Part 9 (2/2)
”Thank you,” she murmured.
My presence occasioned her no surprise and this I thought was no more than natural at the moment. I took my arm from her waist and groped about the room for the water-jug. I found it at last and a gla.s.s beside it. These I carried back to the window.
The girl was still seated on the chair, but she had changed her att.i.tude. She had leaned her arms upon the sill and her head upon her arms. I poured out the water from the jug into the tumbler. She did not raise her head. I spoke to her. She did not answer me. A horrible fear turned me cold. I knelt down by her side, and setting down the water gently lifted her head. She did not resist but sank back with a natural movement into my arms. Her eyes were closed, but she was breathing. I could feel her breath upon my cheek and it came steadily and regular. I cannot describe my astonishment; she was in a deep sleep.
I pondered for a moment what I should do! Should I wake the household?
Should I explain what had happened and my presence in the house? For Helen Mayle's sake I must not do that, since Helen Mayle it surely was whom I held in my arms.
I propped her securely in the chair, then crossed the room, opened the door and listened. The house was very still; so far no one had been disturbed. A long narrow pa.s.sage stretched in front of me, with doors upon either side. Remembering what d.i.c.k Parmiter had told me, I mean that every sound reverberated through the house, I crept down the landing on tiptoe. I had only my stockings upon my feet and I crept forward so carefully that I could not hear my own footfalls.
I had taken some twenty paces when the pa.s.sage opened out to my right.
I put out my hand and touched a bal.u.s.trade. A few yards farther on the bal.u.s.trade ceased; there was an empty s.p.a.ce which I took to be the beginning of the stairs, and beyond the empty s.p.a.ce the pa.s.sage closed in again.
I crept forward, and at last at the far end of the house and on the left hand of the pa.s.sage I came to that for which I searched, and which I barely hoped to find--an open door. I held my breath and listened in the doorway, but there was no sound of any one breathing, so I stepped into the room.
The fog was less dense, it hung outside the window a thin white mist and behind that mist the day was breaking. I looked round the room. It was a large bedroom, and the bed had not been slept in. A glance at the toilette with its dainty knick-knacks of silver proved to me that it was a woman's bedroom. It had two big windows looking out towards the sea, and as I stood in the dim grey light, I wondered whether it was from one of those windows that Adam Mayle had looked years before, and seen the brigantine breaking up upon the Golden Ball Reef. But the light was broadening with the pa.s.sage of every minute. With the same caution which I had observed before I stole back on tiptoe to Cullen Mayle's room. Helen Mayle was still asleep, and she had not moved from her posture. I raised her in my arms, and still she did not wake. I carried her down the pa.s.sage, through the open door and laid her on the bed. There was a coverlet folded at the end of the bed and I spread it over her. She nestled down beneath it and her lips smiled very prettily, and she uttered a little purring murmur of content; but this she did in her sleep. She slept with the untroubled sleep of a child. Her face was pale, but that I took to be its natural complexion. Her long black eyelashes rested upon her cheeks. There was no hint of any trouble in her expression, no trace of any pa.s.sionate despair. I could hardly believe that this was the girl who had sought to hang herself, whom I had seen struggling for her breath.
Yet there was no doubt possible. She had come into the empty room--empty as she thought, and empty it would have been, had not a fisher-boy burst one night into Lieutenant Clutterbuck's lodging off the Strand--when every one slept, and there she had deliberately stood upon the bed, fastened her noose to the cross-bar and sprang off.
There was no doubt possible. It was her spring from the bed which had waked me up, and as I returned to Cullen's room, I saw the silk noose still hanging from the beam.
CHAPTER VIII
HELEN MAYLE
A loud rapping on the door roused me. The mist had cleared away, and out of the open window I could see a long sunlit slope of gorse all yellow and purple stretching upwards, and over the slope a great s.p.a.ce of blue sky whereon the clouds sailed like racing boats in a strong breeze. The door was thrust open and d.i.c.k Parmiter entered.
”You keep London hours, sir,” said he, standing at the foot of the bed, and he happened to raise his eyes. ”What's that?” he asked.
_That_ was the silk scarf still dangling from the cross-bar, and the sight of it brought back to me in a flash my adventure of the night.
With the clear sunlight filling the room and the bright wind chasing the clouds over the sky, I could hardly believe that it had really occurred. But the silk scarf hung between the posts.
”My G.o.d,” I cried out. ”What if I had never waked up!”
There would have been the sunlight and the wind in the sky as now, but, facing me, no longer swaying, but still, inert, horrible, I should have seen--and I clapped my hands over my face, so distinct was this unspeakable vision to me, and cried out again: ”What if I had not waked up!
”You have not waked up very early,” said d.i.c.k, looking at me curiously, and recovering my self-possession I hasten to explain.
”I have had dreams, d.i.c.k. The strange room! I am barely awake yet.”
It appeared that I was not the only one to keep London hours that morning. It was close upon mid-day and d.i.c.k had not waked me before, because he had not before had speech with the mistress of the house.
Helen Mayle had risen late. But she knew now of my presence in the house and what had brought me, and was waiting to offer me her thanks.
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