Fool Errant (17 page)

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Authors: Patricia Wentworth

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At the foot of the steps on either side there was a tall yew pyramid. Hugo pulled Loveday behind the farther one and said “Ssh!” again.

“We haven't a minute. I've got something frightfully important to tell you.”

Loveday was still quivering with laughter.

“We always seem to be running into each other in the dark! It's so
funny
.”

Hugo shook her.

“Don't laugh! You must listen. I'm coming to dinner to-morrow night. It's a put-up job to see whether we recognize each other. I was just wondering how I could warn you.”

“Oh! How
exciting!

He had his arm round her shoulders. He shook her again.

“Listen! It's frightfully important. It's a put-up job. They want to see how we meet each other.”

Loveday rubbed her head against his cheek.

“Well—how
do
we meet each other?”

“Not like this. Loveday—listen! It really is frightfully important. You see, as far as they know, we've only met once—in the lane, when it was dark and we couldn't see each other. That's what you told Cissie—isn't it?”

“Yes, I did.”

“Well, what Cissie knows Hacker knows, and what Hacker knows Mme. de Lara knows. They know we met in the lane, and they know you wanted to see me again because you wanted to warn me about something. Did you tell Cissie just why you wanted to warn me?”

“No, I didn't. I told her I'd heard things about Meade House, and that I didn't think you ought to go there. And when I saw she really wanted to find out, I wouldn't tell her. I said you might be blown up in an explosion—but of course she knew it wasn't that. But I wouldn't tell her what it was.”

“That's all right. Now, so far as they know, you never did see me or warn me. But they want to be quite, quite sure about it, because it's tremendously important for them to be sure that I haven't been warned; so they've put up this dinner-party business, and they're going to spring us on each other and watch to see whether we give ourselves away.”

Loveday wasn't laughing now. She gave a little shiver and said,

“Tell me what to do.”

“You mustn't recognize me, of course—we mustn't recognize each other—but when I'm introduced to you, you'd know my name, you see. So then you can just be all excited and interested and wanting to get an opportunity of speaking to me. You won't get one of course—they'll see to that. That's your line, I think. Have you got it? You don't recognize me, but you know my name and you get quite excited about it. My line's a bit different. I don't know you, and I don't connect you with the girl in the lane even after I've heard your name, because, you see, I'm supposed to think Cissie is you.”

Loveday began to laugh under her breath. Then all at once she stopped and pinched him very hard.

Someone was coming along the shrubbery path—a light footfall and a voice that hummed a light and pleasant air, a shadow in a black cloak. It was Hélène de Lara, and as she passed them by, she sang softly:

“New hope may bloom, and days may come,

Of brighter, purer beam;

But there's nothing half so sweet in life as

Love's young dream.

Oh, there's nothing half so sweet in life as

Love's young dream.”

She ran up the steps and was gone.

Loveday pinched Hugo harder.

“Oh, she's gone in! Hugo, she's gone in! I'm locked out! What on earth am I going to do?”

They peered round the pyramid and saw the curtains part and fall again. There was no shaft of light any more. The door was certainly shut, and Loveday on the wrong side of it. She began to laugh again.

“I'll have to climb up the magnolia. If she goes into my room, I'm done. Oh, Hugo, what fun! Anyhow there's no hurry now, and we can talk.”

“I say—I'm most awfully s-sorry.”

“You needn't be—I'll get in somehow. I've always wanted to be a burglar. It'll be most frightfully amusing, but we'll have to let Hélène go to sleep first.”

“Loveday—how on earth did you get here? I thought you were at Ledlington. You went there, didn't you?”

“I went there, but I didn't stay there. Emily was in an awful fuss because she was just starting off to go and see a tremendously old uncle who sends for her about six times a year, and if she doesn't come, he makes a new will and doesn't leave her anything—and she didn't think it proper to leave me with Andrew.”

She gave a gurgle of delight. “Darling, if you could only see Andrew! He's so proper that if you were to cut him up small, there'd be enough properness in every little bit to last seven Mrs. Grundys for ever and ever. So I just
rocked
, and Emily was frightfully huffy and all stuffed up with the sermons she'd been getting ready to preach to me. It must be awful to be absolutely bunged up with sermons and not be able to get them off your chest because of having to go and stop your uncle from leaving you out of his will. I really did feel sorry for Emily. And right in the middle of all the fuss Hélène blew in and said would I come to her for the week-end?”

“How do you know her?” said Hugo.

“She's my cousin—and she's Emily's cousin too. My mother was Irish, you know, and Hélène's Irish, too. It's frightfully funny her calling herself Hélène, and de Lara; because of course she was just Ellen O'Brien, and she married a horrid little scallywag called Con Larrigan, and they went abroad and made some money somehow. And she came back de Lara, and she says Con's dead. And Emily says it's lucky for her he is. Emily's frightfully funny about the whole thing, and any other time I might have cried my eyes out and she wouldn't have let me go and stay with Hélène.”

“How long is she going to be away?” said Hugo quickly.

“Why?”

“Because you oughtn't to be here—I don't like your being here.”

“You said that just like James. James doesn't like my being here at all—James disapproves of Hélène very much. He did quite a lot of disapproving yesterday—he disapproved about me, and about Hélène, and about Emily going off to her uncle. James thought she ought to let Uncle Richard change his will and stay at home to chaperone me whilst he was being frightfully moral and high-minded and forgiving about my
escapade
—that's what he called it, you know
escapahd
. It sounds dreadfully snoopy that way. I felt quite sorry for James, because I know he'd planned a whole week-end of forgiving me and overlooking my
escapahd
, and it was simply snatched away from him. I think he meant to lecture me on Saturday and forgive me on Sunday and finish up with a nice magnanimous proposal after supper, when Andrew and Emily always go to sleep.”

“Loveday, do stop talking nonsense! When does your cousin Emily come home?”

“Well, as a rule she gets wired for one day, and the next day Uncle Richard tells her he's dying every five minutes and wants someone to telephone for his solicitor about three times an hour, and the day after, he begins to get bored with Emily, and he says he doesn't think he's going to die this time. So I think she'll be back on Monday. She always comes back very cross, because Uncle Richard's housemaid gives her a lukewarm hot-water bottle and doesn't screw the top on tight.”

“I don't like your being here,” said Hugo gloomily.

“Fuss!” said Loveday. “I'm frightfully glad I'm here, and you ought to be frightfully glad too, because if I wasn't here, you couldn't—but perhaps you don't want to.”

Hugo kissed her, but only once.

“I've got to get you into the house,” he said.

“I don't want to go in a bit. You
are
like James, you know.”

“You've got to go in. We shall have to see if we can open a window.”

Loveday followed him meekly. She didn't in the least want to go in; she wanted to stay out in the moonlight, and be made love to, but when Hugo said “You've got to go in,” she heaved a resigned sigh and followed him. She had a dreadful suspicion that Hugo would always make her do what he wanted.

They crossed the terrace and tried the sitting-room window very gently. The room was dark and the door bolted. Hugo began to be very seriously disturbed. If they couldn't get in—they
must
get in. They tried other windows, and found them all fastened.

“I shall have to go in with the milk,” said Loveday in an almost soundless whisper that yet contrived to be gay. “I
am
glad I came out.”

“What made you come?”

“I was looking out of my window, and I saw Hélène run down the steps—at least I thought it was Hélène. And I went to her room, and she wasn't there. And I went down to her little sitting-room, and the door was open, so I came out to look for her.”

They had reached the back premises. A row of windows looked into a paved courtyard. Hugo fished out a pocket-knife and, standing in the shadow, managed to move the catch of one of them. He opened the window softly inch by inch and found himself looking in upon a scullery sink. Loveday had to climb over it.

She dropped lightly down and whisked round with a smothered laugh.

“I hope Hélène doesn't keep black beetles—I do hate them!”

It was not a romantic place for a lovers' parting; but as they leaned together across the sink and kissed, romance was there. Loveday clung to him.

“You haven't said you loved me—not once.”

“That's because I do love you. You mustn't stop.”

Loveday's clasp relaxed; she began to draw back. And then she was holding him tighter than ever.

“Hugo, I'm sure there are black beetles!”

“Nonsense!”

“I heard one—
rustle
. I'm sure I did.”

“Nonsense!”

“It isn't. Hugo, it's so dark—and if I stepped on a black beetle and it squelched—”

Hugo detached her fingers—they were very cold. He heard a little sob in the dark.

“Darling, don't be a goose!”

“I do hate the dark and—and places where there isn't anyone, but you feel there might be.”

“There won't be.”

“There wouldn't be if it was you, but there might be when it's me. It's—it's a long way up to my room in the dark. Couldn't you—couldn't you just come part of the way?”

“No,” said Hugo firmly, “I couldn't. You're being s-silly.” He gave her a little shake, kissed her again, and pushed her away. “Shut the latch your side, and when you get up to your room open the curtains and look out. I'll wait till I see you.”

The window shut between them. He heard her latch it and went cautiously back to the terrace. He had to keep close to the house now, for the moon was clear of the roof, and the path, the steps, and half the terrace were in moonlight. He waited a minute or two, and then ran for the steps and got behind one of the yew pyramids. From there he watched Loveday's window until the curtains moved. She looked out with the light behind her and kissed her hand.

Hugo took the path under the trees.

CHAPTER XXIV

When he turned in at the gate of Meade House, it occurred to him for the first time that he was likely to find himself locked out too; but as he came round the turn of the drive, he saw the hall door standing wide and light streaming out from the hall. Even for Meade House this seemed odd and a trifle disconcerting.

He came across the gravel sweep, and saw Hacker in the doorway like a black shadow. There was a momentary effect of menace; then Hacker's voice:

“That you, Ross?”

It was Hacker's voice, but not quite his ordinary voice. Hugo had the impression that Hacker was trying very hard to be ordinary. He did not quite succeed.

Hugo said, “Yes—I'm l-late.” And then, as he came up close, Hacker began to speak, to say something that never got farther than a single rough sound. With a sudden break he swung round and went striding across the hall and up the stairs.

Hugo waited to shut and bolt the door and put out the hall light. Then as he went up the stairs in the dark, the feeling of menace was there. He was conscious of it to the point of shocked expectancy. Something—some force of anger—something violent, horrible, malignant was there—waiting. If Hacker had sprung upon him with murderous intent, it would have been a sheer relief. The unseen menace was a subtler and more horrible thing.

The turn of the stair showed him Hacker's door with a line of light beneath it. He felt his way to his own room and lit a candle. Five minutes later he was calling himself a fool; but he locked the door and pushed a tin bath against it before he went to sleep.

He dreamt that he was dancing with Mme. de Lara in a fairy ring in the moonlight. The ring was a ring of scarlet toadstools, and Hélène de Lara wore silver slippers with scarlet heels. Someone was playing the flute, and away in the outer darkness he could hear Loveday crying. She was crying bitterly. But he couldn't go to her, because he couldn't get out of the fairy ring; the toadstools grew as tall as trees and burned with a red scorching fire; the wind blew over them and burnt him. But Hélène de Lara danced on. The heels of her shoes were scarlet flames, and her silvered hair was full of dancing fiery sparks.

He woke up hot and panting, and as he woke, he heard the handle of his door turn and the latch click. He called out at once, “Who's there?” and there was no answer, only a faint, faint sound of withdrawal. It was so very faint that he could not have said that he heard it, or that it was really a sound at all.

He jumped out of bed and went to the open window. The air of the house was heavy with menace. He did not sleep again that night.

Next day there was a comedy played at breakfast, the comedy of Hélène de Lara's invitation to dinner. There was a letter for Hacker and a letter for Hugo, sent over by hand.

Hugo opened his letter with a good deal of amusement. It smelt of violets, and began without a beginning:

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