<h2><SPAN name="page29"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE DISAPPEARANCE OF CRISPINA UMBERLEIGH</h2>
<p>In a first-class carriage of a train speeding Balkanward
across the flat, green Hungarian plain two Britons sat in
friendly, fitful converse. They had first foregathered in
the cold grey dawn at the frontier line, where the presiding
eagle takes on an extra head and Teuton lands pass from
Hohenzollern to Habsburg keeping—and where a probing
official beak requires to delve in polite and perhaps
perfunctory, but always tiresome, manner into the baggage of
sleep-hungry passengers. After a day’s break of their
journey at Vienna the travellers had again foregathered at the
trainside and paid one another the compliment of settling
instinctively into the same carriage. The elder of the two
had the appearance and manner of a diplomat; in point of fact he
was the well-connected foster-brother of a wine business.
The other was certainly a journalist. Neither man was
talkative and each was grateful to the other for not being
talkative. That is why from time to time they talked.</p>
<p>One topic of conversation naturally thrust itself forward in
front of all others. In Vienna the previous day they had
learned of the mysterious vanishing of a world-famous picture
from the walls of the Louvre.</p>
<p>“A dramatic disappearance of that sort is sure to
produce a crop of imitations,” said the Journalist.</p>
<p>“It has had a lot of anticipations, for the matter of
that,” said the Wine-brother.</p>
<p>“Oh, of course there have been thefts from the Louvre
before.”</p>
<p>“I was thinking of the spiriting away of human beings
rather than pictures. In particular I was thinking of the
case of my aunt, Crispina Umberleigh.”</p>
<p>“I remember hearing something of the affair,” said
the Journalist, “but I was away from England at the
time. I never quite knew what was supposed to have
happened.”</p>
<p>“You may hear what really happened if you will respect
it as a confidence,” said the Wine Merchant.
“In the first place I may say that the disappearance of
Mrs. Umberleigh was not regarded by the family entirely as a
bereavement. My uncle, Edward Umberleigh, was not by any
means a weak-kneed individual, in fact in the world of politics
he had to be reckoned with more or less as a strong man, but he
was unmistakably dominated by Crispina; indeed I never met any
human being who was not frozen into subjection when brought into
prolonged contact with her. Some people are born to
command; Crispina Mrs. Umberleigh was born to legislate, codify,
administrate, censor, license, ban, execute, and sit in judgement
generally. If she was not born with that destiny she
adopted it at an early age. From the kitchen regions
upwards every one in the household came under her despotic sway
and stayed there with the submissiveness of molluscs involved in
a glacial epoch. As a nephew on a footing of only
occasional visits she affected me merely as an epidemic,
disagreeable while it lasted, but without any permanent effect;
but her own sons and daughters stood in mortal awe of her; their
studies, friendships, diet, amusements, religious observances,
and way of doing their hair were all regulated and ordained
according to the august lady’s will and pleasure.
This will help you to understand the sensation of stupefaction
which was caused in the family when she unobtrusively and
inexplicably vanished. It was as though St. Paul’s
Cathedral or the Piccadilly Hotel had disappeared in the night,
leaving nothing but an open space to mark where it had
stood. As far as was known nothing was troubling her; in
fact there was much before her to make life particularly well
worth living. The youngest boy had come back from school
with an unsatisfactory report, and she was to have sat in
judgement on him the very afternoon of the day she
disappeared—if it had been he who had vanished in a hurry
one could have supplied the motive. Then she was in the
middle of a newspaper correspondence with a rural dean in which
she had already proved him guilty of heresy, inconsistency, and
unworthy quibbling, and no ordinary consideration would have
induced her to discontinue the controversy. Of course the
matter was put in the hands of the police, but as far as possible
it was kept out of the papers, and the generally accepted
explanation of her withdrawal from her social circle was that she
had gone into a nursing home.”</p>
<p>“And what was the immediate effect on the home
circle?” asked the Journalist.</p>
<p>“All the girls bought themselves bicycles; the feminine
cycling craze was still in existence, and Crispina had rigidly
vetoed any participation in it among the members of her
household. The youngest boy let himself go to such an
extent during his next term that it had to be his last as far as
that particular establishment was concerned. The elder boys
propounded a theory that their mother might be wandering
somewhere abroad, and searched for her assiduously, chiefly, it
must be admitted, in a class of Montmartre resort where it was
extremely improbable that she would be found.”</p>
<p>“And all this while couldn’t your uncle get hold
of the least clue?”</p>
<p>“As a matter of fact he had received some information,
though of course I did not know of it at the time. He got a
message one day telling him that his wife had been kidnapped and
smuggled out of the country; she was said to be hidden away, in
one of the islands off the coast of Norway I think it was, in
comfortable surroundings and well cared for. And with the
information came a demand for money; a lump sum of £2000
was to be paid yearly. Failing this she would be
immediately restored to her family.”</p>
<p>The Journalist was silent for a moment, and them began to
laugh quietly.</p>
<p>“It was certainly an inverted form of holding to
ransom,” he said.</p>
<p>“If you had known my aunt,” said the Wine
Merchant, “you would have wondered that they didn’t
put the figure higher.”</p>
<p>“I realise the temptation. Did your uncle succumb
to it?”</p>
<p>“Well, you see, he had to think of others as well as
himself. For the family to have gone back into the Crispina
thraldom after having tasted the delights of liberty would have
been a tragedy, and there were even wider considerations to be
taken into account. Since his bereavement he had
unconsciously taken up a far bolder and more initiatory line in
public affairs, and his popularity and influence had increased
correspondingly. From being merely a strong man in the
political world he began to be spoken of as <i>the</i> strong
man. All this he knew would be jeopardised if he once more
dropped into the social position of the husband of Mrs.
Umberleigh. He was a rich man, and the £2000 a year,
though not exactly a fleabite, did not seem an extravagant price
to pay for the boarding-out of Crispina. Of course, he had
severe qualms of conscience about the arrangement. Later
on, when he took me into his confidence, he told me that in
paying the ransom, or hush-money as I should have called it, he
was partly influenced by the fear that if he refused it the
kidnappers might have vented their rage and disappointment on
their captive. It was better, he said, to think of her
being well cared for as a highly-valued paying-guest in one of
the Lofoden Islands than to have her struggling miserably home in
a maimed and mutilated condition. Anyway he paid the yearly
instalment as punctually as one pays a fire insurance, and with
equal promptitude there would come an acknowledgment of the money
and a brief statement to the effect that Crispina was in good
health and fairly cheerful spirits. One report even
mentioned that she was busying herself with a scheme for proposed
reforms in Church management to be pressed on the local
pastorate. Another spoke of a rheumatic attack and a
journey to a ‘cure’ on the mainland, and on that
occasion an additional eighty pounds was demanded and
conceded. Of course it was to the interest of the
kidnappers to keep their charge in good health, but the secrecy
with which they managed to shroud their arrangements argued a
really wonderful organisation. If my uncle was paying a
rather high price, at least he could console himself with the
reflection that he was paying specialists’ fees.”</p>
<p>“Meanwhile had the police given up all attempts to track
the missing lady?” asked the Journalist.</p>
<p>“Not entirely; they came to my uncle from time to time
to report on clues which they thought might yield some
elucidation as to her fate or whereabouts, but I think they had
their suspicions that he was possessed of more information than
he had put at their disposal. And then, after a
disappearance of more than eight years, Crispina returned with
dramatic suddenness to the home she had left so
mysteriously.”</p>
<p>“She had given her captors the slip?”</p>
<p>“She had never been captured. Her wandering away
had been caused by a sudden and complete loss of memory.
She usually dressed rather in the style of a superior kind of
charwoman, and it was not so very surprising that she should have
imagined that she was one; and still less that people should
accept her statement and help her to get work. She had
wandered as far afield as Birmingham, and found fairly steady
employment there, her energy and enthusiasm in putting
people’s rooms in order counterbalancing her obstinate and
domineering characteristics. It was the shock of being
patronisingly addressed as ‘my good woman’ by a
curate, who was disputing with her where the stove should be
placed in a parish concert hall that led to the sudden
restoration of her memory. ‘I think you forget who
you are speaking to,’ she observed crushingly, which was
rather unduly severe, considering she had only just remembered it
herself.”</p>
<p>“But,” exclaimed the Journalist, “the
Lofoden Island people! Who had they got hold of?”</p>
<p>“A purely mythical prisoner. It was an attempt in
the first place by some one who knew something of the domestic
situation, probably a discharged valet, to bluff a lump sum out
of Edward Umberleigh before the missing woman turned up; the
subsequent yearly instalments were an unlooked-for increment to
the original haul.</p>
<p>“Crispina found that the eight years’ interregnum
had materially weakened her ascendancy over her now grown-up
offspring. Her husband, however, never accomplished
anything great in the political world after her return; the
strain of trying to account satisfactorily for an unspecified
expenditure of sixteen thousand pounds spread over eight years
sufficiently occupied his mental energies. Here is Belgrad
and another custom house.”</p>
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