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The response of Rip was, with a violent scramble, to disentangle himself from his covering, emerging from which he again barked with shrill and piercing vehemence, at the same time leaping to the floor. By the sound, which he could locate, Valentine felt certain that the dog had gone over to the door.
"What on earth is he barking at?" Julian said in the darkness.
"I can't imagine. Hush, Rip! S-s.h.!.+"
"Val, turn on the light, quick! You're nearest to it."
Valentine stretched out his hand hastily, and in a flash the room sprang into view. He was right. Rip was crouched--his front legs extended along the floor, his hind legs standing almost straight--close to the door, and facing it full. His head was down, and moving, darting this way and that, as if he were worrying the feet of some person who was trying to advance from the door into the centre of the room. All his teeth showed, and his yellow eyes were glaring fiercely.
Julian, who had thrown a hasty and searching glance round the room when the light was turned on, sprang forward and bent down to him.
"Rip! Rip!" he said. "Silly! What's the matter? Silly dog!" and he began to stroke him.
Either this action of his, or something else not known by the young men, had an effect on the terrier, for he suddenly ceased barking, and began to snuffle eagerly, excitedly, at the bottom of the door.
"It's as if he were mad," said Julian, turning round. "Hulloh, Val! What the devil's come to you?"
For he found Valentine standing up by the table with an expression of deep astonishment on his face.
He pointed in silence to the door.
"By Jove! that curtain again!" said Julian, with an accent of amazement.
"I'm d.a.m.ned!"
The curtain was, in fact, drawn back from the door. Valentine struck a match and put it to a candle. Then he opened the door. Rip immediately darted out of the room and pattered excitedly down the pa.s.sage, as if searching for something, his sharp nose investigating the ground with a vehement attention. The young men followed him. He ran to the front door, then back into Valentine's bedroom; then, by turns, into the four other apartments--bedroom, drawing-room, bathroom and kitchen--that formed the suite. The doors of the two latter were opened by Valentine. Having completed this useless progress, Rip once more resorted to the pa.s.sage and the front door, by which he paused, whimpering, in an uncertain, almost a wistful att.i.tude.
"Open it!" said Julian.
Valentine did so.
They looked out upon the broad and dreary stone steps, and waited, listening. There was no sound. Rip still whimpered, rather feebly. His excitement was evidently dying away. At last Valentine shut the door, and they went back again to the tentroom, accompanied closely by the dog, who gradually regained his calmness, and who presently jumped of his own accord into his basket, and, after turning quickly round some half-dozen times, composed himself once more to sleep.
"I wish, after all, we had stayed in the other room by the fire," Julian said. "Give me some brandy."
Valentine poured some into a gla.s.s and Julian swallowed it at a gulp.
"We mustn't have Rip in the room another time," he added. "He spoilt the whole thing."
"What whole thing?" Valentine asked, sinking down in a chair.
"Well, the sitting. Perhaps--perhaps one of Marr's mysterious manifestations might have come off to-night."
Valentine did not reply at first. When he did, he startled Julian by saying:
"Perhaps one of them did come off."
"Did?"
"Yes."
"How?"
"What was Rip barking at?"
"There's no accounting for what dogs will do. They often bark at shadows."
"At shadows--yes, exactly. But what cast a shadow to-night?"
Julian laughed with some apparent uneasiness.
"Perhaps a coming event," he exclaimed.
Valentine looked at him rather gravely.
"That is exactly what I felt," he said.
"Explain. For I was only joking."
"I felt, perhaps it was only a fancy, that this second sitting of ours brought some event a stage nearer, a stage nearer on its journey."
"To what?"
"I felt--to us."
"Fancy."
"Probably. You didn't feel it?"
"I? Oh, I scarcely know what I felt. I must say, though, that squatting in the dark, and saying nothing for such an age, and--and all the rest of it, doesn't exactly toughen one's nerves. That little demon of a Rip quite gave me the horrors when he started barking. What fools we are! I should think nothing of mounting a dangerous horse, or sailing a boat in rough weather, or risking my life as we all do half our time in one way or another. Yet a dog and a dark room give me the shudders. Funny, Val, isn't it?"
Valentine answered, "If it is a dog and a dark room."
"What else can it possibly be?" Julian said with an accent of rather unreasonable annoyance.
"I don't know. But I did draw the curtain completely over the door to-night. Julian, I am getting interested in this. Perhaps--who knows?--in the end I shall have your soul, you mine."
He laughed as he spoke; then added:
"No, no; I don't believe in such an exchange; and, Julian, I scarcely desire it. But let us go on. This gives a slight new excitement to life."
"Yes. But it is selfish of you to wish to keep your soul to yourself.
I want it. Well, _au revoir_, Val; to-morrow night."
"_Au revoir_."
After Julian had gone Valentine went back into the drawing-room and stood for a long while before the "Merciful Knight." He had a strange fancy that the picture of the bending Christ protected the room from the intrusion of--what?
He could not tell yet. Perhaps he could never tell.