Part 15 (2/2)
”Then why do you want to go?”
”Well, Sir John, a good home and good food and good treatment's right enough; but I don't want to be found some morning a-weltering in my gore.”
”Now, look here, James Burdon,” he says, laughing. ”I trust you with the keys of the wine-cellar, and you've been at the sherry.”
”You know better than that, Sir John. No, sir. You said that gold plate was an incubus, and such it is, for it's always a-sitting on me, so as I can't sleep o' nights. It's killing me, that's what it is.
Some night I shall be murdered, and all that plate taken away. It ain't safe, and it's cruel to a man to ask him to take charge of it.”
He did not speak for a few minutes.
”What am I to do, then, Burdon?”
”Some people send their plate to the bank, Sir John.”
”Yes,” he says; ”some people do a great many things that I do not intend to do.--There; I shall not take any notice of what you said.”
”But you must, please, Sir John; I couldn't stay like this.”
”Be patient for a few days, and I'll have something done to relieve you.”
I went down-stairs very uneasy, and Sir John went out; and next day, feeling quite poorly, after waking up ten times in the night, thinking I heard people breaking in, as there'd been a deal of burglary in Bloomsbury about that time, I got up quite thankful I was still alive; and directly after breakfast, the wine-merchant's cart came from Saint James's Street with fifty dozen of sherry, as we really didn't want.
Sir John came down and saw to the wine being put in bins; and then he had all the wine brought from the inner cellar into the outer cellar, both being next my pantry, with a door into the pa.s.sage just at the foot of the kitchen stairs.
”That's a neat job, Burdon,” said Sir John, as we stood in the far cellar all among the sawdust, and the place looking dark and damp, with its roof like the vaults of a church, and stone flag floor, but with every bin empty.
”Going to lay down some more wine here, Sir John?” I said; but he didn't answer, only stood with a candle in the arched doorway, which was like a pa.s.sage six feet long, opening from one cellar into the other.
Then he went up-stairs, and I locked up the cellar and put the keys in my drawer.
”He always was eccentric before her ladys.h.i.+p died,” I said to myself; ”and now he's getting worse.”
I saw it again next morning, for Sir John gave orders, sudden-like, for everybody to pack off to the country-house down by Dorking; and of course everybody had to go, cook and housekeeper and all; and just as I was ready to start, I got word to stay.
Sir John went off to his club, and I stayed alone in that old house in Bloomsbury, with the great drops of perspiration dripping off me every time I heard a noise, and feeling sometimes as if I could stand it no longer; but just as it was getting dusk, he came back, and in his short abrupt way, he says: ”Now, Burdon, we'll go to work.”
I'd no idea what he meant till we went down-stairs, when he had the strong-room door opened and the cellar too and then he made me help him carry the old plate-chests right through my pantry into the far wine-cellar, and range them one after the other along one side.
I wanted to tell him that they would not be so safe there; but I daren't speak, and it was not till what followed that I began to understand; for, as soon as we had gone through the narrow arched pa.s.sage back to the outer cellar, he laughed, and he says, ”Now, we'll get rid of the incubus, Burdon. Fix your light up there, and I'll help.”
He did help; and together we got a heap of sawdust and hundreds of empty wine-bottles; and these we built up at the end of the arched entrance between the cellars from floor to ceiling, just as if it had been a wine-bin, till the farther cellar was quite shut off with empty bottles.
And then, if he didn't make me move the new sherry that had just come in and treat that the same, building up full bottles in front of the empty ones till the ceiling was reached once more, and the way in to the chests of gold plate shut up with wine-bottles two deep, one stack full, the other empty.
He saw me shake my head, as if I didn't believe in it; and he laughed again in his strange way, and said: ”Wait a bit.”
Next morning I found he'd given orders, for the men came with a load of bricks and mortar, and they set to work and built up a wall in front of the stacked-up bottles, regularly bricking up the pa.s.sage, just as if it was a bin of wine that was to be left for so many years to mature; after which the wall was white-washed over, the men went away, and Sir John clapped me on the shoulder. ”There, Burdon!” he said; ”we've buried the incubus safely. Now you can sleep in peace.”
<script>