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
gun-powder.
So, with as little reflection as possible, he simply relit the
candle and went up 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 aloud 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.
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