‘Gawd!’ gasped Ben, and leapt to his feet.
Nobody was on the staircase. Only shadows. It occurred to Ben that he had better go up himself, before his knees gave out. He went up, shakily. ‘’Ow I ’ate Injuns!’ he muttered. When he got back to his room, he sat down on the soap box, and thought.
Of course, he had only been putting up a bluff. The wise thing to do would be to leave at once. Yes, even though the weather was getting worse and worse, and darkness was settling on the streets, choking out all their kindliness. Even though the wind was rising, still you didn’t know whether it was the wind or a dog, and the creaking ran up and down your spine.
‘Wot I can’t mike out,’ blinked Ben, ‘is wot I come up orl these stairs agin for at all!’
Perhaps it was for his cap! Yes, one might as well keep one’s cap. He took it from under him. He had used it as a cushion. Then, dissatisfied with himself, and life, and the whole of God’s plan, he crept from the room and out into the passage.
‘If on’y it wasn’t fer that there creakin’!’ he muttered.
Creak! Creak! The house seemed to have become populated with creaks! Perhaps he was making them himself? He paused, on the top stair. The creaks went on. Creak! Creak! Below him. And, once, a sort of slither. Like someone coming in through a window … A window! A back window! A back window that had been left open!
Ben had been standing on the top stair. Now he found himself sitting on it. His knees had given out.
There was no mistake about it! Someone had got in through the back window! Those creaks were not the mere complaint of a dying house. They were not just the moaning of bricks or the cracking up of decayed wood. Life was causing those creaks—life forming contact with death—movement outraging the static! In the more simple language that shames metaphor, someone was coming up.
‘’Ere—wotcher doin’?’ gasped Ben to himself.
He caught hold of the rotting banister and heaved himself up. The banister just held. Then he sped back into his room, and waited.
He waited with his eyes on the door. The door was half-open, and he did not close it because, had he done so, he could only have followed the creaks in his imagination, and they could have ascended to the door without his knowing it. Now, at least, he could listen to them, in the hope that they would come no closer …
They came closer. Now they were on the lower stairs. Now a slight change in their character indicated the passage on the first floor. Hallo! They had stopped! What did that mean? Hallo; they hadn’t stopped! Where were they? Something was wrong somewhere …
Something sounded immediately below him. First floor front! That’s where they were! Gone in! To look for him!
Should he make a dash for it? If he was nippy he might get down the stairs, and then make a bunk for the back window below! Yes, if he was nippy …
He jerked himself towards the half-open door. Then he stopped. He was too late. The creaks had started again. They were now on the last staircase. Creak! Creak!
‘I know!’ thought Ben. ‘I’ll ’it ’im!’
He stood, galvanised. The creaks reached the landing. They reached the door. The door began to open …
SHOCKS have an inconsiderate habit of getting you both ways. If you expect a parson and receive a cannibal, or if you expect an Indian and receive a beautiful girl, the world spins round, just the same. What you really need is a nice quiet life, with breakfast, dinner and tea, and ordinary things in between.
The beautiful girl who provided Ben with his present shock, and made him go all weak like, seemed quite as surprised to see Ben as he was to see her. There was, at least, equality of emotion, and that was something. Moreover, as he stared at her with mouth wide open (Ben never did his mouth by halves) and an exhibition of teeth that could not hold their own beside those she herself displayed, he began to discover certain other compensations in the situation. Item, her eyes. They really were rather a knock-out. The kind of eyes that made you feel sort of … Item, her hair. You couldn’t see much of it because of the natty little helmet hat she was wearing, but what you could see was good. Item, her nose. Now there was a nose fit for anybody! Item, her mouth, and the teeth that put Ben’s incomplete army in the shade … Yes, as he stared at her and she, framed in the doorway, stared back, he realised that the world could spin quite agreeably.
Still, one couldn’t stand staring all one’s life! What was she doing here? But it was the girl who recovered first and opened the attack.
‘Who are you?’ she demanded.
Ben spent half his life telling inquisitive people who he was, and he had a large assortage of answers. He had confessed to being everybody under the sun, from Lloyd George to Tom Thumb. But he did not think in the present circumstances he could improve on the answer he had given to his two other callers, so he murmured: ‘Caretaker, miss.’ And hoped for the best.
‘What—are you the caretaker of this house?’ exclaimed the girl, with unflattering incredulity.
‘That’s right,’ blinked Ben. ‘No. 29 Jowle Street.’
He would prove he knew the number, anyway.
‘I see—it’s to let,’ said the girl slowly.
‘Yus,’ nodded Ben solemnly. ‘But you better not tike it.’
‘Why not?’
‘Carn’t yer see? Comin’ ter bits. Look at that there plarster!’
He pointed to the ceiling. The girl smiled. Yes, her teeth were winners, and no mistake! Like rows of little gravestones. Noo ones, o’ corse …
‘If you’re really the caretaker here,’ she observed, ‘you’re not doing your duty very well. You oughtn’t to run the place down.’
‘It don’t need me to,’ retorted Ben. ‘It does it itself.’
‘I—I suppose you really are the caretaker?’
Ben looked uncomfortable. He hated having to repeat things.
‘Why not?’ he hedged. ‘Come ter that, miss, one might arsk ’oo you was, comin’ in like this?’
‘One might,’ she agreed, without hesitation.
‘Yus—and torkin’ o’ that—’ow did yer come in?’ inquired Ben suddenly.
‘I came in through an open window at the back,’ she responded. ‘Like you.’
‘Like me?’
‘Yes.’
Ben capitulated.
‘Oh, orl right,’ he grunted. ‘But it’s fifty-fifty, so we ain’t got nothin’ on each hother.’
‘No,’ smiled the girl. ‘We both came in to get out of the rain!’
‘Oh rainin’, is it?’ murmured Ben. ‘Well, that’s an idea.’
Yes, it was an idea for him. But was it an idea for her? He regarded her dubiously, and an uneasy suspicion came into