<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0021"></SPAN>CHAPTER 21</h2>
<p>A moment’s glance was enough to satisfy Catherine that her apartment was
very unlike the one which Henry had endeavoured to alarm her by the description
of. It was by no means unreasonably large, and contained neither tapestry nor
velvet. The walls were papered, the floor was carpeted; the windows were
neither less perfect nor more dim than those of the drawing-room below; the
furniture, though not of the latest fashion, was handsome and comfortable, and
the air of the room altogether far from uncheerful. Her heart instantaneously
at ease on this point, she resolved to lose no time in particular examination
of anything, as she greatly dreaded disobliging the general by any delay. Her
habit therefore was thrown off with all possible haste, and she was preparing
to unpin the linen package, which the chaise-seat had conveyed for her
immediate accommodation, when her eye suddenly fell on a large high chest,
standing back in a deep recess on one side of the fireplace. The sight of it
made her start; and, forgetting everything else, she stood gazing on it in
motionless wonder, while these thoughts crossed her:</p>
<p>“This is strange indeed! I did not expect such a sight as this! An
immense heavy chest! What can it hold? Why should it be placed here? Pushed
back too, as if meant to be out of sight! I will look into it—cost me
what it may, I will look into it—and directly too—by daylight. If I
stay till evening my candle may go out.” She advanced and examined it
closely: it was of cedar, curiously inlaid with some darker wood, and raised,
about a foot from the ground, on a carved stand of the same. The lock was
silver, though tarnished from age; at each end were the imperfect remains of
handles also of silver, broken perhaps prematurely by some strange violence;
and, on the centre of the lid, was a mysterious cipher, in the same metal.
Catherine bent over it intently, but without being able to distinguish anything
with certainty. She could not, in whatever direction she took it, believe the
last letter to be a <i>T;</i> and yet that it should be anything else in that
house was a circumstance to raise no common degree of astonishment. If not
originally theirs, by what strange events could it have fallen into the Tilney
family?</p>
<p>Her fearful curiosity was every moment growing greater; and seizing, with
trembling hands, the hasp of the lock, she resolved at all hazards to satisfy
herself at least as to its contents. With difficulty, for something seemed to
resist her efforts, she raised the lid a few inches; but at that moment a
sudden knocking at the door of the room made her, starting, quit her hold, and
the lid closed with alarming violence. This ill-timed intruder was Miss
Tilney’s maid, sent by her mistress to be of use to Miss Morland; and
though Catherine immediately dismissed her, it recalled her to the sense of
what she ought to be doing, and forced her, in spite of her anxious desire to
penetrate this mystery, to proceed in her dressing without further delay. Her
progress was not quick, for her thoughts and her eyes were still bent on the
object so well calculated to interest and alarm; and though she dared not waste
a moment upon a second attempt, she could not remain many paces from the chest.
At length, however, having slipped one arm into her gown, her toilette seemed
so nearly finished that the impatience of her curiosity might safely be
indulged. One moment surely might be spared; and, so desperate should be the
exertion of her strength, that, unless secured by supernatural means, the lid
in one moment should be thrown back. With this spirit she sprang forward, and
her confidence did not deceive her. Her resolute effort threw back the lid, and
gave to her astonished eyes the view of a white cotton counterpane, properly
folded, reposing at one end of the chest in undisputed possession!</p>
<p>She was gazing on it with the first blush of surprise when Miss Tilney, anxious
for her friend’s being ready, entered the room, and to the rising shame
of having harboured for some minutes an absurd expectation, was then added the
shame of being caught in so idle a search. “That is a curious old chest,
is not it?” said Miss Tilney, as Catherine hastily closed it and turned
away to the glass. “It is impossible to say how many generations it has
been here. How it came to be first put in this room I know not, but I have not
had it moved, because I thought it might sometimes be of use in holding hats
and bonnets. The worst of it is that its weight makes it difficult to open. In
that corner, however, it is at least out of the way.”</p>
<p>Catherine had no leisure for speech, being at once blushing, tying her gown,
and forming wise resolutions with the most violent dispatch. Miss Tilney gently
hinted her fear of being late; and in half a minute they ran downstairs
together, in an alarm not wholly unfounded, for General Tilney was pacing the
drawing-room, his watch in his hand, and having, on the very instant of their
entering, pulled the bell with violence, ordered “Dinner to be on table
<i>directly!</i>”</p>
<p>Catherine trembled at the emphasis with which he spoke, and sat pale and
breathless, in a most humble mood, concerned for his children, and detesting
old chests; and the general, recovering his politeness as he looked at her,
spent the rest of his time in scolding his daughter for so foolishly hurrying
her fair friend, who was absolutely out of breath from haste, when there was
not the least occasion for hurry in the world: but Catherine could not at all
get over the double distress of having involved her friend in a lecture and
been a great simpleton herself, till they were happily seated at the
dinner-table, when the general’s complacent smiles, and a good appetite
of her own, restored her to peace. The dining-parlour was a noble room,
suitable in its dimensions to a much larger drawing-room than the one in common
use, and fitted up in a style of luxury and expense which was almost lost on
the unpractised eye of Catherine, who saw little more than its spaciousness and
the number of their attendants. Of the former, she spoke aloud her admiration;
and the general, with a very gracious countenance, acknowledged that it was by
no means an ill-sized room, and further confessed that, though as careless on
such subjects as most people, he did look upon a tolerably large eating-room as
one of the necessaries of life; he supposed, however, “that she must have
been used to much better-sized apartments at Mr. Allen’s?”</p>
<p>“No, indeed,” was Catherine’s honest assurance; “Mr.
Allen’s dining-parlour was not more than half as large,” and she
had never seen so large a room as this in her life. The general’s good
humour increased. Why, as he <i>had</i> such rooms, he thought it would be
simple not to make use of them; but, upon his honour, he believed there might
be more comfort in rooms of only half their size. Mr. Allen’s house, he
was sure, must be exactly of the true size for rational happiness.</p>
<p>The evening passed without any further disturbance, and, in the occasional
absence of General Tilney, with much positive cheerfulness. It was only in his
presence that Catherine felt the smallest fatigue from her journey; and even
then, even in moments of languor or restraint, a sense of general happiness
preponderated, and she could think of her friends in Bath without one wish of
being with them.</p>
<p>The night was stormy; the wind had been rising at intervals the whole
afternoon; and by the time the party broke up, it blew and rained violently.
Catherine, as she crossed the hall, listened to the tempest with sensations of
awe; and, when she heard it rage round a corner of the ancient building and
close with sudden fury a distant door, felt for the first time that she was
really in an abbey. Yes, these were characteristic sounds; they brought to her
recollection a countless variety of dreadful situations and horrid scenes,
which such buildings had witnessed, and such storms ushered in; and most
heartily did she rejoice in the happier circumstances attending her entrance
within walls so solemn! <i>She</i> had nothing to dread from midnight assassins
or drunken gallants. Henry had certainly been only in jest in what he had told
her that morning. In a house so furnished, and so guarded, she could have
nothing to explore or to suffer, and might go to her bedroom as securely as if
it had been her own chamber at Fullerton. Thus wisely fortifying her mind, as
she proceeded upstairs, she was enabled, especially on perceiving that Miss
Tilney slept only two doors from her, to enter her room with a tolerably stout
heart; and her spirits were immediately assisted by the cheerful blaze of a
wood fire. “How much better is this,” said she, as she walked to
the fender—“how much better to find a fire ready lit, than to have
to wait shivering in the cold till all the family are in bed, as so many poor
girls have been obliged to do, and then to have a faithful old servant
frightening one by coming in with a faggot! How glad I am that Northanger is
what it is! If it had been like some other places, I do not know that, in such
a night as this, I could have answered for my courage: but now, to be sure,
there is nothing to alarm one.”</p>
<p>She looked round the room. The window curtains seemed in motion. It could be
nothing but the violence of the wind penetrating through the divisions of the
shutters; and she stepped boldly forward, carelessly humming a tune, to assure
herself of its being so, peeped courageously behind each curtain, saw nothing
on either low window seat to scare her, and on placing a hand against the
shutter, felt the strongest conviction of the wind’s force. A glance at
the old chest, as she turned away from this examination, was not without its
use; she scorned the causeless fears of an idle fancy, and began with a most
happy indifference to prepare herself for bed. “She should take her time;
she should not hurry herself; she did not care if she were the last person up
in the house. But she would not make up her fire; <i>that</i> would seem
cowardly, as if she wished for the protection of light after she were in
bed.” The fire therefore died away, and Catherine, having spent the best
part of an hour in her arrangements, was beginning to think of stepping into
bed, when, on giving a parting glance round the room, she was struck by the
appearance of a high, old-fashioned black cabinet, which, though in a situation
conspicuous enough, had never caught her notice before. Henry’s words,
his description of the ebony cabinet which was to escape her observation at
first, immediately rushed across her; and though there could be nothing really
in it, there was something whimsical, it was certainly a very remarkable
coincidence! She took her candle and looked closely at the cabinet. It was not
absolutely ebony and gold; but it was japan, black and yellow japan of the
handsomest kind; and as she held her candle, the yellow had very much the
effect of gold. The key was in the door, and she had a strange fancy to look
into it; not, however, with the smallest expectation of finding anything, but
it was so very odd, after what Henry had said. In short, she could not sleep
till she had examined it. So, placing the candle with great caution on a chair,
she seized the key with a very tremulous hand and tried to turn it; but it
resisted her utmost strength. Alarmed, but not discouraged, she tried it
another way; a bolt flew, and she believed herself successful; but how
strangely mysterious! The door was still immovable. She paused a moment in
breathless wonder. The wind roared down the chimney, the rain beat in torrents
against the windows, and everything seemed to speak the awfulness of her
situation. To retire to bed, however, unsatisfied on such a point, would be
vain, since sleep must be impossible with the consciousness of a cabinet so
mysteriously closed in her immediate vicinity. Again, therefore, she applied
herself to the key, and after moving it in every possible way for some instants
with the determined celerity of hope’s last effort, the door suddenly
yielded to her hand: her heart leaped with exultation at such a victory, and
having thrown open each folding door, the second being secured only by bolts of
less wonderful construction than the lock, though in that her eye could not
discern anything unusual, a double range of small drawers appeared in view,
with some larger drawers above and below them; and in the centre, a small door,
closed also with a lock and key, secured in all probability a cavity of
importance.</p>
<p>Catherine’s heart beat quick, but her courage did not fail her. With a
cheek flushed by hope, and an eye straining with curiosity, her fingers grasped
the handle of a drawer and drew it forth. It was entirely empty. With less
alarm and greater eagerness she seized a second, a third, a fourth; each was
equally empty. Not one was left unsearched, and in not one was anything found.
Well read in the art of concealing a treasure, the possibility of false linings
to the drawers did not escape her, and she felt round each with anxious
acuteness in vain. The place in the middle alone remained now unexplored; and
though she had “never from the first had the smallest idea of finding
anything in any part of the cabinet, and was not in the least disappointed at
her ill success thus far, it would be foolish not to examine it thoroughly
while she was about it.” It was some time however before she could
unfasten the door, the same difficulty occurring in the management of this
inner lock as of the outer; but at length it did open; and not vain, as
hitherto, was her search; her quick eyes directly fell on a roll of paper
pushed back into the further part of the cavity, apparently for concealment,
and her feelings at that moment were indescribable. Her heart fluttered, her
knees trembled, and her cheeks grew pale. She seized, with an unsteady hand,
the precious manuscript, for half a glance sufficed to ascertain written
characters; and while she acknowledged with awful sensations this striking
exemplification of what Henry had foretold, resolved instantly to peruse every
line before she attempted to rest.</p>
<p>The dimness of the light her candle emitted made her turn to it with alarm; but
there was no danger of its sudden extinction; it had yet some hours to burn;
and that she might not have any greater difficulty in distinguishing the
writing than what its ancient date might occasion, she hastily snuffed it.
Alas! It was snuffed and extinguished in one. A lamp could not have expired
with more awful effect. Catherine, for a few moments, was motionless with
horror. It was done completely; not a remnant of light in the wick could give
hope to the rekindling breath. Darkness impenetrable and immovable filled the
room. A violent gust of wind, rising with sudden fury, added fresh horror to
the moment. Catherine trembled from head to foot. In the pause which succeeded,
a sound like receding footsteps and the closing of a distant door struck on her
affrighted ear. Human nature could support no more. A cold sweat stood on her
forehead, the manuscript fell from her hand, and groping her way to the bed,
she jumped hastily in, and sought some suspension of agony by creeping far
underneath the clothes. To close her eyes in sleep that night, she felt must be
entirely out of the question. With a curiosity so justly awakened, and feelings
in every way so agitated, repose must be absolutely impossible. The storm too
abroad so dreadful! She had not been used to feel alarm from wind, but now
every blast seemed fraught with awful intelligence. The manuscript so
wonderfully found, so wonderfully accomplishing the morning’s prediction,
how was it to be accounted for? What could it contain? To whom could it relate?
By what means could it have been so long concealed? And how singularly strange
that it should fall to her lot to discover it! Till she had made herself
mistress of its contents, however, she could have neither repose nor comfort;
and with the sun’s first rays she was determined to peruse it. But many
were the tedious hours which must yet intervene. She shuddered, tossed about in
her bed, and envied every quiet sleeper. The storm still raged, and various
were the noises, more terrific even than the wind, which struck at intervals on
her startled ear. The very curtains of her bed seemed at one moment in motion,
and at another the lock of her door was agitated, as if by the attempt of
somebody to enter. Hollow murmurs seemed to creep along the gallery, and more
than once her blood was chilled by the sound of distant moans. Hour after hour
passed away, and the wearied Catherine had heard three proclaimed by all the
clocks in the house before the tempest subsided or she unknowingly fell fast
asleep.</p>
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