THE SHADOW ON THE BLIND.
by Louisa Baldwin
(1845-1925)
HARBLEDON HALL
had stood empty for seven years. For seven
years no smoke had issued from its chimneys telling of the
cheerful hearth within, no voice or laughter had been heard under
its roof, no footstep coming or going across its threshold. A
straggling growth of ivy and Virginia creeper that covered the
walls and veiled the windows made the front of the house look as
forlorn and neglected as the face of a sick man who has grown
a ragged beard during a long illness. The window-sills were green
with the drip of rain from the spouts choked with decaying
leaves, and the brickwork was stained with dark patches of damp.
The birds had built their nests undisturbed in every gable and
projection of the roof, and in the wide chimneys, secure from
danger of being smoked out of their comfortable quarters.
And within the house, though man had withdrawn his presence
from it, other tenants were in possession. Rats and mice held
revels in the empty rooms and passages, that resounded with the
patter of their feet, the squeak of their voices, and the nibbling
of their teeth. In the dead of night, bold as they had grown,
they scared themselves by catching in wires that set bells ringing
and echoing through the house, and an army of rats would rush
helter-skelter down the great staircase, bounding over one
another's backs in their panic, as we see them depicted in
illustrations of the famous history of Whittington and his cat.
If desolation reigned in Harbledon Hall its gardens were
returning to a state of savage nature, and the rank growth of
weeds choked and overtopped the flowers and shrubs. No seeds
had been sown, no lawns mown, no hedges clipped or tree or
bush pruned in seven long years, and the once orderly gardens
had become a tangled thicket where the fairy prince might seek
the sleeping beauty. A bramble had sprung up by the sundial,
and, clasping it in its thorny arms, threw its branches about it,
effectually hiding it from the light of day. The stone basin of
the disused fountain had become a nursery of young frogs, that
hopped, swam, and croaked undisturbed, and nature was
endeavouring to re-establish her sway where man had withdrawn his
cultivating and restraining hand.
It was a radiant day in June. The hot sun poured down on
the tangled overgrowth in the gardens of Harbledon Hall, the
birds were in a perfect riot of song, and a south-west wind rocked
them on the bough. Even the old forsaken house on such a day
wore its least sombre aspect. One could imagine there had been
happy household life within its walls, and it was possible to
conceive that they might again resound to the laughter and voices
of children at play.
Some such thought as this must have entered the mind of an
elderly gentleman driving by in an open carriage, with his wife, a
pale grey-haired lady, seated beside him. Mr. Stackpoole was a
cheerful, energetic man of sixty years of age, of strong likes and
dislikes and sudden impulses. As he caught sight of the wide
front of Harbledon Hall with its red gables glowing in the sun,
its confused mass of creepers almost hiding the lower storeys from
view, he told the coachman to draw up at the iron gates at the
entrance.
This is a very picturesque house, my dear; I should like to
have a look at it," he said to his wife; it may be the kind of
place we are in search of," and he alighted from the carriage as
nimbly as a young man to read the notice painted on the
weather-stained board fastened to the gates "For admission to
view these premises, apply to Mr. Judd, sexton, by the church."
Mr. Stackpoole returned to the carriage and bade the coachman
drive to the church, the tower of which they could see embowered
among trees, apparently not more than a quarter of a mile distant.
As they drove he continued, "I like the look of the place very
much. I am sure I could do something with it. I should just
enjoy setting to work upon it to call order out of chaos, and in
six months I would undertake to effect an entire transformation
in the house and grounds and make it one of the prettiest places
in the neighbourhood. What do you think, my dear? Hey?"
The frail-looking elderly lady thus addressed made but a faint
rejoinder, and her husband's sanguine enthusiasm by no means
communicated itself to her. Harbledon Hall was the sixth old
house to which Mr. Stackpoole had taken a fancy in the last ten
years, and fallen out of love with as quickly, after exercising his
ingenuity in putting it in perfect order and living in it for a
short time. It was his diversion, now that he had retired from
business and had nothing particular to do, to hunt up old country
houses, put them in thorough modern repair and working order,
live in them just long enough to induce his wife to hope that he
had pitched his tent finally, when the demon of unrest would
break out in him once more, and he was off again on the old
quest.
This hunting of houses, catching them, and then letting them
go that he might pursue game of the same kind elsewhere was
naturally more entertaining to Mr. Stackpoole than it could be
to his wife and daughter. But the elder lady was patient and
philosophic, and when her daughter said petulantly, "Oh, Mamma,
what a shame it is that we have to be dragged about the country
like this! We have not been a year in this lovely house, and
Papa is tired of it already, and looking out again for some tumble-down
old place to put that in good order, and leave it too, I
suppose!" Mrs. Stackpoole would say, "Never mind, Ella. Papa
must do as he thinks best. The excitement and interest he finds
in frequently changing house are necessary to him now that he has
done with business; and remember, my dear, he has no home
occupations to pass the time like you and I have." But Ella
Stackpoole was now married and settled in a home of her own,
and the only other child, a son, was stationed with his regiment
in Malta.
Therefore it was that when Mr. Stackpoole became suddenly
interested in the appearance of Harbledon Hall his wife was
unable to feel any enthusiasm on the subject. Their last home
had been in Cornwall, where, after six months spent in its most
westerly corner, Mr. Stackpoole discovered what everyone else had
always known, that he was in a decidedly rainy part of England.
He could scarcely have been more astonished at the quantity of
rain that fell if it had been in Egypt, and he fled to London to
make that his headquarters while he looked about for an old house
to suit his fancy in the drier county of Surrey.
And on this bright June day he and his wife were driving
through the fair country house-hunting, and the more dilapidated
a house looked, provided that his experienced eye saw capacities
of improvement about it, the more attractive it appeared to Mr.
Stackpoole, as affording wider scope for his particular form of
genius. His was a costly hobby, and strangers reaped the benefit
of his lavish outlay on houses he perfected, tired of, and left so
soon.
Mr. Judd, the sexton, was found without difficulty, for, indeed,
he was a conspicuous object, sitting in a large armchair by his
cottage door reading the newspaper, and taking an occasional sip
from a glass of cold brandy-and-water that stood beside him on the
window-sill. He was a person of dignity in the village, accustomed
to waste his own time and that of others; but Mr. Stackpoole
hurried him off to the carriage as soon as he had found the keys, and
compelled him to unwonted activity. The garden be a wilderness,
sir," said the old man, opening one of the great iron gates,
"and it's four 'ears since e'er an inquiry was made about the
place."
"It wouldn't be to everyone's taste, you see; it'll need a
considerable outlay upon it before it is fit for habitation," said Mr.
Stackpoole complacently as he stooped to disentangle a briar from
his wife's skirt. Who were the last tenants, and how long had
they lived here?" he said, turning to the old man and asking two
questions at once.
"Sir Roland Shawe and his family had it last, sir. They took
the place on a twenty-one years' lease, and they left uncommon
sudden when it had five years and more to run. There was a deal
o' talk about what made 'em leave i' that way," and Judd opened
wide the front door as he spoke, and they entered a large, lofty
hall, smelling mouldy as though there were vaults below.
"Folks did say there was reasons more 'n what they'd own up
to, for a large fam'ly to turn out all of a sudden, as if they was
running away from the plague," and the old sexton looked
mysterious and as though he longed to be questioned. Mr. Stackpoole,
however, was too much interested in pacing the length of
the dining-room to notice any hints he might throw out.
"My dear," he said to his wife, who was resting on the low
window seat, "we will have the whole of this oak floor polished, and
Turkish rugs laid down at intervals."
That is just what we did in our house in Cumberland," said
Mrs. Stackpoole gently, and if you remember you were not
pleased with it when it was done"; then, turning to the old man:
"You were going to tell us why Sir Roland Shawe left so suddenly."
"Forbid, ma'am, that I should say definite why he left, not
knowing for certain," said Mr. Judd, swelling with importance as
he spoke. "I never believe more 'n 'alf o' what I hear, and puts
no faith in tales, whether master's or man's. But by what I can
make out and old Jimmy Judd can see through a stone wall as
fer as most folks I should say as ghosts was at the bottom of the
whole kick-up."
Mrs. Stackpoole smiled at the old man's mode of expressing
himself, and then looked anxiously towards her husband, who
laughed heartily, and they left the dining-room for the upstairs
regions, which he was impatient to explore.
"They fled before ghosts, did they?" said Mr. Stackpoole, still
laughing at the idea. If the house is supposed to be haunted I
should like it all the better for its reputation," and he swung open
the door of a large, low room, with a deep projecting chimney-place
and wide window letting in a flood of sunshine.
This is certainly a very cheerful aspect," said his wife, stepping
to the window and looking out upon the wild garden enclosed
by ragged yew hedges; "there is nothing ghostly about this room,
at all events!"
"Pooh! Ghosts indeed! those who believe in them deserve
to see them," said Mr. Stackpoole contemptuously. "If we take
the house this shall be your morning-room; you'll get plenty of
sunshine, which is a great thing for you; and if I like the room
under it I will have it done up for a business-room for myself."
And they wandered from cellar to attic of the big house, Mr.
Stackpoole delighted with the possibilities of the place, and noting
in his pocket-book the dimensions of the chief rooms and of the
entrance-hall.
"At all events I shall inquire on what terms the house is to
be let," he said, after spending two hours in energetically inspecting
the premises, and as he slipped five shillings into Mr. Judd's
expectant palm, "By the way, I have not asked who is the
landlord?"
"The landlord, sir, be a many and not one," and the old man
named a well-known city company to which the property belonged.
"I've rented from landlords, and landladies, and trustees, but
never yet from a company. It's all one to me, and I shall see
their agent in town to-morrow." Then Mr. Stackpoole took a
farewell look at the room on the ground floor, immediately under
the cheerful room at the head of the stairs that he had assigned to
his wife's prospective use, and decided that it was exactly adapted
to his requirements, after which they threaded their way back to
the gates through the neglected maze of the garden.
"And how do you like the look of Harbledon Hall?" he asked
his wife as he drove away; "what do you think of the old place?"
"I confess that I was not very favourably impressed with it,
though it is a handsome, well-built house, and might be made
very comfortable, no doubt. But it struck me with a kind of
chill."
"So would any place, my dear, that had been shut up for seven
years. I feel it in my back now; I wish it may not mean an
attack of lumbago for me." Mrs. Stackpoole smiled at the literal
interpretation of her words.
"I don't mean that kind of chill, but a sort of depressed,
foreboding feeling that I have never had before in any of the
houses you and I have been over together, and their name is
legion."
"Why, Anna, you don't mean to say that the tedious old sexton
has frightened you with his gossip! It was merely some nonsense
or other he had made up to increase his importance. If I take
the place I shall put an army of workmen in in a week from now,
and when next you see it, with good fires drying the rooms,
windows bright and clean, and paperers and painters busy upon
it, it will look very different, I can assure you. Any house that
has been uninhabited as long as Harbledon Hall wears a forlorn
look, but for all that I see the possibilities of it, and I could make
it the prettiest place we have lived in yet." And Mrs. Stackpoole
felt certain that her husband would take the old house.
The following day, when Mr. Stackpoole saw the company's
agent, he was surprised at the very moderate rent asked for the
house. Whether he wished to take it on lease or as a yearly
tenant, the sum demanded was small enough to arouse suspicion
in the most unwary.
"Why do you ask such a low rent for a fine old place like
that?" he asked.
It is so much out of repair from standing empty so long,
that I suppose the company is willing to submit to a certain loss,
for the sake of having it inhabited again."
"But with such a temptingly low rent, how is it that it has not
been taken long ago?"
"There have been any number of applications for it."
"Indeed! The old fellow in charge of the keys who showed
me over the place yesterday said that no one had inquired about
it for four years." A peculiar expression passed over the agent's
face, but it was not one of surprise.
"He said so, did he? I've had plenty of inquiries."
"He certainly said so. He was a talkative old man, and
anxious to impress us with the idea that Sir Roland Shawe left
Harbledon Hall suddenly, some considerable time before his lease
was up, in consequence of an absurd notion that the house was
haunted. Now, personally I care nothing about it, but my wife is
sometimes nervous, and I thought I would ask you if you know
anything of any unusual circumstances connected with his
leaving so abruptly."
"Judd is a chattering old fool! Did he tell you anything
definite about it himself?" asked the agent.
"Nothing whatever, but he said some nonsense about ghosts
driving them away from the place."
"Of course there was an absurd story that got about at the
time! It was some hocus-pocus with a magic-lantern, I believe,
got up by the young fellows to frighten the servants, with pictures
of a skeleton on a sheet hung up somewhere or other. The whole
thing was a stupid practical joke, only too successful, for the scare
spread to the ladies of the house, and of course Sir Roland had to
leave; they made the place too hot for him," and the agent
laughed uproariously. I remember all about it now you come
to ask me. The young Shawes got up the panic for their own
purposes. They found the country too slow for them, they wanted
to live in London, so with the simple apparatus of a magic-lantern
and a sheet or blind they frightened the family back into town and
got what they wanted. Naturally Sir Roland used not to speak of
it when he found it out, for no one is proud of having been made
a fool of. And now, my dear sir," he said, assuming an air of great
candour, you know as much about this childish folly as I do
myself. It has been magnified into something wonderful till
we've had that tempting property on our hands all these years in
consequence."
Mr. Stackpoole was pleased and amused with the agent's
frank explanation of the basis of Mr. Judd's mysterious allusions,
and he and his wife laughed at it together over their dinner.
Mrs. Stackpoole was now willing that her husband should take
Harbledon Hall, which he did as a yearly tenant, with the right
of taking the property on a lease, if at the end of three years he
felt inclined to prolong his stay.
Then began all the delightful bustle that Mr. Stackpoole's
soul loved the drying, warming, painting, lighting, decorating,
and furnishing of the house; the taming and reclaiming of the
garden; the stubbing up of old lawns and laying down of new
turf; the cleaning and regravelling or weed-grown paths. Such
an army of workmen was engaged that Mr. Stackpoole calculated
that in less than five months the house would be ready to go into,
and the gardens be all clean, smooth, and bare in their winter tidiness.
"It must be finished by the middle of December," he said,
"that I may keep Christmas here with my family; and if every
man has done his work well, and is out of the house by the twelfth
of December, I will give each one a bonus on his wages, and a
Christmas supper to you all."
No wonder that the workmen caught something of Mr.
Stackpoole's enthusiasm, and that every time he brought his wife
to see what was going on she was delighted with the progress
made. All their friends were informed of the lucky find of the
beautiful old house in Surrey, and invitations were issued long
before for a series of entertainments, dances, and private theatricals
that they intended to give at Harbledon Hall in the following
January, when their daughter, Mrs. Beaumont, and her husband
would be staying with them.
Shortly before Mr. and Mrs. Stackpoole removed to Harbledon
Hall they were dining out one evening, and after the ladies had
left the room and the gentlemen had rearranged their chairs
comfortably and were seated at their wine, Mr. Stackpoole began
on his favourite theme, the furnishing and repairing of the old
house in Surrey. As most of those present had frequently heard
him on the subject before, he was not much heeded, and prosed
on without interruption till a tall, bald-headed gentleman opposite
him caught the words Harbledon Hall and became an attentive
listener.
"Harbledon Hall, did you say? Do you mean the old gabled,
red-brick house three miles from Mendleton in Surrey? I hope
no friend of yours is thinking of taking it."
Mr. Stackpoole smiled. Not exactly a friend of mine, though
probably I know him better than anyone else. I have taken
Harbledon Hall myself and intend moving into it next December."
"The deuce you do!" said the bald-headed gentleman, setting
down his glass.
"I don't know why it should surprise you," said Mr. Stackpoole.
"Surprise me? Certainly not. Only I thought that the house
was empty and likely to remain so."
"Surely it has stood empty long enough for seven years. It
requires an immense deal doing to it, of course, but I took a fancy
to the place, and am putting it into thorough repair, introducing
the electric light among other modern improvements; in fact, I am
sparing no expense. Do you know anything about Harbledon
Hall?"
"I used to do. Sir Roland Shawe, the last tenant, is my
brother," and the bald-headed gentleman spoke in a dry and
uncommunicative manner. But a hint was not enough for Mr.
Stackpoole.
"Then you are the very person to tell me about an absurd
story I have heard it had something to do with a magic-lantern,
I believe, some kind of scare the young people got up to pretend
there were bogies in the house, and frighten their parents back to
town, where they preferred to live. You see, I've heard all about
it, and I only want it corroborating by a member of the family,"
and he laughed heartily, as though it were the best joke in the
world. But the gentleman opposite him grew grave to severity,
and said, "I am unable to understand your allusion to a
magic-lantern performance which is supposed to have tried my brother's
nerves, and absurd is the last word applicable to the circumstances
under which Sir Roland was compelled to leave Harbledon Hall."
"Then I must have been misinformed in the matter," replied
the undaunted Mr. Stackpoole, whose curiosity was now thoroughly
aroused. "As I am about to live in the house, will you not tell
me the real circumstances, that I may be able to contradict the
foolish stories that one hears?"
"Why should it be necessary for you to contradict gossip on
the subject? Sir Roland never mentions it. It is possible that
some time you may learn for yourself why my brother left the
house; then I think you will be satisfied that he acted wisely, and
if not, I should be sorry to prejudice you against Harbledon Hall."
And the gentlemen rose to join the ladies, and Mr. Stackpoole
remained in a state of mystification. Evidently something had
happened to drive Sir Roland Shawe and his family from Harbledon
Hall with which neither old Judd nor the agent was
acquainted. What could it be? For himself, so long as it was
neither rats nor drains, he did not care; but with his wife it was
different. If she had the least inkling that there was anything
uncanny about the house, she would refuse to go into it at the
eleventh hour, or, if she went, would make a point of seeing a
ghost the very first dark night.
But she must hear no silly talk about it. Any ghosts that
former inhabitants of the Hall had imagined they saw was when
they went about the house starting at their own shadows by the
dim light of oil-lamps. The electric light would put all that to
rights. It was the best cure for such preposterous folly, and in
its illumination Mr. Stackpoole felt that he should be more than
a match for all the powers of darkness.
But shortly after meeting Sir Roland Shawe's brother an
odd coincidence happened that drew his attention again to the
subject of their conversation. Mrs. Stackpoole had written to her
son at Malta telling him that his father had taken an old house in
Surrey with which he had fallen in love, how beautifully he was
fitting it up, that they expected to keep Christmas in it, and that
it was at Harbledon Hall that they hoped to welcome him on his
return to England. In reply Jack wrote, "So my father is again
on the move. Well, this time I am glad he is taking you to a
thoroughly accessible place, and not to Cornwall or Cumberland.
But is the old house he has taken a fancy to not far from
Mendleton? I suppose there can't be two Harbledon Halls in the
county, but it is odd if it is the house of that name I have lately
heard something about. There was a young civilian out here for
his health he has gone to Egypt now and he told me that his
uncle, a Sir Roland Smith, or some such name, had been fairly
driven out of an old house in Surrey by ghosts. I'm sure he
called it Harbledon Hall, and he said that his uncle was not in
the least a nervous man, but it was more than he could stand,
and he had to leave. I wish now that I had asked him all about
it, but he was such a dull chap nothing he said interested me, so I
lost the chance of learning particulars. Don't you be timid, dear
mother. Let me tackle the bogies when I come home; I should
enjoy nothing better."
Mrs. Stackpoole did not like this at all. It produced an
eerie and creepy sensation, and her husband took care not to
increase her discomfort by telling her of his conversation with
Mr. Shawe.
"It is odd, my dear, very odd," he said in his most cheerful
tones, and we are obliged to confess that, somehow or other,
someone or other received some sort of a fright at Harbledon Hall.
Nothing can be more vague, and yet that is all that is known
about it. A pity the whole silly business was not inquired into
on the spot, for of course it would admit of a perfectly simple
solution. Very likely one of the maids had supped rather more
heavily than usual on cold pork, and in a paroxysm of indigestion
walked in her sleep; someone saw her in her white nightgown,
took her for a ghost, screamed, and got up a scare for it is always
easier to cry out than to investigate. And there you have the
whole history of a ghost story in a nutshell, my dear in a
nutshell."
The workmen were punctually out of Harbledon Hall on the day
agreed upon, and as punctually received their pay and their
Christmas supper, and the house was ready for the reception of
the new tenant, with the good wishes of all who had helped to
prepare it for him. Mr. Stackpoole arranged that they should
arrive after dark at Harbledon Hall, that he might surprise his
wife with the electric light in every room and passage, and
introduce her to her new home under its most cheerful and attractive
aspect.
As they approached the house both Mrs. Stackpoole and her
daughter exclaimed with delight, and Ella said it was too pretty
to be real, it was like something on the stage. From every
window of the house, from the basement to the garret, streamed
the pure radiance of the electric light, undimmed by curtain or
blind, sending shafts of light far into the surrounding darkness.
From the porch the white light illumined the drive like a cold
sunshine, and showed every pebble on the ground and every twig
on the bare boughs.
"There, my dears," said Mr. Stackpoole triumphantly, as he
led his wife and daughter into the brilliant hall; "this is how
modern science drives away foolish fears of darkness by turning
night into day. No one could be nervous or afraid of ghosts in a
house lighted like this."
"No, indeed the thing would be impossible," replied Mrs.
Stackpoole, her daughter, and son-in-law in confident chorus.
Christmas was kept with much festivity at Harbledon Hall,
and it was impossible to say who was most delighted with the
house the host or hostess, or the guests under its hospitable roof.
Each was charmed with his own room, but Mrs. Stackpoole's
morning-room was the general favourite, and afternoon-tea was
frequently taken there in preference to the more stately drawing-room.
The grandchildren played in the empty rooms upstairs on
rainy days, and every evening watched the miracle of lighting
the house with the electric light with breathless interest. They
regarded Grandpapa as a light-producing wizard, so that something
of awe was mingled with their wildest frolics, and they did not
dare to open the door of his own particular room, which was
respectfully called the study, though its principal use was to smoke
in, or to take a quiet nap before dinner.
It was the end of January, and the Stackpooles were daily
congratulating themselves on their good fortune in meeting with
a house so perfectly suited to all their requirements, when they
wound up their New Year's festivities with a fancy ball. Several
young people were staying in the house for the occasion who were
to depart the day after the ball, leaving their host and hostess
alone for the first time in their new house. Numbers of guests
were coming from a distance, many of whom had accepted the
invitation out of curiosity, as a dance afforded a good opportunity
of spending a night under cheerful auspices in a house with the
reputation of being haunted.
All their entertainments so far had been successful, but the
last was to be the best, and the host and hostess threw their
whole souls into the preparations to ensure its complete success.
The room was charming, the floor perfect, the band that came
from town the most renowned of the season. The costumes to
be worn were of no special time or country, and the Stackpooles
themselves set an example of reckless catholicity in the matter,
the hostess being dressed as Queen Elizabeth, and her husband as
an Admiral of the Fleet of to-day, while Mrs. and Mr. Beaumont
figured respectively as a Japanese lady and Spanish matador. By
the time that the guests had arrived, clad in the garb of all ages
and countries, the ball-room appeared to contain such a motley
throng as the Day of Judgment alone could bring together. Here
an ancient Greek danced with a Swedish peasant, and the Black
Prince with a female captain of the Salvation Army, and there a
clown and a nun waltzed gaily past Mahomet and a ballet-girl.
The electric light was a greater novelty then than it is now,
and the guests were loud in their admiration of the fairy-palace
appearance of the house as they approached, and of its brilliance
within. Mr. Stackpoole was as delighted as a child with a new
toy, and led his friends about showing them how by merely
turning a button on the wall he could plunge a room in darkness
or flood it with radiant light.
Dancing was kept up with great spirit till the small hours,
and as the clock in the hall chimed a quarter-past three the old
house resounded to the half sad and wholly romantic strains of a
waltz by Waldteufel, The guests who came from a distance had
begun to depart, and Mr. Beaumont stood in the porch laughingly
seeing Lady Jane Grey and Flora Macdonald into their carriage.
Just then a maid gave a message to one of the footmen to Mrs.
Beaumont, who sat fanning herself near the door of the ball-room.
"If you please, ma'am, nurse says Master Harry is awake and
crying with the music, and says he won't go to sleep till he sees
you, ma'am."
"Tell nurse I will come directly," and, excusing herself to the
lady who sat next to her, she slipped out of the room. In the
hall she met her father as he was entering his study.
"I'm going to put this miserable encumbrance by," he said,
smiling and flourishing the Admiral's cocked hat, which he had
gallantly carried the whole evening to his great inconvenience.
"And I am on my way to the nursery to see little Harry," and
Mrs. Beaumont ran upstairs, softly singing to the sweet music
that floated from the ball-room. Mr. Stackpoole laid his hat on
the table, and looked at the clock on the mantelpiece. "A
quarter-past three! I'm tired, and the young people ought to be.
Heigh-ho! I'd rather give ten dinners than one dance," and he
yawned profoundly, sank into a low chair by the fire, stretched his
legs out before him, and closed his eyes. Sleep fell upon him.
instantly, and for several minutes he was lost in its depths, light
and sound had ceased to exist for him, his brain was steeped in
silent darkness.
Mr. Beaumont still stood in the porch; the servants had
returned to the house, and he was alone. It was a mild winter's night.
He flung a cloak over his matador's costume and stepped into
the open air. I sha'n't be missed for five minutes," he said to
himself, " while I smoke a cigarette," and he walked briskly along
a broad path some thirty yards from the house, from which he
had a perfect view of the front of Harbledon Hall. And very
pretty its cheerful brightness looked against the dark background
of star-set sky. Brilliant rays of light shot from the undraped
windows, and those that had the blinds drawn down showed the
outline of objects in the room thrown upon them in shadow, as
clearly as from a magic-lantern.
Involuntarily he raised his eyes to the window of Mrs.
Stackpoole's sitting-room, and stood rooted to the spot. Two
figures as clearly defined as silhouettes were visible on the pure
square of the blind the shadows of an old man and a young man
struggling together. From the shape of the heads George
Beaumont saw that they wore tie wigs, and there was the clearly-cut
shadow of the ruffles at the wrists, and the younger and
taller man wore a large Steinkirk with richly-laced ends round
his neck. At first he thought that they were guests dressed in
the costume of the early Georgian period, though how they had
gone upstairs into that room, or why there was a deadly struggle
between them, he did not know. But wonder and speculation
was swallowed up in terrified interest as he watched the course
of the brief conflict. The elder and shorter man, who stooped
considerably, appeared to be unarmed, and seized the younger
man by the throat, when he shook himself free, stepped quickly
back, drew his sword, and, plunging forward on his right foot,
ran his opponent through the body. He staggered backward and
fell out of sight below the level of the window, and there
remained only the shadow of the younger man in clear profile
on the blind. He stood for a minute looking downward, and
George Beaumont had time to observe the finely-cut features of
a total stranger. Then he saw that he wiped the blade of his
sword, turned and walked away, and his shadow passed out of
sight, leaving the window-blind a blank, luminous square.
Indoors at the same time Mr. Stackpoole had been waked
from his short sleep by a sound in his wife's sitting-room
overhead, and he sprang to his feet with every faculty concentrated
in listening. A noise as of chairs pushed back and upset on the
polished floor, and a scuffling of feet as though two men were
struggling together. Then a moment of silence, a loud stamp,
and heavy fall that seemed to shake the ceiling, followed by
deep groans. "Good God! What can be the matter?" cried
Mr. Stackpoole, and he rushed from the room into the hall. The
front door stood open, though the inner glass doors were closed,
and neither his son-in-law nor any servants were there. He
stopped to call nobody, but ran upstairs to his wife's room just
as his daughter came quickly down from the storey above with a
white and terrified face. "Oh, Papa, someone has just frightened
me so, but whoever he is he is in there! I saw him go into
Mamma's room a few minutes ago, and I'm so glad you've come,
for I dare not follow him!" and without asking Ella of whom she
was speaking, Mr. Stackpoole flung the door wide open and rushed
into the room. No one was there. Not a chair or table
displaced, and the electric light illuminating every corner of the
room forbade the possibility of anyone being in hiding.
"It is the most extraordinary thing!" he exclaimed, wiping
the perspiration of terror from his brow as he spoke; "I would not
have your mother know of it for the world!"
"Have you seen him too?" said his daughter faintly.
"Seen whom, child? Seen what? No, I've seen nothing,
but I've heard enough to last me my lifetime. God forbid that
I should hear it again!" and he looked about the room and under
the table, fairly stupefied with amazement.
"He passed me on the stairs just as I came out of the night
nursery," said Mrs. Beaumont anxious to tell her experience
without waiting to hear her father's. "A tall young man ran quickly
by me dressed in a blue coat, with ruffles at the wrists and a great
laced cravat, and a wig tied with a ribbon at the back. He
carried a long thin sword in his hand. At first I thought it was
Arthur Newton, who wore a powdered wig like his this evening,
but I remembered his coat was black and he left early. When I
saw his face it was a stranger's, and he looked cruel and passionate.
I followed him till I saw him go into this room and shut the door
after him."
"Then where the devil is he now?" said Mr. Stackpoole. "This
is some miserable practical joke, but I'll get to the bottom of it
and be even with them yet I'll get to the bottom of it!" and as
he spoke the door that he had taken the precaution to close burst
open, and his son-in-law entered in his matador's dress, pale and
breathless, looking as if the bull had turned and given him chase.
"Oh, George, have you seen him too?" said his wife.
"Did you hear anything?" asked Mr. Stackpoole. "Sit down,
man; you are trembling like a leaf!"
"There were two of them, an old man and a young man, in
this room a minute ago! In God's name, who were they, and why
did not you stop them before murder was done?" he said excitedly.
Mr. Stackpoole grew quiet and self-collected at the sight of
his son-in-law's agitation. "Pull yourself together, George, and
tell me what you mean. There is something up to-night that
needs explaining."
"But where are they? They were in this room, and if you
were with them you must have witnessed what happened, or if
you only came upstairs just now you must have met the young
man leaving the room. The old man will never stir again," and
he lifted the tablecloth and looked under the table.
"How come you to speak confidently of who was in this room
a few minutes ago, when you were downstairs all the while?"
asked Mr. Stackpoole.
"I was smoking a cigarette in the garden after seeing the
Westons off, walking on the broad path, when I looked up at
Mamma's sitting-room window and saw the shadow of two men on
the blind, shown up by the electric light as clear and sharp as in
a magic-lantern. I saw their profiles perfectly, but I did not
know their faces. They wore wigs tied behind, and ruffles at
their wrists, and the younger, taller man, as I saw by his shadow,
wore a laced Steinkirk round his neck. They struggled together,
and the old man grasped the young man by the throat, but he
tore himself free, drew his sword, and ran him through the body.
He fell below the level of the window out of my sight, and the
younger man stood for a minute, wiped his sword, then moved
away, and left the blind a blank sheet of white."
"Good God! and I heard it all in my room below the
struggle and the fall, and deep groans!" said Mr. Stackpoole.
"And I met the young man if it was anything human and
he passed me on the stairs!" said his daughter, seizing her father
by the arm. "Oh, Papa, Harbledon Hall is haunted; people were
right about it! Do let us leave this dreadful place to-morrow!"
And the concluding notes of the sad Waldteufel waltz sighed
through the house as she spoke.
Mr. Stackpoole shook his head. "I don't see how that is to
be done, for your mother must not be frightened. For heaven's
sake try to look as if nothing had happened. We shall be missed
downstairs; I'll go, and you two must manage to bid our guests
good-night decently, and not to alarm those who remain till
to-morrow. We must rouse no suspicions. George, fetch Ella a
glass of champagne; it will do her good."
"Oh, don't leave me alone!" cried Mrs. Beaumont, like a
frightened child.
"Then I'll send wine up for you both," said her father, and
mind you must follow me directly."
Mr. Stackpoole rejoined his guests, who had not missed him,
and were in the midst of the last dance with as much freshness
and enjoyment as if it had been the first in the evening. At
length all the guests had departed except those composing the
house party, and the ladies soon retired, leaving the gentlemen to
have a smoke in the billiard-room.
"You don't look very well, Beaumont," said a young man
dressed as a Tyrolean peasant, as he lit a cigar and looked up at
his friend's pale face.
"It's nothing, only waltzing makes me giddy," and he mixed
himself some brandy and soda.
One by one the guests bade good-night and left the room, till
there only remained Mr. Stackpoole, his son-in-law, and Mr. Liston,
a gentleman with very long legs, wearing tights to display them
to advantage.
"Did your father-in-law know when he took Harbledon Hall
that it was supposed to be haunted?" he said in a low voice to
Mr. Beaumont. Mr. Stackpoole happened to hear the question,
and replied to it himself.
"We heard some foolish gossip on the subject, for of course
no place stands empty so long without legends being invented to
account for the fact. But I am not the man to listen to vulgar
chatter. I took the house, and have been highly delighted with it."
And Mr. Beaumont could only admire his father-in-law's admirable
self-possession.
"Just so, and the electric light is the true cure for the
supposed supernatural. Of course you know how suddenly Sir Roland
Shawe left the place?"
"Oh, yes, we've heard all about that," said Mr. Stackpoole,
forcing a laugh.
"Do you know I doubt whether you have ever heard all about
it; at least, if you have, you must be a cheerful sort of person if
you can laugh at it," said Mr. Liston.
"Why, of course, the whole thing was a foolish practical joke
something connected with a magic-lantern, if I remember
rightly."
"Magic-lantern! I never even heard the word mentioned. No;
if you care to hear the truth about it, I think I can tell it you.
I've lived in the county all my life, and I know the story of
Harbledon Hall by heart. I only wonder you don't. I should not
tell you now if I thought it would make you nervous; but since
you've put in the electric light and done up the house in such
cheerful modern style the whole place is changed and anyone
might enjoy living here."
"Let us hear the story," said Mr. Stackpoole abruptly.
"I see I've roused your curiosity. The story goes that some
hundred and fifty years ago there lived in this house a certain
father and son who hated one another like the devil, and it is
needless to say that there was a woman in the case and a fortune
at stake. The old man must have been an uncommonly bad lot,
and he is said to have grossly insulted the young lady his son was
about to marry, having in the first instance proposed to her
himself and been refused. The two men had a deadly quarrel
about it in this very house, and the upshot was that the son, mad
with passion, ran his father through the heart and killed him on
the spot. There, I sha'n't say anything more about it if it is too
much for you," said Mr. Liston, struck by the white faces before
him.
"Go on, go on," said Mr. Stackpoole.
"Well, one winter's night, now eight years ago, as Sir Roland
Shawe was coming home late, walking across the garden, he looked
up at the window of a room on the first floor where a light was
burning, and he saw on the blind, in clear outline, the shadows of
the old man and his son struggling together, and he saw the
young man run his father through the body with his rapier."
"I cannot bear it! I cannot bear it!" said George Beaumont,
pale as death and looking ready to faint.
"You could but say that if you had seen the grim shadows
yourself. It certainly is a horrid story, and though I can't
say that I believe in ghosts myself, I can offer no explanations
of the details I have given you. Sir Roland believed it, and he
was a clear-headed, matter-of-fact sort of person. Other members
of his family, too, saw and heard unaccountable things that
night. One of his sons who was sitting up late for his father
met the shadow of an evil-looking fellow dressed in a blue coat and
wearing a powdered tie-wig, hurrying along an upper passage,
carrying a naked rapier in his hand. And Lady Shawe was waked
by a sound in the room next hers, which was the room where the
shadows were seen on the blind a sound of struggling and
upsetting of chairs, followed by a heavy fall and deep groans.
Now, if only one person had thought that he had heard or seen
unaccountable things, Sir Roland would have made the best of it
and stayed on at Harbledon Hall; but, by Jove! when three
rational beings are each an eye or ear witness it becomes
intolerable! Whether you believe in ghosts or not, you can't put
up with a thing like that!"
"By Heaven, you can't, that's true!" said Mr. Stackpoole,
wiping his moist brow. "And now, Liston, that you have told
me this, I'll tell you something in return. I and my family leave
Harbledon Hall to-morrow for the precise reason that drove Sir
Roland Shawe out of it eight years ago."
"Never!"
"As sure as I am alive we leave here to-morrow! I must find
some reason for our sudden flight, but go we must, and I cannot
have my wife alarmed."
"I would not spend another night in the house for the world!"
said Beaumont.
"But, my dear Mr. Stackpoole, I hope that nothing that I
have said leads you to make this extraordinary resolution. Your
imagination is excited by what you have heard; there cannot
possibly be any cause why you should leave this charming place
that you have just fitted up to your own taste," said Mr. Liston
soothingly.
"The story you have told us has only helped to explain what
we already know. I tell you that this very night, not a couple of
hours ago, in the blaze of the electric light and with the house
full of company, Beaumont, my daughter, and myself have seen
and heard the sights and sounds that drove Sir Roland Shawe
out of Harbledon Hall; and we leave to-morrow or rather to-day,
for it is nearly six o'clock now never to spend another night
under this accursed roof!" and Mr. Stackpoole's voice shook as
he spoke. I have only to request," he added, "that you will
treat this communication as strictly confidential, for neither
Beaumont nor I shall care to speak or to be spoken to about what
has occurred to-night."
Where was Mr. Stackpoole's intelligent curiosity on the
subject of ghosts, and what had become of his courage? The one
had been satisfied and the other daunted, and he had not the
slightest desire to remain and investigate the mystery.
At late breakfast Mrs. Stackpoole was shocked by the
appearance of her family. It would have been difficult to say
which was most pale and haggard her husband, her daughter, or
her son-in-law. They made the poor excuse that late hours did
not suit them and that dancing knocked them up, and she told
them that they looked like very young children who had been to
their first pantomime the night before. When the last guest was
gone Mrs. Stackpoole saw that there was something seriously
disturbing her husband, and was at a loss to account for his changed
humour.
"My dear, we will go up to town this afternoon with George
and Ella," he said with quick decision.
"Impossible," replied his wife, calmly. "You, of course, can go
if you like, but I really cannot."
"Oh, do come with us, Mamma! You know how much Papa
wishes it," said her daughter.
"Yes, do come with us," urged her son-in-law with unwonted
ardour; it is so long since we met," forgetting that they had
spent the last month together.
Mrs. Stackpoole laughed. "There is evidently some deep-laid
plot among you three to hurry me off. Well, if you will be any
the happier for my coming with you I'll do so, though it is most
inconvenient to leave home in this sudden way," said the
good-tempered lady.
And they travelled up to London that day, never to return to
Harbledon Hall. Mr. Stackpoole so managed that his wife did not
know his real reason for giving up the most charming house they
had ever lived in. He preferred that she should attribute it to his
restlessness and caprice, anything rather than that her nerves
should be shaken by hearing the truth.
He consulted a fashionable physician, first giving him a hint
that he wished to be ordered off to the South of France
immediately, and the hint being taken, he told his long-suffering
wife that Dr. Blank had recommended him to go abroad at once,
and in two days they were en route for Marseilles.
Mrs. Stackpoole was accustomed to her husband's impulsive,
angular movements, so that it did not greatly disturb her; but
when a week later he said that he had decided to give up
Harbledon Hall, and to look for a place somewhere in the eastern
counties which were as yet untrodden ground to him, she shed
tears of present disappointment and prospective fatigue. When
the much-enduring lady had dried her eyes and her husband
had enumerated to her in detail every reason but the real one for
which he was leaving their beautiful home, she said, "My dear, if
I did not know better, I should be forced to believe that you too
had seen the ghost that frightened Sir Roland Shawe out of
Harbledon Hall eight years ago!"