PAGE 4
‘They’
by
Is it so very beautiful? she said wistfully when she heard my raptures. And you like the lead-figures too? Theres the old azalea garden behind. They say that this place must have been made for children. Will you help me out, please? I should like to come with you as far as the cross-roads, but I mustnt leave them. Is that you, Madden? I want you to show this gentleman the way to the cross-roads. He has lost his way buthe has seen them.
A butler appeared noiselessly at the miracle of old oak that must be called the front door, and slipped aside to put on his hat. She stood looking at me with open blue eyes in which no sight lay, and I saw for the first time that she was beautiful.
Remember, she said quietly, if you are fond of them you will come again, and disappeared within the house.
The butler in the car said nothing till we were nearly at the lodge gates, where, catching a glimpse of a blue blouse in a shrubbery, I swerved amply lest the devil that leads little boys to play should drag me into child-murder.
Excuse me, he asked of a sudden, but why did you do that, Sir?
The child yonder.
Our young gentleman in blue?
Of course.
He runs about a good deal. Did you see him by the fountain, Sir?
Oh, yes, several times. Do we turn here?
Yes, Sir. And did you appen to see them upstairs too?
At the upper window? Yes.
Was that before the mistress come out to speak to you, Sir?
A little before that. Why dyou want to know?
He paused a little. Only to make sure thatthat they had seen the car, Sir, because with children running about, though Im sure youre driving particularly careful, there might be an accident. That was all, Sir. Here are the cross-roads. You cant miss your way from now on. Thank you, Sir, but that isnt ourcustom, not with
I beg your pardon, I said, and thrust away the British silver.
Oh, its quite right with the rest of em as a rule. Good-bye, Sir.
He retired into the armour-plated conning tower of his caste and walked away. Evidently a butler solicitous for the honour of his house, and interested, probably through a maid, in the nursery.
Once beyond the signposts at the cross-roads I looked back, but the crumpled hills interlaced so jealously that I could not see where the house had lain. When I asked its name at a cottage along the road, the fat woman who sold sweetmeats there gave me to understand that people with motor cars had small right to livemuch less to go about talking like carriage folk. They were not a pleasant-mannered community.
When I retraced my route on the map that evening I was little wiser. Hawkins Old Farm appeared to be the survey title of the place, and the old County Gazetteer, generally so ample, did not allude to it. The big house of those parts was Hodnington Hall, Georgian with early Victorian embellishments, as an atrocious steel engraving attested. I carried my difficulty to a neighboura deep-rooted tree of that soiland he gave me a name of a family which conveyed no meaning.
A month or so laterI went again, or it may have been that my car took the road of her own volition. She over-ran the fruitless Downs, threaded every turn of the maze of lanes below the hills, drew through the high-walled woods, impenetrable in their full leaf, came out at the cross-roads where the butler had left me, and a little further on developed an internal trouble which forced me to turn her in on a grass way-waste that cut into a summer-silent hazel wood. So far as I could make sure by the sun and a six-inch Ordnance map, this should be the road flank of that wood which I had first explored from the heights above. I made a mighty serious business of my repairs and a glittering shop of my repair kit, spanners, pump, and the like, which I spread out orderly upon a rug. It was a trap to catch all childhood, for on such a day, I argued, the children would not be far off. When I paused in my work I listened, but the wood was so full of the noises of summer (though the birds had mated) that I could not at first distinguish these from the tread of small cautious feet stealing across the dead leaves. I rang my bell in an alluring manner, but the feet fled, and I repented, for to a child a sudden noise is very real terror. I must have been at work half an hour when I heard in the wood the voice of the blind woman crying: Children, oh, children, where
are you? and the stillness made slow to close on the perfection of that cry. She came towards me, half feeling her way between the tree-boles, and though a child, it seemed, clung to her skirt, it swerved into the leafage like a rabbit as she drew nearer.