<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_83"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>V<br/> DANGER TO THE JARS</h2>
<p>Now my ears and eyes and tongue had
been dealt with, and what remained
were the forehead and the chest. I could
not guess what would come of treating these
with the ointment, but I thought I would
try the forehead first. There was still a
day or two when the moon would be bright
enough for the trial. I hoped that perhaps
the effect of these two last jars might be
to make me able to go on with my experiences—to
keep in touch with the new people
I had come across—during the time when
she—the moon, I mean—was out of sight.</p>
<p>I had one anxiety. The precious box
must be guarded from those who were after
it. About this I had a conviction, that if<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_84"></SPAN></span>
I could keep them off until I had used
each of the five jars, the box and I would
be safe. Why I felt sure of this I could
not say, but my experience had led me to
trust these beliefs that came into my head,
and I meant to trust this one. It would
be best, I thought, if I did not go far from
the house—perhaps even if I did not leave
it at all till the time of danger was past.</p>
<p>Several things happened in the course of
the morning which confirmed me in my
belief. I took up a position at the table by
the window of my sitting-room. I had put
the box in my suit-case, which I had locked,
and I now laid it beside me where I could
keep an eye upon it. The view from my
window showed me, first, the garden of the
cottage, with its lawn and little flower beds,
its hedge and back gate, and beyond that
a path leading down across a field. More
fields, I knew, came after that one, and
sloped pretty sharply down to a stream in
the valley, which I could not see; but I<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_85"></SPAN></span>
could see the steep slope of fields, partly
pasture, and then clothed with green woods
towards the top. There were no other
houses in sight: the road was behind me,
passing the front of the cottage, and my
bedroom looked out that way. I had some
writing and reading to do, and I had not
long finished breakfast before I settled down
to it, and heard the maid “doing out” the
bedroom as usual, accompanied every now
and then by a slight mew from the cat, who
(also as usual) was watching her at work.
These mews meant nothing in particular,
I may say; they were only intended to
be met by an encouraging remark, such as
“There you are, then, pussy,” or “Don't
get in my way, now,” or “All in good time.”
Finally I heard “Come along then, and let's
see what we've got for you downstairs,”
and the door was shut. I mention this
because of what happened about a quarter
of an hour later.</p>
<p>There was suddenly a fearful crash in the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_86"></SPAN></span>
bedroom, a fall, a breaking of glass and
crockery and snapping of wood, and then,
fainter, sobbings and moans of pain. I
started up.</p>
<p>“Goodness!” I thought, “she must have
been dusting that heavy shelf high up on
the wall with all the china on it, and the
whole thing has given way. She must be
badly hurt! But why doesn't her mistress
come rushing upstairs? and what was that
rasping noise just beside me?”</p>
<p>I looked at my suit-case, which lay on
the table just inside the open window.
Across the new smooth top of it there were
three deep scratches running towards the
window, which had not been there before.
I moved it to the other side of me and sat
down. There had been an attempt to decoy
me out of the room, and it had failed.
Certainly there would be more.</p>
<p>I waited; but everything was quiet in
the house: no more noise from the bedroom
and no one moving about, upstairs or<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_87"></SPAN></span>
downstairs; nothing but the pump clanking
in the scullery. I turned to my work again.</p>
<p>Half an hour must have gone by, and,
though on the look-out, I was not fidgety.
Then I was aware of a confused noise from
the field outside.</p>
<p>“Help! help! Keep off, you brute! Help,
you there!” as well as I could make out,
again and again. Towards the far end of
the field, which was a pretty large one, a
poor old man was trying to get to a gate
in the hedge at a staggering run, and striking
now and then with his stick at a great
deer-hound which was leaping up at him
with hollow barks. It seemed as if nothing
but the promptest dash to the spot could
save him; it seemed, too, as if he had
caught sight of me at the window, for he
beckoned. How strange the cries sounded!
It was as if someone was shouting into an
empty jug. My field-glasses were by me on
the table, and I thought I would take just
<em>one</em> look before I rushed out. I am glad<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_88"></SPAN></span>
I did; for, do you know, when I had the
glasses focused on the dog and the man,
all that I could see was a sort of fuzz of
dancing vapour, much as if the shimmering
air that you see on the heath on a hot day
had been gathered up and rolled into a
shape.</p>
<p>“Ha! ha!” I said, as I put down the
glasses; and something in the air, about
four yards off, made a sharp hissing sound.
No doubt there were words, but I could
not distinguish them. A second attempt
had failed; you may be sure I was well on
the alert for the next.</p>
<p>I put away my books now, and sat looking
out of the window, and wondering as I
watched whether there was anything out of
the common to be noticed. For one thing,
I thought there were more little birds about
than I expected. At first I did not see
them, for they were not hopping about on
the lawn; but as I stared at the hedge of
the garden, and at that of the field, I became<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_89"></SPAN></span>
aware that these were full of life. On
almost every twig that could hold a bird
in shelter—not on the top of the hedges—a
bird was sitting, quite still, and they were
all looking towards the window, as if they
were expecting something to happen there.
Occasionally one would flutter its wings a
little and turn its head towards its neighbour;
but this was all they did.</p>
<p>I picked up my glasses and began to
study the bottom of the hedges and the
bushes, where there was some quantity of
dead leaves, and here, too, I could see that
there were spectators. A small bright eye
or a bit of a nose was visible almost wherever
I looked; in short, the mice, and, I
don't doubt, some of the rats, hedgehogs,
and toads as well, were collected there and
were as intently on the watch as the birds.
“What a chance for the cat, if only she
knew!” I put my head cautiously out of
the window, and looking down on the sill
of the window below, I could see her head,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_90"></SPAN></span>
with the ears pushed forward; she was
looking earnestly at the hedge, but she did
not move. Only, at the slight noise I made,
she turned her face upwards and crowed to
me in a modest but encouraging manner.</p>
<p>Time passed on. Luncheon was laid—on
another table—and was over, before anything
else happened.</p>
<p>The next thing was that I heard the maid
saying sharply:</p>
<p>“What business 'ave you got going round
to the back? We don't want none of your
rubbish here.”</p>
<p>A hoarse voice answered inaudibly.</p>
<p><i>Maid</i>: “No, nor the gentleman don't
want none of your stuff neither; and how
do you know there's a gentleman here at
all I should like to know? What? Don't
mean no offence? I dare say. That's more
than I know. Well, that's the last word
I've got to say.”</p>
<p>In a minute more there was a knock at
my door, and at the same time a step on<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_91"></SPAN></span>
the gravel path under my window, and a
loud hiss from the cat. As I said “Come
in” to the knock, I hastily looked out of
the window, but saw nothing. It was the
maid who had knocked. She had come to
ask if there was anything I should like from
the village, or anything I should want
before tea-time, because the mistress was
going out, and wanted her to go over and
fetch something from the shop. I said there
was nothing except the letters and perhaps a
small parcel from the post office. She lingered
a moment before going, and finally said:</p>
<p>“You'll excuse me naming it, sir, but
there seems to be some funny people about
the roads to-day, if you'd please to be
what I mean to say a bit on the look-out,
if you're not a-going out yourself.”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” I said. “No, I don't mean
to go out. By the way, who was it came
to the door just now?”</p>
<p>“Oh, it was one of these 'awking men,
not one I've seen before, and he must be a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_92"></SPAN></span>
stranger in this part, I think, because he
began going round to the garden door, only
I stopped him. He'd got these cheap rubbishing
'atpins and what not; leastways,
if you understand me, what I thought to
myself I shouldn't like to be seen with 'em,
whatever others might.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I see,” I answered; and she went,
and I turned to my books once more.</p>
<p>Within a very few minutes I began to suspect
that I was getting sleepy. Yes, it was
undoubtedly so. What with the warmth of
the day, and lunch, and not having been
out.… There was a curious smell in the
room, too, not exactly nasty, like something
burning. What did it remind me of?
Wood smoke from a cottage fire, that one
smells on an autumn evening as one comes
bicycling down the hill into a village? Not
quite so nice as that; something more like
a chemist's shop. I wondered: and as I
wondered, my eyes closed and my head went
forward.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_93"></SPAN></span>
A sharp pain on the back of my hand,
and a crash of glass! Up I jumped, and
which of three or four things I realized
first I don't know now. But I did realize
in a second or two that my hand was
bleeding from a scratch all down the back
of it, that a pane of the window was broken
and that the whole window was darkened
with little birds that were bumping their
chests against it; that the cat was on the
table gazing into my face with intense
expression, that a little smoke was drifting
into the room, and that my suit-case was on
the point of slipping out over the window-sill.
A despairing dash at it I made, and
managed to clutch it; but for the life of me
I could not pull it back. I could see no
string or cord, much less any hand that
was dragging at it. I hardly dared to take
my hand from it to catch up something
and hack at the thief I could not see.
Besides, there was nothing within reach.</p>
<p>Then I remembered the knife in my<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_94"></SPAN></span>
pocket. Could I get it out and open it
without losing hold? “They hate steel,” I
thought. Somehow—frantically holding on
with one hand—I got out the knife, and
opened it, goodness knows how, for it was
horribly small and stiff, with my teeth, and
sheared and stabbed indiscriminately all
round the farther end of the suit-case.
Thank goodness, the strain relaxed. I got
the thing inside the window, dropped it,
and stood on it, craning over the garden
path and round the corner of the house.
Of course there was nothing to be seen.
The birds were gone. The cat was still
on the table saying “O you owl! O you
owl!” The sole and only clue to what
had been happening was a small earthenware
saucer that lay on the path immediately
below the window, with a little heap
of ashes in it, from which a thin column of
smoke was coming straight up and curling
over when it reached the window level.
That, I could not doubt, was the cause of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_95"></SPAN></span>
my sudden sleepiness. I dropped a large
book straight on to it, and had the satisfaction
of hearing it crush to bits and of
seeing the smoke go four ways along the
ground and vanish.</p>
<p>I was perfectly awake now. I looked at
the cat, and showed her the back of my
hand. She sat quite still and said:</p>
<p>“Well, what did you expect? I had to
do something. I'll lick it if you like, but
I'd rather not. No particular ill-feeling, you
understand; all the same a hundred years
hence.”</p>
<p>I was not in a position to answer her,
so I shook my head at her, wound up my
hand in a handkerchief, and then stroked
her. She took it agreeably, jumped off the
table, and requested to be let out.</p>
<p>So the third attack had failed. I sat
down and looked out. The hedges were
empty; not a bird, not a mouse was left.
I took this to mean that the dangerous
time was past, and great was the relief.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_96"></SPAN></span>
Soon I heard the maid come back from her
errands in the village, then the mistress's
chaise, then the clock striking five. I felt
it would be all right for me to go out
after tea.</p>
<p>And so I did; first, however, concealing
the suit-case in my bedroom—not that I
supposed hiding it would be of much use—and
piling upon it poker, tongs, knife, horseshoe,
and anything else I could find which
I thought would keep off trespassers. I
had, by the way, to explain to the maid
that a bird had flown against the window
and broken it, and when she said “Stupid,
tiresome little things they are,” I am afraid
I did not contradict her.</p>
<p>I went out by way of the garden and
crossed the field, near the middle of which
stands a large old oak. I went up to this,
for no particular reason, and stood gazing at
the trunk. As I did so I became aware that
my eyes were beginning to “see through,”
and behold! a family of owls was inside.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_97"></SPAN></span>
As it was near evening, they were getting
wakeful, stirring, smacking their beaks and
opening their wings a little from time to
time. At last one of them said:</p>
<p>“Time's nearly up. Out and about! Out
and about!”</p>
<p>“Anyone outside?” said another.</p>
<p>“No harm there,” said the first.</p>
<p>This short way of talking, I believe, was
due to the owls not being properly awake
and consequently sulky. As they brightened
up and got their eyes open, they
began to be more easy in manner.</p>
<p>“Oop! Oop! Oop! I've had a very
good day of it. You have, too, I hope?”</p>
<p>“Sound as a rock, I thank you, except
when they were carrying on at the cottage.”</p>
<p>“Oh goodness! I forgot! They didn't
bring it off, I hope.”</p>
<p>“Not they; the watch was too well set,
but it was wanted. I had a leaf about it
a few minutes after, and it seems they got
him asleep.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_98"></SPAN></span>
“Well! I never heard anyone bring a
leaf.”</p>
<p>“I dare say not, but I was expecting it;
pigeon dropped it. There it is, on that
child's back.”</p>
<p>I saw the hen-owl stoop and examine a
dead chestnut leaf which lay, as the other
had said, on an owlet's back.</p>
<p>“Fa-a-ther!” said this owlet suddenly,
in a shrill voice, “mayn't I go out to-night?”</p>
<p>But all that Father did was to clasp its
head in his claw and push it to and fro
several times. When he let go, the owlet
made no sound, but crept away and hid its
face in a corner, and heaved as if with
sobs. Father closed his eyes slowly and
opened them slowly—amused, I thought.
The mother had been reading the leaf all
the time.</p>
<p>“Dear me! <em>very</em> interesting!” she said.
“I suppose now the worst of it is over.”</p>
<p>“All's quiet for to-night, anyhow,” said<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_99"></SPAN></span>
Father, “but I wish he could see someone
about to-morrow; that's their last chance,
and they <em>may</em>——” He ruffled up his
feathers, lifted first one foot and then the
other. “The awkwardness is,” he went on,
“if I say too much and they do get the
jars, there's one risk; and if there's no
warning and they get them, there's another
risk.”</p>
<p>“But if there <em>is</em> a warning and they
<em>don't</em> get them,” said she, very sensibly.</p>
<p>“Well, to be sure, that would be better,
even though we don't know much about him.”</p>
<p>“But where do you suppose he is, and
whom ought he to see?” (It was just
what I wanted to know, and I thanked her.)</p>
<p>“Why, as to the first, I suspect he's
outside; there is someone there, and why
they should stop there all this time unless
they're listening, I don't know.”</p>
<p>“Good gracious! listening to our private
conversation! and me with my feathers all
anyhow!” She began to peck at herself<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_100"></SPAN></span>
vigorously; but this was straying from the
point, and annoyed me. However, Father
went slowly on:</p>
<p>“As to that, I don't much care whether
he's listening or not. As to whom he ought
to see, that's rather more difficult. If he's
got as far as talking to any of the Right
People (he said this as if they had capital
letters), they'd know, of course; and some
of them down about the village, they'd
know; and the Old Mother knows, and——”</p>
<p>“What about the boys?” said she, pausing
in the middle of her toilet and poking
her head up at him. He wholly disdained
to answer, and merely butted at her with
his head, so that she slipped down off her
ledge several inches, with a great scrabbling.
“Oh, <em>don't</em>!” she said peevishly, as she
climbed back. “I'm all untidy again.”</p>
<p>“Well then, don't ask such ridiculous
questions. I shall buffle you with both
wings next time. And now, as soon as the
coast is clear, I shall be out and about.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_101"></SPAN></span>
I took the hint and moved off, for I had
learnt as much perhaps as I could expect,
even if all was not yet plain; and before I
had gone many paces I was aware of the
pair both sailing smoothly off in the opposite
direction.</p>
<p>I was “seeing through” a good deal
that evening; it is surprising what a lot of
coppers people drop, even on a field path;
surprising, too, in how many places there
lie, unsuspected, bones of men. Some things
I saw which were ugly and sad, like that,
but more that were amusing and even
exciting. There is one spot I could show
where four gold cups stand round what was
once a book, but the book is no more than
earth now. That, however, I did not see on
this particular evening.</p>
<p>What I remember best is a family of
young rabbits huddled round their parents
in a burrow, and the mother telling a story:
“And so then he went a little farther and
found a dandelion, and stopped and sat up<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_102"></SPAN></span>
and began to eat it. And when he had
eaten two large leaves and one little one,
he saw a fly on it—no, two flies; and then
he thought he had had enough of that
dandelion, and he went a little farther and
found another dandelion.…” And so it
went on interminably, and entirely stupid,
like everything else I ever heard a rabbit
say, for they have forgotten all about their
ancestor, Brer Rabbit. However, the children
were absorbed in the story, so much
so that they never heard a stoat making
its way down the burrow. But I heard it,
and by stamping and driving my stick in I
was able to make it turn tail and go off,
cursing. All stoats, weasels, ferrets, polecats,
are of the wrong people, as you may
imagine, and so are most rats and bats.</p>
<p>At last I left off seeing through, by trying
not to do so, and went back to the
house, where I found all safe and quiet.</p>
<p>I ought to say that I had not as yet
tried speaking to any animal, even to the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_103"></SPAN></span>
cat when she scratched me, but I thought
I would try it now. So when she came
in at dinner-time and circled about, with
what I may call pious aspirations about
fish and other such things, I summoned up
my courage and said (using my voice in
the way I described, or rather did not
describe, before):</p>
<p>“I used to be told, ‘If you are hungry,
you can eat dry bread.’”</p>
<p>She was certainly horribly startled. At
first I thought she would have dashed up
the chimney or out of the window; but she
recovered pretty quickly and sat down, still
looking at me with intense surprise.</p>
<p>“I suppose I might have guessed,” she
said; “but dear! what a turn you did
give me! I feel quite faint; and gracious!
what a day it has been! When I found
you dozing off like a great—— Well, no
one wants to be rude, do they? but I can
tell you I had more than half a mind to
go at your face.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_104"></SPAN></span>
“I am glad you didn't,” I said; “and
really, you know, it wasn't my fault: it
was that stuff they were burning on the
path.”</p>
<p>“I know that well enough,” she said;
“but to come back to the point, all this
anxiety has made me as empty in myself
as a clean saucer.”</p>
<p>“Just what I was saying; if you are
hungry, you can——”</p>
<p>“Say that again, say it just once more,”
she said, and her eyes grew narrow as she
said it, “and I shall——”</p>
<p>“What shall you do?” I asked, for she
stopped suddenly.</p>
<p>She calmed herself. “Oh, you know how
it is when one's been all excited-like and
worked up; we all say more than we mean.
But that about dry bread! Well, there!
I simply can't bear it. It's a wicked, cruel
untruth, that's what it is; and besides, you
<em>can't</em> be going to eat all the whole of what
she's put down for you.” Excitement was<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_105"></SPAN></span>
coming on again, and she ended with a
loud ill-tempered mew.</p>
<p>Well, I gave her what she seemed to want,
and shortly after, worn out doubtless with
the fatigues of the day, she went to sleep
on a chair, not even caring to follow the
maid downstairs when things were cleared
away.</p>
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