The Red House Mystery by A. A. Milne (best electronic book reader .TXT) đ
- Author: A. A. Milne
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âNot well-dressed enough for the drawing-room, eh?â
âI will tell the master you are here, sir,â said Audrey decisively.
She closed the door and left him there.
Well! Here was something to tell auntie! Her mind was busy at once, going over all the things which he had said to her and she had said to himâquiet-like. âDirectly I saw him I said to myselfââ Why, you could have knocked her over with a feather. Feathers, indeed, were a perpetual menace to Audrey.
However, the immediate business was to find the master. She walked across the hall to the library, glanced in, came back a little uncertainly, and stood in front of Cayley.
âIf you please, sir,â she said in a low, respectful voice, âcan you tell me where the master is? Itâs Mr. Robert called.â
âWhat?â said Cayley, looking up from his book. âWho?â
Audrey repeated her question.
âI donât know. Isnât he in the office? He went up to the Temple after lunch. I donât think Iâve seen him since.â
âThank you, sir. I will go up to the Temple.â
Cayley returned to his book.
The âTempleâ was a brick summer-house, in the gardens at the back of the house, about three hundred yards away. Here Mark meditated sometimes before retiring to the âofficeâ to put his thoughts upon paper. The thoughts were not of any great value; moreover, they were given off at the dinner-table more often than they got on to paper, and got on to paper more often than they got into print. But that did not prevent the master of The Red House from being a little pained when a visitor treated the Temple carelessly, as if it had been erected for the ordinary purposes of flirtation and cigarette-smoking. There had been an occasion when two of his guests had been found playing fives in it. Mark had said nothing at the time, save to ask with a little less than his usual pointâwhether they couldnât find anywhere else for their game, but the offenders were never asked to The Red House again.
Audrey walked slowly up to the Temple, looked in and walked slowly back. All that walk for nothing. Perhaps the master was upstairs in his room. âNot well-dressed enough for the drawing-room.â Well, now, Auntie, would you like anyone in your drawing-room with a red handkerchief round his neck and great big dusty boots, andâlisten! One of the men shooting rabbits. Auntie was partial to a nice rabbit, and onion sauce. How hot it was; she wouldnât say no to a cup of tea. Well, one thing, Mr. Robert wasnât staying the night; he hadnât any luggage. Of course Mr. Mark could lend him things; he had clothes enough for six. She would have known him anywhere for Mr. Markâs brother.
She came into the house. As she passed the housekeeperâs room on her way to the hall, the door opened suddenly, and a rather frightened face looked out.
âHallo, Aud,â said Elsie. âItâs Audrey,â she said, turning into the room.
âCome in, Audrey,â called Mrs. Stevens.
âWhatâs up?â said Audrey, looking in at the door.
âOh, my dear, you gave me such a turn. Where have you been?â
âUp to the Temple.â
âDid you hear anything?â
âHear what?â
âBangs and explosions and terrible things.â
âOh!â said Audrey, rather relieved. âOne of the men shooting rabbits. Why, I said to myself as I came along, âAuntieâs partial to a nice rabbit,â I said, and I shouldnât be surprised ifââ
âRabbits!â said her aunt scornfully. âIt was inside the house, my girl.â
âStraight it was,â said Elsie. She was one of the housemaids. âI said to Mrs. Stevensâdidnât I, Mrs. Stevens?ââThat was in the house,â I said.â
Audrey looked at her aunt and then at Elsie.
âDo you think he had a revolver with him?â she said in a hushed voice.
âWho?â said Elsie excitedly.
âThat brother of his. From Australia. I said as soon as I set eyes on him, âYouâre a bad lot, my man!â Thatâs what I said, Elsie. Even before he spoke to me. Rude!â She turned to her aunt. âWell, I give you my word.â
âIf you remember, Audrey, I always said there was no saying with anyone from Australia.â Mrs. Stevens lay back in her chair, breathing rather rapidly. âI wouldnât go out of this room now, not if you paid me a hundred thousand pounds.â
âOh, Mrs. Stevens!â said Elsie, who badly wanted five shillings for a new pair of shoes, âI wouldnât go as far as that, not myself, butââ
âThere!â cried Mrs. Stevens, sitting up with a start. They listened anxiously, the two girls instinctively coming closer to the older womanâs chair.
A door was being shaken, kicked, rattled.
âListen!â
Audrey and Elsie looked at each other with frightened eyes.
They heard a manâs voice, loud, angry.
âOpen the door!â it was shouting. âOpen the door! I say, open the door!â
âDonât open the door!â cried Mrs. Stevens in a panic, as if it was her door which was threatened. âAudrey! Elsie! Donât let him in!â
âDamn it, open the door!â came the voice again.
âWeâre all going to be murdered in our beds,â she quavered. Terrified, the two girls huddled closer, and with an arm round each, Mrs. Stevens sat there, waiting.
Mr. Gillingham Gets Out at the Wrong Station
Whether Mark Ablett was a bore or not depended on the point of view, but it may be said at once that he never bored his company on the subject of his early life. However, stories get about. There is always somebody who knows. It was understoodâand this, anyhow, on Markâs own authorityâthat his father had been a country clergyman. It was said that, as a boy, Mark had attracted the notice, and patronage, of some rich old spinster of the neighbourhood, who had paid for his education, both at school and university. At about the time when he was coming down from Cambridge, his father had died; leaving behind him a few debts, as a warning to his family, and a reputation for short sermons, as an example to his successor. Neither warning nor example seems to have been effective. Mark went to London, with an allowance from his patron, and (it is generally agreed) made acquaintance with the money-lenders. He was supposed, by his patron and any others who inquired, to be âwritingâ; but what he wrote, other than letters asking for more time to pay, has never been discovered. However, he attended the theatres and music halls very regularlyâno doubt with a view to some serious articles in the âSpectatorâ on the decadence of the English stage.
Fortunately (from Markâs point of view) his patron died during his third year in London, and left him all the money he wanted. From that moment his life loses its legendary character, and becomes more a matter of history. He settled accounts with the money-lenders, abandoned his crop of wild oats to the harvesting of others, and became in his turn a patron. He patronized the Arts. It was not only usurers who discovered that Mark Ablett no longer wrote for money; editors were now offered free contributions as well as free lunches; publishers were given agreements for an occasional slender volume, in which the author paid all expenses and waived all royalties; promising young painters and poets dined with him; and he even took a theatrical company on tour, playing host and âleadâ with equal lavishness.
He was not what most people call a snob. A snob has been defined carelessly as a man who loves a lord; and, more carefully, as a mean lover of mean thingsâwhich would be a little unkind to the peerage if the first definition were true. Mark had his vanities undoubtedly, but he would sooner have met an actor-manager than an earl; he would have spoken of his friendship with Danteâhad that been possibleâmore glibly than of his friendship with the Duke. Call him a snob if you like, but not the worst kind of snob; a hanger-on, but to the skirts of Art, not Society; a climber, but in the neighbourhood of Parnassus, not Hay Hill.
His patronage did not stop at the Arts. It also included Matthew Cayley, a small cousin of thirteen, whose circumstances were as limited as had been Markâs own before his patron had rescued him. He sent the Cayley cousin to school and Cambridge. His motives, no doubt, were unworldly enough at first; a mere repaying to his account in the Recording Angelâs book of the generosity which had been lavished on himself; a laying-up of treasure in heaven. But it is probable that, as the boy grew up, Markâs designs for his future were based on his own interests as much as those of his cousin, and that a suitably educated Matthew Cayley of twenty-three was felt by him to be a useful property for a man in his position; a man, that is to say, whose vanities left him so little time for his affairs.
Cayley, then, at twenty-three, looked after his cousinâs affairs. By this time Mark had bought The Red House and the considerable amount of land which went with it. Cayley superintended the necessary staff. His duties, indeed, were many. He was not quite secretary, not quite land-agent, not quite business-adviser, not quite companion, but something of all four. Mark leant upon him and called him âCay,â objecting quite rightly in the circumstances to the name of Matthew. Cay, he felt was, above all, dependable; a big, heavy-jawed, solid fellow, who didnât bother you with unnecessary talkâa boon to a man who liked to do most of the talking himself.
Cayley was now twenty-eight, but had all the appearance of forty, which was his patronâs age. Spasmodically they entertained a good deal at The Red House, and Markâs preferenceâcall it kindliness or vanity, as you pleaseâwas for guests who were not in a position to repay his hospitality. Let us have a look at them as they came down to that breakfast, of which Stevens, the parlour-maid, has already given us a glimpse.
The first to appear was Major Rumbold, a tall, grey-haired, grey-moustached, silent man, wearing a Norfolk coat and grey flannel trousers, who lived on his retired pay and wrote natural history articles for the papers. He inspected the dishes on the side-table, decided carefully on kedgeree, and got to work on it. He had passed on to a sausage by the time of the next arrival. This was Bill Beverly, a cheerful young man in white flannel trousers and a blazer.
âHallo, Major,â he said as he came in, âhowâs the gout?â
âIt isnât gout,â said the Major gruffly.
âWell, whatever it is.â
The Major grunted.
âI make a point of being polite at breakfast,â said Bill, helping himself largely to porridge. âMost people are so rude. Thatâs why I asked you. But donât tell me if itâs a secret. Coffee?â he added, as he poured himself out a cup.
âNo, thanks. I never drink till Iâve finished eating.â
âQuite right, Major; itâs only manners.â He sat down opposite to the other. âWell, weâve got a good day for our game. Itâs going to be dashed hot, but thatâs where Betty and I score. On the fifth green, your old wound, the one you got in that frontier skirmish in â43, will begin to trouble you; on the eighth, your liver, undermined by years of curry, will drop to pieces; on the twelfthââ
âOh, shut up, you ass!â
âWell, Iâm only warning you. Hallo; good morning, Miss Norris. I was just telling the Major what was going to happen to you and him this morning. Do you want any assistance, or do you prefer choosing your own breakfast?â
âPlease donât get up,â said Miss Norris.
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