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Witching Hill - Ernest William Hornung
WITCHING HILL
by
ERNEST W. HORNUNG
Copyright © 2013 Read Books Ltd.
This book is copyright and may not be
reproduced or copied in any way without
the express permission of the publisher in writing
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Contents
WITCHING HILL
E. W. Hornung
CHAPTER I
Unhallowed Ground
CHAPTER II
The House with Red Blinds
CHAPTER III
A Vicious Circle
CHAPTER IV
The Local Colour
CHAPTER V
The Angel of Life
CHAPTER VI
Under Arms
CHAPTER VII
The Locked Room
CHAPTER VIII
The Temple of Bacchus
E. W. Hornung
Ernest William Hornung was born in Middlesbrough, England in 1866. He spent most of his youth in England and France, but had a two-year stay in Australia during his teens which greatly influenced much of his later work. In 1893, having returned to England, Hornung married Constance Aimée Monica Doyle, the sister of his friend and great author Arthur Conan Doyle. After working briefly as a journalist, and publishing a series of poems in The Times, Hornung created the character for which he is best-remembered: A. J. Raffles, a gentleman thief
plying his trade in Victorian London. Raffles first appeared in 1898, and went on to star in a string of stories and a full-length novel, Mr. Justice Raffles (1909). Hornung also wrote on the subject of cricket, and was a skilled player of the sport. In 1915, his only son was killed at Ypres; in response, Hornung took up work with the YMCA in France, dying six years later, in 1921.
You won’t improve his chances by keeping anything back.
CHAPTER I
Unhallowed Ground
The Witching Hill Estate Office was as new as the Queen Anne houses it had to let, and about as worthy of its name. It was just a wooden box with a veneer of rough-cast and a corrugated iron lid. Inside there was a vast of varnish on three of the walls; but the one opposite my counter consisted of plate-glass worth the rest of the structure put together. It afforded a fine prospect of Witching Hill Road, from the level crossing by the station to the second lamp-post round the curve.
Framed and glazed in the great window, this was not a picture calculated to inspire a very young man; and yet there was little to distract a brooding eye from its raw grass-plots and crude red bricks and tiles; for one’s chief duties were making out orders to view the still empty houses, hearing the complaints of established tenants, and keeping such an eye on painters and paperhangers as was compatible with being on the spot if anybody called.
An elderly or a delicate man would have found it nice light work; but for a hulking youth fresh from the breeziest school in Great Britain, where they live in flannels and only work when it is wet or dark, the post seemed death in life. My one consolation was to watch the tenants hurrying to the same train every morning, in the same silk hat and blacks, and crawling home with the same evening paper every night. I at any rate enjoyed comparatively pure air all day. I had not married and settled down in a pretentious jerry-building where nothing interesting could possibly happen, and nothing worth doing be ever done. For that was one’s first feeling about the Witching Hill Estate; it was a place for crabbed age and drab respectability, and a black coat every day of the week. Then young Uvo Delavoye dropped into the office from another hemisphere, in the white ducks and helmet of the tropics. And life began again.
Are you the new clerk to the Estate?
he asked if he might ask, and I prepared myself for the usual grievance. I said I was, and he gave me his name in exchange for mine, with his number in Mulcaster Park, which was all but a continuation of Witching Hill Road. There’s an absolute hole in our lawn,
he complained—and I’d just marked out a court. I do wish you could come and have a look at it.
There was room for a full-size lawn-tennis court behind every house on the Estate. That was one of our advertised attractions. But it was not our business to keep the courts in order, and I rather itched to say so.
It’s early days,
I ventured to suggest; there’s sure to be holes at first, and I’m afraid there’ll be nothing for it but just to fill them in.
Fill them in!
cried the other young man, getting quite excited. You don’t know what a hole this is; it would take a ton of earth to fill it in.
You’re not serious, Mr. Delavoye.
Well, it would take a couple of barrow-loads. It’s a regular depression in the ground, and the funny thing is that it’s come almost while my back was turned. I finished marking out the court last night, and this morning there’s this huge hole bang in the middle of one of my side-lines! If you filled it full of water it would take you over the ankles.
Is the grass not broken at the edges?
Not a bit of it; the whole thing might have been done for years.
And what like is this hole in shape?
Delavoye met me eye to eye. Well, I can only say I’ve seen the same sort of thing in a village churchyard, and nowhere else,
he said. It’s like a churchyard starting to yawn!
he suddenly added, and looked in better humour for the phrase.
I pulled out my watch. I’ll come at one, when I knock off in any case, if you can wait till then.
Rather!
he cried quite heartily; and I’ll wait here if you don’t mind, Mr. Gillon. I’ve just seen my mother and sister off to town, so it fits in rather well. I don’t want them to know if it’s anything beastly. May we smoke in here? Then have one of mine.
And he perched himself on my counter, lighting the whole place up with his white suit and animated air; for he was a very pleasant fellow from the moment he appeared to find me one. Not much my senior, he had none of my rude health and strength, but was drawn and yellowed by some tropical trouble (as I rightly guessed) which had left but little of his outer youth beyond a vivid eye and tongue. Yet I would fain have added these to my own animal advantages. It is difficult to recapture a first impression; but I think I felt, from the beginning, that those twinkling, sunken eyes looked on me and all things in a light of their own.
Not an interesting place?
cried young Delavoye, in astonishment at a chance remark of mine. Why, it’s one of the most interesting in England! None of these fine old crusted country houses are half so fascinating to me as the ones quite near London. Think of the varied life they’ve seen, the bucks and bloods galore, the powder and patches, the orgies begun in town and finished out here, the highwaymen waiting for ‘em on Turnham Green! Of course you know about the heinous Lord Mulcaster who owned this place in the high old days? He committed every crime in the Newgate Calendar, and now I’m just wondering whether you and I aren’t by way of bringing a fresh one home to him.
I remember feeling sorry he should talk like that, though it argued a type of mind that rather reconciled me to my own. I was never one to jump to gimcrack conclusions, and I said as much with perhaps more candour than the occasion required. The statement was taken in such good part, however, that I could not but own I had never even heard the name of Mulcaster until the last few days, whereas Delavoye seemed to know all about the family. Thereupon he told me he was really connected with them, though not at all closely with the present peer. It had nothing to do with his living on an Estate which had changed hands before it was broken up. But I modified my remark about the ancestral acres—and made a worse.
I wasn’t thinking of the place,
I explained, as it used to be before half of it was built over. I was only thinking of that half and its inhabitants—I mean—that is—the people who go up and down in top-hats and frock-coats!
And I was left clinging with both eyes to my companion’s cool attire.
But that’s my very point,
he laughed and said. These City fellows are the absolute salt of historic earth like this; they throw one back into the good old days by sheer force of contrast. I never see them in their office kit without thinking of that old rascal in his wig and ruffles, carrying a rapier instead of an umbrella; he’d have fallen on it like Brutus if he could have seen his grounds plastered with cheap red bricks and mortar, and crawling with Stock Exchange ants!
You’ve got an imagination,
said I, chuckling. I nearly told him he had the gift of the gab as well.
You must have something,
he returned a little grimly, when you’re stuck on the shelf at my age. Besides, it isn’t all imagination, and you needn’t go back a hundred years for your romance. There’s any amount kicking about this Estate at the present moment; it’s in the soil. These business blokes are not all the dull dogs they look. There’s a man up our road—but he can wait. The first mystery to solve is the one that’s crying from our back garden.
I liked his way of putting things. It made one forget his yellow face, and the broken career that his looks and hints suggested, or it made one remember them and think the more of him. But the things themselves were interesting, and Witching Hill had more possibilities when we sallied forth together at one o’clock.
It was the height of such a June as the old century could produce up to the last. The bald red houses, too young to show a shoot of creeper, or a mellow tone from doorstep to chimney-pot, glowed like clowns’ pokers in the ruthless sun. The shade of some stately elms, on a bit of old road between the two new ones of the Estate, appealed sharply to my awakened sense of contrast. It was all familiar ground to me, of course, but I had been over it hitherto with my eyes on nothing else and my heart in the Lowlands. Now I found myself wondering what the elms had seen in their day, and what might not be going on in the red houses even now.
I hope you know the proper name of our road,
said Delavoye as we turned into it. It’s Mulcaster Park, as you see, and not Mulcaster Park Road, as it was when we came here in the spring. Our neighbours have risen in a body against the superfluous monosyllable, and it’s been painted out for ever.
In spite of that precaution Mulcaster Park was still suspiciously like a road. It was very long and straight, and the desired illusion had not been promoted by the great names emblazoned on some of the little wooden gates. Thus there was Longleat, which had just been let for £70 on a three-year tenancy, and Chatsworth with a C. P. card in the drawing-room window. Plain No. 7, the Delavoyes’ house, was near the far end on the left-hand side, which had the advantage of a strip of unspoilt woodland close behind the back gardens; and just through the wood was Witching Hill House, scene of immemorial excesses, according to this descendant of the soil.
But now it’s in very different hands,
he remarked as we reached our destination. Sir Christopher Stainsby is apparently all that my ignoble kinsman was not. They say he’s no end of a saint. In winter we see his holy fane from our back windows.
It was not visible through the giant hedge of horse-chestnuts now heavily overhanging the split fence at the bottom of the garden. I had come out through the dining-room with a fresh sense of interest in these Delavoyes. Their furniture was at once too massive and too good for the house. It stood for some old home of very different type. Large oil-paintings and marble statuettes had not been acquired to receive the light of day through windows whose upper sashes were filled with cheap stained glass. A tigerskin with a man-eating head, over which I tripped, had not always been in the way before a cast-iron mantelpiece. I felt sorry, for the moment, that Mrs. and Miss Delavoye were not at home; but I was not so sorry when I beheld the hole in the lawn behind the house.
It had the ugly shape and appearance which had reminded young Delavoye himself of a churchyard. I was bound to admit its likeness to some sunken grave, and the white line bisecting it was not the only evidence that the subsidence was of recent occurrence; the grass was newly mown and as short inside the hole as it was all over. No machine could have made such a job of such a surface, said the son of the house, with a light in his eyes, but a drop in his voice, which made me wonder whether he desired or feared the worst.
What do you want us to do, Mr. Delavoye?
I inquired in my official capacity.
I want it dug up, if I can have it done now, while my mother’s out of the way.
That was all very well, but I had only limited powers. My instructions were to attend promptly to the petty wants of tenants, but to refer any matter of importance to our Mr. Muskett, who lived on the Estate but spent his days at the London office. This appeared to me that kind of matter, and little as I might like my place I could ill afford to risk it by doing the wrong thing. I put all this as well as I could to my new friend, but not without chafing his impetuous spirit.
Then I’ll do the thing myself!
said he, and fetched from the yard some garden implements which struck me as further relics of more spacious days. In his absence I had come to the same conclusion about a couple of high-backed Dutch garden chairs and an umbrella tent; and the final bond of fallen fortunes made me all the sorrier to have put him out. He was not strong; no wonder he was irritable. He threw himself into his task with a kind of feeble fury; it was more than I could stand by and watch. He had not turned many sods when he paused to wipe his forehead, and I seized the spade.
If one of us is going to do this job,
I cried, it shan’t be the one who’s unfit for it. You can take the responsibility, if you like, but that’s all you do between now and two o’clock!
I should date our actual friendship from that moment. There was some boyish bluster on his part, and on mine a dour display which he eventually countenanced on my promising to stay to lunch. Already the sweat was teeming off my face, but my ankles were buried in rich brown mould. A few days before there had been a thunderstorm accompanied by tropical rain, which had left the earth so moist underneath that one’s muscles were not taxed as much as one’s skin. And I was really very glad of the exercise, after the physical stagnation of office life.
Not that Delavoye left everything to me; he shifted the Dutch chairs and the umbrella tent so as to screen my operations alike from the backyard behind us and from the windows of the occupied house next door. Then he hovered over me, with protests and apologies, until the noble inspiration took him to inquire if I liked beer. I stood upright in my pit, and my mouth must have watered as visibly as the rest of my countenance. It appeared he was not allowed to touch it himself, but he would fetch some in a jug from the Mulcaster Arms, and blow the wives of the gentlemen who went to town!
I could no more dissuade him from this share of the proceedings than he had been able to restrain me from mine; perhaps I did not try very hard; but I did redouble my exertions when he was gone, burying my spade with the enthusiasm of a golddigger working a rich claim, and yet depositing each spadeful with some care under cover of the chairs. And I had hardly been a minute by myself when I struck indubitable wood at the