The Coward Behind the Curtain
Copyright© 2024 by Richard Marsh
Chapter 17: A Friend’s Advice
One of those sudden changes had taken place in the weather to which we in England are so accustomed. With the day the glory had departed. Evening was ushered in by leaden skies. Dorothy became conscious how, all at once, shadows seemed to have gathered. She had no means of telling what the time was; she had never possessed a watch, and in the pink room there was no clock. The regatta seemed over; the garden had emptied; the hum of people’s voices, of laughter, which had floated in to her through the open window, had ceased; silence reigned. To her excited fancy there was something ominous in the sudden stillness, the growing darkness. What was going on downstairs? It was odd that they should have left her so long alone--with the ghosts which would press on her even in the sunshine, but which pressed still closer with the advent of the night. Why had she seen nothing, heard nothing, of Frances? The people had gone. Was she forgotten?--or what? It was very hard to sit there waiting, watching, listening. Why did not something happen? She was so unnerved that, of her own volition, she seemed incapable of doing anything. When she was a very small child, whenever there was trouble in the air, if opportunity offered, she would undress herself and get into bed, as if bed were sanctuary. She would have liked to insinuate herself between the sheets then, though it was scarcely night, but she was afraid; and she had a feeling that, for her, the days when bed was sanctuary had gone. Why did not someone come, if it was only to tap at the door and ask how she was?
Someone did tap. The sound was so unexpected that it started her trembling. It was such a curious tap; not at all the firm, pronounced tap Frances might have given, but faint, furtive; almost as if the tapper were anxious not to be heard. Indeed, in the silence which followed, Dorothy was not sure that it was a tap--until it came again, no louder, as if someone touched the panel of the door lightly, with the tip of a single finger. Dorothy vouchsafed no invitation to enter. She did not ask who was there. She felt sure it was not Frances, nor a message from her; it was not the sort of tap which would be given by a bearer of good tidings.
The tap was not repeated. Instead, after an interval, the door was opened, softly, slowly, with about its movement the same furtive something which had characterised the tapping; a few inches, then a pause; a few more inches, another pause; there was an appreciable space of time before it was opened wide enough to permit of a person entering. Then there slipped, rather than came, into the room, a young woman, a servant, of about Dorothy’s own age; in appearance her antipodes--short, squat, with a square head and face, high cheek-bones, skin the colour of old port when held up to a strong light. Closing the door as stealthily as she had opened it she tiptoed towards the centre of the room. Twisted half round on her seat, Dorothy had sat and watched her in silence; now, as she approached, she rose from her chair.
“What do you want? Who are you?”
The girl answered, speaking in a husky whisper, as if she feared that the walls had ears:
“Never mind who I am; don’t ask me to tell you my name; then, if anyone asks you, you can’t tell them--see? You don’t want to get me into trouble, do you? Of course you don’t.” She put a stubby red finger, in which the dirt was engrained, to her lips, with an air of the utmost mystery. “I am a friend, that’s who I am; and, placed as you are, that’s all you want to know about me, and as a friend I’ve come to give you a word of advice, which is--bolt!”
“I don’t know what you mean! Why--why have you come to me like this? Who has sent you?”
“No one hasn’t sent me--not much! Only they’ve found out all about you in the kitchen; and West, she’s the parlourmaid, she’s after that hundred pounds.”
“Which hundred pounds? What--what do you mean?”
“Mean to say you don’t know they’ve offered a hundred pounds for you?”
“Who--has offered a hundred pounds?”
“Why, over at Newcaster--I suppose it’s them police--it generally is the police what offers rewards, isn’t it? Mean to say you didn’t know there was a reward out for you?”
Dorothy shrank back. A sound came from her lips which might have been “No.”
“Why, it’s in all the papers; I expect there’s thousands looking out for it by now. That’s what West says: someone’s sure to get it, so it might as well be her. So she went to put her hat on; meaning to start off to them police; and if she didn’t leave the key outside her room--so I gave it a turn, and here it is.” She produced a door-key from a pocket in her skirt. “And there she is, locked in. Won’t she be in a tear when she finds out!” The girl grinned, as if enjoying the mental picture she called up of the parlourmaid’s rage when she discovered she was prisoned. “They won’t be so eager to let her out, neither; there’s none of them loves her. So if you’re sharp you ought to get clear off before she’s even started after that reward.”
Dorothy made no attempt to deny the terrible imputation which the speaker’s words conveyed. The thing was so continually present to her own mind that the idea did not occur to her of even pretending not to understand. The question she put tacitly admitted the truth of the whole tale of horror at which the other only remotely hinted.
“Do--do the others know?”
“You mean--the family? I should think by now they do; I know Mr Parkes started off to tell ‘em.”
“Perhaps--perhaps that’s--why no one’s been near me.
“I daresay. I shouldn’t be surprised if I was the only friend you’d got in the house, truly! The truth is--though, mind you, there’s no one in the place so much as guesses at it--the truth is, I have had trouble in my own family, so that gives me a sort of fellow-feeling--I know from bitter experience what them police are; no one sha’n’t get into trouble if I can help it, I don’t care who it is; so, if you take my advice, off you go as far as ever you can; because it’s no use waiting till them police come before you start--not much it’s not!”
“Why--why should I go?”
“Why? Well, if you don’t know, I don’t!--why!”
“Mrs Vernon herself may have sent for the police.”
“Of course she may; I expect a hundred pounds is a hundred pounds to her as well as to anybody else.”
“Then, if you think so, why shouldn’t I let them come and find me here? I’m tired of--of running away--of hiding!”
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