<h2><SPAN name="page175"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE HEDGEHOG</h2>
<p>A “Mixed Double” of young people were contesting a
game of lawn tennis at the Rectory garden party; for the past
five-and-twenty years at least mixed doubles of young people had
done exactly the same thing on exactly the same spot at about the
same time of year. The young people changed and made way
for others in the course of time, but very little else seemed to
alter. The present players were sufficiently conscious of
the social nature of the occasion to be concerned about their
clothes and appearance, and sufficiently sport-loving to be keen
on the game. Both their efforts and their appearance came
under the fourfold scrutiny of a quartet of ladies sitting as
official spectators on a bench immediately commanding the
court. It was one of the accepted conditions of the Rectory
garden party that four ladies, who usually knew very little about
tennis and a great deal about the players, should sit at that
particular spot and watch the game. It had also come to be
almost a tradition that two ladies should be amiable, and that
the other two should be Mrs. Dole and Mrs. Hatch-Mallard.</p>
<p>“What a singularly unbecoming way Eva Jonelet has taken
to doing her hair in,” said Mrs. Hatch-Mallard;
“it’s ugly hair at the best of times, but she
needn’t make it look ridiculous as well. Some one
ought to tell her.”</p>
<p>Eva Jonelet’s hair might have escaped Mrs.
Hatch-Mallard’s condemnation if she could have forgotten
the more glaring fact that Eva was Mrs. Dole’s favourite
niece. It would, perhaps, have been a more comfortable
arrangement if Mrs. Hatch-Mallard and Mrs. Dole could have been
asked to the Rectory on separate occasions, but there was only
one garden party in the course of the year, and neither lady
could have been omitted from the list of invitations without
hopelessly wrecking the social peace of the parish.</p>
<p>“How pretty the yew trees look at this time of
year,” interposed a lady with a soft, silvery voice that
suggested a chinchilla muff painted by Whistler.</p>
<p>“What do you mean by this time of year?” demanded
Mrs. Hatch-Mallard. “Yew trees look beautiful at all
times of the year. That is their great charm.”</p>
<p>“Yew trees never look anything but hideous under any
circumstances or at any time of year,” said Mrs. Dole, with
the slow, emphatic relish of one who contradicts for the pleasure
of the thing. “They are only fit for graveyards and
cemeteries.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Hatch-Mallard gave a sardonic snort, which, being
translated, meant that there were some people who were better
fitted for cemeteries than for garden parties.</p>
<p>“What is the score, please?” asked the lady with
the chinchilla voice.</p>
<p>The desired information was given her by a young gentleman in
spotless white flannels, whose general toilet effect suggested
solicitude rather than anxiety.</p>
<p>“What an odious young cub Bertie Dykson has
become!” pronounced Mrs. Dole, remembering suddenly that
Bertie was a favourite with Mrs. Hatch-Mallard. “The
young men of to-day are not what they used to be twenty years
ago.”</p>
<p>“Of course not,” said Mrs. Hatch-Mallard;
“twenty years ago Bertie Dykson was just two years old, and
you must expect some difference in appearance and manner and
conversation between those two periods.”</p>
<p>“Do you know,” said Mrs. Dole, confidentially,
“I shouldn’t be surprised if that was intended to be
clever.”</p>
<p>“Have you any one interesting coming to stay with you,
Mrs. Norbury?” asked the chinchilla voice, hastily;
“you generally have a house party at this time of
year.”</p>
<p>“I’ve got a most interesting woman coming,”
said Mrs. Norbury, who had been mutely struggling for some chance
to turn the conversation into a safe channel; “an old
acquaintance of mine, Ada Bleek—”</p>
<p>“What an ugly name,” said Mrs. Hatch-Mallard.</p>
<p>“She’s descended from the de la Bliques, an old
Huguenot family of Touraine, you know.”</p>
<p>“There weren’t any Huguenots in Touraine,”
said Mrs. Hatch-Mallard, who thought she might safely dispute any
fact that was three hundred years old.</p>
<p>“Well, anyhow, she’s coming to stay with
me,” continued Mrs. Norbury, bringing her story quickly
down to the present day, “she arrives this evening, and
she’s highly clairvoyante, a seventh daughter of a seventh
daughter, you now, and all that sort of thing.”</p>
<p>“How very interesting,” said the chinchilla voice;
“Exwood is just the right place for her to come to,
isn’t it? There are supposed to be several ghosts
there.”</p>
<p>“That is why she was so anxious to come,” said
Mrs. Norbury; “she put off another engagement in order to
accept my invitation. She’s had visions and dreams,
and all those sort of things, that have come true in a most
marvellous manner, but she’s never actually seen a ghost,
and she’s longing to have that experience. She
belongs to that Research Society, you know.”</p>
<p>“I expect she’ll see the unhappy Lady Cullumpton,
the most famous of all the Exwood ghosts,” said Mrs. Dole;
“my ancestor, you know, Sir Gervase Cullumpton, murdered
his young bride in a fit of jealousy while they were on a visit
to Exwood. He strangled her in the stables with a stirrup
leather, just after they had come in from riding, and she is seen
sometimes at dusk going about the lawns and the stable yard, in a
long green habit, moaning and trying to get the thong from round
her throat. I shall be most interested to hear if your
friend sees—”</p>
<p>“I don’t know why she should be expected to see a
trashy, traditional apparition like the so-called Cullumpton
ghost, that is only vouched for by housemaids and tipsy
stable-boys, when my uncle, who was the owner of Exwood,
committed suicide there under the most tragical circumstances,
and most certainly haunts the place.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Hatch-Mallard has evidently never read
<i>Popple’s County History</i>,” said Mrs. Dole
icily, “or she would know that the Cullumpton ghost has a
wealth of evidence behind it—”</p>
<p>“Oh, Popple!” exclaimed Mrs. Hatch-Mallard
scornfully; “any rubbishy old story is good enough for
him. Popple, indeed! Now my uncle’s ghost was
seen by a Rural Dean, who was also a Justice of the Peace.
I should think that would be good enough testimony for any
one. Mrs. Norbury, I shall take it as a deliberate personal
affront if your clairvoyante friend sees any other ghost except
that of my uncle.”</p>
<p>“I daresay she won’t see anything at all; she
never has yet, you know,” said Mrs. Norbury hopefully.</p>
<p>“It was a most unfortunate topic for me to have
broached,” she lamented afterwards to the owner of the
chinchilla voice; “Exwood belongs to Mrs. Hatch-Mallard,
and we’ve only got it on a short lease. A nephew of
hers has been wanting to live there for some time, and if we
offend her in any way she’ll refuse to renew the
lease. I sometimes think these garden-parties are a
mistake.”</p>
<p>The Norburys played bridge for the next three nights till
nearly one o’clock; they did not care for the game, but it
reduced the time at their guest’s disposal for undesirable
ghostly visitations.</p>
<p>“Miss Bleek is not likely to be in a frame of mind to
see ghosts,” said Hugo Norbury, “if she goes to bed
with her brain awhirl with royal spades and no trumps and grand
slams.”</p>
<p>“I’ve talked to her for hours about Mrs.
Hatch-Mallard’s uncle,” said his wife, “and
pointed out the exact spot where he killed himself, and invented
all sorts of impressive details, and I’ve found an old
portrait of Lord John Russell and put it in her room, and told
her that it’s supposed to be a picture of the uncle in
middle age. If Ada does see a ghost at all it certainly
ought to be old Hatch-Mallard’s. At any rate,
we’ve done our best.”</p>
<p>The precautions were in vain. On the third morning of
her stay Ada Bleek came down late to breakfast, her eyes looking
very tired, but ablaze with excitement, her hair done anyhow, and
a large brown volume hugged under her arm.</p>
<p>“At last I’ve seen something supernatural!”
she exclaimed, and gave Mrs. Norbury a fervent kiss, as though in
gratitude for the opportunity afforded her.</p>
<p>“A ghost!” cried Mrs. Norbury, “not
really!”</p>
<p>“Really and unmistakably!”</p>
<p>“Was it an oldish man in the dress of about fifty years
ago?” asked Mrs. Norbury hopefully.</p>
<p>“Nothing of the sort,” said Ada; “it was a
white hedgehog.”</p>
<p>“A white hedgehog!” exclaimed both the Norburys,
in tones of disconcerted astonishment.</p>
<p>“A huge white hedgehog with baleful yellow eyes,”
said Ada; “I was lying half asleep in bed when suddenly I
felt a sensation as of something sinister and unaccountable
passing through the room. I sat up and looked round, and
there, under the window, I saw an evil, creeping thing, a sort of
monstrous hedgehog, of a dirty white colour, with black,
loathsome claws that clicked and scraped along the floor, and
narrow, yellow eyes of indescribable evil. It slithered
along for a yard or two, always looking at me with its cruel,
hideous eyes, then, when it reached the second window, which was
open it clambered up the sill and vanished. I got up at
once and went to the window; there wasn’t a sign of it
anywhere. Of course, I knew it must be something from
another world, but it was not till I turned up Popple’s
chapter on local traditions that I realised what I had
seen.”</p>
<p>She turned eagerly to the large brown volume and read:
“’Nicholas Herison, an old miser, was hung at
Batchford in 1763 for the murder of a farm lad who had
accidentally discovered his secret hoard. His ghost is
supposed to traverse the countryside, appearing sometimes as a
white owl, sometimes as a huge white hedgehog.”</p>
<p>“I expect you read the Popple story overnight, and that
made you <i>think</i> you saw a hedgehog when you were only half
awake,” said Mrs. Norbury, hazarding a conjecture that
probably came very near the truth.</p>
<p>Ada scouted the possibility of such a solution of her
apparition.</p>
<p>“This must be hushed up,” said Mrs. Norbury
quickly; “the servants—”</p>
<p>“Hushed up!” exclaimed Ada, indignantly;
“I’m writing a long report on it for the Research
Society.”</p>
<p>It was then that Hugo Norbury, who is not naturally a man of
brilliant resource, had one of the really useful inspirations of
his life.</p>
<p>“It was very wicked of us, Miss Bleek,” he said,
“but it would be a shame to let it go further. That
white hedgehog is an old joke of ours; stuffed albino hedgehog,
you know, that my father brought home from Jamaica, where they
grow to enormous size. We hide it in the room with a string
on it, run one end of the string through the window; then we pull
if from below and it comes scraping along the floor, just as
you’ve described, and finally jerks out of the
window. Taken in heaps of people; they all read up Popple
and think it’s old Harry Nicholson’s ghost; we always
stop them from writing to the papers about it, though. That
would be carrying matters too far.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Hatch-Mallard renewed the lease in due course, but Ada
Bleek has never renewed her friendship.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />