The Adventure of My Aunt.
Text 28
The Adventure of My
Aunt.
My aunt was a big
woman, very tall, with a strong mind and will. She was what you may call a very
manly woman. My uncle was a thin, small man, very weak, with no will at all. He
was no match for my aunt. From the day of their marriage he began to grow
smaller and weaker. His wife’s powerful mind was too much for him; it
undermined his health, and very soon he fell ill.
My aunt took all possible care
of him; half the doctors in town visited him and prescribed medicine for him
enough to cure a whole hospital. She made him take all the medicines prescribed
by the doctors, but all was in vain. My uncle grew worse and worse, and one day
she found him dead.
My aunt was very much upset by
the death of her poor dear husband. Perhaps now she was sorry that she had made
him take so much medicine and felt, perhaps, that he was the victim of her
kindness. Anyhow, shi did all that a widow could do to honour his memory. She
spent much money on her mourning dress, she wore a miniature of him about her
neck as large as a small clock; and she had a full-length portrait of him
always hanging in her bedroom. All the
world praised her conduct. "A woman who did so much to honour the memory of one
husband, deserves soon to get another,” said my aunt’s friend.
Some time passed,
and my aunt decided to move to Derbyshire where she had a big country house.
The house stood in a lonely, wild part of the country among the grey Derbyshire
hills. The servants, most of who came with my aunt from town, did not like the
sad-looking old place. They were afraid to walk alone about its half-empty
black-looking rooms. My aunt herself
seemed to be struck with the lonely appearance of her house. Before she went to
bed, there for, she herself examined the doors and the windows and locked them
with her own hands. Then she carried the keys from the house together with a
little box of money and jewels, to her own room. She always saw to all things
herself.
One evening, after she had sent away
her maid, she sat by her toilet-table arranging her hair. For, in spite of her
sorrow for my uncle, she still cared very much about her appearance. She sat
for a little while looking at her face in the glass first on one side, then on
the other. As she looked, she thought of her old friend, a rich gentleman of
the neighbourhood, who had visited her that day and whom she had known since
her girlhood.
All of a sudden,
she thought she heard something move behind her. She looked round quickly, but
their was nothing to be seen. Nothing but the painted portrait of her poor dear
husband on the wall behind her. She gave a heavy sigh to his memory as she
always did whenever she spoke of him in company, and went on arranging her
hair. Her sigh was re-echoed. She looked round again, but no one was to be
seen. "Oh. It is only the wind,” she thought & went on putting her hair in
papers, but her eyes were still fixed on her own reflection & the
reflection of her husband’s portrait in the loking-glass. Suddenly it seemed to
her that in the glass she saw one of the eyes of the portrait move. It gave her
a shock. "I must make sure,” she thought & moved the candle so that the
light fell on the eye in the glass. Now she was sure that it moved. But not
only that, it seemed to give her a wink exactly as her husband used to do when
he was living. Now my aunt got really frightened … her heart began to beast
fast. She suddenly remembered all the fright full stories about ghosts &
criminals that she had heard.
But her fear soon
was over. Next moment, my aunt who, as I have said, had a remarkably strong
will, became calm. She went on arranging her hair. She even sang her favourite
song in a low voice and did not make a single false note. She again moved the
candle and while moving it she overturned her workbox. Then she took the candle
and began without any hurry to pick up the articles one by one from the floor.
She picked up something near the door, then opened the door, looked for a
moment into the corridor as if in doubt whether to go and then walked quickly
out.
She hurried down
the stairs and ordered the servants to arm themselves with anything they could
find. She herself caught a red-hot poker and, followed by her frightened
servants, returned almost at once. They entered the room. All was still and exactly
in the same order as when she had left it. They approached the portrait of my
uncle. "Pull down the picture,” ordered
my aunt.
A heavy sigh was
heard from the portrait. The servants stepped back in fear. "Pull it down at
once,” cried my aunt impatiently. The picture was pulled down, and from a
hiding-place behind it, they dragged out a big, black-bearded fellow with a
knife as long as my arm, but trembling with fear from head to foot. He
confessed that he had stolen into my aunt’s room to get her box of money and
jewels, when all the house was asleep. He had once been a servant in the house
and before my aunt’s arrival had helped to put the house in order. He had
noticed the hiding-place when the portrait had been put up. In order to see
what was going on in the room he had made a hole in one of the eyes of the
portrait.
My aunt did not
send for the police. She could do very well without them: she liked to take the
law into her own hands. She had her own ideas of clean lines also. She ordered the servants to draw the man
through the horse-pond in order to wash away his crimes, and then to dry him
well with a wooden "towel”.
But through my aunt was a very
brave woman, this adventure was too much even for her. She often used to say:” It
is most unpleasant for a woman to live alone in the country.” Soon after she
gave her hand to the rich gentleman
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