Witham, with
the aid of the charwoman, Mrs. Dempster, proceeded to arrange matters. When the
hampers were brought in and unpacked, Malcolmson saw that with much kind
forethought she had sent from her own kitchen sufficient provisions to last for
a few days. Before going she expressed all sorts of kind wishes; and at the
door turned and said:
“And perhaps, sir, as
the room is big and draughty it might be well to have one of those big screens
put round your bed at night—though, truth to tell, I would die myself if I were
to be so shut in with all kinds of—of ‘things,’ that put their heads round the
sides, or over the top, and look on me!” The image which she had called up was
too much for her nerves, and she fled incontinently.
Mrs. Dempster sniffed
in a superior manner as the landlady disappeared, and remarked that for her own
part she wasn’t afraid of all the bogies in the kingdom.
“I’ll tell you what
it is, sir,” she said; “bogies is all kinds and sorts of things—except bogies!
Rats and mice, and beetles; and creaky doors, and loose slates, and broken
panes, and stiff drawer handles, that stay out when you pull them and then fall
down in the middle of the night. Look at the wainscot of the room! It is old—hundreds
of years old! Do you think there’s no rats and beetles there! And do you
imagine, sir, that you won’t see none of them? Rats is bogies, I tell you, and
bogies is rats; and don’t you get to think anything else!”
“Mrs. Dempster,” said
Malcolmson gravely, making her a polite bow, “you know more than a Senior
Wrangler! And let me say, that, as a mark of esteem for your indubitable
soundness of head and heart, I shall, when I go, give you possession of this
house, and let you stay here by yourself for the last two months of my tenancy,
for four weeks will serve my purpose.”
“Thank you kindly,
sir!” she answered, “but I couldn’t sleep away from home a night. I am in
Greenhow’s Charity, and if I slept a night away from my rooms I should lose all
I have got to live on. The rules is very strict; and there’s too many watching
for a vacancy for me to run any risks in the matter. Only for that, sir, I’d
gladly come here and attend on you altogether during your stay.”
“My good woman,” said
Malcolmson hastily, “I have come here on purpose to obtain solitude; and
believe me that I am grateful to the late Greenhow for having so organised his
admirable charity—whatever it is—that I am perforce denied the opportunity of
suffering from such a form of temptation! Saint Anthony himself could not be
more rigid on the point!”
The old woman laughed
harshly. “Ah, you young gentlemen,” she said, “you don’t fear for naught; and
belike you’ll get all the solitude you want here.” She set to work with her
cleaning; and by nightfall, when Malcolmson returned from his walk—he always
had one of his books to study as he walked—he found the room swept and tidied,
a fire burning in the old hearth, the lamp lit, and the table spread for supper
with Mrs. Witham’s excellent fare. “This is comfort, indeed,” he said, as he
rubbed his hands.
When he had finished
his supper, and lifted the tray to the other end of the great oak dining-table,
he got out his books again, put fresh wood on the fire, trimmed his lamp, and
set himself down to a spell of real hard work. He went on without pause till
about eleven o’clock, when he knocked off for a bit to fix his fire and lamp,
and to make himself a cup of tea. He had always been a tea-drinker, and during
his college life had sat late at work and had taken tea late. The rest was a
great luxury to him, and he enjoyed it with a sense of delicious, voluptuous
ease. The renewed fire leaped and sparkled, and threw quaint shadows through
the great old room; and as he sipped his hot tea he revelled in the sense of isolation
from his kind. Then it was that he began to notice for the first time what a
noise the rats were making.
“Surely,” he thought,
“they cannot have been at it all the time I was reading. Had they been, I must
have noticed it!” Presently, when the noise increased, he satisfied himself
that it was really new. It was evident that at first the rats had been
frightened at the presence of a stranger, and the light of fire and lamp; but
that as the time went on they had grown bolder and were now disporting themselves
as was their wont.
How busy they were!
and hark to the strange noises! Up and down behind the old wainscot, over the
ceiling and under the floor they raced, and gnawed, and scratched! Malcolmson
smiled to himself as he recalled to mind the saying of Mrs. Dempster, “Bogies
is rats, and rats is bogies!” The tea began to have its effect of intellectual
and nervous stimulus, he saw with joy another long spell of work to be done
before the night was past, and in the sense of security which it gave him, he
allowed himself the luxury of a good look round the room. He took his lamp in
one hand, and went all around, wondering that so quaint and beautiful an old
house had been so long neglected. The carving of the oak on the panels of the
wainscot was fine, and on and round the doors and windows it was beautiful and
of rare merit. There were some old pictures on the walls, but they were coated
so thick with dust and dirt that he could not distinguish any detail of them,
though he held his lamp as high as he could over his head. Here and there as he
went round he saw some crack or hole blocked for a moment by the face of a rat
with its bright eyes glittering in the light, but in an instant it was gone,
and a squeak and a scamper followed.
The thing that most struck
him, however, was the rope of the great alarm bell on the roof, which hung down
in a corner of the room on the right-hand side of the fireplace. He pulled up
close to the hearth a great high-backed carved oak chair, and sat down to his
last cup of tea. When this was done he made up the fire, and went back to his
work, sitting at the corner of the table, having the fire to his left. For a
while the rats disturbed him somewhat with their perpetual scampering, but he
got accustomed to the noise as one does to the ticking of a clock or to the
roar of moving water; and he became so immersed in his work that everything in
the world, except the problem which he was trying to solve, passed away from
him.
He suddenly looked
up, his problem was still unsolved, and there was in the air that sense of the
hour before the dawn, which is so dread to doubtful life. The noise of the rats
had ceased. Indeed it seemed to him that it must have ceased but lately and
that it was the sudden cessation which had disturbed him.
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