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There Is a Graveyard That Dwells in Man

Page 32

by There Is a Graveyard That Dwells in Man (retail) (epub)


  This is the end of the story, but the following may throw some light upon it.

  The history of Alice's mysterious disappearance became widely known through the medium of the Press and Mr. Roberts, distressed beyond measure at what had taken place, returned in all haste to Overbury to offer what comfort and help he could give to his afflicted friend and tenant. He called upon the Maydews and, having heard their tale, sat for a short time in silence. Then he said: “Have you ever heard any local gossip concerning this Colonel and Mrs. Paxton?”

  “No,” replied Mr. Maydew, “I never heard their names until the day of my poor daughter's fatal visit.”

  “Well,” said Mr. Roberts, “I will tell you all I can about them, which is not very much, I fear.” He paused and then went on: “I am now nearly seventy-five years old, and for nearly seventy years no house has stood in Brickett Bottom. But when I was a child of about five there was an old-fashioned, red brick house standing in a garden at the bend of the road, such as you have described. It was owned and lived in by a retired Indian soldier and his wife, a Colonel and Mrs. Paxton. At the time I speak of, certain events having taken place at the house and the old couple having died, it was sold by their heirs to Lord Carew, who shortly after pulled it down on the ground that it interfered with his shooting. Colonel and Mrs. Paxton were well known to my father, who was the clergyman here before me, and to the neighbourhood in general. They lived quietly and were not unpopular, but the Colonel was supposed to possess a violent and vindictive temper. Their family consisted only of themselves, their daughter and a couple of servants, the Colonel's old Army servant and his Eurasian wife. Well, I cannot tell you details of what happened, I was only a child; my father never liked gossip and in later years, when he talked to me on the subject, he always avoided any appearance of exaggeration or sensationalism. However, it is known that Miss Paxton fell in love with and became engaged to a young man to whom her parents took a strong dislike. They used every possible means to break off the match, and many rumours were set on foot as to their conduct—undue influence, even cruelty were charged against them. I do not know the truth, all I can say is that Miss Paxton died and a very bitter feeling against her parents sprang up. My father, however, continued to call, but was rarely admitted. In fact, he never saw Colonel Paxton after his daughter's death and only saw Mrs. Paxton once or twice. He described her as an utterly broken woman, and was not surprised at her following her daughter to the grave in about three months’ time. Colonel Paxton became, if possible, more of a recluse than ever after his wife's death and himself died not more than a month after her under circumstances which pointed to suicide. Again a crop of rumours sprang up, but there was no one in particular to take action, the doctor certified Death from Natural Causes, and Colonel Paxton, like his wife and daughter, was buried in this churchyard. The property passed to a distant relative, who came down to it for one night shortly afterwards; he never came again, having apparently conceived a violent dislike to the place, but arranged to pension off the servants and then sold the house to Lord Carew, who was glad to purchase this little island in the middle of his property. He pulled it down soon after he had bought it, and the garden was left to relapse into a wilderness.”

  Mr. Roberts paused. “Those are all the facts,” he added.

  “But there is something more,” said Maggie.

  Mr. Roberts hesitated for a while. “You have a right to know all,” he said almost to himself; then louder he continued: “What I am now going to tell you is really rumour, vague and uncertain; I cannot fathom its truth or its meaning. About five years after the house had been pulled down a young maidservant at Carew Court was out walking one afternoon. She was a stranger to the village and a new-comer to the Court. On returning home to tea she told her fellow-servants that as she walked down Brickett Bottom, which place she described clearly, she passed a red brick house at the bend of the road and that a kind-faced old lady had asked her to step in for a while. She did not go in, not because she had any suspicions of there being anything uncanny, but simply because she feared to be late for tea.

  “I do not think she ever visited the Bottom again and she had no other similar experience, so far as I am aware.

  “Two or three years later, shortly after my father's death, a travelling tinker with his wife and daughter camped for the night at the foot of the Bottom. The girl strolled away up the glen to gather blackberries and was never seen or heard of again. She was searched for in vain—of course, one does not know the truth— and she may have run away voluntarily from her parents, although there was no known cause for her doing so.

  “That,” concluded Mr. Roberts, “is all I can tell you of either facts or rumours; all that I can now do is to pray for you and for her.”

  Podolo

  LP Hartley

  The evening before we made the expedition to Podolo we talked it over, and I agreed there was nothing against it really.

  “But why did you say you'd feel safer if Walter was going too?” Angela asked me. And Walter said, “What good should I be? I can't help to row the gondola, you know.”

  Then I felt rather silly, for everything I had said about Podolo was merely conversational exaggeration, meant to whet their curiosity, like a newspaper headline and I knew that when Angela actually saw the dull little island, its stony and inhospitable shore littered with broken bottles and empty tins, she would think what a fool I was, with my romancing. So I took back everything I said, called my own bluff, as it were, and explained that I avoided Podolo only because of its exposed position: it was four miles from Venice, and if a boisterous bora got up (as it sometimes did, without warning) we should find getting back hard work, and might be late home. “And what will Walter say,” I wound up, “if he comes back from Trieste” (he was going there for the day on business) “and finds no wife to welcome him?” Walter said, on the contrary, he had often wished such a thing might happen. And so, after some playful recriminations between this lately married, charming, devoted couple we agreed that Podolo should be the goal for tomorrow's picnic. “You must curb my wife's generous impulses,” Walter warned me; “she always wants to do something for somebody. It's an expensive habit.” I assured him that at Podolo she would find no calls on her heart or her purse. Except perhaps for a rat or two it was quite uninhabited. Next morning in brilliant sunshine Walter gulped down his breakfast and started for the station. It seemed hard that he should have to spend six hours of this divine day in a stuffy train. I stood on the balcony watching his departure.

  The sunlight sparkled on the water; the gondola, in its best array, glowed and glittered. “Say goodbye to Angela for me,” cried Walter as the gondolier braced himself for the first stroke. “And what is your postal address at Podolo?”

  “Full fathom five,” I called out, but I don't think my reply reached him.

  Until you get right up to Podolo you can form no estimate of its size. There is nothing near by to compare it with. On the horizon it looks like a foot-rule. Even now, though I have been there many times, I cannot say whether it is a hundred yards long or two hundred. But I have no wish to go back and make certain.

  We cast anchor a few feet from the stony shore. Podolo, I must say, was looking its best, green, flowery, almost welcoming. One side is rounded to form the shallow arc of a circle: the other is straight. Seen from above, it must look like the moon in its first quarter. Seen as we saw it from the water-line with the grassy rampart behind, it forms a kind of natural amphitheatre. The slim withy-like acacia trees give a certain charm to the foreground, and to the background where they grow in clumps, and cast darker shadows, an air of mystery. As we sat in the gondola we were like theatre-goers in the stalls, staring at an empty stage.

  It was nearly two o’clock when we began lunch. I was very hungry, and, charmed by my companion and occupied by my food, I did not let my eyes stray out of the boat. To Angela belonged the honour of discovering the first denizen of Podolo.

  “Why,”
she exclaimed, “there's a cat.” Sure enough there was: a little cat, hardly more than a kitten, very thin and scraggy, and mewing with automatic regularity every two or three seconds. Standing on the weedy stones at the water's edge it was a pitiful sight. “It's smelt the food,” said Angela. “It's hungry. Probably it's starving.”

  Mario, the gondolier, had also made the discovery, but he received it in a different spirit. “Povera bestia,” he cried in sympathetic accents, but his eyes brightened. “Its owners did not want it. It has been put here on purpose, one sees.” The idea that the cat had been left to starve caused him no great concern, but it shocked Angela profoundly.

  “How abominable!” she exclaimed. “We must take it something to eat at once.”

  The suggestion did not recommend itself to Mario, who had to haul up the anchor and see the prospect of his own lunch growing more remote: I too thought we might wait till the meal was over. The cat would not die before our eyes. But Angela could brook no delay. So to the accompaniment of a good deal of stamping and heavy breathing the prow of the gondola was turned to land.

  Meanwhile the cat continued to miaow, though it had retreated a little and was almost invisible, a thin wisp of tabby fur, against the parched stems of the outermost grasses.

  Angela filled her hand with chicken bones.

  “I shall try to win its confidence with these,” she said, “and then if I can I shall catch it and put it in the boat and we'll take it to Venice. If it's left here it'll certainly starve.”

  She climbed along the knife-like gunwale of the gondola and stepped delicately on to the slippery boulders.

  Continuing to eat my chicken in comfort, I watched her approach the cat. It ran away, but only a few yards: its hunger was obviously keeping its fear at bay. She threw a bit of food and it came nearer: another, and it came nearer still. Its demeanour grew less suspicious; its tail rose into the air; it came right up to Angela's feet. She pounced. But the cat was too quick for her; it slipped through her hands like water. Again hunger overpowered mistrust. Back it came. Once more Angela made a grab at it; once more it eluded her. But the third time she was successful. She got hold of its leg.

  I shall never forget seeing it dangle from Angela's (fortunately) gloved hand. It wriggled and squirmed and fought, and in spite of its tiny size the violence of its struggles made Angela quiver like a twig in a gale. And all the while it made the most extraordinary noise, the angriest, wickedest sound I ever heard. Instead of growing louder as its fury mounted, the sound actually decreased in volume, as though the creature was being choked by its own rage. The spitting died away into the thin ghost of a snarl, infinitely malevolent, but hardly more audible from where I was than the hiss of air from a punctured tyre.

  Mario was distressed by what he felt to be Angela's brutality. “Poor beast!” he exclaimed with pitying looks. “She ought not to treat it like that.” And his face gleamed with satisfaction when, intimidated by the whirling claws, she let the cat drop. It streaked away into the grass, its belly to the ground.

  Angela climbed back into the boat. “I nearly had it,” she said, her voice still unsteady from the encounter. “I think I shall get it next time. I shall throw a coat over it.” She ate her asparagus in silence, throwing the stalks over the side. I saw that she was preoccupied and couldn't get the cat out of her mind. Any form of suffering in others affected her almost like an illness. I began to wish we hadn't come to Podolo; it was not the first time a picnic there had gone badly.

  “I tell you what,” Angela said suddenly, “if I can't catch it I'll kill it. It's only a question of dropping one of these boulders on it. I could do it quite easily.” She disclosed her plan to Mario, who was horror-struck. His code was different from hers. He did not mind the animal dying of slow starvation; that was in the course of nature. But deliberately to kill it! “Poveretto! It has done no one any harm,” he exclaimed with indignation. But there was another reason, I suspected, for his attitude. Venice is overrun with cats, chiefly because it is considered unlucky to kill them. If they fall into the water and are drowned, so much the better, but woe betide whoever pushes them in.

  I expounded the gondolier's point of view to Angela, but she was not impressed. “Of course I don't expect him to do it,” she said, “nor you either, if you'd rather not. It may be a messy business but it will soon be over. Poor little brute, it's in a horrible state. Its life can't be any pleasure to it.”

  “But we don't know that,” I urged, still cravenly averse from the deed of blood. “If it could speak, it might say it preferred to live at all costs.” But I couldn't move Angela from her purpose.

  “Let's go and explore the island,” she said, “until it's time to bathe. The cat will have got over its fright and be hungry again by then, and I'm sure I shall be able to catch it. I promise I won't murder it except as a last resource.”

  The word “murder” lingered unpleasantly in my mind as we made our survey of the island. You couldn't imagine a better place for one. During the war a battery had been mounted there. The concrete emplacement, about as long as a tennis court, remained: but nature and the weather had conspired to break it up, leaving black holes large enough to admit a man. These holes were like crevasses in a glacier, but masked by vegetation instead of snow. Even in the brilliant afternoon sunlight one had to tread cautiously. “Perhaps the cat has its lair down there,” I said, indicating a gloomy cavern with a jagged edge. “I suppose its eyes would shine in the dark.” Angela lay down on the pavement and peered in. “I thought I heard something move,” she said, “but it might be anywhere in this rabbit-warren.”

  Our bathe was a great success. The water was so warm one hardly felt the shock of going in. The only drawback was the mud, which clung to Angela's white bathing shoes, nasty sticky stuff. A little wind had got up. But the grassy rampart sheltered us; we leaned against it and smoked. Suddenly I noticed it was past five.

  “We ought to go soon,” I said. “We promised, do you remember, to send the gondola to meet Walter's train.”

  “All right,” said Angela, “just let me have a go at the cat first. Let's put the food” (we had brought some remnants of lunch with us) “here where we last saw it, and watch.”

  There was no need to watch, for the cat appeared at once and made for the food. Angela and I stole up behind it, but I inadvertently kicked a stone and the cat was off like a flash. Angela looked at me reproachfully. “Perhaps you could manage better alone,” I said. Angela seemed to think she could. I retreated a few yards, but the cat, no doubt scenting a trap, refused to come out.

  Angela threw herself on the pavement. “I can see it,” she muttered. “I must win its confidence again. Give me three minutes and I'll catch it.”

  Three minutes passed. I felt concerned for Angela, her lovely hair floating over the dark hole, her face as much as one could see of it, a little red. The air was getting chilly.

  “Look here,” I said, “I'll wait for you in the gondola. When you've caught it, give a shout and I'll have the boat brought to land.” Angela nodded; she dare not speak for fear of scaring her prey.

  So I returned to the gondola. I could just see the line of Angela's shoulders; her face, of course, was hidden. Mario stood up, eagerly watching the chase. “She loves it so much,” he said, “that she wants to kill it.” I remembered Oscar Wilde's epigram, rather uncomfortably; still, nothing could be more disinterested than Angela's attitude to the cat. “We ought to start,” the gondolier warned me. “The signore will be waiting at the station and wonder what has happened.”

  “What about Walter?” I called across the water. “He won't know what to do.”

  Her mind was clearly on something else as she said: “Oh, he'll find his own way home.”

  More minutes passed. The gondolier smiled. “One must have patience with ladies,” he said; “always patience.”

  I tried a last appeal. “If we started at once we could just do it.” She didn't answer. Presently I called out again. “
What luck,

  Angela? Any hope of catching him?”

  There was a pause: then I heard her say, in a curiously tense voice. “I'm not trying to catch him now.”

  The need for immediate hurry had passed, since we were irrevocably late for Walter. A sense of relaxation stole over me; I wrapped the rug round me to keep off the treacherous cold sirocco and I fell asleep. Almost at once, it seemed, I began to dream. In my dream it was night; we were hurrying across the lagoon trying to be in time for Walter's train. It was so dark I could see nothing but the dim blur of Venice ahead, and the little splash of whitish water where the oar dipped. Suddenly I stopped rowing and looked round. The seat behind me seemed to be empty. “Angela!” I cried; but there was no answer. I grew frightened. “Mario!” I shouted. “Where's the signora? We have left her behind! We must go back at once!” The gondolier, too, stopped rowing and came towards me; I could just distinguish his face; it had a wild look. “She's there, signore,” he said. “But where? She's not on the seat.”

  “She wouldn't stay on it,” said the gondolier. And then, as is the way in dreams, I knew what his next words would be. “We loved her and so we had to kill her.”

  An uprush of panic woke me. The feeling of relief at getting back to actuality was piercingly sweet. I was restored to the sunshine. At least I thought so, in the ecstasy of returning consciousness. The next moment I began to doubt, and an uneasiness, not unlike the beginning of nightmare, stirred in me again. I opened my eyes to the daylight but they didn't receive it. I looked out on to darkness. At first I couldn't believe my eyes: I wondered if I was fainting. But a glance at my watch explained everything. It was past seven o’clock. I had slept the brief twilight through and now it was night, though a few gleams lingered in the sky over Fusina.

 

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