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Prisoner in Fairyland, A
CHAPTER X
Algernon Blackwood
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       _ One of the great facts of the world I hold to be the registration in
       the Universe of every past scene and thought.
       F. W. M.
       No place worth knowing yields itself at sight, and those the least
       inviting on first view may leave the most haunting pictures upon the
       walls of memory.
       This little village, that Henry Rogers was thus to revisit after so
       long an interval, can boast no particular outstanding beauty to lure
       the common traveller. Its single street winds below the pine forest;
       its tiny church gathers close a few brown-roofed houses; orchards
       guard it round about; the music of many fountains tinkle summer and
       winter through its cobbled yards; and its feet are washed by a
       tumbling stream that paints the fields with the radiance of countless
       wild-flowers in the spring. But tourists never come to see them. There
       is no hotel, for one thing, and ticket agents, even at the railway
       stations, look puzzled a moment before they realise where this place
       with the twinkling name can hide.... Some consult books. Yet, once you
       get there, it is not easy to get away again. Something catches the
       feet and ears and eyes. People have been known to go with all their
       luggage on Gygi's handcart to the station--then turn aside at the last
       moment, caught back by the purple woods.
       A traveller, glancing up at the little three-storey house with 'Poste
       et Telegraphe' above the door, could never guess how busy the world
       that came and went beneath its red-tiled roof. In spring the wistaria
       tree (whence the Pension borrowed its brave name, Les Glycines) hangs
       its blossoms between 'Poste' and 'Telegraphe,' and the perfume of
       invisible lilacs drenches the street from the garden at the back.
       Beyond, the road dips past the bee-hives of _la cure_; and Boudry
       towers with his five thousand feet of blue pine woods over the
       horizon. The tinkling of several big stone fountains fills the street.
       But the traveller would not linger, unless he chanced to pass at
       twelve o'clock and caught the stream of people going into their mid-
       day dinner at the Pension. And even then he probably would not see the
       presiding genius, Madame Jequier, for as often as not she would be in
       her garden, busy with eternal bulbs, and so strangely garbed that if
       she showed herself at all, it would be with a shrill, plaintive
       explanation--'Mais il ne faut pas me regarder. Je suis invisible!'
       Whereupon, consistently, she would not speak again, but flit in
       silence to and fro, as though she were one of those spirits she so
       firmly believed in, and sometimes talked to by means of an old
       Planchette.
       And on this particular morning the Widow Jequier was 'invisible' in
       her garden clothes as Gygi, the gendarme, came down the street to ring
       the _midi_ bell. Her mind was black with anxiety. She was not thinking
       of the troop that came to _dejeuner_, their principal meal of the day,
       paying a franc for it, but rather of the violent scenes with unpaid
       tradesmen that had filled the morning-tradesmen who were friends as
       well (which made it doubly awkward) and often dropped in socially for
       an evening's music and conversation. Her pain darkened the sunshine,
       and she found relief in the garden which was her passion. For in three
       weeks the interest on the mortgages was due, and she had nothing saved
       to meet it. The official notice had come that morning from the Bank.
       Her mind was black with confused pictures of bulbs, departed
       _pensionnaires_, hostile bankers, and--the ghastly _charite de la
       Commune_ which awaited her. Yet her husband, before he went into the
       wine-business so disastrously, had been pasteur here. He had preached
       from this very church whose bells now rang out the mid-day hour. The
       spirit of her daughter, she firmly believed, still haunted the garden,
       the narrow passages, and the dilapidated little salon where the ivy
       trailed along the ceiling.
       Twelve o'clock, striking from the church-tower clock, and the voice of
       her sister from the kitchen window, then brought the Widow Jequier
       down the garden in a flying rush. The table was laid and the soup was
       almost ready. The people were coming in. She was late as usual; there
       was no time to change. She flung her garden hat aside and scrambled
       into more presentable garments, while footsteps already sounded on the
       wooden stairs that led up from the village street.
       One by one the retired governesses entered, hung their cloaks upon the
       pegs in the small, dark hallway, and took their places at the table.
       They began talking among themselves, exchanging the little gossip of
       the village, speaking of their books and clothes and sewing, of the
       rooms in which they lived, scattered down the street, of the heating,
       of barking dogs that disturbed their sleep, the behaviour of the
       postman, the fine spring weather, and the views from their respective
       windows across the lake and distant Alps. Each extolled her own
       position: one had a garden; another a balcony; a third was on the top
       floor and so had no noisy tenant overhead; a fourth was on the ground,
       and had no stairs to climb. Each had her secret romance, and her
       secret method of cheap feeding at home. There were five or six of
       them, and this was their principal meal in the day; they meant to make
       the most of it; they always did; they went home to light suppers of
       tea and coffee, made in their own _appartements_. Invitations were
       issued and accepted. There were some who would not speak to each
       other. Cliques, divisions, _societes a part_, existed in the little
       band. And they talked many languages, learned in many lands--Russian,
       German, Italian, even Armenian--for all had laboured far from their
       country, spending the best of their years teaching children of foreign
       families, many of them in important houses. They lived upon their
       savings. Two, at least, had less than thirty pounds a year between
       them and starvation, and all were of necessity careful of every
       centime. They wore the same dresses from one year's end to another.
       They had come home to die.
       The Postmaster entered with the cash-box underneath one arm. He bowed
       gravely to the assembled ladies, and silently took his seat at the
       table. He never spoke; at meals his sole remarks were statements: 'Je
       n'ai pas de pain,' 'Il me manque une serviette,' and the like, while
       his black eyes glared resentfully at every one as though they had done
       him an injury. But his fierceness was only in the eyes. He was a meek
       and solemn fellow really. Nature had dressed him in black, and he
       respected her taste by repeating it in his clothes. Even his
       expression was funereal, though his black eyes twinkled.
       The servant-girl at once brought in his plate of soup, and he tucked
       the napkin beneath his chin and began to eat. From twelve to two the
       post was closed; his recreation time was precious, and no minute must
       be lost. After dinner he took his coat off and did the heavy work of
       the garden, under the merciless oversight of the Widow Jequier, his
       sister-in-law, the cash-box ever by his side. He chatted with his tame
       _corbeau_, but he never smiled. In the winter he did fretwork. On the
       stroke of two he went downstairs again and disappeared into the
       cramped and stuffy bureau, whose window on the street was framed by
       the hanging wistaria blossoms; and at eight o'clock his day of labour
       ended. He carried the cash-box up to bed at 8.15. At 8.30 his wife
       followed him. From nine to five he slept.
       Alone of all the little household the Widow Jequier scorned routine.
       She came and went with the uncertainty of wind. Her entrances and
       exits, too, were like the wind. With a scattering rush she scurried
       through the years--noisy, ineffective, yet somewhere fine. Her brother
       had finished his plate of soup, wiped his black moustaches
       elaborately, and turned his head towards the kitchen door with the
       solemn statement 'Je n'ai pas de viande,' when she descended upon the
       scene like a shrill-voiced little tempest.
       'Bonjour Mesdames, bonjour Mademoiselle, bonjour, bonjour,' she bowed
       and smiled, washing her hands in the air; 'et comment allez-vous ce
       matin?' as the little band of hungry governesses rose with one accord
       and moved to take their places. Some smiled in answer; others merely
       bowed. She made enemies as well as friends, the Widow Jequier. With
       only one of them she shook hands warmly-the one whose payments were
       long overdue. But Madame Jequier never asked for her money; she knew
       the old body's tiny income; she would pay her when she could. Only
       last week she had sent her food and clothing under the guise of a
       belated little Easter present. Her heart was bigger than her body.
       'La famille Anglaise n'est pas encore ici,' announced the Postmaster
       as though it were a funeral to come. He did not even look up. His
       protests passed ever unobserved.
       'But I hear them coming,' said a governess, swallowing her soup with a
       sound of many waters. And, true enough, they came. There was a thunder
       on the stairs, the door into the hall flew open, voices and laughter
       filled the place, and Jimbo and Monkey raced in to take their places,
       breathless, rosy, voluble, and very hungry. Jane Anne followed
       sedately, bowing to every one in turn. She had a little sentence for
       all who cared for one. Smiles appeared on every face. Mother, like a
       frigate coming to anchor with a favourable wind, sailed into her
       chair; and behind her stumbled Daddy, looking absent-minded and pre-
       occupied. Money was uncommonly scarce just then--the usual Bourcelles
       complaint.
       Conversation in many tongues, unmusically high-pitched, then at once
       broke loose, led ever by _la patronne_ at the head of the table. The
       big dishes of meat and vegetables were handed round; plates were piled
       and smothered; knives and forks were laid between mouthfuls upon
       plate-edges, forming a kind of frieze all round the cloth; the gossip
       of the village was retailed with harmless gusto. _Dejeuner_ at Les
       Glycines was in full swing. When the apples and oranges came round,
       most of the governesses took two apiece, slipping one or other into
       little black velvet bags they carried on their laps below the table.
       Some, it was whispered, put bread there too to keep them company. But
       this was probably a libel. Madame Jequier, at any rate, never saw it
       done. She looked the other way. 'We all must live,' was her invariable
       answer to such foolish stories. 'One cannot sleep if one's supper is
       too light.' Like her body, her soul was a bit untidy--careless, that
       is, with loose ends. Who would have guessed, for instance, the anxiety
       that just now gnawed her very entrails? She was a mixture of shameless
       egotism, and of burning zeal for others. There was a touch of grandeur
       in her.
       At the end of the table, just where the ivy leaves dropped rather low
       from their trailing journey across the ceiling, sat Miss Waghorn, her
       vigorous old face wrapped, apparently, in many apple skins. She was
       well past seventy, thin, erect, and active, with restless eyes, and
       hooked nose, the poor old hands knotted with rheumatism, yet the voice
       somehow retaining the energy of forty. Her manners were charming and
       old-fashioned, and she came of Quaker stock. Seven years before she
       arrived at the Pension for the summer, and had forgotten to leave. For
       she forgot most things within ten minutes of their happening. Her
       memory was gone; she remembered a face, as most other things as well,
       about twenty minutes; introductions had to be repeated every day, and
       sometimes at supper she would say with her gentle smile, 'We haven't
       met before, I think,' to some one she had held daily intercourse with
       for many months. 'I was born in '37,' she loved to add, 'the year of
       Queen Victoria's accession'; and five minutes later you might hear her
       ask, 'Now, guess how old I am; I don't mind a bit.' She was as proud
       of her load of years as an old gentleman of his thick hair. 'Say
       exactly what you think. And don't guess too low, mind.' Her numerous
       stories were self-repeaters.
       Miss Waghorn's memory was a source of worry and anxiety to all except
       the children, who mercilessly teased her. She loved the teasing,
       though but half aware of it. It was their evil game to extract as many
       of her familiar stories as possible, one after another. They knew all
       the clues. There was the Cornishman--she came from Cornwall--who had
       seen a fairy; his adventure never failed to thrill them, though she
       used the same words every time and they knew precisely what was
       coming. She was particularly strong on family reminiscences:--her
       father was bald at thirty, her brother's beard was so long that he
       tied it round his neck when playing cricket; her sister 'had the
       shortest arms you ever saw.' Always of youth she spoke; it was
       pathetic, so determined was she to be young at seventy. Her family
       seemed distinguished in this matter of extremes.
       But the superiority of Cornish over Devonshire cream was her _piece
       de resistance_. Monkey need merely whisper--Miss Waghorn's acuteness
       of hearing was positively uncanny--'Devonshire cream is what _I_
       like,' to produce a spurt of explanation and defence that lasted a
       good ten minutes and must be listened to until the bitter end.
       Jimbo would gravely inquire in a pause--of a stranger, if possible, if
       not, of the table in general--
       'Have you ever seen a fairy?'
       'No, but I've eaten Cornish cream--it's poison, you know,' Monkey
       would reply. And up would shoot the keen old face, preened for the
       fray.
       'We haven't been introduced, I think'--forgetting the formal
       introduction of ten minutes ago--'but I overheard, if you'll forgive
       my interrupting, and I can tell you all about Cornish cream. I was
       born in '37'--with her eager smile--'and for years it was on our
       table. I have made quantities of it. The art was brought first by the
       Phoenicians----'
       'Venetians,' said Monkey.
       'No, Phoenicians, dear, when they came to Cornwall for tin----'
       'To put the cream in,' from the same source.
       'No, you silly child, to get tin from the mines, of course, and----'
       Then Mother or Daddy, noting the drift of things, would interfere, and
       the youngsters would be obliterated--until next time. Miss Waghorn
       would finish her recital for the hundredth time, firmly believing it
       to be the first. She was a favourite with everybody, in spite of the
       anxiety she caused. She would go into town to pay her bill at the
       bootmaker's, and order another pair of boots instead, forgetting why
       she came. Her income was sixty pounds a year. She forgot in the
       afternoon the money she had received in the morning, till at last the
       Widow Jequier seized it for her the moment it arrived. And at night
       she would doze in her chair over the paper novel she had been "at"
       for a year and more, beginning it every night afresh, and rarely
       getting beyond the opening chapter. For it was ever new. All were
       anxious, though, what she would do next. She was so full of battle.
       Everybody talked at once, but forced conversation did not flourish.
       Bourcelles was not fashionable; no one ever had appendicitis there.
       Yet ailments of a milder order were the staple, inexhaustible subjects
       at meals. Instead of the weather, _mon estomac_ was the inexhaustible
       tale. The girl brought in the little Cantonal newspaper, and the widow
       read out selections in a high, shrill voice, regardless who listened.
       Misfortunes and accidents were her preference. _Grand ciel_ and
       _quelle horreur_ punctuated the selections. 'There's Tante Jeanne
       grand-cieling as usual,' Mother would say to her husband, who, being a
       little deaf, would answer, 'What?' and Tante Jeanne, overhearing him,
       would re-read the accident for his especial benefit, while the
       governesses recounted personal experiences among themselves, and Miss
       Waghorn made eager efforts to take part in it all, or tell her little
       tales of fairies and Cornish cream....
       One by one the governesses rose to leave; each made a comprehensive
       bow that included the entire company. Daddy lit a cigarette or let
       Jimbo light it for him, too wumbled with his thoughts of afternoon
       work to notice the puff stolen surreptitiously on the way. Jane Anne
       folded her napkin carefully, talking with Mother in a low voice about
       the packing of the basket with provisions for tea. Tea was included in
       the Pension terms; in a small clothes-basket she carried bread, milk,
       sugar, and butter daily across to La Citadelle, except on Sundays when
       she wore gloves and left the duty to the younger children who were
       less particular.
       The governesses, charged with life for another twenty-four hours at
       least, flocked down the creaking stairs. They nodded as they passed
       the Bureau window where the Postmaster pored over his collection of
       stamps, or examined a fretwork pattern of a boy on a bicycle--there
       was no heavy garden work that day--and went out into the street. They
       stood in knots a moment, discussing unfavourably the food just eaten,
       and declaring they would stand it no longer. 'Only where else can we
       go?' said one, feeling automatically at her velvet bag to make sure
       the orange was safely in it. Upstairs, at the open window, Madame
       Jequier overheard them as she filled the walnut shells with butter for
       the birds. She only smiled.
       'I wish we could help her,' Mother was saying to her husband, as they
       watched her from the sofa in the room behind. 'A more generous
       creature never lived.' It was a daily statement that lacked force
       owing to repetition, yet the emotion prompting it was ever new and
       real.
       'Or a more feckless,' was his reply. 'But if we ever come into our
       estates, we will. It shall be the first thing.' His mind always
       hovered after those distant estates when it was perplexed by immediate
       financial difficulty, and just now he was thinking of various bills
       and payments falling due. It was his own sympathetic link with the
       widow--ways and means, and the remorseless nature of sheets of paper
       with columns of figures underneath the horrible word _doit._
       'So Monsieur 'Enry Rogairs is coming,' she said excitedly, turning to
       them a moment on her way to the garden. 'And after all these years! He
       will find the house the same, and the garden better--oh, wonderfully
       improved. But us, _helas!_ he will find old, oh, how old!' She did not
       really mean herself, however.
       She began a long 'reminiscent' chapter, full of details of the days
       when he and Daddy had been boys together, but in the middle of it
       Daddy just got up and walked out, saying, 'I must get over to my work,
       you know.' There was no artificiality of manners at Bourcelles. Mother
       followed him, with a trifle more ceremony. 'Ah, c'est partir a
       l'anglaise!' sighed the widow, watching them go. She was accustomed to
       it. She went out into her garden, full of excitement at the prospect
       of the new arrival. Every arrival for her meant a possible chance of
       help. She was as young as her latest bulb really. Courage, hope, and
       generosity invariably go together. _