Algernon Blackwood

The Extra Day


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you're tired out. I shall be up presently to hear your prayers and tuck you up. And, Judy, you might tell Jackman—"

      But the room was empty, the children vanished. The door banged softly, cutting off the sentence in its middle, and Mother resumed her knitting, smiling quietly to herself. And in the hall outside Come-Back Stumper was discovered, warming his Army back before the open fire of blazing logs. He looked like a cart-horse, the shadows made him spread so. Maria pushed him to one side. She pushed, at least, but he did not move exactly. Yet somehow, by a kind of sidling process, he took up a new position in regard to the fire and themselves, the result of which was that they occupied the best places, while he stood at one corner in an attitude which resisted attack and yet invited it.

      "Good-evening," remarked Maria; "are you warm?"

      "Oh, no," exclaimed Tim, "that's not it at all. The thing is, shall we play hide-and-seek, or would you really rather go to bed, as Mother said, and have dinner and hot drinks?"

      "Nonsense," cried Judy with authority. "He's got an awful cold, and he's got to go to bed at once. He's shivering all over. It's Nindian fever."

      "No, really, really—" began Stumper, but was not allowed to finish.

      "Thin captain biscuits soaked in hot milk with ginger, nutmeg, lemon, and whisky," announced Judy, "would be best." And she shot towards the door, her hair untied and flying.

      "But, my dear, I assure you—"

      "Or Bath Olivers," she interrupted, "because they soak better. You know nothing," she added motheringly; "no man ever does." There was contempt in her voice as well as pity.

      "Why do you know nothing?" inquired Maria, with a blaze of staring eyes, as the door slammed upon her vanishing sister.

      "I think you know everything," said Tim with pride, decidedly, "only you've forgotten it in India. I think it's silly."

      "The milk and stuff?" agreed the soldier. "Yes, so do I. And I hate biscuits, and ginger makes me hot and ill—"

      "Iller than you are already?" asked Maria, "because that means bed."

      "Maria," he snapped angrily, "I'm not ill at all. If you go on saying

       I'm ill, of course I shall get ill. I never felt better in my life."

      Tim turned round like a top. "Then let's play hide-and-seek," he cried.

       "Let's hide before Judy gets back, and she can come and never find us!"

      Cousin William suggested they were not enough to play that game, and was of opinion that Aunt Emily might be invited too.

      "Oh, no," Tim gave his decided verdict, "not women. They can't hide properly. They bulge."

      And at that moment Judy appeared in the doorway across the hall.

      "It's coming," she cried. "I've ordered everything—hot milk and Bath

       Olivers and preserved ginger and—"

      Cousin William took the matter into his own hands then, for the situation was growing desperate. "Look here," he suggested gravely, yet without enthusiasm, "I'll take the milk and stuff upstairs when I've got into bed, and meanwhile we'll do something else. I'm—that is, my cold is too bad to play a game, but I'll tell you a story about—er—about a tiger—if you like?" The last three words were added as a question. An answer, however, was not immediately forthcoming. For the moment was a grave one. It was admitted that Come-Back Stumper could play a game with credit and success, even an active game like hide-and-seek; but it was not known yet that he could tell a story. The fate of the evening, therefore, hung upon the decision.

      "A tiger!" said Tim, doubtfully, weighing probabilities. "A tiger you shot, was it, or just—a tiger?" A sign, half shadow and half pout, was in his face. Maria and Judy waited upon their brother's decision with absolute confidence, meanwhile.

      Colonel Stumper moved artfully backwards towards a big horsehair sofa, beneath the deer heads and assegais from Zululand. He did it on tiptoe, aware that this mysterious and suggestive way of walking has a marked effect on children in the dark. "I did not shoot it," he said, "because I lived with it. It was the most extraordinary tiger that was ever known—"

      "In India?"

      "In the world. And I ought to know, because, as I say, I lived with it for days—"

      "Inside it?"

      "Nearly, but not quite. I lived in its cave with the cubs and other things, half-eaten deer and cows and the bones of Hindus—"

      "Were the bones black? However did you escape? Why didn't the tiger eat you?"

      He drew the children closely round him on the sofa. "I'll tell you," he said, "for this is an inaugural occasion, and I've never told the story before to any one in the world. The experience was incredible, and no one would believe it. But the proof that it really happened is that the tiger has left its mark upon me till I die—"

      "But you haven't died—yet, I mean," Maria observed.

      "He means teeth, silly," Tim squelched her.

      "Died in another sense than the one you mean," the great soldier and former administrator of a province continued, "dyed yellow—"

      "Oh-h-h! Is that why—?"

      "That is why," he replied pathetically. "For living with that tiger family so long, I almost turned into one myself. The tiger nature got into me. I snarl and growl, I use my teeth ferociously when hungry, I walk stealthily on tiptoe, I let my whiskers grow, and my colour has the tint of Indian tigers' skins."

      "Have you got a tail, too?"

      He glared into the blue eyes of Maria, sternly. "It's growing," he whispered horribly, "it's growing."

      There was a pause in which credulity shook hands with faith. Belief was in the air. If doubt did whisper, "Let me see, please," it was too low to be quite audible. Come-Back Stumper was surrounded by an atmosphere of black-edged glory suddenly; he wore a halo; his feet were dipped in mystery.

      "Then what's an orgully occasion?" somebody asked.

      "This!" replied Stumper. But he uttered it so savagely that no one cared to press for further details. Clearly it was a secret and confidential moment, and "inaugural occasion" had something to do with the glory of wearing an incipient tail. Glory and mystery clothed Stumper from that moment with Indian splendour. At least, he thought so. …

      "And the tiger?" came the whispering question.

      "Ugh-h-h-h!" he shuddered; "I'll tell you. But I must think a moment quietly first."

      "His tail hurts," Maria told Tim beneath her breath, while they waited for the story to begin.

      "So would yours," was the answer, "if you had a cold at the same time, too. A girl would simply cry." And he looked contempt at her, but unutterable respect at his soldier friend.

      "This tiger," began the traveller, in a heavy voice, "was a—a very unusual tiger. I met it, that is to say, most unexpectedly. It was in a tropical jungle, where the foliage was so thick that the sunlight hardly penetrated at all. It was dark as night even in the daytime. There were monkeys overhead and snakes beneath, and bananas were so plentiful that every time my elephant knocked against a tree a shower of fruit fell down like hail and tickled its skin."

      "You were on an elephant, then?"

      "We were all on elephants. On my particular elephant there was a man to load for me and a man to guide the beast. We moved slowly and cautiously. It was dark, as I said, but the showers of falling bananas made yellow streaks against the black that the elephant constantly mistook for tigers flying through the air as they leaped in silent fury against the howdah in which we crouched upon his back. The howdah, you know, is the saddle."

      "Was the elephant friendly?"

      "Very friendly indeed; but he found it difficult to