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"I can't 'elp bein' afraid, sir. I know she's dead an' can't do me no 'arm ... not that she'd want to do me any 'arm ... I will say that for 'er ... but some'ow I'm afraid all the same, sir. I can't 'elp it!"
"I want to get a book out of my room," Henry interjected, "so I'll go upstairs with her!"
"Oh, thank you, sir," said Magnolia gratefully. "I know she wouldn't 'arm me if she could 'elp it, not if she was alive any'ow, but they're different when they're dead!..." She broke down, blubbering hopelessly.
"Oh, I wish I was 'ome," she moaned.
"Come on, Magnolia!" Henry said, opening the door for her.
"That girl's getting on my nerves," Gilbert murmured when she had gone.
Magnolia followed Henry upstairs. They had to pa.s.s the room in which the dead woman lay, and Magnolia, when she reached the door, gave a little squeal of fright and ran forward, thrusting past Henry.... "Don't be a fool, Magnolia!" he said, catching hold of her arm and steadying her.
"I'm frightened, sir!" she moaned, looking up at him with dilated eyes.
"There's nothing to be afraid of. Come along!"
He took her to her room and opened the door for her.
"You're all right now, aren't you?" he said, switching on the light.
"Yes, thank you, sir!"
"Good-night, then!"
"Good-night, sir!"
When she had shut the door, he heard her turning the key in the lock, and he smiled at her precaution. "That wouldn't hinder Mrs. Clutters'
ghost if she ... if she started to walk!" he thought to himself, as he descended the stairs to his room. He had switched off the light on Magnolia's landing, but there was a light showing dimly up the stairs from the landing beneath. It shone faintly on the door of the room in which Mrs. Clutters' body was lying. He went down the stairs towards the door, and then, half-way down, stopped. He could not look away from the door ... he felt that in a moment or two it would open, and Mrs.
Clutters, in her grave-clothes, would stand in the shadow and look at him with fixed eyes....
"Don't be a fool!" he said aloud, shaking his head and das.h.i.+ng his hand across his eyes as if he were trying to sweep something away. "I'm nervy, that's what it is," he went on, still speaking aloud. "I'm worse than Magnolia!..."
He descended the rest of the stairs, determined not to show any sign of fear, and then, as he pa.s.sed the door, he shut his eyes and hurried by.
He ran down the next flight of stairs, afraid to look back, and did not pause in his running until he had reached the ground floor. He stood still in the hall for a few minutes to recover himself, and then he entered the room where the others were sitting.
They looked up at him.
"All right?" Ninian asked, and Henry nodded his head.
"You haven't brought the book," Roger said.
"No," he answered, "No ... I changed my mind. I didn't really want the book. I just said that to ... to get Magnolia out of the room!"
6
Mrs. Clutters' husband insisted on seeing them after the funeral because, he said, he wished to thank them for all they had done for "'er!" He made a jerk over his shoulder with his thumb when he said "'er," and they gathered that he was indicating the direction of Kensal Green cemetery. He was very maudlin and drunk, and Ninian thought that he ought to be kicked.
"I'm shorry," he said, "to be thish con ... condish'n, gemmem, but y'see it's like this. A gemman said to me, y'see, 'Bert,' 'e says ... thash my name ... Bert, called after Queen's 'usban' ... Gaw' bless 'er!...
Alber' the Goo' they called '_im_ ... not me, oh, Lor' no!... thish gemmam, 'e says to me, 'Bert,' 'e says, 'come an' 'ave one!' an' so o'
course I '_ad_ to 'ave one. Thash 'ow 'twas, see! Shorry to be in thish disgrashful state ... thish sad occas'n, gemmem. Very shorry! _I_ thank you!" He turned to leave them, staggering towards the door. "I ain't been a good 'usban' to 'er," he went on, again making the jerking gesture over his shoulder with his thumb. "Thash a fac'. I ain't. But I 'pologise. I'm shorry! Can't say no more'n that, can I? Goo'-ni', gemmem!"
And then he staggered out.
"Somebody ought to do him in," said Ninian, going to see that he left the house as quickly as possible.
"Well," said Roger, when Ninian had returned, "what are we going to do next?"
"Sack Magnolia," said Gilbert.
"And then?" Roger went on.
"I don't know," Gilbert replied.
"I suppose we can get another housekeeper," Henry suggested.
"Yes, we could do that," said Gilbert.
Roger got up and moved about the room for a few moments. "I think I shall get married," he said at last. "I've got to get married some time, and I might as well get married now. This ... this business seems to provide an opportunity, don't you think?"
"It's a pity to break up the house," Gilbert murmured.
"It'll have to be broken up some day," Roger retorted.
Ninian joined in. "There's talk of a big railway contract in South America, and I might have to go. Hare spoke of sending me. In about six months' time...."
"We might let the house furnished for the remainder of the lease," Roger went on. "Perhaps some one would take the furniture over altogether....
I could use some of it, of course, for my house when I get married!"
"You've settled it then!" said Gilbert.
"Not exactly. I haven't said anything to Rachel yet. The idea occurred to me in the chapel while the parson was saying the Burial Service!"
"I could have hit that fellow," Gilbert exclaimed. "Gabbling it off like that! I suppose he was in a hurry to get home to tea!"
They sat in silence for a while, each of them conjuring up the vision of the cold little service in the cemetery chapel. Magnolia, clothed in black, had sobbed loudly, while Mr. Clutters sniffed and said "A-men" very emphatically, and the parson, regarding the little group of mourners with the curiosity of a man who is bored by death and the ritual of burial, gabbled away: _NowisChristrisen fromthedeadandbecomethefirstfruitsofthemthatsleptforsince_
_Bymancamedeathbymancamealso_
_Theresurrectionofthedead...._
"It means breaking up everything," Gilbert still protested.
"Things are always breaking up," said Roger.
"I suppose so," Gilbert replied.
Henry had not taken part in the conversation, but had lain back in his chair, with his hands clasped behind his head, lazily listening to what they were saying.