Delphi Collected Works of Hugh Walpole (Illustrated)

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Delphi Collected Works of Hugh Walpole (Illustrated) Page 383

by Hugh Walpole


  So happily Grace ran on and Paul looked up from his desk at her, digging his fingers into his white hair, smiling at her in just the old confidential way that he used to have before Maggie came.

  She revived, too, her old habit of talking to herself. This had always been an immense relief to her — it had helped her to feel reassurance. Lately she had felt that Maggie was overhearing her and was laughing at her; this had checked her and made her suspicious. Now as she began to mount the stairs she would murmur to herself: “It might be better to tell Jenny to go to Bartletts. After all, it’s quicker that way, and she’ll be able to tell the boy to bring the things back. She needn’t wait. All the same she’s stupid, she’ll make a muddle of it as likely as not. And Womball’s boy is livelier than Bartletts’. That’s something after all. But if she goes out at two-thirty she’ll never be back by four — unless she went by Smith’s lane of course — she might do that ... Oh, dear, these stairs are a trial ... yes, she might do that, and then she’d only be an hour altogether. I’ll suggest that ...”

  Her murmur was a cheerful monotonous sound accompanying her as she went. She would stop and rub the side of her nose with her thumb, considering. In the house, when there was no fear of callers, she wore large loose slippers that tap-tapped as she went. In the evenings she sat in Paul’s study all amongst the Cornhills, The Temple Bars, and The Bible Concordances. They were very cosy and happy, and she talked incessantly. For some reason she did not dare to ask him whether he were not happier now that Maggie was away. She did not dare. There was not the complete confidence that there had been. Paul was strange a little, bewitched by Maggie’s strangeness ... There was something there that Grace did not understand. So she said nothing, but she tried to convey to him, in the peculiar warmth of her good-night kiss, what she felt.

  Then Maggie returned. She came back in her black clothes and with her pale face. Her aunt had died. She was more alone even than before. She was very quiet, and agreed to everything that Grace said. Nevertheless, although she agreed, she was more antagonistic than she had been. She had now something that intensely preoccupied her. Grace could see that she was always thinking about something that had nothing to do with Skeaton or Paul or the house. She was more absent-minded than ever, forgot everything, liked best to sit in her bedroom all alone.

  “Oh, she’s mad!” said Grace. “She’s really mad! Just fancy if she should go right off her head!” Grace was now so desperately frightened that she lay awake at night, sweating, listening to every sound. “If she should come and murder me one night,” she thought. Another thought she had was: “It’s just as though she sees some one all the time who isn’t there.”

  Then came 13th March, that dreadful day that would be never forgotten by Grace so long as she lived. During the whole of the past week Skeaton had been delivered up to a tempest of wind and rain. The High Street, emptied of human beings, had glittered and swayed under the sweeping storm. The Skeaton sea, possessing suddenly a life of its own, had stormed upon the Skeaton promenade, and worried and lashed and soaked that hideous structure to within an inch of its unnatural life. Behind the town the woods had swayed and creaked, funeral black against the grey thick sky. Across the folds the rain fell in slanting sheets with the sibilant hiss of relentless power and resolve.

  After luncheon, on this day the 13th, Maggie disappeared into the upper part of the house and Grace settled down on the drawing-room sofa to a nice little nap. She fell asleep to the comforting patter of rain upon the windows and the howling of the storm down the chimney. She dreamt, as she often did, about food.

  She was awakened, with a sudden start, by a sense of apprehension. This happened to her now so often that there was nothing strange in it, but she jumped up, with beating heart, from the sofa, crying out: “What’s happened? What’s the matter?”

  She realised that the room had grown darker since she fell asleep, and although it was early still there was a sort of grey twilight that stood out against a deeper dusk in the garden beyond.

  “What is it?” she said again, and then saw that Jenny, the maid, was standing in the doorway.

  “Well, Jenny?” she asked, trying to recover some of her dignity.

  “It’s a man, mum,” said the little girl. (Grace had got her cheap from an orphanage.) “A gentleman, mum. He’s asking for Mrs. Trenchard. ’E give me ’is card. Oh, mum, ’e is wet too!”

  She had scarcely finished, and Grace had only taken the card, when Mathew Cardinal came forward out of the hall. He was a dim and mysterious figure in that half-light, but Grace could see that he was more battered and shabby than on his last visit. His coat collar was turned up. She could only very vaguely see his face, but it seemed to her strangely white when before it had been so grossly red.

  She was struck by his immobility. Partly perhaps because she had been roused from sleep and was yet neither clear nor resolved, he seemed to her some nightmare figure. This was the man who was responsible for all the trouble and scandal, this was the man who threatened to drive Paul and herself from her home, this was the blackguard who had not known how to behave in decent society. But behind that was the terror of the mystery that enveloped Maggie — the girl’s uncle, the man who had shared in her strange earlier life, and made her what she now was. As he stood there, motionless, silent, the water dripping from his clothes, Grace was as frightened as though he had already offered her personal violence or held a pistol to her head.

  “What do you want?” she asked hoarsely, stepping back to the sofa. Jenny had left the room.

  “I want to see my niece,” he answered, still without moving. She recognised then, strangely, in his voice a terror akin to her own. He also was afraid of something. Of what? It was not that his voice shook or that his tongue faltered. But he was terrified ... She could feel his heart thumping behind the words.

  “I’m sorry,” she said. “You can’t see her. She’s upstairs resting.”

  She did not know whence the resolution had come that he was not, in any case, to see Maggie; she did not know what catastrophe she anticipated from their meeting. She was simply resolved, as though acting under the blind orders of some other power, that Maggie should not see him and that he should leave the house at once.

  “I must see her,” he said, and the desperate urgency in his voice would have touched any one less terrified than Grace. “I must.”

  “I’m sorry,” she answered. The fear in his voice seemed now to give her superiority over him. “It’s impossible.”

  “Oh no,” he said. “If she’s here it can’t be impossible. She’d want to see me. We have things ... I must ... You don’t understand, Miss Trenchard.”

  “I only know,” said Grace, “that after what occurred on your last visit here, Mr. Cardinal, Maggie said that she would never see you again.”

  “That’s a lie!” he said.

  She made no answer. Then at last he said pitifully:

  “She didn’t really say that, did she?”

  “Yes. I’m sorry. But you can understand after what occurred—”

  He came suddenly forward, the water trickling from him on to the carpet.

  “You swear that’s true?”

  She could see now his face and realised that he was, indeed, desperate — breathless as though he had been running from some one.

  “Yes, that’s true,” she answered.

  “Maggie said that.”

  “Those were Maggie’s words.”

  “Oh, well, I’m done ...” He turned away from her as though her announcement had settled something about which he had been in doubt. “It isn’t like Maggie ... But still she hasn’t written. She saw I was hard up last time. All I deserve ... All I deserve.” He turned round to Grace again. “I can’t quite believe it, Miss Trenchard. It doesn’t sound like Maggie, but perhaps you’ve influenced her ... That’s likely. If she should change her mind I’m at the ‘Sea Dog.’ Not much of a place. Quiet though. Yes, well. You might tell her not to bother. I’m f
inished, you see, Miss Trenchard. Yes, down. You’ll be glad to hear it, I’ve no doubt. Well, I mustn’t stay talking. I wish Maggie were happier though. She isn’t happy, is she?”

  The question was so abrupt that Grace was startled.

  “I should hope so — Mr. Cardinal,” she said.

  “Oh, no, she isn’t. I know. Always this religion she gets into. If it isn’t one sort it’s another. But she’s a good girl. Don’t you forget that. Well, I must be going. Good day. Good day.”

  He was actually gone, leaving a little pool of water on the carpet behind him. Grace sat down on the sofa again. What a horrible man! What a horrible man! But she had been wrong to say that about Maggie. Yes, she had. But he had taken her by surprise. Oh dear! How her heart was beating! And how strange he had looked. She could scarcely breathe. She sat there lost in stupefied wonder. At last tea came in, and with it Paul and Maggie. Grace felt ashamed and frightened. Why was Maggie always making her do things of which she was ashamed? It was as though the girl had power over her ... absurd, of course. Nevertheless, as she poured out the tea she was haunted by that man’s eyes. Yes, he had undoubtedly been very unhappy. Yes, in great trouble.

  Maggie sat quietly there. Paul was preoccupied with a letter that must, he had decided, be written to The Church Times. It was a letter about Churchwardens and their growing independence. He finished his tea hurriedly, but before he left the room, looking at Maggie rather wistfully, suddenly he bent down and kissed her. She glanced up at him, smiling.

  “Is there anything I can do for you, Grace?” she asked.

  Then, as it were without her own desire, Grace was compelled to speak. “There’s something I ought to tell you—” she began awkwardly. Then she stopped. Maggie was troubled. She knew that when Grace was uncomfortable every one else was uncomfortable.

  “What have I done now?” she said rather sharply.

  “It’s nothing that you’ve done,” answered Grace also sharply. “I’m sure I don’t know, Maggie, why you should always think that I’m scolding you. No, I don’t indeed. It’s nothing that you’ve done. Your uncle came to see you this afternoon.”

  “Uncle Mathew?” Maggie jumped up from her chair. “Came here?”

  “Yes.”

  “And wanted to see me? Oh, Grace, why didn’t you tell me?”

  “I have told you ... There’s nothing to make a fuss about, Maggie. Really, you needn’t look like that — as though I were always doing something wrong. I only did it for your sake.”

  “For my sake? But why? I wanted to see him. I was trying to see him in London. Oh, Grace, what did he say?”

  “What did he say? Well, fancy! As though I could remember. He said he’d come to see you, and when I said he couldn’t, he went away again.”

  “Said he couldn’t? But why couldn’t he?”

  “Really, Maggie, your tone is extraordinary. Fancy what Paul would say if he heard you. He wouldn’t like it, I’m sure. I said that after the way he’d behaved last time he came here you didn’t want to see him again.”

  “You said that? Oh, Grace! How did you dare!” “Now, Maggie, don’t you look like that. I’ve done nothing, I’m sure.”

  “Did you say that I’d said that I didn’t want to see him again?”

  Grace shrank back behind the tea-things.

  “Yes, I did ... Maggie, you frighten me.”

  “I hope I do ... You’re wicked, you’re wicked. Yes, you are. Where is he now?”

  “He’s at the ‘Sea Dog.’ That dirty public house on the sea-front — near Tunstalls — Where are you going?”

  “I’m going to him of course.” Maggie turned and looked at Grace. Grace was fascinated as a rabbit is by a snake. The two women stared at one another.

  “How strange you are, Grace,” Maggie said. “You seem to like to be cruel!” Then she went out. When the door was closed Grace found “that she was all in a perspiration.” Her hand trembled so that when she tried to pour herself another cup of tea — just to fortify herself — she poured it into the saucer. And the tea was cold — no use now.

  When she rose at last to go in and seek consolation from Paul her knees were trembling so that she staggered across the floor. This couldn’t go on. No, it could not. To be frightened in one’s own house! Absurd ... Really the girl had looked terrible ... Murder ... That’s what it had looked like. Something must be done.

  Murmuring aloud to herself again and again “Something must be done” as she crossed the hall, she walked slowly, her hand to her heart, ponderously, as though she were walking in the dark. Then, as soon as she had opened the study door she began, before she could see her brother: “Oh, Paul, I’m so frightened. It’s Maggie. She’s very angry. Fancy what she said.”

  Maggie meanwhile had gone straight up to her bedroom and found her black hat and her waterproof. Her one thought now was lest he should have caught the five o’clock train and gone back to London. Oh! how hurt he would be with her, how terribly hurt! The thought of the pain and loneliness that he would feel distressed her so bitterly that she could scarcely put on her hat, she was so eager to run and find him. She felt, at the thought of his fruitless journey through the rain, the tenderest affection for him, maternal and loving, so that she wanted to have him with her at once and to see him in warm clothes beside the fire, drinking whisky if he liked, and she would give him all the money she possessed.

  She had still touched very little of her own three hundred pounds. He should have as much of that as he liked. The death of Aunt Anne had shown her how few people in the world there were for her to love. After all, the aunts and Uncle Mathew had needed her as no one else had done. She made little plans; she would, perhaps, go back with him to London for a little time. There was, after all, no reason why she should remain in this horrible place for ever. And Paul now seemed not to care whether she went or stayed.

  She ran out into the wind and the rain. She was surprised by the force and fury of it. It would take time and strength to battle down the High Street. Poor Uncle Mathew! To walk all the way in the rain and then to be told that she would not see him! She could imagine him turning away down the drive, bitterly disappointed ...

  Probably he had come to borrow money, and she had promised that she would not fail him. When she reached the High Street she was soaked. She felt the water dripping down her neck and in her boots. At the corner of the High Street by the bookseller’s she was forced to pause, so fiercely did the wind beat up from the Otterson Road, that runs openly to the sea. Maggie had not even in Glebeshire known so furious a day and hour when the winds tossed and raged but never broke into real storm. It was the more surprising. She had to pause for a moment to remember where Turnstall’s the butcher was, then, suddenly recalling it, she turned off the High Street and found her way to the mean streets that ran behind the Promenade. Still she met no one. It might have been a town abandoned by all human life and given over to the wind and rain and the approaching absorption of the sea. It was now dark and the lamp at the end of the street blew gustily and with an uncertain flare.

  Maggie found Turnstall’s, its shop lit and Mr. Turnstall himself, stout and red-faced, behind his bloody counter. She went in and asked him where “The Sea Dog” might be. He explained to her that it was close at hand, on the right, looking over the Promenade. She found it at last because it had an old-fashioned creaking wooden sign with a blue sailor painted on it. Timidly she stepped into the dark uneven passage. To the right of her she could see a deserted room with wooden trestles and a table. The bar must be near because she could hear voices and the clinking of glasses, but, in spite of those sounds the house seemed very dead. Through the walls and rooms she could hear the pounding beat of the sea. She walked to the end of the passage and there found an old wrinkled man in riding breeches and a brightly-coloured check shirt.

  “Can you tell me where a gentleman, Mr. Cardinal, is staying?” she asked.

  He was obviously very deaf; she had to shout. She repeated her ques
tion, adding. “He came from London to-day.”

  A stout middle-aged woman appeared. “What is it?” she asked. “The old man’s stone deaf. He can’t hear at all.”

  “I was wondering,” said Maggie, “whether you could tell me where I could find a Mr. Cardinal. He came down from London to-day and is staying here.”

  “Cardinal ... Cardinal?” The woman thought, scratching her head. “Was it Caldwell you meant?”

  “No,” said Maggie. “Cardinal.”

  “I’ll go and see.” The woman disappeared, whilst the old man brushed past Maggie as though she were a piece of furniture; he departed on some secret purpose of his own.

  “What a horrible place!” thought Maggie. “Uncle must be in a bad way if he comes here. I never should sleep for the noise of the sea.”

  The woman returned. “Yes. ‘E’s here. No. 5. Come this afternoon. Up the stairs and second door on the right.”

  The stairs to which she pointed offered a gulf of darkness. The woman was gone. The noises from the bar had ceased. The only sound in the place was the thundering of the sea, roaring, as it seemed, at the very foot of the house.

  Maggie climbed the stairs. Half-way up she was compelled to pause. The darkness blinded her; she had lost the reflection from the lamp below and, above her, there was no light at all. She advanced slowly, step by step, feeling her way with a hand on the rickety bannisters. At the top of the stair there was a gleam of light and, turning to the right, she knocked on the second door. There was no answer and she knocked again. Listening, the noise of the sea was now so violent that she fancied that she might not have heard the answer so she turned the handle of the door and pushed it open. She was met then by a gale of wind, a rush of the sea that seemed as imminent as though she were on the shore itself and a dim grey light that revealed nothing in the room to her but only shapes and shadows.

 

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