<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_135"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VII<br/> THE BAT-BALL</h2>
<p>It had certainly been an eventful day and
evening, and I felt that my adventures
could not be quite at an end yet, for I had
still to find out what new power or sense
the Fourth Jar had brought me. I stood
and thought, and tried quite vainly to
detect some difference in myself. And then
I went to the window and drew the curtain
aside and looked out on the road, and
within a few minutes I began to understand.</p>
<p>There came walking rapidly along the
road a young man, and he turned in at the
garden gate and came straight up the path
to the house door. I began to be surprised,
not at his coming, for it was not so
very late, but at the look of him. He was<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_136"></SPAN></span>
young, as I said, rather red-faced, but not
bad-looking; of the class of a farmer, I
thought. He wore biggish brown whiskers—which
is not common nowadays—and
his hair was rather long at the back—which
also is not common with young men
who want to look smart—but his hat, and
his clothes generally, were the really odd
part of him. The hat was a sort of low
top-hat, with a curved brim; it spread
out at the top and it was brushed rough
instead of smooth. His coat was a blue
swallow-tail with brass buttons. He had a
broad tie wound round and round his neck,
and a Gladstone collar. His trousers were
tight all the way down and had straps
under his feet. To put it in the dullest,
shortest way, he was “dressed in the
fashion of eighty or ninety years ago,” as
we read in the ghost stories. Evidently he
knew his way about very well. He came
straight up to the front door and, as far as
I could tell, into the house, but I did not<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_137"></SPAN></span>
hear the door open or shut or any steps on
the stairs. He must, I thought, be in my
landlady's parlour downstairs.</p>
<p>I turned away from the window, and
there was the next surprise. It was as if
there was no wall between me and the
sitting-room. I saw straight into it. There
was a fire in the grate, and by it were
sitting face to face an old man and an old
woman. I thought at once of what one of
the boys had said, and I looked curiously at
them. They were, you would have said, as
fine specimens of an old-fashioned yeoman
and his wife as anyone could wish to see.
The man was hale and red-faced, with grey
whiskers, smiling as he sat bolt upright in
his arm-chair. The old lady was rosy and
smiling too, with a smart silk dress and a
smart cap, and tidy ringlets on each side
of her face—a regular picture of wholesome
old age; and yet I hated them both. The
young man, their son, I suppose, was in
the room standing at the door with his<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_138"></SPAN></span>
hat in his hand, looking timidly at them.
The old man turned half round in his chair,
looked at him, turned down the corners of
his mouth, looked across at the old lady,
and they both smiled as if they were
amused. The son came farther into the
room, put his hat down, leaned with both
hands on the table, and began to speak
(though nothing could be heard) with an
earnestness that was painful to see, because
I could be certain his pleading would be
of no use; sometimes he spread out his
hands and shook them, every now and
again he brushed his eyes. He was very
much moved, and so was I, merely watching
him. The old people were not; they
leaned forward a little in their chairs and
sometimes smiled at each other—again as if
they were amused. At last he had done,
and stood with his hands before him, quivering
all over. His father and mother leaned
back in their chairs and looked at each
other. I think they said not a single word.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_139"></SPAN></span>
The son caught up his hat, turned round,
and went quickly out of the room. Then
the old man threw back his head and
laughed, and the old lady laughed too, not
so boisterously.</p>
<p>I turned back to the window. It was as
I expected. Outside the garden gate, in
the road, a young slight girl in a large
poke-bonnet and shawl and rather short-skirted
dress was waiting, in great anxiety,
as I could see by the way she held to the
railings. Her face I could not see. The
young man came out; she clasped her
hands, he shook his head; they went off
together slowly up the road, he with bowed
shoulders, supporting her, she, I dare say,
crying. Again I looked round to the sitting-room.
The wall hid it now.</p>
<p>It sounds a dull ordinary scene enough,
but I can assure you it was horribly disturbing
to watch, and the cruel calm way
in which the father and mother, who looked
so nice and worthy and were so abominable,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_140"></SPAN></span>
treated their son, was like nothing I had
ever seen.</p>
<p>Of course I know now what the effect of
the Fourth Jar was; it made me able to
see what had happened in any place. I
did not yet know how far back the memories
would go, or whether I was obliged to
see them if I did not want to. But it was
clear to me that the boys were sometimes
taught in this way. “We were watching
them like we do at school,” one of them
said, and though the grammar was poor,
the meaning was plain, and I would ask
Slim about it when we next met. Meanwhile
I must say I hoped the gift would
not go on working instead of letting me go
to sleep. It did not.</p>
<p>Next day I met my landlady employing
herself in the garden, and asked her about
the people who had formerly lived in the
house.</p>
<p>“Oh yes,” said she. “I can tell you
about them, for my father he remembered<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_141"></SPAN></span>
old Mr. and Mrs. Eld quite well when he
was a slip of a lad. They wasn't liked in
the place, neither of them, partly through
bein' so hard-like to their workpeople, and
partly from them treating their only son
so bad—I mean to say turning him right
off because he married without asking permission.
Well, no doubt, that's what he
shouldn't have done, but my father said it
was a very nice respectable young girl he
married, and it do seem hard for them
never to say a word of kindness all those
years and leave every penny away from
the young people. What become of them,
do you say, sir? Why, I believe they
emigrated away to the United States of
America and never was heard of again, but
the old people they lived on here, and I
never heard but what they was easy in
their minds right up to the day of their
death. Nice-looking old people they was
too, my father used to say; seemed as if
butter wouldn't melt in their mouths, as<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_142"></SPAN></span>
the saying is. Now I don't know when
I've thought of them last, but I recollect
my father speaking of them as well,
and the way they're spoke of on their stone
that lays just to the right-hand side as
you go up the churchyard path—well, you'd
think there never was such people. But I
believe that was put up by them that got the
property; now what was that name again?”</p>
<p>But about that time I thought I must be
getting on. I also thought (as before) that
it would be well for me not to go very far
away from the house.</p>
<p>As I strolled up the road I pondered
over the message which Wag's father had
been so good as to send me. “If they're
about the house, give them horseshoes; if
there's a bat-ball, squirt at it. I think
there's a squirt in the tool-house.” All very
well, no doubt. I had one horseshoe, but
that was not much, and I could explore
the tool-house and borrow the garden squirt.
But more horseshoes?</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_143"></SPAN></span>
At that moment I heard a squeak and
a rustle in the hedge, and could not help
poking my stick into it to see what had
made the noise. The stick clinked against
something with its iron ferrule. An old
horseshoe!—evidently shown to me on
purpose by a friendly creature. I picked it
up, and, not to make a long story of it, I
was helped by much the same devices to
increase my collection to four. And now I
felt it would be wise to turn back.</p>
<p>As I turned into the back garden and
came in sight of the little potting-shed or
tool-house or whatever it was, I started.
Someone was just coming out of it. I gave
a loud cough. The party turned round
hastily; it was an old man in a sleeved
waistcoat, made up, I thought, to look like
an “odd man.” He touched his hat civilly
enough, and showed no surprise; but, oh,
horror! he held in his hand the garden
squirt.</p>
<p>“Morning,” I said; “going to do a bit<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_144"></SPAN></span>
of watering?” He grinned. “Just stepped
up to borrer this off the lady; there's a
lot of fly gets on the plants this weather.”</p>
<p>“I dare say there is. By the way, what
a lot of horseshoes you people leave about.
How many do you think I picked up this
morning just along the road? Look here!”
and I held one out to him, and his hand
came slowly out to meet it, as though he
could not keep it back.</p>
<p>His face wrinkled up into a horrible
scowl, and what he was going to say I don't
know, but just then his hand clutched the
horseshoe and he gave a shout of pain,
dropped the squirt and the horseshoe,
whipped round as quick as any young man
could, and was off round the corner of the
shed before I had really taken in what was
happening. Before I tried to see what had
become of him, I snatched up the squirt
and the horseshoe, and almost dropped
them again. Both were pretty hot—the
squirt much the hotter of the two; but<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_145"></SPAN></span>
both of them cooled down in a few seconds.
By that time my old man was completely
out of sight. And I should not wonder if
he was away some time; for perhaps you
know, and perhaps you don't know, the
effect of an old horseshoe on that sort of
people. Not only is it of iron, which they
can't abide, but when they see or, still
more, touch the shoe, they have to go over
all the ground that the shoe went over
since it was last in the blacksmith's hands.
Only I doubt if the same shoe will work
for more than one witch or wizard. Anyway,
I put that one aside when I went
indoors. And then I sat and wondered
what would come next, and how I could
best prepare for it. It occurred to me that
it would do no harm to put one of the
shoes where it couldn't be seen at once,
and it also struck me that under the rug
just inside the bedroom door would not be
a bad place. So there I put it, and then
fell to smoking and reading.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_146"></SPAN></span>
A knock at the door.</p>
<p>“Come in,” said I, a little curious; but
no, it was only the maid. As she passed
me (which she did quickly) I heard her
mutter something about “'ankerchieves for
the wash,” and I thought there was something
not quite usual about the voice. So
I looked round. She was back to me, but
the dress and the height and the hair was
what I was accustomed to see. Into the
bedroom she hurried, and the next thing
was a scream like that of at least two cats
in agony! I could just see her leap into
the air, come down again on the rug, scream
again, and then bundle, hopping, limping—I
don't know what—out of the room and
down the stairs. I did catch sight of her
feet, though; they were bare, they were
greenish, and they were webbed, and I
think there were some large white blisters
on the soles of them. You would have
thought that the commotion would have
brought the household about my ears; but<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_147"></SPAN></span>
it did not, and I can only suppose that
they heard no more of it than they did of
the things which the birds and so on say
to each other.</p>
<p>“Next, please!” said I, as I lighted a
pipe; but if you will believe it, there was
no next. Lunch, the afternoon, tea, all
passed by, and I was completely undisturbed.
“They must be saving up for the
bat-ball,” I thought. “What in the world
can it be?”</p>
<p>As candle-time came on, and the moon
began to make herself felt, I took up my
old position at the window, with the garden
squirt at hand and two full jugs of water
on the floor—plenty more to be got from
the bathroom if wanted. The leaden box
of the Five Jars was in the right place for
the moonbeams to fall on it.… But no
moonbeams would touch it to-night! Why
was this? There were no clouds. Yet,
between the orb of the moon and my box,
there was some obstruction. High up in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_148"></SPAN></span>
the sky was a dancing film, thick enough to
cast a shadow on the area of the window;
and ever, as the moon rode higher in the
heavens, this obstruction became more solid.
It seemed gradually to get its bearings and
settle into the place where it would shut
off the light from the box most completely.
I began to guess. It was the bat-ball;
neither more nor less than a dense
cloud of bats, gradually forming itself into
a solid ball, and coming lower, and nearer
to my window. Soon they were only about
thirty feet off, and I felt that the moment
was come.</p>
<p>I have never much liked bats or desired
their company, and now, as I studied them
through the glass, and saw their horrid
little wicked faces and winking wings, I
felt justified in trying to make things as
unpleasant for them as I could. I charged
the squirt and let fly, and again, and again,
as quick as I could fill it. The water
spread a bit before it reached the ball, but<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_149"></SPAN></span>
not too much to spoil the effect; and the
effect was almost alarming. Some hundreds
of bats all shrieking out at once, and
shrieking with rage and fear (not merely
from the excitement of chasing flies, as
they generally do). Dozens of them dropping
away, with wings too soaked to fly,
some on to the grass, where they hopped
and fluttered and rolled in ecstasies of passion,
some into bushes, one or two plumb
on to the path, where they lay motionless;
that was the first tableau. Then came a
new feature. From both sides there darted
into the heart of the ball two squadrons of
figures flying at great speed (though without
wings) and perfectly horizontal, with
arms joined and straight out in front of
them, and almost at the same instant seven
or eight more plunged into the ball from
above, as if taking headers. The boys were
out.</p>
<p>I stopped squirting, for I did not know
whether the water would fell them as it<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_150"></SPAN></span>
felled the bats; but a shrill cry rose from
below:</p>
<p>“Go on, M! go on, M!”</p>
<p>So I aimed again, and it was time, for a
knot of bats just then detached itself from
the main body and flew full-face towards
me. My shot caught the middle one on
the snout, and as I swung the squirt to
left and right, it disabled four or five
others, and discouraged the rest. Meanwhile
the ball was cloven again and again
by the arms of the flying squadrons, which
shot through it from side to side and from
top to bottom (though never, as appeared
later, quite through the middle), and though
it kept closing up again, it was plainly
growing smaller as more and more of the
bats outside, which were exposed to the
squirt, dropped away.</p>
<p>I suddenly felt something alight on my
shoulder, and a voice said in my ear, “Wag
says if you <em>could</em> throw a shoe into the
middle now, he believes it would finish them.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_151"></SPAN></span>
Can you?” It was, I think, Dart who had
been sent with the message.</p>
<p>“Horseshoes, I suppose he means,” I said.
“I'll try.”</p>
<p>“Wait till we're out of the way,” said
Dart, and was off.</p>
<p>In a moment more I heard—not what I
was rather expecting, a horn of Elf-land, but
two strokes on the bell. I saw the figures
of the boys shoot up and away to left and
right, leaving the bat-ball clear, and the
bats shrieked aloud, I dare say in triumph
at the enemy's retreat.</p>
<p>There were two horseshoes left. I had
no idea how they would fly, and I had not
much confidence in my power of aiming;
but it must be tried, and I threw them
edgeways, like quoits. The first skimmed
the top of the ball, the second went straight
through the middle. Something which the
bats in the very centre were holding—something
soft—was pierced by it, and
burst. I think it must have been a globe<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_152"></SPAN></span>
of jelly-like stuff in a thin skin. The contents
spurted out on to some of the bats,
and seemed to scald the fur off them in an
instant and singe up all the membranes of
their wings. They fell down at once, with
broken screams. The rest darted off in every
direction, and the ball was gone.</p>
<p>“Now don't be long,” said a voice from
the window-sill.</p>
<p>I thought I knew what was meant, and
looked to the leaden casket. As if to make
up for lost time, the moonbeam had already
made an opening all round the part on
which it shone, and I had but to turn the
other side towards it—not even very slowly—to
get the whole lid free. After cleansing
my hands in the water, I made trial of the
Fifth Jar, and, as I replaced it, a chorus
of applause and cheering came up from
below.</p>
<p>The Jars were mine.</p>
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