"I can"t claim the honour. However, I"m willing to take your statement as proof of his existence."
"A most respectable man, most respectable. His wife has fifteen children--twins only last March,--but perhaps I oughtn"t to speak of it to you. He used to be night watchman at Oak Dene in old Mr Morice"s time. Sometimes he takes the letter-bags to and from the mail train, which goes through at half-past one in the morning. He did so last night. He a.s.sures me with his own lips that, coming home, as he was pa.s.sing your place, he heard something moving, and on looking round saw you among the trees in your nightdress. Of course it couldn"t have been you. But, at the same time, it is most singular. He is such a respectable man, and his story was most circ.u.mstantial. Could it have been you?"
"I was not out last night at all, and it never is my custom to wander about the grounds in the costume you refer to, if that is what you mean, Mrs Forrester--at least, not consciously."
"Exactly, that is the very point, of course--not consciously. But do you do it unconsciously?"
"Unconsciously! What do you mean?"
"My dear, it is my duty to tell you that all sorts of people claim to have seen you wandering--sometimes actually running--through the woods of Exham Park at the most extraordinary hours, clad only in your nightdress. The suggestion is that you are walking in your sleep."
"Walking in my sleep? Mrs Forrester!"
"Yes, my dear, walking in your sleep. It is strange that the story should not have reached you; it is on everybody"s tongue. But when, as I tell you, Briggs made that positive statement to me with his own lips, I felt it my bounden duty to come and see you about it at the earliest possible moment. Because, if there is any truth in the tale at all--and they can"t all be liars--it is absolutely essential for your own protection that you should have someone to sleep with you--at any rate, in the same room. Somnambulism is a most serious thing. If you are a somnambulist--and if you aren"t, what are you?--proper precautions ought to be taken, or goodness only knows what may happen."
"If I am a somnambulist, Mrs Forrester. But am I? In all my life I have never heard it hinted that I am anything of the kind, and I myself have never had any reason to suspect it."
"Still, my dear, there are all those stories told by all sorts of people."
"They may have imagined they saw something. I very much doubt if they saw me."
"But there is Briggs"s positive a.s.sertion. I have such faith in Briggs.
And why should he invent a tale of the sort?"
"Did he see my face?"
"No; he says you were walking quickly from him, almost running, but he is positive it was you. He wanted to come and tell you so himself; but I dissuaded him, feeling that it was a matter about which you would prefer that I should come and speak to you first."
"What time was it when he supposes himself to have seen me?"
"Somewhere about two o"clock."
Miss Arnott reflected.
"To the best of my knowledge and belief I was in bed at two o"clock, and never stirred from it till Evans called me to get into my bath. If, as you suggest, I was out in the woods in my nightdress--delightful notion!--surely I should have brought back with me some traces of my excursion. I believe it rained last night."
"It did; Briggs says it was raining at the time he saw you."
"Then that settles the question; he didn"t see me. Was I barefooted?"
"He couldn"t see."
"The presumption is that, if I choose to wander about in such an airy costume as a nightgown, it is hardly likely that I should think it necessary to go through the form of putting on either shoes or stockings. Anyhow, I should have been soaked to the skin. When I woke up this morning my nightgown would have shown traces at least of the soaking it had undergone. But not a bit of it; it was as clean as a new pin. Ask Evans! My feet were stainless. My bedroom slippers--the only footwear within reach, were unsoiled. No; I fancy, Mrs Forrester, that those friends of yours have ardent imaginations, and that even the respectable Briggs is not always to be trusted."
"Then you authorise me to contradict the story _in toto?_
"Yes, Mrs Forrester; I give you the fullest authority to inform anyone and everyone that I never, in the whole course of my life, went out for a stroll in my nightgown, either asleep or waking. Thank you very much indeed for giving me the opportunity of furnishing you with the necessary power."
Mrs Forrester rose from her chair solemnly.
"I felt that I should only be doing my duty if I came."
"Of course you did, and you never miss an opportunity of doing your duty. Do you?"
Before the lady had a chance of replying a door opened. Miss Arnott turned to find that it had admitted Mr Morice. The sight of him was so unexpected, and took her so wholly by surprise that, at a momentary loss for a suitable greeting, she repeated, inanely enough, almost the identical words which she had just been uttering to Mrs Forrester.
"Mr Morice! This is--this is a surprise. I--I was just telling Mrs Forrester, who has been good enough to bring me rather a curious story, that if anyone mentions, in her hearing, that they saw me strolling through the woods in the middle of the night in a state of considerable undress, I shall be obliged if she gives such a statement a point-blank contradiction."
Mr Morice inclined his head gravely, as if he understood precisely what the lady was talking about.
"Certainly. Always advise Mrs Forrester to contradict everything she hears. Mrs Forrester hears such singular things."
CHAPTER XXV
HUGH MORICE EXPLAINS
So soon as Mrs Forrester had gone Mr Morice asked a question.
"What tale has that woman been telling you?"
"She actually says that people have seen me walking about the woods in the middle of the night in my nightdress. That a postman, named Briggs, saw me doing so last night. I believe I am supposed to have been walking in my sleep. Of course it is only some nonsensical rigmarole. I won"t say the whole thing is an invention of Mrs Forrester"s own brain, but it"s the sort of thing she"s fond of."
"That"s true enough. It is the sort of tale she"s fond of; but, for once in a way, she is justified by fact. Since we are on the subject I may as well inform you that, four nights or rather mornings, ago I myself saw you, at two o"clock in the morning, in Cooper"s Spinney, in some such costume as that which you describe."
"Mr Morice!"
"I do not know that I should have told you if it had not been for Mrs Forrester; but, since she has intervened, I do so. In any case, it is perhaps as well that you should be on your guard."
"Are you sure you saw me?"
"I am not likely to make a mistake in a matter of that sort."
"But are you sure it was me?"
"Certain."
"What was I doing?"
"You were under the beech tree--our beech tree. You appeared to me to be looking for something on the ground--something which you could not find."
"But four nights ago? I remember it quite well. I was reading and writing till ever so late. Then I fell asleep directly I got into bed.
I certainly never woke again until Evans called me."
"The probability is that you got out of bed directly you were asleep.
It struck me that there was something singular about your whole proceedings. A doubt crossed my mind at the time as to whether you could possibly be in a somnambulistic condition. As I approached you retreated so rapidly that I never caught sight of you again."