Will gazed about him without enthusiasm. “Fern’s right,” he said. “What’s the point of a house we won’t use? I think we should sell.”
“I must say,” Robin averred, “it looks a bit off-putting. Could move on, I suppose. Find a B & B. Come back in the morning.”
“No.” Fern’s tone did not admit of argument. “We’re here and we’re going to stay. You were both so set on coming: well, I don’t intend to run away just because there isn’t a red carpet. Mrs. Wicklow was asked to leave us tea and milk and so on. Let’s find the kitchen.”
She deposited the flashlight on a table and opened the door to her left, flicking an adjacent switch. A yellow glow sprang into being, no mellow radiance but a tired, sickly, off-color light, as if the bulbs which provided it were continuously on the verge of expiring. It illumined a long drawing room with a few pieces of cumbersome furniture, the velvet upholstery rubbed raw by past occupants, a carpet mottled with age and dirt, and a wide empty fireplace bringing to her the dreary moan of the wind in the chimney. A grandfather clock ticked loudly, but there were no other sounds. At the far end of the room was an alcove, and peering out of it was the Face. For an instant, for all her resolute nerves, Fern stifled a gasp that was almost a cry. It was the face of a malevolent Buddha, not pensive and serene but gloating, somehow sly, the broad lips half parted in an unholy smile, the eyelids creased at some inscrutable jest, stubby horns protruding above a low brow. One of the lightbulbs flickered and she had the illusion that the idol had winked at her. It’s a statue, she told herself. Only a statue. Inadvertently, she spoke aloud.
Will and Robin had been investigating other doors but her brother heard her and came back to the hall. “What’s the matter?” he said. “Did you call?”
“It was the statue,” she said. “It gave me a shock.”
Will pushed past her to take a closer look. “It’s hideous,” he said gleefully. “I’ll bet Great-Cousin Ned brought it back from his travels. Sailors always pick up stuff in foreign parts, don’t they? This place could be full of strange things. Some of them might be valuable.”
“Pirates’ treasure, I suppose?” said Fern, reassured by his ebullience. “Doubloons, and pieces of eight.”
“I thought a doubloon was something you wore.” Will had stopped a couple of feet in front of the idol, and suddenly he turned away. “Actually, I don’t think I do like it very much. I wonder what it’s laughing at?”
“I don’t really want to know,” said Fern.
Robin found the kitchen, at the back of the house. It was stone-flagged, cold but clean, with the barren air of a kitchen where nothing had been cooked in a long while. A jar of coffee, packets of sugar and tea, and a plate of sandwiches in plastic wrap stood on the table, looking like the isolated relics of an alien visitation. There was milk in the fridge. They had snacked at a pub on the way, but Will and Robin tucked into the sandwiches, one eagerly, the other absentmindedly. Fern searched for a teapot to make tea.
“It’s a depressing sort of house, isn’t it?” Robin commented between mouthfuls.
“That’s Yorkshire for you,” said his daughter.
The building was on three storeys, with eight bedrooms but only one bathroom and an extra loo downstairs. “The Victorians,” Robin explained. “Grubby lot. Didn’t reckon too much to bathrooms.” The cistern slurped and gurgled at the slightest provocation; hot water was not forthcoming. They went to bed unwashed, like the Victorians. Mrs. Wicklow had made up the beds in three of the second-floor rooms; Robin chose the front room, Fern and Will slept at the back of the house. Fern lay awake for some time, listening to the unfamiliar sounds of a country night. The rain was silent and there was no traffic, although once she heard the grating roar of an untuned engine on the road below, possibly a motorbike. A strange mewing cry must, she assumed, have been some nocturnal creature, maybe a bird: it was only the unfamiliarity of it which disturbed her. She slept fitfully, falling between uneasy dreams, not sure if the snuffling she could hear, along the wall beneath her window, was real or simply another phantom from the shadows of sleep.
In the morning she woke around nine and got up to look at her surroundings in daylight. There was a small garden at the back of the house but the flower-beds were scantily planted and the grass grew in tufts on what might have been intended for a lawn; only weeds and a few hardy shrubs thrived there. Beyond, the bare hillside, treeless and gray with dew, climbed up toward the moors and the sky. Occasional rocks broke the skin of turf, moss-padded, the outthrust bones of Earth; a bridle path skirted the garden and ascended the slope, a shadowy line against the contouring of the land. Above it Fern noticed something which might have been a solitary boulder or stump, curiously shaped, looking almost like an old man sitting hunched up, cloaked and hooded against the weather. It was not actually raining but a layer of pale cloud covered the sky and the air felt damp. A budding inclination to explore the path died when Fern realized she had come without suitable boots.
Downstairs, she found her brother in the kitchen, bemoaning a lack of cereal, while the water boiled away from the old-fashioned iron kettle which Robin had left on the hob.
“Dad’s gone to the village shop,” Will reported. “I asked him to get me some Frosties. He said he’d bring orange juice too.”
“Is there a village shop?” Fern inquired, transferring the kettle to an unheated surface.
“Probably.”
Robin returned about three quarters of an hour later with squash instead of juice and no Frosties. “Only cornflakes,” he explained, “and porridge oats. Didn’t think you’d like those. Sorry about the juice. Said they’d run out.”
“No Frosties!” Will bewailed.
“You took a long time,” said Fern.
“Met the vicar. Nice chap. Name of Dinsdale—Gus Dinsdale. Invited us to tea. Thought we might like to visit Edward Capel’s grave, pay our respects, I suppose. He’s buried here: local churchyard. Anyway, I said fine. Nothing else to do.”
“A visit to a grave and tea with the vicar,” said Will. “Lovely weekend we’re having.”
They spent the rest of the morning going through the house. Fern found a long-handled broom for the cobwebs and an antiquated vacuum cleaner which made a noise like a small tornado and seemed bent on sucking up the carpets. In the drawing room, she moved the idol to a place where it would not catch her eye every time she opened the door. It was much heavier than she had anticipated and the stone felt rough and chill; she shivered when she set it down. On the second floor, Robin became absorbed in the paintings and estimated that a couple of murky landscapes and the portrait of a little girl with Shirley Temple ringlets clutching a puppy might possibly be worth something. Will, disappointed to find that the vaulted gloom of the cellar contained nothing more promising than a wine-rack with several bottles of superior burgundy, was cheered by the discovery of an attic running the length of the house, colonized by spiders and littered with bric-a-brac, including an iron-bound chest which might have come straight from a pirates’ hoard. His enthusiasm was enhanced rather than mitigated when the chest proved to be locked, with no immediate sign of a key.
“Looking for it will give you something useless to occupy your time,” said Fern, who had stubbed her toe on a lurking footstool and was determined to find nothing intriguing in an overcrowded attic. She was too old for treasure hunts.
“I say,” said Robin from behind her. “Quite a place. Might find all kinds of stuff here—family heirlooms, missing works of art . . . That chair looks like a Chippendale. Pity it’s broken. Not much light, is there? We need Fern’s flashlight.”
They came down finally at lunchtime when Mrs. Wicklow arrived carrying a covered dish. Her greeting was abrupt and her face only slightly less stony than that of the idol but the dish emanated an agreeable aroma of steak-and-kidney and Fern concluded that her attitude was not actively grudging, it was simply that she was resistant to change and unused to the incursion of strangers. “Solicitors told me t’ Captain was your great-uncle,” she said to Robin over their meal.
“Well, not exactly . . .”
“We decided he was our great-cousin,” Will said, “with an extra great for Fern and me.”
“You must miss him,” Fern offered.
“He was a good man,” Mrs. Wicklow conceded, “but tired. He was old and he didn’t like it. He couldn’t go walking the way he used to. Folks say long life is a thing to wish for, but I’m not so sure. It can’t be pleasant to outlive your friends. T’ Captain, he wasn’t t’ same since his dog died.”
“Was he really a captain?” Will asked.
“He was that. Been all over the world, he had. I don’t know as how he ever really took to it, being what he called a lands-man all the time. Of course, we’re near the coast here. He’d go down to look at t’ sea often and often, and come back sad about the eyes. Can’t say I trust it myself, t’ sea: it can seem so blue and gentle, but t’ water’s always cold and tricksy underneath.”
“He must have collected a lot of things on his travels,” Will said opportunely. “I don’t suppose you know where I could find the key to that big chest in the attic?”
“Could be anywhere.” Mrs. Wicklow achieved a shrug. “House is full of stuff. Most of it’s rubbish, if you ask me; he wasn’t one for throwing things away. T’ key’ll be tucked in a drawer in t’ study or bedroom if you’re that set on it.”
“Which was the Captain’s room?” Will pursued.
“One Mr. Capel has now,” Mrs. Wicklow said. She had done some investigative bed-making before serving the pie.
“Er—make it Robin,” their father interjected. “Mr. Capel . . . bit formal.”
“Mr. Robin, then.”
“Might not all be rubbish, you know,” Mr. Robin remarked, discarding any further attempt at informality. “There are some good pictures, although I expect those came to him through the family.”
“I don’t mind pictures,” said Mrs. Wicklow. “It’s that heathen idol in the drawing room I don’t like. Evil-looking object, I told t’ Captain to his face. Unchristian. He said it amused him. There’s different kinds of God, he used to say, all over t’ world. That’s not a kind I’d want in my prayers, I told him, nor any respectable person.”
“I don’t care for it much either,” said Fern.
“And then there’s that woman,” Mrs. Wicklow continued, obscurely. “Carved out of a whole tree, according to t’ Captain, painted up as bright as life, and showing her all just like in t’ Sunday papers. She came from a shipwreck, he said, back in t’ old days when ships had a real lady up front for t’ sailors to warm to, only she doesn’t look much like a lady to me. T’ prow, that’s what they call it. He kept it in t’ barn next door, and a big piece of t’ ship with it.”
“We haven’t looked in the barn yet,” said Will, glancing compellingly at his father, his interest in sea chests temporarily in abeyance.
“We ought to go and see,” Robin affirmed. “A ship’s figurehead—sounds pretty exciting.” His eyes were as bright as his son’s.
Fern stayed in the kitchen, although her offer to help with the washing up was firmly rejected.
“Funny thing, what your brother was asking,” Mrs. Wicklow resumed. “There was a young woman over from Guisborough, not long before t’ Captain died. Something to do with antiques. They’re all crooks, so I hear. Wanting him to sell stuff, she was. He sent her about her business. Anyway, I was doing t’ drawing room when they came downstairs, and I heard them talking. She was asking about keys.”
Later that afternoon they paid a brief visit to the churchyard, where Ned Capel lay in the lee of a dry stone wall, with the turf plumped up like a pillow over his grave. It was a quiet place hollowed into the hillside, with the petals of a hawthorn drifting across the ground like a spring snowfall. “Home is the sailor, home from the sea,” Fern quoted, and for an instant she felt, irrationally, that she too had come home—home to the grimness of Dale House and the wild country waiting in the wings. “Is it supposed to be haunted?” she asked the vicar, over tea.
“Extraordinary question,” said Robin. “Didn’t think you believed in ghosts.”
“I don’t. It’s just—when we arrived, the house appeared, not exactly menacing, but reserved, sort of sullen, unwilling—or afraid—to let us in. I almost fancied . . .” She checked herself, remembering her vaunted distrust of fancies.
“I’ve never been too sure about hauntings,” said the Reverend Dinsdale. He was younger than Fern had expected, probably under forty, with a friendly bony face and a long neck in which a mobile Adam’s apple fluctuated expressively. “I can’t really imagine a human spirit is going to mope around the same old place for centuries just because it was murdered there, or something equally nasty. All the more reason to move on, I would have thought. On the other hand, some houses have a definite personality. I’ve often wondered if it’s the buildings themselves which remember—and maybe sometimes the memory can be strong enough to reproduce an old image, a sound, even a smell, so that human senses can detect it. Perhaps there’s a kind of house-spirit which lives in such places, a degenerate form of something that was once akin to mankind, craving the company of the living even while it resents them, reminded of what it might have been.”
“A sort of
genius loci
,” Will supplied knowledgeably. He was in a beatific mood after the vicar’s wife had donated a packet of Frosties from her larder.
“That’s it. Pure speculation, of course. Mind you, it’s fairly well grounded in folk mythology. In the past, every house in Yorkshire had its own hobgoblin. The occupants would put out a saucer of milk or a choice morsel of food to keep it sweet, and in return it would look after the house, see off danger and disease, that kind of thing. Much more efficient than a burglar alarm.”
“Maybe we should get Fern to put out some milk for ours,” Robin suggested slyly.
“Don’t be silly, Daddy,” his daughter retorted.
“I don’t know about ghosts,” Will said, “but I heard a weird sniffing noise last night, going along the wall under my window. It was awfully loud.” Fern glanced at him with suddenly widening eyes.
“Could be a badger,” the vicar said. “They always sound as if they have a cold in the head. What you want to do is go out in the morning and check for tracks. I’ve got a book in my study with some good illustrations: I’ll show you what to look for.”