryside in an automobile at this
time of night!”
“If you think I ought not to
go alone, I could take Bream.”
“Where is Bream?” said Mr. Mortimer.
The odd fact that Bream was not among
those present suddenly presented itself to the company.
“Where can he be?” said Billie.
Jane Hubbard laughed the wholesome,
indulgent laugh of one who is broad-minded enough
to see the humour of the situation even when the joke
is at her expense.
“What a silly girl I am!”
she said. “I do believe that was Bream I
shot at upstairs. How foolish of me making a
mistake like that!”
“You shot my only son!” cried Mr. Mortimer.
“I shot at him,”
said Jane. “My belief is that I missed him.
Though how I came to do it beats me. I don’t
suppose I’ve missed a sitter like that since
I was a child in the nursery. Of course,”
she proceeded, looking on the reasonable side, “the
visibility wasn’t good, but it’s no use
saying I oughtn’t at least to have winged him,
because I ought.” She shook her head with
a touch of self-reproach. “I shall get chaffed
about this if it comes out,” she said regretfully.
“The poor boy must be in his room,” said
Mr. Mortimer.
“Under the bed, if you ask me,”
said Jane, blowing on the barrel of her gun and polishing
it with the side of her hand. “He’s
all right! Leave him alone, and the housemaid
will sweep him up in the morning.”
“Oh, he can’t be!” cried Billie,
revolted.
A girl of high spirit, it seemed to
her repellent that the man she was engaged to marry
should be displaying such a craven spirit. At
that moment she despised and hated Bream Mortimer.
I think she was wrong, mind you. It is not my
place to criticise the little group of people whose
simple annals I am relating my position
is merely that of a reporter ; but personally
I think highly of Bream’s sturdy common-sense.
If somebody loosed off an elephant-gun at me in a dark
corridor, I would climb on to the roof and pull it
up after me. Still, rightly or wrongly, that
was how Billie felt; and it flashed across her mind
that Samuel Marlowe, scoundrel though he was, would
not have behaved like this. And for a moment
a certain wistfulness added itself to the varied emotions
then engaging her mind.
“I’ll go and look, if
you like,” said Jane agreeably. “You
amuse yourselves somehow till I come back.”
She ran easily up the stairs, three
at a time. Mr. Mortimer turned to Mr. Bennett.
“It’s all very well your
saying Wilhelmina mustn’t go, but, if she doesn’t,
how can we get the police? The house isn’t
on the ’phone, and nobody else can drive the
car.”
“That’s true,” said Mr. Bennett,
wavering.
“Of course, we could drop them
a post-card first thing to-morrow morning,”
said Mr. Mortimer in his nasty sarcastic way.
“I’m going,” said
Billie resolutely. It occurred to her, as it has
occurred to so many women before her, how helpless
men are in a crisis. The temporary withdrawal
of Jane Hubbard had had the effect which the removal
of the rudder has on a boat. “It’s
the only thing to do. I shall be back in no time.”
She stepped firmly to the coat-rack,
and began to put on her motoring-cloak. And just
then Jane Hubbard came downstairs, shepherding before
her a pale and glassy-eyed Bream.
“Right under the bed,”
she announced cheerfully, “making a noise like
a piece of fluff in order to deceive burglars.”
Billie cast a scornful look at her
fiance. Absolutely unjustified, in my opinion,
but nevertheless she cast it. But it had no effect
at all. Terror had stunned Bream Mortimer’s
perceptions. His was what the doctors call a
penumbral mental condition.
“Bream,” said Billie,
“I want you to come in the car with me to fetch
the police.”
“All right,” said Bream.
“Get your coat.”
“All right,” said Bream.
“And cap.”
“All right,” said Bream.
He followed Billie in a docile manner
out through the front door, and they made their way
to the garage at the back of the house, both silent.
The only difference between their respective silences
was that Billie’s was thoughtful, while Bream’s
was just the silence of a man who has unhitched his
brain and is getting along as well as he can without
it.
In the hall they had left, Jane Hubbard
once more took command of affairs.
“Well, that’s something
done,” she said, scratching Smith’s broad
back with the muzzle of her weapon. “Something
accomplished, something done, has earned a night’s
repose. Not that we’re going to get it yet.
I think those fellows are hiding somewhere, and we
ought to search the house and rout them out.
It’s a pity Smith isn’t a bloodhound.
He’s a good cake-hound, but as a watch-dog he
doesn’t finish in the first ten.”
The cake-hound, charmed at the compliment,
frisked about her feet like a young elephant.
“The first thing to do,”
continued Jane, “is to go through the ground-floor
rooms....” She paused to strike a match
against the suit of armour nearest to her, a proceeding
which elicited a sharp cry of protest from Mrs. Hignett,
and lit a cigarette. “I’ll go first,
as I’ve got a gun....” She blew a
cloud of smoke. “I shall want somebody with
me to carry a light, and....”
“Tchoo!”
“What?” said Jane.
“I didn’t speak,”
said Mr. Mortimer. “Who am I to speak?”
he went on bitterly. “Who am I that it
should be supposed that I have anything sensible to
suggest?”
“Somebody spoke,” said Jane. “I....”
“Achoo!”
“Do you feel a draught, Mr.
Bennett?” cried Jane sharply, wheeling round
on him.
“There is a draught,” began Mr.
Bennett.
“Well, finish sneezing and I’ll go on.”
“I didn’t sneeze!”
“Somebody sneezed.”
“It seemed to come from just behind you,”
said Mrs. Hignett nervously.
“It couldn’t have come
from just behind me,” said Jane, “because
there isn’t anything behind me from which it
could have....” She stopped suddenly, in
her eyes the light of understanding, on her face the
set expression which was wont to come to it on the
eve of action. “Oh!” she said in
a different voice, a voice which was cold and tense
and sinister. “Oh, I see!” She raised
her gun, and placed a muscular forefinger on the trigger.
“Come out of that!” she said. “Come
out of that suit of armour and let’s have a
look at you!”
“I can explain everything,”
said a muffled voice through the vizor of the helmet.
“I can achoo!” The smoke
of the cigarette tickled Sam’s nostrils again,
and he suspended his remarks.
“I shall count three,” said Jane Hubbard,
“One two ”
“I’m coming! I’m coming!”
said Sam petulantly.
“You’d better!” said Jane.
“I can’t get this dashed helmet off!”
“If you don’t come quick, I’ll blow
it off.”
Sam stepped out into the hall, a picturesque
figure which combined the costumes of two widely separated
centuries. Modern as far as the neck, he slipped
back at that point to the Middle Ages.
“Hands up!” commanded Jane Hubbard.
“My hands are up!”
retorted Sam querulously, as he wrenched at his unbecoming
head-wear.
“Never mind trying to raise
your hat,” said Jane. “If you’ve
lost the combination, we’ll dispense with the
formalities. What we’re anxious to hear
is what you’re doing in the house at this time
of night, and who your pals are. Come along,
my lad, make a clean breast of it and perhaps you’ll
get off easier. Are you a gang?”
“Do I look like a gang?”
“If you ask me what you look like....”
“My name is Marlowe ... Samuel Marlowe....”
“Alias what?”
“Alias nothing! I say my name is Samuel
Marlowe....”
An explosive roar burst from Mr. Bennett.
“The scoundrel! I know him! I forbade
him the house, and....”
“And by what right did you forbid
people my house, Mr. Bennett?” said Mrs. Hignett
with acerbity.
“I’ve rented the house, Mortimer and I
rented it from your son....”
“Yes, yes, yes,” said
Jane Hubbard. “Never mind about that.
So you know this fellow, do you?”
“I don’t know him!”
“You said you did.”
“I refuse to know him!”
went on Mr. Bennett. “I won’t know
him! I decline to have anything to do with him!”
“But you identify him?”
“If he says he’s Samuel
Marlowe,” assented Mr. Bennett grudgingly, “I
suppose he is. I can’t imagine anybody saying
he was Samuel Marlowe if he didn’t know it could
be proved against him.”
“Are you my nephew Samuel?” said
Mrs. Hignett.
“Yes,” said Sam.
“Well, what are you doing in my house?”
“It’s my house,”
said Mr. Bennett, “for the summer, Henry Mortimer’s
and mine. Isn’t that right, Henry?”
“Dead right,” said Mr. Mortimer.
“There!” said Mr. Bennett.
“You hear? And when Henry Mortimer says
a thing, it’s so. There’s nobody’s
word I’d take before Henry Mortimer’s.”
“When Rufus Bennett makes an
assertion,” said Mr. Mortimer, highly flattered
by these kind words, “you can bank on it.
Rufus Bennett’s word is his bond. Rufus
Bennett is a white man!”
The two old friends, reconciled once
more, clasped hands with a good deal of feeling.
“I am not disputing Mr. Bennett’s
claim to belong to the Caucasian race,” said
Mrs. Hignett testily. “I merely maintain
that this house is m....”
“Yes, yes, yes, yes!”
interrupted Jane. “You can thresh all that
out some other time. The point is, if this fellow
is your nephew, I don’t see what we can do.
We’ll have to let him go.”
“I came to this house,”
said Sam, raising his vizor to facilitate speech,
“to make a social call....”
“At this hour of the night!”
snapped Mrs. Hignett. “You always were an
inconsiderate boy, Samuel.”
“I came to inquire after poor
Eustace’s mumps. I’ve only just heard
that the poor chap was ill.”
“He’s getting along quite
well,” said Jane, melting. “If I had
known you were so fond of Eustace....”
“All right, is he?” said Sam.
“Well, not quite all right, but he’s going
on very nicely.”
“Fine!”
“Eustace and I are engaged, you know!”
“No, really? Splendid!
I can’t see you very distinctly how
those Johnnies in the old days ever contrived to put
up a scrap with things like this on their heads beats
me but you sound a good sort. I hope
you’ll be very happy.”
“Thank you ever so much, Mr. Marlowe. I’m
sure we shall.”
“Eustace is one of the best.”
“How nice of you to say so.”
“All this,” interrupted
Mrs. Hignett, who had been a chaffing auditor of this
interchange of courtesies, “is beside the point.
Why did you dance in the hall, Samuel, and play the
orchestrion?”
“Yes,” said Mr. Bennett, reminded of his
grievance, “waking people up.”
“Scaring us all to death!” complained
Mr. Mortimer.
“I remember you as a boy, Samuel,”
said Mrs. Hignett, “lamentably lacking in consideration
for others and concentrated only on your selfish pleasures.
You seem to have altered very little.”
“Don’t ballyrag the poor
man,” said Jane Hubbard. “Be human!
Lend him a sardine opener!”
“I shall do nothing of the sort,”
said Mrs. Hignett. “I never liked him and
I dislike him now. He has got himself into this
trouble through his own wrong-headedness.”
“It’s not his fault his
head’s the wrong size,” said Jane.
“He must get himself out as
best he can,” said Mrs. Hignett.
“Very well,” said Sam
with bitter dignity. “Then I will not trespass
further on your hospitality, Aunt Adeline. I have
no doubt the local blacksmith will be able to get
this damned thing off me. I shall go to him now.
I will let you have the helmet back by parcel-post
at the earliest opportunity. Good-night!”
He walked coldly to the front door. “And
there are people,” he remarked sardonically,
“who say that blood is thicker than water!
I’ll bet they never had any aunts!”
He tripped over the mat and withdrew.
Se
Billie meanwhile, with Bream trotting
docilely at her heels, had reached the garage and
started the car. Like all cars which have been
spending a considerable time in secluded inaction,
it did not start readily. At each application
of Billie’s foot on the self-starter, it emitted
a tinny and reproachful sound and then seemed to go
to sleep again. Eventually, however, the engines
began to revolve and the machine moved reluctantly
out into the drive.
“The battery must be run down,” said Billie.
“All right,” said Bream.
Billie cast a glance of contempt at
him out of the corner of her eyes. She hardly
knew why she had spoken to him except that, as all
motorists are aware, the impulse to say rude things
about their battery is almost irresistible. To
a motorist the art of conversation consists in rapping
out scathing remarks either about the battery or the
oiling-system.
Billie switched on the head-lights
and turned the car down the dark drive. She was
feeling thoroughly upset. Her idealistic nature
had received a painful shock on the discovery of the
yellow streak in Bream. To call it a yellow streak
was to understate the facts. It was a great belt
of saffron encircling his whole soul. That she,
Wilhelmina Bennett, who had gone through the world
seeking a Galahad, should finish her career as the
wife of a man who hid under beds simply because people
shot at him with elephant guns was abhorrent to her.
Why, Samuel Marlowe would have perished rather than
do such a thing. You might say what you liked
about Samuel Marlowe and, of course, his
habit of playing practical jokes put him beyond the
pale but nobody could question his courage.
Look at the way he had dived overboard that time in
the harbour at New York! Billie found herself
thinking wistfully about Samuel Marlowe.
There are only a few makes of car
in which you can think about anything except the actual
driving without stalling the engines, and Mr. Bennett’s
Twin-Six Complex was not one of them. It stopped
as if it had been waiting for the signal....
The noise of the engine died away. The wheels
ceased to revolve. The car did everything except
lie down. It was a particularly pig-headed car
and right from the start it had been unable to see
the sense in this midnight expedition. It seemed
now to have the idea that if it just lay low and did
nothing, presently it would be taken back to its cosy
garage.
Billie trod on the self-starter. Nothing happened.
“You’ll have to get down and crank her,”
she said curtly.
“All right,” said Bream.
“Well, go on,” said Billie impatiently.
“Eh?”
“Get out and crank her.”
Bream emerged for an instant from his trance.
“All right,” he said.
The art of cranking a car is one that
is not given to all men. Some of our greatest
and wisest stand helpless before the task. It
is a job towards the consummation of which a noble
soul and a fine brain help not at all. A man
may have all the other gifts and yet be unable to
accomplish a task which the fellow at the garage does
with one quiet flick of the wrist without even bothering
to remove his chewing gum. This being so, it
was not only unkind but foolish of Billie to grow
impatient as Bream’s repeated efforts failed
of their object. It was wrong of her to click
her tongue, and certainly she ought not to have told
Bream that he was not fit to churn butter. But
women are an emotional sex and must be forgiven much
in moments of mental stress.
“Give it a good sharp twist,” she said.
“All right,” said Bream.
“Here, let me do it,” cried Billie.
She jumped down and snatched the thingummy
from his hand. With bent brows and set teeth
she wrenched it round. The engine gave a faint
protesting mutter, like a dog that has been disturbed
in its sleep, and was still once more.
“May I help?”
It was not Bream who spoke but a strange
voice a sepulchral voice, the sort of voice
someone would have used in one of Edgar Allen Poe’s
cheerful little tales if he had been buried alive and
were speaking from the family vault. Coming suddenly
out of the night it affected Bream painfully.
He uttered a sharp exclamation and gave a bound which,
if he had been a Russian dancer would undoubtedly
have caused the management to raise his salary.
He was in no frame of mind to bear up under sudden
sepulchral voices.
Billie, on the other hand, was pleased.
The high-spirited girl was just beginning to fear
that she was unequal to the task which she had chided
Bream for being unable to perform and this was mortifying
her.
“Oh, would you mind? Thank
you so much. The self-starter has gone wrong.”
Into the glare of the headlights there
stepped a strange figure, strange, that is to say,
in these tame modern times. In the Middle Ages
he would have excited no comment at all. Passers
by would simply have said to themselves, “Ah,
another of those knights off after the dragons!”
and would have gone on their way with a civil greeting.
But in the present age it is always somewhat startling
to see a helmeted head pop up in front of your motor
car. At any rate, it startled Bream. I will
go further. It gave Bream the shock of a lifetime.
He had had shocks already that night, but none to
be compared with this. Or perhaps it was that
this shock, coming on top of those shocks, affected
him more disastrously than it would have done if it
had been the first of the series instead of the last.
One may express the thing briefly by saying that,
as far as Bream was concerned, Sam’s unconventional
appearance put the lid on it. He did not hesitate.
He did not pause to make comments or ask questions.
With a single cat-like screech which took years off
the lives of the abruptly wakened birds roosting in
the neighbouring trees, he dashed away towards the
house and, reaching his room, locked the door and
pushed the bed, the chest of drawers, two chairs, the
towel stand, and three pairs of boots against it.
Out on the drive Billie was staring
at the man in armour who had now, with a masterful
wrench which informed the car right away that he would
stand no nonsense, set the engine going again.
“Why why,”
she stammered, “why are you wearing that thing
on your head?”
“Because I can’t get it off.”
Hollow as the voice was, Billie recognised it.
“S Mr. Marlowe!” she exclaimed.
“Get in,” said Sam.
He had seated himself at the steering wheel. “Where
can I take you?”
“Go away!” said Billie.
“Get in!”
“I don’t want to talk to you.”
“I want to talk to you! Get in!”
“I won’t.”
Sam bent over the side of the car,
put his hands under her arms, lifted her like a kitten,
and deposited her on the seat beside him. Then
throwing in the clutch, he drove at an ever-increasing
speed down the drive and out into the silent road.
Strange creatures of the night came and went in the
golden glow of the head-lights.
Se
“Put me down,” said Billie.
“You’d get hurt if I did, travelling at
this pace.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Drive about till you promise to marry me.”
“You’ll have to drive a long time.”
“Right ho!” said Sam.
The car took a corner and purred down
a lane. Billie reached out a hand and grabbed
at the steering wheel.
“Of course, if you want
to smash up in a ditch!” said Sam, righting
the car with a wrench.
“You’re a brute!” said Billie.
“Caveman stuff,” explained Sam, “I
ought to have tried it before.”
“I don’t know what you expect to gain
by this.”
“That’s all right,” said Sam, “I
know what I’m about.”
“I’m glad to hear it.”
“I thought you would be.”
“I’m not going to talk to you.”
“All right. Lean back and doze off.
We’ve the whole night before us.”
“What do you mean?” cried Billie, sitting
up with a jerk.
“Have you ever been to Scotland?”
“What do you mean?”
“I thought we might push up
there. We’ve got to go somewhere and, oddly
enough, I’ve never been to Scotland.”
Billie regarded him blankly.
“Are you crazy?”
“I’m crazy about you.
If you knew what I’ve gone through to-night for
your sake you’d be more sympathetic. I love
you,” said Sam, swerving to avoid a rabbit.
“And what’s more, you know it.”
“I don’t care.”
“You will!” said Sam confidently.
“How about North Wales? I’ve heard
people speak well of North Wales. Shall we head
for North Wales?”
“I’m engaged to Bream Mortimer.”
“Oh no, that’s all off,” Sam assured
her.
“It’s not!”
“Right off!” said Sam
firmly. “You could never bring yourself
to marry a man who dashed away like that and deserted
you in your hour of need. Why, for all he knew,
I might have tried to murder you. And he ran away!
No, no, we eliminate Bream Mortimer once and for all.
He won’t do!”
This was so exactly what Billie was
feeling herself that she could not bring herself to
dispute it.
“Anyway, I hate you!” she said,
giving the conversation another turn.
“Why? In the name of goodness, why?”
“How dared you make a fool of me in your father’s
office that morning?”
“It was a sudden inspiration.
I had to do something to make you think well of me,
and I thought it might meet the case if I saved you
from a lunatic with a pistol. It wasn’t
my fault that you found out.”
“I shall never forgive you!”
“Why not Cornwall?” said
Sam. “The Riviera of England! Let’s
go to Cornwall. I beg your pardon. What
were you saying?”
“I said I should never forgive you and I won’t.”
“Well, I hope you’re fond
of motoring,” said Sam, “because we’re
going on till you do.”
“Very well! Go on, then!”
“I intend to. Of course,
it’s all right now while it’s dark.
But have you considered what is going to happen when
the sun gets up? We shall have a sort of triumphal
procession. How the small boys will laugh when
they see a man in a helmet go by in a car! I shan’t
notice them myself because it’s a little difficult
to notice anything from inside this thing, but I’m
afraid it will be rather unpleasant for you....
I know what we’ll do. We’ll go to
London and drive up and down Piccadilly! That
will be fun!”
There was a long silence.
“Is my helmet on straight?” said Sam.
Billie made no reply. She was
looking before her down the hedge-bordered road.
Always a girl of sudden impulses, she had just made
a curious discovery, to wit that she was enjoying
herself. There was something so novel and exhilarating
about this midnight ride that imperceptibly her dismay
and resentment had ebbed away. She found herself
struggling with a desire to laugh.
“Lochinvar!” said Sam
suddenly. “That’s the name of the
chap I’ve been trying to think of! Did
you ever read about Lochinvar? ‘Young Lochinvar’
the poet calls him rather familiarly. He did just
what I’m doing now, and everybody thought very
highly of him. I suppose in those days a helmet
was just an ordinary part of what the well-dressed
man should wear. Odd how fashions change!”
Till now dignity and wrath combined
had kept Billie from making any inquiries into a matter
which had excited in her a quite painful curiosity.
In her new mood she resisted the impulse no longer.
“Why are you wearing that thing?”
“I told you. Purely and
simply because I can’t get it off. You don’t
suppose I’m trying to set a new style in gents’
head-wear, do you?”
“But why did you ever put it on?”
“Well, it was this way.
After I came out of the cupboard in the drawing-room....”
“What!”
“Didn’t I tell you about
that? Oh yes, I was sitting in the cupboard in
the drawing-room from dinner-time onwards. After
that I came out and started cannoning about among
Aunt Adeline’s china, so I thought I’d
better switch the light on. Unfortunately I switched
on some sort of musical instrument instead. And
then somebody started shooting. So, what with
one thing and another, I thought it would be best to
hide somewhere. I hid in one of the suits of
armour in the hall.”
“Were you inside there all the time we were...?”
“Yes. I say, that was funny
about Bream, wasn’t it? Getting under the
bed, I mean.”
“Don’t let’s talk about Bream.”
“That’s the right spirit!
I like to see it! All right, we won’t.
Let’s get back to the main issue. Will
you marry me?”
“But why did you come to the house at all?”
“To see you.”
“To see me! At that time of night?”
“Well, perhaps not actually
to see you.” Sam was a little perplexed
for a moment. Something told him that it would
be injudicious to reveal his true motive and thereby
risk disturbing the harmony which he felt had begun
to exist between them. “To be near you!
To be in the same house with you!” he went on
vehemently feeling that he had struck the right note.
“You don’t know the anguish I went through
after I read that letter of yours. I was mad!
I was ... well, to return to the point, will you marry
me?”
Billie sat looking straight before
her. The car, now on the main road, moved smoothly
on.
“Will you marry me?”
Billie rested her hand on her chin
and searched the darkness with thoughtful eyes.
“Will you marry me?”
The car raced on.
“Will you marry me?” said Sam. “Will
you marry me? Will you marry me?”
“Oh, don’t talk like a parrot,”
cried Billie. “It reminds me of Bream.”
“But will you?”
“Yes,” said Billie.
Sam brought the car to a standstill
with a jerk, probably very bad for the tyres.
“Did you say ’yes’?”
“Yes!”
“Darling!” said Sam, leaning towards her.
“Oh, curse this helmet!”
“Why?”
“Well, I rather wanted to kiss you and it hampers
me.”
“Let me try and get it off. Bend down!”
“Ouch!” said Sam.
“It’s coming. There! How helpless
men are!”
“We need a woman’s tender
care,” said Sam depositing the helmet on the
floor of the car and rubbing his smarting ears.
“Billie!”
“Sam!”
“You angel!”
“You’re rather a darling
after all,” said Billie. “But you
want keeping in order,” she added severely.
“You will do that when we’re
married. When we’re married!” he repeated
luxuriously. “How splendid it sounds!”
“The only trouble is,” said Billie, “father
won’t hear of it.”
“No, he won’t. Not till it is all
over,” said Sam.
He started the car again.
“What are you going to do?” said Billie.
“Where are you going?”
“To London,” said Sam.
“It may be news to you but the old lawyer like
myself knows that, by going to Doctors’ Commons
or the Court of Arches or somewhere or by routing
the Archbishop of Canterbury out of bed or something,
you can get a special licence and be married almost
before you know where you are. My scheme roughly is
to dig this special licence out of whoever keeps such
things, have a bit of breakfast, and then get married
at our leisure before lunch at a registrar’s.”
“Oh, not a registrar’s!” said Billie.
“No?”
“I should hate a registrar’s.”
“Very well, angel. Just
as you say. We’ll go to a church. There
are millions of churches in London. I’ve
seen them all over the place.” He mused
for a moment. “Yes, you’re quite right,”
he said. “A church is the thing. It’ll
please Webster.”
“Webster?”
“Yes, he’s rather keen
on the church bells never having rung out so blithe
a peal before. And we must consider Webster’s
feelings. After all, he brought us together.”
“Webster? How?”
“Oh, I’ll tell you all
about that some other time,” said Sam. “Just
for the moment I want to sit quite still and think.
Are you comfortable? Fine! Then off we go.”
The birds in the trees fringing the
road stirred and twittered grumpily as the noise of
the engine disturbed their slumbers. But, if they
had only known it, they were in luck. At any
rate, the worst had not befallen them, for Sam was
too happy to sing.