“A young life cut short is a very sad thing,” said the old man, shaking his head. “Tommy’s faults may have been mainly due to high spirits.”
“He was a disgusting bully,” said Bridget. “You know he was, Mr. Wake. Always tormenting cats and stray puppies and pinching other little boys.”
“I know—I know.” Mr. Wake shook his head sadly. “But you know, my dear Miss Conway, sometimes cruelty is not so much innate as due to the fact that imagination is slow in ripening. That is why if you conceive of a grown man with the mentality of a child you realize that the cunning and brutality of a lunatic may be quite unrealized by the man himself. A lack of growth somewhere, that, I am convinced, is at the root of much of the cruelty and stupid brutality in the world today. One must put away childish things—”
He shook his head and spread out his hands.
Bridget said in a voice suddenly hoarse:
“Yes, you’re right. I know what you mean. A man who is a child is the most frightening thing in the world….”
Luke looked at her with some curiosity. He was convinced that she was thinking of some particular person, and although Lord Whitfield was in some respects exceedingly childish, he did not believe she was thinking of him. Lord Whitfield was slightly ridiculous, but he was certainly not frightening.
Luke Fitzwilliam wondered very much whom the person Bridget was thinking of might be.
Five
VISIT TO MISS WAYNFLETE
Mr. Wake murmured a few more names to himself.
“Let me see now—poor Mrs. Rose, and old Bell and that child of the Elkins and Harry Carter—they’re not all my people, you understand. Mrs. Rose and Carter were dissenters. And that cold spell in March took off poor old Ben Stanbury at last—ninety-two he was.”
“Amy Gibbs died in April,” said Bridget.
“Yes, poor girl—a sad mistake to happen.”
Luke looked up to find Bridget watching him. She lowered her eyes quickly. He thought, with some annoyance:
“There’s something here that I haven’t got on to. Something to do with this girl Amy Gibbs.”
When they had taken leave of the vicar and were outside again, he said:
“Just who and what was Amy Gibbs?”
Bridget took a minute or two to answer. Then she said—and Luke noticed the slight constraint in her voice:
“Amy was one of the most inefficient housemaids I have ever known.”
“That’s why she got the sack?”
“No. She stayed out after hours playing about with some young man. Gordon has very moral and old-fashioned views. Sin in his view does not take place until after eleven o’clock, but then it is rampant. So he gave the girl notice and she was impertinent about it!”
Luke asked: “A good-looking girl?”
“Very good-looking.”
“She’s the one who swallowed hat paint in mistake for cough mixture?”
“Yes.”
“Rather a stupid thing to do?” Luke hazarded.
“Very stupid.”
“Was she stupid?”
“No, she was quite a sharp girl.”
Luke stole a look at her. He was puzzled. Her replies were given in an even tone, without emphasis or even much interest. But behind what she said, there was, he felt convinced, something not put into words.
At that moment Bridget stopped to speak to a tall man who swept off his hat and greeted her with breezy heartiness.
Bridget, after a word or two, introduced Luke.
“This is my cousin, Mr. Fitzwilliam, who is staying at the Manor. He’s down here to write a book. This is Mr. Abbot.”
Luke looked at Mr. Abbot with some interest. This was the solicitor who had employed Tommy Pierce.
Luke had a somewhat illogical prejudice against lawyers in general—based on the grounds that so many politicians were recruited from their ranks. Also their cautious habit of not committing themselves annoyed him. Mr. Abbot, however, was not at all the conventional type of lawyer, he was neither thin, spare, nor tight-lipped. He was a big florid man, dressed in tweeds with a hearty manner and a jovial effusiveness. There were little creases at the corners of his eyes, and the eyes themselves were more shrewd than one appreciated in a first casual glance.
“Writing a book, eh? Novel?”
“Folklore,” said Bridget.
“You’ve come to the right place for that,” said the lawyer. “Wonderfully interesting part of the world here.”
“So I’ve been led to understand,” said Luke. “I dare say you could help me a bit. You must come across curious old deeds—or know of some interesting surviving customs.”
“Well, I don’t know about that—maybe—maybe—”
“Much belief in ghosts round here?” asked Luke.
“As to that I couldn’t say—I really couldn’t say.”
“No haunted house?”
“No—I don’t know of anything of that kind.”
“There’s the child superstition, of course,” said Luke. “Death of a boy child—a violent death that is—the boy always walks. Not a girl child—interesting that.”
“Very,” said Mr. Abbot. “I never heard that before.”
&
nbsp; Since Luke had just invented it, that was hardly surprising.
“Seems there’s a boy here—Tommy something—was in your office at one time. I’ve reason to believe they think that he’s walking.”
Mr. Abbot’s red face turned slightly purple.
“Tommy Pierce? A good for nothing, prying, meddlesome jackanapes.”
“Spirits always seem to be mischievous. Good law-abiding citizens seldom trouble this world after they’ve left it.”
“Who’s seen him—what’s this story?”
“These things are difficult to pin down,” said Luke. “People won’t come out into the open with a statement. It’s just in the air, so to speak.”
“Yes—yes, I suppose so.”
Luke changed the subject adroitly.
“The real person to get hold of is the local doctor. They hear a lot in the poorer cases they attend. All sorts of superstitions and charms—probably love philtres and all the rest of it.”
“You must get on to Thomas. Good fellow, Thomas, thoroughly up-to-date man. Not like poor old Humbleby.”
“Bit of a reactionary, wasn’t he?”
“Absolutely pigheaded—a diehard of the worst description.”
“You had a real row over the water scheme, didn’t you?” asked Bridget.
Again a rich ruddy glow suffused Abbot’s face.
“Humbleby stood dead in the way of progress,” he said sharply. “He held out against the scheme! He was pretty rude, too, in what he said. Didn’t mince his words. Some of the things he said to me were positively actionable.”
Bridget murmured: “But lawyers never go to law, do they? They know better.”
Abbot laughed immoderately. His anger subsided as quickly as it had arisen.
“Pretty good, Miss Bridget! And you’re not far wrong. We who are in it know too much about law, ha, ha. Well, I must be getting along. Give me a call if you think I can help you in any way, Mr.—er—”
“Fitzwilliam,” said Luke. “Thanks, I will.”
As they walked on Bridget said:
“Your methods, I note, are to make statements and see what they provoke.”
“My methods,” said Luke, “are not strictly truthful, if that is what you mean?”