Page:Once a Week Volume 7.djvu/612

604 as Miss West would supply his plate. The meal was over when Jan came in.

“Don’t trouble to have things brought back for me,” said he. “I’ll eat a bit of bread and cheese.”

He was not like his assistant: his growing days were over.

Master Cheese went straight up to bed. He liked to do so as soon as supper was over, lest any summons came, and he should have to go out. Easy Jan, no matter how tired he might be, would attend himself, sooner than wake up Master Cheese—a ceremony more easy to attempt than to accomplish. Fortifying himself with about a pound of sweet cake, which he kept in his box, as a dessert to the herrings, and to refresh his dreams, Master Cheese put himself into bed.

Jan meanwhile finished his bread and cheese, and rose.

“I wonder whether I shall get a whole night of it to-night?” said he, stretching himself. “I didn’t have much bed last night.”

“Have you to go out again, Mr. Jan?”

“No. I shall look to the books a bit, and then turn in. Good night, Miss Deborah; good night, Miss Amilly.”

“Good night,” they answered.

Amilly drew to the fire. The chilly rain of the afternoon had caused them to have one lighted. She put her feet on the fender, feeling the warmth comfortable. Deborah sent the supper-tray away, and then left the room. Stealing out of the side door quietly, she tripped across the narrow path of wet gravel, and entered the surgery. Jan had got an account-book open on the counter, and was leaning over it, a pen in his hand.

“Don’t be frightened, Mr. Jan; it’s only me,” said Deborah, who did not at all times confine herself to the rules of severe grammar. “I’ll shut the door, if you please, for I want to say a word to yourself alone.”

“Is it more physic that you want?” asked Jan. “Has the pain in the side come again?”

“It is not about pains or physic,” she answered, drawing nearer to the counter. “Mr. Jan,”—dropping her voice to a confidential whisper,—“would you be so good as to tell me the truth of this story that is going about?”

Jan paused.

“What story?” he rejoined.

“This ghost story. They are saying, I understand, that—that—they are saying something about Frederick Massingbird.”

“Did Cheese supply you with the information?” cried Jan, imperturbable as ever.

“He did. But I must beg you not to scold him for it—as he thought you might do. It was I who drew the story from him. He said you cautioned him not to speak of it to me or Amilly. I quite appreciate your motives, Mr. Jan, and feel that it was very considerate of you. But now that I have heard it, I want to know particulars from somebody more reliable than Master Cheese.”

“I told Lionel I’d say nothing to any soul in the parish,” said Jan, open and single-minded as though he had been made of glass. “But he’d not mind my making you an exception—as you have heard it. You are Sibylla’s sister.”

“You don’t believe in its being a ghost?”

Jan grinned.

“I!” cried he. “No, I don’t.”

“Then what do you suppose it is, that’s frightening people? And why should they be frightened?”

Jan sat himself down on the counter, and whirled his legs over to the other side, clearing the gallipots; so that he faced Miss Deborah. Not to waste time, he took the mortar before him. And there he was at his ease; his legs hanging, and his hands pounding.

“What should you think it is?” inquired he.

“How can I think, Mr. Jan? Until an hour or two ago, I had not heard of the rumour. I suppose it is somebody who walks about at night to frighten people. But it is curious that he should look like Frederick Massingbird. Can you understand it?”

“I am afraid I can,” replied Jan, pounding away.

“Will you tell me, please, what you think.”

“Can’t you guess at it, Miss Deb?”

Miss Deb looked at him, beginning to think his manner as mysterious as Master Cheese’s had been.

“I can’t guess at it at all,” she presently said. “Please to tell me.”

“Then don’t you go and drop down in a fit when you hear it,” was the rejoinder of Jan. “I suppose it is Fred himself.”

The words took her utterly by surprise. Not at first did she understand their meaning. She stared at Jan, her eyes and her mouth gradually opening.

“Fred himself?” she mechanically uttered.

“I suppose so. Fred himself. Not his ghost.”

“Do you mean that he has come to life again?” she rapidly rejoined.

“Well, you can call it so if you like,” said Jan. “I expect that, in point of fact, he has never been dead. The report of his death must have been erroneous: one of those unaccountable mistakes that do sometimes happen to astonish the world.”

Deborah West took in the full sense of the words, and sunk down on the big stone jar. She turned all over of a burning heat: she felt her hands beginning to twitch with emotion.

“You mean that he is alive?—that he has never been dead?” she gasped.

Jan nodded.

“Oh, Mr. Jan! Then, what is—what is Sibylla?”

“Ah,” said Jan, “that’s just it. She’s the wife of both of ’em—as you may say.”

For any petty surprise or evil, Miss Deborah would have gone off in a succession of screams, of pseudo-faints. This evil was all too real, too terrible. She sat with her trembling hands clasped to pain, looking hopelessly at Jan.

He told her all he knew; all that was said by others.

“Dan Duff’s nothing,” remarked he; “and Cheese is nothing; and others, who profess to