by Maynard Sims
Who will protect the children?
Fourteen-year-old James has seen his family wiped out by tuberculosis in the England of the 1960s. When he is sent to the country to convalesce with his Uncle Thomas it seems a welcome respite. But his uncle is strange, and clearly has a dark secret. The huge house is secretive too, with whispers and cries in the night. Gradually James meets other children, some real, some apparently ghosts, but all of whom have been hurt by the uncle. Will James be next?
In an eerie novella of repressed depravity, Maynard Sims conjures nightmares from the fears of childhood.
Convalescence
Maynard Sims
Dedication
To those who have suffered, and the ones still suffering, in silence.
Convalescence
It was 1965, and when tuberculosis hit our family the effects were devastating.
My younger sister, Sally, was the first to succumb, dying within days of her tenth birthday. Always a fairly sickly child, underweight and prone to all manner of childhood illnesses, her death was almost expected.
This was not the case with my father, a strapping forty-six-year-old whose rude health was something of a legend, never once taking a day’s sick leave in over twenty years of working for the same company.
A month later my mother, overwhelmed with grief and essentially a broken woman, gave up her battle with the disease and joined her husband at the family plot in the local cemetery.
Which left me fourteen years old and determined that the blight that had struck my nearest and dearest would not claim me.
Two months in hospital being plied with an endless supply of drugs and virtually around-the-clock care brought me through the crisis and left me weak and enfeebled, but ready to face the world alone.
It was decided by powers greater than I that I needed a period of convalescence in order to fully recuperate and regain my strength. So I was shipped off to the warmer, sunnier climes of Dorset, to stay with a distant member of the family whom I only knew from muted conversations between my mother and father at the dinner table.
I had little knowledge of Uncle Thomas, apart from those few facts I had managed to overhear. All I knew of him was that he was my father’s elder brother and that he was immensely wealthy, having made his fortune in the South African diamond mines. He was unmarried, lived in a sprawling estate down on the Dorset/Devon border and had once played cricket for England. Other than that, I was aware that he and my father had become estranged when they were in their twenties and had never spoken since that time. We never visited him, and he in return had never made the journey to our house in Cambridge to visit us. The only image of him that I could bring to mind was a grainy, black-and-white photograph taken when he was still a young man, poised at the crease of Lords cricket ground, taken during his first and only Test century.
What had induced him to take on the care of a nephew he had never seen, let alone been in contact with, I’ll never know, but I was just a child and the matter was out of my hands and shrouded by the deep fog of adult mystery.
I was accompanied on the train journey down to Dorset by a middle-aged woman called Miss Holt who, I assumed, worked for the hospital. She was a plain woman with strong, almost-horselike features, who said little to me on the journey, but shepherded me along in front of her with brisk hand gestures and barked orders.
We were met at Weymouth Station by a taxi driver with a thick local accent and a no-nonsense attitude, who took my luggage and stowed it in the trunk of the car, settled behind the steering wheel and drove us to our destination in near-total silence.
As we pulled into the grounds of my uncle’s estate through a pair of huge wrought-iron gates, a sinking feeling settled over me. I was desperately missing my family, my home, even the street where we’d lived, and the thought of spending an unspecified length of time in unfamiliar surroundings, with people I didn’t know, in an equally unfamiliar and remote part of the country, filled me with dread. I made a pact with myself to recover my strength and my health as quickly as possible. I gave no thought as to what might happen to me once that happened. That was something for the future, and my priority was just to get through the present.
“So you’re my brother’s boy, are you?”
Those were the first words my Uncle Thomas ever spoke to me. He had a shock of iron-gray hair and a matching moustache, but in a lot of ways he resembled my father. His face was harder, without the crow’s feet of laughter lines that surrounded Dad’s dark-brown eyes, and the skin of his face was dark and leathery, scorched by his years spent in harsh sunshine. His lips were thin, the mouth turning down at the corners as if laughter was a stranger to him, and in that initial meeting, my spirits sank even lower.
“James, sir,” I said, proffering my hand.
He ignored it. “James,” he said, rolling my name around his mouth. “Your grandfather’s name. He was a fine man. I wonder if you’ll ever live up to him.”
We were standing in the cavernous hallway of my uncle’s house—a massive building made from yellow stone, with a multitude of deeply set but very long windows and a turreted roof of gray slate. From what I had seen of the outside, the place looked huge, with at least two different wings coming off from a fortresslike square structure at least four times the size of my own Cambridgeshire home. It was the kind of place to get lost in, and I wondered how I would find my way around it.
Uncle Thomas was speaking again. “I’m putting you in the east wing. You’ll have a bedroom and a sitting room.” He turned to Miss Holt. “I’ve assigned a bedroom to you, next to my nephew. You will share the sitting room. Meals will be served in the dining room. If you have any special dietary needs I trust you to consult with my housekeeper, Mrs. Rogers, and she, in turn, will apprise the cook. Care of the boy will be solely your domain while you’re here and I do not wish to be troubled with anything other than a full-blown emergency. You have access to this part of the house, including the library, dining room and study, but the west wing is strictly private and totally out of bounds. Are we clear on this?”
Miss Holt nodded vigorously. “Of course, Mr. Bentley,” she said.
An elderly woman emerged from one of the one of the doorways leading off from the hall.
“Ah, Daphne,” my uncle said. “Could you please show our guests to their rooms?”
Daphne Rogers, the housekeeper, was a woman in her late fifties, early sixties, with a round, kind face framed by a bird’s nest of gray hair, clipped and pinned elaborately around it. “If you’ll come this way,” she said, and led us from the hallway to a long corridor that took us to the farthest reaches of the east wing.
As we walked I could feel Miss Holt’s hand on my shoulder, urging me forward as if I might turn and flee at any moment, which was probably just as well because the thought wasn’t a million miles away from my mind.
Paintings hung on the walls of the corridor we were walking through—dark paintings depicting bleak landscapes and empty moorland vistas with twisted, stunted trees and the occasional derelict building. Their bleakness mirrored my mood as we made our way to our rooms, and as we finally emerged from the corridor into another fairly brightly lit hallway, I felt a great sense of relief.
Mrs. Rogers led us up a curving staircase that gave on to a carpeted landing with doors set every few yards into a wall decorated with floral paper and, thankfully, no depressing paintings. In an alcove halfway along was a small table holding a single vase of multicolored sweet peas. She stopped at a doorway and pushed the door open.
“I’ve put you in here, Miss Holt. I’ve tried to make the room as comfortable as possible, but we’ve not been used to entertaining g
uests at the manor lately, so if there’s anything you need, please don’t hesitate to ask me.”
Miss Holt thanked her and disappeared inside.
The housekeeper turned to me. “Now, Jimmy, let’s get you settled in. You don’t mind if I call you Jimmy, do you? James sounds so stuffy.”
I shook my head. “No,” I said. “Everyone at school calls me Jimmy.”
She smiled. “I guessed they would. You look like a Jimmy.”
I was beginning to warm to the elderly woman with the kind face. She seemed to be out of place here. Out of place but very welcome nonetheless. Perhaps this wasn’t going to be such an ordeal after all.
My bedroom was large and airy with two long sash windows flanking a wide and intricately patterned veneered wardrobe with double doors and heavy brass handles. In the corner was a writing desk with leather top, complete with a studded, leather-upholstered captain’s chair. Set against the adjacent wall was a deeply filled couch covered with a chintz material that matched the curtains that hung either side of the windows and the counterpane that was spread over the iron-framed bed.
“It’s probably not as comfortable as your bedroom at home, but it was the best I could come up with,” Mrs. Rogers said.
“It’s very nice,” I said.
She seemed delighted by my response. “I don’t know about that. I’ll bet your walls at home are covered with football posters. I know my son’s were.”
“You have a son?” I said.
She nodded, her eyes becoming misty. “Grown up now, of course. Grown up and gone. It’s going to be lovely having you here, Jimmy. I do so miss my boy.”
“What’s his name? Your son?”
Her eyes clouded and she sucked in her breath. “Hughie,” she said. “His name was Hughie.”
“Do you see much of him?”
She shook her head and stood for a long time, not answering my question. Finally she appeared to shake herself. “Anyway, as I said to Miss Holt, if there’s anything you need, please ask me. I want your stay here to be as comfortable as possible…and I’m sure your uncle wants that too.”
I thanked her and she left, promising to return later to take us down to the dining room.
I waited until the door had closed behind her and then opened my suitcase, which had been placed on a wooden stand under one of the windows, and started to unpack.
The first thing I took out of the case was my small transistor radio. I switched it on and twisted the tuning dial until I picked up a weak and fractured signal from Radio Luxembourg.
As an unfamiliar song from the hit parade filled the room, I went and lay down on the bed. I was missing Mum and Dad. I was even missing my annoying little sister, Sally. Tears were pricking at my eyes and I let them come. Perhaps when I was feeling stronger I would be able to fight them, but for now I indulged them, let them flow down my cheeks.
The journey down here must have tired me more than I realized because I fell asleep. An insistent knocking at my bedroom door woke me.
I roused and called sleepily, “Come in.”
Mrs. Rogers came into the room, smiling broadly. “Sorry to wake you, sleepyhead. It’s time for dinner.”
I sat up, yawning. “I’m sorry,” I said. “I didn’t mean to fall asleep.”
She clucked her tongue. “Don’t you worry about that. It’s why you’re here—to rest and get your strength back. I was talking to your Miss Holt earlier and she told me just how ill you’ve been. But she says you’re making excellent progress and you should be as right as ninepence soon. A few more weeks should have you fit and healthy enough to go back to school.”
A few more weeks! Was that how long I was going to have to stay here?
She must have seen the disappointment on my face. “Don’t you worry. Time flies down here. It will be gone before you know it.”
I doubted that but pretended to smile, nodded my head and accompanied her down to the dining room.
The room was at the back of the house and had French doors that led onto a garden that looked to be mostly lawn, a lush green swath of grass that swept down to a tree line, interrupted only by a circular iron-and-glass structure that sat in the center of the lawn, about a hundred yards from the house.
Mrs. Rogers noticed me gazing out through the doors. “Ah, yes,” she said. “The summerhouse. We use it quite a lot when the weather’s fine. It’s lovely to sit there watching the bees and butterflies, and listening to the birds. It promises to be fine tomorrow. Perhaps you can try it.”
Miss Holt was sitting at the large oval dining table, sipping soup from a white-china bowl. She looked up at Mrs. Rogers at the mention of the summerhouse.
“That’s if you have no objections, Elise?” Mrs. Rogers said.
“You won’t hear any objection from me, Daphne. Fresh air will be good for his lungs,” Miss Holt said.
Elise! Daphne! The two women were on first-name terms already.
I sat down at the table that was set for two, and had no sooner settled my napkin across my knees, when a pretty girl in a maid’s uniform appeared at my side and started ladling soup from a large china tureen held in the crook of her arm. The maid had a mop of brown, curly hair pinned up and held under a crisp white cap. Her eyes were chocolate brown and sparkled with warmth and humor. She scooped another spoonful of soup from the tureen and let it hover over my bowl, a question in her eyes.
“Please,” I said. I hadn’t eaten on the journey down here and I was feeling ravenous, my appetite helped, no doubt, by the delicious aroma of beef broth drifting up to my nostrils from the soup in my bowl.
“Thank you…”
“Amy,” the girl said and smiled, revealing an even row of brightly white teeth.
“Right,” Mrs. Rogers said. “I’ll leave you to your meal. Afterwards, perhaps, you can come and sit in the parlor. Maybe we can have a hand or two of cards before bedtime.”
I had wondered earlier if the manor possessed a television, although I couldn’t recall seeing an aerial attached to any of the house’s chimney stacks. The suggestion of cards before bedtime answered the question for me, and I wondered how I was going to survive a few weeks without my favorite TV programs. Luckily I was an avid reader and Uncle Thomas had mentioned earlier about me having use of the library. I figured I would become a regular visitor if books were the only entertainment on offer.
The meal that followed the soup was as delicious as the first course had been. Roast beef in a rich gravy, with a mound of crisply roasted potatoes and fresh vegetables, with a whopping Yorkshire pudding that took up half the plate. Towards the end of the meal my appetite was sated and I was struggling to finish.
“Leave what you can’t manage,” Miss Holt said. “Don’t force it down. We don’t need you being sick—not on your first night here.”
I thought she was joking and started to smile, but there was no humor in her eyes and the smile died on my lips. I stopped eating and laid down my knife and fork on the plate.
“You did well,” Amy said quietly to me when she came to take away the dirty crockery. “You had enough there to feed a horse…a small horse.”
I grinned at her. I liked Amy.
“Rummy. Do you play rummy, Jimmy?”
“Yes,” I said and watched as Mrs. Rogers dealt three hands of seven cards. I had hoped that Amy might join us in the parlor, but she obviously had other duties to attend to.
By nine o’clock the last hand was being dealt. Miss Holt was keeping score in pencil on a slim white notepad.
“Rummy,” she announced suddenly and laid her cards down on the table in front of her, seven cards running in sequence from three to nine.
“Oh, you’re too good for me, Elise,” Mrs. Rogers said.
Miss Holt inclined her head, accepting the compliment and then stood and clapped her hands together once. “Right, James. Bedti
me.”
“But it’s only nine o’clock,” I protested.
“And plenty late enough,” she said in a voice that brooked no argument.
“Will I see Uncle Thomas tomorrow?” I said to Mrs. Rogers. Apart from greeting us when we first arrived, I had seen or heard nothing of him since.
“Maybe,” the elderly woman said. “Your uncle’s a very busy man.”
“Come along, James,” Miss Holt said, walking to the door and opening it. “Upstairs to wash and clean your teeth. I’ll look in on you before you settle down.”
I said good night to Mrs. Rogers and walked from the room, feeling sad that the day had finished so abruptly.
I climbed the stairs wearily and was about to enter the bathroom when my bedroom door opened and Amy stepped out onto the landing. For a second her eyes widened and she looked flustered.
“You surprised me,” she said. “I was just turning down your bed.”
“I’m sorry,” I said. “I didn’t mean to startle you.”
Her face relaxed and her smile returned. “Never to worry,” she said. “Sometimes this house can take you unawares. No harm done. Good night.”
I wanted to ask her what she meant by that, but she had already turned and was disappearing down the landing towards the stairs.
I walked into the bathroom and saw my washing things had been laid out on the marble shelf above the washbasin. Quickly I sluiced my face and ran a brush over my teeth.
Five minutes later I was in my room and undressing for bed.
I had not long climbed into bed and pulled up the sheets when Miss Holt came into the room without knocking and walked over to the bed.
“Put out your hand.”
I did as I was told and she dropped two orange pills into it and handed me a glass of water from the dresser. “Take those,” she said.
I tossed them into my mouth and washed them down with a gulp of water.
“Right,” she said when she was satisfied I’d swallowed them. “Sleep well.” She turned and walked to the door, but only took two steps before turning and coming back to the bed. She thrust out her hand. “Give me your wireless.”