“Oh, Aunt Sophie,” I said.

“It was terrible.”

“I’d kill him if I had him here,” she said.

“He’s not worthy to live.”

I grew up in that moment. I understood what might have happened to me but for Crispin St. Aubyn. It was strange that he was the one to whom I had to be thankful. I could not stop thinking of the way he had picked up Mr. Dorian and shaken him. I would never forget the way Mr. Dorian had looked; his expression had been one of stricken horror and despair. I thought I had never seen such anguish on any face before.

Crispin had been furiously angry; the manner in which he had flung Mr. Dorian from him made it seem as though he were throwing away some obnoxious rubbish. He had not cared if he had killed him. I wondered in horror if he had.

It would be murder, I thought. Then Rachel would not have to be frightened any more.

The doctor had come.

“Well, young lady,” he said.

“What have you been doing to yourself?”

He prodded my ankle and I was asked to see if I could stand. His verdict was that I had had a bad twist of the ankle . a nasty sprain.

“It will be a little time before you’ll be able to put it to the ground with comfort. How did you do it?”

“I was in Barrow Wood.”

He shook his head at me.

“You’ll have to watch where you’re going next time.”

He talked to Aunt Sophie about hot and cold compresses and, as soon as he was gone, she got to work on me.

She watched me anxiously. I knew she was thinking that what had happened to me was more than a sprained ankle and that, by great good fortune, I had been saved from greater harm.

Aunt Sophie was the sort of person one could talk to about anything, and she decided that it was better to talk than make a secret of my misadventure.

So I told her all about it: my fall, the sudden appearance of Mr. Dorian. I mentioned that I had been uneasy about him for a long time, and how he had talked of my saying my prayers in my nightdress.

“You should have told me,” she said.

“I didn’t know that it was important,” I replied. Then I told her about Rachel.

“He’s mad, that one,” she said.

“He’s repressed. He sees sin everywhere he goes. It’s what they call religious mania. I’m sorry for his poor wife.”

“I think Crispin St. Aubyn has killed him. I think he’s murdered him.”

“I don’t think that. Just a beating. I reckon it was what he needed.

It might have taught him a lesson. ” Then suddenly she hugged me.

“I’m glad you’re safe and well and unharmed. I’d never have forgiven myself if anything happened to you.”

“It wouldn’t have been your fault.”

“I’d have blamed myself for failing to look after you. I ought to have known the sort he was.”

“How could you?”

“I don’t know, but I should.”

She had my bed moved into her room.

“Just till you’ve settled down a bit,” she said.

“You could wake in the night … and then I’d like to be near you.”

And I did wake in the night, sweating from a nightmare. I was lying in Barrow Wood and he was coming towards me. He was there on the ground beside me. I was calling for Crispin. I felt arms about me . and they were Aunt Sophie’s.

“It’s all right. You’re here in your bed. Old Aunt Sophie is here.”

Then I found myself crying weakly. I could not think why. I was happy because I was safe and my dearest Aunt Sophie was here to look after me.

Silence born of shock lay over Harper’s Green. Then everyone was talking about the horrific events at the Bell House. We were a close community and that such a thing could have happened to one of its members sent a thrill of horror through the place. It was the sort of thing that happened to other people; one read about it in the newspaper, but to take place here in Harper’s Green was difficult to believe.

The news first came to The Rowans through Tom Wilson, the postman, when he delivered the midday mail. I was in bed, for I was to be confined there for the next few days, but Aunt Sophie happened to be in the garden when Tom came.

When she came up to me her face was very solemn and she stood for a few moments regarding me.

Then she said: “A terrible thing has happened.” My thoughts were still in the wood, reliving my nightmare.

“Is it Mr. Dorian?” I asked.

“Is he … dead?” She nodded slowly and I immediately thought: Crispin has killed him. It is murder. Murderers are hanged. He did that . for me.

I believe Aunt Sophie guessed what was in my mind. She said quickly:

“Poor Mrs. Dorian found him in the stables early this morning. He had killed himself.”

“In the stables …?” I stammered.

“He was hanging from one of the rafters that is, according to Tom Wilson. He said Mr. Dorian came back to the Bell House yesterday and his face was bleeding. He had had a fall in the wood, he said. He was very upset.

He went to his room and stayed there. She went up to him but he was at prayer and didn’t want to be disturbed. She said he went on praying for hours in his room. She didn’t see him that night and in the morning she realized he was not in the house. She happened to see that the stable door was unlocked. She went in . and found him. ” She came to the bed and put her arms round me. She said: ” I didn’t know whether to tell you . or what to do for the best. But you’d soon be hearing it in any case. You are so young, my darling, and you were concerned in this unpleasantness. It is all that I wanted to protect you from, but it is best that you should know because of your involvement. You see . this man . he wanted to be good. He wanted to be a saint, but he had certain instincts. He tried to suppress them and they came out in this way. Oh, I am making a mess of explaining.”

I said: “It’s all right. Aunt Sophie. I think I understand.”

“Well, he failed and he was caught, he was exposed. Thank God Crispin St. Aubyn came along at the right moment. But this sad man could not face the fact that he had been discovered … so he killed himself.”

She was silent for a moment. I was reliving it all. I believed it would always be there in my mind. I should never forget those moments of fear and horror.

“There is that poor woman, Mrs. Dorian … and Rachel. It will be terrible for them. And you were there … oh, it doesn’t bear thinking of! So young …”

“I don’t feel young any more. Aunt Sophie.”

“No. It is the sort of thing that makes you grow up. I don’t know what will come out of this, but I don’t want you to be involved in it. I am going to talk to Crispin St. Aubyn. I think I shall go along and see him.”

She did not have to do that because he came to The Rowans. Aunt Sophie was with me when Lily came up to tell her that he was downstairs.

She hastily went to him. She had left the door open and I distinctly heard his voice, which was clear and resonant.

He said: “I’ve come to ask about the child. How is she? No worse, I hope?”

The child! I thought indignantly. I was not a child . especially now.

He had a long talk with Aunt Sophie and finally she brought him up to see me.

He looked at me and said: “Feel better now?”

“Yes, thank you.”

“Sprain, was it? You’ll be up and about in no time.”

Aunt Sophie said: “Mr. St. Aubyn and I have been talking about what happened, and we have come to the conclusion that it would be better for everyone if nothing was said about what that man tried to do to you. The theory is that he had a bad fall and he came home in a distressed state. He shut himself in his room. Mrs. Dorian was upset because he would not see her all the rest of that day. In the morning’ she must have realized that he had gone out. She noticed the stable door was unlocked and went in. She found him’ there. It’s clear ..”

Crispin broke in: “He couldn’t face up to people’s knowing what he was really like. It shattered his pose as the holy man. He just could not face that, so he took his life.”

“Yes,” said Aunt Sophie.

“There will have to be an inquest, and the verdict will be one of suicide which it was. But Mr. St. Aubyn and I have decided that the wisest thing, for the sake of everyone concerned, is to say nothing of what happened in the wood. You fell over a stone and hurt your ankle. Mr. Dorian had a fall too. Say nothing of meeting him. I hate subterfuge, but there are times when it is necessary.”

“Then,” said Crispin, with an air of finality, ‘that is settled. “

He seemed eager to be gone.

He turned to me.

“You’ll be all right now. No need to fear. He can’t cause any more trouble.”

He nodded to me in farewell and then Aunt Sophie took him down. I lay listening to the clip-clop of his horse’s hoofs as he rode away.

The inquest was brief; the verdict ‘suicide while the balance of his mind was disturbed’. I could see that what Aunt Sophie and Crispin St. Aubyn had decided on was the best way. It would have been unbearably distressing for Mrs. Dorian and Rachel to know the truth and, as Aunt Sophie had said, it was better for me. So it was over quickly.

I wondered what it was like in the Bell House now. I could not imagine it without the overpowering presence of Mr. Dorian. It would be a different place altogether.

Mrs. Dorian’s cousin came to help her and Aunt Sophie suggested that Rachel came to stay with us until, as she said, ‘things settled down’.

Aunt Sophie said: “We shall have to put a bed in your room, and you will have to share. That will get you ready for school when you will be in a dormitory with others.”