Classic Audiobook Collection - Grim Tales by E. Nesbit ~ Full Audiobook [horror]
Episode Date: December 10, 2025Grim Tales by E. Nesbit audiobook. Genre: horror Grim Tales by E. Nesbit is a collection of short Victorian-era stories that take the familiar comforts of drawing rooms, seaside holidays, and country... houses and tilt them into the uncanny. Instead of a single hero, Nesbit presents a parade of ordinary people - curious visitors, complacent householders, and practical-minded skeptics - who find that a casual choice, a private wish, or a small act of selfishness can open the door to something coldly inexplicable. Each tale builds with Nesbit's trademark clarity and wit, balancing eerie atmosphere with a sharp eye for human weakness: vanity, greed, jealousy, and the desire to control what should not be controlled. Shadows lengthen in corridors, objects refuse to stay harmless, and the past proves far less settled than anyone would like to believe. Written with brisk pacing and a storyteller's relish for tension, these stories explore the price of temptation and the thin line between the everyday and the supernatural - leaving listeners to wonder what might be waiting just beyond the lamplight. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 1 (00:29:23) Chapter 2 (00:46:52) Chapter 3 (00:55:22) Chapter 4 (01:03:55) Chapter 5 (01:20:26) Chapter 6 (01:29:23) Chapter 7 (01:38:00) Chapter 8 (02:12:15) Chapter 9 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Grim Tales by Edith Nesbit.
Chapter 1, The Ebony Frame
To be rich is a luxurious sensation,
the more so when you have plumbed the depths of hard-upness as a Fleet Street hack,
a picker-up of unconsidered pars, a reporter, an unappreciated journalist.
All callings, utterly inconsistent with one's family feeling,
and one's direct descent from the Dukes of Picardy.
When my aunt Dorcas died and left me 700 a year and a furnished house in Chelsea,
I felt that life had nothing left to offer,
except immediate possession of the legacy.
Even Mildred Mayhew, whom I had hitherto regarded as my life's light,
became less luminous.
I was not engaged to Mildred, but I lodged with her mother,
and I sang duets with Mildred, and gave her gloves when it would run to it, which was seldom.
She was a dear, good girl, and I meant to marry her some day.
It is very nice to feel that a good little woman is thinking of you.
It helps you in your work, and it is pleasant to know she will say,
yes, when you say, will you?
But, as I say, my legacy almost put Mildred out of my head,
especially as she was staying with friends in the country just then.
Before the first gloss was off my new morning,
I was seated in my aunt's own armchair,
in front of the fire in the dining-room of my own house.
My own house!
It was grand, but rather lonely.
I did think of Mildred just then.
The room was comfortably furnished with oak and leather,
On the walls hung a few fairly good oil paintings, but the space above the mantelpiece was disfigured by an exceedingly bad print, the trial of Lord William Russell framed in a dark frame. I got up to look at it. I had visited my aunt with dutiful regularity, but I never remembered seeing this frame before. It was not intended for a print, but for an oil painting. It was of fine ebony.
beautifully and curiously carved.
I looked at it with growing interest,
and when my aunt's housemaid,
I had retained her modest staff of servants,
came in with the lamp.
I asked her how long the print had been there.
Mistress only bought it two days before she was took ill,
she said.
But the frame?
She didn't want to buy a new one,
so she got this out of the attic.
There's lots of curious old things there, sir.
Had my aunt had this frame long?
Oh, yes, sir. It'd come long before I did, and I've been here seven years come Christmas.
There was a picture in it. That's upstairs, too. But it's that black and ugly. It might as well be a chimney-back.
I felt a desire to see this picture. What if it was some priceless old master, in which my aunt's eyes had only seen rubbish?
Directly after breakfast next morning, I paid a visit to the lumber room.
It was crammed with old furniture, enough to stock a curiosity shop.
All the house was furnished solidly in the early Victorian style,
and in this room everything not in keeping with the drawing-room suite ideal was stowed away.
Tables of papier-mache and mother-of-pearl.
Straight-backed chairs with twisted feet and faded needlework cushions.
Fire screens of Old World Design.
Oak Bureau, with brass handles, a little work-table, with its faded, moth-eaten silk flutings,
hanging in disconsolate shreds. On these and the dust that covered them blazed the full daylight
as I drew up the blinds. I promised myself a good time in re-inshrining these household gods
in my parlour, and promoting the Victorian suite to the attic. But at present my business is
was to find the picture as black as the chimney back, and presently, behind a heap of hideous
still life studies, I found it. Jane, the housemaid, identified it at once. I took it downstairs
carefully, and examined it. No subject, no colour, were distinguishable. There was a splodge of a darker
tint in the middle, but whether it was figure, or tree, or house, no man could have told.
It seemed to be painted on a very thick panel bound with leather.
I decided to send it to one of those persons who pour on rotting family portraits the water of eternal youth.
Mere soap and water, Mr. Besant tells us it is.
But even as I did so, the thought occurred to me to try my own restorative hand, at a corner of it.
My bath-sponge, soap and nail-brush vigorously applied for a few seconds, showed me
that there was no picture to clean.
Bear oak presented itself to my persevering brush.
I tried the other side,
Jane watching me with indulgent interest.
The same result.
Then the truth dawned on me.
Why was the panel so thick?
I tore off the leather binding,
and the panel divided and fell to the ground in a cloud of dust.
There were two pictures.
They had been nailed face to face.
I leaned them against the wall,
And the next moment I was leaning against it myself, for one of the pictures was myself,
a perfect portrait, no shade of expression or turn of feature wanting, myself in a cavalier dress,
Love locks and all.
When had this been done?
And how, without my knowledge, was this some whim of my aunts?
Lork, sir, the shrill surprise of Jane at my elbow.
What a lovely photo it is!
Was it a fancy ball, sir?
Yes, I stammered.
I don't think I want anything more now.
You can go.
She went, and I turned, still with my heart beating violently, to the other picture.
This was a woman of the type of beauty beloved of Bern Jones and Rossetti,
straight nose, low brows, full lips, thin hands, large, deep, luminous eyes.
She wore a black velvet gown.
It was a full-length portrait.
Her arms rested on a table beside her, and her head on her hands.
But her face was turned full forward, and her eyes met those of the spectator, bewilderingly.
On the table by her were compasses and instruments whose uses I did not know,
books, a goblet, and a miscellaneous heap of papers and pens.
I saw all this afterwards.
I believe it was a quarter of an hour before I could see.
turn my eyes away from hers. I have never seen any other eyes like hers. They appealed as a child's
or a dog's do. They commanded, as might those of an empress. Shall I sweep up the dust, sir?
Curiosity had brought Jane back. I acceded. I turned from her my portrait. I kept between her and
the woman in the black velvet. When I was alone again, I tore down the trial of Lord William Russell.
and I put the picture of the woman in its strong ebony frame.
Then I wrote to a frame-maker for a frame for my portrait.
It had so long lived face to face with this beautiful witch
that I had not the heart to banish it from her presence,
from which it will be perceived that I am by nature a somewhat sentimental person.
The new frame came home, and I hung it opposite the fireplace.
An exhaustive search among my aunt's papers showed no explanation of the portrait of myself,
no history of the portrait of the woman with the wonderful eyes.
I only learned that all the old furniture together had come to my aunt at the death of my
great uncle, the head of the family, and I should have concluded that the resemblance was
only a family one, if everyone who came in had not exclaimed at the speaking likeness.
I adopted Jane's Fancy Ball explanation.
And there, one might suppose, the matter of the portraits ended.
One might suppose it, that is, if there were not evidently a good deal more written here about it.
However, to me, then, the matter seemed ended.
I went to see Mildred.
I invited her and her mother to come and stay with me.
I rather avoided glancing at the picture in the ebony frame.
I could not forget nor remember without singular emotion
the look in the eyes of that woman when mine first met them.
I shrank from meeting that look again.
I reorganised the house somewhat, preparing for Mildred's visit.
I turned the dining-room into a drawing-room.
I brought down much of the old-fashioned furniture,
and, after a long day of arranging and rearranging, I sat down before the fire, and, lying back
in a pleasant languor, I idly raised my eyes to the picture. I met her dark, deep, hazel eyes,
and once more my gaze was held fixed, as by a strong magic, the kind of fascination that keeps one
sometimes staring for whole minutes into one's own eyes in the glass.
I gazed into her eyes and felt my own dilate, pricked with the smart like the smart of tears.
I wish, I said,
Oh, how I wish you were a woman, and not a picture.
Come down, oh, come down!
I laughed at myself as I spoke, but even as I laughed I held out my arms.
I was not sleepy, I was not drunk.
I was, as wide awake and as sober as ever was.
a man in this world. And yet, as I held out my arms, I saw the eyes of the picture dilate.
Her lips tremble. If I were to be hanged for saying it, it is true. Her hands moved slightly,
and a sort of flicker of a smile passed over her face. I sprang to my feet.
This won't do, I said still aloud. Firelight does play strange tricks. I'll have the lamp.
I pulled myself together and made for the bell. My hand was on it when I heard a sound behind me.
and turned, the bell still unwrung.
The fire had burned low, and the corners of the room were deeply shadowed.
But surely, there, behind the tall, worked chair, was something darker than a shadow.
I must face this out, I said, or I shall never be able to face myself again.
I left the bell, I seized the poker, and battered the dull coals to ablaze.
Then I stepped back resolutely and looked up at the picture.
The ebony frame was empty.
From the shadow of the worked chair came a silken rustle,
And out of the shadow, the woman of the picture was coming,
Coming towards me.
I hope I shall never again know a moment of terror,
So blank and absolute,
I could not have moved or spoken to save my life.
Either all the known laws of nature were nothing, or I was mad.
I stood trembling,
But I am thankful to remember, I stood still,
while the black velvet gown swept across the hearth-rug towards me.
Next moment a hand touched me, a hand soft, warm and human,
and a low voice said,
You called me, I am here.
At that touch and that voice,
the world seemed to give a sort of bewildering half-turn.
I hardly know how to express it,
but at once it seemed not awful, not even unusual,
for portraits to become flesh, only most natural, most right, most unspeakably fortunate.
I laid my hand on hers. I looked from her to my portrait. I could not see it in the firelight.
We are not strangers, I said. Oh no, not strangers. Those luminous eyes were looking up into mine.
Those red lips were near me, with a passionate cry, a sense of having suddenly recovered
life's one great good that had seemed wholly lost. I clasped her in my arms. She was no ghost,
she was a woman, the only woman in the world.
How long, I said, oh love, how long since I lost you! She leaned back, hanging her full weight
on the hands that were clasped behind my head. How can I tell how long?
There is no time in hell, she answered.
It was not a dream.
Ah, no, there are no such dreams.
I wish to God there could be.
When in dreams do I see her eyes, hear her voice,
feel her lips against my cheek,
hold her hands to my lips,
as I did that night, the supreme night of my life.
At first we hardly spoke,
it seemed enough, after long grief and pain,
to feel the arms of my true love round me once again.
It is very difficult to tell this story.
There are no words to express the sense of glad reunion,
the complete realization of every hope and dream of a life
that came upon me as I sat with my hand in hers and looked into her eyes.
How could it have been a dream?
when I left her sitting in the straight-backed chair,
and went down to the kitchen to tell the maids I should want nothing more,
that I was busy, and did not wish to be disturbed.
When I fetched wood for the fire with my own hands,
and bringing it in, found her, still sitting there,
saw the little brown head turn as I entered,
saw the love in her dear eyes,
when I threw myself at her feet,
and blessed the day I was born,
since life had given me this.
Not a thought of Mildred.
All the other things in my life were a dream.
This, it's one splendid reality.
I am wondering, she said after a while,
when we had made such cheer each of the other
as true lovers may after long parting.
I am wondering how much you remember of our past.
I remember nothing, I said.
Oh, my dear lady, my dear sweet,
I remember nothing, but that I love you, that I have loved you all my life.
You remember nothing, really nothing?
Only that I am yours, that we have both suffered, that, tell me, my mistress, dear, all that you remember, explain it all to me, make me understand, and yet, no, I don't want to understand.
It is enough that we are together.
If it was a dream, why have I never dreamed it again?
leaned down towards me. Her arm lay on my neck and drew my head till it rested on her shoulder.
"'I am a ghost, I suppose,' she said, laughing softly, and her laughter stirred memories which
I just grasped at and just missed.
"'But you and I know better, don't we? I will tell you everything you have forgotten.
We loved each other.'
"'Ah, no, you have not forgotten that. And when you came back—'
from the war. We were to be married. Our pictures were painted before you went away. You know I was more
learned than women of that day. Dear one, when you were gone, they said I was a witch. They tried
me. They said I should be burned. Just because I had looked at the stars and had gained more
knowledge than they, they must needs bind me to a stake and let me be eaten by the fire.
And you, far away.
Her whole body trembled and shrank.
Oh, love!
What dream would have told me that my kisses would soothe even that memory?
The night before, she went on,
The devil did come to me.
I was innocent before.
You know it, don't you?
And even then, my sin was for you, for you,
because of the exceeding love I bore you.
The devil came, and I sold my soul.
to eternal flame. But I got a good price. I got the right to come back through my picture,
if anyone looking at it wished for me, as long as my picture stayed in its ebony frame. That frame was
not carved by man's hand. I got the right to come back to you, oh, my heart's heart.
And another thing I won which, you shall hear anon. They burned me for a witch. They
made me suffer hell on earth, those faces all crowding round, the crackling wood and the smell of the smoke.
Oh, love, no more, no more.
When my mother sat that night before my picture, she wept and cried,
Come back, my poor lost child, and I went to her with glad leaps of heart.
Dear, she shrank from me.
She fled.
She shrieked and moaned of ghosts.
She had our pictures covered from sight, and put again in the ebony frame.
She had promised me my picture should stay always there.
Ah, through all these years, your face was against mine.
She paused.
But the man you loved?
You came home.
My picture was gone.
They lied to you, and you married another woman.
But someday I knew you would walk the world again, and that I should find you.
"'The other gain?' I asked.
"'The other gain,' she said slowly,
"'I gave my soul for.
"'It is this.
"'If you also will give up your hopes of heaven,
"'I can remain a woman,
"'I can move in your world,
"'I can be your wife.'
"'Oh, my dear, after all these years,
"'at last, at last,
"'if I sacrifice my soul,'
"'I said slowly with no thought,
of the imbecility of such talk in our so-called 19th century.
If I sacrifice my soul, I win you.
Why, love, it's a contradiction in terms.
You are my soul.
Her eyes looked straight into mine.
Whatever might happen, whatever did happen,
whatever may happen,
our two souls in that moment met and became one.
Then you choose, you deliberately choose,
to give up your hopes of Heaven.
for me, as I gave up mine for you. I decline, I said, to give up my hope of heaven on any terms.
Tell me what I must do that you and I may make our heaven here, as now, my dear love.
I will tell you tomorrow, she said. Be alone here, tomorrow night. Twelve is ghost's time,
isn't it? And then I will come out of the picture, and never go back to it. I shall live with
with you, and die, and be buried, and there will be an end of me. But we shall live first, my
heart's heart. I laid my head on her knee. A strange drowsiness overcame me. Holding her hand
against my cheek I lost consciousness. When I awoke, the grey November dawn was glimmering,
ghost-like, through the uncurtained window. My head was pillowed on my arm, which rested—I raised my head
quickly, ah, not on my lady's knee, but on the needle-worked cushion of the straight-backed chair.
I sprang to my feet. I was stiff with cold and dazed with dreams, but I turned my eyes on the
picture. There she sat, my lady, my dear love. I held out my arms, but the passionate cry
I would have uttered died on my lips. She had said, twelve o'clock. Her lightest word was my
So I only stood in front of the picture, and gazed into those grey-green eyes till tears
of passionate happiness filled my own.
Oh, my dear, my dear, how shall I pass the hours till I hold you again?
No thought then of my whole life's completion and consummation being a dream.
I staggered up to my room, fell across my bed, and slept heavily and dreamlessly.
When I awoke it was high noon, Mildred and her mother were coming to lunch.
I remembered at one shock Mildred's coming and her existence.
Now, indeed, the dream began.
With a penetrating sense of the futility of any action apart from her,
I gave the necessary orders for the reception of my guests.
When Mildred and her mother came, I received them with cordiality.
But my genial phrases all seemed to be,
someone else's. My voice sounded like an echo. My heart was otherware. Still, the situation was not
intolerable until the hour when afternoon tea was served in the drawing-room. Mildred and her mother
kept the conversational pot boiling with a profusion of genteel commonplaces, and I bore it,
as one can bear mild purgatories when one is in sight of heaven. I looked up at my sweetheart in the
ebony frame, and I felt that anything that might happen, any irresponsible imbecility, any
bathos of boredom, was nothing if, after it all, she came to me again.
And yet, when Mildred too looked at the portrait and said,
What a fine lady! One of your flames, Mr. Divine?
I had a sickening sense of impotent irritation, which became absolute torture when Mildred.
How could I ever have admired that...
chocolate-boxed bar-made style of prettiness, threw herself into the high-backed chair,
covering the needlework with her ridiculous flounces, and added,
"'Silence gives consent! Who is it, Mr. Divine? Tell us all about her. I'm sure she has a story.'
Poor little Mildred, sitting there, smiling, serene in her confidence that her every word
charmed me, sitting there with her rather pinched waist, her rather tight boot,
her rather vulgar voice, sitting in the chair where my dear lady had sat when she told me
her story. I could not bear it. Don't sit there, I said. It's not comfortable. But the girl
would not be warned. With a laugh that set every nerve in my body vibrating with annoyance,
she said, Oh dear, mustn't I even sit in the same chair as your black velvet woman?
I looked at the chair in the picture. It was the same. And in my own.
In her chair Mildred was sitting.
Then a horrible sense of the reality of Mildred came upon me.
Was all this a reality after all?
But for fortunate chance, might Mildred have occupied not only her chair, but her place
in my life?
I rose.
I hope you won't think me very rude, I said, but I am obliged to go out.
I forget what appointment I alleged.
The lie came readily enough.
I faced Mildred's pouts, with the hope that she and her mother would not wait dinner for me.
I fled.
In another minute I was safe, alone, under the chill, cloudy autumn sky,
free to think, think, think of my dear lady.
I walked for hours along streets and squares.
I lived over again and again every look, word, and hand-touch, every kiss.
I was completely unspeakably happy.
Mildred was utterly forgotten.
My lady of the ebony frame filled my heart and soul and spirit.
As I heard Eleven boom through the fog, I turned and went home.
When I got to my street, I found a crowd surging through it, a strong red light filling the air.
A house was on fire.
Mine!
I elbowed my way through the crowd.
The picture of my lady, that at least I could save.
As I sprang up the stairs I saw as in a dream.
Yes, all this was really dreamlike.
I saw Mildred leaning out of the first-floor window, wringing her hands.
Come back, sir! cried a fireman.
We'll get the young lady out right enough.
But my lady!
I went on up the stairs, cracking, smoking, and as hot as hell,
to the room where her picture was.
Strange to say, I only felt that the picture was a thing.
thing we should like to look on through the long, glad, wedded life that was to be ours.
I never thought of it as being one with her.
As I reached the first floor, I felt arms round my neck.
The smoke was too thick for me to distinguish features.
Save me, a voice whispered.
I clasped a figure in my arms, and, with a strange dis-ease, bore its downs shaking stairs,
and out into safety.
It was Mildred.
I knew that.
directly I clasped her.
Stand back, cried the crowd.
Everyone's safe, cried a fireman.
The flames leaped from every window.
The sky grew redder and redder.
I sprang from the hands that would have held me.
I leapt up the stairs.
I crawled up the stairs.
Suddenly the whole horror of the situation came on me.
As long as my picture remains in the ebony frame,
what if picture and frame perished together?
I fought with the fire, and with my own choking inability to fight with it.
I pushed on.
I must save my picture.
I reached the drawing-room.
As I sprang in, I saw my lady, I swear it,
through the smoke and the flames, hold out her arms to me,
to me, who came too late to save her,
and to save my own life's joy.
I never saw her again.
Before I could reach her, or cry out to her,
I felt the floor yielded beneath my feet, and I fell into the fiery hell below.
How did they save me? What does that matter? They saved me somehow, curse them.
Every stick of my aunt's furniture was destroyed. My friends pointed out that, as the furniture
was heavily insured, the carelessness of a nightly, studious housemaid, had done me no harm.
No harm! That was how I won and lost my own.
I deny with all my soul in the denial that it was a dream.
There are no such dreams.
Dreams of longing and pain there are in plenty,
but dreams of complete, of unspeakable happiness?
Ah, no, it is the rest of life that is the dream.
But if I think that, why have I married Mildred
and grown stout and dull and poor,
prosperous. I tell you, it is all this that is the dream. My dear lady only is the reality.
And what does it matter what one does in a dream?
End of the ebony frame.
Chapter 2 of Grim Tales by Edith Nesbit.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, recording by Peter Yearsley.
by E. Nesbit, Chapter 2, John Charrington's Wedding.
No one ever thought that May Forster would marry John Charrington,
but he thought differently,
and things which John Charrington intended,
had a queer way of coming to pass.
He asked her to marry him before he went up to Oxford.
She laughed and refused him.
He asked her again next time he came home.
Again she laughed,
tossed her dainty blonde head and again refused.
A third time, he asked her.
She said it was becoming a confirmed bad habit,
and laughed at him more than ever.
John was not the only man who wanted to marry her.
She was the bell of our village coterie,
and we were all in love with her, more or less.
It was a sort of fashion,
like heliotrope ties or Inverness capes.
Therefore, we were as much annoyed as supposed,
when John Sharrington walked into our little local club,
we held it in a loft over the Sadlers, I remember,
and invited us all to his wedding.
You're a wedding?
You don't mean it.
Who's the happy fair?
When's it to be?
John Charrington filled his pipe and lighted it,
before he replied,
then he said,
I'm sorry to deprive you, fellas, of your only joke,
but Miss Forster and I are to be married in September.
You don't mean it.
He's got the mitten again,
and it's turned his head.
No, I said, rising.
I see it's true.
Led me a pistol someone,
or a first-class fare to the other end of nowhere.
Charrington has bewitched the only pretty girl in our twenty-mile radius.
Was it mesmerism or a love-potion, Jack?
Neither, sir, but a gift you'll never have, perseverance,
and the best luck a man ever had in this world.
There was something in his voice that silenced me,
and all chaff of the other fellows failed to draw him further.
The queer thing about it was that when we congratulated Miss Forster,
she blushed and smiled and dimpled for all the world as though she were in love with him,
and had been in love with him all the time.
Upon my word I think she had.
Women are strange creatures.
We were all asked to the wedding.
In Bricksham, everyone who was anybody knew everybody else who was anyone.
My sisters were, I truly believe, more interested in the trousseau than the bride herself,
and I was to be best man.
The coming marriage was much canvassed at afternoon tea-tables,
and at our little club over the Sadlers,
and the question was always asked,
Does she care for him?
I used to ask that question myself in the early days of their engagement,
but after a certain evening in August I never asked it again.
I was coming home from the club through the churchyard.
Our church is on a time-grown hill,
and the turf about it is so thick and soft
that one's footsteps are noiseless.
I made no sound as I vaulted the low-likened wall,
and threaded my way between the tombstones.
It was at the same instant that I heard John Sherrington's voice
and saw her.
May was sitting on a low, flat gravestone.
Her face turned towards the full,
splendour of the Western Sun. Its expression ended, at once and forever, any question of love for him.
It was transfigured to a beauty I should not have believed possible, even to that beautiful little
face. John lay at her feet, and it was his voice that broke the stillness of the golden
August evening. "'My dear, my dear, I believe I should come back from the dead if you wanted me.'
I coughed at once to indicate my presence, and passed on into the shadow, fully enlightened.
The wedding was to be early in September. Two days before, I had to run up to town on business.
The train was late, of course, for we are on the southeastern, and as I stood grumbling with my watch in my hand,
whom should I see but John Charrington and May Forster. They were walking up and down the
unfrequented end of the platform, arm in arm, looking into each other's eyes, careless of the
sympathetic interest of the porters. Of course, I knew better than to hesitate a moment before
burying myself in the booking office, and it was not till the train drew up at the platform
that I obtrusively passed the pair with my Gladstone, and took the corner in a first-class
smoking carriage. I did this with as good an air of not seeing them as I could assume. I pride
myself on my discretion. But if John were travelling alone, I wanted his company. I had it.
Hello, old man, came his cheery voice, as he swung his bag into my carriage.
Here's luck. I was expecting a dull journey.
Where are you off to? I asked, discretion still bidding me turn my eyes away, though I saw
without looking that hers were red-rimmed.
To old Brambridge's, he answered, shutting the door and leaning out for a last word with his
sweetheart. Oh, I wish you wouldn't go, John, she was saying in a low, earnest voice.
I feel certain something will happen. Do you think I should let anything happen to keep me?
And the day after tomorrow, our wedding day, don't go, she answered, with a pleading intensity
which would have sent my gladstone onto the platform, and me after it. But she wasn't speaking
to me. John Sharrington was made differently. He rarely changed his opinions.
never his resolutions.
He only stroked the little ungloved hands that lay on the carriage door.
I must, May.
The old boy's been awfully good to me, and now he's dying.
I must go and see him, but I shall come home in time for—
The rest of the parting was lost in a whisper,
and in the rattling lurch of the starting train.
You're sure to come, she spoke as the train moved.
Nothing shall keep me, he answered, and we steamed out.
After he had seen the last of the little figure on the platform, he leaned back in his
corner and kept silence for a minute.
When he spoke it was to explain to me that his godfather, whose heir he was, lay dying
at Peas Marsh Place, some fifty miles away, and had sent for John, and John had felt bound
to go.
I shall be surely back to-morrow, he said, or if not the day after, in heaps of time.
heaven one hasn't, to get up in the middle of the night to get married nowadays.
And suppose Mr. Brambridge dies. Alive or dead, I mean to be married on Thursday, John answered,
lighting a cigar and unfolding the times. At Peas Marsh Station we said goodbye, and he got out,
and I saw him ride off. I went on to London, where I stayed the night. When I got home the next
afternoon, a very wet one, by the way, my sister greeted me with,
"'Where's Mr. Charrington?'
"'Goodness knows,' I answered testily.
"'Every man, since Cain, has resented that kind of question.'
"'I thought you might have heard from him,' she went on,
"'as you're to give him away to-morrow.'
"'Isn't he back?' I asked,
"'for I had confidently expected to find him at home.'
"'No, Geoffrey.
"'My sister, Fanny, always had a way of jumping to conclusions,
especially such conclusions as were least favourable to her fellow creatures.
He has not returned, and what is more you may depend upon it, he won't.
You mock my words, there'll be no wedding to-morrow.
My sister Fanny has a power of annoying me, which no other human being possesses.
You mark my words, I retorted with Asperity.
You had better give up making such a thundering idiot of yourself.
There'll be more wedding to-morrow than ever you'll take the first part in.
A prophecy, which, by the way, came true.
But, though I could snarl confidently to my sister,
I did not feel so comfortable,
when late that night I, standing on the doorstep of John's house,
heard that he had not returned.
I went home gloomily through the rain.
Next morning brought a brilliant blue sky, gold sun,
and all such softness of air and beauty of cloud
as go to make up a perfect day.
I woke with a vague feeling of having gone to bed anxious,
and of being rather averse to facing that anxiety
in the light of full wakefulness.
But with my shaving water came a note from John,
which relieved my mind,
and sent me up to the Forsters with a light heart.
May was in the garden.
I saw her blue gown through the hollyhocks,
as the lodge gates swung to behind me.
So I did not go up to the house,
but turned aside down the turfed path.
"'He's written to you, too,' she said,
"'without preliminary greeting, when I reached her side.
"'Yes, I'm to meet him at the station at three
"'and come straight on to the church.'
"'Her face looked pale,
"'but there was a brightness in her eyes,
"'and a tender quiver about the mouth
"'that spoke of renewed happiness.
"'Mr Branbridge begged him so to stay another night
"'that he had not the heart to refuse,'
"'she went on.
"'He is so kind, but I wish he had.
hadn't stayed. I was at the station at half-past two. I felt rather annoyed with John. It seemed
a sort of slight to the beautiful girl who loved him, that he should come, as it were out of
breath and with the dust of travel upon him, to take her hand, which some of us would have given
the best years of our lives to take. But when the three o'clock train glided in, and glided
out again, having brought no passengers to our little station, I was more than a night. I was more than
There was no other train for 35 minutes.
I calculated that with much hurry we might just get to the church in time for the ceremony,
but oh, what a fool to miss that first train!
What other man could have done it!
That 35 minutes seemed a year, as I wandered round the station, reading the advertisements
and the timetables, and the company's bylaws, and getting more and more angry with John
Sherrington. This confidence in his own power of getting everything he wanted the minute he wanted it
was leading him too far. I hate waiting. Everyone does, but I believe I hate it more than anyone else.
The 335 was late, of course. I ground my pipe between my teeth and stamped with impatience as I
watched the signals. Click, the signal went down. Five minutes later, I flung myself into the
carriage that I had brought for John.
Drive to the church, I said, as someone shut the door.
Mr. Charrington hasn't come by this train.
Anxiety now replaced anger.
What had become of the man?
Could he have been taken suddenly ill?
I had never known him have a day's illness in his life, and even so he might have telegraphed.
Some awful accident must have happened to him.
The thought that he had played her false never, no, not for a moment, entered my head.
Yes, something terrible had happened to him, and on me,
lay the task of telling his bride. I almost wished the carriage would upset and break my head,
so that someone else might tell her, not I. Who? But that's nothing to do with his story.
It was five minutes to four, as we drew up at the churchyard gate. A double row of eager onlookers
lined the path from Litchgate to porch. I sprang from the carriage and passed up between them.
Our gardener had a good front place near the door. I stopped.
Are they waiting still, Biles? I asked, simply
to gain time, for of course I knew they were, by the waiting crowd's attentive attitude.
Waiting, sir? No, no, sir. Wait, must be over by now. Over? Then Mr. Charrington's come?
To the minute, sir. Must have missed you somehow. And I say, sir, luring his voice, I never see Mr.
John the least bit so afore, but my opinion is he's been drinking pretty free.
His clothes was all dusty, and his face like a sheet. I tell you, I didn't like to. I didn't like
the looks of him at all, and the folks inside are saying all sorts of things.
You'll see something's gone very wrong with Mr. John, and he's tried liquor.
He looked like a ghost, and then he went with his eyes straight before him, with never a look
or a word for none of us, him that was always such a gentleman. I had never heard Biles make
so long a speech. The crowd in the churchyard were talking in whispers, and getting ready, rice and
slippers to throw at the bride and bridegroom. The ringers were ready with their hands on the ropes,
to wring out the merry peel as the bride and bridegroom should come out. A murmur from the church
announced them. Out they came. Biles was right. John Charrington did not look himself. There was
dust on his coat. His hair was disarranged. He seemed to have been in some row, for there was a black
mark above his eyebrow. He was deathly pale, but his pallor was not greater than that of the bride.
who might have been carved in ivory, dress, veil, orange blossoms, face, and all.
As they passed out, the ringers stopped. There were six of them,
and then, on the ears expecting the gay wedding-peel, came the slow tolling of the passing bell.
A thrill of horror at so foolish a jest from the ringers passed through us all.
But the ringers themselves dropped the ropes, and fled like rabbits out into the sunlight.
The bride shuddered, and grey shadows came about her mouth.
But the bridegroom led her on down the path where the people stood with the handfuls of rice.
But the handfuls were never thrown, and the wedding bells never rang.
In vain the ringers were urged to remedy their mistake.
They protested, with many whispered expletives, that they would see themselves further first.
In a hush, like the hush in the chamber of death, the bridal pair passed,
into their carriage, and its door slammed behind them. Then the tongues were loosed, a babel of anger,
wonder, conjecture from the guests and the spectators. If I had seen his condition, sir, said old
Forster to me as we drove off. I would have stretched him on the floor of the church, sir, by heaven I
would, before I'd have let him marry my daughter. Then he put his head out of the window.
Drive like hell, he cried to the coachman. Don't spare the horses. He was obeyed. We passed the bride's
carriage. I forbore to look at it, and Old Forster turned his head away and swore. We reached home
before it. We stood in the hall doorway, in the blazing afternoon sun, and in about half a minute
we heard wheels crunching the gravel. When the carriage stopped in front of the steps,
Old Forster and I ran down. Great Heaven! The carriage is empty! And yet? I had the door open
in a minute, and this is what I saw. No sign of John Charrington.
and of May his wife, only a huddled heap of white satin, lying half on the floor of the carriage
and half on the seat.
"'I drove straight here, sir,' said the coachman, as the bride's father lifted her out,
and I'll swear no one got out of the carriage.
We carried her into the house in her bridal dress, and drew back her veil.
I saw her face.
Shall I ever forget it?
White, white and drawn with agony and horror, bearing such a look
of terror, as I have never seen since except in dreams, and her hair, her radiant, blonde
hair, I tell you it was white like snow.
As we stood, her father and I, half mad with the horror and mystery of it, a boy came
up the avenue, a telegraph boy.
They brought the orange envelope to me.
I tore it open.
Mr. Charrington was thrown from the dog-cart on his way to the station at half-past-one, killed
on the spot. And he was married to May Forster in our parish church at half-past three
in presence of half the parish. I shall be married, dead or alive. What had passed in that carriage
on the homeward drive? No one knows. No one will ever know. Oh, May, oh my dear.
Before a week was over, they laid her beside her husband.
in our little churchyard on the time-covered hill,
the churchyard where they had kept their love-trists.
Thus was accomplished John Charrington's Wedding.
The End of John Charrington's Wedding.
Chapter 3 of Grimm Tales by Edith Nesbitt.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Peter Yearsley.
Uncle Abraham
romance. No, my dear, my uncle Abraham answered me. No, nothing romantic ever happened to me,
unless, but no, that wasn't romantic, either. I was, to me, I being 18, romance was the world.
My uncle Abraham was old and lame. I followed the gaze of his faded eyes, and my own rested on a miniature
that hung at his elbow-chairs right hand,
a portrait of a woman whose loveliness,
even the miniature painter's art,
had been powerless to disguise.
A woman with large, lustrous eyes
and perfect oval face.
I rose to look at it.
I had looked at it a hundred times.
Often enough in my baby days I had asked,
Who's that, uncle?
Always receiving the same answer.
A lady who died long ago, my dear.
As I looked again at the picture, I asked,
Was she like this?
Who?
Your romance.
Uncle Abraham looked hard at me.
Yes.
He said at last, very, very like.
I sat down on the floor by him.
Won't you tell me about her?
There's nothing to tell, he said.
I think it was fancy mostly, and folly.
But it's the realest thing in my way.
my long life, my dear. A long pause. I kept silence. Hurry, no man's cattle. It's a good motto,
especially with old people. I remember, he said, in the dreamy tone, always promising so well
to the ear that a story delighteth. I remember when I was a young man, I was very lonely indeed.
I never had a sweetheart. I was always lame, my dear, from quite a boy, and the girls used to laugh at me.
He sighed. Presently he went on, and so I got into the way of mooning off by myself in lonely places,
and one of my favourite walks was up through our churchyard, which was set high on a hill, in the
middle of the marsh country. I liked that, because I never met anyone there. It's all over,
years ago. I was a silly lad, but I couldn't bear of a summer evening to hear a rustle and a whisper
from the other side of the hedge, or maybe a kiss as I went by. Well, I used to go and sit all by
myself in the churchyard, which was always sweet with time, and quite light, on account of
it being so high, long after the marshes were dark. I used to watch the bats flitting about in the
red light, and wonder why God didn't make everyone's legs straight and strong, and wicked follies
like that. But by the time the light was gone, I had always worked it off, so to speak,
and could go home quietly, and say my prayers without any bitterness. Well, one hot night in August,
when I had watched the sunset fade, and the crescent moon grow golden, I was just stepping over the
low stone wall of the churchyard. When I heard a rustle behind me, I turned round expecting it to be a
rabbit or a bird. It was a woman. He looked at the portrait. So did I. Yes, he said,
that was her very face. I was a bit scared, and said something. I don't know what. And she laughed,
and said, did I think she was a ghost? And I answered back, and I stayed talking to her over the
churchyard wall, till it was quite dark, and the glow-worms were out in the wet grass, all along
the way home. Next night I saw her again, and the next night, and the next, always at twilight time,
and if I passed any lovers leaning on the styles in the marshes, it was nothing to me now.
Again my uncle paused. It's very long ago, he said slowly, and I'm an old man, but
But I know what youth means and happiness, though I was always lame, and the girls used to laugh at me.
I don't know how long it went on. You don't measure time in dreams. But at last your grandfather said,
I looked as if I had one foot in the grave, and he would be sending me to stay with Alkin at Bath,
and take the waters. I had to go. I could not tell my father why I would rather had died than go.
What was her name, uncle? I asked. She never would tell me her name, and why should she?
I had names enough in my heart to call her by. Marriage? My dear, even then I knew marriage was not for me.
But I met her, night after night, always in our churchyard where the yew trees were, and the likened gravestones.
It was there we always met and always parted. The last time was the night-peachers.
before I went away. She was very sad, and dearer than life itself, and she said,
If you come back before the new moon, I shall meet you here, just as usual. But if the
new moon shines on this grave, and you are not here, you will never see me again any more.
She laid her hand on the yellow, likened tomb against which we had been leaning. It was an old
weather-worn stone, and bore on it the inscription, Susanna King's North,
Ob 1713
I shall be here, I said.
I mean it, she said, with deep and sudden seriousness.
It is no fancy.
You will be here when the new moon shines, I promised, and after a while we parted.
I had been with my kids' folk at Bath nearly a month.
I was to go home on the next day.
When turning over a case in the parlour, I came upon that miniature.
i could not speak for a minute at last i said with dry tongue and heart beating to the tune of heaven and hell who is this that said my aunt oh she was betrothed to one of our family many years ago but she died before the wedding they say she was a bit of a witch a handsome one wasn't she
i looked again at the face the lips the eyes of my dear and lovely love whom i was to meet to-morrow night when the new moon shone on that two
in our churchyard.
Did you say she was dead?
I asked, and I hardly knew my own voice.
Years and years ago, her name's on the back and her date.
I took the portrait from its faded red velvet bed,
and red on the back, Susanna Kings North, Ob, 1713.
That was in 1813.
My uncle stopped short.
What happened?
I asked breathlessly.
I believe I had a fit.
My uncle answered slowly.
At any rate, I was very ill.
And you missed the new moon on the grave?
I missed the new moon on the grave.
And you never saw her again?
I never saw her again.
But, uncle, do you really believe, can the dead...
Was she? Did you?
My uncle took out his pipe and filled it.
It's a long time ago.
He said,
a many, many years.
Old men's tales, my dear.
Old men's tales.
Don't you take any notice of them?
He lighted the pipe,
puffed silently a moment or two,
and then added,
But I know what youth means,
and happiness,
though I was lame,
and the girls used to laugh at me.
The end of chapter three.
Chapter 4 of Grim Tales
By Edith Nesbit.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, recording by Peter Yearsley.
The mystery of the semi-detached
He was waiting for her.
He had been waiting an hour and a half in a dusty suburban lane,
with a row of big elms on one side and some eligible building sites on the other,
and, far away to the south-west, the twinkling yellow lights of the Crystal Palace.
It was not quite like a country lane, for it had a pavement and lamp-posts, but it was not a bad place for a meeting all the same.
And farther up towards the cemetery, it was really quite rural and almost pretty, especially in Twilight.
But Twilight had long deepened into night, and still he waited.
He loved her, and he was engaged to be married to her, with the complete,
disapproval of every reasonable person who had been consulted.
And this half-clandestine meeting was tonight to take the place of the grudgingly sanctioned weekly interview,
because a certain rich uncle was visiting at her house,
and her mother was not the woman to acknowledge to a moneyed uncle who might go off any day,
a match so deeply ineligible as hers with him.
So he waited for her,
and the chill of an unusually severe May evening
entered into his bones.
The policeman passed him with,
but a surly response to his,
Good night.
The bicyclists went by him like grey ghosts with foghorns,
and it was nearly ten o'clock,
and she had not come.
He shrugged his shoulders and turned towards his lodgings.
His road led him by her house, desirable, commodious, semi-detached,
and he walked slowly as he neared it.
She might even now be coming out.
But she was not.
There was no sign of movement about the house,
no sign of life, no lights even in the windows.
And her people were not early people.
He paused by the gate, wondering.
Then he noticed that the front door was open, wide open, and the street lamp shone a little way into the dark hall.
There was something about all this that did not please him, that scared him a little indeed.
The house had a gloomy and deserted air.
It was obviously impossible that it harboured a rich uncle.
The old man must have left early, in which case—
He walked up the path of patent glazed tiles, and listened.
No sign of life. He passed into the hall. There was no light anywhere.
Where was everybody? And why was the front door open?
There was no one in the drawing-room. The dining-room and the study, nine feet by seven,
were equally blank. Everyone was out, evidently. But the unpleasant sense that he was,
perhaps not the first casual visitor to walk through that open door,
impelled him to look through the house before he went away and closed it after him, so he went upstairs.
And at the door of the first bedroom he came to, he struck a wax match, as he had done in the sitting-rooms.
Even as he did so, he felt that he was not alone, and he was prepared to see something,
but for what he saw he was not prepared.
For what he saw lay on the bed in a white, loose gown.
and it was his sweetheart, and its throat was cut from ear to ear.
He doesn't know what happened then, nor how he got downstairs and into the street,
but he got out somehow, and the policeman found him in a fit under the lamp-post at the corner of the street.
He couldn't speak when they picked him up, and he passed the night in the police cells,
because the policeman had seen plenty of drunken men before, but never one in a fit.
The next morning he was better, though still very white and shaky, but the tale he told
the magistrate was convincing, and they sent a couple of constables with him to her house.
There was no crowd about it, as he had fancied there would be, and the blinds were not down.
As he stood, dazed in front of the door, it opened, and she came out.
He held on to the doorpost for support.
She's all right, you see, said the constable, who's the constable.
who had found him under the lamp.
I told you you was drunk,
but you would know best.
When he was alone with her,
he told her,
not all,
for that would not bear telling,
but how he had come into the commodious semi-detached,
and how he had found the door open and the lights out,
and that he had been into that long back room
facing the stairs,
and had seen something,
in even trying to hint at which,
he turned sick and broke down,
and had to have brandy given him.
"'But my dearest,' she said,
"'I dare say the house was dark,
"'for we were all at the Crystal Palace with my uncle,
"'and no doubt the door was open,
"'for the maids will run out if they left.
"'But you could not have been in that room,
"'because I locked it when I came away,
"'and the key was in my pocket.
"'I dressed in a hurry,
"'and I left all my odds and ends lying about.
"'I know,' he said,
"'I saw a green scarf on a chair,
and some long brown gloves, and a lot of hairpins and ribbons, and a prayer-book,
and a lace handkerchief on the dressing-table. Why, I even noticed the almanac on the mantelpiece,
October the 21st. At least, it couldn't be that, because this is May. And yet it was.
Your almanac is at October the 21st, isn't it?
No, of course it isn't, she said, smiling rather anxiously.
But all the other things were just as you say. You must have had a dream, or a
vision or something. He was a very ordinary, commonplace, city young man, and he didn't believe
in visions. But he never rested day or night, till he got his sweetheart and her mother away
from that commodious semi-detached, and settled them in a quite distant suburb. In the course
of the removal, he incidentally married her, and the mother went on living with them. His nerve
must have been a good bit shaken, because he was very queer for a long time, and was always
inquiring if anyone had taken the desirable semi-detached. And when an old stockbroker with
a family took it, he went the length of calling on the old gentleman, and imploring him by all
that he held dear not to live in that fatal house. Why, said the stockbroker, not unnaturally,
and then he got so vague and confused
between trying to tell why and trying not to tell why
that the stockbroker showed him out,
and thanked his God he was not such a fool
as to allow a lunatic to stand in the way of his taking
that really remarkably cheap and desirable semi-detached residence.
Now, the curious and quite inexplicable part of this story
is that when she came down to breakfast on the morning of the 22nd of October,
she found him looking like death with the morning paper in his hand.
He caught hers, he couldn't speak, and pointed to the paper.
And there she read that on the night of the 21st,
a young lady, the stockbroker's daughter,
had been found with her throat cut from ear to ear,
on the bed in the long back bedroom.
facing the stairs of that desirable semi-detached.
End of Chapter 4.
Part 1 of Chapter 5 of Grim Tales by Edith Nesbit.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Peter Yearsley.
From the Dead, Part 1.
But true or not true, your brother is a scoundrel!
No man, no decent man, tells such things.
He did not tell me. How dare you suppose it? I found the letter in his desk.
And she being my friend and you being her lover, I never thought there could be any harm in my reading her letter to my brother.
Give me back the letter. I was a fool to tell you.
Ida Helmont held out her hand for the letter.
Not yet, I said, and I went to the window.
The dull red of a London sunset burned on the paper, as I read in the quaint, dainty handwriting.
I knew so well, and had kissed so often.
Dear, I do, I do love you, but it's impossible.
I must marry Arthur.
My honour is engaged.
If he would only set me free, but he never will.
He loves me so foolishly.
But, as for me, it is you, I love, body, soul and spirit.
There is no one in my heart but you.
I think of you all day, and dream of you all.
all night, and we must part.
And that is the way of the world.
Goodbye.
Yours!
Yours!
Yours!
Yours!
Elvir.
I had seen the handwriting indeed often enough, but the passion written there was
new to me.
That I had not seen.
I turned from the window wearily.
My sitting-room looked strange to me.
There were my books, my reading-lamp, my untasted
dinner, still on the table, as I had left it, when I rose to dissemble my surprise at Ida
Helmont's visit. Ida Helmont, who now sat in my easy-chair, looking at me quietly.
Well, do you give me no thanks? You put a knife in my heart, and then ask for thanks.
Pardon me, she said, throwing up her chin.
I have done nothing but show you the truth. For that, one should expect no gratitude.
May I ask, out of mere curiosity, what you intend to do?
Your brother will tell you.
She rose suddenly, pale to the lips.
You will not tell my brother, she began.
That you have read his private letters? Certainly not.
She came towards me, her gold hair flaming in the sunset light.
Why are you so angry with me? she said.
Be reasonable. What else could I do?
I don't know.
Would it have been right not to tell you?
I don't know. I only know that you've put the sun out, and I haven't got used to the dark yet.
Believe me, she said, coming still nearer to me, and laying her hands in the lightest, light touch on my shoulders.
Believe me, she never loved you.
There was a softness in her tone that irritated and stimulated me.
I moved gently back, and her hands fell by her sides.
I beg your pardon, I said.
I have behaved very badly.
You were quite right to come, and I am not ungrateful.
Will you post a letter for me?
I sat down and wrote,
I give you back your freedom, the only gifted mine that can please you now.
Arthur.
I held the sheet out to Miss Helmont, and when she had glanced at it, I sealed, stamped, and addressed it.
Goodbye, I said then, and
gave her the letter. As the door closed behind her, I sank into my chair, and I am not ashamed
to say that I cried like a child, or a fool over my lost plaything, the little dark-haired woman
who loved someone else with body, soul, and spirit. I did not hear the door open, or any
foot on the floor, and therefore I started when a voice behind me said, Are you so very
unhappy? Oh, Arthur, don't think I'm not sorry for you.
I don't want anyone to be sorry for me, Miss Helmont, I said.
She was silent a moment, then with a quick, sudden, gentle movement, she leaned down and
kissed my forehead, and I heard the door softly closed.
Then I knew that the beautiful Miss Helmont loved me.
At first, that thought only fleeted by, a light cloud against the grey sky.
But the next day, Reason woke, and said,
Was Miss Helmod speaking the truth?
Was it possible that?
I determined to see Elvira to know from her own lips whether, by happy fortune, this
blow came not from her, but from a woman in whom love might have killed honesty.
I walked from Hampstead to Gower Street.
As I trod its long length, I saw a figure in pink come out of one of the houses.
It was Elvier.
She walked in front of me to the corner of Stour Street.
There she met Oscar Helmont.
They turned and met me face to face, and I saw all I needed to see.
They loved each other.
Ida Helmont had spoken the truth.
I bowed and passed on.
Before six months were gone, they were married, and before a year was over I had married Ida Helmont.
What did it, I don't know? Whether it was remorse, for having, even for half a day, dreamed that she could be so base as to forge a lie to gain a lover,
or whether it was her beauty, or the sweet flattery of the preference of a woman who had half her acquaintances at her feet, I don't know.
Anyhow, my thoughts turned to her as to their natural home.
My heart too took that road, and before very long I loved her, as I had never loved Elvir.
Let no one doubt that I loved her, as I shall never love again, please God.
There never was anyone like her.
She was brave and beautiful, witty and wise, and beyond all measure, adorable.
She was the only woman in the world.
There was a frankness, a largeness of heart about her that made all other women seem small and contemptible.
She loved me, and I worshipped her.
I married her.
I stayed with her for three golden weeks, and then I left her.
Why?
Because she told me the truth.
It was one night late.
We had sat all the evening in the veranda of our seaside lodging,
watching the moonlight on the water, and listening to the soft sound of the sea on the sand.
I have never been so happy. I never shall be happy anymore, I hope.
Heart's heart, she said, leaning her gold head against my shoulder.
How much do you love me?
How much?
Yes, how much? I want to know what place it is I hold in your heart.
Am I more to you than anyone else?
my love.
More than yourself.
More than my life.
I believe you, she said.
Then she drew a long breath and took my hands in hers.
It can make no difference.
Nothing in heaven or earth can come between us now.
Nothing, I said.
But, sweet, my wife, what is it?
For she was deathly pale.
I must tell you, she said.
I cannot hide anything now from,
you, because I am yours, body, soul and spirit.
The phrase was an echo that stung me.
The moonlight shone on her gold hair, her warm, soft gold hair, and on her pale face.
Arthur, she said,
You remember my coming to you at Hampstead with that letter.
Yes, my sweet, and I remember how you...
Arthur!
She spoke fast and low.
Arthur, that letter was a forgery. She never wrote it. I— She stopped, for I had risen and flung
her hands from me, and stood looking at her. God help me! I thought it was anger at the lie,
I felt. I know now it was only wounded vanity that smarted in me. That I should have been tricked,
that I should have been deceived, that I should have been led on to make a fool of myself,
that I should have married the woman who had be fooled me.
At that moment she was no longer the wife I adored.
She was only a woman who had forged a letter and tricked me into marrying her.
I spoke, I denounced her.
I said I would never speak to her again.
I felt it was rather creditable in me to be so angry.
I said I would have no more to do with a liar and forger.
I don't know whether I expected her to creep to my knees and implore forgiveness.
I think I had some vague idea that I could by and by consent with dignity to forgive and forget.
I did not mean what I said.
No, no, I did not mean a word of it.
While I was saying it, I was longing for her to weep and fall at my feet,
that I might raise her and hold her in my arms again.
But she did not fall at my feet.
She stood quietly looking at me.
Arthur, she said, as I paused for breath.
Let me explain. She, I...
There is nothing to explain, I said hotly,
still with that foolish sense of there being something rather noble in my indignation,
as one feels when one calls oneself a miserable sinner,
you're a liar and a forger, and that is enough for me.
I will never speak to you again. You have wrecked my life.
Do you mean that, she said, interrupting me, and leaning forward to look at me.
Tears lay on her cheeks, but she was not crying now.
I hesitated.
I longed to take her in my arms and say,
Lay your head here, my darling, and cry here, and know how I love you.
But instead I kept silence.
Do you mean it?
She persisted.
Then she put her hand on my arm.
I longed to clasp it and draw her to me.
Instead, I shook it off and said,
"'Mean it? Yes, of course I mean it. Don't touch me, please. You have ruined my life.'
She turned away without a word, went into our room, and shut the door.
I longed to follow her, to tell her that, if there was anything to forgive, I forgave it.
Instead, I went out on the beach and walked away under the cliffs.
The moonlight and the solitude, however, presently brought me to a better mind.
Whatever she had done had been done for love of me.
I knew that.
I would go home and tell her so.
Tell her that whatever she had done, she was my dearest life, my heart's one treasure.
True, my ideal of her was shattered.
But even as she was, what was the whole world of women compared to?
to her. I hurried back, but in my resentment and evil temper I had walked far, and the way back
was very long. I had been parted from her for three hours by the time I opened the door of the
little house where we lodged. The house was dark and very still. I slipped off my shoes and crept up
the narrow stairs, and opened the door of our room quite softly. Perhaps she would have cried herself
to sleep, and I would lean over her and waken her with my kisses, and beg her to forgive me.
Yes, it had come to that now.
I went into the room.
I went towards the bed.
She was not there.
She was not in the room, as one glance showed me.
She was not in the house, as I knew in two minutes.
When I had wasted a priceless hour in searching the town for her, I found a note on the
dressing-table.
Goodbye!
I, make the best of what is left of your life. I will spoil it no more."
She was gone, utterly gone. I rushed to town by the earliest morning train, only to find
that her people knew nothing of her. Advertisement failed. Only a tramp said he had met a white
lady on the cliff, and a fisherman brought me a handkerchief marked with her name that he
had found on the beach. I searched the country far and
wide, but I had to go back to London at last, and the months went by.
I won't say much about those months, because even the memory of that suffering turns me faint
and sick at heart.
The police and detectives and the press failed me utterly.
Her friends could not help me, and were, moreover, wildly indignant with me, especially
her brother, now living very happily with my first love.
i don't know how i got through those long weeks and months i tried to write i tried to read i tried to live the life of a reasonable human being but it was impossible i could not endure the companionship of my kind
Day and night I almost saw her face, almost heard her voice.
I took long walks in the country, and her figure was always just round the next turn of the road,
in the next glade of the wood.
But I never quite saw her, never quite heard her.
I believe I was not altogether sane at that time.
At last, one morning, as I was setting out for one of those long walks that had no goal but
weariness. I met a telegraph boy, and took the red envelope from his hand. On the pink paper
inside was written, "'Come to me at once! I am dying! You must come, Ida!' Appinshore Farm,
Melor, Derbyshire. There was a train at twelve to marple the nearest station. I took it. I tell
you there are some things that cannot be written about. My life for those long months was one of them.
That journey was another.
What had her life been for those months?
That question troubled me,
as one is troubled in every nerve at the sight of a surgical operation,
or a wound inflicted on a being dear to one.
But the overmastering sensation was joy,
intense, unspeakable joy.
She was alive.
I should see her again.
I took out the telegram and looked at it.
I am dying.
I simply did not believe it.
she could not die till she had seen me.
And if she had lived all those months without me,
she could live now, when I was with her again,
when she knew of the hell I had endured apart from her,
and the heaven of our meeting.
She must live! I would not let her die.
There was a long drive over bleak hills,
dark, jolting, infinitely wearisome.
At last we stopped before a long, low building,
where one or two lights gleamed faintly.
I sprang out. The door opened. A blaze of light made me blink and draw back.
A woman was standing in the doorway.
At the Yathamash, she said.
Yes. Then they're at all late.
She's dead.
End of Part 1 of From the Dead.
Part 2 of Chapter 5 of Grim Tales by Edith Nesbit.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, recording by Peter Yearsley.
From the Dead, Part 2.
I went into the house, walked to the fire, and held out my hands to it mechanically,
for though the night was May, I was cold to the bone.
There were some folks standing round the fire, and lights flickering.
Then an old woman came forward with the northern instinct of hospitality.
Tharer Tired, she said, and maize like, have a supper tea.
I burst out laughing.
It was too funny.
I had travelled two hundred miles to see her, and she was dead.
And they offered me tea.
They drew back from me as if I had been a wild beast,
but I could not stop laughing.
Then a hand was laid on my shoulder,
and someone led me into a dark room, lighted a lamp,
set me in a chair, and sat down opposite me.
It was a bare parlour, coldly furnished.
with rush chairs and much-polished tables and presses. I caught my breath, and grew suddenly
grave, and looked at the woman who sat opposite me. I was Miss Ida's nurse, said she, and she
told me to send for you. Who are you? Her husband! The woman looked at me with hard eyes,
where intense surprise struggled with resentment. Then may God forgive you, she said.
What you've done I don't know. But it'll be hard work.
for giving you, even for him.
Tell me, I said, my wife.
Tell you?
The bitter contempt in the woman's tone did not hurt me.
What was it to the self-contempt that had gnawed my heart all these months?
Tell you?
Yes, I'll tell you.
Your wife was that ashamed of you.
She never so much has told me she was married.
She let me think anything I pleased sooner than that.
She'd just come here, and she said, nurse,
Take care of me, for I am in mortal trouble, and don't let them know where I am, says she,
and me being well-married to an honest man, and, well, to do here, I was able to do it by the blessing.
Why didn't you send for me before? It was a cry of anguish wrung from me.
I'd never assent for you. It was her doing.
Oh, to think as God Almighty made men able to measure out such like pecs of trouble for us women.
folk. Young man, I don't know what you did to her to make her leave you, but it must have been
something cruel, for she loved the ground you walked on. She used to sit day after day looking at
your picture and talking to it and kissing of it when she thought I wasn't taking no notice,
and crying till she made me cry too. She used to cry all night most, and one day when I tells her
to pray to God to help her through her trouble, she outs with your personal. She outs with your
put your face on a card, she does, and says she with a poor little smile.
That's my God, Nersy, she says.
Don't, I said feebly, putting out my hands to keep off the torture.
Not anymore, not now.
Don't, she repeated.
She had risen, and was walking up and down the room with clasped hands.
Don't, indeed.
No, I won't, but I shan't forget you.
I tell you, I've had you in my prayers time and again,
when I thought you'd made a lighter love of my darling.
I shan't drop you out of them.
Now I know she was your own wedded wife,
as you chucked away when you'd tired of her,
and left her to eat her art out out with longing for you.
I pray to God above us,
to pay you, scotten lot for all you'd done to her.
You killed my pretty.
The price will be required of you, young man,
even to the uttermost farthing.
Oh, God in heaven, make him suffer.
Make him feel it.
She stamped her foot as she passed me.
I stood quite still.
I bit my lip till I tasted the blood, hot and salt on my tongue.
She was nothing to you, cried the woman,
walking faster up and down between the rushed chairs and the table.
Any fool can see that with half an eye.
You didn't love her, so you don't feel nothing now.
But someday you'll care for someone,
and then you shall know what she felt.
If there's any justice in heaven,
I too walked across the room and leaned against the wall.
I heard her words without understanding them.
Can't you feel nothing?
You made a stone.
Come and look at her lying there, so quiet.
She don't fret out of the like of you no more now.
She won't sit no more and looking out her window and saying nothing,
only dropping her tears one by one.
Slow, slow on her lap.
Come and see her.
Come and see what you've done to my pretty.
And then you can go.
Nobody wants you here.
She don't want you now.
But perhaps you'd like to see her safe underground first.
I'll be bound you'd put a big slab on her
to make sure she don't rise again.
I turned on her.
Her thin face was white with grief and impotent rage.
Her claw-like hands were clenched.
Woman, I said.
Have mercy.
She paused and looked at me.
"'A?' she said.
"'Have mercy,' I said again.
"'Mercy? You should have thought of that before.
You hadn't no mercy on her.
She loved you. She died loving you.
And if I wasn't a Christian woman, I'd kill you for it, like the rat you are.
That I would, though I had to swing for it afterwards.'
I caught the woman's hands and held them fast in spite of her resistance.
"'Don't you understand?' I said savagely.
We loved each other. She died loving me. I have to live loving her. And it's her, you pity. I tell you it was all a mistake, a stupid, stupid mistake. Take me to her, and for pity's sake, let me be left alone with her.
She hesitated, then said in a voice, only a shade less hard. Well, come along then.
We moved towards the door. As she opened it, a faint, we...
weak cry fell on my ear. My heart stood still.
What's that? I asked, stopping on the threshold.
Your child, she said shortly.
That too? Oh, my love. Oh, my poor love.
All these long months.
Cholas said she'd send for you when she got over her trouble, the woman said as we climbed
the stairs. I'd like him to see his little baby nurse. She says, our little baby.
right when the baby's born, she says. I know he'll come to me then. You'll see. And I never
said nothing, not thinking you'd come if she was your leavings, and not dreaming as you could be her
husband, and could stay away from her an hour, her being as she was. Hush! She drew a key from her pocket,
and fitted it to the lock. She opened the door, and I followed her in. It was a large, dark room,
full of old-fashioned furniture. There were wax-candles.
in brass candlesticks, and a smell of lavender.
The big four-post bed was covered with white.
My lamb, my poor pretty lamb, said the woman, beginning to cry for the first time,
as she drew back the sheet.
Don't she look beautiful?
I stood by the bedside.
I looked down on my wife's face.
Just so I had seen it lie on the pillow beside me in the early morning,
when the wind and the dawn came up from beyond the sea.
She did not look like one dead. Her lips were still red, and it seemed to me that a tinge of
colour lay on her cheek. It seemed to me, too, that if I kissed her, she would wake,
and put her slight hand on my neck, and lay her cheek against mine, and that we should tell
each other everything, and weep together, and understand and be comforted.
So I stooped, and laid my lips to hers as the old nurse stole from the room.
But the red lips were like marble, and she did not wake.
She will not wake now ever, anymore.
I tell you again, there are some things that cannot be written.
End of Part 2 of From the Dead.
Part 3 of Chapter 5 of Grim Tales by Edith Nesbitt.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, recording by Peter Yearsley.
From the Dead, Part 3.
I lay that night in a big room filled with heavy dark furniture,
in a great four-poster hung with heavy, dark curtains,
a bed the counterpart of that other bed,
from whose side they had dragged me at last.
They fed me, I believe, and the old nurse was kind to me.
I think she saw now that it is not the dead who are to be pitied most.
I lay at last in the big, roomy bed,
and heard the household noises grow fewer and die out the little wail of my child sounding latest.
They had brought the child to me, and I had held it in my arms,
and bowed my head over its tiny face and frail fingers.
I did not love it then. I told myself it had cost me her life,
but my heart told me that it was I who had done that.
The tall clock at the stairhead sounded the hours,
11, 12, 1, and still I could not sleep. The room was dark and very still. I had not been able to look at my life quietly. I had been full of the intoxication of grief, a real drunkenness, more merciful than the calm that comes after. Now I lay still as the dead woman in the next room, and looked at what was left of my life. I lay still and thought, and thought, and thought, and
and thought, and in those hours I tasted the bitterness of death.
It must have been about two that I first became aware of a slight sound that was not the ticking
of the clock.
I say I first became aware, and yet I knew perfectly that I had heard that sound more than
once before, and had yet determined not to hear it, because it came from the next room, the
room where the corpse lay.
And I did not wish to hear that sound, because I knew it meant that I was nervous, miserably
nervous, a coward and a brute.
It meant that I, having killed my wife as surely as though I had put a knife in her breast,
had now sunk so low as to be afraid of her dead body, the dead body that lay in the room
next to mine.
The heads of the beds were placed against the same wall, and from that wall I had fancied I heard
slight, almost inaudible sounds.
So when I say that I became aware of them,
I mean that I at last heard a sound so distinct
as to leave no room for doubt or question.
It brought me to a sitting position in the bed,
and the drops of sweat gathered heavily on my forehead
and fell on my cold hands as I held my breath and listened.
I don't know how long I sat there.
There was no further sound,
and at last my tense muscles relaxed, and I fell back on the pillow.
You fool, I said to myself,
Dead or alive, is she not your darling, your heart's heart?
Would you not go near to die of joy if she came to you?
Pray God to let her spirit come back and tell you she forgives you.
I wish she would come, myself answered in words,
while every fibre of my body and mind shrank and quivered in denial.
I struck a match, lighted a candle, and breathed more freely as I looked at the polished furniture, the commonplace details of an ordinary room.
Then I thought of her, lying alone, so near me, so quiet under the white sheet.
She was dead.
She would not wake or move.
But suppose she did move.
Suppose she turned back the sheet and got up, and walked across the floor, and turned the door handle.
As I thought it, I heard, plainly, unmistakably heard, the door of the chamber of death open
slowly.
I heard slow steps in the passage, slow, heavy steps.
I heard the touch of hands on my door outside, uncertain hands that felt for the latch.
Sick with terror, I lay clenching the sheet in my hands.
I knew well enough what would come in when that door opened.
That door on which my eyes were fixed, I dreaded.
to look, yet I dared not turn away my eyes. The door opened slowly, slowly, slowly,
and the figure of my dead wife came in. It came straight towards the bed, and stood at the bed-foot
in its white grave-clothes, with the white bandage under its chin. There was a scent of lavender.
Its eyes were wide open, and looked at me with love unspeakable. I could have shrieked aloud.
My wife spoke.
It was the same dear voice that I had loved so to hear,
but it was very weak and faint now,
and now I trembled as I listened.
You aren't afraid of me, darling, are you?
Though I am dead.
I heard all you said to me when you came,
but I couldn't answer.
But now I've come back from the dead to tell you,
I wasn't really so bad as you thought me.
Elvier had told me she loved Oscar.
I only wrote the letter to make it easier for you.
I was too proud to tell you when you were so angry,
but I'm not proud anymore now.
You'll love me again now, won't you?
Now I'm dead.
One always forgives dead people.
The poor ghost's voice was hollow and faint.
Abject terror paralyzed me.
I could answer nothing.
Say you forgive me, the thin, monotonous voice went on.
Say you love me again.
I had to speak, coward as I was, I did manage to stammer.
Yes, I love you. I have always loved you. God help me.
The sound of my own voice reassured me, and I ended more firmly than I began.
The figure by the bed swayed a little unsteadily.
I suppose, she said wearily.
You would be afraid, now I am dead, if I came round to you and kissed you.
She made a movement as though she would have come to me.
Then I did shriek aloud, again and again,
and covered my face with the sheet,
and wound it round my head and body,
and held it with all my force.
There was a moment's silence,
then I heard my door close,
and then a sound of feet and of voices,
and I heard something heavy fall.
I disentangled my head from the sheet.
My room was empty.
Then reason came back to me.
I leapt from the bed.
my darling, come back! I'm not afraid. I love you. Come back! Come back!
I sprang to my door and flung it open. Someone was bringing a light along the passage.
On the floor, outside the door of the death chamber, was a huddled heap, the corpse, in its grave
clothes, dead. Dead. She is buried in Mella churchyard, and there is no stone over her.
Now, whether it was catalepsy, as the doctors said,
or whether my love came back, even from the dead, to me who loved her, I shall never know.
But this I know, that if I had held out my arms to her, as she stood at my bed-foot,
if I had said, Yes, even from the grave, my darling, from hell itself, come back, come back to me.
If I had had room in my coward's heart for anything but the unreasoning terror that killed love in that hour,
I should not now be here alone.
I shrank from her.
I feared her.
I would not take her to my heart,
and now she will not come to me any more.
Why do I go on living?
You see, there is the child.
It is four years old now,
and it has never spoken and never smiled.
End of Part 3 of From the Dead.
Chapter 6 of Grimm Tales by Edith Nuss.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, recording by Peter Yearsley.
Man sighs in marble
Although every word of this story is as true as despair, I do not expect people to believe it.
Nowadays a rational explanation is required before belief is possible.
Let me then, at once, offer the rational explanation, which finds most favour among those
who have heard the tale of my life's tragedy.
It is held that we were under a delusion, Laura and I, on that 31st of October, and that
this supposition places the whole matter on a satisfactory and believable basis.
The reader can judge when he too has heard my story how far this is an explanation, and
in what sense it is rational.
There were three who took part in this, Laura and I and another man.
The other man still lives, and can speak to the truth of the least credible part of my story.
I never in my life knew what it was to have as much money as I required to supply the most
ordinary needs, good colours, books, and cabfares, and when we were married we knew quite
well that we should only be able to live at all by strict punctuality and attention to
business. I used to paint in those days, and Laura used to write, and we felt sure we could
keep the pot at least simmering. Living in town was out of the question, so we went to look for
a cottage in the country, which should be at once sanitary and picturesque. So rarely do these two
qualities meet in one cottage that our search was for some time quite fruitless. We tried
advertisements, but most of the desirable rural residences which we did look at proved to be
lacking in both essentials, and when a cottage chanced to have drains, it always had stucco
as well, and was shaped like a tea caddy. And if we found a vine or rose-covered porch,
corruption invariably lurked within. Our minds got so befogged by the eloquence of
house agents and the rival disadvantages of the fever traps and out-es
and outrages to beauty, which we had seen and scorned, that I very much doubt whether either
of us, on our wedding morning, knew the difference between a house and a haystack.
But when we got away from friends and house agents, on our honeymoon, our wits grew clear
again, and we knew a pretty cottage when at last we saw one.
It was at Brenzett, a little village set on a hill over against the southern marshes.
We had gone there from the seaside village where we were staying to see the church,
and two fields from the church we found this cottage.
It stood quite by itself, about two miles from the village.
It was a long low building, with rooms sticking out in unexpected places.
There was a bit of stonework, ivy-covered and moss-grown,
just two old rooms, all it was left of a big house that had once stood there.
And round this stonework the house had grown up. Stripped of its roses and jasmine, it would have been hideous. As it stood, it was charming, and after a brief examination we took it. It was absurdly cheap.
The rest of our honeymoon we spent in grubbing about in second-hand shops in the county town, picking up bits of old oak and Chippendale chairs for our furnishings.
We wound up with a run up to town, and a visit.
to liberties, and soon the low oak-beamed, lattice-windowed rooms began to be home.
There was a jolly, old-fashioned garden, with grass paths, and no end of hollyhocks and
sunflowers, and big lilies. From the window you could see the marsh pastures, and beyond
them the blue thin line of the sea.
We were as happy as the summer was glorious, and settled down into work sooner than we ourselves
I was never tired of sketching the view and the wonderful cloud effects from the open lattice,
and Laura would sit at the table and write verses about them, in which I mostly played the part of foreground.
We got a tall, old peasant woman to do for us.
Her face and figure were good, though her cooking was of the homeliest, but she understood
all about gardening, and told us all the old names of the coppices and
cornfields, and the stories of the smugglers and high-woman, and better still, of the
things that walked, and of the sights, which met one in lonely glens, of a starlight night.
She was a great comfort to us because Laura hated housekeeping as much as I loved folklore,
and we soon came to leave all the domestic business to Mrs. Dorman, and to use her legends in
little magazine stories, which brought in the jingling guinea.
We had three months of married happiness, and did not have a single quarrel.
One October evening I had been down to smoke a pipe with the doctor, our only neighbour,
a pleasant young Irishman.
Laura had stayed at home to finish a comic sketch of a village episode for the Monthly
Marplot.
I left her laughing over her own jokes, and came in.
in to find her a crumpled heap of pale muslin, weeping on the window-seat.
"'Good heavens, my darling! What's the matter?' I cried, taking her in my arms.
She leaned her little dark head against my shoulder, and went on crying. I had never seen her cry
before. We had always been so happy, you see, and I felt sure some frightful misfortune had
happened.
"'What is the matter? Do speak. It's Mrs. Dorman,' she sobbed.
"'What has she done?' I inquired, immensely relieved.
"'She says she must go before the end of the month.
"'And she says her niece is ill.
"'She's gone down to see her now,
"'but I don't believe that's the reason,
"'because her niece is always ill.
"'I believe someone has been setting her against us.
"'Her manner was so queer.
"'Never mind, pussy,' I said.
"'Whatever you do, don't cry,
"'or I shall have to cry too,
"'to keep you in countenance,
"'and then you'll never really.
respect your man again. She dried her eyes obediently on my handkerchief, and even smiled faintly.
But you see, she went on, it is really serious, because these village people are so sheepy,
and if one won't do a thing, you may be quite sure none of the others will, and I shall have to
cook the dinners, and wash up the hateful, greasy plates, and you'll have to carry cans of
water about, and clean the boots and knives, and we shall never have any time for work,
or earn any money, or anything. We shall have to work all day, and only be able to rest when
we are waiting for the kettle to boil. I represented to her that, even if we had to perform
these duties, the day would still present some margin for other toils and recreations,
but she refused to see the matter in any but the greyest light. She was very unreasonable,
my Laura, but I could not have loved her any more if she had been as reasonable as weightly.
I'll speak to Mrs. Dorman when she comes back, and see if I can't come to terms with her,
I said. Perhaps she wants a rise in her screw. It'll be all right. Let's walk up to the church.
The church was a large and lonely one, and we loved to go there, especially upon bright nights.
The path skirted a wood, cut through it once, and ran along the crest of the hill.
hill through two meadows, and round the churchyard wall, over which the old ewes loomed in black
masses of shadow. This path, which was partly paved, was called the beer-balk, for it had long been
the way by which the corpses had been carried to burial. The church-yard was richly treed,
and was shaded by great elms, which stood just outside, and stretched their majestic arms
in benediction over the happy dead.
A large, low porch let one into the building by a Norman doorway and a heavy oak door
studied with iron. Inside, the arches rose into darkness, and between them the reticulated
windows which stood out white in the moonlight. In the chancel, the windows were of rich
glass, which showed in faint light their noble colouring, and made the black oak of the choir
pews, hardly more solid than the shadows. But on each side of the altar lay a grey marble
figure of a knight in full-plate armour, lying upon a low slab, with hands held up in everlasting
prayer. And these figures, oddly enough, were always to be seen if there was any glimmer
of light in the church. Their names were lost, but the peasants told of them that they had been
fierce and wicked men, marauders by land and sea, who had been the scourge of their
time, and had been guilty of deeds so foul that the house they had lived in. The big house,
by the way, that had stood on the site of our cottage, had been stricken by lightning
and the vengeance of heaven. But for all that, the gold of their heirs had bought them
a place in the church. Looking at the bad, hard faces reproduced in the marble, this story
was easily believed. The church looked at its best
and weirdest on that night, for the shadows of the yew-trees fell through the windows upon the floor of the nave,
and touched the pillars with tattered shade. We sat down together without speaking, and watched the solemn
beauty of the old church, with some of the awe which inspired its early builders. We walked to the
chancel, and looked at the sleeping warriors. Then we rested some time on the stone seat in the porch,
looking out over the stretch of quiet moonlit meadows,
feeling in every fibre of our being the peace of the night,
and of our happy love,
and came away at last with a sense that
even scrubbing and black-ledding were but small troubles at their worst.
Mrs. Dorman had come back from the village,
and I at once invited her to a tete-a-tete.
Now, Mrs. Dorman, I said,
when I had got her into my painting-room,
What's all this about your not staying with us?'
"'I should be glad to get away, sir, before the end of the month,' she answered,
with her usual placid dignity.
"'Have you any fault to find, Mrs. Dorman?'
"'None at all, sir. You and your lady have always been most kind, I'm sure.'
"'Well, what is it? Are your wages not high enough?'
"'No, sir, I guess quite enough.'
"'Then why not stay?'
"'I'd rather not.'
With some hesitation,
My niece is ill.
But your niece has been ill ever since we came.
No answer.
There was a long and awkward silence.
I broke it.
Can't you stay for another month?
I asked.
No, sir.
I'm bound to go by Thursday.
And this was Monday.
Well, I must say,
I think you might have let us know before.
There's no time now to get anyone else.
And your mistress is not.
not fit to do heavy housework. Can't you stay till next week? I might be able to come back next week.
I was now convinced that all she wanted was a brief holiday, which we should have been willing
enough to let her have, as soon as we could get a substitute.
But why must you go this week? I persisted.
Come out with it. Mrs. Dorman drew the little shawl which she always wore tightly across her bosom,
as though she were cold.
Then she said,
With a sort of effort,
They say, sir,
as this was a big house in Catholic times,
and there was a many deeds done here.
The nature of the deeds might be vaguely inferred
from the inflection of Mrs. Dorman's voice,
which was enough to make one's blood run cold.
I was glad that Laura was not in the room.
She was always nervous,
as highly-strung natures are, and I felt that these tales about our house,
told by this old peasant woman with her impressive manner and contagious credulity,
might have made our home less dear to my wife.
Tell me all about it, Mrs. Dorman, I said,
You needn't mind about telling me. I'm not like the young people who make fun of such things.
Which was partly true.
Well, sir, she sank her voice.
You may have seen in the church, beside the altar, two shapes.
You mean the effigies of the knights in armour?
I said cheerfully.
I mean them two bodies, drawed out man-size in marble.
She returned, and I had to admit that her description was a thousand times more graphic than mine,
to say nothing of a certain weird force and uncanniness about the phrase
drawed out man size in marble.
They do say, as on old saints' Eve,
them two bodies sits up on their slabs and gets off of them,
and then walks down the aisle in their marble.
Another good phrase, Mrs. Dorman.
And as the church clock strikes eleven,
they walks out of the church door and over the graves,
and along the beer-bock,
and if it's a wet night there's the marks of their feet in the morning.
And where do they go? I asked, rather fascinated.
They comes back here, to their home, sir, and if anyone meets them.
Well, what then? I asked.
But no, not another word could I get from her,
save that her niece was ill, and she must go.
After what I had heard, I scorned to discuss the niece,
and tried to get from Mrs. Dorman more details of the legend.
I could get nothing but warnings.
Whatever you do, sir, lock the door early on all Saints Eve,
and make the cross sign over the doorstep and on the windows.
But has anyone ever seen these things?
I persisted.
That's not for me to say.
I know what I know, sir.
Well, who was here last year?
No one, sir.
The lady has owned the house only stayed here in summer, and she always went to London, a full
months afore the night.
And I'm sorry to inconvenience you and your lady, but my niece is ill, and I must go on thirsty.
I could have shaken her for her absurd reiteration of that obvious fiction after she had told
me her real reasons.
She was determined to go, nor could our united entreaties move her in the least.
I did not tell Laura the legend of the shapes that walked in their marble, partly because
a legend concerning our house might perhaps trouble my wife, and partly, I think, from some
more occult reason.
This was not quite the same to me as any other story, and I did not want to talk about
it till the day was over.
I had very soon ceased to think of the legend, however.
I was painting a portrait of Laura, against the lattice window, and I could not think of
I had got a splendid background of yellow and grey sunset, and was working away with
enthusiasm at her face.
On Thursday Mrs. Dorman went.
She relented at parting, so far as to say, don't you put yourself about too much, ma'am,
and if there's any little thing I can do next week, I'm sure I shan't mind, from which I inferred
that she wished to come back to us after Halloween.
Up to the last, she adhered to the fiction of the niece with touching fidelity.
Thursday passed off pretty well.
Laura showed marked ability in the matter of steak and potatoes, and I confess that my knives
and the plates, which I insisted upon washing, were better done than I had dared to expect.
Friday came.
It is about what happened on that Friday that this is written.
I wonder if I should have believed it, if anyone had told it to me.
I will write the story of it, as quickly and plainly as I can.
Everything that happened on that day is burnt into my brain.
I shall not forget anything, nor leave anything out.
I got up early, I remember, and lighted the kitchen fire,
and had just achieved a smoky success,
when my little wife came running down as sunny and sweet
as the clear October morning itself.
We prepared breakfast together, and found it very good fun.
The housework was soon done, and when brushes and brooms and pails were quiet again,
the house was still indeed.
It is wonderful what a difference one makes in a house.
We really missed Mrs. Dorman, quite apart from considerations concerning pots and pans.
We spent the day in dusting our books and putting them straight,
and dined gaily on cold steak and coffee.
Laura was, if possible, brighter and gayer and sweeter than usual,
and I began to think that a little domestic toil was really good for her.
We had never been so merry since we were married,
and the walk we had that afternoon was, I think, the happiest time of all my life.
When we had watched the deep scarlet clouds slowly pale into lead and grey
against a pale green sky, and saw the white mists curl up along the hedgerows in the distant marsh.
We came back to the house, silently, hand in hand.
You're sad, my darling, I said, half jestingly, as we sat down together in our little parlour.
I expected a disclaimer, for my own silence had been the silence of complete happiness.
To my surprise, she said,
Yes, I think I am sad.
Or rather, I am uneasy.
I don't think I'm very well.
I have shivered three or four times since we came in,
and it is not cold, is it?
No, I said,
and hoped it was not a chill caught from the treacherous mists
that roll up from the marshes in the dying light.
No, she said.
She did not think so.
Then, after a silence, she spoke suddenly,
Do you ever have presentments of evil?
No, I said, smiling.
And I shouldn't believe in them if I had.
I do, she went on.
The night my father died I knew it,
though he was right away in the north of Scotland.
I did not answer in words.
She sat looking at the fire for some time in silence,
gently stroking my hand.
At last she sprang up, came behind me,
and, drawing my head back, kissed me.
There, it's over now, she said.
What a baby I am!
Come light the candles and we.
We'll have some of these new Rubenstein duets."
And we spent a happy hour or two at the piano.
At about half-past ten I began to long for the good-night pipe, but Laura looked so white
that I felt it would be brutal of me to fill our sitting-room with the fumes of strong
cavern-dish.
I'll take my pipe outside, I said.
Let me come, too.
No, sweetheart.
Not's to-night.
You're much too tired.
I shan't be long. Get to bed, or I shall have an invalid to nurse tomorrow, as well as the boots to clean.
I kissed her, and was turning to go when she flung her arms round my neck, and held me as if she would never let me go again.
I stroked her hair. Come, pussy, you're over tired. The housework has been too much for you.
She loosened her clasp a little, and drew a deep breath.
No, we've been very happy today, Jack, haven't we?
stay out too long? I won't, my dearie. I strolled out of the front door, leaving it unlatched.
What a night it was! The jagged masses of heavy dark cloud were rolling at intervals from horizon
to horizon, and thin white wreaths covered the stars. Through all the rush of the cloud river,
the moon swam, breasting the waves and disappearing again in the darkness. When now and again her light
reached the woodlands. They seemed to be slowly and noiselessly waving, in time to the swing of the
clouds above them. There was a strange grey light over all the earth. The fields had that
shadowy bloom over them, which only comes from the marriage of dew and moonshine, or frost and starlight.
I walked up and down, drinking in the beauty of the quiet earth and the changing sky.
The night was absolutely silent.
Nothing seemed to be abroad.
There was no scurrying of rabbits or twitter of the half-asleep birds,
and though the clouds went sailing across the sky,
the wind that drove them never came low enough
to rustle the dead leaves in the woodland paths.
Across the meadows I could see the church tower
standing out black and grey against the sky.
I walked there, thinking over our three-year.
months of happiness, and of my wife, her dear eyes, her loving ways.
Oh, my little girl, my own little girl! What a vision came then of a long, glad life for you and me
together! I heard a bell beat from the church. Eleven already! I turned to go in, but the night
held me. I could not go back into our little warm rooms yet. I would go off. I would go off
up to the church. I felt vaguely that it would be good to carry my love and thankfulness, to the
sanctuary whither so many loads of sorrow and gladness had been born by the men and women
of the dead years. I looked in at the low window as I went by. Laura was half-lying on her
chair in front of the fire. I could not see her face, only her little head showed dark against
the pale blue wall. She was quite still, asleep no
doubt. My heart reached out to her as I went on. There must be a God, I thought, and a God
who was good. How otherwise could anything so sweet and dear as she have ever been imagined?
I walked slowly along the edge of the wood. A sound broke the stillness of the night. It was
a rustling in the wood. I stopped and listened. The sound stopped, too. I went on, and now distinctly
heard another step than mine, answer mine, like an echo. It was a poacher, or a wood-stealer
most likely, for these were not unknown in our Arcadian neighbourhood. But whoever it was,
he was a fool not to step more lightly. I turned into the wood, and now the footstep seemed
to come from the path I had just left. It must be an echo, I thought. The wood looked perfect in
the moonlight. The large dying ferns and the brushwood showed where through thinning foliage the
pale light came down. The tree trunks stood up like gothic columns all around me. They reminded
me of the church, and I turned into the beer bulk, and passed through the corpse gate, between
the graves to the low porch. I paused for a moment on the stone seat, where Laura and I had watched
the fading landscape. Then I noticed that the door of the church was open.
and I blamed myself for having left it unlatched the other night.
We were the only people who ever cared to come to the church except on Sundays,
and I was vexed to think that, through our carelessness,
the damp autumn airs had had a chance of getting in and injuring the old fabric.
I went in.
It will seem strange, perhaps, that I should have gone halfway up the aisle,
before I remembered, with a sudden chill,
followed by as sudden a rush of self-contempt,
that this was the very day and hour
when, according to tradition,
the shapes drawed out man-size in marble,
began to walk.
Having thus remembered the legend,
and remembered it with a shiver,
of which I was ashamed,
I could not do otherwise than walk up towards the altar,
just to look at the figures,
as I said to myself.
Really what I wanted was to assure
myself, first, that I did not believe the legend, and secondly, that it was not true. I was rather
glad that I had come. I thought, now I could tell Mrs. Dorman how vain her fancies were, and how
peacefully the marble figures slept on through the ghastly hour. With my hands in my pockets I
passed up the aisle. In the grey dim light the eastern end of the church looked larger than usual,
and the arches above the two tombs looked larger too.
The moon came out and showed me the reason.
I stopped short.
My heart gave a leap that nearly choked me,
and then sank sickeningly.
The bodies-draud-out man-size were gone,
and their marble slabs lay wide and bare in the vague moonlight
that slanted through the east window.
Were they really gone, or was I mad?
Clenching my nerves, I stooped and passed my hand over the smooth slabs, and felt their flat,
unbroken surface. Had someone taken the things away? Was it some vile practical joke? I would make
sure, anyway. In an instant I had made a torch of a newspaper which happened to be in my pocket,
and lighting it held it high above my head. Its yellow glare illumined the dark arches and those slabs.
The figures were gone, and I was alone.
in the church. Or was I alone? And then a horror seized me, a horror indefinable and indescribable,
an overwhelming certainty of supreme and accomplished calamity. I flung down the torch and tore along
the aisle and out through the porch, biting my lips as I ran, to keep myself from shrieking aloud.
Oh, was I mad? Or what was this that possessed me? I leapt the churchyard wall and took the
straight cut across the fields, led by the light from our windows. Just as I got over the first
style, a dark figure seemed to spring out of the ground. Mad still with that certainty of
misfortune, I made for the thing that stood in my path, shouting, get out of the way, can't you?
But my push met with a more vigorous resistance than I had expected. My arms were caught
just above the elbow and held as in a vice, and the raw-boned Irish doctor actually shook
me. Would you? He cried, in his own unmistakable.
accents.
Would you then?
Let me go, you fool, I gasped.
The marble figures have gone from the church.
I tell you they've gone.
He broke into a ringing laugh.
I'll have to give you a draught tomorrow, I see.
You've been smoking too much and listening to old wife's tales.
I tell you I've seen the bare slabs.
Well, come back with me.
I'm going up to Old Palmer's.
His daughter is ill.
We're looking at the church and let me see the bear slabs.
see the bare slabs.
You go, if you like, I said,
a little less frantic for his laughter.
I'm going home to my wife.
Robbish man, said he.
Do you think I'll permit of that?
Are you to go saying all your life
that you've seen solid marble
endowed with vitality,
and me to go on me life saying you are a coward?
No, sir, you shan't do it.
The night air, a human voice,
and I think also the physical
contact with this six feet of solid,
common sense, brought me back a little to my ordinary self, and the word coward was a mental
shower-bath.
"'Come on, then,' I said sullenly.
"'Perhaps you're right.'
He still held my arm tightly.
We got over the style and back to the church.
All was still as death.
The place smelt very damp and earthy.
We walked up the aisle.
I am not ashamed to confess that I shut my eyes.
I knew the figures would not be there.
I heard Kelly strike a match.
Here they are, you see.
Right enough, you've been dreaming or drinking,
asking your pardon for the imputation.
I opened my eyes.
By Kelly's expiring vesta,
I saw two shapes lying in their marble on their slabs.
I drew a deep breath and caught his hand.
I'm awfully indebted to you, I said.
It must have been some trick of light,
or I have been working rather hard, perhaps that's it.
Do you know I was quite convinced they were gone?
I'm aware of that, he answered rather grimly.
You'll have to be careful of that brain of yours, my friend, I assure you.
He was leaning over and looking at the right-hand figure,
whose stony face was the most villainous and deadly in expression.
Why, Jove? he said.
Something has been afoot here.
This hand is broken.
And so it was.
I was certain that it had been perfect the last time Laura and I had been there.
Perhaps someone has tried to remove them, said the young doctor.
That won't account for my impression, I objected.
Too much painting and tobacco will account for that well enough.
Come along, I said, or my wife will be getting anxious.
You'll come in and have a drop of whiskey,
and drink confusion to ghosts and better sense to me.
I ought to go up to palm,
but it's so late now I'd best leave it till the morning,' he replied.
I was kept late at the Union, and I've had to see a lot of people since.
All right, I'll come back with you.
I think he fancied I needed him more than did Palmer's girl.
So discussing how such an illusion could have been possible,
and deducing from this experience large generalities concerning ghostly apparitions,
we walked up to our cottage.
We saw, as we walked up the garden path, that bright light streamed out of the front door,
and presently saw that the parlour door was open, too.
Had she gone out?
Come in, I said, and Dr. Kelly followed me into the parlour.
It was all ablaze with candles, not only the wax ones, but at least a dozen, guttering, glaring, tallow dips,
stuck in vases and ornaments in unlikely places.
Light I knew was Laura's remedy for nervousness.
Poor child!
Why had I left her?
Brute that I was!
We glanced round the room, and at first we did not see her.
The window was open, and the draught set all the candles flaring one way.
Her chair was empty, and her handkerchief and book lay on the floor.
I turned to the window.
There, in the recess of the window, I saw her.
Oh, my child, my love, had she gone to that window to watch for me?
and what had come into the room behind her?
To what had she turned with that look of frantic fear and horror?
Oh, my little one!
Had she thought that it was I whose step she heard,
and turned to meet what?
She had fallen back across a table in the window,
and her body lay half on it and half on the window-seat,
and her head hung down over the table,
the brown hair loosened and falling to the carpet.
Her lips were drawn back, and her eyes wide.
wide open. They saw nothing now. What had they seen last? The doctor moved towards her,
but I pushed him aside and sprang to her, caught her in my arms, and cried,
"'It's all right, Laura. I've got you safe, wafy.' She fell into my arms in a heap. I clasped her
and kissed her, and called her by all her pet names, but I think I knew all the time that she was
dead. Her hands were tightly clenched. In one of them, she held something fast. When I was
quite sure she was dead, and that nothing mattered at all anymore, I let him open her hand
to see what she held. It was a grey marble finger. The end of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of Grim Tales by Edith Nesbett. This Librevox
recording is in the public domain. Recording by Peter Yearsley
The Mass for the Dead
I was awake, widely, cruelly awake. I had been awake all night. What sleep could there be
for me when the woman I loved was to be married next morning? Married and not to me. I went
to my room early. The family party in the drawing-room maddened me, grouped about the round
table with the stamped plush cover.
Each was busy with work or book or newspaper,
but not too busy to stab my heart through and through with their talk of the wedding.
Her people were near neighbours of mine,
so why should her marriage not be canvassed in my home circle?
They did not mean to be cruel.
They did not know that I loved her.
But she knew it.
I told her.
But she knew it before that.
She knew it from the moment when I came back from three years of musical study in
Germany, came back and met her in the wood where we used to go nutting when we were children.
I looked into her eyes, and my whole soul trembled with thankfulness that I was living in a world
that held her also.
I turned and walked by her side through the tangled green wood, and we talked of the long
ago days, and it was, Have you forgotten?
And do you remember?
we reached her garden gate. Then I said, goodbye. No, alfidiseum, and then a very little time,
I hope. And she answered, Goodbye. By the way, you haven't congratulated me yet.
Congratulations you? Yes, did I not tell you I am to marry Mr. Benoliel next month?
And she turned away, and went up the garden slowly. I asked my people, and they said it was true.
Kate, my dear playfellow, was to marry this Spaniard, rich, wilful, accustomed to win, polished
in manners and base in life. Why was she to marry him?
No one knows, said my father. But her father is talked about in the city, and Pinoliel the
Spaniard is rich. Perhaps that's it. That was it. She told me so, when after two weeks
Spent with her and near her I implored her to break so vile a chain and to come to me who loved her whom she loved
You are quite right she said calmly we were sitting in the window-seat of the oak parlour in her father's desolate old house
I do love you and I shall marry mr Pinoliel
Why look around you and ask me why if you can I looked around on the shabby
bare room, with its faded hangings of sage-green marine, its threadbare carpet, its patched,
washed-out chintz chair-covers.
I looked out through the square latticed window at the ragged, unkempt lawn, at her own gown
of poor material, though she wore it as queens might desire to wear ermine, and I understood.
Kate is obstinate. It is her one fault. I knew how vain would be my entreative.
yet I offered them.
How unavailing my arguments, yet they were set forth!
How useless my love and my sorrow!
Yet I showed them to her.
No, she answered, but she flung her arms round my neck as she spoke, and held me as one
may hold one's best treasure.
No.
No, you are poor, and he is rich.
You wouldn't have me break my father's heart.
He's so proud!
And if he doesn't get some money next month, he will be ruined.
I'm not deceiving anyone. Mr. Benoliel knows I don't care for him, and if I marry him,
he is going to advance my father a large sum of money. Oh, I assure you that everything has been
talked over and settled. There is no going from it.
Child, child, I cried. How calmly you speak of it. Don't you see that you're selling your
soul and throwing mine away? Father Fabian says I am doing right.
She answered, unclasping her hands, but holding mine in them,
and looking at me with those clear, grey eyes of hers,
Are we to be unselfish in everything else,
and in love to think only of our own happiness?
I love you, and I shall marry him.
Would you rather the positions were reversed?
Yes, I said, for then I would make you love me.
Perhaps he will, she said bitterly.
Even in that moment her mouth trembled with the ghost of a smile.
She always loved to tease.
She goes through more moods in a day than most other women in a year.
Drowning the smile came tears, but she controlled them, and she said,
Goodbye.
You see I am right, don't you?
Oh, Jasper, I wish I hadn't told you I loved you.
It will only make you more unhappy.
It makes my one happiness, I answered.
answered, Nothing can take that from me, and that happiness he will never have. Say again
that you love me. I love you, I love you, I love you."
With further folly of tears and mad, loving words, we parted, and I bore my heartache
away, leaving her to bear hers into her new life. And now she was to be married to-morrow,
And I could not sleep.
When the darkness became unbearable I lighted a candle, and then lay staring vacantly
at the roses on the wallpaper, or following with my eyes the lines and curves of the heavy
mahogany furniture.
The solidity of my surroundings oppressed me.
In the dull light the wardrobe loomed like a hearse, and my violin case looked like a child's
coffin.
I reached a book, and read till my eyes ached, and the letters danced a pa fantastique
up and down the page.
I got up and had ten minutes with the dumbbells.
I sponged my face and hands with cold water, and tried again to sleep, vainly.
I lay there miserably wide awake.
I tried to say poetry, the half-vergotten tasks of my school days even, but through everything ran
the refrain,
"'Kate is to be married to-morrow, and not to me!
Not to me!'
I tried counting up to a thousand.
I tried to imagine sheep in a lane, and to count them as they jumped through a gap in an imaginary
hedge, all the time honoured spells with which sleep is wooed vainly.
Then the weights came, and a torture to the nerves was super-added to the torture of the
heart. After fifteen minutes of carols, every fibre of me seemed vibrating in an agony of physical
misery. To banish the echo of the mistletoe bow, I hummed softly to myself, a melody of palestrinas,
and felt more awake than ever. Then the thing happened, which nothing will ever explain.
As I lay there, I heard, breaking through and gradually overpowering the air I was suggesting,
A harmony, which I had never heard before, beautiful beyond description, and as distinct
and definite as any song man's ears have ever listened to.
My first half-formed thought was more weights, but the music was choral music, true and sweet.
With it mingled an organ's notes, and with every note the music grew in volume.
It is absurd to suggest that I dreamed it, for still hearing the
music, I leapt out of bed and opened the window. The music grew fainter. There was no one to be seen
in the snowy garden below. Shivering, I shut the window. The music grew more distinct, and I became
aware that I was listening to a mass, a funeral mass, and one which I had never heard before.
I lay in my bed and followed the whole course of the office. The music ceased. I was sitting up in bed,
my candle alight, and myself as wide awake as ever, and more than ever possessed by the thought of
her. But with a difference, before I had only mourned the loss of her. Now my thoughts of her were
mingled with an indescribable dread. The sense of death and decay that had come to me with that
strange, beautiful music, coloured all my thoughts. I was filled with fancies of hushed houses,
black garments, rooms where white flowers and white linen lay in a deathly stillness.
I heard echoes of tears, and of dim-voiced bells tolling monotonously.
I shivered, as it were, on the brink of irreparable woe, and in its contemplation I watched
the dull dawn slowly overcome the pale flame of my candle, now burnt down into its socket.
I felt that I must see Kate once again, before she gave herself away. Before ten o'clock I was
in the oak parlour. She came to me. As she entered the room, her pallor, her swollen eyelids,
and the misery in her eyes wrung my heart, as even that night of agony had not done.
I literally could not speak. I held out my hands. Would she reproach me for coming to her again,
for forcing upon her a second time the anguish of parting.
She did not.
She laid her hands in mine and said,
I'm thankful you have come.
Do you know I think I am going mad?
Don't let me go mad, Jasper.
The look in her eyes underlined her words.
I stammered something and kissed her hands.
I was with her again,
and joy fought again with grief.
I must tell someone,
If I am mad, don't lock me up. Take care of me, won't you?
Would I not?
Understand, she went on. It was not a dream.
I was wide awake, thinking of you.
The weights had not long gone, and I...
I was looking at your likeness.
I was not asleep.
I shivered as I held her fast.
As heaven sees us, I did not dream it.
I heard a mass sung, and I was not.
And Jasper, it was a mass for the dead.
I followed the office.
You are not a Catholic, but I thought, I feared, oh, I don't know what I thought.
I am thankful there is nothing wrong with you.
I felt a sudden certainty and complete sense of power possessed me.
Now, in this her moment of weakness, while she was so completely under the influence of a strong
emotion, I could, and would save her from Benoliel, and
myself from lifelong pain.
"'Kate,' I said,
"'I believe it is a warning.
"'You shall not marry this man.
"'You shall marry me, and none other.'
She leaned her head against my shoulder.
She seemed to have forgotten her father
and all the reasons for her marriage with Benoliel.
"'You don't think I'm mad, no?
Then take care of me.
Take me away.
I feel safe with you.'
Thus all obstinate.
Vasticals vanished in less time than the length of a lover's kiss.
I dared not stop to consider the coincidence of supernatural warning, nor what it might mean.
Face to face with crowned hope, I am proud to remember that common sense held her own.
The room in which we were had a French window.
I fetched her garden hat and a shawl from the hall, and we went out through the still white
garden.
We did not meet a soul.
When we reached my father's garden, I took her in by the back way.
to the summer house, and left her, though I was half afraid to leave her, while I went into the house.
I snatched my violin and checkbook, took all my spare money, scrawled the line to my father, and rejoined her.
Still, no one had seen us. We walked to a station five miles away, and, by the time Benoliel would
reach the church, I was leaving Doctors' Commons with a special license in my pocket.
Two hours later, Kate was my wife, and we were quietly and prosaically eating our wedding breakfast in the dining-room of the Grand Hotel.
"'And where shall we go?' I said.
"'I don't know,' she answered, smiling.
"'You have not too much money, have you?'
"'Oh, dear me, yes. I'm not rich, but I'm not absolutely a church mouse.'
"'Could we go to Devonshire?' she asked, twisting her.
her new ring round and round.
Devonshire?
Why, that is where?
Yes I know.
Benoliel arranged to go there.
Jasper, I am afraid of Benoliel.
Then why?
Foolish person, she answered.
Do you think that Benoliel will be likely to go to Devonshire now?
We went to Devonshire.
I had had a small legacy a few months earlier,
and I did not permit money cares to trouble my new and beautiful happiness.
My only fear was that she would be saddened by thoughts of her father.
But I am thankful to remember that in those first days she too was happy,
so happy that there seemed to be hardly room in her mind for any thought but of me,
and every hour of every day I said to my soul,
But for that portent whatever it boded, she might have been not my wife but his.
The first four or five days of our marriage are flowers,
that memory keeps always fresh. Kate's face had recovered its wild rose bloom, and she laughed
and sang and gested, and enjoyed all our little daily adventures with the fullest, freest-hearted
gaiety.
Then I committed the supreme imbecility of my life, one of those acts of folly on which one
looks back all one's life, with a half-stamp of the foot and the unanswerable question.
How on earth could I have been such a fool?'
We were sitting in a little sitting-room, hideous in intention,
but redeemed by blazing fire and the fact that two were there sitting hand in hand,
gazing into the fire and talking of their future and of their love.
There was nothing to trouble us.
No one had discovered our whereabouts,
and my wife's fear of Benoliel's revenge seemed to have dissolved before the flame of our happiness.
And as we sat there, peaceful and untroubled, the imp of the perverse jogged my elbow, as,
Alas, he does so often, and I was moved to tell my wife that I too had heard that unearthly
midnight music, that her hearing of it was not, as she had grown to think, a mere nightmare,
a strange dream, but something more strange, more significant.
I told her that I had heard the mass for the dead, and all the time.
of that night. She listened silently, and I thought her strangely indifferent. When I had finished,
she took her hand from mine and covered her face.
I believe it was a warning to us to flee temptation. We ought never to have married.
Oh, my poor father! Her tone was one that I had never heard before. Its hopeless misery
appalled me, and justly, for no arguments, no entreaties, no caresses, could win
my wife back to the mood of an hour before. She tried to be cheerful, but her gaiety was forced,
and her laughter stung my heart. She spoke no more about the music, and when I tried to reason
with her about it, she smiled a gloomy little smile and said, I cannot be happy. I will not
be happy. It is wrong. I have been very selfish and wicked. You think me very idiotic,
I know, but I believe there is a curse on us. We shall never be happy again.
"'Don't you love me any more?' I asked, like a fool.
"'Love you?'
She only repeated my words, but I was satisfied on that score.
But those were miserable days.
We loved each other passionately, yet our hours were spent like those of lovers on the eve
of parting.
Long, long silences took the place of foolish little jokes and childish talk which
happy lovers know.
and more than once, waking in the night, I heard my wife sobbing, and feigned sleep with the
bitter knowledge that I had no power to comfort her. I knew that the thought of her father was
with her always, and that her anxiety about him grew day by day. I wore myself out in trying
to think of some way to divert her thoughts from him. I could not, indeed, pay his debts,
but I could have him to live with us, a much greater sacrifice. And having a very
a good connection both as a musician and composer, I did not doubt that I could support
her and him in comfort. But Kate had made up her mind that the disgrace of bankruptcy would
break her father's heart, and my Kate is not easy to convince or persuade. At Dorky,
it occurred to me that perhaps it would be well for her to see a priest. True Father
Fabian had counseled her to marry Benoliel, but I could hardly believe that
most priests would advise a girl to marry a bad man, whom she did not love, for the sake of any
worldly gain whatsoever. She received the suggestion with favour, but without enthusiasm,
and we sought out a Catholic church to make inquiries. As we opened the outer door of the church,
we heard music, and as we stood in the entrance and I laid my hand on the heavy inner door,
my other hand was caught by Kate.
"'Jasper,' she whispered, "'it is the same.'
Some person opening the door behind us compelled us to move forward.
In another moment we stood in the dusky church, stood hand in hand in dim daylight,
listening to the same music that each had heard in the lonely night on the eve of our wedding.
I put my arm round my wife and drew her back.
Come away, my darling, I whispered.
It is a funeral service.
She turned her eyes on me.
I must understand.
I must see who it is.
It is.
I shall go mad if you take me away now.
I cannot bear any more."
We walked up the aisle and placed ourselves as near as possible to the spot where the coffin
lay, covered with flowers and with tapers burning about it.
And we heard that music again, every note of it, the same that each had heard before.
And when the service was over I whispered to the sacristan,
"'Whose music was that?'
"'Our organists.'
He answered.
It is the first time they've had it.
Fine, wasn't it?
Who is the...
Who is...
Who is being buried?
Oh, a foreign gentleman, sir.
They do say, as his lady, as was to be,
gave him a slip on his wedding day.
And he'd given her father thousands, they say,
if the truth was known.
But what was he doing here?
Well, that's the curious part, sir.
To show his independence,
what does he do but go the same?
same tour he'd planned for his wedding trip, and there was a railway accident, and him and
everyone in his carriage killed in a twinkling, so to speak. Lucky for the young lady, she was off
with somebody else. The sacristan laughed softly to himself. Kate's fingers gripped my arm.
What was his name? she asked. I would not have asked. I did not wish to hear it.
Benoliel, said the sacristan. Curious name and curious.
tale. Everyone's talking of it. Everyone had something else to talk of when it was found that
Manoliel's pride, which had permitted him to buy a wife, had shrunk from reclaiming the purchase
money when the purchase was lost to him. And to the man who had been willing to sell his daughter,
the retention of her price seemed perfectly natural.
From the moment when she heard Benoliel's name on the Sacristan's lips, all Kate's
gaiety and happiness returned. She loved me, and she hated Benoliel. She was married to me,
and he was dead, and his death was far more of a shock to me than to her. Women are curiously
kind, and curiously cruel, and she never could see why her father should not have kept the money.
It is noteworthy that women, even the cleverest and the best of them, have no perception of what men mean by honour.
How do I account for the music? My good critic, my business is to tell my story, not to account for it.
And do I not pity Benoliel? Yes, I can afford now to pity most men, alive or dead.
The End of The Mass for the Dead
And the End of Grim Tales by Edith Nesbit
