Some Must Watch by Ethel Lina White (books for 5 year olds to read themselves .TXT) đź“•
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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arrives. She must relieve me as soon as she has had something to eat.”
It was Helen’s chance—and she took it.
“Might I sit with Lady Warren?” she asked.
Miss Warren hesitated before her reply. She knew that it would be
against her brother’s wish to entrust Lady Warren to an untrained
stranger; but the girl seemed reliant and conscientious.
“Thank you, Miss Capel,” she replied. “It would be kind. Lady Warren is
asleep, so you will only have to sit very still, and watch her.”
She crossed the landing to her own room, and then turned to give further
advice.
“If she wakes and wants something you can’t find—or if you are in any
difficulty, come, at once, to me.”
Helen promised, even while she was conscious that she would appeal to
Miss Warren only as a last resource. She meant to cope with any
situation on her own initiative, and she hoped that the need would
arise.
The tide of her curiosity was running strongly when, at long last, she
entered the blue room. It was a huge, handsome apartment, furnished with
a massive mahogany suite, made sombre by reason of the prevailing dark
blue color of the walls, carpet and curtains. A dull red fire glowed in
the steel grate. Although its closeness was mitigated with
lavender-water, the atmosphere smelt faintly of rotten apples. Lady
Warren lay in the big bed. She wore a dark-purple silk quilted
dressing-jacket, and her head was propped high with pillows. Her eyes
were closed and she was breathing heavily. The first glance told Helen
that Stephen was right in his description. There was no sign of grand
character in this bedridden old woman. The lines which scored her face,
like an ancient map, were all plainly traced by bad temper and egotism.
Her grey hair was cut short in a thick untidy shock and her nose was
suspiciously red.
Stealing across the floor, Helen sat down in the low chair by the fire.
She noticed that each coal was wrapped in white tissue paper, so that
the scuttle appeared to be filled with snowballs. As she knew this
transformation was a means to ensure quiet, she took the hint, and
remained motionless, as though she were furniture.
Lady Warren’s breathing continued with the volume and regularity of a
steam-engine. Presently Helen began to suspect that it was a special
performance for her benefit.’
“She’s not really asleep,” she thought. “She’s foxing.”
The breathing went on—but nothing happened. Yet Helen was aware of the
quiver of her pulse which always heralded Mr. Poke’s approach.’
Someone was watching her.
She had to turn her head round, in order to look at the bed. When she
did so, Lady Warren’s lids were tightly closed. With a joyous sense of
playing a new game, Helen waited for a chance to catch her unawares.
Presently, after many feints and failures, she proved too quick for Lady
Warren. Looking up unexpectedly, she caught her in the act of spying.
Her lids were slit across by twin black crescents of extraordinary
brightness, which peered out at her.
They shut immediately, only to open again, as the in valid realized that
further subterfuge was vain.
“Come here,” she said, in a faint fluttering voice.
With a memory of Mrs. Oates’ warning, Helen advanced warily. She looked
a small and insignificant person—a pale girl in a blue pinafore dress,
which made her fade into her background.
“Come nearer,” commanded Lady Warren.
Helen obeyed, although her eyes wandered to the objects on the
bed-table. She wondered which missile the invalid might choose to hurl
at her head, and stretched out her hand for the biggest medicine bottle.
“Put that down,” snarled her ladyship faintly. “That’s mine.”
“Oh, I am sorry.” Helen spoke eagerly. “I’m like that. I hate people to
touch my things.”
Feeling that there was a link between them, she stood boldly by the bed,
and smiled down at the invalid.
“You’re very small,” remarked Lady Warren, at last breaking her silence.
“No style. Very unimpressive. I thought my grandson would have shown
better taste when he chose a wife.”
As she listened, Helen realized that Simone had refused to enter the
blue room, although Newton had urged her to do so.
“He showed excellent taste,” she said. “His wife is marvellous. I’m not
her.”
“Then—who are you?” asked Lady Warren.
“The help. Miss Capel.”
A ripple of some strong emotion passed over the old woman’s face,
leaving the black crescent eyes fixed and the lips hanging apart.
“She looks afraid,” thought Helen. “But what’s she afraid of? It—it
must be me.”
Lady Warren’s next words, however, gave the lie to this exciting
possibility. Her voice strengthened.
“Go away,” she shouted, in the bass voice of a man.
Startled by the change, Helen turned and ran from the invalid, expecting
every second, to feel the crash of a bottle on her head. But, before she
reached the door, she was recalled by a shout.
“You little fool, come back.”
Quivering with expectation at this new turn, Helen crossed to the bed.
The old lady began to talk in such a faint, whine, that her words were
almost inaudible.
“Get out of the house. Too many trees.”
“Trees?” repeated Helen, as her mind slipped back to the last tree in
the plantation.
“Trees,” repeated Lady Warren. “They stretch out their branches and
knock at the window. They try to get in… When it’s dark, they
move. Creeping up to the house… Go away.”
As she listened, Helen felt a sense of kinship with the old woman. It
was strange that she, too, had stood at the window, at twilight, and
watched the invasion of the misted shrubs. Of course, it was all
imagination; but that fact alone indicated a common touch of “Mr. Poke.”
In any case, she wanted to use the trees as a liaison bebtween Lady
Warren and herself. It was one of her small failings that, although she
liked to succeed in her own line, she liked still better to make a
success of someone else’s job. She proceeded to try and make a conquest
of Lady Warren.
“How strange,” she said. “I’ve thought exactly the same as you.”
Unfortunately, Lady Warren resented her words as im pertinence.
“I don’t want to hear your thoughts,” Lady Warren whined. “Don’t dare to
presume, because I’m helpless… What’s your name?”
“Helen Capel,” was the dejected reply.
“How old are you?”
“Twenty-three.”
“Liar. Nineteen.”
Helen was startled by her acumen, as her employers had always accepted
her official age.’ “It’s not exactly a lie,” she explained. “I feel I’m
entitled to put on my age, because I’m old in experience. I began to
earn my own living when I was fourteen.”
Lady Warren showed no signs of being touched.
“Why?” she asked. “Are you a love-child?”
“Certainly not,” replied Helen indignantly. “My parents were married in
church. But they couldn’t provide for me. They were unlucky.”
“Dead?”
“Yes.”
“Then they’re lucky.”
In spite of her subordinate position, Helen always found the necessary
courage to protest when any vital principle of her Creed was assaulted.
“No,” Helen protested. “Life is wonderful. I always wake up, just glad
to be alive.”
Lady Warren grunted before she continued her catechism.
“Drink?” she asked.
“No.”
“Any men?”
“No chance—worse luck.”
Lady Warren did not join in her laugh. Stared at Helen so rigidly that
the black slits of her eyes appeared to congeal. Some scheme was being
spun amid the cobwebs of her mind.
The clock ticked away the silence and the fire fell in, with a sudden
spurt of flame.’
“Shall I put on more coal?” asked Helen, anxious to break the spell.
“No. Give me back my teeth.”
The request was so startling that Helen, positively jumped. But the next
second, she realized that Lady Warren was only referring to her denture,
which was in an enamel cup, on the bed-table.
She looked away tactfully, while the august invalid fished them out of
the disinfectant, with her fingers, and adjustedthem in her gums.
“Helen,” she cooed, in a new dove-like voice, “I want you to sleep with
me, tonight.”
Helen looked at her, aghast, for the change in her was both grotesque
and horrible. The denture forced her lips apart in a stiff artificial
grin, which gave her an unhuman resemblance to an old waxwork.
“You were afraid of me, without my teeth,” Lady Warten told her. “But
you won’t be afraid now. I want to take care of you, tonight.”
Helen licked her lips nervously.
“But, my lady,” said Helen, “the new nurse will sleep with you tonight.”
“I’d forgotten the new nurse. Another slut. Well, I’ll be ready for her.
But you’re to sleep with me. You see, my dear, you’re not safe.”
As she smiled, Helen was suddenly reminded of the grin of a crocodile.
“I couldn’t pass a night alone with her,” she thought, even while she
was conscious that her fear was only of her own creation. It was
obviously absurd to be afraid of a bedridden old woman.
“I’m afraid I can do nothing without Miss Warren’s instructions,” she
said.
“My stepdaughter’s a fool. She doesn’t know what’s going on in this
house. Trees always trying to get in… Come here, Helen.” As Helen
stooped over the bed, she felt her hand caught in a strong grip.
“I want you to get me something,” whispered Lady Warren. “It’s in the
cupboard at the top of the wardrobe. Get on a chair.”
Helen, who was enjoying the rare flavor of an adventure, decided to
humor her.
She climbed on to one of the heavy chairs and stood on her toes, in
order to open the door of the cupboard.
She felt a little doubtful of the commission, as she groped with her
hand, in the dark recess. It was evident that Lady Warren was using her
as a tool, to procure forbidden fruit. With a memory of her inflamed
nose, she suspected a hidden bottle of brandy.
“What is it?” she called.
“A little hard thing, wrapped in a silk scarf,” was the disarming reply.
As she spoke, Helen’s fingers closed upon something which answered to
the description.
“Is this it?” she asked, springing to the ground.
“Yes.” Lady Warren’s voice was eager. “Bring it to me.”
In the short journey to the bed, Helen was gripped with a sudden fear of
the thing she held. Even under its mufflings, its shape was
unmistakable. It was a revolver. She remembered Lady Warren’s dead
rabbits—and also a husband shot dead by accident.’
“I wonder if it’s loaded,” she thought fearfully. “I can’t even tell
which is the dangerous end… I mustn’t let her have it. Mrs. Oates
warned me.”
“Bring it to me,” commanded Lady Warren.
She made no attempt to disguise her excitement. Her fingers shook with
eagerness, as she stretched out her hands.
Helen pretended not to hear. With affected carelessness, she laid down
the revolver on a small table—at a safe distance from the
invalid—before she advanced to the bed.
“Now, you mustn’t get worked up,” she said soothingly.
“It is so bad for your heart.”
Fortunately Lady Warren’s attention was distracted by her words.
“What does the doctor say about me?” she asked.
“He says your vitality is wonderful,” replied Helen.
“Then he’s a
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