The Hollow - Agatha Christie [31]
Suddenly he started. He had heard, or he had imagined he heard, the faint closing of a door.
He turned his head sharply. If someone had come down to the pool, following him there. If someone had waited and followed him back that someone could have taken a higher path and so gained entrance to the house again by the side garden door, and the soft closing of the garden door would have made just the sound that he had heard.
He looked up sharply at the windows. Was that curtain moving, had it been pushed aside for someone to look out, and then allowed to fall? Henrietta’s room.
Henrietta! Not Henrietta, his heart cried in a sudden panic. I can’t lose Henrietta!
He wanted suddenly to fling up a handful of pebbles at her window, to cry out to her.
‘Come out, my dear love. Come out to me now and walk with me up through the woods to Shovel Down and there listen–listen to everything that I now know about myself and that you must know, too, if you do not know it already.’
He wanted to say to Henrietta:
‘I am starting again. A new life begins from today. The things that crippled and hindered me from living have fallen away. You were right this afternoon when you asked me if I was running away from myself. That is what I have been doing for years. Because I never knew whether it was strength or weakness that took me away from Veronica. I have been afraid of myself, afraid of life, afraid of you.’
If he were to wake Henrietta and make her come out with him now–up through the woods to where they could watch, together, the sun come up over the rim of the world.
‘You’re mad,’ he said to himself. He shivered. It was cold now, late September after all. ‘What the devil is the matter with you?’ he asked himself. ‘You’ve behaved quite insanely enough for one night. If you get away with it as it is, you’re damned lucky!’ What on earth would Gerda think if he stayed out all night and came home with the milk?
What, for the matter of that, would the Angkatells think?
But that did not worry him for a moment. The Angkatells took Greenwich time, as it were, from Lucy Angkatell. And to Lucy Angkatell, the unusual always appeared perfectly reasonable.
But Gerda, unfortunately, was not an Angkatell.
Gerda would have to be dealt with, and he’d better go in and deal with Gerda as soon as possible.
Supposing it had been Gerda who had followed him tonight?
No good saying people didn’t do such things. As a doctor, he knew only too well what people, high-minded, sensitive, fastidious, honourable people, constantly did. They listened at doors, and opened letters and spied and snooped–not because for one moment they approved of such conduct, but because before the sheer necessity of human anguish they were rendered desperate.
Poor devils, he thought, poor suffering human devils. John Christow knew a good deal about human suffering. He had not very much pity for weakness, but he had for suffering, for it was, he knew, the strong who suffer.
If Gerda knew–
Nonsense, he said to himself, why should she? She’s gone up to bed and she’s fast asleep. She’s no imagination, never has had.
He went in through the french windows, switched on a lamp, closed and locked the windows. Then, switching off the light, he left the room, found the switch in the hall, went quickly and lightly up the stairs. A second switch turned off the hall light. He stood for a moment by the bedroom door, his hand on the door-knob, then he turned it and went in.
The room was dark and he could hear Gerda’s even breathing. She stirred as he came in and closed the door. Her voice came to him, blurred and indistinct with sleep.
‘Is that you, John?’
‘Yes.’
‘Aren’t you very late? What time is it?’
He said easily:
‘I’ve no idea. Sorry I woke you up. I had to go in with the woman and have a drink.’
He made his voice sound bored and sleepy.
Gerda murmured: ‘Oh? Goodnight, John.’
There was a rustle as she