Authors: E.R. Punshon
“His lordship's compliments and her ladyship would he glad of your presence, when convenient.”
“I'll come at once,” Sophy said, not sorry for a summons that removed her from an atmosphere that seemed to her so full of hidden thoughts and currents, of the significance of which she had no idea. It was like, she thought, sitting still in an arena full of flying bullets and poisoned arrows, discharged by hidden adversaries at enemies of whose purpose and whose presence she had no knowledge.
She got up and hurried towards the castle and when she was quite near it, there came to her the thought that this was the tremendous prize for which combat had now been joinedâthis ancient and historic building, the broad lands that went with it, the peerage that gave so privileged a place in the old habit and establishment of British life. All this and more she realized now stood at stake, and for such a stake the game might well be played with desperation. Partly from a sheer instinctive modesty that made her a trifle shy of using the great reception rooms more than was necessary, partly because on the whole it was as short a way as any, Sophy did not enter by the great open French windows of the first drawing-room through which old Earl Wych had issued with claimant and lawyer in attendance, but by a smaller side door into a dark and narrow passage that led on to the inner hall and the central stairway. By contrast with the warmth and sunshine of the summer day without, this passage was so chill and gloomy that Sophy stood still and found herself shivering, with that odd sensation which in olden times was supposed to be caused by someone walking over your grave. She glanced back over her shoulder, afraid, though she knew not why, and then saw again the tea table on the terrace and the tiny group round it, the whole scene looking so peaceful, so ordinary, so normal, she told herself she must be getting quite hysterical.
She hurried on her way and upstairs soon became too busy with Countess Wych to have time for much further thought.
The old lady was evidently very disturbed and upset. The shock and excitement of her grandson's return, for that she accepted him as grandson was made plain by her so referring to him twice over, had plainly been great. Sophy's suggestion, for she was really a little alarmed by the old lady's condition, that the doctor should be sent for, was however firmly rejected.
“No, no, I want no doctor,” she said with energy, and then later on, after she had quietened down a little, she fell into a troubled sleep from which in about half an hour she woke abruptly. Looking at Sophy, who was sitting near with some sewing, she said:â
“Harm will come of it, much harm.”
Sophy came to her side and tried to persuade her to sleep again. But she was still restless and evidently in no fit condition to be left alone, so Sophy sent down word that she would not come to dinner if she might have something sent to her on a tray. The tray was duly brought, but by Martin himself instead of by one of the maids. He asked how her ladyship was. Sophy answered that she was dozing, and tried to think Martin's inquiry was of good will, but in this did not quite succeed.
“He's gloating,” she thought, astonished by the word that had so suddenly presented itself to her as the only one to describe Martin's attitude. “They're all like that. Why? That's silly. They can't be. Only they are.” Natural, she supposed, perfectly natural, inevitable indeed, that this sudden appearance of an heir long believed to be dead, should cause many unexpected complications. It was the nature of those complications that puzzled her, for she felt that all concerned had seen possibilities and chances that were utterly beyond her understanding, and yet that she felt vaguely to be full of strange, dark implications.
From the bed, Countess Wych called her.
“Sophy,” she said, “is he still here?”
Sophy hesitated:â
“Do you meanâ?” she began and paused, not quite sure how to refer to the claimant.
“Ralph,” the countess said. “He was here, wasn't he? Did he stayâwhen he knew?”
“No, he went away almost at once,” Sophy answered, again with a vision of that broad and upright back vanishing behind the ornamental shrubs.
“Did he say anything? Did anything happen?”
“He was very upset,” Sophy answered cautiously, thinking it no time to go into details. “I suppose any one would be. It was such a surprise.”
“I was afraid,” the old woman said. “He is young and fierce. He won't give in easily. I was almost afraid he mightâ” She seemed to be about to leave the sentence unfinished and then added:â“be unwise.”
“Oh, Mr. Ralph would never do anything silly,” declared Sophy, though not with entire conviction, for she, too, had been afraid that Ralph's self-control might slip, as indeed whose might not under such a blow that reduced him in one moment from the position of heir to a title and great estates to that of the poor relative dependent entirely on a rich cousin's bounty.
The old countess was lying back in bed and her aged eyes were heavy with trouble and with fear.
“If Ralphâyou see, Sophy, Ralph doesn't understand, and he may ruin it all, all.”
“Yes,” Sophy said, not understanding this. “Dear Countess Wych, won't you try and forget it now and get a little sleep and then to-morrow it will be easier to realize what it all means.”
“It means mischief,” the old woman answered. “Mischief will come of it. There was nothing else to do but mischief will come of it and worseâmuch worse.”
Some soup Sophy had asked for, now arrived, brought again by Martin. Sophy could not understand why he was so attentive, for he was certainly not as a rule inclined to go outside his ordinary duties. Did he feel there was distress and bewilderment in the room and did he hope to get some hint of its cause? or did he know that cause already and did he merely find pleasure in assuring himself that that distress existed? The soup was good and appetising, but Countess Wych could only be persuaded to take a spoonful or two. Resolutely she pushed it aside, cutting short Sophy's attempted coaxing with the sharp remark:â
“When you went to those A.R.P. lectures, didn't you meet some policeman's wife?”
For this was at the time when the shadow of a war that to many seemed so wanton, and therefore so fantastically incredible, was already beginning to creep across the land. A.R.P. precautions were being taken. Ralph, to his huge disgust, had been informed that he was âreserved', and that his war service, if a thing so wholly unnecessary and absurd and improbable as war did occur, was to consist in increasing the production of food from the land. Evacuation plans were being made. It had already been arranged that in case of what was then called an âemergency'âan emergency some of the papers were declaring every day would never come into beingâa wing of Castle Wych would be used for the accommodation of a girls' school. The villagers also were being asked to get ready to receive children, and in connection with these plans, and then again at A.R.P. lectures, Sophy had met the Mrs. Owen to whom she supposed Countess Wych was now referring.
“You mean Mrs. Owen?” she asked. “I don't think Mr. Owen's a policeman exactly,” she added doubtfully, for she supposed that only those were policemen who wore a uniform and a helmet and were such a comfort when you had to cross busy streets. “I think he has something to do with Colonel Glynne.”
“Well, Colonel Glynne is a policeman, isn't he?” asked the countess, a little tartly. “If a county chief constable isn't a policeman, who is? Isn't Mr. Owen the Bobby Owen man they brought from Scotland Yard to show Midwych how to do detective work? Most unnecessary in my opinion.”
“Mrs. Owen did say they came from London,” Sophy admitted. “I heard someone at the lecture say he was awfully clever. I only saw him once.”
“What is he like?”
Sophy searched her memory. Bobby Owen might be a well-known detective and quite an important person now he was acting as Colonel Glynne's private secretary and more or less as director of the not too efficient or up-to-date Midwych C.I.D., but he had made very little impression on Sophy.
“I don't think he said anything,” she observed finally. “He just sat about. I remember looking when that was said about his being awfully clever, but he was just like any one else, only more so. I liked Mrs. Owen. She seemed very nice, only rather awfully stylish. Oh, and her hatsâ”
Sophy paused with a little gasp of admiration. “Each time she had a different one, and each time it was nothing really and yet perfectly wonderful. She used to have a hat shop before she married, someone said.”
“I hope it's only hats we shall ever hear of from either her or her husband,” the countess muttered, and Sophy wondered very much why she said that.
“If anything does happen and they do want to send children here,” Sophy remarked, “she is to help to look after them. If there is an emergency, I mean.”
“It is another kind of emergency I was thinking of,” Countess Wych answered.
After that she would say no more, and Sophy was only too glad that now she seemed inclined to rest.
But Sophy slept with the door of her own adjoining room wide open; and once, when in the middle of the night she heard the old woman muttering, she got up and went to her side. She was asleep but quite plainly Sophy heard her mutter once again:âÂ
“Harm will come of itâmuch harm,” and then, loudly and distinctly, the name: “Ralph.”
Very thoughtfully Sophy went back to her own bed.
From the strained and difficult situation at Castle Wych, growing ever more darkly ominous as the hours and the days passed, Sophy, when opportunity served, sought escape in the village. There this day she met her father, noticed with disapproval that he had managed to escape from the vicarage in the shabby, worn out old coat he was supposed to wear only when working alone in his study, and so turned back to go home with him, there to remind Mrs. Longden and the maid of the necessity for a more careful watch being kept.
On the way they talked of the extraordinary development at the castle and the unexpected return of an heir so long believed dead. Nothing else indeed was being spoken of anywhere; the Nazi threat, still only a threat no one took very seriously, was quite forgotten; and Mr. Longden had been very worried to find that through all the gossip and chatter was running a note of strange suspicion.
“I can understand,” he told Sophy as they walked along, “that they all sympathize with Ralph, but I do hope and trust there will be no show of hostility towards this young man. It's not his fault.”
“I don't like him,” said Sophy, suddenly and loudly.
“My dear,” said Mr. Longden, slightly shocked, for he thought it only right and natural that every one should always like every one else. “Why, you hardly know him. What makes you say such a thing?”
“He makes me think,” Sophy answered unexpectedly, “of keeping my door locked.”
Mr. Longden looked very puzzled, and then began a frantic search of his pockets.
“There,” he said distractedly, “I must have left my keys at Mrs. Potter's.”
The clergy have a reputation, not always well deserved, for absent-mindedness, and in one respect Mr. Longden did his best to live up to it. His path through life was littered with forgotten keys, umbrellas, books, even hats, of late gas masks, too, that he was always putting down upon tables or chairs and then never thinking of again, unless indeed he seized someone else's hat or book or keys or umbrella that happened to be near, and so went well satisfied on his way. In other respects he was careful and precise, and never forgot an engagement or was late for an appointment, though both his wife and daughter declared that this was largely because his diaryâfoolscap sizeâwas too big to be carried about, had to be kept on his study table, and could not therefore get very badly mislaid. It was, in fact, the first rule of the house, that never, never must the engagement book be taken out of the study; and if ever Mr. Longden were seen wandering away with it under his arm, then everything else had to be abandoned until it was back in its place on the study table.
Possibly a truer explanation was that engagements and appointments concerned the convenience of other people, and that therefore his sub-conscious mind saw to it they were remembered; while such things as keys and umbrellas concerned only himself personally and so mattered less.
However, on this occasion, no harm was done, for a small girl came running up with the keys left behind on Mrs. Potter's table, and Sophy, noticing something else now, said:â
“Dad, where's your umbrella?”Â
Mr. Longden looked vaguely at his hands, surprised to find them empty.
“I can't have brought it with me,” he said hopefully.
But Sophy knew better. Mr. Longden had certain fixed habits. One was, before going out, to open the door and regard the weather. If it looked like rain he nodded with the air of a man who expected no less and turned back for his umbrella. If it seemed likely to be fine, he nodded with the air of a man not to be deceived by appearances and turned back for his umbrella.
“If I did bring it out with me,” he decided presently, “I must have left it somewhere.”
Sophy agreed that this seemed probable.
“Where did you go first?” she asked.
Mr. Longden said he thought it was the post office, so they went there and found the missing article and a small group of people discussing the lost heir's returnâa topic that much talk had done little to exhaust. Mr. Longden, aware again of an undercurrent of suspicion and hostility, pointed out that the heir's reappearance should be a matter of general thanksgiving and must be an overwhelming joy to his aged grandparents. To that they all agreed, and said âof course', and looked as if they meant the opposite, and one man observed that neither the earl nor his old lady seemed very greatly cheered by the return of the prodigal. He added that by all accounts Earl Wych was going about looking as if he had lost a five pound note and found a bad penny, and that his wife was said to be eating nothing, sleeping not at all, and hardly ever speaking a word to any one.