Coelebs - Coelebs Part 11
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Coelebs Part 11

"I knew it!" the girl exclaimed. "I've a feeling in my bones, when I wake in the dark, that there must be a ghost somewhere."

Robert nodded confirmation.

"Hannah--that's my missis--she used to live 'ousemaid up at the 'All in old squire's time. She seen it. Leastways, she says she 'as," he added in the tone of a man who considers the reliability of the evidence open to question.

"If she says so, of course she must have seen it," Peggy insisted.

"Well," Robert answered, "I dunno. Seems to me if Hannah 'ad a seen it, er'd 'ave left; an' 'er didn' leave, not till I married 'er. But 'er was always tellin' up about thicky ole ghost, though 'er never could describe it. If I'd seen a ghost I'd know wot 'e looked like. Misty, 'er used to say--kind o' misty like, an' big. I've seed misty kind o'

things meself when I've 'ad a drop; but Hannah's teetotal."

Peggy eyed him contemplatively.

"When you are digging graves, Mr Robert, do you never see a ghost?" she asked.

"No," he said. "Nothin' more'n a few ole bones."

"Ugh?" the girl exclaimed.

"There's naught to mind in bones," Robert returned. "They couldn't put theirselves together again, anyway, because parts of 'em would be missin'. But the first lot I 'eaved up turned my stummick, sure. A man gets used to it."

Peggy had a feeling that she had had enough of Robert's society for one day, and, having come to a stile where an inviting lane branched off from the fields, she inquired of him where it led.

"It takes 'ee past the back o' Mr Musgrave's house," he answered.

"Oh," said Peggy, "then I think I am going that way. Thank you very much for seeing me past the danger."

She parted from Robert joyfully, and set off with Diogenes down the muddy roadway between its tall green banks.

"We are going to see the back of the fossil's dwelling; now for adventure number two, Diogenes," she said.

CHAPTER TWELVE.

Peggy was fond of boasting that adventures usually met her on her walks abroad. It is a peculiar conceit with some people to believe that things happen for them. To the imaginative person the unexpected event befalls, and signifies considerably more than it would signify to the person of a practical mind. The adult of Peggy's temperament never grows away from the fairyland of make-believe which usually is considered the sole prerogative of childhood. There is a wonderland for grown people, but not many dwell in it. Peggy dwelt in it, which was one reason why she always derived enjoyment from her country rambles with Diogenes.

But on this particular afternoon the adventures which befell Peggy were less agreeable than exciting. The encounter with the bulls had ended comfortably as a result of the opportune appearance of a knight-errant in the form of Robert; the second adventure had a less agreeable termination, possibly because no knight-errant arrived upon the scene, save in a laggard fashion which was in the nature of an anti-climax.

Diogenes was directly responsible in both instances for everything which occurred. It was unusual for Diogenes to make himself a nuisance; possibly the Moresby air was too exhilarating for him.

When Peggy reached the end of the lane and emerged upon Mr Musgrave's back entrance she paused and looked about her, less from a sense of curiosity than a sudden realisation that the lane was a _cul-de-sac_, and unless she could brace herself to make the return journey by the way she had come, and face again the dangers from which Robert had rescued her, only to leave her basely in the lurch outside the back gate of the dwelling-house of a respectable, fossilised bachelor, she would be forced to make use of the tradesmen's entrance--the notice was painted neatly on the gate--and pass through Mr Musgrave's garden.

"Why not?" said Peggy to herself. "I wanted to see his garden. I told him so; and he didn't respond as a gentleman should. Therefore I will commit a trespass."

She would, have committed anything rather than return by the fields with Diogenes, who, for the first time within her knowledge, had defied her authoritative whistle. Diogenes, having created a precedent by this act of defiance, proceeded to follow it, which is what a precedent exists for. When Peggy, not without the feeling which a burglar must have when he forces his first lock, pushed open the tradesmen's entrance and took a furtive look inside to assure herself no one was on the watch to prevent her, Diogenes got his inquisitive snub nose between the crack, and using his broad shoulders, forced the gate a little wider and entered with a bound.

A rush, a scream, a frantic barking and growling followed, and Peggy, pursuing in hot haste and whistling as authoritatively as her panting breath permitted, arrived at the back door of Mr Musgrave's house, and, hearing a distressing pandemonium within, did not pause to consider the conventions, but dashed through the scullery and into the kitchen.

There such a scene met her eyes as would have moved her to laughter had she not been too frightened to realise the comic element in the domestic drama she beheld. Diogenes held the floor--he was too unwieldy an animal to get above it; but he had cleared every one else off it and remained master of the situation, showing his teeth, and growling hideously in huge enjoyment of the game. The respectable Eliza stood on the table screaming; Martha, the corpulent, was mounted on a chair.

Since she was not screaming, but was merely murmuring, "Good doggie, good doggie?" in a soothing voice, Diogenes was not concerned with her, but gave his whole attention to the subduing of Eliza.

The cause of the first mad rush, Mr Musgrave's sedate tabby, had sprung upon the highest shelf on the dresser, having dislodged in her ascent more of Mr Musgrave's valuable dinner-service than would have seemed necessary in attaining to her present elevation. The floor was strewn with broken china, and the breaker, with arched back and distended tail, looked down upon Diogenes barking amid the debris with the most malignant glare that Peggy had ever beheld in the eyes of a cat.

Peggy swooped down upon Diogenes, and, seizing him by the collar, belaboured him soundly with the dog-whip, which, until the present occasion, she had carried merely from force of habit, as one carries an umbrella in England at certain seasons even when one does not expect it to rain. Diogenes, who had recognised the dog-whip only as the symbol of an invitation to go walking, was so astonished when he realised that this hitherto agreeable-looking object could hurt that he ceased his joyous barking and relapsed into a sulky mood, which changed to a whimpering protest when he discovered that Peggy did not tire as readily as he did of this abominable misuse of the instrument she wielded.

Diogenes had thought it was a game; and the game was having a most discouraging ending.

Mingled with Diogenes' protests, drowning them, indeed, Eliza's noisy wailing, the hissing of the cat, and the soothing reiteration of Martha's "Good doggie!" penetrating Peggy's hearing, took the power out of her arm. She did not laugh, although she experienced an hysterical desire to both laugh and cry, but she left off thrashing Diogenes and fastened the lead to his collar, to Eliza's intense relief, and then looked up.

"I am so sorry," she said, addressing herself to Martha, since Martha alone showed sufficient control to heed her apology. "I've never known him do such a thing before. But he wouldn't hurt anyone--not even the cat. He is perfectly gentle."

He might have been; he was, on the whole; but appearances seemed rather to belie the assertion.

Martha scrambled down from the chair and readjusted her cap, which was drooping coquettishly over one ear.

"Lor'!" she said. "What a fright it give me; it most a turned me inside out."

Diogenes, thoroughly subdued, wagged a tentative tail at her. He rather liked Martha. But when Eliza, still weeping, sat down on the table and, with an unconscious display of thin legs, descended on the far side, he showed a tendency to become restive, and strained at the unaccustomed leash. Peggy cuffed him vigorously, whereupon he subsided and affected to sulk again.

"However could that animal 'ave got in?" exclaimed Martha, at which simple question Peggy felt guilty. She felt more guilty still when Martha added acrimoniously to the weeping Eliza, "That's your fault, Lizer. You must 'ave left the gate open."

"No," said Peggy bravely, conscious of her glowing cheeks, and wishing from the depths of her being that she had faced the bulls rather than trespass on Mr Musgrave's property; "I opened the gate. I wanted to walk through the garden because of the bulls. And then Diogenes saw the cat and escaped from me."

Martha looked amazed, only imperfectly understanding this none too lucid explanation; and Eliza, who had been too upset to know whether she had left the gate open or not, discovering that she was not responsible for the mischance, stared resentfully at the intruder.

"This is private property," she announced in the haughty manner of a person who feels herself by virtue of her residence thereon joint owner of the premises. "You can't walk through private grounds."

What Peggy would have replied, or if she would have replied at all, remained indeterminate. At that moment Martha straightened her cap anew and Eliza started to sniff more loudly and Diogenes ventured on a bark as the kitchen door opened and John Musgrave, with gravely astonished face, stood framed in the aperture, gazing upon the scene.

To Peggy's consternation the displeased glance of the master of the house fell immediately upon the broken china which strewed the floor--he could not possibly overlook it, since it lay almost at his feet--and then lifted and rested accusingly, it seemed to her, upon her blushing face. Her presence in his kitchen was an event which called for some explanation. Peggy proceeded to explain, and to express her regret for the accident. She hoped, despite a desire to punish her, which from his expression she was positive he was experiencing, he would eject her by the front gate instead of the back. It would be horrible if after all these nerve-shattering happenings she would still be obliged to face the bulls.

"Diogenes only chased the cat for fun," she finished, loyally excusing the delinquent, who by no means deserved to have his conduct defended.

"He would not have hurt it really. He's rather partial to cats."

"Indeed!" said Mr Musgrave, and stared up at the cat, who glared back at him defiantly from her position of security. The cat was suffered, not as a pet, but because cats in a house were of use in keeping down the mice. "I think," added Mr Musgrave, "that the cat would feel happier if Diogenes were removed."

"Please," pleaded Peggy humbly, "let us go by the front gate. I am really afraid to cross the fields again. Diogenes chases the bulls."

"'Orrid brute!" muttered Eliza with a sniff so loud that it drew Mr Musgrave's eyes in her direction.

"You had better," he observed drily, "clear away this--rubbish."

He indicated the broken crockery. Then he stood away from the door and looked at Peggy.

"If you will come with me, Miss Annersley, I will take you through the garden. Kindly keep the dog on the lead."

Peggy preceded him from the kitchen in a chastened mood, feeling very like a small girl about to be reprimanded. She resented Mr Musgrave's air of elderly superiority. He might have assured her, before the servants at least, that it did not matter, and told her not to distress herself. She had a conviction that he felt it was only proper she should distress herself, for which reason she determined not to be overwhelmingly contrite. It was his cat that had effected the damage; Diogenes had not scrambled over the furniture.

Mr Musgrave led her through a passage and into the hall, which was wide and spacious, and had a comfortable fire glowing on the low hearth. It was a very nice hall. Peggy looked about her with interested curiosity.

It was a nice house altogether; and Mr Musgrave, as he paused and looked down at her a little uncertainly, did not appear so forbidding as he had looked in the kitchen. After all, considering the amount of damage she and Diogenes were responsible for between them, he had shown admirable control. Peggy was relenting. She experienced the desire to more adequately express her regret.

"Would you like to--rest a little while?" Mr Musgrave asked.

The question was so unexpected that Peggy wanted to laugh. She realised that courtesy alone dragged the reluctant suggestion from her unwilling host, and was aware that acceptance of the invitation by increasing his embarrassment would aggravate her former offence. Mischief prompted assent; but the new feeling of kindliness towards him overruled the teasing instinct, and to Mr Musgrave's relief she declined.