<h2><SPAN name="page67"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE PENANCE</h2>
<p>Octavian Ruttle was one of those lively cheerful individuals
on whom amiability had set its unmistakable stamp, and, like most
of his kind, his soul’s peace depended in large measure on
the unstinted approval of his fellows. In hunting to death
a small tabby cat he had done a thing of which he scarcely
approved himself, and he was glad when the gardener had hidden
the body in its hastily dug grave under a lone oak-tree in the
meadow, the same tree that the hunted quarry had climbed as a
last effort towards safety. It had been a distasteful and
seemingly ruthless deed, but circumstances had demanded the doing
of it. Octavian kept chickens; at least he kept some of
them; others vanished from his keeping, leaving only a few
bloodstained feathers to mark the manner of their going.
The tabby cat from the large grey house that stood with its back
to the meadow had been detected in many furtive visits to the
hen-coups, and after due negotiation with those in authority at
the grey house a sentence of death had been agreed on.
“The children will mind, but they need not know,” had
been the last word on the matter.</p>
<p>The children in question were a standing puzzle to Octavian;
in the course of a few months he considered that he should have
known their names, ages, the dates of their birthdays, and have
been introduced to their favourite toys. They remained
however, as non-committal as the long blank wall that shut them
off from the meadow, a wall over which their three heads
sometimes appeared at odd moments. They had parents in
India—that much Octavian had learned in the neighbourhood;
the children, beyond grouping themselves garment-wise into sexes,
a girl and two boys, carried their life-story no further on his
behoof. And now it seemed he was engaged in something which
touched them closely, but must be hidden from their
knowledge.</p>
<p>The poor helpless chickens had gone one by one to their doom,
so it was meet that their destroyer should come to a violent end;
yet Octavian felt some qualms when his share of the violence was
ended. The little cat, headed off from its wonted tracks of
safety, had raced unfriended from shelter to shelter, and its end
had been rather piteous. Octavian walked through the long
grass of the meadow with a step less jaunty than usual. And
as he passed beneath the shadow of the high blank wall he glanced
up and became aware that his hunting had had undesired
witnesses. Three white set faces were looking down at him,
and if ever an artist wanted a threefold study of cold human
hate, impotent yet unyielding, raging yet masked in stillness, he
would have found it in the triple gaze that met Octavian’s
eye.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, but it had to be done,” said
Octavian, with genuine apology in his voice.</p>
<p>“Beast!”</p>
<p>The answer came from three throats with startling
intensity.</p>
<p>Octavian felt that the blank wall would not be more impervious
to his explanations than the bunch of human hostility that peered
over its coping; he wisely decided to withhold his peace
overtures till a more hopeful occasion.</p>
<p>Two days later he ransacked the best sweet shop in the
neighbouring market town for a box of chocolates that by its size
and contents should fitly atone for the dismal deed done under
the oak tree in the meadow. The two first specimens that
were shown him he hastily rejected; one had a group of chickens
pictured on its lid, the other bore the portrait of a tabby
kitten. A third sample was more simply bedecked with a
spray of painted poppies, and Octavian hailed the flowers of
forgetfulness as a happy omen. He felt distinctly more at
ease with his surroundings when the imposing package had been
sent across to the grey house, and a message returned to say that
it had been duly given to the children. The next morning he
sauntered with purposeful steps past the long blank wall on his
way to the chicken-run and piggery that stood at the bottom of
the meadow. The three children were perched at their
accustomed look-out, and their range of sight did not seem to
concern itself with Octavian’s presence. As he became
depressingly aware of the aloofness of their gaze he also noted a
strange variegation in the herbage at his feet; the greensward
for a considerable space around was strewn and speckled with a
chocolate-coloured hail, enlivened here and there with gay
tinsel-like wrappings or the glistening mauve of crystallised
violets. It was as though the fairy paradise of a
greedyminded child had taken shape and substance in the
vegetation of the meadow. Octavian’s bloodmoney had
been flung back at him in scorn.</p>
<p>To increase his discomfiture the march of events tended to
shift the blame of ravaged chicken-coops from the supposed
culprit who had already paid full forfeit; the young chicks were
still carried off, and it seemed highly probable that the cat had
only haunted the chicken-run to prey on the rats which harboured
there. Through the flowing channels of servant talk the
children learned of this belated revision of verdict, and
Octavian one day picked up a sheet of copy-book paper on which
was painstakingly written: “Beast. Rats eated your
chickens.” More ardently than ever did he wish for an
opportunity for sloughing off the disgrace that enwrapped him,
and earning some happier nickname from his three unsparing
judges.</p>
<p>And one day a chance inspiration came to him. Olivia,
his two-year-old daughter, was accustomed to spend the hour from
high noon till one o’clock with her father while the
nursemaid gobbled and digested her dinner and novelette.
About the same time the blank wall was usually enlivened by the
presence of its three small wardens. Octavian, with seeming
carelessness of purpose, brought Olivia well within hail of the
watchers and noted with hidden delight the growing interest that
dawned in that hitherto sternly hostile quarter. His little
Olivia, with her sleepy placid ways, was going to succeed where
he, with his anxious well-meant overtures, had so signally
failed. He brought her a large yellow dahlia, which she
grasped tightly in one hand and regarded with a stare of
benevolent boredom, such as one might bestow on amateur classical
dancing performed in aid of a deserving charity. Then he
turned shyly to the group perched on the wall and asked with
affected carelessness, “Do you like flowers?”
Three solemn nods rewarded his venture.</p>
<p>“Which sorts do you like best?” he asked, this
time with a distinct betrayal of eagerness in his voice.</p>
<p>“Those with all the colours, over there.”
Three chubby arms pointed to a distant tangle of sweet-pea.
Child-like, they had asked for what lay farthest from hand, but
Octavian trotted off gleefully to obey their welcome
behest. He pulled and plucked with unsparing hand, and
brought every variety of tint that he could see into his bunch
that was rapidly becoming a bundle. Then he turned to
retrace his steps, and found the blank wall blanker and more
deserted than ever, while the foreground was void of all trace of
Olivia. Far down the meadow three children were pushing a
go-cart at the utmost speed they could muster in the direction of
the piggeries; it was Olivia’s go-cart and Olivia sat in
it, somewhat bumped and shaken by the pace at which she was being
driven, but apparently retaining her wonted composure of
mind. Octavian stared for a moment at the rapidly moving
group, and then started in hot pursuit, shedding as he ran sprays
of blossom from the mass of sweet-pea that he still clutched in
his hands. Fast as he ran the children had reached the
piggery before he could overtake them, and he arrived just in
time to see Olivia, wondering but unprotesting, hauled and pushed
up to the roof of the nearest sty. They were old buildings
in some need of repair, and the rickety roof would certainly not
have borne Octavian’s weight if he had attempted to follow
his daughter and her captors on their new vantage ground.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do with her?” he
panted. There was no mistaking the grim trend of mischief
in those flushed by sternly composed young faces.</p>
<p>“Hang her in chains over a slow fire,” said one of
the boys. Evidently they had been reading English
history.</p>
<p>“Frow her down the pigs will d’vour her, every bit
’cept the palms of her hands,” said the other
boy. It was also evident that they had studied Biblical
history.</p>
<p>The last proposal was the one which most alarmed Octavian,
since it might be carried into effect at a moment’s notice;
there had been cases, he remembered, of pigs eating babies.</p>
<p>“You surely wouldn’t treat my poor little Olivia
in that way?” he pleaded.</p>
<p>“You killed our little cat,” came in stern
reminder from three throats.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry I did,” said Octavian, and if
there is a standard measurement in truths Octavian’s
statement was assuredly a large nine.</p>
<p>“We shall be very sorry when we’ve killed
Olivia,” said the girl, “but we can’t be sorry
till we’ve done it.”</p>
<p>The inexorable child-logic rose like an unyielding rampart
before Octavian’s scared pleadings. Before he could
think of any fresh line of appeal his energies were called out in
another direction. Olivia had slid off the roof and fallen
with a soft, unctuous splash into a morass of muck and decaying
straw. Octavian scrambled hastily over the pigsty wall to
her rescue, and at once found himself in a quagmire that engulfed
his feet. Olivia, after the first shock of surprise at her
sudden drop through the air, had been mildly pleased at finding
herself in close and unstinted contact with the sticky element
that oozed around her, but as she began to sink gently into the
bed of slime a feeling dawned on her that she was not after all
very happy, and she began to cry in the tentative fashion of the
normally good child. Octavian, battling with the quagmire,
which seemed to have learned the rare art of giving way at all
points without yielding an inch, saw his daughter slowly
disappearing in the engulfing slush, her smeared face further
distorted with the contortions of whimpering wonder, while from
their perch on the pigsty roof the three children looked down
with the cold unpitying detachment of the Parcæ
Sisters.</p>
<p>“I can’t reach her in time,” gasped
Octavian, “she’ll be choked in the muck.
Won’t you help her?”</p>
<p>“No one helped our cat,” came the inevitable
reminder.</p>
<p>“I’ll do anything to show you how sorry I am about
that,” cried Octavian, with a further desperate flounder,
which carried him scarcely two inches forward.</p>
<p>“Will you stand in a white sheet by the
grave?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” screamed Octavian.</p>
<p>“Holding a candle?”</p>
<p>“An’ saying ‘I’m a miserable
Beast’?”</p>
<p>Octavian agreed to both suggestions.</p>
<p>“For a long, long time?”</p>
<p>“For half an hour,” said Octavian. There was
an anxious ring in his voice as he named the time-limit; was
there not the precedent of a German king who did open-air penance
for several days and nights at Christmas-time clad only in his
shirt? Fortunately the children did not appear to have read
German history, and half an hour seemed long and goodly in their
eyes.</p>
<p>“All right,” came with threefold solemnity from
the roof, and a moment later a short ladder had been laboriously
pushed across to Octavian, who lost no time in propping it
against the low pigsty wall. Scrambling gingerly along its
rungs he was able to lean across the morass that separated him
from his slowly foundering offspring and extract her like an
unwilling cork from it’s slushy embrace. A few
minutes later he was listening to the shrill and repeated
assurances of the nursemaid that her previous experience of
filthy spectacles had been on a notably smaller scale.</p>
<p>That same evening when twilight was deepening into darkness
Octavian took up his position as penitent under the lone
oak-tree, having first carefully undressed the part. Clad
in a zephyr shirt, which on this occasion thoroughly merited its
name, he held in one hand a lighted candle and in the other a
watch, into which the soul of a dead plumber seemed to have
passed. A box of matches lay at his feet and was resorted
to on the fairly frequent occasions when the candle succumbed to
the night breezes. The house loomed inscrutable in the
middle distance, but as Octavian conscientiously repeated the
formula of his penance he felt certain that three pairs of solemn
eyes were watching his moth-shared vigil.</p>
<p>And the next morning his eyes were gladdened by a sheet of
copy-book paper lying beside the blank wall, on which was written
the message “Un-Beast.”</p>
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