The Haunted Woman

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by David Lindsay


  "You are Miss Loment, madam?" he asked with suave gravity, gazing at the card in his hand.

  She replied in the affirmative.

  "You are inquiring for Mrs. Richborough?"

  Isbel had risen to her feet.

  "Yes; I wish to see her."

  "You are a relative, madam?"

  "Oh, no. Why?"

  "It is my regrettable duty to inform you that Mrs. Richborough was taken suddenly ill in her room last night, and died almost immediately afterwards. A medical man fortunately was in attendance."

  "Oh, good heavens!…" Isbel grasped the chair-back to steady herself.

  "The precise time was 9.15. It was very sudden, and very sad…Naturally, we are anxious that this should not be known among the other guests. I feel sure that I can rely upon your discretion, madam."

  "Oh, what a tragedy!…But surely Mr. Judge know of it?"

  "Yes, Mr. Judge does know."

  "Could I speak to him a minute, please? Will you send my name up?"

  "I regret that it is impossible, madam. Mr. Judge left us this morning."

  "Left you?…Do you mean he has gone away-altogether?"

  "Yes, madam; he has returned to London."

  "But-has he taken his things with him? Isn't he coming back?"

  "No, he is not coming back…One moment, madam…" He consulted the card in his hand. "I believe he has left a letter for you in charge of the office. If you will pardon me, I will go and inquire."

  Isbel could not even find words to thank him. She sat down, feeling as if the roof had fallen upon her. She understood that a catastrophe had happened, but she was unable to realise its final significance.

  It was the clerk who brought the letter in, a moment or two later. She handed it to Isbel with a pleasant smile, and instantly retired.

  She broke the seal with clumsy haste. The letter ran as follows:

  "My dear Miss Loment.

  "I am sorry to inform you that Mrs. Richborough died suddenly last night of heart failure. The doctor who attended her earlier in the evening had ordered her to bed, and she went there, but a little while late, according to her maid's evidence, she insisted upon rising in order to write an urgent letter, which letter she further insisted upon posting in the hotel box with her own hand. The additional strain upon her lowered vitality which this entailed evidently proved too much for her, for half an hour afterwards she ws discovered lying in a dying condition in her room. There will of course be an inquest.

  "Under the sad circumstances, I feel that any meeting between us would be improper-doubtless you will agree with me. I have accordingly made my arrangements to return at once to town, and by the time you receive this letter-assuming that you have made your promised visit to Worthing-I shall be already on my way back there.

  "I think it will be wise if we allow a considerable time to elapse before attempting to see one another again. We have both, I am afraid, acted rather more impulsively than is altogether consistent with worldly prudence, and, to put it at the lowest, an interval for reflection and a cool weighing of the whole situation will certainly not harm either of us. You will understand, of course, that I blame myself far more than you for the unfortunate happenings of the past few days.

  "I am leaving my town address with the hotel people should you desire to write me a line in reply. I do not ask it.

  "I do not say adieu, for I sincerely hope that at some future time we shall see a great deal of each other.

  "Believe me to be, my dear Miss Loment, your earnest friend and well-wisher.

  "Henry Judge"

  After flashing through the letter from beginning to end, to extract its message, Isbel allowed it to slip from her hand, while she sat back with close eyes…Then she picked it up again, and twice re-read it, word by word. During the perusal her bosom rose and sank the blood mounting to her face, and once or twice she laughed…

  Crushing the sheets into her handbag, she closed it with an angry snap.

  So that was over!…

  The manager escorted her to the outer door. At the foot of the hotel steps she came to a standstill, not knowing in the least what to do, or where to go. She caught sight of an elegantly dressed lady, in expensive furs, who was in the act of entering a closed car not five yards away from where she was standing. The chauffeur wsa taking his final instructions, preparatory to assuming his seat. The lady's back was towards her, but somehow her figure struck a familiar chord.

  "…But first of all, Runhill court," said the unknown, as she stooped to get in.

  Isbel felt bemused. It was not the destination named which dismayed her faculties, and made her feel as though she were in a dream-though this destination was extraordinary enough, in all conscience-but the intonation with which the words were uttered. That sweet, sinking whisper belonged only to one person of her acquaintance, and she could not conceive a second voice like it in the world. It was Mrs. Richborough's…

  As the car drove off she obtained a single rapid glimpse of the lady's face. Mrs. Richborough was dead, and therefore it could not be she; but, then, it must be her twin sister. The resemblance was absolutely uncanny…Well, it was not difficult to understand why a sister should be there at such a distressful time-but what in the world was she doing at Runhill? What possible interest could she have in that house? Evidently some mystery was afoot…Could it be that Judge had arranged a meeting with her there in order to talk over the affairs of her late sister? But what affairs could there be to discuss between them? And why select that out-of-the-way spot for the interview? What did it all mean?…

  She turned to the smart-looking young hotel door-porter, who still stood gazing after the car. "Who is that lady?"

  "Lady Brooke, miss."

  "Is she in any way related to the late Mrs. Richborough, do you know?"

  "I've never seen them together, miss, and I should say it's very unlikely. Lady Brooke is a very exclusive lady."

  "She did tell the chauffeur Runhill Court, didn't she?"

  "No, miss-Arundel," was the surprised answer.

  Isbel was greatly perplexed, but thought it wise to ask no more questions about her. She inquired for, and was directed to the nearest hiring garage in the neighbourhood of the hotel.

  It had entered her mind that she, too, must go to Runhill, though what she expected to accomplish by so doing, she had no idea…that the door-porter must have received certain instructions-or, perhaps he had mistaken the person she had referred to. She knew that it was either Mrs. Richborough or her twin-sister. And she knew that that woman had said "Runhill Court." It was absolutely necessary and important that she should follow her there, to see what was on foot…And, of course, Mr. Judge must be waiting for her there…and it was all lies! lies! lies!

  She was lucky in getting a landaulette at once. Money was of no account to her, she agreed to the charge demanded without demur, and within five minutes was on her way.

  The car was badly sprung, and jolted her abominably; the cushions stank of oil; her tooth started to ache again. Although it was not actually raining, the day was gloomy and forbidding, and everything seemed saturated with damp. Water dripped from the trees. The roads were greasy and they kept skidding. Not a single gleam of light sky promised better things. Isbel squeezed herself in a corner, and closed her eyes.

  After passing Steyning, she roused herself. The chauffeur seemed an utter idiot-his work was in this part of the country, and yet he was forever pulling up to ask her for directions. She told him as well as she could…Would this terrible journey never come to an end?…

  At last they reached the lane which ran past the lodge. Here the road forked. One lane went by the lodge; the other, which she did not know, appeared to skirt the western boundary of the estate, going due north somewhere. The chauffeur stopped the car once more at this fork, and Isbel was about to direct him to proceed straight forward when suddenly her eyes rested on a fashionably-dressed woman in furs, who ws walking quickly but delicately up the second lane,
away from them. She was about twenty yards ahead, and was alone…it was she…So he had lied, that porter!…But, oh heavens! what an appalling resemblance to Mrs. Richborough. She could pick up that step out of a thousand others…Then she wasn't dead. The whole thing was a conspiracy, directed against her, Isbel. Judge had fallen a victim to that woman at last, and they were quietly putting her out of the way, as an inconvenient person. The hotel manager had been bribed. There was really nothing left to explain…

  "You needn't come any further. I'm getting out." Isbel suited the action to the word.

  The man looked dissatisfied. "Am I to wait?"

  "No, you can go home. Do I pay you, or the garage?"

  Being a casual hirer she had to pay him. She hurriedly gave him notes to cover the charge, and, without waiting for the change, or interesting herself in his further movements, at once turned her back on him and started quickly up the lane, round the bend of which the unknown woman had by this time vanished.

  She reached the bend herself. The disagreeable noise of the departing car grew fainter and fainter as the distance increased between them, until finally she heard no sounds but those of nature. Everything around her was moist, dripping, and sullen…Mrs. Richborough-for she had now no doubt that it was she-was still a considerable distance in front. They were both walking swiftly, so there was no question of catching her up. Isbel did not quite understand where she was going to, but probably there was another way into the grounds from this side, which would obviate the necessity of passing through the lodge-gate…But, if so, how had that woman come to know of it? And, by the way, where had her car disappeared to?…Isbel asked herself many questions during that period, but she was unable to answer any one of them.

  The whole right-hand side of the lane was bordered by an ancient, red-brick wall which bounded the estate. Beyond it was a park, looking grey and disconsolate enough on such a day as this; the wet grass was knee-high, and every faintest breath of wind brought water off the brown-leaved trees. The park sloped downhill from the lane at first, but presently it became level. A dark grey shadowy mass on the forward right was probably the house itself; very likely it was not so far away as it looked, but the light was so bad…Suddenly half-way along a straight stretch of lane, her quarry vanished…

  Isbel was careful to keep her eye on the spot where she had last observed her. No doubt there would be an entrance there into the grounds.

  Upon coming up to it she found her anticipation was realised. A small iron wicket-gate opened into the park. It had been swung to, but was unlatched. A gravel walk, barely wide enough for two people side by side, led through the grass and under trees towards what could now distinctly be seen to be the house. It was slightly uphill. Isbel passed in without hesitation.

  After walking quickly for about five minutes, she again saw the woman. She was as far ahead as ever. She had reached the foot of the steep sloping lawn under the house, and now turned sharply to the left, which would evidently bring her to the north-east side of the building-though how she could be so certain of her direction on this, her first visit to the grounds, was more than Isbel could say. The house itself was by this time quite close. Standing high above her, in the grey mist, it looked a huge, weird erection, the more especially as it was a mere silhouette. The part which faced her must be the back-the French windows of the dining-room, the bedrooms of the top storey, etc…But the time that Isbel had gained of the same spot, beneath the lawn, the woman had again disappeared. She also turned to the left.

  The path curved, and in another minute or two she was in full view of the north-east front. The lawn, which was still steeper on this side, towered above her in that dime visibility like a veritable mountain slope, and crowning it was the great house, vast, shadowy, and grim. She could just make out the gable underneath which was the window of the East Room.

  While she paused to gaze up, she became aware that the woman was standing close beside her. Then her doubts were remove. It was Mrs. Richborough!…there was something disquieting and peculiar in her appearance, however…Perhaps it was the way she was standing. Her hands were free, and they crossed, not over her breast but over the lower part of her body, with straightened elbows. She was also very erect and still. Her face appeared white and smiling, under the decorative veil she wore-but perhaps it was illusion, the light wsa so poor. Isbel felt a strange uneasiness.

  "They told me at the hotel that-something happened to you."

  "Oh, yes-I am dead," came the whispering voice. "I died last night."

  And then Isbel realised that her eyes ere closed, that this being standing opposite to her, with the dress and bearing of a fashionable woman, did not see the world as other people!…

  Her tongue was paralysed, and she shook from head to foot.

  The apparition vanished.

  Chapter XIX THE FLASH OF DAY

  The mist came on thicker. It was so wetting that her clothes and face streamed with moisture, though she was too distressed to think of seeking shelter. The upper lawn appeared as a dark shadow against the paler grey of the sky, while the house itself was out of sight.

  As she stood trying to overcome her agitation, something began to affect her ears. It was not exactly a sound, but was more like a heavy pulsing. Her head throbbed with it, till she thought she should go mad. Then it ceased abruptly.

  Five minutes later, the figure of a man loomed up out of the mist and approached her. It wsa Judge. Isbel pressed her fur tightly to her throat and turned away.

  "So it is you!"

  When he replied, there wsa a suppressed exuberance in his voice which immediately arrested her attention by its unusualness.

  "Yes, it is I."

  "Then you told me an untruth? You have not gone to London?"

  "I called here on my way back."

  "Well, I got your letter. Perhaps you are wondering why I have followed you here, after having received my dismissal. I don't want anything from you, and I don't know myself why I came. Mrs. Richborough led me here. I know now that she's dead, but I have seen her and spoken to her, for all that."

  Judge seemed not to remark her statement, for he asked another question:

  "Did you hear my playing?"

  "Your playing?"

  "Yes."…He eyed her curiously. "Your manner is very extraordinary. Surely you recognise where you are? Are you awake or asleep?"

  "I'm quite awake and I fully realise where I am, Mr. Judge. I'm trespassing in your grounds-but it won't be for long. I'm going home now."

  "Haven't you been to the house?"

  "Your house? Hardly, I think."

  He drew a step closer, and for the first time she observed that he was not wearing a hat.

  "Tell me where you think you are?"

  "I have already told you. It is your manner which is very singular, Mr. Judge. Are you quite well?".

  "Listen! I am talking with you here, and I am where we wished to be yesterday. Does it not seem so to you, too?"

  "I don't understand you. Where did we wish to be yesterday?"

  He gave her another searching look. "So you really are seeing differently. And you have not been up that staircase to-day?"

  "I haven't set foot inside your house, I tell you. Have you lost your senses?"

  "No; but I have been up that staircase to-day, and I have not yet come down again."

  "Oh, my God!" said Isbel quietly.

  "I was wretched, and could not keep away from the house. It contained all my memories. The stairs were there; I climbed them. Passing straight into that other room, I got through the window, and succeeded in reaching the ground without accident, though it was not easy…"

  She stared at him with frightened eyes. "And where are you now?"

  "I am standing beside you in the open country, in full sunshine-and it is spring, not autumn."

  "You cannot believe it. You must see for yourself that it isn't so. Feel me-I'm wet with the fine rain."

  But he came no nearer.

  "
The man is asleep, and the sight of his instrument put an idea into my head. I could not see you, but I felt you were somewhere in the neighbourhood-so I played to you…"

  "What man?"

  "The man we saw from the window yesterday."

  There was an embarrassed silence.

  "But this is awful!" said Isbel…"You must be attempting to mystify me, Mr. Judge. If not…"

  "No, I am speaking the truth, Isbel; and I am quite rational."

  The blood came to her face. "You have not yet acquired the right to call me by that name, Mr, Judge."

  "You don't understand-but matters can be set right."

  "Where are you now going?"

  He had started to move off, but stopped at her question.

  "I shall play again."

  "But this is sheer insanity."

  "You did not think so last evening, when we heard that music in the hall."

  She said nothing.

  "Let me go," proceeded Judge quietly. "I ask you only to reserve your judgement for five minutes, and in the meantime to wait here. Should I fail to open your eyes by then, I give you full permission to think of me what you will. Please wait."

  Isbel stared after him with a puzzled frown, as he made his way up and across the long, wet grass. He had hardly taken ten steps before his form merged into the grey of the mist and was swallowed up. She heard nothing but the dripping of the sodden trees.

  While waiting, with a fast-beating heart, for the outcome of this strange business, she experienced the same sensations in her ears as before. It was an inaudible throbbing, too marked to be disregarded, but so unassociated that she was unable even to decide if its cause were internal or external. After continuing for a minute or two, it left off as suddenly as it had started. Nearly at the same time she was surprised to see the day rapidly brightening. The sky grew lighter, and the mists thinner; she could look further away each moment. In less than five minutes after Judge's departure the sun itself had come through. The blue sky appeared, the ground vapours dispersed, and the whole country became visible. The transition ws so abrupt that she scarcely knew how to take it; almost in a flash, to the radiance and heat of an early summer day. A wind sprang up, and long before she had accommodated herself to the change there was not a wisp of cloud in the sky. She loosened her fur wrap.

 

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