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Sleeping
Sleeping
| THE LADY OF THE BARGE | |
| AND OTHER STORIES | |
| By W. W. Jacobs | |
| THREE AT TABLE | |
| The talk in the coffee-room had been of ghosts and apparitions, and | |
| nearly everybody present had contributed his mite to the stock of | |
| information upon a hazy and somewhat thread-bare subject. Opinions | |
| ranged from rank incredulity to childlike faith, one believer going so | |
| far as to denounce unbelief as impious, with a reference to the Witch of | |
| Endor, which was somewhat marred by being complicated in an inexplicable | |
| fashion with the story of Jonah. | |
| "Talking of Jonah," he said solemnly, with a happy disregard of the fact | |
| that he had declined to answer several eager questions put to him on the | |
| subject, "look at the strange tales sailors tell us." | |
| "I wouldn't advise you to believe all those," said a bluff, clean-shaven | |
| man, who had been listening without speaking much. "You see when a | |
| sailor gets ashore he's expected to have something to tell, and his | |
| friends would be rather disappointed if he had not." | |
| "It's a well-known fact," interrupted the first speaker firmly, "that | |
| sailors are very prone to see visions." | |
| "They are," said the other dryly, "they generally see them in pairs, and | |
| the shock to the nervous system frequently causes headache next morning." | |
| "You never saw anything yourself?" suggested an unbeliever. | |
| "Man and boy," said the other, "I've been at sea thirty years, and the | |
| only unpleasant incident of that kind occurred in a quiet English | |
| countryside." | |
| "And that?" said another man. | |
| "I was a young man at the time," said the narrator, drawing at his pipe | |
| and glancing good-humouredly at the company. "I had just come back from | |
| China, and my own people being away I went down into the country to | |
| invite myself to stay with an uncle. When I got down to the place I | |
| found it closed and the family in the South of France; but as they were | |
| due back in a couple of days I decided to put up at the Royal George, | |
| a very decent inn, and await their return. | |
| "The first day I passed well enough; but in the evening the dulness of | |
| the rambling old place, in which I was the only visitor, began to weigh | |
| upon my spirits, and the next morning after a late breakfast I set out | |
| with the intention of having a brisk day's walk. | |
| "I started off in excellent spirits, for the day was bright and frosty, | |
| with a powdering of snow on the iron-bound roads and nipped hedges, and | |
| the country had to me all the charm of novelty. It was certainly flat, | |
| but there was plenty of timber, and the villages through which I passed | |
| were old and picturesque. | |
| "I lunched luxuriously on bread and cheese and beer in the bar of a small | |
| inn, and resolved to go a little further before turning back. When at | |
| length I found I had gone far enough, I turned up a lane at right angles | |
| to the road I was passing, and resolved to find my way back by another | |
| route. It is a long lane that has no turning, but this had several, each | |
| of which had turnings of its own, which generally led, as I found by | |
| trying two or three of them, into the open marshes. Then, tired of | |
| lanes, I resolved to rely upon the small compass which hung from my watch | |
| chain and go across country home. | |
| "I had got well into the marshes when a white fog, which had been for | |
| some time hovering round the edge of the ditches, began gradually to | |
| spread. There was no escaping it, but by aid of my compass I was saved | |
| from making a circular tour and fell instead into frozen ditches or | |
| stumbled over roots in the grass. I kept my course, however, until at | |
| four o'clock, when night was coming rapidly up to lend a hand to the fog, | |
| I was fain to confess myself lost. | |
| "The compass was now no good to me, and I wandered about miserably, | |
| occasionally giving a shout on the chance of being heard by some passing | |
| shepherd or farmhand. At length by great good luck I found my feet on a | |
| rough road driven through the marshes, and by walking slowly and tapping | |
| with my stick managed to keep to it. I had followed it for some distance | |
| when I heard footsteps approaching me. | |
| "We stopped as we met, and the new arrival, a sturdy-looking countryman, | |
| hearing of my plight, walked back with me for nearly a mile, and putting | |
| me on to a road gave me minute instructions how to reach a village some | |
| three miles distant. | |
| "I was so tired that three miles sounded like ten, and besides that, a | |
| little way off from the road I saw dimly a lighted window. I pointed it | |
| out, but my companion shuddered and looked round him uneasily. | |
| "'You won't get no good there,' he said, hastily. | |
| "'Why not?' I asked. | |
| "'There's a something there, sir,' he replied, 'what 'tis I dunno, but | |
| the little 'un belonging to a gamekeeper as used to live in these parts | |
| see it, and it was never much good afterward. Some say as it's a poor | |
| mad thing, others says as it's a kind of animal; but whatever it is, it | |
| ain't good to see.' | |
| "'Well, I'll keep on, then,' I said. 'Goodnight.' | |
| "He went back whistling cheerily until his footsteps died away in the | |
| distance, and I followed the road he had indicated until it divided into | |
| three, any one of which to a stranger might be said to lead straight on. | |
| I was now cold and tired, and having half made up my mind walked slowly | |
| back toward the house. | |
| "At first all I could see of it was the little patch of light at the | |
| window. I made for that until it disappeared suddenly, and I found myself | |
| walking into a tall hedge. I felt my way round this until I came to a | |
| small gate, and opening it cautiously, walked, not without some little | |
| nervousness, up a long path which led to the door. There was no light and | |
| no sound from within. Half repenting of my temerity I shortened my stick | |
| and knocked lightly upon the door. | |
| "I waited a couple of minutes and then knocked again, and my stick was | |
| still beating the door when it opened suddenly and a tall bony old woman, | |
| holding a candle, confronted me. | |
| "'What do you want?' she demanded gruffly. | |
| "'I've lost my way,' I said, civilly; 'I want to get to Ashville.' | |
| "'Don't know it,' said the old woman. | |
| "She was about to close the door when a man emerged from a room at the | |
| side of the hall and came toward us. An old man of great height and | |
| breadth of shoulder. | |
| "'Ashville is fifteen miles distant,' he said slowly. | |
| "'If you will direct me to the nearest village, I shall be grateful,' I | |
| remarked. | |
| "He made no reply, but exchanged a quick, furtive glance with the woman. | |
| She made a gesture of dissent. | |
| "'The nearest place is three miles off,' he said, turning to me and | |
| apparently trying to soften a naturally harsh voice; 'if you will give me | |
| the pleasure of your company, I will make you as comfortable as I can.' | |
| "I hesitated. They were certainly a queer-looking couple, and the gloomy | |
| hall with the shadows thrown by the candle looked hardly more inviting | |
| than the darkness outside. | |
| "'You are very kind,' I murmured, irresolutely, 'but--' | |
| "'Come in,' he said quickly; 'shut the door, Anne.' | |
| "Almost before I knew it I was standing inside and the old woman, | |
| muttering to herself, had closed the door behind me. With a queer | |
| sensation of being trapped I followed my host into the room, and taking | |
| the proffered chair warmed my frozen fingers at the fire. | |
| "'Dinner will soon be ready,' said the old man, regarding me closely. 'If | |
| you will excuse me.' | |
| "I bowed and he left the room. A minute afterward I heard voices; his | |
| and the old woman's, and, I fancied, a third. Before I had finished my | |
| inspection of the room he returned, and regarded me with the same strange | |
| look I had noticed before. | |
| "'There will be three of us at dinner,' he said, at length. 'We two and | |
| my son.' | |
| "I bowed again, and secretly hoped that that look didn't run in the | |
| family. | |
| "'I suppose you don't mind dining in the dark,' he said, abruptly. | |
| "'Not at all,' I replied, hiding my surprise as well as I could, 'but | |
| really I'm afraid I'm intruding. If you'll allow me--' | |
| "He waved his huge gaunt hands. 'We're not going to lose you now we've | |
| got you,' he said, with a dry laugh. 'It's seldom we have company, and | |
| now we've got you we'll keep you. My son's eyes are bad, and he can't | |
| stand the light. Ah, here is Anne.' | |
| "As he spoke the old woman entered, and, eyeing me stealthily, began to | |
| lay the cloth, while my host, taking a chair the other side of the | |
| hearth, sat looking silently into the fire. The table set, the old woman | |
| brought in a pair of fowls ready carved in a dish, and placing three | |
| chairs, left the room. The old man hesitated a moment, and then, rising | |
| from his chair, placed a large screen in front of the fire and slowly | |
| extinguished the candles. | |
| "'Blind man's holiday,' he said, with clumsy jocosity, and groping his | |
| way to the door opened it. Somebody came back into the room with him, | |
| and in a slow, uncertain fashion took a seat at the table, and the | |
| strangest voice I have ever heard broke a silence which was fast becoming | |
| oppressive. | |
| "'A cold night,' it said slowly. | |
| "I replied in the affirmative, and light or no light, fell to with an | |
| appetite which had only been sharpened by the snack in the middle of the | |
| day. It was somewhat difficult eating in the dark, and it was evident | |
| from the behaviour of my invisible companions that they were as unused to | |
| dining under such circumstances as I was. We ate in silence until the | |
| old woman blundered into the room with some sweets and put them with a | |
| crash upon the table. | |
| "'Are you a stranger about here?' inquired the curious voice again. | |
| "I replied in the affirmative, and murmured something about my luck in | |
| stumbling upon such a good dinner. | |
| "'Stumbling is a very good word for it,' said the voice grimly. 'You | |
| have forgotten the port, father.' | |
| "'So I have,' said the old man, rising. 'It's a bottle of the | |
| "Celebrated" to-day; I will get it myself.' | |
| "He felt his way to the door, and closing it behind him, left me alone | |
| with my unseen neighbour. There was something so strange about the whole | |
| business that I must confess to more than a slight feeling of uneasiness. | |
| "My host seemed to be absent a long time. I heard the man opposite lay | |
| down his fork and spoon, and half fancied I could see a pair of wild eyes | |
| shining through the gloom like a cat's. | |
| "With a growing sense of uneasiness I pushed my chair back. It caught | |
| the hearthrug, and in my efforts to disentangle it the screen fell over | |
| with a crash and in the flickering light of the fire I saw the face of | |
| the creature opposite. With a sharp catch of my breath I left my chair | |
| and stood with clenched fists beside it. Man or beast, which was it? | |
| The flame leaped up and then went out, and in the mere red glow of the | |
| fire it looked more devilish than before. | |
| "For a few moments we regarded each other in silence; then the door | |
| opened and the old man returned. He stood aghast as he saw the warm | |
| firelight, and then approaching the table mechanically put down a couple | |
| of bottles. | |
| "'I beg your pardon,' said I, reassured by his presence, 'but I have | |
| accidentally overturned the screen. Allow me to replace it.' | |
| "'No,' said the old man, gently, 'let it be. | |
| "'We have had enough of the dark. I'll give you a light.' | |
| "He struck a match and slowly lit the candles. Then--I saw that the man | |
| opposite had but the remnant of a face, a gaunt wolfish face in which one | |
| unquenched eye, the sole remaining feature, still glittered. I was | |
| greatly moved, some suspicion of the truth occurring to me. | |
| "'My son was injured some years ago in a burning house,' said the old | |
| man. 'Since then we have lived a very retired life. When you came to | |
| the door we--' his voice trembled, 'that is-my son---' | |
| "'I thought," said the son simply, 'that it would be better for me not to | |
| come to the dinner-table. But it happens to be my birthday, and my | |
| father would not hear of my dining alone, so we hit upon this foolish | |
| plan of dining in the dark. I'm sorry I startled you.' | |
| "'I am sorry,' said I, as I reached across the table and gripped his | |
| hand, 'that I am such a fool; but it was only in the dark that you | |
| startled me.' | |
| "From a faint tinge in the old man's cheek and a certain pleasant | |
| softening of the poor solitary eye in front of me I secretly | |
| congratulated myself upon this last remark. | |
| "'We never see a friend,' said the old man, apologetically, 'and the | |
| temptation to have company was too much for us. Besides, I don't know | |
| what else you could have done.' | |
| "'Nothing else half so good, I'm sure,' said I. | |
| "'Come,' said my host, with almost a sprightly air. 'Now we know each | |
| other, draw our chairs to the fire and let's keep this birthday in a | |
| proper fashion.' | |
| "He drew a small table to the fire for the glasses and produced a box of | |
| cigars, and placing a chair for the old servant, sternly bade her to sit | |
| down and drink. If the talk was not sparkling, it did not lack for | |
| vivacity, and we were soon as merry a party as I have ever seen. The | |
| night wore on so rapidly that we could hardly believe our ears when in a | |
| lull in the conversation a clock in the hall struck twelve. | |
| "'A last toast before we retire,' said my host, pitching the end of his | |
| cigar into the fire and turning to the small table. | |
| "We had drunk several before this, but there was something impressive in | |
| the old man's manner as he rose and took up his glass. His tall figure | |
| seemed to get taller, and his voice rang as he gazed proudly at his | |
| disfigured son. | |
| "'The health of the children my boy saved!' he said, and drained his | |
| glass at a draught." | |