“If it becomes necessary I will wire for a doctor from town. I will undertake all the preliminary arrangements, if you will allow me.”
Ten steps before the corner they stopped.
“God bless you, Miss Deronnais. Remember, I am at the inn if you need me.”
IV
Mrs. Baxter dined placidly in bed at about half-past seven; but she was more sleepy than ever when she had done. She was rash enough to drink a little claret and water.
“It always goes straight to my head, Charlotte,” she explained. “Well, set the book—no, not that one—the one bound in white parchment. … Yes, just so, down here; and turn the reading lamp so that I can read if I want to. … Oh! ask Miss Maggie to tap at my door very softly when she comes out from dinner. Has she gone down yet?”
“I think I heard her step just now, ma’am.”
“Very well; then you can just tell Susan to let her know. How was Mr. Laurie looking, Charlotte?”
“I haven’t seen him, ma’am.”
“Very well. Then that is all, Charlotte. You can just look in here after Miss Maggie and settle me for the night.”
Then the door closed, and Mrs. Baxter instantly began to doze off.
She was one of those persons whose moments between sleeping and waking, especially during a little attack of feverishness, are occupied in contemplating a number of little vivid pictures of all kinds that present themselves to the mental vision; and she saw as usual a quantity of these, made up of tiny details of the day that was gone, and of other details markedly unconnected with it. She saw for example little scenes in which Maggie and Charlotte and medicine bottles and Chinese faces and printed pages of a book all moved together in a sort of convincing incoherence; and she was just beginning to lose herself in the depths of sleep, and to forget her firm resolution of reading another page or so of the book by her side, when a little sound came, and she opened, as she thought, her eyes.
Her reading lamp cast a funnel of light across her bed, and the rest of the room was lit only by the fire dancing in the chimney. Yet this was bright enough, she thought at the time, to show her perfectly distinctly, though with shadows fleeting across it, her son’s face peering in at the door. She thought she said something; but she was not sure afterwards. At any rate, the face did not move; and it seemed to her that it bore an expression of such extraordinary malignity that she would hardly have known it for her son’s. In a sudden panic she raised herself in bed, staring; and as the shadows came and went, as she stared, the face was gone again. Mrs. Baxter drew a quick breath or two as she looked; but there was nothing. Yet again she could have sworn that she heard the faint jar of the closing door.
She reached out and put her hand on the bell-string that hung down over her bed. Then she hesitated. It was too ridiculous, she told herself. Besides, Charlotte would have gone to her room.
But the fear did not go immediately; though she told herself again and again that it was just one of those little waking visions that she knew so well.
She lay back on the pillow, thinking. … Why, they would have reached the fish by now. No; she would tell Maggie when she came up. How Laurie would laugh tomorrow! Then, little by little, she dozed off once more.
The next thing of which she was aware was Maggie bending over her.
“Asleep, Auntie dear?” said the girl softly.
The old lady murmured something. Then she sat up, suddenly.
“No, my dear. Have you finished dinner?”
“Yes, Auntie.”
“Where’s Laurie? I should like to see him for a minute.”
“Not tonight, Auntie; you’re too tired. Besides, I think he’s gone to the smoking room.”
She acquiesced placidly.
“Very well, dearest. … Oh! Maggie, such a queer thing happened just now—when you were at dinner.”
“Yes?”
“I thought I saw Laurie look in, just for an instant. But he looked awful, somehow. It was just one of my little waking visions I’ve told you of, I suppose.”
The girl was silent; but the old lady saw her suddenly straighten herself.
“Just ask him whether he did look in, after all. It may just have been the shadow on his face.”
“What time was it?”
“About ten past eight, I suppose, dearest. You’ll ask him, won’t you?”
“Yes, Auntie. … I think I’d better lock your door when I go out. You won’t fancy such things then, will you?”
“Very well, dearest. As you think best.”
The old voice was becoming sleepy again: and Maggie stood watching a moment or two longer.
“Send Charlotte to me, dearest. … Good night, my pet. … I’m too sleepy again. My love to Laurie.”
“Yes, Auntie.”
The old lady felt the girl’s warm lips on her forehead. They seemed to linger a little. Then Mrs. Baxter lost herself once more.
V
The public bar of the Wheatsheaf Inn was the scene this evening of a lively discussion. Some thought the old gentleman, arrived that day from London, to be a new kind of commercial traveler, with designs upon the gardens of the gentry; others that he was a sort of scientific collector; others, again, that he was a private detective; and since there was no evidence at all, good or bad, in support of any one of these suggestions, a very pretty debate became possible.
A silence fell when his step was heard to pass down the stairs and out into the street, and another half an hour later when he returned. Then once more the discussion began.
At ten o’clock the majority of the men moved out into the moonlight to disperse homewards, as the landlord began to put away the glasses and glance at the clock. Overhead the lighted blind showed where the mysterious stranger still kept vigil; and over the way, beyond the still leafless trees, towered up
