The Red House Mystery A. A. Milne (most life changing books TXT) đ
- Author: A. A. Milne
Book online «The Red House Mystery A. A. Milne (most life changing books TXT) đ». Author A. A. Milne
âYes.â
âI donât think I know any house where things are so comfortable. Oneâs roomâ âthe foodâ âdrinksâ âcigarsâ âthe way everythingâs arranged. All that sort of thing. They look after you awfully well.â
âYes?â
âYes.â He repeated it slowly to himself, as if it had given him a new idea: âThey look after you awfully well. Well, thatâs just what it is about Mark. Thatâs one of his little ways. Weaknesses. Looking after you.â
âArranging things for you?â
âYes. Of course, itâs a delightful house, and thereâs plenty to do, and opportunities for every game or sport thatâs ever been invented, and, as I say, one gets awfully well done; but with it all, Tony, thereâs a faint sort of feeling thatâ âwell, that one is on parade, as it were. Youâve got to do as youâre told.â
âHow do you mean?â
âWell, Mark fancies himself rather at arranging things. He arranges things, and itâs understood that the guests fall in with the arrangement. For instance, Bettyâ âMiss Calladineâ âand I were going to play a single just before tea, the other day. Tennis. Sheâs frightfully hot stuff at tennis, and backed herself to take me on level. Iâm rather erratic, you know. Mark saw us going out with our rackets and asked us what we were going to do. Well, heâd got up a little tournament for us after teaâ âhandicaps all arranged by him, and everything ruled out neatly in red and black inkâ âprizes and allâ âquite decent ones, you know. Heâd had the lawn specially cut and marked for it. Well, of course Betty and I wouldnât have spoilt the court, and weâd have been quite ready to play again after teaâ âI had to give her half-fifteen according to his handicapâ âbut somehowâ ââ Bill stopped and shrugged his shoulders.
âIt didnât quite fit in?â
âNo. It spoilt the effect of his tournament. Took the edge off it just a little, I suppose he felt. So we didnât play.â He laughed, and added, âIt would have been as much as our place was worth to have played.â
âDo you mean you wouldnât have been asked here again?â
âProbably. Well, I donât know. Not for some time, anyway.â
âReally, Bill?â
âOh, rather! Heâs a devil for taking offence. That Miss Norrisâ âdid you see herâ âsheâs done for herself. I donât mind betting what you like that she never comes here again.â
âWhy?â
Bill laughed to himself.
âWe were all in it, reallyâ âat least, Betty and I were. Thereâs supposed to be a ghost attached to the house. Lady Anne Patten. Ever heard of her?â
âNever.â
âMark told us about her at dinner one night. He rather liked the idea of there being a ghost in his house, you know; except that he doesnât believe in ghosts. I think he wanted all of us to believe in her, and yet he was annoyed with Betty and Mrs. Calladine for believing in ghosts at all. Rum chap. Well, anyhow, Miss Norrisâ âsheâs an actress, some actress tooâ âdressed up as the ghost and played the fool a bit. And poor Mark was frightened out of his life. Just for a moment, you know.â
âWhat about the others?â
âWell, Betty and I knew; in fact, Iâd told herâ âMiss Norris I meanâ ânot to be a silly ass. Knowing Mark. Mrs. Calladine wasnât thereâ âBetty wouldnât let her be. As for the Major, I donât believe anything would frighten him.â
âWhere did the ghost appear?â
âDown by the bowling-green. Thatâs supposed to be its haunt, you know. We were all down there in the moonlight, pretending to wait for it. Do you know the bowling-green?â
âNo.â
âIâll show it to you after dinner.â
âI wish you would.â ââ ⊠Was Mark very angry afterwards?â
âOh, Lord, yes. Sulked for a whole day. Well, heâs just like that.â
âWas he angry with all of you?â
âOh, yesâ âsulky, you know.â
âThis morning?â
âOh, no. He got over itâ âhe generally does. Heâs just like a child. Thatâs really it, Tony; heâs like a child in some ways. As a matter of fact, he was unusually bucked with himself this morning. And yesterday.â
âYesterday?â
âRather. We all said weâd never seen him in such form.â
âIs he generally in form?â
âHeâs quite good company, you know, if you take him the right way. Heâs rather vain and childishâ âwell, like Iâve been telling youâ âand self-important; but quite amusing in his way, andâ ââ Bill broke off suddenly. âI say, you know, it really is the limit, talking about your host like this.â
âDonât think of him as your host. Think of him as a suspected murderer with a warrant out against him.â
âOh! but thatâs all rot, you know.â
âItâs the fact, Bill.â
âYes, but I mean, he didnât do it. He wouldnât murder anybody. Itâs a funny thing to say, butâ âwell, heâs not big enough for it. Heâs got his faults, like all of us, but they arenât on that scale.â
âOne can kill anybody in a childish fit of temper.â
Bill grunted assent, but without prejudice to Mark. âAll the same,â he said, âI canât believe it. That he would do it deliberately, I mean.â
âSuppose it was an accident, as Cayley says, would he lose his head and run away?â
Bill considered for a moment.
âYes, I really think he might, you know. He nearly ran away when he saw the ghost. Of course, thatâs different, rather.â
âOh, I donât know. In each case itâs a question of obeying your instinct instead of your reason.â
They had left the open land and were following a path through the bordering trees. Two abreast was uncomfortable, so Antony dropped behind, and further conversation was postponed until they were outside the boundary fence and in the high road. The road sloped gently down to the village of Woodhamâ âa few red-roofed cottages, and the grey tower of a church showing above the green.
âWell, now,â said Antony, as they stepped out more quickly, âwhat about Cayley?â
âHow do you mean, what about him?â
âI want to see him. I can see Mark perfectly, thanks to you, Bill. You were wonderful. Now letâs have Cayleyâs character. Cayley from within.â
Bill laughed in pleased embarrassment, and protested that he was not a blooming novelist.
âBesides,â he added, âMarkâs easy. Cayleyâs one of these heavy, quiet people, who might be thinking
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