Coelebs - Coelebs Part 23
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Coelebs Part 23

"Oh, I say, Ruby, I am sorry!" was all that he could articulate, as he gazed at the limp bit of fur in her arms and then into her weeping face.

He blamed himself for having brought Diogenes, but most of all he blamed Diogenes for doing the last thing on earth that might have been expected of him. As Mrs Chadwick continued to lament, and continued to hold the dead dog in her arms, his perturbation increased to the extent of causing him to swear.

"Damn that dog!" he exclaimed in exasperation, and put his arm about his wife's shoulders, and took with his disengaged hand the limp, lifeless thing from her. "He didn't suffer at all," he assured her. "It was so quick, he couldn't have realised that he was hurt."

This knowledge was, of course, consoling to the bereaved mistress; but, beside her grief at the loss of her tiny pet, the consolation was insufficient to balance her distress. She laid her head on her husband's shoulder and wept unrestrainedly, to the distrustful amazement of a cow which lifted its head above the hedge to stare at this singular grouping. Fortunately for the cow's peace of mind Diogenes was by now thoroughly subdued, having gathered from the unusual noises disturbing the tranquillity of the day that this game, like another game he had played with Mr Musgrave's cat, promised a less agreeable ending than he had foreseen. He recalled that on that occasion he had been beaten; so he lay down docilely beside the motor and feigned slumber, in the hope that when the fuss was over the cause of it would be forgotten. But Diogenes' fate was even then being sealed on the other side of the hedge.

"Don't cry, Ruby," Mr Chadwick said. "It won't bring the little beggar to life, you know; and you'll make yourself sick. I'll get you another pet, dear."

This promise, though well meaning, was mistaken. In the first shock of her grief Mrs Chadwick recoiled from the suggestion.

"I couldn't have another pet," she wailed. "I loved him so. I couldn't bear another dog in his place. I d-don't want to see a dog again."

"All right," he said. "But buck up, Ruby. Come and get into the car, and I'll drive you home."

"I couldn't endure to have that brute in with me," she sobbed angrily.

"No, of course not. We'll leave the beast behind. You shan't be worried with the sight of him again. I'll shoot him."

He made the promise glibly, in the hope that this threat would rouse her. It roused her effectually, but not in the way in which he had intended. She looked up with a gleam of vindictive satisfaction in her eyes, showing through her tears.

"Oh, do!" she said. "Shoot him to-day. I couldn't see him about after this."

"All right," he acquiesced, none too heartily. Diogenes was a valuable dog, and had, moreover, a winning way with him towards the people whom he liked, and Will Chadwick was certainly one of these. Mr Chadwick could no more have shot the dog with his own hand than he could have shot a child.

"I'll see to it," he said.

The first intimation Diogenes had that it was expected of him that he should walk home was when the car started and left him, mute and bewildered and bespattered with mud, in the road gazing after it. No word had been vouchsafed him, no look. From the silence and the absence of interest in himself he had been deluded into supposing that he was not held responsible for the evil that had been done; but with the disappearance of the car vague doubts disturbed him, and he started in a sour, halfhearted way to follow the car and face his destiny. Even had his intelligence been equal to grasping what that destiny was, so great is the force of habit that he would have returned inevitably to meet it.

Diogenes got back some time after the car, and was met at the entrance by one of the few men employed at the Hall. This person, who had apparently been waiting for him, fastened a lead to his collar and took up a gun which he had rested against a tree, seeming as though he too were bent on posing as a sportsman, which he was not, save in the humble capacity of cleaning his master's guns.

"You come along with me, old fellow," he said, and tried to look grim, but softened on meeting Diogenes' inquiring eye. "Shame, I calls it,"

he ejaculated in a voice of disgust. "Anyone might 'a' made the mistake of taking that there for a rabbit. Blest if I rekernised it for a dog when I seed it first."

He led Diogenes out through the gate and down the road towards a field.

The gate of the field was troublesome to open. While he fumbled with the padlock, his gun resting against the gatepost for the greater freedom of his hands, a joyous bark from Diogenes, who previously had worn a surprisingly docile and depressed mien, as though aware of what was going forward which these preparations portended, caused him to desist from the business of unfastening the gate to look up. When he saw who it was whose hurrying figure Diogenes thus joyfully hailed, he did not trouble to go on with his job, but waited for Peggy to approach.

She came up at a run, and caught at Diogenes' lead, and, holding it, stared at the man.

"What were you going to do with him?" she asked, her accusing eyes going from his face to the gun, and from the gun back again to his face.

"Shoot 'im, miss," he answered. "It's the master's orders."

"Absurd!" cried Peggy angrily. "I won't have it done."

"Sorry, miss," the man replied, looking at her with a mingling of doubt and submission in his glance. "But I'm afraid it'll 'ave to be. Shoot 'im, without delay. Them's my orders."

"Well, you can't obey them," replied Peggy, as calmly as her agitation allowed, "because, you see, I won't let you. You can't shoot him while I hold him, can you?"

"No, miss," he replied. "But it's as much as my place is worth--"

Peggy cut him short.

"I am going to take him away," she said. "I'll hide him... send him away from the place. But I won't have him sacrificed for--for a silly accident like that. Both Mr and Mrs Chadwick will regret it later.

He's a very valuable dog."

"Yes, miss," he said. "I allow it's a shame. But the master was very short and emphatic. What am I to say when 'e asks me if it's done?"

"He won't ask," Peggy answered, as confident that her uncle would be nearly as pained at Diogenes' death as her aunt was over the pekinese.

"He will take it for granted, of course, that it is done. Go into the field and fire off your gun, and then return to the house. I'll see to Diogenes."

"You are quite sure, miss," the man said doubtfully, "that you won't let no one see that there dog? If the master thought that I'd deceived him--"

"No one shall see him," Peggy answered, not considering at the moment the magnitude of this promise. "I take all responsibility. You leave him with me."

"Very good, miss," he said cheerfully, as much relieved to be free from the task appointed him as Peggy was to watch him vault the gate and disappear, gun in hand, into the field.

The next thing she and Diogenes heard was the report of the gun as this pseudo-murderer killed an imaginary dog in the field with bloodthirsty zest.

CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.

The sound of the gun, although it was discharged harmlessly into the unoffending ground, brought home to Peggy the full significance of the sentence that had been passed upon Diogenes, and the narrow shave by which she had prevented its being carried into effect. Diogenes too seemed to realise instinctively the seriousness of the occasion and the vastness of the service rendered him through Peggy's intervention. He pushed his ungainly body against her skirt, instead of straining from the leash as was his practice, and when the report of the gun startled him, as it startled the girl and made her shiver, he lifted his soft eyes to her face wistfully, and pushed a cold nose into her hand for comfort, and licked the hand in humble testimony of his gratitude.

Peggy looked down on him and her eyes filled with tears.

"Oh, Diogenes!" she cried. "Why did you do it?... Oh, Diogenes?"

Diogenes wagged his foolish tail and licked her hand again with yet more effusive demonstrations of affection. So much distressful weeping troubled him. Save when a child screamed at the sight of him, or a foolish person, like Eliza, his experience had not led him to expect tears. Yet to-day here were two people whom he had never seen cry before, lamenting tearfully in a manner which seemed somehow associated with himself. Diogenes could not understand it; and so he sidled consolingly against Peggy, to the incommoding of her progress as she hurried him away down the road.

Where she intended taking him, or what she purposed doing with him, were reflections which so far her mind had not burdened itself with; getting him away from the Hall and beyond the view of anyone connected with the place was sufficient concern for the moment.

When she had covered a distance of about half a mile the difficult question of the safe disposal of Diogenes arose, and, finding her unprepared with any solution of the problem, left her dismayed and perplexed, standing in the road with the subdued Diogenes beside her, at a complete loss what to do next. She looked at Diogenes, looked down the road, looked again at Diogenes, and frowned.

"Oh, you tiresome animal!" she exclaimed. "What am I to do now?"

One thing she dared not do, and that was take Diogenes back.

Peggy sat down in the hedge, risking chills and all the evils attendant on sitting upon damp ground, and drew Diogenes close to her, while she turned over in her busy brain the people she knew who would be most likely to assist her out of this difficulty. The obvious person, the one to whom she would have turned most readily to assist her with every assurance of his helpful sympathy but for that unfortunate interview in the conservatory, was Doctor Fairbridge. She felt incensed when she reflected upon that absurd scene and realised that the man had thereby made his friendship useless to her; that at this crisis when he could have served her she was debarred from seeking his aid, would have been unable to accept it had it been offered. Yet Doctor Fairbridge could have taken Diogenes, would have taken him, she, knew, and might have kept him successfully concealed at Rushleigh. Why, in the name of all that was annoying, had he been so inconsiderate as to propose to her?

"I don't know what I am to do with you, Diogenes," she said. "I don't know where to hide you in a silly little place like this."

Peggy was upset, and so worried with the whole affair, not only with the business of hiding Diogenes, but at the thought of having to part from this good companion who belonged to her in every sense save that of lawful ownership, that she here broke down and began to cry in earnest.

Diogenes lifted a bandy paw and scratched her knee.

"I'm a snivelling idiot, Diogenes," she sobbed. "But I c-can't help it.

You little know what you've done. I wonder whether you will be sorry when you never see me any more?"

Diogenes appeared sufficiently contrite as it was to have settled that doubt. Finding one paw ineffectual, he put both in her lap and licked her downcast face, whereupon Peggy flung her arms about his neck and wept in its thick creases.

It was at this juncture that Mr Musgrave, returning from a country walk, chanced inadvertently upon this affecting scene. So amazed was he on rounding the curve to come all unprepared upon Miss Annersley, seated in the hedge like any vagrant, and weeping more disconsolately than any vagrant he had ever seen, that he came abruptly to a standstill in front of her, and surveying the picture with a sympathy which was none the less real on account of his complete ignorance as to the cause of her grief, he exclaimed in his astonishment: