pump.â
âLugg, sit down.â
The words were rapped out in a way quite foreign to Mr Campionâs usual manner. Considerably surprised, the big man obeyed him.
âNow, look here,â said his employer, grimly, âyouâve got to forget that, Lugg. Since you know so much you may as well hear the truth. The Gyrths are a family who were going strong about the time that yours were leaping about from twig to twig. And there is, in the east wing of the Tower, I believe, a room which has no visible entrance. The story about the son of the house being initiated into the secret on his twenty-fifth birthday is all quite sound. Itâs a semi-religious ceremony of the family. But get this into your head. Itâs nothing to do with us. Whatever the Gyrthsâ secret is, itâs no oneâs affair but their own, and if you so much as refer to it, even to one of the lowest of the servants, youâll have made an irreparable bloomer, and I wonât have you within ten miles of me again.â
âRight you are, Guvânor. Right you are.â Mr Lugg was apologetic and a little nervous. âIâm glad you told me, though,â he added. âIt fair put the wind up me. Thereâs one or two things, though, that ainât nice âere. Fârinstance, when I was cominâ acrost out of the garage, a woman put âer âead out the door oâ that one-eyed shop next door. She didnât arf give me a turn; she was bald â not just a bit gone on top, yer know, but quite âairless. I asked about âer, and they come out with a yarn about witchcraft and âaunting and cursinâ like a set oâ âeathens. Thereâs too much âanky-panky about this place. I donât believe in it, but I donât like it. They got a âaunted wood âere, and a set oâ gippos livinâ in a âollow. Letâs go âome.â
Mr Campion regarded his aide owlishly.
âWell, you have been having fun in your quiet way,â he said. âYouâre sure your loquacious friend wasnât a Cookâs Guide selling you Rural England by any chance? How much beer did it take you to collect that lot?â
âYouâll see when I put in my bill for expenses,â said Mr Lugg unabashed. âWhat do we do tonight? âAve a mike round or stay âere?â
âWe keep well out of sight,â said Mr Campion. âIâve bought you a book of
Etiquette for Upper Servants.
It wouldnât hurt you to study it. You stay up here and do your homework.â
âSauce!â grumbled Mr Lugg. âIâll go and unpack yer bag. Oh, well, a quiet beginning usually means a quick finish. Iâll âave a monument put up to you at the âead of the grave. A life-size image of yerself dressed as an angel â âorn-rimmed spectacles done in gold.â
He lumbered off. Mr Campion stood at the window and looked over the shadowy garden, still scented in the dusk. There was nothing more lovely, nothing more redolent of peace and kindliness. Far out across the farther fields a nightingale had begun to sing, mimicking all the bird chatter of the sunshine. From the bar beneath his feet scraps of the strident Suffolk dialect floated up to him, mingled with occasional gusts of husky laughter.
Yet Mr Campion was not soothed. His pale eyes were troubled behind his spectacles, and once or twice he shivered. He felt himself hampered at every step. Forces were moving which he had no power to stay, forces all the more terrible because they were unknown to him, enemies which he could not recognize.
The picture of Val and the two girls standing smiling in the bright old-fashioned room sickened him. There was, as Lugg said, something unnatural about the whole business, something more than ordinary danger: and the three young people had been so very young, so very ignorant and charming. His mind wandered to the secret room,
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