<h2><SPAN name="page59"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE GUESTS</h2>
<p>“The landscape seen from our windows is certainly
charming,” said Annabel; “those cherry orchards and
green meadows, and the river winding along the valley, and the
church tower peeping out among the elms, they all make a most
effective picture. There’s something dreadfully
sleepy and languorous about it, though; stagnation seems to be
the dominant note. Nothing ever happens here; seedtime and
harvest, an occasional outbreak of measles or a mildly
destructive thunderstorm, and a little election excitement about
once in five years, that is all that we have to modify the
monotony of our existence. Rather dreadful, isn’t
it?”</p>
<p>“On the contrary,” said Matilda, “I find it
soothing and restful; but then, you see, I’ve lived in
countries where things do happen, ever so many at a time, when
you’re not ready for them happening all at once.”</p>
<p>“That, of course, makes a difference,” said
Annabel.</p>
<p>“I have never forgotten,” said Matilda, “the
occasion when the Bishop of Bequar paid us an unexpected visit;
he was on his way to lay the foundation-stone of a mission-house
or something of the sort.”</p>
<p>“I thought that out there you were always prepared for
emergency guests turning up,” said Annabel.</p>
<p>“I was quite prepared for half a dozen Bishops,”
said Matilda, “but it was rather disconcerting to find out
after a little conversation that this particular one was a
distant cousin of mine, belonging to a branch of the family that
had quarrelled bitterly and offensively with our branch about a
Crown Derby dessert service; they got it, and we ought to have
got it, in some legacy, or else we got it and they thought they
ought to have it, I forget which; anyhow, I know they behaved
disgracefully. Now here was one of them turning up in the
odour of sanctity, so to speak, and claiming the traditional
hospitality of the East.”</p>
<p>“It was rather trying, but you could have left your
husband to do most of the entertaining.”</p>
<p>“My husband was fifty miles up-country, talking sense,
or what he imagined to be sense, to a village community that
fancied one of their leading men was a were-tiger.”</p>
<p>“A what tiger?”</p>
<p>“A were-tiger; you’ve heard of were-wolves,
haven’t you, a mixture of wolf and human being and
demon? Well, in those parts they have were-tigers, or think
they have, and I must say that in this case, so far as sworn and
uncontested evidence went, they had every ground for thinking
so. However, as we gave up witchcraft prosecutions about
three hundred years ago, we don’t like to have other people
keeping on our discarded practices; it doesn’t seem
respectful to our mental and moral position.”</p>
<p>“I hope you weren’t unkind to the Bishop,”
said Annabel.</p>
<p>“Well, of course he was my guest, so I had to be
outwardly polite to him, but he was tactless enough to rake up
the incidents of the old quarrel, and to try to make out that
there was something to be said for the way his side of the family
had behaved; even if there was, which I don’t for a moment
admit, my house was not the place in which to say it. I
didn’t argue the matter, but I gave my cook a holiday to go
and visit his aged parents some ninety miles away. The
emergency cook was not a specialist in curries, in fact, I
don’t think cooking in any shape or form could have been
one of his strong points. I believe he originally came to
us in the guise of a gardener, but as we never pretended to have
anything that could be considered a garden he was utilised as
assistant goat-herd, in which capacity, I understand, he gave
every satisfaction. When the Bishop heard that I had sent
away the cook on a special and unnecessary holiday he saw the
inwardness of the manœuvre, and from that moment we were
scarcely on speaking terms. If you have ever had a Bishop
with whom you were not on speaking terms staying in your house,
you will appreciate the situation.”</p>
<p>Annabel confessed that her life-story had never included such
a disturbing experience.</p>
<p>“Then,” continued Matilda, “to make matters
more complicated, the Gwadlipichee overflowed its banks, a thing
it did every now and then when the rains were unduly prolonged,
and the lower part of the house and all the out-buildings were
submerged. We managed to get the ponies loose in time, and
the syce swam the whole lot of them off to the nearest rising
ground. A goat or two, the chief goat-herd, the chief
goat-herd’s wife, and several of their babies came to
anchorage in the verandah. All the rest of the available
space was filled up with wet, bedraggled-looking hens and
chickens; one never really knows how many fowls one possesses
till the servants’ quarters are flooded out. Of
course, I had been through something of the sort in previous
floods, but never before had I had a houseful of goats and babies
and half-drowned hens, supplemented by a Bishop with whom I was
hardly on speaking terms.”</p>
<p>“It must have been a trying experience,” commented
Annabel.</p>
<p>“More embarrassments were to follow. I
wasn’t going to let a mere ordinary flood wash out the
memory of that Crown Derby dessert service, and I intimated to
the Bishop that his large bedroom, with a writing table in it,
and his small bath-room, with a sufficiency of cold-water jars in
it, was his share of the premises, and that space was rather
congested under the existing circumstances. However, at
about three o’clock in the afternoon, when he had awakened
from his midday sleep, he made a sudden incursion into the room
that was normally the drawing-room, but was now dining-room,
store-house, saddle-room, and half a dozen other temporary
premises as well. From the condition of my guest’s
costume he seemed to think it might also serve as his
dressing-room.</p>
<p>“’I’m afraid there is nowhere for you to
sit,’ I said coldly; ‘the verandah is full of
goats.’</p>
<p>“’There is a goat in my bedroom,’ he
observed with equal coldness, and more than a suspicion of
sardonic reproach.</p>
<p>“’Really,’ I said, ‘another
survivor? I thought all the other goats were done
for.’</p>
<p>“‘This particular goat is quite done for,’
he said, ‘it is being devoured by a leopard at the present
moment. That is why I left the room; some animals resent
being watched while they are eating.’</p>
<p>“The leopard, of course, was easily explained; it had
been hanging round the goat sheds when the flood came, and had
clambered up by the outside staircase leading to the
Bishop’s bath-room, thoughtfully bringing a goat with
it. Probably it found the bath-room too damp and shut-in
for its taste, and transferred its banqueting operations to the
bedroom while the Bishop was having his nap.”</p>
<p>“What a frightful situation!” exclaimed Annabel;
“fancy having a ravening leopard in the house, with a flood
all round you.”</p>
<p>“Not in the least ravening,” said Matilda;
“it was full of goat, had any amount of water at its
disposal if it felt thirsty, and probably had no more immediate
wish than a desire for uninterrupted sleep. Still, I think
any one will admit that it was an embarrassing predicament to
have your only available guest-room occupied by a leopard, the
verandah choked up with goats and babies and wet hens, and a
Bishop with whom you were scarcely on speaking terms planted down
in your own sitting-room. I really don’t know how I
got through those crawling hours, and of course mealtimes only
made matters worse. The emergency cook had every excuse for
sending in watery soup and sloppy rice, and as neither the chief
goat-herd nor his wife were expert divers, the cellar could not
be reached. Fortunately the Gwadlipichee subsides as
rapidly as it rises, and just before dawn the syce came splashing
back, with the ponies only fetlock deep in water. Then
there arose some awkwardness from the fact that the Bishop wished
to leave sooner than the leopard did, and as the latter was
ensconced in the midst of the former’s personal possessions
there was an obvious difficulty in altering the order of
departure. I pointed out to the Bishop that a
leopard’s habits and tastes are not those of an otter, and
that it naturally preferred walking to wading; and that in any
case a meal of an entire goat, washed down with tub-water,
justified a certain amount of repose; if I had had guns fired to
frighten the animal away, as the Bishop suggested, it would
probably merely have left the bedroom to come into the already
over-crowded drawing-room. Altogether it was rather a
relief when they both left. Now, perhaps, you can
understand my appreciation of a sleepy countryside where things
don’t happen.”</p>
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