Goatswood |
This is a 12-part story, originally posted at iRez. It's part of the Avatar Blogger Month event and featured at the Avatar Blogger Crossfit exhibit at LEA11.
5. The
Manor
After hours
of waiting for the train, many of the passengers, cold and tired, found their
way to the Manor. Lord Crewe opened its doors so they could sit in the warmth
of the inviting living-room. This was an unusual situation for the village and
unusual situations needed unusual measures, he announced. A table was set and
the servants rushed to replenish it with appetizing foods. Chairs were solicitously brought from the upstairs
rooms and the generally well organized Manor went into a temporary pandemonium.
The
stationmaster was still carrying the unusual bag; the mysterious man was
nowhere to be found. What intrigued him the most was that he had crossed paths
with several of the passengers a few times already, but not with this
particular man. The village was not that big after all.
A few of
the people who stood closer to the man at the station, during the upheaval, mentioned
seeing him walking up the hill, but the stationmaster didn’t quite understand
what he would do up there; no ceremonies would take place at this time of the
afternoon, and most certainly not with the extra people roaming the village.
The corridors
of the Manor overflowed with passengers, so the stationmaster elbowed his way
towards the kitchen.
“Mr. Kirby,
how lovely to see you,” greeted the cook, a lively matron whose fascination for
food produced the most memorable dishes and earned her a well-deserved fame as
far away as the capital.
“I am
exhausted, Mrs. Thomson,” he replied, plopping down on a chair by the fire.
“How so?”
she asked, her vigilant eyes on a steaming pot of stew. “Too many people, you
mean?”
“No, no… I
have been everywhere in the village with this bag. I simply cannot find its
owner. He was at the station when I explained the passengers they’d have to
wait for the next train. But then he disappeared, leaving it behind.”
The cook
took a glance at the bag and laughed.
“Strange
way to pack a bag!”
The
stationmaster agreed. He had never seen such a thing.
He then
proceeded to explain each step he had taken to find the man and how thorny it
was for him to leave an issue unsolved. It was a matter of honor, of
professional pride.
The cook
agreed out of compassion for the excessively distressed stationmaster. She knew
him for a fairly long time and she had never seen him so upset. He was a picky
man who paid attention to the tiniest of details and who could drive a Zen
master to madness with his excessive obsession with having everything neatly
organized. He would never get tired of stating that schedules were to be
respected. And he never got tired of repeating that his trains were always on
time.
That
fussiness was transferred over time to his meals. Although they were the best
of friends, he had colossal arguments with Augustus, the innkeeper, for not
serving dinner at the agreed time. That interfered with his work, considering
he had to be back at the station punctually, and it interfered with his stomach
too. He would rage out of the Inn without eating and the whole village would know
about it five minutes later. Mrs. Thomson would then grab a few bits and
pieces, put them in a pot, wrap it up to keep everything warm and trod her way
to the station, pot in hand, to leave it there for him to eat when he calmed
down.
However, this
time it was much worse. He seemed to be distraught, broken. For the first time
in his life, he was on the verge of becoming a failure.
“Mr. Kirby,
you’ll find the man, don’t you worry,” she said in a soothing voice. “He didn’t
go anywhere, did he? There’s no train. So, he’s around.”
The
stationmaster knew the cook was right. She always managed to lift his spirits
somehow. A few sentences, her motherly ways, and he felt like new; he didn’t
know how she did it.
“Yes,
you’re right, Mrs. Thomson, you are right” - he leaped out of the chair and grabbed
a muffin from the bread basket. “You are absolutely right.”
The cook
smiled. It was so easy, a few words and freshly baked muffins, the
stationmaster’s favorites.
“Why don’t
you open the bag and tuck those sleeves in? It looks ridiculous, Mr. Kirby.”
He
straightened his back up a bit. The cook was right. He must’ve looked
ridiculous and that had never crossed his mind, not once. His confidence levels
recharged, he placed the bag on the counter. Against his principles of not
touching the passengers’ private property, he opened the bag.
An
extraordinary array of colorful shirts and jackets seemed to be rebelliously entangled.
It struck him that that didn’t look like a bag packed for a trip. There were
several obvious items missing, the clothes didn’t match and nothing was folded
which seemed quite irrational for the orderly stationmaster.
“This is
odd.”
Mrs.
Thomson turned to look at the bag on her counter, at that dusty, dirty, old bag
on her food counter.
“Mr.
Kirby…” she started, with a threatening tone in her voice.
“Oh!”
“What is
it?” asked the young kitchen helper who had been peeling potatoes silently by
the sink.
“Rose, shut
up and go back to your potatoes.”
“This looks
familiar.” He was holding an old key with a symbol. “Isn’t this…?”
Mrs.
Thomson took the key from his hand and turned it over a few times. “Mr. Kirby,
I don’t think I like this. Do you know who this man is?”
“I don’t.”
“You do
realize that the Tower has the…” replied the cook, suddenly extremely agitated.
“Yes, Mrs.
Thomson. That much I know, but it is probably a coincidence.”
The young
kitchen helper cleared her throat.
“Mrs.
Thomson, I just need to find the man and that has proven to be a rather intricate
task.”
The young
kitchen helper cleared her throat again.
“Well, you
will, Mr. Kirby, you will.”
The
stationmaster closed the bag, making sure all the sleeves were inside this
time, and placed the key in his pocket. That stranger had a lot of explaining
to do.
The young
kitchen helper cleared her throat once more.
“For Pete’s
sake, Rose, what is it?” asked the cook, angrily.
Rose
pointed at the window. A man was walking alone up the path leading to the main
entrance of the Manor.
The
stationmaster couldn’t believe his eyes. He ran out of the kitchen with the
bag, elbowing his way through the corridors towards the front door and shouting
“Stop him, stop him!”
Chapte 6: The Gypsy Camp
Chapte 6: The Gypsy Camp
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