As usual I went past Enderby and suddenly a thought hit me. It was about here that I had heard the sound of a shot. I had seen my father emerge from the land with a gun under his arm.
No. It was impossible. I marshalled my thoughts. The shot which I had heard could reasonably be supposed to have been made by my father. Had I not seen him with the gun under his arm?
Belle had been fascinated by the land and by Enderby generally.
It seemed possible that he had found the dog there, been so angry—his temper was fierce when aroused—and shot her.
To kill Belle—that lovely, happy, friendly, creature whom I had loved so much! And to think it had been done by my father, whom I also loved.
I would not believe it.
But the more I thought of it the more likely it seemed.
I slipped off from Tomtit’s back and tethered him to a tree.
“I won’t be long,” I said. “Wait for me. There’s a good boy. But I must go in there. I must see what I can discover.”
Tomtit pawed the ground twice. An answer to my pat. He understood. He was to wait for me.
I climbed over the gate and was inside the enclosure. I suppose it was because of the rumours attached to the place that I felt a sense of evil. It was as though eyes watched me, as though trees would take on the shape of monsters if I turned my back on them. Little girl fears. Relics of my childhood days when I had plagued Emily Philpots to tell me gruesome stories by day and then when darkness fell wished I hadn’t.
I was wishing I hadn’t come now. What did I hope to find? If he had shot Belle … No, I would not believe it. I could not bear to think of that dear creature lying stiff and silent with a shot through her head.
I was being foolish. My father often went out with his gun. He had just decided to look at the land. Perhaps he had been contemplating what he would do with it. There had been so much talk about that lately.
Nevertheless I went walking on. The leaves were wet and slushy. The wind had brought the last of the leaves off the trees and bushes. My feet made a swishing noise which broke the silence of the air.
“Belle,” I called softly. “You’re not hiding here, are you?”
I kept thinking of her as she had looked at the charades, when she had bounded in and laid the dirty old shoe at Matt’s feet—a tribute of love and loyalty. I could see her at this moment, her head on one side, her tail thumping the floor as she had sat down revelling in the old shoe as though it were the Golden Fleece or the Holy Grail.
“Belle, oh, Belle, where are you? Come home, Belle.”
I had come to that spot where she had found the shoe. And then I noticed … The ground had been disturbed recently. It had been dug up and carefully replaced. A terrible understanding came to me. I knew that Belle was underneath that soil.
I stood staring at the patch for some time. I was so overcome by emotion that I could not move.
Two dreadful realities struck me. Belle had been shot and my father had killed her and buried her.
“Oh, father, how could you?” I murmured. “What harm had she done? She came in here and she found the shoe. It was natural to her; she was delighted with her find. Why were you so angry when she was caught in the trap? Why is it so important?”
That was the question. Why?
It had grown dark in the wood. A heavy raindrop fell on my upturned face. The threatened rain was starting again.
The gloom in the wood had increased. It was overpowering. It was evil … evil … all around me. I sensed it. It was true about the will-o’-the wisps. They were here in this evil land which turned good kind men like my father into murderers. For Belle had been murdered. I called it so because Belle was very dear to me. And my father, who was also dear to me, had done it. What was it about this evil spot which changed people?
I had to get away from it. I wanted to be alone to think. I wanted to see Matt and tell him what I had discovered. Or did I? I would not tell anyone that I had seen my father with a gun.
Then the most fearful thought of all struck me. What was hidden in this place which could have this effect on my father?
I was seized with a sudden fear. I must get away. I was caught up in something evil and I must escape from it as soon as I could.
I started to run and as I did so it seemed that the trees reached out to catch me. I found progress difficult through the sodden leaves. I caught my foot and for a horrible moment thought I was going to fall. The prospect of spending a night in this place appalled me.
I caught at a tree trunk. My hand was grazed from the contact but it saved me from a fall. I rushed on. I was caught and held and felt faint with horror but it was only a bramble which had caught my sleeve. At last I came panting to the gate.
The rain was now pelting down. I was going to be saturated if I went back in this. Moreover, it was falling in such sheets that one could hardly see where one was going.
Then I thought of the house. How I was to wish later that I had not done so. But then perhaps it was inevitable and best for me to know.
I untethered Tomtit, who whinnied with pleasure at the sight of me.
“It can’t last long like this,” I said to him. “We’ll wait a bit. There’s an outhouse close to the house.”
I took him over and it was difficult to find our way in the blinding rain. There was just room for him in the shed. I patted him and he nuzzled against me.
I decided to wait in the house porch because I could get more shelter there.
Murmuring that I would not be long and that we would go as soon as the rain abated a little, I stumbled towards the house.
I reached the porch and leaned against the door. To my amazement it opened. It had evidently not been properly shut.
I went inside. It was a relief to get out of the wind and rain. I stood in the great hall and looked towards the minstrels’ gallery.
How gloomy it was. There was an atmosphere of menace, I always thought, in this house even when the sun was shining. But in the gloom it really was forbidding.
Even so it offered comfort after the conditions outside.
I don’t know why it is one can sense human presence but one often does, and as I stood there the firm conviction came to me that I was not alone in the house.
“Is anyone there?” I said. My voice seemed lost in the sound of the rain outside. A sudden flash of lightning illuminated the hall. It startled me so much that I gasped. A few seconds later came the roar of thunder.
A great desire came to me. “Get out.” It was as though a voice was warning me. I stood uncertainly. The darkness outside had deepened. It was like the dead of night.
Then suddenly the hall was lit up by another flash of lightning. I was staring at the minstrels’ gallery expecting to see something there. There was nothing. I braced myself for the tremendous clap of thunder. The storm was right overhead.
I stood leaning against the wall. My heart was beating so fiercely that it seemed as though it would choke me. I waited for the next burst of thunder. It did not come. As I stood there, the darkness lifted. I could see the curtains at the gallery. I could have fancied they moved, but that was only fancy.
And yet I had the conviction that someone was in this house.
“Go away,” said the voice of common sense.
But I could not go. Something was impelling me to stay.
I was in a state of shock, I believe. I was obsessed by the certainty that my father had killed Belle and buried her in the forbidden wood and that there was some dark secret there which I dared not discover. I felt that it would wrench the whole structure of my life if I found out.