The Striding Place
Weigall, continental and detached,
tired early of grouse-shooting. To stand propped
against a sod fence while his host’s workmen
routed up the birds with long poles and drove them
towards the waiting guns, made him feel himself a
parody on the ancestors who had roamed the moors and
forests of this West Riding of Yorkshire in hot pursuit
of game worth the killing. But when in England
in August he always accepted whatever proffered for
the season, and invited his host to shoot pheasants
on his estates in the South. The amusements of
life, he argued, should be accepted with the same
philosophy as its ills.
It had been a bad day. A heavy
rain had made the moor so spongy that it fairly sprang
beneath the feet. Whether or not the grouse had
haunts of their own, wherein they were immune from
rheumatism, the bag had been small. The women,
too, were an unusually dull lot, with the exception
of a new-minded débutante who bothered Weigall
at dinner by demanding the verbal restoration of the
vague paintings on the vaulted roof above them.
But it was no one of these things
that sat on Weigall’s mind as, when the other
men went up to bed, he let himself out of the castle
and sauntered down to the river. His intimate
friend, the companion of his boyhood, the chum of
his college days, his fellow-traveller in many lands,
the man for whom he possessed stronger affection than
for all men, had mysteriously disappeared two days
ago, and his track might have sprung to the upper
air for all trace he had left behind him. He had
been a guest on the adjoining estate during the past
week, shooting with the fervor of the true sportsman,
making love in the intervals to Adeline Cavan, and
apparently in the best of spirits. As far as was
known there was nothing to lower his mental mercury,
for his rent-roll was a large one, Miss Cavan blushed
whenever he looked at her, and, being one of the best
shots in England, he was never happier than in August.
The suicide theory was preposterous, all agreed, and
there was as little reason to believe him murdered.
Nevertheless, he had walked out of March Abbey two
nights ago without hat or overcoat, and had not been
seen since.
The country was being patrolled night
and day. A hundred keepers and workmen were beating
the woods and poking the bogs on the moors, but as
yet not so much as a handkerchief had been found.
Weigall did not believe for a moment
that Wyatt Gifford was dead, and although it was impossible
not to be affected by the general uneasiness, he was
disposed to be more angry than frightened. At
Cambridge Gifford had been an incorrigible practical
joker, and by no means had outgrown the habit; it
would be like him to cut across the country in his
evening clothes, board a cattle-train, and amuse himself
touching up the picture of the sensation in West Riding.
However, Weigall’s affection
for his friend was too deep to companion with tranquillity
in the present state of doubt, and, instead of going
to bed early with the other men, he determined to walk
until ready for sleep. He went down to the river
and followed the path through the woods. There
was no moon, but the stars sprinkled their cold light
upon the pretty belt of water flowing placidly past
wood and ruin, between green masses of overhanging
rocks or sloping banks tangled with tree and shrub,
leaping occasionally over stones with the harsh notes
of an angry scold, to recover its equanimity the moment
the way was clear again.
It was very dark in the depths where
Weigall trod. He smiled as he recalled a remark
of Gifford’s: “An English wood is
like a good many other things in life—very
promising at a distance, but a hollow mockery when
you get within. You see daylight on both sides,
and the sun freckles the very bracken. Our woods
need the night to make them seem what they ought to
be—what they once were, before our ancestors’
descendants demanded so much more money, in these so
much more various days.”
Weigall strolled along, smoking, and
thinking of his friend, his pranks—many
of which had done more credit to his imagination than
this—and recalling conversations that had
lasted the night through. Just before the end
of the London season they had walked the streets one
hot night after a party, discussing the various theories
of the soul’s destiny. That afternoon they
had met at the coffin of a college friend whose mind
had been a blank for the past three years. Some
months previously they had called at the asylum to
see him. His expression had been senile, his
face imprinted with the record of debauchery.
In death the face was placid, intelligent, without
ignoble lineation—the face of the man they
had known at college. Weigall and Gifford had
had no time to comment there, and the afternoon and
evening were full; but, coming forth from the house
of festivity together, they had reverted almost at
once to the topic.
“I cherish the theory,”
Gifford had said, “that the soul sometimes lingers
in the body after death. During madness, of course,
it is an impotent prisoner, albeit a conscious one.
Fancy its agony, and its horror! What more natural
than that, when the life-spark goes out, the tortured
soul should take possession of the vacant skull and
triumph once more for a few hours while old friends
look their last? It has had time to repent while
compelled to crouch and behold the result of its work,
and it has shrived itself into a state of comparative
purity. If I had my way, I should stay inside
my bones until the coffin had gone into its niche,
that I might obviate for my poor old comrade the tragic
impersonality of death. And I should like to see
justice done to it, as it were—to see it
lowered among its ancestors with the ceremony and
solemnity that are its due. I am afraid that if
I dissevered myself too quickly, I should yield to
curiosity and hasten to investigate the mysteries
of space.”
“You believe in the soul as
an independent entity, then—–that
it and the vital principle are not one and the same?”
“Absolutely. The body and
soul are twins, life comrades—sometimes
friends, sometimes enemies, but always loyal in the
last instance. Some day, when I am tired of the
world, I shall go to India and become a mahatma, solely
for the pleasure of receiving proof during life of
this independent relationship.”
“Suppose you were not sealed
up properly, and returned after one of your astral
flights to find your earthly part unfit for habitation?
It is an experiment I don’t think I should care
to try, unless even juggling with soul and flesh had
palled.”
“That would not be an uninteresting
predicament. I should rather enjoy experimenting
with broken machinery.”
The high wild roar of water smote
suddenly upon Weigall’s ear and checked his
memories. He left the wood and walked out on the
huge slippery stones which nearly close the River
Wharfe at this point, and watched the waters boil
down into the narrow pass with their furious untiring
energy. The black quiet of the woods rose high
on either side. The stars seemed colder and whiter
just above. On either hand the perspective of
the river might have run into a rayless cavern.
There was no lonelier spot in England, nor one which
had the right to claim so many ghosts, if ghosts there
were.
Weigall was not a coward, but he recalled
uncomfortably the tales of those that had been done
to death in the Strid.[1] Wordsworth’s Boy of
Egremond had been disposed of by the practical Whitaker;
but countless others, more venturesome than wise,
had gone down into that narrow boiling course, never
to appear in the still pool a few yards beyond.
Below the great rocks which form the walls of the Strid
was believed to be a natural vault, on to whose shelves
the dead were drawn. The spot had an ugly fascination.
Weigall stood, visioning skeletons, uncoffined and
green, the home of the eyeless things which had devoured
all that had covered and filled that rattling symbol
of man’s mortality; then fell to wondering if
any one had attempted to leap the Strid of late.
It was covered with slime; he had never seen it look
so treacherous.
[Footnote 1:
“This striding place
is called the ‘Strid,’
A name which it
took of yore;
A thousand years hath
it borne the name,
And it shall a
thousand more.”
]
He shuddered and turned away, impelled,
despite his manhood, to flee the spot. As he
did so, something tossing in the foam below the fall—something
as white, yet independent of it—caught his
eye and arrested his step. Then he saw that it
was describing a contrary motion to the rushing water—an
upward backward motion. Weigall stood rigid,
breathless; he fancied he heard the crackling of his
hair. Was that a hand? It thrust itself
still higher above the boiling foam, turned sidewise,
and four frantic fingers were distinctly visible against
the black rock beyond.
Weigall’s superstitious terror
left him. A man was there, struggling to free
himself from the suction beneath the Strid, swept down,
doubtless, but a moment before his arrival, perhaps
as he stood with his back to the current.
He stepped as close to the edge as
he dared. The hand doubled as if in imprecation,
shaking savagely in the face of that force which leaves
its creatures to immutable law; then spread wide again,
clutching, expanding, crying for help as audibly as
the human voice.
Weigall dashed to the nearest tree,
dragged and twisted off a branch with his strong arms,
and returned as swiftly to the Strid. The hand
was in the same place, still gesticulating as wildly;
the body was undoubtedly caught in the rocks below,
perhaps already half-way along one of those hideous
shelves. Weigall let himself down upon a lower
rock, braced his shoulder against the mass beside him,
then, leaning out over the water, thrust the branch
into the hand. The fingers clutched it convulsively.
Weigall tugged powerfully, his own feet dragged perilously
near the edge. For a moment he produced no impression,
then an arm shot above the waters.
The blood sprang to Weigall’s
head; he was choked with the impression that the Strid
had him in her roaring hold, and he saw nothing.
Then the mist cleared. The hand and arm were
nearer, although the rest of the body was still concealed
by the foam. Weigall peered out with distended
eyes. The meagre light revealed in the cuffs links
of a peculiar device. The fingers clutching the
branch were as familiar.
Weigall forgot the slippery stones,
the terrible death if he stepped too far. He
pulled with passionate will and muscle. Memories
flung themselves into the hot light of his brain,
trooping rapidly upon each other’s heels, as
in the thought of the drowning. Most of the pleasures
of his life, good and bad, were identified in some
way with this friend. Scenes of college days,
of travel, where they had deliberately sought adventure
and stood between one another and death upon more occasions
than one, of hours of delightful companionship among
the treasures of art, and others in the pursuit of
pleasure, flashed like the changing particles of a
kaleidoscope. Weigall had loved several women;
but he would have flouted in these moments the thought
that he had ever loved any woman as he loved Wyatt
Gifford. There were so many charming women in
the world, and in the thirty-two years of his life
he had never known another man to whom he had cared
to give his intimate friendship.
He threw himself on his face.
His wrists were cracking, the skin was torn from his
hands. The fingers still gripped the stick.
There was life in them yet.
Suddenly something gave way.
The hand swung about, tearing the branch from Weigall’s
grasp. The body had been liberated and flung outward,
though still submerged by the foam and spray.
Weigall scrambled to his feet and
sprang along the rocks, knowing that the danger from
suction was over and that Gifford must be carried
straight to the quiet pool. Gifford was a fish
in the water and could live under it longer than most
men. If he survived this, it would not be the
first time that his pluck and science had saved him
from drowning.
Weigall reached the pool. A man
in his evening clothes floated on it, his face turned
towards a projecting rock over which his arm had fallen,
upholding the body. The hand that had held the
branch hung limply over the rock, its white reflection
visible in the black water. Weigall plunged into
the shallow pool, lifted Gifford in his arms and returned
to the bank. He laid the body down and threw off
his coat that he might be the freer to practise the
methods of resuscitation. He was glad of the
moment’s respite. The valiant life in the
man might have been exhausted in that last struggle.
He had not dared to look at his face, to put his ear
to the heart. The hesitation lasted but a moment.
There was no time to lose.
He turned to his prostrate friend.
As he did so, something strange and disagreeable smote
his senses. For a half-moment he did not appreciate
its nature. Then his teeth clacked together, his
feet, his outstretched arms pointed towards the woods.
But he sprang to the side of the man and bent down
and peered into his face. There was no face.