"For long?"
"No--o. I believe, not for long."
"Have the tenants had any particular reasons for not remaining on there--if I may be so bold as to inquire?"
"All people have reasons to offer, but what they offer you are not supposed to receive as genuine."
I could get no more from him than this. "I think, sir, if I were you I would not go down to Fernwood till after November was out."
"But," said I, "I want the shooting."
"Ah, to be sure--the shooting, ah! I should have preferred if you could have waited till December began."
"That would not suit me," I said, and so the matter ended.
When we were settled in, we occupied the right wing of the house. The left or west wing was but scantily furnished and looked cheerless, as though rarely tenanted. We were not a large family, my wife and myself alone; there was consequently ample accommodation in the east wing for us. The servants were placed above the kitchen, in a portion of the house I have not yet described. It was a half-wing, if I may so describe it, built on the north side parallel with the upper arm of the western limb of the hall and the [Symbol: H]. This block had a gable to the north like the wings, and a broad lead valley was between them, that, as I learned from the agent, had to be attended to after the fall of the leaf, and in times of snow, to clear it.
Access to this valley could be had from within by means of a little window in the roof, formed as a dormer. A short ladder allowed anyone to ascend from the pa.s.sage to this window and open or shut it. The western staircase gave access to this pa.s.sage, from which the servants" rooms in the new block were reached, as also the untenanted apartments in the old wing. And as there were no windows in the extremities of this pa.s.sage that ran due north and south, it derived all its light from the aforementioned dormer window.
One night, after we had been in the house about a week, I was sitting up smoking, with a little whisky-and-water at my elbow, reading a review of an absurd, ignorantly written book on New South Wales, when I heard a tap at the door, and the parlourmaid came in, and said in a nervous tone of voice: "Beg your pardon, sir, but cook nor I, nor none of us dare go to bed."
"Why not?" I asked, looking up in surprise.
"Please, sir, we dursn"t go into the pa.s.sage to get to our rooms."
"Whatever is the matter with the pa.s.sage?"
"Oh, nothing, sir, with the pa.s.sage. Would you mind, sir, just coming to see? We don"t know what to make of it."
I put down my review with a grunt of dissatisfaction, laid my pipe aside, and followed the maid.
She led me through the hall, and up the staircase at the western extremity.
On reaching the upper landing I saw all the maids there in a cl.u.s.ter, and all evidently much scared.
"Whatever is all this nonsense about?" I asked.
"Please, sir, will you look? We can"t say."
The parlourmaid pointed to an oblong patch of moonlight on the wall of the pa.s.sage. The night was cloudless, and the full moon shone slanting in through the dormer and painted a brilliant silver strip on the wall opposite. The window being on the side of the roof to the east, we could not see that, but did see the light thrown through it against the wall.
This patch of reflected light was about seven feet above the floor.
The window itself was some ten feet up, and the pa.s.sage was but four feet wide. I enter into these particulars for reasons that will presently appear.
The window was divided into three parts by wooden mullions, and was composed of four panes of gla.s.s in each compartment.
Now I could distinctly see the reflection of the moon through the window with the black bars up and down, and the division of the panes. But I saw more than that: I saw the shadow of a lean arm with a hand and thin, lengthy fingers across a portion of the window, apparently groping at where was the latch by which the cas.e.m.e.nt could be opened.
My impression at the moment was that there was a burglar on the leads trying to enter the house by means of this dormer.
Without a minute"s hesitation I ran into the pa.s.sage and looked up at the window, but could see only a portion of it, as in shape it was low, though broad, and, as already stated, was set at a great height. But at that moment something fluttered past it, like a rush of flapping draperies obscuring the light.
I had placed the ladder, which I found hooked up to the wall, in position, and planted my foot on the lowest rung, when my wife arrived.
She had been alarmed by the housemaid, and now she clung to me, and protested that I was not to ascend without my pistol.
To satisfy her I got my Colt"s revolver that I always kept loaded, and then, but only hesitatingly, did she allow me to mount. I ascended to the cas.e.m.e.nt, unhasped it, and looked out. I could see nothing. The ladder was over-short, and it required an effort to heave oneself from it through the cas.e.m.e.nt on to the leads. I am stout, and not so nimble as I was when younger. After one or two efforts, and after presenting from below an appearance that would have provoked laughter at any other time, I succeeded in getting through and upon the leads.
I looked up and down the valley--there was absolutely nothing to be seen except an acc.u.mulation of leaves carried there from the trees that were shedding their foliage.
The situation was vastly puzzling. As far as I could judge there was no way off the roof, no other window opening into the valley; I did not go along upon the leads, as it was night, and moonlight is treacherous.
Moreover, I was wholly unacquainted with the arrangement of the roof, and had no wish to risk a fall.
I descended from the window with my feet groping for the upper rung of the ladder in a manner even more grotesque than my ascent through the cas.e.m.e.nt, but neither my wife--usually extremely alive to anything ridiculous in my appearance--nor the domestics were in a mood to make merry. I fastened the window after me, and had hardly reached the bottom of the ladder before again a shadow flickered across the patch of moonlight.
I was fairly perplexed, and stood musing. Then I recalled that immediately behind the house the ground rose; that, in fact, the house lay under a considerable hill. It was just possible by ascending the slope to reach the level of the gutter and rake the leads from one extremity to the other with my eye.
I mentioned this to my wife, and at once the whole set of maids trailed down the stairs after us. They were afraid to remain in the pa.s.sage, and they were curious to see if there was really some person on the leads.
We went out at the back of the house, and ascended the bank till we were on a level with the broad gutter between the gables. I now saw that this gutter did not run through, but stopped against the hall roof; consequently, unless there were some opening of which I knew nothing, the person on the leads could not leave the place, save by the dormer window, when open, or by swarming down the fall pipe.
It at once occurred to me that if what I had seen were the shadow of a burglar, he might have mounted by means of the rain-water pipe. But if so--how had he vanished the moment my head was protruded through the window? and how was it that I had seen the shadow flicker past the light immediately after I had descended the ladder? It was conceivable that the man had concealed himself in the shadow of the hall roof, and had taken advantage of my withdrawal to run past the window so as to reach the fall pipe, and let himself down by that.
I could, however, see no one running away, as I must have done, going outside so soon after his supposed descent.
But the whole affair became more perplexing when, looking towards the leads, I saw in the moonlight something with fluttering garments running up and down them.
There could be no mistake--the object was a woman, and her garments were mere tatters. We could not hear a sound.
I looked round at my wife and the servants,--they saw this weird object as distinctly as myself. It was more like a gigantic bat than a human being, and yet, that it was a woman we could not doubt, for the arms were now and then thrown above the head in wild gesticulation, and at moments a profile was presented, and then we saw, or thought we saw, long flapping hair, unbound.
"I must go back to the ladder," said I; "you remain where you are, watching."
"Oh, Edward! not alone," pleaded my wife.
"My dear, who is to go with me?"
I went. I had left the back door unlocked, and I ascended the staircase and entered the pa.s.sage. Again I saw the shadow flicker past the moonlit patch on the wall opposite the window.
I ascended the ladder and opened the cas.e.m.e.nt.
Then I heard the clock in the hall strike one.
I heaved myself up to the sill with great labour, and I endeavoured to thrust my short body through the window, when I heard feet on the stairs, and next moment my wife"s voice from below, at the foot of the ladder. "Oh, Edward, Edward! please do not go out there again. It has vanished. All at once. There is nothing there now to be seen."
I returned, touched the ladder tentatively with my feet, refastened the window, and descended--perhaps inelegantly. I then went down with my wife, and with her returned up the bank, to the spot where stood cl.u.s.tered our servants.
They had seen nothing further; and although I remained on the spot watching for half an hour, I also saw nothing more.