Certain houses, like certain persons, manage
somehow to proclaim at once their character for evil. In the case of the
latter, no particular feature need betray them; they may boast an open
countenance and an ingenuous smile; and yet a little of their company
leaves the unalterable conviction that there is something radically
amiss with their being: that they are evil. Willy nilly, they seem to
communicate an atmosphere of secret and wicked thoughts which makes
those in their immediate neighbourhood shrink from them as from a thing
diseased.
And, perhaps, with houses the same
principle is operative, and it is the aroma of evil deeds committed
under a particular roof, long after the actual doers have passed away,
that makes the gooseflesh come and the hair rise. Something of the
original passion of the evil-doer, and of the horror felt by his victim,
enters the heart of the innocent watcher, and he becomes suddenly
conscious of tingling nerves, creeping skin, and a chilling of the
blood. He is terror-stricken without apparent cause.
There was manifestly nothing in the
external appearance of this particular house to bear out the tales of
the horror that was said to reign within. It was neither lonely nor
unkempt. It stood, crowded into a corner of the square, and looked
exactly like the houses on either side of it. It had the same number of
windows as its neighbours; the same balcony overlooking the gardens; the
same white steps leading up to the heavy black front door; and, in the
rear, there was the same narrow strip of green, with neat box borders,
running up to the wall that divided it, from the backs of the adjoining
houses. Apparently, too, the number of chimney pots on the roof was the
same; the breadth and angle of the eaves; and even the height of the
dirty area railings.
And yet this house in the square, that
seemed precisely similar to its fifty ugly neighbours, was as a matter
of fact entirely different—horribly different.
Wherein lay this marked, invisible
difference is impossible to say. It cannot be ascribed wholly to the
imagination, because persons who had spent some time in the house,
knowing nothing of the facts, had declared positively that certain rooms
were so disagreeable they would rather die than enter them again, and
that the atmosphere of the whole house produced in them symptoms of a
genuine terror; while the series of innocent tenants who had tried to
live in it and been forced to decamp at the shortest possible notice,
was indeed little less than a scandal in the town.
When Shorthouse arrived to pay a
“week-end” visit to his Aunt Julia in her little house on the
sea-front at the other end of the town, he found her charged to the brim
with mystery and excitement. He had only received her telegram that
morning, and he had come anticipating boredom; but the moment he
touched her hand and kissed her apple-skin wrinkled cheek, he caught the
first wave of her electrical condition. The impression deepened when he
learned that there were to be no other visitors, and that he had been
telegraphed for with a very special object.
Something was in the wind, and the
“something” would doubtless bear fruit; for this elderly spinster
aunt, with a mania for psychical research, had brains as well as willpower,
and by hook or by crook she usually managed to accomplish her ends. The
revelation was made soon after tea, when she sidled close up to him as
they paced slowly along the sea-front in the dusk.
“I’ve got the keys,” she
announced in a delighted, yet half awesome voice. “Got them till
Monday!”
“The keys of the bathing-machine,
or—?” he asked innocently, looking from the sea to the town. Nothing
brought her so quickly to the point as feigning stupidity.
“Neither,” she whispered. “I’ve
got the keys of the haunted house in the square—and I’m going there
to-night.”
Shorthouse was conscious of the
slightest possible tremor down his back. He dropped his teasing tone.
Something in her voice and manner thrilled him. She was in earnest.
“But you can’t go alone—” he
began.
“That’s why I wired for you,” she
said with decision.
He turned to look at her. The ugly,
lined, enigmatical face was alive with excitement. There was the glow of
genuine enthusiasm round it like a halo. The eyes shone. He caught
another wave of her excitement, and a second tremor, more marked than
the first, accompanied it.
“Thanks, Aunt Julia,” he said
politely; “thanks awfully.”
“I should not dare to go quite
alone,” she went on, raising her voice; “but with you I should enjoy
it immensely. You’re afraid of nothing, I know.”
“Thanks so much,” he said again.
“Er—is anything likely to happen?”
“A great deal has happened,” she
whispered, “though it’s been most cleverly hushed up. Three tenants
have come and gone in the last few months, and the house is said to be
empty for good now.”
In spite of himself Shorthouse became
interested. His aunt was so very much in earnest.
“The house is very old indeed,” she
went on, “and the story—an unpleasant one—dates a long way back.
It has to do with a murder committed by a jealous stableman who had some
affair with a servant in the house. One night he managed to secrete
himself in the cellar, and when everyone was asleep, he crept upstairs
to the servants’ quarters, chased the girl down to the next landing,
and before anyone could come to the rescue threw her bodily over the
banisters into the hall below.”
“And the stableman—?”
“Was caught, I believe, and hanged
for murder; but it all happened a century ago, and I’ve not been able
to get more details of the story.”
Shorthouse now felt his interest
thoroughly aroused; but, though he was not particularly nervous for
himself, he hesitated a little on his aunt’s account.
“On one condition,” he said at
length.
“Nothing will prevent my going,”
she said firmly; “but I may as well hear your condition.”
“That you guarantee your power of
self-control if anything really horrible happens. I mean—that you
are sure you won’t get too frightened.”
“Jim,”
she said scornfully, “I’m not young, I know, nor are my nerves; but with you I should be afraid of nothing in the world!”
This, of course, settled it, for
Shorthouse had no pretensions to being other than a very ordinary
young man, and an appeal to his vanity was irresistible. He agreed to
go.
Instinctively, by a sort of
sub-conscious preparation, he kept himself and his forces well in hand
the whole evening, compelling an accumulative reserve of control by that
nameless inward process of gradually putting all the emotions away and
turning the key upon them—a process difficult to describe, but
wonderfully effective, as all men who have lived through severe trials
of the inner man well understand. Later, it stood him in good stead.
But it was not until half-past ten,
when they stood in the hall, well in the glare of friendly lamps and
still surrounded by comforting human influences, that he had to make the
first call upon this store of collected strength. For, once the door was
closed, and he saw the deserted silent street stretching away white in
the moonlight before them, it came to him clearly that the real test
that night would be in dealing with two
fears instead of one. He would have to carry his aunt’s fear as
well as his own. And, as he glanced down at her sphinx-like countenance
and realised that it might assume no pleasant aspect in a rush of real
terror, he felt satisfied with only one thing in the whole
adventure—that he had confidence in his own will and power to stand
against any shock that might come.
Slowly they walked along the empty
streets of the town; a bright autumn moon silvered the roofs, casting
deep shadows; there was no breath of wind; and the trees in the formal
gardens by the sea-front watched them silently as they passed along. To
his aunt’s occasional remarks Shorthouse made no reply, realising that
she was simply surrounding herself with mental buffers—saying
ordinary things to prevent herself thinking of extraordinary things. Few
windows showed lights, and from scarcely a single chimney came smoke or
sparks. Shorthouse had already begun to notice everything, even the
smallest details. Presently they stopped at the street corner and looked
up at the name on the side of the house full in the moonlight, and
with one accord, but without remark, turned into the square and crossed
over to the side of it that lay in shadow.
“The number of the house is
thirteen,” whispered a voice at his side; and neither of them made the
obvious reference, but passed across the broad sheet of moonlight and
began to march up the pavement in silence.
It was about half-way up the square
that Shorthouse felt an arm slipped quietly but significantly into his
own, and knew then that their adventure had begun in earnest, and that
his companion was already yielding imperceptibly to the influences
against them. She needed support.
A few minutes later they stopped before
a tall, narrow house that rose before them into the night, ugly in shape
and painted a dingy white. Shutterless windows, without blinds, stared
down upon them, shining here and there in the moonlight. There were
weather streaks in the wall and cracks in the paint, and the balcony
bulged out from the first floor a little unnaturally. But, beyond this
generally forlorn appearance of an occupied house, there was nothing at
first sight to single out this particular mansion for the evil character
it had most certainly acquired.
Taking a look over their shoulders to
make sure they had not been followed, they went boldly up the steps and
stood against the huge black door that fronted them forbiddingly. But
the first wave of nervousness was now upon them, and Shorthouse fumbled
a long time with the key before he could fit it into the lock at all.
For a moment, if truth were told, they both hoped it would not open, for
they were a prey to various unpleasant emotions as they stood there on
the threshold of their ghostly adventure. Shorthouse, shuffling with the
key and hampered by the steady weight on his arm, certainly felt the
solemnity of the moment. It was as if the whole world—for all
experience seemed at that instant concentrated in his own
consciousness—were listening to the grating noise of that key. A
stray puff of wind wandering down the empty street woke a momentary rustling
in the trees behind them, but otherwise this rattling of the key was the
only sound audible; and at last it turned in the lock and the heavy door
swung open and revealed a yawning gulf of darkness beyond.
With a last glance at the moonlit
square, they passed quickly in and the door slammed behind them with a
roar that echoed prodigiously through empty halls and passages. But,
instantly, with the echoes, another sound made itself heard, and Aunt
Julia leaned suddenly so heavily upon him that he had to take a step
backwards to save himself from falling.
A man had coughed close beside him—so
close that it seemed they must have been actually by his side in the
darkness.
With the possibility of practical jokes
in his mind, Shorthouse at once swung his heavy stick in the direction
of the sound; but it met nothing more solid than air. He heard his aunt
give a little gasp beside him.
“There’s someone here,” she
whispered; “I heard him.”
“Be quiet!” he said sternly. “It
was nothing but the noise of the front door.”
“Oh! get a light—quick!” she
added, as her nephew, fumbling with a box of matches, opened it upside
down and let them all fall with a rattle on to the stone floor.
The sound, however, was not repeated;
and there was no evidence of retreating footsteps. In another minute
they had a candle burning, using an empty end of a cigar case as a
holder; and when the first flare had died down he held the impromptu
lamp aloft and surveyed the scene. And it was dreary enough in all
conscience, for there is nothing more desolate in all the abodes of men
than an unfurnished house dimly lit, silent, and forsaken, and yet
tenanted by rumour with the memories of evil and violent histories.
They were standing in a wide hall-way;
on their left was the open door of a spacious dining-room, and in front
the hall ran, ever narrowing, into a long, dark passage that led
apparently to the top of the kitchen stairs. The broad uncarpeted
staircase rose in a sweep before them, everywhere draped in shadows,
except for a single spot about half-way up where the moonlight came in
through the window and fell in a bright patch on the boards. This shaft
of light shed a faint radiance above and below it, lending to the
objects within its reach a misty outline that was infinitely more
suggestive and ghostly than complete darkness. Filtered moonlight
always seems to paint faces on the surrounding gloom, and as
Shorthouse peered up into the well of darkness and thought of the
countless empty rooms and passages in the upper part of the old house,
he caught himself longing again for the safety of the moonlit square,
or the cosy, bright drawing-room they had left an hour before. Then
realising that these thoughts were dangerous, he thrust them away again
and summoned all his energy for concentration on the present.
“Aunt Julia,” he said aloud,
severely, “we must now go through the house from top to bottom and
make a thorough search.”
The echoes of his voice died away
slowly all over the building, and in the intense silence that followed
he turned to look at her. In the candle-light he saw that her face was
already ghastly pale; but she dropped his arm for a moment and said in a
whisper, stepping close in front of him—
“I agree. We must be sure there’s
no one hiding. That’s the first thing.”
She spoke with evident effort, and he
looked at her with admiration.
“You feel quite sure of yourself?
It’s not too late—
“I think so,” she whispered, her
eyes shifting nervously towards the shadows behind. “Quite sure,
only one thing—”
“What’s that?”
“You must never leave me alone for an
instant.”
“As long as you understand that any
sound or appearance must be investigated at once, for to hesitate
means to admit fear. That is fatal.”
“Agreed,” she said, a little
shakily, after a moment’s hesitation. “I’ll try—”
Arm in arm, Shorthouse holding the
dripping candle and the stick, while his aunt carried the cloak over her
shoulders, figures of utter comedy to all but themselves, they began a
systematic search.
Stealthily, walking on tip-toe and
shading the candle lest it should betray their presence through the
shutterless windows, they went first into the big dining-room. There
was not a stick of furniture to be seen. Bare walls, ugly mantel-pieces
and empty grates stared at them. Everything, they felt, resented their
intrusion, watching them, as it were, with veiled eyes; whispers
followed them; shadows flitted noiselessly to right and left; something
seemed ever at their back, watching, waiting an opportunity to do them
injury. There was the inevitable sense that operations which went on
when the room was empty had been temporarily suspended till they were
well out of the way again. The whole dark interior of the old building
seemed to become a malignant Presence that rose up, warning them to
desist and mind their own business; every moment the strain on the
nerves increased.
Out of the gloomy dining-room they
passed through large folding doors into a sort of library or
smoking-room, wrapt equally in silence, darkness, and dust; and from
this they regained the hall near the top of the back stairs.
Here a pitch black tunnel opened before
them into the lower regions, and—it must be confessed—they
hesitated. But only for a minute. With the worst of the night still to
come it was essential to turn from nothing. Aunt Julia stumbled at the
top step of the dark descent, ill lit by the flickering candle, and even
Shorthouse felt at least half the decision go out of his legs.
“Come on!” he said peremptorily,
and his voice ran on and lost itself in the dark, empty spaces below.
“I’m coming,” she faltered,
catching his arm with unnecessary violence.
They went a little unsteadily down the
stone steps, a cold, damp air meeting them in the face, close and
malodorous. The kitchen, into which the stairs led along a narrow
passage, was large, with a lofty ceiling. Several doors opened out of
it—some into cupboards with empty jars still standing on the shelves,
and others into horrible little ghostly back offices, each colder and
less inviting than the last. Black beetles scurried over the floor, and
once, when they knocked against a deal table standing in a corner,
something about the size of a cat jumped down with a rush and fled,
scampering across the stone floor into the darkness. Everywhere there
was a sense of recent occupation, an impression of sadness and gloom.
Leaving the main kitchen, they next
went towards the scullery. The door was standing ajar, and as they
pushed it open to its full extent Aunt Julia uttered a piercing scream,
which she instantly tried to stifle by placing her hand over her mouth.
For a second Shorthouse stood stock-still, catching his breath. He felt
as if his spine had suddenly become hollow and someone had filled it
with particles of ice.
Facing them, directly in their way
between the doorposts, stood the figure of a woman. She had dishevelled
hair and wildly staring eyes, and her face was terrified and white as
death.
She stood there motionless for the
space of a single second. Then the candle flickered and she was
gone—gone utterly— and the door framed nothing but empty darkness.
“Only the beastly jumping
candle-light,” he said quickly, in a voice that sounded like someone
else’s and was only half under control. “Come on, aunt. There’s
nothing there.”
He dragged her forward. With a
clattering of feet and a great appearance of boldness they went on, but
over his body the skin moved as if crawling ants covered it, and he knew
by the weight on his arm that he was supplying the force of locomotion
for two. The scullery was cold, bare, and empty; more like a large
prison cell than anything else. They went round it, tried the door into
the yard, and the windows, but found them all fastened securely. His
aunt moved beside him like a person in a dream. Her eyes were tightly
shut, and she seemed merely to follow the pressure of his arm. Her
courage filled him with amazement. At the same time he noticed that a
certain odd change had come over her face, which somehow evaded his
power of analysis.
“There’s nothing here, aunty,” he
repeated aloud quickly. “Let’s go upstairs and see the rest of the
house. Then we’ll choose a room to wait up in.”
She followed him obediently, keeping
close to his side, and they locked the kitchen door behind them. It was
a relief to get tip again. In the hall there was more light than before,
for the moon had travelled a little further down the stairs. Cautiously
they began to go up into the dark vault of the upper house, the boards
creaking under their weight.
On the first floor they found the large
double drawing-rooms, a search of which revealed nothing. Here also was
no sign of furniture or recent occupancy; nothing but dust and neglect
and shadows. They opened the big folding doors between front and back
drawing-rooms and then came out again to the landing and went on
upstairs.
They had not gone up more than a dozen
steps when they both simultaneously stopped to listen, looking into each
other’s eyes with a new apprehension across the flickering candle
flame. From the room they had left hardly ten seconds before came the
sound of doors quietly closing. It was beyond all question; they heard
the booming noise that accompanies the shutting of heavy doors, followed
by the sharp catching of the latch.
“We must go back and see,” said
Shorthouse briefly, in a low tone, and turning to go downstairs again.
Somehow she managed to drag after him,
her feet catching in her dress, her face livid.
When they entered the front
drawing-room it was plain that the folding doors had been closed—half
a minute before. Without hesitation Shorthouse opened them. He almost
expected to see someone facing him in the back room; but only darkness
and cold air met him. They went through both rooms, finding nothing
unusual. They tried in every way to make the doors close of themselves,
but there was not wind enough even to set the candle flame flickering.
The doors would not move without strong pressure. All was silent as
the grave. Undeniably the rooms were utterly empty, and the house
utterly still.
“It’s beginning,” whispered a
voice at his elbow which be hardly recognised as his aunt’s.
He nodded acquiescence, taking out his
watch to note the time. It was fifteen minutes before midnight; he made
the entry of exactly what had occurred in his notebook, setting the
candle in its case upon the floor in order to do so. It took a moment or
two to balance it safely against the wall.
Aunt Julia always declared that at this
moment she was not actually watching him, but had turned her head towards
the inner room, where she fancied she heard something moving; but, at
any rate, both positively agreed that there came a sound of rushing
feet, heavy and very swift— and the next instant the candle was out!
But to Shorthouse himself had come more
than this, and he has always thanked his fortunate stars that it came to
him alone and not to his aunt too. For, as he rose from the stooping
position of balancing the candle, and before it was actually
extinguished, a face thrust itself forward so close to his own that he
could almost have touched it with his lips. It was a face working with
passion; a man’s face, dark, with thick features, and angry, savage
eyes. It belonged to a common man, and it was evil in its ordinary
normal expression, no doubt, but as he saw it, alive with intense,
aggressive emotion, it was a malignant and terrible human countenance.
There was no movement of the air;
nothing but the sound of rushing feet—stockinged or muffled feet; the
apparition of the face; and the almost simultaneous extinguishing of the
candle.
In spite of himself, Shorthouse uttered
a little cry, nearly losing his balance as his aunt clung to him with
her whole weight in one moment of real, uncontrollable terror. She made
no sound, but simply seized him bodily. Fortunately, however, she had
seen nothing, but had only heard the rushing feet, for her control
returned almost at once, and he was able to disentangle himself and
strike a match.
The shadows ran away on all sides
before the glare, and his aunt stooped down and groped for the cigar
case with the precious candle. Then they discovered that the candle had
not been blown out at all; it had been crushed
out. The wick was pressed down into the wax, which was flattened as
if by some smooth, heavy instrument.
How his companion so quickly overcame
her terror, Shorthouse never properly understood; but his admiration for
her self-control increased tenfold, and at the same time served to feed
his own dying flame—for which he was undeniably grateful. Equally
inexplicable to him was the evidence of physical force they had just
witnessed. He at once suppressed the memory of stories he had heard of
“physical mediums” and their dangerous phenomena; for if these were
true, and either his aunt or himself was unwittingly a physical medium,
it meant that they were simply aiding to focus the forces of a haunted
house already charged to the brim. It was like walking with unprotected
lamps among uncovered stores of gunpowder.
So, with as little reflection as
possible, he simply relit the candle and went tip to the next floor. The
arm in his trembled, it is true, and his own tread was often uncertain,
but they went on with thoroughness, and after a search revealing nothing
they climbed the last flight of stairs to the top floor of all.
Here they found a perfect nest of small
servants’ rooms, with broken pieces of furniture, dirty cane-bottomed
chairs, chests of drawers, cracked mirrors, and decrepit bedsteads. The
rooms had low sloping ceilings already hung here and there with cobwebs,
small windows, and badly plastered walls—a depressing and dismal
region which they were glad to leave behind.
It was on the stroke of midnight when
they entered a small room on the third floor, close to the top of the
stairs, and arranged to make themselves comfortable for the remainder
of their adventure. It was absolutely bare, and was said to be the
room—then used as a clothes closet—into which the infuriated groom
had chased his victim and finally caught her. Outside, across the narrow
landing, began the stairs leading up to the floor above, and the
servants’ quarters where they had just searched.
In spite of the chilliness of the night
there was something in the air of this room that cried for an open
window. But there was more than this. Shorthouse could only describe it
by saying that he felt less master of himself here than in any other
part of the house. There was something that acted directly on the
nerves, tiring the resolution, enfeebling the will. He was conscious of
this result before he had been in the room five minutes, and it was in
the short time they stayed there that he suffered the wholesale
depletion of his vital forces, which was, for himself, the chief horror
of the whole experience.
They put the candle on the floor of the
cupboard, leaving the door a few inches ajar, so that there was no glare
to confuse the eyes, and no shadow to shift about on walls and ceiling.
Then they spread the cloak on the floor and sat down to wait, with their
backs against the wall.
Shorthouse was within two feet of the
door on to the landing; his position commanded a good view of the main
staircase leading down into the darkness, and also of the beginning of
the servants’ stairs going to the floor above; the heavy stick lay
beside him within easy reach.
The moon was now high above the house.
Through the open window they could see the comforting stars like
friendly eyes watching in the sky. One by one the clocks of the town
struck midnight, and when the sounds died away the deep silence of a
windless night fell again over everything. Only the boom of the sea, far
away and lugubrious, filled the air with hollow murmurs.
Inside the house the silence became
awful; awful, he thought, because any minute now it might be broken by
sounds portending terror. The strain of waiting told more and more
severely on the nerves; they talked in whispers when they talked at all,
for their voices sounded queer and unnatural. A chilliness, not
altogether due to the night air, invaded the room, and made them cold.
The influences against them, whatever these might be, were slowly
robbing them of self-confidence, and the power of decisive action; their
forces were on the wane, and the possibility of real fear took on a new
and terrible meaning. He began to tremble for the elderly woman by his
side, whose pluck could hardly save her beyond a certain extent.
He heard the blood singing in his
veins. It sometimes seemed so loud that he fancied it prevented his
hearing properly certain other sounds that were beginning very faintly
to make themselves audible in the depths of the house. Every time he
fastened his attention on these sounds, they instantly ceased. They
certainly came no nearer. Yet he could not rid himself of the idea that
movement was going on somewhere in the lower regions of the house. The
drawing-room floor, where the doors had been so strangely closed, seemed
too near; the sounds were further off than that. He thought of the
great kitchen, with the scurrying black beetles, and of the dismal
little scullery; but, somehow or other, they did not seem to come from
there either. Surely they were not outside
the house!
Then, suddenly, the truth flashed into
his mind, and for the space of a minute he felt as if his blood had
stopped flowing and turned to ice.
The sounds were not downstairs at all;
they were upstairs—upstairs,
somewhere among those horrid gloomy little servants’ rooms with their
bits of broken furniture, low ceilings, and cramped windows—upstairs
where the victim had first been disturbed and stalked to her death.
And the moment he discovered where the
sounds were, he began to hear them more clearly. It was the sound of
feet, moving stealthily along the passage overhead, in and out among the
rooms, and past the furniture.
He turned quickly to steal a glance at
the motionless figure seated beside him, to note whether she had shared
his discovery. The faint candle-light coming through the crack in the
cupboard door, threw her strongly-marked face into vivid relief against
the white of the wall. But it was something else that made him catch his
breath and stare again. An extraordinary something had come into her
face and seemed to spread over her features like a mask; it smoothed out
the deep lines and drew the skin everywhere a little tighter so that the
wrinkles disappeared; it brought into the face—with the sole exception
of the old eyes—an appearance of youth and almost of childhood.
He stared in speechless
amazement—amazement that was dangerously near to horror. It was his
aunt’s face indeed, but it was her face of forty years ago, the vacant
innocent face of a girl. He had heard stories of that strange effect of
terror which could wipe a human countenance clean of other emotions,
obliterating all previous expressions; but he had never realised that it
could be literally true, or could mean anything so simply horrible as
what he now saw. For the dreadful signature of overmastering fear was
written plainly in that utter vacancy of the girlish face beside him;
and when, feeling his intense gaze, she turned to look at him, he
instinctively closed his eyes tightly to shut out the sight.
Yet, when he turned a minute later, his
feelings well in hand, he saw to his intense relief another expression;
his aunt was smiling, and though the face was deathly white, the awful
veil had lifted and the normal look was returning.
“Anything wrong?” was all he could
think of to say at the moment. And the answer was eloquent, coming from
such a woman.
“I feel cold—and a little
frightened,” she whispered.
He offered to close the window, but she
seized hold of him and begged him not to leave her side even for an
instant.
“It’s upstairs, I know,” she
whispered, with an odd half-laugh; “ but I can’t possibly go up.”
But Shorthouse thought otherwise,
knowing that in action lay their best hope of self-control.
He took the brandy flask and poured out
a glass of neat spirit, stiff enough to help anybody over anything. She
swallowed it with a little shiver. His only idea now was to get out of
the house before her collapse became inevitable; but this could not
safely be done by turning tail and running from the enemy. Inaction was
no longer possible; every minute he was growing less master of himself,
and desperate, aggressive measures were imperative without further
delay. Moreover, the action must be taken towards
the enemy, not away from it; the climax, if necessary and
unavoidable, would have to be faced boldly. He could do it now; but in
ten minutes he might not have the force left to act for himself, much
less for both!
Upstairs, the sounds were meanwhile
becoming louder and closer, accompanied by occasional creaking of the
boards. Someone was moving stealthily about, stumbling now and then
awkwardly against the furniture.
Waiting a few moments to allow the
tremendous dose of spirits to produce its effect, and knowing this would
last but a short time under the circumstances, Shorthouse then quietly
got on his feet, saying in a determined voice:
“Now Aunt Julia, we’ll go upstairs
and find out what all this noise is about. You must come too. It’s
what we agreed.”
He picked up his stick and went to the
cupboard for the candle. A limp form rose shakily beside him breathing
hard, and he heard a voice say very faintly something about being
“ready to come”. The woman’s courage amazed him; it was so much
greater than his own; and, as they advanced, holding aloft the dripping
candle, some subtle force exhaled from this trembling, white-faced old
woman at his side that was the true source of his inspiration. It held
something really great that shamed him and gave him the support without
which he would have proved far less equal to the occasion.
They crossed the dark landing, avoiding
with their eyes the deep black space over the banisters. Then they began
to mount the narrow staircase to meet the sounds which, minute by
minute, grew louder and nearer. About half-way up the stairs Aunt Julia
stumbled and Shorthouse turned to catch her by the arm, and just at that
moment there came a terrific crash in the servants’ corridor overhead.
It was instantly followed by a shrill, agonised scream that was a cry of
terror and a cry for help melted into one.
Before they could move aside, or go
down a single step, someone came rushing along the passage overhead,
blundering horribly, racing madly, at full speed, three steps at a
time, down the very staircase where they stood. The steps were light and
uncertain; but close behind them sounded the heavier tread of another
person, and the staircase seemed to shake.
Shorthouse and his companion just had
time to flatten themselves against the wall when the jumble of flying
steps was upon them, and two persons, with the slightest possible
interval between them, dashed past at full speed. It was a perfect
whirlwind of sound breaking in upon the midnight silence of the empty
building.
The two runners, pursuer and pursued,
had passed clean through them where they stood, and already with a thud
the boards below had received first one, then the other. Yet they had
seen absolutely nothing—not a hand, or arm, or face, or even a shred
of flying clothing.
There came a second’s pause. Then the
first one, the lighter of the two, obviously the pursued one, ran with
uncertain footsteps into the little room which Shorthouse and his aunt
had just left. The heavier one followed. There was a sound of scuffling,
gasping, and smothered screaming; and then out on to the landing came
the step— of a single person treading
weightily.
A
dead silence followed for the space of half a minute, and then was heard
a rushing sound through the air. It was followed by a dull, crashing
thud in the depths of the house below—on the stone floor of the hall.
Utter silence reigned after. Nothing moved. The flame of the
candle was steady. It had been steady the whole time, and the air had
been undisturbed by any movement whatsoever. Palsied with terror, Aunt
Julia, without waiting for her companion, began fumbling her way
downstairs; she was crying gently to herself, and when Shorthouse put
his arm round her and half carried her, he felt that she was trembling
like a leaf. He went into the little room and picked up the cloak from
the floor, and, arm in arm, walking very slowly, without speaking a word
or looking once behind them, they marched down the three flights into
the hall.
In the hall they saw nothing, but the
whole way down the stairs they were conscious that someone followed
them; step by step; when they went faster IT was left behind, and when
they went more slowly IT caught them up. But never once did they look
behind to see; and at each turning of the staircase they lowered their
eyes for fear of the following horror they might see upon the stairs
above.
With trembling hands Shorthouse opened
the front door, and they walked out into the moonlight and drew a deep
breath of the cool night air blowing in from the sea.