Some Must Watch by Ethel Lina White (books for 5 year olds to read themselves .TXT) 📕
For all that, it offered a solidly resistant front to the solitude. Its state of excellent repair was evidence that no money was spared to keep it weather-proof. There was no blistered paint, no defective guttering. The whole was somehow suggestive of a house which, at a pinch, could be rendered secure as an armored car.
It glowed with electric-light, for Oates' principal duty was to work the generating plant. A single wire overhead was also a comfortable reassurance of its link with civilization.
Helen no longer felt any wish to linger outside. The evening mists were rising so that the evergreen shrubs, which clumped the lawn, appeared to quiver into life. Viewed through a veil of vapor, they looked black and grim, like mourners assisting at a funeral.
"If I don't hurry, they'll get between me and the house,
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But, for Heaven’s sake, let me in. I’ll explain everything to the
Professor, afterwards.”
From the moment she had first set eyes on Helen, Nurse Barker had been
frantically envious of her. She was just the type which she, herself,
would have chosen to be quick as a needle and smart as paint. While she
was able to help herself, she was of fairy fragility, which appealed to
the protective instincts of men.
She swallowed convulsively, as she tore the paper into tiny fragments
and dropped them inside the drain-pipe unbrella-stand.
“Dead Letter Office,” she murmured grimly.
Meanwhile, Helen was busy in the blue room, unconscious of the
destruction of her vital mail. She straightened disarranged furniture,
shook up cushions, and put away articles of clothing; presently she came
out on the landing laden with a big basin of soapy water and an armful
of crumpled towels.
As she did so, she was vaguely aware of some stir in the atmosphere, as
though someone had come that way, a few seconds before her. The door
leading to the back-stairs, quivered faintly, as though it would swing
open, at a touch.
Her small white face swam up in the dim depths of the mirror in the old
familiar way; but, as she drew nearer, she noticed something which was
both mysterious and disturbing. A faint mist blurred the glass, about
the height of a man’s mouth.
“Someone stood here, a few seconds ago,” she thought fearfully, as she
watched the patch become bright again. Gripping her basin with stiff
fingers, she stared at the closed doors. She was afraid to take her eyes
off them, lest one should open—afraid to move, lest she precipitated
the attack.
Suddenly her nerve crashed. Putting her basin down on the carpet, she
turned, and hurled herself down the stairs. Nurse Barker watched her as
she sank down, panting, on the lowest step.
“Well?” she asked with cool unconcern.
Ashamed of her unfounded terror, Helen rapidly became composed.
“Lady Warren is asleep,” she said. “We didn’t hear her.”
“Then where have you been all this time?”
“Tidying the room.”
“You’ve not been up in your own room?” Nurse Barker asked.
“No.”
“Well, I wouldn’t, if I was you. It’s a long way up, in case you met
someone.”
Again the dull thud banged in the distance.
“There it is again,” said Nurse Barker. “I wish it would stop. It gets
on my nerves.”
As she listened, Helen suddenly located the sound.
“It’s down in the basement. It must be the window I tied up. It’s blown
open again.”
She hastened to add quickly, “It’s all right. There’s a shutter up, so
no one can get in.”
“It’s criminal carelessness, all the same,” declared Nurse Barker, with
an elaborate yawn.
“Are you sleepy?” asked Helen sharply.
“My eyes are just dropping,” declared Nurse Barker, with another yawn.
“It’s all I can do to keep them open. I came straight off night-duty I
ought to have had a night in bed, between my cases.”
With a chill at her heart, Helen recognized the toofamiliar signals of
the landslide. While she had been afraid of Nurse Barker succumbing to
some treacherously-administered drug, she was, in reality, nearly
overpowered by natural sleep.
As she watched her, Helen realized that her failure to stay awake was
inevitable. Nurse Barker was due for a good night’s rest. She had made a
journey in an open car;… since then she had eaten and smoked heavily,
and had taken a fair quantity of brandy. The air, of the shuttered
house, too, was close.
There seemed no connection between this latest example of cause and
effect, and the mysterious conspiracy which threatened Helen’s safety;
yet her fear of being left alone, to watch, was real, because the
incident was timed with such horrible accuracy.
Suddenly, Nurse Barker’s head dropped forward with a jerk, which
awakened her. She staggered as she rose slowly to her feet.
“Where are you going?” asked Helen anxiously.
“Bed.”
“Where?”
“Patient’s room.”
“But you can’t do that. You can’t leave me here, alone.”
“The house is locked up,” Nurse Barker said. “You’re safe, as long as
you remember not to open the door. If you, forget again it’s your own
funeral.”
“But it’s worse than that,” wailed Helen. “I wouldn’t tell you before,
because I wasn’t sure.”
“Sure of what?” repeated Nurse Barker.
“I’ve a terrible fear that someone is in the house, locked in with us.”
Nurse Barker listened skeptically to the story of the rustle on the back
stairs and the blur of breath on the mirror.
“Wind,” she said. “Or mice. I’m going to bed. You can come up too, if
you’re going to throw a fit.”
Helen hesitated, swayed by temptation to accept the offer. If they
locked the Professor’s door, as well as the blue room, they would be
secured in an inner citadel, together with the vulnerable members of the
household.
But Mrs. Oates would be left outside, in the trenches. In spite of the
special Providence which was supposedly detailed, to guard her, Helen
felt she could not risk leaving her there. “Could we, possibly get
Mrs. Oates up to the blue room?” she asked.
“Drag a drunken log up two flights of stairs?” Nurse Barker shook her
head. “I’m not taking any.”
“But we can’t leave her there. Remember, we should be held responsible,
tomorrow morning.” Fortunately Helen struck the right note, for Nurse
Barker was caught by the argument.
“Oh, well, I’ll have to make do with a lay-down in the drawingroom.”
Helen followed her into the big tasteless room, which still blazed with
electric light. It held traces of its last tenants—the careless, bored
youngsters—whose pose of modern indifference had been so fatally
shattered by the split-atom of passion.
Coffee-cups, with sodden cigarette-ends inside, were scattered about,
together with stray sheets of newspapers, open magazines, choked
ash-trays. Nurse Barker collected a couple of satin cushions, which lay
on the carpet; tucking them under her head, she stretched herself out on
the vast blue settee.
Closing her eyes, she fell, almost instantly, to sleep. “Now, I’m
alone,” thought Helen. “But I can wake her up, if anything happens.”
As she kept vigil, she looked around her with strained eyes, dilated to
black pools. There was no danger of her being soothed, insensibly, to
unconsciousness, by the rhythmof Nurse Barker’s heavy regular breathing.
Her brain was excited to a pitch when it became a store-house of jumbled
impressions.
But, through the chaos and confusion, she knew that she was chasing a
memory.
Suddenly she remembered. The basement window. It had been left open, for
minutes at a stretch, while the bar of its shutter lay uselessly on the
kitchen table, and she and Stephen Rice had gloated over Mrs. Oates’
ancient history.
Her heart gave a leap, but she tried to reason herself out of her panic.
It was the hundredth chance that the criminal, with acres of lonely
countryside for shelter, would rush into a house, filled with
people—the thousandth chance, that he would find the one point of
entry.
“But, if he did,” thought Helen, “he could hide in any of the dark
cellars. And then, when the coast was clear, he could make a dash
through the scullery and kitchen, for the back-stairs.”
There was only one, way of safeguarding Mrs. Oates. She would have to
make a thorough search of the basement. When she had satisfied herself
that it was empty, she must lock the kitchen door, and take away the
key.
Nurse Barker did not hear her, as she went out of the room. The woman
was sleeping too heavily to be aware of the noise of the gale, which
shook the long windows, with its fury.
Presently she awoke with a start, and sat up rubbing her eyes. Refreshed
and alert, she looked around for Helen, who had kept vigil, by her side.
But the girl had disappeared.
Dr. Parry, too, no longer stood, like a sentinel, in the garden. Almost
directly after the head and shoulders had been shadowed on the curtain,
the light in Helen’s bedroom went out.
As he waited for something else to happen, he did his best to master his
uneasiness. Although he knew that Helen’s bush of hair could not assume,
the silhouette of the clean outline of a man, Miss Warren, or the
nurseminus her veil—might have passed across the blind.
Presently he turned away. Conscious that he had let his personal feeling
for a girl work himself up into an unreasonable panic, he was anxious to
get a second opinion on the situation.
Cutting across the plantation, he soon reached Captain Bean’s
whitewashed cottage.
The blind was undrawn, so that he could see into the lamp-lit
sitting-room. Captain Bean, in his shirt-sleeves, sat at a paper-strewn
table—a tea-pot beside him. It was evident that he was sitting up late,
to write one of his articles on travel.
In spite of the interruption to his work, he came, at opce, to the door,
at the sound of Dr. Parry’s knock. His clean-shaven face was a muddle of
small indeterminate features, and his original blond coloring had been
scalded by tropic suns.
“You’ll wonder why I’m knocking you up, this time of the night,” said
Dr. Parry. “But I’m a bit puzzled about things up at the Summit.” “Come
in,” invited Captain Bean.
Dr. Parry was rather astonished by the gravity with which he listened to
his story.
“The fact is,” he admitted, “there’s a girl in that house that. I’m not
quite easy about. She’s such a scrap. And she’s very frightened.”
“She’s reason to be,” snapped the Captain, “after that girl I found in
my garden this evening.”
Dr. Parry, who wanted the reassurance of scepticism, stared at him with
anxious eyes. He looked haggard and unkempt, while the stubble of his
chin smudged his face, as though with grime.
However, the Captain gave a comforting hint of personal bias in his next
sentence.
“I never cottoned’ to that house. And I never cottoned to the family.
I’ll walk over with you and have a look round.”
“N.d.g.” said Dr. Parry hopelessly. “The place is like a fortress. And
you can ring till you pull the wire out.”
“Police?”
“I’ve thought of them. But I don’t know what grounds I can give them
for forcing an entry. It’s all in order. And I’m chiefly to blame for
that—curse it.”
Dr. Parry got up from his chair, to pace the room ex citedly.
“It’s that shadow that gets me,” he said. “In her room. It didn’t look
the shape of any woman.”
“Still, there are young men about the house,” remarked the Captain.
“No, they’ve all left. There’s only the Professor—assuming he’s shaken
off the effect of quadronex.”
Captain Bean grunted as he rammed fresh tobacco into his pipe.
“I want the entire log,” he said. “I’ve knocked about all over the Globe
and seen all the ugliest sights. But that girl’s body, in my own garden,
gave me a turn. Since then, I’ve been thinking of all sorts of things.”
He listened, with close attention, to the story, but made no comment.
When it was finished, he rose and drew on his Wellington boots.
“Where are you going?” asked Dr. Parry.
“Bull. To ‘phone the Police-Station.”
“Why?”
“There’s some things can’t be said. You’ve got to prove
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