Read The Wind on the Moon Online
Authors: Eric Linklater
âWhy do you not fetch him out of prison?' asked the Puma. âYou helped us to escape from the zoo, which was a hard thing to do, and if you think well and use all your wits, I daresay you will find some means by which he may escape from prison.'
âI don't think he would come,' said Dinah. âYou see, there are twelve of them in prison, and all because they won't agree whether Mrs. Taper the draper's wife did or did not try to steal some stockings. If they would agree, they could come out to-morrow.'
âAnd did the woman try to steal the stockings?' asked the Falcon.
âI'm sure she didn't,' said Dinah.
âI think she did,' said Dorinda.
âYou see,' said Dinah, âwe don't really know, but we all have our own opinion, and naturally we don't mean to give it up.'
âI am glad that I am not a human being,' said the Puma. âIt must be very difficult to be happy when your minds are so much at the mercy of ideas.'
âThey have no wings to fly,' said the Falcon, âthey have no feathers to keep them warm, no beak to cut their food, and their eyes are very dull. But they have ideas, and ideas make them strong. Human beings took us captive, my friend, and human beings set us free.'
âI do not dislike them, nor underrate them,' said the Puma. âBut sometimes I am sorry for them.'
âSometimes we are sorry for ourselves,' said Dorinda. âEspecially when it's raining, and we can't run away from Miss Serendip.'
âGo and talk to your music teacher,' said the Puma, âand try to persuade him to change his mind. Tell him you are unhappy because of his imprisonment. Put into his head the idea that his duty is to escape, and perhaps that new idea will drive out the old one that keeps him in gaol.'
âIt sounds rather complicated,' said Dinah, âbut I suppose we had better try.'
âIt will be something to do,' said Dorinda.
Then for an hour or so they played Touch under rules of their own making, by which the Puma had to walk on her hind legs, Dinah and Dorinda go on all-fours, while the Falcon flapped about using only one wing. After that Dinah and Dorinda, with their frocks torn by brambles and stained by grass, with mud on their elbows and their knees, went home to tea and were soundly scolded by Miss Serendip.
The following day was Thursday, and Tuesdays and Thursdays were Visiting Days at the prison. So in the afternoon they went to see Mr. Casimir Corvo.
About forty people from Midmeddlecum had also gone to visit their friends, taking with them baskets well packed with buns and ham sandwiches and lemon tarts and thermos flasks of tea and bottles of ginger-beer, and they were all sitting on the grass of the prison yard, having a picnic with the Members of the Jury. Mr. Horrabin the ironmonger had brought a gramophone, which was playing
Land of Hope and Glory
, and though they were all enjoying themselves thoroughly, the Members of the Jury managed to look noble and virtuous as well.
Mr. Casimir Corvo, however, was not in the happy group of picnickers. Dinah and Dorinda had to search the whole prison before they found him, at last, on the top floor in a little room that was used for drying clothes. He was sitting on a wooden stool under a clothes-line from which hung a pair of flannel trousers belonging to Mr. Jehu the gaoler, an apron of Mrs. Jehu's, Dr. Fosfar's best shirt, three pocket-handkerchiefs, a bath-towel, and a damp pillow-slip. He rose when Dinah and Dorinda came in, and greeted them with a mournful smile.
âMy dear friends,' he said. âMy favourite pupils! You have come to visit your old master? That is so kind of you.'
He was a small man with a handsome cleanshaven face as white as a chicken bone. He had large dark eyes under thick dark eyebrows that moved up and down whenever he became excited. Sometimes the left one appeared to rise half-way up his forehead, and sometimes the right one descended in a fearful one-sided frown. His hair was thick and rather curly, and grew to a point in the middle of his pale brow. He made frequent gestures with his hands, which were long and delicate, and he walked with a light and graceful step. People in Midmeddlecum thought he wore strange clothes, but in Dinah's opinion his dark-green velvet jacket and yellow corduroy trousers suited him very well, and Dinah greatly admired his red waistcoat with brass buttons and his white silk shirt. He spoke perfect English, but he filled it with unusual sounds, with trilling
r
's, and
t
's that made you think someone had struck a tuning-fork on the table, and long vowels with a song in them.
âYou will suppose,' he said, âthat this is a strange place in which to find me, this room in which people hang their clothes to dry. But I had to bring my pillow-slip here, because this morning, when I woke up, I was filled with sadness to think that I must stay in prison. So I began to cry, and it became quite wet. You, because you are English, will think it silly for a grown-up man to cry. But in my country, when people are sad, they all cry, whether they are big or little. And when they are happy, they laugh. The biggest and the littlest together, they all laugh.'
âIt was very sensible of you to hang up your pillow-slip before going to bed again,' said Dinah.
âIf you had gone to sleep on it while it was wet,' said Dorinda, âyou would have caught a cold, and that would have made you sadder than ever.'
âSo I thought,' said Mr. Corvo, âbecause I am not altogether silly. Indeed, when I consider many other people whom I know, I often think that I am a very sensible kind of person.'
âWould you like to escape from prison?' asked Dinah.
âAlas!' said Mr. Corvo, âI cannot. I must remain here with all the other Members of the Jury. It is my duty. But tell me this: have you forgotten all the music I taught you, and all the dances? Or are you remembering them, and practicing every day?'
âIt's very difficult to remember much without you to help us,' said Dorinda. âWe used to enjoy our music and dancing more than anything else, and we shall continue to be thoroughly unhappy until we resume our lessons with you.'
She spoke very clearly and carefully, as though she were repeating a poem that she had learnt by heart. She and Dinah, indeed, had earnestly considered what they should say to Mr. Corvo, and on the way to the prison had rehearsed their speeches over and over again. Now it was Dinah's turn.
âYou have a duty to us, your pupils,' she said, âas well as to your fellow-prisoners. Perhaps it is your duty to think of that duty first and the other duty second, like remembering to brush your teeth before going to bed, and if so you ought to make up your mind to escape, and we shall do our utmost to help you.'
âWe are very good at helping people to escape,' said Dorinda, âand all the benefit of our long experience is at your service.'
âYou can rely on us,' said Dinah.
They stood there, between the clothes-lines, with trousers and towels in front of them, and tea-cloths and pyjamas behind them, and stared at Mr. Corvo with earnest, anxious eyes. Mr. Corvo stared at them. His eyebrows began to move up and down, first one and then the other, and before he spoke he made several beautiful gestures with his long white hands. Then he said âNo!' and sat down again.
Dinah whispered, âIt's your turn, Dorinda.'
âI've forgotten what comes next,' murmured Dorinda.
â
In addressing
. . .'
âIn addressing a final appeal to you,' said Dorinda firmly, âwe rely on the affection that you have so often shown us . . .'
âNo, no!' cried Mr. Corvo, jumping from his stool and waving his hands as though he were conducting an orchestra. âYou must not appeal to my affection. That is not fair! I want so much to escape, more than anything in the world I want to come out of prison and teach you again to dance and play the piano, but it is my duty, my horrible but so necessary duty, to remain here. I have sworn that I shall never give in to Mr. Justice Rumple, and if I were to escape it would be like running away from him. It would be running away from my duty, which is to resist him and resist all tyranny wherever it appears.'
âThen you may have to stay in prison all your life,' said Dinah.
Mr. Corvo struck an attitude. He stood very straight and still, with his head proud and high. He laid the long fingers of his left hand on his heart, and raising the other hand towards a corner of the ceiling he declared, âIf it has to be so, it will be so. I shall never give in!'
But a moment later he turned and covered his face with the drying bath-towel, wiped away a double stream of tears, and cried, âBut I hope it will not be so! I want to come out of prison very soon. I shall do my duty, but oh, I do not want my duty to be more difficult than I can bear!'
âWell,' said Dinah, âwe really did come here to help you, and if there is anything you can suggest . . .'
âYou must not ask me to escape.'
âThen what else can we do?' asked Dorinda.
âThere is only one way out of the difficulty,' said Mr. Corvo. âNeither I nor any other Member of the Jury will ever give in, and therefore Mr. Justice Rumple must give in. Make him change his mind, persuade him that he is in the wrong, and then we can all go free. That is the only way.'
âOh dear,' said Dinah, âthat isn't going to be easy.'
âIt would be far, far easier to plan your escape,' said Dorinda.
âYou do realise, don't you,' said Dinah, âthat what you have asked us to do is very, very difficult indeed?'
âIt is so difficult,' said Mr. Corvo in a melancholy voice, âthat I fully expect you to say it is impossible.'
âNo, I wouldn't say that,' said Dinah thoughtfully.
âWe have done several things,' said Dorinda, âthat a lot of people would have considered
quite
impossible.'
âIt's really surprising,' said Dinah, âhow much you can do if you make up your mind to do it.'
âSometimes it is
very
surprising,' said Dorinda.
Mr. Corvo shook his head in a mournful fashion, and took his pillow-slip off the line. âIt is dry now,' he said. âBut by to-morrow morning, I daresay, it will again be full of tears. Good-bye, my dear friends, my favourite pupils. Come again to see me.'
âThe next time we see you,' said Dinah firmly, âyou will be in your own house in Holly Street.'
On Saturday morning they walked with Miss Serendip into Midmeddlecum to do some shopping, and on the way Dorinda said to Dinah, âHave you thought of anything yet?'
âNot yet,' said Dinah.
âIt was very nearly a promise that we made him,' said Dorinda. âI mean, when you said that the next time we saw him he would be in his own house in Holly Street. That was practically a promise.'
âIt was a promise,' said Dinah, âand we shall have to keep it. But I don't know how.'
âShall we have to keep our promises even when we are grown-up?' asked Dorinda.
âYes, I think so,' said Dinah. âYou just can't get out of them.'
âI thought life would be a lot easier when we grew up,' said Dorinda with a sigh.
âWhen we are very old and cautious,' said Dinah, âI daresay we shan't make any promises. And that will save trouble.'
âLook!' exclaimed Dorinda. âThose two men in bowler hatsâoh, I've forgotten their names!'
âMr. Hobson and Mr. Jobson,' said Dinah.
âThey're lawyers, aren't they?'
âI think they're called barristers.'
âWell, it's the same sort of thing. It was they who had to argue with the Judge and the Jury when Mrs. Taper was tried.'
Mr. Hobson and Mr. Jobson
âThey have to be paid, of course,' said Dinah thoughtfully. âHow much money have you got?'
âSeven shillings in my money-box, and eight-pence in my pocket.'
âAnd I've got nine and threepence altogether. That makes sixteen and elevenpence between us.'
âIt's a lot of money,' said Dorinda.
âDo you think we should ask them to help us?'
âThey know how to argue with people,' said Dorinda. âEspecially with Judges.'
âIt's a good idea,' said Dorinda. âBut we shall have to lose Miss Serendip first.'
They were walking along Ash Street towards the Square, and Mr. Hobson and Mr. Jobson were a little way ahead of them. The two barristers were knocking at every door in the street, Mr. Hobson on the left of the road, Mr. Jobson on the right, and whenever a door was opened, Mr. Hobsonâor Mr. Jobson, as the case might beâwould immediately begin to talk, in a very earnest way, to the person who had opened it. But what they were talking about neither Dinah nor Dorinda could guess.
They and Miss Serendip continued to walk along Ash Street, turned the corner into Wallflower Street, and came into the Square.
Then Miss Serendip stopped and said to them in a brisk and businesslike way, âNow, girls, I have quite a lot of shopping to do, and as you would only hinder me, you had better go and talk to those children beside the statue. But remember this: I don't want you to leave the Square!'