THE GREAT KEINPLATZ EXPERIMENT
and Other Tales of Twilight and the Unseen
BY A. CONAN DOYLE
contents:
1.The Brown Hand 2.The Usher of
Lea House School 3.B. 24 4.The Great Keinplatz Experiment 5.Cyprian Overbeck Wells 6.Playing With Fire 7.The Ring of Thoth 8.The Los Amigos Fiasco 9.How It Happened 10.Lot No. 249 11.”De Profundis” 12.The Lift
Every one knows that Sir
Dominick Holden, the famous Indian surgeon, made me his heir, and that his
death changed me in an hour from a hard-working and impecunious medical man to
a well-to-do landed proprietor. Many know also that there were at least five
people between the inheritance and me, and that Sir Dominick's selection
appeared to be altogether arbitrary and whimsical. I can assure them, however,
that they are quite mistaken, and that, although I only knew Sir Dominick in
the closing years of his life, there were none the less very real reasons why
he should show his goodwill towards me. As a matter of fact, though I say it
myself, no man ever did more for another than I did for my Indian uncle. I
cannot expect the story to be believed, but it is so singular that I should
feel that it was a breach of duty if I did not put it upon record—so here it
is, and your belief or incredulity is your own affair.
Sir Dominick Holden,
C.B., K.C.S.I., and I don't know what besides, was the most distinguished
Indian surgeon of his day. In the Army originally, he afterwards settled
down into civil practice in Bombay, and visited as a consultant every part of
India. His name is best remembered in connection with the Oriental Hospital,
which he founded and supported. The time came, however, when his iron
constitution began to show signs of the long strain to which he had subjected
it, and his brother practitioners (who were not, perhaps, entirely
disinterested upon the point) were unanimous in recommending him to return to
England. He held on so long as he could, but at last he developed nervous
symptoms of a very pronounced character, and so came back, a broken man, to his
native county of Wiltshire. He bought a considerable estate with an ancient
manor-house upon the edge of Salisbury Plain, and devoted his old age to the
study of Comparative Pathology, which had been his learned hobby all his life,
and in which he was a foremost authority.
We of the family were,
as may be imagined, much excited by the news of the return of this rich and
childless uncle to England. On his part, although by no means exuberant in his
hospitality, he showed some sense of his duty to his relations, and each of us
in turn had an invitation to visit him. From the accounts of my cousins it
appeared to be a melancholy business, and it was with mixed feelings that I at
last received my own summons to appear at Rodenhurst. My wife was so carefully
excluded in the invitation that my first impulse was to refuse it, but the
interests of the children had to be considered, and so, with her consent, I set
out one October afternoon upon my visit to Wiltshire, with little thought of
what that visit was to entail.
My uncle's estate was
situated where the arable land of the plains begins to swell upwards into the
rounded chalk hills which are characteristic of the county. As I drove from
Dinton Station in the waning light of that autumn day, I was impressed by the
weird nature of the scenery. The few scattered cottages of the peasants were so
dwarfed by the huge evidences of prehistoric life, that the present appeared to
be a dream and the past to be the obtrusive and masterful reality. The road
wound through the valleys, formed by a succession of grassy hills, and the
summit of each was cut and carved into the most elaborate fortifications, some
circular, and some square, but all on a scale which has defied the winds and
the rains of many centuries. Some call them Roman and some British, but their
true origin and the reasons for this particular tract of country being so
interlaced with entrenchments have never been finally made clear. Here and
there on the long, smooth, olive-coloured slopes there rose small rounded
barrows or tumuli. Beneath them lie the cremated ashes of the race which cut so
deeply into the hills, but their graves tell us nothing save that a jar full of
dust represents the man who once laboured under the sun.
It was through this
weird country that I approached my uncle's residence of Rodenhurst, and the
house was, as I found, in due keeping with its surroundings. Two broken and
weather-stained pillars, each surmounted by a mutilated heraldic emblem,
flanked the entrance to a neglected drive. A cold wind whistled through the
elms which lined it, and the air was full of the drifting leaves. At the far
end, under the gloomy arch of trees, a single yellow lamp burned steadily. In the
dim half-light of the coming night I saw a long, low building stretching out
two irregular wings, with deep eaves, a sloping gambrel roof, and walls which
were criss-crossed with timber balks in the fashion of the Tudors. The cheery
light of a fire flickered in the broad, latticed window to the left of the
low-porched door, and this, as it proved, marked the study of my uncle, for it
was thither that I was led by his butler in order to make my host's
acquaintance.
He was cowering over his
fire, for the moist chill of an English autumn had set him shivering. His lamp
was unlit, and I only saw the red glow of the embers beating upon a huge,
craggy face, with a Red Indian nose and cheek, and deep furrows and seams from
eye to chin, the sinister marks of hidden volcanic fires. He sprang up at my
entrance with something of an old-world courtesy and welcomed me warmly to
Rodenhurst. At the same time I was conscious, as the lamp was carried in, that
it was a very critical pair of light-blue eyes which looked out at me from
under shaggy eyebrows, like scouts beneath a bush, and that this outlandish
uncle of mine was carefully reading off my character with all the ease of a
practised observer and an experienced man of the world.
For my part I looked at
him, and looked again, for I had never seen a man whose appearance was more
fitted to hold one's attention. His figure was the framework of a giant, but he
had fallen away until his coat dangled straight down in a shocking fashion from
a pair of broad and bony shoulders. All his limbs were huge and yet emaciated,
and I could not take my gaze from his knobby wrists, and long, gnarled hands.
But his eyes—those peering light-blue eyes—they were the most arrestive of
any of his peculiarities. It was not their colour alone, nor was it the ambush
of hair in which they lurked; but it was the expression which I read in them.
For the appearance and bearing of the man were masterful, and one expected a
certain corresponding arrogance in his eyes, but instead of that I read the
look which tells of a spirit cowed and crushed, the furtive, expectant look of
the dog whose master has taken the whip from the rack. I formed my own medical
diagnosis upon one glance at those critical and yet appealing eyes. I believed
that he was stricken with some mortal ailment, that he knew himself to be
exposed to sudden death, and that he lived in terror of it. Such was my
judgment—a false one, as the event showed; but I mention it that it may help
you to realise the look which I read in his eyes.
My uncle's welcome was,
as I have said, a courteous one, and in an hour or so I found myself seated
between him and his wife at a comfortable dinner, with curious pungent
delicacies upon the table, and a stealthy, quick-eyed Oriental waiter behind
his chair. The old couple had come round to that tragic imitation of the dawn
of life when husband and wife, having lost or scattered all those who were
their intimates, find themselves face to face and alone once more, their work
done, and the end nearing fast. Those who have reached that stage in sweetness
and love, who can change their winter into a gentle Indian summer, have come as
victors through the ordeal of life. Lady Holden was a small, alert woman with a
kindly eye, and her expression as she glanced at him was a certificate of
character to her husband. And yet, though I read a mutual love in their
glances, I read also mutual horror, and recognised in her face some reflection
of that stealthy fear which I had detected in his. Their talk was sometimes
merry and sometimes sad, but there was a forced note in their merriment and a
naturalness in their sadness which told me that a heavy heart beat upon either
side of me.
We were sitting over our
first glass of wine, and the servants had left the room, when the conversation
took a turn which produced a remarkable effect upon my host and hostess. I
cannot recall what it was which started the topic of the supernatural, but it
ended in my showing them that the abnormal in psychical experiences was a
subject to which I had, like many neurologists, devoted a great deal of
attention. I concluded by narrating my experiences when, as a member of the
Psychical Research Society, I had formed one of a committee of three who spent
the night in a haunted house. Our adventures were neither exciting nor
convincing, but, such as it was, the story appeared to interest my auditors in
a remarkable degree. They listened with an eager silence, and I caught a look
of intelligence between them which I could not understand. Lady Holden
immediately afterwards rose and left the room.
Sir Dominick pushed the
cigar-box over to me, and we smoked for some little time in silence. That huge
bony hand of his was twitching as he raised it with his cheroot to his lips,
and I felt that the man's nerves were vibrating like fiddle-strings. My
instincts told me that he was on the verge of some intimate confidence, and I
feared to speak lest I should interrupt it. At last he turned towards me with a
spasmodic gesture like a man who throws his last scruple to the winds.
"From the little
that I have seen of you it appears to me, Dr. Hardacre," said he,
"that you are the very man I have wanted to meet."
"I am delighted to
hear it, sir."
"Your head seems to
be cool and steady. You will acquit me of any desire to flatter you, for the
circumstances are too serious to permit of insincerities. You have some special
knowledge upon these subjects, and you evidently view them from that
philosophical standpoint which robs them of all vulgar terror. I presume that
the sight of an apparition would not seriously discompose you?"
"I think not,
sir."
"Would even interest
you, perhaps?"
"Most
intensely."
"As a psychical
observer, you would probably investigate it in as impersonal a fashion as an
astronomer investigates a wandering comet?"
"Precisely."
He gave a heavy sigh.
"Believe me, Dr.
Hardacre, there was a time when I could have spoken as you do now. My nerve was
a by-word in India. Even the Mutiny never shook it for an instant. And yet you
see what I am reduced to—the most timorous man, perhaps, in all this county of
Wiltshire. Do not speak too bravely upon this subject, or you may find yourself
subjected to as long-drawn a test as I am—a test which can only end in the
madhouse or the grave."
I waited patiently until
he should see fit to go farther in his confidence. His preamble had, I need not
say, filled me with interest and expectation.
"For some years,
Dr. Hardacre," he continued, "my life and that of my wife have been
made miserable by a cause which is so grotesque that it borders upon the
ludicrous. And yet familiarity has never made it more easy to bear—on the
contrary, as time passes my nerves become more worn and shattered by the
constant attrition. If you have no physical fears, Dr. Hardacre, I should very
much value your opinion upon this phenomenon which troubles us so."
"For what it is
worth my opinion is entirely at your service. May I ask the nature of the
phenomenon?"
"I think that your
experiences will have a higher evidential value if you are not told in advance
what you may expect to encounter. You are yourself aware of the quibbles of
unconscious cerebration and subjective impressions with which a scientific
sceptic may throw a doubt upon your statement. It would be as well to guard
against them in advance."
"What shall I do,
then?"
"I will tell you.
Would you mind following me this way?" He led me out of the dining-room
and down a long passage until we came to a terminal door. Inside there was a
large bare room fitted as a laboratory, with numerous scientific instruments
and bottles. A shelf ran along one side, upon which there stood a long line of
glass jars containing pathological and anatomical specimens.
"You see that I
still dabble in some of my old studies," said Sir Dominick. "These
jars are the remains of what was once a most excellent collection, but unfortunately
I lost the greater part of them when my house was burned down in Bombay in '92.
It was a most unfortunate affair for me—in more ways than one. I had examples
of many rare conditions, and my splenic collection was probably unique. These
are the survivors."
I glanced over them, and
saw that they really were of a very great value and rarity from a pathological
point of view: bloated organs, gaping cysts, distorted bones, odious
parasites—a singular exhibition of the products of India.
"There is, as you
see, a small settee here," said my host. "It was far from our
intention to offer a guest so meagre an accommodation, but since affairs have
taken this turn, it would be a great kindness upon your part if you would
consent to spend the night in this apartment. I beg that you will not hesitate
to let me know if the idea should be at all repugnant to you."
"On the
contrary," I said, "it is most acceptable."
"My own room is the
second on the left, so that if you should feel that you are in need of company
a call would always bring me to your side."
"I trust that I
shall not be compelled to disturb you."
"It is unlikely
that I shall be asleep. I do not sleep much. Do not hesitate to summon
me."
And so with this
agreement we joined Lady Holden in the drawing-room and talked of lighter
things.
It was no affectation
upon my part to say that the prospect of my night's adventure was an agreeable
one. I had no pretence to greater physical courage than my neighbours, but
familiarity with a subject robs it of those vague and undefined terrors which
are the most appalling to the imaginative mind. The human brain is capable
of only one strong emotion at a time, and if it be filled with curiosity or
scientific enthusiasm, there is no room for fear. It is true that I had my
uncle's assurance that he had himself originally taken this point of view, but
I reflected that the breakdown of his nervous system might be due to his forty
years in India as much as to any psychical experiences which had befallen him.
I at least was sound in nerve and brain, and it was with something of the
pleasurable thrill of anticipation with which the sportsman takes his position
beside the haunt of his game that I shut the laboratory door behind me, and
partially undressing, lay down upon the rug-covered settee.
It was not an ideal
atmosphere for a bedroom. The air was heavy with many chemical odours, that of
methylated spirit predominating. Nor were the decorations of my chamber very
sedative. The odious line of glass jars with their relics of disease and suffering
stretched in front of my very eyes. There was no blind to the window, and a
three-quarter moon streamed its white light into the room, tracing a silver
square with filigree lattices upon the opposite wall. When I had extinguished
my candle this one bright patch in the midst of the general gloom had certainly
an eerie and discomposing aspect. A rigid and absolute silence reigned
throughout the old house, so that the low swish of the branches in the garden
came softly and smoothly to my ears. It may have been the hypnotic lullaby of
this gentle susurrus, or it may have been the result of my tiring day, but
after many dozings and many efforts to regain my clearness of perception,
I fell at last into a deep and dreamless sleep.
I was awakened by some sound
in the room, and I instantly raised myself upon my elbow on the couch. Some
hours had passed, for the square patch upon the wall had slid downwards and
sideways until it lay obliquely at the end of my bed. The rest of the room was
in deep shadow. At first I could see nothing, presently, as my eyes became
accustomed to the faint light, I was aware, with a thrill which all my
scientific absorption could not entirely prevent, that something was moving
slowly along the line of the wall. A gentle, shuffling sound, as of soft
slippers, came to my ears, and I dimly discerned a human figure walking
stealthily from the direction of the door. As it emerged into the patch of
moonlight I saw very clearly what it was and how it was employed. It was a man,
short and squat, dressed in some sort of dark-grey gown, which hung straight
from his shoulders to his feet. The moon shone upon the side of his face, and I
saw that it was chocolate-brown in colour, with a ball of black hair like a
woman's at the back of his head. He walked slowly, and his eyes were cast
upwards towards the line of bottles which contained those gruesome remnants of
humanity. He seemed to examine each jar with attention, and then to pass on to
the next. When he had come to the end of the line, immediately opposite my bed,
he stopped, faced me, threw up his hands with a gesture of despair, and
vanished from my sight.
I have said that he
threw up his hands, but I should have said his arms, for as he assumed that
attitude of despair I observed a singular peculiarity about his appearance.
He had only one hand! As the sleeves drooped down from the upflung arms I saw
the left plainly, but the right ended in a knobby and unsightly stump. In every
other way his appearance was so natural, and I had both seen and heard him so
clearly, that I could easily have believed that he was an Indian servant of Sir
Dominick's who had come into my room in search of something. It was only his
sudden disappearance which suggested anything more sinister to me. As it was I
sprang from my couch, lit a candle, and examined the whole room carefully.
There were no signs of my visitor, and I was forced to conclude that there had
really been something outside the normal laws of Nature in his appearance. I
lay awake for the remainder of the night, but nothing else occurred to disturb
me.
I am an early riser, but
my uncle was an even earlier one, for I found him pacing up and down the lawn
at the side of the house. He ran towards me in his eagerness when he saw me
come out from the door.
"Well, well!"
he cried. "Did you see him?"
"An Indian with one
hand?"
"Precisely."
"Yes, I saw
him"—and I told him all that occurred. When I had finished, he led the way
into his study. "We have a little time before breakfast," said he.
"It will suffice to give you an explanation of this extraordinary
affair—so far as I can explain that which is essentially inexplicable. In the
first place, when I tell you that for four years I have never passed one single
night, either in Bombay, aboard ship, or here in England without my sleep being
broken by this fellow, you will understand why it is that I am a wreck of
my former self. His programme is always the same. He appears by my bedside,
shakes me roughly by the shoulder, passes from my room into the laboratory,
walks slowly along the line of my bottles, and then vanishes. For more than a
thousand times he has gone through the same routine."
"What does he
want?"
"He wants his
hand."
"His hand?"
"Yes, it came about
in this way. I was summoned to Peshawur for a consultation some ten years ago,
and while there I was asked to look at the hand of a native who was passing
through with an Afghan caravan. The fellow came from some mountain tribe living
away at the back of beyond somewhere on the other side of Kaffiristan. He
talked a bastard Pushtoo, and it was all I could do to understand him. He was
suffering from a soft sarcomatous swelling of one of the metacarpal joints, and
I made him realise that it was only by losing his hand that he could hope to
save his life. After much persuasion he consented to the operation, and he
asked me, when it was over, what fee I demanded. The poor fellow was almost a
beggar, so that the idea of a fee was absurd, but I answered in jest that my
fee should be his hand, and that I proposed to add it to my pathological
collection.
"To my surprise he
demurred very much to the suggestion, and he explained that according to his
religion it was an all-important matter that the body should be reunited after
death, and so make a perfect dwelling for the spirit. The belief is, of course,
an old one, and the mummies of the Egyptians arose from an analogous
superstition. I answered him that his hand was already off, and asked him
how he intended to preserve it. He replied that he would pickle it in salt and
carry it about with him. I suggested that it might be safer in my keeping than
his, and that I had better means than salt for preserving it. On realising that
I really intended to carefully keep it, his opposition vanished instantly. 'But
remember, sahib,' said he, 'I shall want it back when I am dead.' I laughed at
the remark, and so the matter ended. I returned to my practice, and he no doubt
in the course of time was able to continue his journey to Afghanistan.
"Well, as I told you
last night, I had a bad fire in my house at Bombay. Half of it was burned down,
and, among other things, my pathological collection was largely destroyed. What
you see are the poor remains of it. The hand of the hillman went with the rest,
but I gave the matter no particular thought at the time. That was six years
ago.
"Four years ago—two
years after the fire—I was awakened one night by a furious tugging at my
sleeve. I sat up under the impression that my favourite mastiff was trying to
arouse me. Instead of this, I saw my Indian patient of long ago, dressed in the
long grey gown which was the badge of his people. He was holding up his stump
and looking reproachfully at me. He then went over to my bottles, which at that
time I kept in my room, and he examined them carefully, after which he gave a
gesture of anger and vanished. I realised that he had just died, and that he
had come to claim my promise that I should keep his limb in safety for him.
"Well, there you
have it all, Dr. Hardacre. Every night at the same hour for four years
this performance has been repeated. It is a simple thing in itself, but it has
worn me out like water dropping on a stone. It has brought a vile insomnia with
it, for I cannot sleep now for the expectation of his coming. It has poisoned
my old age and that of my wife, who has been the sharer in this great trouble.
But there is the breakfast gong, and she will be waiting impatiently to know
how it fared with you last night. We are both much indebted to you for your
gallantry, for it takes something from the weight of our misfortune when we
share it, even for a single night, with a friend, and it reassures us as to our
sanity, which we are sometimes driven to question."
This was the curious
narrative which Sir Dominick confided to me—a story which to many would have
appeared to be a grotesque impossibility, but which, after my experience of the
night before, and my previous knowledge of such things, I was prepared to
accept as an absolute fact. I thought deeply over the matter, and brought the
whole range of my reading and experience to bear upon it. After breakfast, I
surprised my host and hostess by announcing that I was returning to London by
the next train.
"My dear
doctor," cried Sir Dominick in great distress, "you make me feel that
I have been guilty of a gross breach of hospitality in intruding this
unfortunate matter upon you. I should have borne my own burden."
"It is, indeed,
that matter which is taking me to London," I answered; "but you are
mistaken, I assure you, if you think that my experience of last night was an
unpleasant one to me. On the contrary, I am about to ask your permission
to return in the evening and spend one more night in your laboratory. I am very
eager to see this visitor once again."
My uncle was exceedingly
anxious to know what I was about to do, but my fears of raising false hopes
prevented me from telling him. I was back in my own consulting-room a little
after luncheon, and was confirming my memory of a passage in a recent book upon
occultism which had arrested my attention when I had read it.
"In the case of
earth-bound spirits," said my authority, "some one dominant idea
obsessing them at the hour of death is sufficient to hold them in this material
world. They are the amphibia of this life and of the next, capable of passing
from one to the other as the turtle passes from land to water. The causes which
may bind a soul so strongly to a life which its body has abandoned are any
violent emotion. Avarice, revenge, anxiety, love, and pity have all been known
to have this effect. As a rule it springs from some unfulfilled wish, and when
the wish has been fulfilled the material bond relaxes. There are many cases
upon record which show the singular persistence of these visitors, and also their
disappearance when their wishes have been fulfilled, or in some cases when a
reasonable compromise has been effected."
"A reasonable
compromise effected"—those were the words which I had brooded over all
the morning, and which I now verified in the original. No actual atonement
could be made here—but a reasonable compromise! I made my way as fast as a
train could take me to the Shadwell Seamen's Hospital, where my old friend Jack
Hewett was house-surgeon. With out explaining the situation I made him
understand what it was that I wanted.
"A brown man's
hand!" said he, in amazement. "What in the world do you want that
for?"
"Never mind. I'll
tell you some day. I know that your wards are full of Indians."
"I should think so.
But a hand——" He thought a little and then struck a bell.
"Travers,"
said he to a student-dresser, "what became of the hands of the Lascar
which we took off yesterday? I mean the fellow from the East India Dock who got
caught in the steam winch."
"They are in
the post-mortem room, sir."
"Just pack one of
them in antiseptics and give it to Dr. Hardacre."
And so I found myself
back at Rodenhurst before dinner with this curious outcome of my day in town. I
still said nothing to Sir Dominick, but I slept that night in the laboratory,
and I placed the Lascar's hand in one of the glass jars at the end of my couch.
So interested was I in
the result of my experiment that sleep was out of the question. I sat with a
shaded lamp beside me and waited patiently for my visitor. This time I saw him
clearly from the first. He appeared beside the door, nebulous for an instant,
and then hardening into as distinct an outline as any living man. The slippers
beneath his grey gown were red and heelless, which accounted for the low,
shuffling sound which he made as he walked. As on the previous night he passed
slowly along the line of bottles until he paused before that which contained
the hand. He reached up to it, his whole figure quivering with expectation,
took it down, examined it eagerly, and then, with a face which was
convulsed with disappointment, he hurled it down on the floor. There was a
crash which resounded through the house, and when I looked up the mutilated
Indian had disappeared. A moment later my door flew open and Sir Dominick rushed
in.
"You are not
hurt?" he cried.
"No—but deeply
disappointed."
He looked in
astonishment at the splinters of glass, and the brown hand lying upon the
floor.
"Good God!" he
cried. "What is this?"
I told him my idea and
its wretched sequel. He listened intently, but shook his head.
"It was well
thought of," said he, "but I fear that there is no such easy end to
my sufferings. But one thing I now insist upon. It is that you shall never
again upon any pretext occupy this room. My fears that something might have
happened to you—when I heard that crash—have been the most acute of all the
agonies which I have undergone. I will not expose myself to a repetition of
it."
He allowed me, however,
to spend the remainder of the night where I was, and I lay there worrying over
the problem and lamenting my own failure. With the first light of morning there
was the Lascar's hand still lying upon the floor to remind me of my fiasco. I
lay looking at it—and as I lay suddenly an idea flew like a bullet through my
head and brought me quivering with excitement out of my couch. I raised the
grim relic from where it had fallen. Yes, it was indeed so. The hand was
the left hand of the Lascar.
By the first train I was
on my way to town, and hurried at once to the Seamen's Hospital. I remembered
that both hands of the Lascar had been amputated, but I was terrified lest the
precious organ which I was in search of might have been already consumed in the
crematory. My suspense was soon ended. It had still been preserved in the post-mortem room.
And so I returned to Rodenhurst in the evening with my mission accomplished and
the material for a fresh experiment.
But Sir Dominick Holden
would not hear of my occupying the laboratory again. To all my entreaties he
turned a deaf ear. It offended his sense of hospitality, and he could no longer
permit it. I left the hand, therefore, as I had done its fellow the night
before, and I occupied a comfortable bedroom in another portion of the house,
some distance from the scene of my adventures.
But in spite of that my
sleep was not destined to be uninterrupted. In the dead of night my host burst
into my room, a lamp in his hand. His huge gaunt figure was enveloped in a
loose dressing-gown, and his whole appearance might certainly have seemed more
formidable to a weak-nerved man than that of the Indian of the night before.
But it was not his entrance so much as his expression which amazed me. He had
turned suddenly younger by twenty years at the least. His eyes were shining,
his features radiant, and he waved one hand in triumph over his head. I sat up
astounded, staring sleepily at this extraordinary visitor. But his words soon
drove the sleep from my eyes.
"We have done it!
We have succeeded!" he shouted. "My dear Hardacre, how can I ever in
this world repay you?"
"You don't mean to
say that it is all right?"
"Indeed I do. I was
sure that you would not mind being awakened to hear such blessed news."
"Mind! I should
think not indeed. But is it really certain?"
"I have no doubt
whatever upon the point. I owe you such a debt, my dear nephew, as I have never
owed a man before, and never expected to. What can I possibly do for you that
is commensurate? Providence must have sent you to my rescue. You have saved
both my reason and my life, for another six months of this must have seen me
either in a cell or a coffin. And my wife—it was wearing her out before my
eyes. Never could I have believed that any human being could have lifted this
burden off me." He seized my hand and wrung it in his bony grip.
"It was only an
experiment—a forlorn hope—but I am delighted from my heart that it has
succeeded. But how do you know that it is all right? Have you seen
something?"
He seated himself at the
foot of my bed.
"I have seen
enough," said he. "It satisfies me that I shall be troubled no more.
What has passed is easily told. You know that at a certain hour this creature
always comes to me. To-night he arrived at the usual time, and aroused me with
even more violence than is his custom. I can only surmise that his
disappointment of last night increased the bitterness of his anger against me.
He looked angrily at me, and then went on his usual round. But in a few minutes
I saw him, for the first time since this persecution began, return to my
chamber. He was smiling. I saw the gleam of his white teeth through the dim
light. He stood facing me at the end of my bed, and three times he made the low
Eastern salaam which is their solemn leave-taking. And the third time that he
bowed he raised his arms over his head, and I saw his two hands
outstretched in the air. So he vanished, and, as I believe, for ever."
000
So that is the curious
experience which won me the affection and the gratitude of my celebrated uncle,
the famous Indian surgeon. His anticipations were realised, and never again was
he disturbed by the visits of the restless hillman in search of his lost
member. Sir Dominick and Lady Holden spent a very happy old age, unclouded, so
far as I know, by any trouble, and they finally died during the great influenza
epidemic within a few weeks of each other. In his lifetime he always turned to
me for advice in everything which concerned that English life of which he knew
so little; and I aided him also in the purchase and development of his estates.
It was no great surprise to me, therefore, that I found myself eventually
promoted over the heads of five exasperated cousins, and changed in a single
day from a hard-working country doctor into the head of an important Wiltshire
family. I at least have reason to bless the memory of the man with the brown
hand, and the day when I was fortunate enough to relieve Rodenhurst of his
unwelcome presence.
II.THE USHER OF LEA HOUSE SCHOOL
Mr. Lumsden, the senior
partner of Lumsden and Westmacott, the well-known scholastic and clerical
agents, was a small, dapper man, with a sharp, abrupt manner, a critical eye,
and an incisive way of speaking.
"Your name,
sir?" said he, sitting pen in hand with his long, red-lined folio in front
of him.
"Harold Weld."
"Oxford or
Cambridge?"
"Cambridge."
"Honours?"
"No, sir."
"Athlete?"
"Nothing
remarkable, I am afraid."
"Not a Blue?"
"Oh no."
Mr. Lumsden shook his
head despondently and shrugged his shoulders in a way which sent my hopes down
to zero. "There is a very keen competition for masterships, Mr.
Weld," said he. "The vacancies are few and the applicants
innumerable. A first-class athlete, oar, or cricketer, or a man who has passed
very high in his examinations, can usually find a vacancy—I might say always in
the case of the cricketer. But the average man—if you will excuse the
description, Mr. Weld—has a very great difficulty, almost an insurmountable
difficulty. We have already more than a hundred such names upon our lists, and if
you think it worth while our adding yours, I dare say that in the course of
some years we may possibly be able to find you some opening which——"
He paused on account of
a knock at the door. It was a clerk with a note. Mr. Lumsden broke the seal and
read it.
"Why, Mr.
Weld," said he, "this is really rather an interesting coincidence. I
understand you to say that Latin and English are your subjects, and that you
would prefer for a time to accept a place in an elementary establishment, where
you would have time for private study?"
"Quite so."
"This note contains
a request from an old client of ours, Dr. Phelps McCarthy, of Willow Lea House
Academy, West Hampstead, that I should at once send him a young man who should
be qualified to teach Latin and English to a small class of boys under fourteen
years of age. His vacancy appears to be the very one which you are looking for.
The terms are not munificent—sixty pounds, board, lodging, and washing—but the
work is not onerous, and you would have the evenings to yourself."
"That would
do," I cried, with all the eagerness of the man who sees work at last
after weary months of seeking.
"I don't know that
it is quite fair to these gentlemen whose names have been so long upon our
list," said Mr. Lumsden, glancing down at his open ledger. "But the
coincidence is so striking that I feel we must really give you the refusal of
it."
"Then I accept it,
sir, and I am much obliged to you."
"There is one small
provision in Dr. McCarthy's letter. He stipulates that the applicant must be a
man with an imperturbable good temper."
"I am the very
man," said I, with conviction.
"Well," said
Mr. Lumsden, with some hesitation, "I hope that your temper is really as
good as you say, for I rather fancy that you may need it."
"I presume that
every elementary school-master does."
"Yes, sir, but it
is only fair to you to warn you that there may be some especially trying
circumstances in this particular situation. Dr. Phelps McCarthy does not make
such a condition without some very good and pressing reason."
There was a certain
solemnity in his speech which struck a chill in the delight with which I had
welcomed this providential vacancy.
"May I ask the
nature of these circumstances?" I asked.
"We endeavour to
hold the balance equally between our clients, and to be perfectly frank with all
of them. If I knew of objections to you I should certainly communicate them to
Dr. McCarthy, and so I have no hesitation in doing as much for you. I
find," he continued, glancing over the pages of his ledger, "that
within the last twelve months we have supplied no fewer than seven Latin
masters to Willow Lea House Academy, four of them having left so abruptly as to
forfeit their month's salary, and none of them having stayed more than eight
weeks."
"And the other
masters? Have they stayed?"
"There is only one
other residential master, and he appears to be unchanged. You can understand,
Mr. Weld," continued the agent, closing both the ledger and the
interview, "that such rapid changes are not desirable from a master's
point of view, whatever may be said for them by an agent working on commission.
I have no idea why these gentlemen have resigned their situations so early. I
can only give you the facts, and advise you to see Dr. McCarthy at once and to
form your own conclusions."
Great is the power of the
man who has nothing to lose, and it was therefore with perfect serenity, but
with a good deal of curiosity, that I rang early that afternoon the heavy
wrought-iron bell of the Willow Lea House Academy. The building was a massive
pile, square and ugly, standing in its own extensive grounds, with a broad
carriage-sweep curving up to it from the road. It stood high, and commanded a
view on the one side of the grey roofs and bristling spires of Northern London,
and on the other of the well-wooded and beautiful country which fringes the
great city. The door was opened by a boy in buttons, and I was shown into a
well-appointed study, where the principal of the academy presently joined me.
The warnings and
insinuations of the agent had prepared me to meet a choleric and overbearing
person—one whose manner was an insupportable provocation to those who worked
under him. Anything further from the reality cannot be imagined. He was a
frail, gentle creature, clean-shaven and round-shouldered, with a bearing which
was so courteous that it became almost deprecating. His bushy hair was thickly
shot with grey, and his age I should imagine to verge upon sixty. His voice was
low and suave, and he walked with a certain mincing delicacy of manner.
His whole appearance was that of a kindly scholar, who was more at home among
his books than in the practical affairs of the world.
"I am sure that we
shall be very happy to have your assistance, Mr. Weld," said he, after a
few professional questions. "Mr. Percival Manners left me yesterday, and I
should be glad if you could take over his duties to-morrow."
"May I ask if that
is Mr. Percival Manners of Selwyn?" I asked.
"Precisely. Did you
know him?"
"Yes; he is a
friend of mine."
"An excellent
teacher, but a little hasty in his disposition. It was his only fault. Now, in
your case, Mr. Weld, is your own temper under good control? Supposing for
argument's sake that I were to so far forget myself as to be rude to you or to
speak roughly or to jar your feelings in any way, could you rely upon yourself
to control your emotions?"
I smiled at the idea of
this courteous, little, mincing creature ruffling my nerves.
"I think that I
could answer for it, sir," said I.
"Quarrels are very
painful to me," said he. "I wish every one to live in harmony under
my roof. I will not deny Mr. Percival Manners had provocation, but I wish to
find a man who can raise himself above provocation, and sacrifice his own
feelings for the sake of peace and concord."
"I will do my best,
sir."
"You cannot say more,
Mr. Weld. In that case I shall expect you to-night, if you can get your things
ready so soon."
I not only succeeded in
getting my things ready, but I found time to call at the Benedict Club in
Piccadilly, where I knew that I should find Manners if he were still in town.
There he was sure enough in the smoking-room, and I questioned him, over a
cigarette, as to his reasons for throwing up his recent situation.
"You don't tell me
that you are going to Dr. Phelps McCarthy's Academy?" he cried, staring at
me in surprise. "My dear chap, it's no use. You can't possibly remain
there."
"But I saw him, and
he seemed the most courtly, inoffensive fellow. I never met a man with more
gentle manners."
"He! oh, he's all
right. There's no vice in him. Have you seen Theophilus St. James?"
"I have never heard
the name. Who is he?"
"Your colleague.
The other master."
"No, I have not
seen him."
"He's the
terror. If you can stand him, you have either the spirit of a perfect Christian
or else you have no spirit at all. A more perfect bounder never bounded."
"But why does
McCarthy stand it?"
My friend looked at me
significantly through his cigarette smoke, and shrugged his shoulders.
"You will form your
own conclusions about that. Mine were formed very soon, and I never found
occasion to alter them."
"It would help me
very much if you would tell me them."
"When you see a man
in his own house allowing his business to be ruined, his comfort destroyed, and
his authority defied by another man in a subordinate position, and calmly
submitting to it without so much as a word of protest, what conclusion do you
come to?"
"That the one has a
hold over the other."
Percival Manners nodded
his head.
"There you are!
You've hit it first barrel. It seems to me that there's no other explanation
which will cover the facts. At some period in his life the little Doctor has
gone astray. Humanum est errare. I have even done it myself.
But this was something serious, and the other man got a hold of it and has
never let go. That's the truth. Blackmail is at the bottom of it. But he had no
hold over me, and there was no reason why I should stand his
insolence, so I came away—and I very much expect to see you do the same."
For some time he talked
over the matter, but he always came to the same conclusion—that I should not
retain my new situation very long.
It was with no very
pleasant feelings after this preparation that I found myself face to face with
the very man of whom I had received so evil an account. Dr. McCarthy introduced
us to each other in his study on the evening of that same day immediately after
my arrival at the school.
"This is your new
colleague, Mr. St. James," said he, in his genial, courteous fashion.
"I trust that you will mutually agree, and that I shall find nothing but good
feeling and sympathy beneath this roof."
I shared the good
Doctor's hope, but my expectations of it were not increased by the appearance
of my confrère. He was a young, bull-necked fellow about thirty
years of age, dark-eyed and black-haired, with an exceedingly
vigorous physique. I have never seen a more strongly built man, though he
tended to run to fat in a way which showed that he was in the worst of
training. His face was coarse, swollen, and brutal, with a pair of small black
eyes deeply sunken in his head. His heavy jowl, his projecting ears, and his
thick bandy legs all went to make up a personality which was as formidable as
it was repellent.
"I hear you've
never been out before," said he, in a rude, brusque fashion. "Well,
it's a poor life: hard work and starvation pay, as you'll find out for
yourself."
"But it has some
compensations," said the principal. "Surely you will allow that, Mr.
St. James?"
"Has it? I never
could find them. What do you call compensations?"
"Even to be in the
continual presence of youth is a privilege. It has the effect of keeping youth
in one's own soul, for one reflects something of their high spirits and their
keen enjoyment of life."
"Little
beasts!" cried my colleague.
"Come, come, Mr.
St. James, you are too hard upon them."
"I hate the sight
of them! If I could put them and their blessed copybooks and lexicons and
slates into one bonfire I'd do it to-night."
"This is Mr. St.
James's way of talking," said the principal, smiling nervously as he
glanced at me. "You must not take him too seriously. Now, Mr. Weld, you
know where your room is, and no doubt you have your own little arrangements to
make. The sooner you make them the sooner you will feel yourself at home."
It seemed to me that he
was only too anxious to remove me at once from the influence of this
extraordinary colleague, and I was glad to go, for the conversation had become
embarrassing.
And so began an epoch
which always seems to me as I look back to it to be the most singular in all my
experience. The school was in many ways an excellent one. Dr. Phelps McCarthy
was an ideal principal. His methods were modern and rational. The management
was all that could be desired. And yet in the middle of this well-ordered
machine there intruded the incongruous and impossible Mr. St. James, throwing
everything into confusion. His duties were to teach English and mathematics,
and how he acquitted himself of them I do not know, as our classes were held in
separate rooms. I can answer for it, however, that the boys feared him and
loathed him, and I know that they had good reason to do so, for frequently my
own teaching was interrupted by his bellowing of anger, and even by the sound
of his blows. Dr. McCarthy spent most of his time in his class, but it was, I suspect,
to watch over the master rather than the boys, and to try to moderate his
ferocious temper when it threatened to become dangerous.
It was in his bearing to
the head master, however, that my colleague's conduct was most outrageous. The
first conversation which I have recorded proved to be typical of their
intercourse. He domineered over him openly and brutally. I have heard him
contradict him roughly before the whole school. At no time would he show him
any mark of respect, and my temper often rose within me when I saw the quiet
acquiescence of the old Doctor, and his patient tolerance of this
monstrous treatment. And yet the sight of it surrounded the principal also with
a certain vague horror in my mind, for supposing my friend's theory to be correct—and
I could devise no better one—how black must have been the story which could be
held over his head by this man and, by fear of its publicity, force him to
undergo such humiliations. This quiet, gentle Doctor might be a profound
hypocrite, a criminal, a forger possibly, or a poisoner. Only such a secret as
this could account for the complete power which the younger man held over him.
Why else should he admit so hateful a presence into his house and so harmful an
influence into his school? Why should he submit to degradations which could not
be witnessed, far less endured, without indignation?
And yet, if it were so,
I was forced to confess that my principal carried it off with extraordinary
duplicity. Never by word or sign did he show that the young man's presence was
distasteful to him. I have seen him look pained, it is true, after some
peculiarly outrageous exhibition, but he gave me the impression that it was
always on account of the scholars or of me, never on account of himself. He
spoke to and of St. James in an indulgent fashion, smiling gently at what made
my blood boil within me. In his way of looking at him and addressing him, one
could see no trace of resentment, but rather a sort of timid and deprecating
good will. His company he certainly courted, and they spent many hours together
in the study and the garden.
As to my own relations
with Theophilus St. James, I made up my mind from the beginning that I should
keep my temper with him, and to that resolution I steadfastly adhered. If
Dr. McCarthy chose to permit this disrespect, and to condone these outrages, it
was his affair and not mine. It was evident that his one wish was that there
should be peace between us, and I felt that I could help him best by respecting
this desire. My easiest way to do so was to avoid my colleague, and this I did
to the best of my ability. When we were thrown together I was quiet, polite,
and reserved. He, on his part, showed me no ill-will, but met me rather with a
coarse joviality, and a rough familiarity which he meant to be ingratiating. He
was insistent in his attempts to get me into his room at night, for the purpose
of playing euchre and of drinking.
"Old McCarthy
doesn't mind," said he. "Don't you be afraid of him. We'll do what we
like, and I'll answer for it that he won't object." Once only I went, and
when I left, after a dull and gross evening, my host was stretched dead drunk
upon the sofa. After that I gave the excuse of a course of study, and spent my
spare hours alone in my own room.
One point upon which I
was anxious to gain information was as to how long these proceedings had been
going on. When did St. James assert his hold over Dr. McCarthy? From neither of
them could I learn how long my colleague had been in his present situation. One
or two leading questions upon my part were eluded or ignored in a manner so
marked that it was easy to see that they were both of them as eager to conceal
the point as I was to know it. But at last one evening I had the chance of a
chat with Mrs. Carter, the matron—for the Doctor was a widower—and from her I
got the information which I wanted. It needed no questioning to get at her
knowledge, for she was so full of indignation that she shook with passion as
she spoke of it, and raised her hands into the air in the earnestness of her
denunciation, as she described the grievances which she had against my
colleague.
"It was three years
ago, Mr. Weld, that he first darkened this doorstep," she cried.
"Three bitter years they have been to me. The school had fifty boys then.
Now it has twenty-two. That's what he has done for us in three years. In
another three there won't be one. And the Doctor, that angel of patience, you
see how he treats him, though he is not fit to lace his boots for him. If it
wasn't for the Doctor, you may be sure that I wouldn't stay an hour under the
same roof with such a man, and so I told him to his own face, Mr. Weld. If the
Doctor would only pack him about his business—but I know that I am saying more
than I should!" She stopped herself with an effort, and spoke no more upon
the subject. She had remembered that I was almost a stranger in the school, and
she feared that she had been indiscreet.
There were one or two
very singular points about my colleague. The chief one was that he rarely took
any exercise. There was a playing-field within the college grounds, and that
was his farthest point. If the boys went out, it was I or Dr. McCarthy who
accompanied them. St. James gave as a reason for this that he had injured his
knee some years before, and that walking was painful to him. For my own part I
put it down to pure laziness upon his part, for he was of an obese, heavy
temperament. Twice, however, I saw him from my window stealing out of the
grounds late at night, and the second time I watched him return in the
grey of the morning and slink in through an open window. These furtive
excursions were never alluded to, but they exposed the hollowness of his story
about his knee, and they increased the dislike and distrust which I had of the
man. His nature seemed to be vicious to the core.
Another point, small but
suggestive, was that he hardly ever during the months that I was at Willow Lea
House received any letters, and on those few occasions they were obviously
tradesmen's bills. I am an early riser, and used every morning to pick my own
correspondence out of the bundle upon the hall table. I could judge therefore
how few were ever there for Mr. Theophilus St. James. There seemed to me to be
something peculiarly ominous in this. What sort of a man could he be who during
thirty years of his life had never made a single friend, high or low, who cared
to continue to keep in touch with him? And yet the sinister fact remained that
the head master not only tolerated, but was even intimate with him. More than
once on entering a room I had found them talking confidentially together, and
they would walk arm in arm in deep conversation up and down the garden paths.
So curious did I become to know what the tie was which bound them, that I found
it gradually push out my other interests and become the main purpose of my
life. In school and out of school, at meals and at play, I was perpetually
engaged in watching Dr. Phelps McCarthy and Mr. Theophilus St. James, and in
endeavouring to solve the mystery which surrounded them.
But, unfortunately, my
curiosity was a little too open. I had not the art to conceal the suspicions
which I felt about the relations which existed between these two men and
the nature of the hold which the one appeared to have over the other. It may
have been my manner of watching them, it may have been some indiscreet
question, but it is certain that I showed too clearly what I felt. One night I
was conscious that the eyes of Theophilus St. James were fixed upon me in a surly
and menacing stare. I had a foreboding of evil, and I was not surprised when
Dr. McCarthy called me next morning into his study.
"I am very sorry,
Mr. Weld," said he, "but I am afraid that I shall be compelled to
dispense with your services."
"Perhaps you would
give me some reason for dismissing me," I answered, for I was conscious of
having done my duties to the best of my power, and knew well that only one
reason could be given.
"I have no fault to
find with you," said he, and the colour came to his cheeks.
"You send me away
at the suggestion of my colleague."
His eyes turned away
from mine.
"We will not
discuss the question, Mr. Weld. It is impossible for me to discuss it. In
justice to you, I will give you the strongest recommendation for your next situation.
I can say no more. I hope that you will continue your duties here until you
have found a place elsewhere."
My whole soul rose
against the injustice of it, and yet I had no appeal and no redress. I could
only bow and leave the room, with a bitter sense of ill-usage at my heart.
My first instinct was to
pack my boxes and leave the house. But the head master had given me
permission to remain until I had found another situation. I was sure that St.
James desired me to go, and that was a strong reason why I should stay. If my
presence annoyed him, I should give him as much of it as I could. I had begun
to hate him and to long to have my revenge upon him. If he had a hold over our
principal, might not I in turn obtain one over him? It was a sign of weakness
that he should be so afraid of my curiosity. He would not resent it so much if
he had not something to fear from it. I entered my name once more upon the
books of the agents, but meanwhile I continued to fulfil my duties at Willow
Lea House, and so it came about that I was present at the dénouement of
this singular situation.
During that week—for it
was only a week before the crisis came—I was in the habit of going down each
evening, after the work of the day was done, to inquire about my new arrangements.
One night, it was a cold and windy evening in March, I had just stepped out
from the hall door when a strange sight met my eyes. A man was crouching before
one of the windows of the house. His knees were bent and his eyes were fixed
upon the small line of light between the curtain and the sash. The window threw
a square of brightness in front of it, and in the middle of this the dark
shadow of this ominous visitor showed clear and hard. It was but for an instant
that I saw him, for he glanced up and was off in a moment through the
shrubbery. I could hear the patter of his feet as he ran down the road, until
it died away in the distance.
It was evidently my duty
to turn back and to tell Dr. McCarthy what I had seen. I found him in his study.
I had expected him to be disturbed at such an incident, but I was not prepared
for the state of panic into which he fell. He leaned back in his chair, white
and gasping, like one who has received a mortal blow.
"Which window, Mr.
Weld?" he asked, wiping his forehead. "Which window was it?"
"The next to the
dining-room—Mr. St. James's window."
"Dear me! Dear me!
This is, indeed, unfortunate! A man looking through Mr. St. James's
window!" He wrung his hands like a man who is at his wits' end what to do.
"I shall be passing
the police-station, sir. Would you wish me to mention the matter?"
"No, no," he
cried, suddenly, mastering his extreme agitation; "I have no doubt that it
was some poor tramp who intended to beg. I attach no importance to the
incident—none at all. Don't let me detain you, Mr. Weld, if you wish to go
out."
I left him sitting in
his study with reassuring words upon his lips, but with horror upon his face.
My heart was heavy for my little employer as I started off once more for town.
As I looked back from the gate at the square of light which marked the window
of my colleague, I suddenly saw the black outline of Dr. McCarthy's figure
passing against the lamp. He had hastened from his study then to tell St. James
what he had heard. What was the meaning of it all, this atmosphere of mystery,
this inexplicable terror, these confidences between two such dissimilar men? I
thought and thought as I walked, but do what I would I could not hit upon any
adequate conclusion. I little knew how near I was to the solution of the
problem.
It was very late—nearly
twelve o'clock—when I returned, and the lights were all out save one in the
Doctor's study. The black, gloomy house loomed before me as I walked up the
drive, its sombre bulk broken only by the one glimmering point of brightness. I
let myself in with my latch-key, and was about to enter my own room when my
attention was arrested by a short, sharp cry like that of a man in pain. I
stood and listened, my hand upon the handle of my door.
All was silent in the
house save for a distant murmur of voices which came, I knew, from the Doctor's
room. I stole quietly down the corridor in that direction. The sound resolved
itself now into two voices, the rough bullying tones of St. James and the lower
tone of the Doctor, the one apparently insisting and the other arguing and
pleading. Four thin lines of light in the blackness showed me the door of the
Doctor's room, and step by step I drew nearer to it in the darkness. St.
James's voice within rose louder and louder, and his words came plainly to my
ear.
"I'll have every
pound of it. If you won't give it me I'll take it. Do you hear?"
Dr. McCarthy's reply was
inaudible, but the angry voice broke in again.
"Leave you
destitute! I leave you this little goldmine of a school, and that's enough for
one old man, is it not? How am I to set up in Australia without money? Answer
me that!"
Again the Doctor said
something in a soothing voice, but his answer only roused his companion to a
higher pitch of fury.
"Done for me! What
have you ever done for me except what you couldn't help doing? It was for your good
name, not for my safety, that you cared. But enough cackle! I must get on my
way before morning. Will you open your safe or will you not?"
"Oh, James, how can
you use me so?" cried a wailing voice, and then there came a sudden little
scream of pain. At the sound of that helpless appeal from brutal violence I
lost for once that temper upon which I had prided myself. Every bit of manhood
in me cried out against any further neutrality. With my walking cane in my hand
I rushed into the study. As I did so I was conscious that the hall-door bell
was violently ringing.
"You villain!"
I cried, "let him go!"
The two men were
standing in front of a small safe, which stood against one wall of the Doctor's
room. St. James held the old man by the wrist, and he had twisted his arm round
in order to force him to produce the key. My little head master, white but
resolute, was struggling furiously in the grip of the burly athlete. The bully
glared over his shoulder at me with a mixture of fury and terror upon his
brutal features. Then, realising that I was alone, he dropped his victim and
made for me with a horrible curse.
"You infernal
spy!" he cried. "I'll do for you anyhow before I leave."
I am not a very strong
man, and I realised that I was helpless if once at close quarters. Twice I cut
at him with my stick, but he rushed in at me with a murderous growl, and seized
me by the throat with both his muscular hands. I fell backwards and he on the
top of me, with a grip which was squeezing the life from me. I was conscious of
his malignant yellow-tinged eyes within a few inches of my own, and then with
a beating of pulses in my head and a singing in my ears, my senses slipped away
from me. But even in that supreme moment I was aware that the door-bell was
still violently ringing.
When I came to myself, I
was lying upon the sofa in Dr. McCarthy's study, and the Doctor himself was
seated beside me. He appeared to be watching me intently and anxiously, for as
I opened my eyes and looked about me he gave a great cry of relief. "Thank
God!" he cried. "Thank God!"
"Where is he?"
I asked, looking round the room. As I did so, I became aware that the furniture
was scattered in every direction, and that there were traces of an even more
violent struggle than that in which I had been engaged.
The Doctor sank his face
between his hands.
"They have
him," he groaned. "After these years of trial they have him again.
But how thankful I am that he has not for a second time stained his hands in
blood."
As the Doctor spoke I
became aware that a man in the braided jacket of an inspector of police was
standing in the doorway.
"Yes, sir," he
remarked, "you have had a pretty narrow escape. If we had not got in when
we did, you would not be here to tell the tale. I don't know that I ever saw
any one much nearer to the undertaker."
I sat up with my hands
to my throbbing head.
"Dr.
McCarthy," said I, "this is all a mystery to me. I should be glad if
you could explain to me who this man is, and why you have tolerated him so long
in your house."
"I owe you an
explanation, Mr. Weld—and the more so since you have, in so chivalrous a
fashion, almost sacrificed your life in my defence. There is no reason now for
secrecy. In a word, Mr. Weld, this unhappy man's real name is James McCarthy,
and he is my only son."
"Your son?"
"Alas, yes. What
sin have I ever committed that I should have such a punishment? He has made my
whole life a misery from the first years of his boyhood. Violent, headstrong,
selfish, unprincipled, he has always been the same. At eighteen he was a
criminal. At twenty, in a paroxysm of passion, he took the life of a boon
companion and was tried for murder. He only just escaped the gallows, and he
was condemned to penal servitude. Three years ago he succeeded in escaping, and
managed, in face of a thousand obstacles, to reach my house in London. My
wife's heart had been broken by his condemnation, and as he had succeeded in
getting a suit of ordinary clothes, there was no one here to recognise him. For
months he lay concealed in the attics until the first search of the police
should be over. Then I gave him employment here, as you have seen, though by
his rough and overbearing manners he made my own life miserable, and that of
his fellow-masters unbearable. You have been with us for four months, Mr. Weld,
but no other master endured him so long. I apologise now for all you have had
to submit to, but I ask you what else could I do? For his dead mother's sake I
could not let harm come to him as long as it was in my power to fend it off.
Only under my roof could he find a refuge—the only spot in all the world—and how
could I keep him here without it exciting remark unless I gave him some occupation?
I made him English master therefore, and in that capacity I have protected him
here for three years. You have no doubt observed that he never during the
daytime went beyond the college grounds. You now understand the reason. But
when to-night you came to me with your report of a man who was looking through
his window, I understood that his retreat was at last discovered. I besought
him to fly at once, but he had been drinking, the unhappy fellow, and my words
fell upon deaf ears. When at last he made up his mind to go he wished to take
from me in his flight every shilling which I possessed. It was your entrance
which saved me from him, while the police in turn arrived only just in time to
rescue you. I have made myself amenable to the law by harbouring an escaped
prisoner, and remain here in the custody of the inspector, but a prison has no
terrors for me after what I have endured in this house during the last three
years."
"It seems to me,
Doctor," said the inspector, "that, if you have broken the law, you
have had quite enough punishment already."
"God knows I
have!" cried Dr. McCarthy, and sank his haggard face upon his hands.
I told my story when I
was taken, and no one would listen to me. Then I told it again at the trial—the
whole thing absolutely as it happened, without so much as a word added. I set
it all out truly, so help me God, all that Lady Mannering said and did, and
then all that I had said and done, just as it occurred. And what did I get for
it? "The prisoner put forward a rambling and inconsequential statement,
incredible in its details, and unsupported by any shred of corroborative
evidence." That was what one of the London papers said, and others let it
pass as if I had made no defence at all. And yet, with my own eyes I saw Lord
Mannering murdered, and I am as guiltless of it as any man on the jury that
tried me.
Now, sir, you are there
to receive the petitions of prisoners. It all lies with you. All I ask is that
you read it—just read it—and then that you make an inquiry or two about the
private character of this "lady" Mannering, if she still keeps the
name that she had three years ago, when to my sorrow and ruin I came to meet
her. You could use a private inquiry agent or a good lawyer, and you would soon
learn enough to show you that my story is the true one. Think of the glory it
would be to you to have all the papers saying that there would have been a
shocking miscarriage of justice if it had not been for your perseverance and
intelligence! That must be your reward, since I am a poor man and can
offer you nothing. But if you don't do it, may you never lie easy in your bed
again! May no night pass that you are not haunted by the thought of the man who
rots in gaol because you have not done the duty which you are paid to do! But
you will do it, sir, I know. Just make one or two inquiries, and you will soon
find which way the wind blows. Remember, also, that the only person who
profited by the crime was herself, since it changed her from an unhappy wife to
a rich young widow. There's the end of the string in your hand, and you only
have to follow it up and see where it leads to.
Mind you, sir, I make no
complaint as far as the burglary goes. I don't whine about what I have
deserved, and so far I have had no more than I have deserved. Burglary it was,
right enough, and my three years have gone to pay for it. It was shown at the
trial that I had had a hand in the Merton Cross business, and did a year for
that, so my story had the less attention on that account. A man with a previous
conviction never gets a really fair trial. I own to the burglary, but when it
comes to the murder which brought me a lifer—any judge but Sir James might have
given me the gallows—then I tell you that I had nothing to do with it, and that
I am an innocent man. And now I'll take that night, the 13th of September,
1894, and I'll give you just exactly what occurred, and may God's hand strike
me down if I go one inch over the truth.
I had been at Bristol in
the summer looking for work, and then I had a notion that I might get something
at Portsmouth, for I was trained as a skilled mechanic, so I came
tramping my way across the south of England, and doing odd jobs as I went. I
was trying all I knew to keep off the cross, for I had done a year in Exeter
Gaol, and I had had enough of visiting Queen Victoria. But it's cruel hard to
get work when once the black mark is against your name, and it was all I could
do to keep soul and body together. At last, after ten days of wood-cutting and
stone-breaking on starvation pay, I found myself near Salisbury with a couple
of shillings in my pocket, and my boots and my patience clean wore out. There's
an alehouse called "The Willing Mind," which stands on the road
between Blandford and Salisbury, and it was there that night I engaged a bed. I
was sitting alone in the taproom just about closing time, when the
inn-keeper—Allen his name was—came beside me and began yarning about the
neighbours. He was a man that liked to talk and to have some one to listen to
his talk, so I sat there smoking and drinking a mug of ale which he had stood
me; and I took no great interest in what he said until he began to talk (as the
devil would have it) about the riches of Mannering Hall.
"Meaning the large
house on the right before I came to the village?" said I. "The one
that stands in its own park?"
"Exactly,"
said he—and I am giving all our talk so that you may know that I am telling you
the truth and hiding nothing. "The long white house with the
pillars," said he. "At the side of the Blandford Road."
Now I had looked at it
as I passed, and it had crossed my mind, as such thoughts will, that it was a very
easy house to get into with that great row of grand windows and glass doors. I
had put the thought away from me, and now here was this landlord bringing it
back with his talk about the riches within. I said nothing, but I listened, and
as luck would have it, he would always come back to this one subject.
"He was a miser
young, so you can think what he is now in his age," said he. "Well,
he's had some good out of his money."
"What good can he
have had if he does not spend it?" said I.
"Well, it bought
him the prettiest wife in England, and that was some good that he got out of
it. She thought she would have the spending of it, but she knows the difference
now."
"Who was she
then?" I asked, just for the sake of something to say.
"She was nobody at
all until the old Lord made her his Lady," said he. "She came from up
London way, and some said that she had been on the stage there, but nobody
knew. The old Lord was away for a year, and when he came home he brought a
young wife back with him, and there she has been ever since. Stephens, the
butler, did tell me once that she was the light of the house when fust she
came, but what with her husband's mean and aggravatin' way, and what with her
loneliness—for he hates to see a visitor within his doors; and what with his
bitter words—for he has a tongue like a hornet's sting, her life all went out
of her, and she became a white, silent creature, moping about the country
lanes. Some say that she loved another man, and that it was just the riches of
the old Lord which tempted her to be false to her lover, and that now she
is eating her heart out because she has lost the one without being any nearer
to the other, for she might be the poorest woman in the parish for all the
money that she has the handling of."
Well, sir, you can
imagine that it did not interest me very much to hear about the quarrels
between a Lord and a Lady. What did it matter to me if she hated the sound of
his voice, or if he put every indignity upon her in the hope of breaking her
spirit, and spoke to her as he would never have dared to speak to one of his
servants? The landlord told me of these things, and of many more like them, but
they passed out of my mind, for they were no concern of mine. But what I did
want to hear was the form in which Lord Mannering kept his riches. Title-deeds
and stock certificates are but paper, and more danger than profit to the man
who takes them. But metal and stones are worth a risk. And then, as if he were
answering my very thoughts, the landlord told me of Lord Mannering's great
collection of gold medals, that it was the most valuable in the world, and that
it was reckoned that if they were put into a sack the strongest man in the
parish would not be able to raise them. Then his wife called him, and he and I
went to our beds.
I am not arguing to make
out a case for myself, but I beg you, sir, to bear all the facts in your mind,
and to ask yourself whether a man could be more sorely tempted than I was. I
make bold to say that there are few who could have held out against it. There I
lay on my bed that night, a desperate man without hope or work, and with my
last shilling in my pocket. I had tried to be honest, and honest folk had
turned their backs upon me. They taunted me for theft; and yet they pushed me
towards it. I was caught in the stream and could not get out. And then it was
such a chance: the great house all lined with windows, the golden medals which
could so easily be melted down. It was like putting a loaf before a starving
man and expecting him not to eat it. I fought against it for a time, but it was
no use. At last I sat up on the side of my bed, and I swore that that night I
should either be a rich man and able to give up crime for ever, or that the
irons should be on my wrists once more. Then I slipped on my clothes, and,
having put a shilling on the table—for the landlord had treated me well, and I
did not wish to cheat him—I passed out through the window into the garden of
the inn.
There was a high wall
round this garden, and I had a job to get over it, but once on the other side
it was all plain sailing. I did not meet a soul upon the road, and the iron gate
of the avenue was open. No one was moving at the lodge. The moon was shining,
and I could see the great house glimmering white through an archway of trees. I
walked up it for a quarter of a mile or so, until I was at the edge of the
drive, where it ended in a broad, gravelled space before the main door. There I
stood in the shadow and looked at the long building, with a full moon shining
in every window and silvering the high stone front. I crouched there for some
time, and I wondered where I should find the easiest entrance. The corner
window of the side seemed to be the one which was least overlooked, and a
screen of ivy hung heavily over it. My best chance was evidently there. I
worked my way under the trees to the back of the house, and then crept along in
the black shadow of the building. A dog barked and rattled his chain, but I
stood waiting until he was quiet, and then I stole on once more until I came to
the window which I had chosen.
It is astonishing how
careless they are in the country, in places far removed from large towns, where
the thought of burglars never enters their heads. I call it setting temptation
in a poor man's way when he puts his hand, meaning no harm, upon a door, and
finds it swing open before him. In this case it was not so bad as that, but the
window was merely fastened with the ordinary catch, which I opened with a push
from the blade of my knife. I pulled up the window as quickly as possible, then
I thrust the knife through the slit in the shutter and prized it open. They
were folding shutters, and I shoved them before me and walked into the room.
"Good evening, sir!
You are very welcome!" said a voice.
I've had some starts in
my life, but never one to come up to that one. There, in the opening of the
shutters, within reach of my arm, was standing a woman with a small coil of wax
taper burning in her hand. She was tall and straight and slender, with a
beautiful white face that might have been cut out of clear marble, but her hair
and eyes were as black as night. She was dressed in some sort of white
dressing-gown which flowed down to her feet, and what with this robe and what
with her face, it seemed as if a spirit from above was standing in front of me.
My knees knocked together, and I held on to the shutter with one hand to
give me support. I should have turned and run away if I had had the strength,
but I could only just stand and stare at her.
She soon brought me back
to myself once more.
"Don't be
frightened!" said she, and they were strange words for the mistress of a
house to have to use to a burglar. "I saw you out of my bedroom window
when you were hiding under those trees, so I slipped downstairs, and then I
heard you at the window. I should have opened it for you if you had waited, but
you managed it yourself just as I came up."
I still held in my hand
the long clasp-knife with which I had opened the shutter. I was unshaven and
grimed from a week on the roads. Altogether, there are few people who would
have cared to face me alone at one in the morning; but this woman, if I had
been her lover meeting her by appointment, could not have looked upon me with a
more welcoming eye. She laid her hand upon my sleeve and drew me into the room.
"What's the meaning
of this, ma'am? Don't get trying any little games upon me," said I, in my
roughest way—and I can put it on rough when I like. "It'll be the worse
for you if you play me any trick," I added, showing her my knife.
"I will play you no
trick," said she. "On the contrary, I am your friend, and I wish to
help you."
"Excuse me, ma'am,
but I find it hard to believe that," said I. "Why should you wish to
help me?"
"I have my own
reasons," said she; and then suddenly, with those black eyes blazing out
of her white face: "It's because I hate him, hate him, hate him! Now
you understand."
I remembered what the
landlord had told me, and I did understand. I looked at her Ladyship's face,
and I knew that I could trust her. She wanted to revenge herself upon her
husband. She wanted to hit him where it would hurt him most—upon the pocket.
She hated him so that she would even lower her pride to take such a man as me
into her confidence if she could gain her end by doing so. I've hated some folk
in my time, but I don't think I ever understood what hate was until I saw that
woman's face in the light of the taper.
"You'll trust me
now?" said she, with another coaxing touch upon my sleeve.
"Yes, your
Ladyship."
"You know me,
then?"
"I can guess who
you are."
"I dare say my
wrongs are the talk of the county. But what does he care for that? He only
cares for one thing in the whole world, and that you can take from him this
night. Have you a bag?"
"No, your
Ladyship."
"Shut the shutter
behind you. Then no one can see the light. You are quite safe. The servants all
sleep in the other wing. I can show you where all the most valuable things are.
You cannot carry them all, so we must pick the best."
The room in which I
found myself was long and low, with many rugs and skins scattered about on a
polished wood floor. Small cases stood here and there, and the walls were
decorated with spears and swords and paddles, and other things which find their
way into museums. There were some queer clothes, too, which had been brought
from savage countries, and the lady took down a large leather sack-bag from
among them.
"This sleeping-sack
will do," said she. "Now come with me and I will show you where the
medals are."
It was like a dream to
me to think that this tall, white woman was the lady of the house, and that she
was lending me a hand to rob her own home. I could have burst out laughing at
the thought of it, and yet there was something in that pale face of hers which
stopped my laughter and turned me cold and serious. She swept on in front of me
like a spirit, with the green taper in her hand, and I walked behind with my
sack until we came to a door at the end of this museum. It was locked, but the
key was in it, and she led me through.
The room beyond was a
small one, hung all round with curtains which had pictures on them. It was the
hunting of a deer that was painted on it, as I remember, and in the flicker of
that light you'd have sworn that the dogs and the horses were streaming round
the walls. The only other thing in the room was a row of cases made of walnut,
with brass ornaments. They had glass tops, and beneath this glass I saw the
long lines of those gold medals, some of them as big as a plate and half an
inch thick, all resting upon red velvet and glowing and gleaming in the
darkness. My fingers were just itching to be at them, and I slipped my knife
under the lock of one of the cases to wrench it open.
"Wait a
moment," said she, laying her hand upon my arm. "You might do better
than this."
"I am very well
satisfied, ma'am," said I, "and much obliged to your Ladyship for kind
assistance."
"You can do
better," she repeated. "Would not golden sovereigns be worth more to
you than these things?"
"Why, yes,"
said I. "That's best of all."
"Well," said
she. "He sleeps just above our head. It is but one short staircase. There
is a tin box with money enough to fill this bag under his bed."
"How can I get it
without waking him?"
"What matter if he
does wake?" She looked very hard at me as she spoke. "You could keep
him from calling out."
"No, no, ma'am,
I'll have none of that."
"Just as you
like," said she. "I thought that you were a stout-hearted sort of man
by your appearance, but I see that I made a mistake. If you are afraid to run
the risk of one old man, then of course you cannot have the gold which is under
his bed. You are the best judge of your own business, but I should think that
you would do better at some other trade."
"I'll not have
murder on my conscience."
"You could
overpower him without harming him. I never said anything about murder. The
money lies under the bed. But if you are faint-hearted, it is better that you
should not attempt it."
She worked upon me so,
partly with her scorn and partly with this money that she held before my eyes,
that I believe I should have yielded and taken my chances upstairs, had it not
been that I saw her eyes following the struggle within me in such a crafty,
malignant fashion, that it was evident she was bent upon making me the tool of
her revenge, and that she would leave me no choice but to do the old man
an injury or to be captured by him. She felt suddenly that she was giving
herself away, and she changed her face to a kindly, friendly smile, but it was
too late, for I had had my warning.
"I will not go
upstairs," said I. "I have all I want here."
She looked her contempt
at me, and there never was a face which could look it plainer.
"Very good. You can
take these medals. I should be glad if you would begin at this end. I suppose
they will all be the same value when melted down, but these are the ones which
are the rarest, and therefore, the most precious to him. It is not necessary to
break the locks. If you press that brass knob you will find that there is a
secret spring. So! Take that small one first—it is the very apple of his
eye."
She had opened one of
the cases, and the beautiful things all lay exposed before me. I had my hand
upon the one which she had pointed out, when suddenly a change came over her
face, and she held up one finger as a warning. "Hist!" she whispered.
"What is that?"
Far away in the silence
of the house we heard a low, dragging, shuffling sound, and the distant tread
of feet. She closed and fastened the case in an instant.
"It's my
husband!" she whispered. "All right. Don't be alarmed. I'll arrange
it. Here! Quick, behind the tapestry!"
She pushed me behind the
painted curtains upon the wall, my empty leather bag still in my hand. Then she
took her taper and walked quickly into the room from which we had come.
From where I stood I could see her through the open door.
"Is that you,
Robert?" she cried.
The light of a candle
shone through the door of the museum, and the shuffling steps came nearer. Then
I saw a face in the doorway, a great, heavy face, all lines and creases, with a
huge curving nose, and a pair of gold glasses fixed across it. He had to throw
his head back to see through the glasses, and that great nose thrust out in
front of him like the beak of some sort of fowl. He was a big man, very tall
and burly, so that in his loose dressing-gown his figure seemed to fill up the
whole doorway. He had a pile of grey, curling hair all round his head, but his
face was clean-shaven. His mouth was thin and small and prim, hidden away under
his long, masterful nose. He stood there, holding the candle in front of him,
and looking at his wife with a queer, malicious gleam in his eyes. It only
needed that one look to tell me that he was as fond of her as she was of him.
"How's this?"
he asked. "Some new tantrum? What do you mean by wandering about the
house? Why don't you go to bed?"
"I could not
sleep," she answered. She spoke languidly and wearily. If she was an
actress once, she had not forgotten her calling.
"Might I
suggest," said he, in the same mocking kind of voice, "that a good
conscience is an excellent aid to sleep?"
"That cannot be
true," she answered, "for you sleep very well."
"I have only one
thing in my life to be ashamed of," said he, and his hair bristled up with
anger until he looked like an old cockatoo. "You know best what that
is. It is a mistake which has brought its own punishment with it."
"To me as well as
to you. Remember that!"
"You have very
little to whine about. It was I who stooped and you who rose."
"Rose!"
"Yes, rose. I
suppose you do not deny that it is a promotion to exchange the music-hall for
Mannering Hall. Fool that I was ever to take you out of your true sphere!"
"If you think so,
why do you not separate?"
"Because private
misery is better than public humiliation. Because it is easier to suffer for a
mistake than to own to it. Because also I like to keep you in my sight, and to
know that you cannot go back to him."
"You villain! You
cowardly villain!"
"Yes, yes, my lady.
I know your secret ambition, but it shall never be while I live, and if it
happens after my death I will at least take care that you go to him as a beggar.
You and dear Edward will never have the satisfaction of squandering my savings,
and you may make up your mind to that, my lady. Why are those shutters and the
window open?"
"I found the night
very close."
"It is not safe.
How do you know that some tramp may not be outside? Are you aware that my
collection of medals is worth more than any similar collection in the world?
You have left the door open also. What is there to prevent any one from rifling
the cases?"
"I was here."
"I know you were. I
heard you moving about in the medal room, and that was why I came down. What
were you doing?"
"Looking at the
medals. What else should I be doing?"
"This curiosity is
something new." He looked suspiciously at her and moved on towards the
inner room, she walking beside him.
It was at this moment
that I saw something which startled. I had laid my clasp-knife open upon the
top of one of the cases, and there it lay in full view. She saw it before he
did, and with a woman's cunning she held her taper out so that the light of it
came between Lord Mannering's eyes and the knife. Then she took it with her
left hand and held it against her gown out of his sight. He looked about from
case to case—I could have put my hand at one time upon his long nose—but there
was nothing to show that the medals had been tampered with, and so, still
snarling and grumbling, he shuffled off into the other room once more.
And now I have to speak
of what I heard rather than of what I saw, but I swear to you, as I shall stand
some day before my Maker, that what I say is the truth.
When they passed into
the outer room I saw him lay his candle upon the corner of one of the tables,
and he sat himself down, but in such a position that he was just out of my
sight. She moved behind him, as I could tell from the fact that the light of
her taper threw his long, lumpy shadow upon the floor in front of him. Then he
began talking about this man whom he called Edward, and every word that he said
was like a blistering drop of vitriol. He spoke low, so that I could not
hear it all, but from what I heard I should guess that she would as soon have
been lashed with a whip. At first she said some hot words in reply, but then
she was silent, and he went on and on in that cold, mocking voice of his, nagging
and insulting and tormenting, until I wondered that she could bear to stand
there in silence and listen to it. Then suddenly I heard him say in a sharp
voice, "Come from behind me! Leave go of my collar! What! would you dare
to strike me?" There was a sound like a blow, just a soft sort of thud,
and then I heard him cry out, "My God, it's blood!" He shuffled with
his feet as if he was getting up, and then I heard another blow, and he cried
out, "Oh, you she-devil!" and was quiet, except for a dripping and
splashing upon the floor.
I ran out from behind my
curtain at that, and rushed into the other room, shaking all over with the
horror of it. The old man had slipped down in the chair, and his dressing-gown
had rucked up until he looked as if he had a monstrous hump to his back. His
head, with the gold glasses still fixed on his nose, was lolling over upon one
side, and his little mouth was open just like a dead fish. I could not see
where the blood was coming from, but I could still hear it drumming upon the
floor. She stood behind him with the candle shining full upon her face. Her
lips were pressed together and her eyes shining, and a touch of colour had come
into each of her cheeks. It just wanted that to make her the most beautiful
woman I had ever seen in my life.
"You've done it
now!" said I.
"Yes," said
she, in her quiet way, "I've done it now."
"What are you going
to do?" I asked. "They'll have you for murder as sure as fate."
"Never fear about
me. I have nothing to live for, and it does not matter. Give me a hand to set
him straight in the chair. It is horrible to see him like this!"
I did so, though it
turned me cold all over to touch him. Some of his blood came on my hand and
sickened me.
"Now," said
she, "you may as well have the medals as any one else. Take them and
go."
"I don't want them.
I only want to get away. I was never mixed up with a business like this
before."
"Nonsense!"
said she. "You came for the medals, and here they are at your mercy. Why
should you not have them? There is no one to prevent you."
I held the bag still in
my hand. She opened the case, and between us we threw a hundred or so of the
medals into it. They were all from the one case, but I could not bring myself
to wait for any more. Then I made for the window, for the very air of this
house seemed to poison me after what I had seen and heard. As I looked back, I
saw her standing there, tall and graceful, with the light in her hand just as I
had seen her first. She waved good-bye, and I waved back at her and sprang out
into the gravel drive.
I thank God that I can
lay my hand upon my heart and say that I have never done a murder, but perhaps
it would be different if I had been able to read that woman's mind and
thoughts. There might have been two bodies in the room instead of one if I
could have seen behind that last smile of hers. But I thought of nothing but of
getting safely away, and it never entered my head how she might be fixing the
rope round my neck. I had not taken five steps out from the window skirting
down the shadow of the house in the way that I had come, when I heard a scream
that might have raised the parish, and then another and another.
"Murder!" she
cried. "Murder! Murder! Help!" and her voice rang out in the quiet of
the night-time and sounded over the whole country-side. It went through my
head, that dreadful cry. In an instant lights began to move and windows to fly
up, not only in the house behind me, but at the lodge and in the stables in
front. Like a frightened rabbit I bolted down the drive, but I heard the clang
of the gate being shut before I could reach it. Then I hid my bag of medals
under some dry fagots, and I tried to get away across the park, but some one
saw me in the moonlight, and presently I had half a dozen of them with dogs
upon my heels. I crouched down among the brambles, but those dogs were too many
for me, and I was glad enough when the men came up and prevented me from being
torn into pieces. They seized me, and dragged me back to the room from which I
had come.
"Is this the man,
your Ladyship?" asked the oldest of them—the same whom I found out
afterwards to be the butler.
She had been bending
over the body, with her handkerchief to her eyes, and now she turned upon
me with the face of a fury. Oh, what an actress that woman was!
"Yes, yes, it is
the very man," she cried. "Oh, you villain, you cruel villain, to
treat an old man so!"
There was a man there
who seemed to be a village constable. He laid his hand upon my shoulder.
"What do you say to
that?" said he.
"It was she who did
it," I cried, pointing at the woman, whose eyes never flinched before
mine.
"Come! come! Try
another!" said the constable, and one of the men-servants struck at me
with his fist.
"I tell you that I
saw her do it. She stabbed him twice with a knife. She first helped me to rob
him, and then she murdered him."
The footman tried to
strike me again, but she held up her hand.
"Do not hurt
him," said she. "I think that his punishment may safely be left to
the law."
"I'll see to that,
your Ladyship," said the constable. "Your Ladyship actually saw the
crime committed, did you not?"
"Yes, yes, I saw it
with my own eyes. It was horrible. We heard the noise and we came down. My poor
husband was in front. The man had one of the cases open, and was filling a
black leather bag which he held in his hand. He rushed past us, and my husband
seized him. There was a struggle, and he stabbed him twice. There you can see
the blood upon his hands. If I am not mistaken, his knife is still in Lord
Mannering's body."
"Look at the blood
upon her hands!" I cried.
"She has been
holding up his Lordship's head, you lying rascal," said the butler.
"And here's the
very sack her Ladyship spoke of," said the constable, as a groom came in
with the one which I had dropped in my flight. "And here are the medals
inside it. That's good enough for me. We will keep him safe here to-night, and
to-morrow the inspector and I can take him into Salisbury."
"Poor
creature," said the woman. "For my own part, I forgive him any injury
which he has done me. Who knows what temptation may have driven him to crime?
His conscience and the law will give him punishment enough without any reproach
of mine rendering it more bitter."
I could not answer—I
tell you, sir, I could not answer, so taken aback was I by the assurance of the
woman. And so, seeming by my silence to agree to all that she had said, I was
dragged away by the butler and the constable into the cellar, in which they
locked me for the night.
There, sir, I have told
you the whole story of the events which led up to the murder of Lord Mannering
by his wife upon the night of September the 14th, in the year 1894. Perhaps you
will put my statement on one side as the constable did at Mannering Towers, or
the judge afterwards at the county assizes. Or perhaps you will see that there
is the ring of truth in what I say, and you will follow it up, and so make your
name for ever as a man who does not grudge personal trouble where justice is to
be done. I have only you to look to, sir, and if you will clear my name of this
false accusation, then I will worship you as one man never yet worshipped
another. But if you fail me, then I give you my solemn promise that I will
rope myself up, this day month, to the bar of my window, and from that time on
I will come to plague you in your dreams if ever yet one man was able to come
back and to haunt another. What I ask you to do is very simple. Make inquiries
about this woman, watch her, learn her past history, find out what she is
making of the money which has come to her, and whether there is not a man
Edward as I have stated. If from all this you learn anything which shows you
her real character, or which seems to you to corroborate the story which I have
told you, then I am sure that I can rely upon your goodness of heart to come to
the rescue of an innocent man.
IV.THE GREAT KEINPLATZ EXPERIMENT
Of all the sciences
which have puzzled the sons of men, none had such an attraction for the learned
Professor von Baumgarten as those which relate to psychology and the
ill-defined relations between mind and matter. A celebrated anatomist, a
profound chemist, and one of the first physiologists in Europe, it was a relief
for him to turn from these subjects and to bring his varied knowledge to bear upon
the study of the soul and the mysterious relationship of spirits. At first,
when as a young man he began to dip into the secrets of mesmerism, his mind
seemed to be wandering in a strange land where all was chaos and darkness, save
that here and there some great unexplainable and disconnected fact loomed out
in front of him. As the years passed, however, and as the worthy Professor's
stock of knowledge increased, for knowledge begets knowledge as money bears
interest, much which had seemed strange and unaccountable began to take another
shape in his eyes. New trains of reasoning became familiar to him, and he
perceived connecting links where all had been incomprehensible and startling.
By experiments which extended over twenty years, he obtained a basis of facts
upon which it was his ambition to build up a new exact science which should
embrace mesmerism, spiritualism, and all cognate subjects. In this he was much
helped by his intimate knowledge of the more intricate parts of animal
physiology which treat of nerve currents and the working of the brain; for
Alexis von Baumgarten was Regius Professor of Physiology at the University of
Keinplatz, and had all the resources of the laboratory to aid him in his
profound researches.
Professor von Baumgarten
was tall and thin, with a hatchet face and steel-grey eyes, which were
singularly bright and penetrating. Much thought had furrowed his forehead and
contracted his heavy eyebrows, so that he appeared to wear a perpetual frown,
which often misled people as to his character, for though austere he was
tender-hearted. He was popular among the students, who would gather round him
after his lectures and listen eagerly to his strange theories. Often he would
call for volunteers from amongst them in order to conduct some experiment, so
that eventually there was hardly a lad in the class who had not, at one time or
another, been thrown into a mesmeric trance by his Professor.
Of all these young
devotees of science there was none who equalled in enthusiasm Fritz von
Hartmann. It had often seemed strange to his fellow-students that wild,
reckless Fritz, as dashing a young fellow as ever hailed from the Rhinelands,
should devote the time and trouble which he did in reading up abstruse works
and in assisting the Professor in his strange experiments. The fact was,
however, that Fritz was a knowing and long-headed fellow. Months before he had
lost his heart to young Elise, the blue-eyed, yellow-haired daughter of the
lecturer. Although he had succeeded in learning from her lips that she was not
indifferent to his suit, he had never dared to announce himself to her family
as a formal suitor. Hence he would have found it a difficult matter to see
his young lady had he not adopted the expedient of making himself useful to the
Professor. By this means he frequently was asked to the old man's house, where
he willingly submitted to be experimented upon in any way as long as there was
a chance of his receiving one bright glance from the eyes of Elise or one touch
of her little hand.
Young Fritz von Hartmann
was a handsome lad enough. There were broad acres, too, which would descend to
him when his father died. To many he would have seemed an eligible suitor; but
Madame frowned upon his presence in the house, and lectured the Professor at
times on his allowing such a wolf to prowl around their lamb. To tell the
truth, Fritz had an evil name in Keinplatz. Never was there a riot or a duel,
or any other mischief afoot, but the young Rhinelander figured as a ringleader
in it. No one used more free and violent language, no one drank more, no one
played cards more habitually, no one was more idle, save in the one solitary
subject. No wonder, then, that the good Frau Professorin gathered her Fräulein
under her wing, and resented the attentions of such a mauvais sujet.
As to the worthy lecturer, he was too much engrossed by his strange studies to
form an opinion upon the subject one way or the other.
For many years there was
one question which had continually obtruded itself upon his thoughts. All his
experiments and his theories turned upon a single point. A hundred times a day
the Professor asked himself whether it was possible for the human spirit to
exist apart from the body for a time and then to return to it once again.
When the possibility first suggested itself to him his scientific mind had
revolted from it. It clashed too violently with preconceived ideas and the
prejudices of his early training. Gradually, however, as he proceeded farther
and farther along the pathway of original research, his mind shook off its old
fetters and became ready to face any conclusion which could reconcile the
facts. There were many things which made him believe that it was possible for
mind to exist apart from matter. At last it occurred to him that by a daring
and original experiment the question might be definitely decided.
"It is
evident," he remarked in his celebrated article upon invisible entities,
which appeared in the Keinplatz wochentliche Medicalschrift about
this time, and which surprised the whole scientific world—"it is evident
that under certain conditions the soul or mind does separate itself from the
body. In the case of a mesmerised person, the body lies in a cataleptic
condition, but the spirit has left it. Perhaps you reply that the soul is
there, but in a dormant condition. I answer that this is not so, otherwise how
can one account for the condition of clairvoyance, which has fallen into
disrepute through the knavery of certain scoundrels, but which can easily be
shown to be an undoubted fact. I have been able myself, with a sensitive
subject, to obtain an accurate description of what was going on in another room
or another house. How can such knowledge be accounted for on any hypothesis
save that the soul of the subject has left the body and is wandering through
space? For a moment it is recalled by the voice of the operator and says what
it has seen, and then wings its way once more through the air. Since the
spirit is by its very nature invisible, we cannot see these comings and goings,
but we see their effect in the body of the subject, now rigid and inert, now
struggling to narrate impressions which could never have come to it by natural
means. There is only one way which I can see by which the fact can be demonstrated.
Although we in the flesh are unable to see these spirits, yet our own spirits,
could we separate them from the body, would be conscious of the presence of
others. It is my intention, therefore, shortly to mesmerise one of my pupils. I
shall then mesmerise myself in a manner which has become easy to me. After
that, if my theory holds good, my spirit will have no difficulty in meeting and
communing with the spirit of my pupil, both being separated from the body. I
hope to be able to communicate the result of this interesting experiment in an
early number of the Keinplatz wochenliche Medicalschrift."
When the good Professor
finally fulfilled his promise, and published an account of what occurred, the
narrative was so extraordinary that it was received with general incredulity.
The tone of some of the papers was so offensive in their comments upon the
matter that the angry savant declared that he would never open his mouth again,
or refer to the subject in any way—a promise which he has faithfully kept. This
narrative has been compiled, however, from the most authentic sources, and the
events cited in it may be relied upon as substantially correct.
It happened, then, that
shortly after the time when Professor von Baumgarten conceived the idea of the
above-mentioned experiment, he was walking thoughtfully homewards after a long
day in the laboratory, when he met a crowd of roystering students who
had just streamed out from a beer-house. At the head of them, half-intoxicated
and very noisy, was young Fritz von Hartmann. The Professor would have passed
them, but his pupil ran across and intercepted him.
"Heh! my worthy
master," he said, taking the old man by the sleeve, and leading him down
the road with him. "There is something that I have to say to you, and it
is easier for me to say it now, when the good beer is humming in my head, than
at another time."
"What is it, then,
Fritz?" the physiologist asked, looking at him in mild surprise.
"I hear, mein Herr,
that you are about to do some wondrous experiment in which you hope to take a
man's soul out of his body, and then to put it back again. Is it not so?"
"It is true,
Fritz."
"And have you
considered, my dear sir, that you may have some difficulty in finding some one
on whom to try this? Potztausend! Suppose that the soul went out and would not
come back. That would be a bad business. Who is to take the risk?"
"But, Fritz,"
the Professor cried, very much startled by this view of the matter, "I had
relied upon your assistance in the attempt. Surely you will not desert me.
Consider the honour and glory."
"Consider the
fiddlesticks!" the student cried angrily. "Am I to be paid always
thus? Did I not stand two hours upon a glass insulator while you poured
electricity into my body? Have you not stimulated my phrenic nerves, besides
ruining my digestion with a galvanic current round my stomach?
Four-and-thirty times you have mesmerised me, and what have I got from all
this? Nothing. And now you wish to take my soul out, as you would take the
works from a watch. It is more than flesh and blood can stand."
"Dear, dear!"
the Professor cried in great distress. "That is very true, Fritz. I never
thought of it before. If you can but suggest how I can compensate you, you will
find me ready and willing."
"Then listen,"
said Fritz solemnly. "If you will pledge your word that after this
experiment I may have the hand of your daughter, then I am willing to assist
you; but if not, I shall have nothing to do with it. These are my only
terms."
"And what would my
daughter say to this?" the Professor exclaimed, after a pause of
astonishment.
"Elise would
welcome it," the young man replied. "We have loved each other
long."
"Then she shall be
yours," the physiologist said with decision, "for you are a
good-hearted young man, and one of the best neurotic subjects that I have ever
known—that is when you are not under the influence of alcohol. My experiment is
to be performed upon the fourth of next month. You will attend at the
physiological laboratory at twelve o'clock. It will be a great occasion, Fritz.
Von Gruben is coming from Jena, and Hinterstein from Basle. The chief men of
science of all South Germany will be there."
"I shall be
punctual," the student said briefly; and so the two parted. The Professor
plodded homeward, thinking of the great coming event, while the young man
staggered along after his noisy companions, with his mind full of the
blue-eyed Elise, and of the bargain which he had concluded with her father.
The Professor did not
exaggerate when he spoke of the widespread interest excited by his novel
psychological experiment. Long before the hour had arrived the room was filled
by a galaxy of talent. Besides the celebrities whom he had mentioned, there had
come from London the great Professor Lurcher, who had just established his
reputation by a remarkable treatise upon cerebral centres. Several great lights
of the Spiritualistic body had also come a long distance to be present, as had
a Swedenborgian minister, who considered that the proceedings might throw some
light upon the doctrines of the Rosy Cross.
There was considerable
applause from this eminent assembly upon the appearance of Professor von
Baumgarten and his subject upon the platform. The lecturer, in a few
well-chosen words, explained what his views were, and how he proposed to test
them. "I hold," he said, "that when a person is under the
influence of mesmerism, his spirit is for the time released from his body, and
I challenge any one to put forward any other hypothesis which will account for
the fact of clairvoyance. I therefore hope that upon mesmerising my young
friend here, and then putting myself into a trance, our spirits may be able to
commune together, though our bodies lie still and inert. After a time nature
will resume her sway, our spirits will return into our respective bodies, and
all will be as before. With your kind permission, we shall now proceed to
attempt the experiment."
The applause was renewed
at this speech, and the audience settled down in expectant silence. With a few
rapid passes the Professor mesmerised the young man, who sank back in his
chair, pale and rigid. He then took a bright globe of glass from his pocket,
and by concentrating his gaze upon it and making a strong mental effort, he
succeeded in throwing himself into the same condition. It was a strange and
impressive sight to see the old man and the young sitting together in the same
cataleptic condition. Whither, then, had their souls fled? That was the
question which presented itself to each and every one of the spectators.
Five minutes passed, and
then ten, and then fifteen, and then fifteen more, while the Professor and his
pupil sat stiff and stark upon the platform. During that time not a sound was
heard from the assembled savants, but every eye was bent upon the two pale
faces, in search of the first signs of returning consciousness. Nearly an hour
had elapsed before the patient watchers were rewarded. A faint flush came back
to the cheeks of Professor von Baumgarten. The soul was coming back once more
to its earthly tenement. Suddenly he stretched out his long thin arms, as one
awaking from sleep, and rubbing his eyes, stood up from his chair and gazed
about him as though he hardly realised where he was. "Tausend
Teufel!" he exclaimed, rapping out a tremendous South German oath, to the
great astonishment of his audience and to the disgust of the Swedenborgian.
"Where the Henker am I then, and what in thunder has occurred? Oh yes, I
remember now. One of these nonsensical mesmeric experiments. There is no result
this time, for I remember nothing at all since I became unconscious; so you
have had all your long journeys for nothing, my learned friends, and a
very good joke too"; at which the Regius Professor of Physiology burst
into a roar of laughter and slapped his thigh in a highly indecorous fashion.
The audience were so enraged at this unseemly behaviour on the part of their
host, that there might have been a considerable disturbance, had it not been
for the judicious interference of young Fritz von Hartmann, who had now
recovered from his lethargy. Stepping to the front of the platform, the young
man apologised for the conduct of his companion. "I am sorry to say,"
he said, "that he is a harum-scarum sort of fellow, although he appeared
so grave at the commencement of this experiment. He is still suffering from
mesmeric reaction, and is hardly accountable for his words. As to the
experiment itself, I do not consider it to be a failure. It is very possible
that our spirits may have been communing in space during this hour; but,
unfortunately, our gross bodily memory is distinct from our spirit, and we
cannot recall what has occurred. My energies shall now be devoted to devising
some means by which spirits may be able to recollect what occurs to them in their
free state, and I trust that when I have worked this out, I may have the
pleasure of meeting you all once again in this hall, and demonstrating to you
the result." This address, coming from so young a student, caused
considerable astonishment among the audience, and some were inclined to be
offended, thinking that he assumed rather too much importance. The majority,
however, looked upon him as a young man of great promise, and many comparisons
were made as they left the hall between his dignified conduct and the levity
of his professor, who during the above remarks was laughing heartily in a
corner, by no means abashed at the failure of the experiment.
Now although all these
learned men were filing out of the lecture-room under the impression that they
had seen nothing of note, as a matter of fact one of the most wonderful things
in the whole history of the world had just occurred before their very eyes.
Professor von Baumgarten had been so far correct in his theory that both his
spirit and that of his pupil had been for a time absent from the body. But here
a strange and unforeseen complication had occurred. In their return the spirit
of Fritz von Hartmann had entered into the body of Alexis von Baumgarten, and
that of Alexis von Baumgarten had taken up its abode in the frame of Fritz von
Hartmann. Hence the slang and scurrility which issued from the lips of the
serious Professor, and hence also the weighty words and grave statements which
fell from the careless student. It was an unprecedented event, yet no one knew
of it, least of all those whom it concerned.
The body of the
Professor, feeling conscious suddenly of a great dryness about the back of the
throat, sallied out into the street, still chuckling to himself over the result
of the experiment, for the soul of Fritz within was reckless at the thought of
the bride whom he had won so easily. His first impulse was to go up to the
house and see her, but on second thought he came to the conclusion that it
would be best to stay away until Madame Baumgarten should be informed by her
husband of the agreement which had been made. He therefore made his way down to
the Grüner Mann, which was one of the favourite trysting-places of the wilder
students, and ran, boisterously waving his cane in the air, into the little
parlour, where sat Spiegle and Müller and half a dozen other boon companions.
"Ha, ha! my
boys," he shouted. "I knew I should find you here. Drink up, every
one of you, and call for what you like, for I'm going to stand treat
to-day."
Had the green man who is
depicted upon the signpost of that well-known inn suddenly marched into the
room and called for a bottle of wine, the students could not have been more
amazed than they were by this unexpected entry of their revered professor. They
were so astonished that for a minute or two they glared at him in utter
bewilderment without being able to make any reply to his hearty invitation.
"Donner und
Blitzen!" shouted the Professor angrily. "What the deuce is the
matter with you, then? You sit there like a set of stuck pigs staring at me.
What is it then?"
"It is the
unexpected honour," stammered Spiegel, who was in the chair.
"Honour—rubbish!"
said the Professor testily. "Do you think that just because I happen to
have been exhibiting mesmerism to a parcel of old fossils, I am therefore too
proud to associate with dear old friends like you? Come out of that chair,
Spiegel, my boy, for I shall preside now. Beer, or wine, or schnapps, my
lads—call for what you like, and put it all down to me."
Never was there such an
afternoon in the Grüner Mann. The foaming flagons of lager and the
green-necked bottles of Rhenish circulated merrily. By degrees the students
lost their shyness in the presence of their Professor. As for him, he shouted,
he sang, he roared, he balanced a long tobacco-pipe upon his nose, and offered
to run a hundred yards against any member of the company. The Kellner and the
barmaid whispered to each other outside the door their astonishment at such
proceedings on the part of a Regius Professor of the ancient university of
Keinplatz. They had still more to whisper about afterwards, for the learned man
cracked the Kellner's crown, and kissed the barmaid behind the kitchen door.
"Gentlemen,"
said the Professor, standing up, albeit somewhat totteringly, at the end of the
table, and balancing his high old-fashioned wine glass in his bony hand,
"I must now explain to you what is the cause of this festivity."
"Hear! hear!"
roared the students, hammering their beer glasses against the table; "a
speech, a speech!—silence for a speech!"
"The fact is, my
friends," said the Professor, beaming through his spectacles, "I hope
very soon to be married."
"Married!"
cried a student, bolder than the others. "Is Madame dead, then?"
"Madame who?"
"Why, Madame von
Baumgarten, of course."
"Ha, ha!"
laughed the Professor; "I can see, then, that you know all about my former
difficulties. No, she is not dead, but I have reason to believe that she will
not oppose my marriage."
"That is very
accommodating of her," remarked one of the company.
"In fact,"
said the Professor, "I hope that she will now be induced to aid me in
getting a wife. She and I never took to each other very much; but now I hope
all that may be ended, and when I marry she will come and stay with me."
"What a happy
family!" exclaimed some wag.
"Yes, indeed; and I
hope you will come to my wedding, all of you. I won't mention names, but here
is to my little bride!" and the Professor waved his glass in the air.
"Here's to his
little bride!" roared the roysterers, with shouts of laughter.
"Here's her health. Sie soll leben—Hoch!" And so the fun waxed still
more fast and furious, while each young fellow followed the Professor's
example, and drank a toast to the girl of his heart.
While all this festivity
had been going on at the Grüner Mann, a very different scene had been enacted
elsewhere. Young Fritz von Hartmann, with a solemn face and a reserved manner,
had, after the experiment, consulted and adjusted some mathematical
instruments; after which, with a few peremptory words to the janitor, he had
walked out into the street and wended his way slowly in the direction of the
house of the Professor. As he walked he saw Von Althaus, the professor of
anatomy, in front of him, and quickening his pace he overtook him.
"I say, Von
Althaus," he exclaimed, tapping him on the sleeve, "you were asking
me for some information the other day concerning the middle coat of the
cerebral arteries. Now I find——"
"Donnerwetter!"
shouted Von Althaus, who was a peppery old fellow. "What the deuce do you
mean by your impertinence! I'll have you up before the Academical Senate for
this, sir"; with which threat he turned on his heel and hurried away. Von
Hartmann was much surprised at this reception. "It's on account of this
failure of my experiment," he said to himself, and continued moodily on
his way.
Fresh surprises were in
store for him, however. He was hurrying along when he was overtaken by two
students. These youths, instead of raising their caps or showing any other sign
of respect, gave a wild whoop of delight the instant that they saw him, and
rushing at him, seized him by each arm and commenced dragging him along with
them.
"Gott in
Himmel!" roared Von Hartmann. "What is the meaning of this
unparalleled insult? Where are you taking me?"
"To crack a bottle
of wine with us," said the two students. "Come along! That is an
invitation which you have never refused."
"I never heard of
such insolence in my life!" cried Von Hartmann. "Let go my arms! I
shall certainly have you rusticated for this. Let me go, I say!" and he
kicked furiously at his captors.
"Oh, if you choose
to turn ill-tempered, you may go where you like," the students said,
releasing him. "We can do very well without you."
"I know you. I'll
pay you out," said Von Hartmann furiously, and continued in the direction
which he imagined to be his own home, much incensed at the two episodes which
had occurred to him on the way.
Now, Madame von
Baumgarten, who was looking out of the window and wondering why her
husband was late for dinner, was considerably astonished to see the young
student come stalking down the road. As already remarked, she had a great
antipathy to him, and if ever he ventured into the house it was on sufferance,
and under the protection of the Professor. Still more astonished was she,
therefore, when she beheld him undo the wicket-gate and stride up the garden
path with the air of one who is master of the situation. She could hardly
believe her eyes, and hastened to the door with all her maternal instincts up
in arms. From the upper windows the fair Elise had also observed this daring
move upon the part of her lover, and her heart beat quick with mingled pride
and consternation.
"Good day,
sir," Madame von Baumgarten remarked to the intruder, as she stood in
gloomy majesty in the open doorway.
"A very fine day
indeed, Martha," returned the other. "Now, don't stand there like a
statue of Juno, but bustle about and get the dinner ready, for I am well-nigh
starved."
"Martha!
Dinner!" ejaculated the lady, falling back in astonishment.
"Yes, dinner,
Martha, dinner!" howled Von Hartmann, who was becoming irritable. "Is
there anything wonderful in that request when a man has been out all day? I'll
wait in the dining-room. Anything will do. Schinken, and sausage, and
prunes—any little thing that happens to be about. There you are, standing
staring again. Woman, will you or will you not stir your legs?"
This last address,
delivered with a perfect shriek of rage, had the effect of sending good
Madame von Baumgarten flying along the passage and through the kitchen, where
she locked herself up in the scullery and went into violent hysterics. In the
meantime Von Hartmann strode into the room and threw himself down upon the sofa
in the worst of tempers.
"Elise!" he
shouted. "Confound the girl! Elise!"
Thus roughly summoned,
the young lady came timidly downstairs and into the presence of her lover.
"Dearest!" she cried, throwing her arms round him, "I know this
is all done for my sake. It is a ruse in order to see
me."
Von Hartmann's
indignation at this fresh attack upon him was so great that he became
speechless for a minute from rage, and could only glare and shake his fists,
while he struggled in her embrace. When he at last regained his utterance, he
indulged in such a bellow of passion that the young lady dropped back,
petrified with fear, into an arm-chair.
"Never have I
passed such a day in my life," Von Hartmann cried, stamping upon the
floor. "My experiment has failed. Von Althaus has insulted me. Two
students have dragged me along the public road. My wife nearly faints when I
ask her for dinner, and my daughter flies at me and hugs me like a grizzly
bear."
"You are ill,
dear," the young lady cried. "Your mind is wandering. You have not even
kissed me once."
"No, and I don't
intend to either," Von Hartmann said with decision. "You ought to be
ashamed of yourself. Why don't you go and fetch my slippers, and help your
mother to dish the dinner?"
"And is it for
this," Elise cried, burying her face in her handkerchief—"is it for
this that I have loved you passionately for upwards of ten months? Is it for
this that I have braved my mother's wrath? Oh, you have broken my heart; I am
sure you have!" and she sobbed hysterically.
"I can't stand much
more of this," roared Von Hartmann furiously. "What the deuce does
the girl mean? What did I do ten months ago which inspired you with such a
particular affection for me? If you are really so very fond, you would do
better to run away down and find the Schinken and some bread, instead of
talking all this nonsense."
"Oh, my
darling!" cried the unhappy maiden, throwing herself into the arms of what
she imagined to be her lover, "you do but joke in order to frighten your
little Elise."
Now it chanced that at
the moment of this unexpected embrace Von Hartmann was still leaning back
against the end of the sofa, which, like much German furniture, was in a
somewhat rickety condition. It also chanced that beneath this end of the sofa
there stood a tank full of water in which the physiologist was conducting
certain experiments upon the ova of fish, and which he kept in his drawing-room
in order to ensure an equable temperature. The additional weight of the maiden,
combined with the impetus with which she hurled herself upon him, caused the
precarious piece of furniture to give way, and the body of the unfortunate
student was hurled backwards into the tank, in which his head and shoulders
were firmly wedged, while his lower extremities flapped helplessly about in the
air. This was the last straw. Extricating himself with some difficulty
from his unpleasant position, Von Hartmann gave an inarticulate yell of fury,
and dashing out of the room, in spite of the entreaties of Elise, he seized his
hat and rushed off into the town, all dripping and dishevelled, with the
intention of seeking in some inn the food and comfort which he could not find
at home.
As the spirit of Von
Baumgarten encased in the body of Von Hartmann strode down the winding pathway
which led down to the little town, brooding angrily over his many wrongs, he
became aware that an elderly man was approaching him who appeared to be in an
advanced state of intoxication. Von Hartmann waited by the side of the road and
watched this individual, who came stumbling along, reeling from one side of the
road to the other, and singing a student song in a very husky and drunken
voice. At first his interest was merely excited by the fact of seeing a man of
so venerable an appearance in such a disgraceful condition, but as he
approached nearer, he became convinced that he knew the other well, though he
could not recall when or where he had met him. This impression became so strong
with him, that when the stranger came abreast of him he stepped in front of him
and took a good look at his features.
"Well, sonny,"
said the drunken man, surveying Von Hartmann and swaying about in front of him,
"where the Henker have I seen you before? I know you as well as I know
myself. Who the deuce are you?"
"I am Professor von
Baumgarten," said the student. "May I ask who you are? I am strangely
familiar with your features."
"You should never
tell lies, young man," said the other. "You're certainly not the
Professor, for he is an ugly snuffy old chap, and you are a big broad-shouldered
young fellow. As to myself, I am Fritz von Hartmann at your service."
"That you certainly
are not," exclaimed the body of Von Hartmann. "You might very well be
his father. But hullo, sir, are you aware that you are wearing my studs and my
watch-chain?"
"Donnerwetter!"
hiccoughed the other. "If those are not the trousers for which my tailor
is about to sue me, may I never taste beer again."
Now as Von Hartmann,
overwhelmed by the many strange things which had occurred to him that day,
passed his hand over his forehead and cast his eyes downwards, he chanced to
catch the reflection of his own face in a pool which the rain had left upon the
road. To his utter astonishment he perceived that his face was that of a youth,
that his dress was that of a fashionable young student, and that in every way
he was the antithesis of the grave and scholarly figure in which his mind was
wont to dwell. In an instant his active brain ran over the series of events
which had occurred and sprang to the conclusion. He fairly reeled under the
blow.
"Himmel!" he
cried, "I see it all. Our souls are in the wrong bodies. I am you and you
are I. My theory is proved—but at what an expense! Is the most scholarly mind
in Europe to go about with this frivolous exterior? Oh the labours of a
lifetime are ruined!" and he smote his breast in his despair.
"I say,"
remarked the real Von Hartmann from the body of the Professor, "I quite
see the force of your remarks, but don't go knocking my body about like
that. You received it in an excellent condition, but I perceive that you have
wet it and bruised it, and spilled snuff over my ruffled shirt-front."
"It matters
little," the other said moodily. "Such as we are so must we stay. My
theory is triumphantly proved, but the cost is terrible."
"If I thought
so," said the spirit of the student, "it would be hard indeed. What
could I do with these stiff old limbs, and how could I woo Elise and persuade
her that I was not her father? No, thank Heaven, in spite of the beer which has
upset me more than ever it could upset my real self, I can see a way out of
it."
"How?" gasped
the Professor.
"Why, by repeating
the experiment. Liberate our souls once more, and the chances are that they
will find their way back into their respective bodies."
No drowning man could
clutch more eagerly at a straw than did Von Baumgarten's spirit at this
suggestion. In feverish haste he dragged his own frame to the side of the road
and threw it into a mesmeric trance; he then extracted the crystal ball from
the pocket, and managed to bring himself into the same condition.
Some students and
peasants who chanced to pass during the next hour were much astonished to see
the worthy Professor of Physiology and his favourite student both sitting upon
a very muddy bank and both completely insensible. Before the hour was up quite
a crowd had assembled, and they were discussing the advisability of sending for
an ambulance to convey the pair to hospital, when the learned savant opened
his eyes and gazed vacantly around him. For an instant he seemed to forget how
he had come there, but next moment he astonished his audience by waving his
skinny arms above his head and crying out in a voice of rapture, "Gott sei
gedanket! I am myself again. I feel I am!" Nor was the amazement lessened
when the student, springing to his feet, burst into the same cry, and the two
performed a sort of pas de joie in the middle of the road.
For some time after that
people had some suspicion of the sanity of both the actors in this strange
episode. When the Professor published his experiences in the Medicalschrift as
he had promised, he was met by an intimation, even from his colleagues, that he
would do well to have his mind cared for, and that another such publication
would certainly consign him to a madhouse. The student also found by experience
that it was wisest to be silent about the matter.
When the worthy lecturer
returned home that night he did not receive the cordial welcome which he might
have looked for after his strange adventures. On the contrary, he was roundly
upbraided by both his female relatives for smelling of drink and tobacco, and
also for being absent while a young scapegrace invaded the house and insulted
its occupants. It was long before the domestic atmosphere of the lecturer's
house resumed its normal quiet, and longer still before the genial face of Von
Hartmann was seen beneath its roof. Perseverance, however, conquers every
obstacle, and the student eventually succeeded in pacifying the enraged ladies
and in establishing himself upon the old footing. He has now no longer any
cause to fear the enmity of Madame, for he is Haupt mann von Hartmann of the Emperor's own Uhlans, and his loving wife
Elise has already presented him with two little Uhlans as a visible sign and token
of her affection.
A LITERARY MOSAIC
From my boyhood I have
had an intense and overwhelming conviction that my real vocation lay in the
direction of literature. I have, however, had a most unaccountable difficulty
in getting any responsible person to share my views. It is true that private
friends have sometimes, after listening to my effusions, gone the length of
remarking, "Really, Smith, that's not half bad!" or, "You take
my advice, old boy, and send that to some magazine!" but I have never on
these occasions had the moral courage to inform my adviser that the article in
question had been sent to well-nigh every publisher in London, and had come
back again with a rapidity and precision which spoke well for the efficiency of
our postal arrangements.
Had my manuscripts been
paper boomerangs they could not have returned with greater accuracy to their
unhappy despatcher. Oh, the vileness and utter degradation of the moment when
the stale little cylinder of closely written pages, which seemed so fresh and
full of promise a few days ago, is handed in by a remorseless postman! And what
moral depravity shines through the editor's ridiculous plea of "want of
space!" But the subject is a painful one, and a digression from the plain
statement of facts which I originally contemplated.
From the age of
seventeen to that of three-and-twenty I was a literary volcano in a constant
state of eruption. Poems and tales, articles and reviews, nothing came amiss to
my pen. From the great sea-serpent to the nebular hypothesis, I was ready to
write on anything or everything, and I can safely say that I seldom handled a
subject without throwing new lights upon it. Poetry and romance, however, had
always the greatest attractions for me. How I have wept over the pathos of my
heroines, and laughed at the comicalities of my buffoons! Alas! I could find no
one to join me in my appreciation, and solitary admiration for one's self,
however genuine, becomes satiating after a time. My father remonstrated with me
too on the score of expense and loss of time, so that I was finally compelled
to relinquish my dreams of literary independence and to become a clerk in a
wholesale mercantile firm connected with the West African trade.
Even when condemned to the
prosaic duties which fell to my lot in the office, I continued faithful to my
first love. I have introduced pieces of word-painting into the most commonplace
business letters which have, I am told, considerably astonished the recipients.
My refined sarcasm has made defaulting creditors writhe and wince.
Occasionally, like the great Silas Wegg, I would drop into poetry, and so raise
the whole tone of the correspondence. Thus what could be more elegant than my
rendering of the firm's instructions to the captain of one of their vessels. It
ran in this way:—
"From
England, Captain, you must steer a
Course directly to Madeira,
Land the casks of salted beef,
Then away to Teneriffe.
Pray be careful, cool, and wary
With the merchants of Canary.
When you leave them make the most
Of the trade winds to the coast.
Down it you shall sail as far
As the land of Calabar,
And from there you'll onward go
To Bonny and Fernando Po"——
and so on for four
pages. The captain, instead of treasuring up this little gem, called at the
office next day, and demanded with quite unnecessary warmth what the thing
meant, and I was compelled to translate it all back into prose. On this, as on
other similar occasions, my employer took me severely to task—for he was, you
see, a man entirely devoid of all pretensions to literary taste!
All this, however, is a
mere preamble, and leads up to the fact that after ten years or so of drudgery
I inherited a legacy which, though small, was sufficient to satisfy my simple
wants. Finding myself independent, I rented a quiet house removed from the
uproar and bustle of London, and there I settled down with the intention of
producing some great work which should single me out from the family of the
Smiths, and render my name immortal. To this end I laid in several quires of
foolscap, a box of quill pens, and a sixpenny bottle of ink, and having given
my housekeeper injunctions to deny me to all visitors, I proceeded to look
round for a suitable subject.
I was looking round for
some weeks. At the end of that time I found that I had by constant nibbling
devoured a large number of the quills, and had spread the ink out to such
advantage, what with blots, spills, and abortive commencements, that there
appeared to be some everywhere except in the bottle. As to the story
itself, however, the facility of my youth had deserted me completely, and my
mind remained a complete blank; nor could I, do what I would, excite my sterile
imagination to conjure up a single incident or character.
In this strait I determined
to devote my leisure to running rapidly through the works of the leading
English novelists, from Daniel Defoe to the present day, in the hope of
stimulating my latent ideas and of getting a good grasp of the general tendency
of literature. For some time past I had avoided opening any work of fiction
because one of the greatest faults of my youth had been that I invariably and
unconsciously mimicked the style of the last author whom I had happened to
read. Now, however, I made up my mind to seek safety in a multitude, and by
consulting all the English classics to avoid the danger of
imitating any one too closely. I had just accomplished the task of reading
through the majority of the standard novels at the time when my narrative
commences.
It was, then, about
twenty minutes to ten on the night of the fourth of June, eighteen hundred and
eighty-six, that, after disposing of a pint of beer and a Welsh rarebit for my
supper, I seated myself in my arm-chair, cocked my feet upon a stool, and lit
my pipe, as was my custom. Both my pulse and my temperature were, as far as I
know, normal at the time. I would give the state of the barometer, but that
unlucky instrument had experienced an unprecedented fall of forty-two
inches—from a nail to the ground—and was not in a reliable condition. We live in
a scientific age, and I flatter myself that I move with the times.
Whilst in that
comfortable lethargic condition which accompanies both digestion and poisoning
by nicotine, I suddenly became aware of the extraordinary fact that my little
drawing-room had elongated into a great salon, and that my humble
table had increased in proportion. Round this colossal mahogany were seated a
great number of people who were talking earnestly together, and the surface in
front of them was strewn with books and pamphlets. I could not help observing
that these persons were dressed in a most extraordinary mixture of costumes,
for those at the end nearest to me wore peruke wigs, swords, and all the
fashions of two centuries back; those about the centre had tight knee-breeches,
high cravats, and heavy bunches of seals; while among those at the far side the
majority were dressed in the most modern style, and among them I saw, to my
surprise, several eminent men of letters whom I had the honour of knowing.
There were two or three women in the company. I should have risen to my feet to
greet these unexpected guests, but all power of motion appeared to have
deserted me, and I could only lie still and listen to their conversation, which
I soon perceived to be all about myself.
"Egad!"
exclaimed a rough, weather-beaten man, who was smoking a long church-warden
pipe at my end of the table, "my heart softens for him. Why, gossips,
we've been in the same straits ourselves. Gadzooks, never did mother feel more
concern for her eldest born than I when Rory Random went out to make his own
way in the world."[Pg 100]
"Right, Tobias,
right!" cried another man, seated at my very elbow. "By my troth, I
lost more flesh over poor Robin on his island, than had I the sweating sickness
twice told. The tale was well-nigh done when in swaggers my Lord of Rochester—a
merry gallant, and one whose word in matters literary might make or mar. 'How
now, Defoe,' quoth he, 'hast a tale on hand?' 'Even so, your lordship,' I
returned. 'A right merry one, I trust,' quoth he. 'Discourse unto me concerning
thy heroine, a comely lass, Dan, or I mistake.' 'Nay,' I replied, 'there is no
heroine in the matter.' 'Split not your phrases,' quoth he; 'thou weighest
every word like a scald attorney. Speak to me of thy principal female
character, be she heroine or no.' 'My lord,' I answered, 'there is no female
character.' 'Then out upon thyself and thy book too!' he cried. 'Thou hadst
best burn it!'—and so out in great dudgeon, whilst I fell to mourning over my
poor romance, which was thus, as it were, sentenced to death before its birth.
Yet there are a thousand now who have heard of Robin and his man Friday, to one
who has heard of my Lord of Rochester."
"Very true,
Defoe," said a genial-looking man in a red waistcoat, who was sitting at
the modern end of the table. "But all this won't help our good friend
Smith in making a start at his story, which, I believe, was the reason why we
assembled."
"The Dickens it
is!" stammered a little man beside him, and everybody laughed, especially
the genial man, who cried out, "Charley Lamb, Charley Lamb, you'll never
alter. You would make a pun if you were hanged for it."
"That would be a
case of haltering," returned the other, on which everybody laughed again.
By this time I had begun
to dimly realise in my confused brain the enormous honour which had been done
me. The greatest masters of fiction in every age of English letters had
apparently made a rendezvous beneath my roof, in order to assist me in my
difficulties. There were many faces at the table whom I was unable to identify;
but when I looked hard at others I often found them to be very familiar to me,
whether from paintings or from mere description. Thus between the first two
speakers, who had betrayed themselves as Defoe and Smollett, there sat a dark,
saturnine, corpulent old man, with harsh prominent features, who I was sure
could be none other than the famous author of Gulliver. There were several
others of whom I was not so sure, sitting at the other side of the table, but I
conjecture that both Fielding and Richardson were among them, and I could swear
to the lantern-jaws and cadaverous visage of Lawrence Sterne. Higher up I could
see among the crowd the high forehead of Sir Walter Scott, the masculine
features of George Eliot, and the flattened nose of Thackeray; while amongst
the living I recognised James Payn, Walter Besant, the lady known as
"Ouida," Robert Louis Stevenson, and several of lesser note. Never
before, probably, had such an assemblage of choice spirits gathered under one
roof.
"Well," said
Sir Walter Scott, speaking with a very pronounced accent, "ye ken the auld
proverb, sirs, 'Ower mony cooks,' or as the Border minstrel sang—
'Black
Johnstone wi' his troopers ten
Might mak' the heart turn cauld,
But Johnstone when he's a' alane
Is waur ten thoosand fauld.'
The Johnstones were one
of the Redesdale families, second cousins of the Armstrongs, and connected by
marriage to——"
"Perhaps, Sir
Walter," interrupted Thackeray, "you would take the responsibility
off our hands by yourself dictating the commencement of a story to this young
literary aspirant."
"Na, na!"
cried Sir Walter; "I'll do my share, but there's Chairlie over there as
full o' wut as a Radical's full o' treason. He's the laddie to give a cheery
opening to it."
Dickens was shaking his
head, and apparently about to refuse the honour, when a voice from among the
moderns—I could not see who it was for the crowd—said:
"Suppose we begin
at the end of the table and work round, any one contributing a little as the
fancy seizes him?"
"Agreed!
agreed!" cried the whole company; and every eye was turned on Defoe, who
seemed very uneasy, and filled his pipe from a great tobacco-box in front of
him.
"Nay,
gossips," he said, "there are others more worthy——" But he was
interrupted by loud cries of "No! no!" from the whole table; and
Smollett shouted out, "Stand to it, Dan—stand to it! You and I and the
Dean here will make three short tacks just to fetch her out of harbour, and
then she may drift where she pleases." Thus encouraged, Defoe cleared
his throat, and began in this way, talking between the puffs of his pipe:—
"My father was a
well-to-do yeoman of Cheshire, named Cyprian Overbeck, but, marrying about the
year 1617, he assumed the name of his wife's family, which was Wells; and thus
I, their eldest son, was named Cyprian Overbeck Wells. The farm was a very
fertile one, and contained some of the best grazing land in those parts, so
that my father was enabled to lay by money to the extent of a thousand crowns,
which he laid out in an adventure to the Indies with such surprising success
that in less than three years it had increased fourfold. Thus encouraged, he
bought a part share of the trader, and, fitting her out once more with such
commodities as were most in demand (viz. old muskets, hangers and axes, besides
glasses, needles, and the like), he placed me on board as supercargo to look
after his interests, and despatched us upon our voyage.
"We had a fair wind
as far as Cape de Verde, and there, getting into the north-west trade-winds,
made good progress down the African coast. Beyond sighting a Barbary rover
once, whereat our mariners were in sad distress, counting themselves already as
little better than slaves, we had good luck until we had come within a hundred
leagues of the Cape of Good Hope, when the wind veered round to the southward
and blew exceeding hard, while the sea rose to such a height that the end of
the mainyard dipped into the water, and I heard the master say that though he
had been at sea for five-and-thirty years he had never seen the like of it, and
that he had little expectation of riding through it. On this I fell to wringing
my hands and bewailing myself, until the mast going by the board with a
crash, I thought that the ship had struck, and swooned with terror, falling
into the scuppers and lying like one dead, which was the saving of me, as will
appear in the sequel. For the mariners, giving up all hope of saving the ship, and
being in momentary expectation that she would founder, pushed off in the
long-boat, whereby I fear that they met the fate which they hoped to avoid,
since I have never from that day heard anything of them. For my own part, on
recovering from the swoon into which I had fallen, I found that, by the mercy
of Providence, the sea had gone down, and that I was alone in the vessel. At
which last discovery I was so terror-struck that I could but stand wringing my
hands and bewailing my sad fate, until at last taking heart, I fell to
comparing my lot with that of my unhappy camerados, on which I became more
cheerful, and descending to the cabin, made a meal off such dainties as were in
the captain's locker."
Having got so far, Defoe
remarked that he thought he had given them a fair start, and handed over the
story to Dean Swift, who, after premising that he feared he would find himself
as much at sea as Master Cyprian Overbeck Wells, continued in this way:—
"For two days I
drifted about in great distress, fearing that there should be a return of the
gale, and keeping an eager look-out for my late companions. Upon the third day,
towards evening, I observed to my extreme surprise that the ship was under the
influence of a very powerful current, which ran to the north-east with such
violence that she was carried, now bows on, now stern on, and occasionally
drifting side ways like a crab, at a rate which I cannot
compute at less than twelve or fifteen knots an hour. For several weeks I was
borne away in this manner, until one morning, to my inexpressible joy, I
sighted an island upon the starboard quarter. The current would, however, have
carried me past it had I not made shift, though single-handed, to set the
flying-jib so as to turn her bows, and then clapping on the sprit-sail,
studding-sail, and fore-sail, I clewed up the halliards upon the port side, and
put the wheel down hard a-starboard, the wind being at the time
north-east-half-east."
At the description of
this nautical manœuvre I observed that Smollett grinned, and a gentleman who
was sitting higher up the table in the uniform of the Royal Navy, and who I
guessed to be Captain Marryat, became very uneasy and fidgeted in his seat.
"By this means I
got clear of the current and was able to steer within a quarter of a mile of
the beach, which indeed I might have approached still nearer by making another
tack, but being an excellent swimmer, I deemed it best to leave the vessel,
which was almost waterlogged, and to make the best of my way to the shore.
"I had had my
doubts hitherto as to whether this new-found country was inhabited or no, but
as I approached nearer to it, being on the summit of a great wave, I perceived
a number of figures on the beach, engaged apparently in watching me and my
vessel. My joy, however, was considerably lessened when on reaching the land I
found that the figures consisted of a vast concourse of animals of various
sorts who were standing about in groups, and who hurried down to the water's
edge to meet me. I had scarce put my[ foot upon the sand before I was surrounded
by an eager crowd of deer, dogs, wild boars, buffaloes, and other creatures,
none of whom showed the least fear either of me or of each other, but, on the
contrary, were animated by a common feeling of curiosity, as well as, it would
appear, by some degree of disgust."
"A second
edition," whispered Lawrence Sterne to his neighbour; "Gulliver
served up cold."
"Did you speak,
sir?" asked the Dean very sternly, having evidently overheard the remark.
"My words were not
addressed to you, sir," answered Sterne, looking rather frightened.
"They were none the
less insolent," roared the Dean. "Your reverence would fain make a
Sentimental Journey of the narrative, I doubt not, and find pathos in a dead
donkey—though faith, no man can blame thee for mourning over thy own kith and
kin."
"Better that than
to wallow in all the filth of Yahooland," returned Sterne warmly, and a
quarrel would certainly have ensued but for the interposition of the remainder
of the company. As it was, the Dean refused indignantly to have any further
hand in the story, and Sterne also stood out of it, remarking with a sneer that
he was loth to fit a good blade on to a poor handle. Under these circumstances
some further unpleasantness might have occurred had not Smollett rapidly taken
up the narrative, continuing it in the third person instead of the first:—
"Our hero, being
considerably alarmed at this strange reception, lost little time in plunging
into the sea again and regaining his vessel, being convinced that the worst
which might befall him from the elements would be as nothing compared to the
dangers of this mysterious island. It was as well that he took this course, for
before nightfall his ship was overhauled and he himself picked up by a British
man-of-war, the Lightning (74), then returning from the West
Indies, where it had formed part of the fleet under the command of Admiral
Benbow. Young Wells, being a likely lad enough, well-spoken and high-spirited,
was at once entered on the books as officer's servant, in which capacity he
both gained great popularity on account of the freedom of his manners, and
found an opportunity for indulging in those practical pleasantries for which he
had all his life been famous.
"Among the
quartermasters of the Lightning there was one named Jedediah
Anchorstock, whose appearance was so remarkable that it quickly attracted the
attention of our hero. He was a man of about fifty, dark with exposure to the
weather, and so tall that as he came along the 'tween decks he had to bend
himself nearly double. The most striking peculiarity of this individual was,
however, that in his boyhood some evil-minded person had tattooed eyes all over
his countenance with such marvellous skill that it was difficult at a short distance
to pick out his real ones among so many counterfeits. On this strange personage
Master Cyprian determined to exercise his talents for mischief, the more so as
he learned that he was extremely superstitious, and also that he had left
behind him in Portsmouth a strong-minded spouse of whom he stood in mortal
terror. With this object he secured one of the sheep which were kept on board
for the officers' table, and pouring a can of rumbo down its throat, re]duced
it to a state of utter intoxication. He then conveyed it to Anchorstock's
berth, and with the assistance of some other imps, as mischievous as himself,
dressed it up in a high nightcap and gown, and covered it over with the
bedclothes.
"When the
quartermaster came down from his watch our hero met him at the door of his
berth with an agitated face. 'Mr. Anchorstock,' said he, 'can it be that your
wife is on board?' 'Wife!' roared the astonished sailor. 'Ye white-faced swab,
what d'ye mean?' 'If she's not here in the ship it must be her ghost,' said
Cyprian, shaking his head gloomily. 'In the ship! How in thunder could she get
into the ship? Why, master, I believe as how you're weak in the upper works,
d'ye see? to as much as think o' such a thing. My Poll is moored head and
starn, behind the point at Portsmouth, more'n two thousand mile away.' 'Upon my
word,' said our hero, very earnestly, 'I saw a female look out of your cabin
not five minutes ago.' 'Ay, ay, Mr. Anchorstock,' joined in several of the
conspirators. 'We all saw her—a spanking-looking craft with a dead-light
mounted on one side.' 'Sure enough,' said Anchorstock, staggered by this
accumulation of evidence, 'my Polly's starboard eye was doused for ever by long
Sue Williams of the Hard. But if so be as she be there I must see her, be she
ghost or quick'; with which the honest sailor, in much perturbation and
trembling in every limb, began to shuffle forward into the cabin, holding the
light well in front of him. It chanced, however, that the unhappy sheep, which
was quietly engaged in sleeping off the effects of its unusual potations, was
awakened by the noise of his approach, and finding herself in such an
unusual position, sprang out of bed and rushed furiously for the door, bleating
wildly, and rolling about like a brig in a tornado, partly from intoxication
and partly from the night-dress which impeded her movements. As Anchorstock saw
this extraordinary apparition bearing down upon him, he uttered a yell and fell
flat upon his face, convinced that he had to do with a supernatural visitor,
the more so as the confederates heightened the effect by a chorus of most
ghastly groans and cries. The joke had nearly gone beyond what was originally
intended, for the quartermaster lay as one dead, and it was only with the
greatest difficulty that he could be brought to his senses. To the end of the
voyage he stoutly asserted that he had seen the distant Mrs. Anchorstock,
remarking with many oaths that though he was too woundily scared to take much
note of the features, there was no mistaking the strong smell of rum which was
characteristic of his better half.
"It chanced shortly
after this to be the king's birthday, an event which was signalised aboard
the Lightning by the death of the commander under singular
circumstances. This officer, who was a real fairweather Jack, hardly knowing
the ship's keel from her ensign, had obtained his position through
parliamentary interest, and used it with such tyranny and cruelty that he was
universally execrated. So unpopular was he that when a plot was entered into by
the whole crew to punish his misdeeds with death, he had not a single friend
among six hundred souls to warn him of his danger. It was the custom on board
the king's ships that upon his birthday the entire ship's company should be drawn
up upon deck, and that at a signal they should discharge their muskets
into the air in honour of his Majesty. On this occasion word had been secretly
passed round for every man to slip a slug into his firelock, instead of the
blank cartridge provided. On the boatswain blowing his whistle the men mustered
upon deck and formed line, whilst the captain, standing well in front of them,
delivered a few words to them. 'When I give the word,' he concluded, 'you shall
discharge your pieces, and by thunder, if any man is a second before or a
second after his fellows I shall trice him up to the weather rigging!' With
these words he roared 'Fire!' on which every man levelled his musket straight
at his head and pulled the trigger. So accurate was the aim and so short the
distance, that more than five hundred bullets struck him simultaneously,
blowing away his head and a large portion of his body. There were so many
concerned in this matter, and it was so hopeless to trace it to any individual,
that the officers were unable to punish any one for the affair—the more readily
as the captain's haughty ways and heartless conduct had made him quite as
hateful to them as to the men whom he commanded.
"By his
pleasantries and the natural charm of his manners our hero so far won the good
wishes of the ship's company that they parted with infinite regret upon their
arrival in England. Filial duty, however, urged him to return home and report
himself to his father, with which object he posted from Portsmouth to London,
intending to proceed thence to Shropshire. As it chanced, however, one of the
horses sprained his off foreleg while passing through Chichester, and as no
change could be obtained, Cyprian found himself compelled to put up at the
Crown and Bull for the night.
"Ods
bodikins!" continued Smollett, laughing, "I never could pass a
comfortable hostel without stopping and so, with your permission, I'll e'en
stop here, and whoever wills may lead friend Cyprian to his further adventures.
Do you, Sir Walter, give us a touch of the Wizard of the North."
With these words
Smollett produced a pipe, and filling it at Defoe's tobacco-pot, waited
patiently for the continuation of the story.
"If I must, I
must," remarked the illustrious Scotchman, taking a pinch of snuff; "but
I must beg leave to put Mr. Wells back a few hundred years, for of all things I
love the true mediæval smack. To proceed then:—
"Our hero, being
anxious to continue his journey, and learning that it would be some time before
any conveyance would be ready, determined to push on alone mounted on his
gallant grey steed. Travelling was particularly dangerous at that time, for
besides the usual perils which beset wayfarers, the southern parts of England
were in a lawless and disturbed state which bordered on insurrection. The young
man, however, having loosened his sword in his sheath, so as to be ready for
every eventuality, galloped cheerily upon his way, guiding himself to the best
of his ability by the light of the rising moon.
"He had not gone
far before he realised that the cautions which had been impressed upon him by
the landlord, and which he had been inclined to look upon as self-interested
advice, were only too well justified. At a spot where the road was particularly
rough, and ran across some marsh land, he perceived a short distance from
him a dark shadow, which his practised eye detected at once as a body of
crouching men. Reining up his horse within a few yards of the ambuscade, he
wrapped his cloak round his bridle-arm and summoned the party to stand forth.
"'What ho, my
masters!' he cried. 'Are beds so scarce, then, that ye must hamper the high
road of the king with your bodies? Now, by St. Ursula of Alpuxerra, there be
those who might think that birds who fly o' nights were after higher game than
the moorhen or the woodcock!'
"'Blades and
targets, comrades!' exclaimed a tall powerful man, springing into the centre of
the road with several companions, and standing in front of the frightened
horse. 'Who is this swashbuckler who summons his Majesty's lieges from their
repose? A very soldado, o' truth. Hark ye, sir, or my lord, or thy grace, or
whatsoever title your honour's honour may be pleased to approve, thou must curb
thy tongue play, or by the seven witches of Gambleside thou may find thyself in
but a sorry plight.'
"'I prythee, then,
that thou wilt expound to me who and what ye are,' quoth our hero, 'and whether
your purpose be such as an honest man may approve of. As to your threats, they
turn from my mind as your caitiffly weapons would shiver upon my hauberk from
Milan.'
"'Nay, Allen,'
interrupted one of the party, addressing him who seemed to be their leader;
'this is a lad of mettle, and such a one as our honest Jack longs for. But we
lure not hawks with empty hands. Look ye, sir, there is game afoot which it may
need such bold hunters as thyself to follow. Come with us and take a
firkin of canary, and we will find better work for that glaive of thine than
getting its owner into broil and bloodshed; for, by my troth! Milan or no
Milan, if my curtel axe do but ring against that morion of thine it will be an
ill day for thy father's son.'
"For a moment our
hero hesitated as to whether it would best become his knightly traditions to
hurl himself against his enemies, or whether it might not be better to obey
their requests. Prudence, mingled with a large share of curiosity, eventually
carried the day, and dismounting from his horse, he intimated that he was ready
to follow his captors.
"'Spoken like a
man!' cried he whom they addressed as Allen. 'Jack Cade will be right glad of
such a recruit. Blood and carrion! but thou hast the thews of a young ox; and I
swear, by the haft of my sword, that it might have gone ill with some of us
hadst thou not listened to reason!'
"'Nay, not so, good
Allen—not so,' squeaked a very small man, who had remained in the background
while there was any prospect of a fray, but who now came pushing to the front.
'Hadst thou been alone it might indeed have been so, perchance, but an expert
swordsman can disarm at pleasure such a one as this young knight. Well I
remember in the Palatinate how I clove to the chine even such another—the Baron
von Slogstaff. He struck at me, look ye, so; but I, with buckler and blade,
did, as one might say, deflect it; and then, countering in carte, I returned in
tierce, and so—St. Agnes save us! who comes here?'
"The apparition
which frightened the loquacious little man was sufficiently strange to
cause a qualm even in the bosom of the knight. Through the darkness there loomed
a figure which appeared to be of gigantic size, and a hoarse voice, issuing
apparently some distance above the heads of the party, broke roughly on the
silence of the night.
"'Now, out upon
thee, Thomas Allen, and foul be thy fate if thou hast abandoned thy post
without good and sufficient cause. By St. Anselm of the Holy Grove, thou hadst
best have never been born than rouse my spleen this night. Wherefore is it that
you and your men are trailing over the moor like a flock of geese when
Michaelmas is near?'
"'Good captain,'
said Allen, doffing his bonnet, an example followed by others of the band, 'we
have captured a goodly youth who was pricking it along the London road.
Methought that some word of thanks were meet reward for such service, rather than
taunt or threat.'
"'Nay, take it not
to heart, bold Allen,' exclaimed their leader, who was none other than the
great Jack Cade himself. 'Thou knowest of old that my temper is somewhat
choleric, and my tongue not greased with that unguent which oils the mouths of
the lip-serving lords of the land. And you,' he continued, turning suddenly
upon our hero, 'are you ready to join the great cause which will make England
what it was when the learned Alfred reigned in the land? Zounds, man, speak
out, and pick not your phrases.'
"'I am ready to do
aught which may become a knight and a gentleman,' said the soldier stoutly.
"'Taxes shall be
swept away!' cried Cade excitedly—'the impost and the anpost—the tithe and the
hundred-tax. The poor man's salt-box and flour-bin shall be as free as the
nobleman's cellar. Ha! what sayest thou?'
"'It is but just,'
said our hero.
"'Ay, but they give
us such justice as the falcon gives the leveret!' roared the orator. 'Down with
them, I say—down with every man of them! Noble and judge, priest and king, down
with them all!'
"'Nay,' said Sir
Overbeck Wells, drawing himself up to his full height, and laying his hand upon
the hilt of his sword, 'there I cannot follow thee, but must rather defy thee
as traitor and faineant, seeing that thou art no true man, but one who would
usurp the rights of our master the king, whom may the Virgin protect!'
"At these bold
words, and the defiance which they conveyed, the rebels seemed for a moment
utterly bewildered; but, encouraged by the hoarse shout of their leader, they
brandished their weapons and prepared to fall upon the knight, who placed
himself in a posture for defence and awaited their attack.
"There now!"
cried Sir Walter, rubbing his hands and chuckling, "I've put the chiel in
a pretty warm corner, and we'll see which of you moderns can take him oot o't.
Ne'er a word more will ye get frae me to help him one way or the other."
"You try your hand,
James," cried several voices, and the author in question had got so far as
to make an allusion to a solitary horseman who was approaching, when he was
interrupted by a tall gentleman a little farther down with a slight stutter and
a very nervous manner.
"Excuse me,"
he said, "but I fancy that I may be able to do something here. Some of
my humble productions have been said to excel Sir Walter at his best, and I was
undoubtedly stronger all round. I could picture modern society as well as
ancient; and as to my plays, why Shakespeare never came near The Lady
of Lyons for popularity. There is this little thing——" (Here he
rummaged among a great pile of papers in front of him.) "Ah! that's a
report of mine, when I was in India. Here it is. No, this is one of my speeches
in the House, and this is my criticism on Tennyson. Didn't I warm him up? I
can't find what I wanted, but of course you have read them all—Rienzi and Harold,
and The Last of the Barons. Every schoolboy knows them by heart, as
poor Macaulay would have said. Allow me to give you a sample:—
"In spite of the
gallant knight's valiant resistance the combat was too unequal to be sustained.
His sword was broken by a slash from a brown bill, and he was borne to the
ground. He expected immediate death, but such did not seem to be the intention
of the ruffians who had captured him. He was placed upon the back of his own
charger and borne, bound hand and foot, over the trackless moor, in the
fastnesses of which the rebels secreted themselves.
"In the depths of
these wilds there stood a stone building which had once been a farmhouse, but
having been for some reason abandoned had fallen into ruin, and had now become
the headquarters of Cade and his men. A large cowhouse near the farm had been
utilised as sleeping quarters, and some rough attempts had been made to shield
the principal room of the main building from the weather by stopping up the
gaping apertures in the walls. In this apartment was spread out a rough meal
for the returning rebels, and our hero was thrown, still bound, into an empty
outhouse, there to await his fate."
Sir Walter had been
listening with the greatest impatience to Bulwer Lytton's narrative, but when
it had reached this point he broke in impatiently.
"We want a touch of
your own style, man," he said. "The
animal-magnetico-electro-hysterical-biological-mysterious sort of story is all
your own, but at present you are just a poor copy of myself, and nothing
more."
There was a murmur of
assent from the company, and Defoe remarked, "Truly, Master Lytton, there
is a plaguey resemblance in the style, which may indeed be but a chance, and
yet methinks it is sufficiently marked to warrant such words as our friend hath
used."
"Perhaps you will
think that this is an imitation also," said Lytton bitterly, and leaning
back in his chair with a morose countenance, he continued the narrative in this
way:—
"Our unfortunate
hero had hardly stretched himself upon the straw with which his dungeon was
littered, when a secret door opened in the wall and a venerable old man swept
majestically into the apartment. The prisoner gazed upon him with astonishment
not unmixed with awe, for on his broad brow was printed the seal of much
knowledge—such knowledge as it is not granted to a son of man to know. He was
clad in a long white robe, crossed and chequered with mystic devices in the
Arabic character, while a high scarlet tiara marked with the square and circle
enhanced his venerable appearance. 'My son,' he said, turning his piercing and
yet dreamy gaze upon Sir Overbeck, 'all things lead to nothing, and nothing is
the foundation of all things. Cosmos is impenetrable. Why then should we
exist?'
"Astounded at this
weighty query, and at the philosophic demeanour of his visitor, our hero made
shift to bid him welcome and to demand his name and quality. As the old man
answered him his voice rose and fell in musical cadences, like the sighing of
the east wind, while an ethereal and aromatic vapour pervaded the apartment.
"'I am the eternal
non-ego,' he answered. 'I am the concentrated negative—the everlasting essence
of nothing. You see in me that which existed before the beginning of matter
many years before the commencement of time. I am the algebraic x which
represents the infinite divisibility of a finite particle.'
"Sir Overbeck felt
a shudder as though an ice-cold hand had been placed upon his brow. 'What is
your message?' he whispered, falling prostrate before his mysterious visitor.
"'To tell you that
the eternities beget chaos, and that the immensities are at the mercy of the
divine ananke. Infinitude crouches before a personality. The mercurial essence
is the prime mover in spirituality, and the thinker is powerless before the
pulsating inanity. The cosmical procession is terminated only by the unknowable
and unpronounceable'——
"May I ask, Mr.
Smollett, what you find to laugh at?"
"Gadzooks,
master," cried Smollett, who had been sniggering for some time back.
"It seems to me that there is little danger of any one venturing to
dispute that style with you."
"It's all your
own," murmured Sir Walter.
"And very pretty,
too," quoth Lawrence Sterne, with a malignant grin. "Pray sir, what
language do you call it?"
Lytton was so enraged at
these remarks, and at the favour with which they appeared to be received, that
he endeavoured to stutter out some reply, and then, losing control of himself
completely, picked up all his loose papers and strode out of the room, dropping
pamphlets and speeches at every step. This incident amused the company so much
that they laughed for several minutes without cessation. Gradually the sound of
their laughter sounded more and more harshly in my ears, the lights on the
table grew dim and the company more misty, until they and their symposium
vanished away altogether. I was sitting before the embers of what had been a
roaring fire, but was now little more than a heap of grey ashes, and the merry
laughter of the august company had changed to the recriminations of my wife,
who was shaking me violently by the shoulder and exhorting me to choose some
more seasonable spot for my slumbers. So ended the wondrous adventures of
Master Cyprian Overbeck Wells, but I still live in the hopes that in some
future dream the great masters may themselves finish that which they have
begun.
I cannot pretend to say
what occurred on the 14th of April last at No. 17, Badderly Gardens. Put down
in black and white, my surmise might seem too crude, too grotesque, for serious
consideration. And yet that something did occur, and that it was of a nature
which will leave its mark upon every one of us for the rest of our lives, is as
certain as the unanimous testimony of five witnesses can make it. I will not
enter into any argument or speculation. I will only give a plain statement,
which will be submitted to John Moir, Harvey Deacon, and Mrs. Delamere, and withheld
from publication unless they are prepared to corroborate every detail. I cannot
obtain the sanction of Paul Le Duc, for he appears to have left the country.
It was John Moir (the
well-known senior partner of Moir, Moir, and Sanderson) who had originally
turned our attention to occult subjects. He had, like many very hard and
practical men of business, a mystic side to his nature, which had led him to
the examination, and eventually to the acceptance, of those elusive phenomena
which are grouped together with much that is foolish, and much that is
fraudulent, under the common heading of spiritualism. His researches, which had
begun with an open mind, ended unhappily in dogma, and he became as positive
and fanatical as any other bigot. He represented in our little group the
body of men who have turned these singular phenomena into a new religion.
Mrs. Delamere, our
medium, was his sister, the wife of Delamere, the rising sculptor. Our
experience had shown us that to work on these subjects without a medium was as
futile as for an astronomer to make observations without a telescope. On the
other hand, the introduction of a paid medium was hateful to all of us. Was it
not obvious that he or she would feel bound to return some result for money
received, and that the temptation to fraud would be an overpowering one? No
phenomena could be relied upon which were produced at a guinea an hour. But,
fortunately, Moir had discovered that his sister was mediumistic—in other
words, that she was a battery of that animal magnetic force which is the only
form of energy which is subtle enough to be acted upon from the spiritual plane
as well as from our own material one. Of course, when I say this, I do not mean
to beg the question; but I am simply indicating the theories upon which we were
ourselves, rightly or wrongly, explaining what we saw. The lady came, not
altogether with the approval of her husband, and though she never gave
indications of any very great psychic force, we were able, at least, to obtain
those usual phenomena of message-tilting which are at the same time so puerile
and so inexplicable. Every Sunday evening we met in Harvey Deacon's studio at
Badderly Gardens, the next house to the corner of Merton Park Road.
Harvey Deacon's
imaginative work in art would prepare any one to find that he was an ardent
lover of everything which was outré and sensational. A certain
picturesqueness in the study of the occult had been the quality which had
originally attracted him to it, but his attention was speedily arrested by some
of those phenomena to which I have referred, and he was coming rapidly to the
conclusion that what he had looked upon as an amusing romance and an
after-dinner entertainment was really a very formidable reality. He is a man
with a remarkably clear and logical brain—a true descendant of his ancestor,
the well-known Scotch professor—and he represented in our small circle the
critical element, the man who has no prejudices, is prepared to follow facts as
far as he can see them, and refuses to theorise in advance of his data. His
caution annoyed Moir as much as the latter's robust faith amused Deacon, but
each in his own way was equally keen upon the matter.
And I? What am I to say
that I represented? I was not the devotee. I was not the scientific critic.
Perhaps the best that I can claim for myself is that I was the dilettante man
about town, anxious to be in the swim of every fresh movement, thankful for any
new sensation which would take me out of myself and open up fresh possibilities
of existence. I am not an enthusiast myself, but I like the company of those
who are. Moir's talk, which made me feel as if we had a private pass-key
through the door of death, filled me with a vague contentment. The soothing
atmosphere of the séance with the darkened lights was delightful to me. In a
word, the thing amused me, and so I was there.
It was, as I have said,
upon the 14th of April last that the very singular event which I am about to
put upon record took place. I was the first of the men to arrive at the
studio, but Mrs. Delamere was already there, having had afternoon tea with Mrs.
Harvey Deacon. The two ladies and Deacon himself were standing in front of an
unfinished picture of his upon the easel. I am not an expert in art, and I have
never professed to understand what Harvey Deacon meant by his pictures; but I
could see in this instance that it was all very clever and imaginative, fairies
and animals and allegorical figures of all sorts. The ladies were loud in their
praises, and indeed the colour effect was a remarkable one.
"What do you think
of it, Markham?" he asked.
"Well, it's above
me," said I. "These beasts—what are they?"
"Mythical monsters,
imaginary creatures, heraldic emblems—a sort of weird, bizarre procession of
them."
"With a white horse
in front!"
"It's not a
horse," said he, rather testily—which was surprising, for he was a very
good-humoured fellow as a rule, and hardly ever took himself seriously.
"What is it,
then?"
"Can't you see the
horn in front? It's a unicorn. I told you they were heraldic beasts. Can't you
recognise one?"
"Very sorry,
Deacon," said I, for he really seemed to be annoyed.
He laughed at his own
irritation.
"Excuse me,
Markham!" said he; "the fact is that I have had an awful job over the
beast. All day I have been painting him in and painting him out, and trying to
imagine what a real live, ramping unicorn would look like. At last I got
him, as I hoped; so when you failed to recognise it, it took me on the
raw."
"Why, of course
it's a unicorn," said I, for he was evidently depressed at my obtuseness.
"I can see the horn quite plainly, but I never saw a unicorn except beside
the Royal Arms, and so I never thought of the creature. And these others are
griffins and cockatrices, and dragons of sorts?"
"Yes, I had no
difficulty with them. It was the unicorn which bothered me. However, there's an
end of it until to-morrow." He turned the picture round upon the easel,
and we all chatted about other subjects.
Moir was late that
evening, and when he did arrive he brought with him, rather to our surprise, a
small, stout Frenchman, whom he introduced as Monsieur Paul Le Duc. I say to
our surprise, for we held a theory that any intrusion into our spiritual circle
deranged the conditions, and introduced an element of suspicion. We knew that
we could trust each other, but all our results were vitiated by the presence of
an outsider. However, Moir soon reconciled us to the innovation. Monsieur Paul
Le Duc was a famous student of occultism, a seer, a medium, and a mystic. He
was travelling in England with a letter of introduction to Moir from the
President of the Parisian brothers of the Rosy Cross. What more natural than
that he should bring him to our little séance, or that we should feel honoured
by his presence?
He was, as I have said,
a small, stout man, undistinguished in appearance, with a broad, smooth,
clean-shaven face, remarkable only for a pair of large, brown, velvety eyes,
staring vaguely out in front of him. He was well dressed, with the manners of a gentleman,
and his curious little turns of English speech set the ladies smiling. Mrs.
Deacon had a prejudice against our researches and left the room, upon which we
lowered the lights, as was our custom, and drew up our chairs to the square mahogany
table which stood in the centre of the studio. The light was subdued, but
sufficient to allow us to see each other quite plainly. I remember that I could
even observe the curious, podgy little square-topped hands which the Frenchman
laid upon the table.
"What a fun!"
said he. "It is many years since I have sat in this fashion, and it is to
me amusing. Madame is medium. Does madame make the trance?"
"Well, hardly
that," said Mrs. Delamere. "But I am always conscious of extreme
sleepiness."
"It is the first
stage. Then you encourage it, and there comes the trance. When the trance
comes, then out jumps your little spirit and in jumps another little spirit,
and so you have direct talking or writing. You leave your machine to be worked
by another. Hein? But what have unicorns to do with it?"
Harvey Deacon started in
his chair. The Frenchman was moving his head slowly round and staring into the
shadows which draped the walls.
"What a fun!"
said he. "Always unicorns. Who has been thinking so hard upon a subject so
bizarre?"
"This is
wonderful!" cried Deacon. "I have been trying to paint one all day.
But how could you know it?"
"You have been
thinking of them in this room."
"Certainly."
"But thoughts are
things, my friend. When you imagine a thing you make a thing. You did not know it, hein?
But I can see your unicorns because it is not only with my eye that I can
see."
"Do you mean to say
that I create a thing which has never existed by merely thinking of it?"
"But certainly. It
is the fact which lies under all other facts. That is why an evil thought is
also a danger."
"They are, I
suppose, upon the astral plane?" said Moir.
"Ah, well, these
are but words, my friends. They are there—somewhere—everywhere—I cannot tell
myself. I see them. I could touch them."
"You could not
make us see them."
"It is to
materialise them. Hold! It is an experiment. But the power is wanting. Let us
see what power we have, and then arrange what we shall do. May I place you as I
wish?"
"You evidently know
a great deal more about it than we do," said Harvey Deacon; "I wish
that you would take complete control."
"It may be that the
conditions are not good. But we will try what we can do. Madame will sit where
she is, I next, and this gentleman beside me. Meester Moir will sit next to
madame, because it is well to have blacks and blondes in turn. So! And now with
your permission I will turn the lights all out."
"What is the
advantage of the dark?" I asked.
"Because the force
with which we deal is a vibration of ether and so also is light. We have the
wires all for ourselves now—hein? You will not be frightened in the
darkness, madame? What a fun is such a séance!"
At first the darkness
appeared to be absolutely pitchy, but in a few minutes our eyes became so
far accustomed to it that we could just make out each other's presence—very
dimly and vaguely, it is true. I could see nothing else in the room—only the
black loom of the motionless figures. We were all taking the matter much more
seriously than we had ever done before.
"You will place
your hands in front. It is hopeless that we touch, since we are so few round so
large a table. You will compose yourself, madame, and if sleep should come to
you you will not fight against it. And now we sit in silence and we expect—hein?"
So we sat in silence and
expected, staring out into the blackness in front of us. A clock ticked in the
passage. A dog barked intermittently far away. Once or twice a cab rattled past
in the street, and the gleam of its lamps through the chink in the curtains was
a cheerful break in that gloomy vigil. I felt those physical symptoms with
which previous séances had made me familiar—the coldness of the feet, the
tingling in the hands, the glow of the palms, the feeling of a cold wind upon
the back. Strange little shooting pains came in my forearms, especially as it
seemed to me in my left one, which was nearest to our visitor—due no doubt to
disturbance of the vascular system, but worthy of some attention all the same.
At the same time I was conscious of a strained feeling of expectancy which was
almost painful. From the rigid, absolute silence of my companions I gathered
that their nerves were as tense as my own.
And then suddenly a
sound came out of the darkness—a low, sibilant sound, the quick, thin breathing
of a woman. Quicker and thinner yet it came, as between clenched teeth, to end
in a loud gasp with a dull rustle of cloth.
"What's that? Is
all right?" some one asked in the darkness.
"Yes, all is
right," said the Frenchman. "It is madame. She is in her trance. Now,
gentlemen, if you will wait quiet you will see something, I think, which will
interest you much."
Still the ticking in the
hall. Still the breathing, deeper and fuller now, from the medium. Still the
occasional flash, more welcome than ever, of the passing lights of the hansoms.
What a gap we were bridging, the half-raised veil of the eternal on the one
side and the cabs of London on the other. The table was throbbing with a mighty
pulse. It swayed steadily, rhythmically, with an easy swooping, scooping motion
under our fingers. Sharp little raps and cracks came from its substance,
file-firing, volley-firing, the sounds of a fagot burning briskly on a frosty
night.
"There is much
power," said the Frenchman. "See it on the table!"
I had thought it was
some delusion of my own, but all could see it now. There was a greenish-yellow
phosphorescent light—or I should say a luminous vapour rather than a
light—which lay over the surface of the table. It rolled and wreathed and
undulated in dim glimmering folds, turning and swirling like clouds of smoke. I
could see the white, square-ended hands of the French medium in this baleful
light.
"What a fun!"
he cried. "It is splendid!"
"Shall we call the
alphabet?" asked Moir.
"But no—for we can
do much better," said our visitor. "It is but a clumsy thing to tilt
the table for every letter of the alphabet, and with such a medium as madame we
should do better than that."
"Yes, you will do
better," said a voice.
"Who was that? Who
spoke? Was that you, Markham?"
"No, I did not
speak."
"It was madame who
spoke."
"But it was not her
voice."
"Is that you, Mrs.
Delamere?"
"It is not the
medium, but it is the power which uses the organs of the medium," said the
strange, deep voice.
"Where is Mrs.
Delamere? It will not hurt her, I trust."
"The medium is
happy in another plane of existence. She has taken my place, as I have taken
hers."
"Who are you?"
"It cannot matter
to you who I am. I am one who has lived as you are living, and who has died as
you will die."
We heard the creak and
grate of a cab pulling up next door. There was an argument about the fare, and
the cabman grumbled hoarsely down the street. The green-yellow cloud still
swirled faintly over the table, dull elsewhere, but glowing into a dim luminosity
in the direction of the medium. It seemed to be piling itself up in front of
her. A sense of fear and cold struck into my heart. It seemed to me that
lightly and flippantly we had approached the most real and august of
sacraments, that communion with the dead of which the fathers of the Church had
spoken.
"Don't you think we
are going too far? Should we not break up this séance?" I cried.
But the others were all
earnest to see the end of it. They laughed at my scruples.
"All the powers are
made for use," said Harvey Deacon. "If we can do
this, we should do this. Every new departure of knowledge has
been called unlawful in its inception. It is right and proper that we should
inquire into the nature of death."
"It is right and
proper," said the voice.
"There, what more
could you ask?" cried Moir, who was much excited. "Let us have a
test. Will you give us a test that you are really there?"
"What test do you
demand?"
"Well, now—I have
some coins in my pocket. Will you tell me how many?"
"We come back in
the hope of teaching and of elevating, and not to guess childish riddles."
"Ha, ha, Meester
Moir, you catch it that time," cried the Frenchman. "But surely this
is very good sense what the Control is saying."
"It is a religion,
not a game," said the cold, hard voice.
"Exactly—the very
view I take of it," cried Moir. "I am sure I am very sorry if I have
asked a foolish question. You will not tell me who you are?"
"What does it
matter?"
"Have you been a
spirit long?"
"Yes."
"How long?"
"We cannot reckon
time as you do. Our conditions are different."
"Are you
happy?"
"Yes."
"You would not wish
to come back to life?"
"No—certainly
not."
"Are you
busy?"
"We could not be
happy if we were not busy."
"What do you
do?"
"I have said that
the conditions are entirely different."
"Can you give us no
idea of your work?"
"We labour for our
own improvement and for the advancement of others."
"Do you like coming
here to-night?"
"I am glad to come
if I can do any good by coming."
"Then to do good is
your object?"
"It is the object
of all life on every plane."
"You see, Markham,
that should answer your scruples."
It did, for my doubts
had passed and only interest remained.
"Have you pain in
your life?" I asked.
"No; pain is a
thing of the body."
"Have you mental
pain?"
"Yes; one may
always be sad or anxious."
"Do you meet the
friends whom you have known on earth?"
"Some of
them."
"Why only some of
them?"
"Only those who are
sympathetic."
"Do husbands meet
wives?"
"Those who have
truly loved."
"And the
others?"
"They are nothing
to each other."
"There must be a
spiritual connection?"
"Of course."
"Is what we are
doing right?"
"If done in the
right spirit."
"What is the wrong
spirit?"
"Curiosity and
levity."
"May harm come of
that?"
"Very serious
harm."
"What sort of
harm?"
"You may call up
forces over which you have no control."
"Evil forces?"
"Undeveloped
forces."
"You say they are
dangerous. Dangerous to body or mind?"
"Sometimes to
both."
There was a pause, and
the blackness seemed to grow blacker still, while the yellow-green fog swirled
and smoked upon the table.
"Any questions you
would like to ask, Moir?" said Harvey Deacon.
"Only this—do you
pray in your world?"
"One should pray in
every world."
"Why?"
"Because it is the
acknowledgment of forces outside ourselves."
"What religion do
you hold over there?"
"We differ exactly
as you do."
"You have no
certain knowledge?"
"We have only
faith."
"These questions of
religion," said the Frenchman, "they are of interest to you serious
English people, but they are not so much fun. It seems to me that with
this power here we might be able to have some great experience—hein?
Something of which we could talk."
"But nothing could
be more interesting than this," said Moir.
"Well, if you think
so, that is very well," the Frenchman answered, peevishly. "For my
part, it seems to me that I have heard all this before, and that to-night I
should weesh to try some experiment with all this force which is given to us.
But if you have other questions, then ask them, and when you are finish we can
try something more."
But the spell was
broken. We asked and asked, but the medium sat silent in her chair. Only her
deep, regular breathing showed that she was there. The mist still whirled upon
the table.
"You have disturbed
the harmony. She will not answer."
"But we have
learned already all that she can tell—hein? For my part I wish to see
something I have never seen before."
"What then?"
"You will let me
try?"
"What would you
do?"
"I have said to you
that thoughts are things. Now I wish to prove it to you, and
to show you that which is only a thought. Yes, yes, I can do it and you will
see. Now I ask you only to sit still and say nothing, and keep ever your hands
quiet upon the table."
The room was blacker and
more silent than ever. The same feeling of apprehension which had lain heavily
upon me at the beginning of the séance was back at my heart once
more. The roots of my hair were tingling.
"It is working! It
is working!" cried the Frenchman, and there was a crack in his voice as he
spoke which told me that he also was strung to his tightest.
The luminous fog drifted
slowly off the table, and wavered and flickered across the room. There in the
farther and darkest corner it gathered and glowed, hardening down into a
shining core—a strange, shifty, luminous, and yet non-illuminating patch of
radiance, bright itself, but throwing no rays into the darkness. It had changed
from a greenish-yellow to a dusky sullen red. Then round this centre there
coiled a dark, smoky substance, thickening, hardening, growing denser and
blacker. And then the light went out, smothered in that which had grown round
it.
"It has gone."
"Hush—there's
something in the room."
We heard it in the
corner where the light had been, something which breathed deeply and fidgeted
in the darkness.
"What is it? Le
Duc, what have you done?"
"It is all right.
No harm will come." The Frenchman's voice was treble with agitation.
"Good heavens,
Moir, there's a large animal in the room. Here it is, close by my chair! Go
away! Go away!"
It was Harvey Deacon's
voice, and then came the sound of a blow upon some hard object. And then ...
And then ... how can I tell you what happened then?
Some huge thing hurtled
against us in the darkness, rearing, stamping, smashing, springing, snorting. The
table was splintered. We were scattered in every direction. It clattered and
scrambled amongst us, rushing with horrible energy from one corner of the room
to another. We were all screaming with fear, grovelling upon our hands and
knees to get away from it. Something trod upon my left hand, and I felt the
bones splinter under the weight.
"A light! A
light!" some one yelled.
"Moir, you have
matches, matches!"
"No, I have none.
Deacon, where are the matches? For God's sake, the matches!"
"I can't find them.
Here, you Frenchman, stop it!"
"It is beyond me.
Oh, mon Dieu, I cannot stop it. The door! Where is the door?"
My hand, by good luck,
lit upon the handle as I groped about in the darkness. The hard-breathing,
snorting, rushing creature tore past me and butted with a fearful crash against
the oaken partition. The instant that it had passed I turned the handle, and
next moment we were all outside, and the door shut behind us. From within came
a horrible crashing and rending and stamping.
"What is it? In
Heaven's name, what is it?"
"A horse. I saw it
when the door opened. But Mrs. Delamere——?"
"We must fetch her
out. Come on, Markham; the longer we wait the less we shall like it."
He flung open the door
and we rushed in. She was there on the ground amidst the splinters of her
chair. We seized her and dragged her swiftly out, and as we gained the door I
looked over my shoulder into the darkness. There were two strange eyes glowing
at us, a rattle of hoofs, and I had just time to slam the door when there
came a crash upon it which split it from top to bottom.
"It's coming
through! It's coming!"
"Run, run for your
lives!" cried the Frenchman.
Another crash, and
something shot through the riven door. It was a long white spike, gleaming in
the lamplight. For a moment it shone before us, and then with a snap it
disappeared again.
"Quick! Quick! This
way!" Harvey Deacon shouted. "Carry her in! Here! Quick!"
We had taken refuge in
the dining-room, and shut the heavy oak door. We laid the senseless woman upon
the sofa, and as we did so, Moir, the hard man of business, drooped and fainted
across the hearth-rug. Harvey Deacon was as white as a corpse, jerking and
twitching like an epileptic. With a crash we heard the studio door fly to
pieces, and the snorting and stamping were in the passage, up and down, shaking
the house with their fury. The Frenchman had sunk his face on his hands, and
sobbed like a frightened child.
"What shall we
do?" I shook him roughly by the shoulder. "Is a gun any use?"
"No, no. The power
will pass. Then it will end."
"You might have
killed us all—you unspeakable fool—with your infernal experiments."
"I did not know.
How could I tell that it would be frightened? It is mad with terror. It was his
fault. He struck it."
Harvey Deacon sprang up.
"Good heavens!" he cried.
A terrible scream
sounded through the house.
"It's my wife!
Here, I'm going out. If it's the Evil One himself I am going out!"
He had thrown open the
door and rushed out into the passage. At the end of it, at the foot of the
stairs, Mrs. Deacon was lying senseless, struck down by the sight which she had
seen. But there was nothing else.
With eyes of horror we
looked about us, but all was perfectly quiet and still. I approached the black
square of the studio door, expecting with every slow step that some atrocious
shape would hurl itself out of it. But nothing came, and all was silent inside
the room. Peeping and peering, our hearts in our mouths, we came to the very
threshold, and stared into the darkness. There was still no sound, but in one
direction there was also no darkness. A luminous, glowing cloud, with an
incandescent centre, hovered in the corner of the room. Slowly it dimmed and
faded, growing thinner and fainter, until at last the same dense, velvety
blackness filled the whole studio. And with the last flickering gleam of that
baleful light the Frenchman broke into a shout of joy.
"What a fun!"
he cried. "No one is hurt, and only the door broken, and the ladies
frightened. But, my friends, we have done what has never been done
before."
"And as far as I
can help," said Harvey Deacon, "it will certainly never be done
again."
And that was what befell
on the 14th of April last at No. 17 Badderly Gardens. I began by saying that it
would seem too grotesque to dogmatise as to what it was which actually did
occur; but I give my impressions, our impressions (since they
are corroborated by Harvey Deacon and John Moir), for what they are worth.
You may, if it pleases you, imagine that we were the victims of an elaborate
and extraordinary hoax. Or you may think with us that we underwent a very real
and a very terrible experience. Or perhaps you may know more than we do of such
occult matters, and can inform us of some similar occurrence. In this latter case
a letter to William Markham, 146m,
the Albany, would help to throw a light upon that which is very dark to us.
Mr. John Vansittart
Smith, F.R.S., of 147-a Gower
Street, was a man whose energy of purpose and clearness of thought might have
placed him in the very first rank of scientific observers. He was the victim,
however, of a universal ambition which prompted him to aim at distinction in
many subjects rather than pre-eminence in one. In his early days he had shown
an aptitude for zoology and for botany which caused his friends to look upon
him as a second Darwin, but when a professorship was almost within his reach he
had suddenly discontinued his studies and turned his whole attention to
chemistry. Here his researches upon the spectra of the metals had won him his
fellowship in the Royal Society; but again he played the coquette with his
subject, and after a year's absence from the laboratory he joined the Oriental
Society, and delivered a paper on the Hieroglyphic and Demotic inscriptions of
El Kab, thus giving a crowning example both of the versatility and of the
inconstancy of his talents.
The most fickle of
wooers, however, is apt to be caught at last, and so it was with John
Vansittart Smith. The more he burrowed his way into Egyptology the more
impressed he became by the vast field which it opened to the inquirer, and by
the extreme importance of a subject which promised to throw a light upon the
first germs of human civilisation and the origin of the greater part of
our arts and sciences. So struck was Mr. Smith that he straightway married an
Egyptological young lady who had written upon the sixth dynasty, and having
thus secured a sound base of operations he set himself to collect materials for
a work which should unite the research of Lepsius and the ingenuity of
Champollion. The preparation of this magnum opus entailed many
hurried visits to the magnificent Egyptian collections of the Louvre, upon the
last of which, no longer ago than the middle of last October, he became
involved in a most strange and noteworthy adventure.
The trains had been slow
and the Channel had been rough, so that the student arrived in Paris in a
somewhat befogged and feverish condition. On reaching the Hôtel de France, in
the Rue Laffitte, he had thrown himself upon a sofa for a couple of hours, but
finding that he was unable to sleep, he determined, in spite of his fatigue, to
make his way to the Louvre, settle the point which he had come to decide, and
take the evening train back to Dieppe. Having come to this conclusion, he
donned his greatcoat, for it was a raw rainy day, and made his way across the
Boulevard des Italiens and down the Avenue de l'Opéra. Once in the Louvre he
was on familiar ground, and he speedily made his way to the collection of
papyri which it was his intention to consult.
The warmest admirers of
John Vansittart Smith could hardly claim for him that he was a handsome man.
His high-beaked nose and prominent chin had something of the same acute and
incisive character which distinguished his intellect. He held his head in a
birdlike fashion, and birdlike, too, was the pecking motion with which, in
conversation, he threw out his objections and retorts. As he stood, with the
high collar of his greatcoat raised to his ears, he might have seen from the
reflection in the glass-case before him that his appearance was a singular one.
Yet it came upon him as a sudden jar when an English voice behind him exclaimed
in very audible tones, "What a queer-looking mortal!"
The student had a large
amount of petty vanity in his composition which manifested itself by an
ostentatious and overdone disregard of all personal considerations. He
straightened his lips and looked rigidly at the roll of papyrus, while his
heart filled with bitterness against the whole race of travelling Britons.
"Yes," said
another voice, "he really is an extraordinary fellow."
"Do you know,"
said the first speaker, "one could almost believe that by the continual
contemplation of mummies the chap has become half a mummy himself?"
"He has certainly
an Egyptian cast of countenance," said the other.
John Vansittart Smith
spun round upon his heel with the intention of shaming his countrymen by a
corrosive remark or two. To his surprise and relief, the two young fellows who
had been conversing had their shoulders turned towards him, and were gazing at
one of the Louvre attendants who was polishing some brass-work at the other
side of the room.
"Carter will be
waiting for us at the Palais Royal," said one tourist to the other,
glancing at his watch, and they clattered away, leaving the student to his
labours.
"I wonder what
these chatterers call an Egyptian cast of countenance," thought John
Vansittart Smith, and he moved his position slightly in order to catch a
glimpse of the man's face. He started as his eyes fell upon it. It was indeed
the very face with which his studies had made him familiar. The regular
statuesque features, broad brow, well-rounded chin, and dusky complexion were
the exact counterpart of the innumerable statues, mummy-cases, and pictures
which adorned the walls of the apartment. The thing was beyond all coincidence.
The man must be an Egyptian. The national angularity of the shoulders and
narrowness of the hips were alone sufficient to identify him.
John Vansittart Smith
shuffled towards the attendant with some intention of addressing him. He was
not light of touch in conversation, and found it difficult to strike the happy
mean between the brusqueness of the superior and the geniality of the equal. As
he came nearer, the man presented his side face to him, but kept his gaze still
bent upon his work. Vansittart Smith, fixing his eyes upon the fellow's skin,
was conscious of a sudden impression that there was something inhuman and preternatural
about its appearance. Over the temple and cheek-bone it was as glazed and as
shiny as varnished parchment. There was no suggestion of pores. One could not
fancy a drop of moisture upon that arid surface. From brow to chin, however, it
was cross-hatched by a million delicate wrinkles, which shot and interlaced as
though Nature in some Maori mood had tried how wild and intricate a pattern she
could devise.
"Où est la
collection de Memphis?" asked the student with the awkward air of a man
who is devising a question merely for the purpose of opening a conversation.
"C'est là,"
replied the man brusquely, nodding his head at the other side of the room.
"Vous êtes un
Egyptien, n'est-ce pas?" asked the Englishman.
The attendant looked up
and turned his strange dark eyes upon his questioner. They were vitreous, with
a misty dry shininess, such as Smith had never seen in a human head before. As
he gazed into them he saw some strong emotion gather in their depths, which
rose and deepened until it broke into a look of something akin both to horror
and to hatred.
"Non, monsieur; je
suis français." The man turned abruptly and bent low over his polishing.
The student gazed at him for a moment in astonishment, and then turning to a
chair in a retired corner behind one of the doors he proceeded to make notes of
his researches among the papyri. His thoughts, however, refused to return into
their natural groove. They would run upon the enigmatical attendant with the
sphinx-like face and the parchment skin.
"Where have I seen
such eyes?" said Vansittart Smith to himself. "There is something
saurian about them, something reptilian. There's the membrana nictitans of the
snakes," he mused, bethinking himself of his zoological studies. "It
gives a shiny effect. But there was something more here. There was a sense of
power, of wisdom—so I read them—and of weariness, utter weariness, and
ineffable despair. It may be all imagination, but I never had so strong an
impression. By Jove, I must have another look at them!" He rose and
paced round the Egyptian rooms, but the man who had excited his curiosity had
disappeared.
The student sat down
again in his quiet corner, and continued to work at his notes. He had gained
the information which he required from the papyri, and it only remained to
write it down while it was still fresh in his memory. For a time his pencil
travelled rapidly over the paper, but soon the lines became less level, the
words more blurred, and finally the pencil tinkled down upon the floor, and the
head of the student dropped heavily forward upon his chest. Tired out by his
journey, he slept so soundly in his lonely post behind the door that neither
the clanking civil guard, nor the footsteps of sightseers, nor even the loud
hoarse bell which gives the signal for closing, were sufficient to arouse him.
Twilight deepened into
darkness, the bustle from the Rue de Rivoli waxed and then waned, distant Notre
Dame clanged out the hour of midnight, and still the dark and lonely figure sat
silently in the shadow. It was not until close upon one in the morning that,
with a sudden gasp and an intaking of the breath, Vansittart Smith returned to
consciousness. For a moment it flashed upon him that he had dropped asleep in
his study-chair at home. The moon was shining fitfully through the unshuttered
window, however, and as his eye ran along the lines of mummies and the endless
array of polished cases, he remembered clearly where he was and how he came
there. The student was not a nervous man. He possessed that love of a novel
situation which is peculiar to his race. Stretching out his cramped limbs, he
looked at his watch, and burst into a chuckle as he observed the hour. The
episode would make an admirable anecdote to be introduced into his next paper
as a relief to the graver and heavier speculations. He was a little cold, but
wide awake and much refreshed. It was no wonder that the guardians had
overlooked him, for the door threw its heavy black shadow right across him.
The complete silence was
impressive. Neither outside nor inside was there a creak or a murmur. He was
alone with the dead men of a dead civilisation. What though the outer city
reeked of the garish nineteenth century! In all this chamber there was scarce
an article, from the shrivelled ear of wheat to the pigment-box of the painter,
which had not held its own against four thousand years. Here was the flotsam
and jetsam washed up by the great ocean of time from that far-off empire. From
stately Thebes, from lordly Luxor, from the great temples of Heliopolis, from a
hundred rifled tombs, these relics had been brought. The student glanced round
at the long silent figures who flickered vaguely up through the gloom, at the
busy toilers who were now so restful, and he fell into a reverent and thoughtful
mood. An unwonted sense of his own youth and insignificance came over him.
Leaning back in his chair, he gazed dreamily down the long vista of rooms, all
silvery with the moonshine, which extend through the whole wing of the
widespread building. His eyes fell upon the yellow glare of a distant lamp.
John Vansittart Smith
sat up on his chair with his nerves all on edge. The light was advancing slowly
towards him, pausing from time to time, and then coming jerkily onwards. The
bearer moved noiselessly. In the utter silence there was no suspicion of the
pat of a footfall. An idea of robbers entered the Englishman's head. He
snuggled up further into the corner. The light was two rooms off. Now it was in
the next chamber, and still there was no sound. With something approaching to a
thrill of fear the student observed a face, floating in the air as it were,
behind the flare of the lamp. The figure was wrapped in shadow, but the light
fell full upon the strange eager face. There was no mistaking the metallic
glistening eyes and the cadaverous skin. It was the attendant with whom he had
conversed.
Vansittart Smith's first
impulse was to come forward and address him. A few words of explanation would
set the matter clear, and lead doubtless to his being conducted to some side
door from which he might make his way to his hotel. As the man entered the
chamber, however, there was something so stealthy in his movements, and so
furtive in his expression, that the Englishman altered his intention. This was
clearly no ordinary official walking the rounds. The fellow wore felt-soled
slippers, stepped with a rising chest, and glanced quickly from left to right,
while his hurried gasping breathing thrilled the flame of his lamp. Vansittart
Smith crouched silently back into the corner and watched him keenly, convinced
that his errand was one of secret and probably sinister import.
There was no hesitation
in the other's movements. He stepped lightly and swiftly across to one of the
great cases, and, drawing a key from his pocket, he unlocked it. From the upper
shelf he pulled down a mummy, which he bore away with him, and laid it with
much care and solicitude upon the ground. By it he placed his lamp, and then
squatting down beside it in Eastern fashion he began with long quivering
fingers to undo the cerecloths and bandages which girt it round. As the
crackling rolls of linen peeled off one after the other, a strong aromatic
odour filled the chamber, and fragments of scented wood and of spices pattered
down upon the marble floor.
It was clear to John
Vansittart Smith that this mummy had never been unswathed before. The operation
interested him keenly. He thrilled all over with curiosity, and his birdlike
head protruded further and further from behind the door. When, however, the
last roll had been removed from the four-thousand-year-old head, it was all
that he could do to stifle an outcry of amazement. First, a cascade of long,
black, glossy tresses poured over the workman's hands and arms. A second turn
of the bandage revealed a low, white forehead, with a pair of delicately arched
eyebrows. A third uncovered a pair of bright, deeply fringed eyes, and a
straight, well-cut nose, while a fourth and last showed a sweet, full,
sensitive mouth, and a beautifully curved chin. The whole face was one of
extraordinary loveliness, save for the one blemish that in the centre of the
forehead there was a single irregular, coffee-coloured splotch. It was a
triumph of the embalmer's art. Vansittart Smith's eyes grew larger and larger
as he gazed upon it, and he chirruped in his throat with satisfaction.
Its effect upon the
Egyptologist was as nothing, however, compared with that which it produced upon
the strange attendant. He threw his hands up into the air, burst into a harsh
clatter of words, and then, hurling himself down upon the ground beside the mummy,
he threw his arms round her, and kissed her repeatedly upon the lips and brow.
"Ma petite!" he groaned in French. "Ma pauvre petite!" His
voice broke with emotion, and his innumerable wrinkles quivered and writhed,
but the student observed in the lamplight that his shining eyes were still dry
and tearless as two beads of steel. For some minutes he lay, with a twitching
face, crooning and moaning over the beautiful head. Then he broke into a sudden
smile, said some words in an unknown tongue, and sprang to his feet with the
vigorous air of one who has braced himself for an effort.
In the centre of the
room there was a large circular case which contained, as the student had
frequently remarked, a magnificent collection of early Egyptian rings and
precious stones. To this the attendant strode, and, unlocking it, threw it
open. On the edge at the side he placed his lamp, and beside it a small
earthenware jar which he had drawn from his pocket. He then took a handful of
rings from the case, and with the most serious and anxious face he proceeded to
smear each in turn with some liquid substance from the earthen pot, holding
them to the light as he did so. He was clearly disappointed with the first lot,
for he threw them petulantly back into the case and drew out some more. One of
these, a massive ring with a large crystal set in it, he seized and eagerly
tested with the contents of the jar. Instantly he uttered a cry of joy, and threw
out his arms in a wild gesture which upset the pot and sent the liquid
streaming across the floor to the very feet of the Englishman. The attendant
drew a red handkerchief from his bosom, and, mopping up the mess, he followed
it into the corner, where in a moment he found himself face to face with
his observer.
"Excuse me,"
said John Vansittart Smith, with all imaginable politeness; "I have been
unfortunate enough to fall asleep behind this door."
"And you have been
watching me?" the other asked in English, with a most venomous look on his
corpse-like face.
The student was a man of
veracity. "I confess," said he, "that I have noticed your
movements, and that they have aroused my curiosity and interest in the highest
degree."
The man drew a long flamboyant-bladed
knife from his bosom. "You have had a very narrow escape," he said;
"had I seen you ten minutes ago, I should have driven this through your
heart. As it is, if you touch me or interfere with me in any way you are a dead
man."
"I have no wish to
interfere with you," the student answered. "My presence here is
entirely accidental. All I ask is that you will have the extreme kindness to
show me out through some side door." He spoke with great suavity, for the
man was still pressing the tip of his dagger against the palm of his left hand,
as though to assure himself of its sharpness, while his face preserved its
malignant expression.
"If I
thought——" said he. "But no, perhaps it is as well. What is your
name?"
The Englishman gave it.
"Vansittart
Smith," the other repeated. "Are you the same Vansittart Smith who
gave a paper in London upon El Kab? I saw a report of it. Your knowledge of the
subject is contemptible."
"Sir!" cried
the Egyptologist.
"Yet it is superior
to that of many who make even greater pretensions. The whole keystone of our
old life in Egypt was not the inscriptions or monuments of which you make so
much, but was our hermetic philosophy and mystic knowledge of which you say
little or nothing."
"Our old
life!" repeated the scholar, wide-eyed; and then suddenly, "Good God,
look at the mummy's face!"
The strange man turned
and flashed his light upon the dead woman, uttering a long doleful cry as he
did so. The action of the air had already undone all the art of the embalmer. The
skin had fallen away, the eyes had sunk inwards, the discoloured lips had
writhed away from the yellow teeth, and the brown mark upon the forehead alone
showed that it was indeed the same face which had shown such youth and beauty a
few short minutes before.
The man flapped his
hands together in grief and horror. Then mastering himself by a strong effort
he turned his hard eyes once more upon the Englishman.
"It does not
matter," he said, in a shaking voice. "It does not really matter. I
came here to-night with the fixed determination to do something. It is now
done. All else is as nothing. I have found my quest. The old curse is broken. I
can rejoin her. What matter about her inanimate shell so long as her spirit is
awaiting me at the other side of the veil!"
"These are wild
words," said Vansittart Smith. He was becoming more and more convinced
that he had to do with a madman.
"Time presses, and
I must go," continued the other. "The moment is at hand for
which I have waited this weary time. But I must show you out first. Come with
me."
Taking up the lamp, he
turned from the disordered chamber, and led the student swiftly through the
long series of the Egyptian, Assyrian, and Persian apartments. At the end of
the latter he pushed open a small door let into the wall and descended a
winding stone stair. The Englishman felt the cold fresh air of the night upon
his brow. There was a door opposite him which appeared to communicate with the
street. To the right of this another door stood ajar, throwing a spurt of
yellow light across the passage. "Come in here!" said the attendant
shortly.
Vansittart Smith
hesitated. He had hoped that he had come to the end of his adventure. Yet his
curiosity was strong within him. He could not leave the matter unsolved, so he
followed his strange companion into the lighted chamber.
It was a small room,
such as is devoted to a concierge. A wood fire sparkled in the
grate. At one side stood a truckle bed, and at the other a coarse wooden chair,
with a round table in the centre, which bore the remains of a meal. As the
visitor's eye glanced round he could not but remark with an ever-recurring
thrill that all the small details of the room were of the most quaint design
and antique workmanship. The candlesticks, the vases upon the chimneypiece, the
fire-irons, the ornaments upon the walls, were all such as he had been wont to
associate with the remote past. The gnarled heavy-eyed man sat himself down
upon the edge of the bed, and motioned his guest into the chair.
"There may be
design in this," he said, still speaking excellent English. "It may
be decreed that I should leave some account behind as a warning to all rash
mortals who would set their wits up against workings of Nature. I leave it with
you. Make such use as you will of it. I speak to you now with my feet upon the
threshold of the other world.
"I am, as you
surmised, an Egyptian—not one of the down-trodden race of slaves who now
inhabit the Delta of the Nile, but a survivor of that fiercer and harder people
who tamed the Hebrew, drove the Ethiopian back into the southern deserts, and
built those mighty works which have been the envy and the wonder of all after
generations. It was in the reign of Tuthmosis, sixteen hundred years before the
birth of Christ, that I first saw the light. You shrink away from me. Wait, and
you will see that I am more to be pitied than to be feared.
"My name was Sosra.
My father had been the chief priest of Osiris in the great temple of Abaris,
which stood in those days upon the Bubastic branch of the Nile. I was brought
up in the temple and was trained in all those mystic arts which are spoken of
in your own Bible. I was an apt pupil. Before I was sixteen I had learned all
which the wisest priest could teach me. From that time on I studied Nature's
secrets for myself, and shared my knowledge with no man.
"Of all the
questions which attracted me there were none over which I laboured so long as
over those which concern themselves with the nature of life. I probed deeply
into the vital principle. The aim of medicine had been to drive away disease
when it appeared. It seemed to me that a method might be devised which should
so fortify the body as to prevent weakness or death from ever taking hold of
it. It is useless that I should recount my researches. You would scarce
comprehend them if I did. They were carried out partly upon animals, partly
upon slaves, and partly on myself. Suffice it that their result was to furnish
me with a substance which, when injected into the blood, would endow the body
with strength to resist the effects of time, of violence, or of disease. It
would not indeed confer immortality, but its potency would endure for many
thousands of years. I used it upon a cat, and afterwards drugged the creature
with the most deadly poisons. That cat is alive in Lower Egypt at the present
moment. There was nothing of mystery or magic in the matter. It was simply a
chemical discovery, which may well be made again.
"Love of life runs
high in the young. It seemed to me that I had broken away from all human care
now that I had abolished pain and driven death to such a distance. With a light
heart I poured the accursed stuff into my veins. Then I looked round for some
one whom I could benefit. There was a young priest of Thoth, Parmes by name,
who had won my goodwill by his earnest nature and his devotion to his studies.
To him I whispered my secret, and at his request I injected him with my elixir.
I should now, I reflected, never be without a companion of the same age as
myself.
"After this grand
discovery I relaxed my studies to some extent, but Parmes continued his with
redoubled energy. Every day I could see him working with his flasks and his
distiller in the Temple of Thoth, but he said little to me as to the result of
his labours. For my own part, I used to walk through the city and look
around me with exultation as I reflected that all this was destined to pass
away, and that only I should remain. The people would bow to me as they passed
me, for the fame of my knowledge had gone abroad.
"There was war at
this time, and the Great King had sent down his soldiers to the eastern
boundary to drive away the Hyksos. A Governor, too, was sent to Abaris, that he
might hold it for the King. I had heard much of the beauty of the daughter of
this Governor, but one day as I walked out with Parmes we met her, borne upon
the shoulders of her slaves. I was struck with love as with lightning. My heart
went out from me. I could have thrown myself beneath the feet of her bearers.
This was my woman. Life without her was impossible. I swore by the head of
Horus that she should be mine. I swore it to the Priest of Thoth. He turned
away from me with a brow which was as black as midnight.
"There is no need
to tell you of our wooing. She came to love me even as I loved her. I learned
that Parmes had seen her before I did, and had shown her that he too loved her,
but I could smile at his passion, for I knew that her heart was mine. The white
plague had come upon the city and many were stricken, but I laid my hands upon
the sick and nursed them without fear or scathe. She marvelled at my daring.
Then I told her my secret, and begged her that she would let me use my art upon
her.
"'Your flower shall
then be unwithered, Atma,' I said. 'Other things may pass away, but you and I,
and our great love for each other, shall outlive the tomb of King Chefru.'
"But she was full
of timid, maidenly objections. 'Was it right?' she asked, 'was it not a
thwarting of the will of the gods? If the great Osiris had wished that our
years should be so long, would he not himself have brought it about?'
"With fond and
loving words I overcame her doubts, and yet she hesitated. It was a great
question, she said. She would think it over for this one night. In the morning
I should know of her resolution. Surely one night was not too much to ask. She
wished to pray to Isis for help in her decision.
"With a sinking
heart and a sad foreboding of evil I left her with her tirewomen. In the
morning, when the early sacrifice was over, I hurried to her house. A
frightened slave met me upon the steps. Her mistress was ill, she said, very
ill. In a frenzy I broke my way through the attendants, and rushed through hall
and corridor to my Atma's chamber. She lay upon her couch, her head high upon
the pillow, with a pallid face and a glazed eye. On her forehead there blazed a
single angry purple patch. I knew that hell-mark of old. It was the scar of the
white plague, the sign-manual of death.
"Why should I speak
of that terrible time? For months I was mad, fevered, delirious, and yet I
could not die. Never did an Arab thirst after the sweet wells as I longed after
death. Could poison or steel have shortened the thread of my existence, I
should soon have rejoined my love in the land with the narrow portal. I tried,
but it was of no avail. The accursed influence was too strong upon me. One
night as I lay upon my couch, weak and weary, Parmes, the priest of Thoth, came
to my chamber. He stood in the circle of the lamplight, and he looked down
upon me with eyes which were bright with a mad joy.
"'Why did you let
the maiden die?' he asked; 'why did you not strengthen her as you strengthened
me?'
"'I was too late,'
I answered. 'But I had forgot. You also loved her. You are my fellow in misfortune.
Is it not terrible to think of the centuries which must pass ere we look upon
her again? Fools, fools, that we were to take death to be our enemy!'
"'You may say
that,' he cried with a wild laugh; 'the words come well from your lips. For me
they have no meaning.'
"'What mean you?' I
cried, raising myself upon my elbow. 'Surely, friend, this grief has turned
your brain.' His face was aflame with joy, and he writhed and shook like one
who hath a devil.
"'Do you know
whither I go?' he asked.
"'Nay,' I answered,
'I cannot tell.'
"'I go to her,'
said he. 'She lies embalmed in the further tomb by the double palm-tree beyond
the city wall.'
"'Why do you go
there?' I asked.
"'To die!' he
shrieked, 'to die! I am not bound by earthen fetters.'
"'But the elixir is
in your blood,' I cried.
"'I can defy it,'
said he; 'I have found a stronger principle which will destroy it. It is
working in my veins at this moment, and in an hour I shall be a dead man. I
shall join her, and you shall remain behind.'
"As I looked upon
him I could see that he spoke words of truth. The light in his eye told me that
he was indeed beyond the power of the elixir.
"'You will teach
me!' I cried.
"'Never!' he
answered.
"'I implore you, by
the wisdom of Thoth, by the majesty of Anubis!'
"'It is useless,?
he said coldly.
"'Then I will find
it out,' I cried.
"'You cannot,' he
answered; 'it came to me by chance. There is one ingredient which you can never
get. Save that which is in the ring of Thoth, none will ever more be made.'
"'In the ring of
Thoth!' I repeated, 'where then is the ring of Thoth?'
"'That also you
shall never know,' he answered. 'You won her love. Who has won in the end? I
leave you to your sordid earth life. My chains are broken. I must go!' He
turned upon his heel and fled from the chamber. In the morning came the news
that the Priest of Thoth was dead.
"My days after that
were spent in study. I must find this subtle poison which was strong enough to
undo the elixir. From early dawn to midnight I bent over the test-tube and the
furnace. Above all, I collected the papyri and the chemical flasks of the
Priest of Thoth. Alas! they taught me little. Here and there some hint or stray
expression would raise hope in my bosom, but no good ever came of it. Still,
month after month, I struggled on. When my heart grew faint I would make my way
to the tomb by the palm-trees. There, standing by the dead casket from which
the jewel had been rifled, I would feel her sweet presence, and would whisper
to her that I would rejoin her if mortal wit could solve the riddle.
"Parmes had said
that his discovery was connected with the ring of Thoth. I had some remembrance of
the trinket. It was a large and weighty circlet, made, not of gold, but of a
rarer and heavier metal brought from the mines of Mount Harbal. Platinum, you
call it. The ring had, I remembered, a hollow crystal set in it, in which some
few drops of liquid might be stored. Now, the secret of Parmes could not have
to do with the metal alone, for there were many rings of that metal in the
Temple. Was it not more likely that he had stored his precious poison within
the cavity of the crystal? I had scarce come to this conclusion before, in
hunting through his papers, I came upon one which told me that it was indeed
so, and that there was still some of the liquid unused.
"But how to find
the ring? It was not upon him when he was stripped for the embalmer. Of that I
made sure. Neither was it among his private effects. In vain I searched every
room that he had entered, every box and vase and chattel that he had owned. I
sifted the very sand of the desert in the place where he had been wont to walk;
but, do what I would, I could come upon no traces of the ring of Thoth. Yet it
may be that my labours would have overcome all obstacles had it not been for a
new and unlooked-for misfortune.
"A great war had
been waged against the Hyksos, and the Captains of the Great King had been cut
off in the desert, with all their bowmen and horsemen. The shepherd tribes were
upon us like the locusts in a dry year. From the wilderness of Shur to the
great bitter lake there was blood by day and fire by night. Abaris was the
bulwark of Egypt, but we could not keep the savages back. The city fell. The
Governor and the soldiers were put to the sword, and I, with many more, was led
away into captivity.
"For years and
years I tended cattle in the great plains by the Euphrates. My master died, and
his son grew old, but I was still as far from death as ever. At last I escaped
upon a swift camel, and made my way back to Egypt. The Hyksos had settled in
the land which they had conquered, and their own King ruled over the country.
Abaris had been torn down, the city had been burned, and of the great Temple
there was nothing left save an unsightly mound. Everywhere the tombs had been
rifled and the monuments destroyed. Of my Atma's grave no sign was left. It was
buried in the sands of the desert, and the palm-trees which marked the spot had
long disappeared. The papers of Parmes and the remains of the Temple of Thoth
were either destroyed or scattered far and wide over the deserts of Syria. All
search after them was vain.
"From that time I
gave up all hope of ever finding the ring or discovering the subtle drug. I set
myself to live as patiently as might be until the effect of the elixir should
wear away. How can you understand how terrible a thing time is, you who have
experience only of the narrow course which lies between the cradle and the
grave! I know it to my cost, I who have floated down the whole stream of
history. I was old when Ilium fell. I was very old when Herodotus came to
Memphis. I was bowed down with years when the new gospel came upon earth. Yet
you see me much as other men are, with the cursed elixir still sweetening my
blood, and guarding me against that which I would court. Now at last, at last I
have come to the end of it!
"I have travelled
in all lands and I have dwelt with all nations. Every
tongue is the same to me. I learned them all to help pass the weary time. I
need not tell you how slowly they drifted by, the long dawn of modern
civilisation, the dreary middle years, the dark times of barbarism. They are
all behind me now. I have never looked with the eyes of love upon another
woman. Atma knows that I have been constant to her.
"It was my custom
to read all that the scholars had to say upon Ancient Egypt. I have been in
many positions, sometimes affluent, sometimes poor, but I have always found
enough to enable me to buy the journals which deal with such matters. Some nine
months ago I was in San Francisco, when I read an account of some discoveries
made in the neighbourhood of Abaris. My heart leapt into my mouth as I read it.
It said that the excavator had busied himself in exploring some tombs recently
unearthed. In one there had been found an unopened mummy with an inscription
upon the outer case setting forth that it contained the body of the daughter of
the Governor of the city in the days of Tuthmosis. It added that on removing
the outer case there had been exposed a large platinum ring set with a crystal,
which had been laid upon the breast of the embalmed woman. This, then, was
where Parmes had hid the ring of Thoth. He might well say that it was safe, for
no Egyptian would ever stain his soul by moving even the outer case of a buried
friend.
"That very night I
set off from San Francisco, and in a few weeks I found myself once more at
Abaris, if a few sand-heaps and crumbling walls may retain the name of the
great city. I hurried to the Frenchmen who were digging there and asked them
for the ring. They replied that both the ring and the mummy had been sent to
the Boulak Museum at Cairo. To Boulak I went, but only to be told that Mariette
Bey had claimed them and had shipped them to the Louvre. I followed them, and there
at last, in the Egyptian chamber, I came, after close upon four thousand years,
upon the remains of my Atma, and upon the ring for which I had sought so long.
"But how was I to
lay hands upon them? How was I to have them for my very own? It chanced that
the office of attendant was vacant. I went to the Director. I convinced him
that I knew much about Egypt. In my eagerness I said too much. He remarked that
a Professor's chair would suit me better than a seat in the conciergerie. I
knew more, he said, than he did. It was only by blundering, and letting him
think that he had over-estimated my knowledge, that I prevailed upon him to let
me move the few effects which I have retained into this chamber. It is my first
and my last night here.
"Such is my story,
Mr. Vansittart Smith. I need not say more to a man of your perception. By a
strange chance you have this night looked upon the face of the woman whom I
loved in those far-off days. There were many rings with crystals in the case,
and I had to test for the platinum to be sure of the one which I wanted. A
glance at the crystal has shown me that the liquid is indeed within it, and
that I shall at last be able to shake off that accursed health which has been
worse to me than the foulest disease. I have nothing more to say to you. I have
unburdened myself. You may tell my story or you may withhold it at your
pleasure. The choice rests with you. I owe you some amends, for you have had a
narrow escape of your life this night. I was a desperate man, and not to be
baulked in my purpose. Had I seen you before the thing was done, I might have
put it beyond your power to oppose me or to raise an alarm. This is the door.
It leads into the Rue de Rivoli. Good-night."
The Englishman glanced
back. For a moment the lean figure of Sosra the Egyptian stood framed in the
narrow doorway. The next the door had slammed, and the heavy rasping of a bolt
broke on the silent night.
It was on the second day
after his return to London that Mr. John Vansittart Smith saw the following
concise narrative in the Paris correspondence of the Times:—
"Curious
Occurrence in the Louvre.—Yesterday morning a strange discovery was made in
the principal Eastern chamber. The ouvriers who are employed
to clean out the rooms in the morning found one of the attendants lying dead
upon the floor with his arms round one of the mummies. So close was his embrace
that it was only with the utmost difficulty that they were separated. One of
the cases containing valuable rings had been opened and rifled. The authorities
are of opinion that the man was bearing away the mummy with some idea of
selling it to a private collector, but that he was struck down in the very act
by long-standing disease of the heart. It is said that he was a man of
uncertain age and eccentric habits, without any living relations to mourn over
his dramatic and untimely end."
I used to be the leading
practitioner of Los Amigos. Of course, every one has heard of the great
electrical generating gear there. The town is wide spread, and there are dozens
of little townlets and villages all around, which receive their supply from the
same centre, so that the works are on a very large scale. The Los Amigos folk
say that they are the largest upon earth, but then we claim that for everything
in Los Amigos except the gaol and the death-rate. Those are said to be the
smallest.
Now, with so fine an
electrical supply, it seemed to be a sinful waste of hemp that the Los Amigos
criminals should perish in the old-fashioned manner. And then came the news of
the electrocutions in the East, and how the results had not after all been so
instantaneous as had been hoped. The Western engineers raised their eyebrows
when they read of the puny shocks by which these men had perished, and they
vowed in Los Amigos that when an irreclaimable came their way he should be
dealt handsomely by, and have the run of all the big dynamos. There should be
no reserve, said the engineers, but he should have all that they had got. And
what the result of that would be none could predict, save that it must be
absolutely blasting and deadly. Never before had a man been so charged with
electricity as they would charge him. He was to be smitten by the essence of
ten thunderbolts. Some prophesied combustion, and some disintegration and
disappearance. They were waiting eagerly to settle the question by actual
demonstration, and it was just at that moment that Duncan Warner came that way.
Warner had been wanted
by the law, and by nobody else, for many years. Desperado, murderer, train
robber, and road agent, he was a man beyond the pale of human pity. He had
deserved a dozen deaths, and the Los Amigos folk grudged him so gaudy a one as
that. He seemed to feel himself to be unworthy of it, for he made two frenzied
attempts at escape. He was a powerful, muscular man, with a lion heart, tangled
black locks, and a sweeping beard which covered his broad chest. When he was
tried, there was no finer head in all the crowded court. It's no new thing to
find the best face looking from the dock. But his good looks could not balance
his bad deeds. His advocate did all he knew, but the cards lay against him, and
Duncan Warner was handed over to the mercy of the big Los Amigos dynamos.
I was there at the
committee meeting when the matter was discussed. The town council had chosen
four experts to look after the arrangements. Three of them were admirable.
There was Joseph M'Connor, the very man who had designed the dynamos, and there
was Joshua Westmacott, the chairman of the Los Amigos Electrical Supply
Company, Limited. Then there was myself as the chief medical man, and lastly an
old German of the name of Peter Stulpnagel. The Germans were a strong body at
Los Amigos, and they all voted for their man. That was how he got on the
committee. It was said that he had been a wonderful electrician at home, and he
was eternally working with wires and insulators and Leyden jars; but, as he
never seemed to get any further, or to have any results worth publishing, he came
at last to be regarded as a harmless crank, who had made science his hobby. We
three practical men smiled when we heard that he had been elected as our
colleague, and at the meeting we fixed it all up very nicely among ourselves
without much thought of the old fellow who sat with his ears scooped forward in
his hands, for he was a trifle hard of hearing, taking no more part in the
proceedings than the gentlemen of the press who scribbled their notes on the
back benches.
We did not take long to
settle it all. In New York a strength of some two thousand volts had been used,
and death had not been instantaneous. Evidently their shock had been too weak.
Los Amigos should not fall into that error. The charge should be six times
greater, and therefore, of course, it would be six times more effective.
Nothing could possibly be more logical. The whole concentrated force of the
great dynamos should be employed on Duncan Warner.
So we three settled it,
and had already risen to break up the meeting, when our silent companion opened
his mouth for the first time.
"Gentlemen,"
said he, "you appear to me to show an extraordinary ignorance upon the
subject of electricity. You have not mastered the first principles of its
actions upon a human being."
The committee was about
to break into an angry reply to this brusque comment, but the chairman of the
Electrical Company tapped his forehead to claim its indulgence for the
crankiness of the speaker.
"Pray tell us,
sir," said he, with an ironical smile, "what is there in our
conclusions with which you find fault?"
"With your
assumption that a large dose of electricity will merely increase the effect of
a small dose. Do you not think it possible that it might have an entirely
different result? Do you know anything, by actual experiment, of the effect of
such powerful shocks?"
"We know it by
analogy," said the chairman pompously. "All drugs increase their
effect when they increase their dose; for example—for example——"
"Whisky," said
Joseph M'Connor.
"Quite so. Whisky.
You see it there."
Peter Stulpnagel smiled
and shook his head.
"Your argument is
not very good," said he. "When I used to take whisky, I used to find
that one glass would excite me, but that six would send me to sleep, which is
just the opposite. Now, suppose that electricity were to act in just the
opposite way also, what then?"
We three practical men
burst out laughing. We had known that our colleague was queer, but we never had
thought that he would be as queer as this.
"What then?"
repeated Peter Stulpnagel.
"We'll take our
chances," said the chairman.
"Pray
consider," said Peter, "that workmen who have touched the wires, and
who have received shocks of only a few hundred volts, have died instantly. The
fact is well known. And yet when a much greater force was used upon a criminal
at New York, the man struggled for some little time. Do you not clearly see
that the smaller dose is the more deadly?"
"I think,
gentlemen, that this discussion has been carried on quite long enough,"
said the chairman, rising again. "The point, I take it, has already been
decided by the majority of the committee, and Duncan Warner shall be
electrocuted on Tuesday by the full strength of the Los Amigos dynamos. Is it
not so?"
"I agree,"
said Joseph M'Connor.
"I agree,"
said I.
"And I
protest," said Peter Stulpnagel.
"Then the motion is
carried, and your protest will be duly entered in the minutes," said the
chairman, and so the sitting was dissolved.
The attendance at the
electrocution was a very small one. We four members of the committee were, of
course, present with the executioner, who was to act under their orders. The
others were the United States Marshal, the governor of the gaol, the chaplain,
and three members of the press. The room was a small brick chamber, forming an
out-house to the Central Electrical station. It had been used as a laundry, and
had an oven and copper at one side, but no other furniture save a single chair
for the condemned man. A metal plate for his feet was placed in front of it, to
which ran a thick insulated wire. Above, another wire depended from the
ceiling, which could be connected with a small metallic rod projecting from a
cap which was to be placed upon his head. When this connection was established
Duncan Warner's hour was come.
There was a solemn hush
as we waited for the coming of the prisoner. The practical engineers looked a
little pale, and fidgeted nervously with the wires. Even the hardened Marshal
was ill at ease, for a mere hanging was one thing, and this blasting of flesh
and blood a very different one. As to the pressmen, their faces were
whiter than the sheets which lay before them. The only man who appeared to feel
none of the influence of these preparations was the little German crank, who
strolled from one to the other with a smile on his lips and mischief in his
eyes. More than once he even went so far as to burst into a shout of laughter,
until the chaplain sternly rebuked him for his ill-timed levity.
"How can you so far
forget yourself, Mr. Stulpnagel," said he, "as to jest in the
presence of death?"
But the German was quite
unabashed.
"If I were in the
presence of death I should not jest," said he, "but since I am not I
may do what I choose."
This flippant reply was
about to draw another and a sterner reproof from the chaplain, when the door
was swung open and two warders entered leading Duncan Warner between them. He
glanced round him with a set face, stepped resolutely forward, and seated
himself upon the chair.
"Touch her
off!" said he.
It was barbarous to keep
him in suspense. The chaplain murmured a few words in his ear, the attendant
placed the cap upon his head, and then, while we all held our breath, the wire
and the metal were brought in contact.
"Great Scott!"
shouted Duncan Warner.
He had bounded in his
chair as the frightful shock crashed through his system. But he was not dead.
On the contrary, his eyes gleamed far more brightly than they had done before.
There was only one change, but it was a singular one. The black had passed
from his hair and beard as the shadow passes from a landscape. They were both
as white as snow. And yet there was no other sign of decay. His skin was smooth
and plump and lustrous as a child's.
The Marshal looked at
the committee with a reproachful eye.
"There seems to be
some hitch here, gentlemen," said he.
We three practical men
looked at each other.
Peter Stulpnagel smiled
pensively.
"I think that
another one should do it," said I.
Again the connection was
made, and again Duncan Warner sprang in his chair and shouted, but, indeed,
were it not that he still remained in the chair none of us would have
recognised him. His hair and his beard had shredded off in an instant, and the
room looked like a barber's shop on a Saturday night. There he sat, his eyes
still shining, his skin radiant with the glow of perfect health, but with a
scalp as bald as a Dutch cheese, and a chin without so much as a trace of down.
He began to revolve one of his arms, slowly and doubtfully at first, but with
more confidence as he went on.
"That joint,"
said he, "has puzzled half the doctors on the Pacific slope. It's as good
as new, and as limber as a hickory twig."
"You are feeling
pretty well?" asked the old German.
"Never better in my
life," said Duncan Warner cheerily.
The situation was a
painful one. The Marshal glared at the committee. Peter Stulpnagel grinned and
rubbed his hands. The engineers scratched their heads. The bald-headed
prisoner revolved his arm and looked pleased.
"I think that one
more shock——" began the chairman.
"No, sir,"
said the Marshal; "we've had foolery enough for one morning. We are here
for an execution, and an execution we'll have."
"What do you
propose?"
"There's a hook
handy upon the ceiling. Fetch a rope, and we'll soon set this matter
straight."
There was another
awkward delay while the warders departed for the cord. Peter Stulpnagel bent
over Duncan Warner, and whispered something in his ear. The desperado stared in
surprise.
"You don't
say?" he asked.
The German nodded.
"What! No
ways?"
Peter shook his head,
and the two began to laugh as though they shared some huge joke between them.
The rope was brought,
and the Marshal himself slipped the noose over the criminal's neck. Then the
two warders, the assistant and he swung their victim into the air. For half an
hour he hung—a dreadful sight—from the ceiling. Then in solemn silence they
lowered him down, and one of the warders went out to order the shell to be
brought round. But as he touched ground again what was our amazement when
Duncan Warner put his hands up to his neck, loosened the noose, and took a
long, deep breath.
"Paul Jefferson's
sale is goin' well," he remarked, "I could see the crowd from up
yonder," and he nodded at the hook in the ceiling.
"Up with him
again!" shouted the Marshal, "we'll get the life out of him
somehow."
In an instant the victim
was up at the hook once more.
They kept him there for
an hour, but when he came down he was perfectly garrulous.
"Old man Plunket
goes too much to the Arcady Saloon," said he. "Three times he's been
there in an hour; and him with a family. Old man Plunket would do well to swear
off."
It was monstrous and
incredible, but there it was. There was no getting round it. The man was there
talking when he ought to have been dead. We all sat staring in amazement, but
United States Marshal Carpenter was not a man to be euchred so easily. He
motioned the others to one side, so that the prisoner was left standing alone.
"Duncan
Warner," said he slowly, "you are here to play your part, and I am
here to play mine. Your game is to live if you can, and my game is to carry out
the sentence of the law. You've beat us on electricity, I'll give you one
there. And you've beat us on hanging, for you seem to thrive on it. But it's my
turn to beat you now, for my duty has to be done."
He pulled a six-shooter
from his coat as he spoke, and fired all the shots through the body of the
prisoner. The room was so filled with smoke that we could see nothing, but when
it cleared the prisoner was still standing there, looking down in disgust at
the front of his coat.
"Coats must be
cheap where you come from," said he. "Thirty dollars it cost me, and
look at it now. The six holes in front are bad enough, but four of the
balls have passed out, and a pretty fine state the back must be in."
The Marshal's revolver
fell from his hand, and he dropped his arms to his sides, a beaten man.
"Maybe some of you
gentlemen can tell me what this means," said he, looking helplessly at the
committee.
Peter Stulpnagel took a
step forward.
"I'll tell you all
about it," said he.
"You seem to be the
only person who knows anything."
"I am the
only person who knows anything. I should have warned these gentlemen; but, as
they would not listen to me, I have allowed them to learn by experience. What
you have done with your electricity is that you have increased the man's
vitality until he can deny death for centuries."
"Centuries!"
"Yes, it will take
the wear of hundreds of years to exhaust the enormous nervous energy with which
you have drenched him. Electricity is life, and you have charged him with it to
the utmost. Perhaps in fifty years you might execute him, but I am not sanguine
about it."
"Great Scott! What
shall I do with him?" cried the unhappy Marshal.
Peter Stulpnagel
shrugged his shoulders.
"It seems to me
that it does not much matter what you do with him now," said he.
"Maybe we could
drain the electricity out of him again. Suppose we hang him up by the
heels?"
"No, no, it's out
of the question."
"Well, well, he
shall do no more mischief in Los Amigos, anyhow," said the Marshal,
with decision. "He shall go into the new gaol. The prison will wear him
out."
"On the
contrary," said Peter Stulpnagel, "I think that it is much more
probable that he will wear out the prison."
It was rather a fiasco,
and for years we didn't talk more about it than we could help, but it's no
secret now, and I thought you might like to jot down the facts in your
case-book.
She was a writing
medium. This is what she wrote:—
I can remember some
things upon that evening most distinctly, and others are like some vague,
broken dreams. That is what makes it so difficult to tell a connected story. I
have no idea now what it was that had taken me to London and brought me back so
late. It just merges into all my other visits to London. But from the time that
I got out at the little country station everything is extraordinarily clear. I
can live it again—every instant of it.
I remember so well
walking down the platform and looking at the illuminated clock at the end which
told me that it was half-past eleven. I remember also my wondering whether I
could get home before midnight. Then I remember the big motor, with its glaring
headlights and glitter of polished brass, waiting for me outside. It was my new
thirty-horse-power Robur, which had only been delivered that day. I remember
also asking Perkins, my chauffeur, how she had gone, and his saying that he
thought she was excellent.
"I'll try her
myself," said I, and I climbed into the driver's seat.
"The gears are not
the same," said he. "Perhaps, sir, I had better drive."
"No; I should like
to try her," said I.
And so we started on the
five-mile drive for home.
My old car had the gears
as they used always to be in notches on a bar. In this car you passed the
gear-lever through a gate to get on the higher ones. It was not difficult to
master, and soon I thought that I understood it. It was foolish, no doubt, to
begin to learn a new system in the dark, but one often does foolish things, and
one has not always to pay the full price for them. I got along very well until
I came to Claystall Hill. It is one of the worst hills in England, a mile and a
half long and one in six in places, with three fairly sharp curves. My park
gates stand at the very foot of it upon the main London road.
We were just over the
brow of this hill, where the grade is steepest, when the trouble began. I had
been on the top speed, and wanted to get her on the free; but she stuck between
gears, and I had to get her back on the top again. By this time she was going
at a great rate, so I clapped on both brakes, and one after the other they gave
way. I didn't mind so much when I felt my footbrake snap, but when I put all my
weight on my side-brake, and the lever clanged to its full limit without a
catch, it brought a cold sweat out of me. By this time we were fairly tearing
down the slope. The lights were brilliant, and I brought her round the first
curve all right. Then we did the second one, though it was a close shave for
the ditch. There was a mile of straight then with the third curve beneath it,
and after that the gate of the park. If I could shoot into that harbour all
would be well, for the slope up to the house would bring her to a stand.
Perkins behaved
splendidly. I should like that to be known. He was perfectly cool and
alert. I had thought at the very beginning of taking the bank, and he read my
intention.
"I wouldn't do it,
sir," said he. "At this pace it must go over and we should have it on
the top of us."
Of course he was right.
He got to the electric switch and had it off, so we were in the free; but we
were still running at a fearful pace. He laid his hands on the wheel.
"I'll keep her
steady," said he, "if you care to jump and chance it. We can never
get round that curve. Better jump, sir."
"No," said I;
"I'll stick it out. You can jump if you like."
"I'll stick it with
you, sir," said he.
If it had been the old
car I should have jammed the gear-lever into the reverse, and seen what would
happen. I expect she would have stripped her gears or smashed up somehow, but
it would have been a chance. As it was, I was helpless. Perkins tried to climb
across, but you couldn't do it going at that pace. The wheels were whirring
like a high wind and the big body creaking and groaning with the strain. But
the lights were brilliant, and one could steer to an inch. I remember thinking
what an awful and yet majestic sight we should appear to any one who met us. It
was a narrow road, and we were just a great, roaring, golden death to any one
who came in our path.
We got round the corner
with one wheel three feet high upon the bank. I thought we were surely over,
but after staggering for a moment she righted darted onwards. That was the
third corner and the last one. There was only the park gate now. It was facing
us, but, as luck would have it, not facing us directly. It was about twenty
yards to the left up the main road into which we ran. Perhaps I could have done
it, but I expect that the steering-gear had been jarred when we ran on the
bank. The wheel did not turn easily. We shot out of the lane. I saw the open
gate on the left. I whirled round my wheel with all the strength of my wrists.
Perkins and I threw our bodies across, and then the next instant, going at
fifty miles an hour, my right front wheel struck full on the right-hand pillar
of my own gate. I heard the crash. I was conscious of flying through the air,
and then—and then——!
000
When I became aware of
my own existence once more I was among some brushwood in the shadow of the oaks
upon the lodge side of the drive. A man was standing beside me. I imagined at
first that it was Perkins, but when I looked again I saw that it was Stanley, a
man whom I had known at college some years before, and for whom I had a really genuine
affection. There was always something peculiarly sympathetic to me in Stanley's
personality; and I was proud to think that I had some similar influence upon
him. At the present moment I was surprised to see him, but I was like a man in
a dream, giddy and shaken and quite prepared to take things as I found them
without questioning them.
"What a
smash!" I said. "Good Lord, what an awful smash!"
He nodded his head, and
even in the gloom I could see that he was smiling the gentle, wistful
smile which I connected with him.
I was quite unable to
move. Indeed, I had not any desire to try to move. But my senses were
exceedingly alert. I saw the wreck of the motor lit up by the moving lanterns.
I saw the little group of people and heard the hushed voices. There were the
lodge-keeper and his wife, and one or two more. They were taking no notice of
me, but were very busy round the car. Then suddenly I heard a cry of pain.
"The weight is on
him. Lift it easy," cried a voice.
"It's only my
leg!" said another one, which I recognised as Perkins's. "Where's
master?" he cried.
"Here I am," I
answered, but they did not seem to hear me. They were all bending over
something which lay in front of the car.
Stanley laid his hand
upon my shoulder, and his touch was inexpressibly soothing. I felt light and
happy, in spite of all.
"No pain, of
course?" said he.
"None," said
I.
"There never
is," said he.
And then suddenly a wave
of amazement passed over me. Stanley! Stanley! Why, Stanley had surely died of
enteric at Bloemfontein in the Boer War!
"Stanley!" I
cried, and the words seemed to choke my throat—"Stanley, you are
dead."
He looked at me with the
same old gentle, wistful smile.
"So are you,"
he answered.
Of the dealings of
Edward Bellingham with William Monkhouse Lee, and of the cause of the great
terror of Abercrombie Smith, it may be that no absolute and final judgment will
ever be delivered. It is true that we have the full and clear narrative of
Smith himself, and such corroboration as he could look for from Thomas Styles
the servant, from the Reverend Plumptree Peterson, Fellow of Old's, and from
such other people as chanced to gain some passing glance at this or that
incident in a singular chain of events. Yet, in the main, the story must rest
upon Smith alone, and the most will think that it is more likely that one
brain, however outwardly sane, has some subtle warp in its texture, some
strange flaw in its workings, than that the path of Nature has been overstepped
in open day in so famed a centre of learning and light as the University of
Oxford. Yet when we think how narrow and how devious this path of Nature is,
how dimly we can trace it, for all our lamps of science, and how from the
darkness which girds it round great and terrible possibilities loom ever
shadowly upwards, it is a bold and confident man who will put a limit to the
strange by-paths into which the human spirit may wander.
In a certain wing of
what we will call Old College in Oxford there is a corner turret of an exceeding
great age. The heavy arch which spans the open door has bent downwards in the
centre under the[Pg 180] weight of its years, and the grey,
lichen-blotched blocks of stone are bound and knitted together with withes and
strand of ivy, as though the old mother had set herself to brace them up
against wind and weather. From a door a stone stair curves upwards spirally,
passing two landings, and terminating in a third one, its steps all shapeless
and hollowed by the tread of so many generations of the seekers after
knowledge. Life has flowed like water down this winding stair, and, waterlike,
has left these smooth-worn grooves behind it. From the long-gowned, pedantic
scholars of Plantagenet days down to the young bloods of a later age, how full
and strong had been that tide of young English life. And what was left now of
all those hopes, those strivings, those fiery energies, save here and there in
some old-world churchyard a few scratches upon a stone, and perchance a handful
of dust in a mouldering coffin? Yet here were the silent stair and the grey old
wall, with bend and saltire and many another heraldic device still to be read
upon its surface, like grotesque shadows thrown back from the days that had
passed.
In the month of May, in
the year 1884, three young men occupied the sets of rooms which opened on to
the separate landings of the old stair. Each set consisted simply of a
sitting-room and a bedroom, while the two corresponding rooms upon the
ground-floor were used, the one as a coal-cellar, and the other as the
living-room of the servant, or scout, Thomas Styles, whose duty it was to wait
upon the three men above him. To right and to left was a line of lecture-rooms
and of offices, so that the dwellers in the old turret enjoyed a certain
seclusion, which made the chambers popular among the more studious
undergraduates. Such were the three who occupied them now—Abercrombie Smith
above, Edward Bellingham beneath him, and William Monkhouse Lee upon the lowest
story.
It was ten o'clock on a
bright spring night, and Abercrombie Smith lay back in his armchair, his feet
upon the fender, and his briar-root pipe between his lips. In a similar chair,
and equally at his ease, there lounged on the other side of the fireplace his
old school friend Jephro Hastie. Both men were in flannels, for they had spent
their evening upon the river, but apart from their dress no one could look at
their hard-cut, alert faces without seeing that they were open-air men—men
whose minds and tastes turned naturally to all that was manly and robust.
Hastie, indeed, was stroke of his college boat, and Smith was an even better
oar, but a coming examination had already cast its shadow over him and held him
to his work, save for the few hours a week which health demanded. A litter of medical
books upon the table, with scattered bones, models, and anatomical plates,
pointed to the extent as well as the nature of his studies, while a couple of
single-sticks and a set of boxing-gloves above the mantelpiece hinted at the
means by which, with Hastie's help, he might take his exercise in its most
compressed and least distant form. They knew each other very well—so well that
they could sit now in that soothing silence which is the very highest
development of companionship.
"Have some
whisky," said Abercrombie Smith at last between two cloudbursts.
"Scotch in the jug and Irish in the bottle."
"No, thanks. I'm in
for the sculls. I don't liquor when I'm training. How about you?"
"I'm reading hard.
I think it best to leave it alone."
Hastie nodded, and they
relapsed into a contented silence.
"By the way,
Smith," asked Hastie, presently, "have you made the acquaintance of
either of the fellows on your stair yet?"
"Just a nod when we
pass. Nothing more."
"Hum! I should be
inclined to let it stand at that. I know something of them both. Not much, but
as much as I want. I don't think I should take them to my bosom if I were you.
Not that there's much amiss with Monkhouse Lee."
"Meaning the thin
one?"
"Precisely. He is a
gentlemanly little fellow. I don't think there is any vice in him. But then you
can't know him without knowing Bellingham."
"Meaning the fat
one?"
"Yes, the fat one.
And he's a man whom I, for one, would rather not know."
Abercrombie Smith raised
his eyebrows and glanced across at his companion.
"What's up,
then?" he asked. "Drink? Cards? Cad? You used not to be
censorious."
"Ah! you evidently
don't know the man, or you wouldn't ask. There's something damnable about
him—something reptilian. My gorge always rises at him. I should put him down as
a man with secret vices—an evil liver. He's no fool, though. They say that he
is one of the best men in his line that they have ever had in the
college."
"Medicine or
classics?"
"Eastern languages.
He's a demon at them. Chillingworth met him somewhere above the second cataract
last long, and he told me that he just prattled to the Arabs as if he had been
born and nursed and weaned among them. He talked Coptic to the Copts, and
Hebrew to the Jews, and Arabic to the Bedouins, and they were all ready to kiss
the hem of his frock-coat. There are some old hermit Johnnies up in those parts
who sit on rocks and scowl and spit at the casual stranger. Well, when they saw
this chap Bellingham, before he had said five words they just lay down on their
bellies and wriggled. Chillingworth said that he never saw anything like it.
Bellingham seemed to take it as his right, too, and strutted about among them
and talked down to them like a Dutch uncle. Pretty good for an undergrad. of
Old's, wasn't it?"
"Why do you say you
can't know Lee without knowing Bellingham?"
"Because Bellingham
is engaged to his sister Eveline. Such a bright little girl, Smith! I know the
whole family well. It's disgusting to see that brute with her. A toad and a
dove, that's what they always remind me of."
Abercrombie Smith
grinned and knocked his ashes out against the side of the grate.
"You show every
card in your hand, old chap," said he. "What a prejudiced,
green-eyed, evil-thinking old man it is! You have really nothing against the
fellow except that."
"Well, I've known
her ever since she was as long as that cherry-wood pipe, and I don't like to
see her taking risks. And it is a risk. He looks beastly. And he has a
beastly temper, a venomous temper. You remember his row with Long Norton?"
"No; you always
forget that I am a freshman."
"Ah, it was last
winter. Of course. Well, you know the towpath along by the river. There were
several fellows going along it, Bellingham in front, when they came on an old
market-woman coming the other way. It had been raining—you know what those
fields are like when it has rained—and the path ran between the river and a
great puddle that was nearly as broad. Well, what does this swine do but keep
the path, and push the old girl into the mud, where she and her marketings came
to terrible grief. It was a blackguard thing to do, and Long Norton, who is as
gentle a fellow as ever stepped, told him what he thought of it. One word led
to another, and it ended in Norton laying his stick across the fellow's
shoulders. There was the deuce of a fuss about it, and it's a treat to see the
way in which Bellingham looks at Norton when they meet now. By Jove, Smith,
it's nearly eleven o'clock!"
"No hurry. Light
your pipe again."
"Not I. I'm
supposed to be in training. Here I've been sitting gossiping when I ought to
have been safely tucked up. I'll borrow your skull, if you can share it.
Williams has had mine for a month. I'll take the little bones of your ear, too,
if you are sure you won't need them. Thanks very much. Never mind a bag, I can
carry them very well under my arm. Good-night, my son, and take my tip as to
your neighbour."
When Hastie, bearing his
anatomical plunder, had clattered off down the winding stair, Abercrombie Smith
hurled his pipe into the wastepaper basket, and drawing his chair nearer to the
lamp, plunged into a formidable green-covered volume, adorned with great
coloured maps of that strange internal kingdom of which we are the hapless and
helpless monarchs. Though a freshman at Oxford, the student was not so in
medicine, for he had worked for four years at Glasgow and at Berlin, and this
coming examination would place him finally as a member of his profession. With
his firm mouth, broad forehead, and clear-cut, somewhat hard-featured face, he
was a man who, if he had no brilliant talent, was yet so dogged, so patient,
and so strong that he might in the end overtop a more showy genius. A man who
can hold his own among Scotchmen and North Germans is not a man to be easily
set back. Smith had left a name at Glasgow and at Berlin, and he was bent now
upon doing as much at Oxford, if hard work and devotion could accomplish it.
He had sat reading for
about an hour, and the hands of the noisy carriage clock upon the side table
were rapidly closing together upon the twelve, when a sudden sound fell upon
the student's ear—a sharp, rather shrill sound, like the hissing intake of a
man's breath who gasps under some strong emotion. Smith laid down his book and
slanted his ear to listen. There was no one on either side or above him, so
that the interruption came certainly from the neighbour beneath—the same
neighbour of whom Hastie had given so unsavory an account. Smith knew him only
as a flabby, pale-faced man of silent and studious habits, a man whose lamp
threw a golden bar from the old turret even after he had extinguished his own.
This community in lateness had formed a certain silent bond between them. It
was soothing to Smith when the hours stole on towards dawning to feel that there
was another so close who set as small a value upon his sleep as he did. Even
now, as his thoughts turned towards him, Smith's feelings were kindly. Hastie
was a good fellow, but he was rough, strong-fibred, with no imagination or
sympathy. He could not tolerate departures from what he looked upon as the
model type of manliness. If a man could not be measured by a public-school
standard, then he was beyond the pale with Hastie. Like so many who are
themselves robust, he was apt to confuse the constitution with the character,
to ascribe to want of principle what was really a want of circulation. Smith,
with his stronger mind, knew his friend's habit, and made allowance for it now
as his thoughts turned towards the man beneath him.
There was no return of
the singular sound, and Smith was about to turn to his work once more, when
suddenly there broke out in the silence of the night a hoarse cry, a positive
scream—the call of a man who is moved and shaken beyond all control. Smith
sprang out of his chair and dropped his book. He was a man of fairly firm
fibre, but there was something in this sudden, uncontrollable shriek of horror
which chilled his blood and pringled in his skin. Coming in such a place and at
such an hour, it brought a thousand fantastic possibilities into his head.
Should he rush down, or was it better to wait? He had all the national hatred
of making a scene, and he knew so little of his neighbour that he would not
lightly intrude upon his affairs. For a moment he stood in doubt and even as he
balanced the matter there was a quick rattle of footsteps upon the stairs,
and young Monkhouse Lee, half dressed and as white as ashes, burst into his
room.
"Come down!"
he gasped. "Bellingham's ill."
Abercrombie Smith
followed him closely downstairs into the sitting-room which was beneath his
own, and intent as he was upon the matter in hand, he could not but take an
amazed glance around him as he crossed the threshold. It was such a chamber as
he had never seen before—a museum rather than a study. Walls and ceiling were
thickly covered with a thousand strange relics from Egypt and the East. Tall,
angular figures bearing burdens or weapons stalked in an uncouth frieze round
the apartments. Above were bull-headed, stork-headed, cat-headed, owl-headed
statues, with viper-crowned, almond-eyed monarchs, and strange, beetle-like
deities cut out of the blue Egyptian lapis lazuli. Horus and Isis and Osiris
peeped down from every niche and shelf, while across the ceiling a true son of
Old Nile, a great, hanging-jawed crocodile, was slung in a double noose.
In the centre of this
singular chamber was a large, square table, littered with papers, bottles, and
the dried leaves of some graceful, palm-like plant. These varied objects had
all been heaped together in order to make room for a mummy case, which had been
conveyed from the wall, as was evident from the gap there, and laid across the
front of the table. The mummy itself, a horrid, black, withered thing, like a
charred head on a gnarled bush, was lying half out of the case, with its
clawlike hand and bony forearm resting upon the table. Propped up against the
sarcophagus was an old yellow scroll of papyrus, and in front of it, in a
wooden armchair, sat the owner of the room, his head thrown back, his
widely-opened eyes directed in a horrified stare to the crocodile above him,
and his blue, thick lips puffing loudly with every expiration.
"My God! he's
dying!" cried Monkhouse Lee distractedly.
He was a slim, handsome
young fellow, olive-skinned and dark-eyed, of a Spanish rather than of an
English type, with a Celtic intensity of manner which contrasted with the Saxon
phlegm of Abercrombie Smith.
"Only a faint, I
think," said the medical student. "Just give me a hand with him. You
take his feet. Now on to the sofa. Can you kick all those little wooden devils
off? What a litter it is! Now he will be all right if we undo his collar and
give him some water. What has he been up to at all?"
"I don't know. I
heard him cry out. I ran up. I know him pretty well, you know. It is very good
of you to come down."
"His heart is going
like a pair of castanets," said Smith, laying his hand on the breast of
the unconscious man. "He seems to me to be frightened all to pieces. Chuck
the water over him! What a face he has got on him!"
It was indeed a strange
and most repellent face, for colour and outline were equally unnatural. It was
white, not with the ordinary pallor of fear, but with an absolutely bloodless
white, like the under side of a sole. He was very fat, but gave the impression
of having at some time been considerably fatter, for his skin hung loosely in
creases and folds, and was shot with a meshwork of wrinkles. Short, stubbly
brown hair bristled up from his scalp, with a pair of thick, wrinkled ears protruding at the sides. His light grey eyes were
still open, the pupils dilated and the balls projecting in a fixed and horrid
stare. It seemed to Smith as he looked down upon him that he had never seen
Nature's danger signals flying so plainly upon a man's countenance, and his
thoughts turned more seriously to the warning which Hastie had given him an
hour before.
"What the deuce can
have frightened him so?" he asked.
"It's the
mummy."
"The mummy? How,
then?"
"I don't know. It's
beastly and morbid. I wish he would drop it. It's the second fright he has
given me. It was the same last winter. I found him just like this, with that
horrid thing in front of him."
"What does he want
with the mummy, then?"
"Oh, he's a crank,
you know. It's his hobby. He knows more about these things than any man in
England. But I wish he wouldn't! Ah, he's beginning to come to."
A faint tinge of colour
had begun to steal back into Bellingham's ghastly cheeks, and his eyelids
shivered like a sail after a calm. He clasped and unclasped his hands, drew a
long, thin breath between his teeth, and suddenly jerking up his head, threw a
glance of recognition around him. As his eyes fell upon the mummy, he sprang
off the sofa, seized the roll of papyrus, thrust it into a drawer, turned the key,
and then staggered back on to the sofa.
"What's up?"
he asked. "What do you chaps want?"
"You've been
shrieking out and making no end of a fuss," said Monkhouse Lee.
"If our neighbour here from above hadn't come down, I'm sure I don't know
what I should have done with you."
"Ah, it's
Abercrombie Smith," said Bellingham, glancing up at him. "How very
good of you to come in! What a fool I am! Oh, my God, what a fool I am!"
He sunk his head on to
his hands, and burst into peal after peal of hysterical laughter.
"Look here! Drop
it!" cried Smith, shaking him roughly by the shoulder.
"Your nerves are
all in a jangle. You must drop these little midnight games with mummies, or
you'll be going off your chump. You're all on wires now."
"I wonder,"
said Bellingham, "whether you would be as cool as I am if you had
seen——"
"What then?"
"Oh, nothing. I
meant that I wonder if you could sit up at night with a mummy without trying
your nerves. I have no doubt that you are quite right. I dare say that I have
been taking it out of myself too much lately. But I am all right now. Please
don't go, though. Just wait for a few minutes until I am quite myself."
"The room is very
close," remarked Lee, throwing open the window and letting in the cool
night air.
"It's balsamic
resin," said Bellingham. He lifted up one of the dried palmate leaves from
the table and frizzled it over the chimney of the lamp. It broke away into
heavy smoke wreaths, and a pungent, biting odour filled the chamber. "It's
the sacred plant—the plant of the priests," he remarked. "Do you know
anything of Eastern languages, Smith?"[Pg 191]
"Nothing at all.
Not a word."
The answer seemed to
lift a weight from the Egyptologist's mind.
"By the way,"
he continued, "how long was it from the time that you ran down, until I
came to my senses?"
"Not long. Some
four or five minutes."
"I thought it could
not be very long," said he, drawing a long breath. "But what a
strange thing unconsciousness is! There is no measurement to it. I could not
tell from my own sensations if it were seconds or weeks. Now that gentleman on
the table was packed up in the days of the eleventh dynasty, some forty
centuries ago, and yet if he could find his tongue, he would tell us that this
lapse of time has been but a closing of the eyes and a reopening of them. He is
a singularly fine mummy, Smith."
Smith stepped over to
the table and looked down with a professional eye at the black and twisted form
in front of him. The features, though horribly discoloured, were perfect, and
two little nut-like eyes still lurked in the depths of the black, hollow
sockets. The blotched skin was drawn tightly from bone to bone, and a tangled
wrap of black coarse hair fell over the ears. Two thin teeth, like those of a
rat, overlay the shrivelled lower lip. In its crouching position, with bent
joints and craned head, there was a suggestion of energy about the horrid thing
which made Smith's gorge rise. The gaunt ribs, with their parchment-like
covering, were exposed, and the sunken, leaden-hued abdomen, with the long slit
where the embalmer had left his mark; but the lower limbs were wrapped round
with coarse yellow bandages. A number of little clove-like pieces of myrrh
and of cassia were sprinkled over the body, and lay scattered on the inside of
the case.
"I don't know his
name," said Bellingham, passing his hand over the shrivelled head.
"You see the outer sarcophagus with the inscriptions is missing. Lot 249
is all the title he has now. You see it printed on his case. That was his
number in the auction at which I picked him up."
"He has been a very
pretty sort of fellow in his day," remarked Abercrombie Smith.
"He has been a
giant. His mummy is six feet seven in length, and that would be a giant over
there, for they were never a very robust race. Feel these great knotted bones,
too. He would be a nasty fellow to tackle."
"Perhaps these very
hands helped to build the stones into the pyramids," suggested Monkhouse
Lee, looking down with disgust in his eyes at the crooked, unclean talons.
"No fear. This fellow
has been pickled in natron, and looked after in the most approved style. They
did not serve hodsmen in that fashion. Salt or bitumen was enough for them. It
has been calculated that this sort of thing cost about seven hundred and thirty
pounds in our money. Our friend was a noble at the least. What do you make of
that small inscription near his feet, Smith?"
"I told you that I
know no Eastern tongue."
"Ah, so you did. It
is the name of the embalmer, I take it. A very conscientious worker he must
have been. I wonder how many modern works will survive four thousand
years?"
He kept on speaking
lightly and rapidly, but it was evident to Abercrombie Smith that he was still
palpitating with fear. His hands shook, his lower lip trembled, and look where
he would, his eye always came sliding round to his gruesome companion. Through
all his fear, however, there was a suspicion of triumph in his tone and manner.
His eyes shone, and his footstep, as he paced the room, was brisk and jaunty.
He gave the impression of a man who has gone through an ordeal, the marks of
which he still bears upon him, but which has helped him to his end.
"You're not going
yet?" he cried, as Smith rose from the sofa.
At the prospect of
solitude, his fears seemed to crowd back upon him, and he stretched out a hand
to detain him.
"Yes, I must go. I
have my work to do. You are all right now. I think that with your nervous
system you should take up some less morbid study."
"Oh, I am not
nervous as a rule; and I have unwrapped mummies before."
"You fainted last
time," observed Monkhouse Lee.
"Ah, yes, so I did.
Well, I must have a nerve tonic or a course of electricity. You are not going,
Lee?"
"I'll do whatever
you wish, Ned."
"Then I'll come
down with you and have a shakedown on your sofa. Good-night, Smith. I am so
sorry to have disturbed you with my foolishness."
They shook hands, and as
the medical student stumbled up the spiral and irregular stair he heard a key
turn in a door, and the steps of his two new acquaintances as they descended to
the lower floor.
000
In this strange way
began the acquaintance between Edward Bellingham and Abercrombie Smith, an
acquaintance which the latter, at least, had no desire to push forward.
Bellingham, however, appeared to have taken a fancy to his rough-spoken
neighbour, and made his advances in such a way that he could hardly be repulsed
without absolute brutality. Twice he called to thank Smith for his assistance,
and many times afterwards he looked in with books, papers and such other civilities
as two bachelor neighbours can offer each other. He was, as Smith soon found, a
man of wide reading, with catholic tastes and an extraordinary memory. His
manner, too, was so pleasing and suave that one came, after a time, to overlook
his repellent appearance. For a jaded and wearied man he was no unpleasant
companion, and Smith found himself, after a time, looking forward to his
visits, and even returning them.
Clever as he undoubtedly
was, however, the medical student seemed to detect a dash of insanity in the
man. He broke out at times into a high, inflated style of talk which was in
contrast with the simplicity of his life.
"It is a wonderful
thing," he cried, "to feel that one can command powers of good and of
evil—a ministering angel or a demon of vengeance." And again, of Monkhouse
Lee, he said,—"Lee is a good fellow, an honest fellow, but he is without
strength or ambition. He would not make a fit partner for a man with a great
enterprise. He would not make a fit partner for me."
At such hints and
innuendoes stolid Smith, puffing solemnly at his pipe, would simply raise his
eyebrows and shake his head, with little interjections of medical wisdom as to
earlier hours and fresher air.
One habit Bellingham had
developed of late which Smith knew to be a frequent herald of a weakening mind.
He appeared to be for ever talking to himself. At late hours of the night, when
there could be no visitor with him, Smith could still hear his voice beneath
him in a low, muffled monologue, sunk almost to a whisper, and yet very audible
in the silence. This solitary babbling annoyed and distracted the student, so
that he spoke more than once to his neighbour about it. Bellingham, however,
flushed up at the charge, and denied curtly that he had uttered a sound; indeed,
he showed more annoyance over the matter than the occasion seemed to demand.
Had Abercrombie Smith
had any doubt as to his own ears he had not to go far to find corroboration.
Tom Styles, the little wrinkled man-servant who had attended to the wants of
the lodgers in the turret for a longer time than any man's memory could carry
him, was sorely put to it over the same matter.
"If you please,
sir," said he, as he tidied down the top chamber one morning, "do you
think Mr. Bellingham is all right, sir?"
"All right,
Styles?"
"Yes, sir. Right in
his head, sir."
"Why should he not
be, then?"
"Well, I don't
know, sir. His habits has changed of late. He's not the same man he used to be,
though I make free to say that he was never quite one of my gentlemen, like Mr.
Hastie or yourself, sir. He's took to talkin' to himself something awful. I
wonder it don't disturb you. I don't know what to make of him, sir."
"I don't know what
business it is of yours, Styles."
"Well, I takes an
interest, Mr. Smith. It may be forward of me, but I can't help it. I feel
sometimes as if I was mother and father to my young gentlemen. It all falls on
me when things go wrong and the relations come. But Mr. Bellingham, sir. I want
to know what it is that walks about his room sometimes when he's out and when
the door's locked on the outside."
"Eh? you're talking
nonsense, Styles."
"Maybe so, sir; but
I heard it more'n once with my own ears."
"Rubbish,
Styles."
"Very good, sir.
You'll ring the bell if you want me."
Abercrombie Smith gave
little heed to the gossip of the old man-servant, but a small incident occurred
a few days later which left an unpleasant effect upon his mind, and brought the
words of Styles forcibly to his memory.
Bellingham had come up
to see him late one night, and was entertaining him with an interesting account
of the rock tombs of Beni Hassan in Upper Egypt, when Smith, whose hearing was
remarkably acute, distinctly heard the sound of a door opening on the landing
below.
"There's some
fellow gone in or out of your room," he remarked.
Bellingham sprang up and
stood helpless for a moment, with the expression of a man who is half
incredulous and half afraid.
"I surely locked
it. I am almost positive that I locked it," he stammered. "No one
could have opened it."
"Why, I hear some
one coming up the steps now," said Smith.
Bellingham rushed out
through the door, slammed it loudly behind him, and hurried down the stairs.
About half-way down Smith heard him stop, and thought he caught the sound of
whispering. A moment later the door beneath him shut, a key creaked in a lock,
and Bellingham, with beads of moisture upon his pale face, ascended the stairs
once more, and re-entered the room.
"It's all
right," he said, throwing himself down in a chair. "It was that fool
of a dog. He had pushed the door open. I don't know how I came to forget to
lock it."
"I didn't know you
kept a dog," said Smith, looking very thoughtfully at the disturbed face
of his companion.
"Yes, I haven't had
him long. I must get rid of him. He's a great nuisance."
"He must be, if you
find it so hard to shut him up. I should have thought that shutting the door
would have been enough, without locking it."
"I want to prevent
old Styles from letting him out. He's of some value, you know, and it would be
awkward to lose him."
"I am a bit of a
dog-fancier myself," said Smith, still gazing hard at his companion from
the corner of his eyes. "Perhaps you'll let me have a look at it."
"Certainly. But I
am afraid it cannot be to-night; I have an appointment. Is that clock right?
Then I am a quarter of an hour late already. You'll excuse me, I am sure."
He picked up his cap and
hurried from the room. In spite of his appointment, Smith heard him
re-enter his own chamber and lock his door upon the inside.
This interview left a
disagreeable impression upon the medical student's mind. Bellingham had lied to
him, and lied so clumsily that it looked as if he had desperate reasons for
concealing the truth. Smith knew that his neighbour had no dog. He knew, also,
that the step which he had heard upon the stairs was not the step of an animal.
But if it were not, then what could it be? There was old Styles's statement
about the something which used to pace the room at times when the owner was
absent. Could it be a woman? Smith rather inclined to the view. If so, it would
mean disgrace and expulsion to Bellingham if it were discovered by the
authorities, so that his anxiety and falsehoods might be accounted for. And yet
it was inconceivable that an undergraduate could keep a woman in his rooms
without being instantly detected. Be the explanation what it might, there was
something ugly about it, and Smith determined, as he turned to his books, to
discourage all further attempts at intimacy on the part of his soft-spoken and
ill-favoured neighbour.
But his work was
destined to interruption that night. He had hardly caught up the broken threads
when a firm, heavy footfall came three steps at a time from below, and Hastie,
in blazer and flannels, burst into the room.
"Still at it!"
said he, plumping down into his wonted arm-chair. "What a chap you are to
stew! I believe an earthquake might come and knock Oxford into a cocked hat,
and you would sit perfectly placid with your books among the ruins.
However, I won't bore you long. Three whiffs of baccy, and I am off."
"What's the news,
then?" asked Smith, cramming a plug of bird's-eye into his briar with his
forefinger.
"Nothing very much.
Wilson made 70 for the freshmen against the eleven. They say that they will play
him instead of Buddicomb, for Buddicomb is clean off colour. He used to be able
to bowl a little, but it's nothing but half-volleys and long hops now."
"Medium
right," suggested Smith, with the intense gravity which comes upon a
'varsity man when he speaks of athletics.
"Inclining to fast,
with a work from leg. Comes with the arm about three inches or so. He used to
be nasty on a wet wicket. Oh, by-the-way, have you heard about Long
Norton?"
"What's that?"
"He's been
attacked."
"Attacked?"
"Yes, just as he
was turning out of the High Street, and within a hundred yards of the gate of
Old's."
"But who——"
"Ah, that's the
rub! If you said 'what,' you would be more grammatical. Norton swears that it
was not human, and, indeed, from the scratches on his throat, I should be
inclined to agree with him."
"What, then? Have
we come down to spooks?"
Abercrombie Smith puffed
his scientific contempt.
"Well, no; I don't
think that is quite the idea, either. I am inclined to think that if any
showman has lost a great ape lately, and the brute is in these parts, a jury
would find a true bill against it. Norton passes that way every night, you
know, about the same hour. There's a tree that hangs low over the path—the
big elm from Rainy's garden. Norton thinks the thing dropped on him out of the
tree. Anyhow, he was nearly strangled by two arms, which, he says, were as
strong and as thin as steel bands. He saw nothing; only those beastly arms that
tightened and tightened on him. He yelled his head nearly off, and a couple of
chaps came running, and the thing went over the wall like a cat. He never got a
fair sight of it the whole time. It gave Norton a shake up, I can tell you. I
tell him it has been as good as a change at the seaside for him."
"A garrotter, most
likely," said Smith.
"Very possible.
Norton says not; but we don't mind what he says. The garrotter had long nails,
and was pretty smart at swinging himself over walls. By-the-way, your beautiful
neighbour would be pleased if he heard about it. He had a grudge against
Norton, and he's not a man, from what I know of him, to forget his little
debts. But hallo, old chap, what have you got in your noddle?"
"Nothing,"
Smith answered curtly.
He had started in his
chair, and the look had flashed over his face which comes upon a man who is
struck suddenly by some unpleasant idea.
"You looked as if
something I had said had taken you on the raw. By-the-way, you have made the
acquaintance of Master B. since I looked in last, have you not? Young Monkhouse
Lee told me something to that effect."
"Yes; I know him
slightly. He has been up here once or twice."
"Well, you're big
enough and ugly enough to take care of yourself. He's not what I should
call exactly a healthy sort of Johnny, though, no doubt, he's very clever, and
all that. But you'll soon find out for yourself. Lee is all right; he's a very
decent little fellow. Well, so long, old chap! I row Mullins for the
Vice-Chancellor's pot on Wednesday week, so mind you come down, in case I don't
see you before."
Bovine Smith laid down
his pipe and turned stolidly to his books once more. But with all the will in
the world, he found it very hard to keep his mind upon his work. It would slip
away to brood upon the man beneath him, and upon the little mystery which hung
round his chambers. Then his thoughts turned to this singular attack of which
Hastie had spoken, and to the grudge which Bellingham was said to owe the
object of it. The two ideas would persist in rising together in his mind, as
though there were some close and intimate connection between them. And yet the
suspicion was so dim and vague that it could not be put down in words.
"Confound the
chap!" cried Smith, as he shied his book on pathology across the room.
"He has spoiled my night's reading, and that's reason enough, if there
were no other, why I should steer clear of him in the future."
For ten days the medical
student confined himself so closely to his studies that he neither saw nor
heard anything of either of the men beneath him. At the hours when Bellingham
had been accustomed to visit him, he took care to sport his oak, and though he
more than once heard a knocking at his outer door, he resolutely refused to
answer it. One afternoon, however, he was descending the stairs when, just
as he was passing it, Bellingham's door flew open, and young Monkhouse Lee came
out with his eyes sparkling and a dark flush of anger upon his olive cheeks.
Close at his heels followed Bellingham, his fat, unhealthy face all quivering
with malignant passion.
"You fool!" he
hissed. "You'll be sorry."
"Very likely,"
cried the other. "Mind what I say. It's off! I won't hear of it!"
"You've promised,
anyhow."
"Oh, I'll keep
that! I won't speak. But I'd rather little Eva was in her grave. Once for all,
it's off. She'll do what I say. We don't want to see you again."
So much Smith could not
avoid hearing, but he hurried on, for he had no wish to be involved in their
dispute. There had been a serious breach between them, that was clear enough,
and Lee was going to cause the engagement with his sister to be broken off.
Smith thought of Hastie's comparison of the toad and the dove, and was glad to
think that the matter was at an end. Bellingham's face when he was in a passion
was not pleasant to look upon. He was not a man to whom an innocent girl could
be trusted for life. As he walked, Smith wondered languidly what could have
caused the quarrel, and what the promise might be which Bellingham had been so
anxious that Monkhouse Lee should keep.
It was the day of the
sculling match between Hastie and Mullins, and a stream of men were making
their way down to the banks of the Isis. A May sun was shining brightly, and
the yellow path was barred with the black shadows of the tall elm-trees. On
either side the grey colleges lay back from the road, the hoary old
mothers of minds looking out from their high, mullioned windows at the tide of
young life which swept so merrily past them. Black-clad tutors, prim officials,
pale reading men, brown-faced, straw-hatted young athletes in white sweaters or
many-coloured blazers, all were hurrying towards the blue winding river which
curves through the Oxford meadows.
Abercrombie Smith, with
the intuition of an old oarsman, chose his position at the point where he knew
that the struggle, if there were a struggle, would come. Far off he heard the
hum which announced the start, the gathering roar of the approach, the thunder
of running feet, and the shouts of the men in the boats beneath him. A spray of
half-clad, deep-breathing runners shot past him, and craning over their
shoulders, he saw Hastie pulling a steady thirty-six, while his opponent, with
a jerky forty, was a good boat's length behind him. Smith gave a cheer for his
friend, and pulling out his watch, was starting off again for his chambers,
when he felt a touch upon his shoulder, and found that young Monkhouse Lee was
beside him.
"I saw you
there," he said, in a timid, deprecating way. "I wanted to speak to
you, if you could spare me a half-hour. This cottage is mine. I share it with
Harrington of King's. Come in and have a cup of tea."
"I must be back
presently," said Smith. "I am hard on the grind at present. But I'll
come in for a few minutes with pleasure. I wouldn't have come out only Hastie
is a friend of mine."
"So he is of mine. Hasn't
he a beautiful style? Mullins wasn't in it. But come into the cottage. It's a
little den of a place, but it is pleasant to work in during the summer
months."
It was a small, square,
white building, with green doors and shutters, and a rustic trellis-work porch,
standing back some fifty yards from the river's bank. Inside, the main room was
roughly fitted up as a study—deal table, unpainted shelves with books, and a
few cheap oleographs upon the wall. A kettle sang upon a spirit-stove, and there
were tea things upon a tray on the table.
"Try that chair and
have a cigarette," said Lee. "Let me pour you out a cup of tea. It's
so good of you to come in, for I know that your time is a good deal taken up. I
wanted to say to you that, if I were you, I should change my rooms at
once."
"Eh?"
Smith sat staring with a
lighted match in one hand and his unlit cigarette in the other.
"Yes; it must seem
very extraordinary, and the worst of it is that I cannot give my reasons, for I
am under a solemn promise—a very solemn promise. But I may go so far as to say
that I don't think Bellingham is a very safe man to live near. I intend to camp
out here as much as I can for a time."
"Not safe! What do
you mean?"
"Ah, that's what I
mustn't say. But do take my advice, and move your rooms. We had a grand row
to-day. You must have heard us, for you came down the stairs."
"I saw that you had
fallen out."
"He's a horrible
chap, Smith. That is the only word for him. I have had doubts about him ever
since that night when he fainted—you remember, when you came down. I taxed
him to-day, and he told me things that made my hair rise, and wanted me to
stand in with him. I'm not strait-laced, but I am a clergyman's son, you know,
and I think there are some things which are quite beyond the pale. I only thank
God that I found him out before it was too late, for he was to have married
into my family."
"This is all very
fine, Lee," said Abercrombie Smith curtly. "But either you are saying
a great deal too much or a great deal too little."
"I give you a
warning."
"If there is real
reason for warning, no promise can bind you. If I see a rascal about to blow a
place up with dynamite no pledge will stand in my way of preventing him."
"Ah, but I cannot
prevent him, and I can do nothing but warn you."
"Without saying
what you warn me against."
"Against
Bellingham."
"But that is
childish. Why should I fear him, or any man?"
"I can't tell you.
I can only entreat you to change your rooms. You are in danger where you are. I
don't even say that Bellingham would wish to injure you. But it might happen,
for he is a dangerous neighbour just now."
"Perhaps I know
more than you think," said Smith, looking keenly at the young man's
boyish, earnest face. "Suppose I tell you that some one else shares
Bellingham's rooms."
Monkhouse Lee sprang
from his chair in uncontrollable excitement.
"You know,
then?" he gasped.
"A woman."
Lee dropped back again
with a groan.
"My lips are
sealed," he said. "I must not speak."
"Well,
anyhow," said Smith, rising, "it is not likely that I should allow
myself to be frightened out of rooms which suit me very nicely. It would be a
little too feeble for me to move out all my goods and chattels because you say
that Bellingham might in some unexplained way do me an injury. I think that
I'll just take my chance, and stay where I am, and as I see that it's nearly
five o'clock, I must ask you to excuse me."
He bade the young
student adieu in a few curt words, and made his way homeward through the sweet
spring evening, feeling half-ruffled, half-amused, as any other strong,
unimaginative man might who has been menaced by a vague and shadowy danger.
There was one little
indulgence which Abercrombie Smith always allowed himself, however closely his
work might press upon him. Twice a week, on the Tuesday and the Friday, it was
his invariable custom to walk over to Farlingford, the residence of Doctor
Plumptree Peterson, situated about a mile and a half out of Oxford. Peterson
had been a close friend of Smith's elder brother Francis, and as he was a
bachelor, fairly well-to-do, with a good cellar and a better library, his house
was a pleasant goal for a man who was in need of a brisk walk. Twice a week,
then, the medical student would swing out there along the dark country roads,
and spend a pleasant hour in Peterson's comfortable study, discussing, over a
glass of old port, the gossip of the 'varsity or the latest developments of
medicine or of surgery.
On the day which
followed his interview with Monkhouse Lee, Smith shut up his books at a quarter
past eight, the hour when he usually started for his friend's house. As he was
leaving his room, however, his eyes chanced to fall upon one of the books which
Bellingham had lent him, and his conscience pricked him for not having returned
it. However repellent the man might be, he should not be treated with
discourtesy. Taking the book, he walked downstairs and knocked at his
neighbour's door. There was no answer; but on turning the handle he found that
it was unlocked. Pleased at the thought of avoiding an interview, he stepped
inside, and placed the book with his card upon the table.
The lamp was turned half
down, but Smith could see the details of the room plainly enough. It was all
much as he had seen it before—the frieze, the animal-headed gods, the hanging
crocodile, and the table littered over with papers and dried leaves. The mummy
case stood upright against the wall, but the mummy itself was missing. There
was no sign of any second occupant of the room, and he felt as he withdrew that
he had probably done Bellingham an injustice. Had he a guilty secret to
preserve, he would hardly leave his door open so that all the world might
enter.
The spiral stair was as
black as pitch, and Smith was slowly making his way down its irregular steps,
when he was suddenly conscious that something had passed him in the darkness.
There was a faint sound, a whiff of air, a light brushing past his elbow, but
so slight that he could scarcely be certain of it. He stopped and listened, but
the wind was rustling among the ivy outside, and he could hear nothing else.
"Is that you,
Styles?" he shouted.
There was no answer, and
all was still behind him. It must have been a sudden gust of air, for there
were crannies and cracks in the old turret. And yet he could almost have sworn
that he heard a footfall by his very side. He had emerged into the quadrangle,
still turning the matter over in his head, when a man came running swiftly
across the smooth-cropped lawn.
"Is that you,
Smith?"
"Hullo, Hastie!"
"For God's sake
come at once! Young Lee is drowned! Here's Harrington of King's with the news.
The doctor is out. You'll do, but come along at once. There may be life in
him."
"Have you
brandy?"
"No."
"I'll bring some.
There's a flask on my table."
Smith bounded up the
stairs, taking three at a time, seized the flask, and was rushing down with it,
when, as he passed Bellingham's room, his eyes fell upon something which left
him gasping and staring upon the landing.
The door, which he had
closed behind him, was now open, and right in front of him, with the lamp-light
shining upon it, was the mummy case. Three minutes ago it had been empty. He
could swear to that. Now it framed the lank body of its horrible occupant, who
stood, grim and stark, with his black shrivelled face towards the door. The
form was lifeless and inert, but it seemed to Smith as he gazed that there
still lingered a lurid spark of vitality, some faint sign of consciousness in
the little eyes which lurked in the depths of the hollow sockets. So astounded
and shaken was he that he had forgotten his errand, and was still staring
at the lean, sunken figure when the voice of his friend below recalled him to
himself.
"Come on,
Smith!" he shouted. "It's life and death, you know. Hurry up! Now,
then," he added, as the medical student reappeared, "let us do a
sprint. It is well under a mile, and we should do it in five minutes. A human
life is better worth running for than a pot."
Neck and neck they
dashed through the darkness, and did not pull up until panting and spent, they
had reached the little cottage by the river. Young Lee, limp and dripping like
a broken water-plant, was stretched upon the sofa, the green scum of the river
upon his black hair, and a fringe of white foam upon his leaden-hued lips.
Beside him knelt his fellow student, Harrington, endeavouring to chafe some
warmth back into his rigid limbs.
"I think there's
life in him," said Smith, with his hand to the lad's side. "Put your
watch glass to his lips. Yes, there's dimming on it. You take one arm, Hastie.
Now work it as I do, and we'll soon pull him round."
For ten minutes they
worked in silence, inflating and depressing the chest of the unconscious man.
At the end of that time a shiver ran through his body, his lips trembled, and
he opened his eyes. The three students burst out into an irrepressible cheer.
"Wake up, old chap.
You've frightened us quite enough."
"Have some brandy.
Take a sip from the flask."
"He's all right
now," said his companion Harrington. "Heavens, what a fright I got! I
was reading here, and had gone out for a stroll as far as the river, when
I heard a scream and a splash. Out I ran, and by the time I could find him and
fish him out, all life seemed to have gone. Then Simpson couldn't get a doctor,
for he has a game-leg, and I had to run, and I don't know what I'd have done
without you fellows. That's right, old chap. Sit up."
Monkhouse Lee had raised
himself on his hands, and looked wildly about him.
"What's up?"
he asked. "I've been in the water. Ah, yes; I remember."
A look of fear came into
his eyes, and he sank his face into his hands.
"How did you fall
in?"
"I didn't fall
in."
"How then?"
"I was thrown in. I
was standing by the bank, and something from behind picked me up like a feather
and hurled me in. I heard nothing, and I saw nothing. But I know what it was,
for all that."
"And so do I,"
whispered Smith.
Lee looked up with a
quick glance of surprise.
"You've learned,
then?" he said. "You remember the advice I gave you?"
"Yes, and I begin
to think that I shall take it."
"I don't know what
the deuce you fellows are talking about," said Hastie, "but I think,
if I were you, Harrington, I should get Lee to bed at once. It will be time
enough to discuss the why and the wherefore when he is a little stronger. I
think, Smith, you and I can leave him alone now. I am walking back to college;
if you are coming in that direction, we can have a chat."
But it was little chat
that they had upon their homeward path. Smith's mind was too full of the
incidents of the evening, the absence of the mummy from his neighbour's rooms,
the step that passed him on the stair, the reappearance—the extraordinary,
inexplicable reappearance of the grisly thing—and then this attack upon Lee,
corresponding so closely to the previous outrage upon another man against whom
Bellingham bore a grudge. All this settled in his thoughts, together with the
many little incidents which had previously turned him against his neighbour,
and the singular circumstances under which he was first called in to him. What
had been a dim suspicion, a vague, fantastic conjecture, had suddenly taken
form, and stood out in his mind as a grim fact, a thing not to be denied. And
yet, how monstrous it was! how unheard of! how entirely beyond all bounds of
human experience. An impartial judge, or even the friend who walked by his
side, would simply tell him that his eyes had deceived him, that the mummy had
been there all the time, that young Lee had tumbled into the river as any other
man tumbles into a river, and that blue pill was the best thing for a
disordered liver. He felt that he would have said as much if the positions had
been reversed. And yet he could swear that Bellingham was a murderer at heart,
and that he wielded a weapon such as no man had ever used in all the grim
history of crime.
Hastie had branched off
to his rooms with a few crisp and emphatic comments upon his friend's
unsociability, and Abercrombie Smith crossed the quadrangle to his corner
turret with a strong feeling of repulsion for his chambers and their
associations. He would take Lee's advice, and move his quarters as soon as
possible, for how could a man study when his ear was ever straining for every
murmur or footstep in the room below? He observed, as he crossed over the lawn,
that the light was still shining in Bellingham's window, and as he passed up
the staircase the door opened, and the man himself looked out at him. With his
fat, evil face he was like some bloated spider fresh from the weaving of his
poisonous web.
"Good-evening,"
said he. "Won't you come in?"
"No," cried
Smith fiercely.
"No? You are busy
as ever? I wanted to ask you about Lee. I was sorry to hear that there was a
rumour that something was amiss with him."
His features were grave,
but there was the gleam of a hidden laugh in his eyes as he spoke. Smith saw
it, and he could have knocked him down for it.
"You'll be sorrier
still to hear that Monkhouse Lee is doing very well, and is out of all
danger," he answered. "Your hellish tricks have not come off this
time. Oh, you needn't try to brazen it out. I know all about it."
Bellingham took a step
back from the angry student, and half-closed the door as if to protect himself.
"You are mad,"
he said. "What do you mean? Do you assert that I had anything to do with
Lee's accident?"
"Yes,"
thundered Smith. "You and that bag of bones behind you; you worked it
between you. I tell you what it is, Master B., they have given up burning folk
like you, but we still keep a hangman, and, by George! if any man in this
college meets his death while you are here, I'll have you up, and if you don't swing
for it, it won't be my fault. You'll find that your filthy Egyptian tricks
won't answer in England."
"You're a raving
lunatic," said Bellingham.
"All right. You
just remember what I say, for you'll find that I'll be better than my
word."
The door slammed, and
Smith went fuming up to his chamber, where he locked the door upon the inside,
and spent half the night in smoking his old briar and brooding over the strange
events of the evening.
Next morning Abercrombie
Smith heard nothing of his neighbour, but Harrington called upon him in the
afternoon to say that Lee was almost himself again. All day Smith stuck fast to
his work, but in the evening he determined to pay the visit to his friend
Doctor Peterson upon which he had started the night before. A good walk and a
friendly chat would be welcome to his jangled nerves.
Bellingham's door was
shut as he passed, but glancing back when he was some distance from the turret,
he saw his neighbour's head at the window outlined against the lamp-light, his
face pressed apparently against the glass as he gazed out into the darkness. It
was a blessing to be away from all contact with him, if but for a few hours,
and Smith stepped out briskly, and breathed the soft spring air into his lungs.
The half-moon lay in the west between two Gothic pinnacles, and threw upon the
silvered street a dark tracery from the stone-work above. There was a brisk
breeze, and light, fleecy clouds drifted swiftly across the sky. Old's was on
the very border of the town, and in five minutes Smith found himself beyond the
houses and between the hedges of a May-scented Oxfordshire lane.
It was a lonely and
little frequented road which led to his friend's house. Early as it was, Smith
did not meet a single soul upon his way. He walked briskly along until he came
to the avenue gate, which opened into the long gravel drive leading up to
Farlingford. In front of him he could see the cosy red light of the windows
glimmering through the foliage. He stood with his hand upon the iron latch of
the swinging gate, and he glanced back at the road along which he had come.
Something was coming swiftly down it.
It moved in the shadow
of the hedge, silently and furtively, a dark, crouching figure, dimly visible
against the black background. Even as he gazed back at it, it had lessened its
distance by twenty paces, and was fast closing upon him. Out of the darkness he
had a glimpse of a scraggy neck, and of two eyes that will ever haunt him in
his dreams. He turned, and with a cry of terror he ran for his life up the
avenue. There were the red lights, the signals of safety, almost within a
stone's-throw of him. He was a famous runner, but never had he run as he ran that
night.
The heavy gate had swung
into place behind him, but he heard it dash open again before his pursuer. As
he rushed madly and wildly through the night, he could hear a swift, dry patter
behind him, and could see, as he threw back a glance, that this horror was
bounding like a tiger at his heels, with blazing eyes and one stringy arm
out-thrown. Thank God, the door was ajar. He could see the thin bar of light
which shot from the lamp in the hall. Nearer yet sounded the clatter from
behind. He heard a hoarse gurgling at his very shoulder. With a shriek he flung
himself against the door, slammed and bolted it behind him, and sank
half-fainting on to the hall chair.
"My goodness,
Smith, what's the matter?" asked Peterson, appearing at the door of his
study.
"Give me some
brandy."
Peterson disappeared,
and came rushing out again with a glass and a decanter.
"You need it,"
he said, as his visitor drank off what he poured out for him. "Why, man,
you are as white as a cheese."
Smith laid down his glass,
rose up, and took a deep breath.
"I am my own man
again now," said he. "I was never so unmanned before. But, with your
leave, Peterson, I will sleep here to-night, for I don't think I could face
that road again except by daylight. It's weak, I know, but I can't help
it."
Peterson looked at his
visitor with a very questioning eye.
"Of course you
shall sleep here if you wish. I'll tell Mrs. Burney to make up the spare bed.
Where are you off to now?"
"Come up with me to
the window that overlooks the door. I want you to see what I have seen."
They went up to the
window of the upper hall whence they could look down upon the approach to the
house. The drive and the fields on either side lay quiet and still, bathed in
the peaceful moonlight.
"Well, really, Smith,"
remarked Peterson, "it is well that I know you to be an abstemious man.
What in the world can have frightened you?"
"I'll tell you
presently. But where can it have gone? Ah, now, look, look! See the curve of
the road just beyond your gate."
"Yes, I see; you
needn't pinch my arm off. I saw some one pass. I should say a man, rather thin,
apparently, and tall, very tall. But what of him? And what of yourself? You are
still shaking like an aspen leaf."
"I have been within
hand-grip of the devil, that's all. But come down to your study, and I shall
tell you the whole story."
He did so. Under the
cheery lamp-light, with a glass of wine on the table beside him, and the portly
form and florid face of his friend in front, he narrated, in their order, all the
events, great and small, which had formed so singular a chain, from the night
on which he had found Bellingham fainting in front of the mummy case until this
horrid experience of an hour ago.
"There now,"
he said as he concluded, "that's the whole black business. It is monstrous
and incredible, but it is true."
Doctor Plumptree
Peterson sat for some time in silence with a very puzzled expression upon his
face.
"I never heard of
such a thing in my life, never!" he said at last. "You have told me
the facts. Now tell me your inferences."
"You can draw your
own."
"But I should like
to hear yours. You have thought over the matter, and I have not."
"Well, it must be a
little vague in detail, but the main points seem to me to be clear enough. This
fellow Bellingham, in his Eastern studies, has got hold of some infernal secret
by which a mummy—or possibly only this particular mummy—can be temporarily
brought to life. He was trying this disgusting business on the night when he
fainted. No doubt the sight of the creature moving had shaken his nerve, even
though he had expected it. You remember that almost the first words he said
were to call out upon himself as a fool. Well, he got more hardened afterwards,
and carried the matter through without fainting. The vitality which he could
put into it was evidently only a passing thing, for I have seen it continually
in its case as dead as this table. He has some elaborate process, I fancy, by
which he brings the thing to pass. Having done it, he naturally bethought him
that he might use the creature as an agent. It has intelligence and it has
strength. For some purpose he took Lee into his confidence; but Lee, like a
decent Christian, would have nothing to do with such a business. Then they had
a row, and Lee vowed that he would tell his sister of Bellingham's true
character. Bellingham's game was to prevent him, and he nearly managed it, by
setting this creature of his on his track. He had already tried its powers upon
another man—Norton—towards whom he had a grudge. It is the merest chance that
he has not two murders upon his soul. Then, when I taxed him with the matter,
he had the strongest reasons for wishing me out of the way, before I could
convey my knowledge to any one else. He got his chance when I went out, for he
knew my habits and where I was bound for. I have had a narrow shave, Peterson,
and it is mere luck you didn't find me on your doorstep in the morning. I'm not
a nervous man as a rule, and I never thought to have the fear of death put upon
me as it was to-night."
"My dear boy, you
take the matter too seriously," said his companion. "Your nerves are
out of order with your work, and you make too much of it. How could such a
thing as this stride about the streets of Oxford, even at night, without being
seen?"
"It has been seen.
There is quite a scare in the town about an escaped ape, as they imagine the
creature to be. It is the talk of the place."
"Well, it's a
striking chain of events. And yet, my dear fellow, you must allow that each
incident in itself is capable of a more natural explanation."
"What! even my
adventure of to-night?"
"Certainly. You
come out with your nerves all unstrung, and your head full of this theory of
yours. Some gaunt, half-famished tramp steals after you, and seeing you run, is
emboldened to pursue you. Your fears and imagination do the rest."
"It won't do,
Peterson; it won't do."
"And again, in the
instance of your finding the mummy case empty, and then a few moments later
with an occupant, you know that it was lamp-light, that the lamp was half
turned down, and that you had no special reason to look hard at the case. It is
quite possible that you may have overlooked the creature in the first
instance."
"No, no; it is out
of the question."
"And then Lee may
have fallen into the river, and Norton been garrotted. It is certainly a
formidable indictment that you have against Bellingham; but if you were to
place it before a police magistrate, he would simply laugh in your face."
"I know he would.
That is why I mean to take the matter into my own hands."
"Eh?"
"Yes; I feel that a
public duty rests upon me, and, besides, I must do it for my own safety,
unless I choose to allow myself to be hunted by this beast out of the college,
and that would be a little too feeble. I have quite made up my mind what I
shall do. And first of all, may I use your paper and pens for an hour?"
"Most certainly.
You will find all that you want upon that side-table."
Abercrombie Smith sat
down before a sheet of foolscap, and for an hour, and then for a second hour
his pen travelled swiftly over it. Page after page was finished and tossed
aside while his friend leaned back in his arm-chair, looking across at him with
patient curiosity. At last, with an exclamation of satisfaction, Smith sprang to
his feet, gathered his papers up into order, and laid the last one upon
Peterson's desk.
"Kindly sign this
as a witness," he said.
"A witness? Of
what?"
"Of my signature,
and of the date. The date is the most important. Why, Peterson, my life might
hang upon it."
"My dear Smith, you
are talking wildly. Let me beg you to go to bed."
"On the contrary, I
never spoke so deliberately in my life. And I will promise to go to bed the
moment you have signed it."
"But what is
it?"
"It is a statement
of all that I have been telling you to-night. I wish you to witness it."
"Certainly,"
said Peterson, signing his name under that of his companion. "There you
are! But what is the idea?"
"You will kindly
retain it, and produce it in case I am arrested."
"Arrested? For
what?"
"For murder. It is
quite on the cards. I wish to be ready for every event. There is only one
course open to me, and I am determined to take it."
"For Heaven's sake,
don't do anything rash!"
"Believe me, it
would be far more rash to adopt any other course. I hope that we won't need to
bother you, but it will ease my mind to know that you have this statement of my
motives. And now I am ready to take your advice and to go to roost, for I want
to be at my best in the morning."
000
Abercrombie Smith was not
an entirely pleasant man to have as an enemy. Slow and easy-tempered, he was
formidable when driven to action. He brought to every purpose in life the same
deliberate resoluteness which had distinguished him as a scientific student. He
had laid his studies aside for a day, but he intended that the day should not
be wasted. Not a word did he say to his host as to his plans, but by nine
o'clock he was well on his way to Oxford.
In the High Street he
stopped at Clifford's the gunmaker's, and bought a heavy revolver, with a box
of central-fire cartridges. Six of them he slipped into the chambers, and
half-cocking the weapon, placed it in the pocket of his coat. He then made his
way to Hastie's rooms, where the big oarsman was lounging over his breakfast, with
the Sporting Times propped up against the coffee-pot.
"Hullo! What's
up?" he asked. "Have some coffee?"
"No, thank you. I
want you to come with me, Hastie, and do what I ask you."
"Certainly, my
boy."
"And bring a heavy
stick with you."
"Hullo!" Hastie
stared. "Here's a hunting crop that would fell an ox."
"One other thing.
You have a box of amputating knives. Give me the longest of them."
"There you are. You
seem to be fairly on the war trail. Anything else?"
"No; that will
do." Smith placed the knife inside his coat, and led the way to the
quadrangle. "We are neither of us chickens, Hastie," said he. "I
think I can do this job alone, but I take you as a precaution. I am going to
have a little talk with Bellingham. If I have only him to deal with, I won't,
of course, need you. If I shout, however, up you come, and lam out with your
whip as hard as you can lick. Do you understand?"
"All right. I'll
come if I hear you bellow."
"Stay here, then. I
may be a little time, but don't budge until I come down."
"I'm a
fixture."
Smith ascended the
stairs, opened Bellingham's door and stepped in. Bellingham was seated behind
his table, writing. Beside him, among his litter of strange possessions,
towered the mummy case, with its sale number 249 still stuck upon its front,
and its hideous occupant stiff and stark within it. Smith looked very
deliberately round him, closed the door, and then stepping across to the
fire-place, struck a match and set the fire alight. Bellingham sat staring,
with amazement and rage upon his bloated face.
"Well, really now,
you make yourself at home," he gasped.
Smith sat himself
deliberately down, placing his watch upon the table, drew out his pistol,
cocked it, and laid it in his lap. Then he took the long amputating knife from
his bosom, and threw it down in front of Bellingham.
"Now, then,"
said he, "just get to work and cut up that mummy."
"Oh, is that
it?" said Bellingham with a sneer.
"Yes, that is it.
They tell me that the law can't touch you. But I have a law that will set
matters straight. If in five minutes you have not set to work, I swear by the
God who made me that I will put a bullet through your brain!"
"You would murder
me?"
Bellingham had half
risen, and his face was the colour of putty.
"Yes."
"And for
what?"
"To stop your
mischief. One minute has gone."
"But what have I
done?"
"I know and you
know."
"This is mere
bullying."
"Two minutes are
gone."
"But you must give
reasons. You are a madman—a dangerous madman. Why should I destroy my own
property? It is a valuable mummy."
"You must cut it
up, and you must burn it."
"I will do no such
thing."
"Four minutes are
gone."
Smith took up the pistol
and he looked towards Bellingham with an inexorable face. As the secondhand
stole round, he raised his hand, and the finger twitched upon the trigger.
"There! there! I'll
do it!" screamed Bellingham.
In frantic haste he
caught up the knife and hacked at the figure of the mummy, ever glancing round
to see the eye and the weapon of his terrible visitor bent upon him. The
creature crackled and snapped under every stab of the keen blade. A thick
yellow dust rose up from it. Spices and dried essences rained down upon the
floor. Suddenly, with a rending crack, its backbone snapped asunder, and it
fell, a brown heap of sprawling limbs, upon the floor.
"Now into the
fire!" said Smith.
The flames leaped and
roared as the dried and tinder-like debris was piled upon it. The little room
was like the stoke-hole of a steamer and the sweat ran down the faces of the
two men; but still the one stooped and worked, while the other sat watching him
with a set face. A thick, fat smoke oozed out from the fire, and a heavy smell
of burned rosin and singed hair filled the air. In a quarter of an hour a few
charred and brittle sticks were all that was left of Lot No. 249.
"Perhaps that will
satisfy you," snarled Bellingham, with hate and fear in his little grey
eyes as he glanced back at his tormentor.
"No; I must make a
clean sweep of all your materials. We must have no more devil's tricks. In with
all these leaves! They may have something to do with it."
"And what
now?" asked Bellingham, when the leaves also had been added to the blaze.
"Now the roll of
papyrus which you had on the table that night. It is in that drawer, I
think."
"No, no,"
shouted Bellingham. "Don't burn that! Why, man, you don't know what you
do. It is unique; it contains wisdom which is nowhere else to be found."
"Out with it!"
"But look here,
Smith, you can't really mean it. I'll share the knowledge with you. I'll teach
you all that is in it. Or, stay, let me only copy it before you burn it!"
Smith stepped forward
and turned the key in the drawer. Taking out the yellow, curled roll of paper,
he threw it into the fire, and pressed it down with his heel. Bellingham screamed,
and grabbed at it; but Smith pushed him back and stood over it until it was
reduced to a formless grey ash.
"Now, Master
B.," said he, "I think I have pretty well drawn your teeth. You'll
hear from me again, if you return to your old tricks. And now good-morning, for
I must go back to my studies."
And such is the
narrative of Abercrombie Smith as to the singular events which occurred in Old
College, Oxford, in the spring of '84. As Bellingham left the university
immediately afterwards, and was last heard of in the Soudan, there is no one
who can contradict his statement. But the wisdom of men is small, and the ways
of Nature are strange, and who shall put a bound to the dark things which may
be found by those who seek for them?
So long as the oceans
are the ligaments which bind together the great broadcast British Empire, so
long will there be a dash of romance in our minds. For the soul is swayed by
the waters, as the waters are by the moon, and when the great highways of an empire
are along such roads as these, so full of strange sights and sounds, with
danger ever running like a hedge on either side of the course, it is a dull
mind indeed which does not bear away with it some trace of such a passage. And
now, Britain lies far beyond herself, for the three-mile limit of every
seaboard is her frontier, which has been won by hammer and loom and pick rather
than by arts of war. For it is written in history that neither king nor army
can bar the path to the man who having twopence in his strong box, and knowing
well where he can turn it to threepence, sets his mind to that one end. And as
the frontier has broadened the mind of Britain has broadened too, spreading out
until all men can see that the ways of the island are continental, even as
those of the Continent are insular.
But for this a price
must be paid, and the price is a grievous one. As the beast of old must have
one young human life as a tribute every year, so to our Empire we throw from
day to day the pick and flower of our youth. The engine is world-wide and
strong, but the only fuel that will drive it is the lives of British men.
Thus it is that in the grey old cathedrals, as we look round upon the brasses
on the walls, we see strange names, such names as they who reared those walls
had never heard, for it is in Peshawur, and Umballah, and Korti, and Fort
Pearson that the youngsters die, leaving only a precedent and a brass behind
them. But if every man had his obelisk, even where he lay, then no frontier
line need be drawn, for a cordon of British graves would ever show how high the
Anglo-Celtic tide had lapped.
This, then, as well as
the waters which join us to the world, has done something to tinge us with
romance. For when so many have their loved ones over the seas, walking amid
hillmen's bullets, or swamp malaria, where death is sudden and distance great,
then mind communes with mind, and strange stories arise of dream, presentiment,
or vision, where the mother sees her dying son, and is past the first bitterness
of her grief ere the message comes which should have broken the news. The
learned have of late looked into the matter and have even labelled it with a
name; but what can we know more of it save that a poor stricken soul, when
hard-pressed and driven, can shoot across the earth some
ten-thousand-mile-distant picture of its trouble to the mind which is most akin
to it. Far be it from me to say that there lies no such power within us, for of
all things which the brain will grasp the last will be itself; but yet it is
well to be very cautious over such matters, for once at least I have known that
which was within the laws of Nature seem to be far upon the further side of
them.
John Vansittart was the
younger partner of the firm of Hudson and Vansittart, coffee exporters of
the Island of Ceylon, three-quarters Dutchman by descent, but wholly English in
his sympathies. For years I had been his agent in London, and when in '72 he
came over to England for a three months' holiday, he turned to me for the introductions
which would enable him to see something of town and country life. Armed with
seven letters he left my offices, and for many weeks scrappy notes from
different parts of the country let me know that he had found favour in the eyes
of my friends. Then came word of his engagement to Emily Lawson, of a cadet
branch of the Hereford Lawsons, and at the very tail of the first flying rumour
the news of his absolute marriage, for the wooing of a wanderer must be short,
and the days were already crowding on towards the date when he must be upon his
homeward journey. They were to return together to Colombo in one of the firm's
own thousand-ton barque-rigged sailing ships, and this was to be their princely
honeymoon, at once a necessity and a delight.
Those were the royal
days of coffee-planting in Ceylon, before a single season and a rotting fungus
drove a whole community through years of despair to one of the greatest
commercial victories which pluck and ingenuity ever won. Not often is it that
men have the heart when their one great industry is withered to rear up in a
few years another as rich to take its place, and the tea-fields of Ceylon are
as true a monument to courage as is the lion at Waterloo. But in '72 there was
no cloud yet above the skyline, and the hopes of the planters were as high and
as bright as the hill-sides on which they reared their crops. Vansittart
came down to London with his young and beautiful wife. I was introduced, dined
with them, and it was finally arranged that I, since business called me also to
Ceylon, should be a fellow-passenger with them on the Eastern Star,
which was timed to sail on the following Monday.
It was on the Sunday
evening that I saw him again. He was shown up into my rooms about nine o'clock
at night, with the air of a man who is bothered and out of sorts. His hand, as
I shook it, was hot and dry.
"I wish,
Atkinson," said he, "that you could give me a little lime-juice and
water. I have a beastly thirst upon me, and the more I take the more I seem to
want."
I rang and ordered a
caraffe and glasses. "You are flushed," said I. "You don't look
the thing."
"No, I'm clean off
colour. Got a touch of rheumatism in my back, and don't seem to taste my food.
It is this vile London that is choking me. I'm not used to breathing air which
has been used up by four million lungs all sucking away on every side of
you." He flapped his crooked hands before his face, like a man who really
struggles for his breath.
"A touch of the sea
will soon set you right."
"Yes, I'm of one
mind with you there. That's the thing for me. I want no other doctor. If I
don't get to sea to-morrow I'll have an illness. There are no two ways about
it." He drank off the tumbler of lime-juice, and clapped his two hands
with his knuckles doubled up into the small of his back.
"That seems to ease
me," said he, looking at me with a filmy eye. "Now I want your
help, Atkinson, for I am rather awkwardly placed."
"As how?"
"This way. My
wife's mother got ill and wired for her. I couldn't go—you know best yourself
how tied I have been—so she had to go alone. Now I've had another wire to say
that she can't come to-morrow, but that she will pick up the ship at Falmouth
on Wednesday. We put in there, you know, though I count it hard, Atkinson, that
a man should be asked to believe in a mystery, and cursed if he can't do it.
Cursed, mind you, no less." He leaned forward and began to draw a catchy
breath like a man who is poised on the very edge of a sob.
Then first it came into
my mind that I had heard much of the hard-drinking life of the island, and that
from brandy came these wild words and fevered hands. The flushed cheek and the
glazing eye were those of one whose drink is strong upon him. Sad it was to see
so noble a young man in the grip of that most bestial of all the devils.
"You should lie
down," I said, with some severity.
He screwed up his eyes
like a man who is striving to wake himself, and looked up with an air of
surprise.
"So I shall
presently," said he, quite rationally. "I felt quite swimmy just now,
but I am my own man again now. Let me see, what was I talking about? Oh, ah, of
course, about the wife. She joins the ship at Falmouth. Now I want to go round
by water. I believe my health depends upon it. I just want a little clean
first-lung air to set me on my feet again. I ask you, like a good fellow, to go
to Falmouth by rail, so that in case we should be late you may be there to look
after the wife. Put up at the Royal Hotel, and I will wire her that you are
there. Her sister will bring her down, so that it will be all plain
sailing."
"I'll do it with
pleasure," said I. "In fact, I would rather go by rail, for we shall
have enough and to spare of the sea before we reach Colombo. I believe too that
you badly need a change. Now, I should go and turn in, if I were you."
"Yes, I will. I
sleep aboard to-night. You know," he continued, as the film settled down
again over his eyes, "I've not slept well the last few nights. I've been
troubled with theolololog—that is to say, theolological—hang it," with a
desperate effort, "with the doubts of theolologicians. Wondering why the
Almighty made us, you know, and why He made our heads swimmy, and fixed little
pains into the small of our backs. Maybe I'll do better to-night." He rose
and steadied himself with an effort against the corner of the chair back.
"Look here,
Vansittart," said I gravely, stepping up to him, and laying my hand upon
his sleeve, "I can give you a shakedown here. You are not fit to go out.
You are all over the place. You've been mixing your drinks."
"Drinks!" He
stared at me stupidly.
"You used to carry
your liquor better than this."
"I give you my
word, Atkinson, that I have not had a drain for two days. It's not drink. I
don't know what it is. I suppose you think this is drink." He took up my
hand in his burning grasp, and passed it over his own forehead.
"Great Lord!"
said I.
His skin felt like a
thin sheet of velvet beneath which lies a close-packed layer of small
shot. It was smooth to the touch at any one place, but to a finger passed along
it, rough as a nutmeg-grater.
"It's all
right," said he, smiling at my startled face. "I've had the prickly
heat nearly as bad."
"But this is never
prickly heat."
"No, it's London.
It's breathing bad air. But to-morrow it'll be all right. There's a surgeon
aboard, so I shall be in safe hands. I must be off now."
"Not you,"
said I, pushing him back into a chair. "This is past a joke. You don't
move from here until a doctor sees you. Just stay where you are."
I caught up my hat and
rushing round to the house of a neighbouring physician, I brought him back with
me. The room was empty and Vansittart gone. I rang the bell. The servant said
that the gentleman had ordered a cab the instant that I had left, and had gone
off in it. He had told the cabman to drive to the docks.
"Did the gentleman
seem ill?" I asked.
"Ill!" The man
smiled. "No, sir, he was singin' his 'ardest all the time."
The information was not
as reassuring as my servant seemed to think, but I reflected that he was going
straight back to the Eastern Star, and that there was a doctor
aboard of her, so that there was nothing which I could do in the matter. None
the less, when I thought of his thirst, his burning hands, his heavy eye, his
tripping speech, and lastly, of that leprous forehead, I carried with me to bed
an unpleasant memory of my visitor and his visit.
At eleven o'clock next
day I was at the docks, but the Eastern Star had already moved
down the river, and was nearly at Gravesend. To Gravesend I went by train,
but only to see her topmasts far off, with a plume of smoke from a tug in front
of her. I would hear no more of my friend until I rejoined him at Falmouth.
When I got back to my offices, a telegram was awaiting me from Mrs. Vansittart,
asking me to meet her; and next evening found us both at the Royal Hotel,
Falmouth, where we were to wait for the Eastern Star. Ten days
passed, and there came no news of her.
They were ten days which
I am not likely to forget. On the very day that the Eastern Star had
cleared from the Thames, a furious easterly gale had sprung up, and blew on
from day to day for the greater part of a week without the sign of a lull. Such
a screaming, raving, long-drawn storm has never been known on the southern
coast. From our hotel windows the sea view was all banked in haze, with a
little rain-swept half-circle under our very eyes, churned and lashed into one
tossing stretch of foam. So heavy was the wind upon the waves that little sea
could rise, for the crest of each billow was torn shrieking from it, and lashed
broadcast over the bay. Clouds, wind, sea, all were rushing to the west, and
there, looking down at this mad jumble of elements, I waited on day after day,
my sole companion a white, silent woman, with terror in her eyes, her forehead
pressed ever against the window, her gaze from early morning to the fall of
night fixed upon that wall of grey haze through which the loom of a vessel
might come. She said nothing, but that face of hers was one long wail of fear.
On the fifth day I took
counsel with an old seaman.
I should have preferred
to have done so alone, but she saw me speak with him, and was at our side in an
instant, with parted lips and a prayer in her eyes.
"Seven days out
from London," said he, "and five in the gale. Well, the Channel's
swept clear by this wind. There's three things for it. She may have popped into
port on the French side. That's like enough."
"No, no; he knew we
were here. He would have telegraphed."
"Ah, yes, so he
would. Well, then, he might have run for it, and if he did that he won't be
very far from Madeira by now. That'll be it, marm, you may depend."
"Or else? You said
there was a third chance."
"Did I, marm? No,
only two, I think. I don't think I said anything of a third. Your ship's out
there, depend upon it, away out in the Atlantic, and you'll hear of it time
enough, for the weather is breaking. Now don't you fret, marm, and wait quiet,
and you'll find a real blue Cornish sky to-morrow."
The old seaman was right
in his surmise, for the next day broke calm and bright, with only a low
dwindling cloud in the west to mark the last trailing wreaths of the
storm-wrack. But still there came no word from the sea, and no sign of the
ship. Three more weary days had passed, the weariest that I have ever spent,
when there came a seafaring man to the hotel with a letter. I gave a shout of
joy. It was from the captain of the Eastern Star. As I read the
first lines of it I whisked my hand over it, but she laid her own upon it and
drew it away. "I have seen it," said she, in a cold, quiet
voice. "I may as well see the rest, too."
"Dear Sir," said the letter,
"Mr. Vansittart is
down with the smallpox, and we are blown so far on our course that we don't
know what to do, he being off his head and unfit to tell us. By dead reckoning
we are but three hundred miles from Funchal, so I take it that it is best that
we should push on there, get Mr. V. into hospital, and wait in the Bay until
you come. There's a sailing-ship due from Falmouth to Funchal in a few days'
time, as I understand. This goes by the brig Marian of
Falmouth, and five pounds is due to the master,
"Yours
respectfully,
"Jno. Hines."
She was a wonderful
woman that, only a chit of a girl fresh from school, but as quiet and strong as
a man. She said nothing—only pressed her lips together tight, and put on her
bonnet.
"You are going
out?" I asked.
"Yes."
"Can I be of
use?"
"No; I am going to
the doctor's."
"To the
doctor's?"
"Yes. To learn how
to nurse a small-pox case."
She was busy at that all
the evening, and next morning we were off with a fine ten-knot breeze in the
barque Rose of Sharon for Madeira. For five days we made good
time, and were no great way from the island; but on the sixth there fell a
calm, and we lay without motion on a sea of oil,
heaving slowly, but making not a foot of way.
At ten o'clock that
night Emily Vansittart and I stood leaning on the starboard railing of the
poop, with a full moon shining at our backs, and casting a black shadow of the
barque, and of our own two heads, upon the shining water. From the shadow a
broadening path of moonshine stretched away to the lonely skyline, flickering
and shimmering in the gentle heave of the swell. We were talking with bent
heads, chatting of the calm, of the chances of wind, of the look of the sky,
when there came a sudden plop, like a rising salmon, and there, in the clear
light, John Vansittart sprang out of the water and looked up at us.
I never saw anything
clearer in my life than I saw that man. The moon shone full upon him, and he
was but three oars' length away. His face was more puffed than when I had seen
him last, mottled here and there with dark scabs, his mouth and eyes open as
one who is struck with some overpowering surprise. He had some white stuff
streaming from his shoulders, and one hand was raised to his ear, the other
crooked across his breast. I saw him leap from the water into the air, and in
the dead calm the waves of his coming lapped up against the sides of the
vessel. Then his figure sank back into the water again, and I heard a rending,
crackling sound like a bundle of brushwood snapping in the fire on a frosty
night. There were no signs of him when I looked again, but a swift swirl and
eddy on the still sea still marked the spot where he had been. How long I stood
there, tingling to my finger-tips, holding up an unconscious woman with one
hand, clutching at the rail of the vessel with the other, was more than I could
afterwards tell. I had been noted as a man of slow and unresponsive emotions,
but this time at least I was shaken to the core. Once and twice I struck my
foot upon the deck to be certain that I was indeed the master of my own senses,
and that this was not some mad prank of an unruly brain. As I stood, still
marvelling, the woman shivered, opened her eyes, gasped, and then standing
erect with her hands upon the rail, looked out over the moonlit sea with a face
which had aged ten years in a summer night.
"You saw his
vision?" she murmured.
"I saw
something."
"It was he! It was
John! He is dead!"
I muttered some lame
words of doubt.
"Doubtless he died
at this hour," she whispered. "In hospital at Madeira. I have read of
such things. His thoughts were with me. His vision came to me. Oh, my John, my
dear, dear, lost John!"
She broke out suddenly
into a storm of weeping, and I led her down into her cabin, where I left her
with her sorrow. That night a brisk breeze blew up from the east, and in the
evening of the next day we passed the two islets of Los Desertos, and dropped
anchor at sundown in the Bay of Funchal. The Eastern Star lay
no great distance from us, with the quarantine flag flying from her main, and
her Jack half-way up her peak.
"You see,"
said Mrs. Vansittart quickly. She was dry-eyed now, for she had known how it
would be.
That night we received
permission from the authorities to move on board the Eastern Star.
The captain, Hines, was waiting upon deck with confusion and grief
contending upon his bluff face as he sought for words with which to break this
heavy tidings, but she took the story from his lips.
"I know that my
husband is dead," she said. "He died yesterday night, about ten
o'clock, in hospital at Madeira, did he not?"
The seaman stared
aghast. "No, marm, he died eight days ago at sea, and we had to bury him out
there, for we lay in a belt of calm, and could not say when we might make the
land."
Well, those are the main
facts about the death of John Vansittart, and his appearance to his wife
somewhere about lat. 35 N. and long. 15 W. A clearer case of a wraith has
seldom been made out, and since then it has been told as such, and put into
print as such, and endorsed by a learned society as such, and so floated off
with many others to support the recent theory of telepathy. For myself, I hold
telepathy to be proved, but I would snatch this one case from amid the
evidence, and say that I do not think that it was the wraith of John
Vansittart, but John Vansittart himself whom we saw that night leaping into the
moonlight out of the depths of the Atlantic. It has ever been my belief that
some strange chance—one of those chances which seem so improbable and yet so
constantly occur—had becalmed us over the very spot where the man had been
buried a week before. For the rest, the surgeon tells me that the leaden weight
was not too firmly fixed, and that seven days bring about changes which fetch a
body to the surface. Coming from the depth to which the weight would have sunk
it, he explains that it might well attain such a velocity as to carry it
clear of the water. Such is my own explanation of the matter, and if you ask me
what then became of the body, I must recall to you that snapping, crackling
sound, with the swirl in the water. The shark is a surface feeder and is
plentiful in those parts.
Flight-Commander
Stangate should have been happy. He had come safely through the war without a
hurt, and with a good name in the most heroic of services. He had only just
turned thirty, and a great career seemed to lie ahead of him. Above all,
beautiful Mary MacLean was walking by his side, and he had her promise that she
was there for life. What could a young man ask for more? And yet there was a
heavy load upon his heart.
He could not explain it
himself, and endeavoured to reason himself out of it. There was the blue sky
above him, the blue sea in front, the beautiful gardens with their throngs of
happy pleasure-seekers around. Above all, there was that sweet face turned upon
him with questioning concern. Why could he not raise himself to so joyful an environment?
He made effort after effort, but they were not convincing enough to deceive the
quick instinct of a loving woman.
"What is it,
Tom?" she asked anxiously. "I can see that something is clouding you.
Do tell me if I can help you in any way."
He laughed in
shame-faced fashion.
"It is such a sin
to spoil our little outing," he said. "I could kick myself round
these gardens when I think of it. Don't worry, my darling, for I know the cloud
will roll off. I suppose I am a creature of nerves, though I should have got
past that by now. The Flying Service is supposed either to break you or to
warrant you for life."
"It is nothing
definite, then?"
"No, it is nothing
definite. That's the worst of it. You could fight it more easily if it was.
It's just a dead, heavy depression here in my chest and across my forehead. But
do forgive me, dear girl! What a brute I am to shadow you like this."
"But I love to
share even the smallest trouble."
"Well, it's
gone—vamosed—vanished. We will talk about it no more."
She gave him a swift,
penetrating glance.
"No, no, Tom; your
brow shows, as well as feels. Tell me, dear, have you often felt like this? You
really look very ill. Sit here, dear, in the shade and tell me of it."
They sat together in the
shadow of the great latticed Tower which reared itself six hundred feet high
beside them.
"I have an absurd
faculty," said he; "I don't know that I have ever mentioned it to any
one before. But when imminent danger is threatening me I get these strange
forebodings. Of course it is absurd to-day in these peaceful surroundings. It
only shows how queerly these things work. But it is the first time that it has
deceived me."
"When had you it
before?"
"When I was a lad
it seized me one morning. I was nearly drowned that afternoon. I had it when
the burglar came to Morton Hall and I got a bullet through my coat. Then twice
in the war when I was overmatched and escaped by a miracle, I had this strange
feeling before ever I climbed into my machine. Then it lifts quite suddenly,
like a mist in the sunshine. Why, it is lifting now. Look at me! Can't you see
that it is so?"
She could indeed. He had
turned in a minute from a haggard man to a laughing boy. She found herself
laughing in sympathy. A rush of high spirits and energy had swept away his
strange foreboding and filled his whole soul with the vivid, dancing joy of
youth.
"Thank
goodness!" he cried. "I think it is your dear eyes that have done it.
I could not stand that wistful look in them. What a silly, foolish nightmare it
all has been! There's an end for ever in my belief in presentiments. Now, dear
girl, we have just time for one good turn before luncheon. After that the
gardens get so crowded that it is hopeless to do anything. Shall we have a side
show, or the great wheel, or the flying boat, or what?"
"What about the
Tower?" she asked, glancing upwards. "Surely that glorious air and
the view from the top would drive the last wisps of cloud out of your
mind."
He looked at his watch.
"Well, it's past
twelve, but I suppose we could do it all in an hour. But it doesn't seem to be
working. What about it, conductor?"
The man shook his head
and pointed to a little knot of people who were assembled at the entrance.
"They've all been
waiting, sir. It's hung up, but the gear is being overhauled, and I expect the
signal every minute. If you join the others I promise it won't be long."
They had hardly reached
the group when the steel face of the lift rolled aside—a sign that there
was hope in the future. The motley crowd drifted through the opening and waited
expectantly upon the wooden platform. They were not numerous, for the gardens
are not crowded until the afternoon, but they were fair samples of the kindly,
good-humoured north-country folk who take their annual holiday at Northam.
Their faces were all upturned now, and they were watching with keen interest a
man who was descending the steel framework. It seemed a dangerous, precarious
business, but he came as swiftly as an ordinary mortal upon a staircase.
"My word!"
said the conductor, glancing up. "Jim has got a move on this
morning."
"Who is he?"
asked Commander Stangate.
"That's Jim Barnes,
sir, the best workman that ever went on a scaffold. He fair lives up there.
Every bolt and rivet are under his care. He's a wonder, is Jim."
"But don't argue
religion with him," said one of the group.
The attendant laughed.
"Ah, you know him,
then," said he. "No, don't argue religion with him."
"Why not?"
asked the officer.
"Well, he takes it
very hard, he does. He's the shining light of his sect."
"It ain't hard to
be that," said the knowing one. "I've heard there are only six folk
in the fold. He's one of those who picture heaven as the exact size of their
own back street conventicle and every one else left outside it."
"Better not tell
him so while he's got that hammer in his hand," said the conductor,
in a hurried whisper. "Hallo, Jim, how goes it this morning?"
The man slid swiftly
down the last thirty feet, and then balanced himself on a cross-bar while he
looked at the little group in the lift. As he stood there, clad in a leather
suit, with his pliers and other tools dangling from his brown belt, he was a
figure to please the eye of an artist. The man was very tall and gaunt, with
great straggling limbs and every appearance of giant strength. His face was a
remarkable one, noble and yet sinister, with dark eyes and hair, a prominent
hooked nose, and a beard which flowed over his chest. He steadied himself with
one knotted hand, while the other held a steel hammer dangling by his knee.
"It's all ready
aloft," said he. "I'll go up with you if I may." He sprang down
from his perch and joined the others in the lift.
"I suppose you are
always watching it," said the young lady.
"That is what I am
engaged for, miss. From morning to night, and often from night to morning, I am
up here. There are times when I feel as if I were not a man at all, but a fowl
of the air. They fly round me, the creatures, as I lie out on the girders, and
they cry to me until I find myself crying back to the poor soulless
things."
"It's a great
charge," said the Commander, glancing up at the wonderful tracery of steel
outlined against the deep blue sky.
"Aye, sir, and
there is not a nut nor a screw that is riot in my keeping. Here's my hammer to
ring them true and my spanner to wrench them tight. As the Lord over the earth,
so am I—even I—over the Tower, with power of life and power of death, aye
of death and of life."
The hydraulic machinery
had begun to work and the lift very slowly ascended. As it mounted, the
glorious panorama of the coast and bay gradually unfolded itself. So engrossing
was the view that the passengers hardly noticed it when the platform stopped
abruptly between stages at the five hundred foot level. Barnes, the workman,
muttered that something must be amiss, and springing like a cat across the gap
which separated them from the trellis-work of metal he clambered out of sight.
The motley little party, suspended in mid-air, lost something of their British
shyness under such unwonted conditions and began to compare notes with each
other. One couple, who addressed each other as Dolly and Billy, announced to
the company that they were the particular stars of the Hippodrome bill, and
kept their neighbours tittering with their rather obvious wit. A buxom mother,
her precocious son, and two married couples upon holiday formed an appreciative
audience.
"You'd like to be a
sailor, would you?" said Billy the comedian, in answer to some remark of
the boy. "Look 'ere, my nipper, you'll end up as a blooming corpse if you
ain't careful. See 'im standin' at the edge. At this hour of the morning I
can't bear to watch it."
"What's the hour
got to do with it?" asked a stout commercial traveller.
"My nerves are
worth nothin' before midday. Why, lookin' down there, and seem' those folks
like dots, puts me all in a twitter. My family is all alike in the
mornin'."
"I expect,"
said Dolly, a high-coloured young woman, "that they're all alike the
evening before."
There was a general
laugh, which was led by the comedian.
"You got it across
that time, Dolly. It's K.O. for Battling Billy—still senseless when last heard
of. If my family is laughed at I'll leave the room."
"It's about time we
did," said the commercial traveller, who was a red-faced, choleric person.
"It's a disgrace the way they hold us up. I'll write to the company."
"Where's the
bell-push?" said Billy. "I'm goin' to ring."
"What for—the
waiter?" asked the lady.
"For the conductor,
the chauffeur, whoever it is that drives the old bus up and down. Have they run
out of petrol, or broke the mainspring, or what?"
"We have a fine
view, anyhow," said the Commander.
"Well, I've had
that," remarked Billy. "I'm done with it, and I'm for getting
on."
"I'm getting
nervous," cried the stout mother. "I do hope there is nothing wrong
with the lift."
"I say, hold on to
the slack of my coat, Dolly. I'm going to look over and chance it. Oh, Lord, it
makes me sick and giddy! There's a horse down under, and it ain't bigger than a
mouse. I don't see any one lookin' after us. Where's old Isaiah the prophet who
came up with us?"
"He shinned out of
it mighty quick when he thought trouble was coming."
"Look here,"
said Dolly, looking very perturbed, "this is a nice thing, I don't think.
Here we are five hundred foot up, and stuck for the day as like as not.
I'm due for the matinée at the Hippodrome. I'm sorry for the
company if they don't get me down in time for that. I'm billed all over the
town for a new song."
"A new one! What's
that, Dolly?"
"A real pot o'
ginger, I tell you. It's called 'On the Road to Ascot.' I've got a hat four
foot across to sing it in."
"Come on, Dolly,
let's have a rehearsal while we wait."
"No, no; the young
lady here wouldn't understand."
"I'd be very glad
to hear it," cried Mary MacLean. "Please don't let me prevent
you."
"The words were
written to the hat. I couldn't sing the verses without the hat. But there's a
nailin' good chorus to it:
"'If
you want a little mascot
When you're on the way to Ascot,
Try the lady with the cartwheel hat.'"
She had a tuneful voice
and a sense of rhythm which set every one nodding. "Try it now all
together," she cried; and the strange little haphazard company sang it
with all their lungs.
"I say," said
Billy, "that ought to wake somebody up. What? Let's try a shout all
together."
It was a fine effort,
but there was no response. It was clear that the management down below was
quite ignorant or impotent. No sound came back to them.
The passengers became
alarmed. The commercial traveller was rather less rubicund. Billy still tried
to joke, but his efforts were not well received. The officer in his blue
uniform at once took his place as rightful leader in a crisis. They all looked
to him and appealed to him.
"What would you
advise, sir? You don't think there's any danger of it coming down, do
you?"
"Not the least. But
it's awkward to be stuck here all the same. I think I could jump across on to
that girder. Then perhaps I could see what is wrong."
"No, no, Tom; for
goodness' sake, don't leave us!"
"Some people have a
nerve," said Billy. "Fancy jumping across a five-hundred-foot
drop!"
"I dare say the
gentleman did worse things in the war."
"Well, I wouldn't
do it myself—not if they starred me in the bills. It's all very well for old
Isaiah. It's his job, and I wouldn't do him out of it."
Three sides of the lift
were shut in with wooden partitions, pierced with windows for the view. The
fourth side, facing the sea, was clear. Stangate leaned as far as he could and
looked upwards. As he did so there came from above him a peculiar sonorous
metallic twang, as if a mighty harp-string had been struck. Some distance up—a
hundred feet, perhaps—he could see a long brown corded arm, which was working
furiously among the wire cordage above. The form was beyond his view, but he
was fascinated by this bare sinewy arm which tugged and pulled and sagged and
stabbed.
"It's all
right," he said, and a general sigh of relief broke from his strange
comrades at his words. "There is some one above us setting things
right."
"It's old
Isaiah," said Billy, stretching his neck round the corner. "I can't
see him, but it's his arm for a dollar. What's he got in his hand? Looks
like a screwdriver or something. No, by George, it's a file."
As he spoke there came
another sonorous twang from above. There was a troubled frown upon the
officer's brow.
"I say, dash it
all, that's the very sound our steel hawser made when it parted, strand by
strand, at Dix-mude. What the deuce is the fellow about? Hey, there! what are
you trying to do?"
The man had ceased his
work and was now slowly descending the iron trellis.
"All right, he's
coming," said Stangate to his startled companions. "It's all right,
Mary. Don't be frightened, any of you. It's absurd to suppose he would really
weaken the cord that holds us."
A pair of high boots
appeared from above. Then came the leathern breeches, the belt with its
dangling tools, the muscular form, and, finally, the fierce, swarthy, eagle
face of the workman. His coat was off and his shirt open, showing the hairy
chest. As he appeared there came another sharp snapping vibration from above.
The man made his way down in leisurely fashion, and then, balancing himself
upon the cross-girder and leaning against the side piece, he stood with folded
arms, looking from under his heavy black brows at the huddled passengers upon
the platform.
"Hallo!" said
Stangate. "What's the matter?"
The man stood impassive
and silent, with something indescribably menacing in his fixed, unwinking
stare.
The flying officer grew
angry.
"Hallo! Are you
deaf?" he cried. "How long do you mean to have us stuck here?"
The man stood silent.
There was something devilish in his appearance.
"I'll complain of
you, my lad," said Billy, in a quivering voice. "This won't stop
here, I can promise you."
"Look here!"
cried the officer. "We have ladies here and you are alarming them. Why are
we stuck here? Has the machinery gone wrong?"
"You are
here," said the man, "because I have put a wedge against the hawser
above you."
"You fouled the
line! How dared you do such a thing! What right have you to frighten the women
and put us all to this inconvenience? Take that wedge out this instant, or it
will be the worse for you."
The man was silent.
"Do you hear what I
say? Why the devil don't you answer? Is this a joke or what? We've had about
enough of it, I tell you."
Mary MacLean had gripped
her lover by the arm in agony of sudden panic.
"Oh, Tom!" she
cried. "Look at his eyes—look at his horrible eyes! The man is a
maniac."
The workman stirred
suddenly into sinister life. His dark face broke into writhing lines of
passion, and his fierce eyes glowed like embers, while he shook one long arm in
the air.
"Behold," he
cried, "those who are mad to the children of this world are in very truth
the Lord's anointed and the dwellers in the inner temple. Lo, I am one who is
prepared to testify even to the uttermost, for of a verity the day has now come
when the humble will be exalted and the wicked will be cut off in their
sins!"
"Mother!
Mother!" cried the little boy, in terror.
"There, there! It's
all right, Jack," said the buxom woman, and then, in a burst of womanly
wrath, "What d'you want to make the child cry for? You're a pretty man,
you are!"
"Better he should
cry now than in the outer darkness. Let him seek safety while there is yet
time."
The officer measured the
gap with a practised eye. It was a good eight feet across, and the fellow could
push him over before he could steady himself. It would be a desperate thing to
attempt. He tried soothing words once more.
"See here, my lad,
you've carried this joke too far. Why should you wish to injure us? Just shin
up and get that wedge out, and we will agree to say no more about it."
Another rending snap
came from above.
"By George, the
hawser is going!" cried Stangate. "Here! Stand aside! I'm coming over
to see to it."
The workman had plucked
the hammer from his belt, and waved it furiously in the air.
"Stand back, young
man! Stand back! Or come—if you would hasten your end."
"Tom, Tom, for
God's sake, don't spring! Help! Help!"
The passengers all
joined in the cry for aid. The man smiled malignantly as he watched them.
"There is no one to
help. They could not come if they would. You would be wiser to turn to your own
souls that ye be not cast to the burning. Lo, strand by strand the cable snaps
which holds you. There is yet another, and with each that goes there is more
strain upon the rest. Five minutes of time, and all eternity beyond."
A moan of fear rose from
the prisoners in the lift. Stangate felt a cold sweat upon his brow as he
passed his arm round the shrinking girl. If this vindictive devil could only be
coaxed away for an instant he would spring across and take his chance in a
hand-to-hand fight.
"Look here, my
friend! We give you best!" he cried. "We can do nothing. Go up and
cut the cable if you wish. Go on—do it now, and get it over!"
"That you may come
across unharmed. Having set my hand to the work, I will not draw back from
it."
Fury seized the young
officer.
"You devil!"
he cried. "What do you stand there grinning for? I'll give you something
to grin about. Give me a stick, one of you."
The man waved his
hammer.
"Come, then! Come
to judgment!" he howled.
"He'll murder you,
Tom! Oh, for God's sake, don't! If we must die, let us die together."
"I wouldn't try it,
sir," cried Billy. "He'll strike you down before you get a footing.
Hold up, Dolly, my dear! Faintin' won't 'elp us. You speak to him, miss. Maybe
he'll listen to you."
"Why should you
wish to hurt us?" said Mary. "What have we ever done to you? Surely
you will be sorry afterwards if we are injured. Now do be kind and reasonable
and help us to get back to the ground."
For a moment there may
have been some softening in the man's fierce eyes as he looked at the sweet
face which was upturned to him. Then his features set once more into their
grim lines of malice.
"My hand is set to
the work, woman. It is not for the servant to look back from his task."
"But why should
this be your task?"
"Because there is a
voice within me which tells me so. In the night-time I have heard it, and in
the daytime too, when I have lain out alone upon the girders and seen the
wicked dotting the streets beneath me, each busy on his own evil intent. 'John
Barnes, John Barnes,' said the voice. 'You are here that you may give a sign to
a sinful generation—such a sign as shall show them that the Lord liveth and
that there is a judgment upon sin.' Who am I that I should disobey the voice of
the Lord?"
"The voice of the
devil," said Stangate. "What is the sin of this lady, or of these
others, that you should seek their lives?"
"You are as the
others, neither better nor worse. All day they pass me, load by load, with
foolish cries and empty songs and vain babble of voices. Their thoughts are set
upon the things of the flesh. Too long have I stood aside and watched and
refused to testify. But now the day of wrath is come and the sacrifice is
ready. Think not that a woman's tongue can turn me from my task."
"It is
useless!" Mary cried. "Useless! I read death in his eyes."
Another cord had
snapped.
"Repent!
Repent!" cried the madman. "One more, and it is over!"
Commander Stangate felt
as if it were all some extraordinary dream—some monstrous nightmare. Could it be possible that he, after all his escapes of death in
warfare, was now, in the heart of peaceful England, at the mercy of a homicidal
lunatic, and that his dear girl, the one being whom he would shield from the
very shadow of danger, was helpless before this horrible man? All his energy
and manhood rose up in him for one last effort.
"Here, we won't be
killed like sheep in the shambles!" he cried, throwing himself against the
wooden wall of the lift and kicking with all his force. "Come on, boys!
Kick it! Beat it! It's only matchboarding, and it is giving. Smash it down!
Well done! Once more all together! There she goes! Now for the side! Out with
it! Splendid!"
First the back and then
the side of the little compartment had been knocked out, and the splinters
dropped down into the abyss. Barnes danced upon his girder, his hammer in the
air.
"Strive not!"
he shrieked. "It avails not. The day is surely come."
"It's not two feet
from the side girder," cried the officer. "Get across! Quick! Quick!
All of you. I'll hold this devil off!" He had seized a stout stick from
the commercial traveller and faced the madman, daring him to spring across.
"Your turn now, my
friend!" he hissed. "Come on, hammer and all! I'm ready for
you."
Above him he heard
another snap, and the frail platform began to rock. Glancing over his shoulder,
he saw that his companions were all safe upon the side girder. A strange line
of terrified castaways they appeared as they clung in an ungainly row to the
trellis-work of steel. But their feet were on the iron support. With two quick
steps and a spring he was at their side. At the same instant the murderer,
hammer in hand, jumped the gap. They had one vision of him there—a vision which
will haunt their dreams—the convulsed face, the blazing eyes, the wind-tossed
raven locks. For a moment he balanced himself upon the swaying platform. The
next, with a rending crash, he and it were gone. There was a long silence and
then, far down, the thud and clatter of a mighty fall.
000
With white faces, the
forlorn group clung to the cold steel bars and gazed down into the terrible
abyss. It was the Commander who broke the silence.
"They'll send for
us now. It's all safe," he cried, wiping his brow. "But, by Jove, it
was a close call!"
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