The Hound of Death - Agatha Christie [2]
‘Is she quite normal in her manner?’ I asked curiously.
‘You can judge for yourself in a minute,’ he replied, smiling.
The district nurse, a dumpy pleasant little body, was just setting out on her bicycle when we arrived.
‘Good evening, nurse, how’s your patient?’ called out the doctor.
‘She’s much as usual, doctor. Just sitting there with her hands folded and her mind far away. Often enough she’ll not answer when I speak to her, though for the matter of that it’s little enough English she understands even now.’
Rose nodded, and as the nurse bicycled away, he went up to the cottage door, rapped sharply and entered.
Sister Marie Angelique was lying in a long chair near the window. She turned her head as we entered.
It was a strange face–pale, transparent looking, with enormous eyes. There seemed to be an infinitude of tragedy in those eyes.
‘Good evening, my sister,’ said the doctor in French.
‘Good evening, M. le docteur.’
‘Permit me to introduce a friend, Mr Anstruther.’
I bowed and she inclined her head with a faint smile.
‘And how are you today?’ inquired the doctor, sitting down beside her.
‘I am much the same as usual.’ She paused and then went on. ‘Nothing seems real to me. Are they days that pass–or months–or years? I hardly know. Only my dreams seem real to me.’
‘You still dream a lot, then?’
‘Always–always–and, you understand?–the dreams seem more real than life.’
‘You dream of your own country–of Belgium?’
She shook her head.
‘No. I dream of a country that never existed–never. But you know this, M. le docteur. I have told you many times.’ She stopped and then said abruptly: ‘But perhaps this gentleman is also a doctor–a doctor perhaps for the diseases of the brain?’
‘No, no.’ Rose said reassuring, but as he smiled I noticed how extraordinarily pointed his canine teeth were, and it occurred to me that there was something wolf-like about the man. He went on:
‘I thought you might be interested to meet Mr Anstruther. He knows something of Belgium. He has lately been hearing news of your convent.’
Her eyes turned to me. A faint flush crept into her cheeks.
‘It’s nothing, really,’ I hastened to explain. ‘But I was dining the other evening with a friend who was describing the ruined walls of the convent to me.’
‘So it is ruined!’
It was a soft exclamation, uttered more to herself than to us. Then looking at me once more she asked hesitatingly: ‘Tell me, Monsieur, did your friend say how–in what way–it was ruined?’
‘It was blown up,’ I said, and added: ‘The peasants are afraid to pass that way at night.’
‘Why are they afraid?’
‘Because of a black mark on a ruined wall. They have a superstitious fear of it.’
She leaned forward.
‘Tell me, Monsieur–quick–quick tell me! What is that mark like?’
‘It has the shape of a huge hound,’ I answered. ‘The peasants call it the Hound of Death.’ ‘Ah!’
A shrill cry burst from her lips.
‘It is true then–it is true. All that I remember is true. It is not some black nightmare. It happened! It happened!’ ‘What happened, my sister?’ asked the doctor in a low voice.
She turned to him eagerly.
‘I remembered. There on the steps, I remembered. I remembered the way of it. I used the power as we used to use it. I stood on the altar steps and I bade them to come no farther. I told them to depart in peace. They would not listen, they came on although I warned them. And so–’ She leaned forward and made a curious gesture. ‘And so I loosed the Hound of Death on them…’
She lay back on her chair shivering all over, her eyes closed.
The doctor rose, fetched a glass from a cupboard, half-filled it with water, added a drop or two from a little bottle which he produced from his pocket, then took the glass to her.
‘Drink this,’ he said authoritatively.
She obeyed–mechanically as it seemed. Her eyes looked far away as though they contemplated some inner vision of her own.
‘But then it is all true,’ she said. ‘Everything. The City of the Circles, the People of the Crystal–everything. It is all true.