Part 21 (1/2)
”I suppose it is. Better, at any rate, than to go mad with fear, as some do. Cecil”--turning to her--”has had fright enough to last her for a twelvemonth, she says.”
”Were you present, Cecil?” asked her brother.
”I was present, but I did not see it,” replied Cecil. ”It occurred in Mrs. Verrall's bedroom, and I was standing at the dressing-table, with my back to her. The first thing I knew, or saw, was Mrs. Verrall on the floor with the rug rolled round her.”
Tea was brought in, and Mrs. Verrall insisted that they should remain for it. Thomas pleaded an engagement, but she would not listen: they could not have the heart, she said, to leave her alone. So Thomas--the very essence of good feeling and politeness--waived his objection and remained. Not the bowing politeness of a _pet.i.t maitre_, but the genuine consideration that springs from a n.o.ble and unselfish heart.
”I am in ecstasy that Verrall was away,” she exclaimed. ”He would have magnified it into something formidable, and I should not have been allowed to stir for a month.”
”When do you expect him home?” asked Thomas G.o.dolphin.
”I never expect him until he comes,” replied Mrs. Verrall. ”London seems to possess attractions for him. Once up there, he may stay a day, or he may stay fifty. I never know.”
Cecil went upstairs to put her things on when tea was over, the maid attending her. Mrs. Verrall turned to see that the door was closed, and then spoke abruptly.
”Mr. G.o.dolphin, can anything be done to prevent the wind whistling as it does in these pa.s.sages?”
”Does it whistle?” he replied.
”The last few nights it has whistled--oh, I cannot describe it to you!
If I were not a good sleeper, it would have kept me awake all night. I wish it could be stopped.”
”It cannot be done, I believe, without pulling the house down,” he said.
”My mother had a great dislike to hear it, and a good deal of expense was incurred in trying to remedy it; but it did little or no good.”
”What puzzles me is, that the wind should have been whistling within the house, when there's no wind whistling without. The weather has been quite calm. Sometimes when it is actually blowing great guns we cannot hear it at all.”
”Something peculiar in the construction of the pa.s.sages,” he carelessly remarked. ”You hear the whistling or not, according to the quarter from which the wind may happen to be blowing.”
”The servants tell a tale--these old Ashlydyat retainers who remain in the house--that this strangely-sounding wind is connected with the Ashlydyat superst.i.tion, and foretells ill to the G.o.dolphins.”
Thomas G.o.dolphin smiled. ”I am sure you do not give ear to anything so foolish, Mrs. Verrall.”
”No, that I do not,” she answered. ”It would take a great deal to imbue me with faith in the supernatural. Ghosts! Shadows! As if any one with common sense could believe in such impossibilities! They tell another tale about here, do they not? That a shadow of some sort may occasionally be seen in the moonbeams in front of the archway, on the Dark Plain; a shadow cast by no earthly substance. Charlotte once declared she saw it. I only laughed at her!”
His lips parted as he listened, and he lightly echoed the laugh said to have been given by Charlotte. Considering what his eyes had just seen, the laugh must have been a very conscious one.
”When do you expect your brother home?” asked Mrs. Verrall. ”He seems to be making a long stay at Broomhead.”
”George is not at Broomhead,” replied Thomas G.o.dolphin. ”He left it three or four days ago. He has joined a party of friends in the Highlands. I do not suppose he will return here much before Christmas.”
Cecil appeared. They wished Mrs. Verrall good night, and a speedy cure to her burns; and departed. Thomas took the open roadway this time, which did not bring them near to the ash-trees or the Dark Plain.
CHAPTER XI.
A TELEGRAPHIC DESPATCH.
”Cecil,” asked Thomas G.o.dolphin, as they walked along, ”how came you to go alone to Ashlydyat, in this unceremonious manner?”