“MY aunt will be down presently, Mr. Nuttel,” said a very self-possessed young lady of fifteen. “Inthemeantime you must try and put up with me.”
Frampton Nuttel endeavored to say
something which should duly flatter the niece of the moment without unduly
discounting the aunt that was to come. Privately he doubted more than ever
whether these formal visits of a succession of total strangers would do much
towards helping the nerve cure which he was supposed to be undergoing.
“I know how it will be,” his sister
had said when he was preparing to migrate to this rural retreat; “you will bury
yourself down there and not speak to a living soul, and your nerves will be
worse than ever from moping. I shall just give you letters of introduction to
all the people I know there. Some of them, as far as I can remember, were quite
nice.”
Frampton wondered whether Mrs. Appleton,
the lady to whom he was presenting one of the letters of introduction, came
into the nice division.
“Do you know many of the people
round here?” asked the niece, when she judged that they had had sufficient
silent communion.
“Hardly a soul,” said Frampton. “My
sister was staying here, some four years ago, and she gave me letters of
introduction to some of the people here.”
He made the last statement in a
tone of distinct regret.
“Then you know practically nothing
about my aunt?” pursued the self-possessed young lady.
“Only her name and address,” admitted the caller.
He was wondering whether Mrs. Appleton was in the married or widowed state. An
undefinable something about the room seemed to suggest masculine habitation.
“Her great tragedy happened just
three years ago,” said the child, “that would be since your sister’s time.”
“Her tragedy?” asked Frampton.
Somehow in this restful country spot tragedies seemed out of place.
“You may wonder why we keep that
window wide open on an October afternoon,” said the niece, indicating a large
French window that opened on to a lawn.
“It is quite warm for the time of
the year,” said Frampton, “but has that window got anything to do with the
tragedy?”
“Out through that window, three years ago to a
day, her husband and her two young brothers went off for their day’s shooting.
They never came back. In crossing the moor to their favorite shooting ground
they were all three engulfed in a treacherous piece of bog. It had been that
dreadful wet summer, you know, and places that were safe in other years gave
way suddenly without warning. Their bodies were never recovered. That was the
dreadful part of it.” Here the child’s voice lost its self-possessed note and
became falteringly human. “Poor aunt always thinks that they will come back
someday, they and the little brown spaniel that was lost with them, and walk in
at that window just as they used to do. That is why the window is kept open
every evening till it is quite dusk. Poor dear aunt, she has often told me how
they went out, her husband with his white waterproof coat over his arm, and
Ronnie, her youngest brother, singing ‘Bertie, why do you bound?’ as he always
did to tease her, because she said it got on her nerves. Do you know, sometimes
on still, quiet evenings like this, I almost get a creepy feeling that they
will all walk in through that window... ”
She broke off with a little shudder. It was a relief to Frampton
when the aunt bustled into the room with a whirl of apologies for being late in
making her appearance.
“I hope Vera has been amusing you?”
she said.
“She has been very interesting,”
said Frampton.
“I hope you don’t mind the open
window,” said Mrs. Appleton briskly; “my husband and brothers will be home
directly from shooting, and they always come in this way. They’ve been out for
snipe in the marshes today, so they’ll make a fine mess over my poor carpets.
So like you menfolk, isn’t it?”
She rattled on cheerfully about the
shooting and the scarcity of birds, and the prospects for duck in the winter.
To Frampton it was all purely horrible. He made a desperate but only partially
successful effort to turn the talk on to a less ghastly topic; he was conscious
that his hostess was giving him only a fragment of her attention, and her eyes
were constantly straying past him to the open window and the lawn beyond. It was
certainly an unfortunate coincidence that he should have paid his visit on this
tragic anniversary.
“The doctors agree in ordering me
complete rest, an absence of mental excitement, and avoidance of anything in
the nature of violent physical exercise,” announced Frampton, who labored under
the tolerably widespread delusion that total strangers and chance acquaintances
are hungry for the least detail of one’s ailments and infirmities, their cause
and cure. “On the matter of diet they are not so much in agreement,” he
continued.
“No?” said Mrs. Appleton, in a
voice which only replaced a yawn at the last moment. Then she suddenly
brightened into alert attention — but not to what Frampton was saying.
“Here they are at last!” she cried.
“Just in time for tea, and don’t they look as if they were muddy up to the
eyes!”
Frampton shivered slightly and turned towards the niece with
a look intended to convey sympathetic comprehension. The child was staring out
through the open window with a dazed horror in her eyes. In a chill shock of
nameless fear Frampton swung round in his seat and looked in the same
direction.
In the deepening twilight three
figures were walking across the lawn towards the window, they all carried guns
under their arms, and one of them was additionally burdened with a white coat
hung over his shoulders. A tired brown spaniel kept close at their heels.
Noiselessly they neared the house, and then a hoarse young voice chanted out of
the dusk: “I say, Bertie, why do you bound?”
Frampton grabbed wildly at his
stick and hat; the hall door, the gravel drive, and the front gate were dimly
noted stages in his headlong retreat. A cyclist coming along the road had to
run into the hedge to avoid imminent collision.
“Here we are, my dear,” said the
bearer of the white mackintosh, coming in through the window. “Who was that who
bolted out as we came up?”
“A most extraordinary man, a Mr.
Nuttel,” said Mrs. Appleton. “He could only talk about his illnesses, and
dashed off without a word of goodbye or apology when you arrived. One would
think he had seen a ghost.”
“I expect it was the spaniel,” said the niece calmly. “He
told me he had a horror of dogs. He was once hunted into a cemetery somewhere
on the banks of the Ganges by a pack of dogs, and had to spend the night in a
newly dug grave with the creatures snarling and grinning and foaming just above
him. Enough to make anyone lose their nerve.”
Romance at short notice was her specialty
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