have a grizzledy grey beard instead of white.â
Belinda giggled. âWhat a nice man! I hope you didnât tell him weâre too old for Father Christmas.â
âGosh, no! I said could we borrow a pair of his socks âcause theyâre probably the biggest stockings in the house,
and he said yes. Heâs a brick. Maybe Iâll be a sailor when I grow up.â
âRight now what youâve got to be is a gentleman. I have to take Nana out. Please, may I borrow your electric torch?â
Derek hesitated, then came up with a compromise. âTell you what, Iâll come with you.â
Even with the torch, it was very dark outside, very different from London with its street lamps and lights in peopleâs houses. The wind was blowing in great gusts which hurried them along in one direction and held them back when they turned around. Some of the gusts showered them with raindrops. Derek thought it was very jolly, and Belinda could see what he meant, but she was glad to go back inside.
They took Nana to the scullery where they had been told she was to sleep, then found their bedroom candles and lit them. They both thought it was very funny to be carrying lit candles up to bed with them, and Derek laughed so hard he blew his out halfway up the stairs. There were two lots of stairs, the second one very steep and narrow and sort of twisty, with a tiny landing at the top.
The bedrooms were very small, with sloping ceilings because they were up under the roof. Derekâs was next to Belindaâs, with a connecting door. There was a door on the other side, too, which a maid had told her was to the Reverend Callowayâs room, and her parents were just at the bottom of the twisty stairs.
She and Derek got ready for bed, then sat cross-legged on Belindaâs bed planning tomorrowâs treasure hunt. Derek was sure the map must have been hidden in the desk with the naked people on it. Bel voted for the other desk Uncle Miles
had shown them, in the South Room, mostly because she didnât think they ought to be looking at the naked people.
âWe wonât look at them,â Derek argued. âWeâll be too busy searching for the secret drawers no one else has found. I bet thatâs why they didnât find them, because they were squeamish about the naked people. Youâre not squeamish, are you?â
âNo!â Bel denied hotly, though she wasnât at all sure what squeamish meant. It was a good word, though. Derek probably learnt it at his boarding school.
âRight-oh, thatâs settled then. Oh, hello, Aunt Daisy. Is it bedtime already?â
âYes, darling, off you go. Iâll pop in when Iâve tucked Bel in. Iâve brought you a night-light, Bel, because youâre in a strange place and thereâs no switch to turn on a light if you need one.â She lit a little, fat candle and set it on the chest-of-drawers. âAll right, darling?â
Belinda was asleep almost before Daisy had kissed her good night.
She woke with a start some hours later. The wind was howling around the eaves and down the chimney, making the night-light flicker. When the howling paused momentarily, something scratched at the window-pane. Just the creeper growing up the wall, Belinda assured herself stoutly. That wouldnât have wakened herâso what did?
She lay straining her ears. Was that a footstep? Something moaned softly. Bel sat bolt upright.
A white figure drifted towards her from the direction of Derekâs room. It had a head, but no face. When she sat up, the moaning grew louder. The figure floated on across the room, and then came a rattling noise.
Belinda screamed.
5
D aisy and Alec had retired early, though a considerable time passed before they settled to sleep. Daisy lay in bed, curled up against Alec, with his arm around her waist. He was already asleep. She mused on how wonderful life was. Before she was married, she hadnât
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