“Be very gentle with Marie Christine in your contacts with her. Remember that she has suffered a great ordeal, from which she is recovering. And remember this: I want no more walking about in the night. Mademoiselle Artois will deal with everything. That is all.”
Madame Rochère had spoken in French, and her speech was immediately repeated in English, Italian and German—to make sure that everyone understood perfectly what was expected of them.
This impressed upon us that the matter was very serious, although there was nothing unusual about sleepwalking. Lots of people did it. If it had been the ghost, that would have been far more exciting. As it was, what most people remembered about that night was Mademoiselle Artois’s plaits.
The nights were getting longer. We were approaching Christmas and there was a great deal of excitement because most of the girls were going home for the holiday. Aunt Celeste wrote that she would come to the school and take Anna B and me to the Princesse’s house where we would spend a night before making the journey home. The girls talked continuously of the arrangements that were being made.
It was November as yet—dark days, just the time for ghosts. Mists in the air, shadows in the rooms, to remind people of them.
Marie Christine seemed better; we would see her laughing now and then. She was going to her aunt’s for Christmas and she had several jolly cousins.
Then rumors about the ghost were started.
One of the senior girls declared she had actually seen it and it was not Marie Christine sleepwalking. She had heard footsteps in the corridor and had opened her door and looked out. She thought that she ought to report it to Mademoiselle Artois if it were Marie Christine sleepwalking, but as it was not, she did no such thing. What she had seen was a figure, a girl, her hair hanging loosely about her shoulders, and over her face was a veil. She had seen it distinctly. There was a full moon and it shone right through the window. There was no mistake. She had seen the veiled woman.
Everyone was talking about it. Janet Carew, the girl who had seen the ghost, was seventeen, and therefore her word should be respected. She had been at the school for three years and was known to be an unperturbable type, not given to flights of fancy. Instead, she was predictable—or more precisely, in the opinion of the girls, rather dull. Yet she insisted that she had seen the ghost.
“What did it do?” she was asked.
“It just…walked.”
“Where did it go?”
“Into one of the dormitories.”
“Which one?”
“I couldn’t see. I think it possibly disappeared into the wall.”
After that, other people said they saw it. There was an uneasiness throughout the school. We were all watchful, anxious not to be alone in any of the big rooms after dark.
There was one night when I could not sleep. It was surprising, because we had all had rather an exhausting day. There had been a long ramble in the afternoon. Miss Carruthers, who taught English and physical training, had said the winter would soon be upon us and we must make the most of the fine days, the “season of mists and fruitfulness.” She was always happy to bring literature and physical exercise together. “A healthy mind and a healthy body” was one of her favorite maxims.
So we had sprinted through fields and thickets almost to the edge of the town of Mons, which we saw in the distance. It was invigorating, but we were all a little weary during conversazione; and as soon as we were in bed most of us were fast asleep.
I had dozed and awoke. The others were all asleep. I could see them clearly because the moon shining through the window was so bright.
I lay there for some time but sleep seemed elusive, and suddenly I thought I heard a sound below.
I got out of bed and went to the window. The dormitories looked out from the back of the house onto the kitchen garden and the orchard. I started with amazement. There was someone down there. I saw her clearly, speeding from the orchard to the back door.
It was Anna B. I would know her anywhere. Her black hair was loose and she was coming purposefully toward the house. I stood watching her…fascinated. She came to the side of the house, opened a window and climbed in.
Where had she been? What had she been doing? It was strange but, in spite of her somewhat superior attitude toward me, I always felt a need to look after her. I had a feeling that she might get into serious trouble.
I turned to look at my roommates. They were all fast asleep.
Anna B would have to come up to her dormitory. I would surprise her. I would tell her what a dangerous thing she was doing. It could result in her expulsion.
I crept out of the room, shutting the door quietly behind me. I went swiftly along the corridor and waited in the shadows.
She came. She did not look like the girl who had recently climbed through the window. She was wearing a veil over her face.
The ghost, of course!
She came silently up the stairs. I saw her clearly in the light from the window. She would never have deceived me into thinking she was the ghost. I would have known her anywhere.
She opened the door of her dormitory. I followed her in. Lucia lifted herself from her bed and said, “You’re late.”
Then both she and Anna B were staring at me.
“What are you doing?” demanded Anna B.
“Where have you been?” I countered.
She just continued to stare at me, puzzled and furious.
“You should be more careful,” I said. “I heard you below. I looked out and saw you come in through the window. I waited for you.”
“You…you spy!”
“Be quiet!” said Lucia. “Do you want to wake the school?”
“You’ll be in trouble, young Lucinda,” said Anna B. “Walking about the dormitories at night.”
“Not as much as you will be, going out and climbing through a window.”
“Listen to me,” said Lucia. “Go back to your dorm. Talk in the morning.”
I could see that was good sense.
I nodded. “All right. I’ll see you in the morning.”
Anna B sat on her bed glowering at me. She was still holding the veil in her hand. Lucia had begun to giggle.
I crept back to my room. The three girls were still fast asleep and unaware that I had been away.
I got into bed and lay there shivering. What could she have been doing? And this was not the first time. I guessed Anna B was the “ghost” whom Janet Carew had seen.
But where did she go? One thing was certain: Lucia was in on the secret.
I had to wait until the following afternoon before I could encounter Anna B, for we attended different classes and our paths did not often cross.
When I saw her, she said, “Come into the garden.”
I followed her there.
“What do you mean by spying on me?” she demanded in a bellicose manner. She was clearly on the defensive and distinctly rattled.
“I was not spying!” I retorted. “I heard you and I looked out as anyone would. It could have been someone else who saw you…Mademoiselle Artois for instance.”
“That old fool!”
“She’s not an old fool. She’s probably a good deal wiser than you are. Tell me, where did you go? Why did you go? It’s not the first time, is it?”
“Who are you—the Grand Inquisitor?”
“No. Just someone to whom you owe an explanation.”
“I owe you nothing.”
“I could go along and tell Mademoiselle Artois what I saw last night…creeping into the house…pretending to be a ghost. So you are the ghost Janet Carew saw!”
She began to laugh. “So you are a sneak as well as a spy! It was a jolly good idea. It scared them. I got the idea when Marie Christine went walking. I thought if they heard me, they’d think she was sleepwalking again and wouldn’t bother. I thought the veil would be a good idea if anyone should see. They wouldn’t recognize me under it.”
“I recognized you.”