summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--2038-8.txt14051
-rw-r--r--2038-8.zipbin0 -> 274595 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038-h.zipbin0 -> 884674 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038-h/2038-h.htm14315
-rw-r--r--2038-h/images/1-tb.jpgbin0 -> 18698 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038-h/images/1.jpgbin0 -> 181020 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038-h/images/cover-tb.jpgbin0 -> 34149 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 249595 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038-h/images/title-tb.jpgbin0 -> 17066 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038-h/images/title.jpgbin0 -> 100650 bytes
-rw-r--r--2038.txt14051
-rw-r--r--2038.zipbin0 -> 274502 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/sbmea10.txt14981
-rw-r--r--old/sbmea10.zipbin0 -> 273121 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/sbmea10h.htm23583
-rw-r--r--old/sbmea10h.zipbin0 -> 295086 bytes
19 files changed, 80997 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/2038-8.txt b/2038-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c3712f0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14051 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lock And Key Library, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Lock And Key Library
+ Classic Mystery And Detective Stories, Modern English
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Julian Hawthorne
+
+Release Date: June 4, 2005 [EBook #2038]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Don Lainson. Text file originally posted in
+January, 2000 with an html conversion added by Walter
+Deboeuf in 2003. The present text and html files were
+produced by Suzanne Shell, M, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+LOCK AND KEY
+LIBRARY
+
+CLASSIC MYSTERY AND
+DETECTIVE STORIES
+
+_EDITED BY_
+JULIAN HAWTHORNE
+
+MODERN ENGLISH
+
+ Rudyard Kipling A. Conan Doyle
+
+ Egerton Castle
+
+ Stanley J. Weyman Wilkie Collins
+
+ Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO.
+ 1909
+
+[Illustration: "And Sent out a Jet of Fire from His Nostrils"
+
+Drawing by Power O'Malley. To illustrate "In the House of Suddhoo," by
+Rudyard Kipling]
+
+
+
+
+Rudyard Kipling
+
+
+
+
+_My Own True Ghost Story_
+
+ As I came through the Desert thus it was--
+ As I came through the Desert.
+ _The City of Dreadful Night._
+
+
+Somewhere in the Other World, where there are books and pictures and plays
+and shop windows to look at, and thousands of men who spend their lives in
+building up all four, lives a gentleman who writes real stories about the
+real insides of people; and his name is Mr. Walter Besant. But he will
+insist upon treating his ghosts--he has published half a workshopful of
+them--with levity. He makes his ghost-seers talk familiarly, and, in some
+cases, flirt outrageously, with the phantoms. You may treat anything, from
+a Viceroy to a Vernacular Paper, with levity; but you must behave
+reverently toward a ghost, and particularly an Indian one.
+
+There are, in this land, ghosts who take the form of fat, cold, pobby
+corpses, and hide in trees near the roadside till a traveler passes. Then
+they drop upon his neck and remain. There are also terrible ghosts of
+women who have died in child-bed. These wander along the pathways at dusk,
+or hide in the crops near a village, and call seductively. But to answer
+their call is death in this world and the next. Their feet are turned
+backward that all sober men may recognize them. There are ghosts of little
+children who have been thrown into wells. These haunt well curbs and the
+fringes of jungles, and wail under the stars, or catch women by the wrist
+and beg to be taken up and carried. These and the corpse ghosts, however,
+are only vernacular articles and do not attack Sahibs. No native ghost has
+yet been authentically reported to have frightened an Englishman; but
+many English ghosts have scared the life out of both white and black.
+
+Nearly every other Station owns a ghost. There are said to be two at
+Simla, not counting the woman who blows the bellows at Syree dâk-bungalow
+on the Old Road; Mussoorie has a house haunted of a very lively Thing; a
+White Lady is supposed to do night-watchman round a house in Lahore;
+Dalhousie says that one of her houses "repeats" on autumn evenings all the
+incidents of a horrible horse-and-precipice accident; Murree has a merry
+ghost, and, now that she has been swept by cholera, will have room for a
+sorrowful one; there are Officers' Quarters in Mian Mir whose doors open
+without reason, and whose furniture is guaranteed to creak, not with the
+heat of June but with the weight of Invisibles who come to lounge in the
+chairs; Peshawur possesses houses that none will willingly rent; and there
+is something--not fever--wrong with a big bungalow in Allahabad. The older
+Provinces simply bristle with haunted houses, and march phantom armies
+along their main thoroughfares.
+
+Some of the dâk-bungalows on the Grand Trunk Road have handy little
+cemeteries in their compound--witnesses to the "changes and chances of
+this mortal life" in the days when men drove from Calcutta to the
+Northwest. These bungalows are objectionable places to put up in. They are
+generally very old, always dirty, while the _khansamah_ is as ancient as
+the bungalow. He either chatters senilely, or falls into the long trances
+of age. In both moods he is useless. If you get angry with him, he refers
+to some Sahib dead and buried these thirty years, and says that when he
+was in that Sahib's service not a _khansamah_ in the Province could touch
+him. Then he jabbers and mows and trembles and fidgets among the dishes,
+and you repent of your irritation.
+
+In these dâk-bungalows, ghosts are most likely to be found, and when
+found, they should be made a note of. Not long ago it was my business to
+live in dâk-bungalows. I never inhabited the same house for three nights
+running, and grew to be learned in the breed. I lived in Government-built
+ones with red brick walls and rail ceilings, an inventory of the furniture
+posted in every room, and an excited snake at the threshold to give
+welcome. I lived in "converted" ones--old houses officiating as
+dâk-bungalows--where nothing was in its proper place and there wasn't even
+a fowl for dinner. I lived in second-hand palaces where the wind blew
+through open-work marble tracery just as uncomfortably as through a broken
+pane. I lived in dâk-bungalows where the last entry in the visitors' book
+was fifteen months old, and where they slashed off the curry-kid's head
+with a sword. It was my good luck to meet all sorts of men, from sober
+traveling missionaries and deserters flying from British Regiments, to
+drunken loafers who threw whisky bottles at all who passed; and my still
+greater good fortune just to escape a maternity case. Seeing that a fair
+proportion of the tragedy of our lives out here acted itself in
+dâk-bungalows, I wondered that I had met no ghosts. A ghost that would
+voluntarily hang about a dâk-bungalow would be mad of course; but so many
+men have died mad in dâk-bungalows that there must be a fair percentage of
+lunatic ghosts.
+
+In due time I found my ghost, or ghosts rather, for there were two of
+them. Up till that hour I had sympathized with Mr. Besant's method of
+handling them, as shown in "The Strange Case of Mr. Lucraft and Other
+Stories." I am now in the Opposition.
+
+We will call the bungalow Katmal dâk-bungalow. But _that_ was the smallest
+part of the horror. A man with a sensitive hide has no right to sleep in
+dâk-bungalows. He should marry. Katmal dâk-bungalow was old and rotten and
+unrepaired. The floor was of worn brick, the walls were filthy, and the
+windows were nearly black with grime. It stood on a bypath largely used by
+native Sub-Deputy Assistants of all kinds, from Finance to Forests; but
+real Sahibs were rare. The _khansamah_, who was nearly bent double with
+old age, said so.
+
+When I arrived, there was a fitful, undecided rain on the face of the
+land, accompanied by a restless wind, and every gust made a noise like the
+rattling of dry bones in the stiff toddy palms outside. The _khansamah_
+completely lost his head on my arrival. He had served a Sahib once. Did I
+know that Sahib? He gave me the name of a well-known man who has been
+buried for more than a quarter of a century, and showed me an ancient
+daguerreotype of that man in his prehistoric youth. I had seen a steel
+engraving of him at the head of a double volume of Memoirs a month before,
+and I felt ancient beyond telling.
+
+The day shut in and the _khansamah_ went to get me food. He did not go
+through the, pretense of calling it "_khana_"--man's victuals. He said
+"_ratub_," and that means, among other things, "grub"--dog's rations.
+There was no insult in his choice of the term. He had forgotten the other
+word, I suppose.
+
+While he was cutting up the dead bodies of animals, I settled myself down,
+after exploring the dâk-bungalow. There were three rooms, beside my own,
+which was a corner kennel, each giving into the other through dingy white
+doors fastened with long iron bars. The bungalow was a very solid one, but
+the partition walls of the rooms were almost jerry-built in their
+flimsiness. Every step or bang of a trunk echoed from my room down the
+other three, and every footfall came back tremulously from the far walls.
+For this reason I shut the door. There were no lamps--only candles in long
+glass shades. An oil wick was set in the bathroom.
+
+For bleak, unadulterated misery that dâk-bungalow was the worst of the
+many that I had ever set foot in. There was no fireplace, and the windows
+would not open; so a brazier of charcoal would have been useless. The rain
+and the wind splashed and gurgled and moaned round the house, and the
+toddy palms rattled and roared. Half a dozen jackals went through the
+compound singing, and a hyena stood afar off and mocked them. A hyena
+would convince a Sadducee of the Resurrection of the Dead--the worst sort
+of Dead. Then came the _ratub_--a curious meal, half native and half
+English in composition--with the old _khansamah_ babbling behind my chair
+about dead and gone English people, and the wind-blown candles playing
+shadow-bo-peep with the bed and the mosquito-curtains. It was just the
+sort of dinner and evening to make a man think of every single one of his
+past sins, and of all the others that he intended to commit if he lived.
+
+Sleep, for several hundred reasons, was not easy. The lamp in the bathroom
+threw the most absurd shadows into the room, and the wind was beginning to
+talk nonsense.
+
+Just when the reasons were drowsy with blood-sucking I heard the
+regular--"Let-us-take-and-heave-him-over" grunt of doolie-bearers in the
+compound. First one doolie came in, then a second, and then a third. I
+heard the doolies dumped on the ground, and the shutter in front of my
+door shook. "That's some one trying to come in," I said. But no one spoke,
+and I persuaded myself that it was the gusty wind. The shutter of the room
+next to mine was attacked, flung back, and the inner door opened. "That's
+some Sub-Deputy Assistant," I said, "and he has brought his friends with
+him. Now they'll talk and spit and smoke for an hour."
+
+But there were no voices and no footsteps. No one was putting his luggage
+into the next room. The door shut, and I thanked Providence that I was to
+be left in peace. But I was curious to know where the doolies had gone. I
+got out of bed and looked into the darkness. There was never a sign of a
+doolie. Just as I was getting into bed again, I heard, in the next room,
+the sound that no man in his senses can possibly mistake--the whir of a
+billiard ball down the length of the slates when the striker is stringing
+for break. No other sound is like it. A minute afterwards there was
+another whir, and I got into bed. I was not frightened--indeed I was not.
+I was very curious to know what had become of the doolies. I jumped into
+bed for that reason.
+
+Next minute I heard the double click of a cannon and my hair sat up. It is
+a mistake to say that hair stands up. The skin of the head tightens and
+you can feel a faint, prickly, bristling all over the scalp. That is the
+hair sitting up.
+
+There was a whir and a click, and both sounds could only have been made by
+one thing--a billiard ball. I argued the matter out at great length with
+myself; and the more I argued the less probable it seemed that one bed,
+one table, and two chairs--all the furniture of the room next to
+mine--could so exactly duplicate the sounds of a game of billiards. After
+another cannon, a three-cushion one to judge by the whir, I argued no
+more. I had found my ghost and would have given worlds to have escaped
+from that dâk-bungalow. I listened, and with each listen the game grew
+clearer. There was whir on whir and click on click. Sometimes there was a
+double click and a whir and another click. Beyond any sort of doubt,
+people were playing billiards in the next room. And the next room was not
+big enough to hold a billiard table!
+
+Between the pauses of the wind I heard the game go forward--stroke after
+stroke. I tried to believe that I could not hear voices; but that attempt
+was a failure.
+
+Do you know what fear is? Not ordinary fear of insult, injury or death,
+but abject, quivering dread of something that you cannot see--fear that
+dries the inside of the mouth and half of the throat--fear that makes you
+sweat on the palms of the hands, and gulp in order to keep the uvula at
+work? This is a fine Fear--a great cowardice, and must be felt to be
+appreciated. The very improbability of billiards in a dâk-bungalow proved
+the reality of the thing. No man--drunk or sober--could imagine a game at
+billiards, or invent the spitting crack of a "screw-cannon."
+
+A severe course of dâk-bungalows has this disadvantage--it breeds infinite
+credulity. If a man said to a confirmed dâk-bungalow-haunter:--"There is a
+corpse in the next room, and there's a mad girl in the next but one, and
+the woman and man on that camel have just eloped from a place sixty miles
+away," the hearer would not disbelieve because he would know that nothing
+is too wild, grotesque, or horrible to happen in a dâk-bungalow.
+
+This credulity, unfortunately, extends to ghosts. A rational person fresh
+from his own house would have turned on his side and slept. I did not. So
+surely as I was given up as a bad carcass by the scores of things in the
+bed because the bulk of my blood was in my heart, so surely did I hear
+every stroke of a long game at billiards played in the echoing room behind
+the iron-barred door. My dominant fear was that the players might want a
+marker. It was an absurd fear; because creatures who could play in the
+dark would be above such superfluities. I only know that that was my
+terror; and it was real.
+
+After a long, long while the game stopped, and the door banged. I slept
+because I was dead tired. Otherwise I should have preferred to have kept
+awake. Not for everything in Asia would I have dropped the door-bar and
+peered into the dark of the next room.
+
+When the morning came, I considered that I had done well and wisely, and
+inquired for the means of departure.
+
+"By the way, _khansamah_," I said, "what were those three doolies doing in
+my compound in the night?"
+
+"There were no doolies," said the _khansamah_.
+
+I went into the next room and the daylight streamed through the open door.
+I was immensely brave. I would, at that hour, have played Black Pool with
+the owner of the big Black Pool down below.
+
+"Has this place always been a dâk-bungalow?" I asked.
+
+"No," said the _khansamah_. "Ten or twenty years ago, I have forgotten how
+long, it was a billiard room."
+
+"A how much?"
+
+"A billiard room for the Sahibs who built the Railway. I was _khansamah_
+then in the big house where all the Railway-Sahibs lived, and I used to
+come across with brandy-_shrab_. These three rooms were all one, and they
+held a big table on which the Sahibs played every evening. But the Sahibs
+are all dead now, and the Railway runs, you say, nearly to Kabul."
+
+"Do you remember anything about the Sahibs?"
+
+"It is long ago, but I remember that one Sahib, a fat man and always
+angry, was playing here one night, and he said to me:--'Mangal Khan,
+brandy-_pani do_,' and I filled the glass, and he bent over the table to
+strike, and his head fell lower and lower till it hit the table, and his
+spectacles came off, and when we--the Sahibs and I myself--ran to lift him
+he was dead. I helped to carry him out. Aha, he was a strong Sahib! But he
+is dead and I, old Mangal Khan, am still living, by your favor."
+
+That was more than enough! I had my ghost--a first-hand, authenticated
+article. I would write to the Society for Psychical Research--I would
+paralyze the Empire with the news! But I would, first of all, put eighty
+miles of assessed crop land between myself and that dâk-bungalow before
+nightfall. The Society might send their regular agent to investigate later
+on.
+
+I went into my own room and prepared to pack after noting down the facts
+of the case. As I smoked I heard the game begin again,--with a miss in
+balk this time, for the whir was a short one.
+
+The door was open and I could see into the room. _Click--click!_ That was
+a cannon. I entered the room without fear, for there was sunlight within
+and a fresh breeze without. The unseen game was going on at a tremendous
+rate. And well it might, when a restless little rat was running to and fro
+inside the dingy ceiling-cloth, and a piece of loose window-sash was
+making fifty breaks off the window-bolt as it shook in the breeze!
+
+Impossible to mistake the sound of billiard balls! Impossible to mistake
+the whir of a ball over the slate! But I was to be excused. Even when I
+shut my enlightened eyes the sound was marvelously like that of a fast
+game.
+
+Entered angrily the faithful partner of my sorrows, Kadir Baksh.
+
+"This bungalow is very bad and low-caste! No wonder the Presence was
+disturbed and is speckled. Three sets of doolie-bearers came to the
+bungalow late last night when I was sleeping outside, and said that it was
+their custom to rest in the rooms set apart for the English people! What
+honor has the _khansamah_? They tried to enter, but I told them to go. No
+wonder, if these _Oorias_ have been here, that the Presence is sorely
+spotted. It is shame, and the work of a dirty man!"
+
+Kadir Baksh did not say that he had taken from each gang two annas for
+rent in advance, and then, beyond my earshot, had beaten them with the big
+green umbrella whose use I could never before divine. But Kadir Baksh has
+no notions of morality.
+
+There was an interview with the _khansamah_, but as he promptly lost his
+head, wrath gave place to pity, and pity led to a long conversation, in
+the course of which he put the fat Engineer-Sahib's tragic death in three
+separate stations--two of them fifty miles away. The third shift was to
+Calcutta, and there the Sahib died while driving a dog-cart.
+
+If I had encouraged him the _khansamah_ would have wandered all through
+Bengal with his corpse.
+
+I did not go away as soon as I intended. I stayed for the night, while the
+wind and the rat and the sash and the window-bolt played a ding-dong
+"hundred and fifty up." Then the wind ran out and the billiards stopped,
+and I felt that I had ruined my one genuine, hall-marked ghost story.
+
+Had I only stopped at the proper time, I could have made _anything_ out of
+it.
+
+That was the bitterest thought of all!
+
+
+
+
+_The Sending of Dana Da_
+
+ When the Devil rides on your chest, remember the _chamar_.
+ _--Native Proverb._
+
+
+Once upon a time some people in India made a new heaven and a new earth
+out of broken teacups, a missing brooch or two, and a hair brush. These
+were hidden under bushes, or stuffed into holes in the hillside, and an
+entire civil service of subordinate gods used to find or mend them again;
+and everyone said: "There are more things in heaven and earth than are
+dreamed of in our philosophy." Several other things happened also, but the
+religion never seemed to get much beyond its first manifestations; though
+it added an air-line postal _dak_, and orchestral effects in order to keep
+abreast of the times, and stall off competition.
+
+This religion was too elastic for ordinary use. It stretched itself and
+embraced pieces of everything that medicine men of all ages have
+manufactured. It approved and stole from Freemasonry; looted the
+Latter-day Rosicrucians of half their pet words; took any fragments of
+Egyptian philosophy that it found in the Encyclopædia Britannica; annexed
+as many of the Vedas as had been translated into French or English, and
+talked of all the rest; built in the German versions of what is left of
+the Zend Avesta; encouraged white, gray, and black magic, including
+Spiritualism, palmistry, fortune-telling by cards, hot chestnuts,
+double-kerneled nuts and tallow droppings; would have adopted Voodoo and
+Oboe had it known anything about them, and showed itself, in every way,
+one of the most accommodating arrangements that had ever been invented
+since the birth of the sea.
+
+When it was in thorough working order, with all the machinery down to the
+subscriptions complete, Dana Da came from nowhere, with nothing in his
+hands, and wrote a chapter in its history which has hitherto been
+unpublished. He said that his first name was Dana, and his second was Da.
+Now, setting aside Dana of the New York _Sun_, Dana is a Bhil name, and Da
+fits no native of India unless you accept the Bengali Dé as the original
+spelling. Da is Lap or Finnish; and Dana Da was neither Finn, Chin, Bhil,
+Bengali, Lap, Nair, Gond, Romaney, Magh, Bokhariot, Kurd, Armenian,
+Levantine, Jew, Persian, Punjabi, Madrasi, Parsee, nor anything else known
+to ethnologists. He was simply Dana Da, and declined to give further
+information. For the sake of brevity, and as roughly indicating his
+origin, he was called "The Native." He might have been the original Old
+Man of the Mountains, who is said to be the only authorized head of the
+Teacup Creed. Some people said that he was; but Dana Da used to smile and
+deny any connection with the cult; explaining that he was an "independent
+experimenter."
+
+As I have said, he came from nowhere, with his hands behind his back, and
+studied the creed for three weeks; sitting at the feet of those best
+competent to explain its mysteries. Then he laughed aloud and went away,
+but the laugh might have been either of devotion or derision.
+
+When he returned he was without money, but his pride was unabated. He
+declared that he knew more about the things in heaven and earth than those
+who taught him, and for this contumacy was abandoned altogether.
+
+His next appearance in public life was at a big cantonment in Upper India,
+and he was then telling fortunes with the help of three leaden dice, a
+very dirty old cloth, and a little tin box of opium pills. He told better
+fortunes when he was allowed half a bottle of whisky; but the things which
+he invented on the opium were quite worth the money. He was in reduced
+circumstances. Among other people's he told the fortune of an Englishman
+who had once been interested in the Simla creed, but who, later on, had
+married and forgotten all his old knowledge in the study of babies and
+Exchange. The Englishman allowed Dana Da to tell a fortune for charity's
+sake, and, gave him five rupees, a dinner, and some old clothes. When he
+had eaten, Dana Da professed gratitude, and asked if there were anything
+he could do for his host--in the esoteric line.
+
+"Is there anyone that you love?" said Dana Da. The Englishman loved his
+wife, but had no desire to drag her name into the conversation. He
+therefore shook his head.
+
+"Is there anyone that you hate?" said Dana Da. The Englishman said that
+there were several men whom he hated deeply.
+
+"Very good," said Dana Da, upon whom the whisky and the opium were
+beginning to tell. "Only give me their names, and I will dispatch a
+Sending to them and kill them."
+
+Now a Sending is a horrible arrangement, first invented, they say, in
+Iceland. It is a thing sent by a wizard, and may take any form, but most
+generally wanders about the land in the shape of a little purple cloud
+till it finds the sendee, and him it kills by changing into the form of a
+horse, or a cat, or a man without a face. It is not strictly a native
+patent, though _chamars_ can, if irritated, dispatch a Sending which sits
+on the breast of their enemy by night and nearly kills him. Very few
+natives care to irritate _chamars_ for this reason.
+
+"Let me dispatch a Sending," said Dana Da; "I am nearly dead now with
+want, and drink, and opium; but I should like to kill a man before I die.
+I can send a Sending anywhere you choose, and in any form except in the
+shape of a man."
+
+The Englishman had no friends that he wished to kill, but partly to soothe
+Dana Da, whose eyes were rolling, and partly to see what would be done, he
+asked whether a modified Sending could not be arranged for--such a Sending
+as should make a man's life a burden to him, and yet do him no harm. If
+this were possible, he notified his willingness to give Dana Da ten rupees
+for the job.
+
+"I am not what I was once," said Dana Da, "and I must take the money
+because I am poor. To what Englishman shall I send it?"
+
+"Send a Sending to Lone Sahib," said the Englishman, naming a man who had
+been most bitter in rebuking him for his apostasy from the Teacup Creed.
+Dana Da laughed and nodded.
+
+"I could have chosen no better man myself," said he. "I will see that he
+finds the Sending about his path and about his bed."
+
+He lay down on the hearthrug, turned up the whites of his eyes, shivered
+all over, and began to snort. This was magic, or opium, or the Sending, or
+all three. When he opened his eyes he vowed that the Sending had started
+upon the warpath, and was at that moment flying up to the town where Lone
+Sahib lives.
+
+"Give me my ten rupees," said Dana Da, wearily, "and write a letter to
+Lone Sahib, telling him, and all who believe with him, that you and a
+friend are using a power greater than theirs. They will see that you are
+speaking the truth."
+
+He departed unsteadily, with the promise of some more rupees if anything
+came of the Sending.
+
+The Englishman sent a letter to Lone Sahib, couched in what he remembered
+of the terminology of the creed. He wrote: "I also, in the days of what
+you held to be my backsliding, have obtained enlightenment, and with
+enlightenment has come power." Then he grew so deeply mysterious that the
+recipient of the letter could make neither head nor tail of it, and was
+proportionately impressed; for he fancied that his friend had become a
+"fifth rounder." When a man is a "fifth rounder" he can do more than Slade
+and Houdin combined.
+
+Lone Sahib read the letter in five different fashions, and was beginning a
+sixth interpretation, when his bearer dashed in with the news that there
+was a cat on the bed. Now, if there was one thing that Lone Sahib hated
+more than another it was a cat. He rated the bearer for not turning it out
+of the house. The bearer said that he was afraid. All the doors of the
+bedroom had been shut throughout the morning, and no real cat could
+possibly have entered the room. He would prefer not to meddle with the
+creature.
+
+Lone Sahib entered the room gingerly, and there, on the pillow of his bed,
+sprawled and whimpered a wee white kitten, not a jumpsome, frisky little
+beast, but a sluglike crawler with its eyes barely opened and its paws
+lacking strength or direction--a kitten that ought to have been in a
+basket with its mamma. Lone Sahib caught it by the scruff of its neck,
+handed it over to the sweeper to be drowned, and fined the bearer four
+annas.
+
+That evening, as he was reading in his room, he fancied that he saw
+something moving about on the hearthrug, outside the circle of light from
+his reading lamp. When the thing began to myowl, he realized that it was a
+kitten--a wee white kitten, nearly blind and very miserable. He was
+seriously angry, and spoke bitterly to his bearer, who said that there was
+no kitten in the room when he brought in the lamp, and real kittens of
+tender age generally had mother cats in attendance.
+
+"If the Presence will go out into the veranda and listen," said the
+bearer, "he will hear no cats. How, therefore, can the kitten on the bed
+and the kitten on the hearthrug be real kittens?"
+
+Lone Sahib went out to listen, and the bearer followed him, but there was
+no sound of Rachel mewing for her children. He returned to his room,
+having hurled the kitten down the hillside, and wrote out the incidents of
+the day for the benefit of his coreligionists. Those people were so
+absolutely free from superstition that they ascribed anything a little out
+of the common to agencies. As it was their business to know all about the
+agencies, they were on terms of almost indecent familiarity with
+manifestations of every kind. Their letters dropped from the
+ceiling--unstamped--and spirits used to squatter up and down their
+staircases all night. But they had never come into contact with kittens.
+Lone Sahib wrote out the facts, noting the hour and the minute, as every
+psychical observer is bound to do, and appending the Englishman's letter
+because it was the most mysterious document and might have had a bearing
+upon anything in this world or the next. An outsider would have
+translated all the tangle thus: "Look out! You laughed at me once, and now
+I am going to make you sit up."
+
+Lone Sahib's coreligionists found that meaning in it; but their
+translation was refined and full of four-syllable words. They held a
+sederunt, and were filled with tremulous joy, for, in spite of their
+familiarity with all the other worlds and cycles, they had a very human
+awe of things sent from ghostland. They met in Lone Sahib's room in
+shrouded and sepulchral gloom, and their conclave was broken up by a
+clinking among the photo frames on the mantelpiece. A wee white kitten,
+nearly blind, was looping and writhing itself between the clock and the
+candlesticks. That stopped all investigations or doubtings. Here was the
+manifestation in the flesh. It was, so far as could be seen, devoid of
+purpose, but it was a manifestation of undoubted authenticity.
+
+They drafted a round robin to the Englishman, the backslider of old days,
+adjuring him in the interests of the creed to explain whether there was
+any connection between the embodiment of some Egyptian god or other (I
+have forgotten the name) and his communication. They called the kitten Ra,
+or Toth, or Shem, or Noah, or something; and when Lone Sahib confessed
+that the first one had, at his most misguided instance, been drowned by
+the sweeper, they said consolingly that in his next life he would be a
+"bounder," and not even a "rounder" of the lowest grade. These words may
+not be quite correct, but they express the sense of the house accurately.
+
+When the Englishman received the round robin--it came by post--he was
+startled and bewildered. He sent into the bazaar for Dana Da, who read the
+letter and laughed. "That is my Sending," said he. "I told you I would
+work well. Now give me another ten rupees."
+
+"But what in the world is this gibberish about Egyptian gods?" asked the
+Englishman.
+
+"Cats," said Dana Da, with a hiccough, for he had discovered the
+Englishman's whisky bottle. "Cats and cats and cats! Never was such a
+Sending. A hundred of cats. Now give me ten more rupees and write as I
+dictate."
+
+Dana Da's letter was a curiosity. It bore the Englishman's signature, and
+hinted at cats--at a Sending of cats. The mere words on paper were creepy
+and uncanny to behold.
+
+"What have you done, though?" said the Englishman; "I am as much in the
+dark as ever. Do you mean to say that you can actually send this absurd
+Sending you talk about?"
+
+"Judge for yourself," said Dana Da. "What does that letter mean? In a
+little time they will all be at my feet and yours, and I, oh, glory! will
+be drugged or drunk all day long."
+
+Dana Da knew his people.
+
+When a man who hates cats wakes up in the morning and finds a little
+squirming kitten on his breast, or puts his hand into his ulster pocket
+and finds a little half-dead kitten where his gloves should be, or opens
+his trunk and finds a vile kitten among his dress shirts, or goes for a
+long ride with his mackintosh strapped on his saddle-bow and shakes a
+little sprawling kitten from its folds when he opens it, or goes out to
+dinner and finds a little blind kitten under his chair, or stays at home
+and finds a writhing kitten under the quilt, or wriggling among his boots,
+or hanging, head downward, in his tobacco jar, or being mangled by his
+terrier in the veranda--when such a man finds one kitten, neither more nor
+less, once a day in a place where no kitten rightly could or should be, he
+is naturally upset. When he dare not murder his daily trove because he
+believes it to be a manifestation, an emissary, an embodiment, and half a
+dozen other things all out of the regular course of nature, he is more
+than upset. He is actually distressed. Some of Lone Sahib's coreligionists
+thought that he was a highly favored individual; but many said that if he
+had treated the first kitten with proper respect--as suited a Toth-Ra
+Tum-Sennacherib Embodiment--all his trouble would have been averted. They
+compared him to the Ancient Mariner, but none the less they were proud of
+him and proud of the Englishman who had sent the manifestation. They did
+not call it a Sending because Icelandic magic was not in their programme.
+
+After sixteen kittens--that is to say, after one fortnight, for there were
+three kittens on the first day to impress the fact of the Sending, the
+whole camp was uplifted by a letter--it came flying through a window--from
+the Old Man of the Mountains--the head of all the creed--explaining the
+manifestation in the most beautiful language and soaking up all the credit
+of it for himself. The Englishman, said the letter, was not there at all.
+He was a backslider without power or asceticism, who couldn't even raise a
+table by force of volition, much less project an army of kittens through
+space. The entire arrangement, said the letter, was strictly orthodox,
+worked and sanctioned by the highest authorities within the pale of the
+creed. There was great joy at this, for some of the weaker brethren seeing
+that an outsider who had been working on independent lines could create
+kittens, whereas their own rulers had never gone beyond crockery--and
+broken at that--were showing a desire to break line on their own trail. In
+fact, there was the promise of a schism. A second round robin was drafted
+to the Englishman, beginning: "Oh, Scoffer," and ending with a selection
+of curses from the rites of Mizraim and Memphis and the Commination of
+Jugana; who was a "fifth rounder," upon whose name an upstart "third
+rounder" once traded. A papal excommunication is a _billet-doux_ compared
+to the Commination of Jugana. The Englishman had been proved under the
+hand and seal of the Old Man of the Mountains to have appropriated virtue
+and pretended to have power which, in reality, belonged only to the
+supreme head. Naturally the round robin did not spare him.
+
+He handed the letter to Dana Da to translate into decent English. The
+effect on Dana Da was curious. At first he was furiously angry, and then
+he laughed for five minutes.
+
+"I had thought," he said, "that they would have come to me. In another
+week I would have shown that I sent the Sending, and they would have
+discrowned the Old Man of the Mountains who has sent this Sending of mine.
+Do you do nothing. The time has come for me to act. Write as I dictate,
+and I will put them to shame. But give me ten more rupees."
+
+At Dana Da's dictation the Englishman wrote nothing less than a formal
+challenge to the Old Man of the Mountains. It wound up: "And if this
+manifestation be from your hand, then let it go forward; but if it be from
+my hand, I will that the Sending shall cease in two days' time. On that
+day there shall be twelve kittens and thenceforward none at all. The
+people shall judge between us." This was signed by Dana Da, who added
+pentacles and pentagrams, and a _crux ansata_, and half a dozen
+_swastikas_, and a Triple Tau to his name, just to show that he was all he
+laid claim to be.
+
+The challenge was read out to the gentlemen and ladies, and they
+remembered then that Dana Da had laughed at them some years ago. It was
+officially announced that the Old Man of the Mountains would treat the
+matter with contempt; Dana Da being an independent investigator without a
+single "round" at the back of him. But this did not soothe his people.
+They wanted to see a fight. They were very human for all their
+spirituality. Lone Sahib, who was really being worn out with kittens,
+submitted meekly to his fate. He felt that he was being "kittened to prove
+the power of Dana Da," as the poet says.
+
+When the stated day dawned, the shower of kittens began. Some were white
+and some were tabby, and all were about the same loathsome age. Three were
+on his hearthrug, three in his bathroom, and the other six turned up at
+intervals among the visitors who came to see the prophecy break down.
+Never was a more satisfactory Sending. On the next day there were no
+kittens, and the next day and all the other days were kittenless and
+quiet. The people murmured and looked to the Old Man of the Mountains for
+an explanation. A letter, written on a palm leaf, dropped from the
+ceiling, but everyone except Lone Sahib felt that letters were not what
+the occasion demanded. There should have been cats, there should have been
+cats--full-grown ones. The letter proved conclusively that there had been
+a hitch in the psychic current which, colliding with a dual identity, had
+interfered with the percipient activity all along the main line. The
+kittens were still going on, but owing to some failure in the developing
+fluid, they were not materialized. The air was thick with letters for a
+few days afterwards. Unseen hands played Glück and Beethoven on
+finger-bowls and clock shades; but all men felt that psychic life was a
+mockery without materialized kittens. Even Lone Sahib shouted with the
+majority on this head. Dana Da's letters were very insulting, and if he
+had then offered to lead a new departure, there is no knowing what might
+not have happened.
+
+But Dana Da was dying of whisky and opium in the Englishman's go-down, and
+had small heart for new creeds.
+
+"They have been put to shame," said he. "Never was such a Sending. It has
+killed me."
+
+"Nonsense," said the Englishman, "you are going to die, Dana Da, and that
+sort of stuff must be left behind. I'll admit that you have made some
+queer things come about. Tell me honestly, now, how was it done?"
+
+"Give me ten more rupees," said Dana Da, faintly, "and if I die before I
+spend them, bury them with me." The silver was counted out while Dana Da
+was fighting with death. His hand closed upon the money and he smiled a
+grim smile.
+
+"Bend low," he whispered. The Englishman bent.
+
+"_Bunnia_--mission school--expelled--_box-wallah_ (peddler)--Ceylon pearl
+merchant--all mine English education--outcasted, and made up name Dana
+Da--England with American thought-reading man and--and--you gave me ten
+rupees several times--I gave the Sahib's bearer two-eight a month for
+cats--little, little cats. I wrote, and he put them about--very clever
+man. Very few kittens now in the bazaar. Ask Lone Sahib's sweeper's wife."
+
+So saying, Dana Da gasped and passed away into a land where, if all be
+true, there are no materializations and the making of new creeds is
+discouraged.
+
+But consider the gorgeous simplicity of it all!
+
+
+
+
+_In the House of Suddhoo_
+
+ A stone's throw out on either hand
+ From that well-ordered road we tread,
+ And all the world is wild and strange;
+ _Churel_ and ghoul and _Djinn_ and sprite
+ Shall bear us company to-night,
+ For we have reached the Oldest Land
+ Wherein the Powers of Darkness range.
+
+ _--From the Dusk to the Dawn._
+
+
+The house of Suddhoo, near the Taksali Gate, is two storied, with four
+carved windows of old brown wood, and a flat roof. You may recognize it by
+five red handprints arranged like the Five of Diamonds on the whitewash
+between the upper windows. Bhagwan Dass, the bunnia, and a man who says he
+gets his living by seal-cutting live in the lower story with a troop of
+wives, servants, friends, and retainers. The two upper rooms used to be
+occupied by Janoo and Azizun and a little black-and-tan terrier that was
+stolen from an Englishman's house and given to Janoo by a soldier. To-day,
+only Janoo lives in the upper rooms. Suddhoo sleeps on the roof generally,
+except when he sleeps in the street. He used to go to Peshawar in the cold
+weather to visit his son, who sells curiosities near the Edwardes' Gate,
+and then he slept under a real mud roof. Suddhoo is a great friend of
+mine, because his cousin had a son who secured, thanks to my
+recommendation, the post of head messenger to a big firm in the Station.
+Suddhoo says that God will make me a Lieutenant-Governor one of these
+days. I daresay his prophecy will come true. He is very, very old, with
+white hair and no teeth worth showing, and he has outlived his
+wits--outlived nearly everything except his fondness for his son at
+Peshawar. Janoo and Azizun are Kashmiris, Ladies of the City, and theirs
+was an ancient and more or less honorable profession; but Azizun has since
+married a medical student from the Northwest and has settled down to a
+most respectable life somewhere near Bareilly. Bhagwan Dass is an
+extortionate and an adulterator. He is very rich. The man who is supposed
+to get his living by seal cutting pretends to be very poor. This lets you
+know as much as is necessary of the four principal tenants in the house of
+Suddhoo. Then there is Me, of course; but I am only the chorus that comes
+in at the end to explain things. So I do not count.
+
+Suddhoo was not clever. The man who pretended to cut seals was the
+cleverest of them all--Bhagwan Dass only knew how to lie--except Janoo.
+She was also beautiful, but that was her own affair.
+
+Suddhoo's son at Peshawar was attacked by pleurisy, and old Suddhoo was
+troubled. The seal-cutter man heard of Suddhoo's anxiety and made capital
+out of it. He was abreast of the times. He got a friend in Peshawar to
+telegraph daily accounts of the son's health. And here the story begins.
+
+Suddhoo's cousin's son told me, one evening, that Suddhoo wanted to see
+me; that he was too old and feeble to come personally, and that I should
+be conferring an everlasting honor on the House of Suddhoo if I went to
+him. I went; but I think, seeing how well off Suddhoo was then, that he
+might have sent something better than an _ekka_, which jolted fearfully,
+to haul out a future Lieutenant-Governor to the City on a muggy April
+evening. The _ekka_ did not run quickly. It was full dark when we pulled
+up opposite the door of Ranjit Singh's Tomb near the main gate of the
+Fort. Here was Suddhoo and he said that by reason of my condescension, it
+was absolutely certain that I should become a Lieutenant-Governor while
+my hair was yet black. Then we talked about the weather and the state of
+my health, and the wheat crops, for fifteen minutes, in the Huzuri Bagh,
+under the stars.
+
+Suddhoo came to the point at last. He said that Janoo had told him that
+there was an order of the _Sirkar_ against magic, because it was feared
+that magic might one day kill the Empress of India. I didn't know anything
+about the state of the law; but I fancied that something interesting was
+going to happen. I said that so far from magic being discouraged by the
+Government it was highly commended. The greatest officials of the State
+practiced it themselves. (If the Financial Statement isn't magic, I don't
+know what is.) Then, to encourage him further, I said that, if there was
+any _jadoo_ afoot, I had not the least objection to giving it my
+countenance and sanction, and to seeing that it was clean _jadoo_--white
+magic, as distinguished from the unclean _jadoo_ which kills folk. It took
+a long time before Suddhoo admitted that this was just what he had asked
+me to come for. Then he told me, in jerks and quavers, that the man who
+said he cut seals was a sorcerer of the cleanest kind; that every day he
+gave Suddhoo news of his sick son in Peshawar more quickly than the
+lightning could fly, and that this news was always corroborated by the
+letters. Further, that he had told Suddhoo how a great danger was
+threatening his son, which could be removed by clean _jadoo_; and, of
+course, heavy payment. I began to see exactly how the land lay, and told
+Suddhoo that _I_ also understood a little _jadoo_ in the Western line, and
+would go to his house to see that everything was done decently and in
+order. We set off together; and on the way Suddhoo told me that he had
+paid the seal cutter between one hundred and two hundred rupees already;
+and the _jadoo_ of that night would cost two hundred more. Which was
+cheap, he said, considering the greatness of his son's danger; but I do
+not think he meant it.
+
+The lights were all cloaked in the front of the house when we arrived. I
+could hear awful noises from behind the seal cutter's shop front, as if
+some one were groaning his soul out. Suddhoo shook all over, and while we
+groped our way upstairs told me that the _jadoo_ had begun. Janoo and
+Azizun met us at the stair head, and told us that the _jadoo_ work was
+coming off in their rooms, because there was more space there. Janoo is a
+lady of a freethinking turn of mind. She whispered that the _jadoo_ was an
+invention to get money out of Suddhoo, and that the seal cutter would go
+to a hot place when he died. Suddhoo was nearly crying with fear and old
+age. He kept walking up and down the room in the half light, repeating his
+son's name over and over again, and asking Azizun if the seal cutter ought
+not to make a reduction in the case of his own landlord. Janoo pulled me
+over to the shadow in the recess of the carved bow-windows. The boards
+were up, and the rooms were only lit by one tiny oil lamp. There was no
+chance of my being seen if I stayed still.
+
+Presently, the groans below ceased, and we heard steps on the staircase.
+That was the seal cutter. He stopped outside the door as the terrier
+barked and Azizun fumbled at the chain, and he told Suddhoo to blow out
+the lamp. This left the place in jet darkness, except for the red glow
+from the two _huqas_ that belonged to Janoo and Azizun. The seal cutter
+came in, and I heard Suddhoo throw himself down on the floor and groan.
+Azizun caught her breath, and Janoo backed on to one of the beds with a
+shudder. There was a clink of something metallic, and then shot up a pale
+blue-green flame near the ground. The light was just enough to show
+Azizun, pressed against one corner of the room with the terrier between
+her knees; Janoo, with her hands clasped, leaning forward as she sat on
+the bed; Suddhoo, face down, quivering, and the seal cutter.
+
+I hope I may never see another man like that seal cutter. He was stripped
+to the waist, with a wreath of white jasmine as thick as my wrist round
+his forehead, a salmon-colored loin-cloth round his middle, and a steel
+bangle on each ankle. This was not awe-inspiring. It was the face of the
+man that turned me cold. It was blue-gray in the first place. In the
+second, the eyes were rolled back till you could only see the whites of
+them; and, in the third, the face was the face of a demon--a
+ghoul--anything you please except of the sleek, oily old ruffian who sat
+in the daytime over his turning-lathe downstairs. He was lying on his
+stomach with his arms turned and crossed behind him, as if he had been
+thrown down pinioned. His head and neck were the only parts of him off the
+floor. They were nearly at right angles to the body, like the head of a
+cobra at spring. It was ghastly. In the center of the room, on the bare
+earth floor, stood a big, deep, brass basin, with a pale blue-green light
+floating in the center like a night-light. Round that basin the man on the
+floor wriggled himself three times. How he did it I do not know. I could
+see the muscles ripple along his spine and fall smooth again; but I could
+not see any other motion. The head seemed the only thing alive about him,
+except that slow curl and uncurl of the laboring back muscles. Janoo from
+the bed was breathing seventy to the minute; Azizun held her hands before
+her eyes; and old Suddhoo, fingering at the dirt that had got into his
+white beard, was crying to himself. The horror of it was that the
+creeping, crawly thing made no sound--only crawled! And, remember, this
+lasted for ten minutes, while the terrier whined, and Azizun shuddered,
+and Janoo gasped and Suddhoo cried.
+
+I felt the hair lift at the back of my head, and my heart thump like a
+thermantidote paddle. Luckily, the seal cutter betrayed himself by his
+most impressive trick and made me calm again. After he had finished that
+unspeakable crawl, he stretched his head away from the floor as high as he
+could, and sent out a jet of fire from his nostrils. Now I knew how
+fire--spouting is done--I can do it myself--so I felt at ease. The
+business was a fraud. If he had only kept to that crawl without trying to
+raise the effect, goodness knows what I might not have thought. Both the
+girls shrieked at the jet of fire, and the head dropped, chin down on the
+floor, with a thud; the whole body lying then like a corpse with its arms
+trussed. There was a pause of five full minutes after this, and the
+blue-green flame died down. Janoo stooped to settle one of her anklets,
+while Azizun turned her face to the wall and took the terrier in her arms.
+Suddhoo put out an arm mechanically to Janoo's _huqa_, and she slid it
+across the floor with her foot. Directly above the body and on the wall
+were a couple of flaming portraits, in stamped paper frames, of the Queen
+and the Prince of Wales. They looked down on the performance, and, to my
+thinking, seemed to heighten the grotesqueness of it all.
+
+Just when the silence was getting unendurable, the body turned over and
+rolled away from the basin to the side of the room, where it lay stomach
+up. There was a faint "plop" from the basin--exactly like the noise a fish
+makes when it takes a fly--and the green light in the center revived.
+
+I looked at the basin, and saw, bobbing in the water the dried, shriveled,
+black head of a native baby--open eyes, open mouth and shaved scalp. It
+was worse, being so very sudden, than the crawling exhibition. We had no
+time to say anything before it began to speak.
+
+Read Poe's account of the voice that came from the mesmerized dying man,
+and you will realize less than one half of the horror of that head's
+voice.
+
+There was an interval of a second or two between each word, and a sort of
+"ring, ring, ring," in the note of the voice like the timbre of a bell. It
+pealed slowly, as if talking to itself, for several minutes before I got
+rid of my cold sweat. Then the blessed solution struck me. I looked at the
+body lying near the doorway, and saw, just where the hollow of the throat
+joins on the shoulders, a muscle that had nothing to do with any man's
+regular breathing, twitching away steadily. The whole thing was a careful
+reproduction of the Egyptian teraphin that one reads about sometimes; and
+the voice was as clever and as appalling a piece of ventriloquism as one
+could wish to hear. All this time the head was "lip-lip-lapping" against
+the side of the basin, and speaking. It told Suddhoo, on his face again
+whining, of his son's illness and of the state of the illness up to the
+evening of that very night. I always shall respect the seal cutter for
+keeping so faithfully to the time of the Peshawar telegrams. It went on to
+say that skilled doctors were night and day watching over the man's life;
+and that he would eventually recover if the fee to the potent sorcerer,
+whose servant was the head in the basin, were doubled.
+
+Here the mistake from the artistic point of view came in. To ask for twice
+your stipulated fee in a voice that Lazarus might have used when he rose
+from the dead, is absurd. Janoo, who is really a woman of masculine
+intellect, saw this as quickly as I did. I heard her say "_Ash nahin!
+Fareib!_" scornfully under her breath; and just as she said so, the light
+in the basin died out, the head stopped talking, and we heard the room
+door creak on its hinges. Then Janoo struck a match, lit the lamp, and we
+saw that head, basin, and seal cutter were gone. Suddhoo was wringing his
+hands and explaining to anyone who cared to listen, that, if his chances
+of eternal salvation depended on it, he could not raise another two
+hundred rupees. Azizun was nearly in hysterics in the corner; while Janoo
+sat down composedly on one of the beds to discuss the probabilities of the
+whole thing being a _bunao_, or "make-up."
+
+I explained as much as I knew of the seal cutter's way of _jadoo_; but her
+argument was much more simple:--"The magic that is always demanding gifts
+is no true magic," said she. "My mother told me that the only potent love
+spells are those which are told you for love. This seal cutter man is a
+liar and a devil. I dare not tell, do anything, or get anything done,
+because I am in debt to Bhagwan Dass the bunnia for two gold rings and a
+heavy anklet. I must get my food from his shop. The seal cutter is the
+friend of Bhagwan Dass, and he would poison my food. A fool's _jadoo_ has
+been going on for ten days, and has cost Suddhoo many rupees each night.
+The seal cutter used black hens and lemons and _mantras_ before. He never
+showed us anything like this till to-night. Azizun is a fool, and will be
+a _pur dahnashin_ soon. Suddhoo has lost his strength and his wits. See
+now! I had hoped to get from Suddhoo many rupees while he lived, and many
+more after his death; and behold, he is spending everything on that
+offspring of a devil and a she-ass, the seal cutter!"
+
+Here I said: "But what induced Suddhoo to drag me into the business? Of
+course I can speak to the seal cutter, and he shall refund. The whole
+thing is child's talk--shame--and senseless."
+
+"Suddhoo _is_ an old child," said Janoo. "He has lived on the roofs these
+seventy years and is as senseless as a milch goat. He brought you here to
+assure himself that he was not breaking any law of the _Sirkar_, whose
+salt he ate many years ago. He worships the dust off the feet of the seal
+cutter, and that cow devourer has forbidden him to go and see his son.
+What does Suddhoo know of your laws or the lightning post? I have to watch
+his money going day by day to that lying beast below."
+
+Janoo stamped her foot on the floor and nearly cried with vexation; while
+Suddhoo was whimpering under a blanket in the corner, and Azizun was
+trying to guide the pipe-stem to his foolish old mouth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now the case stands thus. Unthinkingly, I have laid myself open to the
+charge of aiding and abetting the seal cutter in obtaining money under
+false pretenses, which is forbidden by Section 420 of the Indian Penal
+Code. I am helpless in the matter for these reasons, I cannot inform the
+police. What witnesses would support my statements? Janoo refuses flatly,
+and Azizun is a veiled woman somewhere near Bareilly--lost in this big
+India of ours. I dare not again take the law into my own hands, and speak
+to the seal cutter; for certain am I that, not only would Suddhoo
+disbelieve me, but this step would end in the poisoning of Janoo, who is
+bound hand and foot by her debt to the _bunnia_. Suddhoo is an old dotard;
+and whenever we meet mumbles my idiotic joke that the _Sirkar_ rather
+patronizes the Black Art than otherwise. His son is well now; but Suddhoo
+is completely under the influence of the seal cutter, by whose advice he
+regulates the affairs of his life. Janoo watches daily the money that she
+hoped to wheedle out of Suddhoo taken by the seal cutter, and becomes
+daily more furious and sullen.
+
+She will never tell, because she dare not; but, unless something happens
+to prevent her, I am afraid that the seal cutter will die of cholera--the
+white arsenic kind--about the middle of May. And thus I shall have to be
+privy to a murder in the house of Suddhoo.
+
+
+
+
+_His Wedded Wife_
+
+ Cry "Murder!" in the market-place, and each
+ Will turn upon his neighbor anxious eyes
+ That ask:--"Art thou the man?" We hunted Cain
+ Some centuries ago, across the world,
+ That bred the fear our own misdeeds maintain
+ To-day.
+
+ _--Vibart's Moralities._
+
+
+Shakespeare says something about worms, or it may be giants or beetles,
+turning if you tread on them too severely. The safest plan is never to
+tread on a worm--not even on the last new subaltern from Home, with his
+buttons hardly out of their tissue paper, and the red of sappy English
+beef in his cheeks. This is the story of the worm that turned. For the
+sake of brevity, we will call Henry Augustus Ramsay Faizanne, "The Worm,"
+although he really was an exceedingly pretty boy, without a hair on his
+face, and with a waist like a girl's, when he came out to the Second
+"Shikarris" and was made unhappy in several ways. The "Shikarris" are a
+high-caste regiment, and you must be able to do things well--play a banjo,
+or ride more than little, or sing, or act--to get on with them.
+
+The Worm did nothing except fall off his pony, and knock chips out of gate
+posts with his trap. Even that became monotonous after a time. He objected
+to whist, cut the cloth at billiards, sang out of tune, kept very much to
+himself, and wrote to his Mamma and sisters at Home. Four of these five
+things were vices which the "Shikarris" objected to and set themselves to
+eradicate. Everyone knows how subalterns are, by brother subalterns,
+softened and not permitted to be ferocious. It is good and wholesome, and
+does no one any harm, unless tempers are lost; and then there is trouble.
+There was a man once--but that is another story.
+
+The "Shikarris" _shikarred_ The Worm very much, and he bore everything
+without winking. He was so good and so anxious to learn, and flushed so
+pink, that his education was cut short, and he was left to his own devices
+by everyone except the Senior Subaltern who continued to make life a
+burden to The Worm. The Senior Subaltern meant no harm; but his chaff was
+coarse, and he didn't quite understand where to stop. He had been waiting
+too long for his Company; and that always sours a man. Also he was in
+love, which made him worse.
+
+One day, after he had borrowed The Worm's trap for a lady who never
+existed, had used it himself all the afternoon, had sent a note to The
+Worm, purporting to come from the lady, and was telling the Mess all about
+it, The Worm rose in his place and said, in his quiet, ladylike
+voice:--"That was a very pretty sell; but I'll lay you a month's pay to a
+month's pay when you get your step, that I work a sell on you that you'll
+remember for the rest of your days, and the Regiment after you when you're
+dead or broke." The Worm wasn't angry in the least, and the rest of the
+Mess shouted. Then the Senior Subaltern looked at The Worm from the boots
+upward, and down again and said: "Done, Baby." The Worm took the rest of
+the Mess to witness that the bet had been taken, and retired into a book
+with a sweet smile.
+
+Two months passed, and the Senior Subaltern still educated The Worm, who
+began to move about a little more as the hot weather came on. I have said
+that the Senior Subaltern was in love. The curious thing is that a girl
+was in love with the Senior Subaltern. Though the Colonel said awful
+things, and the Majors snorted, and married Captains looked unutterable
+wisdom, and the juniors scoffed, those two were engaged.
+
+The Senior Subaltern was so pleased with getting his Company and his
+acceptance at the same time that he forgot to bother The Worm. The girl
+was a pretty girl, and had money of her own. She does not come into this
+story at all.
+
+One night, at beginning of the hot weather, all the Mess, except The Worm
+who had gone to his own room to write Home letters, were sitting on the
+platform outside the Mess House. The Band had finished playing, but no one
+wanted to go in. And the Captains' wives were there also. The folly of a
+man in love is unlimited. The Senior Subaltern had been holding forth on
+the merits of the girl he was engaged to, and the ladies were purring
+approval, while the men yawned, when there was a rustle of skirts in the
+dark, and a tired, faint voice lifted itself.
+
+"Where's my husband?"
+
+I do not wish in the least to reflect on the morality of the "Shikarris";
+but it is on record that four men jumped up as if they had been shot.
+Three of them were married men. Perhaps they were afraid that their wives
+had come from Home unbeknownst. The fourth said that he had acted on the
+impulse of the moment. He explained this afterwards.
+
+Then the voice cried: "Oh Lionel!" Lionel was the Senior Subaltern's name.
+A woman came into the little circle of light by the candles on the peg
+tables, stretching out her hands to the dark where the Senior Subaltern
+was, and sobbing. We rose to our feet, feeling that things were going to
+happen and ready to believe the worst. In this bad, small world of ours,
+one knows so little of the life of the next man--which, after all, is
+entirely his own concern--that one is not surprised when a crash comes.
+Anything might turn up any day for anyone. Perhaps the Senior Subaltern
+had been trapped in his youth. Men are crippled that way occasionally. We
+didn't know; we wanted to hear; and the Captains' wives were as anxious as
+we. If he _had_ been trapped, he was to be excused; for the woman from
+nowhere, in the dusty shoes and gray traveling dress, was very lovely,
+with black hair and great eyes full of tears. She was tall, with a fine
+figure, and her voice had a running sob in it pitiful to hear. As soon as
+the Senior Subaltern stood up, she threw her arms round his neck, and
+called him "my darling" and said she could not bear waiting alone in
+England, and his letters were so short and cold, and she was his to the
+end of the world, and would he forgive her? This did not sound quite like
+a lady's way of speaking. It was too demonstrative.
+
+Things seemed black indeed, and the Captains' wives peered under their
+eyebrows at the Senior Subaltern, and the Colonel's face set like the Day
+of Judgment framed in gray bristles, and no one spoke for a while.
+
+Next the Colonel said, very shortly: "Well, sir?" and the woman sobbed
+afresh. The Senior Subaltern was half choked with the arms round his neck,
+but he gasped out: "It's a d----d lie! I never had a wife in my life!"
+"Don't swear," said the Colonel. "Come into the Mess. We must sift this
+clear somehow," and he sighed to himself, for he believed in his
+"Shikarris," did the Colonel.
+
+We trooped into the anteroom, under the full lights, and there we saw how
+beautiful the woman was. She stood up in the middle of us all, sometimes
+choking with crying, then hard and proud, and then holding out her arms to
+the Senior Subaltern. It was like the fourth act of a tragedy. She told us
+how the Senior Subaltern had married her when he was Home on leave
+eighteen months before; and she seemed to know all that we knew, and more
+too, of his people and his past life. He was white and ashy gray, trying
+now and again to break into the torrent of her words; and we, noting how
+lovely she was and what a criminal he looked, esteemed him a beast of the
+worst kind. We felt sorry for him, though.
+
+I shall never forget the indictment of the Senior Subaltern by his wife.
+Nor will he. It was so sudden, rushing out of the dark, unannounced, into
+our dull lives. The Captains' wives stood back; but their eyes were
+alight, and you could see that they had already convicted and sentenced
+the Senior Subaltern. The Colonel seemed five years older. One Major was
+shading his eyes with his hand and watching the woman from underneath it.
+Another was chewing his mustache and smiling quietly as if he were
+witnessing a play. Full in the open space in the center, by the whist
+tables, the Senior Subaltern's terrier was hunting for fleas. I remember
+all this as clearly as though a photograph were in my hand. I remember the
+look of horror on the Senior Subaltern's face. It was rather like seeing a
+man hanged; but much more interesting. Finally, the woman wound up by
+saying that the Senior Subaltern carried a double F.M. in tattoo on his
+left shoulder. We all knew that, and to our innocent minds it seemed to
+clinch the matter. But one of the Bachelor Majors said very politely: "I
+presume that your marriage certificate would be more to the purpose?"
+
+That roused the woman. She stood up and sneered at the Senior Subaltern
+for a cur, and abused the Major and the Colonel and all the rest. Then she
+wept, and then she pulled a paper from her breast, saying imperially:
+"Take that! And let my husband--my lawfully wedded husband--read it
+aloud--if he dare!"
+
+There was a hush, and the men looked into each other's eyes as the Senior
+Subaltern came forward in a dazed and dizzy way, and took the paper. We
+were wondering, as we stared, whether there was anything against any one
+of us that might turn up later on. The Senior Subaltern's throat was dry;
+but, as he ran his eye over the paper, he broke out into a hoarse cackle
+of relief, and said to the woman: "You young blackguard!"
+
+But the woman had fled through a door, and on the paper was written: "This
+is to certify that I, The Worm, have paid in full my debts to the Senior
+Subaltern, and, further, that the Senior Subaltern is my debtor, by
+agreement on the 23d of February, as by the Mess attested, to the extent
+of one month's Captain's pay, in the lawful currency of the India Empire."
+
+Then a deputation set off for The Worm's quarters and found him, betwixt
+and between, unlacing his stays, with the hat, wig, serge dress, etc., on
+the bed. He came over as he was, and the "Shikarris" shouted till the
+Gunners' Mess sent over to know if they might have a share of the fun. I
+think we were all, except the Colonel and the Senior Subaltern, a little
+disappointed that the scandal had come to nothing. But that is human
+nature. There could be no two words about The Worm's acting. It leaned as
+near to a nasty tragedy as anything this side of a joke can. When most of
+the Subalterns sat upon him with sofa cushions to find out why he had not
+said that acting was his strong point, he answered very quietly: "I don't
+think you ever asked me. I used to act at Home with my sisters." But no
+acting with girls could account for The Worm's display that night.
+Personally, I think it was in bad taste. Besides being dangerous. There is
+no sort of use in playing with fire, even for fun.
+
+The "Shikarris" made him President of the Regimental Dramatic Club; and,
+when the Senior Subaltern paid up his debt, which he did at once, The Worm
+sank the money in scenery and dresses. He was a good Worm; and the
+"Shikarris" are proud of him. The only drawback is that he has been
+christened "Mrs. Senior Subaltern"; and, as there are now two Mrs. Senior
+Subalterns in the Station, this is sometimes confusing to strangers.
+
+Later on, I will tell you of a case something like this, but with all the
+jest left out and nothing in it but real trouble.
+
+
+
+
+A. Conan Doyle
+
+
+
+
+
+_A Case of Identity_
+
+
+"My dear fellow," said Sherlock Holmes, as we sat on either side of the
+fire in his lodgings at Baker Street, "life is infinitely stranger than
+anything which the mind of man can invent. We would not dare to conceive
+the things which are really mere commonplaces of existence. If we could
+fly out of that window hand in hand, hover over this great city, gently
+remove the roofs, and peep in at the queer things which are going on, the
+strange coincidences, the plannings, the cross-purposes, the wonderful
+chains of events, working through generations, and leading to the most
+_outré_ results, it would make all fiction, with its conventionalities and
+foreseen conclusions, most stale and unprofitable."
+
+"And yet I am not convinced of it," I answered. "The cases which come to
+light in the papers are, as a rule, bald enough, and vulgar enough. We
+have in our police reports realism pushed to its extreme limits, and yet
+the result is, it must be confessed, neither fascinating nor artistic."
+
+"A certain selection and discretion must be used in producing a realistic
+effect," remarked Holmes. "This is wanting in the police report, where
+more stress is laid perhaps upon the platitudes of the magistrate than
+upon the details, which to an observer contain the vital essence of the
+whole matter. Depend upon it, there is nothing so unnatural as the
+commonplace."
+
+I smiled and shook my head. "I can quite understand your thinking so," I
+said. "Of course, in your position of unofficial adviser and helper to
+everybody who is absolutely puzzled, throughout three continents, you are
+brought in contact with all that is strange and _bizarre_. But here"--I
+picked up the morning paper from the ground--"let us put it to a practical
+test. Here is the first heading upon which I come. 'A husband's cruelty to
+his wife.' There is half a column of print, but I know without reading it
+that it is all perfectly familiar to me. There is, of course, the other
+woman, the drink, the push, the blow, the bruise, the unsympathetic sister
+or landlady. The crudest of writers could invent nothing more crude."
+
+"Indeed your example is an unfortunate one for your argument," said
+Holmes, taking the paper, and glancing his eye down it. "This is the
+Dundas separation case, and, as it happens, I was engaged in clearing up
+some small points in connection with it. The husband was a teetotaler,
+there was no other woman, and the conduct complained of was that he had
+drifted into the habit of winding up every meal by taking out his false
+teeth and hurling them at his wife, which you will allow is not an action
+likely to occur to the imagination of the average story teller. Take a
+pinch of snuff, doctor, and acknowledge that I have scored over you in
+your example."
+
+He held out his snuffbox of old gold, with a great amethyst in the center
+of the lid. Its splendor was in such contrast to his homely ways and
+simple life that I could not help commenting upon it.
+
+"Ah!" said he, "I forgot that I had not seen you for some weeks. It is a
+little souvenir from the King of Bohemia, in return for my assistance in
+the case of the Irene Adler papers."
+
+"And the ring?" I asked, glancing at a remarkable brilliant which sparkled
+upon his finger.
+
+"It was from the reigning family of Holland, though the matter in which I
+served them was of such delicacy that I cannot confide it even to you, who
+have been good enough to chronicle one or two of my little problems."
+
+"And have you any on hand just now?" I asked with interest.
+
+"Some ten or twelve, but none which present any features of interest. They
+are important, you understand, without being interesting. Indeed I have
+found that it is usually in unimportant matters that there is a field for
+the observation, and for the quick analysis of cause and effect which
+gives the charm to an investigation. The larger crimes are apt to be the
+simpler, for the bigger the crime, the more obvious, as a rule, is the
+motive. In these cases, save for one rather intricate matter which has
+been referred to me from Marseilles, there is nothing which presents any
+features of interest. It is possible, however, that I may have something
+better before very many minutes are over, for this is one of my clients,
+or I am much mistaken."
+
+He had risen from his chair, and was standing between the parted blinds,
+gazing down into the dull, neutral-tinted London street. Looking over his
+shoulder, I saw that on the pavement opposite there stood a large woman
+with a heavy fur boa round her neck, and a large curling red feather in a
+broad-brimmed hat which was tilted in a coquettish Duchess-of-Devonshire
+fashion over her ear.
+
+From under this great panoply she peeped up in a nervous, hesitating
+fashion at our windows, while her body oscillated backward and forward,
+and her fingers fidgeted with her glove buttons. Suddenly, with a plunge,
+as of the swimmer who leaves the bank, she hurried across the road, and we
+heard the sharp clang of the bell.
+
+"I have seen those symptoms before," said Holmes, throwing his cigarette
+into the fire. "Oscillation upon the pavement always means an _affaire de
+coeur_. She would like advice, but is not sure that the matter is not too
+delicate for communication. And yet even here we may discriminate. When a
+woman has been seriously wronged by a man, she no longer oscillates, and
+the usual symptom is a broken bell wire. Here we may take it that there is
+a love matter, but that the maiden is not so much angry as perplexed or
+grieved. But here she comes in person to resolve our doubts."
+
+As he spoke, there was a tap at the door, and the boy in buttons entered
+to announce Miss Mary Sutherland, while the lady herself loomed behind
+his small black figure like a full-sailed merchantman behind a tiny pilot
+boat. Sherlock Holmes welcomed her with the easy courtesy for which he was
+remarkable, and having closed the door, and bowed her into an armchair, he
+looked her over in the minute and yet abstracted fashion which was
+peculiar to him.
+
+"Do you not find," he said, "that with your short sight it is a little
+trying to do so much typewriting?"
+
+"I did at first," she answered, "but now I know where the letters are
+without looking." Then, suddenly realizing the full purport of his words,
+she gave a violent start, and looked up with fear and astonishment upon
+her broad, good-humored face. "You've heard about me, Mr. Holmes," she
+cried, "else how could you know all that?"
+
+"Never mind," said Holmes, laughing, "it is my business to know things.
+Perhaps I have trained myself to see what others overlook. If not, why
+should you come to consult me?"
+
+"I came to you, sir, because I heard of you from Mrs. Etherege, whose
+husband you found so easily when the police and everyone had given him up
+for dead. Oh, Mr. Holmes, I wish you would do as much for me. I'm not
+rich, but still I have a hundred a year in my own right, besides the
+little that I make by the machine, and I would give it all to know what
+has become of Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+"Why did you come away to consult me in such a hurry?" asked Sherlock
+Holmes, with his finger tips together, and his eyes to the ceiling.
+
+Again a startled look came over the somewhat vacuous face of Miss Mary
+Sutherland. "Yes, I did bang out of the house," she said, "for it made me
+angry to see the easy way in which Mr. Windibank--that is, my father--took
+it all. He would not go to the police, and he would not go to you, and so
+at last, as he would do nothing, and kept on saying that there was no harm
+done, it made me mad, and I just on with my things and came right away to
+you."
+
+"Your father?" said Holmes. "Your stepfather, surely, since the name is
+different."
+
+"Yes, my stepfather. I call him father, though it sounds funny, too, for
+he is only five years and two months older than myself."
+
+"And your mother is alive?"
+
+"Oh, yes; mother is alive and well. I wasn't best pleased, Mr. Holmes,
+when she married again so soon after father's death, and a man who was
+nearly fifteen years younger than herself. Father was a plumber in the
+Tottenham Court Road, and he left a tidy business behind him, which mother
+carried on with Mr. Hardy, the foreman; but when Mr. Windibank came he
+made her sell the business, for he was very superior, being a traveler in
+wines. They got four thousand seven hundred for the good-will and
+interest, which wasn't near as much as father could have got if he had
+been alive."
+
+I had expected to see Sherlock Holmes impatient under this rambling and
+inconsequential narrative, but, on the contrary, he had listened with the
+greatest concentration of attention.
+
+"Your own little income," he asked, "does it come out of the business?"
+
+"Oh, no, sir. It is quite separate, and was left me by my Uncle Ned in
+Auckland. It is in New Zealand stock, paying four and half per cent. Two
+thousand five hundred pounds was the amount, but I can only touch the
+interest."
+
+"You interest me extremely," said Holmes. "And since you draw so large a
+sum as a hundred a year, with what you earn into the bargain, you no doubt
+travel a little, and indulge yourself in every way. I believe that a
+single lady can get on very nicely upon an income of about sixty pounds."
+
+"I could do with much less than that, Mr. Holmes, but you understand that
+as long as I live at home I don't wish to be a burden to them, and so they
+have the use of the money just while I am staying with them. Of course
+that is only just for the time. Mr. Windibank draws my interest every
+quarter, and pays it over to mother, and I find that I can do pretty well
+with what I earn at typewriting. It brings me twopence a sheet, and I can
+often do from fifteen to twenty sheets in a day."
+
+"You have made your position very clear to me," said Holmes. "This is my
+friend, Doctor Watson, before whom you can speak as freely as before
+myself. Kindly tell us now all about your connection with Mr. Hosmer
+Angel."
+
+A flush stole over Miss Sutherland's face, and she picked nervously at the
+fringe of her jacket. "I met him first at the gasfitters' ball," she said.
+"They used to send father tickets when he was alive, and then afterwards
+they remembered us, and sent them to mother. Mr. Windibank did not wish us
+to go. He never did wish us to go anywhere. He would get quite mad if I
+wanted so much as to join a Sunday School treat. But this time I was set
+on going, and I would go, for what right had he to prevent? He said the
+folk were not fit for us to know, when all father's friends were to be
+there. And he said that I had nothing fit to wear, when I had my purple
+plush that I had never so much as taken out of the drawer. At last, when
+nothing else would do, he went off to France upon the business of the
+firm; but we went, mother and I, with Mr. Hardy, who used to be our
+foreman, and it was there I met Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+"I suppose," said Holmes, "that when Mr. Windibank came back from France,
+he was very annoyed at your having gone to the ball?"
+
+"Oh, well, he was very good about it. He laughed, I remember, and shrugged
+his shoulders, and said there was no use denying anything to a woman, for
+she would have her way."
+
+"I see. Then at the gasfitters' ball you met, as I understand, a gentleman
+called Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I met him that night, and he called next day to ask if we had
+got home all safe, and after that we met him--that is to say, Mr. Holmes,
+I met him twice for walks, but after that father came back again, and Mr.
+Hosmer Angel could not come to the house any more."
+
+"No?"
+
+"Well, you know, father didn't like anything of the sort. He wouldn't have
+any visitors if he could help it, and he used to say that a woman should
+be happy in her own family circle. But then, as I used to say to mother, a
+woman wants her own circle to begin with, and I had not got mine yet."
+
+"But how about Mr. Hosmer Angel? Did he make no attempt to see you?"
+
+"Well, father was going off to France again in a week, and Hosmer wrote
+and said that it would be safer and better not to see each other until he
+had gone. We could write in the meantime, and he used to write every day.
+I took the letters in the morning, so there was no need for father to
+know."
+
+"Were you engaged to the gentleman at this time?"
+
+"Oh, yes, Mr. Holmes. We were engaged after the first walk that we took.
+Hosmer--Mr. Angel--was a cashier in an office in Leadenhall Street--and--"
+
+"What office?"
+
+"That's the worst of it, Mr. Holmes; I don't know."
+
+"Where did he live, then?"
+
+"He slept on the premises."
+
+"And you don't know his address?"
+
+"No--except that it was Leadenhall Street."
+
+"Where did you address your letters, then?"
+
+"To the Leadenhall Street Post Office, to be left till called for. He said
+that if they were sent to the office he would be chaffed by all the other
+clerks about having letters from a lady, so I offered to typewrite them,
+like he did his, but he wouldn't have that, for he said that when I wrote
+them they seemed to come from me, but when they were typewritten he always
+felt that the machine had come between us. That will just show you how
+fond he was of me, Mr. Holmes, and the little things that he would think
+of."
+
+"It was most suggestive," said Holmes. "It has long been an axiom of mine
+that the little things are infinitely the most important. Can you remember
+any other little things about Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"He was a very shy man, Mr. Holmes. He would rather walk with me in the
+evening than in the daylight, for he said that he hated to be conspicuous.
+Very retiring and gentlemanly he was. Even his voice was gentle. He'd had
+the quinsy and swollen glands when he was young, he told me, and it had
+left him with a weak throat and a hesitating, whispering fashion of
+speech. He was always well dressed, very neat and plain, but his eyes were
+weak, just as mine are, and he wore tinted glasses against the glare."
+
+"Well, and what happened when Mr. Windibank, your stepfather, returned to
+France?"
+
+"Mr. Hosmer Angel came to the house again, and proposed that we should
+marry before father came back. He was in dreadful earnest, and made me
+swear, with my hands on the Testament, that whatever happened I would
+always be true to him. Mother said he was quite right to make me swear,
+and that it was a sign of his passion. Mother was all in his favor from
+the first, and was even fonder of him than I was. Then, when they talked
+of marrying within the week, I began to ask about father; but they both
+said never to mind about father, but just to tell him afterwards and
+mother said she would make it all right with him. I didn't quite like
+that, Mr. Holmes. It seemed funny that I should ask his leave, as he was
+only a few years older than me; but I didn't want to do anything on the
+sly, so I wrote to father at Bordeaux, where the company has its French
+offices, but the letter came back to me on the very morning of the
+wedding."
+
+"It missed him, then?"
+
+"Yes, sir, for he had started to England just before it arrived."
+
+"Ha! that was unfortunate. Your wedding was arranged, then, for the
+Friday. Was it to be in church?"
+
+"Yes, sir, but very quietly. It was to be at St. Saviour's, near King's
+Cross, and we were to have breakfast afterwards at the St. Pancras Hotel.
+Hosmer came for us in a hansom, but as there were two of us, he put us
+both into it, and stepped himself into a four-wheeler, which happened to
+be the only other cab in the street. We got to the church first, and when
+the four-wheeler drove up we waited for him to step out, but he never did,
+and when the cabman got down from the box and looked, there was no one
+there! The cabman said that he could not imagine what had become of him,
+for he had seen him get in with his own eyes. That was last Friday, Mr.
+Holmes, and I have never seen or heard anything since then to throw any
+light upon what became of him."
+
+"It seems to me that you have been very shamefully treated," said Holmes.
+
+"Oh, no, sir! He was too good and kind to leave me so. Why, all the
+morning he was saying to me that, whatever happened, I was to be true; and
+that even if something quite unforeseen occurred to separate us, I was
+always to remember that I was pledged to him, and that he would claim his
+pledge sooner or later. It seemed strange talk for a wedding morning, but
+what has happened since gives a meaning to it."
+
+"Most certainly it does. Your own opinion is, then, that some unforeseen
+catastrophe has occurred to him?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I believe that he foresaw some danger, or else he would not
+have talked so. And then I think that what he foresaw happened."
+
+"But you have no notion as to what it could have been?"
+
+"None."
+
+"One more question. How did your mother take the matter?"
+
+"She was angry, and said that I was never to speak of the matter again."
+
+"And your father? Did you tell him?"
+
+"Yes, and he seemed to think, with me, that something had happened, and
+that I should hear of Hosmer again. As he said, what interest could
+anyone have in bringing me to the door of the church, and then leaving me?
+Now, if he had borrowed my money, or if he had married me and got my money
+settled on him, there might be some reason; but Hosmer was very
+independent about money, and never would look at a shilling of mine. And
+yet what could have happened? And why could he not write? Oh! it drives me
+half mad to think of, and I can't sleep a wink at night." She pulled a
+little handkerchief out of her muff, and began to sob heavily into it.
+
+"I shall glance into the case for you," said Holmes, rising, "and I have
+no doubt that we shall reach some definite result. Let the weight of the
+matter rest upon me now, and do not let your mind dwell upon it further.
+Above all, try to let Mr. Hosmer Angel vanish from your memory, as he has
+done from your life."
+
+"Then you don't think I'll see him again?"
+
+"I fear not."
+
+"Then what has happened to him?"
+
+"You will leave that question in my hands. I should like an accurate
+description of him, and any letters of his which you can spare."
+
+"I advertised for him in last Saturday's _Chronicle_," said she. "Here is
+the slip, and here are four letters from him."
+
+"Thank you. And your address?"
+
+"No. 31 Lyon Place, Camberwell."
+
+"Mr. Angel's address you never had, I understand. Where is your father's
+place of business?"
+
+"He travels for Westhouse & Marbank, the great claret importers of
+Fenchurch Street."
+
+"Thank you. You have made your statement very clearly. You will leave the
+papers here, and remember the advice which I have given you. Let the whole
+incident be a sealed book, and do not allow it to affect your life."
+
+"You are very kind, Mr. Holmes, but I cannot do that. I shall be true to
+Hosmer. He shall find me ready when he comes back."
+
+For all the preposterous hat and the vacuous face, there was something
+noble in the simple faith of our visitor which compelled our respect. She
+laid her little bundle of papers upon the table, and went her way, with a
+promise to come again whenever she might be summoned.
+
+Sherlock Holmes sat silent for a few minutes with his finger tips still
+pressed together, his legs stretched out in front of him, and his gaze
+directed upward to the ceiling. Then he took down from the rack the old
+and oily clay pipe, which was to him as a counselor, and, having lighted
+it, he leaned back in his chair, with thick blue cloud wreaths spinning up
+from him, and a look of infinite languor in his face.
+
+"Quite an interesting study, that maiden," he observed. "I found her more
+interesting than her little problem, which, by the way, is rather a trite
+one. You will find parallel cases, if you consult my index, in Andover in
+'77, and there was something of the sort at The Hague last year. Old as is
+the idea, however, there were one or two details which were new to me. But
+the maiden herself was most instructive."
+
+"You appeared to read a good deal upon her which was quite invisible to
+me," I remarked.
+
+"Not invisible, but unnoticed, Watson. You did not know where to look, and
+so you missed all that was important. I can never bring you to realize the
+importance of sleeves, the suggestiveness of thumb nails, or the great
+issues that may hang from a boot lace. Now, what did you gather from that
+woman's appearance? Describe it."
+
+"Well, she had a slate-colored, broad-brimmed straw hat, with a feather of
+a brickish red. Her jacket was black, with black beads sewed upon it and a
+fringe of little black jet ornaments. Her dress was brown, rather darker
+than coffee color, with a little purple plush at the neck and sleeves. Her
+gloves were grayish, and were worn through at the right forefinger. Her
+boots I didn't observe. She had small round, hanging gold earrings, and a
+general air of being fairly well-to-do, in a vulgar, comfortable,
+easy-going way."
+
+Sherlock Holmes clapped his hands softly together and chuckled.
+
+"'Pon my word, Watson, you are coming along wonderfully. You have really
+done very well indeed. It is true that you have missed everything of
+importance, but you have hit upon the method, and you have a quick eye for
+color. Never trust to general impressions, my boy, but concentrate
+yourself upon details. My first glance is always at a woman's sleeve. In a
+man it is perhaps better first to take the knee of the trouser. As you
+observe, this woman had plush upon her sleeve, which is a most useful
+material for showing traces. The double line a little above the wrist,
+where the typewritist presses against the table, was beautifully defined.
+The sewing machine, of the hand type, leaves a similar mark, but only on
+the left arm, and on the side of it farthest from the thumb, instead of
+being right across the broadest part, as this was. I then glanced at her
+face, and observing the dint of a _pince-nez_ at either side of her nose,
+I ventured a remark upon short sight and typewriting, which seemed to
+surprise her."
+
+"It surprised me."
+
+"But, surely, it was very obvious. I was then much surprised and
+interested on glancing down to observe that, though the boots which she
+was wearing were not unlike each other, they were really odd ones, the one
+having a slightly decorated toe cap and the other a plain one. One was
+buttoned only in the two lower buttons out of five, and the other at the
+first, third, and fifth. Now, when you see that a young lady, otherwise
+neatly dressed, has come away from home with odd boots, half-buttoned, it
+is no great deduction to say that she came away in a hurry."
+
+"And what else?" I asked, keenly interested, as I always was, by my
+friend's incisive reasoning.
+
+"I noted, in passing, that she had written a note before leaving home, but
+after being fully dressed. You observed that her right glove was torn at
+the forefinger, but you did not, apparently, see that both glove and
+finger were stained with violet ink. She had written in a hurry, and
+dipped her pen too deep. It must have been this morning, or the mark would
+not remain clear upon the finger. All this is amusing, though rather
+elementary, but I must go back to business, Watson. Would you mind reading
+me the advertised description of Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+I held the little printed slip to the light. "Missing," it said, "on the
+morning of the fourteenth, a gentleman named Hosmer Angel. About five feet
+seven inches in height; strongly built, sallow complexion, black hair, a
+little bald in the center, bushy black side-whiskers and mustache; tinted
+glasses; slight infirmity of speech. Was dressed, when last seen, in black
+frock-coat faced with silk, black waistcoat, gold Albert chain, and gray
+Harris tweed trousers, with brown gaiters over elastic-sided boots. Known
+to have been employed in an office in Leadenhall Street. Anybody
+bringing," etc., etc.
+
+"That will do," said Holmes. "As to the letters," he continued, glancing
+over them, "they are very commonplace. Absolutely no clew in them to Mr.
+Angel, save that he quotes Balzac once. There is one remarkable point,
+however, which will no doubt strike you."
+
+"They are typewritten," I remarked.
+
+"Not only that, but the signature is typewritten. Look at the neat little
+'Hosmer Angel' at the bottom. There is a date, you see, but no
+superscription except Leadenhall Street, which is rather vague. The point
+about the signature is very suggestive--in fact, we may call it
+conclusive."
+
+"Of what?"
+
+"My dear fellow, is it possible you do not see how strongly it bears upon
+the case?"
+
+"I cannot say that I do, unless it were that he wished to be able to deny
+his signature if an action for breach of promise were instituted."
+
+"No, that was not the point. However, I shall write two letters which
+should settle the matter. One is to a firm in the City, the other is to
+the young lady's stepfather, Mr. Windibank, asking him whether he could
+meet us here at six o'clock to-morrow evening. It is just as well that we
+should do business with the male relatives. And now, doctor, we can do
+nothing until the answers to those letters come, so we may put our little
+problem upon the shelf for the interim."
+
+I had had so many reasons to believe in my friend's subtle powers of
+reasoning, and extraordinary energy in action, that I felt that he must
+have some solid grounds for the assured and easy demeanor with which he
+treated the singular mystery which he had been called upon to fathom. Once
+only had I known him to fail, in the case of the King of Bohemia and the
+Irene Adler photograph, but when I looked back to the weird business of
+the "Sign of the Four," and the extraordinary circumstances connected with
+the "Study in Scarlet," I felt that it would be a strange tangle indeed
+which he could not unravel.
+
+I left him then, still puffing at his black clay pipe, with the conviction
+that when I came again on the next evening I would find that he held in
+his hands all the clews which would lead up to the identity of the
+disappearing bridegroom of Miss Mary Sutherland.
+
+A professional case of great gravity was engaging my own attention at the
+time, and the whole of next day I was busy at the bedside of the sufferer.
+It was not until close upon six o'clock that I found myself free, and was
+able to spring into a hansom and drive to Baker Street, half afraid that I
+might be too late to assist at the _dénouement_ of the little mystery. I
+found Sherlock Holmes alone, however, half asleep, with his long, thin
+form curled up in the recesses of his armchair. A formidable array of
+bottles and test-tubes, with the pungent, cleanly smell of hydrochloric
+acid, told me that he had spent his day in the chemical work which was so
+dear to him.
+
+"Well, have you solved it?" I asked as I entered.
+
+"Yes. It was the bisulphate of baryta."
+
+"No, no; the mystery!" I cried.
+
+"Oh, that! I thought of the salt that I have been working upon. There was
+never any mystery in the matter, though, as I said yesterday, some of the
+details are of interest. The only drawback is that there is no law, I
+fear, that can touch the scoundrel."
+
+"Who was he, then, and what was his object in deserting Miss Sutherland?"
+
+The question was hardly out of my mouth, and Holmes had not yet opened his
+lips to reply, when we heard a heavy footfall in the passage, and a tap at
+the door.
+
+"This is the girl's stepfather, Mr. James Windibank," said Holmes. "He has
+written to me to say that he would be here at six. Come in!"
+
+The man who entered was a sturdy, middle-sized fellow, some thirty years
+of age, clean shaven, and sallow-skinned, with a bland, insinuating
+manner, and a pair of wonderfully sharp and penetrating gray eyes. He shot
+a questioning glance at each of us, placed his shiny top hat upon the
+sideboard, and, with a slight bow, sidled down into the nearest chair.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. James Windibank," said Holmes. "I think this
+typewritten letter is from you, in which you made an appointment with me
+for six o'clock?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I am afraid that I am a little late, but I am not quite my own
+master, you know. I am sorry that Miss Sutherland has troubled you about
+this little matter, for I think it is far better not to wash linen of the
+sort in public. It was quite against my wishes that she came, but she is a
+very excitable, impulsive girl, as you may have noticed, and she is not
+easily controlled when she has made up her mind on a point. Of course, I
+did not mind you so much, as you are not connected with the official
+police, but it is not pleasant to have a family misfortune like this
+noised abroad. Besides, it is a useless expense, for how could you
+possibly find this Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"On the contrary," said Holmes, quietly, "I have every reason to believe
+that I will succeed in discovering Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+Mr. Windibank gave a violent start, and dropped his gloves. "I am
+delighted to hear it," he said.
+
+"It is a curious thing," remarked Holmes, "that a typewriter has really
+quite as much individuality as a man's handwriting. Unless they are quite
+new no two of them write exactly alike. Some letters get more worn than
+others, and some wear only on one side. Now, you remark in this note of
+yours, Mr. Windibank, that in every case there is some little slurring
+over the _e_, and a slight defect in the tail of the _r_. There are
+fourteen other characteristics, but those are the more obvious."
+
+"We do all our correspondence with this machine at the office, and no
+doubt it is a little worn," our visitor answered, glancing keenly at
+Holmes with his bright little eyes.
+
+"And now I will show you what is really a very interesting study, Mr.
+Windibank," Holmes continued. "I think of writing another little monograph
+some of these days on the typewriter and its relation to crime. It is a
+subject to which I have devoted some little attention. I have here four
+letters which purport to come from the missing man. They are all
+typewritten. In each case, not only are the _e_'s slurred and the _r_'s
+tailless, but you will observe, if you care to use my magnifying lens,
+that the fourteen other characteristics to which I have alluded are there
+as well."
+
+Mr. Windibank sprung out of his chair, and picked up his hat. "I cannot
+waste time over this sort of fantastic talk, Mr. Holmes," he said. "If you
+can catch the man, catch him, and let me know when you have done it."
+
+"Certainly," said Holmes, stepping over and turning the key in the door.
+"I let you know, then, that I have caught him!"
+
+"What! where?" shouted Mr. Windibank, turning white to his lips, and
+glancing about him like a rat in a trap.
+
+"Oh, it won't do--really it won't," said Holmes, suavely. "There is no
+possible getting out of it, Mr. Windibank. It is quite too transparent,
+and it was a very bad compliment when you said that it was impossible for
+me to solve so simple a question. That's right! Sit down, and let us talk
+it over."
+
+Our visitor collapsed into a chair, with a ghastly face, and a glitter of
+moisture on his brow. "It--it's not actionable," he stammered.
+
+"I am very much afraid that it is not; but between ourselves, Windibank,
+it was as cruel, and selfish, and heartless a trick in a petty way as ever
+came before me. Now, let me just run over the course of events, and you
+will contradict me if I go wrong."
+
+The man sat huddled up in his chair, with his head sunk upon his breast,
+like one who is utterly crushed. Holmes stuck his feet up on the corner of
+the mantelpiece, and, leaning back with his hands in his pockets, began
+talking, rather to himself, as it seemed, than to us.
+
+"The man married a woman very much older than himself for her money," said
+he, "and he enjoyed the use of the money of the daughter as long as she
+lived with them. It was a considerable sum, for people in their position,
+and the loss of it would have made a serious difference. It was worth an
+effort to preserve it. The daughter was of a good, amiable disposition,
+but affectionate and warm-hearted in her ways, so that it was evident that
+with her fair personal advantages, and her little income, she would not be
+allowed to remain single long. Now her marriage would mean, of course, the
+loss of a hundred a year, so what does her stepfather do to prevent it? He
+takes the obvious course of keeping her at home, and forbidding her to
+seek the company of people of her own age. But soon he found that that
+would not answer forever. She became restive, insisted upon her rights,
+and finally announced her positive intention of going to a certain ball.
+What does her clever stepfather do then? He conceives an idea more
+creditable to his head than to his heart. With the connivance and
+assistance of his wife, he disguised himself, covered those keen eyes with
+tinted glasses masked the face with a mustache and a pair of bushy
+whiskers, sunk that clear voice into an insinuating whisper, and doubly
+secure on account of the girl's short sight, he appears as Mr. Hosmer
+Angel, and keeps off other lovers by making love himself."
+
+"It was only a joke at first," groaned our visitor. "We never thought that
+she would have been so carried away."
+
+"Very likely not. However that may be, the young lady was very decidedly
+carried away, and having quite made up her mind that her stepfather was in
+France, the suspicion of treachery never for an instant entered her mind.
+She was flattered by the gentleman's attentions, and the effect was
+increased by the loudly expressed admiration of her mother. Then Mr. Angel
+began to call, for it was obvious that the matter should be pushed as far
+as if would go, if a real effect were to be produced. There were meetings,
+and an engagement, which would finally secure the girl's affections from
+turning toward anyone else. But the deception could not be kept up
+forever. These pretended journeys to France were rather cumbrous. The
+thing to do was clearly to bring the business to an end in such a dramatic
+manner that it would leave a permanent impression upon the young lady's
+mind, and prevent her from looking upon any other suitor for some time to
+come. Hence those vows of fidelity exacted upon a Testament, and hence
+also the allusions to a possibility of something happening on the very
+morning of the wedding. James Windibank wished Miss Sutherland to be so
+bound to Hosmer Angel, and so uncertain as to his fate, that for ten years
+to come, at any rate, she would not listen to another man. As far as the
+church door he brought her, and then, as he could go no farther, he
+conveniently vanished away by the old trick of stepping in at one door of
+a four-wheeler and out at the other. I think that that was the chain of
+events, Mr. Windibank!"
+
+Our visitor had recovered something of his assurance while Holmes had been
+talking, and he rose from his chair now with a cold sneer upon his pale
+face.
+
+"It may be so, or it may not, Mr. Holmes," said he; "but if you are so
+very sharp you ought to be sharp enough to know that it is you who are
+breaking the law now, and not me. I have done nothing actionable from the
+first, but as long as you keep that door locked you lay yourself open to
+an action for assault and illegal constraint."
+
+"The law cannot, as you say, touch you," said Holmes, unlocking and
+throwing open the door, "yet there never was a man who deserved punishment
+more. If the young lady has a brother or a friend, he ought to lay a whip
+across your shoulders. By Jove!" he continued, flushing up at the sight of
+the bitter sneer upon the man's face, "it is not part of my duties to my
+client, but here's a hunting crop handy, and I think I shall just treat
+myself to--" He took two swift steps to the whip, but before he could
+grasp it there was a wild clatter of steps upon the stairs, the heavy hall
+door banged, and from the window we could see Mr. James Windibank running
+at the top of his speed down the road.
+
+"There's a cold-blooded scoundrel!" said Holmes, laughing as he threw
+himself down into his chair once more. "That fellow will rise from crime
+to crime until he does something very bad and ends on a gallows. The case
+has, in some respects, been not entirely devoid of interest."
+
+"I cannot now entirely see all the steps of your reasoning," I remarked.
+
+"Well, of course it was obvious from the first that this Mr. Hosmer Angel
+must have some strong object for his curious conduct, and it was equally
+clear that the only man who really profited by the incident, as far as we
+could see, was the stepfather. Then the fact that the two men were never
+together, but that the one always appeared when the other was away, was
+suggestive. So were the tinted spectacles and the curious voice, which
+both hinted at a disguise, as did the bushy whiskers. My suspicions were
+all confirmed by his peculiar action in typewriting his signature, which,
+of course, inferred that his handwriting was so familiar to her that she
+would recognize even the smallest sample of it. You see all these isolated
+facts, together with many minor ones, all pointed in the same direction."
+
+"And how did you verify them?"
+
+"Having once spotted my man, it was easy to get corroboration. I knew the
+firm for which this man worked. Having taken the printed description, I
+eliminated everything from it which could be the result of a
+disguise,--the whiskers, the glasses, the voice,--and I sent it to the
+firm with a request that they would inform me whether it answered to the
+description of any of their travelers. I had already noticed the
+peculiarities of the typewriter, and I wrote to the man himself at his
+business address, asking him if he would come here. As I expected, his
+reply was typewritten, and revealed the same trivial but characteristic
+defects. The same post brought me a letter from Westhouse & Marbank, of
+Fenchurch Street, to say that the description tallied in every respect
+with that of their employee, James Windibank. _Voilà tout!_"
+
+"And Miss Sutherland?"
+
+"If I tell her she will not believe me. You may remember the old Persian
+saying, 'There is danger for him who taketh the tiger cub, and danger also
+for whoso snatcheth a delusion from a woman.' There is as much sense in
+Hafiz as in Horace, and as much knowledge of the world."
+
+
+
+
+
+_A Scandal in Bohemia_
+
+
+I
+
+To Sherlock Holmes she is always _the_ woman. I have seldom heard him
+mention her under any other name. In his eyes she eclipses and
+predominates the whole of her sex. It was not that he felt any emotion
+akin to love for Irene Adler. All emotions, and that one particularly,
+were abhorrent to his cold, precise but admirably balanced mind. He was,
+I take it, the most perfect reasoning and observing machine that the world
+has seen; but as a lover, he would have placed himself in a false
+position. He never spoke of the softer passions, save with a gibe and a
+sneer. They were admirable things for the observer--excellent for drawing
+the veil from men's motives and actions. But for the trained reasoner to
+admit such intrusions into his own delicate and finely adjusted
+temperament was to introduce a distracting factor which might throw a
+doubt upon all his mental results. Grit in a sensitive instrument, or a
+crack in one of his own high-power lenses, would not be more disturbing
+that a strong emotion in a nature such as his. And yet there was but one
+woman to him, and that woman was the late Irene Adler, of dubious and
+questionable memory.
+
+I had seen little of Holmes lately. My marriage had drifted us away from
+each other. My own complete happiness, and the home-centered interests
+which rise up around the man who first finds himself master of his own
+establishment, were sufficient to absorb all my attention; while Holmes,
+who loathed every form of society with his whole Bohemian soul, remained
+in our lodgings in Baker Street, buried among his old books, and
+alternating from week to week between cocaine and ambition, the drowsiness
+of the drug and the fierce energy of his own keen nature. He was still, as
+ever, deeply attracted by the study of crime, and occupied his immense
+faculties and extraordinary powers of observation in following out those
+clews, and clearing up those mysteries, which had been abandoned as
+hopeless by the official police. From time to time I heard some vague
+account of his doings; of his summons to Odessa in the case of the Trepoff
+murder, of his clearing up of the singular tragedy of the Atkinson
+brothers at Trincomalee, and finally of the mission which he had
+accomplished so delicately and successfully for the reigning family of
+Holland. Beyond these signs of his activity, however, which I merely
+shared with all the readers of the daily press, I knew little of my former
+friend and companion.
+
+One night--it was on the 20th of March, 1888--I was returning from a
+journey to a patient (for I had now returned to civil practice), when my
+way led me through Baker Street. As I passed the well-remembered door,
+which must always be associated in my mind with my wooing, and with the
+dark incidents of the Study in Scarlet, I was seized with a keen desire to
+see Holmes again, and to know how he was employing his extraordinary
+powers. His rooms were brilliantly lighted, and even as I looked up, I saw
+his tall, spare figure pass twice in a dark silhouette against the blind.
+He was pacing the room swiftly, eagerly, with his head sunk upon his
+chest, and his hands clasped behind him. To me, who knew his every mood
+and habit, his attitude and manner told their own story. He was at work
+again. He had risen out of his drug-created dreams, and was hot upon the
+scent of some new problem. I rang the bell, and was shown up to the
+chamber which had formerly been in part my own.
+
+His manner was not effusive. It seldom was; but he was glad, I think, to
+see me. With hardly a word spoken, but with a kindly eye, he waved me to
+an armchair, threw across his case of cigars, and indicated a spirit case
+and a gasogene in the corner. Then he stood before the fire, and looked me
+over in his singular introspective fashion.
+
+"Wedlock suits you," he remarked. "I think, Watson, that you have put on
+seven and a half pounds since I saw you."
+
+"Seven," I answered.
+
+"Indeed, I should have thought a little more. Just a trifle more, I fancy,
+Watson. And in practice again, I observe. You did not tell me that you
+intended to go into harness."
+
+"Then how do you know?"
+
+"I see it, I deduce it. How do I know that you have been getting yourself
+very wet lately, and that you have a most clumsy and careless servant
+girl?"
+
+"My dear Holmes," said I, "this is too much. You would certainly have been
+burned had you lived a few centuries ago. It is true that I had a country
+walk on Thursday and came home in a dreadful mess; but as I have changed
+my clothes, I can't imagine how you deduce it. As to Mary Jane, she is
+incorrigible, and my wife has given her notice; but there again I fail to
+see how you work it out."
+
+He chuckled to himself and rubbed his long nervous hands together.
+
+"It is simplicity itself," said he, "my eyes tell me that on the inside of
+your left shoe, just where the firelight strikes it, the leather is scored
+by six almost parallel cuts. Obviously they have been caused by some one
+who has very carelessly scraped round the edges of the sole in order to
+remove crusted mud from it. Hence, you see, my double deduction that you
+had been out in vile weather, and that you had a particularly malignant
+boot-slicking specimen of the London slavey. As to your practice, if a
+gentleman walks into my rooms, smelling of iodoform, with a black mark of
+nitrate of silver upon his right forefinger, and a bulge on the side of
+his top hat to show where he has secreted his stethoscope, I must be dull
+indeed if I do not pronounce him to be an active member of the medical
+profession."
+
+I could not help laughing at the ease with which he, explained his process
+of deduction. "When I hear you give your reasons," I remarked, "the thing
+always appears to me so ridiculously simple that I could easily do it
+myself, though at each successive instance of your reasoning I am baffled,
+until you explain your process. And yet, I believe that my eyes are as
+good as yours."
+
+"Quite so," he answered, lighting a cigarette, and throwing himself down
+into an armchair. "You see, but you do not observe. The distinction is
+clear. For example, you have frequently seen the steps which lead up from
+the hall to this room."
+
+"Frequently."
+
+"How often?"
+
+"Well, some hundreds of times."
+
+"Then how many are there?"
+
+"How many? I don't know."
+
+"Quite so! You have not observed. And yet you have seen. That is just my
+point. Now, I know there are seventeen steps, because I have both seen and
+observed. By the way, since you are interested in these little problems,
+and since you are good enough to chronicle one or two of my trifling
+experiences, you may be interested in this." He threw over a sheet of
+thick pink-tinted note paper which had been lying open upon the table. "It
+came by the last post," said he. "Read it aloud."
+
+The note was undated, and without either signature or address.
+
+"There will call upon you to-night, at a quarter to eight o'clock," it
+said, "a gentleman who desires to consult you upon a matter of the very
+deepest moment. Your recent services to one of the royal houses of Europe
+have shown that you are one who may safely be trusted with matters which
+are of an importance which can hardly be exaggerated. This account of you
+we have from all quarters received. Be in your chamber, then, at that
+hour, and do not take it amiss if your visitor wears a mask."
+
+"This is indeed a mystery," I remarked. "What do you imagine that it
+means?"
+
+"I have no data yet. It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has
+data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of
+theories to suit facts. But the note itself--what do you deduce from it?"
+
+I carefully examined the writing, and the paper upon which it was written.
+
+"The man who wrote it was presumably well to do," I remarked, endeavoring
+to imitate my companion's processes. "Such paper could not be bought under
+half a crown a packet. It is peculiarly strong and stiff."
+
+"Peculiar--that is the very word," said Holmes. "It is not an English
+paper at all. Hold it up to the light"
+
+I did so, and saw a large _E_ with a small _g_, a _P_ and a large _G_ with
+a small _t_ woven into the texture of the paper.
+
+"What do you make of that?" asked Holmes.
+
+"The name of the maker, no doubt; or his monogram, rather."
+
+"Not all. The _G_ with the small _t_ stands for 'Gesellschaft,' which is
+the German for 'Company.' It is a customary contraction like our 'Co.'
+_P_, of course, stands for 'Papier.' Now for the _Eg_. Let us glance at
+our 'Continental Gazetteer'." He took down a heavy brown volume from his
+shelves. "Eglow, Eglonitz--here we are, Egria. It is in a German-speaking
+country--in Bohemia, not far from Carlsbad. 'Remarkable as being the scene
+of the death of Wallenstein, and for its numerous glass factories and
+paper mills.' Ha! ha! my boy, what do you make of that?" His eyes
+sparkled, and he sent up a great blue triumphant cloud from his cigarette.
+
+"The paper was made in Bohemia," I said.
+
+"Precisely. And the man who wrote the note is a German. Do you note the
+peculiar construction of the sentence--'This account of you we have from
+all quarters received'? A Frenchman or Russian could not have written
+that. It is the German who is so uncourteous to his verbs. It only
+remains, therefore, to discover what is wanted by this German who writes
+upon Bohemian paper, and prefers wearing a mask to showing his face. And
+here he comes, if I am not mistaken, to resolve all our doubts."
+
+As he spoke there was the sharp sound of horses' hoofs and grating wheels
+against the curb, followed by a sharp pull at the bell. Holmes whistled.
+
+"A pair, by the sound," said he. "Yes," he continued, glancing out of the
+window. "A nice little brougham and a pair of beauties. A hundred and
+fifty guineas apiece. There's money in this case, Watson, if there is
+nothing else."
+
+"I think I had better go, Holmes."
+
+"Not a bit, doctor. Stay where you are. I am lost without my Boswell. And
+this promises to be interesting. It would be a pity to miss it."
+
+"But your client--"
+
+"Never mind him. I may want your help, and so may he. Here he comes. Sit
+down in that armchair, doctor, and give us your best attention."
+
+A slow and heavy step, which had been heard upon the stairs and in the
+passage, paused immediately outside the door. Then there was a loud and
+authoritative tap.
+
+"Come in!" said Holmes.
+
+A man entered who could hardly have been less than six feet six inches in
+height, with the chest and limbs of a Hercules. His dress was rich with a
+richness which would, in England, be looked upon as akin to bad taste.
+Heavy bands of astrakhan were slashed across the sleeves and front of his
+double-breasted coat, while the deep blue cloak which was thrown over his
+shoulders was lined with flame-colored silk, and secured at the neck with
+a brooch which consisted of a single flaming beryl. Boots which extended
+halfway up his calves, and which were trimmed at the tops with rich brown
+fur, completed the impression of barbaric opulence which was suggested by
+his whole appearance. He carried a broad-brimmed hat in his hand, while he
+wore across the upper part of his face, extending down past the
+cheek-bones, a black visard mask, which he had apparently adjusted that
+very moment, for his hand was still raised to it as he entered. From the
+lower part of the face he appeared to be a man of strong character, with a
+thick, hanging lip, and a long, straight chin, suggestive of resolution
+pushed to the length of obstinacy.
+
+"You had my note?" he asked, with a deep, harsh voice and a strongly
+marked German accent. "I told you that I would call." He looked from one
+to the other of us, as if uncertain which to address.
+
+"Pray take a seat," said Holmes. "This is my friend and colleague, Doctor
+Watson, who is occasionally good enough to help me in my cases. Whom have
+I the honor to address?"
+
+"You may address me as the Count von Kramm, a Bohemian nobleman. I
+understand that this gentleman, your friend, is a man of honor and
+discretion, whom I may trust with a matter of the most extreme
+importance. If not, I should much prefer to communicate with you alone."
+
+I rose to go, but Holmes caught me by the wrist and pushed me back into my
+chair. "It is both, or none," said he. "You may say before this gentleman
+anything which you may say to me."
+
+The count shrugged his broad shoulders. "Then I must begin," said he, "by
+binding you both to absolute secrecy for two years; at the end of that
+time the matter will be of no importance. At present it is not too much to
+say that it is of such weight that it may have an influence upon European
+history."
+
+"I promise," said Holmes.
+
+"And I."
+
+"You will excuse this mask," continued our strange visitor. "The august
+person who employs me wishes his agent to be unknown to you, and I may
+confess at once that the title by which I have just called myself is not
+exactly my own."
+
+"I was aware of it," said Holmes, dryly.
+
+"The circumstances are of great delicacy, and every precaution has to be
+taken to quench what might grow to be an immense scandal, and seriously
+compromise one of the reigning families of Europe. To speak plainly, the
+matter implicates the great House of Ormstein, hereditary kings of
+Bohemia."
+
+"I was also aware of that," murmured Holmes, settling himself down in his
+armchair, and closing his eyes.
+
+Our visitor glanced with some apparent surprise at the languid, lounging
+figure of the man who had been, no doubt, depicted to him as the most
+incisive reasoner and most energetic agent in Europe. Holmes slowly
+reopened his eyes and looked impatiently at his gigantic client.
+
+"If your majesty would condescend to state your case," he remarked, "I
+should be better able to advise you."
+
+The man sprung from his chair, and paced up and down the room in
+uncontrollable agitation. Then, with a gesture of desperation, he tore
+the mask from his face and hurled it upon the ground.
+
+"You are right," he cried, "I am the king. Why should I attempt to conceal
+it?"
+
+"Why, indeed?" murmured Holmes. "Your majesty had not spoken before I was
+aware that I was addressing Wilhelm Gottsreich Sigismond von Ormstein,
+Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein, and hereditary King of Bohemia."
+
+"But you can understand," said our strange visitor, sitting down once more
+and passing his hand over his high, white forehead, "you can understand
+that I am not accustomed to doing such business in my own person. Yet the
+matter was so delicate that I could not confide it to an agent without
+putting myself in his power. I have come incognito from Prague for the
+purpose of consulting you."
+
+"Then, pray consult," said Holmes, shutting his eyes once more.
+
+"The facts are briefly these: Some five years ago, during a lengthy visit
+to Warsaw, I made the acquaintance of the well-known adventuress Irene
+Adler. The name is no doubt familiar to you."
+
+"Kindly look her up in my index, doctor," murmured Holmes, without opening
+his eyes. For many years he had adopted a system for docketing all
+paragraphs concerning men and things, so that it was difficult to name a
+subject or a person on which he could not at once furnish information. In
+this case I found her biography sandwiched in between that of a Hebrew
+rabbi and that of a staff commander who had written a monograph upon the
+deep-sea fishes.
+
+"Let me see!" said Holmes. "Hum! Born in New Jersey in the year 1858.
+Contralto--hum! La Scala--hum! Prima donna Imperial Opera of Warsaw--yes!
+Retired from operatic stage--ha! Living in London--quite so! Your majesty,
+as I understand, became entangled with this young person, wrote her some
+compromising letters, and is now desirous of getting those letters back."
+
+"Precisely so. But how--"
+
+"Was there a secret marriage?"
+
+"None."
+
+"No legal papers or certificates?"
+
+"None."
+
+"Then I fail to follow your majesty. If this young person should produce
+her letters for blackmailing or other purposes, how is she to prove their
+authenticity?"
+
+"There is the writing."
+
+"Pooh-pooh! Forgery."
+
+"My private note paper."
+
+"Stolen."
+
+"My own seal."
+
+"Imitated."
+
+"My photograph."
+
+"Bought."
+
+"We were both in the photograph."
+
+"Oh, dear! That is very bad. Your majesty has indeed committed an
+indiscretion."
+
+"I was mad--insane."
+
+"You have compromised yourself seriously."
+
+"I was only crown prince then. I was young. I am but thirty now."
+
+"It must be recovered."
+
+"We have tried and failed."
+
+"Your majesty must pay. It must be bought."
+
+"She will not sell."
+
+"Stolen, then."
+
+"Five attempts have been made. Twice burglars in my pay ransacked her
+house. Once we diverted her luggage when she traveled. Twice she has been
+waylaid. There has been no result."
+
+"No sign of it?"
+
+"Absolutely none."
+
+Holmes laughed. "It is quite a pretty little problem," said he.
+
+"But a very serious one to me," returned the king, reproachfully.
+
+"Very, indeed. And what does she propose to do with the photograph?"
+
+"To ruin me."
+
+"But how?"
+
+"I am about to be married."
+
+"So I have heard."
+
+"To Clotilde Lothman von Saxe-Meiningen, second daughter of the King of
+Scandinavia. You may know the strict principles of her family. She is
+herself the very soul of delicacy. A shadow of a doubt as to my conduct
+would bring the matter to an end."
+
+"And Irene Adler?"
+
+"Threatens to send them the photograph. And she will do it. I know that
+she will do it. You do not know her, but she has a soul of steel. She has
+the face of the most beautiful of women and the mind of the most resolute
+of men. Rather than I should marry another woman, there are no lengths to
+which she would not go--none."
+
+"You are sure she has not sent it yet?"
+
+"I am sure."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"Because she has said that she would send it on the day when the betrothal
+was publicly proclaimed. That will be next Monday."
+
+"Oh, then we have three days yet," said Holmes, with a yawn. "That is very
+fortunate, as I have one or two matters of importance to look into just at
+present. Your majesty will, of course, stay in London for the present?"
+
+"Certainly. You will find me at the Langham, under the name of the Count
+von Kramm."
+
+"Then I shall drop you a line to let you know how we progress."
+
+"Pray do so; I shall be all anxiety."
+
+"Then, as to money?"
+
+"You have _carte blanche_."
+
+"Absolutely?"
+
+"I tell you that I would give one of the provinces of my kingdom to have
+that photograph."
+
+"And for present expenses?"
+
+The king took a heavy chamois-leather bag from under his cloak, and laid
+it on the table.
+
+"There are three hundred pounds in gold, and seven hundred in notes," he
+said.
+
+Holmes scribbled a receipt upon a sheet of his notebook, and handed it to
+him.
+
+"And mademoiselle's address?" he asked.
+
+"Is Briony Lodge, Serpentine Avenue, St. John's Wood."
+
+Holmes took a note of it. "One other question," said he, thoughtfully.
+"Was the photograph a cabinet?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"Then, good-night, your majesty, and I trust that we shall soon have some
+good news for you. And good-night, Watson," he added, as the wheels of the
+royal brougham rolled down the street. "If you will be good enough to call
+to-morrow afternoon, at three o'clock, I should like to chat this little
+matter over with you."
+
+
+II
+
+At three o'clock precisely I was at Baker Street, but Holmes had not yet
+returned. The landlady informed me that he had left the house shortly
+after eight o'clock in the morning. I sat down beside the fire, however,
+with the intention of awaiting him, however long he might be. I was
+already deeply interested in his inquiry, for, though it was surrounded by
+none of the grim and strange features which were associated with the two
+crimes which I have already recorded, still, the nature of the case and
+the exalted station of his client gave it a character of its own. Indeed,
+apart from the nature of the investigation which my friend had on hand,
+there was something in his masterly grasp of a situation, and his keen,
+incisive reasoning, which made it a pleasure to me to study his system of
+work, and to follow the quick, subtle methods by which he disentangled the
+most inextricable mysteries. So accustomed was I to his invariable
+success that the very possibility of his failing had ceased to enter into
+my head.
+
+It was close upon four before the door opened, and a drunken-looking
+groom, ill-kempt and side-whiskered, with an inflamed face and
+disreputable clothes, walked into the room. Accustomed as I was to my
+friend's amazing powers in the use of disguises, I had to look three times
+before I was certain that it was indeed he. With a nod he vanished into
+the bedroom, whence he emerged in five minutes tweed-suited and
+respectable, as of old. Putting his hands into his pockets, he stretched
+out his legs in front of the fire, and laughed heartily for some minutes.
+
+"Well, really!" he cried, and then he choked, and laughed again until he
+was obliged to lie back, limp and helpless, in the chair.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"It's quite too funny. I am sure you could never guess how I employed my
+morning, or what I ended by doing."
+
+"I can't imagine. I suppose that you have been watching the habits, and,
+perhaps, the house, of Miss Irene Adler."
+
+"Quite so, but the sequel was rather unusual. I will tell you, however. I
+left the house a little after eight o'clock this morning in the character
+of a groom out of work. There is a wonderful sympathy and freemasonry
+among horsey men. Be one of them, and you will know all that there is to
+know. I soon found Briony Lodge. It is a bijou villa, with a garden at the
+back, but built out in the front right up to the road, two stories. Chubb
+lock to the door. Large sitting room on the right side, well furnished,
+with long windows almost to the floor, and those preposterous English
+window fasteners which a child could open. Behind there was nothing
+remarkable, save that the passage window could be reached from the top of
+the coach-house. I walked round it and examined it closely from every
+point of view, but without noting anything else of interest.
+
+"I then lounged down the street, and found, as I expected, that there was
+a mews in a lane which runs down by one wall of the garden. I lent the
+hostlers a hand in rubbing down their horses, and I received in exchange
+twopence, a glass of half and half, two fills of shag tobacco, and as much
+information as I could desire about Miss Adler, to say nothing of half a
+dozen other people in the neighborhood, in whom I was not in the least
+interested, but whose biographies I was compelled to listen to."
+
+"And what of Irene Adler?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, she has turned all the men's heads down in that part. She is the
+daintiest thing under a bonnet on this planet. So say the Serpentine Mews,
+to a man. She lives quietly, sings at concerts, drives out at five every
+day, and returns at seven sharp for dinner. Seldom goes out at other
+times, except when she sings. Has only one male visitor, but a good deal
+of him. He is dark, handsome, and dashing; never calls less than once a
+day, and often twice. He is a Mr. Godfrey Norton of the Inner Temple. See
+the advantages of a cabman as a confidant. They had driven him home a
+dozen times from Serpentine Mews, and knew all about him. When I had
+listened to all that they had to tell, I began to walk up and down near
+Briony Lodge once more, and to think over my plan of campaign.
+
+"This Godfrey Norton was evidently an important factor in the matter. He
+was a lawyer. That sounded ominous. What was the relation between them,
+and what the object of his repeated visits? Was she his client, his
+friend, or his mistress? If the former, she had probably transferred the
+photograph to his keeping. If the latter, it was less likely. On the issue
+of this question depended whether I should continue my work at Briony
+Lodge, or turn my attention to the gentleman's chambers in the Temple. It
+was a delicate point, and it widened the field of my inquiry. I fear that
+I bore you with these details, but I have to let you see my little
+difficulties, if you are to understand the situation."
+
+"I am following you closely," I answered.
+
+"I was still balancing the matter in my mind, when a hansom cab drove up
+to Briony Lodge, and a gentleman sprung out. He was a remarkably handsome
+man, dark, aquiline, and mustached--evidently the man of whom I had heard.
+He appeared to be in a great hurry, shouted to the cabman to wait, and
+brushed past the maid who opened the door, with the air of a man who was
+thoroughly at home.
+
+"He was in the house about half an hour, and I could catch glimpses of him
+in the windows of the sitting room, pacing up and down, talking excitedly
+and waving his arms. Of her I could see nothing. Presently he emerged,
+looking even more flurried than before. As he stepped up to the cab, he
+pulled a gold watch from his pocket and looked at it earnestly. 'Drive
+like the devil!' he shouted, 'first to Gross & Hankey's in Regent Street,
+and then to the Church of St. Monica in the Edgeware Road. Half a guinea
+if you do it in twenty minutes!'
+
+"Away they went, and I was just wondering whether I should not do well to
+follow them, when up the lane came a neat little landau, the coachman with
+his coat only half buttoned, and his tie under his ear, while all the tags
+of his harness were sticking out of the buckles. It hadn't pulled up
+before she shot out of the hall door and into it. I only caught a glimpse
+of her at the moment, but she was a lovely woman, with a face that a man
+might die for.
+
+"'The Church of St. Monica, John,' she cried; 'and half a sovereign if you
+reach it in twenty minutes.'
+
+"This was quite too good to lose, Watson. I was just balancing whether I
+should run for it, or whether I should perch behind her landau, when a cab
+came through the street. The driver looked twice at such a shabby fare;
+but I jumped in before he could object. 'The Church of St. Monica,' said
+I, 'and half a sovereign if you reach it in twenty minutes.' It was
+twenty-five minutes to twelve, and of course it was clear enough what was
+in the wind.
+
+"My cabby drove fast. I don't think I ever drove faster, but the others
+were there before us. The cab and landau with their steaming horses were
+in front of the door when I arrived. I paid the man, and hurried into the
+church. There was not a soul there save the two whom I had followed, and
+a surpliced clergyman, who seemed to be expostulating with them. They were
+all three standing in a knot in front of the altar. I lounged up the side
+aisle like any other idler who has dropped into a church. Suddenly, to my
+surprise, the three at the altar faced round to me, and Godfrey Norton
+came running as hard as he could toward me.
+
+"'Thank God!' he cried. 'You'll do. Come! Come!'
+
+"'What then?' I asked.
+
+"'Come, man, come; only three minutes, or it won't be legal.'
+
+"I was half dragged up to the altar, and, before I knew where I was, I
+found myself mumbling responses which were whispered in my ear, and
+vouching for things of which I knew nothing, and generally assisting in
+the secure tying up of Irene Adler, spinster, to Godfrey Norton, bachelor.
+It was all done in an instant, and there was the gentleman thanking me on
+the one side and the lady on the other, while the clergyman beamed on me
+in front. It was the most preposterous position in which I ever found
+myself in my life, and it was the thought of it that started me laughing
+just now. It seems that there had been some informality about their
+license; that the clergyman absolutely refused to marry them without a
+witness of some sort, and that my lucky appearance saved the bridegroom
+from having to sally out into the streets in search of a best man. The
+bride gave me a sovereign, and I mean to wear it on my watch chain in
+memory of the occasion."
+
+"This is a very unexpected turn of affairs," said I; "and what then?"
+
+"Well, I found my plans very seriously menaced. It looked as if the pair
+might take an immediate departure, and so necessitate very prompt and
+energetic measures on my part. At the church door, however, they
+separated, he driving back to the Temple, and she to her own house. 'I
+shall drive out in the park at five as usual,' she said, as she left him.
+I heard no more. They drove away in different directions, and I went off
+to make my own arrangements."
+
+"Which are?"
+
+"Some cold beef and a glass of beer," he answered, ringing the bell. "I
+have been too busy to think of food, and I am likely to be busier still
+this evening. By the way, doctor, I shall want your cooperation."
+
+"I shall be delighted."
+
+"You don't mind breaking the law?"
+
+"Not in the least."
+
+"Nor running a chance of arrest?"
+
+"Not in a good cause."
+
+"Oh, the cause is excellent!"
+
+"Then I am your man."
+
+"I was sure that I might rely on you."
+
+"But what is it you wish?"
+
+"When Mrs. Turner has brought in the tray I will make it clear to you.
+Now," he said, as he turned hungrily on the simple fare that our landlady
+had provided, "I must discuss it while I eat, for I have not much time. It
+is nearly five now. In two hours we must be on the scene of action. Miss
+Irene, or Madame, rather, returns from her drive at seven. We must be at
+Briony Lodge to meet her."
+
+"And what then?"
+
+"You must leave that to me. I have already arranged what is to occur.
+There is only one point on which I must insist. You must not interfere,
+come what may. You understand?"
+
+"I am to be neutral?"
+
+"To do nothing whatever. There will probably be some small unpleasantness.
+Do not join in it. It will end in my being conveyed into the house. Four
+or five minutes afterwards the sitting-room window will open. You are to
+station yourself close to that open window."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You are to watch me, for I will be visible to you."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And when I raise my hand--so--you will throw into the room what I give
+you to throw, and will, at the same time, raise the cry of fire. You quite
+follow me?"
+
+"Entirely."
+
+"It is nothing very formidable," he said, taking a long, cigar-shaped roll
+from his pocket. "It is an ordinary plumber's smoke-rocket, fitted with a
+cap at either end, to make it self-lighting. Your task is confined to
+that. When you raise your cry of fire, it will be taken up by quite a
+number of people. You may then walk to the end of the street, and I will
+rejoin you in ten minutes. I hope that I have made myself clear?"
+
+"I am to remain neutral, to get near the window, to watch you, and, at the
+signal, to throw in this object, then to raise the cry of fire and to wait
+you at the corner of the street."
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"Then you may entirely rely on me."
+
+"That is excellent. I think, perhaps, it is almost time that I prepared
+for the new role I have to play."
+
+He disappeared into his bedroom, and returned in a few minutes in the
+character of an amiable and simple-minded Nonconformist clergyman. His
+broad, black hat, his baggy trousers, his white tie, his sympathetic
+smile, and general look of peering and benevolent curiosity were such as
+Mr. John Hare alone could have equaled. It was not merely that Holmes
+changed his costume. His expression, his manner, his very soul seemed to
+vary with every fresh part that he assumed. The stage lost a fine actor,
+even as science lost an acute reasoner, when he became a specialist in
+crime.
+
+It was a quarter past six when we left Baker Street, and it still wanted
+ten minutes to the hour when we found ourselves in Serpentine Avenue. It
+was already dusk, and the lamps were just being lighted as we paced up and
+down in front of Briony Lodge, waiting for the coming of its occupant. The
+house was just such as I had pictured it from Sherlock Holmes's succinct
+description, but the locality appeared to be less private than I expected.
+On the contrary, for a small street in a quiet neighborhood, it was
+remarkably animated. There was a group of shabbily dressed men smoking and
+laughing in a corner, a scissors grinder with his wheel, two guardsmen who
+were flirting with a nurse girl, and several well-dressed young men who
+were lounging up and down with cigars in their mouths.
+
+"You see," remarked Holmes, as we paced to and fro in front of the house,
+"this marriage rather simplifies matters. The photograph becomes a
+double-edged weapon now. The chances are that she would be as averse to
+its being seen by Mr. Godfrey Norton as our client is to its coming to the
+eyes of his princess. Now the question is--where are we to find the
+photograph?"
+
+"Where, indeed?"
+
+"It is most unlikely that she carries it about with her. It is cabinet
+size. Too large for easy concealment about a woman's dress. She knows that
+the king is capable of having her waylaid and searched. Two attempts of
+the sort have already been made. We may take it, then, that she does not
+carry it about with her."
+
+"Where, then?"
+
+"Her banker or her lawyer. There is that double possibility. But I am
+inclined to think neither. Women are naturally secretive, and they like to
+do their own secreting. Why should she hand it over to anyone else? She
+could trust her own guardianship, but she could not tell what indirect or
+political influence might be brought to bear upon a business man. Besides,
+remember that she had resolved to use it within a few days. It must be
+where she can lay her hands upon it. It must be in her own house."
+
+"But it has twice been burglarized."
+
+"Pshaw! They did not know how to look."
+
+"But how will you look?"
+
+"I will not look."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"I will get her to show me."
+
+"But she will refuse."
+
+"She will not be able to. But I hear the rumble of wheels. It is her
+carriage. Now carry out my orders to the letter."
+
+As he spoke, the gleam of the sidelights of a carriage came round the
+curve of the avenue. It was a smart little landau which rattled up to the
+door of Briony Lodge. As it pulled up one of the loafing men at the corner
+dashed forward to open the door in the hope of earning a copper, but was
+elbowed away by another loafer who had rushed up with the same intention.
+A fierce quarrel broke out which was increased by the two guardsmen, who
+took sides with one of the loungers, and by the scissors grinder, who was
+equally hot upon the other side. A blow was struck, and in an instant the
+lady, who had stepped from her carriage, was the center of a little knot
+of struggling men who struck savagely at each other with their fists and
+sticks. Holmes dashed into the crowd to protect the lady; but, just as he
+reached her, he gave a cry and dropped to the ground, with the blood
+running freely down his face. At his fall the guardsmen took to their
+heels in one direction and the loungers in the other, while a number of
+better-dressed people who had watched the scuffle without taking part in
+it crowded in to help the lady and to attend to the injured man. Irene
+Adler, as I will still call her, had hurried up the steps; but she stood
+at the top, with her superb figure outlined against the lights of the
+hall, looking back into the street.
+
+"Is the poor gentleman much hurt?" she asked.
+
+"He is dead," cried several voices.
+
+"No, no, there's life in him," shouted another. "But he'll be gone before
+you can get him to the hospital."
+
+"He's a brave fellow," said a woman. "They would have had the lady's purse
+and watch if it hadn't been for him. They were a gang, and a rough one,
+too. Ah! he's breathing now."
+
+"He can't lie in the street. May we bring him in, marm?"
+
+"Surely. Bring him into the sitting room. There is a comfortable sofa.
+This way, please." Slowly and solemnly he was borne into Briony Lodge, and
+laid out in the principal room, while I still observed the proceedings
+from my post by the window. The lamps had been lighted, but the blinds had
+not been drawn, so that I could see Holmes as he lay upon the couch. I do
+not know whether he was seized with compunction at that moment for the
+part he was playing, but I know that I never felt more heartily ashamed of
+myself in my life than when I saw the beautiful creature against whom I
+was conspiring, or the grace and kindliness with which she waited upon the
+injured man. And yet it would be the blackest treachery to Holmes to draw
+back now from the part which he had intrusted to me. I hardened my heart,
+and took the smoke-rocket from under my ulster. After all, I thought, we
+are not injuring her. We are but preventing her from injuring another.
+
+Holmes had sat upon the couch, and I saw him motion like a man who is in
+need of air. A maid rushed across and threw open the window. At the same
+instant I saw him raise his hand, and at the signal I tossed my rocket
+into the room with a cry of "Fire!" The word was no sooner out of my mouth
+than the whole crowd of spectators, well dressed and ill--gentlemen,
+hostlers, and servant maids--joined in a general shriek of "Fire!" Thick
+clouds of smoke curled through the room, and out at the open window. I
+caught a glimpse of rushing figures, and a moment later the voice of
+Holmes from within assuring them that it was a false alarm. Slipping
+through the shouting crowd, I made my way to the corner of the street, and
+in ten minutes was rejoiced to find my friend's arm in mine, and to get
+away from the scene of uproar. He walked swiftly and in silence for some
+few minutes, until we had turned down one of the quiet streets which led
+toward the Edgeware Road.
+
+"You did it very nicely, doctor," he remarked. "Nothing could have been
+better. It is all right."
+
+"You have the photograph?"
+
+"I know where it is."
+
+"And how did you find out?"
+
+"She showed me, as I told you that she would."
+
+"I am still in the dark."
+
+"I do not wish to make a mystery," said he, laughing. "The matter was
+perfectly simple. You, of course, saw that everyone in the street was an
+accomplice. They were all engaged for the evening."
+
+"I guessed as much."
+
+"Then, when the row broke out, I had a little moist red paint in the palm
+of my hand. I rushed forward, fell down, clapped my hand to my face, and
+became a piteous spectacle. It is an old trick."
+
+"That also I could fathom."
+
+"Then they carried me in. She was bound to have me in. What else could she
+do? And into her sitting room, which was the very room which I suspected.
+It lay between that and her bedroom, and I was determined to see which.
+They laid me on a couch, I motioned for air, they were compelled to open
+the window, and you had your chance."
+
+"How did that help you?"
+
+"It was all-important. When a woman thinks that her house is on fire, her
+instinct is at once to rush to the thing which she values most. It is a
+perfectly overpowering impulse, and I have more than once taken advantage
+of it. In the case of the Darlington Substitution Scandal it was of use to
+me, and also in the Arnsworth Castle business. A married woman grabs at
+her baby--an unmarried one reaches for her jewel box. Now it was clear to
+me that our lady of to-day had nothing in the house more precious to her
+than what we are in quest of. She would rush to secure it. The alarm of
+fire was admirably done. The smoke and shouting were enough to shake
+nerves of steel. She responded beautifully. The photograph is in a recess
+behind a sliding panel just above the right bell-pull. She was there in an
+instant, and I caught a glimpse of it as she drew it out. When I cried out
+that it was a false alarm, she replaced it, glanced at the rocket, rushed
+from the room, and I have not seen her since. I rose, and, making my
+excuses, escaped from the house. I hesitated whether to attempt to secure
+the photograph at once; but the coachman had come in, and as he was
+watching me narrowly, it seemed safer to wait. A little over-precipitance
+may ruin all."
+
+"And now?" I asked.
+
+"Our quest is practically finished. I shall call with the king to-morrow,
+and with you, if you care to come with us. We will be shown into the
+sitting room to wait for the lady, but it is probable that when she comes
+she may find neither us nor the photograph. It might be a satisfaction to
+his majesty to regain it with his own hands."
+
+"And when will you call?"
+
+"At eight in the morning. She will not be up, so that we shall have a
+clear field. Besides, we must be prompt, for this marriage may mean a
+complete change in her life and habits. I must wire to the king without
+delay."
+
+We had reached Baker Street, and had stopped at the door. He was searching
+his pockets for the key, when some one passing said:
+
+"Good night, Mister Sherlock Holmes."
+
+There were several people on the pavement at the time, but the greeting
+appeared to come from a slim youth in an ulster who had hurried by.
+
+"I've heard that voice before," said Holmes, staring down the dimly
+lighted street. "Now, I wonder who the deuce that could have been?"
+
+
+III
+
+I slept at Baker Street that night, and we were engaged upon our toast and
+coffee in the morning, when the King of Bohemia rushed into the room.
+
+"You have really got it?" he cried, grasping Sherlock Holmes by either
+shoulder, and looking eagerly into his face.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"But you have hopes?"
+
+"I have hopes."
+
+"Then come. I am all impatience to be gone."
+
+"We must have a cab."
+
+"No, my brougham is waiting."
+
+"Then that will simplify matters." We descended, and started off once more
+for Briony Lodge.
+
+"Irene Adler is married," remarked Holmes.
+
+"Married! When?"
+
+"Yesterday."
+
+"But to whom?"
+
+"To an English lawyer named Norton."
+
+"But she could not love him."
+
+"I am in hopes that she does."
+
+"And why in hopes?"
+
+"Because it would spare your majesty all fear of future annoyance. If the
+lady loves her husband, she does not love your majesty. If she does not
+love your majesty, there is no reason why she should interfere with your
+majesty's plan."
+
+"It is true. And yet--Well, I wish she had been of my own station. What a
+queen she would have made!" He relapsed into a moody silence, which was
+not broken until we drew up in Serpentine Avenue.
+
+The door of Briony Lodge was open, and an elderly woman stood upon the
+steps. She watched us with a sardonic eye as we stepped from the
+brougham.
+
+"Mr. Sherlock Holmes, I believe?" said she.
+
+"I am Mr. Holmes," answered my companion, looking at her with a
+questioning and rather startled gaze.
+
+"Indeed! My mistress told me that you were likely to call. She left this
+morning, with her husband, by the 5:15 train from Charing Cross, for the
+Continent."
+
+"What!" Sherlock Holmes staggered back, white with chagrin and surprise.
+
+"Do you mean that she has left England?"
+
+"Never to return."
+
+"And the papers?" asked the king hoarsely. "All is lost!"
+
+"We shall see." He pushed past the servant, and rushed into the
+drawing-room, followed by the king and myself. The furniture was scattered
+about in every direction, with dismantled shelves, and open drawers, as if
+the lady had hurriedly ransacked them before her flight. Holmes rushed at
+the bell-pull, tore back a small sliding shutter, and plunging in his
+hand, pulled out a photograph and a letter. The photograph was of Irene
+Adler herself in evening dress; the letter was superscribed to "Sherlock
+Holmes, Esq. To be left till called for." My friend tore it open, and we
+all three read it together. It was dated at midnight of the preceding
+night, and ran in this way:
+
+ "MY DEAR MR. SHERLOCK HOLMES,--You really did it very well. You
+ took me in completely. Until after the alarm of the fire, I had
+ not a suspicion. But then, when I found how I had betrayed
+ myself, I began to think. I had been warned against you months
+ ago. I had been told that if the king employed an agent, it would
+ certainly be you. And your address had been given me. Yet, with
+ all this, you made me reveal what you wanted to know. Even after
+ I became suspicious, I found it hard to think evil of such a
+ dear, kind old clergyman. But, you know, I have been trained as
+ an actress myself. Male costume is nothing new to me. I often
+ take advantage of the freedom which it gives. I sent John, the
+ coachman, to watch you, ran upstairs, got into my walking
+ clothes, as I call them, and came down just as you departed.
+
+ "Well, I followed you to the door, and so made sure that I was
+ really an object of interest to the celebrated Mr. Sherlock
+ Holmes. Then I, rather imprudently, wished you good night, and
+ started for the Temple to see my husband.
+
+ "We both thought the best resource was flight when pursued by so
+ formidable an antagonist; so you will find the nest empty when
+ you call to-morrow. As to the photograph, your client may rest in
+ peace. I love and am loved by a better man than he. The king may
+ do what he will without hindrance from one whom he has cruelly
+ wronged. I keep it only to safeguard myself, and preserve a
+ weapon which will always secure me from any steps which he might
+ take in the future. I leave a photograph which he might care to
+ possess; and I remain, dear Mr. Sherlock Holmes, very truly
+ yours,
+
+ "IRENE NORTON, _née_ ADLER."
+
+"What a woman--oh, what a woman!" cried the King of Bohemia, when we had
+all three read this epistle. "Did I not tell you how quick and resolute
+she was? Would she not have made an admirable queen? Is it not a pity that
+she was not on my level?"
+
+"From what I have seen of the lady, she seems indeed to be on a very
+different level to your majesty," said Holmes coldly. "I am sorry that I
+have not been able to bring your majesty's business to a more successful
+conclusion."
+
+"On the contrary, my dear sir," cried the king, "nothing could be more
+successful. I know that her word is inviolate. The photograph is now as
+safe as if it were in the fire."
+
+"I am glad to hear your majesty say so."
+
+"I am immensely indebted to you. Pray tell me in what way I can reward
+you. This ring--" He slipped an emerald snake ring from his finger, and
+held it out upon the palm of his hand.
+
+"Your majesty has something which I should value even more highly," said
+Holmes.
+
+"You have but to name it."
+
+"This photograph!"
+
+The king stared at him in amazement.
+
+"Irene's photograph!" he cried. "Certainly, if you wish it."
+
+"I thank your majesty. Then there is no more to be done in the matter. I
+have the honor to wish you a very good morning." He bowed, and turning
+away without observing the hand which the king had stretched out to him,
+he set off in my company for his chambers.
+
+And that was how a great scandal threatened to affect the kingdom of
+Bohemia, and how the best plans of Mr. Sherlock Holmes were beaten by a
+woman's wit. He used to make merry over the cleverness of women, but I
+have not heard him do it of late. And when he speaks of Irene Adler, or
+when he refers to her photograph, it is always under the honorable title
+of _the_ woman.
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Red-Headed League_
+
+
+I had called upon my friend, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, one day in the autumn of
+last year, and found him in deep conversation with a very stout,
+florid-faced elderly gentleman, with fiery red hair. With an apology for
+my intrusion, I was about to withdraw, when Holmes pulled me abruptly into
+the room and closed the door behind me.
+
+"You could not possibly have come at a better time, my dear Watson," he
+said, cordially.
+
+"I was afraid that you were engaged."
+
+"So I am. Very much so."
+
+"Then I can wait in the next room."
+
+"Not at all. This gentleman, Mr. Wilson, has been my partner and helper in
+many of my most successful cases, and I have no doubt that he will be of
+the utmost use to me in yours also."
+
+The stout gentleman half rose from his chair and gave a bob of greeting,
+with a quick little questioning glance from his small, fat-encircled eyes.
+
+"Try the settee," said Holmes, relapsing into his armchair, and putting
+his finger tips together, as was his custom when in judicial moods. "I
+know, my dear Watson, that you share my love of all that is bizarre and
+outside the conventions and humdrum routine of everyday life. You have
+shown your relish for it by the enthusiasm which has prompted you to
+chronicle, and, if you will excuse my saying so, somewhat to embellish so
+many of my own little adventures."
+
+"Your cases have indeed been of the greatest interest to me," I observed.
+
+"You will remember that I remarked the other day, just before we went into
+the very simple problem presented by Miss Mary Sutherland, that for
+strange effects and extraordinary combinations we must go to life itself,
+which is always far more daring than any effort of the imagination."
+
+"A proposition which I took the liberty of doubting."
+
+"You did, doctor, but none the less you must come round to my view, for
+otherwise I shall keep on piling fact upon fact on you, until your reason
+breaks down under them and acknowledge me to be right. Now, Mr. Jabez
+Wilson here has been good enough to call upon me this morning, and to
+begin a narrative which promises to be one of the most singular which I
+have listened to for some time. You have heard me remark that the
+strangest and most unique things are very often connected not with the
+larger but with the smaller crimes, and occasionally, indeed, where there
+is room for doubt whether any positive crime has been committed. As far as
+I have heard, it is impossible for me to say whether the present case is
+an instance of crime or not, but the course of events is certainly among
+the most singular that I have ever listened to. Perhaps, Mr. Wilson, you
+would have the great kindness to recommence your narrative. I ask you, not
+merely because my friend, Dr. Watson, has not heard the opening part, but
+also because the peculiar nature of the story makes me anxious to have
+every possible detail from your lips. As a rule, when I have heard some
+slight indication of the course of events I am able to guide myself by the
+thousands of other similar cases which occur to my memory. In the present
+instance I am forced to admit that the facts are, to the best of my
+belief, unique."
+
+The portly client puffed out his chest with an appearance of some little
+pride, and pulled a dirty and wrinkled newspaper from the inside pocket of
+his greatcoat. As he glanced down the advertisement column, with his head
+thrust forward, and the paper flattened out upon his knee, I took a good
+look at the man, and endeavored, after the fashion of my companion, to
+read the indications which might be presented by his dress or appearance.
+
+I did not gain very much, however, by my inspection. Our visitor bore
+every mark of being an average commonplace British tradesman, obese,
+pompous, and slow. He wore rather baggy gray shepherd's check trousers, a
+not overclean black frock coat, unbuttoned in the front, and a drab
+waistcoat with a heavy brassy Albert chain, and a square pierced bit of
+metal dangling down as an ornament. A frayed top hat and a faded brown
+overcoat with a wrinkled velvet collar lay upon a chair beside him.
+Altogether, look as I would, there was nothing remarkable about the man
+save his blazing red head and the expression of extreme chagrin and
+discontent upon his features.
+
+Sherlock Holmes's quick eye took in my occupation, and he shook his head
+with a smile as he noticed my questioning glances. "Beyond the obvious
+facts that he has at some time done manual labor, that he takes snuff,
+that he is a Freemason, that he has been in China, and that he has done a
+considerable amount of writing lately, I can deduce nothing else."
+
+Mr. Jabez Wilson started up in his chair, with his forefinger upon the
+paper, but his eyes upon my companion.
+
+"How, in the name of good fortune, did you know all that, Mr. Holmes?" he
+asked. "How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? It's as
+true as gospel, for I began as a ship's carpenter."
+
+"Your hands, my dear sir. Your right hand is quite a size larger than your
+left. You have worked with it and the muscles are more developed."
+
+"Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry?"
+
+"I won't insult your intelligence by telling you how I read that,
+especially as, rather against the strict rules of your order, you use an
+arc and compass breastpin."
+
+"Ah, of course, I forgot that. But the writing?"
+
+"What else can be indicated by that right cuff so very shiny for five
+inches, and the left one with the smooth patch near the elbow where you
+rest it upon the desk."
+
+"Well, but China?"
+
+"The fish which you have tattooed immediately above your wrist could only
+have been done in China. I have made a small study of tattoo marks, and
+have even contributed to the literature of the subject. That trick of
+staining the fishes' scales of a delicate pink is quite peculiar to China.
+When, in addition, I see a Chinese coin hanging from your watch chain, the
+matter becomes even more simple."
+
+Mr. Jabez Wilson laughed heavily. "Well, I never!" said he. "I thought at
+first that you had done something clever, but I see that there was nothing
+in it after all."
+
+"I begin to think, Watson," said Holmes, "that I make a mistake in
+explaining. '_Omne ignotom pro magnifico_,' you know, and my poor little
+reputation, such as it is, will suffer shipwreck if I am so candid. Can
+you not find the advertisement, Mr. Wilson?"
+
+"Yes, I have got it now," he answered, with his thick, red finger planted
+halfway down the column. "Here it is. This is what began it all. You just
+read it for yourself, sir."
+
+I took the paper from him and read as follows:
+
+ "To the Red-headed League: On account of the bequest of the late
+ Ezekiah Hopkins, of Lebanon, Pa., U.S.A., there is now another
+ vacancy open which entitles a member of the League to a salary of
+ four pounds a week for purely nominal services. All red-headed
+ men who are sound in body and mind and above the age of
+ twenty-one years are eligible. Apply in person on Monday, at
+ eleven o'clock, to Duncan Ross, at the offices of the League, 7
+ Pope's Court, Fleet Street."
+
+"What on earth does this mean?" I ejaculated, after I had twice read over
+the extraordinary announcement.
+
+Holmes chuckled and wriggled in his chair, as was his habit when in high
+spirits. "It is a little off the beaten track, isn't it?" said he. "And
+now, Mr. Wilson, off you go at scratch, and tell us all about yourself,
+your household, and the effect which this advertisement had upon your
+fortunes. You will first make a note, doctor, of the paper and the date."
+
+"It is _The Morning Chronicle_ of April 27, 1890. Just two months ago."
+
+"Very good. Now, Mr. Wilson."
+
+"Well, it is just as I have been telling you, Mr. Sherlock Holmes," said
+Jabez Wilson, mopping his forehead, "I have a small pawnbroker's business
+at Saxe-Coburg Square, near the City. It's not a very large affair, and of
+late years it has not done more than just give me a living. I used to be
+able to keep two assistants, but now I only keep one; and I would have a
+job to pay him but that he is willing to come for half wages, so as to
+learn the business."
+
+"What is the name of this obliging youth?" asked Sherlock Holmes.
+
+"His name is Vincent Spaulding, and he's not such a youth either. It's
+hard to say his age. I should not wish a smarter assistant, Mr. Holmes;
+and I know very well that he could better himself, and earn twice what I
+am able to give him. But, after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put
+ideas in his head?"
+
+"Why, indeed? You seem most fortunate in having an employee who comes
+under the full market price. It is not a common experience among employers
+in this age. I don't know that your assistant is not as remarkable as your
+advertisement."
+
+"Oh, he has his faults, too," said Mr. Wilson. "Never was such a fellow
+for photography. Snapping away with a camera when he ought to be improving
+his mind, and then diving down into the cellar like a rabbit into its hole
+to develop his pictures. That is his main fault; but, on the whole, he's a
+good worker. There's no vice in him."
+
+"He is still with you, I presume?"
+
+"Yes, sir. He and a girl of fourteen, who does a bit of simple cooking,
+and keeps the place clean--that's all I have in the house, for I am a
+widower, and never had any family. We live very quietly, sir, the three of
+us; and we keep a roof over our heads, and pay our debts, if we do nothing
+more.
+
+"The first thing that put us out was that advertisement. Spaulding, he
+came down into the office just this day eight weeks, with this very paper
+in his hand, and he says:
+
+"'I wish to the Lord, Mr. Wilson, that I was a red-headed man.'
+
+"'Why that?' I asks.
+
+"'Why,' says he, 'here's another vacancy on the League of the Red-headed
+Men. It's worth quite a little fortune to any man who gets it, and I
+understand that there are more vacancies than there are men, so that the
+trustees are at their wits' end what to do with the money. If my hair
+would only change color here's a nice little crib all ready for me to step
+into.'
+
+"'Why, what is it, then?' I asked. You see, Mr. Holmes, I am a very
+stay-at-home man, and, as my business came to me instead of my having to
+go to it, I was often weeks on end without putting my foot over the door
+mat. In that way I didn't know much of what was going on outside, and I
+was always glad of a bit of news.
+
+"'Have you never heard of the League of the Red-headed Men?' he asked,
+with his eyes open.
+
+"'Never.'
+
+"'Why, I wonder at that, for you are eligible yourself for one of the
+vacancies.'
+
+"'And what are they worth?' I asked.
+
+"'Oh, merely a couple of hundred a year, but the work is slight, and it
+need not interfere very much with one's other occupations.'
+
+"Well, you can easily think that that made me prick up my ears, for the
+business has not been over good for some years, and an extra couple of
+hundred would have been very handy.
+
+"'Tell me all about it,' said I.
+
+"'Well,' said he, showing me the advertisement, 'you can see for yourself
+that the League has a vacancy, and there is the address where you should
+apply for particulars. As far as I can make out, the League was founded by
+an American millionaire, Ezekiah Hopkins, who was very peculiar in his
+ways. He was himself red-headed, and he had a great sympathy for all
+red-headed men; so, when he died, it was found that he had left his
+enormous fortune in the hands of trustees, with instructions to apply the
+interest to the providing of easy berths to men whose hair is of that
+color. From all I hear it is splendid pay, and very little to do.'
+
+"'But,' said I, 'there would be millions of red-headed men who would
+apply.'
+
+"'Not so many as you might think,' he answered. 'You see it is really
+confined to Londoners, and to grown men. This American had started from
+London when he was young, and he wanted to do the old town a good turn.
+Then, again, I have heard it is of no use your applying if your hair is
+light red, or dark red, or anything but real, bright, blazing, fiery red.
+Now, if you cared to apply, Mr. Wilson, you would just walk in; but
+perhaps it would hardly be worth your while to put yourself out of the way
+for the sake of a few hundred pounds.'
+
+"Now it is a fact, gentlemen, as you may see for yourselves, that my hair
+is of a very full and rich tint, so that it seemed to me that, if there
+was to be any competition in the matter, I stood as good a chance as any
+man that I had ever met. Vincent Spaulding seemed to know so much about it
+that I thought he might prove useful, so I just ordered him to put up the
+shutters for the day, and to come right away with me. He was very willing
+to have a holiday, so we shut the business up, and started off for the
+address that was given us in the advertisement.
+
+"I never hope to see such a sight as that again, Mr. Holmes. From north,
+south, east, and west every man who had a shade of red in his hair had
+tramped into the City to answer the advertisement. Fleet Street was choked
+with red-headed folk, and Pope's Court looked like a coster's orange
+barrow. I should not have thought there were so many in the whole country
+as were brought together by that single advertisement. Every shade of
+color they were--straw, lemon, orange, brick, Irish setter, liver, clay;
+but, as Spaulding said, there were not many who had the real vivid
+flame-colored tint. When I saw how many were waiting, I would have given
+it up in despair; but Spaulding would not hear of it. How he did it I
+could not imagine, but he pushed and pulled and butted until he got me
+through the crowd, and right up to the steps which led to the office.
+There was a double stream upon the stair, some going up in hope, and some
+coming back dejected; but we wedged in as well as we could, and soon found
+ourselves in the office."
+
+"Your experience has been a most entertaining one," remarked Holmes, as
+his client paused and refreshed his memory with a huge pinch of snuff.
+"Pray continue your very interesting statement."
+
+"There was nothing in the office but a couple of wooden chairs and a deal
+table, behind which sat a small man, with a head that was even redder than
+mine. He said a few words to each candidate as he came up, and then he
+always managed to find some fault in them which would disqualify them.
+Getting a vacancy did not seem to be such a very easy matter after all.
+However, when our turn came, the little man was much more favorable to me
+than to any of the others, and he closed the door as we entered, so that
+he might have a private word with us.
+
+"'This is Mr. Jabez Wilson,' said my assistant, 'and he is willing to fill
+a vacancy in the League.'
+
+"'And he is admirably suited for it,' the other answered. 'He has every
+requirement. I cannot recall when I have seen anything so fine.' He took a
+step backward, cocked his head on one side, and gazed at my hair until I
+felt quite bashful. Then suddenly he plunged forward, wrung my hand, and
+congratulated me warmly on my success.
+
+"'It would be injustice to hesitate,' said he. 'You will, however, I am
+sure, excuse me for taking an obvious precaution.' With that he seized my
+hair in both his hands, and tugged until I yelled with the pain. 'There is
+water in your eyes,' said he, as he released me. 'I perceive that all is
+as it should be. But we have to be careful, for we have twice been
+deceived by wigs and once by paint. I could tell you tales of cobbler's
+wax which would disgust you with human nature.' He stepped over to the
+window and shouted through it at the top of his voice that the vacancy was
+filled. A groan of disappointment came up from below, and the folk all
+trooped away in different directions, until there was not a red head to be
+seen except my own and that of the manager.
+
+"'My name,' said he, 'is Mr. Duncan Ross, and I am myself one of the
+pensioners upon the fund left by our noble benefactor. Are you a married
+man, Mr. Wilson? Have you a family?'
+
+"I answered that I had not.
+
+"His face fell immediately.
+
+"'Dear me!' he said, gravely, 'that is very serious indeed! I am sorry to
+hear you say that. The fund was, of course, for the propagation and spread
+of the red heads as well as for their maintenance. It is exceedingly
+unfortunate that you should be a bachelor.'
+
+"My face lengthened at this, Mr. Holmes, for I thought that I was not to
+have the vacancy after all; but, after thinking it over for a few
+minutes, he said that it would be all right.
+
+"'In the case of another,' said he, 'the objection might be fatal, but we
+must stretch a point in favor of a man with such a head of hair as yours.
+When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?'
+
+"'Well, it is a little awkward, for I have a business already,' said I.
+
+"'Oh, never mind about that, Mr. Wilson!' said Vincent Spaulding. 'I shall
+be able to look after that for you.'
+
+"'What would be the hours?' I asked.
+
+"'Ten to two.'
+
+"Now a pawnbroker's business is mostly done of an evening, Mr. Holmes,
+especially Thursday and Friday evenings, which is just before pay day; so
+it would suit me very well to earn a little in the mornings. Besides, I
+knew that my assistant was a good man, and that he would see to anything
+that turned up.
+
+"'That would suit me very well,' said I. 'And the pay?'
+
+"'Is four pounds a week.'
+
+"'And the work?'
+
+"'Is purely nominal.'
+
+"'What do you call purely nominal?'
+
+"'Well, you have to be in the office, or at least in the building, the
+whole time. If you leave, you forfeit your whole position forever. The
+will is very clear upon that point. You don't comply with the conditions
+if you budge from the office during that time.'
+
+"'It's only four hours a day, and I should not think of leaving,' said I.
+
+"'No excuse will avail,' said Mr. Duncan Ross, 'neither sickness, nor
+business, nor anything else. There you must stay, or you lose your
+billet.'
+
+"'And the work?'
+
+"'Is to copy out the "Encyclopædia Britannica." There is the first volume
+of it in that press. You must find your own ink, pens, and blotting
+paper, but we provide this table and chair. Will you be ready to-morrow?'
+
+"'Certainly,' I answered.
+
+"'Then, good-by, Mr. Jabez Wilson, and let me congratulate you once more
+on the important position which you have been fortunate enough to gain.'
+He bowed me out of the room, and I went home with my assistant hardly
+knowing what to say or do, I was so pleased at my own good fortune.
+
+"Well, I thought over the matter all day, and by evening I was in low
+spirits again; for I had quite persuaded myself that the whole affair must
+be some great hoax or fraud, though what its object might be I could not
+imagine. It seemed altogether past belief that anyone could make such a
+will, or that they would pay such a sum for doing anything so simple as
+copying out the 'Encyclopædia Britannica.' Vincent Spaulding did what he
+could to cheer me up, but by bed time I had reasoned myself out of the
+whole thing. However, in the morning I determined to have a look at it
+anyhow, so I bought a penny bottle of ink, and with a quill pen and seven
+sheets of foolscap paper I started off for Pope's Court.
+
+"Well, to my surprise and delight everything was as right as possible. The
+table was set out ready for me, and Mr. Duncan Ross was there to see that
+I got fairly to work. He started me off upon the letter A, and then he
+left me; but he would drop in from time to time to see that all was right
+with me. At two o'clock he bade me good-day, complimented me upon the
+amount that I had written, and locked the door of the office after me.
+
+"This went on day after day, Mr. Holmes, and on Saturday the manager came
+in and planked down four golden sovereigns for my week's work. It was the
+same next week, and the same the week after. Every morning I was there at
+ten, and every afternoon I left at two. By degrees Mr. Duncan Ross took to
+coming in only once of a morning, and then, after a time, he did not come
+in at all. Still, of course, I never dared to leave the room for an
+instant, for I was not sure when he might come, and the billet was such a
+good one, and suited me so well, that I would not risk the loss of it.
+
+"Eight weeks passed away like this, and I had written about Abbots, and
+Archery, and Armor, and Architecture, and Attica, and hoped with diligence
+that I might get on to the Bs before very long. It cost me something in
+foolscap, and I had pretty nearly filled a shelf with my writings. And
+then suddenly the whole business came to an end."
+
+"To an end?"
+
+"Yes, sir. And no later than this morning. I went to my work as usual at
+ten o'clock, but the door was shut and locked, with a little square of
+cardboard hammered onto the middle of the panel with a tack. Here it is,
+and you can read for yourself."
+
+He held up a piece of white cardboard, about the size of a sheet of note
+paper. It read in this fashion:
+
+ "THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE IS DISSOLVED.
+ Oct. 9, 1890."
+
+Sherlock Holmes and I surveyed this curt announcement and the rueful face
+behind it, until the comical side of the affair so completely overtopped
+every consideration that we both burst out into a roar of laughter.
+
+"I cannot see that there is anything very funny," cried our client,
+flushing up to the roots of his flaming head. "If you can do nothing
+better than laugh at me, I can go elsewhere."
+
+"No, no," cried Holmes, shoving him back into the chair from which he had
+half risen. "I really wouldn't miss your case for the world. It is most
+refreshingly unusual. But there is, if you will excuse my saying so,
+something just a little funny about it. Pray what steps did you take when
+you found the card upon the door?"
+
+"I was staggered, sir. I did not know what to do. Then I called at the
+offices round, but none of them seemed to know anything about it. Finally,
+I went to the landlord, who is an accountant living on the ground floor,
+and I asked him if he could tell me what had become of the Red-headed
+League. He said that he had never heard of any such body. Then I asked him
+who Mr. Duncan Ross was. He answered that the name was new to him.
+
+"'Well' said I, 'the gentleman at No. 4.'
+
+"'What, the red-headed man?'
+
+"'Yes.'
+
+"'Oh,' said he, 'his name was William Morris. He was a solicitor, and was
+using my room as a temporary convenience until his new premises were
+ready. He moved out yesterday.'
+
+"'Where could I find him?'
+
+"'Oh, at his new offices. He did tell me the address. Yes, 17 King Edward
+Street, near St. Paul's.'
+
+"I started off, Mr. Holmes, but when I got to that address it was a
+manufactory of artificial knee-caps, and no one in it had ever heard of
+either Mr. William Morris or Mr. Duncan Ross."
+
+"And what did you do then?" asked Holmes.
+
+"I went home to Saxe-Coburg Square, and I took the advice of my assistant.
+But he could not help me in any way. He could only say that if I waited I
+should hear by post. But that was not quite good enough, Mr. Holmes. I did
+not wish to lose such a place without a struggle, so, as I had heard that
+you were good enough to give advice to poor folk who were in need of it, I
+came right away to you."
+
+"And you did very wisely," said Holmes. "Your case is an exceedingly
+remarkable one, and I shall be happy to look into it. From what you have
+told me I think that it is possible that graver issues hang from it than
+might at first sight appear."
+
+"Grave enough!" said Mr. Jabez Wilson. "Why, I have lost four pound a
+week."
+
+"As far as you are personally concerned," remarked Holmes, "I do not see
+that you have any grievance against this extraordinary league. On the
+contrary, you are, as I understand, richer by some thirty pounds, to say
+nothing of the minute knowledge which you have gained on every subject
+which comes under the letter A. You have lost nothing by them."
+
+"No, sir. But I want to find out about them, and who they are, and what
+their object was in playing this prank--if it was a prank--upon me. It was
+a pretty expensive joke for them, for it cost them two-and-thirty pounds."
+
+"We shall endeavor to clear up these points for you. And, first, one or
+two questions, Mr. Wilson. This assistant of yours who first called your
+attention to the advertisement--how long had he been with you?"
+
+"About a month then."
+
+"How did he come?"
+
+"In answer to an advertisement."
+
+"Was he the only applicant?"
+
+"No, I had a dozen."
+
+"Why did you pick him?"
+
+"Because he was handy and would come cheap."
+
+"At half wages, in fact."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding?"
+
+"Small, stout-built, very quick in his ways, no hair on his face, though
+he's not short of thirty. Has a white splash of acid upon his forehead."
+
+Holmes sat up in his chair in considerable excitement. "I thought as
+much," said he. "Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for
+earrings?"
+
+"Yes, sir. He told me that a gypsy had done it for him when he was a lad."
+
+"Hum!" said Holmes, sinking back in deep thought. "He is still with you?"
+
+"Oh, yes, sir; I have only just left him."
+
+"And has your business been attended to in your absence?"
+
+"Nothing to complain of, sir. There's never very much to do of a morning."
+
+"That will do, Mr. Wilson. I shall be happy to give you an opinion upon
+the subject in the course of a day or two. To-day is Saturday, and I hope
+that by Monday we may come to a conclusion."
+
+"Well, Watson," said Holmes, when our visitor had left us, "what do you
+make of it all?"
+
+"I make nothing of it," I answered frankly. "It is a most mysterious
+business."
+
+"As a rule," said Holmes, "the more bizarre a thing is the less mysterious
+it proves to be. It is your commonplace, featureless crimes which are
+really puzzling, just as a commonplace face is the most difficult to
+identify. But I must be prompt over this matter."
+
+"What are you going to do, then?" I asked.
+
+"To smoke," he answered. "It is quite a three-pipe problem, and I beg that
+you won't speak to me for fifty minutes." He curled himself up in his
+chair, with his thin knees drawn up to his hawklike nose, and there he sat
+with his eyes closed and his black clay pipe thrusting out like the bill
+of some strange bird. I had come to the conclusion that he had dropped
+asleep, and indeed was nodding myself, when he suddenly sprang out of his
+chair with the gesture of a man who has made up his mind, and put his pipe
+down upon the mantelpiece.
+
+"Sarasate plays at St. James's Hall this afternoon," he remarked. "What do
+you think, Watson? Could your patients spare you for a few hours?"
+
+"I have nothing to do to-day. My practice is never very absorbing."
+
+"Then put on your hat and come. I am going through the City first, and we
+can have some lunch on the way. I observe that there is a good deal of
+German music on the programme, which is rather more to my taste than
+Italian or French. It is introspective, and I want to introspect. Come
+along!"
+
+We traveled by the Underground as far as Aldersgate; and a short walk took
+us to Saxe-Coburg Square, the scene of the singular story which we had
+listened to in the morning. It was a poky, little, shabby-genteel place,
+where four lines of dingy, two-storied brick houses looked out into a
+small railed-in inclosure, where a lawn of weedy grass, and a few clumps
+of faded laurel bushes made a hard fight against a smoke-laden and
+uncongenial atmosphere. Three gilt balls and a brown board with JABEZ
+WILSON in white letters, upon a corner house, announced the place where
+our red-headed client carried on his business. Sherlock Holmes stopped in
+front of it with his head on one side, and looked it all over, with his
+eyes shining brightly between puckered lids. Then he walked slowly up the
+street, and then down again to the corner, still looking keenly at the
+houses. Finally he returned to the pawnbroker's and, having thumped
+vigorously upon the pavement with his stick two or three times, he went up
+to the door and knocked. It was instantly opened by a bright-looking,
+clean-shaven young fellow, who asked him to step in.
+
+"Thank you," said Holmes, "I only wished to ask you how you would go from
+here to the Strand."
+
+"Third right, fourth left," answered the assistant, promptly, closing the
+door.
+
+"Smart fellow, that," observed Holmes as we walked away. "He is, in my
+judgment, the fourth smartest man in London, and for daring I am not sure
+that he has not a claim to be third. I have known something of him
+before."
+
+"Evidently," said I, "Mr. Wilson's assistant counts for a good deal in
+this mystery of the Red-headed League. I am sure that you inquired your
+way merely in order that you might see him."
+
+"Not him."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"The knees of his trousers."
+
+"And what did you see?"
+
+"What I expected to see."
+
+"Why did you beat the pavement?"
+
+"My dear doctor, this is a time for observation, not for talk. We are
+spies in an enemy's country. We know something of Saxe-Coburg Square. Let
+us now explore the parts which lie behind it."
+
+The road in which we found ourselves as we turned round the corner from
+the retired Saxe-Coburg Square presented as great a contrast to it as the
+front of a picture does to the back. It was one of the main arteries which
+convey the traffic of the City to the north and west. The roadway was
+blocked with the immense stream of commerce flowing in a double tide
+inward and outward, while the footpaths were black with the hurrying swarm
+of pedestrians. It was difficult to realize, as we looked at the line of
+fine shops and stately business premises, that they really abutted on the
+other side upon the faded and stagnant square which we had just quitted.
+
+"Let me see," said Holmes, standing at the corner, and glancing along the
+line, "I should like just to remember the order of the houses here. It is
+a hobby of mine to have an exact knowledge of London. There is Mortimer's,
+the tobacconist; the little newspaper shop, the Coburg branch of the City
+and Suburban Bank, the Vegetarian Restaurant, and McFarlane's
+carriage-building depot. That carries us right on to the other block. And
+now, doctor, we've done our work, so it's time we had some play. A
+sandwich and a cup of coffee, and then off to violin-land, where all is
+sweetness, and delicacy, and harmony, and there are no red-headed clients
+to vex us with their conundrums."
+
+My friend was an enthusiastic musician, being himself not only a very
+capable performer, but a composer of no ordinary merit. All the afternoon
+he sat in the stalls wrapped in the most perfect happiness, gently waving
+his long thin fingers in time to the music, while his gently smiling face
+and his languid, dreamy eyes were as unlike those of Holmes the
+sleuth-hound, Holmes the relentless, keen-witted, ready-handed criminal
+agent, as it was possible to conceive. In his singular character the dual
+nature alternately asserted itself, and his extreme exactness and
+astuteness represented, as I have often thought, the reaction against the
+poetic and contemplative mood which occasionally predominated in him. The
+swing of his nature took him from extreme languor to devouring energy;
+and, as I knew well, he was never so truly formidable as when, for days on
+end, he had been lounging in his armchair amid his improvisations and his
+black-letter editions. Then it was that the lust of the chase would
+suddenly come upon him, and that his brilliant reasoning power would rise
+to the level of intuition, until those who were unacquainted with his
+methods would look askance at him as on a man whose knowledge was not that
+of other mortals. When I saw him that afternoon so enwrapped in the music
+at St. James's Hall, I felt that an evil time might be coming upon those
+whom he had set himself to hunt down.
+
+"You want to go home, no doubt, doctor," he remarked, as we emerged.
+
+"Yes, it would be as well."
+
+"And I have some business to do which will take some hours. This business
+at Saxe-Coburg Square is serious."
+
+"Why serious?"
+
+"A considerable crime is in contemplation. I have every reason to believe
+that we shall be in time to stop it. But to-day being Saturday rather
+complicates matters. I shall want your help to-night."
+
+"At what time?"
+
+"Ten will be early enough."
+
+"I shall be at Baker Street at ten."
+
+"Very well. And, I say, doctor! there may be some little danger, so kindly
+put your army revolver in your pocket." He waved his hand, turned on his
+heel, and disappeared in an instant among the crowd.
+
+I trust that I am not more dense than my neighbors, but I was always
+oppressed with a sense of my own stupidity in my dealings with Sherlock
+Holmes. Here I had heard what he had heard, I had seen what he had seen,
+and yet from his words it was evident that he saw clearly not only what
+had happened, but what was about to happen, while to me the whole
+business was still confused and grotesque. As I drove home to my house in
+Kensington I thought over it all, from the extraordinary story of the
+red-headed copier of the "Encyclopædia" down to the visit to Saxe-Coburg
+Square, and the ominous words with which he had parted from me. What was
+this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed? Where were we going,
+and what were we to do? I had the hint from Holmes that this smooth-faced
+pawnbroker's assistant was a formidable man--a man who might play a deep
+game. I tried to puzzle it out, but gave it up in despair, and set the
+matter aside until night should bring an explanation.
+
+It was a quarter-past nine when I started from home and made my way across
+the Park, and so through Oxford Street to Baker Street. Two hansoms were
+standing at the door, and, as I entered the passage, I heard the sound of
+voices from above. On entering his room, I found Holmes in animated
+conversation with two men, one of whom I recognized as Peter Jones, the
+official police agent; while the other was a long, thin, sad-faced man,
+with a very shiny hat and oppressively respectable frock coat.
+
+"Ha! our party is complete," said Holmes, buttoning up his pea-jacket, and
+taking his heavy hunting crop from the rack. "Watson, I think you know Mr.
+Jones, of Scotland Yard? Let me introduce you to Mr. Merryweather, who is
+to be our companion in to-night's adventure."
+
+"We're hunting in couples again, doctor, you see," said Jones, in his
+consequential way. "Our friend here is a wonderful man for starting a
+chase. All he wants is an old dog to help him do the running down."
+
+"I hope a wild goose may not prove to be the end of our chase," observed
+Mr. Merryweather gloomily.
+
+"You may place considerable confidence in Mr. Holmes, sir," said the
+police agent loftily. "He has his own little methods, which are, if he
+won't mind my saying so, just a little too theoretical and fantastic, but
+he has the makings of a detective in him. It is not too much to say that
+once or twice, as in that business of the Sholto murder and the Agra
+treasure, he has been more nearly correct than the official force."
+
+"Oh, if you say so, Mr. Jones, it is all right!" said the stranger, with
+deference. "Still, I confess that I miss my rubber. It is the first
+Saturday night for seven-and-twenty years that I have not had my rubber."
+
+"I think you will find," said Sherlock Holmes, "that you will play for a
+higher stake to-night than you have ever done yet, and that the play will
+be more exciting. For you, Mr. Merryweather, the stake will be some thirty
+thousand pounds; and for you, Jones, it will be the man upon whom you wish
+to lay your hands."
+
+"John Clay, the murderer, thief, smasher, and forger. He's a young man,
+Mr. Merryweather, but he is at the head of his profession, and I would
+rather have my bracelets on him than on any criminal in London. He's a
+remarkable man, is young John Clay. His grandfather was a Royal Duke, and
+he himself has been to Eton and Oxford. His brain is as cunning as his
+fingers, and though we meet signs of him at every turn, we never know
+where to find the man himself. He'll crack a crib in Scotland one week,
+and be raising money to build an orphanage in Cornwall the next. I've been
+on his track for years, and have never set eyes on him yet."
+
+"I hope that I may have the pleasure of introducing you to-night. I've had
+one or two little turns also with Mr. John Clay, and I agree with you that
+he is at the head of his profession. It is past ten, however, and quite
+time that we started. If you two will take the first hansom, Watson and I
+will follow in the second."
+
+Sherlock Holmes was not very communicative during the long drive, and lay
+back in the cab humming the tunes which he had heard in the afternoon. We
+rattled through an endless labyrinth of gaslit streets until we emerged
+into Farringdon Street.
+
+"We are close there now," my friend remarked. "This fellow Merryweather
+is a bank director and personally interested in the matter. I thought it
+as well to have Jones with us also. He is not a bad fellow, though an
+absolute imbecile in his profession. He has one positive virtue. He is as
+brave as a bulldog, and as tenacious as a lobster if he gets his claws
+upon anyone. Here we are, and they are waiting for us."
+
+We had reached the same crowded thoroughfare in which we had found
+ourselves in the morning. Our cabs were dismissed, and following the
+guidance of Mr. Merryweather, we passed down a narrow passage, and through
+a side door which he opened for us. Within there was a small corridor,
+which ended in a very massive iron gate. This also was opened, and led
+down a flight of winding stone steps, which terminated at another
+formidable gate. Mr. Merryweather stopped to light a lantern, and then
+conducted us down a dark, earth-smelling passage, and so, after opening a
+third door, into a huge vault or cellar, which was piled all round with
+crates and massive boxes.
+
+"You are not very vulnerable from above," Holmes remarked, as he held up
+the lantern and gazed about him.
+
+"Nor from below," said Mr. Merryweather, striking his stick upon the flags
+which lined the floor. "Why, dear me, it sounds quite hollow!" he
+remarked, looking up in surprise.
+
+"I must really ask you to be a little more quiet," said Holmes severely.
+"You have already imperiled the whole success of our expedition. Might I
+beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes,
+and not to interfere?"
+
+The solemn Mr. Merryweather perched himself upon a crate, with a very
+injured expression upon his face, while Holmes fell upon his knees upon
+the floor, and, with the lantern and a magnifying lens, began to examine
+minutely the cracks between the stones. A few seconds sufficed to satisfy
+him, for he sprang to his feet again, and put his glass in his pocket.
+
+"We have at least an hour before us," he remarked, "for they can hardly
+take any steps until the good pawnbroker is safely in bed. Then they will
+not lose a minute, for the sooner they do their work the longer time they
+will have for their escape. We are at present, doctor--as no doubt you
+have divined--in the cellar of the City branch of one of the principal
+London banks. Mr. Merryweather is the chairman of directors, and he will
+explain to you that there are reasons why the more daring criminals of
+London should take a considerable interest in this cellar at present."
+
+"It is our French gold," whispered the director. "We have had several
+warnings that an attempt might be made upon it."
+
+"Your French gold?"
+
+"Yes. We had occasion some months ago to strengthen our resources, and
+borrowed, for that purpose, thirty thousand napoleons from the Bank of
+France. It has become known that we have never had occasion to unpack the
+money, and that it is still lying in our cellar. The crate upon which I
+sit contains two thousand napoleons packed between layers of lead foil.
+Our reserve of bullion is much larger at present than is usually kept in a
+single branch office, and the directors have had misgivings upon the
+subject."
+
+"Which were very well justified," observed Holmes.
+
+"And now it is time that we arranged our little plans. I expect that
+within an hour matters will come to a head. In the meantime, Mr.
+Merryweather, we must put the screen over that dark lantern."
+
+"And sit in the dark?"
+
+"I am afraid so. I had brought a pack of cards in my pocket, and I thought
+that, as we were a _partie carrée_, you might have your rubber after all.
+But I see that the enemy's preparations have gone so far that we cannot
+risk the presence of a light. And, first of all, we must choose our
+positions. These are daring men, and, though we shall take them at a
+disadvantage, they may do us some harm, unless we are careful. I shall
+stand behind this crate, and do you conceal yourself behind those. Then,
+when I flash a light upon them, close in swiftly. If they fire, Watson,
+have no compunction about shooting them down."
+
+I placed my revolver, cocked, upon the top of the wooden case behind which
+I crouched. Holmes shot the slide across the front of his lantern, and
+left us in pitch darkness--such an absolute darkness as I have never
+before experienced. The smell of hot metal remained to assure us that the
+light was still there, ready to flash out at a moment's notice. To me,
+with my nerves worked up to a pitch of expectancy, there was something
+depressing and subduing in the sudden gloom, and in the cold, dank air of
+the vault.
+
+"They have but one retreat," whispered Holmes. "That is back through the
+house into Saxe-Coburg Square. I hope that you have done what I asked you,
+Jones?"
+
+"I have an inspector and two officers waiting at the front door."
+
+"Then we have stopped all the holes. And now we must be silent and wait."
+
+What a time it seemed! From comparing notes afterwards, it was but an hour
+and a quarter, yet it appeared to me that the night must have almost gone,
+and the dawn be breaking above us. My limbs were weary and stiff, for I
+feared to change my position, yet my nerves were worked up to the highest
+pitch of tension, and my hearing was so acute that I could not only hear
+the gentle breathing of my companions, but I could distinguish the deeper,
+heavier inbreath of the bulky Jones from the thin, sighing note of the
+bank director. From my position I could look over the case in the
+direction of the floor. Suddenly my eyes caught the glint of a light.
+
+At first it was but a lurid spark upon the stone pavement. Then it
+lengthened out until it became a yellow line, and then, without any
+warning or sound, a gash seemed to open and a hand appeared, a white,
+almost womanly hand, which felt about in the center of the little area of
+light. For a minute or more the hand, with its writhing fingers,
+protruded out of the floor. Then it was withdrawn as suddenly as it
+appeared, and all was dark again save the single lurid spark, which marked
+a chink between the stones.
+
+Its disappearance, however, was but momentary. With a rending, tearing
+sound, one of the broad white stones turned over upon its side, and left a
+square, gaping hole, through which streamed the light of a lantern. Over
+the edge there peeped a clean-cut, boyish face, which looked keenly about
+it, and then, with a hand on either side of the aperture, drew itself
+shoulder-high and waist-high, until one knee rested upon the edge. In
+another instant he stood at the side of the hole, and was hauling after
+him a companion, lithe and small like himself, with a pale face and a
+shock of very red hair.
+
+"It's all clear," he whispered. "Have you the chisel and the bags? Great
+Scott! Jump, Archie, jump, and I'll swing for it!"
+
+Sherlock Holmes had sprung out and seized the intruder by the collar. The
+other dived down the hole, and I heard the sound of rending cloth as Jones
+clutched at his skirts. The light flashed upon the barrel of a revolver,
+but Holmes's hunting crop came down on the man's wrist, and the pistol
+clinked upon the stone floor.
+
+"It's no use, John Clay," said Holmes blandly, "you have no chance at
+all."
+
+"So I see," the other answered, with the utmost coolness. "I fancy that my
+pal is all right, though I see you have got his coat-tails."
+
+"There are three men waiting for him at the door," said Holmes.
+
+"Oh, indeed. You seem to have done the thing very completely. I must
+compliment you."
+
+"And I you," Holmes answered. "Your red-headed idea was very new and
+effective."
+
+"You'll see your pal again presently," said Jones. "He's quicker at
+climbing down holes than I am. Just hold out while I fix the derbies."
+
+"I beg that you will not touch me with your filthy hands," remarked our
+prisoner, as the handcuffs clattered upon his wrists. "You may not be
+aware that I have royal blood in my veins. Have the goodness also, when
+you address me, always to say 'sir' and 'please.'"
+
+"All right," said Jones, with a stare and a snigger. "Well, would you
+please, sir, march upstairs where we can get a cab to carry your highness
+to the police station?"
+
+"That is better," said John Clay serenely. He made a sweeping bow to the
+three of us, and walked quietly off in the custody of the detective.
+
+"Really, Mr. Holmes," said Mr. Merryweather, as we followed them from the
+cellar, "I do not know how the bank can thank you or repay you. There is
+no doubt that you have detected and defeated in the most complete manner
+one of the most determined attempts at bank robbery, that have ever come
+within my experience."
+
+"I have had one or two little scores of my own to settle with Mr. John
+Clay," said Holmes. "I have been at some small expense over this matter,
+which I shall expect the bank to refund, but beyond that I am amply repaid
+by having had an experience which is in many ways unique, and by hearing
+the very remarkable narrative of the Red-headed League."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"You see, Watson," he explained, in the early hours of the morning, as we
+sat over a glass of whisky and soda in Baker Street, "it was perfectly
+obvious from the first that the only possible object of this rather
+fantastic business of the advertisement of the League, and the copying of
+the 'Encyclopædia,' must be to get this not over-bright pawnbroker out of
+the way for a number of hours every day. It was a curious way of managing
+it, but really it would be difficult to suggest a better. The method was
+no doubt suggested to Clay's ingenious mind by the color of his
+accomplice's hair. The four pounds a week was a lure which must draw him,
+and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands? They put in the
+advertisement, one rogue has the temporary office, the other rogue incites
+the man to apply for it, and together they manage to secure his absence
+every morning in the week. From the time that I heard of the assistant
+having come for half wages, it was obvious to me that he had some strong
+motive for securing the situation."
+
+"But how could you guess what the motive was?"
+
+"Had there been women in the house, I should have suspected a mere vulgar
+intrigue. That, however, was out of the question. The man's business was a
+small one, and there was nothing in his house which could account for such
+elaborate preparations, and such an expenditure as they were at. It must
+then be something out of the house. What could it be? I thought of the
+assistant's fondness for photography, and his trick of vanishing into the
+cellar. The cellar! There was the end of this tangled clew. Then I made
+inquiries as to this mysterious assistant, and found that I had to deal
+with one of the coolest and most daring criminals in London. He was doing
+something in the cellar--something which took many hours a day for months
+on end. What could it be, once more? I could think of nothing save that he
+was running a tunnel to some other building.
+
+"So far I had got when we went to visit the scene of action. I surprised
+you by beating upon the pavement with my stick. I was ascertaining whether
+the cellar stretched out in front or behind. It was not in front. Then I
+rang the bell, and, as I hoped, the assistant answered it. We have had
+some skirmishes, but we had never set eyes upon each other before. I
+hardly looked at his face. His knees were what I wished to see. You must
+yourself have remarked how worn, wrinkled, and stained they were. They
+spoke of those hours of burrowing. The only remaining point was what they
+were burrowing for. I walked round the corner, saw that the City and
+Suburban Bank abutted on our friend's premises, and felt that I had solved
+my problem. When you drove home after the concert I called upon Scotland
+Yard, and upon the chairman of the bank directors, with the result that
+you have seen."
+
+"And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to-night?" I
+asked.
+
+"Well, when they closed their League offices that was a sign that they
+cared no longer about Mr. Jabez Wilson's presence; in other words, that
+they had completed their tunnel. But it was essential that they should use
+it soon, as it might be discovered, or the bullion might be removed.
+Saturday would suit them better than any other day, as it would give them
+two days for their escape. For all these reasons I expected them to come
+to-night."
+
+"You reasoned it out beautifully," I exclaimed, in unfeigned admiration.
+"It is so long a chain, and yet every link rings true."
+
+"It saved me from ennui," he answered, yawning. "Alas! I already feel it
+closing in upon me. My life is spent in one long effort to escape from the
+commonplaces of existence. These little problems help me to do so."
+
+"And you are a benefactor of the race," said I. He shrugged his shoulders.
+"Well, perhaps, after all, it is of some little use," he remarked.
+"'L'homme c'est rien--l'oeuvre c'est tout,' as Gustave Flaubert wrote to
+Georges Sands."
+
+
+
+
+Egerton Castle
+
+
+
+
+_The Baron's Quarry_
+
+
+"Oh, no, I assure you, you are not boring Mr. Marshfield," said this
+personage himself in his gentle voice--that curious voice that could flow
+on for hours, promulgating profound and startling theories on every
+department of human knowledge or conducting paradoxical arguments without
+a single inflection or pause of hesitation. "I am, on the contrary, much
+interested in your hunting talk. To paraphrase a well-worn quotation
+somewhat widely, _nihil humanum a me alienum est_. Even hunting stories
+may have their point of biological interest; the philologist sometimes
+pricks his ear to the jargon of the chase; moreover, I am not incapable of
+appreciating the subject matter itself. This seems to excite some
+derision. I admit I am not much of a sportsman to look at, nor, indeed, by
+instinct, yet I have had some out-of-the-way experiences in that
+line--generally when intent on other pursuits. I doubt, for instance, if
+even you, Major Travers, notwithstanding your well-known exploits against
+man and beast, notwithstanding that doubtful smile of yours, could match
+the strangeness of a certain hunting adventure in which I played an
+important part."
+
+The speaker's small, deep-set, black eyes, that never warmed to anything
+more human than a purely speculative scientific interest in his
+surroundings, here wandered round the skeptical yet expectant circle with
+bland amusement. He stretched out his bloodless fingers for another of his
+host's superfine cigars and proceeded, with only such interruptions as
+were occasioned by the lighting and careful smoking of the latter.
+
+"I was returning home after my prolonged stay in Petersburg, intending to
+linger on my way and test with mine own ears certain among the many
+dialects of Eastern Europe--anent which there is a symmetrical little
+cluster of philological knotty points it is my modest intention one day to
+unravel. However, that is neither here nor there. On the road to Hungary I
+bethought myself opportunely of proving the once pressingly offered
+hospitality of the Baron Kossowski.
+
+"You may have met the man, Major Travers; he was a tremendous sportsman,
+if you like. I first came across him at McNeil's place in remote Ireland.
+Now, being in Bukowina, within measurable distance of his Carpathian
+abode, and curious to see a Polish lord at home, I remembered his
+invitation. It was already of long standing, but it had been warm, born in
+fact of a sudden fit of enthusiasm for me"--here a half-mocking smile
+quivered an instant under the speaker's black mustache--"which, as it was
+characteristic, I may as well tell you about.
+
+"It was on the day of, or, rather, to be accurate, on the day after my
+arrival, toward the small hours of the morning, in the smoking room at
+Rathdrum. Our host was peacefully snoring over his empty pipe and his
+seventh glass of whisky, also empty. The rest of the men had slunk off to
+bed. The baron, who all unknown to himself had been a subject of most
+interesting observation to me the whole evening, being now practically
+alone with me, condescended to turn an eye, as wide awake as a fox's,
+albeit slightly bloodshot, upon the contemptible white-faced person who
+had preferred spending the raw hours over his papers, within the radius of
+a glorious fire's warmth, to creeping slyly over treacherous quagmires in
+the pursuit of timid bog creatures (snipe shooting had been the order of
+the day)-the baron, I say, became aware of my existence and entered into
+conversation with me.
+
+"He would no doubt have been much surprised could he have known that he
+was already mapped out, craniologically and physiognomically, catalogued
+with care and neatly laid by in his proper ethnological box, in my private
+type museum; that, as I sat and examined him from my different coigns of
+vantage in library, in dining and smoking room that evening, not a look of
+his, not a gesture went forth but had significance for me.
+
+"You, I had thought, with your broad shoulders and deep chest; your
+massive head that should have gone with a tall stature, not with those
+short sturdy limbs; with your thick red hair, that should have been black
+for that matter, as should your wide-set yellow eyes--you would be a real
+puzzle to one who did not recognize in you equal mixtures of the fair,
+stalwart and muscular Slav with the bilious-sanguine, thick-set, wiry
+Turanian. Your pedigree would no doubt bear me out: there is as much of
+the Magyar as of the Pole in your anatomy. Athlete, and yet a tangle of
+nerves; a ferocious brute at bottom, I dare say, for your broad forehead
+inclines to flatness; under your bristling beard your jaw must protrude,
+and the base of your skull is ominously thick. And, with all that, capable
+of ideal transports: when that girl played and sang to-night I saw the
+swelling of your eyelid veins, and how that small, tenacious, claw-like
+hand of yours twitched! You would be a fine leader of men--but God help
+the wretches in your power!
+
+"So had I mused upon him. Yet I confess that when we came in closer
+contact with each other, even I was not proof against the singular
+courtesy of his manner and his unaccountable personal charm.
+
+"Our conversation soon grew interesting; to me as a matter of course, and
+evidently to him also. A few general words led to interchange of remarks
+upon the country we were both visitors in and so to national
+characteristics--Pole and Irishman have not a few in common, both in their
+nature and history. An observation which he made, not without a certain
+flash in his light eyes and a transient uncovering of the teeth, on the
+Irish type of female beauty suddenly suggested to me a stanza of an
+ancient Polish ballad, very full of milk-and-blood imagery, of alternating
+ferocity and voluptuousness. This I quoted to the astounded foreigner in
+the vernacular, and this it was that metamorphosed his mere perfection of
+civility into sudden warmth, and, in fact, procured me the invitation in
+question.
+
+"When I left Rathdrum the baron's last words to me were that if I ever
+thought of visiting his country otherwise than in books, he held me bound
+to make Yany, his Galician seat, my headquarters of study.
+
+"From Czernowicz, therefore, where I stopped some time, I wrote, received
+in due time a few lines of prettily worded reply, and ultimately entered
+my sled in the nearest town to, yet at a most forbidding distance from,
+Yany, and started on my journey thither.
+
+"The undertaking meant many long hours of undulation and skidding over the
+November snow, to the somniferous bell jangle of my dirty little horses,
+the only impression of interest being a weird gypsy concert I came in for
+at a miserable drinking-booth half buried in the snow where we halted for
+the refreshment of man and beast. Here, I remember, I discovered a very
+definite connection between the characteristic run of the tsimbol, the
+peculiar bite of the Zigeuner's bow on his fiddle-string, and some
+distinctive points of Turanian tongues. In other countries, in Spain, for
+instance, your gypsy speaks differently on his instrument. But, oddly
+enough, when I later attempted to put this observation on paper I could
+find no word to express it."
+
+A few of our company evinced signs of sleepiness, but most of us who knew
+Marshfield, and that he could, unless he had something novel to say, be as
+silent and retiring as he now evinced signs of being copious, awaited
+further developments with patience. He has his own deliberate way of
+speaking, which he evidently enjoys greatly, though it be occasionally
+trying to his listeners.
+
+"On the afternoon of my second day's drive, the snow, which till then had
+fallen fine and continuous, ceased, and my Jehu, suddenly interrupting
+himself in the midst of some exciting wolf story quite in keeping with the
+time of year and the wild surroundings, pointed to a distant spot against
+the gray sky to the northwest, between two wood-covered folds of
+ground--the first eastern spurs of the great Carpathian chain.
+
+"'There stands Yany,' said he. I looked at my far-off goal with interest.
+As we drew nearer, the sinking sun, just dipping behind the hills, tinged
+the now distinct frontage with a cold copper-like gleam, but it was only
+for a minute; the next the building became nothing more to the eye than a
+black irregular silhouette against the crimson sky.
+
+"Before we entered the long, steep avenue of poplars, the early winter
+darkness was upon us, rendered all the more depressing by gray mists which
+gave a ghostly aspect to such objects as the sheen of the snow rendered
+visible. Once or twice there were feeble flashes of light looming in
+iridescent halos as we passed little clusters of hovels, but for which I
+should have been induced to fancy that the great Hof stood alone in the
+wilderness, such was the deathly stillness around. But even as the tall,
+square building rose before us above the vapor, yellow lighted in various
+stories, and mighty in height and breadth, there broke upon my ear a
+deep-mouthed, menacing bay, which gave at once almost alarming reality to
+the eerie surroundings. 'His lordship's boar and wolf hounds,' quoth my
+charioteer calmly, unmindful of the regular pandemonium, of howls and
+barks which ensued as he skillfully turned his horses through the gateway
+and flogged the tired beasts into a sort of shambling canter that we might
+land with glory before the house door: a weakness common, I believe, to
+drivers of all nations.
+
+"I alighted in the court of honor, and while awaiting an answer to my tug
+at the bell, stood, broken with fatigue, depressed, chilled and aching,
+questioning the wisdom of my proceedings and the amount of comfort,
+physical and moral, that was likely to await me in a _tête-à-tête_ visit
+with a well-mannered savage in his own home.
+
+"The unkempt tribe of stable retainers who began to gather round me and my
+rough vehicle in the gloom, with their evil-smelling sheepskins and their
+resigned, battered visages, were not calculated to reassure me. Yet when
+the door opened, there stood a smart chasseur and a solemn major-domo who
+might but just have stepped out of Mayfair; and there was displayed a
+spreading vista of warm, deep-colored halls, with here a statue and there
+a stuffed bear, and under foot pile carpets strewn with rarest skins.
+
+"Marveling, yet comforted withal, I followed the solemn butler, who
+received me with the deference due to an expected guest and expressed the
+master's regret for his enforced absence till dinner time. I traversed
+vast rooms, each more sumptuous than the last, feeling the strangeness of
+the contrast between the outer desolation and this sybaritic excess of
+luxury growing ever more strongly upon me; caught a glimpse of a picture
+gallery, where peculiar yet admirably executed latter-day French pictures
+hung side by side with ferocious boar hunts of Snyder and such kin; and,
+at length, was ushered into a most cheerful room, modern to excess in its
+comfortable promise, where, in addition to the tall stove necessary for
+warmth, there burned on an open hearth a vastly pleasant fire of resinous
+logs, and where, on a low table, awaited me a dainty service of fragrant
+Russian tea.
+
+"My impression of utter novelty seemed somehow enhanced by this unexpected
+refinement in the heart of the solitudes and in such a rugged shell, and
+yet, when I came to reflect, it was only characteristic of my cosmopolitan
+host. But another surprise was in store for me.
+
+"When I had recovered bodily warmth and mental equilibrium in my downy
+armchair, before the roaring logs, and during the delicious absorption of
+my second glass of tea, I turned my attention to the French valet,
+evidently the baron's own man, who was deftly unpacking my portmanteau,
+and who, unless my practiced eye deceived me, asked for nothing better
+than to entertain me with agreeable conversation the while.
+
+"'Your master is out, then?' quoth I, knowing that the most trivial remark
+would suffice to start him.
+
+"True, Monseigneur was out; he was desolated in despair (this with the
+national amiable and imaginative instinct); 'but it was doubtless
+important business. M. le Baron had the visit of his factor during the
+midday meal; had left the table hurriedly, and had not been seen since.
+Madame la Baronne had been a little suffering, but she would receive
+monsieur!'
+
+"'Madame!' exclaimed I, astounded, 'is your master then married?--since
+when?'--visions of a fair Tartar, fit mate for my baron, immediately
+springing somewhat alluringly before my mental vision. But the answer
+dispelled the picturesque fancy.
+
+"'Oh, yes,' said the man, with a somewhat peculiar expression. 'Yes,
+Monseigneur is married. Did Monsieur not know? And yet it was from England
+that Monseigneur brought back his wife.'
+
+"'An Englishwoman!'
+
+"My first thought was one of pity; an Englishwoman alone in this
+wilderness--two days' drive from even a railway station--and at the mercy
+of Kossowski! But the next minute I reversed my judgment. Probably she
+adored her rufous lord, took his veneer of courtesy--a veneer of the most
+exquisite polish, I grant you, but perilously thin--for the very
+perfection of chivalry. Or perchance it was his inner savageness itself
+that charmed her; the most refined women often amaze one by the
+fascination which the preponderance of the brute in the opposite sex seems
+to have for them.
+
+"I was anxious to hear more.
+
+"'Is it not dull for the lady here at this time of the year?'
+
+"The valet raised his shoulders with a gesture of despair that was almost
+passionate.
+
+"Dull! Ah, monsieur could not conceive to himself the dullness of it. That
+poor Madame la Baronne! not even a little child to keep her company on the
+long, long days when there was nothing but snow in the heaven and on the
+earth and the howling of the wind and the dogs to cheer her. At the
+beginning, indeed, it had been different; when the master first brought
+home his bride the house was gay enough. It was all redecorated and
+refurnished to receive her (monsieur should have seen it before, a mere
+_rendezvous-de-chasse_--for the matter of that so were all the country
+houses in these parts). Ah, that was the good time! There were visits
+month after month; parties, sleighing, dancing, trips to St. Petersburg
+and Vienna. But this year it seemed they were to have nothing but boars
+and wolves. How madame could stand it--well, it was not for him to
+speak--and heaving a deep sigh he delicately inserted my white tie round
+my collar, and with a flourish twisted it into an irreproachable bow
+beneath my chin. I did not think it right to cross-examine the willing
+talker any further, especially as, despite his last asseveration, there
+were evidently volumes he still wished to pour forth; but I confess that,
+as I made my way slowly out of my room along the noiseless length of
+passage, I was conscious of an unwonted, not to say vulgar, curiosity
+concerning the woman who had captivated such a man as the Baron Kossowski.
+
+"In a fit of speculative abstraction I must have taken the wrong turning,
+for I presently found myself in a long, narrow passage. I did not
+remember. I was retracing my steps when there came the sound of rapid
+footfalls upon stone flags; a little door flew open in the wall close to
+me, and a small, thick-set man, huddled in the rough sheepskin of the
+Galician peasant, with a mangy fur cap on his head, nearly ran headlong
+into my arms. I was about condescendingly to interpellate him in my best
+Polish, when I caught the gleam of an angry yellow eye and noted the
+bristle of a red beard--Kossowski!
+
+"Amazed, I fell back a step in silence. With a growl like an uncouth
+animal disturbed, he drew his filthy cap over his brow with a savage
+gesture and pursued his way down the corridor at a sort of wild-boar trot.
+
+"This first meeting between host and guest was so odd, so incongruous,
+that it afforded me plenty of food for a fresh line of conjecture as I
+traced my way back to the picture gallery, and from thence successfully to
+the drawing room, which, as the door was ajar, I could not this time
+mistake.
+
+"It was large and lofty and dimly lit by shaded lamps; through the rosy
+gloom I could at first only just make out a slender figure by the hearth;
+but as I advanced, this was resolved into a singularly graceful woman in
+clinging, fur-trimmed velvet gown, who, with one hand resting on the high
+mantelpiece, the other hanging listlessly by her side, stood gazing down
+at the crumbling wood fire as if in a dream.
+
+"My friends are kind enough to say that I have a cat-like tread; I know
+not how that may be; at any rate the carpet I was walking upon was thick
+enough to smother a heavier footfall: not until I was quite close to her
+did my hostess become aware of my presence. Then she started violently and
+looked over her shoulder at me with dilating eyes. Evidently a nervous
+creature, I saw the pulse in her throat, strained by her attitude, flutter
+like a terrified bird.
+
+"The next instant she had stretched out her hand with sweet English words
+of welcome, and the face, which I had been comparing in my mind to that of
+Guido's Cenci, became transformed by the arch and exquisite smile of a
+Greuse. For more than two years I had had no intercourse with any of my
+nationality. I could conceive the sound of his native tongue under such
+circumstances moving a man in a curious unexpected fashion.
+
+"I babbled some commonplace reply, after which there was silence while we
+stood opposite each other, she looking at me expectantly. At length, with
+a sigh checked by a smile and an overtone of sadness in a voice that yet
+tried to be sprightly:
+
+"'Am I then so changed, Mr. Marshfield?' she asked. And all at once I knew
+her: the girl whose nightingale throat had redeemed the desolation of the
+evenings at Rathdrum, whose sunny beauty had seemed (even to my
+celebrated cold-blooded æstheticism) worthy to haunt a man's dreams. Yes,
+there was the subtle curve of the waist, the warm line of throat, the
+dainty foot, the slender tip-tilted fingers--witty fingers, as I had
+classified them--which I now shook like a true Briton, instead of availing
+myself of the privilege the country gave me, and kissing her slender
+wrist.
+
+"But she was changed; and I told her so with unconventional frankness,
+studying her closely as I spoke.
+
+"'I am afraid,' I said gravely, 'that this place does not agree with you.'
+
+"She shrank from my scrutiny with a nervous movement and flushed to the
+roots of her red-brown hair. Then she answered coldly that I was wrong,
+that she was in excellent health, but that she could not expect any more
+than other people to preserve perennial youth (I rapidly calculated she
+might be two-and-twenty), though, indeed, with a little forced laugh, it
+was scarcely flattering to hear one had altered out of all recognition.
+Then, without allowing me time to reply, she plunged into a general topic
+of conversation which, as I should have been obtuse indeed not to take the
+hint, I did my best to keep up.
+
+"But while she talked of Vienna and Warsaw, of her distant neighbors, and
+last year's visitors, it was evident that her mind was elsewhere; her eye
+wandered, she lost the thread of her discourse, answered me at random, and
+smiled her piteous smile incongruously.
+
+"However lonely she might be in her solitary splendor, the company of a
+countryman was evidently no such welcome diversion.
+
+"After a little while she seemed to feel herself that she was lacking in
+cordiality, and, bringing her absent gaze to bear upon me with a puzzled
+strained look: 'I fear you will find it very dull,' she said, 'my husband
+is so wrapped up this winter in his country life and his sport. You are
+the first visitor we have had. There is nothing but guns and horses here,
+and you do not care for these things.'
+
+"The door creaked behind us; and the baron entered, in faultless evening
+dress. Before she turned toward him I was sharp enough to catch again the
+upleaping of a quick dread in her eyes, not even so much dread perhaps, I
+thought afterwards, as horror--the horror we notice in some animals at the
+nearing of a beast of prey. It was gone in a second, and she was smiling.
+But it was a revelation.
+
+"Perhaps he beat her in Russian fashion, and she, as an Englishwoman, was
+narrow-minded enough to resent this; or perhaps, merely, I had the
+misfortune to arrive during a matrimonial misunderstanding.
+
+"The baron would not give me leisure to reflect; he was so very effusive
+in his greeting--not a hint of our previous meeting--unlike my hostess,
+all in all to me; eager to listen, to reply; almost affectionate, full of
+references to old times and genial allusions. No doubt when he chose he
+could be the most charming of men; there were moments when, looking at him
+in his quiet smile and restrained gesture, the almost exaggerated
+politeness of his manner to his wife, whose fingers he had kissed with
+pretty, old-fashioned gallantry upon his entrance, I asked myself, Could
+that encounter in the passage have been a dream? Could that savage in the
+sheepskin be my courteous entertainer?
+
+"Just as I came in, did I hear my wife say there was nothing for you to do
+in this place?" he said presently to me. Then, turning to her:
+
+"You do not seem to know Mr. Marshfield. Wherever he can open his eyes
+there is for him something to see which might not interest other men. He
+will find things in my library which I have no notion of. He will discover
+objects for scientific observation in all the members of my household, not
+only in the good-looking maids--though he could, I have no doubt, tell
+their points as I could those of a horse. We have maidens here of several
+distinct races, Marshfield. We have also witches, and Jew leeches, and
+holy daft people. In any case, Yany, with all its dependencies, material,
+male and female, are at your disposal, for what you can make out of them.
+
+"'It is good," he went on gayly, 'that you should happen to have this
+happy disposition, for I fear that, no later than to-morrow, I may have to
+absent myself from home. I have heard that there are news of wolves--they
+threaten to be a greater pest than usual this winter, but I am going to
+drive them on quite a new plan, and it will go hard with me if I don't
+come even with them. Well for you, by the way, Marshfield, that you did
+not pass within their scent to-day.' Then, musingly: 'I should not give
+much for the life of a traveler who happened to wander in these parts just
+now.' Here he interrupted himself hastily and went over to his wife, who
+had sunk back on her chair, livid, seemingly on the point of swooning.
+
+"His gaze was devouring; so might a man look at the woman he adored, in
+his anxiety.
+
+"'What! faint, Violet, alarmed!' His voice was subdued, yet there was an
+unmistakable thrill of emotion in it.
+
+"'Pshaw!' thought I to myself, 'the man is a model husband.'
+
+"She clinched her hands, and by sheer force of will seemed to pull herself
+together. These nervous women have often an unexpected fund of strength.
+
+"'Come, that is well,' said the baron with a flickering smile; 'Mr.
+Marshfield will think you but badly acclimatized to Poland if a little
+wolf scare can upset you. My dear wife is so soft-hearted,' he went on to
+me, 'that she is capable of making herself quite ill over the sad fate
+that might have, but has not, overcome you. Or, perhaps,' he added, in a
+still gentler voice, 'her fear is that I may expose myself to danger for
+the public weal.'
+
+"She turned her head away, but I saw her set her teeth as if to choke a
+sob. The baron chuckled in his throat and seemed to luxuriate in the
+pleasant thought.
+
+"At this moment folding doors were thrown open, and supper was announced.
+I offered my arm, she rose and took it in silence. This silence she
+maintained during the first part of the meal, despite her husband's
+brilliant conversation and almost uproarious spirits. But by and by a
+bright color mounted to her cheeks and luster to her eyes. I suppose you
+will think me horribly unpoetical if I add that she drank several glasses
+of champagne one after the other, a fact which perhaps may account for the
+change.
+
+"At any rate she spoke and laughed and looked lovely, and I did not wonder
+that the baron could hardly keep his eyes off her. But whether it was her
+wifely anxiety or not--it was evident her mind was not at ease through it
+all, and I fancied that her brightness was feverish, her merriment
+slightly hysterical.
+
+"After supper--an exquisite one it was--we adjourned together, in foreign
+fashion, to the drawing-room; the baron threw himself into a chair and,
+somewhat with the air of a pasha, demanded music. He was flushed; the
+veins of his forehead were swollen and stood out like cords; the wine
+drunk at table was potent: even through my phlegmatic frame it ran hotly.
+
+"She hesitated a moment or two, then docilely sat down to the piano. That
+she could sing I have already made clear: how she could sing, with what
+pathos, passion, as well as perfect art, I had never realized before.
+
+"When the song was ended she remained for a while, with eyes lost in
+distance, very still, save for her quick breathing. It was clear she was
+moved by the music; indeed she must have thrown her whole soul into it.
+
+"At first we, the audience, paid her the rare compliment of silence. Then
+the baron broke forth into loud applause. 'Brava, brava! that was really
+said _con amore_. A delicious love song, delicious--but French! You must
+sing one of our Slav melodies for Marshfield before you allow us to go and
+smoke.'
+
+"She started from her reverie with a flush, and after a pause struck
+slowly a few simple chords, then began one of those strangely sweet, yet
+intensely pathetic Russian airs, which give one a curious revelation of
+the profound, endless melancholy lurking in the national mind.
+
+"'What do you think of it?' asked the baron of me when it ceased.
+
+"'What I have always thought of such music--it is that of a hopeless
+people; poetical, crushed, and resigned.'
+
+"He gave a loud laugh. 'Hear the analyst, the psychologue--why, man, it is
+a love song! Is it possible that we, uncivilized, are truer realists than
+our hypercultured Western neighbors? Have we gone to the root of the
+matter, in our simple way?'
+
+"The baroness got up abruptly. She looked white and spent; there were
+bister circles round her eyes.
+
+"'I am tired,' she said, with dry lips. 'You will excuse me, Mr.
+Marshfield, I must really go to bed.'
+
+"'Go to bed, go to bed,' cried her husband gayly. Then, quoting in Russian
+from the song she had just sung: 'Sleep, my little soft white dove: my
+little innocent tender lamb!' She hurried from the room. The baron laughed
+again, and, taking me familiarly by the arm, led me to his own set of
+apartments for the promised smoke. He ensconced me in an armchair, placed
+cigars of every description and a Turkish pipe ready to my hand, and a
+little table on which stood cut-glass flasks and beakers in tempting
+array.
+
+"After I had selected my cigar with some precautions, I glanced at him
+over a careless remark, and was startled to see a sudden alteration in his
+whole look and attitude.
+
+"'You will forgive me, Marshfield,' he said, as he caught my eye, speaking
+with spasmodic politeness. 'It is more than probable that I shall have to
+set out upon this chase I spoke of to-night, and I must now go and change
+my clothes, that I may be ready to start at any moment. This is the hour
+when it is most likely these hell beasts are to be got at. You have all
+you want, I hope,' interrupting an outbreak of ferocity by an effort after
+his former courtesy.
+
+"It was curious to watch the man of the world struggling with the
+primitive man.
+
+"'But, baron,' said I, 'I do not at all see the fun of sticking at home
+like this. You know my passion for witnessing everything new, strange, and
+outlandish. You will surely not refuse me such an opportunity for
+observation as a midnight wolf raid. I will do my best not to be in the
+way if you will take me with you.'
+
+"At first it seemed as if he had some difficulty in realizing the drift of
+my words, he was so engrossed by some inner thought. But as I repeated
+them, he gave vent to a loud cachinnation.
+
+"'By heaven! I like your spirit,' he exclaimed, clapping me strongly on
+the shoulder. 'Of course you shall come. You shall,' he repeated, 'and I
+promise you a sight, a hunt such as you never heard or dreamed of--you
+will be able to tell them in England the sort of thing we can do here in
+that line--such wolves are rare quarry,' he added, looking slyly at me,
+'and I have a new plan for getting at them.'
+
+"There was a long pause, and then there rose in the stillness the
+unearthly howling of the baron's hounds, a cheerful sound which only their
+owner's somewhat loud converse of the evening had kept from becoming
+excessively obtrusive.
+
+"'Hark at them--the beauties!' cried he, showing his short, strong teeth,
+pointed like a dog's in a wide grin of anticipative delight. 'They have
+been kept on pretty short commons, poor things! They are hungry. By the
+way, Marshfield, you can sit tight to a horse, I trust? If you were to
+roll off, you know, these splendid fellows--they would chop you up in a
+second. They would chop you up,' he repeated unctuously, 'snap, crunch,
+gobble, and there would be an end of you!'
+
+"'If I could not ride a decent horse without being thrown,' I retorted, a
+little stung by his manner, 'after my recent three months' torture with
+the Guard Cossacks, I should indeed be a hopeless subject. Do not think of
+frightening me from the exploit, but say frankly if my company would be
+displeasing.'
+
+"'Tut!' he said, waving his hand impatiently, 'it is your affair. I have
+warned you. Go and get ready if you want to come. Time presses.'
+
+"I was determined to be of the fray; my blood was up. I have hinted that
+the baron's Tokay had stirred it.
+
+"I went to my room and hurriedly donned clothes more suitable for rough
+night work. My last care was to slip into my pockets a brace of
+double-barreled pistols which formed part of my traveling kit. When I
+returned I found the baron already booted and spurred; this without
+metaphor. He was stretched full length on the divan, and did not speak as
+I came in, or even look at me. Chewing an unlit cigar, with eyes fixed on
+the ceiling, he was evidently following some absorbing train of ideas.
+
+"The silence was profound; time went by; it grew oppressive; at length,
+wearied out, I fell, over my chibouque, into a doze filled with puzzling
+visions, out of which I was awakened with a start. My companion had sprung
+up, very lightly, to his feet. In his throat was an odd, half-suppressed
+cry, grewsome to hear. He stood on tiptoe, with eyes fixed, as though
+looking through the wall, and I distinctly saw his ears point in the
+intensity of his listening.
+
+"After a moment, with hasty, noiseless energy, and without the slightest
+ceremony, he blew the lamps out, drew back the heavy curtains and threw
+the tall window wide open. A rush of icy air, and the bright rays of the
+moon--gibbous, I remember, in her third quarter--filled the room. Outside
+the mist had condensed, and the view was unrestricted over the white
+plains at the foot of the hill.
+
+"The baron stood motionless in the open window, callous to the cold in
+which, after a minute, I could hardly keep my teeth from chattering, his
+head bent forward, still listening. I listened too, with 'all my ears,'
+but could not catch a sound; indeed the silence over the great expanse of
+snow might have been called awful; even the dogs were mute.
+
+"Presently, far, far away, came a faint tinkle of bells; so faint, at
+first, that I thought it was but fancy, then distincter. It was even more
+eerie than the silence, I thought, though I knew it could come but from
+some passing sleigh. All at once that ceased, and again my duller senses
+could perceive nothing, though I saw by my host's craning neck that he was
+more on the alert than ever. But at last I too heard once more, this time
+not bells, but as it were the tread of horses muffled by the snow,
+intermittent and dull, yet drawing nearer. And then in the inner silence
+of the great house it seemed to me I caught the noise of closing doors;
+but here the hounds, as if suddenly becoming alive to some disturbance,
+raised the same fearsome concert of yells and barks with which they had
+greeted my arrival, and listening became useless.
+
+"I had risen to my feet. My host, turning from the window, seized my
+shoulder with a fierce grip, and bade me 'hold my noise'; for a second or
+two I stood motionless under his iron talons, then he released me with an
+exultant whisper: "Now for our chase!" and made for the door with a
+spring. Hastily gulping down a mouthful of arrack from one of the bottles
+on the table, I followed him, and, guided by the sound of his footsteps
+before me, groped my way through passages as black as Erebus.
+
+"After a time, which seemed a long one, a small door was flung open in
+front, and I saw Kossowski glide into the moonlit courtyard and cross the
+square. When I too came out he was disappearing into the gaping darkness
+of the open stable door, and there I overtook him.
+
+"A man who seemed to have been sleeping in a corner jumped up at our
+entrance, and led out a horse ready saddled. In obedience to a gruff order
+from his master, as the latter mounted, he then brought forward another
+which he had evidently thought to ride himself and held the stirrup for
+me.
+
+"We came delicately forth, and the Cossack hurriedly barred the great door
+behind us. I caught a glimpse of his worn, scarred face by the moonlight,
+as he peeped after us for a second before shutting himself in; it was
+stricken with terror.
+
+"The baron trotted briskly toward the kennels, from whence there was now
+issuing a truly infernal clangor, and, as my steed followed suit of his
+own accord, I could see how he proceeded dexterously to unbolt the gates
+without dismounting, while the beasts within dashed themselves against
+them and tore the ground in their fury of impatience.
+
+"He smiled, as he swung back the barriers at last, and his 'beauties' came
+forth. Seven or eight monstrous brutes, hounds of a kind unknown to me:
+fulvous and sleek of coat, tall on their legs, square-headed, long-tailed,
+deep-chested; with terrible jaws slobbering in eagerness. They leaped
+around and up at us, much to our horses' distaste. Kossowski, still
+smiling, lashed at them unsparingly with his hunting whip, and they
+responded, not with yells of pain, but with snarls of fury.
+
+"Managing his restless steed and his cruel whip with consummate ease, my
+host drove the unruly crew before him out of the precincts, then halted
+and bent down from his saddle to examine some slight prints in the snow
+which led, not the way I had come, but toward what seemed another avenue.
+In a second or two the hounds were gathered round this spot, their great
+snake-like tails quivering, nose to earth, yelping with excitement. I had
+some ado to manage my horse, and my eyesight was far from being as keen as
+the baron's, but I had then no doubt he had come already upon wolf tracks,
+and I shuddered mentally, thinking of the sleigh bells.
+
+"Suddenly Kossowski raised himself from his strained position; under his
+low fur cap his face, with its fixed smile, looked scarcely human in the
+white light: and then we broke into a hand canter just as the hounds
+dashed, in a compact body, along the trail.
+
+"But we had not gone more than a few hundred yards before they began to
+falter, then straggled, stopped and ran back and about with dismal cries.
+It was clear to me they had lost the scent. My companion reined in his
+horse, and mine, luckily a well-trained brute, halted of himself.
+
+"We had reached a bend in a broad avenue of firs and larches, and just
+where we stood, and where the hounds ever returned and met nose to nose in
+frantic conclave, the snow was trampled and soiled, and a little farther
+on planed in a great sweep, as if by a turning sleigh. Beyond was a
+double-furrowed track of skaits and regular hoof prints leading far away.
+
+"Before I had time to reflect upon the bearing of this unexpected
+interruption, Kossowski, as if suddenly possessed by a devil, fell upon
+the hounds with his whip, flogging them upon the new track, uttering the
+while the most savage cries I have ever heard issue from human throat. The
+disappointed beasts were nothing loath to seize upon another trail; after
+a second of hesitation they had understood, and were off upon it at a
+tearing pace, we after them at the best speed of our horses.
+
+"Some unformed idea that we were going to escort, or rescue, benighted
+travelers flickered dimly in my mind as I galloped through the night air;
+but when I managed to approach my companion and called out to him for
+explanation, he only turned half round and grinned at me.
+
+"Before us lay now the white plain, scintillating under the high moon's
+rays. That light is deceptive; I could be sure of nothing upon the wide
+expanse but of the dark, leaping figures of the hounds already spread out
+in a straggling line, some right ahead, others just in front of us. In a
+short time also the icy wind, cutting my face mercilessly as we increased
+our pace, well nigh blinded me with tears of cold.
+
+"I can hardly realize how long this pursuit after an unseen prey lasted; I
+can only remember that I was getting rather faint with fatigue, and
+ignominiously held on to my pommel, when all of a sudden the black outline
+of a sleigh merged into sight in front of us.
+
+"I rubbed my smarting eyes with my benumbed hand; we were gaining upon it
+second by second; two of those hell hounds of the baron's were already
+within a few leaps of it.
+
+"Soon I was able to make out two figures, one standing up and urging the
+horses on with whip and voice, the other clinging to the back seat and
+looking toward us in an attitude of terror. A great fear crept into my
+half-frozen brain--were we not bringing deadly danger instead of help to
+these travelers? Great God! did the baron mean to use them as a bait for
+his new method of wolf hunting?
+
+"I would have turned upon Kossowski with a cry of expostulation or
+warning, but he, urging on his hounds as he galloped on their flank,
+howling and gesticulating like a veritable Hun, passed me by like a
+flash--and all at once I knew."
+
+Marshfield paused for a moment and sent his pale smile round upon his
+listeners, who now showed no signs of sleepiness; he knocked the ash from
+his cigar, twisted the latter round in his mouth, and added dryly:
+
+"And I confess it seemed to me a little strong even for a baron in the
+Carpathians. The travelers were our quarry. But the reason why the Lord of
+Yany had turned man-hunter I was yet to learn. Just then I had to direct
+my energies to frustrating his plans. I used my spurs mercilessly. While I
+drew up even with him I saw the two figures in the sleigh change places;
+he who had hitherto driven now faced back, while his companion took the
+reins, there was the pale blue sheen of a revolver barrel under the
+moonlight, followed by a yellow flash, and the nearest hound rolled over
+in the snow.
+
+"With an oath the baron twisted round in his saddle to call up and urge on
+the remainder. My horse had taken fright at the report and dashed
+irresistibly forward, bringing me at once almost level with the fugitives,
+and the next instant the revolver was turned menacingly toward me. There
+was no time to explain; my pistol was already drawn, and as another of the
+brutes bounded up, almost under my horse's feet, I loosed it upon him. I
+must have let off both barrels at once, for the weapon flew out of my
+hand, but the hound's back was broken. I presume the traveler understood;
+at any rate, he did not fire at me.
+
+"In moments of intense excitement like these, strangely enough, the mind
+is extraordinarily open to impressions. I shall never forget that man's
+countenance in the sledge, as he stood upright and defied us in his mortal
+danger; it was young, very handsome, the features not distorted, but set
+into a sort of desperate, stony calm, and I knew it, beyond all doubt, for
+that of an Englishman. And then I saw his companion--it was the baron's
+wife. And I understood why the bells had been removed.
+
+"It takes a long time to say this; it only required an instant to see it.
+The loud explosion of my pistol had hardly ceased to ring before the
+baron, with a fearful imprecation, was upon me. First he lashed at me with
+his whip as we tore along side by side, and then I saw him wind the reins
+round his off arm and bend over, and I felt his angry fingers close
+tightly on my right foot. The next instant I should have been lifted out
+of my saddle, but there came another shot from the sledge. The baron's
+horse plunged and stumbled, and the baron, hanging on to my foot with a
+fierce grip, was wrenched from his seat. His horse, however, was up again
+immediately, and I was released, and then I caught a confused glimpse of
+the frightened and wounded animal galloping wildly away to the right,
+leaving a black track of blood behind him in the snow, his master,
+entangled in the reins, running with incredible swiftness by his side and
+endeavoring to vault back into the saddle.
+
+"And now came to pass a terrible thing which, in his savage plans, my host
+had doubtless never anticipated.
+
+"One of the hounds that had during this short check recovered lost ground,
+coming across this hot trail of blood, turned away from his course, and
+with a joyous yell darted after the running man. In another instant the
+remainder of the pack was upon the new scent.
+
+"As soon as I could stop my horse, I tried to turn him in the direction
+the new chase had taken, but just then, through the night air, over the
+receding sound of the horse's scamper and the sobbing of the pack in full
+cry, there came a long scream, and after that a sickening silence. And I
+knew that somewhere yonder, under the beautiful moonlight, the Baron
+Kossowski was being devoured by his starving dogs.
+
+"I looked round, with the sweat on my face, vaguely, for some human being
+to share the horror of the moment, and I saw, gliding away, far away in
+the white distance, the black silhouette of the sledge."
+
+"Well?" said we, in divers tones of impatience, curiosity, or horror,
+according to our divers temperaments, as the speaker uncrossed his legs
+and gazed at us in mild triumph, with all the air of having said his say,
+and satisfactorily proved his point.
+
+"Well," repeated he, "what more do you want to know? It will interest you
+but slightly, I am sure, to hear how I found my way back to the Hof; or
+how I told as much as I deemed prudent of the evening's grewsome work to
+the baron's servants, who, by the way, to my amazement, displayed the
+profoundest and most unmistakable sorrow at the tidings, and sallied forth
+(at their head the Cossack who had seen us depart) to seek for his
+remains. Excuse the unpleasantness of the remark: I fear the dogs must
+have left very little of him, he had dieted them so carefully. However,
+since it was to have been a case of 'chop, crunch, and gobble,' as the
+baron had it, I preferred that that particular fate should have overtaken
+him rather than me--or, for that matter, either of those two country
+people of ours in the sledge.
+
+"Nor am I going to inflict upon you," continued Marshfield, after draining
+his glass, "a full account of my impressions when I found myself once more
+in that immense, deserted, and stricken house, so luxuriously prepared for
+the mistress who had fled from it; how I philosophized over all this,
+according to my wont; the conjectures I made as to the first acts of the
+drama; the untold sufferings my countrywoman must have endured from the
+moment her husband first grew jealous till she determined on this
+desperate step; as to how and when she had met her lover, how they
+communicated, and how the baron had discovered the intended flitting in
+time to concoct his characteristic revenge.
+
+"One thing you may be sure of, I had no mind to remain at Yany an hour
+longer than necessary. I even contrived to get well clear of the
+neighborhood before the lady's absence was discovered. Luckily for me--or
+I might have been taxed with connivance, though indeed the simple
+household did not seem to know what suspicion was, and accepted my account
+with childlike credence--very typical, and very convenient to me at the
+same time."
+
+"But how do you know," said one of us, "that the man was her lover? He
+might have been her brother or some other relative."
+
+"That," said Marshfield, with his little flat laugh, "I happen to have
+ascertained--and, curiously enough, only a few weeks ago. It was at the
+play, between the acts, from my comfortable seat (the first row in the
+pit). I was looking leisurely round the house when I caught sight of a
+woman, in a box close by, whose head was turned from me, and who presented
+the somewhat unusual spectacle of a young neck and shoulders of the most
+exquisite contour--and perfectly gray hair; and not dull gray, but rather
+of a pleasing tint like frosted silver. This aroused my curiosity. I
+brought my glasses to a focus on her and waited patiently till she turned
+round. Then I recognized the Baroness Kassowski, and I no longer wondered
+at the young hair being white.
+
+"Yet she looked placid and happy; strangely so, it seemed to me, under the
+sudden reviving in my memory of such scenes as I have now described. But
+presently I understood further: beside her, in close attendance, was the
+man of the sledge, a handsome fellow with much of a military air about
+him.
+
+"During the course of the evening, as I watched, I saw a friend of mine
+come into the box, and at the end I slipped out into the passage to catch
+him as he came out.
+
+"'Who is the woman with the white hair?' I asked. Then, in the fragmentary
+style approved of by ultra-fashionable young men--this earnest-languid
+mode of speech presents curious similarities in all languages--he told me:
+'Most charming couple in London--awfully pretty, wasn't she?--he had been
+in the Guards--attaché at Vienna once--they adored each other. White hair,
+devilish queer, wasn't it? Suited her, somehow. And then she had been
+married to a Russian, or something, somewhere in the wilds, and their
+names were--' But do you know," said Marshfield, interrupting himself, "I
+think I had better let you find that out for yourselves, if you care."
+
+
+
+
+Stanley J. Weyman
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Fowl in the Pot_
+
+_An Episode Adapted from the Memoirs of Maximilian de Bethune, Duke of
+Sully_
+
+
+What I am going to relate may seem to some merely to be curious and on a
+party with the diverting story of M. Boisrosé, which I have set down in an
+earlier part of my memoirs. But among the calumnies of those who have
+never ceased to attack me since the death of the late king, the statement
+that I kept from his majesty things which should have reached his ears has
+always had a prominent place, though a thousand times refuted by my
+friends, and those who from an intimate acquaintance with events could
+judge how faithfully I labored to deserve the confidence with which my
+master honored me. Therefore, I take it in hand to show by an example,
+trifling in itself, the full knowledge of affairs which the king had, and
+to prove that in many matters, which were never permitted to become known
+to the idlers of the court, he took a personal share, worthy as much of
+Haroun as of Alexander.
+
+It was my custom, before I entered upon those negotiations with the Prince
+of Condé which terminated in the recovery of the estate of Villebon, where
+I now principally reside, to spend a part of the autumn and winter at
+Rosny. On these occasions I was in the habit of leaving Paris with a
+considerable train of Swiss, pages, valets, and grooms, together with the
+maids of honor and waiting women of the duchess. We halted to take dinner
+at Poissy, and generally contrived to reach Rosny toward nightfall, so as
+to sup by the light of flambeaux in a manner enjoyable enough, though
+devoid of that state which I have ever maintained, and enjoined upon my
+children, as at once the privilege and burden of rank.
+
+At the time of which I am speaking I had for my favorite charger the
+sorrel horse which the Duke of Mercoeur presented to me with a view to my
+good offices at the time of the king's entry into Paris; and which I
+honestly transferred to his majesty in accordance with a principle laid
+down in another place. The king insisted on returning it to me, and for
+several years I rode it on these annual visits to Rosny. What was more
+remarkable was that on each of these occasions it cast a shoe about the
+middle of the afternoon, and always when we were within a short league of
+the village of Aubergenville. Though I never had with me less than half a
+score of led horses, I had such an affection for the sorrel that I
+preferred to wait until it was shod, rather than accommodate myself to a
+nag of less easy paces; and would allow my household to precede me,
+staying behind myself with at most a guard or two, my valet, and a page.
+
+The forge at Aubergenville was kept by a smith of some skill, a cheerful
+fellow, whom I always remembered to reward, considering my own position
+rather than his services, with a gold livre. His joy at receiving what was
+to him the income of a year was great, and never failed to reimburse me;
+in addition to which I took some pleasure in unbending, and learning from
+this simple peasant and loyal man, what the taxpayers were saying of me
+and my reforms--a duty I always felt I owed to the king my master.
+
+As a man of breeding it would ill become me to set down the homely truths
+I thus learned. The conversations of the vulgar are little suited to a
+nobleman's memoirs; but in this I distinguish between the Duke of Sully
+and the king's minister, and it is in the latter capacity that I relate
+what passed on these diverting occasions. "Ho, Simon," I would say,
+encouraging the poor man as he came bowing and trembling before me, "how
+goes it, my friend?"
+
+"Badly," he would answer, "very badly until your lordship came this way."
+
+"And how is that, little man?"
+
+"Oh, it is the roads," he always replied, shaking his bald head as he
+began to set about his business. "The roads since your lordship became
+surveyor-general are so good that not one horse in a hundred casts a shoe;
+and then there are so few highwaymen now that not one robber's plates do I
+replace in a twelvemonth. There is where it is."
+
+At this I was highly delighted.
+
+"Still, since I began to pass this way times have not been so bad with
+you, Simon," I would answer.
+
+Thereto he had one invariable reply.
+
+"No; thanks to Ste. Geneviève and your lordship, whom we call in this
+village the poor man's friend, I have a fowl in the pot."
+
+This phrase so pleased me that I repeated it to the king. It tickled his
+fancy also, and for some years it was a very common remark of that good
+and great ruler, that he hoped to live to see every peasant with a fowl in
+his pot.
+
+"But why," I remember I once asked this honest fellow--it was on the last
+occasion of the sorrel falling lame there--"do you thank Ste. Geneviève?"
+
+"She is my patron saint," he answered.
+
+"Then you are a Parisian?"
+
+"Your lordship is always right."
+
+"But does her saintship do you any good?" I asked curiously.
+
+"Certainly, by your lordship's leave. My wife prays to her and she loosens
+the nails in the sorrel's shoes."
+
+"In fact she pays off an old grudge," I answered, "for there was a time
+when Paris liked me little; but hark ye, master smith, I am not sure that
+this is not an act of treason to conspire with Madame Geneviève against
+the comfort of the king's minister. What think you, you rascal; can you
+pass the justice elm without a shiver?"
+
+This threw the simple fellow into a great fear, which the sight of the
+livre of gold speedily converted into joy as stupendous. Leaving him still
+staring at his fortune I rode away; but when we had gone some little
+distance, the aspect of his face, when I charged him with treason, or my
+own unassisted discrimination suggested a clew to the phenomenon.
+
+"La Trape," I said to my valet--the same who was with me at Cahors--"what
+is the name of the innkeeper at Poissy, at whose house we are accustomed
+to dine?"
+
+"Andrew, may it please your lordship."
+
+"Andrew! I thought so!" I exclaimed, smiting my thigh. "Simon and Andrew
+his brother! Answer, knave, and, if you have permitted me to be robbed
+these many times, tremble for your ears. Is he not brother to the smith at
+Aubergenville who has just shod my horse?"
+
+La Trape professed to be ignorant on this point, but a groom who had
+stayed behind with me, having sought my permission to speak, said it was
+so, adding that Master Andrew had risen in the world through large
+dealings in hay, which he was wont to take daily into Paris and sell, and
+that he did not now acknowledge or see anything of his brother the smith,
+though it was believed that he retained a sneaking liking for him.
+
+On receiving this confirmation of my suspicions, my vanity as well as my
+sense of justice led me to act with the promptitude which I have exhibited
+in greater emergencies. I rated La Trape for his carelessness of my
+interests in permitting this deception to be practiced on me; and the main
+body of my attendants being now in sight, I ordered him to take two Swiss
+and arrest both brothers without delay. It wanted yet three hours of
+sunset, and I judged that, by hard riding, they might reach Rosny with
+their prisoners before bedtime.
+
+I spent some time while still on the road in considering what punishment I
+should inflict on the culprits; and finally laid aside the purpose I had
+at first conceived of putting them to death--an infliction they had richly
+deserved--in favor of a plan which I thought might offer me some
+amusement. For the execution of this I depended upon Maignan, my equerry,
+who was a man of lively imagination, being the same who had of his own
+motion arranged and carried out the triumphal procession, in which I was
+borne to Rosny after the battle of Ivry. Before I sat down to supper I
+gave him his directions; and as I had expected, news was brought to me
+while I was at table that the prisoners had arrived.
+
+Thereupon I informed the duchess and the company generally, for, as was
+usual, a number of my country neighbors had come to compliment me on my
+return, that there was some sport of a rare kind on foot; and we
+adjourned, Maignan, followed by four pages bearing lights, leading the way
+to that end of the terrace which abuts on the linden avenue. Here, a score
+of grooms holding torches aloft had been arranged in a circle so that the
+impromptu theater thus formed, which Maignan had ordered with much taste,
+was as light as in the day. On a sloping bank at one end seats had been
+placed for those who had supped at my table, while the rest of the company
+found such places of vantage as they could; their number, indeed,
+amounting, with my household, to two hundred persons. In the center of the
+open space a small forge fire had been kindled, the red glow of which
+added much to the strangeness of the scene; and on the anvil beside it
+were ranged a number of horses' and donkeys' shoes, with a full complement
+of the tools used by smiths. All being ready I gave the word to bring in
+the prisoners, and escorted by La Trape and six of my guards, they were
+marched into the arena. In their pale and terrified faces, and the shaking
+limbs which could scarce support them to their appointed stations, I read
+both the consciousness of guilt and the apprehension of immediate death;
+it was plain that they expected nothing less. I was very willing to play
+with their fears, and for some time looked at them in silence, while all
+wondered with lively curiosity what would ensue. I then addressed them
+gravely, telling the innkeeper that I knew well he had loosened each year
+a shoe of my horse, in order that his brother might profit by the job of
+replacing it; and went on to reprove the smith for the ingratitude which
+had led him to return my bounty by the conception of so knavish a trick.
+
+Upon this they confessed their guilt, and flinging themselves upon their
+knees with many tears and prayers begged for mercy. This, after a decent
+interval, I permitted myself to grant. "Your lives, which are forfeited,
+shall be spared," I pronounced. "But punished you must be. I therefore
+ordain that Simon, the smith, at once fit, nail, and properly secure a
+pair of iron shoes to Andrew's heels, and that then Andrew, who by that
+time will have picked up something of the smith's art, do the same to
+Simon. So will you both learn to avoid such shoeing tricks for the
+future."
+
+It may well be imagined that a judgment so whimsical, and so justly
+adapted to the offense, charmed all save the culprits; and in a hundred
+ways the pleasure of those present was evinced, to such a degree, indeed,
+that Maignan had some difficulty in restoring silence and gravity to the
+assemblage. This done, however, Master Andrew was taken in hand and his
+wooden shoes removed. The tools of his trade were placed before the smith,
+who cast glances so piteous, first at his brother's feet and then at the
+shoes on the anvil, as again gave rise to a prodigious amount of
+merriment, my pages in particular well-nigh forgetting my presence, and
+rolling about in a manner unpardonable at another time. However, I rebuked
+them sharply, and was about to order the sentence to be carried into
+effect, when the remembrance of the many pleasant simplicities which the
+smith had uttered to me, acting upon a natural disposition to mercy, which
+the most calumnious of my enemies have never questioned, induced me to
+give the prisoners a chance of escape. "Listen," I said, "Simon and
+Andrew. Your sentence has been pronounced, and will certainly be executed
+unless you can avail yourself of the condition I now offer. You shall have
+three minutes; if in that time either of you can make a good joke, he
+shall go free. If not, let a man attend to the bellows, La Trape!"
+
+This added a fresh satisfaction to my neighbors, who were well assured now
+that I had not promised them a novel entertainment without good grounds;
+for the grimaces of the two knaves thus bidden to jest if they would save
+their skins, were so diverting they would have made a nun laugh. They
+looked at me with their eyes as wide as plates, and for the whole of the
+time of grace never a word could they utter save howls for mercy. "Simon,"
+I said gravely, when the time was up, "have you a joke? No. Andrew, my
+friend, have you a joke? No. Then--"
+
+I was going on to order the sentence to be carried out, when the innkeeper
+flung himself again upon his knees, and cried out loudly--as much to my
+astonishment as to the regret of the bystanders, who were bent on seeing
+so strange a shoeing feat--"One word, my lord; I can give you no joke, but
+I can do a service, an eminent service to the king. I can disclose a
+conspiracy!"
+
+I was somewhat taken aback by this sudden and public announcement. But I
+had been too long in the king's employment not to have remarked how
+strangely things are brought to light. On hearing the man's words
+therefore--which were followed by a stricken silence--I looked sharply at
+the faces of such of those present as it was possible to suspect, but
+failed to observe any sign of confusion or dismay, or anything more
+particular than so abrupt a statement was calculated to produce. Doubting
+much whether the man was not playing with me, I addressed him sternly,
+warning him to beware, lest in his anxiety to save his heels by falsely
+accusing others, he should lose his head. For that if his conspiracy
+should prove to be an invention of his own, I should certainly consider it
+my duty to hang him forthwith.
+
+He heard me out, but nevertheless persisted in his story, adding
+desperately, "It is a plot, my lord, to assassinate you and the king on
+the same day."
+
+This statement struck me a blow; for I had good reason to know that at
+that time the king had alienated many by his infatuation for Madame de
+Verneuil; while I had always to reckon firstly with all who hated him, and
+secondly with all whom my pursuit of his interests injured, either in
+reality or appearance. I therefore immediately directed that the prisoners
+should be led in close custody to the chamber adjoining my private closet,
+and taking the precaution to call my guards about me, since I knew not
+what attempt despair might not breed, I withdrew myself, making such
+apologies to the company as the nature of the case permitted.
+
+I ordered Simon the smith to be first brought to me, and in the presence
+of Maignan only, I severely examined him as to his knowledge of any
+conspiracy. He denied, however, that he had ever heard of the matters
+referred to by his brother, and persisted so firmly in the denial that I
+was inclined to believe him. In the end he was taken out and Andrew was
+brought in. The innkeeper's demeanor was such as I have often observed in
+intriguers brought suddenly to book. He averred the existence of the
+conspiracy, and that its objects were those which he had stated. He also
+offered to give up his associates, but conditioned that he should do this
+in his own way; undertaking to conduct me and one other person--but no
+more, lest the alarm should be given--to a place in Paris on the following
+night, where we could hear the plotters state their plans and designs. In
+this way only, he urged, could proof positive be obtained.
+
+I was much startled by this proposal, and inclined to think it a trap; but
+further consideration dispelled my fears. The innkeeper had held no parley
+with anyone save his guards and myself since his arrest, and could neither
+have warned his accomplices, nor acquainted them with any design the
+execution of which should depend on his confession to me. I therefore
+accepted his terms--with a private reservation that I should have help at
+hand--and before daybreak next morning left Rosny, which I had only seen
+by torchlight, with my prisoner and a select body of Swiss. We entered
+Paris in the afternoon in three parties, with as little parade as
+possible, and went straight to the Arsenal, whence, as soon as evening
+fell, I hurried with only two armed attendants to the Louvre.
+
+A return so sudden and unexpected was as great a surprise to the court as
+to the king, and I was not slow to mark with an inward smile the
+discomposure which appeared very clearly on the faces of several, as the
+crowd in the chamber fell back for me to approach my master. I was
+careful, however, to remember that this might arise from other causes than
+guilt. The king received me with his wonted affection; and divining at
+once that I must have something important to communicate, withdrew with me
+to the farther end of the chamber, where we were out of earshot of the
+court. I there related the story to his majesty, keeping back nothing.
+
+He shook his head, saying merely: "The fish to escape the frying pan,
+grand master, will jump into the fire. And human nature, save in the case
+of you and me, who can trust one another, is very fishy."
+
+I was touched by this gracious compliment, but not convinced. "You have
+not seen the man, sire," I said, "and I have had that advantage."
+
+"And believe him?"
+
+"In part," I answered with caution. "So far at least as to be assured that
+he thinks to save his skin, which he will only do if he be telling the
+truth. May I beg you, sire," I added hastily, seeing the direction of his
+glance, "not to look so fixedly at the Duke of Epernon? He grows uneasy."
+
+"Conscience makes--you know the rest."
+
+"Nay, sire, with submission," I replied, "I will answer for him; if he be
+not driven by fear to do something reckless."
+
+"Good! I take your warranty, Duke of Sully," the king said, with the easy
+grace which came so natural to him. "But now in this matter what would you
+have me do?"
+
+"Double your guards, sire, for to-night--that is all. I will answer for
+the Bastile and the Arsenal; and holding these we hold Paris."
+
+But thereupon I found that the king had come to a decision, which I felt
+it to be my duty to combat with all my influence. He had conceived the
+idea of being the one to accompany me to the rendezvous. "I am tired of
+the dice," he complained, "and sick of tennis, at which I know everybody's
+strength. Madame de Verneuil is at Fontainebleau, the queen is unwell. Ah,
+Sully, I would the old days were back when we had Nerac for our Paris, and
+knew the saddle better than the armchair!"
+
+"A king must think of his people," I reminded him.
+
+"The fowl in the pot? To be sure. So I will--to-morrow," he replied. And
+in the end he would be obeyed. I took my leave of him as if for the night,
+and retired, leaving him at play with the Duke of Epernon. But an hour
+later, toward eight o'clock, his majesty, who had made an excuse to
+withdraw to his closet, met me outside the eastern gate of the Louvre.
+
+He was masked, and attended only by Coquet, his master of the household. I
+too wore a mask and was esquired by Maignan, under whose orders were four
+Swiss--whom I had chosen because they were unable to speak
+French--guarding the prisoner Andrew. I bade Maignan follow the
+innkeeper's directions, and we proceeded in two parties through the
+streets on the left bank of the river, past the Châtelet and Bastile,
+until we reached an obscure street near the water, so narrow that the
+decrepit wooden houses shut out well-nigh all view of the sky. Here the
+prisoner halted and called upon me to fulfill the terms of my agreement. I
+bade Maignan therefore to keep with the Swiss at a distance of fifty
+paces, but to come up should I whistle or otherwise give the alarm; and
+myself with the king and Andrew proceeded onward in the deep shadow of the
+houses. I kept my hand on my pistol, which I had previously shown to the
+prisoner, intimating that on the first sign of treachery I should blow out
+his brains. However, despite precaution, I felt uncomfortable to the last
+degree. I blamed myself severely for allowing the king to expose himself
+and the country to this unnecessary danger; while the meanness of the
+locality, the fetid air, the darkness of the night, which was wet and
+tempestuous, and the uncertainty of the event lowered my spirits, and made
+every splash in the kennel and stumble on the reeking, slippery
+pavements--matters over which the king grew merry--seem no light troubles
+to me.
+
+Arriving at a house, which, if we might judge in the darkness, seemed to
+be of rather greater pretensions than its fellows, our guide stopped, and
+whispered to us to mount some steps to a raised wooden gallery, which
+intervened between the lane and the doorway. On this, besides the door, a
+couple of unglazed windows looked out. The shutter of one was ajar, and
+showed us a large, bare room, lighted by a couple of rushlights. Directing
+us to place ourselves close to this shutter, the innkeeper knocked at the
+door in a peculiar fashion, and almost immediately entered, going at once
+into the lighted room. Peering cautiously through the window we were
+surprised to find that the only person within, save the newcomer, was a
+young woman, who, crouching over a smoldering fire, was crooning a lullaby
+while she attended to a large black pot.
+
+"Good evening, mistress!" said the innkeeper, advancing to the fire with a
+fair show of nonchalance.
+
+"Good evening, Master Andrew," the girl replied, looking up and nodding,
+but showing no sign of surprise at his appearance. "Martin is away, but he
+may return at any moment."
+
+"Is he still of the same mind?"
+
+"Quite."
+
+"And what of Sully? Is he to die then?" he asked.
+
+"They have decided he must," the girl answered gloomily. It may be
+believed that I listened with all my ears, while the king by a nudge in my
+side seemed to rally me on the destiny so coolly arranged for me. "Martin
+says it is no good killing the other unless he goes too--they have been so
+long together. But it vexes me sadly, Master Andrew," she added with a
+sudden break in her voice. "Sadly it vexes me. I could not sleep last
+night for thinking of it, and the risk Martin runs. And I shall sleep less
+when it is done."
+
+"Pooh-pooh!" said that rascally innkeeper. "Think less about it. Things
+will grow worse and worse if they are let live. The King has done harm
+enough already. And he grows old besides."
+
+"That is true!" said the girl. "And no doubt the sooner he is put out of
+the way the better. He is changed sadly. I do not say a word for him. Let
+him die. It is killing Sully that troubles me--that and the risk Martin
+runs."
+
+At this I took the liberty of gently touching the king. He answered by an
+amused grimace; then by a motion of his hand he enjoined silence. We
+stooped still farther forward so as better to command the room. The girl
+was rocking herself to and fro in evident distress of mind. "If we killed
+the King," she continued, "Martin declares we should be no better off, as
+long as Sully lives. Both or neither, he says. But I do not know. I cannot
+bear to think of it. It was a sad day when we brought Epernon here, Master
+Andrew; and one I fear we shall rue as long as we live."
+
+It was now the king's turn to be moved. He grasped my wrist so forcibly
+that I restrained a cry with difficulty. "Epernon!" he whispered harshly
+in my ear. "They are Epernon's tools! Where is your guaranty now, Rosny?"
+
+I confess that I trembled. I knew well that the king, particular in small
+courtesies, never forgot to call his servants by their correct titles,
+save in two cases; when he indicated by the seeming error, as once in
+Marshal Biron's affair, his intention to promote or degrade them; or when
+he was moved to the depths of his nature and fell into an old habit. I did
+not dare to reply, but listened greedily for more information.
+
+"When is it to be done?" asked the innkeeper, sinking his voice and
+glancing round, as if he would call especial attention to this.
+
+"That depends upon Master la Rivière," the girl answered. "To-morrow
+night, I understand, if Master la Rivière can have the stuff ready."
+
+I met the king's eyes. They shone fiercely in the faint light, which
+issuing from the window fell on him. Of all things he hated treachery
+most, and La Rivière was his first body physician, and at this very time,
+as I well knew, was treating him for a slight derangement which the king
+had brought upon himself by his imprudence. This doctor had formerly been
+in the employment of the Bouillon family, who had surrendered his services
+to the king. Neither I nor his majesty had trusted the Duke of Bouillon
+for the last year past, so that we were not surprised by this hint that he
+was privy to the design.
+
+Despite our anxiety not to miss a word, an approaching step warned us at
+this moment to draw back. More than once before we had done so to escape
+the notice of a wayfarer passing up and down. But this time I had a
+difficulty in inducing the king to adopt the precaution. Yet it was well
+that I succeeded, for the person who came stumbling along toward us did
+not pass, but, mounting the steps, walked by within touch of us and
+entered the house.
+
+"The plot thickens," muttered the king. "Who is this?"
+
+At the moment he asked I was racking my brain to remember. I have a good
+eye and a fair recollection for faces, and this was one I had seen several
+times. The features were so familiar that I suspected the man of being a
+courtier in disguise, and I ran over the names of several persons whom I
+knew to be Bouillon's secret agents. But he was none of these, and obeying
+the king's gesture, I bent myself again to the task of listening.
+
+The girl looked up on the man's entrance, but did not rise. "You are late,
+Martin," she said.
+
+"A little," the newcomer answered. "How do you do, Master Andrew? What
+cheer? What, still vexing, mistress?" he added contemptuously to the girl.
+"You have too soft a heart for this business!"
+
+She sighed, but made no answer.
+
+"You have made up your mind to it, I hear?" said the innkeeper.
+
+"That is it. Needs must when the devil drives!" replied the man jauntily.
+He had a downcast, reckless, luckless air, yet in his face I thought I
+still saw traces of a better spirit.
+
+"The devil in this case was Epernon," quoth Andrew.
+
+"Aye, curse him! I would I had cut his dainty throat before he crossed my
+threshold," cried the desperado. "But there, it is too late to say that
+now. What has to be done, has to be done."
+
+"How are you going about it? Poison, the mistress says."
+
+"Yes; but if I had my way," the man growled fiercely, "I would out one of
+these nights and cut the dogs' throats in the kennel!"
+
+"You could never escape, Martin!" the girl cried, rising in excitement.
+"It would be hopeless. It would merely be throwing away your own life."
+
+"Well, it is not to be done that way, so there is an end of it," quoth the
+man wearily. "Give me my supper. The devil take the king and Sully too! He
+will soon have them."
+
+On this Master Andrew rose, and I took his movement toward the door for a
+signal for us to retire. He came out at once, shutting the door behind him
+as he bade the pair within a loud good night. He found us standing in the
+street waiting for him and forthwith fell on his knees in the mud and
+looked up at me, the perspiration standing thick on his white face. "My
+lord," he cried hoarsely, "I have earned my pardon!"
+
+"If you go on," I said encouragingly, "as you have begun, have no fear."
+Without more ado I whistled up the Swiss and bade Maignan go with them and
+arrest the man and woman with as little disturbance as possible. While
+this was being done we waited without, keeping a sharp eye upon the
+informer, whose terror, I noted with suspicion, seemed to be in no degree
+diminished. He did not, however, try to escape, and Maignan presently came
+to tell us that he had executed the arrest without difficulty or
+resistance.
+
+The importance of arriving at the truth before Epernon and the greater
+conspirators should take the alarm was so vividly present to the minds of
+the king and myself, that we did not hesitate to examine the prisoners in
+their house, rather than hazard the delay and observation which their
+removal to a more fit place must occasion. Accordingly, taking the
+precaution to post Coquet in the street outside, and to plant a burly
+Swiss in the doorway, the king and I entered. I removed my mask as I did
+so, being aware of the necessity of gaining the prisoners' confidence, but
+I begged the king to retain his. As I had expected, the man immediately
+recognized me and fell on his knees, a nearer view confirming the notion I
+had previously entertained that his features were familiar to me, though I
+could not remember his name. I thought this a good starting-point for my
+examination, and bidding Maignan withdraw, I assumed an air of mildness
+and asked the fellow his name.
+
+"Martin, only, please your lordship," he answered; adding, "once I sold
+you two dogs, sir, for the chase, and to your lady a lapdog called Ninette
+no larger than her hand."
+
+I remembered the knave, then, as a fashionable dog dealer, who had been
+much about the court in the reign of Henry the Third and later; and I saw
+at once how convenient a tool he might be made, since he could be seen in
+converse with people of all ranks without arousing suspicion. The man's
+face as he spoke expressed so much fear and surprise that I determined to
+try what I had often found successful in the case of greater criminals, to
+squeeze him for a confession while still excited by his arrest, and before
+he should have had time to consider what his chances of support at the
+hands of his confederates might be. I charged him therefore solemnly to
+tell the whole truth as he hoped for the king's mercy. He heard me, gazing
+at me piteously; but his only answer, to my surprise, was that he had
+nothing to confess.
+
+"Come, come," I replied sternly, "this will avail you nothing; if you do
+not speak quickly, rogue, and to the point, we shall find means to compel
+you. Who counseled you to attempt his majesty's life?"
+
+On this he stared so stupidly at me, and exclaimed with so real an
+appearance of horror: "How? I attempt the king's life? God forbid!" that I
+doubted that we had before us a more dangerous rascal than I had thought,
+and I hastened to bring him to the point.
+
+"What, then," I cried, frowning, "of the stuff Master la Rivière is to
+give you to take the king's life to-morrow night? Oh, we know something, I
+assure you; bethink you quickly, and find your tongue if you would have an
+easy death."
+
+I expected to see his self-control break down at this proof of our
+knowledge of his design, but he only stared at me with the same look of
+bewilderment. I was about to bid them bring in the informer that I might
+see the two front to front, when the female prisoner, who had hitherto
+stood beside her companion in such distress and terror as might be
+expected in a woman of that class, suddenly stopped her tears and
+lamentations. It occurred to me that she might make a better witness. I
+turned to her, but when I would have questioned her she broke into a wild
+scream of hysterical laughter.
+
+From that I remember that I learned nothing, though it greatly annoyed me.
+But there was one present who did--the king. He laid his hand on my
+shoulder, gripping it with a force that I read as a command to be silent.
+
+"Where," he said to the man, "do you keep the King and Sully and Epernon,
+my friend?"
+
+"The King and Sully--with the lordship's leave," said the man quickly,
+with a frightened glance at me--"are in the kennels at the back of the
+house, but it is not safe to go near them. The King is raving mad,
+and--and the other dog is sickening. Epernon we had to kill a month back.
+He brought the disease here, and I have had such losses through him as
+have nearly ruined me, please your lordship."
+
+"Get up--get up, man!" cried the king, and tearing off his mask he stamped
+up and down the room, so torn by paroxysms of laughter that he choked
+himself when again and again he attempted to speak.
+
+I too now saw the mistake, but I could not at first see it in the same
+light. Commanding myself as well as I could, I ordered one of the Swiss to
+fetch in the innkeeper, but to admit no one else.
+
+The knave fell on his knees as soon as he saw me, his cheeks shaking like
+a jelly.
+
+"Mercy, mercy!" was all he could say.
+
+"You have dared to play with me?" I whispered.
+
+"You bade me joke," he sobbed, "you bade me."
+
+I was about to say that it would be his last joke in this world--for my
+anger was fully aroused--when the king intervened.
+
+"Nay," he said, laying his hand softly on my shoulder. "It has been the
+most glorious jest. I would not have missed it for a kingdom. I command
+you, Sully, to forgive him."
+
+Thereupon his majesty strictly charged the three that they should not on
+peril of their lives mention the circumstances to anyone. Nor to the best
+of my belief did they do so, being so shrewdly scared when they recognized
+the king that I verily think they never afterwards so much as spoke of the
+affair to one another. My master further gave me on his own part his most
+gracious promise that he would not disclose the matter even to Madame de
+Verneuil or the queen, and upon these representations he induced me freely
+to forgive the innkeeper. So ended this conspiracy, on the diverting
+details of which I may seem to have dwelt longer than I should; but alas!
+in twenty-one years of power I investigated many, and this one only can I
+regard with satisfaction. The rest were so many warnings and predictions
+of the fate which, despite all my care and fidelity, was in store for the
+great and good master I served.
+
+
+
+
+Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Pavilion on the Links_
+
+
+I
+
+I was a great solitary when I was young. I made it my pride to keep aloof
+and suffice for my own entertainment; and I may say that I had neither
+friends nor acquaintances until I met that friend who became my wife and
+the mother of my children. With one man only was I on private terms; this
+was R. Northmour, Esquire, of Graden Easter, in Scotland. We had met at
+college; and though there was not much liking between us, nor even much
+intimacy, we were so nearly of a humor that we could associate with ease
+to both. Misanthropes, we believed ourselves to be; but I have thought
+since that we were only sulky fellows. It was scarcely a companionship,
+but a co-existence in unsociability. Northmour's exceptional violence of
+temper made it no easy affair for him to keep the peace with anyone but
+me; and as he respected my silent ways, and let me come and go as I
+pleased, I could tolerate his presence without concern. I think we called
+each other friends.
+
+When Northmour took his degree and I decided to leave the university
+without one, he invited me on a long visit to Graden Easter; and it was
+thus that I first became acquainted with the scene of my adventures. The
+mansion house of Graden stood in a bleak stretch of country some three
+miles from the shore of the German Ocean. It was as large as a barrack;
+and as it had been built of a soft stone, liable to consume in the eager
+air of the seaside, it was damp and draughty within and half ruinous
+without. It was impossible for two young men to lodge with comfort in
+such a dwelling. But there stood in the northern part of the estate, in a
+wilderness of links and blowing sand hills, and between a plantation and
+the sea, a small pavilion or belvedere, of modern design, which was
+exactly suited to our wants; and in this hermitage, speaking little,
+reading much, and rarely associating except at meals, Northmour and I
+spent four tempestuous winter months. I might have stayed longer; but one
+March night there sprung up between us a dispute, which rendered my
+departure necessary. Northmour spoke hotly, I remember, and I suppose I
+must have made some tart rejoinder. He leaped from his chair and grappled
+me; I had to fight, without exaggeration, for my life; and it was only
+with a great effort that I mastered him, for he was near as strong in body
+as myself, and seemed filled with the devil. The next morning, we met on
+our usual terms; but I judged it more delicate to withdraw; nor did he
+attempt to dissuade me.
+
+It was nine years before I revisited the neighborhood. I traveled at that
+time with a tilt-cart, a tent, and a cooking stove, tramping all day
+beside the wagon, and at night, whenever it was possible, gypsying in a
+cove of the hills, or by the side of a wood. I believe I visited in this
+manner most of the wild and desolate regions both in England and Scotland;
+and, as I had neither friends nor relations, I was troubled with no
+correspondence, and had nothing in the nature of headquarters, unless it
+was the office of my solicitors, from whom I drew my income twice a year.
+It was a life in which I delighted; and I fully thought to have grown old
+upon the march, and at last died in a ditch.
+
+It was my whole business to find desolate corners, where I could camp
+without the fear of interruption; and hence, being in another part of the
+same shire, I bethought me suddenly of the Pavilion on the Links. No
+thoroughfare passed within three miles of it. The nearest town, and that
+was but a fisher village, was at a distance of six or seven. For ten miles
+of length, and from a depth varying from three miles to half a mile, this
+belt of barren country lay along the sea. The beach, which was the natural
+approach, was full of quicksands. Indeed I may say there is hardly a
+better place of concealment in the United Kingdom. I determined to pass a
+week in the Sea-Wood of Graden Easter, and making a long stage, reached it
+about sundown on a wild September day.
+
+The country, I have said, was mixed sand hill and links; _links_ being a
+Scottish name for sand which has ceased drifting and become more or less
+solidly covered with turf. The pavilion stood on an even space: a little
+behind it, the wood began in a hedge of elders huddled together by the
+wind; in front, a few tumbled sand hills stood between it and the sea. An
+outcropping of rock had formed a bastion for the sand, so that there was
+here a promontory in the coast line between two shallow bays; and just
+beyond the tides, the rock again cropped out and formed an islet of small
+dimensions but strikingly designed. The quicksands were of great extent at
+low water, and had an infamous reputation in the country. Close in shore,
+between the islet and the promontory, it was said they would swallow a man
+in four minutes and a half; but there may have been little ground for this
+precision. The district was alive with rabbits, and haunted by gulls which
+made a continual piping about the pavilion. On summer days the outlook was
+bright and even gladsome; but at sundown in September, with a high wind,
+and a heavy surf rolling in close along the links, the place told of
+nothing but dead mariners and sea disaster. A ship beating to windward on
+the horizon, and a huge truncheon of wreck half buried in the sands at my
+feet, completed the innuendo of the scene.
+
+The pavilion--it had been built by the last proprietor, Northmour's uncle,
+a silly and prodigal virtuoso--presented little signs of age. It was two
+stories in height, Italian in design, surrounded by a patch of garden in
+which nothing had prospered but a few coarse flowers; and looked, with its
+shuttered windows, not like a house that had been deserted, but like one
+that had never been tenanted by man. Northmour was plainly from home;
+whether, as usual, sulking in the cabin of his yacht, or in one of his
+fitful and extravagant appearances in the world of society, I had, of
+course, no means of guessing. The place had an air of solitude that
+daunted even a solitary like myself; the wind cried in the chimneys with a
+strange and wailing note; and it was with a sense of escape, as if I were
+going indoors, that I turned away and, driving my cart before me, entered
+the skirts of the wood.
+
+The Sea-Wood of Graden had been planted to shelter the cultivated fields
+behind, and check the encroachments of the blowing sand. As you advanced
+into it from coastward, elders were succeeded by other hardy shrubs; but
+the timber was all stunted and bushy; it led a life of conflict; the trees
+were accustomed to swing there all night long in fierce winter tempests;
+and even in early spring, the leaves were already flying, and autumn was
+beginning, in this exposed plantation. Inland the ground rose into a
+little hill, which, along with the islet, served as a sailing mark for
+seamen. When the hill was open of the islet to the north, vessels must
+bear well to the eastward to clear Graden Ness and the Graden Bullers. In
+the lower ground, a streamlet ran among the trees, and, being dammed with
+dead leaves and clay of its own carrying, spread out every here and there,
+and lay in stagnant pools. One or two ruined cottages were dotted about
+the wood; and, according to Northmour, these were ecclesiastical
+foundations, and in their time had sheltered pious hermits.
+
+I found a den, or small hollow, where there was a spring of pure water;
+and there, clearing away the brambles, I pitched the tent, and made a fire
+to cook my supper. My horse I picketed farther in the wood where there was
+a patch of sward. The banks of the den not only concealed the light of my
+fire, but sheltered me from the wind, which was cold as well as high.
+
+The life I was leading made me both hardy and frugal. I never drank but
+water, and rarely eat anything more costly than oatmeal; and I required so
+little sleep, that, although I rose with the peep of day, I would often
+lie long awake in the dark or starry watches of the night. Thus in Graden
+Sea-Wood, although I fell thankfully asleep by eight in the evening I was
+awake again before eleven with a full possession of my faculties, and no
+sense of drowsiness or fatigue. I rose and sat by the fire, watching the
+trees and clouds tumultuously tossing and fleeing overhead, and hearkening
+to the wind and the rollers along the shore; till at length, growing weary
+of inaction, I quitted the den, and strolled toward the borders of the
+wood. A young moon, buried in mist, gave a faint illumination to my steps;
+and the light grew brighter as I walked forth into the links. At the same
+moment, the wind, smelling salt of the open ocean and carrying particles
+of sand, struck me with its full force, so that I had to bow my head.
+
+When I raised it again to look about me, I was aware of a light in the
+pavilion. It was not stationary; but passed from one window to another, as
+though some one were reviewing the different apartments with a lamp or
+candle. I watched it for some seconds in great surprise. When I had
+arrived in the afternoon the house had been plainly deserted; now it was
+as plainly occupied. It was my first idea that a gang of thieves might
+have broken in and be now ransacking Northmour's cupboards, which were
+many and not ill supplied. But what should bring thieves at Graden Easter?
+And, again, all the shutters had been thrown open, and it would have been
+more in the character of such gentry to close them. I dismissed the
+notion, and fell back upon another. Northmour himself must have arrived,
+and was now airing and inspecting the pavilion.
+
+I have said that there was no real affection between this man and me; but,
+had I loved him like a brother, I was then so much more in love with
+solitude that I should none the less have shunned his company. As it was,
+I turned and ran for it; and it was with genuine satisfaction that I found
+myself safely back beside the fire. I had escaped an acquaintance; I
+should have one more night in comfort. In the morning, I might either slip
+away before Northmour was abroad, or pay him as short a visit as I chose.
+
+But when morning came, I thought the situation so diverting that I forgot
+my shyness. Northmour was at my mercy; I arranged a good practical jest,
+though I knew well that my neighbor was not the man to jest with in
+security; and, chuckling beforehand over its success, took my place among
+the elders at the edge of the wood, whence I could command the door of the
+pavilion. The shutters were all once more closed, which I remember
+thinking odd; and the house, with its white walls and green venetians,
+looked spruce and habitable in the morning light. Hour after hour passed,
+and still no sign of Northmour. I knew him for a sluggard in the morning;
+but, as it drew on toward noon, I lost my patience. To say the truth, I
+had promised myself to break my fast in the pavilion, and hunger began to
+prick me sharply. It was a pity to let the opportunity go by without some
+cause for mirth; but the grosser appetite prevailed, and I relinquished my
+jest with regret, and sallied from the wood.
+
+The appearance of the house affected me, as I drew near, with disquietude.
+It seemed unchanged since last evening; and I had expected it, I scarce
+knew why, to wear some external signs of habitation. But no: the windows
+were all closely shuttered, the chimneys breathed no smoke, and the front
+door itself was closely padlocked. Northmour, therefore, had entered by
+the back; this was the natural, and indeed, the necessary conclusion; and
+you may judge of my surprise when, on turning the house, I found the back
+door similarly secured.
+
+My mind at once reverted to the original theory of thieves; and I blamed
+myself sharply for my last night's inaction. I examined all the windows on
+the lower story, but none of them had been tampered with; I tried the
+padlocks, but they were both secure. It thus became a problem how the
+thieves, if thieves they were, had managed to enter the house. They must
+have got, I reasoned, upon the roof of the outhouse where Northmour used
+to keep his photographic battery; and from thence, either by the window of
+the study or that of my old bedroom, completed their burglarious entry.
+
+I followed what I supposed was their example; and, getting on the roof,
+tried the shutters of each room. Both were secure; but I was not to be
+beaten; and, with a little force, one of them flew open, grazing, as it
+did so, the back of my hand. I remember, I put the wound to my mouth, and
+stood for perhaps half a minute licking it like a dog, and mechanically
+gazing behind me over the waste links and the sea; and, in that space of
+time, my eye made note of a large schooner yacht some miles to the
+northeast. Then I threw up the window and climbed in.
+
+I went over the house, and nothing can express my mystification. There was
+no sign of disorder, but, on the contrary, the rooms were unusually clean
+and pleasant. I found fires laid, ready for lighting; three bedrooms
+prepared with a luxury quite foreign to Northmour's habits, and with water
+in the ewers and the beds turned down; a table set for three in the
+dining-room; and an ample supply of cold meats, game, and vegetables on
+the pantry shelves. There were guests expected, that was plain; but why
+guests, when Northmour hated society? And, above all, why was the house
+thus stealthily prepared at dead of night? and why were the shutters
+closed and the doors padlocked?
+
+I effaced all traces of my visit, and came forth from the window feeling
+sobered and concerned.
+
+The schooner yacht was still in the same place; and it flashed for a
+moment through my mind that this might be the "Red Earl" bringing the
+owner of the pavilion and his guests. But the vessel's head was set the
+other way.
+
+
+II
+
+I returned to the den to cook myself a meal, of which I stood in great
+need, as well as to care for my horse, whom I had somewhat neglected in
+the morning. From time to time I went down to the edge of the wood; but
+there was no change in the pavilion, and not a human creature was seen all
+day upon the links. The schooner in the offing was the one touch of life
+within my range of vision. She, apparently with no set object, stood off
+and on or lay to, hour after hour; but as the evening deepened, she drew
+steadily nearer. I became more convinced that she carried Northmour and
+his friends, and that they would probably come ashore after dark; not only
+because that was of a piece with the secrecy of the preparations, but
+because the tide would not have flowed sufficiently before eleven to cover
+Graden Floe and the other sea quags that fortified the shore against
+invaders.
+
+All day the wind had been going down, and the sea along with it; but there
+was a return toward sunset of the heavy weather of the day before. The
+night set in pitch dark. The wind came off the sea in squalls, like the
+firing of a battery of cannon; now and then there was a flaw of rain, and
+the surf rolled heavier with the rising tide. I was down at my observatory
+among the elders, when a light was run up to the masthead of the schooner,
+and showed she was closer in than when I had last seen her by the dying
+daylight. I concluded that this must be a signal to Northmour's associates
+on shore; and, stepping forth into the links, looked around me for
+something in response.
+
+A small footpath ran along the margin of the wood, and formed the most
+direct communication between the pavilion and the mansion house; and, as I
+cast my eyes to that side, I saw a spark of light, not a quarter of a mile
+away, and rapidly approaching. From its uneven course it appeared to be
+the light of a lantern carried by a person who followed the windings of
+the path, and was often staggered, and taken aback by the more violent
+squalls. I concealed myself once more among the elders, and waited eagerly
+for the newcomer's advance. It proved to be a woman; and, as she passed
+within half a rod of my ambush, I was able to recognize the features. The
+deaf and silent old dame, who had nursed Northmour in his childhood, was
+his associate in this underhand affair.
+
+I followed her at a little distance, taking advantage of the innumerable
+heights and hollows, concealed by the darkness, and favored not only by
+the nurse's deafness, but by the uproar of the wind and surf. She entered
+the pavilion, and, going at once to the upper story, opened and set a
+light in one of the windows that looked toward the sea. Immediately
+afterwards the light at the schooner's masthead was run down and
+extinguished. Its purpose had been attained, and those on board were sure
+that they were expected. The old woman resumed her preparations; although
+the other shutters remained closed, I could see a glimmer going to and fro
+about the house; and a gush of sparks from one chimney after another soon
+told me that the fires were being kindled.
+
+Northmour and his guests, I was now persuaded, would come ashore as soon
+as there was water on the floe. It was a wild night for boat service; and
+I felt some alarm mingle with my curiosity as I reflected on the danger of
+the landing. My old acquaintance, it was true, was the most eccentric of
+men; but the present eccentricity was both disquieting and lugubrious to
+consider. A variety of feelings thus led me toward the beach, where I lay
+flat on my face in a hollow within six feet of the track that led to the
+pavilion. Thence, I should have the satisfaction of recognizing the
+arrivals, and, if they should prove to be acquaintances, greeting them as
+soon as they landed.
+
+Some time before eleven, while the tide was still dangerously low, a
+boat's lantern appeared close in shore; and, my attention being thus
+awakened, I could perceive another still far to seaward, violently tossed,
+and sometimes hidden by the billows. The weather, which was getting
+dirtier as the night went on, and the perilous situation of the yacht upon
+a lee shore, had probably driven them to attempt a landing at the earliest
+possible moment.
+
+A little afterwards, four yachtsmen carrying a very heavy chest, and
+guided by a fifth with a lantern, passed close in front of me as I lay,
+and were admitted to the pavilion by the nurse. They returned to the
+beach, and passed me a third time with another chest, larger but
+apparently not so heavy as the first. A third time they made the transit;
+and on this occasion one of the yachtsmen carried a leather portmanteau,
+and the others a lady's trunk and carriage bag. My curiosity was sharply
+excited. If a woman were among the guests of Northmour, it would show a
+change in his habits, and an apostasy from his pet theories of life, well
+calculated to fill me with surprise. When he and I dwelt there together,
+the pavilion had been a temple of misogyny. And now, one of the detested
+sex was to be installed under its roof. I remembered one or two
+particulars, a few notes of daintiness and almost of coquetry which had
+struck me the day before as I surveyed the preparations in the house;
+their purpose was now clear, and I thought myself dull not to have
+perceived it from the first.
+
+While I was thus reflecting, a second lantern drew near me from the beach.
+It was carried by a yachtsman whom I had not yet seen, and who was
+conducting two other persons to the pavilion. These two persons were
+unquestionably the guests for whom the house was made ready; and,
+straining eye and ear, I set myself to watch them as they passed. One was
+an unusually tall man, in a traveling hat slouched over his eyes, and a
+highland cape closely buttoned and turned up so as to conceal his face.
+You could make out no more of him than that he was, as I have said,
+unusually tall, and walked feebly with a heavy stoop. By his side, and
+either clinging to him or giving him support--I could not make out
+which--was a young, tall, and slender figure of a woman. She was extremely
+pale; but in the light of the lantern her face was so marred by strong and
+changing shadows, that she might equally well have been as ugly as sin or
+as beautiful as I afterwards found her to be.
+
+When they were just abreast of me, the girl made some remark which was
+drowned by the noise of the wind.
+
+"Hush!" said her companion; and there was something in the tone with which
+the word was uttered that thrilled and rather shook my spirits. It seemed
+to breathe from a bosom laboring under the deadliest terror; I have never
+heard another syllable so expressive; and I still hear it again when I am
+feverish at night, and my mind runs upon old times. The man turned toward
+the girl as he spoke; I had a glimpse of much red beard and a nose which
+seemed to have been broken in youth; and his light eyes seemed shining in
+his face with some strong and unpleasant emotion.
+
+But these two passed on and were admitted in their turn to the pavilion.
+
+One by one, or in groups, the seamen returned to the beach. The wind
+brought me the sound of a rough voice crying, "Shove off!" Then, after a
+pause, another lantern drew near. It was Northmour alone.
+
+My wife and I, a man and a woman, have often agreed to wonder how a person
+could be, at the same time, so handsome and so repulsive as Northmour. He
+had the appearance of a finished gentleman; his face bore every mark of
+intelligence and courage; but you had only to look at him, even in his
+most amiable moment, to see that he had the temper of a slaver captain. I
+never knew a character that was both explosive and revengeful to the same
+degree; he combined the vivacity of the south with the sustained and
+deadly hatreds of the north; and both traits were plainly written on his
+face, which was a sort of danger signal. In person, he was tall, strong,
+and active; his hair and complexion very dark; his features handsomely
+designed, but spoiled by a menacing expression.
+
+At that moment he was somewhat paler than by nature; he wore a heavy
+frown; and his lips worked, and he looked sharply round him as he walked,
+like a man besieged with apprehensions. And yet I thought he had a look of
+triumph underlying all, as though he had already done much, and was near
+the end of an achievement.
+
+Partly from a scruple of delicacy--which I dare say came too late--partly
+from the pleasure of startling an acquaintance, I desired to make my
+presence known to him without delay.
+
+I got suddenly to my feet, and stepped forward.
+
+"Northmour!" said I.
+
+I have never had so shocking a surprise in all my days. He leaped on me
+without a word; something shone in his hand; and he struck for my heart
+with a dagger. At the same moment I knocked him head over heels. Whether
+it was my quickness, or his own uncertainty, I know not; but the blade
+only grazed my shoulder, while the hilt and his fist struck me violently
+on the mouth.
+
+I fled, but not far. I had often and often observed the capabilities of
+the sand hills for protracted ambush or stealthy advances and retreats;
+and, not ten yards from the scene of the scuffle, plumped down again upon
+the grass. The lantern had fallen and gone out. But what was my
+astonishment to see Northmour slip at a bound into the pavilion, and hear
+him bar the door behind him with a clang of iron!
+
+He had not pursued me. He had run away. Northmour, whom I knew for the
+most implacable and daring of men, had run away! I could scarce believe my
+reason; and yet in this strange business, where all was incredible, there
+was nothing to make a work about in an incredibility more or less. For why
+was the pavilion secretly prepared? Why had Northmour landed with his
+guests at dead of night, in half a gale of wind, and with the floe scarce
+covered? Why had he sought to kill me? Had he not recognized my voice? I
+wondered. And, above all, how had he come to have a dagger ready in his
+hand? A dagger, or even a sharp knife, seemed out of keeping with the age
+in which we lived; and a gentleman landing from his yacht on the shore of
+his own estate, even although it was at night and with some mysterious
+circumstances, does not usually, as a matter of fact, walk thus prepared
+for deadly onslaught. The more I reflected, the further I felt at sea. I
+recapitulated the elements of mystery, counting them on my fingers: the
+pavilion secretly prepared for guests; the guests landed at the risk of
+their lives and to the imminent peril of the yacht; the guests, or at
+least one of them, in undisguised and seemingly causeless terror;
+Northmour with a naked weapon; Northmour stabbing his most intimate
+acquaintance at a word; last, and not least strange, Northmour fleeing
+from the man whom he had sought to murder, and barricading himself, like a
+hunted creature, behind the door of the pavilion. Here were at least six
+separate causes for extreme surprise; each part and parcel with the
+others, and forming all together one consistent story. I felt almost
+ashamed to believe my own senses.
+
+As I thus stood, transfixed with wonder, I began to grow painfully
+conscious of the injuries I had received in the scuffle; skulked round
+among the sand hills; and, by a devious path, regained the shelter of the
+wood. On the way, the old nurse passed again within several yards of me,
+still carrying her lantern, on the return journey to the mansion house of
+Graden. This made a seventh suspicious feature in the case. Northmour and
+his guests, it appeared, were to cook and do the cleaning for themselves,
+while the old woman continued to inhabit the big empty barrack among the
+policies. There must surely be great cause for secrecy, when so many
+inconveniences were confronted to preserve it.
+
+So thinking, I made my way to the den. For greater security, I trod out
+the embers of the fire, and lighted my lantern to examine the wound upon
+my shoulder. It was a trifling hurt, although it bled somewhat freely, and
+I dressed it as well as I could (for its position made it difficult to
+reach) with some rag and cold water from the spring. While I was thus
+busied, I mentally declared war against Northmour and his mystery. I am
+not an angry man by nature, and I believe there was more curiosity than
+resentment in my heart. But war I certainly declared; and, by way of
+preparation, I got out my revolver, and, having drawn the charges, cleaned
+and reloaded it with scrupulous care. Next I became preoccupied about my
+horse. It might break loose, or fall to neighing, and so betray my camp in
+the Sea-Wood. I determined to rid myself of its neighborhood; and long
+before dawn I was leading it over the links in the direction of the fisher
+village.
+
+
+III
+
+For two days I skulked round the pavilion, profiting by the uneven surface
+of the links. I became an adept in the necessary tactics. These low
+hillocks and shallow dells, running one into another, became a kind of
+cloak of darkness for my inthralling, but perhaps dishonorable, pursuit.
+
+Yet, in spite of this advantage, I could learn but little of Northmour or
+his guests.
+
+Fresh provisions were brought under cover of darkness by the old woman
+from the mansion house. Northmour, and the young lady, sometimes together,
+but more often singly, would walk for an hour or two at a time on the
+beach beside the quicksand. I could not but conclude that this promenade
+was chosen with an eye to secrecy; for the spot was open only to seaward.
+But it suited me not less excellently; the highest and most accidented of
+the sand hills immediately adjoined; and from these, lying flat in a
+hollow, I could overlook Northmour or the young lady as they walked.
+
+The tall man seemed to have disappeared. Not only did he never cross the
+threshold, but he never so much as showed face at a window; or, at least,
+not so far as I could see; for I dared not creep forward beyond a certain
+distance in the day, since the upper floors commanded the bottoms of the
+links; and at night, when I could venture further, the lower windows were
+barricaded as if to stand a siege. Sometimes I thought the tall man must
+be confined to bed, for I remembered the feebleness of his gait; and
+sometimes I thought he must have gone clear away, and that Northmour and
+the young lady remained alone together in the pavilion. The idea, even
+then, displeased me.
+
+Whether or not this pair were man and wife, I had seen abundant reason to
+doubt the friendliness of their relation. Although I could hear nothing of
+what they said, and rarely so much as glean a decided expression on the
+face of either, there was a distance, almost a stiffness, in their
+bearing which showed them to be either unfamiliar or at enmity. The girl
+walked faster when she was with Northmour than when she was alone; and I
+conceived that any inclination between a man and a woman would rather
+delay than accelerate the step. Moreover, she kept a good yard free of
+him, and trailed her umbrella, as if it were a barrier, on the side
+between them. Northmour kept sidling closer; and, as the girl retired from
+his advance, their course lay at a sort of diagonal across the beach, and
+would have landed them in the surf had it been long enough continued. But,
+when this was imminent, the girl would unostentatiously change sides and
+put Northmour between her and the sea. I watched these maneuvers, for my
+part, with high enjoyment and approval, and chuckled to myself at every
+move.
+
+On the morning of the third day, she walked alone for some time, and I
+perceived, to my great concern, that she was more than once in tears. You
+will see that my heart was already interested more than I supposed. She
+had a firm yet airy motion of the body, and carried her head with
+unimaginable grace; every step was a thing to look at, and she seemed in
+my eyes to breathe sweetness and distinction.
+
+The day was so agreeable, being calm and sunshiny, with a tranquil sea,
+and yet with a healthful piquancy and vigor in the air, that, contrary to
+custom, she was tempted forth a second time to walk. On this occasion she
+was accompanied by Northmour, and they had been but a short while on the
+beach, when I saw him take forcible possession of her hand. She struggled,
+and uttered a cry that was almost a scream. I sprung to my feet, unmindful
+of my strange position; but, ere I had taken a step, I saw Northmour
+bareheaded and bowing very low, as if to apologize; and dropped again at
+once into my ambush. A few words were interchanged; and then, with another
+bow, he left the beach to return to the pavilion. He passed not far from
+me, and I could see him, flushed and lowering, and cutting savagely with
+his cane among the grass. It was not without satisfaction that I
+recognized my own handiwork in a great cut under his right eye, and a
+considerable discoloration round the socket.
+
+For some time the girl remained where he had left her, looking out past
+the islet and over the bright sea. Then with a start, as one who throws
+off preoccupation and puts energy again upon its mettle, she broke into a
+rapid and decisive walk. She also was much incensed by what had passed.
+She had forgotten where she was. And I beheld her walk straight into the
+borders of the quicksand where it is most abrupt and dangerous. Two or
+three steps farther and her life would have been in serious jeopardy, when
+I slid down the face of the sand hill, which is there precipitous, and,
+running halfway forward, called to her to stop.
+
+She did so, and turned round. There was not a tremor of fear in her
+behavior, and she marched directly up to me like a queen. I was barefoot,
+and clad like a common sailor, save for an Egyptian scarf round my waist;
+and she probably took me at first for some one from the fisher village,
+straying after bait. As for her, when I thus saw her face to face, her
+eyes set steadily and imperiously upon mine, I was filled with admiration
+and astonishment, and thought her even more beautiful than I had looked to
+find her. Nor could I think enough of one who, acting with so much
+boldness, yet preserved a maidenly air that was both quaint and engaging;
+for my wife kept an old-fashioned precision of manner through all her
+admirable life--an excellent thing in woman, since it sets another value
+on her sweet familiarities.
+
+"What does this mean?" she asked.
+
+"You were walking," I told her, "directly into Graden Floe."
+
+"You do not belong to these parts," she said again. "You speak like an
+educated man."
+
+"I believe I have a right to that name," said I, "although in this
+disguise."
+
+But her woman's eye had already detected the sash.
+
+"Oh!" she said; "your sash betrays you."
+
+"You have said the word _betray_," I resumed. "May I ask you not to betray
+me? I was obliged to disclose myself in your interest; but if Northmour
+learned my presence it might be worse than disagreeable for me."
+
+"Do you know," she asked, "to whom you are speaking?"
+
+"Not to Mr. Northmour's wife?" I asked, by way of answer.
+
+She shook her head. All this while she was studying my face with an
+embarrassing intentness. Then she broke out--
+
+"You have an honest face. Be honest like your face, sir, and tell me what
+you want and what you are afraid of. Do you think I could hurt you? I
+believe you have far more power to injure me! And yet you do not look
+unkind. What do you mean--you, a gentleman--by skulking like a spy about
+this desolate place? Tell me," she said, "who is it you hate?"
+
+"I hate no one," I answered; "and I fear no one face to face. My name is
+Cassilis--Frank Cassilis. I lead the life of a vagabond for my own good
+pleasure. I am one of Northmour's oldest friends; and three nights ago,
+when I addressed him on these links, he stabbed me in the shoulder with a
+knife."
+
+"It was you!" she said.
+
+"Why he did so," I continued, disregarding the interruption, "is more than
+I can guess, and more than I care to know. I have not many friends, nor am
+I very susceptible to friendship; but no man shall drive me from a place
+by terror. I had camped in the Graden Sea-Wood ere he came; I camp in it
+still. If you think I mean harm to you or yours, madame, the remedy is in
+your hand. Tell him that my camp is in the Hemlock Den, and to-night he
+can stab me in safety while I sleep."
+
+With this I doffed my cap to her, and scrambled up once more among the
+sand hills. I do not know why, but I felt a prodigious sense of injustice,
+and felt like a hero and a martyr; while as a matter of fact, I had not a
+word to say in my defense, nor so much as one plausible reason to offer
+for my conduct. I had stayed at Graden out of a curiosity natural enough,
+but undignified; and though there was another motive growing in along with
+the first, it was not one which, at that period, I could have properly
+explained to the lady of my heart.
+
+Certainly, that night, I thought of no one else; and, though her whole
+conduct and position seemed suspicious, I could not find it in my heart to
+entertain a doubt of her integrity. I could have staked my life that she
+was clear of blame, and, though all was dark at the present, that the
+explanation of the mystery would show her part in these events to be both
+right and needful. It was true, let me cudgel my imagination as I pleased,
+that I could invent no theory of her relations to Northmour; but I felt
+none the less sure of my conclusion because it was founded on instinct in
+place of reason, and, as I may say, went to sleep that night with the
+thought of her under my pillow.
+
+Next day she came out about the same hour alone, and, as soon as the sand
+hills concealed her from the pavilion, drew nearer to the edge, and called
+me by name in guarded tones. I was astonished to observe that she was
+deadly pale, and seemingly under the influence of strong emotion.
+
+"Mr. Cassilis!" she cried; "Mr. Cassilis!"
+
+I appeared at once, and leaped down upon the beach. A remarkable air of
+relief overspread her countenance as soon as she saw me.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, with a hoarse sound, like one whose bosom had been
+lightened of a weight. And then, "Thank God you are still safe!" she
+added; "I knew, if you were, you would be here." (Was not this strange? So
+swiftly and wisely does Nature prepare our hearts for these great lifelong
+intimacies, that both my wife and I had been given a presentiment on this
+the second day of our acquaintance. I had even then hoped that she would
+seek me; she had felt sure that she would find me.) "Do not," she went on
+swiftly, "do not stay in this place. Promise me that you sleep no longer
+in that wood. You do not know how I suffer; all last night I could not
+sleep for thinking of your peril."
+
+"Peril!" I repeated. "Peril from whom? From Northmour?"
+
+"Not so," she said. "Did you think I would tell him after what you said?"
+
+"Not from Northmour?" I repeated. "Then how? From whom? I see none to be
+afraid of."
+
+"You must not ask me," was her reply, "for I am not free to tell you. Only
+believe me, and go hence--believe me, and go away quickly, quickly, for
+your life!"
+
+An appeal to his alarm is never a good plan to rid oneself of a spirited
+young man. My obstinacy was but increased by what she said, and I made it
+a point of honor to remain. And her solicitude for my safety still more
+confirmed me in the resolve.
+
+"You must not think me inquisitive, madame," I replied, "but, if Graden
+is so dangerous a place, you yourself perhaps remain here at some risk."
+
+She only looked at me reproachfully.
+
+"You and your father--" I resumed; but she interrupted me almost with a
+gasp.
+
+"My father! How do you know that?" she cried.
+
+"I saw you together when you landed," was my answer; and I do not know
+why, but it seemed satisfactory to both of us, as indeed it was truth.
+"But," I continued, "you need have no fear from me. I see you have some
+reason to be secret, and, you may believe me, your secret is as safe with
+me as if I were in Graden Floe. I have scarce spoken to anyone for years;
+my horse is my only companion, and even he, poor beast, is not beside me.
+You see, then, you may count on me for silence. So tell me the truth, my
+dear young lady, are you not in danger?"
+
+"Mr. Northmour says you are an honorable man," she returned, "and I
+believe it when I see you. I will tell you so much; you are right: we are
+in dreadful, dreadful danger, and you share it by remaining where you
+are."
+
+"Ah!" said I; "you have heard of me from Northmour? And he gives me a good
+character?"
+
+"I asked him about you last night," was her reply. "I pretended," she
+hesitated, "I pretended to have met you long ago, and spoken to you of
+him. It was not true; but I could not help myself without betraying you,
+and you had put me in a difficulty. He praised you highly."
+
+"And--you may permit me one question--does this danger come from
+Northmour?" I asked.
+
+"From Mr. Northmour?" she cried. "Oh, no, he stays with us to share it."
+
+"While you propose that I should run away?" I said. "You do not rate me
+very high."
+
+"Why should you stay?" she asked. "You are no friend of ours."
+
+I know not what came over me, for I had not been conscious of a similar
+weakness since I was a child, but I was so mortified by this retort that
+my eyes pricked and filled with tears, as I continued to gaze upon her
+face.
+
+"No, no," she said, in a changed voice; "I did not mean the words
+unkindly."
+
+"It was I who offended," I said; and I held out my hand with a look of
+appeal that somehow touched her, for she gave me hers at once, and even
+eagerly. I held it for awhile in mine, and gazed into her eyes. It was she
+who first tore her hand away, and, forgetting all about her request and
+the promise she had sought to extort, ran at the top of her speed, and
+without turning, till she was out of sight. And then I knew that I loved
+her, and thought in my glad heart that she--she herself--was not
+indifferent to my suit. Many a time she has denied it in after days, but
+it was with a smiling and not a serious denial. For my part, I am sure our
+hands would not have lain so closely in each other if she had not begun to
+melt to me already. And, when all is said, it is no great contention,
+since, by her own avowal, she began to love me on the morrow.
+
+And yet on the morrow very little took place. She came and called me down
+as on the day before, upbraided me for lingering at Graden, and, when she
+found I was still obdurate, began to ask me more particularly as to my
+arrival. I told her by what series of accidents I had come to witness
+their disembarkation, and how I had determined to remain, partly from the
+interest which had been awakened in me by Northmour's guests, and partly
+because of his own murderous attack. As to the former, I fear I was
+disingenuous, and led her to regard herself as having been an attraction
+to me from the first moment that I saw her on the links. It relieves my
+heart to make this confession even now, when my wife is with God, and
+already knows all things, and the honesty of my purpose even in this; for
+while she lived, although it often pricked my conscience, I had never the
+hardihood to undeceive her. Even a little secret, in such a married life
+as ours, is like the rose leaf which kept the princess from her sleep.
+
+From this the talk branched into other subjects, and I told her much about
+my lonely and wandering existence; she, for her part, giving ear, and
+saying little. Although we spoke very naturally, and latterly on topics
+that might seem indifferent, we were both sweetly agitated. Too soon it
+was time for her to go; and we separated, as if by mutual consent, without
+shaking hands, for both knew that, between us, it was no idle ceremony.
+
+The next, and that was the fourth day of our acquaintance, we met in the
+same spot, but early in the morning, with much familiarity and yet much
+timidity on either side. While she had once more spoken about my
+danger--and that, I understood, was her excuse for coming--I, who had
+prepared a great deal of talk during the night, began to tell her how
+highly I valued her kind interest, and how no one had ever cared to hear
+about my life, nor had I ever cared to relate it, before yesterday.
+Suddenly she interrupted me, saying with vehemence--
+
+"And yet, if you knew who I was, you would not so much as speak to me!"
+
+I told her such a thought was madness, and, little as we had met, I
+counted her already a dear friend; but my protestations seemed only to
+make her more desperate.
+
+"My father is in hiding!" she cried.
+
+"My dear," I said, forgetting for the first time to add "young lady,"
+"what do I care? If I were in hiding twenty times over, would it make one
+thought of change in you?"
+
+"Ah, but the cause!" she cried, "the cause! It is"--she faltered for a
+second--"it is disgraceful to us!"
+
+
+IV
+
+This was my wife's story, as I drew it from her among tears and sobs. Her
+name was Clara Huddlestone: it sounded very beautiful in my ears; but not
+so beautiful as that other name of Clara Cassilis, which she wore during
+the longer and, I thank God, the happier portion of her life. Her father,
+Bernard Huddlestone, had been a private banker in a very large way of
+business. Many years before, his affairs becoming disordered, he had been
+led to try dangerous, and at last criminal, expedients to retrieve himself
+from ruin. All was in vain; he became more and more cruelly involved, and
+found his honor lost at the same moment with his fortune. About this
+period, Northmour had been courting his daughter with great assiduity,
+though with small encouragement; and to him, knowing him thus disposed in
+his favor, Bernard Huddlestone turned for help in his extremity. It was
+not merely ruin and dishonor, nor merely a legal condemnation, that the
+unhappy man had brought upon his head. It seems he could have gone to
+prison with a light heart. What he feared, what kept him awake at night or
+recalled him from slumber into frenzy, was some secret, sudden, and
+unlawful attempt upon his life. Hence, he desired to bury his existence
+and escape to one of the islands in the South Pacific, and it was in
+Northmour's yacht, the "Red Earl," that he designed to go. The yacht
+picked them up clandestinely upon the coast of Wales, and had once more
+deposited them at Graden, till she could be refitted and provisioned for
+the longer voyage. Nor could Clara doubt that her hand had been stipulated
+as the price of passage. For, although Northmour was neither unkind, nor
+even discourteous, he had shown himself in several instances somewhat
+overbold in speech and manner.
+
+I listened, I need not say, with fixed attention, and put many questions
+as to the more mysterious part. It was in vain. She had no clear idea of
+what the blow was, nor of how it was expected to fall. Her father's alarm
+was unfeigned and physically prostrating, and he had thought more than
+once of making an unconditional surrender to the police. But the scheme
+was finally abandoned, for he was convinced that not even the strength of
+our English prisons could shelter him from his pursuers. He had had many
+affairs in Italy, and with Italians resident in London, in the latter
+years of his business; and these last, as Clara fancied, were somehow
+connected with the doom that threatened him. He had shown great terror at
+the presence of an Italian seaman on board the "Red Earl," and had
+bitterly and repeatedly accused Northmour in consequence. The latter had
+protested that Beppo (that was the seaman's name) was a capital fellow,
+and could be trusted to the death; but Mr. Huddlestone had continued ever
+since to declare that all was lost, that it was only a question of days,
+and that Beppo would be the ruin of him yet.
+
+I regarded the whole story as the hallucination of a mind shaken by
+calamity. He had suffered heavy loss by his Italian transactions; and
+hence the sight of an Italian was hateful to him, and the principal part
+in his nightmare would naturally enough be played by one of that nation.
+
+"What your father wants," I said, "is a good doctor and some calming
+medicine."
+
+"But Mr. Northmour?" objected Clara. "He is untroubled by losses, and yet
+he shares in this terror."
+
+I could not help laughing at what I considered her simplicity.
+
+"My dear," said I, "you have told me yourself what reward he has to look
+for. All is fair in love, you must remember; and if Northmour foments your
+father's terrors, it is not at all because he is afraid of any Italian
+man, but simply because he is infatuated with a charming English woman."
+
+She reminded me of his attack upon myself on the night of the
+disembarkation, and this I was unable to explain. In short, and from one
+thing to another, it was agreed between us that I should set out at once
+for the fisher village, Graden Wester, as it was called, look up all the
+newspapers I could find, and see for myself if there seemed any basis of
+fact for these continued alarms. The next morning, at the same hour and
+place, I was to make my report to Clara. She said no more on that occasion
+about my departure; nor, indeed, did she make it a secret that she clung
+to the thought of my proximity as something helpful and pleasant; and, for
+my part, I could not have left her, if she had gone upon her knees to ask
+it.
+
+I reached Graden Wester before ten in the forenoon; for in those days I
+was an excellent pedestrian, and the distance, as I think I have said, was
+little over seven miles; fine walking all the way upon the springy turf.
+The village is one of the bleakest on that coast, which is saying much:
+there is a church in the hollow; a miserable haven in the rocks, where
+many boats have been lost as they returned from fishing; two or three
+score of stone houses arranged along the beach and in two streets, one
+leading from the harbor, and another striking out from it at right angles;
+and, at the corner of these two, a very dark and cheerless tavern, by way
+of principal hotel.
+
+I had dressed myself somewhat more suitably to my station in life, and at
+once called upon the minister in his little manse beside the graveyard. He
+knew me, although it was more than nine years since we had met; and when I
+told him that I had been long upon a walking tour, and was behind with the
+news, readily lent me an armful of newspapers, dating from a month back to
+the day before. With these I sought the tavern, and, ordering some
+breakfast, sat down to study the "Huddlestone Failure."
+
+It had been, it appeared, a very flagrant case. Thousands of persons were
+reduced to poverty; and one in particular had blown out his brains as soon
+as payment was suspended. It was strange to myself that, while I read
+these details, I continued rather to sympathize with Mr. Huddlestone than
+with his victims; so complete already was the empire of my love for my
+wife. A price was naturally set upon the banker's head; and, as the case
+was inexcusable and the public indignation thoroughly aroused, the unusual
+figure of £750 was offered for his capture. He was reported to have large
+sums of money in his possession. One day, he had been heard of in Spain;
+the next, there was sure intelligence that he was still lurking between
+Manchester and Liverpool, or along the border of Wales; and the day after,
+a telegram would announce his arrival in Cuba or Yucatan. But in all this
+there was no word of an Italian, nor any sign of mystery.
+
+In the very last paper, however, there was one item not so clear. The
+accountants who were charged to verify the failure had, it seemed, come
+upon the traces of a very large number of thousands, which figured for
+some time in the transactions of the house of Huddlestone; but which came
+from nowhere, and disappeared in the same mysterious fashion. It was only
+once referred to by name, and then under the initials "X.X."; but it had
+plainly been floated for the first time into the business at a period of
+great depression some six years ago. The name of a distinguished royal
+personage had been mentioned by rumor in connection with this sum. "The
+cowardly desperado"--such, I remember, was the editorial expression--was
+supposed to have escaped with a large part of this mysterious fund still
+in his possession.
+
+I was still brooding over the fact, and trying to torture it into some
+connection with Mr. Huddlestone's danger, when a man entered the tavern
+and asked for some bread and cheese with a decided foreign accent.
+
+"_Siete Italiano_?" said I.
+
+"_Si, Signor_," was his reply.
+
+I said it was unusually far north to find one of his compatriots; at which
+he shrugged his shoulders, and replied that a man would go anywhere to
+find work. What work he could hope to find at Graden Wester, I was totally
+unable to conceive; and the incident struck so unpleasantly upon my mind,
+that I asked the landlord, while he was counting me some change, whether
+he had ever before seen an Italian in the village. He said he had once
+seen some Norwegians, who had been shipwrecked on the other side of Graden
+Ness and rescued by the lifeboat from Cauldhaven.
+
+"No!" said I; "but an Italian, like the man who has just had bread and
+cheese."
+
+"What?" cried he, "yon black-avised fellow wi' the teeth? Was he an
+I-talian? Weel, yon's the first that ever I saw, an' I dare say he's like
+to be the last."
+
+Even as he was speaking, I raised my eyes, and, casting a glance into the
+street, beheld three men in earnest conversation together, and not thirty
+yards away. One of them was my recent companion in the tavern parlor; the
+other two, by their handsome sallow features and soft hats, should
+evidently belong to the same race. A crowd of village children stood
+around them, gesticulating and talking gibberish in imitation. The trio
+looked singularly foreign to the bleak dirty street in which they were
+standing and the dark gray heaven that overspread them; and I confess my
+incredulity received at that moment a shock from which it never recovered.
+I might reason with myself as I pleased, but I could not argue down the
+effect of what I had seen, and I began to share in the Italian terror.
+
+It was already drawing toward the close of the day before I had returned
+the newspapers to the manse, and got well forward on to the links on my
+way home. I shall never forget that walk. It grew very cold and
+boisterous; the wind sung in the short grass about my feet; thin rain
+showers came running on the gusts; and an immense mountain range of
+clouds began to arise out of the bosom of the sea. It would be hard to
+imagine a more dismal evening; and whether it was from these external
+influences, or because my nerves were already affected by what I had heard
+and seen, my thoughts were as gloomy as the weather.
+
+The upper windows of the pavilion commanded a considerable spread of links
+in the direction of Graden Wester. To avoid observation, it was necessary
+to hug the beach until I had gained cover from the higher sand hills on
+the little headland, when I might strike across, through the hollows, for
+the margin of the wood. The sun was about setting; the tide was low, and
+all the quicksands uncovered; and I was moving along, lost in unpleasant
+thought, when I was suddenly thunderstruck to perceive the prints of human
+feet. They ran parallel to my own course, but low down upon the beach,
+instead of along the border of the turf; and, when I examined them, I saw
+at once, by the size and coarseness of the impression, that it was a
+stranger to me and to those of the pavilion who had recently passed that
+way. Not only so; but from the recklessness of the course which he had
+followed, steering near to the most formidable portions of the sand, he
+was evidently a stranger to the country and to the ill-repute of Graden
+beach.
+
+Step by step I followed the prints; until, a quarter of a mile farther, I
+beheld them die away into the southeastern boundary of Graden Floe. There,
+whoever he was, the miserable man had perished. One or two gulls, who had,
+perhaps, seen him disappear, wheeled over his sepulcher with their usual
+melancholy piping. The sun had broken through the clouds by a last effort,
+and colored the wide level of quicksands with a dusky purple. I stood for
+some time gazing at the spot, chilled and disheartened by my own
+reflections, and with a strong and commanding consciousness of death. I
+remember wondering how long the tragedy had taken, and whether his screams
+had been audible at the pavilion. And then, making a strong resolution, I
+was about to tear myself away, when a gust fiercer than usual fell upon
+this quarter of the beach, and I saw, now whirling high in air, now
+skimming lightly across the surface of the sands, a soft, black, felt hat,
+somewhat conical in shape, such as I had remarked already on the heads of
+the Italians.
+
+I believe, but I am not sure, that I uttered a cry. The wind was driving
+the hat shoreward, and I ran round the border of the floe to be ready
+against its arrival. The gust fell, dropping the hat for awhile upon the
+quicksand, and then, once more freshening, landed it a few yards from
+where I stood. I seized it with the interest you may imagine. It had seen
+some service; indeed, it was rustier than either of those I had seen that
+day upon the street. The lining was red, stamped with the name of the
+maker, which I have forgotten, and that of the place of manufacture,
+_Venedig_. This (it is not yet forgotten) was the name given by the
+Austrians to the beautiful city of Venice, then, and for long after, a
+part of their dominions.
+
+The shock was complete. I saw imaginary Italians upon every side; and for
+the first, and, I may say, for the last time in my experience, became
+overpowered by what is called a panic terror. I knew nothing, that is, to
+be afraid of, and yet I admit that I was heartily afraid; and it was with
+sensible reluctance that I returned to my exposed and solitary camp in the
+Sea-Wood.
+
+There I eat some cold porridge which had been left over from the night
+before, for I was disinclined to make a fire; and, feeling strengthened
+and reassured, dismissed all these fanciful terrors from my mind, and lay
+down to sleep with composure.
+
+How long I may have slept it is impossible for me to guess; but I was
+awakened at last by a sudden, blinding flash of light into my face. It
+woke me like a blow. In an instant I was upon my knees. But the light had
+gone as suddenly as it came. The darkness was intense. And, as it was
+blowing great guns from the sea, and pouring with rain, the noises of the
+storm effectually concealed all others.
+
+It was, I dare say, half a minute before I regained my self-possession.
+But for two circumstances, I should have thought I had been awakened by
+some new and vivid form of nightmare. First, the flap of my tent, which I
+had shut carefully when I retired, was now unfastened; and, second, I
+could still perceive, with a sharpness that excluded any theory of
+hallucination, the smell of hot metal and of burning oil. The conclusion
+was obvious. I had been awakened by some one flashing a bull's-eye lantern
+in my face. It had been but a flash, and away. He had seen my face, and
+then gone. I asked myself the object of so strange a proceeding, and the
+answer came pat. The man, whoever he was, had thought to recognize me, and
+he had not. There was another question unresolved; and to this, I may say,
+I feared to give an answer; if he had recognized me, what would he have
+done?
+
+My fears were immediately diverted from myself, for I saw that I had been
+visited in a mistake; and I became persuaded that some dreadful danger
+threatened the pavilion. It required some nerve to issue forth into the
+black and intricate thicket which surrounded and overhung the den; but I
+groped my way to the links, drenched with rain, beaten upon and deafened
+by the gusts, and fearing at every step to lay my hand upon some lurking
+adversary. The darkness was so complete that I might have been surrounded
+by an army and yet none the wiser, and the uproar of the gale so loud that
+my hearing was as useless as my sight.
+
+For the rest of that night, which seemed interminably long, I patrolled
+the vicinity of the pavilion, without seeing a living creature or hearing
+any noise but the concert of the wind, the sea, and the rain. A light in
+the upper story filtered through a cranny of the shutter, and kept me
+company till the approach of dawn.
+
+
+V
+
+With the first peep of day, I retired from the open to my old lair among
+the sand hills, there to await the coming of my wife. The morning was
+gray, wild, and melancholy; the wind moderated before sunrise, and then
+went about, and blew in puffs from the shore; the sea began to go down,
+but the rain still fell without mercy. Over all the wilderness of links
+there was not a creature to be seen. Yet I felt sure the neighborhood was
+alive with skulking foes. The light that had been so suddenly and
+surprisingly flashed upon my face as I lay sleeping, and the hat that had
+been blown ashore by the wind from over Graden Floe, were two speaking
+signals of the peril that environed Clara and the party in the pavilion.
+
+It was, perhaps, half-past seven, or nearer eight, before I saw the door
+open, and that dear figure come toward me in the rain. I was waiting for
+her on the beach before she had crossed the sand hills.
+
+"I have had such trouble to come!" she cried. "They did not wish me to go
+walking in the rain."
+
+"Clara," I said, "you are not frightened!"
+
+"No," said she, with a simplicity that filled my heart with confidence.
+For my wife was the bravest as well as the best of women; in my
+experience, I have not found the two go always together, but with her they
+did; and she combined the extreme of fortitude with the most endearing and
+beautiful virtues.
+
+I told her what had happened; and, though her cheek grew visibly paler,
+she retained perfect control over her senses.
+
+"You see now that I am safe," said I, in conclusion. "They do not mean to
+harm me; for, had they chosen, I was a dead man last night."
+
+She laid her hand upon my arm.
+
+"And I had no presentiment!" she cried.
+
+Her accent thrilled me with delight. I put my arm about her, and strained
+her to my side; and, before either of us was aware, her hands were on my
+shoulders and my lips upon her mouth. Yet up to that moment no word of
+love had passed between us. To this day I remember the touch of her cheek,
+which was wet and cold with the rain; and many a time since, when she has
+been washing her face, I have kissed it again for the sake of that morning
+on the beach. Now that she is taken from me, and I finish my pilgrimage
+alone, I recall our old loving kindnesses and the deep honesty and
+affection which united us, and my present loss seems but a trifle in
+comparison.
+
+We may have thus stood for some seconds--for time passes quickly with
+lovers--before we were startled by a peal of laughter close at hand. It
+was not natural mirth, but seemed to be affected in order to conceal an
+angrier feeling. We both turned, though I still kept my left arm about
+Clara's waist; nor did she seek to withdraw herself; and there, a few
+paces off upon the beach, stood Northmour, his head lowered, his hands
+behind his back, his nostrils white with passion.
+
+"Ah! Cassilis!" he said, as I disclosed my face.
+
+"That same," said I; for I was not at all put about.
+
+"And so, Miss Huddlestone," he continued slowly, but savagely, "this is
+how you keep your faith to your father and to me? This is the value you
+set upon your father's life? And you are so infatuated with this young
+gentleman that you must brave ruin, and decency, and common human
+caution--"
+
+"Miss Huddlestone--" I was beginning to interrupt him, when he, in his
+turn, cut in brutally--
+
+"You hold your tongue," said he; "I am speaking to that girl."
+
+"That girl, as you call her, is my wife," said I; and my wife only leaned
+a little nearer, so that I knew she had affirmed my words.
+
+"Your what?" he cried. "You lie!"
+
+"Northmour," I said, "we all know you have a bad temper, and I am the last
+man to be irritated by words. For all that, I propose that you speak
+lower, for I am convinced that we are not alone."
+
+He looked round him, and it was plain my remark had in some degree sobered
+his passion. "What do you mean?" he asked.
+
+I only said one word: "Italians."
+
+He swore a round oath, and looked at us, from one to the other.
+
+"Mr. Cassilis knows all that I know," said my wife.
+
+"What I want to know," he broke out, "is where the devil Mr. Cassilis
+comes from, and what the devil Mr. Cassilis is doing here. You say you are
+married; that I do not believe. If you were, Graden Floe would soon
+divorce you; four minutes and a half, Cassilis. I keep my private cemetery
+for my friends."
+
+"It took somewhat longer," said I, "for that Italian."
+
+He looked at me for a moment half daunted, and then, almost civilly, asked
+me to tell my story. "You have too much the advantage of me, Cassilis," he
+added. I complied of course; and he listened, with several ejaculations,
+while I told him how I had come to Graden: that it was I whom he had tried
+to murder on the night of landing; and what I had subsequently seen and
+heard of the Italians.
+
+"Well," said he, when I had done, "it is here at last; there is no mistake
+about that. And what, may I ask, do you propose to do?"
+
+"I propose to stay with you and lend a hand," said I.
+
+"You are a brave man," he returned, with a peculiar intonation.
+
+"I am not afraid," said I.
+
+"And so," he continued, "I am to understand that you two are married? And
+you stand up to it before my face, Miss Huddlestone?"
+
+"We are not yet married," said Clara; "but we shall be as soon as we can."
+
+"Bravo!" cried Northmour. "And the bargain? D----n it, you're not a fool,
+young woman; I may call a spade a spade with you. How about the bargain?
+You know as well as I do what your father's life depends upon. I have
+only to put my hands under my coat tails and walk away, and his throat
+would be cut before the evening."
+
+"Yes, Mr. Northmour," returned Clara, with great spirit; "but that is what
+you will never do. You made a bargain that was unworthy of a gentleman;
+but you are a gentleman for all that, and you will never desert a man whom
+you have begun to help."
+
+"Aha!" said he. "You think I will give my yacht for nothing? You think I
+will risk my life and liberty for love of the old gentleman; and then, I
+suppose, be best man at the wedding, to wind up? Well," he added, with an
+odd smile, "perhaps you are not altogether wrong. But ask Cassilis here.
+_He_ knows me. Am I a man to trust? Am I safe and scrupulous? Am I kind?"
+
+"I know you talk a great deal, and sometimes, I think, very foolishly,"
+replied Clara, "but I know you are a gentleman, and I am not the least
+afraid."
+
+He looked at her with a peculiar approval and admiration; then, turning to
+me, "Do you think I would give her up without a struggle, Frank?" said he.
+"I tell you plainly, you look out. The next time we come to blows--"
+
+"Will make the third," I interrupted, smiling.
+
+"Aye, true; so it will," he said. "I had forgotten. Well, the third time's
+lucky."
+
+"The third time, you mean, you will have the crew of the 'Red Earl' to
+help," I said.
+
+"Do you hear him?" he asked, turning to my wife.
+
+"I hear two men speaking like cowards," said she. "I should despise myself
+either to think or speak like that. And neither of you believe one word
+that you are saying, which makes it the more wicked and silly."
+
+"She's a trump!" cried Northmour. "But she's not yet Mrs. Cassilis. I say
+no more. The present is not for me."
+
+Then my wife surprised me.
+
+"I leave you here," she said suddenly. "My father has been too long alone.
+But remember this: you are to be friends, for you are both good friends to
+me."
+
+She has since told me her reason for this step. As long as she remained,
+she declares that we two would have continued to quarrel; and I suppose
+that she was right, for when she was gone we fell at once into a sort of
+confidentiality.
+
+Northmour stared after her as she went away over the sand hill.
+
+"She is the only woman in the world!" he exclaimed with an oath. "Look at
+her action."
+
+I, for my part, leaped at this opportunity for a little further light.
+
+"See here, Northmour," said I; "we are all in a tight place, are we not?"
+
+"I believe you, my boy," he answered, looking me in the eyes, and with
+great emphasis. "We have all hell upon us, that's the truth. You may
+believe me or not, but I'm afraid of my life."
+
+"Tell me one thing," said I. "What are they after, these Italians? What do
+they want with Mr. Huddlestone?"
+
+"Don't you know?" he cried. "The black old scamp had _carbonari_ funds on
+a deposit--two hundred and eighty thousand; and of course he gambled it
+away on stocks. There was to have been a revolution in the Tridentino, or
+Parma; but the revolution is off, and the whole wasp's nest is after
+Huddlestone. We shall all be lucky if we can save our skins."
+
+"The _carbonari_!" I exclaimed; "God help him indeed!"
+
+"Amen!" said Northmour. "And now, look here: I have said that we are in a
+fix; and, frankly, I shall be glad of your help. If I can't save
+Huddlestone, I want at least to save the girl. Come and stay in the
+pavilion; and, there's my hand on it, I shall act as your friend until the
+old man is either clear or dead. But," he added, "once that is settled,
+you become my rival once again, and I warn you--mind yourself."
+
+"Done!" said I; and we shook hands.
+
+"And now let us go directly to the fort," said Northmour; and he began to
+lead the way through the rain.
+
+
+VI
+
+We were admitted to the pavilion by Clara, and I was surprised by the
+completeness and security of the defenses. A barricade of great strength,
+and yet easy to displace, supported the door against any violence from
+without; and the shutters of the dining-room, into which I was led
+directly, and which was feebly illuminated by a lamp, were even more
+elaborately fortified. The panels were strengthened by bars and crossbars;
+and these, in their turn, were kept in position by a system of braces and
+struts, some abutting on the floor, some on the roof, and others, in fine,
+against the opposite wall of the apartment. It was at once a solid and
+well-designed piece of carpentry; and I did not seek to conceal my
+admiration.
+
+"I am the engineer," said Northmour. "You remember the planks in the
+garden? Behold them?"
+
+"I did not know you had so many talents," said I.
+
+"Are you armed?" he continued, pointing to an array of guns and pistols,
+all in admirable order, which stood in line against the wall or were
+displayed upon the sideboard.
+
+"Thank you," I returned; "I have gone armed since our last encounter. But,
+to tell you the truth, I have had nothing to eat since early yesterday
+evening."
+
+Northmour produced some cold meat, to which I eagerly set myself, and a
+bottle of good Burgundy, by which, wet as I was, I did not scruple to
+profit. I have always been an extreme temperance man on principle; but it
+is useless to push principle to excess, and on this occasion I believe
+that I finished three quarters of the bottle. As I eat, I still continued
+to admire the preparations for defense.
+
+"We could stand a siege," I said at length.
+
+"Ye--es," drawled Northmour; "a very little one, per--haps. It is not so
+much the strength of the pavilion I misdoubt; it is the double danger that
+kills me. If we get to shooting, wild as the country is, some one is sure
+to hear it, and then--why then it's the same thing, only different, as
+they say: caged by law, or killed by _carbonari_. There's the choice. It
+is a devilish bad thing to have the law against you in this world, and so
+I tell the old gentleman upstairs. He is quite of my way of thinking."
+
+"Speaking of that," said I, "what kind of person is he?"
+
+"Oh, he!" cried the other; "he's a rancid fellow, as far as he goes. I
+should like to have his neck wrung to-morrow by all the devils in Italy. I
+am not in this affair for him. You take me? I made a bargain for missy's
+hand, and I mean to have it too."
+
+"That, by the way," said I. "I understand. But how will Mr. Huddlestone
+take my intrusion?"
+
+"Leave that to Clara," returned Northmour.
+
+I could have struck him in the face for his coarse familiarity; but I
+respected the truce, as, I am bound to say, did Northmour, and so long as
+the danger continued not a cloud arose in our relation. I bear him this
+testimony with the most unfeigned satisfaction; nor am I without pride
+when I look back upon my own behavior. For surely no two men were ever
+left in a position so invidious and irritating.
+
+As soon as I had done eating, we proceeded to inspect the lower floor.
+Window by window we tried the different supports, now and then making an
+inconsiderable change; and the strokes of the hammer sounded with
+startling loudness through the house. I proposed, I remember, to make
+loop-holes; but he told me they were already made in the windows of the
+upper story. It was an anxious business, this inspection, and left me
+down-hearted. There were two doors and five windows to protect, and,
+counting Clara, only four of us to defend them against an unknown number
+of foes. I communicated my doubts to Northmour, who assured me, with
+unmoved composure, that he entirely shared them.
+
+"Before morning," said he, "we shall all be butchered and buried in Graden
+Floe. For me, that is written."
+
+I could not help shuddering at the mention of the quicksand, but reminded
+Northmour that our enemies had spared me in the wood.
+
+"Do not flatter yourself," said he. "Then you were not in the same boat
+with the old gentleman; now you are. It's the floe for all of us, mark my
+words."
+
+I trembled for Clara; and just then her dear voice was heard calling us to
+come upstairs. Northmour showed me the way, and, when he had reached the
+landing, knocked at the door of what used to be called My Uncle's Bedroom,
+as the founder of the pavilion had designed it especially for himself.
+
+"Come in, Northmour; come in, dear Mr. Cassilis," said a voice from
+within.
+
+Pushing open the door, Northmour admitted me before him into the
+apartment. As I came in I could see the daughter slipping out by the side
+door into the study, which had been prepared as her bedroom. In the bed,
+which was drawn back against the wall, instead of standing, as I had last
+seen it, boldly across the window, sat Bernard Huddlestone, the defaulting
+banker. Little as I had seen of him by the shifting light of the lantern
+on the links, I had no difficulty in recognizing him for the same. He had
+a long and sallow countenance, surrounded by a long red beard and
+side-whiskers. His broken nose and high cheek-bones gave him somewhat the
+air of a Kalmuck, and his light eyes shone with the excitement of a high
+fever. He wore a skull-cap of black silk; a huge Bible lay open before him
+on the bed, with a pair of gold spectacles in the place, and a pile of
+other books lay on the stand by his side. The green curtains lent a
+cadaverous shade to his cheek; and, as he sat propped on pillows, his
+great stature was painfully hunched, and his head protruded till it
+overhung his knees. I believe if he had not died otherwise, he must have
+fallen a victim to consumption in the course of but a very few weeks.
+
+He held out to me a hand, long, thin, and disagreeably hairy.
+
+"Come in, come in, Mr. Cassilis," said he. "Another
+protector--ahem!--another protector. Always welcome as a friend of my
+daughter's, Mr. Cassilis. How they have rallied about me, my daughter's
+friends! May God in heaven bless and reward them for it!"
+
+I gave him my hand, of course, because I could not help it; but the
+sympathy I had been prepared to feel for Clara's father was immediately
+soured by his appearance, and the wheedling, unreal tones in which he
+spoke.
+
+"Cassilis is a good man," said Northmour; "worth ten."
+
+"So I hear," cried Mr. Huddlestone eagerly; "so my girl tells me. Ah, Mr.
+Cassilis, my sin has found me out, you see! I am very low, very low; but I
+hope equally penitent. We must all come to the throne of grace at last,
+Mr. Cassilis. For my part, I come late indeed; but with unfeigned
+humility, I trust."
+
+"Fiddle-de-dee!" said Northmour roughly.
+
+"No, no, dear Northmour!" cried the banker. "You must not say that; you
+must not try to shake me. You forget, my dear, good boy, you forget I may
+be called this very night before my Maker."
+
+His excitement was pitiful to behold; and I felt myself grow indignant
+with Northmour, whose infidel opinions I well knew, and heartily despised,
+as he continued to taunt the poor sinner out of his humor of repentance.
+
+"Pooh, my dear Huddlestone!" said he. "You do yourself injustice. You are
+a man of the world inside and out, and were up to all kinds of mischief
+before I was born. Your conscience is tanned like South American
+leather--only you forgot to tan your liver, and that, if you will believe
+me, is the seat of the annoyance."
+
+"Rogue, rogue! bad boy!" said Mr. Huddlestone, shaking his finger. "I am
+no precisian, if you come to that; I always hated a precisian; but I never
+lost hold of something better through it all. I have been a bad boy, Mr.
+Cassilis; I do not seek to deny that; but it was after my wife's death,
+and you know, with a widower, it's a different thing: sinful--I won't say
+no; but there is a gradation, we shall hope. And talking of that--Hark!"
+he broke out suddenly, his hand raised, his fingers spread, his face
+racked with interest and terror. "Only the rain, bless God!" he added,
+after a pause, and with indescribable relief.
+
+For some seconds he lay back among the pillows like a man near to
+fainting; then he gathered himself together, and, in somewhat tremulous
+tones, began once more to thank me for the share I was prepared to take in
+his defense.
+
+"One question, sir," said I, when he had paused. "Is it true that you have
+money with you?"
+
+He seemed annoyed by the question, but admitted with reluctance that he
+had a little.
+
+"Well," I continued, "it is their money they are after, is it not? Why not
+give it up to them?"
+
+"Ah!" replied he, shaking his head, "I have tried that already, Mr.
+Cassilis; and alas! that it should be so, but it is blood they want."
+
+"Huddlestone, that's a little less than fair," said Northmour. "You should
+mention that what you offered them was upward of two hundred thousand
+short. The deficit is worth a reference; it is for what they call a cool
+sum, Frank. Then, you see, the fellows reason in their clear Italian way;
+and it seems to them, as indeed it seems to me, that they may just as well
+have both while they're about it--money and blood together, by George, and
+no more trouble for the extra pleasure."
+
+"Is it in the pavilion?" I asked.
+
+"It is; and I wish it were in the bottom of the sea instead," said
+Northmour; and then suddenly--"What are you making faces at me for?" he
+cried to Mr. Huddlestone, on whom I had unconsciously turned my back. "Do
+you think Cassilis would sell you?"
+
+Mr. Huddlestone protested that nothing had been further from his mind.
+
+"It is a good thing," retorted Northmour in his ugliest manner. "You might
+end by wearying us. What were you going to say?" he added, turning to me.
+
+"I was going to propose an occupation for the afternoon," said I. "Let us
+carry that money out, piece by piece, and lay it down before the pavilion
+door. If the _carbonari_ come, why, it's theirs at any rate."
+
+"No, no," cried Mr. Huddlestone; "it does not, it cannot, belong to them!
+It should be distributed _pro rata_ among all my creditors."
+
+"Come now, Huddlestone," said Northmour, "none of that."
+
+"Well, but my daughter," moaned the wretched man.
+
+"Your daughter will do well enough. Here are two suitors, Cassilis and I,
+neither of us beggars, between whom she has to choose. And as for
+yourself, to make an end of arguments, you have no right to a farthing,
+and, unless I'm much mistaken, you are going to die."
+
+It was certainly very cruelly said; but Mr. Huddlestone was a man who
+attracted little sympathy; and, although I saw him wince and shudder, I
+mentally indorsed the rebuke; nay, I added a contribution of my own.
+
+"Northmour and I," I said, "are willing enough to help you to save your
+life, but not to escape with stolen property."
+
+He struggled for awhile with himself, as though he were on the point of
+giving way to anger, but prudence had the best of the controversy.
+
+"My dear boys," he said, "do with me or my money what you will. I leave
+all in your hands. Let me compose myself."
+
+And so we left him, gladly enough I am sure.
+
+The last that I saw, he had once more taken up his great Bible, and with
+tremulous hands was adjusting his spectacles to read.
+
+
+VII
+
+The recollection of that afternoon will always be graven on my mind.
+Northmour and I were persuaded that an attack was imminent; and if it had
+been in our power to alter in any way the order of events, that power
+would have been used to precipitate rather than delay the critical moment.
+The worst was to be anticipated; yet we could conceive no extremity so
+miserable as the suspense we were now suffering. I have never been an
+eager, though always a great, reader; but I never knew books so insipid
+as those which I took up and cast aside that afternoon in the pavilion.
+Even talk became impossible, as the hours went on. One or other was always
+listening for some sound, or peering from an upstairs window over the
+links. And yet not a sign indicated the presence of our foes.
+
+We debated over and over again my proposal with regard to the money; and
+had we been in complete possession of our faculties, I am sure we should
+have condemned it as unwise; but we were flustered with alarm, grasped at
+a straw, and determined, although it was as much as advertising Mr.
+Huddlestone's presence in the pavilion, to carry my proposal into effect.
+
+The sum was part in specie, part in bank paper, and part in circular notes
+payable to the name of James Gregory. We took it out, counted it, inclosed
+it once more in a dispatch box belonging to Northmour, and prepared a
+letter in Italian which he tied to the handle. It was signed by both of us
+under oath, and declared that this was all the money which had escaped the
+failure of the house of Huddlestone. This was, perhaps, the maddest action
+ever perpetrated by two persons professing to be sane. Had the dispatch
+box fallen into other hands than those for which it was intended, we stood
+criminally convicted on our own written testimony; but, as I have said, we
+were neither of us in a condition to judge soberly, and had a thirst for
+action that drove us to do something, right or wrong, rather than endure
+the agony of waiting. Moreover, as we were both convinced that the hollows
+of the links were alive with hidden spies upon our movements, we hoped
+that our appearance with the box might lead to a parley, and, perhaps, a
+compromise.
+
+It was nearly three when we issued from the pavilion. The rain had taken
+off; the sun shone quite cheerfully. I had never seen the gulls fly so
+close about the house or approach so fearlessly to human beings. On the
+very doorstep one flapped heavily past our heads, and uttered its wild cry
+in my very ear.
+
+"There is an omen for you," said Northmour, who like all freethinkers was
+much under the influence of superstition. "They think we are already
+dead."
+
+I made some light rejoinder, but it was with half my heart; for the
+circumstance had impressed me.
+
+A yard or two before the gate, on a patch of smooth turf, we set down the
+dispatch box; and Northmour waved a white handkerchief over his head.
+Nothing replied. We raised our voices, and cried aloud in Italian that we
+were there as ambassadors to arrange the quarrel, but the stillness
+remained unbroken save by the seagulls and the surf. I had a weight at my
+heart when we desisted; and I saw that even Northmour was unusually pale.
+He looked over his shoulder nervously, as though he feared that some one
+had crept between him and the pavilion door.
+
+"By God," he said in a whisper, "this is too much for me!"
+
+I replied in the same key: "Suppose there should be none, after all!"
+
+"Look there," he returned, nodding with his head, as though he had been
+afraid to point.
+
+I glanced in the direction indicated; and there, from the northern quarter
+of the Sea-Wood, beheld a thin column of smoke rising steadily against the
+now cloudless sky.
+
+"Northmour," I said (we still continued to talk in whispers), "it is not
+possible to endure this suspense. I prefer death fifty times over. Stay
+you here to watch the pavilion; I will go forward and make sure, if I have
+to walk right into their camp."
+
+He looked once again all round him with puckered eyes, and then nodded
+assentingly to my proposal.
+
+My heart beat like a sledge hammer as I set out walking rapidly in the
+direction of the smoke; and, though up to that moment I had felt chill and
+shivering, I was suddenly conscious of a glow of heat all over my body.
+The ground in this direction was very uneven; a hundred men might have
+lain hidden in as many square yards about my path. But I who had not
+practiced the business in vain, chose such routes as cut at the very root
+of concealment, and, by keeping along the most convenient ridges,
+commanded several hollows at a time. It was not long before I was rewarded
+for my caution. Coming suddenly on to a mound somewhat more elevated than
+the surrounding hummocks, I saw, not thirty yards away, a man bent almost
+double, and running as fast as his attitude permitted, along the bottom of
+a gully. I had dislodged one of the spies from his ambush. As soon as I
+sighted him, I called loudly both in English and Italian; and he, seeing
+concealment was no longer possible, straightened himself out, leaped from
+the gully, and made off as straight as an arrow for the borders of the
+wood. It was none of my business to pursue; I had learned what I
+wanted--that we were beleaguered and watched in the pavilion; and I
+returned at once, and walked as nearly as possible in my old footsteps, to
+where Northmour awaited me beside the dispatch box. He was even paler than
+when I had left him, and his voice shook a little.
+
+"Could you see what he was like?" he asked.
+
+"He kept his back turned," I replied.
+
+"Let us get into the house, Frank. I don't think I'm a coward, but I can
+stand no more of this," he whispered.
+
+All was still and sunshiny about the pavilion, as we turned to reenter it;
+even the gulls had flown in a wider circuit, and were seen flickering
+along the beach and sand hills; and this loneliness terrified me more than
+a regiment under arms. It was not until the door was barricaded that I
+could draw a full inspiration and relieve the weight that lay upon my
+bosom. Northmour and I exchanged a steady glance; and I suppose each made
+his own reflections on the white and startled aspect of the other.
+
+"You were right," I said. "All is over. Shake hands, old man, for the last
+time."
+
+"Yes," replied he, "I will shake hands; for, as sure as I am here, I bear
+no malice. But, remember, if, by some impossible accident, we should give
+the slip to these blackguards, I'll take the upper hand of you by fair or
+foul."
+
+"Oh," said I, "you weary me!"
+
+He seemed hurt, and walked away in silence to the foot of the stairs,
+where he paused.
+
+"You do not understand," said he. "I am not a swindler, and I guard
+myself; that is all. I may weary you or not, Mr. Cassilis, I do not care a
+rush; I speak for my own satisfaction, and not for your amusement. You had
+better go upstairs and court the girl; for my part, I stay here."
+
+"And I stay with you," I returned. "Do you think I would steal a march,
+even with your permission?"
+
+"Frank," he said, smiling, "it's a pity you are an ass, for you have the
+makings of a man. I think I must be _fey_ to-day; you cannot irritate me
+even when you try. Do you know," he continued softly, "I think we are the
+two most miserable men in England, you and I? we have got on to thirty
+without wife or child, or so much as a shop to look after--poor, pitiful,
+lost devils, both! And now we clash about a girl! As if there were not
+several millions in the United Kingdom! Ah, Frank, Frank, the one who
+loses his throw, be it you or me, he has my pity! It were better for
+him--how does the Bible say?--that a millstone were hanged about his neck
+and he were cast into the depth of the sea. Let us take a drink," he
+concluded suddenly, but without any levity of tone.
+
+I was touched by his words, and consented. He sat down on the table in the
+dining-room, and held up the glass of sherry to his eye.
+
+"If you beat me, Frank," he said, "I shall take to drink. What will you
+do, if it goes the other way?"
+
+"God knows," I returned.
+
+"Well," said he, "here is a toast in the meantime: '_Italia irredenta_!'"
+
+The remainder of the day was passed in the same dreadful tedium and
+suspense. I laid the table for dinner, while Northmour and Clara prepared
+the meal together in the kitchen. I could hear their talk as I went to and
+fro, and was surprised to find it ran all the time upon myself. Northmour
+again bracketed us together, and rallied Clara on a choice of husbands;
+but he continued to speak of me with some feeling, and uttered nothing to
+my prejudice unless he included himself in the condemnation. This awakened
+a sense of gratitude in my heart, which combined with the immediateness of
+our peril to fill my eyes with tears. After all, I thought--and perhaps
+the thought was laughably vain--we were here three very noble human beings
+to perish in defense of a thieving banker.
+
+Before we sat down to table, I looked forth from an upstairs window. The
+day was beginning to decline; the links were utterly deserted; the
+dispatch box still lay untouched where we had left it hours before.
+
+Mr. Huddlestone, in a long yellow dressing gown, took one end of the
+table, Clara the other; while Northmour and I faced each other from the
+sides. The lamp was brightly trimmed; the wine was good; the viands,
+although mostly cold, excellent of their sort. We seemed to have agreed
+tacitly; all reference to the impending catastrophe was carefully avoided;
+and, considering our tragic circumstances, we made a merrier party than
+could have been expected. From time to time, it is true, Northmour or I
+would rise from table and make a round of the defenses; and, on each of
+these occasions, Mr. Huddlestone was recalled to a sense of his tragic
+predicament, glanced up with ghastly eyes, and bore for an instant on his
+countenance the stamp of terror. But he hastened to empty his glass, wiped
+his forehead with his handkerchief, and joined again in the conversation.
+
+I was astonished at the wit and information he displayed. Mr.
+Huddlestone's was certainly no ordinary character; he had read and
+observed for himself; his gifts were sound; and, though I could never have
+learned to love the man, I began to understand his success in business,
+and the great respect in which he had been held before his failure. He
+had, above all, the talent of society; and though I never heard him speak
+but on this one and most unfavorable occasion, I set him down among the
+most brilliant conversationalists I ever met.
+
+He was relating with great gusto, and seemingly no feeling of shame, the
+maneuvers of a scoundrelly commission merchant whom he had known and
+studied in his youth, and we were all listening with an odd mixture of
+mirth and embarrassment, when our little party was brought abruptly to an
+end in the most startling manner.
+
+A noise like that of a wet finger on the window pane interrupted Mr.
+Huddlestone's tale; and in an instant we were all four as white as paper,
+and sat tongue-tied and motionless round the table.
+
+"A snail," I said at last; for I had heard that these animals make a noise
+somewhat similar in character.
+
+"Snail be d----d!" said Northmour. "Hush!"
+
+The same sound was repeated twice at regular intervals; and then a
+formidable voice shouted through the shutters the Italian word,
+_"Traditore!"_
+
+Mr. Huddlestone threw his head in the air; his eyelids quivered; next
+moment he fell insensible below the table. Northmour and I had each run to
+the armory and seized a gun. Clara was on her feet with her hand at her
+throat.
+
+So we stood waiting, for we thought the hour of attack was certainly come;
+but second passed after second, and all but the surf remained silent in
+the neighborhood of the pavilion.
+
+"Quick," said Northmour; "upstairs with him before they come."
+
+
+VIII
+
+Somehow or other, by hook and crook, and between the three of us, we got
+Bernard Huddlestone bundled upstairs and laid upon the bed in My Uncle's
+Room. During the whole process, which was rough enough, he gave no sign of
+consciousness, and he remained, as we had thrown him, without changing the
+position of a finger. His daughter opened his shirt and began to wet his
+head and bosom; while Northmour and I ran to the window. The weather
+continued clear; the moon, which was now about full, had risen and shed a
+very clear light upon the links; yet, strain our eyes as we might, we
+could distinguish nothing moving. A few dark spots, more or less, on the
+uneven expanse were not to be identified; they might be crouching men,
+they might be shadows; it was impossible to be sure.
+
+"Thank God," said Northmour, "Aggie is not coming to-night."
+
+Aggie was the name of the old nurse; he had not thought of her until now;
+but that he should think of her at all was a trait that surprised me in
+the man.
+
+We were again reduced to waiting. Northmour went to the fireplace and
+spread his hands before the red embers, as if he were cold. I followed him
+mechanically with my eyes, and in so doing turned my back upon the window.
+At that moment a very faint report was audible from without, and a ball
+shivered a pane of glass, and buried itself in the shutter two inches from
+my head. I heard Clara scream; and though I whipped instantly out of range
+and into a corner, she was there, so to speak, before me, beseeching to
+know if I were hurt. I felt that I could stand to be shot at every day and
+all day long, with such remarks of solicitude for a reward; and I
+continued to reassure her, with, the tenderest caresses and in complete
+forgetfulness of our situation, till the voice of Northmour recalled me to
+myself.
+
+"An air gun," he said. "They wish to make no noise."
+
+I put Clara aside, and looked at him. He was standing with his back to the
+fire and his hands clasped behind him; and I knew by the black look on his
+face, that passion was boiling within. I had seen just such a look before
+he attacked me, that March night, in the adjoining chamber; and, though I
+could make every allowance for his anger, I confess I trembled for the
+consequences. He gazed straight before him; but he could see us with the
+tail of his eye, and his temper kept rising like a gale of wind. With
+regular battle awaiting us outside, this prospect of an internecine strife
+within the walls began to daunt me.
+
+Suddenly, as I was thus closely watching his expression and prepared
+against the worst, I saw a change, a flash, a look of relief, upon his
+face. He took up the lamp which stood beside him on the table, and turned
+to us with an air of some excitement.
+
+"There is one point that we must know," said he. "Are they going to
+butcher the lot of us, or only Huddlestone? Did they take you for him, or
+fire at you for your own _beaux yeux_?"
+
+"They took me for him, for certain," I replied. "I am near as tall, and my
+head is fair."
+
+"I am going to make sure," returned Northmour; and he stepped up to the
+window, holding the lamp above his head, and stood there, quietly
+affronting death, for half a minute.
+
+Clara sought to rush forward and pull him from the place of danger; but I
+had the pardonable selfishness to hold her back by force.
+
+"Yes," said Northmour, turning coolly from the window, "it's only
+Huddlestone they want."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Northmour!" cried Clara; but found no more to add; the temerity
+she had just witnessed seeming beyond, the reach of words.
+
+He, on his part, looked at me, cocking his head, with a fire of triumph in
+his eyes; and I understood at once that he had thus hazarded his life,
+merely to attract Clara's notice, and depose me from my position as the
+hero of the hour. He snapped his fingers.
+
+"The fire is only beginning," said he. "When they warm up to their work,
+they won't be so particular."
+
+A voice was now heard hailing us from the entrance. From the window we
+could see the figure of a man in the moonlight; he stood motionless, his
+face uplifted to ours, and a rag of something white on his extended arm;
+and as we looked right down upon him, though he was a good many yards
+distant on the links, we could see the moonlight glitter on his eyes.
+
+He opened his lips again, and spoke for some minutes on end, in a key so
+loud that he might have been heard in every corner of the pavilion, and as
+far away as the borders of the wood. It was the same voice that had
+already shouted, _"Traditore!"_ through the shutters of the dining-room;
+this time it made a complete and clear statement. If the traitor
+"Oddlestone" were given up, all others should be spared; if not, no one
+should escape to tell the tale.
+
+"Well, Huddlestone, what do you say to that?" asked Northmour, turning to
+the bed.
+
+Up to that moment the banker had given no sign of life, and I, at least,
+had supposed him to be still lying in a faint; but he replied at once, and
+in such tones as I have never heard elsewhere, save from a delirious
+patient, adjured and besought us not to desert him. It was the most
+hideous and abject performance that my imagination can conceive.
+
+"Enough," cried Northmour; and then he threw open the window, leaned out
+into the night, and in a tone of exultation, and with a total
+forgetfulness of what was due to the presence of a lady, poured out upon
+the ambassador a string of the most abominable raillery both in English
+and Italian, and bade him be gone where he had come from. I believe that
+nothing so delighted Northmour at that moment as the thought that we must
+all infallibly perish before the night was out.
+
+Meantime, the Italian put his flag of truce into his pocket, and
+disappeared, at a leisurely pace, among the sand hills.
+
+"They make honorable war," said Northmour. "They are all gentlemen and
+soldiers. For the credit of the thing, I wish we could change sides--you
+and I, Frank, and you, too, missy, my darling--and leave that being on the
+bed to some one else. Tut! Don't look shocked! We are all going post to
+what they call eternity, and may as well be above board while there's
+time. As far as I am concerned, if I could first strangle Huddlestone and
+then get Clara in my arms, I could die with some pride and satisfaction.
+And as it is, by God, I'll have a kiss!"
+
+Before I could do anything to interfere, he had rudely embraced and
+repeatedly kissed the resisting girl. Next moment I had pulled him away
+with fury, and flung him heavily against the wall. He laughed loud and
+long, and I feared his wits had given way under the strain; for even in
+the best of days he had been a sparing and a quiet laugher.
+
+"Now, Frank," said he, when his mirth was somewhat appeased, "it's your
+turn. Here's my hand. Good-bye, farewell!" Then, seeing me stand rigid and
+indignant, and holding Clara to my side--"Man!" he broke out, "are you
+angry? Did you think we were going to die with all the airs and graces of
+society? I took a kiss; I'm glad I did it; and now you can take another if
+you like, and square accounts."
+
+I turned from him with a feeling of contempt which I did not seek to
+dissemble.
+
+"As you please," said he. "You've been a prig in life; a prig you'll die."
+
+And with that he sat down in a chair, a rifle over his knee, and amused
+himself with snapping the lock; but I could see that his ebullition of
+light spirits (the only one I ever knew him to display) had already come
+to an end, and was succeeded by a sullen, scowling humor.
+
+All this time our assailants might have been entering the house, and we
+been none the wiser; we had in truth almost forgotten the danger that so
+imminently overhung our days. But just then Mr. Huddlestone uttered a cry,
+and leaped from the bed.
+
+I asked him what was wrong.
+
+"Fire!" he cried. "They have set the house on fire!"
+
+Northmour was on his feet in an instant, and he and I ran through the door
+of communication with the study. The room was illuminated by a red and
+angry light. Almost at the moment of our entrance, a tower of flame arose
+in front of the window, and, with a tingling report, a pane fell inward on
+the carpet. They had set fire to the lean-to outhouse, where Northmour
+used to nurse his negatives.
+
+"Hot work," said Northmour. "Let us try in your old room."
+
+We ran thither in a breath, threw up the casement, and looked forth. Along
+the whole back wall of the pavilion piles of fuel had been arranged and
+kindled; and it is probable they had been drenched with mineral oil, for,
+in spite of the morning's rain, they all burned bravely. The fire had
+taken a firm hold already on the outhouse, which blazed higher and higher
+every moment; the back door was in the center of a red-hot bonfire; the
+eaves we could see, as we looked upward, were already smoldering, for the
+roof overhung, and was supported by considerable beams of wood. At the
+same time, hot, pungent, and choking volumes of smoke began to fill the
+house. There was not a human being to be seen to right or left.
+
+"Ah, well!" said Northmour, "here's the end, thank God!"
+
+And we returned to My Uncle's Room. Mr. Huddlestone was putting on his
+boots, still violently trembling, but with an air of determination such as
+I had not hitherto observed. Clara stood close by him, with her cloak in
+both hands ready to throw about her shoulders, and a strange look in her
+eyes, as if she were half hopeful, half doubtful of her father.
+
+"Well, boys and girls," said Northmour, "how about a sally? The oven is
+heating; it is not good to stay here and be baked; and, for my part, I
+want to come to my hands with them, and be done."
+
+"There's nothing else left," I replied.
+
+And both Clara and Mr. Huddlestone, though with a very different
+intonation, added, "Nothing."
+
+As we went downstairs the heat was excessive, and the roaring of the fire
+filled our ears; and we had scarce reached the passage before the stairs
+window fell in, a branch of flame shot brandishing through the aperture,
+and the interior of the pavilion became lighted up with that dreadful and
+fluctuating glare. At the same moment we heard the fall of something heavy
+and inelastic in the upper story. The whole pavilion, it was plain, had
+gone alight like a box of matches, and now not only flamed sky high to
+land and sea, but threatened with every moment to crumble and fall in
+about our ears.
+
+Northmour and I cocked our revolvers. Mr. Huddlestone, who had already
+refused a firearm, put us behind him with a manner of command.
+
+"Let Clara open the door," said he. "So, if they fire a volley, she will
+be protected. And in the meantime stand behind me. I am the scapegoat; my
+sins have found me out."
+
+I heard him, as I stood breathless by his shoulder, with my pistol ready,
+pattering off prayers in a tremulous, rapid whisper; and, I confess,
+horrid as the thought may seem, I despised him for thinking of
+supplications in a moment so critical and thrilling. In the meantime,
+Clara, who was dead white but still possessed her faculties, had displaced
+the barricade from the front door. Another moment, and she had pulled it
+open. Firelight and moonlight illuminated the links with confused and
+changeful luster, and far away against the sky we could see a long trail
+of glowing smoke.
+
+Mr. Huddlestone, filled for the moment with a strength greater than his
+own, struck Northmour and myself a back-hander in the chest; and while we
+were thus for the moment incapacitated from action, lifting his arms above
+his head like one about to dive, he ran straight forward out of the
+pavilion.
+
+"Here am I!" he cried--"Huddlestone! Kill me, and spare the others!"
+
+His sudden appearance daunted, I suppose, our hidden enemies; for
+Northmour and I had time to recover, to seize Clara between us, one by
+each arm, and to rush forth to his assistance, ere anything further had
+taken place. But scarce had we passed the threshold when there came near a
+dozen reports and flashes from every direction among the hollows of the
+links. Mr. Huddlestone staggered, uttered a weird and freezing cry, threw
+up his arms over his head, and fell backward on the turf.
+
+_"Traditore! Traditore!"_ cried the invisible avengers.
+
+And just then a part of the roof of the pavilion fell in, so rapid was the
+progress of the fire. A loud, vague, and horrible noise accompanied the
+collapse, and a vast volume of flame went soaring up to heaven. It must
+have been visible at that moment from twenty miles out at sea, from the
+shore at Graden Wester, and far inland from the peak of Graystiel, the
+most eastern summit of the Caulder Hills. Bernard Huddlestone, although
+God knows what were his obsequies, had a fine pyre at the moment of his
+death.
+
+
+IX
+
+I should have the greatest difficulty to tell you what followed next after
+this tragic circumstance. It is all to me, as I look back upon it, mixed,
+strenuous, and ineffectual, like the struggles of a sleeper in a
+nightmare. Clara, I remember, uttered a broken sigh and would have fallen
+forward to earth, had not Northmour and I supported her insensible body. I
+do not think we were attacked: I do not remember even to have seen an
+assailant; and I believe we deserted Mr. Huddlestone without a glance. I
+only remember running like a man in a panic, now carrying Clara altogether
+in my own arms, now sharing her weight with Northmour, now scuffling
+confusedly for the possession of that dear burden. Why we should have made
+for my camp in the Hemlock Den, or how we reached it, are points lost
+forever to my recollection. The first moment at which I became definitely
+sure, Clara had been suffered to fall against the outside of my little
+tent, Northmour and I were tumbling together on the ground, and he, with
+contained ferocity, was striking for my head with the butt of his
+revolver. He had already twice wounded me on the scalp; and it is to the
+consequent loss of blood that I am tempted to attribute the sudden
+clearness of my mind.
+
+I caught him by the wrist.
+
+"Northmour," I remember saying, "you can kill me afterwards. Let us first
+attend to Clara."
+
+He was at that moment uppermost. Scarcely had the words passed my lips,
+when he had leaped to his feet and ran toward the tent; and the next
+moment, he was straining Clara to his heart and covering her unconscious
+hands and face with his caresses.
+
+"Shame!" I cried. "Shame to you, Northmour!"
+
+And, giddy though I still was, I struck him repeatedly upon the head and
+shoulders.
+
+He relinquished his grasp, and faced me in the broken moonlight.
+
+"I had you under, and I let you go," said he; "and now you strike me!
+Coward!"
+
+"You are the coward," I retorted. "Did she wish your kisses while she was
+still sensible of what you wanted? Not she! And now she may be dying; and
+you waste this precious time, and abuse her helplessness. Stand aside, and
+let me help her."
+
+He confronted me for a moment, white and menacing; then suddenly he
+stepped aside.
+
+"Help her then," said he.
+
+I threw myself on my knees beside her, and loosened, as well as I was
+able, her dress and corset; but while I was thus engaged, a grasp
+descended on my shoulder.
+
+"Keep your hands off her," said Northmour, fiercely. "Do you think I have
+no blood in my veins?"
+
+"Northmour," I cried, "if you will neither help her yourself, nor let me
+do so, do you know that I shall have to kill you?"
+
+"That is better!" he cried. "Let her die also, where's the harm? Step
+aside from that girl! and stand up to fight."
+
+"You will observe," said I, half rising, "that I have not kissed her yet."
+
+"I dare you to," he cried.
+
+I do not know what possessed me; it was one of the things I am most
+ashamed of in my life, though, as my wife used to say, I knew that my
+kisses would be always welcome were she dead or living; down I fell again
+upon my knees, parted the hair from her forehead, and, with the dearest
+respect, laid my lips for a moment on that cold brow. It was such a caress
+as a father might have given; it was such a one as was not unbecoming
+from a man soon to die to a woman already dead.
+
+"And now," said I, "I am at your service, Mr. Northmour."
+
+
+But I saw, to my surprise, that he had turned his back upon me.
+
+"Do you hear?" I asked.
+
+"Yes," said he, "I do. If you wish to fight, I am ready. If not, go on and
+save Clara. All is one to me."
+
+I did not wait to be twice bidden; but, stooping again over Clara,
+continued my efforts to revive her. She still lay white and lifeless; I
+began to fear that her sweet spirit had indeed fled beyond recall, and
+horror and a sense of utter desolation seized upon my heart. I called her
+by name with the most endearing inflections; I chafed and beat her hands;
+now I laid her head low, now supported it against my knee; but all seemed
+to be in vain, and the lids still lay heavy on her eyes.
+
+"Northmour," I said, "there is my hat. For God's sake bring some water
+from the spring."
+
+Almost in a moment he was by my side with the water.
+
+"I have brought it in my own," he said. "You do not grudge me the
+privilege?"
+
+"Northmour," I was beginning to say, as I laved her head and breast; but
+he interrupted me savagely.
+
+"Oh, you hush up!" he said. "The best thing you can do is to say nothing."
+
+I had certainly no desire to talk, my mind being swallowed up in concern
+for my dear love and her condition; so I continued in silence to do my
+best toward her recovery, and, when the hat was empty, returned it to him,
+with one word--"More." He had, perhaps, gone several times upon this
+errand, when Clara reopened her eyes.
+
+"Now," said he, "since she is better, you can spare me, can you not? I
+wish you a good night, Mr. Cassilis."
+
+And with that he was gone among the thicket. I made a fire, for I had now
+no fear of the Italians, who had even spared all the little possessions
+left in my encampment; and, broken as she was by the excitement and the
+hideous catastrophe of the evening, I managed, in one way or another--by
+persuasion, encouragement, warmth, and such simple remedies as I could lay
+my hand on--to bring her back to some composure of mind and strength of
+body.
+
+Day had already come, when a sharp "Hist!" sounded from the thicket. I
+started from the ground; but the voice of Northmour was heard adding, in
+the most tranquil tones: "Come here, Cassilis, and alone; I want to show
+you something."
+
+I consulted Clara with my eyes, and, receiving her tacit permission, left
+her alone, and clambered out of the den. At some distance off I saw
+Northmour leaning against an elder; and, as soon as he perceived me, he
+began walking seaward. I had almost overtaken him as he reached the
+outskirts of the wood.
+
+"Look," said he, pausing.
+
+A couple of steps more brought me out of the foliage. The light of the
+morning lay cold and clear over that well-known scene. The pavilion was
+but a blackened wreck; the roof had fallen in, one of the gables had
+fallen out; and, far and near, the face of the links was cicatrized with
+little patches of burned furze. Thick smoke still went straight upward in
+the windless air of the morning, and a great pile of ardent cinders filled
+the bare walls of the house, like coals in an open grate. Close by the
+islet a schooner yacht lay to, and a well-manned boat was pulling
+vigorously for the shore.
+
+"The 'Red Earl'!" I cried. "The 'Red Earl' twelve hours too late!"
+
+"Feel in your pocket, Frank. Are you armed?" asked Northmour.
+
+I obeyed him, and I think I must have become deadly pale. My revolver had
+been taken from me.
+
+"You see, I have you in my power," he continued. "I disarmed you last
+night while you were nursing Clara; but this morning--here--take your
+pistol. No thanks!" he cried, holding up his hand. "I do not like them;
+that is the only way you can annoy me now."
+
+He began to walk forward across the links to meet the boat, and I followed
+a step or two behind. In front of the pavilion I paused to see where Mr.
+Huddlestone had fallen; but there was no sign of him, nor so much as a
+trace of blood.
+
+"Graden Floe," said Northmour.
+
+He continued to advance till we had come to the head of the beach.
+
+"No farther, please," said he. "Would you like to take her to Graden
+House?"
+
+"Thank you," replied I; "I shall try to get her to the minister at Graden
+Wester."
+
+The prow of the boat here grated on the beach, and a sailor jumped ashore
+with a line in his hand.
+
+"Wait a minute, lads!" cried Northmour; and then lower and to my private
+ear, "You had better say nothing of all this to her," he added.
+
+"On the contrary!" I broke out, "she shall know everything that I can
+tell."
+
+"You do not understand," he returned, with an air of great dignity. "It
+will be nothing to her; she expects it of me. Good-by!" he added, with a
+nod.
+
+I offered him my hand.
+
+"Excuse me," said he. "It's small, I know; but I can't push things quite
+so far as that. I don't wish any sentimental business, to sit by your
+hearth a white-haired wanderer, and all that. Quite the contrary: I hope
+to God I shall never again clap eyes on either one of you."
+
+"Well, God bless you, Northmour!" I said heartily.
+
+"Oh, yes," he returned.
+
+He walked down the beach; and the man who was ashore gave him an arm on
+board, and then shoved off and leaped into the bows himself. Northmour
+took the tiller; the boat rose to the waves, and the oars between the
+tholepins sounded crisp and measured in the morning air.
+
+They were not yet half way to the "Red Earl," and I was still watching
+their progress, when the sun rose out of the sea.
+
+One word more, and my story is done. Years after, Northmour was killed
+fighting under the colors of Garibaldi for the liberation of the Tyrol.
+
+
+
+
+Wilkie Collins
+
+
+
+
+_The Dream Woman_
+
+_A Mystery in Four Narratives_
+
+THE FIRST NARRATIVE
+
+INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT OF THE FACTS BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+I
+
+"Hullo, there! Hostler! Hullo-o-o!"
+
+"My dear! why don't you look for the bell?"
+
+"I have looked--there is no bell."
+
+"And nobody in the yard. How very extraordinary! Call again, dear."
+
+"Hostler! Hullo, there! Hostler-r-r!"
+
+My second call echoes through empty space, and rouses nobody--produces, in
+short, no visible result. I am at the end of my resources--I don't know
+what to say or what to do next. Here I stand in the solitary inn yard of a
+strange town, with two horses to hold, and a lady to take care of. By way
+of adding to my responsibilities, it so happens that one of the horses is
+dead lame, and that the lady is my wife.
+
+Who am I?--you will ask.
+
+There is plenty of time to answer the question. Nothing happens; and
+nobody appears to receive us. Let me introduce myself and my wife.
+
+I am Percy Fairbank--English gentleman--age (let us say) forty--no
+profession--moderate politics--middle height--fair complexion--easy
+character--plenty of money.
+
+My wife is a French lady. She was Mademoiselle Clotilde Delorge--when I
+was first presented to her at her father's house in France. I fell in love
+with her--I really don't know why. It might have been because I was
+perfectly idle, and had nothing else to do at the time. Or it might have
+been because all my friends said she was the very last woman whom I ought
+to think of marrying. On the surface, I must own, there is nothing in
+common between Mrs. Fairbank and me. She is tall; she is dark; she is
+nervous, excitable, romantic; in all her opinions she proceeds to
+extremes. What could such a woman see in me? what could I see in her? I
+know no more than you do. In some mysterious manner we exactly suit each
+other. We have been man and wife for ten years, and our only regret is,
+that we have no children. I don't know what you may think; I call
+that--upon the whole--a happy marriage.
+
+So much for ourselves. The next question is--what has brought us into the
+inn yard? and why am I obliged to turn groom, and hold the horses?
+
+We live for the most part in France--at the country house in which my wife
+and I first met. Occasionally, by way of variety, we pay visits to my
+friends in England. We are paying one of those visits now. Our host is an
+old college friend of mine, possessed of a fine estate in Somersetshire;
+and we have arrived at his house--called Farleigh Hall--toward the close
+of the hunting season.
+
+On the day of which I am now writing--destined to be a memorable day in
+our calendar--the hounds meet at Farleigh Hall. Mrs. Fairbank and I are
+mounted on two of the best horses in my friend's stables. We are quite
+unworthy of that distinction; for we know nothing and care nothing about
+hunting. On the other hand, we delight in riding, and we enjoy the breezy
+Spring morning and the fair and fertile English landscape surrounding us
+on every side. While the hunt prospers, we follow the hunt. But when a
+check occurs--when time passes and patience is sorely tried; when the
+bewildered dogs run hither and thither, and strong language falls from
+the lips of exasperated sportsmen--we fail to take any further interest in
+the proceedings. We turn our horses' heads in the direction of a grassy
+lane, delightfully shaded by trees. We trot merrily along the lane, and
+find ourselves on an open common. We gallop across the common, and follow
+the windings of a second lane. We cross a brook, we pass through a
+village, we emerge into pastoral solitude among the hills. The horses toss
+their heads, and neigh to each other, and enjoy it as much as we do. The
+hunt is forgotten. We are as happy as a couple of children; we are
+actually singing a French song--when in one moment our merriment comes to
+an end. My wife's horse sets one of his forefeet on a loose stone, and
+stumbles. His rider's ready hand saves him from falling. But, at the first
+attempt he makes to go on, the sad truth shows itself--a tendon is
+strained; the horse is lame.
+
+What is to be done? We are strangers in a lonely part of the country. Look
+where we may, we see no signs of a human habitation. There is nothing for
+it but to take the bridle road up the hill, and try what we can discover
+on the other side. I transfer the saddles, and mount my wife on my own
+horse. He is not used to carry a lady; he misses the familiar pressure of
+a man's legs on either side of him; he fidgets, and starts, and kicks up
+the dust. I follow on foot, at a respectful distance from his heels,
+leading the lame horse. Is there a more miserable object on the face of
+creation than a lame horse? I have seen lame men and lame dogs who were
+cheerful creatures; but I never yet saw a lame horse who didn't look
+heartbroken over his own misfortune.
+
+For half an hour my wife capers and curvets sideways along the bridle
+road. I trudge on behind her; and the heartbroken horse halts behind _me_.
+Hard by the top of the hill, our melancholy procession passes a
+Somersetshire peasant at work in a field. I summon the man to approach us;
+and the man looks at me stolidly, from the middle of the field, without
+stirring a step. I ask at the top of my voice how far it is to Farleigh
+Hall. The Somersetshire peasant answers at the top of _his_ voice:
+
+"Vourteen mile. Gi' oi a drap o' zyder."
+
+I translate (for my wife's benefit) from the Somersetshire language into
+the English language. We are fourteen miles from Farleigh Hall; and our
+friend in the field desires to be rewarded, for giving us that
+information, with a drop of cider. There is the peasant, painted by
+himself! Quite a bit of character, my dear! Quite a bit of character!
+
+Mrs. Fairbank doesn't view the study of agricultural human nature with my
+relish. Her fidgety horse will not allow her a moment's repose; she is
+beginning to lose her temper.
+
+"We can't go fourteen miles in this way," she says. "Where is the nearest
+inn? Ask that brute in the field!"
+
+I take a shilling from my pocket and hold it up in the sun. The shilling
+exercises magnetic virtues. The shilling draws the peasant slowly toward
+me from the middle of the field. I inform him that we want to put up the
+horses and to hire a carriage to take us back to Farleigh Hall. Where can
+we do that? The peasant answers (with his eye on the shilling):
+
+"At Oonderbridge, to be zure." (At Underbridge, to be sure.)
+
+"Is it far to Underbridge?"
+
+The peasant repeats, "Var to Oonderbridge?"--and laughs at the question.
+"Hoo-hoo-hoo!" (Underbridge is evidently close by--if we could only find
+it.) "Will you show us the way, my man?" "Will you gi' oi a drap of
+zyder?" I courteously bend my head, and point to the shilling. The
+agricultural intelligence exerts itself. The peasant joins our melancholy
+procession. My wife is a fine woman, but he never once looks at my
+wife--and, more extraordinary still, he never even looks at the horses.
+His eyes are with his mind--and his mind is on the shilling.
+
+We reach the top of the hill--and, behold on the other side, nestling in
+a valley, the shrine of our pilgrimage, the town of Underbridge! Here our
+guide claims his shilling, and leaves us to find out the inn for
+ourselves. I am constitutionally a polite man. I say "Good morning" at
+parting. The guide looks at me with the shilling between his teeth to make
+sure that it is a good one. "Marnin!" he says savagely--and turns his back
+on us, as if we had offended him. A curious product, this, of the growth
+of civilization. If I didn't see a church spire at Underbridge, I might
+suppose that we had lost ourselves on a savage island.
+
+
+II
+
+Arriving at the town, we had no difficulty in finding the inn. The town is
+composed of one desolate street; and midway in that street stands the
+inn--an ancient stone building sadly out of repair. The painting on the
+sign-board is obliterated. The shutters over the long range of front
+windows are all closed. A cock and his hens are the only living creatures
+at the door. Plainly, this is one of the old inns of the stage-coach
+period, ruined by the railway. We pass through the open arched doorway,
+and find no one to welcome us. We advance into the stable yard behind; I
+assist my wife to dismount--and there we are in the position already
+disclosed to view at the opening of this narrative. No bell to ring. No
+human creature to answer when I call. I stand helpless, with the bridles
+of the horses in my hand. Mrs. Fairbank saunters gracefully down the
+length of the yard and does--what all women do, when they find themselves
+in a strange place. She opens every door as she passes it, and peeps in.
+On my side, I have just recovered my breath, I am on the point of shouting
+for the hostler for the third and last time, when I hear Mrs. Fairbank
+suddenly call to me:
+
+"Percy! come here!"
+
+Her voice is eager and agitated. She has opened a last door at the end of
+the yard, and has started back from some sight which has suddenly met her
+view. I hitch the horses' bridles on a rusty nail in the wall near me, and
+join my wife. She has turned pale, and catches me nervously by the arm.
+
+"Good heavens!" she cries; "look at that!"
+
+I look--and what do I see? I see a dingy little stable, containing two
+stalls. In one stall a horse is munching his corn. In the other a man is
+lying asleep on the litter.
+
+A worn, withered, woebegone man in a hostler's dress. His hollow wrinkled
+cheeks, his scanty grizzled hair, his dry yellow skin, tell their own tale
+of past sorrow or suffering. There is an ominous frown on his
+eyebrows--there is a painful nervous contraction on the side of his mouth.
+I hear him breathing convulsively when I first look in; he shudders and
+sighs in his sleep. It is not a pleasant sight to see, and I turn round
+instinctively to the bright sunlight in the yard. My wife turns me back
+again in the direction of the stable door.
+
+"Wait!" she says. "Wait! he may do it again."
+
+"Do what again?"
+
+"He was talking in his sleep, Percy, when I first looked in. He was
+dreaming some dreadful dream. Hush! he's beginning again."
+
+I look and listen. The man stirs on his miserable bed. The man speaks in a
+quick, fierce whisper through his clinched teeth. "Wake up! Wake up,
+there! Murder!"
+
+There is an interval of silence. He moves one lean arm slowly until it
+rests over his throat; he shudders, and turns on his straw; he raises his
+arm from his throat, and feebly stretches it out; his hand clutches at the
+straw on the side toward which he has turned; he seems to fancy that he is
+grasping at the edge of something. I see his lips begin to move again; I
+step softly into the stable; my wife follows me, with her hand fast
+clasped in mine. We both bend over him. He is talking once more in his
+sleep--strange talk, mad talk, this time.
+
+"Light gray eyes" (we hear him say), "and a droop in the left
+eyelid--flaxen hair, with a gold-yellow streak in it--all right, mother!
+fair, white arms with a down on them--little, lady's hand, with a reddish
+look round the fingernails--the knife--the cursed knife--first on one
+side, then on the other--aha, you she-devil! where is the knife?"
+
+He stops and grows restless on a sudden. We see him writhing on the straw.
+He throws up both his hands and gasps hysterically for breath. His eyes
+open suddenly. For a moment they look at nothing, with a vacant glitter in
+them--then they close again in deeper sleep. Is he dreaming still? Yes;
+but the dream seems to have taken a new course. When he speaks next, the
+tone is altered; the words are few--sadly and imploringly repeated over
+and over again. "Say you love me! I am so fond of _you_. Say you love me!
+say you love me!" He sinks into deeper and deeper sleep, faintly repeating
+those words. They die away on his lips. He speaks no more.
+
+By this time Mrs. Fairbank has got over her terror; she is devoured by
+curiosity now. The miserable creature on the straw has appealed to the
+imaginative side of her character. Her illimitable appetite for romance
+hungers and thirsts for more. She shakes me impatiently by the arm.
+
+"Do you hear? There is a woman at the bottom of it, Percy! There is love
+and murder in it, Percy! Where are the people of the inn? Go into the
+yard, and call to them again."
+
+My wife belongs, on her mother's side, to the South of France. The South
+of France breeds fine women with hot tempers. I say no more. Married men
+will understand my position. Single men may need to be told that there are
+occasions when we must not only love and honor--we must also obey--our
+wives.
+
+I turn to the door to obey _my_ wife, and find myself confronted by a
+stranger who has stolen on us unawares. The stranger is a tiny, sleepy,
+rosy old man, with a vacant pudding-face, and a shining bald head. He
+wears drab breeches and gaiters, and a respectable square-tailed ancient
+black coat. I feel instinctively that here is the landlord of the inn.
+
+"Good morning, sir," says the rosy old man. "I'm a little hard of hearing.
+Was it you that was a-calling just now in the yard?"
+
+Before I can answer, my wife interposes. She insists (in a shrill voice,
+adapted to our host's hardness of hearing) on knowing who that unfortunate
+person is sleeping on the straw. "Where does he come from? Why does he say
+such dreadful things in his sleep? Is he married or single? Did he ever
+fall in love with a murderess? What sort of a looking woman was she? Did
+she really stab him or not? In short, dear Mr. Landlord, tell us the whole
+story!"
+
+Dear Mr. Landlord waits drowsily until Mrs. Fairbank has quite done--then
+delivers himself of his reply as follows:
+
+"His name's Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He was
+forty-five year old last birthday. And he's my hostler. That's his story."
+
+My wife's hot southern temper finds its way to her foot, and expresses
+itself by a stamp on the stable yard.
+
+The landlord turns himself sleepily round, and looks at the horses. "A
+fine pair of horses, them two in the yard. Do you want to put 'em in my
+stables?" I reply in the affirmative by a nod. The landlord, bent on
+making himself agreeable to my wife, addresses her once more. "I'm a-going
+to wake Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He was forty-five
+year old last birthday. And he's my hostler. That's his story."
+
+Having issued this second edition of his interesting narrative, the
+landlord enters the stable. We follow him to see how he will wake Francis
+Raven, and what will happen upon that. The stable broom stands in a
+corner; the landlord takes it--advances toward the sleeping hostler--and
+coolly stirs the man up with a broom as if he was a wild beast in a cage.
+Francis Raven starts to his feet with a cry of terror--looks at us wildly,
+with a horrid glare of suspicion in his eyes--recovers himself the next
+moment--and suddenly changes into a decent, quiet, respectable
+serving-man.
+
+"I beg your pardon, ma'am. I beg your pardon, sir."
+
+The tone and manner in which he makes his apologies are both above his
+apparent station in life. I begin to catch the infection of Mrs.
+Fairbank's interest in this man. We both follow him out into the yard to
+see what he will do with the horses. The manner in which he lifts the
+injured leg of the lame horse tells me at once that he understands his
+business. Quickly and quietly, he leads the animal into an empty stable;
+quickly and quietly, he gets a bucket of hot water, and puts the lame
+horse's leg into it. "The warm water will reduce the swelling, sir. I will
+bandage the leg afterwards." All that he does is done intelligently; all
+that he says, he says to the purpose.
+
+Nothing wild, nothing strange about him now. Is this the same man whom we
+heard talking in his sleep?--the same man who woke with that cry of terror
+and that horrid suspicion in his eyes? I determine to try him with one or
+two questions.
+
+
+III
+
+"Not much to do here," I say to the hostler.
+
+"Very little to do, sir," the hostler replies.
+
+"Anybody staying in the house?"
+
+"The house is quite empty, sir."
+
+"I thought you were all dead. I could make nobody hear me."
+
+"The landlord is very deaf, sir, and the waiter is out on an errand."
+
+"Yes; and _you_ were fast asleep in the stable. Do you often take a nap in
+the daytime?"
+
+The worn face of the hostler faintly flushes. His eyes look away from my
+eyes for the first time. Mrs. Fairbank furtively pinches my arm. Are we on
+the eve of a discovery at last? I repeat my question. The man has no civil
+alternative but to give me an answer. The answer is given in these words:
+
+"I was tired out, sir. You wouldn't have found me asleep in the daytime
+but for that."
+
+"Tired out, eh? You had been hard at work, I suppose?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"What was it, then?"
+
+He hesitates again, and answers unwillingly, "I was up all night."
+
+"Up all night? Anything going on in the town?"
+
+"Nothing going on, sir."
+
+"Anybody ill?"
+
+"Nobody ill, sir."
+
+That reply is the last. Try as I may, I can extract nothing more from him.
+He turns away and busies himself in attending to the horse's leg. I leave
+the stable to speak to the landlord about the carriage which is to take us
+back to Farleigh Hall. Mrs. Fairbank remains with the hostler, and favors
+me with a look at parting. The look says plainly, "_I_ mean to find out
+why he was up all night. Leave him to Me."
+
+The ordering of the carriage is easily accomplished. The inn possesses one
+horse and one chaise. The landlord has a story to tell of the horse, and a
+story to tell of the chaise. They resemble the story of Francis
+Raven--with this exception, that the horse and chaise belong to no
+religious persuasion. "The horse will be nine year old next birthday. I've
+had the shay for four-and-twenty year. Mr. Max, of Underbridge, he bred
+the horse; and Mr. Pooley, of Yeovil, he built the shay. It's my horse and
+my shay. And that's _their_ story!" Having relieved his mind of these
+details, the landlord proceeds to put the harness on the horse. By way of
+assisting him, I drag the chaise into the yard. Just as our preparations
+are completed, Mrs. Fairbank appears. A moment or two later the hostler
+follows her out. He has bandaged the horse's leg, and is now ready to
+drive us to Farleigh Hall. I observe signs of agitation in his face and
+manner, which suggest that my wife has found her way into his confidence.
+I put the question to her privately in a corner of the yard. "Well? Have
+you found out why Francis Raven was up all night?"
+
+Mrs. Fairbank has an eye to dramatic effect. Instead of answering plainly,
+Yes or No, she suspends the interest and excites the audience by putting a
+question on her side.
+
+"What is the day of the month, dear?"
+
+"The day of the month is the first of March."
+
+"The first of March, Percy, is Francis Raven's birthday."
+
+I try to look as if I was interested--and don't succeed.
+
+"Francis was born," Mrs. Fairbank proceeds gravely, "at two o'clock in the
+morning."
+
+I begin to wonder whether my wife's intellect is going the way of the
+landlord's intellect. "Is that all?" I ask.
+
+"It is _not_ all," Mrs. Fairbank answers. "Francis Raven sits up on the
+morning of his birthday because he is afraid to go to bed."
+
+"And why is he afraid to go to bed?"
+
+"Because he is in peril of his life."
+
+"On his birthday?"
+
+"On his birthday. At two o'clock in the morning. As regularly as the
+birthday comes round."
+
+There she stops. Has she discovered no more than that? No more thus far. I
+begin to feel really interested by this time. I ask eagerly what it means?
+Mrs. Fairbank points mysteriously to the chaise--with Francis Raven
+(hitherto our hostler, now our coachman) waiting for us to get in. The
+chaise has a seat for two in front, and a seat for one behind. My wife
+casts a warning look at me, and places herself on the seat in front.
+
+The necessary consequence of this arrangement is that Mrs. Fairbank sits
+by the side of the driver during a journey of two hours and more. Need I
+state the result? It would be an insult to your intelligence to state the
+result. Let me offer you my place in the chaise. And let Francis Raven
+tell his terrible story in his own words.
+
+
+
+
+THE SECOND NARRATIVE
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HOSTLER'S STORY.--TOLD BY HIMSELF
+
+
+IV
+
+It is now ten years ago since I got my first warning of the great trouble
+of my life in the Vision of a Dream.
+
+I shall be better able to tell you about it if you will please suppose
+yourselves to be drinking tea along with us in our little cottage in
+Cambridgeshire, ten years since.
+
+The time was the close of day, and there were three of us at the table,
+namely, my mother, myself, and my mother's sister, Mrs. Chance. These two
+were Scotchwomen by birth, and both were widows. There was no other
+resemblance between them that I can call to mind. My mother had lived all
+her life in England, and had no more of the Scotch brogue on her tongue
+than I have. My aunt Chance had never been out of Scotland until she came
+to keep house with my mother after her husband's death. And when _she_
+opened her lips you heard broad Scotch, I can tell you, if you ever heard
+it yet!
+
+As it fell out, there was a matter of some consequence in debate among us
+that evening. It was this: whether I should do well or not to take a long
+journey on foot the next morning.
+
+Now the next morning happened to be the day before my birthday; and the
+purpose of the journey was to offer myself for a situation as groom at a
+great house in the neighboring county to ours. The place was reported as
+likely to fall vacant in about three weeks' time. I was as well fitted to
+fill it as any other man. In the prosperous days of our family, my father
+had been manager of a training stable, and he had kept me employed among
+the horses from my boyhood upward. Please to excuse my troubling you with
+these small matters. They all fit into my story farther on, as you will
+soon find out. My poor mother was dead against my leaving home on the
+morrow.
+
+"You can never walk all the way there and all the way back again by
+to-morrow night," she says. "The end of it will be that you will sleep
+away from home on your birthday. You have never done that yet, Francis,
+since your father's death, I don't like your doing it now. Wait a day
+longer, my son--only one day."
+
+For my own part, I was weary of being idle, and I couldn't abide the
+notion of delay. Even one day might make all the difference. Some other
+man might take time by the forelock, and get the place.
+
+"Consider how long I have been out of work," I says, "and don't ask me to
+put off the journey. I won't fail you, mother. I'll get back by to-morrow
+night, if I have to pay my last sixpence for a lift in a cart.
+
+My mother shook her head. "I don't like it, Francis--I don't like it!"
+There was no moving her from that view. We argued and argued, until we
+were both at a deadlock. It ended in our agreeing to refer the difference
+between us to my mother's sister, Mrs. Chance.
+
+While we were trying hard to convince each other, my aunt Chance sat as
+dumb as a fish, stirring her tea and thinking her own thoughts. When we
+made our appeal to her, she seemed as it were to wake up. "Ye baith refer
+it to my puir judgment?" she says, in her broad Scotch. We both answered
+Yes. Upon that my aunt Chance first cleared the tea-table, and then pulled
+out from the pocket of her gown a pack of cards.
+
+Don't run away, if you please, with the notion that this was done lightly,
+with a view to amuse my mother and me. My aunt Chance seriously believed
+that she could look into the future by telling fortunes on the cards. She
+did nothing herself without first consulting the cards. She could give no
+more serious proof of her interest in my welfare than the proof which she
+was offering now. I don't say it profanely; I only mention the fact--the
+cards had, in some incomprehensible way, got themselves jumbled up
+together with her religious convictions. You meet with people nowadays who
+believe in spirits working by way of tables and chairs. On the same
+principle (if there _is_ any principle in it) my aunt Chance believed in
+Providence working by way of the cards.
+
+"Whether _you_ are right, Francie, or your mither--whether ye will do weel
+or ill, the morrow, to go or stay--the cairds will tell it. We are a' in
+the hands of Proavidence. The cairds will tell it."
+
+Hearing this, my mother turned her head aside, with something of a sour
+look in her face. Her sister's notions about the cards were little better
+than flat blasphemy to her mind. But she kept her opinion to herself. My
+aunt Chance, to own the truth, had inherited, through her late husband, a
+pension of thirty pounds a year. This was an important contribution to our
+housekeeping, and we poor relations were bound to treat her with a certain
+respect. As for myself, if my poor father never did anything else for me
+before he fell into difficulties, he gave me a good education, and raised
+me (thank God) above superstitions of all sorts. However, a very little
+amused me in those days; and I waited to have my fortune told, as
+patiently as if I believed in it too!
+
+My aunt began her hocus pocus by throwing out all the cards in the pack
+under seven. She shuffled the rest with her left hand for luck; and then
+she gave them to me to cut. "Wi' yer left hand, Francie. Mind that! Pet
+your trust in Proavidence--but dinna forget that your luck's in yer left
+hand!" A long and roundabout shifting of the cards followed, reducing them
+in number until there were just fifteen of them left, laid out neatly
+before my aunt in a half circle. The card which happened to lie outermost,
+at the right-hand end of the circle, was, according to rule in such cases,
+the card chosen to represent Me. By way of being appropriate to my
+situation as a poor groom out of employment, the card was--the King of
+Diamonds.
+
+"I tak' up the King o' Diamants," says my aunt. "I count seven cairds fra'
+richt to left; and I humbly ask a blessing on what follows." My aunt shut
+her eyes as if she was saying grace before meat, and held up to me the
+seventh card. I called the seventh card--the Queen of Spades. My aunt
+opened her eyes again in a hurry, and cast a sly look my way. "The Queen
+o' Spades means a dairk woman. Ye'll be thinking in secret, Francie, of a
+dairk woman?"
+
+When a man has been out of work for more than three months, his mind isn't
+troubled much with thinking of women--light or dark. I was thinking of the
+groom's place at the great house, and I tried to say so. My aunt Chance
+wouldn't listen. She treated my interpretation with contempt. "Hoot-toot!
+there's the caird in your hand! If ye're no thinking of her the day, ye'll
+be thinking of her the morrow. Where's the harm of thinking of a dairk
+woman! I was ance a dairk woman myself, before my hair was gray. Haud yer
+peace, Francie, and watch the cairds."
+
+I watched the cards as I was told. There were seven left on the table. My
+aunt removed two from one end of the row and two from the other, and
+desired me to call the two outermost of the three cards now left on the
+table. I called the Ace of Clubs and the Ten of Diamonds. My aunt Chance
+lifted her eyes to the ceiling with a look of devout gratitude which
+sorely tried my mother's patience. The Ace of Clubs and the Ten of
+Diamonds, taken together, signified--first, good news (evidently the news
+of the groom's place); secondly, a journey that lay before me (pointing
+plainly to my journey to-morrow!); thirdly and lastly, a sum of money
+(probably the groom's wages!) waiting to find its way into my pockets.
+Having told my fortune in these encouraging terms, my aunt declined to
+carry the experiment any further. "Eh, lad! it's a clean tempting o'
+Proavidence to ask mair o' the cairds than the cairds have tauld us noo.
+Gae yer ways to-morrow to the great hoose. A dairk woman will meet ye at
+the gate; and she'll have a hand in getting ye the groom's place, wi' a'
+the gratifications and pairquisites appertaining to the same. And, mebbe,
+when yer poaket's full o' money, ye'll no' be forgetting yer aunt Chance,
+maintaining her ain unblemished widowhood--wi' Proavidence assisting--on
+thratty punds a year!"
+
+I promised to remember my aunt Chance (who had the defect, by the way, of
+being a terribly greedy person after money) on the next happy occasion
+when my poor empty pockets were to be filled at last. This done, I looked
+at my mother. She had agreed to take her sister for umpire between us, and
+her sister had given it in my favor. She raised no more objections.
+Silently, she got on her feet, and kissed me, and sighed bitterly--and so
+left the room. My aunt Chance shook her head. "I doubt, Francie, yer puir
+mither has but a heathen notion of the vairtue of the cairds!"
+
+By daylight the next morning I set forth on my journey. I looked back at
+the cottage as I opened the garden gate. At one window was my mother, with
+her handkerchief to her eyes. At the other stood my aunt Chance, holding
+up the Queen of Spades by way of encouraging me at starting. I waved my
+hands to both of them in token of farewell, and stepped out briskly into
+the road. It was then the last day of February. Be pleased to remember, in
+connection with this, that the first of March was the day, and two o'clock
+in the morning the hour of my birth.
+
+
+V
+
+Now you know how I came to leave home. The next thing to tell is, what
+happened on the journey.
+
+I reached the great house in reasonably good time considering the
+distance. At the very first trial of it, the prophecy of the cards turned
+out to be wrong. The person who met me at the lodge gate was not a dark
+woman--in fact, not a woman at all--but a boy. He directed me on the way
+to the servants' offices; and there again the cards were all wrong. I
+encountered, not one woman, but three--and not one of the three was dark.
+I have stated that I am not superstitious, and I have told the truth. But
+I must own that I did feel a certain fluttering at the heart when I made
+my bow to the steward, and told him what business had brought me to the
+house. His answer completed the discomfiture of aunt Chance's
+fortune-telling. My ill-luck still pursued me. That very morning another
+man had applied for the groom's place, and had got it.
+
+I swallowed my disappointment as well as I could, and thanked the steward,
+and went to the inn in the village to get the rest and food which I sorely
+needed by this time.
+
+Before starting on my homeward walk I made some inquiries at the inn, and
+ascertained that I might save a few miles, on my return, by following a
+new road. Furnished with full instructions, several times repeated, as to
+the various turnings I was to take, I set forth, and walked on till the
+evening with only one stoppage for bread and cheese. Just as it was
+getting toward dark, the rain came on and the wind began to rise; and I
+found myself, to make matters worse, in a part of the country with which I
+was entirely unacquainted, though I guessed myself to be some fifteen
+miles from home. The first house I found to inquire at, was a lonely
+roadside inn, standing on the outskirts of a thick wood. Solitary as the
+place looked, it was welcome to a lost man who was also hungry, thirsty,
+footsore, and wet. The landlord was civil and respectable-looking; and the
+price he asked for a bed was reasonable enough. I was grieved to
+disappoint my mother. But there was no conveyance to be had, and I could
+go no farther afoot that night. My weariness fairly forced me to stop at
+the inn.
+
+I may say for myself that I am a temperate man. My supper simply consisted
+of some rashers of bacon, a slice of home-made bread, and a pint of ale. I
+did not go to bed immediately after this moderate meal, but sat up with
+the landlord, talking about my bad prospects and my long run of ill-luck,
+and diverging from these topics to the subjects of horse-flesh and racing.
+Nothing was said, either by myself, my host, or the few laborers who
+strayed into the tap-room, which could, in the slightest degree, excite
+my mind, or set my fancy--which is only a small fancy at the best of
+times--playing tricks with my common sense.
+
+At a little after eleven the house was closed. I went round with the
+landlord, and held the candle while the doors and lower windows were being
+secured. I noticed with surprise the strength of the bolts, bars, and
+iron-sheathed shutters.
+
+"You see, we are rather lonely here," said the landlord. "We never have
+had any attempts to break in yet, but it's always as well to be on the
+safe side. When nobody is sleeping here, I am the only man in the house.
+My wife and daughter are timid, and the servant girl takes after her
+missuses. Another glass of ale, before you turn in?--No!--Well, how such a
+sober man as you comes to be out of a place is more than I can understand
+for one.--Here's where you're to sleep. You're the only lodger to-night,
+and I think you'll say my missus has done her best to make you
+comfortable. You're quite sure you won't have another glass of ale?--Very
+well. Good night."
+
+It was half-past eleven by the clock in the passage as we went upstairs to
+the bedroom. The window looked out on the wood at the back of the house.
+
+I locked my door, set my candle on the chest of drawers, and wearily got
+me ready for bed. The bleak wind was still blowing, and the solemn,
+surging moan of it in the wood was very dreary to hear through the night
+silence. Feeling strangely wakeful, I resolved to keep the candle alight
+until I began to grow sleepy. The truth is, I was not quite myself. I was
+depressed in mind by my disappointment of the morning; and I was worn out
+in body by my long walk. Between the two, I own I couldn't face the
+prospect of lying awake in the darkness, listening to the dismal moan of
+the wind in the wood.
+
+Sleep stole on me before I was aware of it; my eyes closed, and I fell off
+to rest, without having so much as thought of extinguishing the candle.
+
+The next thing that I remember was a faint shivering that ran through me
+from head to foot, and a dreadful sinking pain at my heart, such as I had
+never felt before. The shivering only disturbed my slumbers--the pain woke
+me instantly. In one moment I passed from a state of sleep to a state of
+wakefulness--my eyes wide open--my mind clear on a sudden as if by a
+miracle. The candle had burned down nearly to the last morsel of tallow,
+but the unsnuffed wick had just fallen off, and the light was, for the
+moment, fair and full.
+
+Between the foot of the bed and the closet door, I saw a person in my
+room. The person was a woman, standing looking at me, with a knife in her
+hand. It does no credit to my courage to confess it--but the truth _is_
+the truth. I was struck speechless with terror. There I lay with my eyes
+on the woman; there the woman stood (with the knife in her hand) with
+_her_ eyes on _me_.
+
+She said not a word as we stared each other in the face; but she moved
+after a little--moved slowly toward the left-hand side of the bed.
+
+The light fell full on her face. A fair, fine woman, with yellowish flaxen
+hair, and light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. I noticed
+these things and fixed them in my mind, before she was quite round at the
+side of the bed. Without saying a word; without any change in the stony
+stillness of her face; without any noise following her footfall, she came
+closer and closer; stopped at the bed-head; and lifted the knife to stab
+me. I laid my arm over my throat to save it; but, as I saw the blow
+coming, I threw my hand across the bed to the right side, and jerked my
+body over that way, just as the knife came down, like lightning, within a
+hair's breadth of my shoulder.
+
+My eyes fixed on her arm and her hand--she gave me time to look at them as
+she slowly drew the knife out of the bed. A white, well-shaped arm, with a
+pretty down lying lightly over the fair skin. A delicate lady's hand, with
+a pink flush round the finger nails.
+
+She drew the knife out, and passed back again slowly to the foot of the
+bed; she stopped there for a moment looking at me; then she came on
+without saying a word; without any change in the stony stillness of her
+face; without any noise following her footfall--came on to the side of the
+bed where I now lay.
+
+Getting near me, she lifted the knife again, and I drew myself away to the
+left side. She struck, as before right into the mattress, with a swift
+downward action of her arm; and she missed me, as before; by a hair's
+breadth. This time my eyes wandered from _her_ to the knife. It was like
+the large clasp knives which laboring men use to cut their bread and bacon
+with. Her delicate little fingers did not hide more than two thirds of the
+handle; I noticed that it was made of buckhorn, clean and shining as the
+blade was, and looking like new.
+
+For the second time she drew the knife out of the bed, and suddenly hid it
+away in the wide sleeve of her gown. That done, she stopped by the bedside
+watching me. For an instant I saw her standing in that position--then the
+wick of the spent candle fell over into the socket. The flame dwindled to
+a little blue point, and the room grew dark.
+
+A moment, or less, if possible, passed so--and then the wick flared up,
+smokily, for the last time. My eyes were still looking for her over the
+right-hand side of the bed when the last flash of light came. Look as I
+might, I could see nothing. The woman with the knife was gone.
+
+I began to get back to myself again. I could feel my heart beating; I
+could hear the woeful moaning of the wind in the wood; I could leap up in
+bed, and give the alarm before she escaped from the house. "Murder! Wake
+up there! Murder!"
+
+Nobody answered to the alarm. I rose and groped my way through the
+darkness to the door of the room. By that way she must have got in. By
+that way she must have gone out.
+
+The door of the room was fast locked, exactly as I had left it on going to
+bed! I looked at the window. Fast locked too!
+
+Hearing a voice outside, I opened the door. There was the landlord, coming
+toward me along the passage, with his burning candle in one hand, and his
+gun in the other.
+
+"What is it?" he says, looking at me in no very friendly way.
+
+I could only answer in a whisper, "A woman, with a knife in her hand. In
+my room. A fair, yellow-haired woman. She jabbed at me with the knife,
+twice over."
+
+He lifted his candle, and looked at me steadily from head to foot. "She
+seems to have missed you--twice over."
+
+"I dodged the knife as it came down. It struck the bed each time. Go in,
+and see."
+
+The landlord took his candle into the bedroom immediately. In less than a
+minute he came out again into the passage in a violent passion.
+
+"The devil fly away with you and your woman with the knife! There isn't a
+mark in the bedclothes anywhere. What do you mean by coming into a man's
+place and frightening his family out of their wits by a dream?"
+
+A dream? The woman who had tried to stab me, not a living human being like
+myself? I began to shake and shiver. The horrors got hold of me at the
+bare thought of it.
+
+"I'll leave the house," I said. "Better be out on the road in the rain and
+dark, than back in that room, after what I've seen in it. Lend me the
+light to get my clothes by, and tell me what I'm to pay."
+
+The landlord led the way back with his light into the bedroom. "Pay?" says
+he. "You'll find your score on the slate when you go downstairs. I
+wouldn't have taken you in for all the money you've got about you, if I
+had known your dreaming, screeching ways beforehand. Look at the
+bed--where's the cut of a knife in it? Look at the window--is the lock
+bursted? Look at the door (which I heard you fasten yourself)--is it broke
+in? A murdering woman with a knife in my house! You ought to be ashamed of
+yourself!"
+
+My eyes followed his hand as it pointed first to the bed--then to the
+window--then to the door. There was no gainsaying it. The bed sheet was as
+sound as on the day it was made. The window was fast. The door hung on its
+hinges as steady as ever. I huddled my clothes on without speaking. We
+went downstairs together. I looked at the clock in the bar-room. The time
+was twenty minutes past two in the morning. I paid my bill, and the
+landlord let me out. The rain had ceased; but the night was dark, and the
+wind was bleaker than ever. Little did the darkness, or the cold, or the
+doubt about the way home matter to _me_. My mind was away from all these
+things. My mind was fixed on the vision in the bedroom. What had I seen
+trying to murder me? The creature of a dream? Or that other creature from
+the world beyond the grave, whom men call ghost? I could make nothing of
+it as I walked along in the night; I had made nothing by it by
+midday--when I stood at last, after many times missing my road, on the
+doorstep of home.
+
+
+VI
+
+My mother came out alone to welcome me back. There were no secrets between
+us two. I told her all that had happened, just as I have told it to you.
+She kept silence till I had done. And then she put a question to me.
+
+"What time was it, Francis, when you saw the Woman in your Dream?"
+
+I had looked at the clock when I left the inn, and I had noticed that the
+hands pointed to twenty minutes past two. Allowing for the time consumed
+in speaking to the landlord, and in getting on my clothes, I answered that
+I must have first seen the Woman at two o'clock in the morning. In other
+words, I had not only seen her on my birthday, but at the hour of my
+birth.
+
+My mother still kept silence. Lost in her own thoughts, she took me by the
+hand, and led me into the parlor. Her writing-desk was on the table by
+the fireplace. She opened it, and signed to me to take a chair by her
+side.
+
+"My son! your memory is a bad one, and mine is fast failing me. Tell me
+again what the Woman looked like. I want her to be as well known to both
+of us, years hence, as she is now."
+
+I obeyed; wondering what strange fancy might be working in her mind. I
+spoke; and she wrote the words as they fell from my lips:
+
+"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair, with a
+golden-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon them. Little,
+lady's hands, with a rosy-red look about the finger nails."
+
+"Did you notice how she was dressed, Francis?"
+
+"No, mother."
+
+"Did you notice the knife?"
+
+"Yes. A large clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, as good as new."
+
+My mother added the description of the knife. Also the year, month, day of
+the week, and hour of the day when the Dream-Woman appeared to me at the
+inn. That done, she locked up the paper in her desk.
+
+"Not a word, Francis, to your aunt. Not a word to any living soul. Keep
+your Dream a secret between you and me."
+
+The weeks passed, and the months passed. My mother never returned to the
+subject again. As for me, time, which wears out all things, wore out my
+remembrance of the Dream. Little by little, the image of the Woman grew
+dimmer and dimmer. Little by little, she faded out of my mind.
+
+
+VII
+
+The story of the warning is now told. Judge for yourself if it was a true
+warning or a false, when you hear what happened to me on my next birthday.
+
+In the Summer time of the year, the Wheel of Fortune turned the right way
+for me at last. I was smoking my pipe one day, near an old stone quarry at
+the entrance to our village, when a carriage accident happened, which gave
+a new turn, as it were, to my lot in life. It was an accident of the
+commonest kind--not worth mentioning at any length. A lady driving
+herself; a runaway horse; a cowardly man-servant in attendance, frightened
+out of his wits; and the stone quarry too near to be agreeable--that is
+what I saw, all in a few moments, between two whiffs of my pipe. I stopped
+the horse at the edge of the quarry, and got myself a little hurt by the
+shaft of the chaise. But that didn't matter. The lady declared I had saved
+her life; and her husband, coming with her to our cottage the next day,
+took me into his service then and there. The lady happened to be of a dark
+complexion; and it may amuse you to hear that my aunt Chance instantly
+pitched on that circumstance as a means of saving the credit of the cards.
+Here was the promise of the Queen of Spades performed to the very letter,
+by means of "a dark woman," just as my aunt had told me. "In the time to
+come, Francis, beware o' pettin' yer ain blinded intairpretation on the
+cairds. Ye're ower ready, I trow, to murmur under dispensation of
+Proavidence that ye canna fathom--like the Eesraelites of auld. I'll say
+nae mair to ye. Mebbe when the mony's powering into yer poakets, ye'll no
+forget yer aunt Chance, left like a sparrow on the housetop, wi' a sma'
+annuitee o' thratty punds a year."
+
+I remained in my situation (at the West-end of London) until the Spring of
+the New Year. About that time, my master's health failed. The doctors
+ordered him away to foreign parts, and the establishment was broken up.
+But the turn in my luck still held good. When I left my place, I left
+it--thanks to the generosity of my kind master--with a yearly allowance
+granted to me, in remembrance of the day when I had saved my mistress's
+life. For the future, I could go back to service or not, as I pleased; my
+little income was enough to support my mother and myself.
+
+My master and mistress left England toward the end of February. Certain
+matters of business to do for them detained me in London until the last
+day of the month. I was only able to leave for our village by the evening
+train, to keep my birthday with my mother as usual. It was bedtime when I
+got to the cottage; and I was sorry to find that she was far from well. To
+make matters worse, she had finished her bottle of medicine on the
+previous day, and had omitted to get it replenished, as the doctor had
+strictly directed. He dispensed his own medicines, and I offered to go and
+knock him up. She refused to let me do this; and, after giving me my
+supper, sent me away to my bed.
+
+I fell asleep for a little, and woke again. My mother's bed-chamber was
+next to mine. I heard my aunt Chance's heavy footsteps going to and fro in
+the room, and, suspecting something wrong, knocked at the door. My
+mother's pains had returned upon her; there was a serious necessity for
+relieving her sufferings as speedily as possible, I put on my clothes, and
+ran off, with the medicine bottle in my hand, to the other end of the
+village, where the doctor lived. The church clock chimed the quarter to
+two on my birthday just as I reached his house. One ring of the night bell
+brought him to his bedroom window to speak to me. He told me to wait, and
+he would let me in at the surgery door. I noticed, while I was waiting,
+that the night was wonderfully fair and warm for the time of year. The old
+stone quarry where the carriage accident had happened was within view. The
+moon in the clear heavens lit it up almost as bright as day.
+
+In a minute or two the doctor let me into the surgery. I closed the door,
+noticing that he had left his room very lightly clad. He kindly pardoned
+my mother's neglect of his directions, and set to work at once at
+compounding the medicine. We were both intent on the bottle; he filling
+it, and I holding the light--when we heard the surgery door suddenly
+opened from the street.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Who could possibly be up and about in our quiet village at the second hour
+of the morning?
+
+The person who opened the door appeared within range of the light of the
+candle. To complete our amazement, the person proved to be a woman! She
+walked up to the counter, and standing side by side with me, lifted her
+veil. At the moment when she showed her face, I heard the church clock
+strike two. She was a stranger to me, and a stranger to the doctor. She
+was also, beyond all comparison, the most beautiful woman I have ever seen
+in my life.
+
+"I saw the light under the door," she said. "I want some medicine."
+
+She spoke quite composedly, as if there was nothing at all extraordinary
+in her being out in the village at two in the morning, and following me
+into the surgery to ask for medicine! The doctor stared at her as if he
+suspected his own eyes of deceiving him. "Who are you?" he asked. "How do
+you come to be wandering about at this time in the morning?"
+
+She paid no heed to his questions. She only told him coolly what she
+wanted. "I have got a bad toothache. I want a bottle of laudanum."
+
+The doctor recovered himself when she asked for the laudanum. He was on
+his own ground, you know, when it came to a matter of laudanum; and he
+spoke to her smartly enough this time.
+
+"Oh, you have got the toothache, have you? Let me look at the tooth."
+
+She shook her head, and laid a two-shilling piece on the counter. "I won't
+trouble you to look at the tooth," she said. "There is the money. Let me
+have the laudanum, if you please."
+
+The doctor put the two-shilling piece back again in her hand. "I don't
+sell laudanum to strangers," he answered. "If you are in any distress of
+body or mind, that is another matter. I shall be glad to help you."
+
+She put the money back in her pocket. "_You_ can't help me," she said, as
+quietly as ever. "Good morning."
+
+With that, she opened the surgery door to go out again into the street. So
+far, I had not spoken a word on my side. I had stood with the candle in my
+hand (not knowing I was holding it)--with my eyes fixed on her, with my
+mind fixed on her like a man bewitched. Her looks betrayed, even more
+plainly than her words, her resolution, in one way or another, to destroy
+herself. When she opened the door, in my alarm at what might happen I
+found the use of my tongue.
+
+"Stop!" I cried out. "Wait for me. I want to speak to you before you go
+away." She lifted her eyes with a look of careless surprise and a mocking
+smile on her lips.
+
+"What can _you_ have to say to me?" She stopped, and laughed to herself.
+"Why not?" she said. "I have got nothing to do, and nowhere to go." She
+turned back a step, and nodded to me. "You're a strange man--I think I'll
+humor you--I'll wait outside." The door of the surgery closed on her. She
+was gone.
+
+I am ashamed to own what happened next. The only excuse for me is that I
+was really and truly a man bewitched. I turned me round to follow her out,
+without once thinking of my mother. The doctor stopped me.
+
+"Don't forget the medicine," he said. "And if you will take my advice,
+don't trouble yourself about that woman. Rouse up the constable. It's his
+business to look after her--not yours."
+
+I held out my hand for the medicine in silence: I was afraid I should fail
+in respect if I trusted myself to answer him. He must have seen, as I saw,
+that she wanted the laudanum to poison herself. He had, to my mind, taken
+a very heartless view of the matter. I just thanked him when he gave me
+the medicine--and went out.
+
+She was waiting for me as she had promised; walking slowly to and fro--a
+tall, graceful, solitary figure in the bright moonbeams. They shed over
+her fair complexion, her bright golden hair, her large gray eyes, just the
+light that suited them best. She looked hardly mortal when she first
+turned to speak to me.
+
+"Well?" she said. "And what do you want?"
+
+In spite of my pride, or my shyness, or my better sense--whichever it
+might me--all my heart went out to her in a moment. I caught hold of her
+by the hands, and owned what was in my thoughts, as freely as if I had
+known her for half a lifetime.
+
+"You mean to destroy yourself," I said. "And I mean to prevent you from
+doing it. If I follow you about all night, I'll prevent you from doing
+it."
+
+She laughed. "You saw yourself that he wouldn't sell me the laudanum. Do
+you really care whether I live or die?" She squeezed my hands gently as
+she put the question: her eyes searched mine with a languid, lingering
+look in them that ran through me like fire. My voice died away on my lips;
+I couldn't answer her.
+
+She understood, without my answering. "You have given me a fancy for
+living, by speaking kindly to me," she said. "Kindness has a wonderful
+effect on women, and dogs, and other domestic animals. It is only men who
+are superior to kindness. Make your mind easy--I promise to take as much
+care of myself as if I was the happiest woman living! Don't let me keep
+you here, out of your bed. Which way are you going?"
+
+Miserable wretch that I was, I had forgotten my mother--with the medicine
+in my hand! "I am going home," I said. "Where are you staying? At the
+inn?"
+
+She laughed her bitter laugh, and pointed to the stone quarry. "There is
+my inn for to-night," she said. "When I got tired of walking about, I
+rested there."
+
+We walked on together, on my way home. I took the liberty of asking her if
+she had any friends.
+
+"I thought I had one friend left," she said, "or you would never have met
+me in this place. It turns out I was wrong. My friend's door was closed in
+my face some hours since; my friend's servants threatened me with the
+police. I had nowhere else to go, after trying my luck in your
+neighborhood; and nothing left but my two-shilling piece and these rags on
+my back. What respectable innkeeper would take _me_ into his house? I
+walked about, wondering how I could find my way out of the world without
+disfiguring myself, and without suffering much pain. You have no river in
+these parts. I didn't see my way out of the world, till I heard you
+ringing at the doctor's house. I got a glimpse at the bottles in the
+surgery, when he let you in, and I thought of the laudanum directly. What
+were you doing there? Who is that medicine for? Your wife?"
+
+"I am not married!"
+
+She laughed again. "Not married! If I was a little better dressed there
+might be a chance for ME. Where do you live? Here?"
+
+We had arrived, by this time, at my mother's door. She held out her hand
+to say good-by. Houseless and homeless as she was, she never asked me to
+give her a shelter for the night. It was my proposal that she should rest,
+under my roof, unknown to my mother and my aunt. Our kitchen was built out
+at the back of the cottage: she might remain there unseen and unheard
+until the household was astir in the morning. I led her into the kitchen,
+and set a chair for her by the dying embers of the fire. I dare say I was
+to blame--shamefully to blame, if you like. I only wonder what _you_ would
+have done in my place. On your word of honor as a man, would _you_ have
+let that beautiful creature wander back to the shelter of the stone quarry
+like a stray dog? God help the woman who is foolish enough to trust and
+love you, if you would have done that!
+
+I left her by the fire, and went to my mother's room.
+
+
+IX
+
+If you have ever felt the heartache, you will know what I suffered in
+secret when my mother took my hand, and said, "I am sorry, Francis, that
+your night's rest has been disturbed through _me_." I gave her the
+medicine; and I waited by her till the pains abated. My aunt Chance went
+back to her bed; and my mother and I were left alone. I noticed that her
+writing-desk, moved from its customary place, was on the bed by her side.
+She saw me looking at it. "This is your birthday, Francis," she said.
+"Have you anything to tell me?" I had so completely forgotten my Dream,
+that I had no notion of what was passing in her mind when she said those
+words. For a moment there was a guilty fear in me that she suspected
+something. I turned away my face, and said, "No, mother; I have nothing to
+tell." She signed to me to stoop down over the pillow and kiss her. "God
+bless you, my love!" she said; "and many happy returns of the day." She
+patted my hand, and closed her weary eyes, and, little by little, fell off
+peaceably into sleep.
+
+I stole downstairs again. I think the good influence of my mother must
+have followed me down. At any rate, this is true: I stopped with my hand
+on the closed kitchen door, and said to myself: "Suppose I leave the
+house, and leave the village, without seeing her or speaking to her more?"
+
+Should I really have fled from temptation in this way, if I had been left
+to myself to decide? Who can tell? As things were, I was not left to
+decide. While my doubt was in my mind, she heard me, and opened the
+kitchen door. My eyes and her eyes met. That ended it.
+
+We were together, unsuspected and undisturbed, for the next two hours.
+Time enough for her to reveal the secret of her wasted life. Time enough
+for her to take possession of me as her own, to do with me as she liked.
+It is needless to dwell here on the misfortunes which had brought her
+low; they are misfortunes too common to interest anybody.
+
+Her name was Alicia Warlock. She had been born and bred a lady. She had
+lost her station, her character, and her friends. Virtue shuddered at the
+sight of her; and Vice had got her for the rest of her days. Shocking and
+common, as I told you. It made no difference to _me_. I have said it
+already--I say it again--I was a man bewitched. Is there anything so very
+wonderful in that? Just remember who I was. Among the honest women in my
+own station in life, where could I have found the like of _her_? Could
+_they_ walk as she walked? and look as she looked? When _they_ gave me a
+kiss, did their lips linger over it as hers did? Had _they_ her skin, her
+laugh, her foot, her hand, her touch? _She_ never had a speck of dirt on
+her: I tell you her flesh was a perfume. When she embraced me, her arms
+folded round me like the wings of angels; and her smile covered me softly
+with its light like the sun in heaven. I leave you to laugh at me, or to
+cry over me, just as your temper may incline. I am not trying to excuse
+myself--I am trying to explain. You are gentle-folks; what dazzled and
+maddened _me_, is everyday experience to _you_. Fallen or not, angel or
+devil, it came to this--she was a lady; and I was a groom.
+
+Before the house was astir, I got her away (by the workmen's train) to a
+large manufacturing town in our parts.
+
+Here--with my savings in money to help her--she could get her outfit of
+decent clothes and her lodging among strangers who asked no questions so
+long as they were paid. Here--now on one pretense and now on another--I
+could visit her, and we could both plan together what our future lives
+were to be. I need not tell you that I stood pledged to make her my wife.
+A man in my station always marries a woman of her sort.
+
+Do you wonder if I was happy at this time? I should have been perfectly
+happy but for one little drawback. It was this: I was never quite at my
+ease in the presence of my promised wife.
+
+I don't mean that I was shy with her, or suspicious of her, or ashamed of
+her. The uneasiness I am speaking of was caused by a faint doubt in my
+mind whether I had not seen her somewhere, before the morning when we met
+at the doctor's house. Over and over again, I found myself wondering
+whether her face did not remind me of some other face--_what_ other I
+never could tell. This strange feeling, this one question that could never
+be answered, vexed me to a degree that you would hardly credit. It came
+between us at the strangest times--oftenest, however, at night, when the
+candles were lit. You have known what it is to try and remember a
+forgotten name--and to fail, search as you may, to find it in your mind.
+That was my case. I failed to find my lost face, just as you failed to
+find your lost name.
+
+In three weeks we had talked matters over, and had arranged how I was to
+make a clean breast of it at home. By Alicia's advice, I was to describe
+her as having been one of my fellow servants during the time I was
+employed under my kind master and mistress in London. There was no fear
+now of my mother taking any harm from the shock of a great surprise. Her
+health had improved during the three weeks' interval. On the first evening
+when she was able to take her old place at tea time, I summoned my
+courage, and told her I was going to be married. The poor soul flung her
+arms round my neck, and burst out crying for joy. "Oh, Francis!" she says,
+"I am so glad you will have somebody to comfort you and care for you when
+I am gone!" As for my aunt Chance, you can anticipate what _she_ did,
+without being told. Ah, me! If there had really been any prophetic virtue
+in the cards, what a terrible warning they might have given us that night!
+It was arranged that I was to bring my promised wife to dinner at the
+cottage on the next day.
+
+
+X
+
+I own I was proud of Alicia when I led her into our little parlor at the
+appointed time. She had never, to my mind, looked so beautiful as she
+looked that day. I never noticed any other woman's dress--I noticed hers
+as carefully as if I had been a woman myself! She wore a black silk gown,
+with plain collar and cuffs, and a modest lavender-colored bonnet, with
+one white rose in it placed at the side. My mother, dressed in her Sunday
+best, rose up, all in a flutter, to welcome her daughter-in-law that was
+to be. She walked forward a few steps, half smiling, half in tears--she
+looked Alicia full in the face--and suddenly stood still. Her cheeks
+turned white in an instant; her eyes stared in horror; her hands dropped
+helplessly at her sides. She staggered back, and fell into the arms of my
+aunt, standing behind her. It was no swoon--she kept her senses. Her eyes
+turned slowly from Alicia to me. "Francis," she said, "does that woman's
+face remind you of nothing?".
+
+Before I could answer, she pointed to her writing-desk on the table at the
+fireside. "Bring it!" she cried, "bring it!".
+
+At the same moment I felt Alicia's hand on my shoulder, and saw Alicia's
+face red with anger--and no wonder!
+
+"What does this mean?" she asked. "Does your mother want to insult me?".
+
+I said a few words to quiet her; what they were I don't remember--I was so
+confused and astonished at the time. Before I had done, I heard my mother
+behind me.
+
+My aunt had fetched her desk. She had opened it; she had taken a paper
+from it. Step by step, helping herself along by the wall, she came nearer
+and nearer, with the paper in her hand. She looked at the paper--she
+looked in Alicia's face--she lifted the long, loose sleeve of her gown,
+and examined her hand and arm. I saw fear suddenly take the place of anger
+in Alicia's eyes. She shook herself free of my mother's grasp. "Mad!" she
+said to herself, "and Francis never told me!" With those words she ran out
+of the room.
+
+I was hastening out after her, when my mother signed to me to stop. She
+read the words written on the paper. While they fell slowly, one by one,
+from her lips, she pointed toward the open door.
+
+"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair, with a
+gold-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon them. Little,
+lady's hand, with a rosy-red look about the finger nails. The Dream Woman,
+Francis! The Dream Woman!"
+
+Something darkened the parlor window as those words were spoken. I looked
+sidelong at the shadow. Alicia Warlock had come back! She was peering in
+at us over the low window blind. There was the fatal face which had first
+looked at me in the bedroom of the lonely inn. There, resting on the
+window blind, was the lovely little hand which had held the murderous
+knife. I _had_ seen her before we met in the village. The Dream Woman! The
+Dream Woman!
+
+
+XI
+
+I expect nobody to approve of what I have next to tell of myself. In three
+weeks from the day when my mother had identified her with the Woman of the
+Dream, I took Alicia Warlock to church, and made her my wife. I was a man
+bewitched. Again and again I say it--I was a man bewitched!
+
+During the interval before my marriage, our little household at the
+cottage was broken up. My mother and my aunt quarreled. My mother,
+believing in the Dream, entreated me to break off my engagement. My aunt,
+believing in the cards, urged me to marry.
+
+This difference of opinion produced a dispute between them, in the course
+of which my aunt Chance--quite unconscious of having any superstitious
+feelings of her own--actually set out the cards which prophesied
+happiness to me in my married life, and asked my mother how anybody but "a
+blinded heathen could be fule enough, after seeing those cairds, to
+believe in a dream!" This was, naturally, too much for my mother's
+patience; hard words followed on either side; Mrs. Chance returned in
+dudgeon to her friends in Scotland. She left me a written statement of my
+future prospects, as revealed by the cards, and with it an address at
+which a post-office order would reach her. "The day was not that far off,"
+she remarked, "when Francie might remember what he owed to his aunt
+Chance, maintaining her ain unbleemished widowhood on thratty punds a
+year."
+
+Having refused to give her sanction to my marriage, my mother also refused
+to be present at the wedding, or to visit Alicia afterwards. There was no
+anger at the bottom of this conduct on her part. Believing as she did in
+this Dream, she was simply in mortal fear of my wife. I understood this,
+and I made allowances for her. Not a cross word passed between us. My one
+happy remembrance now--though I did disobey her in the matter of my
+marriage--is this: I loved and respected my good mother to the last.
+
+As for my wife, she expressed no regret at the estrangement between her
+mother-in-law and herself. By common consent, we never spoke on that
+subject. We settled in the manufacturing town which I have already
+mentioned, and we kept a lodging-house. My kind master, at my request,
+granted me a lump sum in place of my annuity. This put us into a good
+house, decently furnished. For a while things went well enough. I may
+describe myself at this time of my life as a happy man.
+
+My misfortunes began with a return of the complaint with which my mother
+had already suffered. The doctor confessed, when I asked him the question,
+that there was danger to be dreaded this time. Naturally, after hearing
+this, I was a good deal away at the cottage. Naturally also, I left the
+business of looking after the house, in my absence, to my wife. Little by
+little, I found her beginning to alter toward me. While my back was
+turned, she formed acquaintances with people of the doubtful and
+dissipated sort. One day, I observed something in her manner which forced
+the suspicion on me that she had been drinking. Before the week was out,
+my suspicion was a certainty. From keeping company with drunkards, she had
+grown to be a drunkard herself.
+
+I did all a man could do to reclaim her. Quite useless! She had never
+really returned the love I felt for her: I had no influence; I could do
+nothing. My mother, hearing of this last worse trouble, resolved to try
+what her influence could do. Ill as she was, I found her one day dressed
+to go out.
+
+"I am not long for this world, Francis," she said. "I shall not feel easy
+on my deathbed, unless I have done my best to the last to make you happy.
+I mean to put my own fears and my own feelings out of the question, and go
+with you to your wife, and try what I can do to reclaim her. Take me home
+with you, Francis. Let me do all I can to help my son, before it is too
+late."
+
+How could I disobey her? We took the railway to the town: it was only half
+an hour's ride. By one o'clock in the afternoon we reached my house. It
+was our dinner hour, and Alicia was in the kitchen. I was able to take my
+mother quietly into the parlor and then to prepare my wife for the visit.
+She had drunk but little at that early hour; and, luckily, the devil in
+her was tamed for the time.
+
+She followed me into the parlor, and the meeting passed off better than I
+had ventured to forecast; with this one drawback, that my mother--though
+she tried hard to control herself--shrank from looking my wife in the face
+when she spoke to her. It was a relief to me when Alicia began to prepare
+the table for dinner.
+
+She laid the cloth, brought in the bread tray, and cut some slices for us
+from the loaf. Then she returned to the kitchen. At that moment, while I
+was still anxiously watching my mother, I was startled by seeing the same
+ghastly change pass over her face which had altered it in the morning
+when Alicia and she first met. Before I could say a word, she started up
+with a look of horror.
+
+"Take me back!--home, home again, Francis! Come with me, and never go back
+more!"
+
+I was afraid to ask for an explanation; I could only sign her to be
+silent, and help her quickly to the door. As we passed the bread tray on
+the table, she stopped and pointed to it.
+
+"Did you see what your wife cut your bread with?" she asked.
+
+"No, mother; I was not noticing. What was it?"
+
+"Look!"
+
+I did look. A new clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, lay with the loaf
+in the bread tray. I stretched out my hand to possess myself of it. At the
+same moment, there was a noise in the kitchen, and my mother caught me by
+the arm.
+
+"The knife of the Dream! Francis, I'm faint with fear--take me away before
+she comes back!"
+
+I couldn't speak to comfort or even to answer her. Superior as I was to
+superstition, the discovery of the knife staggered me. In silence, I
+helped my mother out of the house; and took her home.
+
+I held out my hand to say good-by. She tried to stop me.
+
+"Don't go back, Francis! don't go back!".
+
+"I must get the knife, mother. I must go back by the next train." I held
+to that resolution. By the next train I went back.
+
+
+XII
+
+My wife had, of course, discovered our secret departure from the house.
+She had been drinking. She was in a fury of passion. The dinner in the
+kitchen was flung under the grate; the cloth was off the parlor table.
+Where was the knife?
+
+I was foolish enough to ask for it. She refused to give it to me. In the
+course of the dispute between us which followed, I discovered that there
+was a horrible story attached to the knife. It had been used in a
+murder--years since--and had been so skillfully hidden that the
+authorities had been unable to produce it at the trial. By help of some of
+her disreputable friends, my wife had been able to purchase this relic of
+a bygone crime. Her perverted nature set some horrid unacknowledged value
+on the knife. Seeing there was no hope of getting it by fair means, I
+determined to search for it, later in the day, in secret. The search was
+unsuccessful. Night came on, and I left the house to walk about the
+streets. You will understand what a broken man I was by this time, when I
+tell you I was afraid to sleep in the same room with her!
+
+Three weeks passed. Still she refused to give up the knife; and still that
+fear of sleeping in the same room with her possessed me. I walked about at
+night, or dozed in the parlor, or sat watching by my mother's bedside.
+Before the end of the first week in the new month, the worst misfortune of
+all befell me--my mother died. It wanted then but a short time to my
+birthday. She had longed to live till that day. I was present at her
+death. Her last words in this world were addressed to me. "Don't go back,
+my son--don't go back!"
+
+I was obliged to go back, if it was only to watch my wife. In the last
+days of my mother's illness she had spitefully added a sting to my grief
+by declaring she would assert her right to attend the funeral. In spite of
+all that I could do or say, she held to her word. On the day appointed for
+the burial she forced herself, inflamed and shameless with drink, into my
+presence, and swore she would walk in the funeral procession to my
+mother's grave.
+
+This last insult--after all I had gone through already--was more than I
+could endure. It maddened me. Try to make allowances for a man beside
+himself. I struck her.
+
+The instant the blow was dealt, I repented it. She crouched down, silent,
+in a corner of the room, and eyed me steadily. It was a look that cooled
+my hot blood in an instant. There was no time now to think of making
+atonement. I could only risk the worst, and make sure of her till the
+funeral was over. I locked her into her bedroom.
+
+When I came back, after laying my mother in the grave, I found her sitting
+by the bedside, very much altered in look and bearing, with a bundle on
+her lap. She faced me quietly; she spoke with a curious stillness in her
+voice--strangely and unnaturally composed in look and manner.
+
+"No man has ever struck me yet," she said. "My husband shall have no
+second opportunity. Set the door open, and let me go."
+
+She passed me, and left the room. I saw her walk away up the street. Was
+she gone for good?
+
+All that night I watched and waited. No footstep came near the house. The
+next night, overcome with fatigue, I lay down on the bed in my clothes,
+with the door locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning. My
+slumber was not disturbed. The third night, the fourth, the fifth, the
+sixth, passed, and nothing happened. I lay down on the seventh night,
+still suspicious of something happening; still in my clothes; still with
+the door locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning.
+
+My rest was disturbed. I awoke twice, without any sensation of uneasiness.
+The third time, that horrid shivering of the night at the lonely inn, that
+awful sinking pain at the heart, came back again, and roused me in an
+instant. My eyes turned to the left-hand side of the bed. And there stood,
+looking at me--
+
+The Dream Woman again? No! My wife. The living woman, with the face of the
+Dream--in the attitude of the Dream--the fair arm up; the knife clasped in
+the delicate white hand.
+
+I sprang upon her on the instant; but not quickly enough to stop her from
+hiding the knife. Without a word from me, without a cry from her, I
+pinioned her in a chair. With one hand I felt up her sleeve; and there,
+where the Dream Woman had hidden the knife, my wife had hidden it--the
+knife with the buckhorn handle, that looked like new.
+
+What I felt when I made that discovery I could not realize at the time,
+and I can't describe now. I took one steady look at her with the knife in
+my hand. "You meant to kill me?" I said.
+
+"Yes," she answered; "I meant to kill you." She crossed her arms over her
+bosom, and stared me coolly in the face. "I shall do it yet," she said.
+"With that knife."
+
+I don't know what possessed me--I swear to you I am no coward; and yet I
+acted like a coward. The horrors got hold of me. I couldn't look at her--I
+couldn't speak to her. I left her (with the knife in my hand), and went
+out into the night.
+
+There was a bleak wind abroad, and the smell of rain was in the air. The
+church clocks chimed the quarter as I walked beyond the last house in the
+town. I asked the first policeman I met what hour that was, of which the
+quarter past had just struck.
+
+The man looked at his watch, and answered, "Two o'clock." Two in the
+morning. What day of the month was this day that had just begun? I
+reckoned it up from the date of my mother's funeral. The horrid parallel
+between the dream and the reality was complete--it was my birthday!
+
+Had I escaped, the mortal peril which the dream foretold? or had I only
+received a second warning? As that doubt crossed my mind I stopped on my
+way out of the town. The air had revived me--I felt in some degree like my
+own self again. After a little thinking, I began to see plainly the
+mistake I had made in leaving my wife free to go where she liked and to do
+as she pleased.
+
+I turned instantly, and made my way back to the house. It was still dark.
+I had left the candle burning in the bedchamber. When I looked up to the
+window of the room now, there was no light in it. I advanced to the house
+door. On going away, I remembered to have closed it; on trying it now, I
+found it open.
+
+I waited outside, never losing sight of the house till daylight. Then I
+ventured indoors--listened, and heard nothing--looked into the kitchen,
+scullery, parlor, and found nothing--went up at last into the bedroom. It
+was empty.
+
+A picklock lay on the floor, which told me how she had gained entrance in
+the night. And that was the one trace I could find of the Dream Woman.
+
+
+XIII
+
+I waited in the house till the town was astir for the day, and then I went
+to consult a lawyer. In the confused state of my mind at the time, I had
+one clear notion of what I meant to do: I was determined to sell my house
+and leave the neighborhood. There were obstacles in the way which I had
+not counted on. I was told I had creditors to satisfy before I could
+leave--I, who had given my wife the money to pay my bills regularly every
+week! Inquiry showed that she had embezzled every farthing of the money I
+had intrusted to her. I had no choice but to pay over again.
+
+Placed in this awkward position, my first duty was to set things right,
+with the help of my lawyer. During my forced sojourn in the town I did two
+foolish things. And, as a consequence that followed, I heard once more,
+and heard for the last time, of my wife.
+
+In the first place, having got possession of the knife, I was rash enough
+to keep it in my pocket. In the second place, having something of
+importance to say to my lawyer, at a late hour of the evening, I went to
+his house after dark--alone and on foot. I got there safely enough.
+Returning, I was seized on from behind by two men, dragged down a passage
+and robbed--not only of the little money I had about me, but also of the
+knife. It was the lawyer's opinion (as it was mine) that the thieves were
+among the disreputable acquaintances formed by my wife, and that they had
+attacked me at her instigation. To confirm this view I received a letter
+the next day, without date or address, written in Alicia's hand. The first
+line informed me that the knife was back again in her possession. The
+second line reminded me of the day when I struck her. The third line
+warned me that she would wash out the stain of that blow in my blood, and
+repeated the words, "I shall do it with the knife!"
+
+These things happened a year ago. The law laid hands on the men who had
+robbed me; but from that time to this, the law has failed completely to
+find a trace of my wife.
+
+My story is told. When I had paid the creditors and paid the legal
+expenses, I had barely five pounds left out of the sale of my house; and I
+had the world to begin over again. Some months since--drifting here and
+there--I found my way to Underbridge. The landlord of the inn had known
+something of my father's family in times past. He gave me (all he had to
+give) my food, and shelter in the yard. Except on market days, there is
+nothing to do. In the coming winter the inn is to be shut up, and I shall
+have to shift for myself. My old master would help me if I applied to
+him--but I don't like to apply: he has done more for me already than I
+deserve. Besides, in another year who knows but my troubles may all be at
+an end? Next winter will bring me nigh to my next birthday, and my next
+birthday may be the day of my death. Yes! it's true I sat up all last
+night; and I heard two in the morning strike: and nothing happened. Still,
+allowing for that, the time to come is a time I don't trust. My wife has
+got the knife--my wife is looking for me. I am above superstition, mind! I
+don't say I believe in dreams; I only say, Alicia Warlock is looking for
+me. It is possible I may be wrong. It is possible I may be right. Who can
+tell?
+
+
+
+
+THE THIRD NARRATIVE
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY CONTINUED BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+XIV
+
+We took leave of Francis Raven at the door of Farleigh Hall, with the
+understanding that he might expect to hear from us again.
+
+The same night Mrs. Fairbank and I had a discussion in the sanctuary of
+our own room. The topic was "The Hostler's Story"; and the question in
+dispute between us turned on the measure of charitable duty that we owed
+to the hostler himself.
+
+The view I took of the man's narrative was of the purely matter-of-fact
+kind. Francis Raven had, in my opinion, brooded over the misty connection
+between his strange dream and his vile wife, until his mind was in a state
+of partial delusion on that subject. I was quite willing to help him with
+a trifle of money, and to recommend him to the kindness of my lawyer, if
+he was really in any danger and wanted advice. There my idea of my duty
+toward this afflicted person began and ended.
+
+Confronted with this sensible view of the matter, Mrs. Fairbank's romantic
+temperament rushed, as usual, into extremes. "I should no more think of
+losing sight of Francis Raven when his next birthday comes round," says my
+wife, "than I should think of laying down a good story with the last
+chapters unread. I am positively determined, Percy, to take him back with
+us when we return to France, in the capacity of groom. What does one man
+more or less among the horses matter to people as rich as we are?" In this
+strain the partner of my joys and sorrows ran on, perfectly impenetrable
+to everything that I could say on the side of common sense. Need I tell my
+married brethren how it ended? Of course I allowed my wife to irritate me,
+and spoke to her sharply.
+
+Of course my wife turned her face away indignantly on the conjugal pillow,
+and burst into tears. Of course upon that, "Mr." made his excuses, and
+"Mrs." had her own way.
+
+Before the week was out we rode over to Underbridge, and duly offered to
+Francis Raven a place in our service as supernumerary groom.
+
+At first the poor fellow seemed hardly able to realize his own
+extraordinary good fortune. Recovering himself, he expressed his gratitude
+modestly and becomingly. Mrs. Fairbank's ready sympathies overflowed, as
+usual, at her lips. She talked to him about our home in France, as if the
+worn, gray-headed hostler had been a child. "Such a dear old house,
+Francis; and such pretty gardens! Stables! Stables ten times as big as
+your stables here--quite a choice of rooms for you. You must learn the
+name of our house--Maison Rouge. Our nearest town is Metz. We are within a
+walk of the beautiful River Moselle. And when we want a change we have
+only to take the railway to the frontier, and find ourselves in Germany."
+
+Listening, so far, with a very bewildered face, Francis started and
+changed color when my wife reached the end of her last sentence.
+"Germany?" he repeated.
+
+"Yes. Does Germany remind you of anything?"
+
+The hostler's eyes looked down sadly on the ground. "Germany reminds me of
+my wife," he replied.
+
+"Indeed! How?"
+
+"She once told me she had lived in Germany--long before I knew her--in the
+time when she was a young girl."
+
+"Was she living with relations or friends?"
+
+"She was living as governess in a foreign family."
+
+"In what part of Germany?"
+
+"I don't remember, ma'am. I doubt if she told me."
+
+"Did she tell you the name of the family?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. It was a foreign name, and it has slipped my memory long
+since. The head of the family was a wine grower in a large way of
+business--I remember that."
+
+"Did you hear what sort of wine he grew? There are wine growers in our
+neighborhood. Was it Moselle wine?"
+
+"I couldn't say, ma'am, I doubt if I ever heard."
+
+There the conversation dropped. We engaged to communicate with Francis
+Raven before we left England, and took our leave. I had made arrangements
+to pay our round of visits to English friends, and to return to Maison
+Rouge in the summer. On the eve of departure, certain difficulties in
+connection with the management of some landed property of mine in Ireland
+obliged us to alter our plans. Instead of getting back to our house in
+France in the Summer, we only returned a week or two before Christmas.
+Francis Raven accompanied us, and was duly established, in the nominal
+capacity of stable keeper, among the servants at Maison Rouge.
+
+Before long, some of the objections to taking him into our employment,
+which I had foreseen and had vainly mentioned to my wife, forced
+themselves on our attention in no very agreeable form. Francis Raven
+failed (as I had feared he would) to get on smoothly with his
+fellow-servants They were all French; and not one of them understood
+English. Francis, on his side, was equally ignorant of French. His
+reserved manners, his melancholy temperament, his solitary ways--all told
+against him. Our servants called him "the English Bear." He grew widely
+known in the neighborhood under his nickname. Quarrels took place, ending
+once or twice in blows. It became plain, even to Mrs. Fairbank herself,
+that some wise change must be made. While we were still considering what
+the change was to be, the unfortunate hostler was thrown on our hands for
+some time to come by an accident in the stables. Still pursued by his
+proverbial ill-luck, the poor wretch's leg was broken by a kick from a
+horse.
+
+He was attended to by our own surgeon, in his comfortable bedroom at the
+stables. As the date of his birthday drew near, he was still confined to
+his bed.
+
+Physically speaking, he was doing very well. Morally speaking, the surgeon
+was not satisfied. Francis Raven was suffering under some mysterious
+mental disturbance, which interfered seriously with his rest at night.
+Hearing this, I thought it my duty to tell the medical attendant what was
+preying on the patient's mind. As a practical man, he shared my opinion
+that the hostler was in a state of delusion on the subject of his Wife and
+his Dream. "Curable delusion, in my opinion," the surgeon added, "if the
+experiment could be fairly tried."
+
+"How can it be tried?" I asked. Instead of replying, the surgeon put a
+question to me, on his side.
+
+"Do you happen to know," he said, "that this year is Leap Year?"
+
+"Mrs. Fairbank reminded me of it yesterday," I answered. "Otherwise I
+might _not_ have known it."
+
+"Do you think Francis Raven knows that this year is Leap Year?"
+
+(I began to see dimly what my friend was driving at.)
+
+"It depends," I answered, "on whether he has got an English almanac.
+Suppose he has _not_ got the almanac--what then?"
+
+"In that case," pursued the surgeon, "Francis Raven is innocent of all
+suspicion that there is a twenty-ninth day in February this year. As a
+necessary consequence--what will he do? He will anticipate the appearance
+of the Woman with the Knife, at two in the morning of the twenty-ninth of
+February, instead of the first of March. Let him suffer all his
+superstitious terrors on the wrong day. Leave him, on the day that is
+really his birthday, to pass a perfectly quiet night, and to be as sound
+asleep as other people at two in the morning. And then, when he wakes
+comfortably in time for his breakfast, shame him out of his delusion by
+telling him the truth."
+
+I agreed to try the experiment. Leaving the surgeon to caution Mrs.
+Fairbank on the subject of Leap Year, I went to the stables to see Mr.
+Raven.
+
+
+XV
+
+The poor fellow was full of forebodings of the fate in store for him on
+the ominous first of March. He eagerly entreated me to order one of the
+men servants to sit up with him on the birthday morning. In granting his
+request, I asked him to tell me on which day of the week his birthday
+fell. He reckoned the days on his fingers; and proved his innocence of all
+suspicion that it was Leap Year, by fixing on the twenty-ninth of
+February, in the full persuasion that it was the first of March. Pledged
+to try the surgeon's experiment, I left his error uncorrected, of course.
+In so doing, I took my first step blindfold toward the last act in the
+drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+The next day brought with it a little domestic difficulty, which
+indirectly and strangely associated itself with the coming end.
+
+My wife received a letter, inviting us to assist in celebrating the
+"Silver Wedding" of two worthy German neighbors of ours--Mr. and Mrs.
+Beldheimer. Mr. Beldheimer was a large wine grower on the banks of the
+Moselle. His house was situated on the frontier line of France and
+Germany; and the distance from our house was sufficiently considerable to
+make it necessary for us to sleep under our host's roof. Under these
+circumstances, if we accepted the invitation, a comparison of dates showed
+that we should be away from home on the morning of the first of March.
+Mrs. Fairbank--holding to her absurd resolution to see with her own eyes
+what might, or might not, happen to Francis Raven on his birthday--flatly
+declined to leave Maison Rouge. "It's easy to send an excuse," she said,
+in her off-hand manner.
+
+I failed, for my part, to see any easy way out of the difficulty. The
+celebration of a "Silver Wedding" in Germany is the celebration of
+twenty-five years of happy married life; and the host's claim upon the
+consideration of his friends on such an occasion is something in the
+nature of a royal "command." After considerable discussion, finding my
+wife's obstinacy invincible, and feeling that the absence of both of us
+from the festival would certainly offend our friends, I left Mrs. Fairbank
+to make her excuses for herself, and directed her to accept the invitation
+so far as I was concerned. In so doing, I took my second step, blindfold,
+toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+A week elapsed; the last days of February were at hand. Another domestic
+difficulty happened; and, again, this event also proved to be strangely
+associated with the coming end.
+
+My head groom at the stables was one Joseph Rigobert. He was an
+ill-conditioned fellow, inordinately vain of his personal appearance, and
+by no means scrupulous in his conduct with women. His one virtue consisted
+of his fondness for horses, and in the care he took of the animals under
+his charge. In a word, he was too good a groom to be easily replaced, or
+he would have quitted my service long since. On the occasion of which I am
+now writing, he was reported to me by my steward as growing idle and
+disorderly in his habits. The principal offense alleged against him was,
+that he had been seen that day in the city of Metz, in the company of a
+woman (supposed to be an Englishwoman), whom he was entertaining at a
+tavern, when he ought to have been on his way back to Maison Rouge. The
+man's defense was that "the lady" (as he called her) was an English
+stranger, unacquainted with the ways of the place, and that he had only
+shown her where she could obtain some refreshments at her own request. I
+administered the necessary reprimand, without troubling myself to inquire
+further into the matter. In failing to do this, I took my third step,
+blindfold, toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+On the evening of the twenty-eighth, I informed the servants at the
+stables that one of them must watch through the night by the Englishman's
+bedside. Joseph Rigobert immediately volunteered for the duty--as a means,
+no doubt, of winning his way back to my favor. I accepted his proposal.
+
+That day the surgeon dined with us. Toward midnight he and I left the
+smoking room, and repaired to Francis Raven's bedside. Rigobert was at his
+post, with no very agreeable expression on his face. The Frenchman and the
+Englishman had evidently not got on well together so far. Francis Raven
+lay helpless on his bed, waiting silently for two in the morning and the
+Dream Woman.
+
+"I have come, Francis, to bid you good night," I said, cheerfully.
+"To-morrow morning I shall look in at breakfast time, before I leave home
+on a journey."
+
+"Thank you for all your kindness, sir. You will not see me alive to-morrow
+morning. She will find me this time. Mark my words--she will find me this
+time."
+
+"My good fellow! she couldn't find you in England. How in the world is she
+to find you in France?"
+
+"It's borne in on my mind, sir, that she will find me here. At two in the
+morning on my birthday I shall see her again, and see her for the last
+time."
+
+"Do you mean that she will kill you?"
+
+"I mean that, sir, she will kill me--with the knife."
+
+"And with Rigobert in the room to protect you?"
+
+"I am a doomed man. Fifty Rigoberts couldn't protect me."
+
+"And you wanted somebody to sit up with you?"
+
+"Mere weakness, sir. I don't like to be left alone on my deathbed."
+
+I looked at the surgeon. If he had encouraged me, I should certainly, out
+of sheer compassion, have confessed to Francis Raven the trick that we
+were playing him. The surgeon held to his experiment; the surgeon's face
+plainly said--"No."
+
+The next day (the twenty-ninth of February) was the day of the "Silver
+Wedding." The first thing in the morning, I went to Francis Raven's room.
+Rigobert met me at the door.
+
+"How has he passed the night?" I asked.
+
+"Saying his prayers, and looking for ghosts," Rigobert answered. "A
+lunatic asylum is the only proper place for him."
+
+I approached the bedside. "Well, Francis, here you are, safe and sound, in
+spite of what you said to me last night."
+
+His eyes rested on mine with a vacant, wondering look.
+
+"I don't understand it," he said.
+
+"Did you see anything of your wife when the clock struck two?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Did anything happen?"
+
+"Nothing happened, sir."
+
+"Doesn't _this_ satisfy you that you were wrong?"
+
+His eyes still kept their vacant, wondering look. He only repeated the
+words he had spoken already: "I don't understand it."
+
+I made a last attempt to cheer him. "Come, come, Francis! keep a good
+heart. You will be out of bed in a fortnight."
+
+He shook his head on the pillow. "There's something wrong," he said. "I
+don't expect you to believe me, sir. I only say there's something
+wrong--and time will show it."
+
+I left the room. Half an hour later I started for Mr. Beldheimer's house;
+leaving the arrangements for the morning of the first of March in the
+hands of the doctor and my wife.
+
+
+XVI
+
+The one thing which principally struck me when I joined the guests at the
+"Silver Wedding" is also the one thing which it is necessary to mention
+here. On this joyful occasion a noticeable lady present was out of
+spirits. That lady was no other than the heroine of the festival, the
+mistress of the house!
+
+In the course of the evening I spoke to Mr. Beldheimer's eldest son on the
+subject of his mother. As an old friend of the family, I had a claim on
+his confidence which the young man willingly recognized.
+
+"We have had a very disagreeable matter to deal with," he said; "and my
+mother has not recovered the painful impression left on her mind. Many
+years since, when my sisters were children, we had an English governess in
+the house. She left us, as we then understood, to be married. We heard no
+more of her until a week or ten days since, when my mother received a
+letter, in which our ex-governess described herself as being in a
+condition of great poverty and distress. After much hesitation she had
+ventured--at the suggestion of a lady who had been kind to her--to write
+to her former employers, and to appeal to their remembrance of old times.
+You know my mother: she is not only the most kind-hearted, but the most
+innocent of women--it is impossible to persuade her of the wickedness that
+there is in the world. She replied by return of post, inviting the
+governess to come here and see her, and inclosing the money for her
+traveling expenses. When my father came home, and heard what had been
+done, he wrote at once to his agent in London to make inquiries, inclosing
+the address on the governess' letter. Before he could receive the agent's
+reply the governess, arrived. She produced the worst possible impression
+on his mind. The agent's letter, arriving a few days later, confirmed his
+suspicions. Since we had lost sight of her, the woman had led a most
+disreputable life. My father spoke to her privately: he offered--on
+condition of her leaving the house--a sum of money to take her back to
+England. If she refused, the alternative would be an appeal to the
+authorities and a public scandal. She accepted the money, and left the
+house. On her way back to England she appears to have stopped at Metz. You
+will understand what sort of woman she is when I tell you that she was
+seen the other day in a tavern, with your handsome groom, Joseph
+Rigobert."
+
+While my informant was relating these circumstances, my memory was at
+work. I recalled what Francis Raven had vaguely told us of his wife's
+experience in former days as governess in a German family. A suspicion of
+the truth suddenly flashed across my mind. "What was the woman's name?" I
+asked.
+
+Mr. Beldheimer's son answered: "Alicia Warlock."
+
+I had but one idea when I heard that reply--to get back to my house
+without a moment's needless delay. It was then ten o'clock at night--the
+last train to Metz had left long since. I arranged with my young
+friend--after duly informing him of the circumstances--that I should go by
+the first train in the morning, instead of staying to breakfast with the
+other guests who slept in the house.
+
+At intervals during the night I wondered uneasily how things were going on
+at Maison Rouge. Again and again the same question occurred to me, on my
+journey home in the early morning--the morning of the first of March. As
+the event proved, but one person in my house knew what really happened at
+the stables on Francis Raven's birthday. Let Joseph Rigobert take my place
+as narrator, and tell the story of the end to You--as he told it, in times
+past, to his lawyer and to Me.
+
+
+
+
+FOURTH (AND LAST) NARRATIVE
+
+
+
+
+
+STATEMENT OF JOSEPH RIGOBERT: ADDRESSED TO THE ADVOCATE WHO DEFENDED HIM
+AT HIS TRIAL
+
+
+
+
+Respected Sir,--On the twenty-seventh of February I was sent, on business
+connected with the stables at Maison Rouge, to the city of Metz. On the
+public promenade I met a magnificent woman. Complexion, blond.
+Nationality, English. We mutually admired each other; we fell into
+conversation. (She spoke French perfectly--with the English accent.) I
+offered refreshment; my proposal was accepted. We had a long and
+interesting interview--we discovered that we were made for each other. So
+far, Who is to blame?
+
+Is it my fault that I am a handsome man--universally agreeable as such to
+the fair sex? Is it a criminal offense to be accessible to the amiable
+weakness of love? I ask again, Who is to blame? Clearly, nature. Not the
+beautiful lady--not my humble self.
+
+To resume. The most hard-hearted person living will understand that two
+beings made for each other could not possibly part without an appointment
+to meet again.
+
+I made arrangements for the accommodation of the lady in the village near
+Maison Rouge. She consented to honor me with her company at supper, in my
+apartment at the stables, on the night of the twenty-ninth. The time fixed
+on was the time when the other servants were accustomed to retire--eleven
+o'clock.
+
+Among the grooms attached to the stables was an Englishman, laid up with a
+broken leg. His name was Francis. His manners were repulsive; he was
+ignorant of the French language. In the kitchen he went by the nickname of
+the "English Bear." Strange to say, he was a great favorite with my master
+and my mistress. They even humored certain superstitious terrors to which
+this repulsive person was subject--terrors into the nature of which I, as
+an advanced freethinker, never thought it worth my while to inquire.
+
+On the evening of the twenty-eighth the Englishman, being a prey to the
+terrors which I have mentioned, requested that one of his fellow servants
+might sit up with him for that night only. The wish that he expressed was
+backed by Mr. Fairbank's authority. Having already incurred my master's
+displeasure--in what way, a proper sense of my own dignity forbids me to
+relate--I volunteered to watch by the bedside of the English Bear. My
+object was to satisfy Mr. Fairbank that I bore no malice, on my side,
+after what had occurred between us. The wretched Englishman passed a night
+of delirium. Not understanding his barbarous language, I could only gather
+from his gesture that he was in deadly fear of some fancied apparition at
+his bedside. From time to time, when this madman disturbed my slumbers, I
+quieted him by swearing at him. This is the shortest and best way of
+dealing with persons in his condition.
+
+On the morning of the twenty-ninth, Mr. Fairbank left us on a journey.
+Later in the day, to my unspeakable disgust, I found that I had not done
+with the Englishman yet. In Mr. Fairbank's absence, Mrs. Fairbank took an
+incomprehensible interest in the question of my delirious fellow servant's
+repose at night. Again, one or the other of us was to watch at his
+bedside, and report it, if anything happened. Expecting my fair friend to
+supper, it was necessary to make sure that the other servants at the
+stables would be safe in their beds that night. Accordingly, I volunteered
+once more to be the man who kept watch. Mrs. Fairbank complimented me on
+my humanity. I possess great command over my feelings. I accepted the
+compliment without a blush.
+
+Twice, after nightfall, my mistress and the doctor (the last staying in
+the house in Mr. Fairbank's absence) came to make inquiries. Once _before_
+the arrival of my fair friend--and once _after_. On the second occasion
+(my apartment being next door to the Englishman's) I was obliged to hide
+my charming guest in the harness room. She consented, with angelic
+resignation, to immolate her dignity to the servile necessities of my
+position. A more amiable woman (so far) I never met with!
+
+After the second visit I was left free. It was then close on midnight. Up
+to that time there was nothing in the behavior of the mad Englishman to
+reward Mrs. Fairbank and the doctor for presenting themselves at his
+bedside. He lay half awake, half asleep, with an odd wondering kind of
+look in his face. My mistress at parting warned me to be particularly
+watchful of him toward two in the morning. The doctor (in case anything
+happened) left me a large hand bell to ring, which could easily be heard
+at the house.
+
+Restored to the society of my fair friend, I spread the supper table. A
+pâté, a sausage, and a few bottles of generous Moselle wine, composed our
+simple meal. When persons adore each other, the intoxicating illusion of
+Love transforms the simplest meal into a banquet. With immeasurable
+capacities for enjoyment, we sat down to table. At the very moment when I
+placed my fascinating companion in a chair, the infamous Englishman in the
+next room took that occasion, of all others, to become restless and noisy
+once more. He struck with his stick on the floor; he cried out, in a
+delirious access of terror, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"
+
+The sound of that lamentable voice, suddenly assailing our ears, terrified
+my fair friend. She lost all her charming color in an instant. "Good
+heavens!" she exclaimed. "Who is that in the next room?"
+
+"A mad Englishman."
+
+"An Englishman?"
+
+"Compose yourself, my angel. I will quiet him."
+
+The lamentable voice called out on me again, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"
+
+My fair friend caught me by the arm. "Who is he?" she cried. "What is his
+name?"
+
+Something in her face struck me as she put that question. A spasm of
+jealousy shook me to the soul. "You know him?" I said.
+
+"His name!" she vehemently repeated; "his name!"
+
+"Francis," I answered.
+
+"Francis--_what_?"
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. I could neither remember nor pronounce the
+barbarous English surname. I could only tell her it began with an "R."
+
+She dropped back into the chair. Was she going to faint? No: she
+recovered, and more than recovered, her lost color. Her eyes flashed
+superbly. What did it mean? Profoundly as I understand women in general, I
+was puzzled by _this_ woman!
+
+"You know him?" I repeated.
+
+She laughed at me. "What nonsense! How should I know him? Go and quiet the
+wretch."
+
+My looking-glass was near. One glance at it satisfied me that no woman in
+her senses could prefer the Englishman to Me. I recovered my self-respect.
+I hastened to the Englishman's bedside.
+
+The moment I appeared he pointed eagerly toward my room. He overwhelmed me
+with a torrent of words in his own language. I made out, from his gestures
+and his looks, that he had, in some incomprehensible manner, discovered
+the presence of my guest; and, stranger still, that he was scared by the
+idea of a person in my room. I endeavored to compose him on the system
+which I have already mentioned--that is to say, I swore at him in _my_
+language. The result not proving satisfactory, I own I shook my fist in
+his face, and left the bedchamber.
+
+Returning to my fair friend, I found her walking backward and forward in a
+state of excitement wonderful to behold. She had not waited for me to fill
+her glass--she had begun the generous Moselle in my absence. I prevailed
+on her with difficulty to place herself at the table. Nothing would induce
+her to eat. "My appetite is gone," she said. "Give me wine."
+
+The generous Moselle deserves its name--delicate on the palate, with
+prodigious "body." The strength of this fine wine produced no stupefying
+effect on my remarkable guest. It appeared to strengthen and exhilarate
+her--nothing more. She always spoke in the same low tone, and always, turn
+the conversation as I might, brought it back with the same dexterity to
+the subject of the Englishman in the next room. In any other woman this
+persistency would have offended me. My lovely guest was irresistible; I
+answered her questions with the docility of a child. She possessed all the
+amusing eccentricity of her nation. When I told her of the accident which
+confined the Englishman to his bed, she sprang to her feet. An
+extraordinary smile irradiated her countenance. She said, "Show me the
+horse who broke the Englishman's leg! I must see that horse!" I took her
+to the stables. She kissed the horse--on my word of honor, she kissed the
+horse! That struck me. I said. "You _do_ know the man; and he has wronged
+you in some way." No! she would not admit it, even then. "I kiss all
+beautiful animals," she said. "Haven't I kissed _you_?" With that charming
+explanation of her conduct, she ran back up the stairs. I only remained
+behind to lock the stable door again. When I rejoined her, I made a
+startling discovery. I caught her coming out of the Englishman's room.
+
+"I was just going downstairs again to call you," she said. "The man in
+there is getting noisy once more."
+
+The mad Englishman's voice assailed our ears once again. "Rigobert!
+Rigobert!"
+
+He was a frightful object to look at when I saw him this time. His eyes
+were staring wildly; the perspiration was pouring over his face. In a
+panic of terror he clasped his hands; he pointed up to heaven. By every
+sign and gesture that a man can make, he entreated me not to leave him
+again. I really could not help smiling. The idea of my staying with _him_,
+and leaving my fair friend by herself in the next room!
+
+I turned to the door. When the mad wretch saw me leaving him he burst out
+into a screech of despair--so shrill that I feared it might awaken the
+sleeping servants.
+
+My presence of mind in emergencies is proverbial among those who know me.
+I tore open the cupboard in which he kept his linen--seized a handful of
+his handkerchiefs--gagged him with one of them, and secured his hands with
+the others. There was now no danger of his alarming the servants. After
+tying the last knot, I looked up.
+
+The door between the Englishman's room and mine was open. My fair friend
+was standing on the threshold--watching _him_ as he lay helpless on the
+bed; watching _me_ as I tied the last knot.
+
+"What are you doing there?" I asked. "Why did you open the door?"
+
+She stepped up to me, and whispered her answer in my ear, with her eyes
+all the time upon the man on the bed:
+
+"I heard him scream."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I thought you had killed him."
+
+I drew back from her in horror. The suspicion of me which her words
+implied was sufficiently detestable in itself. But her manner when she
+uttered the words was more revolting still. It so powerfully affected me
+that I started back from that beautiful creature as I might have recoiled
+from a reptile crawling over my flesh.
+
+Before I had recovered myself sufficiently to reply, my nerves were
+assailed by another shock. I suddenly heard my mistress's voice calling to
+me from the stable yard.
+
+There was no time to think--there was only time to act. The one thing
+needed was to keep Mrs. Fairbank from ascending the stairs, and
+discovering--not my lady guest only--but the Englishman also, gagged and
+bound on his bed. I instantly hurried to the yard. As I ran down the
+stairs I heard the stable clock strike the quarter to two in the morning.
+
+My mistress was eager and agitated. The doctor (in attendance on her) was
+smiling to himself, like a man amused at his own thoughts.
+
+"Is Francis awake or asleep?" Mrs. Fairbank inquired.
+
+"He has been a little restless, madam. But he is now quiet again. If he is
+not disturbed" (I added those words to prevent her from ascending the
+stairs), "he will soon fall off into a quiet sleep."
+
+"Has nothing happened since I was here last?"
+
+"Nothing, madam."
+
+The doctor lifted his eyebrows with a comical look of distress. "Alas,
+alas, Mrs. Fairbank!" he said. "Nothing has happened! The days of romance
+are over!"
+
+"It is not two o'clock yet," my mistress answered, a little irritably.
+
+The smell of the stables was strong on the morning air. She put her
+handkerchief to her nose and led the way out of the yard by the north
+entrance--the entrance communicating with the gardens and the house. I was
+ordered to follow her, along with the doctor. Once out of the smell of the
+stables she began to question me again. She was unwilling to believe that
+nothing had occurred in her absence. I invented the best answers I could
+think of on the spur of the moment; and the doctor stood by laughing. So
+the minutes passed till the clock struck two. Upon that, Mrs. Fairbank
+announced her intention of personally visiting the Englishman in his room.
+To my great relief, the doctor interfered to stop her from doing this.
+
+"You have heard that Francis is just falling asleep," he said. "If you
+enter his room you may disturb him. It is essential to the success of my
+experiment that he should have a good night's rest, and that he should own
+it himself, before I tell him the truth. I must request, madam, that you
+will not disturb the man. Rigobert will ring the alarm bell if anything
+happens."
+
+My mistress was unwilling to yield. For the next five minutes, at least,
+there was a warm discussion between the two. In the end Mrs. Fairbank was
+obliged to give way--for the time. "In half an hour," she said, "Francis
+will either be sound asleep, or awake again. In half an hour I shall come
+back." She took the doctor's arm. They returned together to the house.
+
+Left by myself, with half an hour before me, I resolved to take the
+Englishwoman back to the village--then, returning to the stables, to
+remove the gag and the bindings from Francis, and to let him screech to
+his heart's content. What would his alarming the whole establishment
+matter to _me_ after I had got rid of the compromising presence of my
+guest?
+
+Returning to the yard I heard a sound like the creaking of an open door on
+its hinges. The gate of the north entrance I had just closed with my own
+hand. I went round to the west entrance, at the back of the stables. It
+opened on a field crossed by two footpaths in Mr. Fairbank's grounds. The
+nearest footpath led to the village. The other led to the highroad and the
+river.
+
+Arriving at the west entrance I found the door open--swinging to and fro
+slowly in the fresh morning breeze. I had myself locked and bolted that
+door after admitting my fair friend at eleven o'clock. A vague dread of
+something wrong stole its way into my mind. I hurried back to the stables.
+
+I looked into my own room. It was empty. I went to the harness room. Not a
+sign of the woman was there. I returned to my room, and approached the
+door of the Englishman's bedchamber. Was it possible that she had remained
+there during my absence? An unaccountable reluctance to open the door made
+me hesitate, with my hand on the lock. I listened. There was not a sound
+inside. I called softly. There was no answer. I drew back a step, still
+hesitating. I noticed something dark moving slowly in the crevice between
+the bottom of the door and the boarded floor. Snatching up the candle from
+the table, I held it low, and looked. The dark, slowly moving object was a
+stream of blood!
+
+That horrid sight roused me. I opened the door. The Englishman lay on his
+bed--alone in the room. He was stabbed in two places--in the throat and in
+the heart. The weapon was left in the second wound. It was a knife of
+English manufacture, with a handle of buckhorn as good as new.
+
+I instantly gave the alarm. Witnesses can speak to what followed. It is
+monstrous to suppose that I am guilty of the murder. I admit that I am
+capable of committing follies: but I shrink from the bare idea of a crime.
+Besides, I had no motive for killing the man. The woman murdered him in my
+absence. The woman escaped by the west entrance while I was talking to my
+mistress. I have no more to say. I swear to you what I have here written
+is a true statement of all that happened on the morning of the first of
+March.
+
+Accept, sir, the assurance of my sentiments of profound gratitude and
+respect.
+
+ JOSEPH RIGOBERT.
+
+
+
+
+LAST LINES.--ADDED BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+Tried for the murder of Francis Raven, Joseph Rigobert was found Not
+Guilty; the papers of the assassinated man presented ample evidence of the
+deadly animosity felt toward him by his wife.
+
+The investigations pursued on the morning when the crime was committed
+showed that the murderess, after leaving the stable, had taken the
+footpath which led to the river. The river was dragged--without result. It
+remains doubtful to this day whether she died by drowning or not. The one
+thing certain is--that Alicia Warlock was never seen again.
+
+So--beginning in mystery, ending in mystery--the Dream Woman passes from
+your view. Ghost; demon; or living human creature--say for yourselves
+which she is. Or, knowing what unfathomed wonders are around you, what
+unfathomed wonders are _in_ you, let the wise words of the greatest of all
+poets be explanation enough:
+
+ "We are such stuff
+ As dreams are made of, and our little life
+ Is rounded with, a sleep."
+
+
+
+
+Anonymous
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Lost Duchess_
+
+
+I
+
+"Has the duchess returned?"
+
+"No, your grace."
+
+Knowles came farther into the room. He had a letter on a salver. When the
+duke had taken it, Knowles still lingered. The duke glanced at him.
+
+"Is an answer required?"
+
+"No, your grace." Still Knowles lingered. "Something a little singular has
+happened. The carriage has returned without the duchess, and the men say
+that they thought her grace was in it."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I hardly understand myself, your grace. Perhaps you would like to see
+Barnes."
+
+Barnes was the coachman.
+
+"Send him up." When Knowles had gone, and he was alone, his grace showed
+signs of being slightly annoyed. He looked at his watch. "I told her she'd
+better be in by four. She says that she's not feeling well, and yet one
+would think that she was not aware of the fatigue entailed in having the
+prince come to dinner, and a mob of people to follow. I particularly
+wished her to lie down for a couple of hours."
+
+Knowles ushered in not only Barnes, the coachman, but Moysey, the footman,
+too. Both these persons seemed to be ill at ease. The duke glanced at them
+sharply. In his voice there was a suggestion of impatience.
+
+"What is the matter?"
+
+Barnes explained as best he could.
+
+"If you please, your grace, we waited for the duchess outside Cane and
+Wilson's, the drapers. The duchess came out, got into the carriage, and
+Moysey shut the door, and her grace said, 'Home!' and yet when we got home
+she wasn't there."
+
+"She wasn't where?"
+
+"Her grace wasn't in the carriage, your grace."
+
+"What on earth do you mean?"
+
+"Her grace did get into the carriage; you shut the door, didn't you?"
+
+Barnes turned to Moysey. Moysey brought his hand up to his brow in a sort
+of military salute--he had been a soldier in the regiment in which, once
+upon a time, the duke had been a subaltern.
+
+"She did. The duchess came out of the shop. She seemed rather in a hurry,
+I thought. She got into the carriage, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!' I shut
+the door, and Barnes drove straight home. We never stopped anywhere, and
+we never noticed nothing happen on the way; and yet when we got home the
+carriage was empty."
+
+The duke started.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that the duchess got out of the carriage while you
+were driving full pelt through the streets without saying anything to you,
+and without you noticing it?"
+
+"The carriage was empty when we got home, your grace."
+
+"Was either of the doors open?"
+
+"No, your grace."
+
+"You fellows have been up to some infernal mischief. You have made a mess
+of it. You never picked up the duchess, and you're trying to palm this
+tale off on me to save yourselves."
+
+Barnes was moved to adjuration:
+
+"I'll take my Bible oath, your grace, that the duchess got into the
+carriage outside Cane and Wilson's."
+
+Moysey seconded his colleague.
+
+"I will swear to that, your grace. She got into that carriage, and I shut
+the door, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!'"
+
+The duke looked as if he did not know what to make of the story and its
+tellers.
+
+"What carriage did you have?"
+
+"Her grace's brougham, your grace."
+
+Knowles interposed:
+
+"The brougham was ordered because I understood that the duchess was not
+feeling very well, and there's rather a high wind, your grace."
+
+The duke snapped at him:
+
+"What has that to do with it? Are you suggesting that the duchess was more
+likely to jump out of a brougham while it was dashing through the streets
+than out of any other kind of vehicle?"
+
+The duke's glance fell on the letter which Knowles had brought him when he
+first had entered. He had placed it on his writing table. Now he took it
+up. It was addressed:
+
+ "_To His Grace the Duke of Datchet_.
+ _Private!_
+ VERY PRESSING!!!"
+
+The name was written in a fine, clear, almost feminine hand. The words in
+the left-hand corner of the envelope were written in a different hand.
+They were large and bold; almost as though they had been painted with the
+end of the penholder instead of being written with the pen. The envelope
+itself was of an unusual size, and bulged out as though it contained
+something else besides a letter.
+
+The duke tore the envelope open. As he did so something fell out of it on
+to the writing table. It looked as though it was a lock of a woman's hair.
+As he glanced at it the duke seemed to be a trifle startled. The duke read
+the letter:
+
+ "Your grace will be so good as to bring five hundred pounds in
+ gold to the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade within an
+ hour of the receipt of this. The Duchess of Datchet has been
+ kidnaped. An imitation duchess got into the carriage, which was
+ waiting outside Cane and Wilson's, and she alighted on the road.
+ Unless your grace does as you are requested, the Duchess of
+ Datchet's left-hand little finger will be at once cut off, and
+ sent home in time to receive the prince to dinner. Other portions
+ of her grace will follow. A lock of her grace's hair is inclosed
+ with this as an earnest of our good intentions.
+
+ "_Before_ 5:30 p.m. your grace is requested to be at the
+ Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade with five hundred pounds
+ in gold. You will there be accosted by an individual in a white
+ top hat, and with a gardenia in his buttonhole. You will be
+ entirely at liberty to give him into custody, or to have him
+ followed by the police, in which case the duchess's left arm, cut
+ off at the shoulder, will be sent home for dinner--not to mention
+ other extremely possible contingencies. But you are _advised_ to
+ give the individual in question the five hundred pounds in gold,
+ because in that case the duchess herself will be home in time to
+ receive the prince to dinner, and with one of the best stories
+ with which to entertain your distinguished guests they ever
+ heard.
+
+ "Remember! _not later than_ 5:30, unless you wish to receive her
+ grace's little finger."
+
+The duke stared at this amazing epistle when he had read it as though he
+found it difficult to believe the evidence of his eyes. He was not a
+demonstrative person, as a rule, but this little communication astonished
+even him. He read it again. Then his hands dropped to his sides, and he
+swore.
+
+He took up the lock of hair which had fallen out of the envelope. Was it
+possible that it could be his wife's, the duchess? Was it possible that a
+Duchess of Datchet could be kidnaped, in broad daylight, in the heart of
+London, and be sent home, as it were, in pieces? Had sacrilegious hands
+already been playing pranks with that great lady's hair? Certainly,
+_that_ hair was so like _her_ hair that the mere resemblance made his
+grace's blood run cold. He turned on Messrs. Barnes and Moysey as though
+he would have liked to rend them.
+
+"You scoundrels!"
+
+He moved forward as though the intention had entered his ducal heart to
+knock his servants down. But, if that were so, he did not act quite up to
+his intention. Instead, he stretched out his arm, pointing at them as if
+he were an accusing spirit:
+
+"Will you swear that it was the duchess who got into the carriage outside
+Cane and Wilson's?"
+
+Barnes began to stammer:
+
+"I'll swear, your grace, that I--I thought--"
+
+The duke stormed an interruption:
+
+"I don't ask what you thought. I ask you, will you swear it was?"
+
+The duke's anger was more than Barnes could face. He was silent. Moysey
+showed a larger courage.
+
+"I could have sworn that it was at the time, your grace. But now it seems
+to me that it's a rummy go."
+
+"A rummy go!" The peculiarity of the phrase did not seem to strike the
+duke just then--at least, he echoed it as if it didn't. "You call it a
+rummy go! Do you know that I am told in this letter that the woman who
+entered the carriage was not the duchess? What you were thinking about, or
+what case you will be able to make out for yourselves, you know better
+than I; but I can tell you this--that in an hour you will leave my
+service, and you may esteem yourselves fortunate if, to-night, you are not
+both of you sleeping in jail."
+
+One might almost have suspected that the words were spoken in irony. But
+before they could answer, another servant entered, who also brought a
+letter for the duke. When his grace's glance fell on it he uttered an
+exclamation. The writing on the envelope was the same writing that had
+been on the envelope which had contained the very singular
+communication--like it in all respects, down to the broomstick-end
+thickness of the "Private!" and "Very pressing!!!" in the corner.
+
+"Who brought this?" stormed the duke.
+
+The servant appeared to be a little startled by the violence of his
+grace's manner.
+
+"A lady--or, at least, your grace, she seemed to be a lady."
+
+"Where is she?"
+
+"She came in a hansom, your grace. She gave me that letter, and said,
+'Give that to the Duke of Datchet at once--without a moment's delay!' Then
+she got into the hansom again, and drove away."
+
+"Why didn't you stop her?"
+
+"Your grace!"
+
+The man seemed surprised, as though the idea of stopping chance visitors
+to the ducal mansion _vi et armis_ had not, until that moment, entered
+into his philosophy. The duke continued to regard the man as if he could
+say a good deal, if he chose. Then he pointed to the door. His lips said
+nothing, but his gesture much. The servant vanished.
+
+"Another hoax!" the duke said grimly, as he tore the envelope open.
+
+This time the envelope contained a sheet of paper, and in the sheet of
+paper another envelope. The duke unfolded the sheet of paper. On it some
+words were written. These:
+
+"The duchess appears so particularly anxious to drop you a line, that one
+really hasn't the heart to refuse her.
+
+"Her grace's communication--written amidst blinding tears!--you will find
+inclosed with this."
+
+"Knowles," said the duke, in a voice which actually trembled, "Knowles,
+hoax or no hoax, I will be even with the gentleman who wrote that."
+
+Handing the sheet of paper to Mr. Knowles, his grace turned his attention
+to the envelope which had been inclosed. It was a small, square envelope,
+of the finest quality, and it reeked with perfume. The duke's countenance
+assumed an added frown--he had no fondness for envelopes which were
+scented. In the center of the envelope were the words, "To the Duke of
+Datchet," written in the big, bold, sprawling hand which he knew so well.
+
+"Mabel's writing," he said, half to himself, as, with shaking fingers, he
+tore the envelope open.
+
+The sheet of paper which he took out was almost as stiff as cardboard. It,
+too, emitted what his grace deemed the nauseous odors of the perfumer's
+shop. On it was written this letter:
+
+ "MY DEAR HEREWARD--For Heaven's sake do what these people
+ require! I don't know what has happened or where I am, but I am
+ nearly distracted! They have already cut off some of my hair, and
+ they tell me that, if you don't let them have five hundred pounds
+ in gold by half-past five, they will cut off my little finger
+ too. I would sooner die than lose my little finger--and--I don't
+ know what else besides.
+
+ "By the token which I send you, and which has never, until now,
+ been off my breast, I conjure you to help me.
+
+
+ "Hereward--_help me_!"
+
+When he read that letter the duke turned white--very white, as white as
+the paper on which it was written. He passed the epistle on to Knowles.
+
+"I suppose that also is a hoax?"
+
+Mr. Knowles was silent. He still yielded to his constitutional disrelish
+to commit himself. At last he asked:
+
+"What is it that your grace proposes to do?"
+
+The duke spoke with a bitterness which almost suggested a personal
+animosity toward the inoffensive Mr. Knowles.
+
+"I propose, with your permission, to release the duchess from the custody
+of my estimable correspondent. I propose--always with your permission--to
+comply with his modest request, and to take him his five hundred pounds in
+gold." He paused, then continued in a tone which, coming from him, meant
+volumes: "Afterwards, I propose to cry quits with the concocter of this
+pretty little hoax, even if it costs me every penny I possess. He shall
+pay more for that five hundred pounds than he supposes."
+
+
+II
+
+The Duke of Datchet, coming out of the bank, lingered for a moment on the
+steps. In one hand he carried a canvas bag which seemed well weighted. On
+his countenance there was an expression which to a casual observer might
+have suggested that his grace was not completely at his ease. That casual
+observer happened to come strolling by. It took the form of Ivor Dacre.
+
+Mr. Dacre looked the Duke of Datchet up and down in that languid way he
+has. He perceived the canvas bag. Then he remarked, possibly intending to
+be facetious:
+
+"Been robbing the bank? Shall I call a cart?"
+
+Nobody minds what Ivor Dacre says. Besides, he is the duke's own cousin.
+Perhaps a little removed; still, there it is. So the duke smiled a sickly
+smile, as if Mr. Dacre's delicate wit had given him a passing touch of
+indigestion.
+
+Mr. Dacre noticed that the duke looked sallow, so he gave his pretty sense
+of humor another airing.
+
+"Kitchen boiler burst? When I saw the duchess just now I wondered if it
+had."
+
+His grace distinctly started. He almost dropped the canvas bag.
+
+"You saw the duchess just now, Ivor! When?"
+
+The duke was evidently moved. Mr. Dacre was stirred to languid curiosity.
+"I can't say I clocked it. Perhaps half an hour ago; perhaps a little
+more."
+
+"Half an hour ago! Are you sure? Where did you see her?"
+
+Mr. Dacre wondered. The Duchess of Datchet could scarcely have been
+eloping in broad daylight. Moreover, she had not yet been married a year.
+Everyone knew that she and the duke were still as fond of each other as if
+they were not man and wife. So, although the duke, for some cause or
+other, was evidently in an odd state of agitation, Mr. Dacre saw no reason
+why he should not make a clean breast of all he knew.
+
+"She was going like blazes in a hansom cab."
+
+"In a hansom cab? Where?"
+
+"Down Waterloo Place."
+
+"Was she alone?"
+
+Mr. Dacre reflected. He glanced at the duke out of the corners of his
+eyes. His languid utterance became a positive drawl.
+
+"I rather fancy that she wasn't."
+
+"Who was with her?"
+
+"My dear fellow, if you were to offer me the bank I couldn't tell you."
+
+"Was it a man?"
+
+Mr. Dacre's drawl became still more pronounced.
+
+"I rather fancy that it was."
+
+Mr. Dacre expected something. The duke was so excited. But he by no means
+expected what actually came.
+
+"Ivor, she's been kidnaped!"
+
+Mr. Dacre did what he had never been known to do before within the memory
+of man--he dropped his eyeglass.
+
+"Datchet!"
+
+"She has! Some scoundrel has decoyed her away, and trapped her. He's
+already sent me a lock of her hair, and he tells me that if I don't let
+him have five hundred pounds in gold by half-past five he'll let me have
+her little finger."
+
+Mr. Dacre did not know what to make of his grace at all. He was a sober
+man--it _couldn't_ be that! Mr. Dacre felt really concerned.
+
+"I'll call a cab, old man, and you'd better let me see you home."
+
+Mr. Dacre half raised his stick to hail a passing hansom. The duke caught
+him by the arm.
+
+"You ass! What do you mean? I am telling you the simple truth. My wife's
+been kidnaped."
+
+Mr. Dacre's countenance was a thing to be seen--and remembered.
+
+"Oh! I hadn't heard that there was much of that sort of thing about just
+now. They talk of poodles being kidnaped, but as for duchesses--You'd
+really better let me call that cab."
+
+"Ivor, do you want me to kick you? Don't you see that to me it's a
+question of life and death? I've been in there to get the money." His
+grace motioned toward the bank. "I'm going to take it to the scoundrel who
+has my darling at his mercy. Let me but have her hand in mine again, and
+he shall continue to pay for every sovereign with tears of blood until he
+dies."
+
+"Look here, Datchet, I don't know if you're having a joke with me, or if
+you're not well--"
+
+The duke stepped impatiently into the roadway.
+
+"Ivor, you're a fool! Can't you tell jest from earnest, health from
+disease? I'm off! Are you coming with me? It would be as well that I
+should have a witness."
+
+"Where are you off to?"
+
+"To the other end of the Arcade."
+
+"Who is the gentleman you expect to have the pleasure of meeting there?"
+
+"How should I know?" The duke took a letter from his pocket--it was the
+letter which had just arrived. "The fellow is to wear a white top hat, and
+a gardenia in his buttonhole."
+
+"What is it you have there?"
+
+"It's the letter which brought the news--look for yourself and see; but,
+for God's sake, make haste!" His grace glanced at his watch. "It's already
+twenty after five."
+
+"And do you mean to say that on the strength of a letter such as this you
+are going to hand over five hundred pounds to--"
+
+The duke cut Mr. Dacre short.
+
+"What are five hundred pounds to me? Besides, you don't know all. There is
+another letter. And I have heard from Mabel. But I will tell you all about
+it later. If you are coming, come!"
+
+Folding up the letter, Mr. Dacre returned it to the duke.
+
+"As you say, what are five hundred pounds to you? It's as well they are
+not as much to you as they are to me, or I'm afraid--"
+
+"Hang it, Ivor, do prose afterwards!"
+
+The duke hurried across the road. Mr. Dacre hastened after him. As they
+entered the Arcade they passed a constable. Mr. Dacre touched his
+companion's arm.
+
+"Don't you think we'd better ask our friend in blue to walk behind us? His
+neighborhood might be handy."
+
+"Nonsense!" The duke stopped short. "Ivor, this is my affair, not yours.
+If you are not content to play the part of silent witness, be so good as
+to leave me."
+
+"My dear Datchet, I'm entirely at your service. I can be every whit as
+insane as you, I do assure you."
+
+Side by side they moved rapidly down the Burlington Arcade. The duke was
+obviously in a state of the extremest nervous tension. Mr. Dacre was
+equally obviously in a state of the most supreme enjoyment. People stared
+as they rushed past. The duke saw nothing. Mr. Dacre saw everything, and
+smiled.
+
+When they reached the Piccadilly end of the Arcade the duke pulled up. He
+looked about him. Mr. Dacre also looked about him.
+
+"I see nothing of your white-hatted and gardenia-buttonholed friend," said
+Ivor.
+
+The duke referred to his watch.
+
+"It's not yet half-past five. I'm up to time."
+
+Mr. Dacre held his stick in front of him and leaned on it. He indulged
+himself with a beatific smile.
+
+"It strikes me, my dear Datchet, that you've been the victim of one of the
+finest things in hoaxes--"
+
+"I hope I haven't kept you waiting."
+
+The voice which interrupted Mr. Dacre came from the rear. While they were
+looking in front of them some one approached them from behind, apparently
+coming out of the shop which was at their backs.
+
+The speaker looked a gentleman. He sounded like one, too. Costume,
+appearance, manner, were beyond reproach--even beyond the criticism of
+two such keen critics as were these. The glorious attire of a London dandy
+was surmounted with a beautiful white top hat. In his buttonhole was a
+magnificent gardenia.
+
+In age the stranger was scarcely more than a boy, and a sunny-faced,
+handsome boy at that. His cheeks were hairless, his eyes were blue. His
+smile was not only innocent, it was bland. Never was there a more
+conspicuous illustration of that repose which stamps the caste of Vere de
+Vere.
+
+The duke looked at him and glowered. Mr. Dacre looked at him and smiled.
+
+"Who are you?" asked the duke.
+
+"Ah--that is the question!" The newcomer's refined and musical voice
+breathed the very soul of affability. "I am an individual who is so
+unfortunate as to be in want of five hundred pounds."
+
+"Are you the scoundrel who sent me that infamous letter?"
+
+The charming stranger never turned a hair.
+
+"I am the scoundrel mentioned in that infamous letter who wants to accost
+you at the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade before half-past
+five--as witness my white hat and my gardenia."
+
+"Where's my wife?"
+
+The stranger gently swung his stick in front of him with his two hands. He
+regarded the duke as a merry-hearted son might regard his father. The
+thing was beautiful!
+
+"Her grace will be home almost as soon as you are--when you have given me
+the money which I perceive you have all ready for me in that scarcely
+elegant-looking canvas bag." He shrugged his shoulders quite gracefully.
+"Unfortunately, in these matters one has no choice--one is forced to ask
+for gold."
+
+"And suppose, instead of giving you what is in this canvas bag, I take you
+by the throat and choke the life right out of you?"
+
+"Or suppose," amended Mr. Dacre, "that you do better, and commend this
+gentleman to the tender mercies of the first policeman we encounter."
+
+The stranger turned to Mr. Dacre. He condescended to become conscious of
+his presence.
+
+"Is this gentleman your grace's friend? Ah--Mr. Dacre, I perceive! I have
+the honor of knowing Mr. Dacre, though, possibly, I am unknown to him."
+
+"You were--until this moment."
+
+With an airy little laugh the stranger returned to the duke. He brushed an
+invisible speck of dust off the sleeve of his coat.
+
+"As has been intimated in that infamous letter, his grace is at perfect
+liberty to give me into custody--why not? Only"--he said it with his
+boyish smile--"if a particular communication is not received from me in
+certain quarters within a certain time the Duchess of Datchet's beautiful
+white arm will be hacked off at the shoulder."
+
+"You hound!"
+
+The duke would have taken the stranger by the throat, and have done his
+best to choke the life right out of him then and there, if Mr. Dacre had
+not intervened.
+
+"Steady, old man!" Mr. Dacre turned to the stranger. "You appear to be a
+pretty sort of a scoundrel."
+
+The stranger gave his shoulders that almost imperceptible shrug.
+
+"Oh, my dear Dacre, I am in want of money! I believe that you sometimes
+are in want of money, too."
+
+Everybody knows that nobody knows where Ivor Dacre gets his money from, so
+the allusion must have tickled him immensely.
+
+"You're a cool hand," he said.
+
+"Some men are born that way."
+
+"So I should imagine. Men like you must be born, not made."
+
+"Precisely--as you say!" The stranger turned, with his graceful smile, to
+the duke: "But are we not wasting precious time? I can assure your grace
+that, in this particular matter, moments are of value."
+
+Mr. Dacre interposed before the duke could answer.
+
+"If you take my strongly urged advice, Datchet, you will summon this
+constable who is now coming down the Arcade, and hand this gentleman over
+to his keeping. I do not think that you need fear that the duchess will
+lose her arm, or even her little finger. Scoundrels of this one's kidney
+are most amenable to reason when they have handcuffs on their wrists."
+
+The duke plainly hesitated. He would--and he would not. The stranger, as
+he eyed him, seemed much amused.
+
+"My dear duke, by all means act on Mr. Dacre's valuable suggestion. As I
+said before, why not? It would at least be interesting to see if the
+duchess does or does not lose her arm--almost as interesting to you as to
+Mr. Dacre. Those blackmailing, kidnaping scoundrels do use such empty
+menaces. Besides, you would have the pleasure of seeing me locked up. My
+imprisonment for life would recompense you even for the loss of her
+grace's arm. And five hundred pounds is such a sum to have to pay--merely
+for a wife! Why not, therefore, act on Mr. Dacre's suggestion? Here comes
+the constable." The constable referred to was advancing toward them--he
+was not a dozen yards away. "Let me beckon to him--I will with pleasure."
+He took out his watch--a gold chronograph repeater. "There are scarcely
+ten minutes left during which it will be possible for me to send the
+communication which I spoke of, so that it may arrive in time. As it will
+then be too late, and the instruments are already prepared for the little
+operation which her grace is eagerly anticipating, it would, perhaps, be
+as well, after all, that you should give me into charge. You would have
+saved your five hundred pounds, and you would, at any rate, have something
+in exchange for her grace's mutilated limb. Ah, here is the constable!
+Officer!"
+
+The stranger spoke with such a pleasant little air of easy geniality that
+it was impossible to tell if he were in jest or in earnest. This fact
+impressed the duke much more than if he had gone in for a liberal
+indulgence of the--under the circumstances--orthodox melodramatic
+scowling. And, indeed, in the face of his own common sense, it impressed
+Mr. Ivor Dacre too.
+
+This well-bred, well-groomed youth was just the being to realize--_aux
+bouts des ongles_--a modern type of the devil, the type which depicts him
+as a perfect gentleman, who keeps smiling all the time.
+
+The constable whom this audacious rogue had signaled approached the little
+group. He addressed the stranger:
+
+"Do you want me, sir?"
+
+"No, I do not want you. I think it is the Duke of Datchet."
+
+The constable, who knew the duke very well by sight, saluted him as he
+turned to receive instructions.
+
+The duke looked white, even savage. There was not a pleasant look in his
+eyes and about his lips. He appeared to be endeavoring to put a great
+restraint upon himself. There was a momentary silence. Mr. Dacre made a
+movement as if to interpose. The duke caught him by the arm.
+
+He spoke: "No, constable, I do not want you. This person is mistaken."
+
+The constable looked as if he could not quite make out how such a mistake
+could have arisen, hesitated, then, with another salute, he moved away.
+
+The stranger was still holding his watch in his hand.
+
+"Only eight minutes," he said.
+
+The duke seemed to experience some difficulty in giving utterance to what
+he had to say.
+
+"If I give you this five hundred pounds, you--you--"
+
+As the duke paused, as if at a loss for language which was strong enough
+to convey his meaning, the stranger laughed.
+
+"Let us take the adjectives for granted. Besides, it is only boys who call
+each other names--men do things. If you give me the five hundred
+sovereigns, which you have in that bag, at once--in five minutes it will
+be too late--I will promise--I will not swear; if you do not credit my
+simple promise, you will not believe my solemn affirmation--I will
+promise that, possibly within an hour, certainly within an hour and a
+half, the Duchess of Datchet shall return to you absolutely
+uninjured--except, of course, as you are already aware, with regard to a
+few of the hairs of her head. I will promise this on the understanding
+that you do not yourself attempt to see where I go, and that you will
+allow no one else to do so." This with a glance at Ivor Dacre. "I shall
+know at once if I am followed. If you entertain such intentions, you had
+better, on all accounts, remain in possession of your five hundred
+pounds."
+
+The duke eyed him very grimly.
+
+"I entertain no such intentions--until the duchess returns."
+
+Again the stranger indulged in that musical laugh of his.
+
+"Ah, until the duchess returns! Of course, then the bargain's at an end.
+When you are once more in the enjoyment of her grace's society, you will
+be at liberty to set all the dogs in Europe at my heels. I assure you I
+fully expect that you will do so--why not?" The duke raised the canvas
+bag. "My dear duke, ten thousand thanks! You shall see her grace at
+Datchet House, 'pon my honor, probably within the hour."
+
+"Well," commented Ivor Dacre, when the stranger had vanished, with the
+bag, into Piccadilly, and as the duke and himself moved toward Burlington
+Gardens, "if a gentleman is to be robbed, it is as well that he should
+have another gentleman rob him."
+
+
+III
+
+Mr. Dacre eyed his companion covertly as they progressed. His Grace of
+Datchet appeared to have some fresh cause for uneasiness. All at once he
+gave it utterance, in a tone of voice which was extremely somber:
+
+"Ivor, do you think that scoundrel will dare to play me false?"
+
+"I think," murmured Mr. Dacre, "that he has dared to play you pretty false
+already."
+
+"I don't mean that. But I mean how am I to know, now that he has his
+money, that he will still not keep Mabel in his clutches?"
+
+There came an echo from Mr. Dacre.
+
+"Just so--how are you to know?"
+
+"I believe that something of this sort has been done in the States."
+
+"I thought that there they were content to kidnap them after they were
+dead. I was not aware that they had, as yet, got quite so far as the
+living."
+
+"I believe that I have heard of something just like this."
+
+"Possibly; they are giants over there."
+
+"And in that case the scoundrels, when their demands were met, refused to
+keep to the letter of their bargain and asked for more."
+
+The duke stood still. He clinched his fists, and swore:
+
+"Ivor, if that--villain doesn't keep his word, and Mabel isn't home within
+the hour, by--I shall go mad!"
+
+"My dear Datchet"--Mr. Dacre loved strong language as little as he loved a
+scene--"let us trust to time and, a little, to your white-hatted and
+gardenia-buttonholed friend's word of honor. You should have thought of
+possible eventualities before you showed your confidence--really. Suppose,
+instead of going mad, we first of all go home?"
+
+A hansom stood waiting for a fare at the end of the Arcade. Mr. Dacre had
+handed the duke into it before his grace had quite realized that the
+vehicle was there.
+
+"Tell the fellow to drive faster." That was what the duke said when the
+cab had started.
+
+"My dear Datchet, the man's already driving his geerage off its legs. If a
+bobby catches sight of him he'll take his number."
+
+A moment later, a murmur from the duke:
+
+"I don't know if you're aware that the prince is coming to dinner?"
+
+"I am perfectly aware of it."
+
+"You take it uncommonly cool. How easy it is to bear our brother's
+burdens! Ivor, if Mabel doesn't turn up I shall feel like murder."
+
+"I sympathize with you, Datchet, with all my heart, though, I may observe,
+parenthetically, that I very far from realize the situation even yet. Take
+my advice. If the duchess does not show quite as soon as we both of us
+desire, don't make a scene; just let me see what I can do."
+
+Judging from the expression of his countenance, the duke was conscious of
+no overwhelming desire to witness an exhibition of Mr. Dacre's prowess.
+
+When the cab reached Datchet House his grace dashed up the steps three at
+a time. The door flew open.
+
+"Has the duchess returned?"
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+A voice floated downward from above. Some one came running down the
+stairs. It was her Grace of Datchet.
+
+"Mabel!"
+
+She actually rushed into the duke's extended arms. And he kissed her, and
+she kissed him--before the servants.
+
+"So you're not quite dead?" she cried.
+
+"I am almost," he said.
+
+She drew herself a little away from him.
+
+"Hereward, were you seriously hurt?"
+
+"Do you suppose that I could have been otherwise than seriously hurt?"
+
+"My darling! Was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duke stared.
+
+"A Pickford's van? I don't understand. But come in here. Come along, Ivor.
+Mabel, you don't see Ivor."
+
+"How do you do, Mr. Dacre?"
+
+Then the trio withdrew into a little anteroom; it was really time. Even
+then the pair conducted themselves as if Mr. Dacre had been nothing and no
+one. The duke took the lady's two hands in his. He eyed her fondly.
+
+"So you are uninjured, with the exception of that lock of hair. Where did
+the villain take it from?"
+
+The lady looked a little puzzled.
+
+"What lock of hair?"
+
+From an envelope which he took from his pocket the duke produced a shining
+tress. It was the lock of hair which had arrived in the first
+communication. "I will have it framed."
+
+"You will have what framed?" The duchess glanced at what the duke was so
+tenderly caressing, almost, as it seemed, a little dubiously. "Whatever is
+it you have there?"
+
+"It is the lock of hair which that scoundrel sent me." Something in the
+lady's face caused him to ask a question; "Didn't he tell you he had sent
+it to me?"
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+"Did the brute tell you that he meant to cut off your little finger?"
+
+A very curious look came into the lady's face. She glanced at the duke as
+if she, all at once, was half afraid of him. She cast at Mr. Dacre what
+really seemed to be a look of inquiry. Her voice was tremulously anxious.
+
+"Hereward, did--did the accident affect you mentally?"
+
+"How could it not have affected me mentally? Do you think that my mental
+organization is of steel?"
+
+"But you look so well."
+
+"Of course I look well, now that I have you back again. Tell me, darling,
+did that hound actually threaten you with cutting off your arm? If he did,
+I shall feel half inclined to kill him yet."
+
+The duchess seemed positively to shrink from her better half's near
+neighborhood.
+
+"Hereward, was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duke seemed puzzled. Well he might be.
+
+"Was what a Pickford's van?"
+
+The lady turned to Mr. Dacre. In her voice there was a ring of anguish.
+
+"Mr. Dacre, tell me, was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+Ivor could only imitate his relative's repetition of her inquiry.
+
+"I don't quite catch you--was what a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duchess clasped her hands in front of her.
+
+"What is it you are keeping from me? What is it you are trying to hide? I
+implore you to tell me the worst, whatever it may be! Do not keep me any
+longer in suspense; you do not know what I already have endured. Mr.
+Dacre, is my husband mad?"
+
+One need scarcely observe that the lady's amazing appeal to Mr. Dacre as
+to her husband's sanity was received with something like surprise. As the
+duke continued to stare at her, a dreadful fear began to loom in his
+brain.
+
+"My darling, your brain is unhinged!"
+
+He advanced to take her two hands again in his; but, to his unmistakable
+distress, she shrank away from him.
+
+"Hereward--don't touch me. How is it that I missed you? Why did you not
+wait until I came?"
+
+"Wait until you came?"
+
+The duke's bewilderment increased.
+
+"Surely, if your injuries turned out, after all, to be slight, that was
+all the more reason why you should have waited, after sending for me like
+that."
+
+"I sent for you--I?" The duke's tone was grave. "My darling, perhaps you
+had better come upstairs."
+
+"Not until we have had an explanation. You must have known that I should
+come. Why did you not wait for me after you had sent me that?"
+
+The duchess held out something to the duke. He took it. It was a card--his
+own visiting card. Something was written on the back of it. He read aloud
+what was written.
+
+"Mabel, come to me at once with the bearer. They tell me that they cannot
+take me home." It looks like my own writing."
+
+"Looks like it! It is your writing."
+
+"It looks like it--and written with a shaky pen."
+
+"My dear child, one's hand would shake at such a moment as that."
+
+"Mabel, where did you get this?"
+
+"It was brought to me in Cane and Wilson's."
+
+"Who brought it?"
+
+"Who brought it? Why, the man you sent."
+
+"The man I sent!" A light burst upon the duke's brain. He fell back a
+pace. "It's the decoy!"
+
+Her grace echoed the words:
+
+"The decoy?"
+
+"The scoundrel! To set a trap with such a bait! My poor innocent darling,
+did you think it came from me? Tell me, Mabel, where did he cut off your
+hair?"
+
+"Cut off my hair?"
+
+Her grace put her hand to her head as if to make sure that her hair was
+there.
+
+"Where did he take you to?"
+
+"He took me to Draper's Buildings."
+
+"Draper's Buildings?"
+
+"I have never been in the City before, but he told me it was Draper's
+Buildings. Isn't that near the Stock Exchange?"
+
+"Near the Stock Exchange?"
+
+It seemed rather a curious place to which to take a kidnaped victim. The
+man's audacity!
+
+"He told me that you were coming out of the Stock Exchange when a van
+knocked you over. He said that he thought it was a Pickford's van--was it
+a Pickford's van?"
+
+"No, it was not a Pickford's van. Mabel, were you in Draper's Buildings
+when you wrote that letter?"
+
+"Wrote what letter?"
+
+"Have you forgotten it already? I do not believe that there is a word in
+it which will not be branded on my brain until I die."
+
+"Hereward! What do you mean?"
+
+"Surely you cannot have written me such a letter as that, and then have
+forgotten it already?"
+
+He handed her the letter which had arrived in the second communication.
+She glanced at it, askance. Then she took it with a little gasp.
+
+"Hereward, if you don't mind, I think I'll take a chair." She took a
+chair. "Whatever--whatever's this?" As she read the letter the varying
+expressions which passed across her face were, in themselves, a study in
+psychology. "Is it possible that you can imagine that, under any
+conceivable circumstances, I could have written such a letter as this?"
+
+"Mabel!"
+
+She rose to her feet with emphasis.
+
+"Hereward, don't say that you thought this came from me!"
+
+"Not from you?" He remembered Knowles's diplomatic reception of the
+epistle on its first appearance. "I suppose that you will say next that
+this is not a lock of your hair?"
+
+"My dear child, what bee have you got in your bonnet? This a lock of my
+hair! Why, it's not in the least bit like my hair!"
+
+Which was certainly inaccurate. As far as color was concerned it was an
+almost perfect match. The duke turned to Mr. Dacre.
+
+"Ivor, I've had to go through a good deal this afternoon. If I have to go
+through much more, something will crack!" He touched his forehead. "I
+think it's my turn to take a chair." Not the one which the duchess had
+vacated, but one which faced it. He stretched out his legs in front of
+him; he thrust his hands into his trousers pockets; he said, in a tone
+which was not gloomy but absolutely grewsome:
+
+"Might I ask, Mabel, if you have been kidnaped?"
+
+"Kidnaped?"
+
+"The word I used was 'kidnaped.' But I will spell it if you like. Or I
+will get a dictionary, that you may see its meaning."
+
+The duchess looked as if she was beginning to be not quite sure if she was
+awake or sleeping. She turned to Ivor.
+
+"Mr. Dacre, has the accident affected Hereward's brain?"
+
+The duke took the words out of his cousin's mouth.
+
+"On that point, my dear, let me ease your mind. I don't know if you are
+under the impression that I should be the same shape after a Pickford's
+van had run over me as I was before; but, in any case, I have not been run
+over by a Pickford's van. So far as I am concerned there has been no
+accident. Dismiss that delusion from your mind."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"You appear surprised. One might even think that you were sorry. But may I
+now ask what you did when you arrived at Draper's Buildings?"
+
+"Did! I looked for you!"
+
+"Indeed! And when you had looked in vain, what was the next item in your
+programme?"
+
+The lady shrank still farther from him.
+
+"Hereward, have you been having a jest at my expense? Can you have been so
+cruel?" Tears stood in her eyes.
+
+Rising, the duke laid his hand upon her arm.
+
+"Mabel, tell me--what did you do when you had looked for me in vain?"
+
+"I looked for you upstairs and downstairs and everywhere. It was quite a
+large place, it took me ever such a time. I thought that I should go
+distracted. Nobody seemed to know anything about you, or even that there
+had been an accident at all--it was all offices. I couldn't make it out in
+the least, and the people didn't seem to be able to make me out either. So
+when I couldn't find you anywhere I came straight home again."
+
+The duke was silent for a moment. Then with funereal gravity he turned to
+Mr. Dacre. He put to him this question:
+
+"Ivor, what are you laughing at?"
+
+Mr. Dacre drew his hand across his mouth with rather a suspicious gesture.
+
+"My dear fellow, only a smile!"
+
+The duchess looked from one to the other.
+
+"What have you two been doing? What is the joke?"
+
+With an air of preternatural solemnity the duke took two letters from the
+breast pocket of his coat.
+
+"Mabel, you have already seen your letter. You have already seen the lock
+of your hair. Just look at this--and that."
+
+He gave her the two very singular communications which had arrived in such
+a mysterious manner, and so quickly one after the other. She read them
+with wide-open eyes.
+
+"Hereward! Wherever did these come from?"
+
+The duke was standing with his legs apart, and his hands in his trousers
+pockets. "I would give--I would give another five hundred pounds to know.
+Shall I tell you, madam, what I have been doing? I have been presenting
+five hundred golden sovereigns to a perfect stranger, with a top hat, and
+a gardenia in his buttonhole."
+
+"Whatever for?"
+
+"If you have perused those documents which you have in your hand, you will
+have some faint idea. Ivor, when it's your funeral, I'll smile. Mabel,
+Duchess of Datchet, it is beginning to dawn upon the vacuum which
+represents my brain that I've been the victim of one of the prettiest
+things in practical jokes that ever yet was planned. When that fellow
+brought you that card at Cane and Wilson's--which, I need scarcely tell
+you, never came from me--some one walked out of the front entrance who was
+so exactly like you that both Barnes and Moysey took her for you. Moysey
+showed her into the carriage, and Barnes drove her home. But when the
+carriage reached home it was empty. Your double had got out upon the
+road."
+
+The duchess uttered a sound which was half gasp, half sigh.
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+"Barnes and Moysey, with beautiful and childlike innocence, when they
+found that they had brought the thing home empty, came straightway and
+told me that you had jumped out of the brougham while it had been driving
+full pelt through the streets. While I was digesting that piece of
+information there came the first epistle, with the lock of your hair.
+Before I had time to digest that there came the second epistle, with yours
+inside."
+
+"It seems incredible!"
+
+"It sounds incredible; but unfathomable is the folly of man, especially of
+a man who loves his wife." The duke crossed to Mr. Dacre. "I don't want,
+Ivor, to suggest anything in the way of bribery and corruption, but if you
+could keep this matter to yourself, and not mention it to your friends,
+our white-hatted and gardenia-buttonholed acquaintance is welcome to his
+five hundred pounds, and--Mabel, what on earth are you laughing at?"
+
+The duchess appeared, all at once, to be seized with inextinguishable
+laughter.
+
+"Hereward," she cried, "just think how that man must be laughing at you!"
+
+And the Duke of Datchet thought of it.
+
+
+
+
+_The Minor Canon_
+
+
+It was Monday, and in the afternoon, as I was walking along the High
+Street of Marchbury, I was met by a distinguished-looking person whom I
+had observed at the services in the cathedral on the previous day. Now it
+chanced on that Sunday that I was singing the service. Properly speaking,
+it was not my turn; but, as my brother minor canons were either away from
+Marchbury or ill in bed, I was the only one left to perform the necessary
+duty. The distinguished-looking person was a tall, big man with a round
+fat face and small features. His eyes, his hair and mustache (his face was
+bare but for a small mustache) were quite black, and he had a very
+pleasant and genial expression. He wore a tall hat, set rather jauntily on
+his head, and he was dressed in black with a long frock coat buttoned
+across the chest and fitting him close to the body. As he came, with a
+half saunter, half swagger, along the street, I knew him again at once by
+his appearance; and, as he came nearer, I saw from his manner that he was
+intending to stop and speak to me, for he slightly raised his hat and in
+a soft, melodious voice with a colonial "twang" which was far from being
+disagreeable, and which, indeed, to my ear gave a certain additional
+interest to his remarks, he saluted me with "Good day, sir!"
+
+"Good day," I answered, with just a little reserve in my tone.
+
+"I hope, sir," he began, "you will excuse my stopping you in the street,
+but I wish to tell you how very much I enjoyed the music at your cathedral
+yesterday. I am an Australian, sir, and we have no such music in my
+country."
+
+"I suppose not," I said.
+
+"No, sir," he went on, "nothing nearly so fine. I am very fond of music,
+and as my business brought me in this direction, I thought I would stop at
+your city and take the opportunity of paying a visit to your grand
+cathedral. And I am delighted I came; so pleased, indeed, that I should
+like to leave some memorial of my visit behind me. I should like, sir, to
+do something for your choir."
+
+"I am sure it is very kind of you," I replied.
+
+"Yes, I should certainly be glad if you could suggest to me something I
+might do in this way. As regards money, I may say that I have plenty of
+it. I am the owner of a most valuable property. My business relations
+extend throughout the world, and if I am as fortunate in the projects of
+the future as I have been in the past, I shall probably one day achieve
+the proud position of being the richest man in the world."
+
+I did not like to undertake myself the responsibility of advising or
+suggesting, so I simply said:
+
+"I cannot venture to say, offhand, what would be the most acceptable way
+of showing your great kindness and generosity, but I should certainly
+recommend you to put yourself in communication with the dean."
+
+"Thank you, sir," said my Australian friend, "I will do so. And now, sir,"
+he continued, "let me say how much I admire your voice. It is, without
+exception, the very finest and clearest voice I have ever heard."
+
+"Really," I answered, quite overcome with such unqualified praise, "really
+it is very good of you to say so."
+
+"Ah, but I feel it, my dear sir. I have been round the world, from Sydney
+to Frisco, across the continent of America" (he called it Amerrker) "to
+New York City, then on to England, and to-morrow I shall leave your city
+to continue my travels. But in all my experience I have never heard so
+grand a voice as your own."
+
+This and a great deal more he said in the same strain, which modesty
+forbids me to reproduce.
+
+Now I am not without some knowledge of the world outside the close of
+Marchbury Cathedral, and I could not listen to such a "flattering tale"
+without having my suspicions aroused. Who and what is this man? thought I.
+I looked at him narrowly. At first the thought flashed across me that he
+might be a "swell mobsman." But no, his face was too good for that;
+besides, no man with that huge frame, that personality so marked and so
+easily recognizable, could be a swindler; he could not escape detection a
+single hour. I dismissed the ungenerous thought. Perhaps he is rich, as he
+says. We do hear of munificent donations by benevolent millionaires now
+and then. What if this Australian, attracted by the glories of the old
+cathedral, should now appear as a _deus ex machina_ to reëndow the choir,
+or to found a musical professoriate in connection with the choir,
+appointing me the first occupant of the professorial chair?
+
+These thoughts flashed across my mind in the momentary pause of his fluent
+tongue.
+
+"As for yourself, sir," he began again, "I have something to propose which
+I trust may not prove unwelcome. But the public street is hardly a
+suitable place to discuss my proposal. May I call upon you this evening at
+your house in the close? I know which it is, for I happened to see you go
+into it yesterday after the morning service."
+
+"I shall be very pleased to see you," I replied. "We are going out to
+dinner this evening, but I shall be at home and disengaged till about
+seven."
+
+"Thank you very much. Then I shall do myself the pleasure of calling upon
+you about six o'clock. Till then, farewell!" A graceful wave of the hand,
+and my unknown friend had disappeared round the corner of the street.
+
+Now at last, I thought, something is going to happen in my uneventful
+life--something to break the monotony of existence. Of course, he must
+have inquired my name--he could get that from any of the cathedral
+vergers--and, as he said, he had observed whereabouts in the close I
+lived. What is he coming to see me for? I wondered. I spent the rest of
+the afternoon in making the wildest surmises. I was castle-building in
+Spain at a furious rate. At one time I imagined that this faithful son of
+the church--as he appeared to me--was going to build and endow a grand
+cathedral in Australia on condition that I should be appointed dean at a
+yearly stipend of, say, ten thousand pounds. Or perhaps, I said to myself,
+he will beg me to accept a sum of money--I never thought of it as less
+than a thousand pounds--as a slight recognition of and tribute to my
+remarkable vocal ability.
+
+I took a long, lonely walk into the country to correct these ridiculous
+fancies and to steady my mind, and when I reached home and had refreshed
+myself with a quiet cup of afternoon tea, I felt I was morally and
+physically prepared for my interview with the opulent stranger.
+
+Punctually as the cathedral clock struck six there was a ring at the
+visitor's bell. In a moment or two my unknown friend was shown into the
+drawing-room, which he entered with the easy air of a man of the world. I
+noticed he was carrying a small black bag.
+
+"How do you do again, Mr. Dale?" he said as though we were old
+acquaintances; "you see I have come sharp to my time."
+
+"Yes," I answered, "and I am pleased to see you; do sit down." He sank
+into my best armchair, and placed his bag on the floor beside him.
+
+"Since we met in the afternoon," he said, "I have written a letter to
+your dean, expressing the great pleasure I felt in listening to your
+choir, and at the same time I inclosed a five-pound note, which I begged
+him to divide among the choir boys and men, from Alexander Poulter, Esq.,
+of Poulter's Pills. You have of course heard of the world-renowned
+Poulter's Pills. I am Poulter!"
+
+Poulter of Poulter's Pills! My heart sank within me! A five-pound note! My
+airy castles were tottering!
+
+"I also sent him a couple of hundred of my pamphlets, which I said I
+trusted he would be so kind as to distribute in the close."
+
+I was aghast!
+
+"And now, with regard to the special object of my call, Mr. Dale. If you
+will allow me to say so, you are not making the most of that grand voice
+of yours; you are hidden under an ecclesiastical bushel here--lost to the
+world. You are wasting your vocal strength and sweetness on the desert
+air, so to speak. Why, if I may hazard a guess, I don't suppose you make
+five hundred a year here, at the outside?"
+
+I could say nothing.
+
+"Well, now, I can put you into the way of making at least three or four
+times as much as that. Listen! I am Alexander Poulter, of Poulter's Pills.
+I have a proposal to make to you. The scheme is bound to succeed, but I
+want your help. Accept my proposal and your fortune's made. Did you ever
+hear Moody and Sankey?" he asked abruptly.
+
+The man is an idiot, thought I; he is now fairly carried away with his
+particular mania. Will it last long? Shall I ring?
+
+"Novelty, my dear sir," he went on, "is the rule of the day; and there
+must be novelty in advertising, as in everything else, to catch the public
+interest. So I intend to go on a tour, lecturing on the merits of
+Poulter's Pills in all the principal halls of all the principal towns all
+over the world. But I have been delayed in carrying out my idea till I
+could associate myself with a gentleman such as yourself. Will you join
+me? I should be the Moody of the tour; you would be its Sankey. I would
+speak my patter, and you would intersperse my orations with melodious
+ballads bearing upon the virtues of Poulter's Pills. The ballads are all
+ready!"
+
+So saying, he opened that bag and drew forth from its recesses nothing
+more alarming than a thick roll of manuscript music.
+
+"The verses are my own," he said, with a little touch of pride; "and as
+for the music, I thought it better to make use of popular melodies, so as
+to enable an audience to join in the chorus. See, here is one of the
+ballads: 'Darling, I am better now.' It describes the woes of a fond
+lover, or rather his physical ailments, until he went through a course of
+Poulter. Here's another: 'I'm ninety-five! I'm ninety-five!' You catch the
+drift of that, of course--a healthy old age, secured by taking Poulter's
+Pills. Ah! what's this? 'Little sister's last request.' I fancy the idea
+of that is to beg the family never to be without Poulter's Pills. Here
+again: 'Then you'll remember me!' I'm afraid that title is not original;
+never mind, the song is. And here is--but there are many more, and I won't
+detain you with them now." He saw, perhaps, I was getting impatient. Thank
+Heaven, however, he was no escaped lunatic. I was safe!
+
+"Mr. Poulter," said I, "I took you this afternoon for a disinterested and
+philanthropic millionaire; you take me for--for--something different from
+what I am. We have both made mistakes. In a word, it is impossible for me
+to accept your offer!"
+
+"Is that final?" asked Poulter.
+
+"Certainly," said I.
+
+Poulter gathered his manuscripts together and replaced them in the bag,
+and got up to leave the room.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Dale," he said mournfully, as I opened the door of the
+room. "Good evening"--he kept on talking till he was fairly out of the
+house--"mark my words, you'll be sorry--very sorry--one day that you did
+not fall in with my scheme. Offers like mine don't come every day, and you
+will one day regret having refused it."
+
+With these words he left the house.
+
+I had little appetite for my dinner that evening.
+
+
+
+
+_The Pipe_
+
+ "RANDOLPH CRESCENT, N.W.
+
+ "MY DEAR PUGH--I hope you will like the pipe which I send with
+ this. It is rather a curious example of a certain school of
+ Indian carving. And is a present from
+
+ "Yours truly, Joseph Tress."
+
+It was really very handsome of Tress--very handsome! The more especially
+as I was aware that to give presents was not exactly in Tress's line. The
+truth is that when I saw what manner of pipe it was I was amazed. It was
+contained in a sandalwood box, which was itself illustrated with some
+remarkable specimens of carving. I use the word "remarkable" advisedly,
+because, although the workmanship was undoubtedly, in its way, artistic,
+the result could not be described as beautiful. The carver had thought
+proper to ornament the box with some of the ugliest figures I remember to
+have seen. They appeared to me to be devils. Or perhaps they were intended
+to represent deities appertaining to some mythological system with which,
+thank goodness, I am unacquainted. The pipe itself was worthy of the case
+in which it was contained. It was of meerschaum, with an amber mouthpiece.
+It was rather too large for ordinary smoking. But then, of course, one
+doesn't smoke a pipe like that. There are pipes in my collection which I
+should as soon think of smoking as I should of eating. Ask a china maniac
+to let you have afternoon tea out of his Old Chelsea, and you will learn
+some home truths as to the durability of human friendships. The glory of
+the pipe, as Tress had suggested, lay in its carving. Not that I claim
+that it was beautiful, any more than I make such a claim for the carving
+on the box, but, as Tress said in his note, it was curious.
+
+The stem and the bowl were quite plain, but on the edge of the bowl was
+perched some kind of lizard. I told myself it was an octopus when I first
+saw it, but I have since had reason to believe that it was some almost
+unique member of the lizard tribe. The creature was represented as
+climbing over the edge of the bowl down toward the stem, and its legs, or
+feelers, or tentacula, or whatever the things are called, were, if I may
+use a vulgarism, sprawling about "all over the place." For instance, two
+or three of them were twined about the bowl, two or three of them were
+twisted round the stem, and one, a particularly horrible one, was uplifted
+in the air, so that if you put the pipe in your mouth the thing was
+pointing straight at your nose.
+
+Not the least agreeable feature about the creature was that it was
+hideously lifelike. It appeared to have been carved in amber, but some
+coloring matter must have been introduced, for inside the amber the
+creature was of a peculiarly ghastly green. The more I examined the pipe
+the more amazed I was at Tress's generosity. He and I are rival
+collectors. I am not going to say, in so many words, that his collection
+of pipes contains nothing but rubbish, because, as a matter of fact, he
+has two or three rather decent specimens. But to compare his collection to
+mine would be absurd. Tress is conscious of this, and he resents it. He
+resents it to such an extent that he has been known, at least on one
+occasion, to declare that one single pipe of his--I believe he alluded to
+the Brummagem relic preposterously attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh--was
+worth the whole of my collection put together. Although I have forgiven
+this, as I hope I always shall forgive remarks made when envious passions
+get the better of our nobler nature, even of a Joseph Tress, it is not to
+be supposed that I have forgotten it. He was, therefore, not at all the
+sort of person from whom I expected to receive a present. And such a
+present! I do not believe that he himself had a finer pipe in his
+collection. And to have given it to me! I had misjudged the man. I
+wondered where he had got it from. I had seen his pipes; I knew them off
+by heart--and some nice trumpery he has among them, too! but I had never
+seen _that_ pipe before. The more I looked at it, the more my amazement
+grew. The beast perched upon the edge of the bowl was so lifelike. Its two
+bead-like eyes seemed to gleam at me with positively human intelligence.
+The pipe fascinated me to such an extent that I actually resolved
+to--smoke it!
+
+I filled it with Perique. Ordinarily I use Birdseye, but on those very
+rare occasions on which I use a specimen I smoke Perique. I lit up with
+quite a small sensation of excitement. As I did so I kept my eyes perforce
+fixed upon the beast. The beast pointed its upraised tentacle directly at
+me. As I inhaled the pungent tobacco that tentacle impressed me with a
+feeling of actual uncanniness. It was broad daylight, and I was smoking in
+front of the window, yet to such an extent was I affected that it seemed
+to me that the tentacle was not only vibrating, which, owing to the
+peculiarity of its position, was quite within the range of probability,
+but actually moving, elongating--stretching forward, that is, farther
+toward me, and toward the tip of my nose. So impressed was I by this idea
+that I took the pipe out of my mouth and minutely examined the beast.
+Really, the delusion was excusable. So cunningly had the artist wrought
+that he succeeded in producing a creature which, such was its uncanniness,
+I could only hope had no original in nature.
+
+Replacing the pipe between my lips I took several whiffs. Never had
+smoking had such an effect on me before. Either the pipe, or the creature
+on it, exercised some singular fascination. I seemed, without an instant's
+warning, to be passing into some land of dreams. I saw the beast, which
+was perched upon the bowl, writhe and twist. I saw it lift itself bodily
+from the meerschaum.
+
+
+II
+
+"Feeling better now?"
+
+I looked up. Joseph Tress was speaking.
+
+"What's the matter? Have I been ill?"
+
+"You appear to have been in some kind of swoon."
+
+Tress's tone was peculiar, even a little dry.
+
+"Swoon! I never was guilty of such a thing in my life."
+
+"Nor was I, until I smoked that pipe."
+
+I sat up. The act of sitting up made me conscious of the fact that I had
+been lying down. Conscious, too, that I was feeling more than a little
+dazed. It seemed as though I was waking out of some strange, lethargic
+sleep--a kind of feeling which I have read of and heard about, but never
+before experienced.
+
+"Where am I?"
+
+"You're on the couch in your own room. You _were_ on the floor; but I
+thought it would be better to pick you up and place you on the
+couch--though no one performed the same kind office to me when I was on
+the floor."
+
+Again Tress's tone was distinctly dry.
+
+"How came _you_ here?"
+
+"Ah, that's the question." He rubbed his chin--a habit of his which has
+annoyed me more than once before. "Do you think you're sufficiently
+recovered to enable you to understand a little simple explanation?" I
+stared at him, amazed. He went on stroking his chin. "The truth is that
+when I sent you the pipe I made a slight omission."
+
+"An omission?"
+
+"I omitted to advise you not to smoke it."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"Because--well, I've reason to believe the thing is drugged."
+
+"Drugged!"
+
+"Or poisoned."
+
+"Poisoned!" I was wide awake enough then. I jumped off the couch with a
+celerity which proved it.
+
+"It is this way. I became its owner in rather a singular manner." He
+paused, as if for me to make a remark; but I was silent. "It is not often
+that I smoke a specimen, but, for some reason, I did smoke this. I
+commenced to smoke it, that is. How long I continued to smoke it is more
+than I can say. It had on me the same peculiar effect which it appears to
+have had on you. When I recovered consciousness I was lying on the floor."
+
+"On the floor?"
+
+"On the floor. In about as uncomfortable a position as you can easily
+conceive. I was lying face downward, with my legs bent under me. I was
+never so surprised in my life as I was when I found myself _where_ I was.
+At first I supposed that I had had a stroke. But by degrees it dawned upon
+me that I didn't _feel_ as though I had had a stroke." Tress, by the way,
+has been an army surgeon. "I was conscious of distinct nausea. Looking
+about, I saw the pipe. With me it had fallen on to the floor. I took it
+for granted, considering the delicacy of the carving, that the fall had
+broken it. But when I picked it up I found it quite uninjured. While I was
+examining it a thought flashed to my brain. Might it not be answerable for
+what had happened to me? Suppose, for instance, it was drugged? I had
+heard of such things. Besides, in my case were present all the symptoms of
+drug poisoning, though what drug had been used I couldn't in the least
+conceive. I resolved that I would give the pipe another trial."
+
+"On yourself? or on another party, meaning me?"
+
+"On myself, my dear Pugh--on myself! At that point of my investigations I
+had not begun to think of you. I lit up and had another smoke."
+
+"With what result?"
+
+"Well, that depends on the standpoint from which you regard the thing.
+From one point of view the result was wholly satisfactory--I proved that
+the thing was drugged, and more."
+
+"Did you have another fall?"
+
+"I did. And something else besides."
+
+"On that account, I presume, you resolved to pass the treasure on to me?"
+
+"Partly on that account, and partly on another."
+
+"On my word, I appreciate your generosity. You might have labeled the
+thing as poison."
+
+"Exactly. But then you must remember how often you have told me that you
+_never_ smoke your specimens."
+
+"That was no reason why you shouldn't have given me a hint that the thing
+was more dangerous than dynamite."
+
+"That did occur to me afterwards. Therefore I called to supply the slight
+omission."
+
+"_Slight_ omission, you call it! I wonder what you would have called it if
+you had found me dead."
+
+"If I had known that you _intended_ smoking it I should not have been at
+all surprised if I had."
+
+"Really, Tress, I appreciate your kindness more and more! And where is
+this example of your splendid benevolence? Have you pocketed it,
+regretting your lapse into the unaccustomed paths of generosity? Or is it
+smashed to atoms?"
+
+"Neither the one nor the other. You will find the pipe upon the table. I
+neither desire its restoration nor is it in any way injured. It is merely
+an expression of personal opinion when I say that I don't believe that it
+_could_ be injured. Of course, having discovered its deleterious
+properties, you will not want to smoke it again. You will therefore be
+able to enjoy the consciousness of being the possessor of what I honestly
+believe to be the most remarkable pipe in existence. Good day, Pugh."
+
+He was gone before I could say a word. I immediately concluded, from the
+precipitancy of his flight, that the pipe _was_ injured. But when I
+subjected it to close examination I could discover no signs of damage.
+While I was still eying it with jealous scrutiny the door reopened, and
+Tress came in again.
+
+"By the way, Pugh, there is one thing I might mention, especially as I
+know it won't make any difference to you."
+
+"That depends on what it is. If you have changed your mind, and want the
+pipe back again, I tell you frankly that it won't. In my opinion, a thing
+once given is given for good."
+
+"Quite so; I don't want it back again. You may make your mind easy on that
+point. I merely wanted to tell you _why_ I gave it you."
+
+"You have told me that already."
+
+"Only partly, my dear Pugh--only partly. You don't suppose I should have
+given you such a pipe as that merely because it happened to be drugged?
+Scarcely! I gave it you because I discovered from indisputable evidence,
+and to my cost, that it was haunted."
+
+"Haunted?"
+
+"Yes, haunted. Good day."
+
+He was gone again. I ran out of the room, and shouted after him down the
+stairs. He was already at the bottom of the flight.
+
+"Tress! Come back! What do you mean by talking such nonsense?"
+
+"Of course it's only nonsense. We know that that sort of thing always is
+nonsense. But if you should have reason to suppose that there is something
+in it besides nonsense, you may think it worth your while to make
+inquiries of me. But I won't have that pipe back again in my possession on
+any terms--mind that!"
+
+The bang of the front door told me that he had gone out into the street. I
+let him go. I laughed to myself as I reëntered the room. Haunted! That was
+not a bad idea of his. I saw the whole position at a glance. The truth of
+the matter was that he did regret his generosity, and he was ready to go
+any lengths if he could only succeed in cajoling me into restoring his
+gift. He was aware that I have views upon certain matters which are not
+wholly in accordance with those which are popularly supposed to be the
+views of the day, and particularly that on the question of what are
+commonly called supernatural visitations I have a standpoint of my own.
+Therefore, it was not a bad move on his part to try to make me believe
+that about the pipe on which he knew I had set my heart there was
+something which could not be accounted for by ordinary laws. Yet, as his
+own sense would have told him it would do, if he had only allowed himself
+to reflect for a moment, the move failed. Because I am not yet so far gone
+as to suppose that a pipe, a thing of meerschaum and of amber, in the
+sense in which I understand the word, _could_ be haunted--a pipe, a mere
+pipe.
+
+"Hollo! I thought the creature's legs were twined right round the bowl!"
+
+I was holding the pipe in my hand, regarding it with the affectionate eyes
+with which a connoisseur does regard a curio, when I was induced to make
+this exclamation. I was certainly under the impression that, when I first
+took the pipe out of the box, two, if not three of the feelers had been
+twined about the bowl--twined tightly, so that you could not see daylight
+between them and it. Now they were almost entirely detached, only the tips
+touching the meerschaum, and those particular feelers were gathered up as
+though the creature were in the act of taking a spring. Of course I was
+under a misapprehension: the feelers _couldn't_ have been twined; a moment
+before I should have been ready to bet a thousand to one that they were.
+Still, one does make mistakes, and very egregious mistakes, at times. At
+the same time, I confess that when I saw that dreadful-looking animal
+poised on the extreme edge of the bowl, for all the world as though it
+were just going to spring at me, I was a little startled. I remembered
+that when I was smoking the pipe I did think I saw the uplifted tentacle
+moving, as though it were reaching out to me. And I had a clear
+recollection that just as I had been sinking into that strange state of
+unconsciousness, I had been under the impression that the creature was
+writhing and twisting, as though it had suddenly become instinct with
+life. Under the circumstances, these reflections were not pleasant. I
+wished Tress had not talked that nonsense about the thing being haunted.
+It was surely sufficient to know that it was drugged and poisonous,
+without anything else.
+
+I replaced it in the sandalwood box. I locked the box in a cabinet. Quite
+apart from the question as to whether that pipe was or was not haunted, I
+know it haunted me. It was with me in a figurative--which was worse than
+actual--sense all the day. Still worse, it was with me all the night. It
+was with me in my dreams. Such dreams! Possibly I had not yet wholly
+recovered from the effects of that insidious drug, but, whether or no, it
+was very wrong of Tress to set my thoughts into such a channel. He knows
+that I am of a highly imaginative temperament, and that it is easier to
+get morbid thoughts into my mind than to get them out again. Before that
+night was through I wished very heartily that I had never seen the pipe! I
+woke from one nightmare to fall into another. One dreadful dream was with
+me all the time--of a hideous, green reptile which advanced toward me out
+of some awful darkness, slowly, inch by inch, until it clutched me round
+the neck, and, gluing its lips to mine, sucked the life's blood out of my
+veins as it embraced me with a slimy kiss. Such dreams are not restful. I
+woke anything but refreshed when the morning came. And when I got up and
+dressed I felt that, on the whole, it would perhaps have been better if I
+never had gone to bed. My nerves were unstrung, and I had that generally
+tremulous feeling which is, I believe, an inseparable companion of the
+more advanced stages of dipsomania. I ate no breakfast. I am no breakfast
+eater as a rule, but that morning I ate absolutely nothing.
+
+"If this sort of thing is to continue, I will let Tress have his pipe
+again. He may have the laugh of me, but anything is better than this."
+
+It was with almost funereal forebodings that I went to the cabinet in
+which I had placed the sandalwood box. But when I opened it my feelings of
+gloom partially vanished. Of what phantasies had I been guilty! It must
+have been an entire delusion on my part to have supposed that those
+tentacula had ever been twined about the bowl. The creature was in
+exactly the same position in which I had left it the day before--as, of
+course, I knew it would be--poised, as if about to spring. I was telling
+myself how foolish I had been to allow myself to dwell for a moment on
+Tress's words, when Martin Brasher was shown in.
+
+Brasher is an old friend of mine. We have a common ground--ghosts. Only we
+approach them from different points of view. He takes the
+scientific--psychological--inquiry side. He is always anxious to hear of a
+ghost, so that he may have an opportunity of "showing it up."
+
+"I've something in your line here," I observed, as he came in.
+
+"In my line? How so? _I'm_ not pipe mad."
+
+"No; but you're ghost mad. And this is a haunted pipe."
+
+"A haunted pipe! I think you're rather more mad about ghosts, my dear
+Pugh, than I am."
+
+Then I told him all about it. He was deeply interested, especially when I
+told him that the pipe was drugged. But when I repeated Tress's words
+about its being haunted, and mentioned my own delusion about the creature
+moving, he took a more serious view of the case than I had expected he
+would do.
+
+"I propose that we act on Tress's suggestion, and go and make inquiries of
+him."
+
+"But you don't really think that there is anything in it?"
+
+"On these subjects I never allow myself to think at all. There are Tress's
+words, and there is your story. It is agreed on all hands that the pipe
+has peculiar properties. It seems to me that there is a sufficient case
+here to merit inquiry."
+
+He persuaded me. I went with him. The pipe, in the sandalwood box, went
+too. Tress received us with a grin--a grin which was accentuated when I
+placed the sandalwood box on the table.
+
+"You understand," he said, "that a gift is a gift. On no terms will I
+consent to receive that pipe back in my possession."
+
+I was rather nettled by his tone.
+
+"You need be under no alarm. I have no intention of suggesting anything of
+the kind."
+
+"Our business here," began Brasher--I must own that his manner is a little
+ponderous--"is of a scientific, I may say also, and at the same time, of a
+judicial nature. Our object is the Pursuit of Truth and the Advancement of
+Inquiry."
+
+"Have you been trying another smoke?" inquired Tress, nodding his head
+toward me.
+
+Before I had time to answer, Brasher went droning on:
+
+"Our friend here tells me that you say this pipe is haunted."
+
+"I say it is haunted because it _is_ haunted."
+
+I looked at Tress. I half suspected that he was poking fun at us. But he
+appeared to be serious enough.
+
+"In these matters," remarked Brasher, as though he were giving utterance
+to a new and important truth, "there is a scientific and nonscientific
+method of inquiry. The scientific method is to begin at the beginning. May
+I ask how this pipe came into your possession?"
+
+Tress paused before he answered.
+
+"You may ask." He paused again. "Oh, you certainly may ask. But it doesn't
+follow that I shall tell you."
+
+"Surely your object, like ours, can be but the Spreading About of the
+Truth?"
+
+"I don't see it at all. It is possible to imagine a case in which the
+spreading about of the truth might make me look a little awkward."
+
+"Indeed!" Brasher pursed up his lips. "Your words would almost lead one to
+suppose that there was something about your method of acquiring the pipe
+which you have good and weighty reasons for concealing."
+
+"I don't know why I should conceal the thing from you. I don't suppose
+either of you is any better than I am. I don't mind telling you how I got
+the pipe. I stole it."
+
+"Stole it!"
+
+Brasher seemed both amazed and shocked. But I, who had previous experience
+of Tress's methods of adding to his collection, was not at all surprised.
+Some of the pipes which he calls his, if only the whole truth about them
+were publicly known, would send him to jail.
+
+"That's nothing!" he continued. "All collectors steal! The eighth
+commandment was not intended to apply to them. Why, Pugh there has
+'conveyed' three fourths of the pipes which he flatters himself are his."
+
+I was so dumfoundered by the charge that it took my breath away. I sat in
+astounded silence. Tress went raving on:
+
+"I was so shy of this particular pipe when I had obtained it, that I put
+it away for quite three months. When I took it out to have a look at it
+something about the thing so tickled me that I resolved to smoke it. Owing
+to peculiar circumstances attending the manner in which the thing came
+into my possession, and on which I need not dwell--you don't like to dwell
+on those sort of things, do you, Pugh?--I knew really nothing about the
+pipe. As was the case with Pugh, one peculiarity I learned from actual
+experience. It was also from actual experience that I learned that the
+thing was--well, I said haunted, but you may use any other word you like."
+
+"Tell us, as briefly as possible, what it was you really did discover."
+
+"Take the pipe out of the box!" Brasher took the pipe out of the box and
+held it in his hand. "You see that creature on it. Well, when I first had
+it it was underneath the pipe."
+
+"How do you mean that it was underneath the pipe?"
+
+"It was bunched together underneath the stem, just at the end of the
+mouthpiece, in the same way in which a fly might be suspended from the
+ceiling. When I began to smoke the pipe I saw the creature move."
+
+"But I thought that unconsciousness immediately followed."
+
+"It did follow, but not before I saw that the thing was moving. It was
+because I thought that I had been, in a way, a victim of delirium that I
+tried the second smoke. Suspecting that the thing was drugged I swallowed
+what I believed would prove a powerful antidote. It enabled me to resist
+the influence of the narcotic much longer than before, and while I still
+retained my senses I saw the creature crawl along under the stem and over
+the bowl. It was that sight, I believe, as much as anything else, which
+sent me silly. When I came to I then and there decided to present the pipe
+to Pugh. There is one more thing I would remark. When the pipe left me the
+creature's legs were twined about the bowl. Now they are withdrawn.
+Possibly you, Pugh, are able to cap my story with a little one which is
+all your own."
+
+"I certainly did imagine that I saw the creature move. But I supposed that
+while I was under the influence of the drug imagination had played me a
+trick."
+
+"Not a bit of it! Depend upon it, the beast is bewitched. Even to my eye
+it looks as though it were, and to a trained eye like yours, Pugh! You've
+been looking for the devil a long time, and you've got him at last."
+
+"I--I wish you wouldn't make those remarks, Tress. They jar on me."
+
+"I confess," interpolated Brasher--I noticed that he had put the pipe down
+on the table as though he were tired of holding it--"that, to _my_
+thinking, such remarks are not appropriate. At the same time what you have
+told us is, I am bound to allow, a little curious. But of course what I
+require is ocular demonstration. I haven't seen the movement myself."
+
+"No, but you very soon will do if you care to have a pull at the pipe on
+your own account. Do, Brasher, to oblige me! There's a dear!"
+
+"It appears, then, that the movement is only observable when the pipe is
+smoked. We have at least arrived at step No. 1."
+
+"Here's a match, Brasher! Light up, and we shall have arrived at step No.
+2."
+
+Tress lit a match and held it out to Brasher. Brasher retreated from its
+neighborhood.
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Tress, I am no smoker, as you are aware. And I have no
+desire to acquire the art of smoking by means of a poisoned pipe."
+
+Tress laughed. He blew out the match and threw it into the grate.
+
+"Then I tell you what I'll do--I'll have up Bob."
+
+"Bob--why Bob?"
+
+"Bob"--whose real name was Robert Haines, though I should think he must
+have forgotten the fact, so seldom was he addressed by it--was Tress's
+servant. He had been an old soldier, and had accompanied his master when
+he left the service. He was as depraved a character as Tress himself. I am
+not sure even that he was not worse than his master. I shall never forget
+how he once behaved toward myself. He actually had the assurance to accuse
+me of attempting to steal the Wardour Street relic which Tress fondly
+deludes himself was once the property of Sir Walter Raleigh. The truth is
+that I had slipped it with my handkerchief into my pocket in a fit of
+absence of mind. A man who could accuse _me_ of such a thing would be
+guilty of anything. I was therefore quite at one with Brasher when he
+asked what Bob could possibly be wanted for. Tress explained.
+
+"I'll get him to smoke the pipe," he said.
+
+Brasher and I exchanged glances, but we refrained from speech.
+
+"It won't do him any harm," said Tress.
+
+"What--not a poisoned pipe?" asked Brasher.
+
+"It's not poisoned--it's only drugged."
+
+"_Only_ drugged!"
+
+"Nothing hurts Bob. He is like an ostrich. He has digestive organs which
+are peculiarly his own. It will only serve him as it served me--and
+Pugh--it will knock him over. It is all done in the Pursuit of Truth and
+for the Advancement of Inquiry."
+
+I could see that Brasher did not altogether like the tone in which Tress
+repeated his words. As for me, it was not to be supposed that I should put
+myself out in a matter which in no way concerned me. If Tress chose to
+poison the man, it was his affair, not mine. He went to the door and
+shouted:
+
+"Bob! Come here, you scoundrel!"
+
+That is the way in which he speaks to him. No really decent servant would
+stand it. I shouldn't care to address Nalder, my servant, in such a way.
+He would give me notice on the spot. Bob came in. He is a great hulking
+fellow who is always on the grin. Tress had a decanter of brandy in his
+hand. He filled a tumbler with the neat spirit.
+
+"Bob, what would you say to a glassful of brandy--the real thing--my boy?"
+
+"Thank you, sir."
+
+"And what would you say to a pull at a pipe when the brandy is drunk!"
+
+"A pipe?" The fellow is sharp enough when he likes. I saw him look at the
+pipe upon the table, and then at us, and then a gleam of intelligence came
+into his eyes. "I'd do it for a dollar, sir."
+
+"A dollar, you thief?"
+
+"I meant ten shillings, sir."
+
+"Ten shillings, you brazen vagabond?"
+
+"I should have said a pound."
+
+"A pound! Was ever the like of that! Do I understand you to ask a pound
+for taking a pull at your master's pipe?"
+
+"I'm thinking that I'll have to make it two."
+
+"The deuce you are! Here, Pugh, lend me a pound."
+
+"I'm afraid I've left my purse behind."
+
+"Then lend me ten shillings--Ananias!"
+
+"I doubt if I have more than five."
+
+"Then give me the five. And, Brasher, lend me the other fifteen."
+
+Brasher lent him the fifteen. I doubt if we shall either of us ever see
+our money again. He handed the pound to Bob.
+
+"Here's the brandy--drink it up!" Bob drank it without a word, draining
+the glass of every drop. "And here's the pipe."
+
+"Is it poisoned, sir?"
+
+"Poisoned, you villain! What do you mean?"
+
+"It isn't the first time I've seen your tricks, sir--is it now? And you're
+not the one to give a pound for nothing at all. If it kills me you'll send
+my body to my mother--she'd like to know that I was dead."
+
+"Send your body to your grandmother! You idiot, sit down and smoke!"
+
+Bob sat down. Tress had filled the pipe, and handed it, with a lighted
+match, to Bob. The fellow declined the match. He handled the pipe very
+gingerly, turning it over and over, eying it with all his eyes.
+
+"Thank you, sir--I'll light up myself if it's the same to you. I carry
+matches of my own. It's a beautiful pipe, entirely. I never see the like
+of it for ugliness. And what's the slimy-looking varmint that looks as
+though it would like to have my life? Is it living, or is it dead?"
+
+"Come, we don't want to sit here all day, my man!"
+
+"Well, sir, the look of this here pipe has quite upset my stomach. I'd
+like another drop of liquor, if it's the same to you."
+
+"Another drop! Why, you've had a tumblerful already! Here's another
+tumblerful to put on top of that. You won't want the pipe to kill
+you--you'll be killed before you get to it."
+
+"And isn't it better to die a natural death?"
+
+Bob emptied the second tumbler of brandy as though it were water. I
+believe he would empty a hogshead without turning a hair! Then he gave
+another look at the pipe. Then, taking a match from his waistcoat pocket,
+he drew a long breath, as though he were resigning himself to fate.
+Striking the match on the seat of his trousers, while, shaded by his hand,
+the flame was gathering strength, he looked at each of us in turn. When he
+looked at Tress I distinctly saw him wink his eye. What my feelings would
+have been if a servant of mine had winked his eye at me I am unable to
+imagine! The match was applied to the tobacco, a puff of smoke came
+through his lips--the pipe was alight!
+
+During this process of lighting the pipe we had sat--I do not wish to use
+exaggerated language, but we had sat and watched that alcoholic scamp's
+proceedings as though we were witnessing an action which would leave its
+mark upon the age. When we saw the pipe was lighted we gave a simultaneous
+start. Brasher put his hands under his coat tails and gave a kind of hop.
+I raised myself a good six inches from my chair, and Tress rubbed his
+palms together with a chuckle. Bob alone was calm.
+
+"Now," cried Tress, "you'll see the devil moving."
+
+Bob took the pipe from between his lips.
+
+"See what?" he said.
+
+"Bob, you rascal, put that pipe back into your mouth, and smoke it for
+your life!"
+
+Bob was eying the pipe askance.
+
+"I dare say, but what I want to know is whether this here varmint's dead
+or whether he isn't. I don't want to have him flying at my nose--and he
+looks vicious enough for anything."
+
+"Give me back that pound, you thief, and get out of my house, and bundle."
+
+"I ain't going to give you back no pound."
+
+"Then smoke that pipe!"
+
+"I am smoking it, ain't I?"
+
+With the utmost deliberation Bob returned the pipe to his mouth. He
+emitted another whiff or two of smoke.
+
+"Now--now!" cried Tress, all excitement, and wagging his hand in the air.
+
+We gathered round. As we did so Bob again withdrew the pipe.
+
+"What is the meaning of all this here? I ain't going to have you playing
+none of your larks on me. I know there's something up, but I ain't going
+to throw my life away for twenty shillings--not quite I ain't."
+
+Tress, whose temper is not at any time one of the best, was seized with
+quite a spasm of rage.
+
+"As I live, my lad, if you try to cheat me by taking that pipe from
+between your lips until I tell you, you leave this room that instant,
+never again to be a servant of mine."
+
+I presume the fellow knew from long experience when his master meant what
+he said, and when he didn't. Without an attempt at remonstrance he
+replaced the pipe. He continued stolidly to puff away. Tress caught me by
+the arm.
+
+"What did I tell you? There--there! That tentacle is moving."
+
+The uplifted tentacle _was_ moving. It was doing what I had seen it do, as
+I supposed, in my distorted imagination--it was reaching forward.
+Undoubtedly Bob saw what it was doing; but, whether in obedience to his
+master's commands, or whether because the drug was already beginning to
+take effect, he made no movement to withdraw the pipe. He watched the
+slowly advancing tentacle, coming closer and closer toward his nose, with
+an expression of such intense horror on his countenance that it became
+quite shocking. Farther and farther the creature reached forward, until on
+a sudden, with a sort of jerk, the movement assumed a downward direction,
+and the tentacle was slowly lowered until the tip rested on the stem of
+the pipe. For a moment the creature remained motionless. I was quieting my
+nerves with the reflection that this thing was but some trick of the
+carver's art, and that what we had seen we had seen in a sort of
+nightmare, when the whole hideous reptile was seized with what seemed to
+be a fit of convulsive shuddering. It seemed to be in agony. It trembled
+so violently that I expected to see it loosen its hold of the stem and
+fall to the ground. I was sufficiently master of myself to steal a glance
+at Bob. We had had an inkling of what might happen. He was wholly
+unprepared. As he saw that dreadful, human-looking creature, coming to
+life, as it seemed, within an inch or two of his nose, his eyes dilated to
+twice their usual size. I hoped, for his sake, that unconsciousness would
+supervene, through the action of the drug, before through sheer fright
+his senses left him. Perhaps mechanically he puffed steadily on.
+
+The creature's shuddering became more violent. It appeared to swell before
+our eyes. Then, just as suddenly as it began, the shuddering ceased. There
+was another instant of quiescence. Then the creature began to crawl along
+the stem of the pipe! It moved with marvelous caution, the merest fraction
+of an inch at a time. But still it moved! Our eyes were riveted on it with
+a fascination which was absolutely nauseous. I am unpleasantly affected
+even as I think of it now. My dreams of the night before had been nothing
+to this.
+
+Slowly, slowly, it went, nearer and nearer to the smoker's nose. Its mode
+of progression was in the highest degree unsightly. It glided, never, so
+far as I could see, removing its tentacles from the stem of the pipe. It
+slipped its hindmost feelers onward until they came up to those which were
+in advance. Then, in their turn, it advanced those which were in front. It
+seemed, too, to move with the utmost labor, shuddering as though it were
+in pain.
+
+We were all, for our parts, speechless. I was momentarily hoping that the
+drug would take effect on Bob. Either his constitution enabled him to
+offer a strong resistance to narcotics, or else the large quantity of neat
+spirit which he had drunk acted--as Tress had malevolently intended that
+it should--as an antidote. It seemed to me that he would _never_ succumb.
+On went the creature--on, and on, in its infinitesimal progression. I was
+spellbound. I would have given the world to scream, to have been able to
+utter a sound. I could do nothing else but watch.
+
+The creature had reached the end of the stem. It had gained the amber
+mouthpiece. It was within an inch of the smoker's nose. Still on it went.
+It seemed to move with greater freedom on the amber. It increased its rate
+of progress. It was actually touching the foremost feature on the smoker's
+countenance. I expected to see it grip the wretched Bob, when it began to
+oscillate from side to side. Its oscillations increased in violence. It
+fell to the floor. That same instant the narcotic prevailed. Bob slipped
+sideways from the chair, the pipe still held tightly between his rigid
+jaws.
+
+We were silent. There lay Bob. Close beside him lay the creature. A few
+more inches to the left, and he would have fallen on and squashed it flat.
+It had fallen on its back. Its feelers were extended upward. They were
+writhing and twisting and turning in the air.
+
+Tress was the first to speak.
+
+"I think a little brandy won't be amiss." Emptying the remainder of the
+brandy into a glass, he swallowed it at a draught. "Now for a closer
+examination of our friend." Taking a pair of tongs from the grate he
+nipped the creature between them. He deposited it upon the table. "I
+rather fancy that this is a case for dissection."
+
+He took a penknife from his waistcoat pocket. Opening the large blade, he
+thrust its point into the object on the table. Little or no resistance
+seemed to be offered to the passage of the blade, but as it was inserted
+the tentacula simultaneously began to writhe and twist. Tress withdrew the
+knife.
+
+"I thought so!" He held the blade out for our inspection. The point was
+covered with some viscid-looking matter. "That's blood! The thing's
+alive!"
+
+"Alive!"
+
+"Alive! That's the secret of the whole performance!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"But me no buts, my Pugh! The mystery's exploded! One more ghost is lost
+to the world! The person from whom I _obtained_ that pipe was an Indian
+juggler--up to many tricks of the trade. He, or some one for him, got hold
+of this sweet thing in reptiles--and a sweeter thing would, I imagine, be
+hard to find--and covered it with some preparation of, possibly, gum
+arabic. He allowed this to harden. Then he stuck the thing--still living,
+for those sort of gentry are hard to kill--to the pipe. The consequence
+was that when anyone lit up, the warmth was communicated to the adhesive
+agent--again some preparation of gum, no doubt--it moistened it, and the
+creature, with infinite difficulty, was able to move. But I am open to lay
+odds with any gentleman of sporting tastes that _this_ time the creature's
+traveling days _are_ done. It has given me rather a larger taste of the
+horrors than is good for my digestion."
+
+With the aid of the tongs he removed the creature from the table. He
+placed it on the hearth. Before Brasher or I had a notion of what it was
+he intended to do he covered it with a heavy marble paper weight. Then he
+stood upon the weight, and between the marble and the hearth he ground the
+creature flat.
+
+While the execution was still proceeding, Bob sat up upon the floor.
+
+"Hollo!" he asked, "what's happened?"
+
+"We've emptied the bottle, Bob," said Tress. "But there's another where
+that came from. Perhaps you could drink another tumblerful, my boy?"
+
+Bob drank it!
+
+
+FOOTNOTE
+
+ "Those gentry are hard to kill." Here is fact, not fantasy.
+ Lizard yarns no less sensational than this Mystery Story can be
+ found between the covers of solemn, zoological textbooks.
+
+ Reptiles, indeed, are far from finicky in the matters of air,
+ space, and especially warmth. Frogs and other such
+ sluggish-blooded creatures have lived after being frozen fast in
+ ice. Their blood is little warmer than air or water, enjoying no
+ extra casing of fur or feathers.
+
+ Air and food seem held in light esteem by lizards. Their blood
+ need not be highly oxygenated; it nourishes just as well when
+ impure. In temperate climes lizards lie torpid and buried all
+ winter; some species of the tropic deserts sleep peacefully all
+ summer. Their anatomy includes no means for the continuous
+ introduction and expulsion of air; reptilian lungs are little
+ more than closed sacs, without cell structure.
+
+ If any further zoological fact were needed to verify the
+ dénouement of "The Pipe," it might be the general statement that
+ lizards are abnormal brutes anyhow. Consider the chameleons of
+ unsettled hue. And what is one to think of an animal which, when
+ captured by the tail, is able to make its escape by willfully
+ shuffling off that appendage?--EDITOR.
+
+
+
+
+The Puzzle
+
+
+I
+
+Pugh came into my room holding something wrapped in a piece of brown
+paper.
+
+"Tress, I have brought you something on which you may exercise your
+ingenuity." He began, with exasperating deliberation, to untie the string
+which bound his parcel; he is one of those persons who would not cut a
+knot to save their lives. The process occupied him the better part of a
+quarter of an hour. Then he held out the contents of the paper.
+
+"What do you think of that?" he asked. I thought nothing of it, and I told
+him so. "I was prepared for that confession. I have noticed, Tress, that
+you generally do think nothing of an article which really deserves the
+attention of a truly thoughtful mind. Possibly, as you think so little of
+it, you will be able to solve the puzzle."
+
+I took what he held out to me. It was an oblong box, perhaps seven inches
+long by three inches broad.
+
+"Where's the puzzle?" I asked.
+
+"If you will examine the lid of the box, you will see."
+
+I turned it over and over; it was difficult to see which was the lid. Then
+I perceived that on one side were printed these words:
+
+ "PUZZLE: TO OPEN THE BOX"
+
+The words were so faintly printed that it was not surprising that I had
+not noticed them at first. Pugh explained.
+
+"I observed that box on a tray outside a second-hand furniture shop. It
+struck my eye. I took it up. I examined it. I inquired of the proprietor
+of the shop in what the puzzle lay. He replied that that was more than he
+could tell me. He himself had made several attempts to open the box, and
+all of them had failed. I purchased it. I took it home. I have tried, and
+I have failed. I am aware, Tress, of how you pride yourself upon your
+ingenuity. I cannot doubt that, if you try, you will not fail."
+
+While Pugh was prosing, I was examining the box. It was at least well
+made. It weighed certainly under two ounces. I struck it with my knuckles;
+it sounded hollow. There was no hinge; nothing of any kind to show that it
+ever had been opened, or, for the matter of that, that it ever could be
+opened. The more I examined the thing, the more it whetted my curiosity.
+That it could be opened, and in some ingenious manner, I made no
+doubt--but how?
+
+The box was not a new one. At a rough guess I should say that it had been
+a box for a good half century; there were certain signs of age about it
+which could not escape a practiced eye. Had it remained unopened all that
+time? When opened, what would be found inside? It _sounded_ hollow;
+probably nothing at all--who could tell?
+
+It was formed of small pieces of inlaid wood. Several woods had been used;
+some of them were strange to me. They were of different colors; it was
+pretty obvious that they must all of them have been hard woods. The pieces
+were of various shapes--hexagonal, octagonal, triangular, square, oblong,
+and even circular. The process of inlaying them had been beautifully done.
+So nicely had the parts been joined that the lines of meeting were
+difficult to discover with the naked eye; they had been joined solid, so
+to speak. It was an excellent example of marquetry. I had been over-hasty
+in my deprecation; I owed as much to Pugh.
+
+"This box of yours is better worth looking at than I first supposed. Is it
+to be sold?"
+
+"No, it is not to be sold. Nor"--he "fixed" me with his spectacles--"is it
+to be given away. I have brought it to you for the simple purpose of
+ascertaining if you have ingenuity enough to open it."
+
+"I will engage to open it in two seconds--with a hammer."
+
+"I dare say. _I_ will open it with a hammer. The thing is to open it
+without."
+
+"Let me see." I began, with the aid of a microscope, to examine the box
+more closely. "I will give you one piece of information, Pugh. Unless I am
+mistaken, the secret lies in one of these little pieces of inlaid wood.
+You push it, or you press it, or something, and the whole affair flies
+open."
+
+"Such was my own first conviction. I am not so sure of it now. I have
+pressed every separate piece of wood; I have tried to move each piece in
+every direction. No result has followed. My theory was a hidden spring."
+
+"But there must be a hidden spring of some sort, unless you are to open it
+by a mere exercise of force. I suppose the box is empty."
+
+"I thought it was at first, but now I am not so sure of that either. It
+all depends on the position in which you hold it. Hold it in this
+position--like this--close to your ear. Have you a small hammer?" I took a
+small hammer. "Tap it softly, with the hammer. Don't you notice a sort of
+reverberation within?"
+
+Pugh was right, there certainly was something within; something which
+seemed to echo back my tapping, almost as if it were a living thing. I
+mentioned this to Pugh.
+
+"But you don't think that there is something alive inside the box? There
+can't be. The box must be air-tight, probably as much air-tight as an
+exhausted receiver."
+
+"How do we know that? How can we tell that no minute interstices have been
+left for the express purpose of ventilation?" I continued tapping with the
+hammer. I noticed one peculiarity, that it was only when I held the box in
+a particular position, and tapped at a certain spot, there came the
+answering taps from within. "I tell you what it is, Pugh, what I hear is
+the reverberation of some machinery."
+
+"Do you think so?"
+
+"I'm sure of it."
+
+"Give the box to me." Pugh put the box to his ear. He tapped. "It sounds
+to me like the echoing tick, tick of some great beetle; like the sort of
+noise which a deathwatch makes, you know."
+
+Trust Pugh to find a remarkable explanation for a simple fact; if the
+explanation leans toward the supernatural, so much the more satisfactory
+to Pugh. I knew better.
+
+"The sound which you hear is merely the throbbing or the trembling of the
+mechanism with which it is intended that the box should be opened. The
+mechanism is placed just where you are tapping it with the hammer. Every
+tap causes it to jar."
+
+"It sounds to me like the ticking of a deathwatch. However, on such
+subjects, Tress, I know what you are."
+
+"My dear Pugh, give it an extra hard tap, and you will see."
+
+He gave it an extra hard tap. The moment he had done so, he started.
+
+"I've done it now."
+
+"What have you done?"
+
+"Broken something, I fancy." He listened intently, with his ear to the
+box. "No--it seems all right. And yet I could have sworn I had damaged
+something; I heard it smash."
+
+"Give me the box." He gave it me. In my turn, I listened. I shook the box.
+Pugh must have been mistaken. Nothing rattled; there was not a sound; the
+box was as empty as before. I gave a smart tap with the hammer, as Pugh
+had done. Then there certainly was a curious sound. To my ear, it sounded
+like the smashing of glass. "I wonder if there is anything fragile inside
+your precious puzzle, Pugh, and, if so, if we are shivering it by
+degrees?"
+
+
+II
+
+"What _is_ that noise?"
+
+I lay in bed in that curious condition which is between sleep and waking.
+When, at last, I _knew_ that I was awake, I asked myself what it was that
+had woke me. Suddenly I became conscious that something was making itself
+audible in the silence of the night. For some seconds I lay and listened.
+Then I sat up in bed.
+
+"What _is_ that noise?"
+
+It was like the tick, tick of some large and unusually clear-toned clock.
+It might have been a clock, had it not been that the sound was varied,
+every half dozen ticks or so, by a sort of stifled screech, such as might
+have been uttered by some small creature in an extremity of anguish. I got
+out of bed; it was ridiculous to think of sleep during the continuation of
+that uncanny shrieking. I struck a light. The sound seemed to come from
+the neighborhood of my dressing-table. I went to the dressing-table, the
+lighted match in my hand, and, as I did so, my eyes fell on Pugh's
+mysterious box. That same instant there issued, from the bowels of the
+box, a more uncomfortable screech than any I had previously heard. It took
+me so completely by surprise that I let the match fall from my hand to the
+floor. The room was in darkness. I stood, I will not say trembling,
+listening--considering their volume--to the _eeriest_ shrieks I ever
+heard. All at once they ceased. Then came the tick, tick, tick again. I
+struck another match and lit the gas.
+
+Pugh had left his puzzle box behind him. We had done all we could,
+together, to solve the puzzle. He had left it behind to see what I could
+do with it alone. So much had it engrossed my attention that I had even
+brought it into my bedroom, in order that I might, before retiring to
+rest, make a final attempt at the solution of the mystery. _Now_ what
+possessed the thing?
+
+As I stood, and looked, and listened, one thing began to be clear to me,
+that some sort of machinery had been set in motion inside the box. How it
+had been set in motion was another matter. But the box had been subjected
+to so much handling, to such pressing and such hammering, that it was not
+strange if, after all, Pugh or I had unconsciously hit upon the spring
+which set the whole thing going. Possibly the mechanism had got so rusty
+that it had refused to act at once. It had hung fire, and only after some
+hours had something or other set the imprisoned motive power free.
+
+But what about the screeching? Could there be some living creature
+concealed within the box? Was I listening to the cries of some small
+animal in agony? Momentary reflection suggested that the explanation of
+the one thing was the explanation of the other. Rust!--there was the
+mystery. The same rust which had prevented the mechanism from acting at
+once was causing the screeching now. The uncanny sounds were caused by
+nothing more nor less than the want of a drop or two of oil. Such an
+explanation would not have satisfied Pugh, it satisfied me.
+
+Picking up the box, I placed it to my ear.
+
+"I wonder how long this little performance is going to continue. And what
+is going to happen when it is good enough to cease? I hope"--an
+uncomfortable thought occurred to me--"I hope Pugh hasn't picked up some
+pleasant little novelty in the way of an infernal machine. It would be a
+first-rate joke if he and I had been endeavoring to solve the puzzle of
+how to set it going."
+
+I don't mind owning that as this reflection crossed my mind I replaced
+Pugh's puzzle on the dressing-table. The idea did not commend itself to me
+at all. The box evidently contained some curious mechanism. It might be
+more curious than comfortable. Possibly some agreeable little device in
+clockwork. The tick, tick, tick suggested clockwork which had been planned
+to go a certain time, and then--then, for all I knew, ignite an explosive,
+and--blow up. It would be a charming solution to the puzzle if it were to
+explode while I stood there, in my nightshirt, looking on. It is true that
+the box weighed very little. Probably, as I have said, the whole affair
+would not have turned the scale at a couple of ounces. But then its very
+lightness might have been part of the ingenious inventor's little game.
+There are explosives with which one can work a very satisfactory amount of
+damage with considerably less than a couple of ounces.
+
+While I was hesitating--I own it!--whether I had not better immerse Pugh's
+puzzle in a can of water, or throw it out of the window, or call down Bob
+with a request to at once remove it to his apartment, both the tick, tick,
+tick, and the screeching ceased, and all within the box was still. If it
+_was_ going to explode, it was now or never. Instinctively I moved in the
+direction of the door.
+
+I waited with a certain sense of anxiety. I waited in vain. Nothing
+happened, not even a renewal of the sound.
+
+"I wish Pugh had kept his precious puzzle at home. This sort of thing
+tries one's nerves."
+
+When I thought that I perceived that nothing seemed likely to happen, I
+returned to the neighborhood of the table. I looked at the box askance. I
+took it up gingerly. Something might go off at any moment for all I knew.
+It would be too much of a joke if Pugh's precious puzzle exploded in my
+hand. I shook it doubtfully; nothing rattled. I held it to my ear. There
+was not a sound. What had taken place? Had the clockwork run down, and was
+the machine arranged with such a diabolical ingenuity that a certain,
+interval was required, after the clockwork had run down, before an
+explosion could occur? Or had rust caused the mechanism to again hang
+fire?
+
+"After making all that commotion the thing might at least come open." I
+banged the box viciously against the corner of the table. I felt that I
+would almost rather that an explosion should take place than that nothing
+should occur. One does not care to be disturbed from one's sound slumber
+in the small hours of the morning for a trifle.
+
+"I've half a mind to get a hammer, and try, as they say in the cookery
+books, another way."
+
+Unfortunately I had promised Pugh to abstain from using force. I might
+have shivered the box open with my hammer, and then explained that it had
+fallen, or got trod upon, or sat upon, or something, and so got shattered,
+only I was afraid that Pugh would not believe me. The man is himself such
+an untruthful man that he is in a chronic state of suspicion about the
+truthfulness of others.
+
+"Well, if you're not going to blow up, or open, or something, I'll say
+good night."
+
+I gave the box a final rap with my knuckles and a final shake, replaced it
+on the table, put out the gas, and returned to bed.
+
+I was just sinking again into slumber, when that box began again. It was
+true that Pugh had purchased the puzzle, but it was evident that the whole
+enjoyment of the purchase was destined to be mine. It was useless to think
+of sleep while that performance was going on. I sat up in bed once more.
+
+"It strikes me that the puzzle consists in finding out how it is possible
+to go to sleep with Pugh's purchase in your bedroom. This is far better
+than the old-fashioned prescription of cats on the tiles."
+
+It struck me the noise was distinctly louder than before; this applied
+both to the tick, tick, tick, and the screeching.
+
+"Possibly," I told myself, as I relighted the gas, "the explosion is to
+come off this time."
+
+I turned to look at the box. There could be no doubt about it; the noise
+was louder. And, if I could trust my eyes, the box was moving--giving a
+series of little jumps. This might have been an optical delusion, but it
+seemed to me that at each tick the box gave a little bound. During the
+screeches--which sounded more like the cries of an animal in an agony of
+pain even than before--if it did not tilt itself first on one end, and
+then on another, I shall never be willing to trust the evidence of my own
+eyes again. And surely the box had increased in size; I could have sworn
+not only that it had increased, but that it was increasing, even as I
+stood there looking on. It had grown, and still was growing, both broader,
+and longer, and deeper. Pugh, of course, would have attributed it to
+supernatural agency; there never was a man with such a nose for a ghost. I
+could picture him occupying my position, shivering in his nightshirt, as
+he beheld that miracle taking place before his eyes. The solution which at
+once suggested itself to me--and which would _never_ have suggested itself
+to Pugh!--was that the box was fashioned, as it were, in layers, and that
+the ingenious mechanism it contained was forcing the sides at once both
+upward and outward. I took it in my hand. I could feel something striking
+against the bottom of the box, like the tap, tap, tapping of a tiny
+hammer.
+
+"This is a pretty puzzle of Pugh's. He would say that that is the tapping
+of a deathwatch. For my part I have not much faith in deathwatches, _et
+hoc genus omne_, but it certainly is a curious tapping; I wonder what is
+going to happen next?"
+
+Apparently nothing, except a continuation of those mysterious sounds. That
+the box had increased in size I had, and have, no doubt whatever. I should
+say that it had increased a good inch in every direction, at least half an
+inch while I had been looking on. But while I stood looking its growth was
+suddenly and perceptibly stayed; it ceased to move. Only the noise
+continued.
+
+"I wonder how long it will be before anything worth happening does happen!
+I suppose something is going to happen; there can't be all this to-do for
+nothing. If it is anything in the infernal machine line, and there is
+going to be an explosion, I might as well be here to see it. I think I'll
+have a pipe."
+
+I put on my dressing-gown. I lit my pipe. I sat and stared at the box. I
+dare say I sat there for quite twenty minutes when, as before, without any
+sort of warning, the sound was stilled. Its sudden cessation rather
+startled me.
+
+"Has the mechanism again hung fire? Or, this time, is the explosion
+coming off?" It did not come off; nothing came off. "Isn't the box even
+going to open?"
+
+It did not open. There was simply silence all at once, and that was all. I
+sat there in expectation for some moments longer. But I sat for nothing. I
+rose. I took the box in my hand. I shook it.
+
+"This puzzle _is_ a puzzle." I held the box first to one ear, then to the
+other. I gave it several sharp raps with my knuckles. There was not an
+answering sound, not even the sort of reverberation which Pugh and I had
+noticed at first. It seemed hollower than ever. It was as though the soul
+of the box was dead. "I suppose if I put you down, and extinguish the gas
+and return to bed, in about half an hour or so, just as I am dropping off
+to sleep, the performance will be recommenced. Perhaps the third time will
+be lucky."
+
+But I was mistaken--there was no third time. When I returned to bed that
+time I returned to sleep, and I was allowed to sleep; there was no
+continuation of the performance, at least so far as I know. For no sooner
+was I once more between the sheets than I was seized with an irresistible
+drowsiness, a drowsiness which so mastered me that I--I imagine it must
+have been instantly--sank into slumber which lasted till long after day
+had dawned. Whether or not any more mysterious sounds issued from the
+bowels of Pugh's puzzle is more than I can tell. If they did, they did not
+succeed in rousing me.
+
+And yet, when at last I did awake, I had a sort of consciousness that my
+waking had been caused by something strange. What it was I could not
+surmise. My own impression was that I had been awakened by the touch of a
+person's hand. But that impression must have been a mistaken one, because,
+as I could easily see by looking round the room, there was no one in the
+room to touch me.
+
+It was broad daylight. I looked at my watch; it was nearly eleven o'clock.
+I am a pretty late sleeper as a rule, but I do not usually sleep as late
+as that. That scoundrel Bob would let me sleep all day without thinking it
+necessary to call me. I was just about to spring out of bed with the
+intention of ringing the bell so that I might give Bob a piece of my mind
+for allowing me to sleep so late, when my glance fell on the
+dressing-table on which, the night before, I had placed Pugh's puzzle. It
+had gone!
+
+Its absence so took me by surprise that I ran to the table. It _had_ gone.
+But it had not gone far; it had gone to pieces! There were the pieces
+lying where the box had been. The puzzle had solved itself. The box was
+open, open with a vengeance, one might say. Like that unfortunate Humpty
+Dumpty, who, so the chroniclers tell us, sat on a wall, surely "all the
+king's horses and all the king's men" never could put Pugh's puzzle
+together again!
+
+The marquetry had resolved itself into its component parts. How those
+parts had ever been joined was a mystery. They had been laid upon no
+foundation, as is the case with ordinary inlaid work. The several pieces
+of wood were not only of different shapes and sizes, but they were as thin
+as the thinnest veneer; yet the box had been formed by simply joining them
+together. The man who made that box must have been possessed of ingenuity
+worthy of a better cause.
+
+I perceived how the puzzle had been worked. The box had contained an
+arrangement of springs, which, on being released, had expanded themselves
+in different directions until their mere expansion had rent the box to
+pieces. There were the springs, lying amid the ruin they had caused.
+
+There was something else amid that ruin besides those springs; there was a
+small piece of writing paper. I took it up. On the reverse side of it was
+written in a minute, crabbed hand: "A Present For You." What was a present
+for me? I looked, and, not for the first time since I had caught sight of
+Pugh's precious puzzle, could scarcely believe my eyes.
+
+There, poised between two upright wires, the bent ends of which held it
+aloft in the air, was either a piece of glass or--a crystal. The scrap of
+writing paper had exactly covered it. I understood what it was, when Pugh
+and I had tapped with the hammer, had caused the answering taps to proceed
+from within. Our taps caused the wires to oscillate, and in these
+oscillations the crystal, which they held suspended, had touched the side
+of the box.
+
+I looked again at the piece of paper. "A Present For You." Was _this_ the
+present--this crystal? I regarded it intently.
+
+"It _can't_ be a diamond."
+
+The idea was ridiculous, absurd. No man in his senses would place a
+diamond inside a twopenny-halfpenny puzzle box. The thing was as big as a
+walnut! And yet--I am a pretty good judge of precious stones--if it was
+not an uncut diamond it was the best imitation I had seen. I took it up. I
+examined it closely. The more closely I examined it, the more my wonder
+grew.
+
+"It _is_ a diamond!"
+
+And yet the idea was too preposterous for credence. Who would present a
+diamond as big as a walnut with a trumpery puzzle? Besides, all the
+diamonds which the world contains of that size are almost as well known as
+the Koh-i-noor.
+
+"If it is a diamond, it is worth--it is worth--Heaven only knows what it
+isn't worth if it's a diamond."
+
+I regarded it through a strong pocket lens. As I did so I could not
+restrain an exclamation.
+
+"The world to a China orange, it _is_ a diamond!"
+
+The words had scarcely escaped my lips than there came a tapping at the
+door.
+
+"Come in!" I cried, supposing it was Bob. It was not Bob, it was Pugh.
+Instinctively I put the lens and the crystal behind my back. At sight of
+me in my nightshirt Pugh began to shake his head.
+
+"What hours, Tress, what hours! Why, my dear Tress, I've breakfasted, read
+the papers and my letters, came all the way from my house here, and you're
+not up!"
+
+"Don't I look as though I were up?"
+
+"Ah, Tress! Tress!" He approached the dressing-table. His eye fell upon
+the ruins. "What's this?"
+
+"That's the solution to the puzzle."
+
+"Have you--have you solved it fairly, Tress?"
+
+"It has solved itself. Our handling, and tapping, and hammering must have
+freed the springs which the box contained, and during the night, while I
+slept, they have caused it to come open."
+
+"While you slept? Dear me! How strange! And--what are these?"
+
+He had discovered the two upright wires on which the crystal had been
+poised.
+
+"I suppose they're part of the puzzle."
+
+"And was there anything in the box? What's this?" He picked up the scrap
+of paper; I had left it on the table. He read what was written on it: "'A
+Present For You.' What's it mean? Tress, was this in the box?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"What's it mean about a present? Was there anything in the box besides?"
+
+"Pugh, if you will leave the room I shall be able to dress; I am not in
+the habit of receiving quite such early calls, or I should have been
+prepared to receive you. If you will wait in the next room, I will be with
+you as soon as I'm dressed. There is a little subject in connection with
+the box which I wish to discuss with you."
+
+"A subject in connection with the box? What is the subject?"
+
+"I will tell you, Pugh, when I have performed my toilet."
+
+"Why can't you tell me now?"
+
+"Do you propose, then, that I should stand here shivering in my shirt
+while you are prosing at your ease? Thank you; I am obliged, but I
+decline. May I ask you once more, Pugh, to wait for me in the adjoining
+apartment?"
+
+He moved toward the door. When he had taken a couple of steps, he halted.
+
+"I--I hope, Tress, that you're--you're going to play no tricks on me?"
+
+"Tricks on you! Is it likely that I am going to play tricks upon my oldest
+friend?"
+
+When he had gone--he vanished, it seemed to me, with a somewhat doubtful
+visage--I took the crystal to the window. I drew the blind. I let the
+sunshine fall on it. I examined it again, closely and minutely, with the
+aid of my pocket lens. It _was_ a diamond; there could not be a doubt of
+it. If, with my knowledge of stones, I was deceived, then I was deceived
+as never man had been deceived before. My heart beat faster as I
+recognized the fact that I was holding in my hand what was, in all
+probability, a fortune for a man of moderate desires. Of course, Pugh knew
+nothing of what I had discovered, and there was no reason why he should
+know. Not the least! The only difficulty was that if I kept my own
+counsel, and sold the stone and utilized the proceeds of the sale, I
+should have to invent a story which would account for my sudden accession
+to fortune. Pugh knows almost as much of my affairs as I do myself. That
+is the worst of these old friends!
+
+When I joined Pugh I found him dancing up and down the floor like a bear
+upon hot plates. He scarcely allowed me to put my nose inside the door
+before attacking me.
+
+"Tress, give me what was in the box."
+
+"My dear Pugh, how do you know that there was something in the box to give
+you?"
+
+"I know there was!"
+
+"Indeed! If you know that there was something in the box, perhaps you will
+tell me what that something was."
+
+He eyed me doubtfully. Then, advancing, he laid upon my arm a hand which
+positively trembled.
+
+"Tress, you--you wouldn't play tricks on an old friend."
+
+"You are right, Pugh, I wouldn't, though I believe there have been
+occasions on which you have had doubts upon the subject. By the way, Pugh,
+I believe that I am the oldest friend you have."
+
+"I--I don't know about that. There's--there's Brasher."
+
+"Brasher! Who's Brasher? You wouldn't compare my friendship to the
+friendship of such a man as Brasher? Think of the tastes we have in
+common, you and I. We're both collectors."
+
+"Ye-es, we're both collectors."
+
+"I make my interests yours, and you make your interests mine. Isn't that
+so, Pugh?"
+
+"Tress, what--what was in the box?"
+
+"I will be frank with you, Pugh. If there had been something in the box,
+would you have been willing to go halves with me in my discovery?"
+
+"Go halves! In your discovery, Tress! Give me what is mine!"
+
+"With pleasure, Pugh, if you will tell me what is yours."
+
+"If--if you don't give me what was in the box I'll--I'll send for the
+police."
+
+"Do! Then I shall be able to hand to them what was in the box in order
+that it may be restored to its proper owner."
+
+"Its proper owner! I'm its proper owner!"
+
+"Excuse me, but I don't understand how that can be; at least, until the
+police have made inquiries. I should say that the proper owner was the
+person from whom you purchased the box, or, more probably, the person from
+whom he purchased it, and by whom, doubtless, it was sold in ignorance, or
+by mistake. Thus, Pugh, if you will only send for the police, we shall
+earn the gratitude of a person of whom we never heard in our lives--I for
+discovering the contents of the box, and you for returning them."
+
+As I said this, Pugh's face was a study. He gasped for breath. He actually
+took out his handkerchief to wipe his brow.
+
+"Tress, I--I don't think you need to use a tone like that to me. It isn't
+friendly. What--what was in the box?"
+
+"Let us understand each other, Pugh. If you don't hand over what was in
+the box to the police, I go halves."
+
+Pugh began to dance about the floor.
+
+"What a fool I was to trust you with the box! I knew I couldn't trust
+you." I said nothing. I turned and rang the bell. "What's that for?"
+
+"That, my dear Pugh, is for breakfast, and, if you desire it, for the
+police. You know, although you have breakfasted, I haven't. Perhaps while
+I am breaking my fast, you would like to summon the representatives of law
+and order." Bob came in. I ordered breakfast. Then I turned to Pugh. "Is
+there anything you would like?"
+
+"No, I--I've breakfasted."
+
+"It wasn't of breakfast I was thinking. It was of--something else. Bob is
+at your service, if, for instance, you wish to send him on an errand."
+
+"No, I want nothing. Bob can go." Bob went. Directly he was gone, Pugh
+turned to me. "You shall have half. What was in the box?"
+
+"I shall have half?"
+
+"You shall!"
+
+"I don't think it is necessary that the terms of our little understanding
+should be expressly embodied in black and white. I fancy that, under the
+circumstance, I can trust you, Pugh. I believe that I am capable of seeing
+that, in this matter, you don't do me. That was in the box."
+
+I held out the crystal between my finger and thumb.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"That is what I desire to learn."
+
+"Let me look at it."
+
+"You are welcome to look at it where it is. Look at it as long as you
+like, and as closely."
+
+Pugh leaned over my hand. His eyes began to gleam. He is himself not a bad
+judge of precious stones, is Pugh.
+
+"It's--it's--Tress!--is it a diamond?"
+
+"That question I have already asked myself."
+
+"Let me look at it! It will be safe with me! It's mine!"
+
+I immediately put the thing behind my back.
+
+"Pardon me, it belongs neither to you nor to me. It belongs, in all
+probability, to the person who sold that puzzle to the man from whom you
+bought it--perhaps some weeping widow, Pugh, or hopeless orphan--think of
+it. Let us have no further misunderstanding upon that point, my dear old
+friend. Still, because you are my dear old friend, I am willing to trust
+you with this discovery of mine, on condition that you don't attempt to
+remove it from my sight, and that you return it to me the moment I require
+you."
+
+"You're--you're very hard on me." I made a movement toward my waistcoat
+pocket. "I'll return it to you!"
+
+I handed him the crystal, and with it I handed him my pocket lens.
+
+"With the aid of that glass I imagine that you will be able to subject it
+to a more acute examination, Pugh."
+
+He began to examine it through the lens. Directly he did so, he gave an
+exclamation. In a few moments he looked up at me. His eyes were glistening
+behind his spectacles. I could see he trembled.
+
+"Tress, it's--it's a diamond, a Brazil diamond. It's worth a fortune!"
+
+"I'm glad you think so."
+
+"Glad I think so! Don't you think that it's a diamond?"
+
+"It appears to be a diamond. Under ordinary conditions I should say,
+without hesitation, that it was a diamond. But when I consider the
+circumstances of its discovery, I am driven to doubts. How much did you
+give for that puzzle, Pugh?"
+
+"Ninepence; the fellow wanted a shilling, but I gave him ninepence. He
+seemed content."
+
+"Ninepence! Does it seem reasonable that we should find a diamond, which,
+if it is a diamond, is the finest stone I ever saw and handled, in a
+ninepenny puzzle? It is not as though it had got into the thing by
+accident, it had evidently been placed there to be found, and, apparently,
+by anyone who chanced to solve the puzzle; witness the writing on the
+scrap of paper."
+
+Pugh reexamined the crystal.
+
+"It is a diamond! I'll stake my life that it's a diamond!"
+
+"Still, though it be a diamond, I smell a rat!"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I strongly suspect that the person who placed that diamond inside that
+puzzle intended to have a joke at the expense of the person who discovered
+it. What was to be the nature of the joke is more than I can say at
+present, but I should like to have a bet with you that the man who
+compounded that puzzle was an ingenious practical joker. I may be wrong,
+Pugh; we shall see. But, until I have proved the contrary, I don't believe
+that the maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond worth,
+apparently, shall we say a thousand pounds?"
+
+"A thousand pounds! This diamond is worth a good deal more than a thousand
+pounds."
+
+"Well, that only makes my case the stronger; I don't believe that the
+maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond worth more than a
+thousand pounds with such utter wantonness as seems to have characterized
+the action of the original owner of the stone which I found in your
+ninepenny puzzle, Pugh."
+
+"There have been some eccentric characters in the world, some very
+eccentric characters. However, as you say, we shall see. I fancy that I
+know somebody who would be quite willing to have such a diamond as this,
+and who, moreover, would be willing to pay a fair price for its
+possession; I will take it to him and see what he says."
+
+"Pugh, hand me back that diamond."
+
+"My dear Tress, I was only going--"
+
+Bob came in with the breakfast tray.
+
+"Pugh, you will either hand me that at once, or Bob shall summon the
+representatives of law and order."
+
+He handed me the diamond. I sat down to breakfast with a hearty appetite.
+Pugh stood and scowled at me.
+
+"Joseph Tress, it is my solemn conviction, and I have no hesitation in
+saying so in plain English, that you're a thief."
+
+"My dear Pugh, it seems to me that we show every promise of becoming a
+couple of thieves."
+
+"Don't bracket me with you!"
+
+"Not at all, you are worse than I. It is you who decline to return the
+contents of the box to its proper owner. Put it to yourself, you have
+_some_ common sense, my dear old friend!--do you suppose that a diamond
+worth more than a thousand pounds is to be _honestly_ bought for
+ninepence?"
+
+He resumed his old trick of dancing about the room.
+
+"I was a fool ever to let you have the box! I ought to have known better
+than to have trusted you; goodness knows you have given me sufficient
+cause to mistrust you! Over and over again! Your character is only too
+notorious! You have plundered friend and foe alike--friend and foe alike!
+As for the rubbish which you call your collection, nine tenths of it, I
+know as a positive fact, you have stolen out and out."
+
+"Who stole my Sir Walter Raleigh pipe? Wasn't it a man named Pugh?"
+
+"Look here, Joseph Tress!"
+
+"I'm looking."
+
+"Oh, it's no good talking to you, not the least! You're--you're dead to
+all the promptings of conscience! May I inquire, Mr. Tress, what it is you
+propose to do?"
+
+"I _propose_ to do nothing, except summon the representatives of law and
+order. Failing that, my dear Pugh, I had some faint, vague, very vague
+idea of taking the contents of your ninepenny puzzle to a certain firm in
+Hatton Garden, who are dealers in precious stones, and to learn from them
+if they are disposed to give anything for it, and if so, what."
+
+"I shall come with you."
+
+"With pleasure, on condition that you pay the cab."
+
+"I pay the cab! I will pay half."
+
+"Not at all. You will either pay the whole fare, or else I will have one
+cab and you shall have another. It is a three-shilling cab fare from here
+to Hatton Garden. If you propose to share my cab, you will be so good as
+to hand over that three shillings before we start."
+
+He gasped, but he handed over the three shillings. There are few things I
+enjoy so much as getting money out of Pugh!
+
+On the road to Hatton Garden we wrangled nearly all the way. I own that I
+feel a certain satisfaction in irritating Pugh, he is such an irritable
+man. He wanted to know what I thought we should get for the diamond.
+
+"You can't expect to get much for the contents of a ninepenny puzzle, not
+even the price of a cab fare, Pugh."
+
+He eyed me, but for some minutes he was silent. Then he began again.
+
+"Tress, I don't think we ought to let it go for less than--than five
+thousand pounds."
+
+"Seriously, Pugh, I doubt whether, when the whole affair is ended, we
+shall get five thousand pence for it, or, for the matter of that, five
+thousand farthings."
+
+"But why not? Why not? It's a magnificent stone--magnificent! I'll stake
+my life on it."
+
+I tapped my breast with the tips of my fingers.
+
+"There's a warning voice within my breast that ought to be in yours, Pugh!
+Something tells me, perhaps it is the unusually strong vein of common
+sense which I possess, that the contents of your ninepenny puzzle will be
+found to be a magnificent do--an ingenious practical joke, my friend."
+
+"I don't believe it."
+
+But I think he did; at any rate, I had unsettled the foundations of his
+faith.
+
+We entered the Hatton Garden office side by side; in his anxiety not to
+let me get before him, Pugh actually clung to my arm. The office was
+divided into two parts by a counter which ran from wall to wall. I
+advanced to a man who stood on the other side of this counter.
+
+"I want to sell you a diamond."
+
+"_We_ want to sell you a diamond," interpolated Pugh.
+
+I turned to Pugh. I "fixed" him with my glance.
+
+"_I_ want to sell you a diamond. Here it is. What will you give me for
+it?"
+
+Taking the crystal from my waistcoat pocket I handed it to the man on the
+other side of the counter. Directly, he got it between his fingers, and
+saw that it was that he had got, I noticed a sudden gleam come into his
+eyes.
+
+"This is--this is rather a fine stone."
+
+Pugh nudged my arm.
+
+"I told you so." I paid no attention to Pugh. "What will you give me for
+it?"
+
+"Do you mean, what will I give you for it cash down upon the nail?"
+
+"Just so--what will you give me for it cash down upon the nail?"
+
+The man turned the crystal over and over in his fingers.
+
+"Well, that's rather a large order. We don't often get a chance of buying
+such a stone as this across the counter. What do you say to--well--to ten
+thousand pounds?"
+
+Ten thousand pounds! It was beyond my wildest imaginings. Pugh gasped. He
+lurched against the counter.
+
+"Ten thousand pounds!" he echoed.
+
+The man on the other side glanced at him, I thought, a little curiously.
+
+"If you can give me references, or satisfy me in any way as to your _bona
+fides_, I am prepared to give you for this diamond an open check for ten
+thousand pounds, or if you prefer it, the cash instead."
+
+I stared; I was not accustomed to see business transacted on quite such
+lines as those.
+
+"We'll take it," murmured Pugh; I believe he was too much overcome by his
+feelings to do more than murmur. I interposed.
+
+"My dear sir, you will excuse my saying that you arrive very rapidly at
+your conclusions. In the first place, how can you make sure that it is a
+diamond?"
+
+The man behind the counter smiled.
+
+"I should be very ill-fitted for the position which I hold if I could not
+tell a diamond directly I get a sight of it, especially such a stone as
+this."
+
+"But have you no tests you can apply?"
+
+"We have tests which we apply in cases in which doubt exists, but in this
+case there is no doubt whatever. I am as sure that this is a diamond as I
+am sure that it is air I breathe. However, here is a test."
+
+There was a wheel close by the speaker. It was worked by a treadle. It was
+more like a superior sort of traveling-tinker's grindstone than anything
+else. The man behind the counter put his foot upon the treadle. The wheel
+began to revolve. He brought the crystal into contact with the swiftly
+revolving wheel. There was a s--s--sh! And, in an instant, his hand was
+empty; the crystal had vanished into air.
+
+"Good heavens!" he gasped. I never saw such a look of amazement on a human
+countenance before. "It's splintered!"
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT
+
+It _was_ a diamond, although it _had_ splintered. In that fact lay the
+point of the joke. The man behind the counter had not been wrong;
+examination of such dust as could be collected proved that fact beyond a
+doubt. It was declared by experts that the diamond, at some period of its
+history, had been subjected to intense and continuing heat. The result had
+been to make it as brittle as glass.
+
+There could be no doubt that its original owner had been an expert too. He
+knew where he got it from, and he probably knew what it had endured. He
+was aware that, from a mercantile point of view, it was worthless; it
+could never have been cut. So, having a turn for humor of a peculiar kind,
+he had devoted days, and weeks, and possibly months, to the construction
+of that puzzle. He had placed the diamond inside, and he had enjoyed, in
+anticipation and in imagination, the Alnaschar visions of the lucky
+finder.
+
+Pugh blamed me for the catastrophe. He said, and still says, that if I had
+not, in a measure, and quite gratuitously, insisted on a test, the man
+behind the counter would have been satisfied with the evidence of his
+organs of vision, and we should have been richer by ten thousand pounds.
+But I satisfy my conscience with the reflection that what I did at any
+rate was honest, though, at the same time, I am perfectly well aware that
+such a reflection gives Pugh no sort of satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+_The Great Valdez Sapphire_
+
+
+I know more about it than anyone else in the world, its present owner not
+excepted. I can give its whole history, from the Cingalese who found it,
+the Spanish adventurer who stole it, the cardinal who bought it, the Pope
+who graciously accepted it, the favored son of the Church who received it,
+the gay and giddy duchess who pawned it, down to the eminent prelate who
+now holds it in trust as a family heirloom.
+
+It will occupy a chapter to itself in my forthcoming work on "Historic
+Stones," where full details of its weight, size, color, and value may be
+found. At present I am going to relate an incident in its history which,
+for obvious reasons, will not be published--which, in fact, I trust the
+reader will consider related in strict confidence.
+
+I had never seen the stone itself when I began to write about it, and it
+was not till one evening last spring, while staying with my nephew, Sir
+Thomas Acton, that I came within measurable distance of it. A dinner party
+was impending, and, at my instigation, the Bishop of Northchurch and Miss
+Panton, his daughter and heiress, were among the invited guests.
+
+The dinner was a particularly good one, I remember that distinctly. In
+fact, I felt myself partly responsible for it, having engaged the new
+cook--a talented young Italian, pupil of the admirable old _chef_ at my
+club. We had gone over the _menu_ carefully together, with a result
+refreshing in its novelty, but not so daring as to disturb the minds of
+the innocent country guests who were bidden thereto.
+
+The first spoonful of soup was reassuring, and I looked to the end of the
+table to exchange a congratulatory glance with Leta. What was amiss? No
+response. Her pretty face was flushed, her smile constrained, she was
+talking with quite unnecessary _empressement_ to her neighbor, Sir Harry
+Landor, though Leta is one of those few women who understand the
+importance of letting a man settle down tranquilly and with an undisturbed
+mind to the business of dining, allowing no topic of serious interest to
+come on before the _relevés_, and reserving mere conversational brilliancy
+for the _entremets_.
+
+Guests all right? No disappointments? I had gone through the list with
+her, selecting just the right people to be asked to meet the Landors, our
+new neighbors. Not a mere cumbrous county gathering, nor yet a showy
+imported party from town, but a skillful blending of both. Had anything
+happened already? I had been late for dinner and missed the arrivals in
+the drawing-room. It was Leta's fault. She has got into a way of coming
+into my room and putting the last touches to my toilet. I let her, for I
+am doubtful of myself nowadays after many years' dependence on the best of
+valets. Her taste is generally beyond dispute, but to-day she had indulged
+in a feminine vagary that provoked me and made me late for dinner.
+
+"Are you going to wear your sapphire, Uncle Paul!" she cried in a tone of
+dismay. "Oh, why not the ruby?"
+
+"You _would_ have your way about the table decorations," I gently reminded
+her. "With that service of Crown Derby _repoussé_ and orchids, the ruby
+would look absolutely barbaric. Now if you would have had the Limoges set,
+white candles, and a yellow silk center--"
+
+"Oh, but--I'm _so_ disappointed--I wanted the bishop to see your ruby--or
+one of your engraved gems--"
+
+"My dear, it is on the bishop's account I put this on. You know his
+daughter is heiress of the great Valdez sapphire--"
+
+"Of course she is, and when he has the charge of a stone three times as
+big as yours, what's the use of wearing it? The ruby, dear Uncle Paul,
+_please_!"
+
+She was desperately in earnest I could see, and considering the
+obligations which I am supposed to be under to her and Tom, it was but a
+little matter to yield, but it involved a good deal of extra trouble.
+Studs, sleeve-links, watch-guard, all carefully selected to go with the
+sapphire, had to be changed, the emerald which I chose as a compromise
+requiring more florid accompaniments of a deeper tone of gold; and the
+dinner hour struck as I replaced my jewel case, the one relic left me of a
+once handsome fortune, in my fireproof safe.
+
+The emerald looked very well that evening, however. I kept my eyes upon it
+for comfort when Miss Panton proved trying.
+
+She was a lean, yellow, dictatorial young person with no conversation. I
+spoke of her father's celebrated sapphires. "_My_ sapphires," she amended
+sourly; "though I am legally debarred from making any profitable use of
+them." She furthermore informed me that she viewed them as useless gauds,
+which ought to be disposed of for the benefit of the heathen. I gave the
+subject up, and while she discoursed of the work of the Blue Ribbon Army
+among the Bosjesmans I tried to understand a certain dislocation in the
+arrangement of the table. Surely we were more or less in number than we
+should be? Opposite side all right. Who was extra on ours? I leaned
+forward. Lady Landor on one side of Tom, on the other who? I caught
+glimpses of plumes pink and green nodding over a dinner plate, and beneath
+them a pink nose in a green visage with a nutcracker chin altogether
+unknown to me. A sharp gray eye shot a sideway glance down the table and
+caught me peeping, and I retreated, having only marked in addition two
+clawlike hands, with pointed ruffles and a mass of brilliant rings, making
+good play with a knife and fork. Who was she? At intervals a high acid
+voice could be heard addressing Tom, and a laugh that made me shudder; it
+had the quality of the scream of a bird of prey or the yell of a jackal. I
+had heard that sort of laugh before, and it always made me feel like a
+defenseless rabbit. Every time it sounded I saw Leta's fan flutter more
+furiously and her manner grow more nervously animated. Poor dear girl! I
+never in all my recollection wished a dinner at an end so earnestly so as
+to assure her of my support and sympathy, though without the faintest
+conception why either should be required.
+
+The ices at last. A _menu_ card folded in two was laid beside me. I read
+it unobserved. "Keep the B. from joining us in the drawing-room." The B.?
+The bishop, of course. With pleasure. But why? And how? _That's_ the
+question, never mind "why." Could I lure him into the library--the
+billiard room--the conservatory? I doubted it, and I doubted still more
+what I should do with him when I got him there.
+
+The bishop is a grand and stately ecclesiastic of the mediæval type,
+broad-chested, deep-voiced, martial of bearing. I could picture him
+charging mace in hand at the head of his vassals, or delivering over a
+dissenter of the period to the rack and thumbscrew, but not pottering
+among rare editions, tall copies and Grolier bindings, nor condescending
+to a quiet cigar among the tree ferns and orchids. Leta must and should be
+obeyed, I swore, nevertheless, even if I were driven to lock the door in
+the fearless old fashion of a bygone day, and declare I'd shoot any man
+who left while a drop remained in the bottles.
+
+The ladies were rising. The lady at the head of the line smirked and
+nodded her pink plumes coquettishly at Tom, while her hawk's eyes roved
+keen and predatory over us all. She stopped suddenly, creating a block and
+confusion.
+
+"Ah, the dear bishop! _You_ there, and I never saw you! You must come and
+have a nice long chat presently. By-by--!" She shook her fan at him over
+my shoulder and tripped off. Leta, passing me last, gave me a look of
+profound despair.
+
+"Lady Carwitchet!" somebody exclaimed. "I couldn't believe my eyes."
+
+"Thought she was dead or in penal servitude. Never should have expected
+to see her _here_," said some one else behind me confidentially.
+
+"What Carwitchet? Not the mother of the Carwitchet who--"
+
+"Just so. The Carwitchet who--" Tom assented with a shrug. "We needn't go
+farther, as she's my guest. Just my luck. I met them at Buxton, thought
+them uncommonly good company--in fact, Carwitchet laid me under a great
+obligation about a horse I was nearly let in for buying--and gave them a
+general invitation here, as one does, you know. Never expected her to turn
+up with her luggage this afternoon just before dinner, to stay a week, or
+a fortnight if Carwitchet can join her." A groan of sympathy ran round the
+table. "It can't be helped. I've told you this just to show that I
+shouldn't have asked you here to meet this sort of people of my own free
+will; but, as it is, please say no more about them." The subject was not
+dropped by any means, and I took care that it should not be. At our end of
+the table one story after another went buzzing round--_sotto voce_, out of
+deference to Tom--but perfectly audible.
+
+"Carwitchet? Ah, yes. Mixed up in that Rawlings divorce case, wasn't he? A
+bad lot. Turned out of the Dragoon Guards for cheating at cards, or
+picking pockets, or something--remember the row at the Cerulean Club?
+Scandalous exposure--and that forged letter business--oh, that was the
+mother--prosecution hushed up somehow. Ought to be serving her fourteen
+years--and that business of poor Farrars, the banker--got hold of some of
+his secrets and blackmailed him till he blew his brains out--"
+
+It was so exciting that I clean forgot the bishop, till a low gasp at my
+elbow startled me. He was lying back in his chair, his mighty shaven jowl
+a ghastly white, his fierce imperious eyebrows drooping limp over his
+fishlike eyes, his splendid figure shrunk and contracted. He was trying
+with a shaken hand to pour out wine. The decanter clattered against the
+glass and the wine spilled on the cloth.
+
+"I'm afraid you find the room too warm. Shall we go into the library?"
+
+He rose hastily and followed me like a lamb.
+
+He recovered himself once we got into the hall, and affably rejected all
+my proffers of brandy and soda--medical advice--everything else my limited
+experience could suggest. He only demanded his carriage "directly" and
+that Miss Panton should be summoned forthwith.
+
+I made the best use I could of the time left me.
+
+"I'm uncommonly sorry you do not feel equal to staying a little longer, my
+lord. I counted on showing you my few trifles of precious stones, the
+salvage from the wreck of my possessions. Nothing in comparison with your
+own collection."
+
+The bishop clasped his hand over his heart. His breath came short and
+quick.
+
+"A return of that dizziness," he explained with a faint smile. "You are
+thinking of the Valdez sapphire, are you not? Some day," he went on with
+forced composure, "I may have the pleasure of showing it to you. It is at
+my banker's just now."
+
+Miss Panton's steps were heard in the hall. "You are well known as a
+connoisseur, Mr. Acton," he went on hurriedly. "Is your collection
+valuable? If so, _keep it safe; don't trust a ring off your hand, or the
+key of your jewel case out of your pocket till the house is clear again_."
+The words rushed from his lips in an impetuous whisper, he gave me a
+meaning glance, and departed with his daughter. I went back to the
+drawing-room, my head swimming with bewilderment.
+
+"What! The dear bishop gone!" screamed Lady Carwitchet from the central
+ottoman where she sat, surrounded by most of the gentlemen, all apparently
+well entertained by her conversation. "And I wanted to talk over old times
+with him so badly. His poor wife was my greatest friend. Mira Montanaro,
+daughter of the great banker, you know. It's not possible that that
+miserable little prig is my poor Mira's girl. The heiress of all the
+Montanaros in a black lace gown worth twopence! When I think of her
+mother's beauty and her toilets! Does she ever wear the sapphires? Has
+anyone ever seen her in them? Eleven large stones in a lovely antique
+setting, and the great Valdez sapphire--worth thousands and thousands--for
+the pendant." No one replied. "I wanted to get a rise out of the bishop
+to-night. It used to make him so mad when I wore this."
+
+She fumbled among the laces at her throat, and clawed out a pendant that
+hung to a velvet band around her neck. I fairly gasped when she removed
+her hand. A sapphire of irregular shape flashed out its blue lightning on
+us. Such a stone! A true, rich, cornflower blue even by that wretched
+artificial light, with soft velvety depths of color and dazzling clearness
+of tint in its lights and shades--a stone to remember! I stretched out my
+hand involuntarily, but Lady Carwitchet drew back with a coquettish
+squeal. "No! no! You mustn't look any closer. Tell me what you think of it
+now. Isn't it pretty?"
+
+"Superb!" was all I could ejaculate, staring at the azure splendor of that
+miraculous jewel in a sort of trance.
+
+She gave a shrill cackling laugh of mockery.
+
+"The great Mr. Acton taken in by a bit of Palais Royal gimcrackery! What
+an advertisement for Bogaerts et Cie! They are perfect artists in frauds.
+Don't you remember their stand at the first Paris Exhibition? They had
+imitation there of every celebrated stone; but I never expected anything
+made by man could delude Mr. Acton, never!" And she went off into another
+mocking cackle, and all the idiots round her haw-hawed knowingly, as if
+they had seen the joke all along. I was too bewildered to reply, which was
+on the whole lucky. "I suppose I mustn't tell why I came to give quite a
+big sum in francs for this?" she went on, tapping her closed lips with her
+closed fan, and cocking her eye at us all like a parrot wanting to be
+coaxed to talk. "It's a queer story."
+
+I didn't want to hear her anecdote, especially as I saw she wanted to tell
+it. What I _did_ want was to see that pendant again. She had thrust it
+back among her laces, only the loop which held it to the velvet being
+visible. It was set with three small sapphires, and even from a distance I
+clearly made them out to be imitations, and poor ones. I felt a queer
+thrill of self-mistrust. Was the large stone no better? Could I, even for
+an instant, have been dazzled by a sham, and a sham of that quality? The
+events of the evening had flurried and confused me. I wished to think them
+over in quiet. I would go to bed.
+
+My rooms at the Manor are the best in the house. Leta will have it so. I
+must explain their position for a reason to be understood later. My
+bedroom is in the southeast angle of the house; it opens on one side into
+a sitting-room in the east corridor, the rest of which is taken up by the
+suite of rooms occupied by Tom and Leta; and on the other side into my
+bathroom, the first room in the south corridor, where the principal guest
+chambers are, to one of which it was originally the dressing-room. Passing
+this room I noticed a couple of housemaids preparing it for the night, and
+discovered with a shiver that Lady Carwitchet was to be my next-door
+neighbor. It gave me a turn.
+
+The bishop's strange warning must have unnerved me. I was perfectly safe
+from her ladyship. The disused door into her room was locked, and the key
+safe on the housekeeper's bunch. It was also undiscoverable on her side,
+the recess in which it stood being completely filled by a large wardrobe.
+On my side hung a thick sound-proof _portière_. Nevertheless, I resolved
+not to use that room while she inhabited the next one. I removed my
+possessions, fastened the door of communication with my bedroom, and
+dragged a heavy ottoman across it.
+
+Then I stowed away my emerald in my strong-box. It is built into the wall
+of my sitting-room, and masked by the lower part of an old carved oak
+bureau. I put away even the rings I wore habitually, keeping out only an
+inferior cat's-eye for workaday wear. I had just made all safe when Leta
+tapped at the door and came in to wish me good night. She looked flushed
+and harassed and ready to cry. "Uncle Paul," she began, "I want you to go
+up to town at once, and stay away till I send for you."
+
+"My dear--!" I was too amazed to expostulate.
+
+"We've got a--a pestilence among us," she declared, her foot tapping the
+ground angrily, "and the least we can do is to go into quarantine. Oh, I'm
+so sorry and so ashamed! The poor bishop! I'll take good care that no one
+else shall meet that woman here. You did your best for me, Uncle Paul, and
+managed admirably, but it was all no use. I hoped against hope that what
+between the dusk of the drawing-room before dinner, and being put at
+opposite ends of the table, we might get through without a meeting--"
+
+"But, my dear, explain. Why shouldn't the bishop and Lady Carwitchet meet?
+Why is it worse for him than anyone else?"
+
+"Why? I thought everybody had heard of that dreadful wife of his who
+nearly broke his heart. If he married her for her money it served him
+right, but Lady Landor says she was very handsome and really in love with
+him at first. Then Lady Carwitchet got hold of her and led her into all
+sorts of mischief. She left her husband--he was only a rector with a
+country living in those days--and went to live in town, got into a horrid
+fast set, and made herself notorious. You _must_ have heard of her."
+
+"I heard of her sapphires, my dear. But I was in Brazil at the time."
+
+"I wish you had been at home. You might have found her out. She was
+furious because her husband refused to let her wear the great Valdez
+sapphire. It had been in the Montanaro family for some generations, and
+her father settled it first on her and then on her little girl--the bishop
+being trustee. He felt obliged to take away the little girl, and send her
+off to be brought up by some old aunts in the country, and he locked up
+the sapphire. Lady Carwitchet tells as a splendid joke how they got the
+copy made in Paris, and it did just as well for the people to stare at. No
+wonder the bishop hates the very name of the stone."
+
+"How long will she stay here?" I asked dismally.
+
+"Till Lord Carwitchet can come and escort her to Paris to visit some
+American friends. Goodness knows when that will be! Do go up to town,
+Uncle Paul!"
+
+I refused indignantly. The very least I could do was to stand by my poor
+young relatives in their troubles and help them through. I did so. I wore
+that inferior cat's eye for six weeks!
+
+It is a time I cannot think of even now without a shudder. The more I saw
+of that terrible old woman the more I detested her, and we saw a very
+great deal of her. Leta kept her word, and neither accepted nor gave
+invitations all that time. We were cut off from all society but that of
+old General Fairford, who would go anywhere and meet anyone to get a
+rubber after dinner; the doctor, a sporting widower; and the Duberlys, a
+giddy, rather rackety young, couple who had taken the Dower House for a
+year. Lady Carwitchet seemed perfectly content. She reveled in the soft
+living and good fare of the Manor House, the drives in Leta's big
+barouche, and Domenico's dinners, as one to whom short commons were not
+unknown. She had a hungry way of grabbing and grasping at everything she
+could--the shillings she won at whist, the best fruit at dessert, the
+postage stamps in the library inkstand--that was infinitely suggestive.
+Sometimes I could have pitied her, she was so greedy, so spiteful, so
+friendless. She always made me think of some wicked old pirate putting
+into a peaceful port to provision and repair his battered old hulk,
+obliged to live on friendly terms with the natives, but his piratical old
+nostrils asniff for plunder and his piratical old soul longing to be off
+marauding once more. When would that be? Not till the arrival in Paris of
+her distinguished American friends, of whom we heard a great deal.
+"Charming people, the Bokums of Chicago, the American branch of the
+English Beauchamps, you know!" They seemed to be taking an unconscionable
+time to get there. She would have insisted on being driven over to
+Northchurch to call at the palace, but that the bishop was understood to
+be holding confirmations at the other end of the diocese.
+
+I was alone in the house one afternoon sitting by my window, toying with
+the key of my safe, and wondering whether I dare treat myself to a peep at
+my treasures, when a suspicious movement in the park below caught my
+attention. A black figure certainly dodged from behind one tree to the
+next, and then into the shadow of the park paling instead of keeping to
+the footpath. It looked queer. I caught up my field glass and marked him
+at one point where he was bound to come into the open for a few steps. He
+crossed the strip of turf with giant strides and got into cover again, but
+not quick enough to prevent me recognizing him. It was--great
+heavens!--the bishop! In a soft hat pulled over his forehead, with a long
+cloak and a big stick, he looked like a poacher.
+
+Guided by some mysterious instinct I hurried to meet him. I opened the
+conservatory door, and in he rushed like a hunted rabbit. Without
+explanation I led him up the wide staircase to my room, where he dropped
+into a chair and wiped his face.
+
+"You are astonished, Mr. Acton," he panted. "I will explain directly.
+Thanks." He tossed off the glass of brandy I had poured out without
+waiting for the qualifying soda, and looked better.
+
+"I am in serious trouble. You can help me. I've had a shock to-day--a
+grievous shock." He stopped and tried to pull himself together. "I must
+trust you implicitly, Mr. Acton, I have no choice. Tell me what you think
+of this." He drew a case from his breast pocket and opened it. "I promised
+you should see the Valdez sapphire. Look there!"
+
+The Valdez sapphire! A great big shining lump of blue crystal--flawless
+and of perfect color--that was all. I took it up, breathed on it, drew out
+my magnifier, looked at it in one light and another. What was wrong with
+it? I could not say. Nine experts out of ten would undoubtedly have
+pronounced the stone genuine. I, by virtue of some mysterious instinct
+that has hitherto always guided me aright, was the unlucky tenth. I looked
+at the bishop. His eyes met mine. There was no need of spoken word
+between us.
+
+"Has Lady Carwitchet shown you her sapphire?" was his most unexpected
+question. "She has? Now, Mr. Acton, on your honor as a connoisseur and a
+gentleman, which of the two is the Valdez?"
+
+"Not this one." I could say naught else.
+
+"You were my last hope." He broke off, and dropped his face on his folded
+arms with a groan that shook the table on which he rested, while I stood
+dismayed at myself for having let so hasty a judgment escape me. He lifted
+a ghastly countenance to me. "She vowed she would see me ruined and
+disgraced. I made her my enemy by crossing some of her schemes once, and
+she never forgives. She will keep her word. I shall appear before the
+world as a fraudulent trustee. I can neither produce the valuable confided
+to my charge nor make the loss good. I have only an incredible story to
+tell," he dropped his head and groaned again. "Who will believe me?"
+
+"I will, for one."
+
+"Ah, you? Yes, you know her. She took my wife from me, Mr. Acton. Heaven
+only knows what the hold was that she had over poor Mira. She encouraged
+her to set me at defiance and eventually to leave me. She was answerable
+for all the scandalous folly and extravagance of poor Mira's life in
+Paris--spare me the telling of the story. She left her at last to die
+alone and uncared for. I reached my wife to find her dying of a fever from
+which Lady Carwitchet and her crew had fled. She was raving in delirium,
+and died without recognizing me. Some trouble she had been in which I must
+never know oppressed her. At the very last she roused from a long stupor
+and spoke to the nurse. 'Tell him to get the sapphire back--she stole it.
+She has robbed my child.' Those were her last words. The nurse understood
+no English, and treated them as wandering; but _I_ heard them, and knew
+she was sane when she spoke."
+
+"What did you do?"
+
+"What could I? I saw Lady Carwitchet, who laughed at me, and defied me to
+make her confess or disgorge. I took the pendant to more than one eminent
+jeweler on pretense of having the setting seen to, and all have examined
+and admired without giving a hint of there being anything wrong. I allowed
+a celebrated mineralogist to see it; he gave no sign--"
+
+"Perhaps they are right and we are wrong."
+
+"No, no. Listen. I heard of an old Dutchman celebrated for his imitations.
+I went to him, and he told me at once that he had been allowed by
+Montanaro to copy the Valdez--setting and all--for the Paris Exhibition. I
+showed him this, and he claimed it for his own work at once, and pointed
+out his private mark upon it. You must take your magnifier to find it; a
+Greek Beta. He also told me that he had sold it to Lady Carwitchet more
+than a year ago."
+
+"It is a terrible position."
+
+"It is. My co-trustee died lately. I have never dared to have another
+appointed. I am bound to hand over the sapphire to my daughter on her
+marriage, if her husband consents to take the name of Montanaro."
+
+The bishop's face was ghastly pale, and the moisture started on his brow.
+I racked my brain for some word of comfort.
+
+"Miss Panton may never marry."
+
+"But she will!" he shouted. "That is the blow that has been dealt me
+to-day. My chaplain--actually, my chaplain--tells me that he is going out
+as a temperance missionary to equatorial Africa, and has the assurance to
+add that he believes my daughter is not indisposed to accompany him!" His
+consummating wrath acted as a momentary stimulant. He sat upright, his
+eyes flashing and his brow thunderous. I felt for that chaplain. Then he
+collapsed miserably. "The sapphires will have to be produced, identified,
+revalued. How shall I come out of it? Think of the disgrace, the ripping
+up of old scandals! Even if I were to compound with Lady Carwitchet, the
+sum she hinted at was too monstrous. She wants more than my money. Help
+me, Mr. Acton! For the sake of your own family interests, help me!"
+
+"I beg your pardon--family interests? I don't understand."
+
+"If my daughter is childless, her next of kin is poor Marmaduke Panton,
+who is dying at Cannes, not married, or likely to marry; and failing him,
+your nephew, Sir Thomas Acton, succeeds."
+
+My nephew Tom! Leta, or Leta's baby, might come to be the possible
+inheritor of the great Valdez sapphire! The blood rushed to my head as I
+looked at the great shining swindle before me. "What diabolic jugglery was
+at work when the exchange was made?" I demanded fiercely.
+
+"It must have been on the last occasion of her wearing the sapphires in
+London. I ought never to have let her out of my sight."
+
+"You must put a stop to Miss Panton's marriage in the first place," I
+pronounced as autocratically as he could have done himself.
+
+"Not to be thought of," he admitted helplessly. "Mira has my force of
+character. She knows her rights, and she will have her jewels. I want you
+to take charge of the--thing for me. If it's in the house she'll make me
+produce it. She'll inquire at the banker's. If _you_ have it we can gain
+time, if but for a day or two." He broke off. Carriage wheels were
+crashing on the gravel outside. We looked at one another in consternation.
+Flight was imperative. I hurried him downstairs and out of the
+conservatory just as the door bell rang. I think we both lost our heads in
+the confusion. He shoved the case into my hands, and I pocketed it,
+without a thought of the awful responsibility I was incurring, and saw him
+disappear into the shelter of the friendly night.
+
+When I think of what my feelings were that evening--of my murderous hatred
+of that smirking, jesting Jezebel who sat opposite me at dinner, my
+wrathful indignation at the thought of the poor little expected heir
+defrauded ere his birth; of the crushing contempt I felt for myself and
+the bishop as a pair of witless idiots unable to see our way out of the
+dilemma; all this boiling and surging through my soul, I can only
+wonder--Domenico having given himself a holiday, and the kitchen maid
+doing her worst and wickedest--that gout or jaundice did not put an end to
+this story at once.
+
+"Uncle Paul!" Leta was looking her sweetest when she tripped into my room
+next morning. "I've news for you. She," pointing a delicate forefinger in
+the direction of the corridor, "is going! Her Bokums have reached Paris at
+last, and sent for her to join them at the Grand Hotel."
+
+I was thunderstruck. The longed-for deliverance had but come to remove
+hopelessly and forever out of my reach Lady Carwitchet and the great
+Valdez sapphire.
+
+"Why, aren't you overjoyed? I am. We are going to celebrate the event by a
+dinner party. Tom's hospitable soul is vexed by the lack of entertainment
+we had provided her. We must ask the Brownleys some day or other, and they
+will be delighted to meet anything in the way of a ladyship, or such smart
+folks as the Duberly-Parkers. Then we may as well have the Blomfields, and
+air that awful modern Sèvres dessert service she gave us when we were
+married." I had no objection to make, and she went on, rubbing her soft
+cheek against my shoulder like the purring little cat she was: "Now I want
+you to do something to please me--and Mrs. Blomfield. She has set her
+heart on seeing your rubies, and though I know you hate her about as much
+as you do that Sèvres china--"
+
+"What! Wear my rubies with that! I won't. I'll tell you what I will do,
+though. I've got some carbuncles as big as prize gooseberries, a whole
+set. Then you have only to put those Bohemian glass vases and candelabra
+on the table, and let your gardener do his worst with his great forced,
+scentless, vulgar blooms, and we shall all be in keeping." Leta pouted. An
+idea struck me. "Or I'll do as you wish, on one condition. You get Lady
+Carwitchet to wear her big sapphire, and don't tell her I wish it."
+
+I lived through the next few days as one in some evil dream. The
+sapphires, like twin specters, haunted me day and night. Was ever man so
+tantalized? To hold the shadow and see the substance dangled temptingly
+within reach. The bishop made no sign of ridding me of my unwelcome
+charge, and the thought of what might happen in a case of
+burglary--fire--earthquake--made me start and tremble at all sorts of
+inopportune moments.
+
+I kept faith with Leta, and reluctantly produced my beautiful rubies on
+the night of her dinner party. Emerging from my room I came full upon Lady
+Carwitchet in the corridor. She was dressed for dinner, and at her throat
+I caught the blue gleam of the great sapphire. Leta had kept faith with
+me. I don't know what I stammered in reply to her ladyship's remarks; my
+whole soul was absorbed in the contemplation of the intoxicating
+loveliness of the gem. _That_ a Palais Royal deception! Incredible! My
+fingers twitched, my breath came short and fierce with the lust of
+possession. She must have seen the covetous glare in my eyes. A look of
+gratified spiteful complacency overspread her features, as she swept on
+ahead and descended the stairs before me. I followed her to the
+drawing-room door. She stopped suddenly, and murmuring something
+unintelligible hurried back again.
+
+Everybody was assembled there that I expected to see, with an addition.
+Not a welcome one by the look on Tom's face. He stood on the hearthrug
+conversing with a great hulking, high-shouldered fellow, sallow-faced,
+with a heavy mustache and drooping eyelids, from the corners of which
+flashed out a sudden suspicious look as I approached, which lighted up
+into a greedy one as it rested on my rubies, and seemed unaccountably
+familiar to me, till Lady Carwitchet tripping past me exclaimed:
+
+"He has come at last! My naughty, naughty boy! Mr. Acton, this is my son,
+Lord Carwitchet!"
+
+I broke off short in the midst of my polite acknowledgments to stare
+blankly at her. The sapphire was gone! A great gilt cross, with a Scotch
+pebble like an acid drop, was her sole decoration.
+
+"I had to put my pendant away," she explained confidentially; "the clasp
+had got broken somehow." I didn't believe a word.
+
+Lord Carwitchet contributed little to the general entertainment at dinner,
+but fell into confidential talk with Mrs. Duberly-Parker. I caught a few
+unintelligible remarks across the table. They referred, I subsequently
+discovered, to the lady's little book on Northchurch races, and I
+recollected that the Spring Meeting was on, and to-morrow "Cup Day." After
+dinner there was great talk about getting up a party to go on General
+Fairford's drag. Lady Carwitchet was in ecstasies and tried to coax me
+into joining. Leta declined positively. Tom accepted sulkily.
+
+The look in Lord Carwitchet's eye returned to my mind as I locked up my
+rubies that night. It made him look so like his mother! I went round my
+fastenings with unusual care. Safe and closets and desk and doors, I tried
+them all. Coming at last to the bathroom, it opened at once. It was the
+housemaid's doing. She had evidently taken advantage of my having
+abandoned the room to give it "a thorough spring cleaning," and I
+anathematized her. The furniture was all piled together and veiled with
+sheets, the carpet and felt curtain were gone, there were new brooms
+about. As I peered around, a voice close at my ear made me jump--Lady
+Carwitchet's!
+
+"I tell you I have nothing, not a penny! I shall have to borrow my train
+fare before I can leave this. They'll be glad enough to lend it."
+
+Not only had the _portière_ been removed, but the door behind it had been
+unlocked and left open for convenience of dusting behind the wardrobe. I
+might as well have been in the bedroom.
+
+"Don't tell me," I recognized Carwitchet's growl. "You've not been here
+all this time for nothing. You've been collecting for a Kilburn cot or
+getting subscriptions for the distressed Irish landlords. I know you. Now
+I'm not going to see myself ruined for the want of a paltry hundred or so.
+I tell you the colt is a dead certainty. If I could have got a thousand or
+two on him last week, we might have ended our dog days millionaires. Hand
+over what you can. You've money's worth, if not money. Where's that
+sapphire you stole?"
+
+"I didn't. I can show you the receipted bill. All _I_ possess is honestly
+come by. What could you do with it, even if I gave it you? You couldn't
+sell it as the Valdez, and you can't get it cut up as you might if it were
+real."
+
+"If it's only bogus, why are you always in such a flutter about it? I'll
+do something with it, never fear. Hand over."
+
+"I can't. I haven't got it. I had to raise something on it before I left
+town."
+
+"Will you swear it's not in that wardrobe? I dare say you will. I mean to
+see. Give me those keys."
+
+I heard a struggle and a jingle, then the wardrobe door must have been
+flung open, for a streak of light struck through a crack in the wood of
+the back. Creeping close and peeping through, I could see an awful sight.
+Lady Carwitchet in a flannel wrapper, minus hair, teeth, complexion,
+pointing a skinny forefinger that quivered with rage at her son, who was
+out of the range of my vision.
+
+"Stop that, and throw those keys down here directly, or I'll rouse the
+house. Sir Thomas is a magistrate, and will lock you up as soon as look at
+you." She clutched at the bell rope as she spoke. "I'll swear I'm in
+danger of my life from you and give you in charge. Yes, and when you're in
+prison I'll keep you there till you die. I've often thought I'd do it. How
+about the hotel robberies last summer at Cowes, eh? Mightn't the police be
+grateful for a hint or two? And how about--"
+
+The keys fell with a crash on the bed, accompanied by some bad language in
+an apologetic tone, and the door slammed to. I crept trembling to bed.
+
+This new and horrible complication of the situation filled me with
+dismay. Lord Carwitchet's wolfish glance at my rubies took a new meaning.
+They were safe enough, I believed--but the sapphire! If he disbelieved his
+mother, how long would she be able to keep it from his clutches? That she
+had some plot of her own of which the bishop would eventually be the
+victim I did not doubt, or why had she not made her bargain with him long
+ago? But supposing she took fright, lost her head, allowed her son to
+wrest the jewel from her, or gave consent to its being mutilated, divided!
+I lay in a cold perspiration till morning.
+
+My terrors haunted me all day. They were with me at breakfast time when
+Lady Carwitchet, tripping in smiling, made a last attempt to induce me to
+accompany her and keep her "bad, bad boy" from getting among "those horrid
+betting men."
+
+They haunted me through the long peaceful day with Leta and the
+_tête-à-tête_ dinner, but they swarmed around and beset me sorest when,
+sitting alone over my sitting-room fire, I listened for the return of the
+drag party. I read my newspaper and brewed myself some hot strong drink,
+but there comes a time of night when no fire can warm and no drink can
+cheer. The bishop's despairing face kept me company, and his troubles and
+the wrongs of the future heir took possession of me. Then the uncanny
+noises that make all old houses ghostly during the small hours began to
+make themselves heard. Muffled footsteps trod the corridor, stopping to
+listen at every door, door latches gently clicked, boards creaked
+unreasonably, sounds of stealthy movements came from the locked-up
+bathroom. The welcome crash of wheels at last, and the sound of the
+front-door bell. I could hear Lady Carwitchet making her shrill _adieux_
+to her friends and her steps in the corridor. She was softly humming a
+little song as she approached. I heard her unlock her bedroom door before
+she entered--an odd thing to do. Tom came sleepily stumbling to his room
+later. I put my head out. "Where is Lord Carwitchet?"
+
+"Haven't you seen him? He left us hours ago. Not come home, eh? Well,
+he's welcome to stay away. I don't want to see more of him." Tom's brow
+was dark and his voice surly. "I gave him to understand as much." Whatever
+had happened, Tom was evidently too disgusted to explain just then.
+
+I went back to my fire unaccountably relieved, and brewed myself another
+and a stronger brew. It warmed me this time, but excited me foolishly.
+There must be some way out of the difficulty. I felt now as if I could
+almost see it if I gave my mind to it. Why--suppose--there might be no
+difficulty after all! The bishop was a nervous old gentleman. He might
+have been mistaken all through, Bogaerts might have been mistaken, I
+might--no. I could not have been mistaken--or I thought not. I fidgeted
+and fumed and argued with myself till I found I should have no peace of
+mind without a look at the stone in my possession, and I actually went to
+the safe and took the case out.
+
+The sapphire certainly looked different by lamplight. I sat and stared,
+and all but overpersuaded my better judgment into giving it a verdict.
+Bogaerts's mark--I suddenly remembered it. I took my magnifier and held
+the pendant to the light. There, scratched upon the stone, was the Greek
+Beta! There came a tap on my door, and before I could answer, the handle
+turned softly and Lord Carwitchet stood before me. I whipped the case into
+my dressing-gown pocket and stared at him. He was not pleasant to look at,
+especially at that time of night. He had a disheveled, desperate air, his
+voice was hoarse, his red-rimmed eyes wild.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he began civilly enough. "I saw your light burning,
+and thought, as we go by the early train to-morrow, you might allow me to
+consult you now on a little business of my mother's." His eyes roved about
+the room. Was he trying to find the whereabouts of my safe? "You know a
+lot about precious stones, don't you?"
+
+"So my friends are kind enough to say. Won't you sit down? I have
+unluckily little chance of indulging the taste on my own account," was my
+cautious reply.
+
+"But you've written a book about them, and know them when you see them,
+don't you? Now my mother has given me something, and would like you to
+give a guess at its value. Perhaps you can put me in the way of disposing
+of it?"
+
+"I certainly can do so if it is worth anything. Is that it?" I was in a
+fever of excitement, for I guessed what was clutched in his palm. He held
+out to me the Valdez sapphire.
+
+How it shone and sparkled like a great blue star! I made myself a
+deprecating smile as I took it from him, but how dare I call it false to
+its face? As well accuse the sun in heaven of being a cheap imitation. I
+faltered and prevaricated feebly. Where was my moral courage, and where
+was the good, honest, thumping lie that should have aided me? "I have the
+best authority for recognizing this as a very good copy of a famous stone
+in the possession of the Bishop of Northchurch." His scowl grew so black
+that I saw he believed me, and I went on more cheerily: "This was
+manufactured by Johannes Bogaerts--I can give you his address, and you can
+make inquiries yourself--by special permission of the then owner, the late
+Leone Montanaro."
+
+"Hand it back!" he interrupted (his other remarks were outrageous, but
+satisfactory to hear); but I waved him off. I couldn't give it up. It
+fascinated me. I toyed with it, I caressed it. I made it display its
+different tones of color. I must see the two stones together. I must see
+it outshine its paltry rival. It was a whimsical frenzy that seized me--I
+can call it by no other name.
+
+"Would you like to see the original? Curiously enough, I have it here. The
+bishop has left it in my charge."
+
+The wolfish light flamed up in Carwitchet's eyes as I drew forth the case.
+He laid the Valdez down on a sheet of paper, and I placed the other, still
+in its case, beside it. In that moment they looked identical, except for
+the little loop of sham stones, replaced by a plain gold band in the
+bishop's jewel. Carwitchet leaned across the table eagerly, the table gave
+a lurch, the lamp tottered, crashed over, and we were left in
+semidarkness.
+
+"Don't stir!" Carwitchet shouted. "The paraffin is all over the place!" He
+seized my sofa blanket, and flung it over the table while I stood
+helpless. "There, that's safe now. Have you candles on the chimney-piece?
+I've got matches."
+
+He looked very white and excited as he lit up. "Might have been an awkward
+job with all that burning paraffin, running about," he said quite
+pleasantly. "I hope no real harm is done." I was lifting the rug with
+shaking hands. The two stones lay as I had placed them. No! I nearly
+dropped it back again. It was the stone in the case that had the loop with
+the three sham sapphires!
+
+Carwitchet picked the other up hastily. "So you say this is rubbish?" he
+asked, his eyes sparkling wickedly, and an attempt at mortification in his
+tone.
+
+"Utter rubbish!" I pronounced, with truth and decision, snapping up the
+case and pocketing it. "Lady Carwitchet must have known it."
+
+"Ah, well, it's disappointing, isn't it? Good-by, we shall not meet
+again."
+
+I shook hands with him most cordially. "Good-by, Lord Carwitchet. _So_
+glad to have met you and your mother. It has been a source of the
+_greatest_ pleasure, I assure you."
+
+I have never seen the Carwitchets since. The bishop drove over next day in
+rather better spirits. Miss Panton had refused the chaplain.
+
+"It doesn't matter, my lord," I said to him heartily. "We've all been
+under some strange misconception. The stone in your possession is the
+veritable one. I could swear to that anywhere. The sapphire Lady
+Carwitchet wears is only an excellent imitation, and--I have seen it with
+my own eyes--is the one bearing Bogaerts's mark, the Greek Beta."
+
+
+
+ THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY
+
+
+ CLASSIC MYSTERY AND DETECTIVE
+ STORIES OF ALL NATIONS
+
+
+ TEN VOLUMES
+
+
+ NORTH EUROPE MEDITERRANEAN GERMAN CLASSIC FRENCH
+
+ MODERN FRENCH FRENCH NOVELS OLD TIME ENGLISH
+
+ MODERN ENGLISH AMERICAN REAL LIFE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lock And Key Library, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 2038-8.txt or 2038-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/0/3/2038/
+
+Produced by Don Lainson. Text file originally posted in
+January, 2000 with an html conversion added by Walter
+Deboeuf in 2003. The present text and html files were
+produced by Suzanne Shell, M, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net;
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/2038-8.zip b/2038-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0b613c8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038-h.zip b/2038-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6461122
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038-h/2038-h.htm b/2038-h/2038-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..701c53e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h/2038-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,14315 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Lock and Key Library, by Julian Hawthorne, ed.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ p { margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ .poem span.i16 {display: block; margin-left: 16em;}
+ .poem span.i20 {display: block; margin-left: 20em;}
+ .poem span.i21 {display: block; margin-left: 21em;}
+ .poem span.i6 {display: block; margin-left: 6em;}
+ .poem span.i8 {display: block; margin-left: 8em;}
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+ }
+ hr { width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+ }
+
+ table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;}
+
+ body{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+
+ .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */
+ .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .pagenum {position: absolute; left: 92%; font-size: smaller; text-align: right;} /* page numbers */
+ .sidenote {width: 20%; padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em;
+ padding-left: .5em; padding-right: .5em; margin-left: 1em;
+ float: right; clear: right; margin-top: 1em;
+ font-size: smaller; background: #eeeeee; border: dashed 1px;}
+
+ .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;}
+ .bl {border-left: solid 2px;}
+ .bt {border-top: solid 2px;}
+ .br {border-right: solid 2px;}
+ .bbox {border: solid 2px;}
+
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top:
+ 1em; margin-right: 1em; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
+ .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+ .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+ .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;}
+
+ .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;}
+ .poem br {display: none;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem span {display: block; margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em;}
+ img {border: 0;}
+ // -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lock And Key Library, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Lock And Key Library
+ Classic Mystery And Detective Stories, Modern English
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Julian Hawthorne
+
+Release Date: June 4, 2005 [EBook #2038]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Don Lainson. Text file originally posted in
+January, 2000 with an html conversion added by Walter
+Deboeuf in 2003. The present text and html files were
+produced by Suzanne Shell, M, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="./images/cover.jpg"><img src="./images/cover-tb.jpg" alt="Cover" title="cover" /></a></p>
+
+<h1>THE
+LOCK AND KEY
+LIBRARY</h1>
+
+<h2>CLASSIC MYSTERY AND
+DETECTIVE STORIES</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>EDITED BY</i>
+JULIAN HAWTHORNE</p>
+
+<h3>MODERN ENGLISH</h3>
+
+<p class="center">Rudyard Kipling&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; A. Conan Doyle</p>
+
+<p class="center">Egerton Castle</p>
+
+<p class="center">Stanley J. Weyman&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Wilkie Collins</p>
+
+<p class="center">Robert Louis Stevenson</p>
+
+
+<h4>NEW YORK</h4>
+<h4>THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO.</h4>
+<h4>1909</h4>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="./images/1.jpg"><img src="./images/1-tb.jpg" alt="And Sent out a Jet of Fire from His Nostrils" title="&quot;And Sent out a Jet of Fire from His Nostrils&quot;" /></a></p><p class="figcenter">&quot;And Sent out a Jet of Fire from His Nostrils&quot;&nbsp;<br />Drawing by Power O'Malley. <br />To illustrate &quot;In the House of Suddhoo,&quot; by
+Rudyard Kipling</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="./images/title.jpg"><img src="./images/title-tb.jpg" alt="Title page" title="Title page" /></a></p>
+
+<div class="centered"><table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'> <b>Rudyard Kipling</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#My_Own_True_Ghost_Story"><b>My Own True Ghost Story</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Sending_of_Dana_Da"><b>The Sending of Dana Da</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#In_the_House_of_Suddhoo"><b>In the House of Suddhoo</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#His_Wedded_Wife"><b>His Wedded Wife</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> <b>A. Conan Doyle</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#A_Case_of_Identity"><b>A Case of Identity</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#A_Scandal_in_Bohemia"><b>A Scandal in Bohemia</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Red_Headed_League"><b>The Red-Headed League</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> <b>Egerton Castle</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Barons_Quarry"><b>The Baron's Quarry</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> <b>Stanley J. Weyman</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Fowl_in_the_Pot"><b>The Fowl in the Pot</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> <b>Robert Louis Stevenson</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Pavilion_on_the_Links"><b>The Pavilion on the Links</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> <b>Wilkie Collins</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Dream_Woman"><b>The Dream Woman</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#THE_FIRST_NARRATIVE"><b>The First Narrative</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#THE_SECOND_NARRATIVE"><b>The Second Narrative</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#THE_THIRD_NARRATIVE"><b>The Third Narrative</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#FOURTH_AND_LAST_NARRATIVE"><b>Fourth (and Last) Narrative</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> <b>Anonymous</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Lost_Duchess"><b>The Lost Duchess</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Minor_Canon"><b>The Minor Canon</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Pipe"><b>The Pipe</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Puzzle"><b>The Puzzle</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#The_Great_Valdez_Sapphire"><b>The Great Valdez Sapphire</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'> </td></tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Rudyard Kipling</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="My_Own_True_Ghost_Story" id="My_Own_True_Ghost_Story" /><i>My Own True Ghost Story</i></h2>
+
+
+<div style="margin-left: 20%"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>As I came through the Desert thus it was&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span>As I came through the Desert.<br /></span>
+<span class="i8"><i>The City of Dreadful Night.</i><br /></span>
+</div></div></div>
+
+
+<p>Somewhere in the Other World, where there are books and pictures and plays
+and shop windows to look at, and thousands of men who spend their lives in
+building up all four, lives a gentleman who writes real stories about the
+real insides of people; and his name is Mr. Walter Besant. But he will
+insist upon treating his ghosts&mdash;he has published half a workshopful of
+them&mdash;with levity. He makes his ghost-seers talk familiarly, and, in some
+cases, flirt outrageously, with the phantoms. You may treat anything, from
+a Viceroy to a Vernacular Paper, with levity; but you must behave
+reverently toward a ghost, and particularly an Indian one.</p>
+
+<p>There are, in this land, ghosts who take the form of fat, cold, pobby
+corpses, and hide in trees near the roadside till a traveler passes. Then
+they drop upon his neck and remain. There are also terrible ghosts of
+women who have died in child-bed. These wander along the pathways at dusk,
+or hide in the crops near a village, and call seductively. But to answer
+their call is death in this world and the next. Their feet are turned
+backward that all sober men may recognize them. There are ghosts of little
+children who have been thrown into wells. These haunt well curbs and the
+fringes of jungles, and wail under the stars, or catch women by the wrist
+and beg to be taken up and carried. These and the corpse ghosts, however,
+are only vernacular articles and do not attack Sahibs. No native ghost has
+yet been authentically reported to have frightened an Englishman; but
+many English ghosts have scared the life out of both white and black.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly every other Station owns a ghost. There are said to be two at
+Simla, not counting the woman who blows the bellows at Syree d&acirc;k-bungalow
+on the Old Road; Mussoorie has a house haunted of a very lively Thing; a
+White Lady is supposed to do night-watchman round a house in Lahore;
+Dalhousie says that one of her houses &quot;repeats&quot; on autumn evenings all the
+incidents of a horrible horse-and-precipice accident; Murree has a merry
+ghost, and, now that she has been swept by cholera, will have room for a
+sorrowful one; there are Officers' Quarters in Mian Mir whose doors open
+without reason, and whose furniture is guaranteed to creak, not with the
+heat of June but with the weight of Invisibles who come to lounge in the
+chairs; Peshawur possesses houses that none will willingly rent; and there
+is something&mdash;not fever&mdash;wrong with a big bungalow in Allahabad. The older
+Provinces simply bristle with haunted houses, and march phantom armies
+along their main thoroughfares.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the d&acirc;k-bungalows on the Grand Trunk Road have handy little
+cemeteries in their compound&mdash;witnesses to the &quot;changes and chances of
+this mortal life&quot; in the days when men drove from Calcutta to the
+Northwest. These bungalows are objectionable places to put up in. They are
+generally very old, always dirty, while the <i>khansamah</i> is as ancient as
+the bungalow. He either chatters senilely, or falls into the long trances
+of age. In both moods he is useless. If you get angry with him, he refers
+to some Sahib dead and buried these thirty years, and says that when he
+was in that Sahib's service not a <i>khansamah</i> in the Province could touch
+him. Then he jabbers and mows and trembles and fidgets among the dishes,
+and you repent of your irritation.</p>
+
+<p>In these d&acirc;k-bungalows, ghosts are most likely to be found, and when
+found, they should be made a note of. Not long ago it was my business to
+live in d&acirc;k-bungalows. I never inhabited the same house for three nights
+running, and grew to be learned in the breed. I lived in Government-built
+ones with red brick walls and rail ceilings, an inventory of the furniture
+posted in every room, and an excited snake at the threshold to give
+welcome. I lived in &quot;converted&quot; ones&mdash;old houses officiating as
+d&acirc;k-bungalows&mdash;where nothing was in its proper place and there wasn't even
+a fowl for dinner. I lived in second-hand palaces where the wind blew
+through open-work marble tracery just as uncomfortably as through a broken
+pane. I lived in d&acirc;k-bungalows where the last entry in the visitors' book
+was fifteen months old, and where they slashed off the curry-kid's head
+with a sword. It was my good luck to meet all sorts of men, from sober
+traveling missionaries and deserters flying from British Regiments, to
+drunken loafers who threw whisky bottles at all who passed; and my still
+greater good fortune just to escape a maternity case. Seeing that a fair
+proportion of the tragedy of our lives out here acted itself in
+d&acirc;k-bungalows, I wondered that I had met no ghosts. A ghost that would
+voluntarily hang about a d&acirc;k-bungalow would be mad of course; but so many
+men have died mad in d&acirc;k-bungalows that there must be a fair percentage of
+lunatic ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>In due time I found my ghost, or ghosts rather, for there were two of
+them. Up till that hour I had sympathized with Mr. Besant's method of
+handling them, as shown in &quot;The Strange Case of Mr. Lucraft and Other
+Stories.&quot; I am now in the Opposition.</p>
+
+<p>We will call the bungalow Katmal d&acirc;k-bungalow. But <i>that</i> was the smallest
+part of the horror. A man with a sensitive hide has no right to sleep in
+d&acirc;k-bungalows. He should marry. Katmal d&acirc;k-bungalow was old and rotten and
+unrepaired. The floor was of worn brick, the walls were filthy, and the
+windows were nearly black with grime. It stood on a bypath largely used by
+native Sub-Deputy Assistants of all kinds, from Finance to Forests; but
+real Sahibs were rare. The <i>khansamah</i>, who was nearly bent double with
+old age, said so.</p>
+
+<p>When I arrived, there was a fitful, undecided rain on the face of the
+land, accompanied by a restless wind, and every gust made a noise like the
+rattling of dry bones in the stiff toddy palms outside. The <i>khansamah</i>
+completely lost his head on my arrival. He had served a Sahib once. Did I
+know that Sahib? He gave me the name of a well-known man who has been
+buried for more than a quarter of a century, and showed me an ancient
+daguerreotype of that man in his prehistoric youth. I had seen a steel
+engraving of him at the head of a double volume of Memoirs a month before,
+and I felt ancient beyond telling.</p>
+
+<p>The day shut in and the <i>khansamah</i> went to get me food. He did not go
+through the, pretense of calling it &quot;<i>khana</i>&quot;&mdash;man's victuals. He said
+&quot;<i>ratub</i>,&quot; and that means, among other things, &quot;grub&quot;&mdash;dog's rations.
+There was no insult in his choice of the term. He had forgotten the other
+word, I suppose.</p>
+
+<p>While he was cutting up the dead bodies of animals, I settled myself down,
+after exploring the d&acirc;k-bungalow. There were three rooms, beside my own,
+which was a corner kennel, each giving into the other through dingy white
+doors fastened with long iron bars. The bungalow was a very solid one, but
+the partition walls of the rooms were almost jerry-built in their
+flimsiness. Every step or bang of a trunk echoed from my room down the
+other three, and every footfall came back tremulously from the far walls.
+For this reason I shut the door. There were no lamps&mdash;only candles in long
+glass shades. An oil wick was set in the bathroom.</p>
+
+<p>For bleak, unadulterated misery that d&acirc;k-bungalow was the worst of the
+many that I had ever set foot in. There was no fireplace, and the windows
+would not open; so a brazier of charcoal would have been useless. The rain
+and the wind splashed and gurgled and moaned round the house, and the
+toddy palms rattled and roared. Half a dozen jackals went through the
+compound singing, and a hyena stood afar off and mocked them. A hyena
+would convince a Sadducee of the Resurrection of the Dead&mdash;the worst sort
+of Dead. Then came the <i>ratub</i>&mdash;a curious meal, half native and half
+English in composition&mdash;with the old <i>khansamah</i> babbling behind my chair
+about dead and gone English people, and the wind-blown candles playing
+shadow-bo-peep with the bed and the mosquito-curtains. It was just the
+sort of dinner and evening to make a man think of every single one of his
+past sins, and of all the others that he intended to commit if he lived.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep, for several hundred reasons, was not easy. The lamp in the bathroom
+threw the most absurd shadows into the room, and the wind was beginning to
+talk nonsense.</p>
+
+<p>Just when the reasons were drowsy with blood-sucking I heard the
+regular&mdash;&quot;Let-us-take-and-heave-him-over&quot; grunt of doolie-bearers in the
+compound. First one doolie came in, then a second, and then a third. I
+heard the doolies dumped on the ground, and the shutter in front of my
+door shook. &quot;That's some one trying to come in,&quot; I said. But no one spoke,
+and I persuaded myself that it was the gusty wind. The shutter of the room
+next to mine was attacked, flung back, and the inner door opened. &quot;That's
+some Sub-Deputy Assistant,&quot; I said, &quot;and he has brought his friends with
+him. Now they'll talk and spit and smoke for an hour.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But there were no voices and no footsteps. No one was putting his luggage
+into the next room. The door shut, and I thanked Providence that I was to
+be left in peace. But I was curious to know where the doolies had gone. I
+got out of bed and looked into the darkness. There was never a sign of a
+doolie. Just as I was getting into bed again, I heard, in the next room,
+the sound that no man in his senses can possibly mistake&mdash;the whir of a
+billiard ball down the length of the slates when the striker is stringing
+for break. No other sound is like it. A minute afterwards there was
+another whir, and I got into bed. I was not frightened&mdash;indeed I was not.
+I was very curious to know what had become of the doolies. I jumped into
+bed for that reason.</p>
+
+<p>Next minute I heard the double click of a cannon and my hair sat up. It is
+a mistake to say that hair stands up. The skin of the head tightens and
+you can feel a faint, prickly, bristling all over the scalp. That is the
+hair sitting up.</p>
+
+<p>There was a whir and a click, and both sounds could only have been made by
+one thing&mdash;a billiard ball. I argued the matter out at great length with
+myself; and the more I argued the less probable it seemed that one bed,
+one table, and two chairs&mdash;all the furniture of the room next to
+mine&mdash;could so exactly duplicate the sounds of a game of billiards. After
+another cannon, a three-cushion one to judge by the whir, I argued no
+more. I had found my ghost and would have given worlds to have escaped
+from that d&acirc;k-bungalow. I listened, and with each listen the game grew
+clearer. There was whir on whir and click on click. Sometimes there was a
+double click and a whir and another click. Beyond any sort of doubt,
+people were playing billiards in the next room. And the next room was not
+big enough to hold a billiard table!</p>
+
+<p>Between the pauses of the wind I heard the game go forward&mdash;stroke after
+stroke. I tried to believe that I could not hear voices; but that attempt
+was a failure.</p>
+
+<p>Do you know what fear is? Not ordinary fear of insult, injury or death,
+but abject, quivering dread of something that you cannot see&mdash;fear that
+dries the inside of the mouth and half of the throat&mdash;fear that makes you
+sweat on the palms of the hands, and gulp in order to keep the uvula at
+work? This is a fine Fear&mdash;a great cowardice, and must be felt to be
+appreciated. The very improbability of billiards in a d&acirc;k-bungalow proved
+the reality of the thing. No man&mdash;drunk or sober&mdash;could imagine a game at
+billiards, or invent the spitting crack of a &quot;screw-cannon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A severe course of d&acirc;k-bungalows has this disadvantage&mdash;it breeds infinite
+credulity. If a man said to a confirmed d&acirc;k-bungalow-haunter:&mdash;&quot;There is a
+corpse in the next room, and there's a mad girl in the next but one, and
+the woman and man on that camel have just eloped from a place sixty miles
+away,&quot; the hearer would not disbelieve because he would know that nothing
+is too wild, grotesque, or horrible to happen in a d&acirc;k-bungalow.</p>
+
+<p>This credulity, unfortunately, extends to ghosts. A rational person fresh
+from his own house would have turned on his side and slept. I did not. So
+surely as I was given up as a bad carcass by the scores of things in the
+bed because the bulk of my blood was in my heart, so surely did I hear
+every stroke of a long game at billiards played in the echoing room behind
+the iron-barred door. My dominant fear was that the players might want a
+marker. It was an absurd fear; because creatures who could play in the
+dark would be above such superfluities. I only know that that was my
+terror; and it was real.</p>
+
+<p>After a long, long while the game stopped, and the door banged. I slept
+because I was dead tired. Otherwise I should have preferred to have kept
+awake. Not for everything in Asia would I have dropped the door-bar and
+peered into the dark of the next room.</p>
+
+<p>When the morning came, I considered that I had done well and wisely, and
+inquired for the means of departure.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By the way, <i>khansamah</i>,&quot; I said, &quot;what were those three doolies doing in
+my compound in the night?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There were no doolies,&quot; said the <i>khansamah</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I went into the next room and the daylight streamed through the open door.
+I was immensely brave. I would, at that hour, have played Black Pool with
+the owner of the big Black Pool down below.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Has this place always been a d&acirc;k-bungalow?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said the <i>khansamah</i>. &quot;Ten or twenty years ago, I have forgotten how
+long, it was a billiard room.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A how much?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A billiard room for the Sahibs who built the Railway. I was <i>khansamah</i>
+then in the big house where all the Railway-Sahibs lived, and I used to
+come across with brandy-<i>shrab</i>. These three rooms were all one, and they
+held a big table on which the Sahibs played every evening. But the Sahibs
+are all dead now, and the Railway runs, you say, nearly to Kabul.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you remember anything about the Sahibs?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is long ago, but I remember that one Sahib, a fat man and always
+angry, was playing here one night, and he said to me:&mdash;'Mangal Khan,
+brandy-<i>pani do</i>,' and I filled the glass, and he bent over the table to
+strike, and his head fell lower and lower till it hit the table, and his
+spectacles came off, and when we&mdash;the Sahibs and I myself&mdash;ran to lift him
+he was dead. I helped to carry him out. Aha, he was a strong Sahib! But he
+is dead and I, old Mangal Khan, am still living, by your favor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That was more than enough! I had my ghost&mdash;a first-hand, authenticated
+article. I would write to the Society for Psychical Research&mdash;I would
+paralyze the Empire with the news! But I would, first of all, put eighty
+miles of assessed crop land between myself and that d&acirc;k-bungalow before
+nightfall. The Society might send their regular agent to investigate later
+on.</p>
+
+<p>I went into my own room and prepared to pack after noting down the facts
+of the case. As I smoked I heard the game begin again,&mdash;with a miss in
+balk this time, for the whir was a short one.</p>
+
+<p>The door was open and I could see into the room. <i>Click&mdash;click!</i> That was
+a cannon. I entered the room without fear, for there was sunlight within
+and a fresh breeze without. The unseen game was going on at a tremendous
+rate. And well it might, when a restless little rat was running to and fro
+inside the dingy ceiling-cloth, and a piece of loose window-sash was
+making fifty breaks off the window-bolt as it shook in the breeze!</p>
+
+<p>Impossible to mistake the sound of billiard balls! Impossible to mistake
+the whir of a ball over the slate! But I was to be excused. Even when I
+shut my enlightened eyes the sound was marvelously like that of a fast
+game.</p>
+
+<p>Entered angrily the faithful partner of my sorrows, Kadir Baksh.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This bungalow is very bad and low-caste! No wonder the Presence was
+disturbed and is speckled. Three sets of doolie-bearers came to the
+bungalow late last night when I was sleeping outside, and said that it was
+their custom to rest in the rooms set apart for the English people! What
+honor has the <i>khansamah</i>? They tried to enter, but I told them to go. No
+wonder, if these <i>Oorias</i> have been here, that the Presence is sorely
+spotted. It is shame, and the work of a dirty man!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Kadir Baksh did not say that he had taken from each gang two annas for
+rent in advance, and then, beyond my earshot, had beaten them with the big
+green umbrella whose use I could never before divine. But Kadir Baksh has
+no notions of morality.</p>
+
+<p>There was an interview with the <i>khansamah</i>, but as he promptly lost his
+head, wrath gave place to pity, and pity led to a long conversation, in
+the course of which he put the fat Engineer-Sahib's tragic death in three
+separate stations&mdash;two of them fifty miles away. The third shift was to
+Calcutta, and there the Sahib died while driving a dog-cart.</p>
+
+<p>If I had encouraged him the <i>khansamah</i> would have wandered all through
+Bengal with his corpse.</p>
+
+<p>I did not go away as soon as I intended. I stayed for the night, while the
+wind and the rat and the sash and the window-bolt played a ding-dong
+&quot;hundred and fifty up.&quot; Then the wind ran out and the billiards stopped,
+and I felt that I had ruined my one genuine, hall-marked ghost story.</p>
+
+<p>Had I only stopped at the proper time, I could have made <i>anything</i> out of
+it.</p>
+
+<p>That was the bitterest thought of all!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Sending_of_Dana_Da" id="The_Sending_of_Dana_Da" /><i>The Sending of Dana Da</i></h2>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>When the Devil rides on your chest, remember the <i>chamar</i>.<br /></span>
+<span class="i21"><i>&mdash;Native Proverb.</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Once upon a time some people in India made a new heaven and a new earth
+out of broken teacups, a missing brooch or two, and a hair brush. These
+were hidden under bushes, or stuffed into holes in the hillside, and an
+entire civil service of subordinate gods used to find or mend them again;
+and everyone said: &quot;There are more things in heaven and earth than are
+dreamed of in our philosophy.&quot; Several other things happened also, but the
+religion never seemed to get much beyond its first manifestations; though
+it added an air-line postal <i>dak</i>, and orchestral effects in order to keep
+abreast of the times, and stall off competition.</p>
+
+<p>This religion was too elastic for ordinary use. It stretched itself and
+embraced pieces of everything that medicine men of all ages have
+manufactured. It approved and stole from Freemasonry; looted the
+Latter-day Rosicrucians of half their pet words; took any fragments of
+Egyptian philosophy that it found in the Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica; annexed
+as many of the Vedas as had been translated into French or English, and
+talked of all the rest; built in the German versions of what is left of
+the Zend Avesta; encouraged white, gray, and black magic, including
+Spiritualism, palmistry, fortune-telling by cards, hot chestnuts,
+double-kerneled nuts and tallow droppings; would have adopted Voodoo and
+Oboe had it known anything about them, and showed itself, in every way,
+one of the most accommodating arrangements that had ever been invented
+since the birth of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>When it was in thorough working order, with all the machinery down to the
+subscriptions complete, Dana Da came from nowhere, with nothing in his
+hands, and wrote a chapter in its history which has hitherto been
+unpublished. He said that his first name was Dana, and his second was Da.
+Now, setting aside Dana of the New York <i>Sun</i>, Dana is a Bhil name, and Da
+fits no native of India unless you accept the Bengali D&eacute; as the original
+spelling. Da is Lap or Finnish; and Dana Da was neither Finn, Chin, Bhil,
+Bengali, Lap, Nair, Gond, Romaney, Magh, Bokhariot, Kurd, Armenian,
+Levantine, Jew, Persian, Punjabi, Madrasi, Parsee, nor anything else known
+to ethnologists. He was simply Dana Da, and declined to give further
+information. For the sake of brevity, and as roughly indicating his
+origin, he was called &quot;The Native.&quot; He might have been the original Old
+Man of the Mountains, who is said to be the only authorized head of the
+Teacup Creed. Some people said that he was; but Dana Da used to smile and
+deny any connection with the cult; explaining that he was an &quot;independent
+experimenter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As I have said, he came from nowhere, with his hands behind his back, and
+studied the creed for three weeks; sitting at the feet of those best
+competent to explain its mysteries. Then he laughed aloud and went away,
+but the laugh might have been either of devotion or derision.</p>
+
+<p>When he returned he was without money, but his pride was unabated. He
+declared that he knew more about the things in heaven and earth than those
+who taught him, and for this contumacy was abandoned altogether.</p>
+
+<p>His next appearance in public life was at a big cantonment in Upper India,
+and he was then telling fortunes with the help of three leaden dice, a
+very dirty old cloth, and a little tin box of opium pills. He told better
+fortunes when he was allowed half a bottle of whisky; but the things which
+he invented on the opium were quite worth the money. He was in reduced
+circumstances. Among other people's he told the fortune of an Englishman
+who had once been interested in the Simla creed, but who, later on, had
+married and forgotten all his old knowledge in the study of babies and
+Exchange. The Englishman allowed Dana Da to tell a fortune for charity's
+sake, and, gave him five rupees, a dinner, and some old clothes. When he
+had eaten, Dana Da professed gratitude, and asked if there were anything
+he could do for his host&mdash;in the esoteric line.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is there anyone that you love?&quot; said Dana Da. The Englishman loved his
+wife, but had no desire to drag her name into the conversation. He
+therefore shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is there anyone that you hate?&quot; said Dana Da. The Englishman said that
+there were several men whom he hated deeply.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very good,&quot; said Dana Da, upon whom the whisky and the opium were
+beginning to tell. &quot;Only give me their names, and I will dispatch a
+Sending to them and kill them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Now a Sending is a horrible arrangement, first invented, they say, in
+Iceland. It is a thing sent by a wizard, and may take any form, but most
+generally wanders about the land in the shape of a little purple cloud
+till it finds the sendee, and him it kills by changing into the form of a
+horse, or a cat, or a man without a face. It is not strictly a native
+patent, though <i>chamars</i> can, if irritated, dispatch a Sending which sits
+on the breast of their enemy by night and nearly kills him. Very few
+natives care to irritate <i>chamars</i> for this reason.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me dispatch a Sending,&quot; said Dana Da; &quot;I am nearly dead now with
+want, and drink, and opium; but I should like to kill a man before I die.
+I can send a Sending anywhere you choose, and in any form except in the
+shape of a man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman had no friends that he wished to kill, but partly to soothe
+Dana Da, whose eyes were rolling, and partly to see what would be done, he
+asked whether a modified Sending could not be arranged for&mdash;such a Sending
+as should make a man's life a burden to him, and yet do him no harm. If
+this were possible, he notified his willingness to give Dana Da ten rupees
+for the job.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not what I was once,&quot; said Dana Da, &quot;and I must take the money
+because I am poor. To what Englishman shall I send it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Send a Sending to Lone Sahib,&quot; said the Englishman, naming a man who had
+been most bitter in rebuking him for his apostasy from the Teacup Creed.
+Dana Da laughed and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I could have chosen no better man myself,&quot; said he. &quot;I will see that he
+finds the Sending about his path and about his bed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He lay down on the hearthrug, turned up the whites of his eyes, shivered
+all over, and began to snort. This was magic, or opium, or the Sending, or
+all three. When he opened his eyes he vowed that the Sending had started
+upon the warpath, and was at that moment flying up to the town where Lone
+Sahib lives.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give me my ten rupees,&quot; said Dana Da, wearily, &quot;and write a letter to
+Lone Sahib, telling him, and all who believe with him, that you and a
+friend are using a power greater than theirs. They will see that you are
+speaking the truth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He departed unsteadily, with the promise of some more rupees if anything
+came of the Sending.</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman sent a letter to Lone Sahib, couched in what he remembered
+of the terminology of the creed. He wrote: &quot;I also, in the days of what
+you held to be my backsliding, have obtained enlightenment, and with
+enlightenment has come power.&quot; Then he grew so deeply mysterious that the
+recipient of the letter could make neither head nor tail of it, and was
+proportionately impressed; for he fancied that his friend had become a
+&quot;fifth rounder.&quot; When a man is a &quot;fifth rounder&quot; he can do more than Slade
+and Houdin combined.</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib read the letter in five different fashions, and was beginning a
+sixth interpretation, when his bearer dashed in with the news that there
+was a cat on the bed. Now, if there was one thing that Lone Sahib hated
+more than another it was a cat. He rated the bearer for not turning it out
+of the house. The bearer said that he was afraid. All the doors of the
+bedroom had been shut throughout the morning, and no real cat could
+possibly have entered the room. He would prefer not to meddle with the
+creature.</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib entered the room gingerly, and there, on the pillow of his bed,
+sprawled and whimpered a wee white kitten, not a jumpsome, frisky little
+beast, but a sluglike crawler with its eyes barely opened and its paws
+lacking strength or direction&mdash;a kitten that ought to have been in a
+basket with its mamma. Lone Sahib caught it by the scruff of its neck,
+handed it over to the sweeper to be drowned, and fined the bearer four
+annas.</p>
+
+<p>That evening, as he was reading in his room, he fancied that he saw
+something moving about on the hearthrug, outside the circle of light from
+his reading lamp. When the thing began to myowl, he realized that it was a
+kitten&mdash;a wee white kitten, nearly blind and very miserable. He was
+seriously angry, and spoke bitterly to his bearer, who said that there was
+no kitten in the room when he brought in the lamp, and real kittens of
+tender age generally had mother cats in attendance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If the Presence will go out into the veranda and listen,&quot; said the
+bearer, &quot;he will hear no cats. How, therefore, can the kitten on the bed
+and the kitten on the hearthrug be real kittens?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib went out to listen, and the bearer followed him, but there was
+no sound of Rachel mewing for her children. He returned to his room,
+having hurled the kitten down the hillside, and wrote out the incidents of
+the day for the benefit of his coreligionists. Those people were so
+absolutely free from superstition that they ascribed anything a little out
+of the common to agencies. As it was their business to know all about the
+agencies, they were on terms of almost indecent familiarity with
+manifestations of every kind. Their letters dropped from the
+ceiling&mdash;unstamped&mdash;and spirits used to squatter up and down their
+staircases all night. But they had never come into contact with kittens.
+Lone Sahib wrote out the facts, noting the hour and the minute, as every
+psychical observer is bound to do, and appending the Englishman's letter
+because it was the most mysterious document and might have had a bearing
+upon anything in this world or the next. An outsider would have
+translated all the tangle thus: &quot;Look out! You laughed at me once, and now
+I am going to make you sit up.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib's coreligionists found that meaning in it; but their
+translation was refined and full of four-syllable words. They held a
+sederunt, and were filled with tremulous joy, for, in spite of their
+familiarity with all the other worlds and cycles, they had a very human
+awe of things sent from ghostland. They met in Lone Sahib's room in
+shrouded and sepulchral gloom, and their conclave was broken up by a
+clinking among the photo frames on the mantelpiece. A wee white kitten,
+nearly blind, was looping and writhing itself between the clock and the
+candlesticks. That stopped all investigations or doubtings. Here was the
+manifestation in the flesh. It was, so far as could be seen, devoid of
+purpose, but it was a manifestation of undoubted authenticity.</p>
+
+<p>They drafted a round robin to the Englishman, the backslider of old days,
+adjuring him in the interests of the creed to explain whether there was
+any connection between the embodiment of some Egyptian god or other (I
+have forgotten the name) and his communication. They called the kitten Ra,
+or Toth, or Shem, or Noah, or something; and when Lone Sahib confessed
+that the first one had, at his most misguided instance, been drowned by
+the sweeper, they said consolingly that in his next life he would be a
+&quot;bounder,&quot; and not even a &quot;rounder&quot; of the lowest grade. These words may
+not be quite correct, but they express the sense of the house accurately.</p>
+
+<p>When the Englishman received the round robin&mdash;it came by post&mdash;he was
+startled and bewildered. He sent into the bazaar for Dana Da, who read the
+letter and laughed. &quot;That is my Sending,&quot; said he. &quot;I told you I would
+work well. Now give me another ten rupees.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But what in the world is this gibberish about Egyptian gods?&quot; asked the
+Englishman.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Cats,&quot; said Dana Da, with a hiccough, for he had discovered the
+Englishman's whisky bottle. &quot;Cats and cats and cats! Never was such a
+Sending. A hundred of cats. Now give me ten more rupees and write as I
+dictate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Dana Da's letter was a curiosity. It bore the Englishman's signature, and
+hinted at cats&mdash;at a Sending of cats. The mere words on paper were creepy
+and uncanny to behold.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What have you done, though?&quot; said the Englishman; &quot;I am as much in the
+dark as ever. Do you mean to say that you can actually send this absurd
+Sending you talk about?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Judge for yourself,&quot; said Dana Da. &quot;What does that letter mean? In a
+little time they will all be at my feet and yours, and I, oh, glory! will
+be drugged or drunk all day long.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Dana Da knew his people.</p>
+
+<p>When a man who hates cats wakes up in the morning and finds a little
+squirming kitten on his breast, or puts his hand into his ulster pocket
+and finds a little half-dead kitten where his gloves should be, or opens
+his trunk and finds a vile kitten among his dress shirts, or goes for a
+long ride with his mackintosh strapped on his saddle-bow and shakes a
+little sprawling kitten from its folds when he opens it, or goes out to
+dinner and finds a little blind kitten under his chair, or stays at home
+and finds a writhing kitten under the quilt, or wriggling among his boots,
+or hanging, head downward, in his tobacco jar, or being mangled by his
+terrier in the veranda&mdash;when such a man finds one kitten, neither more nor
+less, once a day in a place where no kitten rightly could or should be, he
+is naturally upset. When he dare not murder his daily trove because he
+believes it to be a manifestation, an emissary, an embodiment, and half a
+dozen other things all out of the regular course of nature, he is more
+than upset. He is actually distressed. Some of Lone Sahib's coreligionists
+thought that he was a highly favored individual; but many said that if he
+had treated the first kitten with proper respect&mdash;as suited a Toth-Ra
+Tum-Sennacherib Embodiment&mdash;all his trouble would have been averted. They
+compared him to the Ancient Mariner, but none the less they were proud of
+him and proud of the Englishman who had sent the manifestation. They did
+not call it a Sending because Icelandic magic was not in their programme.</p>
+
+<p>After sixteen kittens&mdash;that is to say, after one fortnight, for there were
+three kittens on the first day to impress the fact of the Sending, the
+whole camp was uplifted by a letter&mdash;it came flying through a window&mdash;from
+the Old Man of the Mountains&mdash;the head of all the creed&mdash;explaining the
+manifestation in the most beautiful language and soaking up all the credit
+of it for himself. The Englishman, said the letter, was not there at all.
+He was a backslider without power or asceticism, who couldn't even raise a
+table by force of volition, much less project an army of kittens through
+space. The entire arrangement, said the letter, was strictly orthodox,
+worked and sanctioned by the highest authorities within the pale of the
+creed. There was great joy at this, for some of the weaker brethren seeing
+that an outsider who had been working on independent lines could create
+kittens, whereas their own rulers had never gone beyond crockery&mdash;and
+broken at that&mdash;were showing a desire to break line on their own trail. In
+fact, there was the promise of a schism. A second round robin was drafted
+to the Englishman, beginning: &quot;Oh, Scoffer,&quot; and ending with a selection
+of curses from the rites of Mizraim and Memphis and the Commination of
+Jugana; who was a &quot;fifth rounder,&quot; upon whose name an upstart &quot;third
+rounder&quot; once traded. A papal excommunication is a <i>billet-doux</i> compared
+to the Commination of Jugana. The Englishman had been proved under the
+hand and seal of the Old Man of the Mountains to have appropriated virtue
+and pretended to have power which, in reality, belonged only to the
+supreme head. Naturally the round robin did not spare him.</p>
+
+<p>He handed the letter to Dana Da to translate into decent English. The
+effect on Dana Da was curious. At first he was furiously angry, and then
+he laughed for five minutes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had thought,&quot; he said, &quot;that they would have come to me. In another
+week I would have shown that I sent the Sending, and they would have
+discrowned the Old Man of the Mountains who has sent this Sending of mine.
+Do you do nothing. The time has come for me to act. Write as I dictate,
+and I will put them to shame. But give me ten more rupees.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At Dana Da's dictation the Englishman wrote nothing less than a formal
+challenge to the Old Man of the Mountains. It wound up: &quot;And if this
+manifestation be from your hand, then let it go forward; but if it be from
+my hand, I will that the Sending shall cease in two days' time. On that
+day there shall be twelve kittens and thenceforward none at all. The
+people shall judge between us.&quot; This was signed by Dana Da, who added
+pentacles and pentagrams, and a <i>crux ansata</i>, and half a dozen
+<i>swastikas</i>, and a Triple Tau to his name, just to show that he was all he
+laid claim to be.</p>
+
+<p>The challenge was read out to the gentlemen and ladies, and they
+remembered then that Dana Da had laughed at them some years ago. It was
+officially announced that the Old Man of the Mountains would treat the
+matter with contempt; Dana Da being an independent investigator without a
+single &quot;round&quot; at the back of him. But this did not soothe his people.
+They wanted to see a fight. They were very human for all their
+spirituality. Lone Sahib, who was really being worn out with kittens,
+submitted meekly to his fate. He felt that he was being &quot;kittened to prove
+the power of Dana Da,&quot; as the poet says.</p>
+
+<p>When the stated day dawned, the shower of kittens began. Some were white
+and some were tabby, and all were about the same loathsome age. Three were
+on his hearthrug, three in his bathroom, and the other six turned up at
+intervals among the visitors who came to see the prophecy break down.
+Never was a more satisfactory Sending. On the next day there were no
+kittens, and the next day and all the other days were kittenless and
+quiet. The people murmured and looked to the Old Man of the Mountains for
+an explanation. A letter, written on a palm leaf, dropped from the
+ceiling, but everyone except Lone Sahib felt that letters were not what
+the occasion demanded. There should have been cats, there should have been
+cats&mdash;full-grown ones. The letter proved conclusively that there had been
+a hitch in the psychic current which, colliding with a dual identity, had
+interfered with the percipient activity all along the main line. The
+kittens were still going on, but owing to some failure in the developing
+fluid, they were not materialized. The air was thick with letters for a
+few days afterwards. Unseen hands played Gl&uuml;ck and Beethoven on
+finger-bowls and clock shades; but all men felt that psychic life was a
+mockery without materialized kittens. Even Lone Sahib shouted with the
+majority on this head. Dana Da's letters were very insulting, and if he
+had then offered to lead a new departure, there is no knowing what might
+not have happened.</p>
+
+<p>But Dana Da was dying of whisky and opium in the Englishman's go-down, and
+had small heart for new creeds.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They have been put to shame,&quot; said he. &quot;Never was such a Sending. It has
+killed me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense,&quot; said the Englishman, &quot;you are going to die, Dana Da, and that
+sort of stuff must be left behind. I'll admit that you have made some
+queer things come about. Tell me honestly, now, how was it done?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give me ten more rupees,&quot; said Dana Da, faintly, &quot;and if I die before I
+spend them, bury them with me.&quot; The silver was counted out while Dana Da
+was fighting with death. His hand closed upon the money and he smiled a
+grim smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bend low,&quot; he whispered. The Englishman bent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Bunnia</i>&mdash;mission school&mdash;expelled&mdash;<i>box-wallah</i> (peddler)&mdash;Ceylon pearl
+merchant&mdash;all mine English education&mdash;outcasted, and made up name Dana
+Da&mdash;England with American thought-reading man and&mdash;and&mdash;you gave me ten
+rupees several times&mdash;I gave the Sahib's bearer two-eight a month for
+cats&mdash;little, little cats. I wrote, and he put them about&mdash;very clever
+man. Very few kittens now in the bazaar. Ask Lone Sahib's sweeper's wife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Dana Da gasped and passed away into a land where, if all be
+true, there are no materializations and the making of new creeds is
+discouraged.</p>
+
+<p>But consider the gorgeous simplicity of it all!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="In_the_House_of_Suddhoo" id="In_the_House_of_Suddhoo" /><i>In the House of Suddhoo</i></h2>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 20%"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>A stone's throw out on either hand<br /></span>
+<span>From that well-ordered road we tread,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And all the world is wild and strange;<br /></span>
+<span><i>Churel</i> and ghoul and <i>Djinn</i> and sprite<br /></span>
+<span>Shall bear us company to-night,<br /></span>
+<span>For we have reached the Oldest Land<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Wherein the Powers of Darkness range.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i20"><i>&mdash;From the Dusk to the Dawn.</i><br /></span>
+</div></div></div>
+
+
+<p>The house of Suddhoo, near the Taksali Gate, is two storied, with four
+carved windows of old brown wood, and a flat roof. You may recognize it by
+five red handprints arranged like the Five of Diamonds on the whitewash
+between the upper windows. Bhagwan Dass, the bunnia, and a man who says he
+gets his living by seal-cutting live in the lower story with a troop of
+wives, servants, friends, and retainers. The two upper rooms used to be
+occupied by Janoo and Azizun and a little black-and-tan terrier that was
+stolen from an Englishman's house and given to Janoo by a soldier. To-day,
+only Janoo lives in the upper rooms. Suddhoo sleeps on the roof generally,
+except when he sleeps in the street. He used to go to Peshawar in the cold
+weather to visit his son, who sells curiosities near the Edwardes' Gate,
+and then he slept under a real mud roof. Suddhoo is a great friend of
+mine, because his cousin had a son who secured, thanks to my
+recommendation, the post of head messenger to a big firm in the Station.
+Suddhoo says that God will make me a Lieutenant-Governor one of these
+days. I daresay his prophecy will come true. He is very, very old, with
+white hair and no teeth worth showing, and he has outlived his
+wits&mdash;outlived nearly everything except his fondness for his son at
+Peshawar. Janoo and Azizun are Kashmiris, Ladies of the City, and theirs
+was an ancient and more or less honorable profession; but Azizun has since
+married a medical student from the Northwest and has settled down to a
+most respectable life somewhere near Bareilly. Bhagwan Dass is an
+extortionate and an adulterator. He is very rich. The man who is supposed
+to get his living by seal cutting pretends to be very poor. This lets you
+know as much as is necessary of the four principal tenants in the house of
+Suddhoo. Then there is Me, of course; but I am only the chorus that comes
+in at the end to explain things. So I do not count.</p>
+
+<p>Suddhoo was not clever. The man who pretended to cut seals was the
+cleverest of them all&mdash;Bhagwan Dass only knew how to lie&mdash;except Janoo.
+She was also beautiful, but that was her own affair.</p>
+
+<p>Suddhoo's son at Peshawar was attacked by pleurisy, and old Suddhoo was
+troubled. The seal-cutter man heard of Suddhoo's anxiety and made capital
+out of it. He was abreast of the times. He got a friend in Peshawar to
+telegraph daily accounts of the son's health. And here the story begins.</p>
+
+<p>Suddhoo's cousin's son told me, one evening, that Suddhoo wanted to see
+me; that he was too old and feeble to come personally, and that I should
+be conferring an everlasting honor on the House of Suddhoo if I went to
+him. I went; but I think, seeing how well off Suddhoo was then, that he
+might have sent something better than an <i>ekka</i>, which jolted fearfully,
+to haul out a future Lieutenant-Governor to the City on a muggy April
+evening. The <i>ekka</i> did not run quickly. It was full dark when we pulled
+up opposite the door of Ranjit Singh's Tomb near the main gate of the
+Fort. Here was Suddhoo and he said that by reason of my condescension, it
+was absolutely certain that I should become a Lieutenant-Governor while
+my hair was yet black. Then we talked about the weather and the state of
+my health, and the wheat crops, for fifteen minutes, in the Huzuri Bagh,
+under the stars.</p>
+
+<p>Suddhoo came to the point at last. He said that Janoo had told him that
+there was an order of the <i>Sirkar</i> against magic, because it was feared
+that magic might one day kill the Empress of India. I didn't know anything
+about the state of the law; but I fancied that something interesting was
+going to happen. I said that so far from magic being discouraged by the
+Government it was highly commended. The greatest officials of the State
+practiced it themselves. (If the Financial Statement isn't magic, I don't
+know what is.) Then, to encourage him further, I said that, if there was
+any <i>jadoo</i> afoot, I had not the least objection to giving it my
+countenance and sanction, and to seeing that it was clean <i>jadoo</i>&mdash;white
+magic, as distinguished from the unclean <i>jadoo</i> which kills folk. It took
+a long time before Suddhoo admitted that this was just what he had asked
+me to come for. Then he told me, in jerks and quavers, that the man who
+said he cut seals was a sorcerer of the cleanest kind; that every day he
+gave Suddhoo news of his sick son in Peshawar more quickly than the
+lightning could fly, and that this news was always corroborated by the
+letters. Further, that he had told Suddhoo how a great danger was
+threatening his son, which could be removed by clean <i>jadoo</i>; and, of
+course, heavy payment. I began to see exactly how the land lay, and told
+Suddhoo that <i>I</i> also understood a little <i>jadoo</i> in the Western line, and
+would go to his house to see that everything was done decently and in
+order. We set off together; and on the way Suddhoo told me that he had
+paid the seal cutter between one hundred and two hundred rupees already;
+and the <i>jadoo</i> of that night would cost two hundred more. Which was
+cheap, he said, considering the greatness of his son's danger; but I do
+not think he meant it.</p>
+
+<p>The lights were all cloaked in the front of the house when we arrived. I
+could hear awful noises from behind the seal cutter's shop front, as if
+some one were groaning his soul out. Suddhoo shook all over, and while we
+groped our way upstairs told me that the <i>jadoo</i> had begun. Janoo and
+Azizun met us at the stair head, and told us that the <i>jadoo</i> work was
+coming off in their rooms, because there was more space there. Janoo is a
+lady of a freethinking turn of mind. She whispered that the <i>jadoo</i> was an
+invention to get money out of Suddhoo, and that the seal cutter would go
+to a hot place when he died. Suddhoo was nearly crying with fear and old
+age. He kept walking up and down the room in the half light, repeating his
+son's name over and over again, and asking Azizun if the seal cutter ought
+not to make a reduction in the case of his own landlord. Janoo pulled me
+over to the shadow in the recess of the carved bow-windows. The boards
+were up, and the rooms were only lit by one tiny oil lamp. There was no
+chance of my being seen if I stayed still.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, the groans below ceased, and we heard steps on the staircase.
+That was the seal cutter. He stopped outside the door as the terrier
+barked and Azizun fumbled at the chain, and he told Suddhoo to blow out
+the lamp. This left the place in jet darkness, except for the red glow
+from the two <i>huqas</i> that belonged to Janoo and Azizun. The seal cutter
+came in, and I heard Suddhoo throw himself down on the floor and groan.
+Azizun caught her breath, and Janoo backed on to one of the beds with a
+shudder. There was a clink of something metallic, and then shot up a pale
+blue-green flame near the ground. The light was just enough to show
+Azizun, pressed against one corner of the room with the terrier between
+her knees; Janoo, with her hands clasped, leaning forward as she sat on
+the bed; Suddhoo, face down, quivering, and the seal cutter.</p>
+
+<p>I hope I may never see another man like that seal cutter. He was stripped
+to the waist, with a wreath of white jasmine as thick as my wrist round
+his forehead, a salmon-colored loin-cloth round his middle, and a steel
+bangle on each ankle. This was not awe-inspiring. It was the face of the
+man that turned me cold. It was blue-gray in the first place. In the
+second, the eyes were rolled back till you could only see the whites of
+them; and, in the third, the face was the face of a demon&mdash;a
+ghoul&mdash;anything you please except of the sleek, oily old ruffian who sat
+in the daytime over his turning-lathe downstairs. He was lying on his
+stomach with his arms turned and crossed behind him, as if he had been
+thrown down pinioned. His head and neck were the only parts of him off the
+floor. They were nearly at right angles to the body, like the head of a
+cobra at spring. It was ghastly. In the center of the room, on the bare
+earth floor, stood a big, deep, brass basin, with a pale blue-green light
+floating in the center like a night-light. Round that basin the man on the
+floor wriggled himself three times. How he did it I do not know. I could
+see the muscles ripple along his spine and fall smooth again; but I could
+not see any other motion. The head seemed the only thing alive about him,
+except that slow curl and uncurl of the laboring back muscles. Janoo from
+the bed was breathing seventy to the minute; Azizun held her hands before
+her eyes; and old Suddhoo, fingering at the dirt that had got into his
+white beard, was crying to himself. The horror of it was that the
+creeping, crawly thing made no sound&mdash;only crawled! And, remember, this
+lasted for ten minutes, while the terrier whined, and Azizun shuddered,
+and Janoo gasped and Suddhoo cried.</p>
+
+<p>I felt the hair lift at the back of my head, and my heart thump like a
+thermantidote paddle. Luckily, the seal cutter betrayed himself by his
+most impressive trick and made me calm again. After he had finished that
+unspeakable crawl, he stretched his head away from the floor as high as he
+could, and sent out a jet of fire from his nostrils. Now I knew how
+fire&mdash;spouting is done&mdash;I can do it myself&mdash;so I felt at ease. The
+business was a fraud. If he had only kept to that crawl without trying to
+raise the effect, goodness knows what I might not have thought. Both the
+girls shrieked at the jet of fire, and the head dropped, chin down on the
+floor, with a thud; the whole body lying then like a corpse with its arms
+trussed. There was a pause of five full minutes after this, and the
+blue-green flame died down. Janoo stooped to settle one of her anklets,
+while Azizun turned her face to the wall and took the terrier in her arms.
+Suddhoo put out an arm mechanically to Janoo's <i>huqa</i>, and she slid it
+across the floor with her foot. Directly above the body and on the wall
+were a couple of flaming portraits, in stamped paper frames, of the Queen
+and the Prince of Wales. They looked down on the performance, and, to my
+thinking, seemed to heighten the grotesqueness of it all.</p>
+
+<p>Just when the silence was getting unendurable, the body turned over and
+rolled away from the basin to the side of the room, where it lay stomach
+up. There was a faint &quot;plop&quot; from the basin&mdash;exactly like the noise a fish
+makes when it takes a fly&mdash;and the green light in the center revived.</p>
+
+<p>I looked at the basin, and saw, bobbing in the water the dried, shriveled,
+black head of a native baby&mdash;open eyes, open mouth and shaved scalp. It
+was worse, being so very sudden, than the crawling exhibition. We had no
+time to say anything before it began to speak.</p>
+
+<p>Read Poe's account of the voice that came from the mesmerized dying man,
+and you will realize less than one half of the horror of that head's
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>There was an interval of a second or two between each word, and a sort of
+&quot;ring, ring, ring,&quot; in the note of the voice like the timbre of a bell. It
+pealed slowly, as if talking to itself, for several minutes before I got
+rid of my cold sweat. Then the blessed solution struck me. I looked at the
+body lying near the doorway, and saw, just where the hollow of the throat
+joins on the shoulders, a muscle that had nothing to do with any man's
+regular breathing, twitching away steadily. The whole thing was a careful
+reproduction of the Egyptian teraphin that one reads about sometimes; and
+the voice was as clever and as appalling a piece of ventriloquism as one
+could wish to hear. All this time the head was &quot;lip-lip-lapping&quot; against
+the side of the basin, and speaking. It told Suddhoo, on his face again
+whining, of his son's illness and of the state of the illness up to the
+evening of that very night. I always shall respect the seal cutter for
+keeping so faithfully to the time of the Peshawar telegrams. It went on to
+say that skilled doctors were night and day watching over the man's life;
+and that he would eventually recover if the fee to the potent sorcerer,
+whose servant was the head in the basin, were doubled.</p>
+
+<p>Here the mistake from the artistic point of view came in. To ask for twice
+your stipulated fee in a voice that Lazarus might have used when he rose
+from the dead, is absurd. Janoo, who is really a woman of masculine
+intellect, saw this as quickly as I did. I heard her say &quot;<i>Ash nahin!
+Fareib!</i>&quot; scornfully under her breath; and just as she said so, the light
+in the basin died out, the head stopped talking, and we heard the room
+door creak on its hinges. Then Janoo struck a match, lit the lamp, and we
+saw that head, basin, and seal cutter were gone. Suddhoo was wringing his
+hands and explaining to anyone who cared to listen, that, if his chances
+of eternal salvation depended on it, he could not raise another two
+hundred rupees. Azizun was nearly in hysterics in the corner; while Janoo
+sat down composedly on one of the beds to discuss the probabilities of the
+whole thing being a <i>bunao</i>, or &quot;make-up.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I explained as much as I knew of the seal cutter's way of <i>jadoo</i>; but her
+argument was much more simple:&mdash;&quot;The magic that is always demanding gifts
+is no true magic,&quot; said she. &quot;My mother told me that the only potent love
+spells are those which are told you for love. This seal cutter man is a
+liar and a devil. I dare not tell, do anything, or get anything done,
+because I am in debt to Bhagwan Dass the bunnia for two gold rings and a
+heavy anklet. I must get my food from his shop. The seal cutter is the
+friend of Bhagwan Dass, and he would poison my food. A fool's <i>jadoo</i> has
+been going on for ten days, and has cost Suddhoo many rupees each night.
+The seal cutter used black hens and lemons and <i>mantras</i> before. He never
+showed us anything like this till to-night. Azizun is a fool, and will be
+a <i>pur dahnashin</i> soon. Suddhoo has lost his strength and his wits. See
+now! I had hoped to get from Suddhoo many rupees while he lived, and many
+more after his death; and behold, he is spending everything on that
+offspring of a devil and a she-ass, the seal cutter!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Here I said: &quot;But what induced Suddhoo to drag me into the business? Of
+course I can speak to the seal cutter, and he shall refund. The whole
+thing is child's talk&mdash;shame&mdash;and senseless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Suddhoo <i>is</i> an old child,&quot; said Janoo. &quot;He has lived on the roofs these
+seventy years and is as senseless as a milch goat. He brought you here to
+assure himself that he was not breaking any law of the <i>Sirkar</i>, whose
+salt he ate many years ago. He worships the dust off the feet of the seal
+cutter, and that cow devourer has forbidden him to go and see his son.
+What does Suddhoo know of your laws or the lightning post? I have to watch
+his money going day by day to that lying beast below.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Janoo stamped her foot on the floor and nearly cried with vexation; while
+Suddhoo was whimpering under a blanket in the corner, and Azizun was
+trying to guide the pipe-stem to his foolish old mouth.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Now the case stands thus. Unthinkingly, I have laid myself open to the
+charge of aiding and abetting the seal cutter in obtaining money under
+false pretenses, which is forbidden by Section 420 of the Indian Penal
+Code. I am helpless in the matter for these reasons, I cannot inform the
+police. What witnesses would support my statements? Janoo refuses flatly,
+and Azizun is a veiled woman somewhere near Bareilly&mdash;lost in this big
+India of ours. I dare not again take the law into my own hands, and speak
+to the seal cutter; for certain am I that, not only would Suddhoo
+disbelieve me, but this step would end in the poisoning of Janoo, who is
+bound hand and foot by her debt to the <i>bunnia</i>. Suddhoo is an old dotard;
+and whenever we meet mumbles my idiotic joke that the <i>Sirkar</i> rather
+patronizes the Black Art than otherwise. His son is well now; but Suddhoo
+is completely under the influence of the seal cutter, by whose advice he
+regulates the affairs of his life. Janoo watches daily the money that she
+hoped to wheedle out of Suddhoo taken by the seal cutter, and becomes
+daily more furious and sullen.</p>
+
+<p>She will never tell, because she dare not; but, unless something happens
+to prevent her, I am afraid that the seal cutter will die of cholera&mdash;the
+white arsenic kind&mdash;about the middle of May. And thus I shall have to be
+privy to a murder in the house of Suddhoo.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="His_Wedded_Wife" id="His_Wedded_Wife" /><i>His Wedded Wife</i></h2>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>Cry &quot;Murder!&quot; in the market-place, and each<br /></span>
+<span>Will turn upon his neighbor anxious eyes<br /></span>
+<span>That ask:&mdash;&quot;Art thou the man?&quot; We hunted Cain<br /></span>
+<span>Some centuries ago, across the world,<br /></span>
+<span>That bred the fear our own misdeeds maintain<br /></span>
+<span>To-day.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i16"><i>&mdash;Vibart's Moralities.</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Shakespeare says something about worms, or it may be giants or beetles,
+turning if you tread on them too severely. The safest plan is never to
+tread on a worm&mdash;not even on the last new subaltern from Home, with his
+buttons hardly out of their tissue paper, and the red of sappy English
+beef in his cheeks. This is the story of the worm that turned. For the
+sake of brevity, we will call Henry Augustus Ramsay Faizanne, &quot;The Worm,&quot;
+although he really was an exceedingly pretty boy, without a hair on his
+face, and with a waist like a girl's, when he came out to the Second
+&quot;Shikarris&quot; and was made unhappy in several ways. The &quot;Shikarris&quot; are a
+high-caste regiment, and you must be able to do things well&mdash;play a banjo,
+or ride more than little, or sing, or act&mdash;to get on with them.</p>
+
+<p>The Worm did nothing except fall off his pony, and knock chips out of gate
+posts with his trap. Even that became monotonous after a time. He objected
+to whist, cut the cloth at billiards, sang out of tune, kept very much to
+himself, and wrote to his Mamma and sisters at Home. Four of these five
+things were vices which the &quot;Shikarris&quot; objected to and set themselves to
+eradicate. Everyone knows how subalterns are, by brother subalterns,
+softened and not permitted to be ferocious. It is good and wholesome, and
+does no one any harm, unless tempers are lost; and then there is trouble.
+There was a man once&mdash;but that is another story.</p>
+
+<p>The &quot;Shikarris&quot; <i>shikarred</i> The Worm very much, and he bore everything
+without winking. He was so good and so anxious to learn, and flushed so
+pink, that his education was cut short, and he was left to his own devices
+by everyone except the Senior Subaltern who continued to make life a
+burden to The Worm. The Senior Subaltern meant no harm; but his chaff was
+coarse, and he didn't quite understand where to stop. He had been waiting
+too long for his Company; and that always sours a man. Also he was in
+love, which made him worse.</p>
+
+<p>One day, after he had borrowed The Worm's trap for a lady who never
+existed, had used it himself all the afternoon, had sent a note to The
+Worm, purporting to come from the lady, and was telling the Mess all about
+it, The Worm rose in his place and said, in his quiet, ladylike
+voice:&mdash;&quot;That was a very pretty sell; but I'll lay you a month's pay to a
+month's pay when you get your step, that I work a sell on you that you'll
+remember for the rest of your days, and the Regiment after you when you're
+dead or broke.&quot; The Worm wasn't angry in the least, and the rest of the
+Mess shouted. Then the Senior Subaltern looked at The Worm from the boots
+upward, and down again and said: &quot;Done, Baby.&quot; The Worm took the rest of
+the Mess to witness that the bet had been taken, and retired into a book
+with a sweet smile.</p>
+
+<p>Two months passed, and the Senior Subaltern still educated The Worm, who
+began to move about a little more as the hot weather came on. I have said
+that the Senior Subaltern was in love. The curious thing is that a girl
+was in love with the Senior Subaltern. Though the Colonel said awful
+things, and the Majors snorted, and married Captains looked unutterable
+wisdom, and the juniors scoffed, those two were engaged.</p>
+
+<p>The Senior Subaltern was so pleased with getting his Company and his
+acceptance at the same time that he forgot to bother The Worm. The girl
+was a pretty girl, and had money of her own. She does not come into this
+story at all.</p>
+
+<p>One night, at beginning of the hot weather, all the Mess, except The Worm
+who had gone to his own room to write Home letters, were sitting on the
+platform outside the Mess House. The Band had finished playing, but no one
+wanted to go in. And the Captains' wives were there also. The folly of a
+man in love is unlimited. The Senior Subaltern had been holding forth on
+the merits of the girl he was engaged to, and the ladies were purring
+approval, while the men yawned, when there was a rustle of skirts in the
+dark, and a tired, faint voice lifted itself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where's my husband?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I do not wish in the least to reflect on the morality of the &quot;Shikarris&quot;;
+but it is on record that four men jumped up as if they had been shot.
+Three of them were married men. Perhaps they were afraid that their wives
+had come from Home unbeknownst. The fourth said that he had acted on the
+impulse of the moment. He explained this afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>Then the voice cried: &quot;Oh Lionel!&quot; Lionel was the Senior Subaltern's name.
+A woman came into the little circle of light by the candles on the peg
+tables, stretching out her hands to the dark where the Senior Subaltern
+was, and sobbing. We rose to our feet, feeling that things were going to
+happen and ready to believe the worst. In this bad, small world of ours,
+one knows so little of the life of the next man&mdash;which, after all, is
+entirely his own concern&mdash;that one is not surprised when a crash comes.
+Anything might turn up any day for anyone. Perhaps the Senior Subaltern
+had been trapped in his youth. Men are crippled that way occasionally. We
+didn't know; we wanted to hear; and the Captains' wives were as anxious as
+we. If he <i>had</i> been trapped, he was to be excused; for the woman from
+nowhere, in the dusty shoes and gray traveling dress, was very lovely,
+with black hair and great eyes full of tears. She was tall, with a fine
+figure, and her voice had a running sob in it pitiful to hear. As soon as
+the Senior Subaltern stood up, she threw her arms round his neck, and
+called him &quot;my darling&quot; and said she could not bear waiting alone in
+England, and his letters were so short and cold, and she was his to the
+end of the world, and would he forgive her? This did not sound quite like
+a lady's way of speaking. It was too demonstrative.</p>
+
+<p>Things seemed black indeed, and the Captains' wives peered under their
+eyebrows at the Senior Subaltern, and the Colonel's face set like the Day
+of Judgment framed in gray bristles, and no one spoke for a while.</p>
+
+<p>Next the Colonel said, very shortly: &quot;Well, sir?&quot; and the woman sobbed
+afresh. The Senior Subaltern was half choked with the arms round his neck,
+but he gasped out: &quot;It's a d&mdash;&mdash;d lie! I never had a wife in my life!&quot;
+&quot;Don't swear,&quot; said the Colonel. &quot;Come into the Mess. We must sift this
+clear somehow,&quot; and he sighed to himself, for he believed in his
+&quot;Shikarris,&quot; did the Colonel.</p>
+
+<p>We trooped into the anteroom, under the full lights, and there we saw how
+beautiful the woman was. She stood up in the middle of us all, sometimes
+choking with crying, then hard and proud, and then holding out her arms to
+the Senior Subaltern. It was like the fourth act of a tragedy. She told us
+how the Senior Subaltern had married her when he was Home on leave
+eighteen months before; and she seemed to know all that we knew, and more
+too, of his people and his past life. He was white and ashy gray, trying
+now and again to break into the torrent of her words; and we, noting how
+lovely she was and what a criminal he looked, esteemed him a beast of the
+worst kind. We felt sorry for him, though.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget the indictment of the Senior Subaltern by his wife.
+Nor will he. It was so sudden, rushing out of the dark, unannounced, into
+our dull lives. The Captains' wives stood back; but their eyes were
+alight, and you could see that they had already convicted and sentenced
+the Senior Subaltern. The Colonel seemed five years older. One Major was
+shading his eyes with his hand and watching the woman from underneath it.
+Another was chewing his mustache and smiling quietly as if he were
+witnessing a play. Full in the open space in the center, by the whist
+tables, the Senior Subaltern's terrier was hunting for fleas. I remember
+all this as clearly as though a photograph were in my hand. I remember the
+look of horror on the Senior Subaltern's face. It was rather like seeing a
+man hanged; but much more interesting. Finally, the woman wound up by
+saying that the Senior Subaltern carried a double F.M. in tattoo on his
+left shoulder. We all knew that, and to our innocent minds it seemed to
+clinch the matter. But one of the Bachelor Majors said very politely: &quot;I
+presume that your marriage certificate would be more to the purpose?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That roused the woman. She stood up and sneered at the Senior Subaltern
+for a cur, and abused the Major and the Colonel and all the rest. Then she
+wept, and then she pulled a paper from her breast, saying imperially:
+&quot;Take that! And let my husband&mdash;my lawfully wedded husband&mdash;read it
+aloud&mdash;if he dare!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was a hush, and the men looked into each other's eyes as the Senior
+Subaltern came forward in a dazed and dizzy way, and took the paper. We
+were wondering, as we stared, whether there was anything against any one
+of us that might turn up later on. The Senior Subaltern's throat was dry;
+but, as he ran his eye over the paper, he broke out into a hoarse cackle
+of relief, and said to the woman: &quot;You young blackguard!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But the woman had fled through a door, and on the paper was written: &quot;This
+is to certify that I, The Worm, have paid in full my debts to the Senior
+Subaltern, and, further, that the Senior Subaltern is my debtor, by
+agreement on the 23d of February, as by the Mess attested, to the extent
+of one month's Captain's pay, in the lawful currency of the India Empire.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then a deputation set off for The Worm's quarters and found him, betwixt
+and between, unlacing his stays, with the hat, wig, serge dress, etc., on
+the bed. He came over as he was, and the &quot;Shikarris&quot; shouted till the
+Gunners' Mess sent over to know if they might have a share of the fun. I
+think we were all, except the Colonel and the Senior Subaltern, a little
+disappointed that the scandal had come to nothing. But that is human
+nature. There could be no two words about The Worm's acting. It leaned as
+near to a nasty tragedy as anything this side of a joke can. When most of
+the Subalterns sat upon him with sofa cushions to find out why he had not
+said that acting was his strong point, he answered very quietly: &quot;I don't
+think you ever asked me. I used to act at Home with my sisters.&quot; But no
+acting with girls could account for The Worm's display that night.
+Personally, I think it was in bad taste. Besides being dangerous. There is
+no sort of use in playing with fire, even for fun.</p>
+
+<p>The &quot;Shikarris&quot; made him President of the Regimental Dramatic Club; and,
+when the Senior Subaltern paid up his debt, which he did at once, The Worm
+sank the money in scenery and dresses. He was a good Worm; and the
+&quot;Shikarris&quot; are proud of him. The only drawback is that he has been
+christened &quot;Mrs. Senior Subaltern&quot;; and, as there are now two Mrs. Senior
+Subalterns in the Station, this is sometimes confusing to strangers.</p>
+
+<p>Later on, I will tell you of a case something like this, but with all the
+jest left out and nothing in it but real trouble.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>A. Conan Doyle</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="A_Case_of_Identity" id="A_Case_of_Identity" /><i>A Case of Identity</i></h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;My dear fellow,&quot; said Sherlock Holmes, as we sat on either side of the
+fire in his lodgings at Baker Street, &quot;life is infinitely stranger than
+anything which the mind of man can invent. We would not dare to conceive
+the things which are really mere commonplaces of existence. If we could
+fly out of that window hand in hand, hover over this great city, gently
+remove the roofs, and peep in at the queer things which are going on, the
+strange coincidences, the plannings, the cross-purposes, the wonderful
+chains of events, working through generations, and leading to the most
+<i>outr&eacute;</i> results, it would make all fiction, with its conventionalities and
+foreseen conclusions, most stale and unprofitable.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And yet I am not convinced of it,&quot; I answered. &quot;The cases which come to
+light in the papers are, as a rule, bald enough, and vulgar enough. We
+have in our police reports realism pushed to its extreme limits, and yet
+the result is, it must be confessed, neither fascinating nor artistic.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A certain selection and discretion must be used in producing a realistic
+effect,&quot; remarked Holmes. &quot;This is wanting in the police report, where
+more stress is laid perhaps upon the platitudes of the magistrate than
+upon the details, which to an observer contain the vital essence of the
+whole matter. Depend upon it, there is nothing so unnatural as the
+commonplace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I smiled and shook my head. &quot;I can quite understand your thinking so,&quot; I
+said. &quot;Of course, in your position of unofficial adviser and helper to
+everybody who is absolutely puzzled, throughout three continents, you are
+brought in contact with all that is strange and <i>bizarre</i>. But here&quot;&mdash;I
+picked up the morning paper from the ground&mdash;&quot;let us put it to a practical
+test. Here is the first heading upon which I come. 'A husband's cruelty to
+his wife.' There is half a column of print, but I know without reading it
+that it is all perfectly familiar to me. There is, of course, the other
+woman, the drink, the push, the blow, the bruise, the unsympathetic sister
+or landlady. The crudest of writers could invent nothing more crude.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed your example is an unfortunate one for your argument,&quot; said
+Holmes, taking the paper, and glancing his eye down it. &quot;This is the
+Dundas separation case, and, as it happens, I was engaged in clearing up
+some small points in connection with it. The husband was a teetotaler,
+there was no other woman, and the conduct complained of was that he had
+drifted into the habit of winding up every meal by taking out his false
+teeth and hurling them at his wife, which you will allow is not an action
+likely to occur to the imagination of the average story teller. Take a
+pinch of snuff, doctor, and acknowledge that I have scored over you in
+your example.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He held out his snuffbox of old gold, with a great amethyst in the center
+of the lid. Its splendor was in such contrast to his homely ways and
+simple life that I could not help commenting upon it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah!&quot; said he, &quot;I forgot that I had not seen you for some weeks. It is a
+little souvenir from the King of Bohemia, in return for my assistance in
+the case of the Irene Adler papers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And the ring?&quot; I asked, glancing at a remarkable brilliant which sparkled
+upon his finger.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was from the reigning family of Holland, though the matter in which I
+served them was of such delicacy that I cannot confide it even to you, who
+have been good enough to chronicle one or two of my little problems.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And have you any on hand just now?&quot; I asked with interest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Some ten or twelve, but none which present any features of interest. They
+are important, you understand, without being interesting. Indeed I have
+found that it is usually in unimportant matters that there is a field for
+the observation, and for the quick analysis of cause and effect which
+gives the charm to an investigation. The larger crimes are apt to be the
+simpler, for the bigger the crime, the more obvious, as a rule, is the
+motive. In these cases, save for one rather intricate matter which has
+been referred to me from Marseilles, there is nothing which presents any
+features of interest. It is possible, however, that I may have something
+better before very many minutes are over, for this is one of my clients,
+or I am much mistaken.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He had risen from his chair, and was standing between the parted blinds,
+gazing down into the dull, neutral-tinted London street. Looking over his
+shoulder, I saw that on the pavement opposite there stood a large woman
+with a heavy fur boa round her neck, and a large curling red feather in a
+broad-brimmed hat which was tilted in a coquettish Duchess-of-Devonshire
+fashion over her ear.</p>
+
+<p>From under this great panoply she peeped up in a nervous, hesitating
+fashion at our windows, while her body oscillated backward and forward,
+and her fingers fidgeted with her glove buttons. Suddenly, with a plunge,
+as of the swimmer who leaves the bank, she hurried across the road, and we
+heard the sharp clang of the bell.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have seen those symptoms before,&quot; said Holmes, throwing his cigarette
+into the fire. &quot;Oscillation upon the pavement always means an <i>affaire de
+coeur</i>. She would like advice, but is not sure that the matter is not too
+delicate for communication. And yet even here we may discriminate. When a
+woman has been seriously wronged by a man, she no longer oscillates, and
+the usual symptom is a broken bell wire. Here we may take it that there is
+a love matter, but that the maiden is not so much angry as perplexed or
+grieved. But here she comes in person to resolve our doubts.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, there was a tap at the door, and the boy in buttons entered
+to announce Miss Mary Sutherland, while the lady herself loomed behind
+his small black figure like a full-sailed merchantman behind a tiny pilot
+boat. Sherlock Holmes welcomed her with the easy courtesy for which he was
+remarkable, and having closed the door, and bowed her into an armchair, he
+looked her over in the minute and yet abstracted fashion which was
+peculiar to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you not find,&quot; he said, &quot;that with your short sight it is a little
+trying to do so much typewriting?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did at first,&quot; she answered, &quot;but now I know where the letters are
+without looking.&quot; Then, suddenly realizing the full purport of his words,
+she gave a violent start, and looked up with fear and astonishment upon
+her broad, good-humored face. &quot;You've heard about me, Mr. Holmes,&quot; she
+cried, &quot;else how could you know all that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never mind,&quot; said Holmes, laughing, &quot;it is my business to know things.
+Perhaps I have trained myself to see what others overlook. If not, why
+should you come to consult me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I came to you, sir, because I heard of you from Mrs. Etherege, whose
+husband you found so easily when the police and everyone had given him up
+for dead. Oh, Mr. Holmes, I wish you would do as much for me. I'm not
+rich, but still I have a hundred a year in my own right, besides the
+little that I make by the machine, and I would give it all to know what
+has become of Mr. Hosmer Angel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why did you come away to consult me in such a hurry?&quot; asked Sherlock
+Holmes, with his finger tips together, and his eyes to the ceiling.</p>
+
+<p>Again a startled look came over the somewhat vacuous face of Miss Mary
+Sutherland. &quot;Yes, I did bang out of the house,&quot; she said, &quot;for it made me
+angry to see the easy way in which Mr. Windibank&mdash;that is, my father&mdash;took
+it all. He would not go to the police, and he would not go to you, and so
+at last, as he would do nothing, and kept on saying that there was no harm
+done, it made me mad, and I just on with my things and came right away to
+you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your father?&quot; said Holmes. &quot;Your stepfather, surely, since the name is
+different.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, my stepfather. I call him father, though it sounds funny, too, for
+he is only five years and two months older than myself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And your mother is alive?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes; mother is alive and well. I wasn't best pleased, Mr. Holmes,
+when she married again so soon after father's death, and a man who was
+nearly fifteen years younger than herself. Father was a plumber in the
+Tottenham Court Road, and he left a tidy business behind him, which mother
+carried on with Mr. Hardy, the foreman; but when Mr. Windibank came he
+made her sell the business, for he was very superior, being a traveler in
+wines. They got four thousand seven hundred for the good-will and
+interest, which wasn't near as much as father could have got if he had
+been alive.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had expected to see Sherlock Holmes impatient under this rambling and
+inconsequential narrative, but, on the contrary, he had listened with the
+greatest concentration of attention.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your own little income,&quot; he asked, &quot;does it come out of the business?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no, sir. It is quite separate, and was left me by my Uncle Ned in
+Auckland. It is in New Zealand stock, paying four and half per cent. Two
+thousand five hundred pounds was the amount, but I can only touch the
+interest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You interest me extremely,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;And since you draw so large a
+sum as a hundred a year, with what you earn into the bargain, you no doubt
+travel a little, and indulge yourself in every way. I believe that a
+single lady can get on very nicely upon an income of about sixty pounds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I could do with much less than that, Mr. Holmes, but you understand that
+as long as I live at home I don't wish to be a burden to them, and so they
+have the use of the money just while I am staying with them. Of course
+that is only just for the time. Mr. Windibank draws my interest every
+quarter, and pays it over to mother, and I find that I can do pretty well
+with what I earn at typewriting. It brings me twopence a sheet, and I can
+often do from fifteen to twenty sheets in a day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have made your position very clear to me,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;This is my
+friend, Doctor Watson, before whom you can speak as freely as before
+myself. Kindly tell us now all about your connection with Mr. Hosmer
+Angel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A flush stole over Miss Sutherland's face, and she picked nervously at the
+fringe of her jacket. &quot;I met him first at the gasfitters' ball,&quot; she said.
+&quot;They used to send father tickets when he was alive, and then afterwards
+they remembered us, and sent them to mother. Mr. Windibank did not wish us
+to go. He never did wish us to go anywhere. He would get quite mad if I
+wanted so much as to join a Sunday School treat. But this time I was set
+on going, and I would go, for what right had he to prevent? He said the
+folk were not fit for us to know, when all father's friends were to be
+there. And he said that I had nothing fit to wear, when I had my purple
+plush that I had never so much as taken out of the drawer. At last, when
+nothing else would do, he went off to France upon the business of the
+firm; but we went, mother and I, with Mr. Hardy, who used to be our
+foreman, and it was there I met Mr. Hosmer Angel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose,&quot; said Holmes, &quot;that when Mr. Windibank came back from France,
+he was very annoyed at your having gone to the ball?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, well, he was very good about it. He laughed, I remember, and shrugged
+his shoulders, and said there was no use denying anything to a woman, for
+she would have her way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I see. Then at the gasfitters' ball you met, as I understand, a gentleman
+called Mr. Hosmer Angel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir. I met him that night, and he called next day to ask if we had
+got home all safe, and after that we met him&mdash;that is to say, Mr. Holmes,
+I met him twice for walks, but after that father came back again, and Mr.
+Hosmer Angel could not come to the house any more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, you know, father didn't like anything of the sort. He wouldn't have
+any visitors if he could help it, and he used to say that a woman should
+be happy in her own family circle. But then, as I used to say to mother, a
+woman wants her own circle to begin with, and I had not got mine yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But how about Mr. Hosmer Angel? Did he make no attempt to see you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, father was going off to France again in a week, and Hosmer wrote
+and said that it would be safer and better not to see each other until he
+had gone. We could write in the meantime, and he used to write every day.
+I took the letters in the morning, so there was no need for father to
+know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Were you engaged to the gentleman at this time?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, Mr. Holmes. We were engaged after the first walk that we took.
+Hosmer&mdash;Mr. Angel&mdash;was a cashier in an office in Leadenhall Street&mdash;and&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What office?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the worst of it, Mr. Holmes; I don't know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where did he live, then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He slept on the premises.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you don't know his address?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No&mdash;except that it was Leadenhall Street.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where did you address your letters, then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To the Leadenhall Street Post Office, to be left till called for. He said
+that if they were sent to the office he would be chaffed by all the other
+clerks about having letters from a lady, so I offered to typewrite them,
+like he did his, but he wouldn't have that, for he said that when I wrote
+them they seemed to come from me, but when they were typewritten he always
+felt that the machine had come between us. That will just show you how
+fond he was of me, Mr. Holmes, and the little things that he would think
+of.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was most suggestive,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;It has long been an axiom of mine
+that the little things are infinitely the most important. Can you remember
+any other little things about Mr. Hosmer Angel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He was a very shy man, Mr. Holmes. He would rather walk with me in the
+evening than in the daylight, for he said that he hated to be conspicuous.
+Very retiring and gentlemanly he was. Even his voice was gentle. He'd had
+the quinsy and swollen glands when he was young, he told me, and it had
+left him with a weak throat and a hesitating, whispering fashion of
+speech. He was always well dressed, very neat and plain, but his eyes were
+weak, just as mine are, and he wore tinted glasses against the glare.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, and what happened when Mr. Windibank, your stepfather, returned to
+France?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Hosmer Angel came to the house again, and proposed that we should
+marry before father came back. He was in dreadful earnest, and made me
+swear, with my hands on the Testament, that whatever happened I would
+always be true to him. Mother said he was quite right to make me swear,
+and that it was a sign of his passion. Mother was all in his favor from
+the first, and was even fonder of him than I was. Then, when they talked
+of marrying within the week, I began to ask about father; but they both
+said never to mind about father, but just to tell him afterwards and
+mother said she would make it all right with him. I didn't quite like
+that, Mr. Holmes. It seemed funny that I should ask his leave, as he was
+only a few years older than me; but I didn't want to do anything on the
+sly, so I wrote to father at Bordeaux, where the company has its French
+offices, but the letter came back to me on the very morning of the
+wedding.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It missed him, then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir, for he had started to England just before it arrived.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ha! that was unfortunate. Your wedding was arranged, then, for the
+Friday. Was it to be in church?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir, but very quietly. It was to be at St. Saviour's, near King's
+Cross, and we were to have breakfast afterwards at the St. Pancras Hotel.
+Hosmer came for us in a hansom, but as there were two of us, he put us
+both into it, and stepped himself into a four-wheeler, which happened to
+be the only other cab in the street. We got to the church first, and when
+the four-wheeler drove up we waited for him to step out, but he never did,
+and when the cabman got down from the box and looked, there was no one
+there! The cabman said that he could not imagine what had become of him,
+for he had seen him get in with his own eyes. That was last Friday, Mr.
+Holmes, and I have never seen or heard anything since then to throw any
+light upon what became of him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seems to me that you have been very shamefully treated,&quot; said Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no, sir! He was too good and kind to leave me so. Why, all the
+morning he was saying to me that, whatever happened, I was to be true; and
+that even if something quite unforeseen occurred to separate us, I was
+always to remember that I was pledged to him, and that he would claim his
+pledge sooner or later. It seemed strange talk for a wedding morning, but
+what has happened since gives a meaning to it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Most certainly it does. Your own opinion is, then, that some unforeseen
+catastrophe has occurred to him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir. I believe that he foresaw some danger, or else he would not
+have talked so. And then I think that what he foresaw happened.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you have no notion as to what it could have been?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One more question. How did your mother take the matter?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She was angry, and said that I was never to speak of the matter again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And your father? Did you tell him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, and he seemed to think, with me, that something had happened, and
+that I should hear of Hosmer again. As he said, what interest could
+anyone have in bringing me to the door of the church, and then leaving me?
+Now, if he had borrowed my money, or if he had married me and got my money
+settled on him, there might be some reason; but Hosmer was very
+independent about money, and never would look at a shilling of mine. And
+yet what could have happened? And why could he not write? Oh! it drives me
+half mad to think of, and I can't sleep a wink at night.&quot; She pulled a
+little handkerchief out of her muff, and began to sob heavily into it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall glance into the case for you,&quot; said Holmes, rising, &quot;and I have
+no doubt that we shall reach some definite result. Let the weight of the
+matter rest upon me now, and do not let your mind dwell upon it further.
+Above all, try to let Mr. Hosmer Angel vanish from your memory, as he has
+done from your life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you don't think I'll see him again?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I fear not.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then what has happened to him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will leave that question in my hands. I should like an accurate
+description of him, and any letters of his which you can spare.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I advertised for him in last Saturday's <i>Chronicle</i>,&quot; said she. &quot;Here is
+the slip, and here are four letters from him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you. And your address?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No. 31 Lyon Place, Camberwell.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Angel's address you never had, I understand. Where is your father's
+place of business?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He travels for Westhouse &amp; Marbank, the great claret importers of
+Fenchurch Street.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you. You have made your statement very clearly. You will leave the
+papers here, and remember the advice which I have given you. Let the whole
+incident be a sealed book, and do not allow it to affect your life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are very kind, Mr. Holmes, but I cannot do that. I shall be true to
+Hosmer. He shall find me ready when he comes back.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>For all the preposterous hat and the vacuous face, there was something
+noble in the simple faith of our visitor which compelled our respect. She
+laid her little bundle of papers upon the table, and went her way, with a
+promise to come again whenever she might be summoned.</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes sat silent for a few minutes with his finger tips still
+pressed together, his legs stretched out in front of him, and his gaze
+directed upward to the ceiling. Then he took down from the rack the old
+and oily clay pipe, which was to him as a counselor, and, having lighted
+it, he leaned back in his chair, with thick blue cloud wreaths spinning up
+from him, and a look of infinite languor in his face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite an interesting study, that maiden,&quot; he observed. &quot;I found her more
+interesting than her little problem, which, by the way, is rather a trite
+one. You will find parallel cases, if you consult my index, in Andover in
+'77, and there was something of the sort at The Hague last year. Old as is
+the idea, however, there were one or two details which were new to me. But
+the maiden herself was most instructive.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You appeared to read a good deal upon her which was quite invisible to
+me,&quot; I remarked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not invisible, but unnoticed, Watson. You did not know where to look, and
+so you missed all that was important. I can never bring you to realize the
+importance of sleeves, the suggestiveness of thumb nails, or the great
+issues that may hang from a boot lace. Now, what did you gather from that
+woman's appearance? Describe it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, she had a slate-colored, broad-brimmed straw hat, with a feather of
+a brickish red. Her jacket was black, with black beads sewed upon it and a
+fringe of little black jet ornaments. Her dress was brown, rather darker
+than coffee color, with a little purple plush at the neck and sleeves. Her
+gloves were grayish, and were worn through at the right forefinger. Her
+boots I didn't observe. She had small round, hanging gold earrings, and a
+general air of being fairly well-to-do, in a vulgar, comfortable,
+easy-going way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes clapped his hands softly together and chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Pon my word, Watson, you are coming along wonderfully. You have really
+done very well indeed. It is true that you have missed everything of
+importance, but you have hit upon the method, and you have a quick eye for
+color. Never trust to general impressions, my boy, but concentrate
+yourself upon details. My first glance is always at a woman's sleeve. In a
+man it is perhaps better first to take the knee of the trouser. As you
+observe, this woman had plush upon her sleeve, which is a most useful
+material for showing traces. The double line a little above the wrist,
+where the typewritist presses against the table, was beautifully defined.
+The sewing machine, of the hand type, leaves a similar mark, but only on
+the left arm, and on the side of it farthest from the thumb, instead of
+being right across the broadest part, as this was. I then glanced at her
+face, and observing the dint of a <i>pince-nez</i> at either side of her nose,
+I ventured a remark upon short sight and typewriting, which seemed to
+surprise her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It surprised me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But, surely, it was very obvious. I was then much surprised and
+interested on glancing down to observe that, though the boots which she
+was wearing were not unlike each other, they were really odd ones, the one
+having a slightly decorated toe cap and the other a plain one. One was
+buttoned only in the two lower buttons out of five, and the other at the
+first, third, and fifth. Now, when you see that a young lady, otherwise
+neatly dressed, has come away from home with odd boots, half-buttoned, it
+is no great deduction to say that she came away in a hurry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what else?&quot; I asked, keenly interested, as I always was, by my
+friend's incisive reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I noted, in passing, that she had written a note before leaving home, but
+after being fully dressed. You observed that her right glove was torn at
+the forefinger, but you did not, apparently, see that both glove and
+finger were stained with violet ink. She had written in a hurry, and
+dipped her pen too deep. It must have been this morning, or the mark would
+not remain clear upon the finger. All this is amusing, though rather
+elementary, but I must go back to business, Watson. Would you mind reading
+me the advertised description of Mr. Hosmer Angel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I held the little printed slip to the light. &quot;Missing,&quot; it said, &quot;on the
+morning of the fourteenth, a gentleman named Hosmer Angel. About five feet
+seven inches in height; strongly built, sallow complexion, black hair, a
+little bald in the center, bushy black side-whiskers and mustache; tinted
+glasses; slight infirmity of speech. Was dressed, when last seen, in black
+frock-coat faced with silk, black waistcoat, gold Albert chain, and gray
+Harris tweed trousers, with brown gaiters over elastic-sided boots. Known
+to have been employed in an office in Leadenhall Street. Anybody
+bringing,&quot; etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That will do,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;As to the letters,&quot; he continued, glancing
+over them, &quot;they are very commonplace. Absolutely no clew in them to Mr.
+Angel, save that he quotes Balzac once. There is one remarkable point,
+however, which will no doubt strike you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They are typewritten,&quot; I remarked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not only that, but the signature is typewritten. Look at the neat little
+'Hosmer Angel' at the bottom. There is a date, you see, but no
+superscription except Leadenhall Street, which is rather vague. The point
+about the signature is very suggestive&mdash;in fact, we may call it
+conclusive.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of what?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear fellow, is it possible you do not see how strongly it bears upon
+the case?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot say that I do, unless it were that he wished to be able to deny
+his signature if an action for breach of promise were instituted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, that was not the point. However, I shall write two letters which
+should settle the matter. One is to a firm in the City, the other is to
+the young lady's stepfather, Mr. Windibank, asking him whether he could
+meet us here at six o'clock to-morrow evening. It is just as well that we
+should do business with the male relatives. And now, doctor, we can do
+nothing until the answers to those letters come, so we may put our little
+problem upon the shelf for the interim.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had had so many reasons to believe in my friend's subtle powers of
+reasoning, and extraordinary energy in action, that I felt that he must
+have some solid grounds for the assured and easy demeanor with which he
+treated the singular mystery which he had been called upon to fathom. Once
+only had I known him to fail, in the case of the King of Bohemia and the
+Irene Adler photograph, but when I looked back to the weird business of
+the &quot;Sign of the Four,&quot; and the extraordinary circumstances connected with
+the &quot;Study in Scarlet,&quot; I felt that it would be a strange tangle indeed
+which he could not unravel.</p>
+
+<p>I left him then, still puffing at his black clay pipe, with the conviction
+that when I came again on the next evening I would find that he held in
+his hands all the clews which would lead up to the identity of the
+disappearing bridegroom of Miss Mary Sutherland.</p>
+
+<p>A professional case of great gravity was engaging my own attention at the
+time, and the whole of next day I was busy at the bedside of the sufferer.
+It was not until close upon six o'clock that I found myself free, and was
+able to spring into a hansom and drive to Baker Street, half afraid that I
+might be too late to assist at the <i>d&eacute;nouement</i> of the little mystery. I
+found Sherlock Holmes alone, however, half asleep, with his long, thin
+form curled up in the recesses of his armchair. A formidable array of
+bottles and test-tubes, with the pungent, cleanly smell of hydrochloric
+acid, told me that he had spent his day in the chemical work which was so
+dear to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, have you solved it?&quot; I asked as I entered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes. It was the bisulphate of baryta.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no; the mystery!&quot; I cried.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, that! I thought of the salt that I have been working upon. There was
+never any mystery in the matter, though, as I said yesterday, some of the
+details are of interest. The only drawback is that there is no law, I
+fear, that can touch the scoundrel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who was he, then, and what was his object in deserting Miss Sutherland?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The question was hardly out of my mouth, and Holmes had not yet opened his
+lips to reply, when we heard a heavy footfall in the passage, and a tap at
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is the girl's stepfather, Mr. James Windibank,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;He has
+written to me to say that he would be here at six. Come in!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man who entered was a sturdy, middle-sized fellow, some thirty years
+of age, clean shaven, and sallow-skinned, with a bland, insinuating
+manner, and a pair of wonderfully sharp and penetrating gray eyes. He shot
+a questioning glance at each of us, placed his shiny top hat upon the
+sideboard, and, with a slight bow, sidled down into the nearest chair.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good evening, Mr. James Windibank,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;I think this
+typewritten letter is from you, in which you made an appointment with me
+for six o'clock?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir. I am afraid that I am a little late, but I am not quite my own
+master, you know. I am sorry that Miss Sutherland has troubled you about
+this little matter, for I think it is far better not to wash linen of the
+sort in public. It was quite against my wishes that she came, but she is a
+very excitable, impulsive girl, as you may have noticed, and she is not
+easily controlled when she has made up her mind on a point. Of course, I
+did not mind you so much, as you are not connected with the official
+police, but it is not pleasant to have a family misfortune like this
+noised abroad. Besides, it is a useless expense, for how could you
+possibly find this Hosmer Angel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the contrary,&quot; said Holmes, quietly, &quot;I have every reason to believe
+that I will succeed in discovering Mr. Hosmer Angel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Windibank gave a violent start, and dropped his gloves. &quot;I am
+delighted to hear it,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is a curious thing,&quot; remarked Holmes, &quot;that a typewriter has really
+quite as much individuality as a man's handwriting. Unless they are quite
+new no two of them write exactly alike. Some letters get more worn than
+others, and some wear only on one side. Now, you remark in this note of
+yours, Mr. Windibank, that in every case there is some little slurring
+over the <i>e</i>, and a slight defect in the tail of the <i>r</i>. There are
+fourteen other characteristics, but those are the more obvious.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We do all our correspondence with this machine at the office, and no
+doubt it is a little worn,&quot; our visitor answered, glancing keenly at
+Holmes with his bright little eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now I will show you what is really a very interesting study, Mr.
+Windibank,&quot; Holmes continued. &quot;I think of writing another little monograph
+some of these days on the typewriter and its relation to crime. It is a
+subject to which I have devoted some little attention. I have here four
+letters which purport to come from the missing man. They are all
+typewritten. In each case, not only are the <i>e</i>'s slurred and the <i>r</i>'s
+tailless, but you will observe, if you care to use my magnifying lens,
+that the fourteen other characteristics to which I have alluded are there
+as well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Windibank sprung out of his chair, and picked up his hat. &quot;I cannot
+waste time over this sort of fantastic talk, Mr. Holmes,&quot; he said. &quot;If you
+can catch the man, catch him, and let me know when you have done it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly,&quot; said Holmes, stepping over and turning the key in the door.
+&quot;I let you know, then, that I have caught him!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What! where?&quot; shouted Mr. Windibank, turning white to his lips, and
+glancing about him like a rat in a trap.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, it won't do&mdash;really it won't,&quot; said Holmes, suavely. &quot;There is no
+possible getting out of it, Mr. Windibank. It is quite too transparent,
+and it was a very bad compliment when you said that it was impossible for
+me to solve so simple a question. That's right! Sit down, and let us talk
+it over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Our visitor collapsed into a chair, with a ghastly face, and a glitter of
+moisture on his brow. &quot;It&mdash;it's not actionable,&quot; he stammered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am very much afraid that it is not; but between ourselves, Windibank,
+it was as cruel, and selfish, and heartless a trick in a petty way as ever
+came before me. Now, let me just run over the course of events, and you
+will contradict me if I go wrong.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man sat huddled up in his chair, with his head sunk upon his breast,
+like one who is utterly crushed. Holmes stuck his feet up on the corner of
+the mantelpiece, and, leaning back with his hands in his pockets, began
+talking, rather to himself, as it seemed, than to us.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The man married a woman very much older than himself for her money,&quot; said
+he, &quot;and he enjoyed the use of the money of the daughter as long as she
+lived with them. It was a considerable sum, for people in their position,
+and the loss of it would have made a serious difference. It was worth an
+effort to preserve it. The daughter was of a good, amiable disposition,
+but affectionate and warm-hearted in her ways, so that it was evident that
+with her fair personal advantages, and her little income, she would not be
+allowed to remain single long. Now her marriage would mean, of course, the
+loss of a hundred a year, so what does her stepfather do to prevent it? He
+takes the obvious course of keeping her at home, and forbidding her to
+seek the company of people of her own age. But soon he found that that
+would not answer forever. She became restive, insisted upon her rights,
+and finally announced her positive intention of going to a certain ball.
+What does her clever stepfather do then? He conceives an idea more
+creditable to his head than to his heart. With the connivance and
+assistance of his wife, he disguised himself, covered those keen eyes with
+tinted glasses masked the face with a mustache and a pair of bushy
+whiskers, sunk that clear voice into an insinuating whisper, and doubly
+secure on account of the girl's short sight, he appears as Mr. Hosmer
+Angel, and keeps off other lovers by making love himself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was only a joke at first,&quot; groaned our visitor. &quot;We never thought that
+she would have been so carried away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very likely not. However that may be, the young lady was very decidedly
+carried away, and having quite made up her mind that her stepfather was in
+France, the suspicion of treachery never for an instant entered her mind.
+She was flattered by the gentleman's attentions, and the effect was
+increased by the loudly expressed admiration of her mother. Then Mr. Angel
+began to call, for it was obvious that the matter should be pushed as far
+as if would go, if a real effect were to be produced. There were meetings,
+and an engagement, which would finally secure the girl's affections from
+turning toward anyone else. But the deception could not be kept up
+forever. These pretended journeys to France were rather cumbrous. The
+thing to do was clearly to bring the business to an end in such a dramatic
+manner that it would leave a permanent impression upon the young lady's
+mind, and prevent her from looking upon any other suitor for some time to
+come. Hence those vows of fidelity exacted upon a Testament, and hence
+also the allusions to a possibility of something happening on the very
+morning of the wedding. James Windibank wished Miss Sutherland to be so
+bound to Hosmer Angel, and so uncertain as to his fate, that for ten years
+to come, at any rate, she would not listen to another man. As far as the
+church door he brought her, and then, as he could go no farther, he
+conveniently vanished away by the old trick of stepping in at one door of
+a four-wheeler and out at the other. I think that that was the chain of
+events, Mr. Windibank!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Our visitor had recovered something of his assurance while Holmes had been
+talking, and he rose from his chair now with a cold sneer upon his pale
+face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It may be so, or it may not, Mr. Holmes,&quot; said he; &quot;but if you are so
+very sharp you ought to be sharp enough to know that it is you who are
+breaking the law now, and not me. I have done nothing actionable from the
+first, but as long as you keep that door locked you lay yourself open to
+an action for assault and illegal constraint.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The law cannot, as you say, touch you,&quot; said Holmes, unlocking and
+throwing open the door, &quot;yet there never was a man who deserved punishment
+more. If the young lady has a brother or a friend, he ought to lay a whip
+across your shoulders. By Jove!&quot; he continued, flushing up at the sight of
+the bitter sneer upon the man's face, &quot;it is not part of my duties to my
+client, but here's a hunting crop handy, and I think I shall just treat
+myself to&mdash;&quot; He took two swift steps to the whip, but before he could
+grasp it there was a wild clatter of steps upon the stairs, the heavy hall
+door banged, and from the window we could see Mr. James Windibank running
+at the top of his speed down the road.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There's a cold-blooded scoundrel!&quot; said Holmes, laughing as he threw
+himself down into his chair once more. &quot;That fellow will rise from crime
+to crime until he does something very bad and ends on a gallows. The case
+has, in some respects, been not entirely devoid of interest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot now entirely see all the steps of your reasoning,&quot; I remarked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, of course it was obvious from the first that this Mr. Hosmer Angel
+must have some strong object for his curious conduct, and it was equally
+clear that the only man who really profited by the incident, as far as we
+could see, was the stepfather. Then the fact that the two men were never
+together, but that the one always appeared when the other was away, was
+suggestive. So were the tinted spectacles and the curious voice, which
+both hinted at a disguise, as did the bushy whiskers. My suspicions were
+all confirmed by his peculiar action in typewriting his signature, which,
+of course, inferred that his handwriting was so familiar to her that she
+would recognize even the smallest sample of it. You see all these isolated
+facts, together with many minor ones, all pointed in the same direction.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And how did you verify them?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Having once spotted my man, it was easy to get corroboration. I knew the
+firm for which this man worked. Having taken the printed description, I
+eliminated everything from it which could be the result of a
+disguise,&mdash;the whiskers, the glasses, the voice,&mdash;and I sent it to the
+firm with a request that they would inform me whether it answered to the
+description of any of their travelers. I had already noticed the
+peculiarities of the typewriter, and I wrote to the man himself at his
+business address, asking him if he would come here. As I expected, his
+reply was typewritten, and revealed the same trivial but characteristic
+defects. The same post brought me a letter from Westhouse &amp; Marbank, of
+Fenchurch Street, to say that the description tallied in every respect
+with that of their employee, James Windibank. <i>Voil&agrave; tout!</i>&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And Miss Sutherland?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I tell her she will not believe me. You may remember the old Persian
+saying, 'There is danger for him who taketh the tiger cub, and danger also
+for whoso snatcheth a delusion from a woman.' There is as much sense in
+Hafiz as in Horace, and as much knowledge of the world.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="A_Scandal_in_Bohemia" id="A_Scandal_in_Bohemia" /><i>A Scandal in Bohemia</i></h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+
+<p>To Sherlock Holmes she is always <i>the</i> woman. I have seldom heard him
+mention her under any other name. In his eyes she eclipses and
+predominates the whole of her sex. It was not that he felt any emotion
+akin to love for Irene Adler. All emotions, and that one particularly,
+were abhorrent to his cold, precise but admirably balanced mind. He was,
+I take it, the most perfect reasoning and observing machine that the world
+has seen; but as a lover, he would have placed himself in a false
+position. He never spoke of the softer passions, save with a gibe and a
+sneer. They were admirable things for the observer&mdash;excellent for drawing
+the veil from men's motives and actions. But for the trained reasoner to
+admit such intrusions into his own delicate and finely adjusted
+temperament was to introduce a distracting factor which might throw a
+doubt upon all his mental results. Grit in a sensitive instrument, or a
+crack in one of his own high-power lenses, would not be more disturbing
+that a strong emotion in a nature such as his. And yet there was but one
+woman to him, and that woman was the late Irene Adler, of dubious and
+questionable memory.</p>
+
+<p>I had seen little of Holmes lately. My marriage had drifted us away from
+each other. My own complete happiness, and the home-centered interests
+which rise up around the man who first finds himself master of his own
+establishment, were sufficient to absorb all my attention; while Holmes,
+who loathed every form of society with his whole Bohemian soul, remained
+in our lodgings in Baker Street, buried among his old books, and
+alternating from week to week between cocaine and ambition, the drowsiness
+of the drug and the fierce energy of his own keen nature. He was still, as
+ever, deeply attracted by the study of crime, and occupied his immense
+faculties and extraordinary powers of observation in following out those
+clews, and clearing up those mysteries, which had been abandoned as
+hopeless by the official police. From time to time I heard some vague
+account of his doings; of his summons to Odessa in the case of the Trepoff
+murder, of his clearing up of the singular tragedy of the Atkinson
+brothers at Trincomalee, and finally of the mission which he had
+accomplished so delicately and successfully for the reigning family of
+Holland. Beyond these signs of his activity, however, which I merely
+shared with all the readers of the daily press, I knew little of my former
+friend and companion.</p>
+
+<p>One night&mdash;it was on the 20th of March, 1888&mdash;I was returning from a
+journey to a patient (for I had now returned to civil practice), when my
+way led me through Baker Street. As I passed the well-remembered door,
+which must always be associated in my mind with my wooing, and with the
+dark incidents of the Study in Scarlet, I was seized with a keen desire to
+see Holmes again, and to know how he was employing his extraordinary
+powers. His rooms were brilliantly lighted, and even as I looked up, I saw
+his tall, spare figure pass twice in a dark silhouette against the blind.
+He was pacing the room swiftly, eagerly, with his head sunk upon his
+chest, and his hands clasped behind him. To me, who knew his every mood
+and habit, his attitude and manner told their own story. He was at work
+again. He had risen out of his drug-created dreams, and was hot upon the
+scent of some new problem. I rang the bell, and was shown up to the
+chamber which had formerly been in part my own.</p>
+
+<p>His manner was not effusive. It seldom was; but he was glad, I think, to
+see me. With hardly a word spoken, but with a kindly eye, he waved me to
+an armchair, threw across his case of cigars, and indicated a spirit case
+and a gasogene in the corner. Then he stood before the fire, and looked me
+over in his singular introspective fashion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wedlock suits you,&quot; he remarked. &quot;I think, Watson, that you have put on
+seven and a half pounds since I saw you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Seven,&quot; I answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed, I should have thought a little more. Just a trifle more, I fancy,
+Watson. And in practice again, I observe. You did not tell me that you
+intended to go into harness.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then how do you know?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I see it, I deduce it. How do I know that you have been getting yourself
+very wet lately, and that you have a most clumsy and careless servant
+girl?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Holmes,&quot; said I, &quot;this is too much. You would certainly have been
+burned had you lived a few centuries ago. It is true that I had a country
+walk on Thursday and came home in a dreadful mess; but as I have changed
+my clothes, I can't imagine how you deduce it. As to Mary Jane, she is
+incorrigible, and my wife has given her notice; but there again I fail to
+see how you work it out.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He chuckled to himself and rubbed his long nervous hands together.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is simplicity itself,&quot; said he, &quot;my eyes tell me that on the inside of
+your left shoe, just where the firelight strikes it, the leather is scored
+by six almost parallel cuts. Obviously they have been caused by some one
+who has very carelessly scraped round the edges of the sole in order to
+remove crusted mud from it. Hence, you see, my double deduction that you
+had been out in vile weather, and that you had a particularly malignant
+boot-slicking specimen of the London slavey. As to your practice, if a
+gentleman walks into my rooms, smelling of iodoform, with a black mark of
+nitrate of silver upon his right forefinger, and a bulge on the side of
+his top hat to show where he has secreted his stethoscope, I must be dull
+indeed if I do not pronounce him to be an active member of the medical
+profession.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could not help laughing at the ease with which he, explained his process
+of deduction. &quot;When I hear you give your reasons,&quot; I remarked, &quot;the thing
+always appears to me so ridiculously simple that I could easily do it
+myself, though at each successive instance of your reasoning I am baffled,
+until you explain your process. And yet, I believe that my eyes are as
+good as yours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite so,&quot; he answered, lighting a cigarette, and throwing himself down
+into an armchair. &quot;You see, but you do not observe. The distinction is
+clear. For example, you have frequently seen the steps which lead up from
+the hall to this room.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Frequently.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How often?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, some hundreds of times.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then how many are there?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How many? I don't know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite so! You have not observed. And yet you have seen. That is just my
+point. Now, I know there are seventeen steps, because I have both seen and
+observed. By the way, since you are interested in these little problems,
+and since you are good enough to chronicle one or two of my trifling
+experiences, you may be interested in this.&quot; He threw over a sheet of
+thick pink-tinted note paper which had been lying open upon the table. &quot;It
+came by the last post,&quot; said he. &quot;Read it aloud.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The note was undated, and without either signature or address.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There will call upon you to-night, at a quarter to eight o'clock,&quot; it
+said, &quot;a gentleman who desires to consult you upon a matter of the very
+deepest moment. Your recent services to one of the royal houses of Europe
+have shown that you are one who may safely be trusted with matters which
+are of an importance which can hardly be exaggerated. This account of you
+we have from all quarters received. Be in your chamber, then, at that
+hour, and do not take it amiss if your visitor wears a mask.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is indeed a mystery,&quot; I remarked. &quot;What do you imagine that it
+means?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have no data yet. It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has
+data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of
+theories to suit facts. But the note itself&mdash;what do you deduce from it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I carefully examined the writing, and the paper upon which it was written.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The man who wrote it was presumably well to do,&quot; I remarked, endeavoring
+to imitate my companion's processes. &quot;Such paper could not be bought under
+half a crown a packet. It is peculiarly strong and stiff.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Peculiar&mdash;that is the very word,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;It is not an English
+paper at all. Hold it up to the light&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did so, and saw a large <i>E</i> with a small <i>g</i>, a <i>P</i> and a large <i>G</i> with
+a small <i>t</i> woven into the texture of the paper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you make of that?&quot; asked Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The name of the maker, no doubt; or his monogram, rather.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not all. The <i>G</i> with the small <i>t</i> stands for 'Gesellschaft,' which is
+the German for 'Company.' It is a customary contraction like our 'Co.'
+<i>P</i>, of course, stands for 'Papier.' Now for the <i>Eg</i>. Let us glance at
+our 'Continental Gazetteer.&quot; He took down a heavy brown volume from his
+shelves. &quot;Eglow, Eglonitz&mdash;here we are, Egria. It is in a German-speaking
+country&mdash;in Bohemia, not far from Carlsbad. 'Remarkable as being the scene
+of the death of Wallenstein, and for its numerous glass factories and
+paper mills.' Ha! ha! my boy, what do you make of that?&quot; His eyes
+sparkled, and he sent up a great blue triumphant cloud from his cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The paper was made in Bohemia,&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Precisely. And the man who wrote the note is a German. Do you note the
+peculiar construction of the sentence&mdash;'This account of you we have from
+all quarters received'? A Frenchman or Russian could not have written
+that. It is the German who is so uncourteous to his verbs. It only
+remains, therefore, to discover what is wanted by this German who writes
+upon Bohemian paper, and prefers wearing a mask to showing his face. And
+here he comes, if I am not mistaken, to resolve all our doubts.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke there was the sharp sound of horses' hoofs and grating wheels
+against the curb, followed by a sharp pull at the bell. Holmes whistled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A pair, by the sound,&quot; said he. &quot;Yes,&quot; he continued, glancing out of the
+window. &quot;A nice little brougham and a pair of beauties. A hundred and
+fifty guineas apiece. There's money in this case, Watson, if there is
+nothing else.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think I had better go, Holmes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a bit, doctor. Stay where you are. I am lost without my Boswell. And
+this promises to be interesting. It would be a pity to miss it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But your client&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never mind him. I may want your help, and so may he. Here he comes. Sit
+down in that armchair, doctor, and give us your best attention.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A slow and heavy step, which had been heard upon the stairs and in the
+passage, paused immediately outside the door. Then there was a loud and
+authoritative tap.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come in!&quot; said Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>A man entered who could hardly have been less than six feet six inches in
+height, with the chest and limbs of a Hercules. His dress was rich with a
+richness which would, in England, be looked upon as akin to bad taste.
+Heavy bands of astrakhan were slashed across the sleeves and front of his
+double-breasted coat, while the deep blue cloak which was thrown over his
+shoulders was lined with flame-colored silk, and secured at the neck with
+a brooch which consisted of a single flaming beryl. Boots which extended
+halfway up his calves, and which were trimmed at the tops with rich brown
+fur, completed the impression of barbaric opulence which was suggested by
+his whole appearance. He carried a broad-brimmed hat in his hand, while he
+wore across the upper part of his face, extending down past the
+cheek-bones, a black visard mask, which he had apparently adjusted that
+very moment, for his hand was still raised to it as he entered. From the
+lower part of the face he appeared to be a man of strong character, with a
+thick, hanging lip, and a long, straight chin, suggestive of resolution
+pushed to the length of obstinacy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You had my note?&quot; he asked, with a deep, harsh voice and a strongly
+marked German accent. &quot;I told you that I would call.&quot; He looked from one
+to the other of us, as if uncertain which to address.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pray take a seat,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;This is my friend and colleague, Doctor
+Watson, who is occasionally good enough to help me in my cases. Whom have
+I the honor to address?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You may address me as the Count von Kramm, a Bohemian nobleman. I
+understand that this gentleman, your friend, is a man of honor and
+discretion, whom I may trust with a matter of the most extreme
+importance. If not, I should much prefer to communicate with you alone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I rose to go, but Holmes caught me by the wrist and pushed me back into my
+chair. &quot;It is both, or none,&quot; said he. &quot;You may say before this gentleman
+anything which you may say to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The count shrugged his broad shoulders. &quot;Then I must begin,&quot; said he, &quot;by
+binding you both to absolute secrecy for two years; at the end of that
+time the matter will be of no importance. At present it is not too much to
+say that it is of such weight that it may have an influence upon European
+history.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I promise,&quot; said Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will excuse this mask,&quot; continued our strange visitor. &quot;The august
+person who employs me wishes his agent to be unknown to you, and I may
+confess at once that the title by which I have just called myself is not
+exactly my own.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was aware of it,&quot; said Holmes, dryly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The circumstances are of great delicacy, and every precaution has to be
+taken to quench what might grow to be an immense scandal, and seriously
+compromise one of the reigning families of Europe. To speak plainly, the
+matter implicates the great House of Ormstein, hereditary kings of
+Bohemia.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was also aware of that,&quot; murmured Holmes, settling himself down in his
+armchair, and closing his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Our visitor glanced with some apparent surprise at the languid, lounging
+figure of the man who had been, no doubt, depicted to him as the most
+incisive reasoner and most energetic agent in Europe. Holmes slowly
+reopened his eyes and looked impatiently at his gigantic client.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If your majesty would condescend to state your case,&quot; he remarked, &quot;I
+should be better able to advise you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man sprung from his chair, and paced up and down the room in
+uncontrollable agitation. Then, with a gesture of desperation, he tore
+the mask from his face and hurled it upon the ground.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are right,&quot; he cried, &quot;I am the king. Why should I attempt to conceal
+it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, indeed?&quot; murmured Holmes. &quot;Your majesty had not spoken before I was
+aware that I was addressing Wilhelm Gottsreich Sigismond von Ormstein,
+Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein, and hereditary King of Bohemia.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you can understand,&quot; said our strange visitor, sitting down once more
+and passing his hand over his high, white forehead, &quot;you can understand
+that I am not accustomed to doing such business in my own person. Yet the
+matter was so delicate that I could not confide it to an agent without
+putting myself in his power. I have come incognito from Prague for the
+purpose of consulting you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then, pray consult,&quot; said Holmes, shutting his eyes once more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The facts are briefly these: Some five years ago, during a lengthy visit
+to Warsaw, I made the acquaintance of the well-known adventuress Irene
+Adler. The name is no doubt familiar to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Kindly look her up in my index, doctor,&quot; murmured Holmes, without opening
+his eyes. For many years he had adopted a system for docketing all
+paragraphs concerning men and things, so that it was difficult to name a
+subject or a person on which he could not at once furnish information. In
+this case I found her biography sandwiched in between that of a Hebrew
+rabbi and that of a staff commander who had written a monograph upon the
+deep-sea fishes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me see!&quot; said Holmes. &quot;Hum! Born in New Jersey in the year 1858.
+Contralto&mdash;hum! La Scala&mdash;hum! Prima donna Imperial Opera of Warsaw&mdash;yes!
+Retired from operatic stage&mdash;ha! Living in London&mdash;quite so! Your majesty,
+as I understand, became entangled with this young person, wrote her some
+compromising letters, and is now desirous of getting those letters back.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Precisely so. But how&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was there a secret marriage?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No legal papers or certificates?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I fail to follow your majesty. If this young person should produce
+her letters for blackmailing or other purposes, how is she to prove their
+authenticity?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is the writing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pooh-pooh! Forgery.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My private note paper.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stolen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My own seal.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Imitated.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My photograph.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bought.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We were both in the photograph.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, dear! That is very bad. Your majesty has indeed committed an
+indiscretion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was mad&mdash;insane.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have compromised yourself seriously.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was only crown prince then. I was young. I am but thirty now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It must be recovered.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have tried and failed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your majesty must pay. It must be bought.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She will not sell.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stolen, then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Five attempts have been made. Twice burglars in my pay ransacked her
+house. Once we diverted her luggage when she traveled. Twice she has been
+waylaid. There has been no result.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No sign of it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Absolutely none.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Holmes laughed. &quot;It is quite a pretty little problem,&quot; said he.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But a very serious one to me,&quot; returned the king, reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very, indeed. And what does she propose to do with the photograph?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To ruin me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But how?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am about to be married.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I have heard.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To Clotilde Lothman von Saxe-Meiningen, second daughter of the King of
+Scandinavia. You may know the strict principles of her family. She is
+herself the very soul of delicacy. A shadow of a doubt as to my conduct
+would bring the matter to an end.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And Irene Adler?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Threatens to send them the photograph. And she will do it. I know that
+she will do it. You do not know her, but she has a soul of steel. She has
+the face of the most beautiful of women and the mind of the most resolute
+of men. Rather than I should marry another woman, there are no lengths to
+which she would not go&mdash;none.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are sure she has not sent it yet?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am sure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And why?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because she has said that she would send it on the day when the betrothal
+was publicly proclaimed. That will be next Monday.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, then we have three days yet,&quot; said Holmes, with a yawn. &quot;That is very
+fortunate, as I have one or two matters of importance to look into just at
+present. Your majesty will, of course, stay in London for the present?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly. You will find me at the Langham, under the name of the Count
+von Kramm.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I shall drop you a line to let you know how we progress.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pray do so; I shall be all anxiety.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then, as to money?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have <i>carte blanche</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Absolutely?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I tell you that I would give one of the provinces of my kingdom to have
+that photograph.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And for present expenses?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The king took a heavy chamois-leather bag from under his cloak, and laid
+it on the table.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are three hundred pounds in gold, and seven hundred in notes,&quot; he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Holmes scribbled a receipt upon a sheet of his notebook, and handed it to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And mademoiselle's address?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is Briony Lodge, Serpentine Avenue, St. John's Wood.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Holmes took a note of it. &quot;One other question,&quot; said he, thoughtfully.
+&quot;Was the photograph a cabinet?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then, good-night, your majesty, and I trust that we shall soon have some
+good news for you. And good-night, Watson,&quot; he added, as the wheels of the
+royal brougham rolled down the street. &quot;If you will be good enough to call
+to-morrow afternoon, at three o'clock, I should like to chat this little
+matter over with you.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+
+<p>At three o'clock precisely I was at Baker Street, but Holmes had not yet
+returned. The landlady informed me that he had left the house shortly
+after eight o'clock in the morning. I sat down beside the fire, however,
+with the intention of awaiting him, however long he might be. I was
+already deeply interested in his inquiry, for, though it was surrounded by
+none of the grim and strange features which were associated with the two
+crimes which I have already recorded, still, the nature of the case and
+the exalted station of his client gave it a character of its own. Indeed,
+apart from the nature of the investigation which my friend had on hand,
+there was something in his masterly grasp of a situation, and his keen,
+incisive reasoning, which made it a pleasure to me to study his system of
+work, and to follow the quick, subtle methods by which he disentangled the
+most inextricable mysteries. So accustomed was I to his invariable
+success that the very possibility of his failing had ceased to enter into
+my head.</p>
+
+<p>It was close upon four before the door opened, and a drunken-looking
+groom, ill-kempt and side-whiskered, with an inflamed face and
+disreputable clothes, walked into the room. Accustomed as I was to my
+friend's amazing powers in the use of disguises, I had to look three times
+before I was certain that it was indeed he. With a nod he vanished into
+the bedroom, whence he emerged in five minutes tweed-suited and
+respectable, as of old. Putting his hands into his pockets, he stretched
+out his legs in front of the fire, and laughed heartily for some minutes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, really!&quot; he cried, and then he choked, and laughed again until he
+was obliged to lie back, limp and helpless, in the chair.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's quite too funny. I am sure you could never guess how I employed my
+morning, or what I ended by doing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can't imagine. I suppose that you have been watching the habits, and,
+perhaps, the house, of Miss Irene Adler.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite so, but the sequel was rather unusual. I will tell you, however. I
+left the house a little after eight o'clock this morning in the character
+of a groom out of work. There is a wonderful sympathy and freemasonry
+among horsey men. Be one of them, and you will know all that there is to
+know. I soon found Briony Lodge. It is a bijou villa, with a garden at the
+back, but built out in the front right up to the road, two stories. Chubb
+lock to the door. Large sitting room on the right side, well furnished,
+with long windows almost to the floor, and those preposterous English
+window fasteners which a child could open. Behind there was nothing
+remarkable, save that the passage window could be reached from the top of
+the coach-house. I walked round it and examined it closely from every
+point of view, but without noting anything else of interest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I then lounged down the street, and found, as I expected, that there was
+a mews in a lane which runs down by one wall of the garden. I lent the
+hostlers a hand in rubbing down their horses, and I received in exchange
+twopence, a glass of half and half, two fills of shag tobacco, and as much
+information as I could desire about Miss Adler, to say nothing of half a
+dozen other people in the neighborhood, in whom I was not in the least
+interested, but whose biographies I was compelled to listen to.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what of Irene Adler?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, she has turned all the men's heads down in that part. She is the
+daintiest thing under a bonnet on this planet. So say the Serpentine Mews,
+to a man. She lives quietly, sings at concerts, drives out at five every
+day, and returns at seven sharp for dinner. Seldom goes out at other
+times, except when she sings. Has only one male visitor, but a good deal
+of him. He is dark, handsome, and dashing; never calls less than once a
+day, and often twice. He is a Mr. Godfrey Norton of the Inner Temple. See
+the advantages of a cabman as a confidant. They had driven him home a
+dozen times from Serpentine Mews, and knew all about him. When I had
+listened to all that they had to tell, I began to walk up and down near
+Briony Lodge once more, and to think over my plan of campaign.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This Godfrey Norton was evidently an important factor in the matter. He
+was a lawyer. That sounded ominous. What was the relation between them,
+and what the object of his repeated visits? Was she his client, his
+friend, or his mistress? If the former, she had probably transferred the
+photograph to his keeping. If the latter, it was less likely. On the issue
+of this question depended whether I should continue my work at Briony
+Lodge, or turn my attention to the gentleman's chambers in the Temple. It
+was a delicate point, and it widened the field of my inquiry. I fear that
+I bore you with these details, but I have to let you see my little
+difficulties, if you are to understand the situation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am following you closely,&quot; I answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was still balancing the matter in my mind, when a hansom cab drove up
+to Briony Lodge, and a gentleman sprung out. He was a remarkably handsome
+man, dark, aquiline, and mustached&mdash;evidently the man of whom I had heard.
+He appeared to be in a great hurry, shouted to the cabman to wait, and
+brushed past the maid who opened the door, with the air of a man who was
+thoroughly at home.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He was in the house about half an hour, and I could catch glimpses of him
+in the windows of the sitting room, pacing up and down, talking excitedly
+and waving his arms. Of her I could see nothing. Presently he emerged,
+looking even more flurried than before. As he stepped up to the cab, he
+pulled a gold watch from his pocket and looked at it earnestly. 'Drive
+like the devil!' he shouted, 'first to Gross &amp; Hankey's in Regent Street,
+and then to the Church of St. Monica in the Edgeware Road. Half a guinea
+if you do it in twenty minutes!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Away they went, and I was just wondering whether I should not do well to
+follow them, when up the lane came a neat little landau, the coachman with
+his coat only half buttoned, and his tie under his ear, while all the tags
+of his harness were sticking out of the buckles. It hadn't pulled up
+before she shot out of the hall door and into it. I only caught a glimpse
+of her at the moment, but she was a lovely woman, with a face that a man
+might die for.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'The Church of St. Monica, John,' she cried; 'and half a sovereign if you
+reach it in twenty minutes.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This was quite too good to lose, Watson. I was just balancing whether I
+should run for it, or whether I should perch behind her landau, when a cab
+came through the street. The driver looked twice at such a shabby fare;
+but I jumped in before he could object. 'The Church of St. Monica,' said
+I, 'and half a sovereign if you reach it in twenty minutes.' It was
+twenty-five minutes to twelve, and of course it was clear enough what was
+in the wind.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My cabby drove fast. I don't think I ever drove faster, but the others
+were there before us. The cab and landau with their steaming horses were
+in front of the door when I arrived. I paid the man, and hurried into the
+church. There was not a soul there save the two whom I had followed, and
+a surpliced clergyman, who seemed to be expostulating with them. They were
+all three standing in a knot in front of the altar. I lounged up the side
+aisle like any other idler who has dropped into a church. Suddenly, to my
+surprise, the three at the altar faced round to me, and Godfrey Norton
+came running as hard as he could toward me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Thank God!' he cried. 'You'll do. Come! Come!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What then?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Come, man, come; only three minutes, or it won't be legal.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was half dragged up to the altar, and, before I knew where I was, I
+found myself mumbling responses which were whispered in my ear, and
+vouching for things of which I knew nothing, and generally assisting in
+the secure tying up of Irene Adler, spinster, to Godfrey Norton, bachelor.
+It was all done in an instant, and there was the gentleman thanking me on
+the one side and the lady on the other, while the clergyman beamed on me
+in front. It was the most preposterous position in which I ever found
+myself in my life, and it was the thought of it that started me laughing
+just now. It seems that there had been some informality about their
+license; that the clergyman absolutely refused to marry them without a
+witness of some sort, and that my lucky appearance saved the bridegroom
+from having to sally out into the streets in search of a best man. The
+bride gave me a sovereign, and I mean to wear it on my watch chain in
+memory of the occasion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is a very unexpected turn of affairs,&quot; said I; &quot;and what then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I found my plans very seriously menaced. It looked as if the pair
+might take an immediate departure, and so necessitate very prompt and
+energetic measures on my part. At the church door, however, they
+separated, he driving back to the Temple, and she to her own house. 'I
+shall drive out in the park at five as usual,' she said, as she left him.
+I heard no more. They drove away in different directions, and I went off
+to make my own arrangements.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Which are?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Some cold beef and a glass of beer,&quot; he answered, ringing the bell. &quot;I
+have been too busy to think of food, and I am likely to be busier still
+this evening. By the way, doctor, I shall want your cooperation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall be delighted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You don't mind breaking the law?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not in the least.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor running a chance of arrest?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not in a good cause.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, the cause is excellent!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I am your man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was sure that I might rely on you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But what is it you wish?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When Mrs. Turner has brought in the tray I will make it clear to you.
+Now,&quot; he said, as he turned hungrily on the simple fare that our landlady
+had provided, &quot;I must discuss it while I eat, for I have not much time. It
+is nearly five now. In two hours we must be on the scene of action. Miss
+Irene, or Madame, rather, returns from her drive at seven. We must be at
+Briony Lodge to meet her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must leave that to me. I have already arranged what is to occur.
+There is only one point on which I must insist. You must not interfere,
+come what may. You understand?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am to be neutral?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To do nothing whatever. There will probably be some small unpleasantness.
+Do not join in it. It will end in my being conveyed into the house. Four
+or five minutes afterwards the sitting-room window will open. You are to
+station yourself close to that open window.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are to watch me, for I will be visible to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And when I raise my hand&mdash;so&mdash;you will throw into the room what I give
+you to throw, and will, at the same time, raise the cry of fire. You quite
+follow me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Entirely.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is nothing very formidable,&quot; he said, taking a long, cigar-shaped roll
+from his pocket. &quot;It is an ordinary plumber's smoke-rocket, fitted with a
+cap at either end, to make it self-lighting. Your task is confined to
+that. When you raise your cry of fire, it will be taken up by quite a
+number of people. You may then walk to the end of the street, and I will
+rejoin you in ten minutes. I hope that I have made myself clear?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am to remain neutral, to get near the window, to watch you, and, at the
+signal, to throw in this object, then to raise the cry of fire and to wait
+you at the corner of the street.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Precisely.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you may entirely rely on me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is excellent. I think, perhaps, it is almost time that I prepared
+for the new role I have to play.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He disappeared into his bedroom, and returned in a few minutes in the
+character of an amiable and simple-minded Nonconformist clergyman. His
+broad, black hat, his baggy trousers, his white tie, his sympathetic
+smile, and general look of peering and benevolent curiosity were such as
+Mr. John Hare alone could have equaled. It was not merely that Holmes
+changed his costume. His expression, his manner, his very soul seemed to
+vary with every fresh part that he assumed. The stage lost a fine actor,
+even as science lost an acute reasoner, when he became a specialist in
+crime.</p>
+
+<p>It was a quarter past six when we left Baker Street, and it still wanted
+ten minutes to the hour when we found ourselves in Serpentine Avenue. It
+was already dusk, and the lamps were just being lighted as we paced up and
+down in front of Briony Lodge, waiting for the coming of its occupant. The
+house was just such as I had pictured it from Sherlock Holmes's succinct
+description, but the locality appeared to be less private than I expected.
+On the contrary, for a small street in a quiet neighborhood, it was
+remarkably animated. There was a group of shabbily dressed men smoking and
+laughing in a corner, a scissors grinder with his wheel, two guardsmen who
+were flirting with a nurse girl, and several well-dressed young men who
+were lounging up and down with cigars in their mouths.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see,&quot; remarked Holmes, as we paced to and fro in front of the house,
+&quot;this marriage rather simplifies matters. The photograph becomes a
+double-edged weapon now. The chances are that she would be as averse to
+its being seen by Mr. Godfrey Norton as our client is to its coming to the
+eyes of his princess. Now the question is&mdash;where are we to find the
+photograph?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where, indeed?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is most unlikely that she carries it about with her. It is cabinet
+size. Too large for easy concealment about a woman's dress. She knows that
+the king is capable of having her waylaid and searched. Two attempts of
+the sort have already been made. We may take it, then, that she does not
+carry it about with her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where, then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Her banker or her lawyer. There is that double possibility. But I am
+inclined to think neither. Women are naturally secretive, and they like to
+do their own secreting. Why should she hand it over to anyone else? She
+could trust her own guardianship, but she could not tell what indirect or
+political influence might be brought to bear upon a business man. Besides,
+remember that she had resolved to use it within a few days. It must be
+where she can lay her hands upon it. It must be in her own house.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But it has twice been burglarized.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pshaw! They did not know how to look.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But how will you look?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will not look.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will get her to show me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But she will refuse.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She will not be able to. But I hear the rumble of wheels. It is her
+carriage. Now carry out my orders to the letter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the gleam of the sidelights of a carriage came round the
+curve of the avenue. It was a smart little landau which rattled up to the
+door of Briony Lodge. As it pulled up one of the loafing men at the corner
+dashed forward to open the door in the hope of earning a copper, but was
+elbowed away by another loafer who had rushed up with the same intention.
+A fierce quarrel broke out which was increased by the two guardsmen, who
+took sides with one of the loungers, and by the scissors grinder, who was
+equally hot upon the other side. A blow was struck, and in an instant the
+lady, who had stepped from her carriage, was the center of a little knot
+of struggling men who struck savagely at each other with their fists and
+sticks. Holmes dashed into the crowd to protect the lady; but, just as he
+reached her, he gave a cry and dropped to the ground, with the blood
+running freely down his face. At his fall the guardsmen took to their
+heels in one direction and the loungers in the other, while a number of
+better-dressed people who had watched the scuffle without taking part in
+it crowded in to help the lady and to attend to the injured man. Irene
+Adler, as I will still call her, had hurried up the steps; but she stood
+at the top, with her superb figure outlined against the lights of the
+hall, looking back into the street.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is the poor gentleman much hurt?&quot; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is dead,&quot; cried several voices.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, there's life in him,&quot; shouted another. &quot;But he'll be gone before
+you can get him to the hospital.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He's a brave fellow,&quot; said a woman. &quot;They would have had the lady's purse
+and watch if it hadn't been for him. They were a gang, and a rough one,
+too. Ah! he's breathing now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He can't lie in the street. May we bring him in, marm?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surely. Bring him into the sitting room. There is a comfortable sofa.
+This way, please.&quot; Slowly and solemnly he was borne into Briony Lodge, and
+laid out in the principal room, while I still observed the proceedings
+from my post by the window. The lamps had been lighted, but the blinds had
+not been drawn, so that I could see Holmes as he lay upon the couch. I do
+not know whether he was seized with compunction at that moment for the
+part he was playing, but I know that I never felt more heartily ashamed of
+myself in my life than when I saw the beautiful creature against whom I
+was conspiring, or the grace and kindliness with which she waited upon the
+injured man. And yet it would be the blackest treachery to Holmes to draw
+back now from the part which he had intrusted to me. I hardened my heart,
+and took the smoke-rocket from under my ulster. After all, I thought, we
+are not injuring her. We are but preventing her from injuring another.</p>
+
+<p>Holmes had sat upon the couch, and I saw him motion like a man who is in
+need of air. A maid rushed across and threw open the window. At the same
+instant I saw him raise his hand, and at the signal I tossed my rocket
+into the room with a cry of &quot;Fire!&quot; The word was no sooner out of my mouth
+than the whole crowd of spectators, well dressed and ill&mdash;gentlemen,
+hostlers, and servant maids&mdash;joined in a general shriek of &quot;Fire!&quot; Thick
+clouds of smoke curled through the room, and out at the open window. I
+caught a glimpse of rushing figures, and a moment later the voice of
+Holmes from within assuring them that it was a false alarm. Slipping
+through the shouting crowd, I made my way to the corner of the street, and
+in ten minutes was rejoiced to find my friend's arm in mine, and to get
+away from the scene of uproar. He walked swiftly and in silence for some
+few minutes, until we had turned down one of the quiet streets which led
+toward the Edgeware Road.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You did it very nicely, doctor,&quot; he remarked. &quot;Nothing could have been
+better. It is all right.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have the photograph?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know where it is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And how did you find out?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She showed me, as I told you that she would.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am still in the dark.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not wish to make a mystery,&quot; said he, laughing. &quot;The matter was
+perfectly simple. You, of course, saw that everyone in the street was an
+accomplice. They were all engaged for the evening.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I guessed as much.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then, when the row broke out, I had a little moist red paint in the palm
+of my hand. I rushed forward, fell down, clapped my hand to my face, and
+became a piteous spectacle. It is an old trick.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That also I could fathom.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then they carried me in. She was bound to have me in. What else could she
+do? And into her sitting room, which was the very room which I suspected.
+It lay between that and her bedroom, and I was determined to see which.
+They laid me on a couch, I motioned for air, they were compelled to open
+the window, and you had your chance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How did that help you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was all-important. When a woman thinks that her house is on fire, her
+instinct is at once to rush to the thing which she values most. It is a
+perfectly overpowering impulse, and I have more than once taken advantage
+of it. In the case of the Darlington Substitution Scandal it was of use to
+me, and also in the Arnsworth Castle business. A married woman grabs at
+her baby&mdash;an unmarried one reaches for her jewel box. Now it was clear to
+me that our lady of to-day had nothing in the house more precious to her
+than what we are in quest of. She would rush to secure it. The alarm of
+fire was admirably done. The smoke and shouting were enough to shake
+nerves of steel. She responded beautifully. The photograph is in a recess
+behind a sliding panel just above the right bell-pull. She was there in an
+instant, and I caught a glimpse of it as she drew it out. When I cried out
+that it was a false alarm, she replaced it, glanced at the rocket, rushed
+from the room, and I have not seen her since. I rose, and, making my
+excuses, escaped from the house. I hesitated whether to attempt to secure
+the photograph at once; but the coachman had come in, and as he was
+watching me narrowly, it seemed safer to wait. A little over-precipitance
+may ruin all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our quest is practically finished. I shall call with the king to-morrow,
+and with you, if you care to come with us. We will be shown into the
+sitting room to wait for the lady, but it is probable that when she comes
+she may find neither us nor the photograph. It might be a satisfaction to
+his majesty to regain it with his own hands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And when will you call?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At eight in the morning. She will not be up, so that we shall have a
+clear field. Besides, we must be prompt, for this marriage may mean a
+complete change in her life and habits. I must wire to the king without
+delay.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We had reached Baker Street, and had stopped at the door. He was searching
+his pockets for the key, when some one passing said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good night, Mister Sherlock Holmes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There were several people on the pavement at the time, but the greeting
+appeared to come from a slim youth in an ulster who had hurried by.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've heard that voice before,&quot; said Holmes, staring down the dimly
+lighted street. &quot;Now, I wonder who the deuce that could have been?&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+
+<p>I slept at Baker Street that night, and we were engaged upon our toast and
+coffee in the morning, when the King of Bohemia rushed into the room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have really got it?&quot; he cried, grasping Sherlock Holmes by either
+shoulder, and looking eagerly into his face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you have hopes?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have hopes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then come. I am all impatience to be gone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We must have a cab.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, my brougham is waiting.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then that will simplify matters.&quot; We descended, and started off once more
+for Briony Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Irene Adler is married,&quot; remarked Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Married! When?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yesterday.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But to whom?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To an English lawyer named Norton.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But she could not love him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am in hopes that she does.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And why in hopes?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because it would spare your majesty all fear of future annoyance. If the
+lady loves her husband, she does not love your majesty. If she does not
+love your majesty, there is no reason why she should interfere with your
+majesty's plan.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is true. And yet&mdash;Well, I wish she had been of my own station. What a
+queen she would have made!&quot; He relapsed into a moody silence, which was
+not broken until we drew up in Serpentine Avenue.</p>
+
+<p>The door of Briony Lodge was open, and an elderly woman stood upon the
+steps. She watched us with a sardonic eye as we stepped from the
+brougham.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Sherlock Holmes, I believe?&quot; said she.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am Mr. Holmes,&quot; answered my companion, looking at her with a
+questioning and rather startled gaze.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed! My mistress told me that you were likely to call. She left this
+morning, with her husband, by the 5:15 train from Charing Cross, for the
+Continent.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What!&quot; Sherlock Holmes staggered back, white with chagrin and surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you mean that she has left England?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never to return.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And the papers?&quot; asked the king hoarsely. &quot;All is lost!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall see.&quot; He pushed past the servant, and rushed into the
+drawing-room, followed by the king and myself. The furniture was scattered
+about in every direction, with dismantled shelves, and open drawers, as if
+the lady had hurriedly ransacked them before her flight. Holmes rushed at
+the bell-pull, tore back a small sliding shutter, and plunging in his
+hand, pulled out a photograph and a letter. The photograph was of Irene
+Adler herself in evening dress; the letter was superscribed to &quot;Sherlock
+Holmes, Esq. To be left till called for.&quot; My friend tore it open, and we
+all three read it together. It was dated at midnight of the preceding
+night, and ran in this way:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&quot;MY DEAR MR. SHERLOCK HOLMES,&mdash;You really did it very well. You
+ took me in completely. Until after the alarm of the fire, I had
+ not a suspicion. But then, when I found how I had betrayed
+ myself, I began to think. I had been warned against you months
+ ago. I had been told that if the king employed an agent, it would
+ certainly be you. And your address had been given me. Yet, with
+ all this, you made me reveal what you wanted to know. Even after
+ I became suspicious, I found it hard to think evil of such a
+ dear, kind old clergyman. But, you know, I have been trained as
+ an actress myself. Male costume is nothing new to me. I often
+ take advantage of the freedom which it gives. I sent John, the
+ coachman, to watch you, ran upstairs, got into my walking
+ clothes, as I call them, and came down just as you departed.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Well, I followed you to the door, and so made sure that I was
+ really an object of interest to the celebrated Mr. Sherlock
+ Holmes. Then I, rather imprudently, wished you good night, and
+ started for the Temple to see my husband.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;We both thought the best resource was flight when pursued by so
+ formidable an antagonist; so you will find the nest empty when
+ you call to-morrow. As to the photograph, your client may rest in
+ peace. I love and am loved by a better man than he. The king may
+ do what he will without hindrance from one whom he has cruelly
+ wronged. I keep it only to safeguard myself, and preserve a
+ weapon which will always secure me from any steps which he might
+ take in the future. I leave a photograph which he might care to
+ possess; and I remain, dear Mr. Sherlock Holmes, very truly
+ yours,</p></div>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;IRENE NORTON, <i>n&eacute;e</i> ADLER.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What a woman&mdash;oh, what a woman!&quot; cried the King of Bohemia, when we had
+all three read this epistle. &quot;Did I not tell you how quick and resolute
+she was? Would she not have made an admirable queen? Is it not a pity that
+she was not on my level?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From what I have seen of the lady, she seems indeed to be on a very
+different level to your majesty,&quot; said Holmes coldly. &quot;I am sorry that I
+have not been able to bring your majesty's business to a more successful
+conclusion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the contrary, my dear sir,&quot; cried the king, &quot;nothing could be more
+successful. I know that her word is inviolate. The photograph is now as
+safe as if it were in the fire.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am glad to hear your majesty say so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am immensely indebted to you. Pray tell me in what way I can reward
+you. This ring&mdash;&quot; He slipped an emerald snake ring from his finger, and
+held it out upon the palm of his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your majesty has something which I should value even more highly,&quot; said
+Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have but to name it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This photograph!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The king stared at him in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Irene's photograph!&quot; he cried. &quot;Certainly, if you wish it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thank your majesty. Then there is no more to be done in the matter. I
+have the honor to wish you a very good morning.&quot; He bowed, and turning
+away without observing the hand which the king had stretched out to him,
+he set off in my company for his chambers.</p>
+
+<p>And that was how a great scandal threatened to affect the kingdom of
+Bohemia, and how the best plans of Mr. Sherlock Holmes were beaten by a
+woman's wit. He used to make merry over the cleverness of women, but I
+have not heard him do it of late. And when he speaks of Irene Adler, or
+when he refers to her photograph, it is always under the honorable title
+of <i>the</i> woman.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Red_Headed_League" id="The_Red_Headed_League" /><i>The Red-Headed League</i></h2>
+
+
+<p>I had called upon my friend, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, one day in the autumn of
+last year, and found him in deep conversation with a very stout,
+florid-faced elderly gentleman, with fiery red hair. With an apology for
+my intrusion, I was about to withdraw, when Holmes pulled me abruptly into
+the room and closed the door behind me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You could not possibly have come at a better time, my dear Watson,&quot; he
+said, cordially.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was afraid that you were engaged.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I am. Very much so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I can wait in the next room.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not at all. This gentleman, Mr. Wilson, has been my partner and helper in
+many of my most successful cases, and I have no doubt that he will be of
+the utmost use to me in yours also.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The stout gentleman half rose from his chair and gave a bob of greeting,
+with a quick little questioning glance from his small, fat-encircled eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Try the settee,&quot; said Holmes, relapsing into his armchair, and putting
+his finger tips together, as was his custom when in judicial moods. &quot;I
+know, my dear Watson, that you share my love of all that is bizarre and
+outside the conventions and humdrum routine of everyday life. You have
+shown your relish for it by the enthusiasm which has prompted you to
+chronicle, and, if you will excuse my saying so, somewhat to embellish so
+many of my own little adventures.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your cases have indeed been of the greatest interest to me,&quot; I observed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will remember that I remarked the other day, just before we went into
+the very simple problem presented by Miss Mary Sutherland, that for
+strange effects and extraordinary combinations we must go to life itself,
+which is always far more daring than any effort of the imagination.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A proposition which I took the liberty of doubting.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You did, doctor, but none the less you must come round to my view, for
+otherwise I shall keep on piling fact upon fact on you, until your reason
+breaks down under them and acknowledge me to be right. Now, Mr. Jabez
+Wilson here has been good enough to call upon me this morning, and to
+begin a narrative which promises to be one of the most singular which I
+have listened to for some time. You have heard me remark that the
+strangest and most unique things are very often connected not with the
+larger but with the smaller crimes, and occasionally, indeed, where there
+is room for doubt whether any positive crime has been committed. As far as
+I have heard, it is impossible for me to say whether the present case is
+an instance of crime or not, but the course of events is certainly among
+the most singular that I have ever listened to. Perhaps, Mr. Wilson, you
+would have the great kindness to recommence your narrative. I ask you, not
+merely because my friend, Dr. Watson, has not heard the opening part, but
+also because the peculiar nature of the story makes me anxious to have
+every possible detail from your lips. As a rule, when I have heard some
+slight indication of the course of events I am able to guide myself by the
+thousands of other similar cases which occur to my memory. In the present
+instance I am forced to admit that the facts are, to the best of my
+belief, unique.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The portly client puffed out his chest with an appearance of some little
+pride, and pulled a dirty and wrinkled newspaper from the inside pocket of
+his greatcoat. As he glanced down the advertisement column, with his head
+thrust forward, and the paper flattened out upon his knee, I took a good
+look at the man, and endeavored, after the fashion of my companion, to
+read the indications which might be presented by his dress or appearance.</p>
+
+<p>I did not gain very much, however, by my inspection. Our visitor bore
+every mark of being an average commonplace British tradesman, obese,
+pompous, and slow. He wore rather baggy gray shepherd's check trousers, a
+not overclean black frock coat, unbuttoned in the front, and a drab
+waistcoat with a heavy brassy Albert chain, and a square pierced bit of
+metal dangling down as an ornament. A frayed top hat and a faded brown
+overcoat with a wrinkled velvet collar lay upon a chair beside him.
+Altogether, look as I would, there was nothing remarkable about the man
+save his blazing red head and the expression of extreme chagrin and
+discontent upon his features.</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes's quick eye took in my occupation, and he shook his head
+with a smile as he noticed my questioning glances. &quot;Beyond the obvious
+facts that he has at some time done manual labor, that he takes snuff,
+that he is a Freemason, that he has been in China, and that he has done a
+considerable amount of writing lately, I can deduce nothing else.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Jabez Wilson started up in his chair, with his forefinger upon the
+paper, but his eyes upon my companion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How, in the name of good fortune, did you know all that, Mr. Holmes?&quot; he
+asked. &quot;How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? It's as
+true as gospel, for I began as a ship's carpenter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your hands, my dear sir. Your right hand is quite a size larger than your
+left. You have worked with it and the muscles are more developed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I won't insult your intelligence by telling you how I read that,
+especially as, rather against the strict rules of your order, you use an
+arc and compass breastpin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, of course, I forgot that. But the writing?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What else can be indicated by that right cuff so very shiny for five
+inches, and the left one with the smooth patch near the elbow where you
+rest it upon the desk.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, but China?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The fish which you have tattooed immediately above your wrist could only
+have been done in China. I have made a small study of tattoo marks, and
+have even contributed to the literature of the subject. That trick of
+staining the fishes' scales of a delicate pink is quite peculiar to China.
+When, in addition, I see a Chinese coin hanging from your watch chain, the
+matter becomes even more simple.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Jabez Wilson laughed heavily. &quot;Well, I never!&quot; said he. &quot;I thought at
+first that you had done something clever, but I see that there was nothing
+in it after all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I begin to think, Watson,&quot; said Holmes, &quot;that I make a mistake in
+explaining. '<i>Omne ignotom pro magnifico</i>,' you know, and my poor little
+reputation, such as it is, will suffer shipwreck if I am so candid. Can
+you not find the advertisement, Mr. Wilson?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I have got it now,&quot; he answered, with his thick, red finger planted
+halfway down the column. &quot;Here it is. This is what began it all. You just
+read it for yourself, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I took the paper from him and read as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&quot;To the Red-headed League: On account of the bequest of the late
+ Ezekiah Hopkins, of Lebanon, Pa., U.S.A., there is now another
+ vacancy open which entitles a member of the League to a salary of
+ four pounds a week for purely nominal services. All red-headed
+ men who are sound in body and mind and above the age of
+ twenty-one years are eligible. Apply in person on Monday, at
+ eleven o'clock, to Duncan Ross, at the offices of the League, 7
+ Pope's Court, Fleet Street.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<p>&quot;What on earth does this mean?&quot; I ejaculated, after I had twice read over
+the extraordinary announcement.</p>
+
+<p>Holmes chuckled and wriggled in his chair, as was his habit when in high
+spirits. &quot;It is a little off the beaten track, isn't it?&quot; said he. &quot;And
+now, Mr. Wilson, off you go at scratch, and tell us all about yourself,
+your household, and the effect which this advertisement had upon your
+fortunes. You will first make a note, doctor, of the paper and the date.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is <i>The Morning Chronicle</i> of April 27, 1890. Just two months ago.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very good. Now, Mr. Wilson.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, it is just as I have been telling you, Mr. Sherlock Holmes,&quot; said
+Jabez Wilson, mopping his forehead, &quot;I have a small pawnbroker's business
+at Saxe-Coburg Square, near the City. It's not a very large affair, and of
+late years it has not done more than just give me a living. I used to be
+able to keep two assistants, but now I only keep one; and I would have a
+job to pay him but that he is willing to come for half wages, so as to
+learn the business.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the name of this obliging youth?&quot; asked Sherlock Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His name is Vincent Spaulding, and he's not such a youth either. It's
+hard to say his age. I should not wish a smarter assistant, Mr. Holmes;
+and I know very well that he could better himself, and earn twice what I
+am able to give him. But, after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put
+ideas in his head?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, indeed? You seem most fortunate in having an employee who comes
+under the full market price. It is not a common experience among employers
+in this age. I don't know that your assistant is not as remarkable as your
+advertisement.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, he has his faults, too,&quot; said Mr. Wilson. &quot;Never was such a fellow
+for photography. Snapping away with a camera when he ought to be improving
+his mind, and then diving down into the cellar like a rabbit into its hole
+to develop his pictures. That is his main fault; but, on the whole, he's a
+good worker. There's no vice in him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is still with you, I presume?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir. He and a girl of fourteen, who does a bit of simple cooking,
+and keeps the place clean&mdash;that's all I have in the house, for I am a
+widower, and never had any family. We live very quietly, sir, the three of
+us; and we keep a roof over our heads, and pay our debts, if we do nothing
+more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The first thing that put us out was that advertisement. Spaulding, he
+came down into the office just this day eight weeks, with this very paper
+in his hand, and he says:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I wish to the Lord, Mr. Wilson, that I was a red-headed man.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Why that?' I asks.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Why,' says he, 'here's another vacancy on the League of the Red-headed
+Men. It's worth quite a little fortune to any man who gets it, and I
+understand that there are more vacancies than there are men, so that the
+trustees are at their wits' end what to do with the money. If my hair
+would only change color here's a nice little crib all ready for me to step
+into.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Why, what is it, then?' I asked. You see, Mr. Holmes, I am a very
+stay-at-home man, and, as my business came to me instead of my having to
+go to it, I was often weeks on end without putting my foot over the door
+mat. In that way I didn't know much of what was going on outside, and I
+was always glad of a bit of news.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Have you never heard of the League of the Red-headed Men?' he asked,
+with his eyes open.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Never.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Why, I wonder at that, for you are eligible yourself for one of the
+vacancies.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'And what are they worth?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh, merely a couple of hundred a year, but the work is slight, and it
+need not interfere very much with one's other occupations.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, you can easily think that that made me prick up my ears, for the
+business has not been over good for some years, and an extra couple of
+hundred would have been very handy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Tell me all about it,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well,' said he, showing me the advertisement, 'you can see for yourself
+that the League has a vacancy, and there is the address where you should
+apply for particulars. As far as I can make out, the League was founded by
+an American millionaire, Ezekiah Hopkins, who was very peculiar in his
+ways. He was himself red-headed, and he had a great sympathy for all
+red-headed men; so, when he died, it was found that he had left his
+enormous fortune in the hands of trustees, with instructions to apply the
+interest to the providing of easy berths to men whose hair is of that
+color. From all I hear it is splendid pay, and very little to do.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'But,' said I, 'there would be millions of red-headed men who would
+apply.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Not so many as you might think,' he answered. 'You see it is really
+confined to Londoners, and to grown men. This American had started from
+London when he was young, and he wanted to do the old town a good turn.
+Then, again, I have heard it is of no use your applying if your hair is
+light red, or dark red, or anything but real, bright, blazing, fiery red.
+Now, if you cared to apply, Mr. Wilson, you would just walk in; but
+perhaps it would hardly be worth your while to put yourself out of the way
+for the sake of a few hundred pounds.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now it is a fact, gentlemen, as you may see for yourselves, that my hair
+is of a very full and rich tint, so that it seemed to me that, if there
+was to be any competition in the matter, I stood as good a chance as any
+man that I had ever met. Vincent Spaulding seemed to know so much about it
+that I thought he might prove useful, so I just ordered him to put up the
+shutters for the day, and to come right away with me. He was very willing
+to have a holiday, so we shut the business up, and started off for the
+address that was given us in the advertisement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I never hope to see such a sight as that again, Mr. Holmes. From north,
+south, east, and west every man who had a shade of red in his hair had
+tramped into the City to answer the advertisement. Fleet Street was choked
+with red-headed folk, and Pope's Court looked like a coster's orange
+barrow. I should not have thought there were so many in the whole country
+as were brought together by that single advertisement. Every shade of
+color they were&mdash;straw, lemon, orange, brick, Irish setter, liver, clay;
+but, as Spaulding said, there were not many who had the real vivid
+flame-colored tint. When I saw how many were waiting, I would have given
+it up in despair; but Spaulding would not hear of it. How he did it I
+could not imagine, but he pushed and pulled and butted until he got me
+through the crowd, and right up to the steps which led to the office.
+There was a double stream upon the stair, some going up in hope, and some
+coming back dejected; but we wedged in as well as we could, and soon found
+ourselves in the office.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your experience has been a most entertaining one,&quot; remarked Holmes, as
+his client paused and refreshed his memory with a huge pinch of snuff.
+&quot;Pray continue your very interesting statement.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There was nothing in the office but a couple of wooden chairs and a deal
+table, behind which sat a small man, with a head that was even redder than
+mine. He said a few words to each candidate as he came up, and then he
+always managed to find some fault in them which would disqualify them.
+Getting a vacancy did not seem to be such a very easy matter after all.
+However, when our turn came, the little man was much more favorable to me
+than to any of the others, and he closed the door as we entered, so that
+he might have a private word with us.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'This is Mr. Jabez Wilson,' said my assistant, 'and he is willing to fill
+a vacancy in the League.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'And he is admirably suited for it,' the other answered. 'He has every
+requirement. I cannot recall when I have seen anything so fine.' He took a
+step backward, cocked his head on one side, and gazed at my hair until I
+felt quite bashful. Then suddenly he plunged forward, wrung my hand, and
+congratulated me warmly on my success.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'It would be injustice to hesitate,' said he. 'You will, however, I am
+sure, excuse me for taking an obvious precaution.' With that he seized my
+hair in both his hands, and tugged until I yelled with the pain. 'There is
+water in your eyes,' said he, as he released me. 'I perceive that all is
+as it should be. But we have to be careful, for we have twice been
+deceived by wigs and once by paint. I could tell you tales of cobbler's
+wax which would disgust you with human nature.' He stepped over to the
+window and shouted through it at the top of his voice that the vacancy was
+filled. A groan of disappointment came up from below, and the folk all
+trooped away in different directions, until there was not a red head to be
+seen except my own and that of the manager.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'My name,' said he, 'is Mr. Duncan Ross, and I am myself one of the
+pensioners upon the fund left by our noble benefactor. Are you a married
+man, Mr. Wilson? Have you a family?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I answered that I had not.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His face fell immediately.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Dear me!' he said, gravely, 'that is very serious indeed! I am sorry to
+hear you say that. The fund was, of course, for the propagation and spread
+of the red heads as well as for their maintenance. It is exceedingly
+unfortunate that you should be a bachelor.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My face lengthened at this, Mr. Holmes, for I thought that I was not to
+have the vacancy after all; but, after thinking it over for a few
+minutes, he said that it would be all right.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'In the case of another,' said he, 'the objection might be fatal, but we
+must stretch a point in favor of a man with such a head of hair as yours.
+When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well, it is a little awkward, for I have a business already,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh, never mind about that, Mr. Wilson!' said Vincent Spaulding. 'I shall
+be able to look after that for you.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What would be the hours?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Ten to two.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now a pawnbroker's business is mostly done of an evening, Mr. Holmes,
+especially Thursday and Friday evenings, which is just before pay day; so
+it would suit me very well to earn a little in the mornings. Besides, I
+knew that my assistant was a good man, and that he would see to anything
+that turned up.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'That would suit me very well,' said I. 'And the pay?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Is four pounds a week.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'And the work?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Is purely nominal.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What do you call purely nominal?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well, you have to be in the office, or at least in the building, the
+whole time. If you leave, you forfeit your whole position forever. The
+will is very clear upon that point. You don't comply with the conditions
+if you budge from the office during that time.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'It's only four hours a day, and I should not think of leaving,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'No excuse will avail,' said Mr. Duncan Ross, 'neither sickness, nor
+business, nor anything else. There you must stay, or you lose your
+billet.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'And the work?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Is to copy out the &quot;Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica.&quot; There is the first volume
+of it in that press. You must find your own ink, pens, and blotting
+paper, but we provide this table and chair. Will you be ready to-morrow?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Certainly,' I answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Then, good-by, Mr. Jabez Wilson, and let me congratulate you once more
+on the important position which you have been fortunate enough to gain.'
+He bowed me out of the room, and I went home with my assistant hardly
+knowing what to say or do, I was so pleased at my own good fortune.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I thought over the matter all day, and by evening I was in low
+spirits again; for I had quite persuaded myself that the whole affair must
+be some great hoax or fraud, though what its object might be I could not
+imagine. It seemed altogether past belief that anyone could make such a
+will, or that they would pay such a sum for doing anything so simple as
+copying out the 'Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica.' Vincent Spaulding did what he
+could to cheer me up, but by bed time I had reasoned myself out of the
+whole thing. However, in the morning I determined to have a look at it
+anyhow, so I bought a penny bottle of ink, and with a quill pen and seven
+sheets of foolscap paper I started off for Pope's Court.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, to my surprise and delight everything was as right as possible. The
+table was set out ready for me, and Mr. Duncan Ross was there to see that
+I got fairly to work. He started me off upon the letter A, and then he
+left me; but he would drop in from time to time to see that all was right
+with me. At two o'clock he bade me good-day, complimented me upon the
+amount that I had written, and locked the door of the office after me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This went on day after day, Mr. Holmes, and on Saturday the manager came
+in and planked down four golden sovereigns for my week's work. It was the
+same next week, and the same the week after. Every morning I was there at
+ten, and every afternoon I left at two. By degrees Mr. Duncan Ross took to
+coming in only once of a morning, and then, after a time, he did not come
+in at all. Still, of course, I never dared to leave the room for an
+instant, for I was not sure when he might come, and the billet was such a
+good one, and suited me so well, that I would not risk the loss of it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Eight weeks passed away like this, and I had written about Abbots, and
+Archery, and Armor, and Architecture, and Attica, and hoped with diligence
+that I might get on to the Bs before very long. It cost me something in
+foolscap, and I had pretty nearly filled a shelf with my writings. And
+then suddenly the whole business came to an end.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To an end?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir. And no later than this morning. I went to my work as usual at
+ten o'clock, but the door was shut and locked, with a little square of
+cardboard hammered onto the middle of the panel with a tack. Here it is,
+and you can read for yourself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He held up a piece of white cardboard, about the size of a sheet of note
+paper. It read in this fashion:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE IS DISSOLVED.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oct. 9, 1890.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes and I surveyed this curt announcement and the rueful face
+behind it, until the comical side of the affair so completely overtopped
+every consideration that we both burst out into a roar of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot see that there is anything very funny,&quot; cried our client,
+flushing up to the roots of his flaming head. &quot;If you can do nothing
+better than laugh at me, I can go elsewhere.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no,&quot; cried Holmes, shoving him back into the chair from which he had
+half risen. &quot;I really wouldn't miss your case for the world. It is most
+refreshingly unusual. But there is, if you will excuse my saying so,
+something just a little funny about it. Pray what steps did you take when
+you found the card upon the door?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was staggered, sir. I did not know what to do. Then I called at the
+offices round, but none of them seemed to know anything about it. Finally,
+I went to the landlord, who is an accountant living on the ground floor,
+and I asked him if he could tell me what had become of the Red-headed
+League. He said that he had never heard of any such body. Then I asked him
+who Mr. Duncan Ross was. He answered that the name was new to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well' said I, 'the gentleman at No. 4.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What, the red-headed man?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh,' said he, 'his name was William Morris. He was a solicitor, and was
+using my room as a temporary convenience until his new premises were
+ready. He moved out yesterday.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Where could I find him?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh, at his new offices. He did tell me the address. Yes, 17 King Edward
+Street, near St. Paul's.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I started off, Mr. Holmes, but when I got to that address it was a
+manufactory of artificial knee-caps, and no one in it had ever heard of
+either Mr. William Morris or Mr. Duncan Ross.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what did you do then?&quot; asked Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I went home to Saxe-Coburg Square, and I took the advice of my assistant.
+But he could not help me in any way. He could only say that if I waited I
+should hear by post. But that was not quite good enough, Mr. Holmes. I did
+not wish to lose such a place without a struggle, so, as I had heard that
+you were good enough to give advice to poor folk who were in need of it, I
+came right away to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you did very wisely,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;Your case is an exceedingly
+remarkable one, and I shall be happy to look into it. From what you have
+told me I think that it is possible that graver issues hang from it than
+might at first sight appear.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Grave enough!&quot; said Mr. Jabez Wilson. &quot;Why, I have lost four pound a
+week.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As far as you are personally concerned,&quot; remarked Holmes, &quot;I do not see
+that you have any grievance against this extraordinary league. On the
+contrary, you are, as I understand, richer by some thirty pounds, to say
+nothing of the minute knowledge which you have gained on every subject
+which comes under the letter A. You have lost nothing by them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir. But I want to find out about them, and who they are, and what
+their object was in playing this prank&mdash;if it was a prank&mdash;upon me. It was
+a pretty expensive joke for them, for it cost them two-and-thirty pounds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall endeavor to clear up these points for you. And, first, one or
+two questions, Mr. Wilson. This assistant of yours who first called your
+attention to the advertisement&mdash;how long had he been with you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;About a month then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How did he come?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In answer to an advertisement.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was he the only applicant?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I had a dozen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why did you pick him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because he was handy and would come cheap.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At half wages, in fact.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Small, stout-built, very quick in his ways, no hair on his face, though
+he's not short of thirty. Has a white splash of acid upon his forehead.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Holmes sat up in his chair in considerable excitement. &quot;I thought as
+much,&quot; said he. &quot;Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for
+earrings?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir. He told me that a gypsy had done it for him when he was a lad.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hum!&quot; said Holmes, sinking back in deep thought. &quot;He is still with you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, sir; I have only just left him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And has your business been attended to in your absence?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing to complain of, sir. There's never very much to do of a morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That will do, Mr. Wilson. I shall be happy to give you an opinion upon
+the subject in the course of a day or two. To-day is Saturday, and I hope
+that by Monday we may come to a conclusion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Watson,&quot; said Holmes, when our visitor had left us, &quot;what do you
+make of it all?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I make nothing of it,&quot; I answered frankly. &quot;It is a most mysterious
+business.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As a rule,&quot; said Holmes, &quot;the more bizarre a thing is the less mysterious
+it proves to be. It is your commonplace, featureless crimes which are
+really puzzling, just as a commonplace face is the most difficult to
+identify. But I must be prompt over this matter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you going to do, then?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To smoke,&quot; he answered. &quot;It is quite a three-pipe problem, and I beg that
+you won't speak to me for fifty minutes.&quot; He curled himself up in his
+chair, with his thin knees drawn up to his hawklike nose, and there he sat
+with his eyes closed and his black clay pipe thrusting out like the bill
+of some strange bird. I had come to the conclusion that he had dropped
+asleep, and indeed was nodding myself, when he suddenly sprang out of his
+chair with the gesture of a man who has made up his mind, and put his pipe
+down upon the mantelpiece.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sarasate plays at St. James's Hall this afternoon,&quot; he remarked. &quot;What do
+you think, Watson? Could your patients spare you for a few hours?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have nothing to do to-day. My practice is never very absorbing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then put on your hat and come. I am going through the City first, and we
+can have some lunch on the way. I observe that there is a good deal of
+German music on the programme, which is rather more to my taste than
+Italian or French. It is introspective, and I want to introspect. Come
+along!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We traveled by the Underground as far as Aldersgate; and a short walk took
+us to Saxe-Coburg Square, the scene of the singular story which we had
+listened to in the morning. It was a poky, little, shabby-genteel place,
+where four lines of dingy, two-storied brick houses looked out into a
+small railed-in inclosure, where a lawn of weedy grass, and a few clumps
+of faded laurel bushes made a hard fight against a smoke-laden and
+uncongenial atmosphere. Three gilt balls and a brown board with JABEZ
+WILSON in white letters, upon a corner house, announced the place where
+our red-headed client carried on his business. Sherlock Holmes stopped in
+front of it with his head on one side, and looked it all over, with his
+eyes shining brightly between puckered lids. Then he walked slowly up the
+street, and then down again to the corner, still looking keenly at the
+houses. Finally he returned to the pawnbroker's and, having thumped
+vigorously upon the pavement with his stick two or three times, he went up
+to the door and knocked. It was instantly opened by a bright-looking,
+clean-shaven young fellow, who asked him to step in.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you,&quot; said Holmes, &quot;I only wished to ask you how you would go from
+here to the Strand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Third right, fourth left,&quot; answered the assistant, promptly, closing the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Smart fellow, that,&quot; observed Holmes as we walked away. &quot;He is, in my
+judgment, the fourth smartest man in London, and for daring I am not sure
+that he has not a claim to be third. I have known something of him
+before.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evidently,&quot; said I, &quot;Mr. Wilson's assistant counts for a good deal in
+this mystery of the Red-headed League. I am sure that you inquired your
+way merely in order that you might see him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The knees of his trousers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what did you see?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What I expected to see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why did you beat the pavement?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear doctor, this is a time for observation, not for talk. We are
+spies in an enemy's country. We know something of Saxe-Coburg Square. Let
+us now explore the parts which lie behind it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The road in which we found ourselves as we turned round the corner from
+the retired Saxe-Coburg Square presented as great a contrast to it as the
+front of a picture does to the back. It was one of the main arteries which
+convey the traffic of the City to the north and west. The roadway was
+blocked with the immense stream of commerce flowing in a double tide
+inward and outward, while the footpaths were black with the hurrying swarm
+of pedestrians. It was difficult to realize, as we looked at the line of
+fine shops and stately business premises, that they really abutted on the
+other side upon the faded and stagnant square which we had just quitted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me see,&quot; said Holmes, standing at the corner, and glancing along the
+line, &quot;I should like just to remember the order of the houses here. It is
+a hobby of mine to have an exact knowledge of London. There is Mortimer's,
+the tobacconist; the little newspaper shop, the Coburg branch of the City
+and Suburban Bank, the Vegetarian Restaurant, and McFarlane's
+carriage-building depot. That carries us right on to the other block. And
+now, doctor, we've done our work, so it's time we had some play. A
+sandwich and a cup of coffee, and then off to violin-land, where all is
+sweetness, and delicacy, and harmony, and there are no red-headed clients
+to vex us with their conundrums.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My friend was an enthusiastic musician, being himself not only a very
+capable performer, but a composer of no ordinary merit. All the afternoon
+he sat in the stalls wrapped in the most perfect happiness, gently waving
+his long thin fingers in time to the music, while his gently smiling face
+and his languid, dreamy eyes were as unlike those of Holmes the
+sleuth-hound, Holmes the relentless, keen-witted, ready-handed criminal
+agent, as it was possible to conceive. In his singular character the dual
+nature alternately asserted itself, and his extreme exactness and
+astuteness represented, as I have often thought, the reaction against the
+poetic and contemplative mood which occasionally predominated in him. The
+swing of his nature took him from extreme languor to devouring energy;
+and, as I knew well, he was never so truly formidable as when, for days on
+end, he had been lounging in his armchair amid his improvisations and his
+black-letter editions. Then it was that the lust of the chase would
+suddenly come upon him, and that his brilliant reasoning power would rise
+to the level of intuition, until those who were unacquainted with his
+methods would look askance at him as on a man whose knowledge was not that
+of other mortals. When I saw him that afternoon so enwrapped in the music
+at St. James's Hall, I felt that an evil time might be coming upon those
+whom he had set himself to hunt down.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You want to go home, no doubt, doctor,&quot; he remarked, as we emerged.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, it would be as well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I have some business to do which will take some hours. This business
+at Saxe-Coburg Square is serious.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why serious?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A considerable crime is in contemplation. I have every reason to believe
+that we shall be in time to stop it. But to-day being Saturday rather
+complicates matters. I shall want your help to-night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At what time?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ten will be early enough.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall be at Baker Street at ten.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very well. And, I say, doctor! there may be some little danger, so kindly
+put your army revolver in your pocket.&quot; He waved his hand, turned on his
+heel, and disappeared in an instant among the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>I trust that I am not more dense than my neighbors, but I was always
+oppressed with a sense of my own stupidity in my dealings with Sherlock
+Holmes. Here I had heard what he had heard, I had seen what he had seen,
+and yet from his words it was evident that he saw clearly not only what
+had happened, but what was about to happen, while to me the whole
+business was still confused and grotesque. As I drove home to my house in
+Kensington I thought over it all, from the extraordinary story of the
+red-headed copier of the &quot;Encyclop&aelig;dia&quot; down to the visit to Saxe-Coburg
+Square, and the ominous words with which he had parted from me. What was
+this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed? Where were we going,
+and what were we to do? I had the hint from Holmes that this smooth-faced
+pawnbroker's assistant was a formidable man&mdash;a man who might play a deep
+game. I tried to puzzle it out, but gave it up in despair, and set the
+matter aside until night should bring an explanation.</p>
+
+<p>It was a quarter-past nine when I started from home and made my way across
+the Park, and so through Oxford Street to Baker Street. Two hansoms were
+standing at the door, and, as I entered the passage, I heard the sound of
+voices from above. On entering his room, I found Holmes in animated
+conversation with two men, one of whom I recognized as Peter Jones, the
+official police agent; while the other was a long, thin, sad-faced man,
+with a very shiny hat and oppressively respectable frock coat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ha! our party is complete,&quot; said Holmes, buttoning up his pea-jacket, and
+taking his heavy hunting crop from the rack. &quot;Watson, I think you know Mr.
+Jones, of Scotland Yard? Let me introduce you to Mr. Merryweather, who is
+to be our companion in to-night's adventure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We're hunting in couples again, doctor, you see,&quot; said Jones, in his
+consequential way. &quot;Our friend here is a wonderful man for starting a
+chase. All he wants is an old dog to help him do the running down.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope a wild goose may not prove to be the end of our chase,&quot; observed
+Mr. Merryweather gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You may place considerable confidence in Mr. Holmes, sir,&quot; said the
+police agent loftily. &quot;He has his own little methods, which are, if he
+won't mind my saying so, just a little too theoretical and fantastic, but
+he has the makings of a detective in him. It is not too much to say that
+once or twice, as in that business of the Sholto murder and the Agra
+treasure, he has been more nearly correct than the official force.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, if you say so, Mr. Jones, it is all right!&quot; said the stranger, with
+deference. &quot;Still, I confess that I miss my rubber. It is the first
+Saturday night for seven-and-twenty years that I have not had my rubber.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think you will find,&quot; said Sherlock Holmes, &quot;that you will play for a
+higher stake to-night than you have ever done yet, and that the play will
+be more exciting. For you, Mr. Merryweather, the stake will be some thirty
+thousand pounds; and for you, Jones, it will be the man upon whom you wish
+to lay your hands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;John Clay, the murderer, thief, smasher, and forger. He's a young man,
+Mr. Merryweather, but he is at the head of his profession, and I would
+rather have my bracelets on him than on any criminal in London. He's a
+remarkable man, is young John Clay. His grandfather was a Royal Duke, and
+he himself has been to Eton and Oxford. His brain is as cunning as his
+fingers, and though we meet signs of him at every turn, we never know
+where to find the man himself. He'll crack a crib in Scotland one week,
+and be raising money to build an orphanage in Cornwall the next. I've been
+on his track for years, and have never set eyes on him yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope that I may have the pleasure of introducing you to-night. I've had
+one or two little turns also with Mr. John Clay, and I agree with you that
+he is at the head of his profession. It is past ten, however, and quite
+time that we started. If you two will take the first hansom, Watson and I
+will follow in the second.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes was not very communicative during the long drive, and lay
+back in the cab humming the tunes which he had heard in the afternoon. We
+rattled through an endless labyrinth of gaslit streets until we emerged
+into Farringdon Street.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We are close there now,&quot; my friend remarked. &quot;This fellow Merryweather
+is a bank director and personally interested in the matter. I thought it
+as well to have Jones with us also. He is not a bad fellow, though an
+absolute imbecile in his profession. He has one positive virtue. He is as
+brave as a bulldog, and as tenacious as a lobster if he gets his claws
+upon anyone. Here we are, and they are waiting for us.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We had reached the same crowded thoroughfare in which we had found
+ourselves in the morning. Our cabs were dismissed, and following the
+guidance of Mr. Merryweather, we passed down a narrow passage, and through
+a side door which he opened for us. Within there was a small corridor,
+which ended in a very massive iron gate. This also was opened, and led
+down a flight of winding stone steps, which terminated at another
+formidable gate. Mr. Merryweather stopped to light a lantern, and then
+conducted us down a dark, earth-smelling passage, and so, after opening a
+third door, into a huge vault or cellar, which was piled all round with
+crates and massive boxes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are not very vulnerable from above,&quot; Holmes remarked, as he held up
+the lantern and gazed about him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor from below,&quot; said Mr. Merryweather, striking his stick upon the flags
+which lined the floor. &quot;Why, dear me, it sounds quite hollow!&quot; he
+remarked, looking up in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I must really ask you to be a little more quiet,&quot; said Holmes severely.
+&quot;You have already imperiled the whole success of our expedition. Might I
+beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes,
+and not to interfere?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The solemn Mr. Merryweather perched himself upon a crate, with a very
+injured expression upon his face, while Holmes fell upon his knees upon
+the floor, and, with the lantern and a magnifying lens, began to examine
+minutely the cracks between the stones. A few seconds sufficed to satisfy
+him, for he sprang to his feet again, and put his glass in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have at least an hour before us,&quot; he remarked, &quot;for they can hardly
+take any steps until the good pawnbroker is safely in bed. Then they will
+not lose a minute, for the sooner they do their work the longer time they
+will have for their escape. We are at present, doctor&mdash;as no doubt you
+have divined&mdash;in the cellar of the City branch of one of the principal
+London banks. Mr. Merryweather is the chairman of directors, and he will
+explain to you that there are reasons why the more daring criminals of
+London should take a considerable interest in this cellar at present.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is our French gold,&quot; whispered the director. &quot;We have had several
+warnings that an attempt might be made upon it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your French gold?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes. We had occasion some months ago to strengthen our resources, and
+borrowed, for that purpose, thirty thousand napoleons from the Bank of
+France. It has become known that we have never had occasion to unpack the
+money, and that it is still lying in our cellar. The crate upon which I
+sit contains two thousand napoleons packed between layers of lead foil.
+Our reserve of bullion is much larger at present than is usually kept in a
+single branch office, and the directors have had misgivings upon the
+subject.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Which were very well justified,&quot; observed Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now it is time that we arranged our little plans. I expect that
+within an hour matters will come to a head. In the meantime, Mr.
+Merryweather, we must put the screen over that dark lantern.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And sit in the dark?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am afraid so. I had brought a pack of cards in my pocket, and I thought
+that, as we were a <i>partie carr&eacute;e</i>, you might have your rubber after all.
+But I see that the enemy's preparations have gone so far that we cannot
+risk the presence of a light. And, first of all, we must choose our
+positions. These are daring men, and, though we shall take them at a
+disadvantage, they may do us some harm, unless we are careful. I shall
+stand behind this crate, and do you conceal yourself behind those. Then,
+when I flash a light upon them, close in swiftly. If they fire, Watson,
+have no compunction about shooting them down.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I placed my revolver, cocked, upon the top of the wooden case behind which
+I crouched. Holmes shot the slide across the front of his lantern, and
+left us in pitch darkness&mdash;such an absolute darkness as I have never
+before experienced. The smell of hot metal remained to assure us that the
+light was still there, ready to flash out at a moment's notice. To me,
+with my nerves worked up to a pitch of expectancy, there was something
+depressing and subduing in the sudden gloom, and in the cold, dank air of
+the vault.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They have but one retreat,&quot; whispered Holmes. &quot;That is back through the
+house into Saxe-Coburg Square. I hope that you have done what I asked you,
+Jones?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have an inspector and two officers waiting at the front door.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then we have stopped all the holes. And now we must be silent and wait.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>What a time it seemed! From comparing notes afterwards, it was but an hour
+and a quarter, yet it appeared to me that the night must have almost gone,
+and the dawn be breaking above us. My limbs were weary and stiff, for I
+feared to change my position, yet my nerves were worked up to the highest
+pitch of tension, and my hearing was so acute that I could not only hear
+the gentle breathing of my companions, but I could distinguish the deeper,
+heavier inbreath of the bulky Jones from the thin, sighing note of the
+bank director. From my position I could look over the case in the
+direction of the floor. Suddenly my eyes caught the glint of a light.</p>
+
+<p>At first it was but a lurid spark upon the stone pavement. Then it
+lengthened out until it became a yellow line, and then, without any
+warning or sound, a gash seemed to open and a hand appeared, a white,
+almost womanly hand, which felt about in the center of the little area of
+light. For a minute or more the hand, with its writhing fingers,
+protruded out of the floor. Then it was withdrawn as suddenly as it
+appeared, and all was dark again save the single lurid spark, which marked
+a chink between the stones.</p>
+
+<p>Its disappearance, however, was but momentary. With a rending, tearing
+sound, one of the broad white stones turned over upon its side, and left a
+square, gaping hole, through which streamed the light of a lantern. Over
+the edge there peeped a clean-cut, boyish face, which looked keenly about
+it, and then, with a hand on either side of the aperture, drew itself
+shoulder-high and waist-high, until one knee rested upon the edge. In
+another instant he stood at the side of the hole, and was hauling after
+him a companion, lithe and small like himself, with a pale face and a
+shock of very red hair.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's all clear,&quot; he whispered. &quot;Have you the chisel and the bags? Great
+Scott! Jump, Archie, jump, and I'll swing for it!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes had sprung out and seized the intruder by the collar. The
+other dived down the hole, and I heard the sound of rending cloth as Jones
+clutched at his skirts. The light flashed upon the barrel of a revolver,
+but Holmes's hunting crop came down on the man's wrist, and the pistol
+clinked upon the stone floor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's no use, John Clay,&quot; said Holmes blandly, &quot;you have no chance at
+all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I see,&quot; the other answered, with the utmost coolness. &quot;I fancy that my
+pal is all right, though I see you have got his coat-tails.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are three men waiting for him at the door,&quot; said Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, indeed. You seem to have done the thing very completely. I must
+compliment you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I you,&quot; Holmes answered. &quot;Your red-headed idea was very new and
+effective.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You'll see your pal again presently,&quot; said Jones. &quot;He's quicker at
+climbing down holes than I am. Just hold out while I fix the derbies.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I beg that you will not touch me with your filthy hands,&quot; remarked our
+prisoner, as the handcuffs clattered upon his wrists. &quot;You may not be
+aware that I have royal blood in my veins. Have the goodness also, when
+you address me, always to say 'sir' and 'please.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right,&quot; said Jones, with a stare and a snigger. &quot;Well, would you
+please, sir, march upstairs where we can get a cab to carry your highness
+to the police station?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is better,&quot; said John Clay serenely. He made a sweeping bow to the
+three of us, and walked quietly off in the custody of the detective.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Really, Mr. Holmes,&quot; said Mr. Merryweather, as we followed them from the
+cellar, &quot;I do not know how the bank can thank you or repay you. There is
+no doubt that you have detected and defeated in the most complete manner
+one of the most determined attempts at bank robbery, that have ever come
+within my experience.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have had one or two little scores of my own to settle with Mr. John
+Clay,&quot; said Holmes. &quot;I have been at some small expense over this matter,
+which I shall expect the bank to refund, but beyond that I am amply repaid
+by having had an experience which is in many ways unique, and by hearing
+the very remarkable narrative of the Red-headed League.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&quot;You see, Watson,&quot; he explained, in the early hours of the morning, as we
+sat over a glass of whisky and soda in Baker Street, &quot;it was perfectly
+obvious from the first that the only possible object of this rather
+fantastic business of the advertisement of the League, and the copying of
+the 'Encyclop&aelig;dia,' must be to get this not over-bright pawnbroker out of
+the way for a number of hours every day. It was a curious way of managing
+it, but really it would be difficult to suggest a better. The method was
+no doubt suggested to Clay's ingenious mind by the color of his
+accomplice's hair. The four pounds a week was a lure which must draw him,
+and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands? They put in the
+advertisement, one rogue has the temporary office, the other rogue incites
+the man to apply for it, and together they manage to secure his absence
+every morning in the week. From the time that I heard of the assistant
+having come for half wages, it was obvious to me that he had some strong
+motive for securing the situation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But how could you guess what the motive was?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Had there been women in the house, I should have suspected a mere vulgar
+intrigue. That, however, was out of the question. The man's business was a
+small one, and there was nothing in his house which could account for such
+elaborate preparations, and such an expenditure as they were at. It must
+then be something out of the house. What could it be? I thought of the
+assistant's fondness for photography, and his trick of vanishing into the
+cellar. The cellar! There was the end of this tangled clew. Then I made
+inquiries as to this mysterious assistant, and found that I had to deal
+with one of the coolest and most daring criminals in London. He was doing
+something in the cellar&mdash;something which took many hours a day for months
+on end. What could it be, once more? I could think of nothing save that he
+was running a tunnel to some other building.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So far I had got when we went to visit the scene of action. I surprised
+you by beating upon the pavement with my stick. I was ascertaining whether
+the cellar stretched out in front or behind. It was not in front. Then I
+rang the bell, and, as I hoped, the assistant answered it. We have had
+some skirmishes, but we had never set eyes upon each other before. I
+hardly looked at his face. His knees were what I wished to see. You must
+yourself have remarked how worn, wrinkled, and stained they were. They
+spoke of those hours of burrowing. The only remaining point was what they
+were burrowing for. I walked round the corner, saw that the City and
+Suburban Bank abutted on our friend's premises, and felt that I had solved
+my problem. When you drove home after the concert I called upon Scotland
+Yard, and upon the chairman of the bank directors, with the result that
+you have seen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to-night?&quot; I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, when they closed their League offices that was a sign that they
+cared no longer about Mr. Jabez Wilson's presence; in other words, that
+they had completed their tunnel. But it was essential that they should use
+it soon, as it might be discovered, or the bullion might be removed.
+Saturday would suit them better than any other day, as it would give them
+two days for their escape. For all these reasons I expected them to come
+to-night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You reasoned it out beautifully,&quot; I exclaimed, in unfeigned admiration.
+&quot;It is so long a chain, and yet every link rings true.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It saved me from ennui,&quot; he answered, yawning. &quot;Alas! I already feel it
+closing in upon me. My life is spent in one long effort to escape from the
+commonplaces of existence. These little problems help me to do so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you are a benefactor of the race,&quot; said I. He shrugged his shoulders.
+&quot;Well, perhaps, after all, it is of some little use,&quot; he remarked.
+&quot;'L'homme c'est rien&mdash;l'oeuvre c'est tout,' as Gustave Flaubert wrote to
+Georges Sands.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Egerton Castle</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Barons_Quarry" id="The_Barons_Quarry" /><i>The Baron's Quarry</i></h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no, I assure you, you are not boring Mr. Marshfield,&quot; said this
+personage himself in his gentle voice&mdash;that curious voice that could flow
+on for hours, promulgating profound and startling theories on every
+department of human knowledge or conducting paradoxical arguments without
+a single inflection or pause of hesitation. &quot;I am, on the contrary, much
+interested in your hunting talk. To paraphrase a well-worn quotation
+somewhat widely, <i>nihil humanum a me alienum est</i>. Even hunting stories
+may have their point of biological interest; the philologist sometimes
+pricks his ear to the jargon of the chase; moreover, I am not incapable of
+appreciating the subject matter itself. This seems to excite some
+derision. I admit I am not much of a sportsman to look at, nor, indeed, by
+instinct, yet I have had some out-of-the-way experiences in that
+line&mdash;generally when intent on other pursuits. I doubt, for instance, if
+even you, Major Travers, notwithstanding your well-known exploits against
+man and beast, notwithstanding that doubtful smile of yours, could match
+the strangeness of a certain hunting adventure in which I played an
+important part.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The speaker's small, deep-set, black eyes, that never warmed to anything
+more human than a purely speculative scientific interest in his
+surroundings, here wandered round the skeptical yet expectant circle with
+bland amusement. He stretched out his bloodless fingers for another of his
+host's superfine cigars and proceeded, with only such interruptions as
+were occasioned by the lighting and careful smoking of the latter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was returning home after my prolonged stay in Petersburg, intending to
+linger on my way and test with mine own ears certain among the many
+dialects of Eastern Europe&mdash;anent which there is a symmetrical little
+cluster of philological knotty points it is my modest intention one day to
+unravel. However, that is neither here nor there. On the road to Hungary I
+bethought myself opportunely of proving the once pressingly offered
+hospitality of the Baron Kossowski.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You may have met the man, Major Travers; he was a tremendous sportsman,
+if you like. I first came across him at McNeil's place in remote Ireland.
+Now, being in Bukowina, within measurable distance of his Carpathian
+abode, and curious to see a Polish lord at home, I remembered his
+invitation. It was already of long standing, but it had been warm, born in
+fact of a sudden fit of enthusiasm for me&quot;&mdash;here a half-mocking smile
+quivered an instant under the speaker's black mustache&mdash;&quot;which, as it was
+characteristic, I may as well tell you about.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was on the day of, or, rather, to be accurate, on the day after my
+arrival, toward the small hours of the morning, in the smoking room at
+Rathdrum. Our host was peacefully snoring over his empty pipe and his
+seventh glass of whisky, also empty. The rest of the men had slunk off to
+bed. The baron, who all unknown to himself had been a subject of most
+interesting observation to me the whole evening, being now practically
+alone with me, condescended to turn an eye, as wide awake as a fox's,
+albeit slightly bloodshot, upon the contemptible white-faced person who
+had preferred spending the raw hours over his papers, within the radius of
+a glorious fire's warmth, to creeping slyly over treacherous quagmires in
+the pursuit of timid bog creatures (snipe shooting had been the order of
+the day)-the baron, I say, became aware of my existence and entered into
+conversation with me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He would no doubt have been much surprised could he have known that he
+was already mapped out, craniologically and physiognomically, catalogued
+with care and neatly laid by in his proper ethnological box, in my private
+type museum; that, as I sat and examined him from my different coigns of
+vantage in library, in dining and smoking room that evening, not a look of
+his, not a gesture went forth but had significance for me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You, I had thought, with your broad shoulders and deep chest; your
+massive head that should have gone with a tall stature, not with those
+short sturdy limbs; with your thick red hair, that should have been black
+for that matter, as should your wide-set yellow eyes&mdash;you would be a real
+puzzle to one who did not recognize in you equal mixtures of the fair,
+stalwart and muscular Slav with the bilious-sanguine, thick-set, wiry
+Turanian. Your pedigree would no doubt bear me out: there is as much of
+the Magyar as of the Pole in your anatomy. Athlete, and yet a tangle of
+nerves; a ferocious brute at bottom, I dare say, for your broad forehead
+inclines to flatness; under your bristling beard your jaw must protrude,
+and the base of your skull is ominously thick. And, with all that, capable
+of ideal transports: when that girl played and sang to-night I saw the
+swelling of your eyelid veins, and how that small, tenacious, claw-like
+hand of yours twitched! You would be a fine leader of men&mdash;but God help
+the wretches in your power!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So had I mused upon him. Yet I confess that when we came in closer
+contact with each other, even I was not proof against the singular
+courtesy of his manner and his unaccountable personal charm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our conversation soon grew interesting; to me as a matter of course, and
+evidently to him also. A few general words led to interchange of remarks
+upon the country we were both visitors in and so to national
+characteristics&mdash;Pole and Irishman have not a few in common, both in their
+nature and history. An observation which he made, not without a certain
+flash in his light eyes and a transient uncovering of the teeth, on the
+Irish type of female beauty suddenly suggested to me a stanza of an
+ancient Polish ballad, very full of milk-and-blood imagery, of alternating
+ferocity and voluptuousness. This I quoted to the astounded foreigner in
+the vernacular, and this it was that metamorphosed his mere perfection of
+civility into sudden warmth, and, in fact, procured me the invitation in
+question.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When I left Rathdrum the baron's last words to me were that if I ever
+thought of visiting his country otherwise than in books, he held me bound
+to make Yany, his Galician seat, my headquarters of study.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From Czernowicz, therefore, where I stopped some time, I wrote, received
+in due time a few lines of prettily worded reply, and ultimately entered
+my sled in the nearest town to, yet at a most forbidding distance from,
+Yany, and started on my journey thither.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The undertaking meant many long hours of undulation and skidding over the
+November snow, to the somniferous bell jangle of my dirty little horses,
+the only impression of interest being a weird gypsy concert I came in for
+at a miserable drinking-booth half buried in the snow where we halted for
+the refreshment of man and beast. Here, I remember, I discovered a very
+definite connection between the characteristic run of the tsimbol, the
+peculiar bite of the Zigeuner's bow on his fiddle-string, and some
+distinctive points of Turanian tongues. In other countries, in Spain, for
+instance, your gypsy speaks differently on his instrument. But, oddly
+enough, when I later attempted to put this observation on paper I could
+find no word to express it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A few of our company evinced signs of sleepiness, but most of us who knew
+Marshfield, and that he could, unless he had something novel to say, be as
+silent and retiring as he now evinced signs of being copious, awaited
+further developments with patience. He has his own deliberate way of
+speaking, which he evidently enjoys greatly, though it be occasionally
+trying to his listeners.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the afternoon of my second day's drive, the snow, which till then had
+fallen fine and continuous, ceased, and my Jehu, suddenly interrupting
+himself in the midst of some exciting wolf story quite in keeping with the
+time of year and the wild surroundings, pointed to a distant spot against
+the gray sky to the northwest, between two wood-covered folds of
+ground&mdash;the first eastern spurs of the great Carpathian chain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'There stands Yany,' said he. I looked at my far-off goal with interest.
+As we drew nearer, the sinking sun, just dipping behind the hills, tinged
+the now distinct frontage with a cold copper-like gleam, but it was only
+for a minute; the next the building became nothing more to the eye than a
+black irregular silhouette against the crimson sky.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before we entered the long, steep avenue of poplars, the early winter
+darkness was upon us, rendered all the more depressing by gray mists which
+gave a ghostly aspect to such objects as the sheen of the snow rendered
+visible. Once or twice there were feeble flashes of light looming in
+iridescent halos as we passed little clusters of hovels, but for which I
+should have been induced to fancy that the great Hof stood alone in the
+wilderness, such was the deathly stillness around. But even as the tall,
+square building rose before us above the vapor, yellow lighted in various
+stories, and mighty in height and breadth, there broke upon my ear a
+deep-mouthed, menacing bay, which gave at once almost alarming reality to
+the eerie surroundings. 'His lordship's boar and wolf hounds,' quoth my
+charioteer calmly, unmindful of the regular pandemonium, of howls and
+barks which ensued as he skillfully turned his horses through the gateway
+and flogged the tired beasts into a sort of shambling canter that we might
+land with glory before the house door: a weakness common, I believe, to
+drivers of all nations.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I alighted in the court of honor, and while awaiting an answer to my tug
+at the bell, stood, broken with fatigue, depressed, chilled and aching,
+questioning the wisdom of my proceedings and the amount of comfort,
+physical and moral, that was likely to await me in a <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> visit
+with a well-mannered savage in his own home.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The unkempt tribe of stable retainers who began to gather round me and my
+rough vehicle in the gloom, with their evil-smelling sheepskins and their
+resigned, battered visages, were not calculated to reassure me. Yet when
+the door opened, there stood a smart chasseur and a solemn major-domo who
+might but just have stepped out of Mayfair; and there was displayed a
+spreading vista of warm, deep-colored halls, with here a statue and there
+a stuffed bear, and under foot pile carpets strewn with rarest skins.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Marveling, yet comforted withal, I followed the solemn butler, who
+received me with the deference due to an expected guest and expressed the
+master's regret for his enforced absence till dinner time. I traversed
+vast rooms, each more sumptuous than the last, feeling the strangeness of
+the contrast between the outer desolation and this sybaritic excess of
+luxury growing ever more strongly upon me; caught a glimpse of a picture
+gallery, where peculiar yet admirably executed latter-day French pictures
+hung side by side with ferocious boar hunts of Snyder and such kin; and,
+at length, was ushered into a most cheerful room, modern to excess in its
+comfortable promise, where, in addition to the tall stove necessary for
+warmth, there burned on an open hearth a vastly pleasant fire of resinous
+logs, and where, on a low table, awaited me a dainty service of fragrant
+Russian tea.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My impression of utter novelty seemed somehow enhanced by this unexpected
+refinement in the heart of the solitudes and in such a rugged shell, and
+yet, when I came to reflect, it was only characteristic of my cosmopolitan
+host. But another surprise was in store for me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When I had recovered bodily warmth and mental equilibrium in my downy
+armchair, before the roaring logs, and during the delicious absorption of
+my second glass of tea, I turned my attention to the French valet,
+evidently the baron's own man, who was deftly unpacking my portmanteau,
+and who, unless my practiced eye deceived me, asked for nothing better
+than to entertain me with agreeable conversation the while.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Your master is out, then?' quoth I, knowing that the most trivial remark
+would suffice to start him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True, Monseigneur was out; he was desolated in despair (this with the
+national amiable and imaginative instinct); 'but it was doubtless
+important business. M. le Baron had the visit of his factor during the
+midday meal; had left the table hurriedly, and had not been seen since.
+Madame la Baronne had been a little suffering, but she would receive
+monsieur!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Madame!' exclaimed I, astounded, 'is your master then married?&mdash;since
+when?'&mdash;visions of a fair Tartar, fit mate for my baron, immediately
+springing somewhat alluringly before my mental vision. But the answer
+dispelled the picturesque fancy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh, yes,' said the man, with a somewhat peculiar expression. 'Yes,
+Monseigneur is married. Did Monsieur not know? And yet it was from England
+that Monseigneur brought back his wife.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'An Englishwoman!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My first thought was one of pity; an Englishwoman alone in this
+wilderness&mdash;two days' drive from even a railway station&mdash;and at the mercy
+of Kossowski! But the next minute I reversed my judgment. Probably she
+adored her rufous lord, took his veneer of courtesy&mdash;a veneer of the most
+exquisite polish, I grant you, but perilously thin&mdash;for the very
+perfection of chivalry. Or perchance it was his inner savageness itself
+that charmed her; the most refined women often amaze one by the
+fascination which the preponderance of the brute in the opposite sex seems
+to have for them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was anxious to hear more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Is it not dull for the lady here at this time of the year?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The valet raised his shoulders with a gesture of despair that was almost
+passionate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dull! Ah, monsieur could not conceive to himself the dullness of it. That
+poor Madame la Baronne! not even a little child to keep her company on the
+long, long days when there was nothing but snow in the heaven and on the
+earth and the howling of the wind and the dogs to cheer her. At the
+beginning, indeed, it had been different; when the master first brought
+home his bride the house was gay enough. It was all redecorated and
+refurnished to receive her (monsieur should have seen it before, a mere
+<i>rendezvous-de-chasse</i>&mdash;for the matter of that so were all the country
+houses in these parts). Ah, that was the good time! There were visits
+month after month; parties, sleighing, dancing, trips to St. Petersburg
+and Vienna. But this year it seemed they were to have nothing but boars
+and wolves. How madame could stand it&mdash;well, it was not for him to
+speak&mdash;and heaving a deep sigh he delicately inserted my white tie round
+my collar, and with a flourish twisted it into an irreproachable bow
+beneath my chin. I did not think it right to cross-examine the willing
+talker any further, especially as, despite his last asseveration, there
+were evidently volumes he still wished to pour forth; but I confess that,
+as I made my way slowly out of my room along the noiseless length of
+passage, I was conscious of an unwonted, not to say vulgar, curiosity
+concerning the woman who had captivated such a man as the Baron Kossowski.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In a fit of speculative abstraction I must have taken the wrong turning,
+for I presently found myself in a long, narrow passage. I did not
+remember. I was retracing my steps when there came the sound of rapid
+footfalls upon stone flags; a little door flew open in the wall close to
+me, and a small, thick-set man, huddled in the rough sheepskin of the
+Galician peasant, with a mangy fur cap on his head, nearly ran headlong
+into my arms. I was about condescendingly to interpellate him in my best
+Polish, when I caught the gleam of an angry yellow eye and noted the
+bristle of a red beard&mdash;Kossowski!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Amazed, I fell back a step in silence. With a growl like an uncouth
+animal disturbed, he drew his filthy cap over his brow with a savage
+gesture and pursued his way down the corridor at a sort of wild-boar trot.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This first meeting between host and guest was so odd, so incongruous,
+that it afforded me plenty of food for a fresh line of conjecture as I
+traced my way back to the picture gallery, and from thence successfully to
+the drawing room, which, as the door was ajar, I could not this time
+mistake.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was large and lofty and dimly lit by shaded lamps; through the rosy
+gloom I could at first only just make out a slender figure by the hearth;
+but as I advanced, this was resolved into a singularly graceful woman in
+clinging, fur-trimmed velvet gown, who, with one hand resting on the high
+mantelpiece, the other hanging listlessly by her side, stood gazing down
+at the crumbling wood fire as if in a dream.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My friends are kind enough to say that I have a cat-like tread; I know
+not how that may be; at any rate the carpet I was walking upon was thick
+enough to smother a heavier footfall: not until I was quite close to her
+did my hostess become aware of my presence. Then she started violently and
+looked over her shoulder at me with dilating eyes. Evidently a nervous
+creature, I saw the pulse in her throat, strained by her attitude, flutter
+like a terrified bird.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The next instant she had stretched out her hand with sweet English words
+of welcome, and the face, which I had been comparing in my mind to that of
+Guido's Cenci, became transformed by the arch and exquisite smile of a
+Greuse. For more than two years I had had no intercourse with any of my
+nationality. I could conceive the sound of his native tongue under such
+circumstances moving a man in a curious unexpected fashion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I babbled some commonplace reply, after which there was silence while we
+stood opposite each other, she looking at me expectantly. At length, with
+a sigh checked by a smile and an overtone of sadness in a voice that yet
+tried to be sprightly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Am I then so changed, Mr. Marshfield?' she asked. And all at once I knew
+her: the girl whose nightingale throat had redeemed the desolation of the
+evenings at Rathdrum, whose sunny beauty had seemed (even to my
+celebrated cold-blooded &aelig;stheticism) worthy to haunt a man's dreams. Yes,
+there was the subtle curve of the waist, the warm line of throat, the
+dainty foot, the slender tip-tilted fingers&mdash;witty fingers, as I had
+classified them&mdash;which I now shook like a true Briton, instead of availing
+myself of the privilege the country gave me, and kissing her slender
+wrist.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But she was changed; and I told her so with unconventional frankness,
+studying her closely as I spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I am afraid,' I said gravely, 'that this place does not agree with you.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She shrank from my scrutiny with a nervous movement and flushed to the
+roots of her red-brown hair. Then she answered coldly that I was wrong,
+that she was in excellent health, but that she could not expect any more
+than other people to preserve perennial youth (I rapidly calculated she
+might be two-and-twenty), though, indeed, with a little forced laugh, it
+was scarcely flattering to hear one had altered out of all recognition.
+Then, without allowing me time to reply, she plunged into a general topic
+of conversation which, as I should have been obtuse indeed not to take the
+hint, I did my best to keep up.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But while she talked of Vienna and Warsaw, of her distant neighbors, and
+last year's visitors, it was evident that her mind was elsewhere; her eye
+wandered, she lost the thread of her discourse, answered me at random, and
+smiled her piteous smile incongruously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;However lonely she might be in her solitary splendor, the company of a
+countryman was evidently no such welcome diversion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After a little while she seemed to feel herself that she was lacking in
+cordiality, and, bringing her absent gaze to bear upon me with a puzzled
+strained look: 'I fear you will find it very dull,' she said, 'my husband
+is so wrapped up this winter in his country life and his sport. You are
+the first visitor we have had. There is nothing but guns and horses here,
+and you do not care for these things.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The door creaked behind us; and the baron entered, in faultless evening
+dress. Before she turned toward him I was sharp enough to catch again the
+upleaping of a quick dread in her eyes, not even so much dread perhaps, I
+thought afterwards, as horror&mdash;the horror we notice in some animals at the
+nearing of a beast of prey. It was gone in a second, and she was smiling.
+But it was a revelation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Perhaps he beat her in Russian fashion, and she, as an Englishwoman, was
+narrow-minded enough to resent this; or perhaps, merely, I had the
+misfortune to arrive during a matrimonial misunderstanding.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The baron would not give me leisure to reflect; he was so very effusive
+in his greeting&mdash;not a hint of our previous meeting&mdash;unlike my hostess,
+all in all to me; eager to listen, to reply; almost affectionate, full of
+references to old times and genial allusions. No doubt when he chose he
+could be the most charming of men; there were moments when, looking at him
+in his quiet smile and restrained gesture, the almost exaggerated
+politeness of his manner to his wife, whose fingers he had kissed with
+pretty, old-fashioned gallantry upon his entrance, I asked myself, Could
+that encounter in the passage have been a dream? Could that savage in the
+sheepskin be my courteous entertainer?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just as I came in, did I hear my wife say there was nothing for you to do
+in this place?&quot; he said presently to me. Then, turning to her:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do not seem to know Mr. Marshfield. Wherever he can open his eyes
+there is for him something to see which might not interest other men. He
+will find things in my library which I have no notion of. He will discover
+objects for scientific observation in all the members of my household, not
+only in the good-looking maids&mdash;though he could, I have no doubt, tell
+their points as I could those of a horse. We have maidens here of several
+distinct races, Marshfield. We have also witches, and Jew leeches, and
+holy daft people. In any case, Yany, with all its dependencies, material,
+male and female, are at your disposal, for what you can make out of them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'It is good,&quot; he went on gayly, 'that you should happen to have this
+happy disposition, for I fear that, no later than to-morrow, I may have to
+absent myself from home. I have heard that there are news of wolves&mdash;they
+threaten to be a greater pest than usual this winter, but I am going to
+drive them on quite a new plan, and it will go hard with me if I don't
+come even with them. Well for you, by the way, Marshfield, that you did
+not pass within their scent to-day.' Then, musingly: 'I should not give
+much for the life of a traveler who happened to wander in these parts just
+now.' Here he interrupted himself hastily and went over to his wife, who
+had sunk back on her chair, livid, seemingly on the point of swooning.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His gaze was devouring; so might a man look at the woman he adored, in
+his anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What! faint, Violet, alarmed!' His voice was subdued, yet there was an
+unmistakable thrill of emotion in it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Pshaw!' thought I to myself, 'the man is a model husband.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She clinched her hands, and by sheer force of will seemed to pull herself
+together. These nervous women have often an unexpected fund of strength.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Come, that is well,' said the baron with a flickering smile; 'Mr.
+Marshfield will think you but badly acclimatized to Poland if a little
+wolf scare can upset you. My dear wife is so soft-hearted,' he went on to
+me, 'that she is capable of making herself quite ill over the sad fate
+that might have, but has not, overcome you. Or, perhaps,' he added, in a
+still gentler voice, 'her fear is that I may expose myself to danger for
+the public weal.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She turned her head away, but I saw her set her teeth as if to choke a
+sob. The baron chuckled in his throat and seemed to luxuriate in the
+pleasant thought.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At this moment folding doors were thrown open, and supper was announced.
+I offered my arm, she rose and took it in silence. This silence she
+maintained during the first part of the meal, despite her husband's
+brilliant conversation and almost uproarious spirits. But by and by a
+bright color mounted to her cheeks and luster to her eyes. I suppose you
+will think me horribly unpoetical if I add that she drank several glasses
+of champagne one after the other, a fact which perhaps may account for the
+change.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At any rate she spoke and laughed and looked lovely, and I did not wonder
+that the baron could hardly keep his eyes off her. But whether it was her
+wifely anxiety or not&mdash;it was evident her mind was not at ease through it
+all, and I fancied that her brightness was feverish, her merriment
+slightly hysterical.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After supper&mdash;an exquisite one it was&mdash;we adjourned together, in foreign
+fashion, to the drawing-room; the baron threw himself into a chair and,
+somewhat with the air of a pasha, demanded music. He was flushed; the
+veins of his forehead were swollen and stood out like cords; the wine
+drunk at table was potent: even through my phlegmatic frame it ran hotly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She hesitated a moment or two, then docilely sat down to the piano. That
+she could sing I have already made clear: how she could sing, with what
+pathos, passion, as well as perfect art, I had never realized before.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When the song was ended she remained for a while, with eyes lost in
+distance, very still, save for her quick breathing. It was clear she was
+moved by the music; indeed she must have thrown her whole soul into it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At first we, the audience, paid her the rare compliment of silence. Then
+the baron broke forth into loud applause. 'Brava, brava! that was really
+said <i>con amore</i>. A delicious love song, delicious&mdash;but French! You must
+sing one of our Slav melodies for Marshfield before you allow us to go and
+smoke.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She started from her reverie with a flush, and after a pause struck
+slowly a few simple chords, then began one of those strangely sweet, yet
+intensely pathetic Russian airs, which give one a curious revelation of
+the profound, endless melancholy lurking in the national mind.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What do you think of it?' asked the baron of me when it ceased.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What I have always thought of such music&mdash;it is that of a hopeless
+people; poetical, crushed, and resigned.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He gave a loud laugh. 'Hear the analyst, the psychologue&mdash;why, man, it is
+a love song! Is it possible that we, uncivilized, are truer realists than
+our hypercultured Western neighbors? Have we gone to the root of the
+matter, in our simple way?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The baroness got up abruptly. She looked white and spent; there were
+bister circles round her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I am tired,' she said, with dry lips. 'You will excuse me, Mr.
+Marshfield, I must really go to bed.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Go to bed, go to bed,' cried her husband gayly. Then, quoting in Russian
+from the song she had just sung: 'Sleep, my little soft white dove: my
+little innocent tender lamb!' She hurried from the room. The baron laughed
+again, and, taking me familiarly by the arm, led me to his own set of
+apartments for the promised smoke. He ensconced me in an armchair, placed
+cigars of every description and a Turkish pipe ready to my hand, and a
+little table on which stood cut-glass flasks and beakers in tempting
+array.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After I had selected my cigar with some precautions, I glanced at him
+over a careless remark, and was startled to see a sudden alteration in his
+whole look and attitude.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'You will forgive me, Marshfield,' he said, as he caught my eye, speaking
+with spasmodic politeness. 'It is more than probable that I shall have to
+set out upon this chase I spoke of to-night, and I must now go and change
+my clothes, that I may be ready to start at any moment. This is the hour
+when it is most likely these hell beasts are to be got at. You have all
+you want, I hope,' interrupting an outbreak of ferocity by an effort after
+his former courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was curious to watch the man of the world struggling with the
+primitive man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'But, baron,' said I, 'I do not at all see the fun of sticking at home
+like this. You know my passion for witnessing everything new, strange, and
+outlandish. You will surely not refuse me such an opportunity for
+observation as a midnight wolf raid. I will do my best not to be in the
+way if you will take me with you.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At first it seemed as if he had some difficulty in realizing the drift of
+my words, he was so engrossed by some inner thought. But as I repeated
+them, he gave vent to a loud cachinnation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'By heaven! I like your spirit,' he exclaimed, clapping me strongly on
+the shoulder. 'Of course you shall come. You shall,' he repeated, 'and I
+promise you a sight, a hunt such as you never heard or dreamed of&mdash;you
+will be able to tell them in England the sort of thing we can do here in
+that line&mdash;such wolves are rare quarry,' he added, looking slyly at me,
+'and I have a new plan for getting at them.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There was a long pause, and then there rose in the stillness the
+unearthly howling of the baron's hounds, a cheerful sound which only their
+owner's somewhat loud converse of the evening had kept from becoming
+excessively obtrusive.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Hark at them&mdash;the beauties!' cried he, showing his short, strong teeth,
+pointed like a dog's in a wide grin of anticipative delight. 'They have
+been kept on pretty short commons, poor things! They are hungry. By the
+way, Marshfield, you can sit tight to a horse, I trust? If you were to
+roll off, you know, these splendid fellows&mdash;they would chop you up in a
+second. They would chop you up,' he repeated unctuously, 'snap, crunch,
+gobble, and there would be an end of you!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'If I could not ride a decent horse without being thrown,' I retorted, a
+little stung by his manner, 'after my recent three months' torture with
+the Guard Cossacks, I should indeed be a hopeless subject. Do not think of
+frightening me from the exploit, but say frankly if my company would be
+displeasing.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Tut!' he said, waving his hand impatiently, 'it is your affair. I have
+warned you. Go and get ready if you want to come. Time presses.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was determined to be of the fray; my blood was up. I have hinted that
+the baron's Tokay had stirred it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I went to my room and hurriedly donned clothes more suitable for rough
+night work. My last care was to slip into my pockets a brace of
+double-barreled pistols which formed part of my traveling kit. When I
+returned I found the baron already booted and spurred; this without
+metaphor. He was stretched full length on the divan, and did not speak as
+I came in, or even look at me. Chewing an unlit cigar, with eyes fixed on
+the ceiling, he was evidently following some absorbing train of ideas.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The silence was profound; time went by; it grew oppressive; at length,
+wearied out, I fell, over my chibouque, into a doze filled with puzzling
+visions, out of which I was awakened with a start. My companion had sprung
+up, very lightly, to his feet. In his throat was an odd, half-suppressed
+cry, grewsome to hear. He stood on tiptoe, with eyes fixed, as though
+looking through the wall, and I distinctly saw his ears point in the
+intensity of his listening.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After a moment, with hasty, noiseless energy, and without the slightest
+ceremony, he blew the lamps out, drew back the heavy curtains and threw
+the tall window wide open. A rush of icy air, and the bright rays of the
+moon&mdash;gibbous, I remember, in her third quarter&mdash;filled the room. Outside
+the mist had condensed, and the view was unrestricted over the white
+plains at the foot of the hill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The baron stood motionless in the open window, callous to the cold in
+which, after a minute, I could hardly keep my teeth from chattering, his
+head bent forward, still listening. I listened too, with 'all my ears,'
+but could not catch a sound; indeed the silence over the great expanse of
+snow might have been called awful; even the dogs were mute.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Presently, far, far away, came a faint tinkle of bells; so faint, at
+first, that I thought it was but fancy, then distincter. It was even more
+eerie than the silence, I thought, though I knew it could come but from
+some passing sleigh. All at once that ceased, and again my duller senses
+could perceive nothing, though I saw by my host's craning neck that he was
+more on the alert than ever. But at last I too heard once more, this time
+not bells, but as it were the tread of horses muffled by the snow,
+intermittent and dull, yet drawing nearer. And then in the inner silence
+of the great house it seemed to me I caught the noise of closing doors;
+but here the hounds, as if suddenly becoming alive to some disturbance,
+raised the same fearsome concert of yells and barks with which they had
+greeted my arrival, and listening became useless.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had risen to my feet. My host, turning from the window, seized my
+shoulder with a fierce grip, and bade me 'hold my noise'; for a second or
+two I stood motionless under his iron talons, then he released me with an
+exultant whisper: &quot;Now for our chase!&quot; and made for the door with a
+spring. Hastily gulping down a mouthful of arrack from one of the bottles
+on the table, I followed him, and, guided by the sound of his footsteps
+before me, groped my way through passages as black as Erebus.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After a time, which seemed a long one, a small door was flung open in
+front, and I saw Kossowski glide into the moonlit courtyard and cross the
+square. When I too came out he was disappearing into the gaping darkness
+of the open stable door, and there I overtook him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A man who seemed to have been sleeping in a corner jumped up at our
+entrance, and led out a horse ready saddled. In obedience to a gruff order
+from his master, as the latter mounted, he then brought forward another
+which he had evidently thought to ride himself and held the stirrup for
+me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We came delicately forth, and the Cossack hurriedly barred the great door
+behind us. I caught a glimpse of his worn, scarred face by the moonlight,
+as he peeped after us for a second before shutting himself in; it was
+stricken with terror.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The baron trotted briskly toward the kennels, from whence there was now
+issuing a truly infernal clangor, and, as my steed followed suit of his
+own accord, I could see how he proceeded dexterously to unbolt the gates
+without dismounting, while the beasts within dashed themselves against
+them and tore the ground in their fury of impatience.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He smiled, as he swung back the barriers at last, and his 'beauties' came
+forth. Seven or eight monstrous brutes, hounds of a kind unknown to me:
+fulvous and sleek of coat, tall on their legs, square-headed, long-tailed,
+deep-chested; with terrible jaws slobbering in eagerness. They leaped
+around and up at us, much to our horses' distaste. Kossowski, still
+smiling, lashed at them unsparingly with his hunting whip, and they
+responded, not with yells of pain, but with snarls of fury.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Managing his restless steed and his cruel whip with consummate ease, my
+host drove the unruly crew before him out of the precincts, then halted
+and bent down from his saddle to examine some slight prints in the snow
+which led, not the way I had come, but toward what seemed another avenue.
+In a second or two the hounds were gathered round this spot, their great
+snake-like tails quivering, nose to earth, yelping with excitement. I had
+some ado to manage my horse, and my eyesight was far from being as keen as
+the baron's, but I had then no doubt he had come already upon wolf tracks,
+and I shuddered mentally, thinking of the sleigh bells.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Suddenly Kossowski raised himself from his strained position; under his
+low fur cap his face, with its fixed smile, looked scarcely human in the
+white light: and then we broke into a hand canter just as the hounds
+dashed, in a compact body, along the trail.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But we had not gone more than a few hundred yards before they began to
+falter, then straggled, stopped and ran back and about with dismal cries.
+It was clear to me they had lost the scent. My companion reined in his
+horse, and mine, luckily a well-trained brute, halted of himself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We had reached a bend in a broad avenue of firs and larches, and just
+where we stood, and where the hounds ever returned and met nose to nose in
+frantic conclave, the snow was trampled and soiled, and a little farther
+on planed in a great sweep, as if by a turning sleigh. Beyond was a
+double-furrowed track of skaits and regular hoof prints leading far away.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before I had time to reflect upon the bearing of this unexpected
+interruption, Kossowski, as if suddenly possessed by a devil, fell upon
+the hounds with his whip, flogging them upon the new track, uttering the
+while the most savage cries I have ever heard issue from human throat. The
+disappointed beasts were nothing loath to seize upon another trail; after
+a second of hesitation they had understood, and were off upon it at a
+tearing pace, we after them at the best speed of our horses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Some unformed idea that we were going to escort, or rescue, benighted
+travelers flickered dimly in my mind as I galloped through the night air;
+but when I managed to approach my companion and called out to him for
+explanation, he only turned half round and grinned at me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before us lay now the white plain, scintillating under the high moon's
+rays. That light is deceptive; I could be sure of nothing upon the wide
+expanse but of the dark, leaping figures of the hounds already spread out
+in a straggling line, some right ahead, others just in front of us. In a
+short time also the icy wind, cutting my face mercilessly as we increased
+our pace, well nigh blinded me with tears of cold.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can hardly realize how long this pursuit after an unseen prey lasted; I
+can only remember that I was getting rather faint with fatigue, and
+ignominiously held on to my pommel, when all of a sudden the black outline
+of a sleigh merged into sight in front of us.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I rubbed my smarting eyes with my benumbed hand; we were gaining upon it
+second by second; two of those hell hounds of the baron's were already
+within a few leaps of it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Soon I was able to make out two figures, one standing up and urging the
+horses on with whip and voice, the other clinging to the back seat and
+looking toward us in an attitude of terror. A great fear crept into my
+half-frozen brain&mdash;were we not bringing deadly danger instead of help to
+these travelers? Great God! did the baron mean to use them as a bait for
+his new method of wolf hunting?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I would have turned upon Kossowski with a cry of expostulation or
+warning, but he, urging on his hounds as he galloped on their flank,
+howling and gesticulating like a veritable Hun, passed me by like a
+flash&mdash;and all at once I knew.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Marshfield paused for a moment and sent his pale smile round upon his
+listeners, who now showed no signs of sleepiness; he knocked the ash from
+his cigar, twisted the latter round in his mouth, and added dryly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I confess it seemed to me a little strong even for a baron in the
+Carpathians. The travelers were our quarry. But the reason why the Lord of
+Yany had turned man-hunter I was yet to learn. Just then I had to direct
+my energies to frustrating his plans. I used my spurs mercilessly. While I
+drew up even with him I saw the two figures in the sleigh change places;
+he who had hitherto driven now faced back, while his companion took the
+reins, there was the pale blue sheen of a revolver barrel under the
+moonlight, followed by a yellow flash, and the nearest hound rolled over
+in the snow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With an oath the baron twisted round in his saddle to call up and urge on
+the remainder. My horse had taken fright at the report and dashed
+irresistibly forward, bringing me at once almost level with the fugitives,
+and the next instant the revolver was turned menacingly toward me. There
+was no time to explain; my pistol was already drawn, and as another of the
+brutes bounded up, almost under my horse's feet, I loosed it upon him. I
+must have let off both barrels at once, for the weapon flew out of my
+hand, but the hound's back was broken. I presume the traveler understood;
+at any rate, he did not fire at me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In moments of intense excitement like these, strangely enough, the mind
+is extraordinarily open to impressions. I shall never forget that man's
+countenance in the sledge, as he stood upright and defied us in his mortal
+danger; it was young, very handsome, the features not distorted, but set
+into a sort of desperate, stony calm, and I knew it, beyond all doubt, for
+that of an Englishman. And then I saw his companion&mdash;it was the baron's
+wife. And I understood why the bells had been removed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It takes a long time to say this; it only required an instant to see it.
+The loud explosion of my pistol had hardly ceased to ring before the
+baron, with a fearful imprecation, was upon me. First he lashed at me with
+his whip as we tore along side by side, and then I saw him wind the reins
+round his off arm and bend over, and I felt his angry fingers close
+tightly on my right foot. The next instant I should have been lifted out
+of my saddle, but there came another shot from the sledge. The baron's
+horse plunged and stumbled, and the baron, hanging on to my foot with a
+fierce grip, was wrenched from his seat. His horse, however, was up again
+immediately, and I was released, and then I caught a confused glimpse of
+the frightened and wounded animal galloping wildly away to the right,
+leaving a black track of blood behind him in the snow, his master,
+entangled in the reins, running with incredible swiftness by his side and
+endeavoring to vault back into the saddle.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now came to pass a terrible thing which, in his savage plans, my host
+had doubtless never anticipated.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One of the hounds that had during this short check recovered lost ground,
+coming across this hot trail of blood, turned away from his course, and
+with a joyous yell darted after the running man. In another instant the
+remainder of the pack was upon the new scent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As soon as I could stop my horse, I tried to turn him in the direction
+the new chase had taken, but just then, through the night air, over the
+receding sound of the horse's scamper and the sobbing of the pack in full
+cry, there came a long scream, and after that a sickening silence. And I
+knew that somewhere yonder, under the beautiful moonlight, the Baron
+Kossowski was being devoured by his starving dogs.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I looked round, with the sweat on my face, vaguely, for some human being
+to share the horror of the moment, and I saw, gliding away, far away in
+the white distance, the black silhouette of the sledge.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well?&quot; said we, in divers tones of impatience, curiosity, or horror,
+according to our divers temperaments, as the speaker uncrossed his legs
+and gazed at us in mild triumph, with all the air of having said his say,
+and satisfactorily proved his point.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; repeated he, &quot;what more do you want to know? It will interest you
+but slightly, I am sure, to hear how I found my way back to the Hof; or
+how I told as much as I deemed prudent of the evening's grewsome work to
+the baron's servants, who, by the way, to my amazement, displayed the
+profoundest and most unmistakable sorrow at the tidings, and sallied forth
+(at their head the Cossack who had seen us depart) to seek for his
+remains. Excuse the unpleasantness of the remark: I fear the dogs must
+have left very little of him, he had dieted them so carefully. However,
+since it was to have been a case of 'chop, crunch, and gobble,' as the
+baron had it, I preferred that that particular fate should have overtaken
+him rather than me&mdash;or, for that matter, either of those two country
+people of ours in the sledge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor am I going to inflict upon you,&quot; continued Marshfield, after draining
+his glass, &quot;a full account of my impressions when I found myself once more
+in that immense, deserted, and stricken house, so luxuriously prepared for
+the mistress who had fled from it; how I philosophized over all this,
+according to my wont; the conjectures I made as to the first acts of the
+drama; the untold sufferings my countrywoman must have endured from the
+moment her husband first grew jealous till she determined on this
+desperate step; as to how and when she had met her lover, how they
+communicated, and how the baron had discovered the intended flitting in
+time to concoct his characteristic revenge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One thing you may be sure of, I had no mind to remain at Yany an hour
+longer than necessary. I even contrived to get well clear of the
+neighborhood before the lady's absence was discovered. Luckily for me&mdash;or
+I might have been taxed with connivance, though indeed the simple
+household did not seem to know what suspicion was, and accepted my account
+with childlike credence&mdash;very typical, and very convenient to me at the
+same time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But how do you know,&quot; said one of us, &quot;that the man was her lover? He
+might have been her brother or some other relative.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That,&quot; said Marshfield, with his little flat laugh, &quot;I happen to have
+ascertained&mdash;and, curiously enough, only a few weeks ago. It was at the
+play, between the acts, from my comfortable seat (the first row in the
+pit). I was looking leisurely round the house when I caught sight of a
+woman, in a box close by, whose head was turned from me, and who presented
+the somewhat unusual spectacle of a young neck and shoulders of the most
+exquisite contour&mdash;and perfectly gray hair; and not dull gray, but rather
+of a pleasing tint like frosted silver. This aroused my curiosity. I
+brought my glasses to a focus on her and waited patiently till she turned
+round. Then I recognized the Baroness Kassowski, and I no longer wondered
+at the young hair being white.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet she looked placid and happy; strangely so, it seemed to me, under the
+sudden reviving in my memory of such scenes as I have now described. But
+presently I understood further: beside her, in close attendance, was the
+man of the sledge, a handsome fellow with much of a military air about
+him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;During the course of the evening, as I watched, I saw a friend of mine
+come into the box, and at the end I slipped out into the passage to catch
+him as he came out.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Who is the woman with the white hair?' I asked. Then, in the fragmentary
+style approved of by ultra-fashionable young men&mdash;this earnest-languid
+mode of speech presents curious similarities in all languages&mdash;he told me:
+'Most charming couple in London&mdash;awfully pretty, wasn't she?&mdash;he had been
+in the Guards&mdash;attach&eacute; at Vienna once&mdash;they adored each other. White hair,
+devilish queer, wasn't it? Suited her, somehow. And then she had been
+married to a Russian, or something, somewhere in the wilds, and their
+names were&mdash;' But do you know,&quot; said Marshfield, interrupting himself, &quot;I
+think I had better let you find that out for yourselves, if you care.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Stanley J. Weyman</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Fowl_in_the_Pot" id="The_Fowl_in_the_Pot" /><i>The Fowl in the Pot</i></h2>
+
+<p><i>An Episode Adapted from the Memoirs of Maximilian de Bethune, Duke of
+Sully</i></p>
+
+
+<p>What I am going to relate may seem to some merely to be curious and on a
+party with the diverting story of M. Boisros&eacute;, which I have set down in an
+earlier part of my memoirs. But among the calumnies of those who have
+never ceased to attack me since the death of the late king, the statement
+that I kept from his majesty things which should have reached his ears has
+always had a prominent place, though a thousand times refuted by my
+friends, and those who from an intimate acquaintance with events could
+judge how faithfully I labored to deserve the confidence with which my
+master honored me. Therefore, I take it in hand to show by an example,
+trifling in itself, the full knowledge of affairs which the king had, and
+to prove that in many matters, which were never permitted to become known
+to the idlers of the court, he took a personal share, worthy as much of
+Haroun as of Alexander.</p>
+
+<p>It was my custom, before I entered upon those negotiations with the Prince
+of Cond&eacute; which terminated in the recovery of the estate of Villebon, where
+I now principally reside, to spend a part of the autumn and winter at
+Rosny. On these occasions I was in the habit of leaving Paris with a
+considerable train of Swiss, pages, valets, and grooms, together with the
+maids of honor and waiting women of the duchess. We halted to take dinner
+at Poissy, and generally contrived to reach Rosny toward nightfall, so as
+to sup by the light of flambeaux in a manner enjoyable enough, though
+devoid of that state which I have ever maintained, and enjoined upon my
+children, as at once the privilege and burden of rank.</p>
+
+<p>At the time of which I am speaking I had for my favorite charger the
+sorrel horse which the Duke of Mercoeur presented to me with a view to my
+good offices at the time of the king's entry into Paris; and which I
+honestly transferred to his majesty in accordance with a principle laid
+down in another place. The king insisted on returning it to me, and for
+several years I rode it on these annual visits to Rosny. What was more
+remarkable was that on each of these occasions it cast a shoe about the
+middle of the afternoon, and always when we were within a short league of
+the village of Aubergenville. Though I never had with me less than half a
+score of led horses, I had such an affection for the sorrel that I
+preferred to wait until it was shod, rather than accommodate myself to a
+nag of less easy paces; and would allow my household to precede me,
+staying behind myself with at most a guard or two, my valet, and a page.</p>
+
+<p>The forge at Aubergenville was kept by a smith of some skill, a cheerful
+fellow, whom I always remembered to reward, considering my own position
+rather than his services, with a gold livre. His joy at receiving what was
+to him the income of a year was great, and never failed to reimburse me;
+in addition to which I took some pleasure in unbending, and learning from
+this simple peasant and loyal man, what the taxpayers were saying of me
+and my reforms&mdash;a duty I always felt I owed to the king my master.</p>
+
+<p>As a man of breeding it would ill become me to set down the homely truths
+I thus learned. The conversations of the vulgar are little suited to a
+nobleman's memoirs; but in this I distinguish between the Duke of Sully
+and the king's minister, and it is in the latter capacity that I relate
+what passed on these diverting occasions. &quot;Ho, Simon,&quot; I would say,
+encouraging the poor man as he came bowing and trembling before me, &quot;how
+goes it, my friend?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Badly,&quot; he would answer, &quot;very badly until your lordship came this way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And how is that, little man?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, it is the roads,&quot; he always replied, shaking his bald head as he
+began to set about his business. &quot;The roads since your lordship became
+surveyor-general are so good that not one horse in a hundred casts a shoe;
+and then there are so few highwaymen now that not one robber's plates do I
+replace in a twelvemonth. There is where it is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this I was highly delighted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Still, since I began to pass this way times have not been so bad with
+you, Simon,&quot; I would answer.</p>
+
+<p>Thereto he had one invariable reply.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No; thanks to Ste. Genevi&egrave;ve and your lordship, whom we call in this
+village the poor man's friend, I have a fowl in the pot.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This phrase so pleased me that I repeated it to the king. It tickled his
+fancy also, and for some years it was a very common remark of that good
+and great ruler, that he hoped to live to see every peasant with a fowl in
+his pot.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But why,&quot; I remember I once asked this honest fellow&mdash;it was on the last
+occasion of the sorrel falling lame there&mdash;&quot;do you thank Ste. Genevi&egrave;ve?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She is my patron saint,&quot; he answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you are a Parisian?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your lordship is always right.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But does her saintship do you any good?&quot; I asked curiously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly, by your lordship's leave. My wife prays to her and she loosens
+the nails in the sorrel's shoes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In fact she pays off an old grudge,&quot; I answered, &quot;for there was a time
+when Paris liked me little; but hark ye, master smith, I am not sure that
+this is not an act of treason to conspire with Madame Genevi&egrave;ve against
+the comfort of the king's minister. What think you, you rascal; can you
+pass the justice elm without a shiver?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This threw the simple fellow into a great fear, which the sight of the
+livre of gold speedily converted into joy as stupendous. Leaving him still
+staring at his fortune I rode away; but when we had gone some little
+distance, the aspect of his face, when I charged him with treason, or my
+own unassisted discrimination suggested a clew to the phenomenon.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;La Trape,&quot; I said to my valet&mdash;the same who was with me at Cahors&mdash;&quot;what
+is the name of the innkeeper at Poissy, at whose house we are accustomed
+to dine?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Andrew, may it please your lordship.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Andrew! I thought so!&quot; I exclaimed, smiting my thigh. &quot;Simon and Andrew
+his brother! Answer, knave, and, if you have permitted me to be robbed
+these many times, tremble for your ears. Is he not brother to the smith at
+Aubergenville who has just shod my horse?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>La Trape professed to be ignorant on this point, but a groom who had
+stayed behind with me, having sought my permission to speak, said it was
+so, adding that Master Andrew had risen in the world through large
+dealings in hay, which he was wont to take daily into Paris and sell, and
+that he did not now acknowledge or see anything of his brother the smith,
+though it was believed that he retained a sneaking liking for him.</p>
+
+<p>On receiving this confirmation of my suspicions, my vanity as well as my
+sense of justice led me to act with the promptitude which I have exhibited
+in greater emergencies. I rated La Trape for his carelessness of my
+interests in permitting this deception to be practiced on me; and the main
+body of my attendants being now in sight, I ordered him to take two Swiss
+and arrest both brothers without delay. It wanted yet three hours of
+sunset, and I judged that, by hard riding, they might reach Rosny with
+their prisoners before bedtime.</p>
+
+<p>I spent some time while still on the road in considering what punishment I
+should inflict on the culprits; and finally laid aside the purpose I had
+at first conceived of putting them to death&mdash;an infliction they had richly
+deserved&mdash;in favor of a plan which I thought might offer me some
+amusement. For the execution of this I depended upon Maignan, my equerry,
+who was a man of lively imagination, being the same who had of his own
+motion arranged and carried out the triumphal procession, in which I was
+borne to Rosny after the battle of Ivry. Before I sat down to supper I
+gave him his directions; and as I had expected, news was brought to me
+while I was at table that the prisoners had arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon I informed the duchess and the company generally, for, as was
+usual, a number of my country neighbors had come to compliment me on my
+return, that there was some sport of a rare kind on foot; and we
+adjourned, Maignan, followed by four pages bearing lights, leading the way
+to that end of the terrace which abuts on the linden avenue. Here, a score
+of grooms holding torches aloft had been arranged in a circle so that the
+impromptu theater thus formed, which Maignan had ordered with much taste,
+was as light as in the day. On a sloping bank at one end seats had been
+placed for those who had supped at my table, while the rest of the company
+found such places of vantage as they could; their number, indeed,
+amounting, with my household, to two hundred persons. In the center of the
+open space a small forge fire had been kindled, the red glow of which
+added much to the strangeness of the scene; and on the anvil beside it
+were ranged a number of horses' and donkeys' shoes, with a full complement
+of the tools used by smiths. All being ready I gave the word to bring in
+the prisoners, and escorted by La Trape and six of my guards, they were
+marched into the arena. In their pale and terrified faces, and the shaking
+limbs which could scarce support them to their appointed stations, I read
+both the consciousness of guilt and the apprehension of immediate death;
+it was plain that they expected nothing less. I was very willing to play
+with their fears, and for some time looked at them in silence, while all
+wondered with lively curiosity what would ensue. I then addressed them
+gravely, telling the innkeeper that I knew well he had loosened each year
+a shoe of my horse, in order that his brother might profit by the job of
+replacing it; and went on to reprove the smith for the ingratitude which
+had led him to return my bounty by the conception of so knavish a trick.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this they confessed their guilt, and flinging themselves upon their
+knees with many tears and prayers begged for mercy. This, after a decent
+interval, I permitted myself to grant. &quot;Your lives, which are forfeited,
+shall be spared,&quot; I pronounced. &quot;But punished you must be. I therefore
+ordain that Simon, the smith, at once fit, nail, and properly secure a
+pair of iron shoes to Andrew's heels, and that then Andrew, who by that
+time will have picked up something of the smith's art, do the same to
+Simon. So will you both learn to avoid such shoeing tricks for the
+future.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It may well be imagined that a judgment so whimsical, and so justly
+adapted to the offense, charmed all save the culprits; and in a hundred
+ways the pleasure of those present was evinced, to such a degree, indeed,
+that Maignan had some difficulty in restoring silence and gravity to the
+assemblage. This done, however, Master Andrew was taken in hand and his
+wooden shoes removed. The tools of his trade were placed before the smith,
+who cast glances so piteous, first at his brother's feet and then at the
+shoes on the anvil, as again gave rise to a prodigious amount of
+merriment, my pages in particular well-nigh forgetting my presence, and
+rolling about in a manner unpardonable at another time. However, I rebuked
+them sharply, and was about to order the sentence to be carried into
+effect, when the remembrance of the many pleasant simplicities which the
+smith had uttered to me, acting upon a natural disposition to mercy, which
+the most calumnious of my enemies have never questioned, induced me to
+give the prisoners a chance of escape. &quot;Listen,&quot; I said, &quot;Simon and
+Andrew. Your sentence has been pronounced, and will certainly be executed
+unless you can avail yourself of the condition I now offer. You shall have
+three minutes; if in that time either of you can make a good joke, he
+shall go free. If not, let a man attend to the bellows, La Trape!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This added a fresh satisfaction to my neighbors, who were well assured now
+that I had not promised them a novel entertainment without good grounds;
+for the grimaces of the two knaves thus bidden to jest if they would save
+their skins, were so diverting they would have made a nun laugh. They
+looked at me with their eyes as wide as plates, and for the whole of the
+time of grace never a word could they utter save howls for mercy. &quot;Simon,&quot;
+I said gravely, when the time was up, &quot;have you a joke? No. Andrew, my
+friend, have you a joke? No. Then&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was going on to order the sentence to be carried out, when the innkeeper
+flung himself again upon his knees, and cried out loudly&mdash;as much to my
+astonishment as to the regret of the bystanders, who were bent on seeing
+so strange a shoeing feat&mdash;&quot;One word, my lord; I can give you no joke, but
+I can do a service, an eminent service to the king. I can disclose a
+conspiracy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was somewhat taken aback by this sudden and public announcement. But I
+had been too long in the king's employment not to have remarked how
+strangely things are brought to light. On hearing the man's words
+therefore&mdash;which were followed by a stricken silence&mdash;I looked sharply at
+the faces of such of those present as it was possible to suspect, but
+failed to observe any sign of confusion or dismay, or anything more
+particular than so abrupt a statement was calculated to produce. Doubting
+much whether the man was not playing with me, I addressed him sternly,
+warning him to beware, lest in his anxiety to save his heels by falsely
+accusing others, he should lose his head. For that if his conspiracy
+should prove to be an invention of his own, I should certainly consider it
+my duty to hang him forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>He heard me out, but nevertheless persisted in his story, adding
+desperately, &quot;It is a plot, my lord, to assassinate you and the king on
+the same day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This statement struck me a blow; for I had good reason to know that at
+that time the king had alienated many by his infatuation for Madame de
+Verneuil; while I had always to reckon firstly with all who hated him, and
+secondly with all whom my pursuit of his interests injured, either in
+reality or appearance. I therefore immediately directed that the prisoners
+should be led in close custody to the chamber adjoining my private closet,
+and taking the precaution to call my guards about me, since I knew not
+what attempt despair might not breed, I withdrew myself, making such
+apologies to the company as the nature of the case permitted.</p>
+
+<p>I ordered Simon the smith to be first brought to me, and in the presence
+of Maignan only, I severely examined him as to his knowledge of any
+conspiracy. He denied, however, that he had ever heard of the matters
+referred to by his brother, and persisted so firmly in the denial that I
+was inclined to believe him. In the end he was taken out and Andrew was
+brought in. The innkeeper's demeanor was such as I have often observed in
+intriguers brought suddenly to book. He averred the existence of the
+conspiracy, and that its objects were those which he had stated. He also
+offered to give up his associates, but conditioned that he should do this
+in his own way; undertaking to conduct me and one other person&mdash;but no
+more, lest the alarm should be given&mdash;to a place in Paris on the following
+night, where we could hear the plotters state their plans and designs. In
+this way only, he urged, could proof positive be obtained.</p>
+
+<p>I was much startled by this proposal, and inclined to think it a trap; but
+further consideration dispelled my fears. The innkeeper had held no parley
+with anyone save his guards and myself since his arrest, and could neither
+have warned his accomplices, nor acquainted them with any design the
+execution of which should depend on his confession to me. I therefore
+accepted his terms&mdash;with a private reservation that I should have help at
+hand&mdash;and before daybreak next morning left Rosny, which I had only seen
+by torchlight, with my prisoner and a select body of Swiss. We entered
+Paris in the afternoon in three parties, with as little parade as
+possible, and went straight to the Arsenal, whence, as soon as evening
+fell, I hurried with only two armed attendants to the Louvre.</p>
+
+<p>A return so sudden and unexpected was as great a surprise to the court as
+to the king, and I was not slow to mark with an inward smile the
+discomposure which appeared very clearly on the faces of several, as the
+crowd in the chamber fell back for me to approach my master. I was
+careful, however, to remember that this might arise from other causes than
+guilt. The king received me with his wonted affection; and divining at
+once that I must have something important to communicate, withdrew with me
+to the farther end of the chamber, where we were out of earshot of the
+court. I there related the story to his majesty, keeping back nothing.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head, saying merely: &quot;The fish to escape the frying pan,
+grand master, will jump into the fire. And human nature, save in the case
+of you and me, who can trust one another, is very fishy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was touched by this gracious compliment, but not convinced. &quot;You have
+not seen the man, sire,&quot; I said, &quot;and I have had that advantage.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And believe him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In part,&quot; I answered with caution. &quot;So far at least as to be assured that
+he thinks to save his skin, which he will only do if he be telling the
+truth. May I beg you, sire,&quot; I added hastily, seeing the direction of his
+glance, &quot;not to look so fixedly at the Duke of Epernon? He grows uneasy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Conscience makes&mdash;you know the rest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nay, sire, with submission,&quot; I replied, &quot;I will answer for him; if he be
+not driven by fear to do something reckless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good! I take your warranty, Duke of Sully,&quot; the king said, with the easy
+grace which came so natural to him. &quot;But now in this matter what would you
+have me do?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Double your guards, sire, for to-night&mdash;that is all. I will answer for
+the Bastile and the Arsenal; and holding these we hold Paris.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But thereupon I found that the king had come to a decision, which I felt
+it to be my duty to combat with all my influence. He had conceived the
+idea of being the one to accompany me to the rendezvous. &quot;I am tired of
+the dice,&quot; he complained, &quot;and sick of tennis, at which I know everybody's
+strength. Madame de Verneuil is at Fontainebleau, the queen is unwell. Ah,
+Sully, I would the old days were back when we had Nerac for our Paris, and
+knew the saddle better than the armchair!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A king must think of his people,&quot; I reminded him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The fowl in the pot? To be sure. So I will&mdash;to-morrow,&quot; he replied. And
+in the end he would be obeyed. I took my leave of him as if for the night,
+and retired, leaving him at play with the Duke of Epernon. But an hour
+later, toward eight o'clock, his majesty, who had made an excuse to
+withdraw to his closet, met me outside the eastern gate of the Louvre.</p>
+
+<p>He was masked, and attended only by Coquet, his master of the household. I
+too wore a mask and was esquired by Maignan, under whose orders were four
+Swiss&mdash;whom I had chosen because they were unable to speak
+French&mdash;guarding the prisoner Andrew. I bade Maignan follow the
+innkeeper's directions, and we proceeded in two parties through the
+streets on the left bank of the river, past the Ch&acirc;telet and Bastile,
+until we reached an obscure street near the water, so narrow that the
+decrepit wooden houses shut out well-nigh all view of the sky. Here the
+prisoner halted and called upon me to fulfill the terms of my agreement. I
+bade Maignan therefore to keep with the Swiss at a distance of fifty
+paces, but to come up should I whistle or otherwise give the alarm; and
+myself with the king and Andrew proceeded onward in the deep shadow of the
+houses. I kept my hand on my pistol, which I had previously shown to the
+prisoner, intimating that on the first sign of treachery I should blow out
+his brains. However, despite precaution, I felt uncomfortable to the last
+degree. I blamed myself severely for allowing the king to expose himself
+and the country to this unnecessary danger; while the meanness of the
+locality, the fetid air, the darkness of the night, which was wet and
+tempestuous, and the uncertainty of the event lowered my spirits, and made
+every splash in the kennel and stumble on the reeking, slippery
+pavements&mdash;matters over which the king grew merry&mdash;seem no light troubles
+to me.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at a house, which, if we might judge in the darkness, seemed to
+be of rather greater pretensions than its fellows, our guide stopped, and
+whispered to us to mount some steps to a raised wooden gallery, which
+intervened between the lane and the doorway. On this, besides the door, a
+couple of unglazed windows looked out. The shutter of one was ajar, and
+showed us a large, bare room, lighted by a couple of rushlights. Directing
+us to place ourselves close to this shutter, the innkeeper knocked at the
+door in a peculiar fashion, and almost immediately entered, going at once
+into the lighted room. Peering cautiously through the window we were
+surprised to find that the only person within, save the newcomer, was a
+young woman, who, crouching over a smoldering fire, was crooning a lullaby
+while she attended to a large black pot.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good evening, mistress!&quot; said the innkeeper, advancing to the fire with a
+fair show of nonchalance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good evening, Master Andrew,&quot; the girl replied, looking up and nodding,
+but showing no sign of surprise at his appearance. &quot;Martin is away, but he
+may return at any moment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is he still of the same mind?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what of Sully? Is he to die then?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They have decided he must,&quot; the girl answered gloomily. It may be
+believed that I listened with all my ears, while the king by a nudge in my
+side seemed to rally me on the destiny so coolly arranged for me. &quot;Martin
+says it is no good killing the other unless he goes too&mdash;they have been so
+long together. But it vexes me sadly, Master Andrew,&quot; she added with a
+sudden break in her voice. &quot;Sadly it vexes me. I could not sleep last
+night for thinking of it, and the risk Martin runs. And I shall sleep less
+when it is done.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pooh-pooh!&quot; said that rascally innkeeper. &quot;Think less about it. Things
+will grow worse and worse if they are let live. The King has done harm
+enough already. And he grows old besides.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is true!&quot; said the girl. &quot;And no doubt the sooner he is put out of
+the way the better. He is changed sadly. I do not say a word for him. Let
+him die. It is killing Sully that troubles me&mdash;that and the risk Martin
+runs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this I took the liberty of gently touching the king. He answered by an
+amused grimace; then by a motion of his hand he enjoined silence. We
+stooped still farther forward so as better to command the room. The girl
+was rocking herself to and fro in evident distress of mind. &quot;If we killed
+the King,&quot; she continued, &quot;Martin declares we should be no better off, as
+long as Sully lives. Both or neither, he says. But I do not know. I cannot
+bear to think of it. It was a sad day when we brought Epernon here, Master
+Andrew; and one I fear we shall rue as long as we live.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was now the king's turn to be moved. He grasped my wrist so forcibly
+that I restrained a cry with difficulty. &quot;Epernon!&quot; he whispered harshly
+in my ear. &quot;They are Epernon's tools! Where is your guaranty now, Rosny?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I confess that I trembled. I knew well that the king, particular in small
+courtesies, never forgot to call his servants by their correct titles,
+save in two cases; when he indicated by the seeming error, as once in
+Marshal Biron's affair, his intention to promote or degrade them; or when
+he was moved to the depths of his nature and fell into an old habit. I did
+not dare to reply, but listened greedily for more information.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When is it to be done?&quot; asked the innkeeper, sinking his voice and
+glancing round, as if he would call especial attention to this.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That depends upon Master la Rivi&egrave;re,&quot; the girl answered. &quot;To-morrow
+night, I understand, if Master la Rivi&egrave;re can have the stuff ready.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I met the king's eyes. They shone fiercely in the faint light, which
+issuing from the window fell on him. Of all things he hated treachery
+most, and La Rivi&egrave;re was his first body physician, and at this very time,
+as I well knew, was treating him for a slight derangement which the king
+had brought upon himself by his imprudence. This doctor had formerly been
+in the employment of the Bouillon family, who had surrendered his services
+to the king. Neither I nor his majesty had trusted the Duke of Bouillon
+for the last year past, so that we were not surprised by this hint that he
+was privy to the design.</p>
+
+<p>Despite our anxiety not to miss a word, an approaching step warned us at
+this moment to draw back. More than once before we had done so to escape
+the notice of a wayfarer passing up and down. But this time I had a
+difficulty in inducing the king to adopt the precaution. Yet it was well
+that I succeeded, for the person who came stumbling along toward us did
+not pass, but, mounting the steps, walked by within touch of us and
+entered the house.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The plot thickens,&quot; muttered the king. &quot;Who is this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At the moment he asked I was racking my brain to remember. I have a good
+eye and a fair recollection for faces, and this was one I had seen several
+times. The features were so familiar that I suspected the man of being a
+courtier in disguise, and I ran over the names of several persons whom I
+knew to be Bouillon's secret agents. But he was none of these, and obeying
+the king's gesture, I bent myself again to the task of listening.</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked up on the man's entrance, but did not rise. &quot;You are late,
+Martin,&quot; she said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A little,&quot; the newcomer answered. &quot;How do you do, Master Andrew? What
+cheer? What, still vexing, mistress?&quot; he added contemptuously to the girl.
+&quot;You have too soft a heart for this business!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She sighed, but made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have made up your mind to it, I hear?&quot; said the innkeeper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is it. Needs must when the devil drives!&quot; replied the man jauntily.
+He had a downcast, reckless, luckless air, yet in his face I thought I
+still saw traces of a better spirit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The devil in this case was Epernon,&quot; quoth Andrew.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aye, curse him! I would I had cut his dainty throat before he crossed my
+threshold,&quot; cried the desperado. &quot;But there, it is too late to say that
+now. What has to be done, has to be done.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How are you going about it? Poison, the mistress says.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes; but if I had my way,&quot; the man growled fiercely, &quot;I would out one of
+these nights and cut the dogs' throats in the kennel!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You could never escape, Martin!&quot; the girl cried, rising in excitement.
+&quot;It would be hopeless. It would merely be throwing away your own life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, it is not to be done that way, so there is an end of it,&quot; quoth the
+man wearily. &quot;Give me my supper. The devil take the king and Sully too! He
+will soon have them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On this Master Andrew rose, and I took his movement toward the door for a
+signal for us to retire. He came out at once, shutting the door behind him
+as he bade the pair within a loud good night. He found us standing in the
+street waiting for him and forthwith fell on his knees in the mud and
+looked up at me, the perspiration standing thick on his white face. &quot;My
+lord,&quot; he cried hoarsely, &quot;I have earned my pardon!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you go on,&quot; I said encouragingly, &quot;as you have begun, have no fear.&quot;
+Without more ado I whistled up the Swiss and bade Maignan go with them and
+arrest the man and woman with as little disturbance as possible. While
+this was being done we waited without, keeping a sharp eye upon the
+informer, whose terror, I noted with suspicion, seemed to be in no degree
+diminished. He did not, however, try to escape, and Maignan presently came
+to tell us that he had executed the arrest without difficulty or
+resistance.</p>
+
+<p>The importance of arriving at the truth before Epernon and the greater
+conspirators should take the alarm was so vividly present to the minds of
+the king and myself, that we did not hesitate to examine the prisoners in
+their house, rather than hazard the delay and observation which their
+removal to a more fit place must occasion. Accordingly, taking the
+precaution to post Coquet in the street outside, and to plant a burly
+Swiss in the doorway, the king and I entered. I removed my mask as I did
+so, being aware of the necessity of gaining the prisoners' confidence, but
+I begged the king to retain his. As I had expected, the man immediately
+recognized me and fell on his knees, a nearer view confirming the notion I
+had previously entertained that his features were familiar to me, though I
+could not remember his name. I thought this a good starting-point for my
+examination, and bidding Maignan withdraw, I assumed an air of mildness
+and asked the fellow his name.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Martin, only, please your lordship,&quot; he answered; adding, &quot;once I sold
+you two dogs, sir, for the chase, and to your lady a lapdog called Ninette
+no larger than her hand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I remembered the knave, then, as a fashionable dog dealer, who had been
+much about the court in the reign of Henry the Third and later; and I saw
+at once how convenient a tool he might be made, since he could be seen in
+converse with people of all ranks without arousing suspicion. The man's
+face as he spoke expressed so much fear and surprise that I determined to
+try what I had often found successful in the case of greater criminals, to
+squeeze him for a confession while still excited by his arrest, and before
+he should have had time to consider what his chances of support at the
+hands of his confederates might be. I charged him therefore solemnly to
+tell the whole truth as he hoped for the king's mercy. He heard me, gazing
+at me piteously; but his only answer, to my surprise, was that he had
+nothing to confess.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, come,&quot; I replied sternly, &quot;this will avail you nothing; if you do
+not speak quickly, rogue, and to the point, we shall find means to compel
+you. Who counseled you to attempt his majesty's life?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On this he stared so stupidly at me, and exclaimed with so real an
+appearance of horror: &quot;How? I attempt the king's life? God forbid!&quot; that I
+doubted that we had before us a more dangerous rascal than I had thought,
+and I hastened to bring him to the point.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What, then,&quot; I cried, frowning, &quot;of the stuff Master la Rivi&egrave;re is to
+give you to take the king's life to-morrow night? Oh, we know something, I
+assure you; bethink you quickly, and find your tongue if you would have an
+easy death.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I expected to see his self-control break down at this proof of our
+knowledge of his design, but he only stared at me with the same look of
+bewilderment. I was about to bid them bring in the informer that I might
+see the two front to front, when the female prisoner, who had hitherto
+stood beside her companion in such distress and terror as might be
+expected in a woman of that class, suddenly stopped her tears and
+lamentations. It occurred to me that she might make a better witness. I
+turned to her, but when I would have questioned her she broke into a wild
+scream of hysterical laughter.</p>
+
+<p>From that I remember that I learned nothing, though it greatly annoyed me.
+But there was one present who did&mdash;the king. He laid his hand on my
+shoulder, gripping it with a force that I read as a command to be silent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where,&quot; he said to the man, &quot;do you keep the King and Sully and Epernon,
+my friend?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The King and Sully&mdash;with the lordship's leave,&quot; said the man quickly,
+with a frightened glance at me&mdash;&quot;are in the kennels at the back of the
+house, but it is not safe to go near them. The King is raving mad,
+and&mdash;and the other dog is sickening. Epernon we had to kill a month back.
+He brought the disease here, and I have had such losses through him as
+have nearly ruined me, please your lordship.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Get up&mdash;get up, man!&quot; cried the king, and tearing off his mask he stamped
+up and down the room, so torn by paroxysms of laughter that he choked
+himself when again and again he attempted to speak.</p>
+
+<p>I too now saw the mistake, but I could not at first see it in the same
+light. Commanding myself as well as I could, I ordered one of the Swiss to
+fetch in the innkeeper, but to admit no one else.</p>
+
+<p>The knave fell on his knees as soon as he saw me, his cheeks shaking like
+a jelly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mercy, mercy!&quot; was all he could say.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have dared to play with me?&quot; I whispered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You bade me joke,&quot; he sobbed, &quot;you bade me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was about to say that it would be his last joke in this world&mdash;for my
+anger was fully aroused&mdash;when the king intervened.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nay,&quot; he said, laying his hand softly on my shoulder. &quot;It has been the
+most glorious jest. I would not have missed it for a kingdom. I command
+you, Sully, to forgive him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon his majesty strictly charged the three that they should not on
+peril of their lives mention the circumstances to anyone. Nor to the best
+of my belief did they do so, being so shrewdly scared when they recognized
+the king that I verily think they never afterwards so much as spoke of the
+affair to one another. My master further gave me on his own part his most
+gracious promise that he would not disclose the matter even to Madame de
+Verneuil or the queen, and upon these representations he induced me freely
+to forgive the innkeeper. So ended this conspiracy, on the diverting
+details of which I may seem to have dwelt longer than I should; but alas!
+in twenty-one years of power I investigated many, and this one only can I
+regard with satisfaction. The rest were so many warnings and predictions
+of the fate which, despite all my care and fidelity, was in store for the
+great and good master I served.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Robert Louis Stevenson</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Pavilion_on_the_Links" id="The_Pavilion_on_the_Links" /><i>The Pavilion on the Links</i></h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+
+<p>I was a great solitary when I was young. I made it my pride to keep aloof
+and suffice for my own entertainment; and I may say that I had neither
+friends nor acquaintances until I met that friend who became my wife and
+the mother of my children. With one man only was I on private terms; this
+was R. Northmour, Esquire, of Graden Easter, in Scotland. We had met at
+college; and though there was not much liking between us, nor even much
+intimacy, we were so nearly of a humor that we could associate with ease
+to both. Misanthropes, we believed ourselves to be; but I have thought
+since that we were only sulky fellows. It was scarcely a companionship,
+but a co-existence in unsociability. Northmour's exceptional violence of
+temper made it no easy affair for him to keep the peace with anyone but
+me; and as he respected my silent ways, and let me come and go as I
+pleased, I could tolerate his presence without concern. I think we called
+each other friends.</p>
+
+<p>When Northmour took his degree and I decided to leave the university
+without one, he invited me on a long visit to Graden Easter; and it was
+thus that I first became acquainted with the scene of my adventures. The
+mansion house of Graden stood in a bleak stretch of country some three
+miles from the shore of the German Ocean. It was as large as a barrack;
+and as it had been built of a soft stone, liable to consume in the eager
+air of the seaside, it was damp and draughty within and half ruinous
+without. It was impossible for two young men to lodge with comfort in
+such a dwelling. But there stood in the northern part of the estate, in a
+wilderness of links and blowing sand hills, and between a plantation and
+the sea, a small pavilion or belvedere, of modern design, which was
+exactly suited to our wants; and in this hermitage, speaking little,
+reading much, and rarely associating except at meals, Northmour and I
+spent four tempestuous winter months. I might have stayed longer; but one
+March night there sprung up between us a dispute, which rendered my
+departure necessary. Northmour spoke hotly, I remember, and I suppose I
+must have made some tart rejoinder. He leaped from his chair and grappled
+me; I had to fight, without exaggeration, for my life; and it was only
+with a great effort that I mastered him, for he was near as strong in body
+as myself, and seemed filled with the devil. The next morning, we met on
+our usual terms; but I judged it more delicate to withdraw; nor did he
+attempt to dissuade me.</p>
+
+<p>It was nine years before I revisited the neighborhood. I traveled at that
+time with a tilt-cart, a tent, and a cooking stove, tramping all day
+beside the wagon, and at night, whenever it was possible, gypsying in a
+cove of the hills, or by the side of a wood. I believe I visited in this
+manner most of the wild and desolate regions both in England and Scotland;
+and, as I had neither friends nor relations, I was troubled with no
+correspondence, and had nothing in the nature of headquarters, unless it
+was the office of my solicitors, from whom I drew my income twice a year.
+It was a life in which I delighted; and I fully thought to have grown old
+upon the march, and at last died in a ditch.</p>
+
+<p>It was my whole business to find desolate corners, where I could camp
+without the fear of interruption; and hence, being in another part of the
+same shire, I bethought me suddenly of the Pavilion on the Links. No
+thoroughfare passed within three miles of it. The nearest town, and that
+was but a fisher village, was at a distance of six or seven. For ten miles
+of length, and from a depth varying from three miles to half a mile, this
+belt of barren country lay along the sea. The beach, which was the natural
+approach, was full of quicksands. Indeed I may say there is hardly a
+better place of concealment in the United Kingdom. I determined to pass a
+week in the Sea-Wood of Graden Easter, and making a long stage, reached it
+about sundown on a wild September day.</p>
+
+<p>The country, I have said, was mixed sand hill and links; <i>links</i> being a
+Scottish name for sand which has ceased drifting and become more or less
+solidly covered with turf. The pavilion stood on an even space: a little
+behind it, the wood began in a hedge of elders huddled together by the
+wind; in front, a few tumbled sand hills stood between it and the sea. An
+outcropping of rock had formed a bastion for the sand, so that there was
+here a promontory in the coast line between two shallow bays; and just
+beyond the tides, the rock again cropped out and formed an islet of small
+dimensions but strikingly designed. The quicksands were of great extent at
+low water, and had an infamous reputation in the country. Close in shore,
+between the islet and the promontory, it was said they would swallow a man
+in four minutes and a half; but there may have been little ground for this
+precision. The district was alive with rabbits, and haunted by gulls which
+made a continual piping about the pavilion. On summer days the outlook was
+bright and even gladsome; but at sundown in September, with a high wind,
+and a heavy surf rolling in close along the links, the place told of
+nothing but dead mariners and sea disaster. A ship beating to windward on
+the horizon, and a huge truncheon of wreck half buried in the sands at my
+feet, completed the innuendo of the scene.</p>
+
+<p>The pavilion&mdash;it had been built by the last proprietor, Northmour's uncle,
+a silly and prodigal virtuoso&mdash;presented little signs of age. It was two
+stories in height, Italian in design, surrounded by a patch of garden in
+which nothing had prospered but a few coarse flowers; and looked, with its
+shuttered windows, not like a house that had been deserted, but like one
+that had never been tenanted by man. Northmour was plainly from home;
+whether, as usual, sulking in the cabin of his yacht, or in one of his
+fitful and extravagant appearances in the world of society, I had, of
+course, no means of guessing. The place had an air of solitude that
+daunted even a solitary like myself; the wind cried in the chimneys with a
+strange and wailing note; and it was with a sense of escape, as if I were
+going indoors, that I turned away and, driving my cart before me, entered
+the skirts of the wood.</p>
+
+<p>The Sea-Wood of Graden had been planted to shelter the cultivated fields
+behind, and check the encroachments of the blowing sand. As you advanced
+into it from coastward, elders were succeeded by other hardy shrubs; but
+the timber was all stunted and bushy; it led a life of conflict; the trees
+were accustomed to swing there all night long in fierce winter tempests;
+and even in early spring, the leaves were already flying, and autumn was
+beginning, in this exposed plantation. Inland the ground rose into a
+little hill, which, along with the islet, served as a sailing mark for
+seamen. When the hill was open of the islet to the north, vessels must
+bear well to the eastward to clear Graden Ness and the Graden Bullers. In
+the lower ground, a streamlet ran among the trees, and, being dammed with
+dead leaves and clay of its own carrying, spread out every here and there,
+and lay in stagnant pools. One or two ruined cottages were dotted about
+the wood; and, according to Northmour, these were ecclesiastical
+foundations, and in their time had sheltered pious hermits.</p>
+
+<p>I found a den, or small hollow, where there was a spring of pure water;
+and there, clearing away the brambles, I pitched the tent, and made a fire
+to cook my supper. My horse I picketed farther in the wood where there was
+a patch of sward. The banks of the den not only concealed the light of my
+fire, but sheltered me from the wind, which was cold as well as high.</p>
+
+<p>The life I was leading made me both hardy and frugal. I never drank but
+water, and rarely eat anything more costly than oatmeal; and I required so
+little sleep, that, although I rose with the peep of day, I would often
+lie long awake in the dark or starry watches of the night. Thus in Graden
+Sea-Wood, although I fell thankfully asleep by eight in the evening I was
+awake again before eleven with a full possession of my faculties, and no
+sense of drowsiness or fatigue. I rose and sat by the fire, watching the
+trees and clouds tumultuously tossing and fleeing overhead, and hearkening
+to the wind and the rollers along the shore; till at length, growing weary
+of inaction, I quitted the den, and strolled toward the borders of the
+wood. A young moon, buried in mist, gave a faint illumination to my steps;
+and the light grew brighter as I walked forth into the links. At the same
+moment, the wind, smelling salt of the open ocean and carrying particles
+of sand, struck me with its full force, so that I had to bow my head.</p>
+
+<p>When I raised it again to look about me, I was aware of a light in the
+pavilion. It was not stationary; but passed from one window to another, as
+though some one were reviewing the different apartments with a lamp or
+candle. I watched it for some seconds in great surprise. When I had
+arrived in the afternoon the house had been plainly deserted; now it was
+as plainly occupied. It was my first idea that a gang of thieves might
+have broken in and be now ransacking Northmour's cupboards, which were
+many and not ill supplied. But what should bring thieves at Graden Easter?
+And, again, all the shutters had been thrown open, and it would have been
+more in the character of such gentry to close them. I dismissed the
+notion, and fell back upon another. Northmour himself must have arrived,
+and was now airing and inspecting the pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that there was no real affection between this man and me; but,
+had I loved him like a brother, I was then so much more in love with
+solitude that I should none the less have shunned his company. As it was,
+I turned and ran for it; and it was with genuine satisfaction that I found
+myself safely back beside the fire. I had escaped an acquaintance; I
+should have one more night in comfort. In the morning, I might either slip
+away before Northmour was abroad, or pay him as short a visit as I chose.</p>
+
+<p>But when morning came, I thought the situation so diverting that I forgot
+my shyness. Northmour was at my mercy; I arranged a good practical jest,
+though I knew well that my neighbor was not the man to jest with in
+security; and, chuckling beforehand over its success, took my place among
+the elders at the edge of the wood, whence I could command the door of the
+pavilion. The shutters were all once more closed, which I remember
+thinking odd; and the house, with its white walls and green venetians,
+looked spruce and habitable in the morning light. Hour after hour passed,
+and still no sign of Northmour. I knew him for a sluggard in the morning;
+but, as it drew on toward noon, I lost my patience. To say the truth, I
+had promised myself to break my fast in the pavilion, and hunger began to
+prick me sharply. It was a pity to let the opportunity go by without some
+cause for mirth; but the grosser appetite prevailed, and I relinquished my
+jest with regret, and sallied from the wood.</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of the house affected me, as I drew near, with disquietude.
+It seemed unchanged since last evening; and I had expected it, I scarce
+knew why, to wear some external signs of habitation. But no: the windows
+were all closely shuttered, the chimneys breathed no smoke, and the front
+door itself was closely padlocked. Northmour, therefore, had entered by
+the back; this was the natural, and indeed, the necessary conclusion; and
+you may judge of my surprise when, on turning the house, I found the back
+door similarly secured.</p>
+
+<p>My mind at once reverted to the original theory of thieves; and I blamed
+myself sharply for my last night's inaction. I examined all the windows on
+the lower story, but none of them had been tampered with; I tried the
+padlocks, but they were both secure. It thus became a problem how the
+thieves, if thieves they were, had managed to enter the house. They must
+have got, I reasoned, upon the roof of the outhouse where Northmour used
+to keep his photographic battery; and from thence, either by the window of
+the study or that of my old bedroom, completed their burglarious entry.</p>
+
+<p>I followed what I supposed was their example; and, getting on the roof,
+tried the shutters of each room. Both were secure; but I was not to be
+beaten; and, with a little force, one of them flew open, grazing, as it
+did so, the back of my hand. I remember, I put the wound to my mouth, and
+stood for perhaps half a minute licking it like a dog, and mechanically
+gazing behind me over the waste links and the sea; and, in that space of
+time, my eye made note of a large schooner yacht some miles to the
+northeast. Then I threw up the window and climbed in.</p>
+
+<p>I went over the house, and nothing can express my mystification. There was
+no sign of disorder, but, on the contrary, the rooms were unusually clean
+and pleasant. I found fires laid, ready for lighting; three bedrooms
+prepared with a luxury quite foreign to Northmour's habits, and with water
+in the ewers and the beds turned down; a table set for three in the
+dining-room; and an ample supply of cold meats, game, and vegetables on
+the pantry shelves. There were guests expected, that was plain; but why
+guests, when Northmour hated society? And, above all, why was the house
+thus stealthily prepared at dead of night? and why were the shutters
+closed and the doors padlocked?</p>
+
+<p>I effaced all traces of my visit, and came forth from the window feeling
+sobered and concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The schooner yacht was still in the same place; and it flashed for a
+moment through my mind that this might be the &quot;Red Earl&quot; bringing the
+owner of the pavilion and his guests. But the vessel's head was set the
+other way.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+
+<p>I returned to the den to cook myself a meal, of which I stood in great
+need, as well as to care for my horse, whom I had somewhat neglected in
+the morning. From time to time I went down to the edge of the wood; but
+there was no change in the pavilion, and not a human creature was seen all
+day upon the links. The schooner in the offing was the one touch of life
+within my range of vision. She, apparently with no set object, stood off
+and on or lay to, hour after hour; but as the evening deepened, she drew
+steadily nearer. I became more convinced that she carried Northmour and
+his friends, and that they would probably come ashore after dark; not only
+because that was of a piece with the secrecy of the preparations, but
+because the tide would not have flowed sufficiently before eleven to cover
+Graden Floe and the other sea quags that fortified the shore against
+invaders.</p>
+
+<p>All day the wind had been going down, and the sea along with it; but there
+was a return toward sunset of the heavy weather of the day before. The
+night set in pitch dark. The wind came off the sea in squalls, like the
+firing of a battery of cannon; now and then there was a flaw of rain, and
+the surf rolled heavier with the rising tide. I was down at my observatory
+among the elders, when a light was run up to the masthead of the schooner,
+and showed she was closer in than when I had last seen her by the dying
+daylight. I concluded that this must be a signal to Northmour's associates
+on shore; and, stepping forth into the links, looked around me for
+something in response.</p>
+
+<p>A small footpath ran along the margin of the wood, and formed the most
+direct communication between the pavilion and the mansion house; and, as I
+cast my eyes to that side, I saw a spark of light, not a quarter of a mile
+away, and rapidly approaching. From its uneven course it appeared to be
+the light of a lantern carried by a person who followed the windings of
+the path, and was often staggered, and taken aback by the more violent
+squalls. I concealed myself once more among the elders, and waited eagerly
+for the newcomer's advance. It proved to be a woman; and, as she passed
+within half a rod of my ambush, I was able to recognize the features. The
+deaf and silent old dame, who had nursed Northmour in his childhood, was
+his associate in this underhand affair.</p>
+
+<p>I followed her at a little distance, taking advantage of the innumerable
+heights and hollows, concealed by the darkness, and favored not only by
+the nurse's deafness, but by the uproar of the wind and surf. She entered
+the pavilion, and, going at once to the upper story, opened and set a
+light in one of the windows that looked toward the sea. Immediately
+afterwards the light at the schooner's masthead was run down and
+extinguished. Its purpose had been attained, and those on board were sure
+that they were expected. The old woman resumed her preparations; although
+the other shutters remained closed, I could see a glimmer going to and fro
+about the house; and a gush of sparks from one chimney after another soon
+told me that the fires were being kindled.</p>
+
+<p>Northmour and his guests, I was now persuaded, would come ashore as soon
+as there was water on the floe. It was a wild night for boat service; and
+I felt some alarm mingle with my curiosity as I reflected on the danger of
+the landing. My old acquaintance, it was true, was the most eccentric of
+men; but the present eccentricity was both disquieting and lugubrious to
+consider. A variety of feelings thus led me toward the beach, where I lay
+flat on my face in a hollow within six feet of the track that led to the
+pavilion. Thence, I should have the satisfaction of recognizing the
+arrivals, and, if they should prove to be acquaintances, greeting them as
+soon as they landed.</p>
+
+<p>Some time before eleven, while the tide was still dangerously low, a
+boat's lantern appeared close in shore; and, my attention being thus
+awakened, I could perceive another still far to seaward, violently tossed,
+and sometimes hidden by the billows. The weather, which was getting
+dirtier as the night went on, and the perilous situation of the yacht upon
+a lee shore, had probably driven them to attempt a landing at the earliest
+possible moment.</p>
+
+<p>A little afterwards, four yachtsmen carrying a very heavy chest, and
+guided by a fifth with a lantern, passed close in front of me as I lay,
+and were admitted to the pavilion by the nurse. They returned to the
+beach, and passed me a third time with another chest, larger but
+apparently not so heavy as the first. A third time they made the transit;
+and on this occasion one of the yachtsmen carried a leather portmanteau,
+and the others a lady's trunk and carriage bag. My curiosity was sharply
+excited. If a woman were among the guests of Northmour, it would show a
+change in his habits, and an apostasy from his pet theories of life, well
+calculated to fill me with surprise. When he and I dwelt there together,
+the pavilion had been a temple of misogyny. And now, one of the detested
+sex was to be installed under its roof. I remembered one or two
+particulars, a few notes of daintiness and almost of coquetry which had
+struck me the day before as I surveyed the preparations in the house;
+their purpose was now clear, and I thought myself dull not to have
+perceived it from the first.</p>
+
+<p>While I was thus reflecting, a second lantern drew near me from the beach.
+It was carried by a yachtsman whom I had not yet seen, and who was
+conducting two other persons to the pavilion. These two persons were
+unquestionably the guests for whom the house was made ready; and,
+straining eye and ear, I set myself to watch them as they passed. One was
+an unusually tall man, in a traveling hat slouched over his eyes, and a
+highland cape closely buttoned and turned up so as to conceal his face.
+You could make out no more of him than that he was, as I have said,
+unusually tall, and walked feebly with a heavy stoop. By his side, and
+either clinging to him or giving him support&mdash;I could not make out
+which&mdash;was a young, tall, and slender figure of a woman. She was extremely
+pale; but in the light of the lantern her face was so marred by strong and
+changing shadows, that she might equally well have been as ugly as sin or
+as beautiful as I afterwards found her to be.</p>
+
+<p>When they were just abreast of me, the girl made some remark which was
+drowned by the noise of the wind.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hush!&quot; said her companion; and there was something in the tone with which
+the word was uttered that thrilled and rather shook my spirits. It seemed
+to breathe from a bosom laboring under the deadliest terror; I have never
+heard another syllable so expressive; and I still hear it again when I am
+feverish at night, and my mind runs upon old times. The man turned toward
+the girl as he spoke; I had a glimpse of much red beard and a nose which
+seemed to have been broken in youth; and his light eyes seemed shining in
+his face with some strong and unpleasant emotion.</p>
+
+<p>But these two passed on and were admitted in their turn to the pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>One by one, or in groups, the seamen returned to the beach. The wind
+brought me the sound of a rough voice crying, &quot;Shove off!&quot; Then, after a
+pause, another lantern drew near. It was Northmour alone.</p>
+
+<p>My wife and I, a man and a woman, have often agreed to wonder how a person
+could be, at the same time, so handsome and so repulsive as Northmour. He
+had the appearance of a finished gentleman; his face bore every mark of
+intelligence and courage; but you had only to look at him, even in his
+most amiable moment, to see that he had the temper of a slaver captain. I
+never knew a character that was both explosive and revengeful to the same
+degree; he combined the vivacity of the south with the sustained and
+deadly hatreds of the north; and both traits were plainly written on his
+face, which was a sort of danger signal. In person, he was tall, strong,
+and active; his hair and complexion very dark; his features handsomely
+designed, but spoiled by a menacing expression.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment he was somewhat paler than by nature; he wore a heavy
+frown; and his lips worked, and he looked sharply round him as he walked,
+like a man besieged with apprehensions. And yet I thought he had a look of
+triumph underlying all, as though he had already done much, and was near
+the end of an achievement.</p>
+
+<p>Partly from a scruple of delicacy&mdash;which I dare say came too late&mdash;partly
+from the pleasure of startling an acquaintance, I desired to make my
+presence known to him without delay.</p>
+
+<p>I got suddenly to my feet, and stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour!&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>I have never had so shocking a surprise in all my days. He leaped on me
+without a word; something shone in his hand; and he struck for my heart
+with a dagger. At the same moment I knocked him head over heels. Whether
+it was my quickness, or his own uncertainty, I know not; but the blade
+only grazed my shoulder, while the hilt and his fist struck me violently
+on the mouth.</p>
+
+<p>I fled, but not far. I had often and often observed the capabilities of
+the sand hills for protracted ambush or stealthy advances and retreats;
+and, not ten yards from the scene of the scuffle, plumped down again upon
+the grass. The lantern had fallen and gone out. But what was my
+astonishment to see Northmour slip at a bound into the pavilion, and hear
+him bar the door behind him with a clang of iron!</p>
+
+<p>He had not pursued me. He had run away. Northmour, whom I knew for the
+most implacable and daring of men, had run away! I could scarce believe my
+reason; and yet in this strange business, where all was incredible, there
+was nothing to make a work about in an incredibility more or less. For why
+was the pavilion secretly prepared? Why had Northmour landed with his
+guests at dead of night, in half a gale of wind, and with the floe scarce
+covered? Why had he sought to kill me? Had he not recognized my voice? I
+wondered. And, above all, how had he come to have a dagger ready in his
+hand? A dagger, or even a sharp knife, seemed out of keeping with the age
+in which we lived; and a gentleman landing from his yacht on the shore of
+his own estate, even although it was at night and with some mysterious
+circumstances, does not usually, as a matter of fact, walk thus prepared
+for deadly onslaught. The more I reflected, the further I felt at sea. I
+recapitulated the elements of mystery, counting them on my fingers: the
+pavilion secretly prepared for guests; the guests landed at the risk of
+their lives and to the imminent peril of the yacht; the guests, or at
+least one of them, in undisguised and seemingly causeless terror;
+Northmour with a naked weapon; Northmour stabbing his most intimate
+acquaintance at a word; last, and not least strange, Northmour fleeing
+from the man whom he had sought to murder, and barricading himself, like a
+hunted creature, behind the door of the pavilion. Here were at least six
+separate causes for extreme surprise; each part and parcel with the
+others, and forming all together one consistent story. I felt almost
+ashamed to believe my own senses.</p>
+
+<p>As I thus stood, transfixed with wonder, I began to grow painfully
+conscious of the injuries I had received in the scuffle; skulked round
+among the sand hills; and, by a devious path, regained the shelter of the
+wood. On the way, the old nurse passed again within several yards of me,
+still carrying her lantern, on the return journey to the mansion house of
+Graden. This made a seventh suspicious feature in the case. Northmour and
+his guests, it appeared, were to cook and do the cleaning for themselves,
+while the old woman continued to inhabit the big empty barrack among the
+policies. There must surely be great cause for secrecy, when so many
+inconveniences were confronted to preserve it.</p>
+
+<p>So thinking, I made my way to the den. For greater security, I trod out
+the embers of the fire, and lighted my lantern to examine the wound upon
+my shoulder. It was a trifling hurt, although it bled somewhat freely, and
+I dressed it as well as I could (for its position made it difficult to
+reach) with some rag and cold water from the spring. While I was thus
+busied, I mentally declared war against Northmour and his mystery. I am
+not an angry man by nature, and I believe there was more curiosity than
+resentment in my heart. But war I certainly declared; and, by way of
+preparation, I got out my revolver, and, having drawn the charges, cleaned
+and reloaded it with scrupulous care. Next I became preoccupied about my
+horse. It might break loose, or fall to neighing, and so betray my camp in
+the Sea-Wood. I determined to rid myself of its neighborhood; and long
+before dawn I was leading it over the links in the direction of the fisher
+village.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+
+<p>For two days I skulked round the pavilion, profiting by the uneven surface
+of the links. I became an adept in the necessary tactics. These low
+hillocks and shallow dells, running one into another, became a kind of
+cloak of darkness for my inthralling, but perhaps dishonorable, pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, in spite of this advantage, I could learn but little of Northmour or
+his guests.</p>
+
+<p>Fresh provisions were brought under cover of darkness by the old woman
+from the mansion house. Northmour, and the young lady, sometimes together,
+but more often singly, would walk for an hour or two at a time on the
+beach beside the quicksand. I could not but conclude that this promenade
+was chosen with an eye to secrecy; for the spot was open only to seaward.
+But it suited me not less excellently; the highest and most accidented of
+the sand hills immediately adjoined; and from these, lying flat in a
+hollow, I could overlook Northmour or the young lady as they walked.</p>
+
+<p>The tall man seemed to have disappeared. Not only did he never cross the
+threshold, but he never so much as showed face at a window; or, at least,
+not so far as I could see; for I dared not creep forward beyond a certain
+distance in the day, since the upper floors commanded the bottoms of the
+links; and at night, when I could venture further, the lower windows were
+barricaded as if to stand a siege. Sometimes I thought the tall man must
+be confined to bed, for I remembered the feebleness of his gait; and
+sometimes I thought he must have gone clear away, and that Northmour and
+the young lady remained alone together in the pavilion. The idea, even
+then, displeased me.</p>
+
+<p>Whether or not this pair were man and wife, I had seen abundant reason to
+doubt the friendliness of their relation. Although I could hear nothing of
+what they said, and rarely so much as glean a decided expression on the
+face of either, there was a distance, almost a stiffness, in their
+bearing which showed them to be either unfamiliar or at enmity. The girl
+walked faster when she was with Northmour than when she was alone; and I
+conceived that any inclination between a man and a woman would rather
+delay than accelerate the step. Moreover, she kept a good yard free of
+him, and trailed her umbrella, as if it were a barrier, on the side
+between them. Northmour kept sidling closer; and, as the girl retired from
+his advance, their course lay at a sort of diagonal across the beach, and
+would have landed them in the surf had it been long enough continued. But,
+when this was imminent, the girl would unostentatiously change sides and
+put Northmour between her and the sea. I watched these maneuvers, for my
+part, with high enjoyment and approval, and chuckled to myself at every
+move.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the third day, she walked alone for some time, and I
+perceived, to my great concern, that she was more than once in tears. You
+will see that my heart was already interested more than I supposed. She
+had a firm yet airy motion of the body, and carried her head with
+unimaginable grace; every step was a thing to look at, and she seemed in
+my eyes to breathe sweetness and distinction.</p>
+
+<p>The day was so agreeable, being calm and sunshiny, with a tranquil sea,
+and yet with a healthful piquancy and vigor in the air, that, contrary to
+custom, she was tempted forth a second time to walk. On this occasion she
+was accompanied by Northmour, and they had been but a short while on the
+beach, when I saw him take forcible possession of her hand. She struggled,
+and uttered a cry that was almost a scream. I sprung to my feet, unmindful
+of my strange position; but, ere I had taken a step, I saw Northmour
+bareheaded and bowing very low, as if to apologize; and dropped again at
+once into my ambush. A few words were interchanged; and then, with another
+bow, he left the beach to return to the pavilion. He passed not far from
+me, and I could see him, flushed and lowering, and cutting savagely with
+his cane among the grass. It was not without satisfaction that I
+recognized my own handiwork in a great cut under his right eye, and a
+considerable discoloration round the socket.</p>
+
+<p>For some time the girl remained where he had left her, looking out past
+the islet and over the bright sea. Then with a start, as one who throws
+off preoccupation and puts energy again upon its mettle, she broke into a
+rapid and decisive walk. She also was much incensed by what had passed.
+She had forgotten where she was. And I beheld her walk straight into the
+borders of the quicksand where it is most abrupt and dangerous. Two or
+three steps farther and her life would have been in serious jeopardy, when
+I slid down the face of the sand hill, which is there precipitous, and,
+running halfway forward, called to her to stop.</p>
+
+<p>She did so, and turned round. There was not a tremor of fear in her
+behavior, and she marched directly up to me like a queen. I was barefoot,
+and clad like a common sailor, save for an Egyptian scarf round my waist;
+and she probably took me at first for some one from the fisher village,
+straying after bait. As for her, when I thus saw her face to face, her
+eyes set steadily and imperiously upon mine, I was filled with admiration
+and astonishment, and thought her even more beautiful than I had looked to
+find her. Nor could I think enough of one who, acting with so much
+boldness, yet preserved a maidenly air that was both quaint and engaging;
+for my wife kept an old-fashioned precision of manner through all her
+admirable life&mdash;an excellent thing in woman, since it sets another value
+on her sweet familiarities.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What does this mean?&quot; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You were walking,&quot; I told her, &quot;directly into Graden Floe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do not belong to these parts,&quot; she said again. &quot;You speak like an
+educated man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe I have a right to that name,&quot; said I, &quot;although in this
+disguise.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But her woman's eye had already detected the sash.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot; she said; &quot;your sash betrays you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have said the word <i>betray</i>,&quot; I resumed. &quot;May I ask you not to betray
+me? I was obliged to disclose myself in your interest; but if Northmour
+learned my presence it might be worse than disagreeable for me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you know,&quot; she asked, &quot;to whom you are speaking?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not to Mr. Northmour's wife?&quot; I asked, by way of answer.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. All this while she was studying my face with an
+embarrassing intentness. Then she broke out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have an honest face. Be honest like your face, sir, and tell me what
+you want and what you are afraid of. Do you think I could hurt you? I
+believe you have far more power to injure me! And yet you do not look
+unkind. What do you mean&mdash;you, a gentleman&mdash;by skulking like a spy about
+this desolate place? Tell me,&quot; she said, &quot;who is it you hate?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hate no one,&quot; I answered; &quot;and I fear no one face to face. My name is
+Cassilis&mdash;Frank Cassilis. I lead the life of a vagabond for my own good
+pleasure. I am one of Northmour's oldest friends; and three nights ago,
+when I addressed him on these links, he stabbed me in the shoulder with a
+knife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was you!&quot; she said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why he did so,&quot; I continued, disregarding the interruption, &quot;is more than
+I can guess, and more than I care to know. I have not many friends, nor am
+I very susceptible to friendship; but no man shall drive me from a place
+by terror. I had camped in the Graden Sea-Wood ere he came; I camp in it
+still. If you think I mean harm to you or yours, madame, the remedy is in
+your hand. Tell him that my camp is in the Hemlock Den, and to-night he
+can stab me in safety while I sleep.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With this I doffed my cap to her, and scrambled up once more among the
+sand hills. I do not know why, but I felt a prodigious sense of injustice,
+and felt like a hero and a martyr; while as a matter of fact, I had not a
+word to say in my defense, nor so much as one plausible reason to offer
+for my conduct. I had stayed at Graden out of a curiosity natural enough,
+but undignified; and though there was another motive growing in along with
+the first, it was not one which, at that period, I could have properly
+explained to the lady of my heart.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly, that night, I thought of no one else; and, though her whole
+conduct and position seemed suspicious, I could not find it in my heart to
+entertain a doubt of her integrity. I could have staked my life that she
+was clear of blame, and, though all was dark at the present, that the
+explanation of the mystery would show her part in these events to be both
+right and needful. It was true, let me cudgel my imagination as I pleased,
+that I could invent no theory of her relations to Northmour; but I felt
+none the less sure of my conclusion because it was founded on instinct in
+place of reason, and, as I may say, went to sleep that night with the
+thought of her under my pillow.</p>
+
+<p>Next day she came out about the same hour alone, and, as soon as the sand
+hills concealed her from the pavilion, drew nearer to the edge, and called
+me by name in guarded tones. I was astonished to observe that she was
+deadly pale, and seemingly under the influence of strong emotion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Cassilis!&quot; she cried; &quot;Mr. Cassilis!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I appeared at once, and leaped down upon the beach. A remarkable air of
+relief overspread her countenance as soon as she saw me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot; she cried, with a hoarse sound, like one whose bosom had been
+lightened of a weight. And then, &quot;Thank God you are still safe!&quot; she
+added; &quot;I knew, if you were, you would be here.&quot; (Was not this strange? So
+swiftly and wisely does Nature prepare our hearts for these great lifelong
+intimacies, that both my wife and I had been given a presentiment on this
+the second day of our acquaintance. I had even then hoped that she would
+seek me; she had felt sure that she would find me.) &quot;Do not,&quot; she went on
+swiftly, &quot;do not stay in this place. Promise me that you sleep no longer
+in that wood. You do not know how I suffer; all last night I could not
+sleep for thinking of your peril.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Peril!&quot; I repeated. &quot;Peril from whom? From Northmour?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not so,&quot; she said. &quot;Did you think I would tell him after what you said?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not from Northmour?&quot; I repeated. &quot;Then how? From whom? I see none to be
+afraid of.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must not ask me,&quot; was her reply, &quot;for I am not free to tell you. Only
+believe me, and go hence&mdash;believe me, and go away quickly, quickly, for
+your life!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>An appeal to his alarm is never a good plan to rid oneself of a spirited
+young man. My obstinacy was but increased by what she said, and I made it
+a point of honor to remain. And her solicitude for my safety still more
+confirmed me in the resolve.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must not think me inquisitive, madame,&quot; I replied, &quot;but, if Graden
+is so dangerous a place, you yourself perhaps remain here at some risk.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She only looked at me reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You and your father&mdash;&quot; I resumed; but she interrupted me almost with a
+gasp.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My father! How do you know that?&quot; she cried.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I saw you together when you landed,&quot; was my answer; and I do not know
+why, but it seemed satisfactory to both of us, as indeed it was truth.
+&quot;But,&quot; I continued, &quot;you need have no fear from me. I see you have some
+reason to be secret, and, you may believe me, your secret is as safe with
+me as if I were in Graden Floe. I have scarce spoken to anyone for years;
+my horse is my only companion, and even he, poor beast, is not beside me.
+You see, then, you may count on me for silence. So tell me the truth, my
+dear young lady, are you not in danger?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Northmour says you are an honorable man,&quot; she returned, &quot;and I
+believe it when I see you. I will tell you so much; you are right: we are
+in dreadful, dreadful danger, and you share it by remaining where you
+are.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah!&quot; said I; &quot;you have heard of me from Northmour? And he gives me a good
+character?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I asked him about you last night,&quot; was her reply. &quot;I pretended,&quot; she
+hesitated, &quot;I pretended to have met you long ago, and spoken to you of
+him. It was not true; but I could not help myself without betraying you,
+and you had put me in a difficulty. He praised you highly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And&mdash;you may permit me one question&mdash;does this danger come from
+Northmour?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From Mr. Northmour?&quot; she cried. &quot;Oh, no, he stays with us to share it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;While you propose that I should run away?&quot; I said. &quot;You do not rate me
+very high.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why should you stay?&quot; she asked. &quot;You are no friend of ours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I know not what came over me, for I had not been conscious of a similar
+weakness since I was a child, but I was so mortified by this retort that
+my eyes pricked and filled with tears, as I continued to gaze upon her
+face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no,&quot; she said, in a changed voice; &quot;I did not mean the words
+unkindly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was I who offended,&quot; I said; and I held out my hand with a look of
+appeal that somehow touched her, for she gave me hers at once, and even
+eagerly. I held it for awhile in mine, and gazed into her eyes. It was she
+who first tore her hand away, and, forgetting all about her request and
+the promise she had sought to extort, ran at the top of her speed, and
+without turning, till she was out of sight. And then I knew that I loved
+her, and thought in my glad heart that she&mdash;she herself&mdash;was not
+indifferent to my suit. Many a time she has denied it in after days, but
+it was with a smiling and not a serious denial. For my part, I am sure our
+hands would not have lain so closely in each other if she had not begun to
+melt to me already. And, when all is said, it is no great contention,
+since, by her own avowal, she began to love me on the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>And yet on the morrow very little took place. She came and called me down
+as on the day before, upbraided me for lingering at Graden, and, when she
+found I was still obdurate, began to ask me more particularly as to my
+arrival. I told her by what series of accidents I had come to witness
+their disembarkation, and how I had determined to remain, partly from the
+interest which had been awakened in me by Northmour's guests, and partly
+because of his own murderous attack. As to the former, I fear I was
+disingenuous, and led her to regard herself as having been an attraction
+to me from the first moment that I saw her on the links. It relieves my
+heart to make this confession even now, when my wife is with God, and
+already knows all things, and the honesty of my purpose even in this; for
+while she lived, although it often pricked my conscience, I had never the
+hardihood to undeceive her. Even a little secret, in such a married life
+as ours, is like the rose leaf which kept the princess from her sleep.</p>
+
+<p>From this the talk branched into other subjects, and I told her much about
+my lonely and wandering existence; she, for her part, giving ear, and
+saying little. Although we spoke very naturally, and latterly on topics
+that might seem indifferent, we were both sweetly agitated. Too soon it
+was time for her to go; and we separated, as if by mutual consent, without
+shaking hands, for both knew that, between us, it was no idle ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>The next, and that was the fourth day of our acquaintance, we met in the
+same spot, but early in the morning, with much familiarity and yet much
+timidity on either side. While she had once more spoken about my
+danger&mdash;and that, I understood, was her excuse for coming&mdash;I, who had
+prepared a great deal of talk during the night, began to tell her how
+highly I valued her kind interest, and how no one had ever cared to hear
+about my life, nor had I ever cared to relate it, before yesterday.
+Suddenly she interrupted me, saying with vehemence&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And yet, if you knew who I was, you would not so much as speak to me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I told her such a thought was madness, and, little as we had met, I
+counted her already a dear friend; but my protestations seemed only to
+make her more desperate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My father is in hiding!&quot; she cried.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear,&quot; I said, forgetting for the first time to add &quot;young lady,&quot;
+&quot;what do I care? If I were in hiding twenty times over, would it make one
+thought of change in you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, but the cause!&quot; she cried, &quot;the cause! It is&quot;&mdash;she faltered for a
+second&mdash;&quot;it is disgraceful to us!&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IV</h2>
+
+
+<p>This was my wife's story, as I drew it from her among tears and sobs. Her
+name was Clara Huddlestone: it sounded very beautiful in my ears; but not
+so beautiful as that other name of Clara Cassilis, which she wore during
+the longer and, I thank God, the happier portion of her life. Her father,
+Bernard Huddlestone, had been a private banker in a very large way of
+business. Many years before, his affairs becoming disordered, he had been
+led to try dangerous, and at last criminal, expedients to retrieve himself
+from ruin. All was in vain; he became more and more cruelly involved, and
+found his honor lost at the same moment with his fortune. About this
+period, Northmour had been courting his daughter with great assiduity,
+though with small encouragement; and to him, knowing him thus disposed in
+his favor, Bernard Huddlestone turned for help in his extremity. It was
+not merely ruin and dishonor, nor merely a legal condemnation, that the
+unhappy man had brought upon his head. It seems he could have gone to
+prison with a light heart. What he feared, what kept him awake at night or
+recalled him from slumber into frenzy, was some secret, sudden, and
+unlawful attempt upon his life. Hence, he desired to bury his existence
+and escape to one of the islands in the South Pacific, and it was in
+Northmour's yacht, the &quot;Red Earl,&quot; that he designed to go. The yacht
+picked them up clandestinely upon the coast of Wales, and had once more
+deposited them at Graden, till she could be refitted and provisioned for
+the longer voyage. Nor could Clara doubt that her hand had been stipulated
+as the price of passage. For, although Northmour was neither unkind, nor
+even discourteous, he had shown himself in several instances somewhat
+overbold in speech and manner.</p>
+
+<p>I listened, I need not say, with fixed attention, and put many questions
+as to the more mysterious part. It was in vain. She had no clear idea of
+what the blow was, nor of how it was expected to fall. Her father's alarm
+was unfeigned and physically prostrating, and he had thought more than
+once of making an unconditional surrender to the police. But the scheme
+was finally abandoned, for he was convinced that not even the strength of
+our English prisons could shelter him from his pursuers. He had had many
+affairs in Italy, and with Italians resident in London, in the latter
+years of his business; and these last, as Clara fancied, were somehow
+connected with the doom that threatened him. He had shown great terror at
+the presence of an Italian seaman on board the &quot;Red Earl,&quot; and had
+bitterly and repeatedly accused Northmour in consequence. The latter had
+protested that Beppo (that was the seaman's name) was a capital fellow,
+and could be trusted to the death; but Mr. Huddlestone had continued ever
+since to declare that all was lost, that it was only a question of days,
+and that Beppo would be the ruin of him yet.</p>
+
+<p>I regarded the whole story as the hallucination of a mind shaken by
+calamity. He had suffered heavy loss by his Italian transactions; and
+hence the sight of an Italian was hateful to him, and the principal part
+in his nightmare would naturally enough be played by one of that nation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What your father wants,&quot; I said, &quot;is a good doctor and some calming
+medicine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But Mr. Northmour?&quot; objected Clara. &quot;He is untroubled by losses, and yet
+he shares in this terror.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could not help laughing at what I considered her simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear,&quot; said I, &quot;you have told me yourself what reward he has to look
+for. All is fair in love, you must remember; and if Northmour foments your
+father's terrors, it is not at all because he is afraid of any Italian
+man, but simply because he is infatuated with a charming English woman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She reminded me of his attack upon myself on the night of the
+disembarkation, and this I was unable to explain. In short, and from one
+thing to another, it was agreed between us that I should set out at once
+for the fisher village, Graden Wester, as it was called, look up all the
+newspapers I could find, and see for myself if there seemed any basis of
+fact for these continued alarms. The next morning, at the same hour and
+place, I was to make my report to Clara. She said no more on that occasion
+about my departure; nor, indeed, did she make it a secret that she clung
+to the thought of my proximity as something helpful and pleasant; and, for
+my part, I could not have left her, if she had gone upon her knees to ask
+it.</p>
+
+<p>I reached Graden Wester before ten in the forenoon; for in those days I
+was an excellent pedestrian, and the distance, as I think I have said, was
+little over seven miles; fine walking all the way upon the springy turf.
+The village is one of the bleakest on that coast, which is saying much:
+there is a church in the hollow; a miserable haven in the rocks, where
+many boats have been lost as they returned from fishing; two or three
+score of stone houses arranged along the beach and in two streets, one
+leading from the harbor, and another striking out from it at right angles;
+and, at the corner of these two, a very dark and cheerless tavern, by way
+of principal hotel.</p>
+
+<p>I had dressed myself somewhat more suitably to my station in life, and at
+once called upon the minister in his little manse beside the graveyard. He
+knew me, although it was more than nine years since we had met; and when I
+told him that I had been long upon a walking tour, and was behind with the
+news, readily lent me an armful of newspapers, dating from a month back to
+the day before. With these I sought the tavern, and, ordering some
+breakfast, sat down to study the &quot;Huddlestone Failure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It had been, it appeared, a very flagrant case. Thousands of persons were
+reduced to poverty; and one in particular had blown out his brains as soon
+as payment was suspended. It was strange to myself that, while I read
+these details, I continued rather to sympathize with Mr. Huddlestone than
+with his victims; so complete already was the empire of my love for my
+wife. A price was naturally set upon the banker's head; and, as the case
+was inexcusable and the public indignation thoroughly aroused, the unusual
+figure of &pound;750 was offered for his capture. He was reported to have large
+sums of money in his possession. One day, he had been heard of in Spain;
+the next, there was sure intelligence that he was still lurking between
+Manchester and Liverpool, or along the border of Wales; and the day after,
+a telegram would announce his arrival in Cuba or Yucatan. But in all this
+there was no word of an Italian, nor any sign of mystery.</p>
+
+<p>In the very last paper, however, there was one item not so clear. The
+accountants who were charged to verify the failure had, it seemed, come
+upon the traces of a very large number of thousands, which figured for
+some time in the transactions of the house of Huddlestone; but which came
+from nowhere, and disappeared in the same mysterious fashion. It was only
+once referred to by name, and then under the initials &quot;X.X.&quot;; but it had
+plainly been floated for the first time into the business at a period of
+great depression some six years ago. The name of a distinguished royal
+personage had been mentioned by rumor in connection with this sum. &quot;The
+cowardly desperado&quot;&mdash;such, I remember, was the editorial expression&mdash;was
+supposed to have escaped with a large part of this mysterious fund still
+in his possession.</p>
+
+<p>I was still brooding over the fact, and trying to torture it into some
+connection with Mr. Huddlestone's danger, when a man entered the tavern
+and asked for some bread and cheese with a decided foreign accent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Siete Italiano</i>?&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Si, Signor</i>,&quot; was his reply.</p>
+
+<p>I said it was unusually far north to find one of his compatriots; at which
+he shrugged his shoulders, and replied that a man would go anywhere to
+find work. What work he could hope to find at Graden Wester, I was totally
+unable to conceive; and the incident struck so unpleasantly upon my mind,
+that I asked the landlord, while he was counting me some change, whether
+he had ever before seen an Italian in the village. He said he had once
+seen some Norwegians, who had been shipwrecked on the other side of Graden
+Ness and rescued by the lifeboat from Cauldhaven.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No!&quot; said I; &quot;but an Italian, like the man who has just had bread and
+cheese.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What?&quot; cried he, &quot;yon black-avised fellow wi' the teeth? Was he an
+I-talian? Weel, yon's the first that ever I saw, an' I dare say he's like
+to be the last.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Even as he was speaking, I raised my eyes, and, casting a glance into the
+street, beheld three men in earnest conversation together, and not thirty
+yards away. One of them was my recent companion in the tavern parlor; the
+other two, by their handsome sallow features and soft hats, should
+evidently belong to the same race. A crowd of village children stood
+around them, gesticulating and talking gibberish in imitation. The trio
+looked singularly foreign to the bleak dirty street in which they were
+standing and the dark gray heaven that overspread them; and I confess my
+incredulity received at that moment a shock from which it never recovered.
+I might reason with myself as I pleased, but I could not argue down the
+effect of what I had seen, and I began to share in the Italian terror.</p>
+
+<p>It was already drawing toward the close of the day before I had returned
+the newspapers to the manse, and got well forward on to the links on my
+way home. I shall never forget that walk. It grew very cold and
+boisterous; the wind sung in the short grass about my feet; thin rain
+showers came running on the gusts; and an immense mountain range of
+clouds began to arise out of the bosom of the sea. It would be hard to
+imagine a more dismal evening; and whether it was from these external
+influences, or because my nerves were already affected by what I had heard
+and seen, my thoughts were as gloomy as the weather.</p>
+
+<p>The upper windows of the pavilion commanded a considerable spread of links
+in the direction of Graden Wester. To avoid observation, it was necessary
+to hug the beach until I had gained cover from the higher sand hills on
+the little headland, when I might strike across, through the hollows, for
+the margin of the wood. The sun was about setting; the tide was low, and
+all the quicksands uncovered; and I was moving along, lost in unpleasant
+thought, when I was suddenly thunderstruck to perceive the prints of human
+feet. They ran parallel to my own course, but low down upon the beach,
+instead of along the border of the turf; and, when I examined them, I saw
+at once, by the size and coarseness of the impression, that it was a
+stranger to me and to those of the pavilion who had recently passed that
+way. Not only so; but from the recklessness of the course which he had
+followed, steering near to the most formidable portions of the sand, he
+was evidently a stranger to the country and to the ill-repute of Graden
+beach.</p>
+
+<p>Step by step I followed the prints; until, a quarter of a mile farther, I
+beheld them die away into the southeastern boundary of Graden Floe. There,
+whoever he was, the miserable man had perished. One or two gulls, who had,
+perhaps, seen him disappear, wheeled over his sepulcher with their usual
+melancholy piping. The sun had broken through the clouds by a last effort,
+and colored the wide level of quicksands with a dusky purple. I stood for
+some time gazing at the spot, chilled and disheartened by my own
+reflections, and with a strong and commanding consciousness of death. I
+remember wondering how long the tragedy had taken, and whether his screams
+had been audible at the pavilion. And then, making a strong resolution, I
+was about to tear myself away, when a gust fiercer than usual fell upon
+this quarter of the beach, and I saw, now whirling high in air, now
+skimming lightly across the surface of the sands, a soft, black, felt hat,
+somewhat conical in shape, such as I had remarked already on the heads of
+the Italians.</p>
+
+<p>I believe, but I am not sure, that I uttered a cry. The wind was driving
+the hat shoreward, and I ran round the border of the floe to be ready
+against its arrival. The gust fell, dropping the hat for awhile upon the
+quicksand, and then, once more freshening, landed it a few yards from
+where I stood. I seized it with the interest you may imagine. It had seen
+some service; indeed, it was rustier than either of those I had seen that
+day upon the street. The lining was red, stamped with the name of the
+maker, which I have forgotten, and that of the place of manufacture,
+<i>Venedig</i>. This (it is not yet forgotten) was the name given by the
+Austrians to the beautiful city of Venice, then, and for long after, a
+part of their dominions.</p>
+
+<p>The shock was complete. I saw imaginary Italians upon every side; and for
+the first, and, I may say, for the last time in my experience, became
+overpowered by what is called a panic terror. I knew nothing, that is, to
+be afraid of, and yet I admit that I was heartily afraid; and it was with
+sensible reluctance that I returned to my exposed and solitary camp in the
+Sea-Wood.</p>
+
+<p>There I eat some cold porridge which had been left over from the night
+before, for I was disinclined to make a fire; and, feeling strengthened
+and reassured, dismissed all these fanciful terrors from my mind, and lay
+down to sleep with composure.</p>
+
+<p>How long I may have slept it is impossible for me to guess; but I was
+awakened at last by a sudden, blinding flash of light into my face. It
+woke me like a blow. In an instant I was upon my knees. But the light had
+gone as suddenly as it came. The darkness was intense. And, as it was
+blowing great guns from the sea, and pouring with rain, the noises of the
+storm effectually concealed all others.</p>
+
+<p>It was, I dare say, half a minute before I regained my self-possession.
+But for two circumstances, I should have thought I had been awakened by
+some new and vivid form of nightmare. First, the flap of my tent, which I
+had shut carefully when I retired, was now unfastened; and, second, I
+could still perceive, with a sharpness that excluded any theory of
+hallucination, the smell of hot metal and of burning oil. The conclusion
+was obvious. I had been awakened by some one flashing a bull's-eye lantern
+in my face. It had been but a flash, and away. He had seen my face, and
+then gone. I asked myself the object of so strange a proceeding, and the
+answer came pat. The man, whoever he was, had thought to recognize me, and
+he had not. There was another question unresolved; and to this, I may say,
+I feared to give an answer; if he had recognized me, what would he have
+done?</p>
+
+<p>My fears were immediately diverted from myself, for I saw that I had been
+visited in a mistake; and I became persuaded that some dreadful danger
+threatened the pavilion. It required some nerve to issue forth into the
+black and intricate thicket which surrounded and overhung the den; but I
+groped my way to the links, drenched with rain, beaten upon and deafened
+by the gusts, and fearing at every step to lay my hand upon some lurking
+adversary. The darkness was so complete that I might have been surrounded
+by an army and yet none the wiser, and the uproar of the gale so loud that
+my hearing was as useless as my sight.</p>
+
+<p>For the rest of that night, which seemed interminably long, I patrolled
+the vicinity of the pavilion, without seeing a living creature or hearing
+any noise but the concert of the wind, the sea, and the rain. A light in
+the upper story filtered through a cranny of the shutter, and kept me
+company till the approach of dawn.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>V</h2>
+
+
+<p>With the first peep of day, I retired from the open to my old lair among
+the sand hills, there to await the coming of my wife. The morning was
+gray, wild, and melancholy; the wind moderated before sunrise, and then
+went about, and blew in puffs from the shore; the sea began to go down,
+but the rain still fell without mercy. Over all the wilderness of links
+there was not a creature to be seen. Yet I felt sure the neighborhood was
+alive with skulking foes. The light that had been so suddenly and
+surprisingly flashed upon my face as I lay sleeping, and the hat that had
+been blown ashore by the wind from over Graden Floe, were two speaking
+signals of the peril that environed Clara and the party in the pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>It was, perhaps, half-past seven, or nearer eight, before I saw the door
+open, and that dear figure come toward me in the rain. I was waiting for
+her on the beach before she had crossed the sand hills.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have had such trouble to come!&quot; she cried. &quot;They did not wish me to go
+walking in the rain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Clara,&quot; I said, &quot;you are not frightened!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said she, with a simplicity that filled my heart with confidence.
+For my wife was the bravest as well as the best of women; in my
+experience, I have not found the two go always together, but with her they
+did; and she combined the extreme of fortitude with the most endearing and
+beautiful virtues.</p>
+
+<p>I told her what had happened; and, though her cheek grew visibly paler,
+she retained perfect control over her senses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see now that I am safe,&quot; said I, in conclusion. &quot;They do not mean to
+harm me; for, had they chosen, I was a dead man last night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She laid her hand upon my arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I had no presentiment!&quot; she cried.</p>
+
+<p>Her accent thrilled me with delight. I put my arm about her, and strained
+her to my side; and, before either of us was aware, her hands were on my
+shoulders and my lips upon her mouth. Yet up to that moment no word of
+love had passed between us. To this day I remember the touch of her cheek,
+which was wet and cold with the rain; and many a time since, when she has
+been washing her face, I have kissed it again for the sake of that morning
+on the beach. Now that she is taken from me, and I finish my pilgrimage
+alone, I recall our old loving kindnesses and the deep honesty and
+affection which united us, and my present loss seems but a trifle in
+comparison.</p>
+
+<p>We may have thus stood for some seconds&mdash;for time passes quickly with
+lovers&mdash;before we were startled by a peal of laughter close at hand. It
+was not natural mirth, but seemed to be affected in order to conceal an
+angrier feeling. We both turned, though I still kept my left arm about
+Clara's waist; nor did she seek to withdraw herself; and there, a few
+paces off upon the beach, stood Northmour, his head lowered, his hands
+behind his back, his nostrils white with passion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! Cassilis!&quot; he said, as I disclosed my face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That same,&quot; said I; for I was not at all put about.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And so, Miss Huddlestone,&quot; he continued slowly, but savagely, &quot;this is
+how you keep your faith to your father and to me? This is the value you
+set upon your father's life? And you are so infatuated with this young
+gentleman that you must brave ruin, and decency, and common human
+caution&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Huddlestone&mdash;&quot; I was beginning to interrupt him, when he, in his
+turn, cut in brutally&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You hold your tongue,&quot; said he; &quot;I am speaking to that girl.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That girl, as you call her, is my wife,&quot; said I; and my wife only leaned
+a little nearer, so that I knew she had affirmed my words.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your what?&quot; he cried. &quot;You lie!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour,&quot; I said, &quot;we all know you have a bad temper, and I am the last
+man to be irritated by words. For all that, I propose that you speak
+lower, for I am convinced that we are not alone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He looked round him, and it was plain my remark had in some degree sobered
+his passion. &quot;What do you mean?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>I only said one word: &quot;Italians.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He swore a round oath, and looked at us, from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Cassilis knows all that I know,&quot; said my wife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What I want to know,&quot; he broke out, &quot;is where the devil Mr. Cassilis
+comes from, and what the devil Mr. Cassilis is doing here. You say you are
+married; that I do not believe. If you were, Graden Floe would soon
+divorce you; four minutes and a half, Cassilis. I keep my private cemetery
+for my friends.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It took somewhat longer,&quot; said I, &quot;for that Italian.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me for a moment half daunted, and then, almost civilly, asked
+me to tell my story. &quot;You have too much the advantage of me, Cassilis,&quot; he
+added. I complied of course; and he listened, with several ejaculations,
+while I told him how I had come to Graden: that it was I whom he had tried
+to murder on the night of landing; and what I had subsequently seen and
+heard of the Italians.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; said he, when I had done, &quot;it is here at last; there is no mistake
+about that. And what, may I ask, do you propose to do?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I propose to stay with you and lend a hand,&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are a brave man,&quot; he returned, with a peculiar intonation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not afraid,&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And so,&quot; he continued, &quot;I am to understand that you two are married? And
+you stand up to it before my face, Miss Huddlestone?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We are not yet married,&quot; said Clara; &quot;but we shall be as soon as we can.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bravo!&quot; cried Northmour. &quot;And the bargain? D&mdash;&mdash;n it, you're not a fool,
+young woman; I may call a spade a spade with you. How about the bargain?
+You know as well as I do what your father's life depends upon. I have
+only to put my hands under my coat tails and walk away, and his throat
+would be cut before the evening.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, Mr. Northmour,&quot; returned Clara, with great spirit; &quot;but that is what
+you will never do. You made a bargain that was unworthy of a gentleman;
+but you are a gentleman for all that, and you will never desert a man whom
+you have begun to help.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aha!&quot; said he. &quot;You think I will give my yacht for nothing? You think I
+will risk my life and liberty for love of the old gentleman; and then, I
+suppose, be best man at the wedding, to wind up? Well,&quot; he added, with an
+odd smile, &quot;perhaps you are not altogether wrong. But ask Cassilis here.
+<i>He</i> knows me. Am I a man to trust? Am I safe and scrupulous? Am I kind?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know you talk a great deal, and sometimes, I think, very foolishly,&quot;
+replied Clara, &quot;but I know you are a gentleman, and I am not the least
+afraid.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her with a peculiar approval and admiration; then, turning to
+me, &quot;Do you think I would give her up without a struggle, Frank?&quot; said he.
+&quot;I tell you plainly, you look out. The next time we come to blows&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will make the third,&quot; I interrupted, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aye, true; so it will,&quot; he said. &quot;I had forgotten. Well, the third time's
+lucky.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The third time, you mean, you will have the crew of the 'Red Earl' to
+help,&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you hear him?&quot; he asked, turning to my wife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hear two men speaking like cowards,&quot; said she. &quot;I should despise myself
+either to think or speak like that. And neither of you believe one word
+that you are saying, which makes it the more wicked and silly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She's a trump!&quot; cried Northmour. &quot;But she's not yet Mrs. Cassilis. I say
+no more. The present is not for me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then my wife surprised me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I leave you here,&quot; she said suddenly. &quot;My father has been too long alone.
+But remember this: you are to be friends, for you are both good friends to
+me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She has since told me her reason for this step. As long as she remained,
+she declares that we two would have continued to quarrel; and I suppose
+that she was right, for when she was gone we fell at once into a sort of
+confidentiality.</p>
+
+<p>Northmour stared after her as she went away over the sand hill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She is the only woman in the world!&quot; he exclaimed with an oath. &quot;Look at
+her action.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I, for my part, leaped at this opportunity for a little further light.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See here, Northmour,&quot; said I; &quot;we are all in a tight place, are we not?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe you, my boy,&quot; he answered, looking me in the eyes, and with
+great emphasis. &quot;We have all hell upon us, that's the truth. You may
+believe me or not, but I'm afraid of my life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tell me one thing,&quot; said I. &quot;What are they after, these Italians? What do
+they want with Mr. Huddlestone?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't you know?&quot; he cried. &quot;The black old scamp had <i>carbonari</i> funds on
+a deposit&mdash;two hundred and eighty thousand; and of course he gambled it
+away on stocks. There was to have been a revolution in the Tridentino, or
+Parma; but the revolution is off, and the whole wasp's nest is after
+Huddlestone. We shall all be lucky if we can save our skins.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The <i>carbonari</i>!&quot; I exclaimed; &quot;God help him indeed!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Amen!&quot; said Northmour. &quot;And now, look here: I have said that we are in a
+fix; and, frankly, I shall be glad of your help. If I can't save
+Huddlestone, I want at least to save the girl. Come and stay in the
+pavilion; and, there's my hand on it, I shall act as your friend until the
+old man is either clear or dead. But,&quot; he added, &quot;once that is settled,
+you become my rival once again, and I warn you&mdash;mind yourself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Done!&quot; said I; and we shook hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now let us go directly to the fort,&quot; said Northmour; and he began to
+lead the way through the rain.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VI</h2>
+
+
+<p>We were admitted to the pavilion by Clara, and I was surprised by the
+completeness and security of the defenses. A barricade of great strength,
+and yet easy to displace, supported the door against any violence from
+without; and the shutters of the dining-room, into which I was led
+directly, and which was feebly illuminated by a lamp, were even more
+elaborately fortified. The panels were strengthened by bars and crossbars;
+and these, in their turn, were kept in position by a system of braces and
+struts, some abutting on the floor, some on the roof, and others, in fine,
+against the opposite wall of the apartment. It was at once a solid and
+well-designed piece of carpentry; and I did not seek to conceal my
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am the engineer,&quot; said Northmour. &quot;You remember the planks in the
+garden? Behold them?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did not know you had so many talents,&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you armed?&quot; he continued, pointing to an array of guns and pistols,
+all in admirable order, which stood in line against the wall or were
+displayed upon the sideboard.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you,&quot; I returned; &quot;I have gone armed since our last encounter. But,
+to tell you the truth, I have had nothing to eat since early yesterday
+evening.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Northmour produced some cold meat, to which I eagerly set myself, and a
+bottle of good Burgundy, by which, wet as I was, I did not scruple to
+profit. I have always been an extreme temperance man on principle; but it
+is useless to push principle to excess, and on this occasion I believe
+that I finished three quarters of the bottle. As I eat, I still continued
+to admire the preparations for defense.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We could stand a siege,&quot; I said at length.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ye&mdash;es,&quot; drawled Northmour; &quot;a very little one, per&mdash;haps. It is not so
+much the strength of the pavilion I misdoubt; it is the double danger that
+kills me. If we get to shooting, wild as the country is, some one is sure
+to hear it, and then&mdash;why then it's the same thing, only different, as
+they say: caged by law, or killed by <i>carbonari</i>. There's the choice. It
+is a devilish bad thing to have the law against you in this world, and so
+I tell the old gentleman upstairs. He is quite of my way of thinking.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Speaking of that,&quot; said I, &quot;what kind of person is he?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, he!&quot; cried the other; &quot;he's a rancid fellow, as far as he goes. I
+should like to have his neck wrung to-morrow by all the devils in Italy. I
+am not in this affair for him. You take me? I made a bargain for missy's
+hand, and I mean to have it too.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That, by the way,&quot; said I. &quot;I understand. But how will Mr. Huddlestone
+take my intrusion?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Leave that to Clara,&quot; returned Northmour.</p>
+
+<p>I could have struck him in the face for his coarse familiarity; but I
+respected the truce, as, I am bound to say, did Northmour, and so long as
+the danger continued not a cloud arose in our relation. I bear him this
+testimony with the most unfeigned satisfaction; nor am I without pride
+when I look back upon my own behavior. For surely no two men were ever
+left in a position so invidious and irritating.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as I had done eating, we proceeded to inspect the lower floor.
+Window by window we tried the different supports, now and then making an
+inconsiderable change; and the strokes of the hammer sounded with
+startling loudness through the house. I proposed, I remember, to make
+loop-holes; but he told me they were already made in the windows of the
+upper story. It was an anxious business, this inspection, and left me
+down-hearted. There were two doors and five windows to protect, and,
+counting Clara, only four of us to defend them against an unknown number
+of foes. I communicated my doubts to Northmour, who assured me, with
+unmoved composure, that he entirely shared them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before morning,&quot; said he, &quot;we shall all be butchered and buried in Graden
+Floe. For me, that is written.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could not help shuddering at the mention of the quicksand, but reminded
+Northmour that our enemies had spared me in the wood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do not flatter yourself,&quot; said he. &quot;Then you were not in the same boat
+with the old gentleman; now you are. It's the floe for all of us, mark my
+words.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I trembled for Clara; and just then her dear voice was heard calling us to
+come upstairs. Northmour showed me the way, and, when he had reached the
+landing, knocked at the door of what used to be called My Uncle's Bedroom,
+as the founder of the pavilion had designed it especially for himself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come in, Northmour; come in, dear Mr. Cassilis,&quot; said a voice from
+within.</p>
+
+<p>Pushing open the door, Northmour admitted me before him into the
+apartment. As I came in I could see the daughter slipping out by the side
+door into the study, which had been prepared as her bedroom. In the bed,
+which was drawn back against the wall, instead of standing, as I had last
+seen it, boldly across the window, sat Bernard Huddlestone, the defaulting
+banker. Little as I had seen of him by the shifting light of the lantern
+on the links, I had no difficulty in recognizing him for the same. He had
+a long and sallow countenance, surrounded by a long red beard and
+side-whiskers. His broken nose and high cheek-bones gave him somewhat the
+air of a Kalmuck, and his light eyes shone with the excitement of a high
+fever. He wore a skull-cap of black silk; a huge Bible lay open before him
+on the bed, with a pair of gold spectacles in the place, and a pile of
+other books lay on the stand by his side. The green curtains lent a
+cadaverous shade to his cheek; and, as he sat propped on pillows, his
+great stature was painfully hunched, and his head protruded till it
+overhung his knees. I believe if he had not died otherwise, he must have
+fallen a victim to consumption in the course of but a very few weeks.</p>
+
+<p>He held out to me a hand, long, thin, and disagreeably hairy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come in, come in, Mr. Cassilis,&quot; said he. &quot;Another
+protector&mdash;ahem!&mdash;another protector. Always welcome as a friend of my
+daughter's, Mr. Cassilis. How they have rallied about me, my daughter's
+friends! May God in heaven bless and reward them for it!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I gave him my hand, of course, because I could not help it; but the
+sympathy I had been prepared to feel for Clara's father was immediately
+soured by his appearance, and the wheedling, unreal tones in which he
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Cassilis is a good man,&quot; said Northmour; &quot;worth ten.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I hear,&quot; cried Mr. Huddlestone eagerly; &quot;so my girl tells me. Ah, Mr.
+Cassilis, my sin has found me out, you see! I am very low, very low; but I
+hope equally penitent. We must all come to the throne of grace at last,
+Mr. Cassilis. For my part, I come late indeed; but with unfeigned
+humility, I trust.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fiddle-de-dee!&quot; said Northmour roughly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, dear Northmour!&quot; cried the banker. &quot;You must not say that; you
+must not try to shake me. You forget, my dear, good boy, you forget I may
+be called this very night before my Maker.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His excitement was pitiful to behold; and I felt myself grow indignant
+with Northmour, whose infidel opinions I well knew, and heartily despised,
+as he continued to taunt the poor sinner out of his humor of repentance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pooh, my dear Huddlestone!&quot; said he. &quot;You do yourself injustice. You are
+a man of the world inside and out, and were up to all kinds of mischief
+before I was born. Your conscience is tanned like South American
+leather&mdash;only you forgot to tan your liver, and that, if you will believe
+me, is the seat of the annoyance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Rogue, rogue! bad boy!&quot; said Mr. Huddlestone, shaking his finger. &quot;I am
+no precisian, if you come to that; I always hated a precisian; but I never
+lost hold of something better through it all. I have been a bad boy, Mr.
+Cassilis; I do not seek to deny that; but it was after my wife's death,
+and you know, with a widower, it's a different thing: sinful&mdash;I won't say
+no; but there is a gradation, we shall hope. And talking of that&mdash;Hark!&quot;
+he broke out suddenly, his hand raised, his fingers spread, his face
+racked with interest and terror. &quot;Only the rain, bless God!&quot; he added,
+after a pause, and with indescribable relief.</p>
+
+<p>For some seconds he lay back among the pillows like a man near to
+fainting; then he gathered himself together, and, in somewhat tremulous
+tones, began once more to thank me for the share I was prepared to take in
+his defense.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One question, sir,&quot; said I, when he had paused. &quot;Is it true that you have
+money with you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He seemed annoyed by the question, but admitted with reluctance that he
+had a little.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; I continued, &quot;it is their money they are after, is it not? Why not
+give it up to them?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah!&quot; replied he, shaking his head, &quot;I have tried that already, Mr.
+Cassilis; and alas! that it should be so, but it is blood they want.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Huddlestone, that's a little less than fair,&quot; said Northmour. &quot;You should
+mention that what you offered them was upward of two hundred thousand
+short. The deficit is worth a reference; it is for what they call a cool
+sum, Frank. Then, you see, the fellows reason in their clear Italian way;
+and it seems to them, as indeed it seems to me, that they may just as well
+have both while they're about it&mdash;money and blood together, by George, and
+no more trouble for the extra pleasure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it in the pavilion?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is; and I wish it were in the bottom of the sea instead,&quot; said
+Northmour; and then suddenly&mdash;&quot;What are you making faces at me for?&quot; he
+cried to Mr. Huddlestone, on whom I had unconsciously turned my back. &quot;Do
+you think Cassilis would sell you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone protested that nothing had been further from his mind.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is a good thing,&quot; retorted Northmour in his ugliest manner. &quot;You might
+end by wearying us. What were you going to say?&quot; he added, turning to me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was going to propose an occupation for the afternoon,&quot; said I. &quot;Let us
+carry that money out, piece by piece, and lay it down before the pavilion
+door. If the <i>carbonari</i> come, why, it's theirs at any rate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no,&quot; cried Mr. Huddlestone; &quot;it does not, it cannot, belong to them!
+It should be distributed <i>pro rata</i> among all my creditors.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come now, Huddlestone,&quot; said Northmour, &quot;none of that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, but my daughter,&quot; moaned the wretched man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your daughter will do well enough. Here are two suitors, Cassilis and I,
+neither of us beggars, between whom she has to choose. And as for
+yourself, to make an end of arguments, you have no right to a farthing,
+and, unless I'm much mistaken, you are going to die.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was certainly very cruelly said; but Mr. Huddlestone was a man who
+attracted little sympathy; and, although I saw him wince and shudder, I
+mentally indorsed the rebuke; nay, I added a contribution of my own.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour and I,&quot; I said, &quot;are willing enough to help you to save your
+life, but not to escape with stolen property.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He struggled for awhile with himself, as though he were on the point of
+giving way to anger, but prudence had the best of the controversy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear boys,&quot; he said, &quot;do with me or my money what you will. I leave
+all in your hands. Let me compose myself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And so we left him, gladly enough I am sure.</p>
+
+<p>The last that I saw, he had once more taken up his great Bible, and with
+tremulous hands was adjusting his spectacles to read.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VII</h2>
+
+
+<p>The recollection of that afternoon will always be graven on my mind.
+Northmour and I were persuaded that an attack was imminent; and if it had
+been in our power to alter in any way the order of events, that power
+would have been used to precipitate rather than delay the critical moment.
+The worst was to be anticipated; yet we could conceive no extremity so
+miserable as the suspense we were now suffering. I have never been an
+eager, though always a great, reader; but I never knew books so insipid
+as those which I took up and cast aside that afternoon in the pavilion.
+Even talk became impossible, as the hours went on. One or other was always
+listening for some sound, or peering from an upstairs window over the
+links. And yet not a sign indicated the presence of our foes.</p>
+
+<p>We debated over and over again my proposal with regard to the money; and
+had we been in complete possession of our faculties, I am sure we should
+have condemned it as unwise; but we were flustered with alarm, grasped at
+a straw, and determined, although it was as much as advertising Mr.
+Huddlestone's presence in the pavilion, to carry my proposal into effect.</p>
+
+<p>The sum was part in specie, part in bank paper, and part in circular notes
+payable to the name of James Gregory. We took it out, counted it, inclosed
+it once more in a dispatch box belonging to Northmour, and prepared a
+letter in Italian which he tied to the handle. It was signed by both of us
+under oath, and declared that this was all the money which had escaped the
+failure of the house of Huddlestone. This was, perhaps, the maddest action
+ever perpetrated by two persons professing to be sane. Had the dispatch
+box fallen into other hands than those for which it was intended, we stood
+criminally convicted on our own written testimony; but, as I have said, we
+were neither of us in a condition to judge soberly, and had a thirst for
+action that drove us to do something, right or wrong, rather than endure
+the agony of waiting. Moreover, as we were both convinced that the hollows
+of the links were alive with hidden spies upon our movements, we hoped
+that our appearance with the box might lead to a parley, and, perhaps, a
+compromise.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly three when we issued from the pavilion. The rain had taken
+off; the sun shone quite cheerfully. I had never seen the gulls fly so
+close about the house or approach so fearlessly to human beings. On the
+very doorstep one flapped heavily past our heads, and uttered its wild cry
+in my very ear.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is an omen for you,&quot; said Northmour, who like all freethinkers was
+much under the influence of superstition. &quot;They think we are already
+dead.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I made some light rejoinder, but it was with half my heart; for the
+circumstance had impressed me.</p>
+
+<p>A yard or two before the gate, on a patch of smooth turf, we set down the
+dispatch box; and Northmour waved a white handkerchief over his head.
+Nothing replied. We raised our voices, and cried aloud in Italian that we
+were there as ambassadors to arrange the quarrel, but the stillness
+remained unbroken save by the seagulls and the surf. I had a weight at my
+heart when we desisted; and I saw that even Northmour was unusually pale.
+He looked over his shoulder nervously, as though he feared that some one
+had crept between him and the pavilion door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By God,&quot; he said in a whisper, &quot;this is too much for me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I replied in the same key: &quot;Suppose there should be none, after all!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look there,&quot; he returned, nodding with his head, as though he had been
+afraid to point.</p>
+
+<p>I glanced in the direction indicated; and there, from the northern quarter
+of the Sea-Wood, beheld a thin column of smoke rising steadily against the
+now cloudless sky.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour,&quot; I said (we still continued to talk in whispers), &quot;it is not
+possible to endure this suspense. I prefer death fifty times over. Stay
+you here to watch the pavilion; I will go forward and make sure, if I have
+to walk right into their camp.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He looked once again all round him with puckered eyes, and then nodded
+assentingly to my proposal.</p>
+
+<p>My heart beat like a sledge hammer as I set out walking rapidly in the
+direction of the smoke; and, though up to that moment I had felt chill and
+shivering, I was suddenly conscious of a glow of heat all over my body.
+The ground in this direction was very uneven; a hundred men might have
+lain hidden in as many square yards about my path. But I who had not
+practiced the business in vain, chose such routes as cut at the very root
+of concealment, and, by keeping along the most convenient ridges,
+commanded several hollows at a time. It was not long before I was rewarded
+for my caution. Coming suddenly on to a mound somewhat more elevated than
+the surrounding hummocks, I saw, not thirty yards away, a man bent almost
+double, and running as fast as his attitude permitted, along the bottom of
+a gully. I had dislodged one of the spies from his ambush. As soon as I
+sighted him, I called loudly both in English and Italian; and he, seeing
+concealment was no longer possible, straightened himself out, leaped from
+the gully, and made off as straight as an arrow for the borders of the
+wood. It was none of my business to pursue; I had learned what I
+wanted&mdash;that we were beleaguered and watched in the pavilion; and I
+returned at once, and walked as nearly as possible in my old footsteps, to
+where Northmour awaited me beside the dispatch box. He was even paler than
+when I had left him, and his voice shook a little.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Could you see what he was like?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He kept his back turned,&quot; I replied.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let us get into the house, Frank. I don't think I'm a coward, but I can
+stand no more of this,&quot; he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>All was still and sunshiny about the pavilion, as we turned to reenter it;
+even the gulls had flown in a wider circuit, and were seen flickering
+along the beach and sand hills; and this loneliness terrified me more than
+a regiment under arms. It was not until the door was barricaded that I
+could draw a full inspiration and relieve the weight that lay upon my
+bosom. Northmour and I exchanged a steady glance; and I suppose each made
+his own reflections on the white and startled aspect of the other.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You were right,&quot; I said. &quot;All is over. Shake hands, old man, for the last
+time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; replied he, &quot;I will shake hands; for, as sure as I am here, I bear
+no malice. But, remember, if, by some impossible accident, we should give
+the slip to these blackguards, I'll take the upper hand of you by fair or
+foul.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh,&quot; said I, &quot;you weary me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He seemed hurt, and walked away in silence to the foot of the stairs,
+where he paused.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do not understand,&quot; said he. &quot;I am not a swindler, and I guard
+myself; that is all. I may weary you or not, Mr. Cassilis, I do not care a
+rush; I speak for my own satisfaction, and not for your amusement. You had
+better go upstairs and court the girl; for my part, I stay here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I stay with you,&quot; I returned. &quot;Do you think I would steal a march,
+even with your permission?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Frank,&quot; he said, smiling, &quot;it's a pity you are an ass, for you have the
+makings of a man. I think I must be <i>fey</i> to-day; you cannot irritate me
+even when you try. Do you know,&quot; he continued softly, &quot;I think we are the
+two most miserable men in England, you and I? we have got on to thirty
+without wife or child, or so much as a shop to look after&mdash;poor, pitiful,
+lost devils, both! And now we clash about a girl! As if there were not
+several millions in the United Kingdom! Ah, Frank, Frank, the one who
+loses his throw, be it you or me, he has my pity! It were better for
+him&mdash;how does the Bible say?&mdash;that a millstone were hanged about his neck
+and he were cast into the depth of the sea. Let us take a drink,&quot; he
+concluded suddenly, but without any levity of tone.</p>
+
+<p>I was touched by his words, and consented. He sat down on the table in the
+dining-room, and held up the glass of sherry to his eye.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you beat me, Frank,&quot; he said, &quot;I shall take to drink. What will you
+do, if it goes the other way?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;God knows,&quot; I returned.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; said he, &quot;here is a toast in the meantime: '<i>Italia irredenta</i>!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The remainder of the day was passed in the same dreadful tedium and
+suspense. I laid the table for dinner, while Northmour and Clara prepared
+the meal together in the kitchen. I could hear their talk as I went to and
+fro, and was surprised to find it ran all the time upon myself. Northmour
+again bracketed us together, and rallied Clara on a choice of husbands;
+but he continued to speak of me with some feeling, and uttered nothing to
+my prejudice unless he included himself in the condemnation. This awakened
+a sense of gratitude in my heart, which combined with the immediateness of
+our peril to fill my eyes with tears. After all, I thought&mdash;and perhaps
+the thought was laughably vain&mdash;we were here three very noble human beings
+to perish in defense of a thieving banker.</p>
+
+<p>Before we sat down to table, I looked forth from an upstairs window. The
+day was beginning to decline; the links were utterly deserted; the
+dispatch box still lay untouched where we had left it hours before.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone, in a long yellow dressing gown, took one end of the
+table, Clara the other; while Northmour and I faced each other from the
+sides. The lamp was brightly trimmed; the wine was good; the viands,
+although mostly cold, excellent of their sort. We seemed to have agreed
+tacitly; all reference to the impending catastrophe was carefully avoided;
+and, considering our tragic circumstances, we made a merrier party than
+could have been expected. From time to time, it is true, Northmour or I
+would rise from table and make a round of the defenses; and, on each of
+these occasions, Mr. Huddlestone was recalled to a sense of his tragic
+predicament, glanced up with ghastly eyes, and bore for an instant on his
+countenance the stamp of terror. But he hastened to empty his glass, wiped
+his forehead with his handkerchief, and joined again in the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>I was astonished at the wit and information he displayed. Mr.
+Huddlestone's was certainly no ordinary character; he had read and
+observed for himself; his gifts were sound; and, though I could never have
+learned to love the man, I began to understand his success in business,
+and the great respect in which he had been held before his failure. He
+had, above all, the talent of society; and though I never heard him speak
+but on this one and most unfavorable occasion, I set him down among the
+most brilliant conversationalists I ever met.</p>
+
+<p>He was relating with great gusto, and seemingly no feeling of shame, the
+maneuvers of a scoundrelly commission merchant whom he had known and
+studied in his youth, and we were all listening with an odd mixture of
+mirth and embarrassment, when our little party was brought abruptly to an
+end in the most startling manner.</p>
+
+<p>A noise like that of a wet finger on the window pane interrupted Mr.
+Huddlestone's tale; and in an instant we were all four as white as paper,
+and sat tongue-tied and motionless round the table.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A snail,&quot; I said at last; for I had heard that these animals make a noise
+somewhat similar in character.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Snail be d&mdash;&mdash;d!&quot; said Northmour. &quot;Hush!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The same sound was repeated twice at regular intervals; and then a
+formidable voice shouted through the shutters the Italian word,
+&quot;<i>Traditore</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone threw his head in the air; his eyelids quivered; next
+moment he fell insensible below the table. Northmour and I had each run to
+the armory and seized a gun. Clara was on her feet with her hand at her
+throat.</p>
+
+<p>So we stood waiting, for we thought the hour of attack was certainly come;
+but second passed after second, and all but the surf remained silent in
+the neighborhood of the pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quick,&quot; said Northmour; &quot;upstairs with him before they come.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>Somehow or other, by hook and crook, and between the three of us, we got
+Bernard Huddlestone bundled upstairs and laid upon the bed in My Uncle's
+Room. During the whole process, which was rough enough, he gave no sign of
+consciousness, and he remained, as we had thrown him, without changing the
+position of a finger. His daughter opened his shirt and began to wet his
+head and bosom; while Northmour and I ran to the window. The weather
+continued clear; the moon, which was now about full, had risen and shed a
+very clear light upon the links; yet, strain our eyes as we might, we
+could distinguish nothing moving. A few dark spots, more or less, on the
+uneven expanse were not to be identified; they might be crouching men,
+they might be shadows; it was impossible to be sure.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank God,&quot; said Northmour, &quot;Aggie is not coming to-night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Aggie was the name of the old nurse; he had not thought of her until now;
+but that he should think of her at all was a trait that surprised me in
+the man.</p>
+
+<p>We were again reduced to waiting. Northmour went to the fireplace and
+spread his hands before the red embers, as if he were cold. I followed him
+mechanically with my eyes, and in so doing turned my back upon the window.
+At that moment a very faint report was audible from without, and a ball
+shivered a pane of glass, and buried itself in the shutter two inches from
+my head. I heard Clara scream; and though I whipped instantly out of range
+and into a corner, she was there, so to speak, before me, beseeching to
+know if I were hurt. I felt that I could stand to be shot at every day and
+all day long, with such remarks of solicitude for a reward; and I
+continued to reassure her, with, the tenderest caresses and in complete
+forgetfulness of our situation, till the voice of Northmour recalled me to
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;An air gun,&quot; he said. &quot;They wish to make no noise.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I put Clara aside, and looked at him. He was standing with his back to the
+fire and his hands clasped behind him; and I knew by the black look on his
+face, that passion was boiling within. I had seen just such a look before
+he attacked me, that March night, in the adjoining chamber; and, though I
+could make every allowance for his anger, I confess I trembled for the
+consequences. He gazed straight before him; but he could see us with the
+tail of his eye, and his temper kept rising like a gale of wind. With
+regular battle awaiting us outside, this prospect of an internecine strife
+within the walls began to daunt me.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, as I was thus closely watching his expression and prepared
+against the worst, I saw a change, a flash, a look of relief, upon his
+face. He took up the lamp which stood beside him on the table, and turned
+to us with an air of some excitement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is one point that we must know,&quot; said he. &quot;Are they going to
+butcher the lot of us, or only Huddlestone? Did they take you for him, or
+fire at you for your own <i>beaux yeux</i>?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They took me for him, for certain,&quot; I replied. &quot;I am near as tall, and my
+head is fair.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am going to make sure,&quot; returned Northmour; and he stepped up to the
+window, holding the lamp above his head, and stood there, quietly
+affronting death, for half a minute.</p>
+
+<p>Clara sought to rush forward and pull him from the place of danger; but I
+had the pardonable selfishness to hold her back by force.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; said Northmour, turning coolly from the window, &quot;it's only
+Huddlestone they want.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Mr. Northmour!&quot; cried Clara; but found no more to add; the temerity
+she had just witnessed seeming beyond, the reach of words.</p>
+
+<p>He, on his part, looked at me, cocking his head, with a fire of triumph in
+his eyes; and I understood at once that he had thus hazarded his life,
+merely to attract Clara's notice, and depose me from my position as the
+hero of the hour. He snapped his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The fire is only beginning,&quot; said he. &quot;When they warm up to their work,
+they won't be so particular.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A voice was now heard hailing us from the entrance. From the window we
+could see the figure of a man in the moonlight; he stood motionless, his
+face uplifted to ours, and a rag of something white on his extended arm;
+and as we looked right down upon him, though he was a good many yards
+distant on the links, we could see the moonlight glitter on his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He opened his lips again, and spoke for some minutes on end, in a key so
+loud that he might have been heard in every corner of the pavilion, and as
+far away as the borders of the wood. It was the same voice that had
+already shouted, &quot;<i>Traditore</i>!&quot; through the shutters of the dining-room;
+this time it made a complete and clear statement. If the traitor
+&quot;Oddlestone&quot; were given up, all others should be spared; if not, no one
+should escape to tell the tale.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Huddlestone, what do you say to that?&quot; asked Northmour, turning to
+the bed.</p>
+
+<p>Up to that moment the banker had given no sign of life, and I, at least,
+had supposed him to be still lying in a faint; but he replied at once, and
+in such tones as I have never heard elsewhere, save from a delirious
+patient, adjured and besought us not to desert him. It was the most
+hideous and abject performance that my imagination can conceive.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Enough,&quot; cried Northmour; and then he threw open the window, leaned out
+into the night, and in a tone of exultation, and with a total
+forgetfulness of what was due to the presence of a lady, poured out upon
+the ambassador a string of the most abominable raillery both in English
+and Italian, and bade him be gone where he had come from. I believe that
+nothing so delighted Northmour at that moment as the thought that we must
+all infallibly perish before the night was out.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, the Italian put his flag of truce into his pocket, and
+disappeared, at a leisurely pace, among the sand hills.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They make honorable war,&quot; said Northmour. &quot;They are all gentlemen and
+soldiers. For the credit of the thing, I wish we could change sides&mdash;you
+and I, Frank, and you, too, missy, my darling&mdash;and leave that being on the
+bed to some one else. Tut! Don't look shocked! We are all going post to
+what they call eternity, and may as well be above board while there's
+time. As far as I am concerned, if I could first strangle Huddlestone and
+then get Clara in my arms, I could die with some pride and satisfaction.
+And as it is, by God, I'll have a kiss!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Before I could do anything to interfere, he had rudely embraced and
+repeatedly kissed the resisting girl. Next moment I had pulled him away
+with fury, and flung him heavily against the wall. He laughed loud and
+long, and I feared his wits had given way under the strain; for even in
+the best of days he had been a sparing and a quiet laugher.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, Frank,&quot; said he, when his mirth was somewhat appeased, &quot;it's your
+turn. Here's my hand. Good-bye, farewell!&quot; Then, seeing me stand rigid and
+indignant, and holding Clara to my side&mdash;&quot;Man!&quot; he broke out, &quot;are you
+angry? Did you think we were going to die with all the airs and graces of
+society? I took a kiss; I'm glad I did it; and now you can take another if
+you like, and square accounts.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I turned from him with a feeling of contempt which I did not seek to
+dissemble.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As you please,&quot; said he. &quot;You've been a prig in life; a prig you'll die.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And with that he sat down in a chair, a rifle over his knee, and amused
+himself with snapping the lock; but I could see that his ebullition of
+light spirits (the only one I ever knew him to display) had already come
+to an end, and was succeeded by a sullen, scowling humor.</p>
+
+<p>All this time our assailants might have been entering the house, and we
+been none the wiser; we had in truth almost forgotten the danger that so
+imminently overhung our days. But just then Mr. Huddlestone uttered a cry,
+and leaped from the bed.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him what was wrong.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fire!&quot; he cried. &quot;They have set the house on fire!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Northmour was on his feet in an instant, and he and I ran through the door
+of communication with the study. The room was illuminated by a red and
+angry light. Almost at the moment of our entrance, a tower of flame arose
+in front of the window, and, with a tingling report, a pane fell inward on
+the carpet. They had set fire to the lean-to outhouse, where Northmour
+used to nurse his negatives.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hot work,&quot; said Northmour. &quot;Let us try in your old room.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We ran thither in a breath, threw up the casement, and looked forth. Along
+the whole back wall of the pavilion piles of fuel had been arranged and
+kindled; and it is probable they had been drenched with mineral oil, for,
+in spite of the morning's rain, they all burned bravely. The fire had
+taken a firm hold already on the outhouse, which blazed higher and higher
+every moment; the back door was in the center of a red-hot bonfire; the
+eaves we could see, as we looked upward, were already smoldering, for the
+roof overhung, and was supported by considerable beams of wood. At the
+same time, hot, pungent, and choking volumes of smoke began to fill the
+house. There was not a human being to be seen to right or left.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, well!&quot; said Northmour, &quot;here's the end, thank God!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And we returned to My Uncle's Room. Mr. Huddlestone was putting on his
+boots, still violently trembling, but with an air of determination such as
+I had not hitherto observed. Clara stood close by him, with her cloak in
+both hands ready to throw about her shoulders, and a strange look in her
+eyes, as if she were half hopeful, half doubtful of her father.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, boys and girls,&quot; said Northmour, &quot;how about a sally? The oven is
+heating; it is not good to stay here and be baked; and, for my part, I
+want to come to my hands with them, and be done.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There's nothing else left,&quot; I replied.</p>
+
+<p>And both Clara and Mr. Huddlestone, though with a very different
+intonation, added, &quot;Nothing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As we went downstairs the heat was excessive, and the roaring of the fire
+filled our ears; and we had scarce reached the passage before the stairs
+window fell in, a branch of flame shot brandishing through the aperture,
+and the interior of the pavilion became lighted up with that dreadful and
+fluctuating glare. At the same moment we heard the fall of something heavy
+and inelastic in the upper story. The whole pavilion, it was plain, had
+gone alight like a box of matches, and now not only flamed sky high to
+land and sea, but threatened with every moment to crumble and fall in
+about our ears.</p>
+
+<p>Northmour and I cocked our revolvers. Mr. Huddlestone, who had already
+refused a firearm, put us behind him with a manner of command.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let Clara open the door,&quot; said he. &quot;So, if they fire a volley, she will
+be protected. And in the meantime stand behind me. I am the scapegoat; my
+sins have found me out.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I heard him, as I stood breathless by his shoulder, with my pistol ready,
+pattering off prayers in a tremulous, rapid whisper; and, I confess,
+horrid as the thought may seem, I despised him for thinking of
+supplications in a moment so critical and thrilling. In the meantime,
+Clara, who was dead white but still possessed her faculties, had displaced
+the barricade from the front door. Another moment, and she had pulled it
+open. Firelight and moonlight illuminated the links with confused and
+changeful luster, and far away against the sky we could see a long trail
+of glowing smoke.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone, filled for the moment with a strength greater than his
+own, struck Northmour and myself a back-hander in the chest; and while we
+were thus for the moment incapacitated from action, lifting his arms above
+his head like one about to dive, he ran straight forward out of the
+pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here am I!&quot; he cried&mdash;&quot;Huddlestone! Kill me, and spare the others!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His sudden appearance daunted, I suppose, our hidden enemies; for
+Northmour and I had time to recover, to seize Clara between us, one by
+each arm, and to rush forth to his assistance, ere anything further had
+taken place. But scarce had we passed the threshold when there came near a
+dozen reports and flashes from every direction among the hollows of the
+links. Mr. Huddlestone staggered, uttered a weird and freezing cry, threw
+up his arms over his head, and fell backward on the turf.</p>
+
+<p><i>&quot;Traditore! Traditore!&quot;</i> cried the invisible avengers.</p>
+
+<p>And just then a part of the roof of the pavilion fell in, so rapid was the
+progress of the fire. A loud, vague, and horrible noise accompanied the
+collapse, and a vast volume of flame went soaring up to heaven. It must
+have been visible at that moment from twenty miles out at sea, from the
+shore at Graden Wester, and far inland from the peak of Graystiel, the
+most eastern summit of the Caulder Hills. Bernard Huddlestone, although
+God knows what were his obsequies, had a fine pyre at the moment of his
+death.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IX</h2>
+
+
+<p>I should have the greatest difficulty to tell you what followed next after
+this tragic circumstance. It is all to me, as I look back upon it, mixed,
+strenuous, and ineffectual, like the struggles of a sleeper in a
+nightmare. Clara, I remember, uttered a broken sigh and would have fallen
+forward to earth, had not Northmour and I supported her insensible body. I
+do not think we were attacked: I do not remember even to have seen an
+assailant; and I believe we deserted Mr. Huddlestone without a glance. I
+only remember running like a man in a panic, now carrying Clara altogether
+in my own arms, now sharing her weight with Northmour, now scuffling
+confusedly for the possession of that dear burden. Why we should have made
+for my camp in the Hemlock Den, or how we reached it, are points lost
+forever to my recollection. The first moment at which I became definitely
+sure, Clara had been suffered to fall against the outside of my little
+tent, Northmour and I were tumbling together on the ground, and he, with
+contained ferocity, was striking for my head with the butt of his
+revolver. He had already twice wounded me on the scalp; and it is to the
+consequent loss of blood that I am tempted to attribute the sudden
+clearness of my mind.</p>
+
+<p>I caught him by the wrist.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour,&quot; I remember saying, &quot;you can kill me afterwards. Let us first
+attend to Clara.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was at that moment uppermost. Scarcely had the words passed my lips,
+when he had leaped to his feet and ran toward the tent; and the next
+moment, he was straining Clara to his heart and covering her unconscious
+hands and face with his caresses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shame!&quot; I cried. &quot;Shame to you, Northmour!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, giddy though I still was, I struck him repeatedly upon the head and
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>He relinquished his grasp, and faced me in the broken moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had you under, and I let you go,&quot; said he; &quot;and now you strike me!
+Coward!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are the coward,&quot; I retorted. &quot;Did she wish your kisses while she was
+still sensible of what you wanted? Not she! And now she may be dying; and
+you waste this precious time, and abuse her helplessness. Stand aside, and
+let me help her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He confronted me for a moment, white and menacing; then suddenly he
+stepped aside.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Help her then,&quot; said he.</p>
+
+<p>I threw myself on my knees beside her, and loosened, as well as I was
+able, her dress and corset; but while I was thus engaged, a grasp
+descended on my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Keep your hands off her,&quot; said Northmour, fiercely. &quot;Do you think I have
+no blood in my veins?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour,&quot; I cried, &quot;if you will neither help her yourself, nor let me
+do so, do you know that I shall have to kill you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is better!&quot; he cried. &quot;Let her die also, where's the harm? Step
+aside from that girl! and stand up to fight.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will observe,&quot; said I, half rising, &quot;that I have not kissed her yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I dare you to,&quot; he cried.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know what possessed me; it was one of the things I am most
+ashamed of in my life, though, as my wife used to say, I knew that my
+kisses would be always welcome were she dead or living; down I fell again
+upon my knees, parted the hair from her forehead, and, with the dearest
+respect, laid my lips for a moment on that cold brow. It was such a caress
+as a father might have given; it was such a one as was not unbecoming
+from a man soon to die to a woman already dead.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now,&quot; said I, &quot;I am at your service, Mr. Northmour.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p>But I saw, to my surprise, that he had turned his back upon me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you hear?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; said he, &quot;I do. If you wish to fight, I am ready. If not, go on and
+save Clara. All is one to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did not wait to be twice bidden; but, stooping again over Clara,
+continued my efforts to revive her. She still lay white and lifeless; I
+began to fear that her sweet spirit had indeed fled beyond recall, and
+horror and a sense of utter desolation seized upon my heart. I called her
+by name with the most endearing inflections; I chafed and beat her hands;
+now I laid her head low, now supported it against my knee; but all seemed
+to be in vain, and the lids still lay heavy on her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour,&quot; I said, &quot;there is my hat. For God's sake bring some water
+from the spring.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Almost in a moment he was by my side with the water.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have brought it in my own,&quot; he said. &quot;You do not grudge me the
+privilege?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Northmour,&quot; I was beginning to say, as I laved her head and breast; but
+he interrupted me savagely.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you hush up!&quot; he said. &quot;The best thing you can do is to say nothing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had certainly no desire to talk, my mind being swallowed up in concern
+for my dear love and her condition; so I continued in silence to do my
+best toward her recovery, and, when the hat was empty, returned it to him,
+with one word&mdash;&quot;More.&quot; He had, perhaps, gone several times upon this
+errand, when Clara reopened her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now,&quot; said he, &quot;since she is better, you can spare me, can you not? I
+wish you a good night, Mr. Cassilis.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And with that he was gone among the thicket. I made a fire, for I had now
+no fear of the Italians, who had even spared all the little possessions
+left in my encampment; and, broken as she was by the excitement and the
+hideous catastrophe of the evening, I managed, in one way or another&mdash;by
+persuasion, encouragement, warmth, and such simple remedies as I could lay
+my hand on&mdash;to bring her back to some composure of mind and strength of
+body.</p>
+
+<p>Day had already come, when a sharp &quot;Hist!&quot; sounded from the thicket. I
+started from the ground; but the voice of Northmour was heard adding, in
+the most tranquil tones: &quot;Come here, Cassilis, and alone; I want to show
+you something.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I consulted Clara with my eyes, and, receiving her tacit permission, left
+her alone, and clambered out of the den. At some distance off I saw
+Northmour leaning against an elder; and, as soon as he perceived me, he
+began walking seaward. I had almost overtaken him as he reached the
+outskirts of the wood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look,&quot; said he, pausing.</p>
+
+<p>A couple of steps more brought me out of the foliage. The light of the
+morning lay cold and clear over that well-known scene. The pavilion was
+but a blackened wreck; the roof had fallen in, one of the gables had
+fallen out; and, far and near, the face of the links was cicatrized with
+little patches of burned furze. Thick smoke still went straight upward in
+the windless air of the morning, and a great pile of ardent cinders filled
+the bare walls of the house, like coals in an open grate. Close by the
+islet a schooner yacht lay to, and a well-manned boat was pulling
+vigorously for the shore.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The 'Red Earl'!&quot; I cried. &quot;The 'Red Earl' twelve hours too late!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Feel in your pocket, Frank. Are you armed?&quot; asked Northmour.</p>
+
+<p>I obeyed him, and I think I must have become deadly pale. My revolver had
+been taken from me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see, I have you in my power,&quot; he continued. &quot;I disarmed you last
+night while you were nursing Clara; but this morning&mdash;here&mdash;take your
+pistol. No thanks!&quot; he cried, holding up his hand. &quot;I do not like them;
+that is the only way you can annoy me now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He began to walk forward across the links to meet the boat, and I followed
+a step or two behind. In front of the pavilion I paused to see where Mr.
+Huddlestone had fallen; but there was no sign of him, nor so much as a
+trace of blood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Graden Floe,&quot; said Northmour.</p>
+
+<p>He continued to advance till we had come to the head of the beach.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No farther, please,&quot; said he. &quot;Would you like to take her to Graden
+House?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you,&quot; replied I; &quot;I shall try to get her to the minister at Graden
+Wester.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The prow of the boat here grated on the beach, and a sailor jumped ashore
+with a line in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wait a minute, lads!&quot; cried Northmour; and then lower and to my private
+ear, &quot;You had better say nothing of all this to her,&quot; he added.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the contrary!&quot; I broke out, &quot;she shall know everything that I can
+tell.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do not understand,&quot; he returned, with an air of great dignity. &quot;It
+will be nothing to her; she expects it of me. Good-by!&quot; he added, with a
+nod.</p>
+
+<p>I offered him my hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Excuse me,&quot; said he. &quot;It's small, I know; but I can't push things quite
+so far as that. I don't wish any sentimental business, to sit by your
+hearth a white-haired wanderer, and all that. Quite the contrary: I hope
+to God I shall never again clap eyes on either one of you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, God bless you, Northmour!&quot; I said heartily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes,&quot; he returned.</p>
+
+<p>He walked down the beach; and the man who was ashore gave him an arm on
+board, and then shoved off and leaped into the bows himself. Northmour
+took the tiller; the boat rose to the waves, and the oars between the
+tholepins sounded crisp and measured in the morning air.</p>
+
+<p>They were not yet half way to the &quot;Red Earl,&quot; and I was still watching
+their progress, when the sun rose out of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>One word more, and my story is done. Years after, Northmour was killed
+fighting under the colors of Garibaldi for the liberation of the Tyrol.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Wilkie Collins</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Dream_Woman" id="The_Dream_Woman" /><i>The Dream Woman</i></h2>
+
+<h4><i>A Mystery in Four Narratives</i></h4>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="THE_FIRST_NARRATIVE" id="THE_FIRST_NARRATIVE" />THE FIRST NARRATIVE</h3>
+
+
+<h5>INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT OF THE FACTS BY PERCY FAIRBANK</h5>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Hullo, there! Hostler! Hullo-o-o!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear! why don't you look for the bell?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have looked&mdash;there is no bell.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And nobody in the yard. How very extraordinary! Call again, dear.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hostler! Hullo, there! Hostler-r-r!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My second call echoes through empty space, and rouses nobody&mdash;produces, in
+short, no visible result. I am at the end of my resources&mdash;I don't know
+what to say or what to do next. Here I stand in the solitary inn yard of a
+strange town, with two horses to hold, and a lady to take care of. By way
+of adding to my responsibilities, it so happens that one of the horses is
+dead lame, and that the lady is my wife.</p>
+
+<p>Who am I?&mdash;you will ask.</p>
+
+<p>There is plenty of time to answer the question. Nothing happens; and
+nobody appears to receive us. Let me introduce myself and my wife.</p>
+
+<p>I am Percy Fairbank&mdash;English gentleman&mdash;age (let us say) forty&mdash;no
+profession&mdash;moderate politics&mdash;middle height&mdash;fair complexion&mdash;easy
+character&mdash;plenty of money.</p>
+
+<p>My wife is a French lady. She was Mademoiselle Clotilde Delorge&mdash;when I
+was first presented to her at her father's house in France. I fell in love
+with her&mdash;I really don't know why. It might have been because I was
+perfectly idle, and had nothing else to do at the time. Or it might have
+been because all my friends said she was the very last woman whom I ought
+to think of marrying. On the surface, I must own, there is nothing in
+common between Mrs. Fairbank and me. She is tall; she is dark; she is
+nervous, excitable, romantic; in all her opinions she proceeds to
+extremes. What could such a woman see in me? what could I see in her? I
+know no more than you do. In some mysterious manner we exactly suit each
+other. We have been man and wife for ten years, and our only regret is,
+that we have no children. I don't know what you may think; I call
+that&mdash;upon the whole&mdash;a happy marriage.</p>
+
+<p>So much for ourselves. The next question is&mdash;what has brought us into the
+inn yard? and why am I obliged to turn groom, and hold the horses?</p>
+
+<p>We live for the most part in France&mdash;at the country house in which my wife
+and I first met. Occasionally, by way of variety, we pay visits to my
+friends in England. We are paying one of those visits now. Our host is an
+old college friend of mine, possessed of a fine estate in Somersetshire;
+and we have arrived at his house&mdash;called Farleigh Hall&mdash;toward the close
+of the hunting season.</p>
+
+<p>On the day of which I am now writing&mdash;destined to be a memorable day in
+our calendar&mdash;the hounds meet at Farleigh Hall. Mrs. Fairbank and I are
+mounted on two of the best horses in my friend's stables. We are quite
+unworthy of that distinction; for we know nothing and care nothing about
+hunting. On the other hand, we delight in riding, and we enjoy the breezy
+Spring morning and the fair and fertile English landscape surrounding us
+on every side. While the hunt prospers, we follow the hunt. But when a
+check occurs&mdash;when time passes and patience is sorely tried; when the
+bewildered dogs run hither and thither, and strong language falls from
+the lips of exasperated sportsmen&mdash;we fail to take any further interest in
+the proceedings. We turn our horses' heads in the direction of a grassy
+lane, delightfully shaded by trees. We trot merrily along the lane, and
+find ourselves on an open common. We gallop across the common, and follow
+the windings of a second lane. We cross a brook, we pass through a
+village, we emerge into pastoral solitude among the hills. The horses toss
+their heads, and neigh to each other, and enjoy it as much as we do. The
+hunt is forgotten. We are as happy as a couple of children; we are
+actually singing a French song&mdash;when in one moment our merriment comes to
+an end. My wife's horse sets one of his forefeet on a loose stone, and
+stumbles. His rider's ready hand saves him from falling. But, at the first
+attempt he makes to go on, the sad truth shows itself&mdash;a tendon is
+strained; the horse is lame.</p>
+
+<p>What is to be done? We are strangers in a lonely part of the country. Look
+where we may, we see no signs of a human habitation. There is nothing for
+it but to take the bridle road up the hill, and try what we can discover
+on the other side. I transfer the saddles, and mount my wife on my own
+horse. He is not used to carry a lady; he misses the familiar pressure of
+a man's legs on either side of him; he fidgets, and starts, and kicks up
+the dust. I follow on foot, at a respectful distance from his heels,
+leading the lame horse. Is there a more miserable object on the face of
+creation than a lame horse? I have seen lame men and lame dogs who were
+cheerful creatures; but I never yet saw a lame horse who didn't look
+heartbroken over his own misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>For half an hour my wife capers and curvets sideways along the bridle
+road. I trudge on behind her; and the heartbroken horse halts behind <i>me</i>.
+Hard by the top of the hill, our melancholy procession passes a
+Somersetshire peasant at work in a field. I summon the man to approach us;
+and the man looks at me stolidly, from the middle of the field, without
+stirring a step. I ask at the top of my voice how far it is to Farleigh
+Hall. The Somersetshire peasant answers at the top of <i>his</i> voice:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Vourteen mile. Gi' oi a drap o' zyder.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I translate (for my wife's benefit) from the Somersetshire language into
+the English language. We are fourteen miles from Farleigh Hall; and our
+friend in the field desires to be rewarded, for giving us that
+information, with a drop of cider. There is the peasant, painted by
+himself! Quite a bit of character, my dear! Quite a bit of character!</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fairbank doesn't view the study of agricultural human nature with my
+relish. Her fidgety horse will not allow her a moment's repose; she is
+beginning to lose her temper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We can't go fourteen miles in this way,&quot; she says. &quot;Where is the nearest
+inn? Ask that brute in the field!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I take a shilling from my pocket and hold it up in the sun. The shilling
+exercises magnetic virtues. The shilling draws the peasant slowly toward
+me from the middle of the field. I inform him that we want to put up the
+horses and to hire a carriage to take us back to Farleigh Hall. Where can
+we do that? The peasant answers (with his eye on the shilling):</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At Oonderbridge, to be zure.&quot; (At Underbridge, to be sure.)</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it far to Underbridge?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The peasant repeats, &quot;Var to Oonderbridge?&quot;&mdash;and laughs at the question.
+&quot;Hoo-hoo-hoo!&quot; (Underbridge is evidently close by&mdash;if we could only find
+it.) &quot;Will you show us the way, my man?&quot; &quot;Will you gi' oi a drap of
+zyder?&quot; I courteously bend my head, and point to the shilling. The
+agricultural intelligence exerts itself. The peasant joins our melancholy
+procession. My wife is a fine woman, but he never once looks at my
+wife&mdash;and, more extraordinary still, he never even looks at the horses.
+His eyes are with his mind&mdash;and his mind is on the shilling.</p>
+
+<p>We reach the top of the hill&mdash;and, behold on the other side, nestling in
+a valley, the shrine of our pilgrimage, the town of Underbridge! Here our
+guide claims his shilling, and leaves us to find out the inn for
+ourselves. I am constitutionally a polite man. I say &quot;Good morning&quot; at
+parting. The guide looks at me with the shilling between his teeth to make
+sure that it is a good one. &quot;Marnin!&quot; he says savagely&mdash;and turns his back
+on us, as if we had offended him. A curious product, this, of the growth
+of civilization. If I didn't see a church spire at Underbridge, I might
+suppose that we had lost ourselves on a savage island.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+
+<p>Arriving at the town, we had no difficulty in finding the inn. The town is
+composed of one desolate street; and midway in that street stands the
+inn&mdash;an ancient stone building sadly out of repair. The painting on the
+sign-board is obliterated. The shutters over the long range of front
+windows are all closed. A cock and his hens are the only living creatures
+at the door. Plainly, this is one of the old inns of the stage-coach
+period, ruined by the railway. We pass through the open arched doorway,
+and find no one to welcome us. We advance into the stable yard behind; I
+assist my wife to dismount&mdash;and there we are in the position already
+disclosed to view at the opening of this narrative. No bell to ring. No
+human creature to answer when I call. I stand helpless, with the bridles
+of the horses in my hand. Mrs. Fairbank saunters gracefully down the
+length of the yard and does&mdash;what all women do, when they find themselves
+in a strange place. She opens every door as she passes it, and peeps in.
+On my side, I have just recovered my breath, I am on the point of shouting
+for the hostler for the third and last time, when I hear Mrs. Fairbank
+suddenly call to me:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Percy! come here!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Her voice is eager and agitated. She has opened a last door at the end of
+the yard, and has started back from some sight which has suddenly met her
+view. I hitch the horses' bridles on a rusty nail in the wall near me, and
+join my wife. She has turned pale, and catches me nervously by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good heavens!&quot; she cries; &quot;look at that!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I look&mdash;and what do I see? I see a dingy little stable, containing two
+stalls. In one stall a horse is munching his corn. In the other a man is
+lying asleep on the litter.</p>
+
+<p>A worn, withered, woebegone man in a hostler's dress. His hollow wrinkled
+cheeks, his scanty grizzled hair, his dry yellow skin, tell their own tale
+of past sorrow or suffering. There is an ominous frown on his
+eyebrows&mdash;there is a painful nervous contraction on the side of his mouth.
+I hear him breathing convulsively when I first look in; he shudders and
+sighs in his sleep. It is not a pleasant sight to see, and I turn round
+instinctively to the bright sunlight in the yard. My wife turns me back
+again in the direction of the stable door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wait!&quot; she says. &quot;Wait! he may do it again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do what again?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He was talking in his sleep, Percy, when I first looked in. He was
+dreaming some dreadful dream. Hush! he's beginning again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I look and listen. The man stirs on his miserable bed. The man speaks in a
+quick, fierce whisper through his clinched teeth. &quot;Wake up! Wake up,
+there! Murder!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There is an interval of silence. He moves one lean arm slowly until it
+rests over his throat; he shudders, and turns on his straw; he raises his
+arm from his throat, and feebly stretches it out; his hand clutches at the
+straw on the side toward which he has turned; he seems to fancy that he is
+grasping at the edge of something. I see his lips begin to move again; I
+step softly into the stable; my wife follows me, with her hand fast
+clasped in mine. We both bend over him. He is talking once more in his
+sleep&mdash;strange talk, mad talk, this time.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Light gray eyes&quot; (we hear him say), &quot;and a droop in the left
+eyelid&mdash;flaxen hair, with a gold-yellow streak in it&mdash;all right, mother!
+afair, white arms with a down on them&mdash;little, lady's hand, with a reddish
+look round the fingernails&mdash;the knife&mdash;the cursed knife&mdash;first on one
+side, then on the other&mdash;aha, you she-devil! where is the knife?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He stops and grows restless on a sudden. We see him writhing on the straw.
+He throws up both his hands and gasps hysterically for breath. His eyes
+open suddenly. For a moment they look at nothing, with a vacant glitter in
+them&mdash;then they close again in deeper sleep. Is he dreaming still? Yes;
+but the dream seems to have taken a new course. When he speaks next, the
+tone is altered; the words are few&mdash;sadly and imploringly repeated over
+and over again. &quot;Say you love me! I am so fond of <i>you</i>. Say you love me!
+say you love me!&quot; He sinks into deeper and deeper sleep, faintly repeating
+those words. They die away on his lips. He speaks no more.</p>
+
+<p>By this time Mrs. Fairbank has got over her terror; she is devoured by
+curiosity now. The miserable creature on the straw has appealed to the
+imaginative side of her character. Her illimitable appetite for romance
+hungers and thirsts for more. She shakes me impatiently by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you hear? There is a woman at the bottom of it, Percy! There is love
+and murder in it, Percy! Where are the people of the inn? Go into the
+yard, and call to them again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My wife belongs, on her mother's side, to the South of France. The South
+of France breeds fine women with hot tempers. I say no more. Married men
+will understand my position. Single men may need to be told that there are
+occasions when we must not only love and honor&mdash;we must also obey&mdash;our
+wives.</p>
+
+<p>I turn to the door to obey <i>my</i> wife, and find myself confronted by a
+stranger who has stolen on us unawares. The stranger is a tiny, sleepy,
+rosy old man, with a vacant pudding-face, and a shining bald head. He
+wears drab breeches and gaiters, and a respectable square-tailed ancient
+black coat. I feel instinctively that here is the landlord of the inn.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good morning, sir,&quot; says the rosy old man. &quot;I'm a little hard of hearing.
+Was it you that was a-calling just now in the yard?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Before I can answer, my wife interposes. She insists (in a shrill voice,
+adapted to our host's hardness of hearing) on knowing who that unfortunate
+person is sleeping on the straw. &quot;Where does he come from? Why does he say
+such dreadful things in his sleep? Is he married or single? Did he ever
+fall in love with a murderess? What sort of a looking woman was she? Did
+she really stab him or not? In short, dear Mr. Landlord, tell us the whole
+story!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. Landlord waits drowsily until Mrs. Fairbank has quite done&mdash;then
+delivers himself of his reply as follows:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His name's Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He was
+forty-five year old last birthday. And he's my hostler. That's his story.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My wife's hot southern temper finds its way to her foot, and expresses
+itself by a stamp on the stable yard.</p>
+
+<p>The landlord turns himself sleepily round, and looks at the horses. &quot;A
+fine pair of horses, them two in the yard. Do you want to put 'em in my
+stables?&quot; I reply in the affirmative by a nod. The landlord, bent on
+making himself agreeable to my wife, addresses her once more. &quot;I'm a-going
+to wake Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He was forty-five
+year old last birthday. And he's my hostler. That's his story.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Having issued this second edition of his interesting narrative, the
+landlord enters the stable. We follow him to see how he will wake Francis
+Raven, and what will happen upon that. The stable broom stands in a
+corner; the landlord takes it&mdash;advances toward the sleeping hostler&mdash;and
+coolly stirs the man up with a broom as if he was a wild beast in a cage.
+Francis Raven starts to his feet with a cry of terror&mdash;looks at us wildly,
+with a horrid glare of suspicion in his eyes&mdash;recovers himself the next
+moment&mdash;and suddenly changes into a decent, quiet, respectable
+serving-man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I beg your pardon, ma'am. I beg your pardon, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The tone and manner in which he makes his apologies are both above his
+apparent station in life. I begin to catch the infection of Mrs.
+Fairbank's interest in this man. We both follow him out into the yard to
+see what he will do with the horses. The manner in which he lifts the
+injured leg of the lame horse tells me at once that he understands his
+business. Quickly and quietly, he leads the animal into an empty stable;
+quickly and quietly, he gets a bucket of hot water, and puts the lame
+horse's leg into it. &quot;The warm water will reduce the swelling, sir. I will
+bandage the leg afterwards.&quot; All that he does is done intelligently; all
+that he says, he says to the purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing wild, nothing strange about him now. Is this the same man whom we
+heard talking in his sleep?&mdash;the same man who woke with that cry of terror
+and that horrid suspicion in his eyes? I determine to try him with one or
+two questions.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Not much to do here,&quot; I say to the hostler.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very little to do, sir,&quot; the hostler replies.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Anybody staying in the house?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The house is quite empty, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought you were all dead. I could make nobody hear me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The landlord is very deaf, sir, and the waiter is out on an errand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes; and <i>you</i> were fast asleep in the stable. Do you often take a nap in
+the daytime?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The worn face of the hostler faintly flushes. His eyes look away from my
+eyes for the first time. Mrs. Fairbank furtively pinches my arm. Are we on
+the eve of a discovery at last? I repeat my question. The man has no civil
+alternative but to give me an answer. The answer is given in these words:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was tired out, sir. You wouldn't have found me asleep in the daytime
+but for that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tired out, eh? You had been hard at work, I suppose?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What was it, then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He hesitates again, and answers unwillingly, &quot;I was up all night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Up all night? Anything going on in the town?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing going on, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Anybody ill?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nobody ill, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That reply is the last. Try as I may, I can extract nothing more from him.
+He turns away and busies himself in attending to the horse's leg. I leave
+the stable to speak to the landlord about the carriage which is to take us
+back to Farleigh Hall. Mrs. Fairbank remains with the hostler, and favors
+me with a look at parting. The look says plainly, &quot;<i>I</i> mean to find out
+why he was up all night. Leave him to Me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The ordering of the carriage is easily accomplished. The inn possesses one
+horse and one chaise. The landlord has a story to tell of the horse, and a
+story to tell of the chaise. They resemble the story of Francis
+Raven&mdash;with this exception, that the horse and chaise belong to no
+religious persuasion. &quot;The horse will be nine year old next birthday. I've
+had the shay for four-and-twenty year. Mr. Max, of Underbridge, he bred
+the horse; and Mr. Pooley, of Yeovil, he built the shay. It's my horse and
+my shay. And that's <i>their</i> story!&quot; Having relieved his mind of these
+details, the landlord proceeds to put the harness on the horse. By way of
+assisting him, I drag the chaise into the yard. Just as our preparations
+are completed, Mrs. Fairbank appears. A moment or two later the hostler
+follows her out. He has bandaged the horse's leg, and is now ready to
+drive us to Farleigh Hall. I observe signs of agitation in his face and
+manner, which suggest that my wife has found her way into his confidence.
+I put the question to her privately in a corner of the yard. &quot;Well? Have
+you found out why Francis Raven was up all night?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fairbank has an eye to dramatic effect. Instead of answering plainly,
+Yes or No, she suspends the interest and excites the audience by putting a
+question on her side.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the day of the month, dear?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The day of the month is the first of March.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The first of March, Percy, is Francis Raven's birthday.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I try to look as if I was interested&mdash;and don't succeed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Francis was born,&quot; Mrs. Fairbank proceeds gravely, &quot;at two o'clock in the
+morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I begin to wonder whether my wife's intellect is going the way of the
+landlord's intellect. &quot;Is that all?&quot; I ask.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is <i>not</i> all,&quot; Mrs. Fairbank answers. &quot;Francis Raven sits up on the
+morning of his birthday because he is afraid to go to bed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And why is he afraid to go to bed?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because he is in peril of his life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On his birthday?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On his birthday. At two o'clock in the morning. As regularly as the
+birthday comes round.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There she stops. Has she discovered no more than that? No more thus far. I
+begin to feel really interested by this time. I ask eagerly what it means?
+Mrs. Fairbank points mysteriously to the chaise&mdash;with Francis Raven
+(hitherto our hostler, now our coachman) waiting for us to get in. The
+chaise has a seat for two in front, and a seat for one behind. My wife
+casts a warning look at me, and places herself on the seat in front.</p>
+
+<p>The necessary consequence of this arrangement is that Mrs. Fairbank sits
+by the side of the driver during a journey of two hours and more. Need I
+state the result? It would be an insult to your intelligence to state the
+result. Let me offer you my place in the chaise. And let Francis Raven
+tell his terrible story in his own words.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="THE_SECOND_NARRATIVE" id="THE_SECOND_NARRATIVE" />THE SECOND NARRATIVE</h3>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h5>THE HOSTLER'S STORY.&mdash;TOLD BY HIMSELF</h5>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IV</h2>
+
+
+<p>It is now ten years ago since I got my first warning of the great trouble
+of my life in the Vision of a Dream.</p>
+
+<p>I shall be better able to tell you about it if you will please suppose
+yourselves to be drinking tea along with us in our little cottage in
+Cambridgeshire, ten years since.</p>
+
+<p>The time was the close of day, and there were three of us at the table,
+namely, my mother, myself, and my mother's sister, Mrs. Chance. These two
+were Scotchwomen by birth, and both were widows. There was no other
+resemblance between them that I can call to mind. My mother had lived all
+her life in England, and had no more of the Scotch brogue on her tongue
+than I have. My aunt Chance had never been out of Scotland until she came
+to keep house with my mother after her husband's death. And when <i>she</i>
+opened her lips you heard broad Scotch, I can tell you, if you ever heard
+it yet!</p>
+
+<p>As it fell out, there was a matter of some consequence in debate among us
+that evening. It was this: whether I should do well or not to take a long
+journey on foot the next morning.</p>
+
+<p>Now the next morning happened to be the day before my birthday; and the
+purpose of the journey was to offer myself for a situation as groom at a
+great house in the neighboring county to ours. The place was reported as
+likely to fall vacant in about three weeks' time. I was as well fitted to
+fill it as any other man. In the prosperous days of our family, my father
+had been manager of a training stable, and he had kept me employed among
+the horses from my boyhood upward. Please to excuse my troubling you with
+these small matters. They all fit into my story farther on, as you will
+soon find out. My poor mother was dead against my leaving home on the
+morrow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You can never walk all the way there and all the way back again by
+to-morrow night,&quot; she says. &quot;The end of it will be that you will sleep
+away from home on your birthday. You have never done that yet, Francis,
+since your father's death, I don't like your doing it now. Wait a day
+longer, my son&mdash;only one day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>For my own part, I was weary of being idle, and I couldn't abide the
+notion of delay. Even one day might make all the difference. Some other
+man might take time by the forelock, and get the place.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Consider how long I have been out of work,&quot; I says, &quot;and don't ask me to
+put off the journey. I won't fail you, mother. I'll get back by to-morrow
+night, if I have to pay my last sixpence for a lift in a cart.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My mother shook her head. &quot;I don't like it, Francis&mdash;I don't like it!&quot;
+There was no moving her from that view. We argued and argued, until we
+were both at a deadlock. It ended in our agreeing to refer the difference
+between us to my mother's sister, Mrs. Chance.</p>
+
+<p>While we were trying hard to convince each other, my aunt Chance sat as
+dumb as a fish, stirring her tea and thinking her own thoughts. When we
+made our appeal to her, she seemed as it were to wake up. &quot;Ye baith refer
+it to my puir judgment?&quot; she says, in her broad Scotch. We both answered
+Yes. Upon that my aunt Chance first cleared the tea-table, and then pulled
+out from the pocket of her gown a pack of cards.</p>
+
+<p>Don't run away, if you please, with the notion that this was done lightly,
+with a view to amuse my mother and me. My aunt Chance seriously believed
+that she could look into the future by telling fortunes on the cards. She
+did nothing herself without first consulting the cards. She could give no
+more serious proof of her interest in my welfare than the proof which she
+was offering now. I don't say it profanely; I only mention the fact&mdash;the
+cards had, in some incomprehensible way, got themselves jumbled up
+together with her religious convictions. You meet with people nowadays who
+believe in spirits working by way of tables and chairs. On the same
+principle (if there <i>is</i> any principle in it) my aunt Chance believed in
+Providence working by way of the cards.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whether <i>you</i> are right, Francie, or your mither&mdash;whether ye will do weel
+or ill, the morrow, to go or stay&mdash;the cairds will tell it. We are a' in
+the hands of Proavidence. The cairds will tell it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Hearing this, my mother turned her head aside, with something of a sour
+look in her face. Her sister's notions about the cards were little better
+than flat blasphemy to her mind. But she kept her opinion to herself. My
+aunt Chance, to own the truth, had inherited, through her late husband, a
+pension of thirty pounds a year. This was an important contribution to our
+housekeeping, and we poor relations were bound to treat her with a certain
+respect. As for myself, if my poor father never did anything else for me
+before he fell into difficulties, he gave me a good education, and raised
+me (thank God) above superstitions of all sorts. However, a very little
+amused me in those days; and I waited to have my fortune told, as
+patiently as if I believed in it too!</p>
+
+<p>My aunt began her hocus pocus by throwing out all the cards in the pack
+under seven. She shuffled the rest with her left hand for luck; and then
+she gave them to me to cut. &quot;Wi' yer left hand, Francie. Mind that! Pet
+your trust in Proavidence&mdash;but dinna forget that your luck's in yer left
+hand!&quot; A long and roundabout shifting of the cards followed, reducing them
+in number until there were just fifteen of them left, laid out neatly
+before my aunt in a half circle. The card which happened to lie outermost,
+at the right-hand end of the circle, was, according to rule in such cases,
+the card chosen to represent Me. By way of being appropriate to my
+situation as a poor groom out of employment, the card was&mdash;the King of
+Diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I tak' up the King o' Diamants,&quot; says my aunt. &quot;I count seven cairds fra'
+richt to left; and I humbly ask a blessing on what follows.&quot; My aunt shut
+her eyes as if she was saying grace before meat, and held up to me the
+seventh card. I called the seventh card&mdash;the Queen of Spades. My aunt
+opened her eyes again in a hurry, and cast a sly look my way. &quot;The Queen
+o' Spades means a dairk woman. Ye'll be thinking in secret, Francie, of a
+dairk woman?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>When a man has been out of work for more than three months, his mind isn't
+troubled much with thinking of women&mdash;light or dark. I was thinking of the
+groom's place at the great house, and I tried to say so. My aunt Chance
+wouldn't listen. She treated my interpretation with contempt. &quot;Hoot-toot!
+there's the caird in your hand! If ye're no thinking of her the day, ye'll
+be thinking of her the morrow. Where's the harm of thinking of a dairk
+woman! I was ance a dairk woman myself, before my hair was gray. Haud yer
+peace, Francie, and watch the cairds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I watched the cards as I was told. There were seven left on the table. My
+aunt removed two from one end of the row and two from the other, and
+desired me to call the two outermost of the three cards now left on the
+table. I called the Ace of Clubs and the Ten of Diamonds. My aunt Chance
+lifted her eyes to the ceiling with a look of devout gratitude which
+sorely tried my mother's patience. The Ace of Clubs and the Ten of
+Diamonds, taken together, signified&mdash;first, good news (evidently the news
+of the groom's place); secondly, a journey that lay before me (pointing
+plainly to my journey to-morrow!); thirdly and lastly, a sum of money
+(probably the groom's wages!) waiting to find its way into my pockets.
+Having told my fortune in these encouraging terms, my aunt declined to
+carry the experiment any further. &quot;Eh, lad! it's a clean tempting o'
+Proavidence to ask mair o' the cairds than the cairds have tauld us noo.
+Gae yer ways to-morrow to the great hoose. A dairk woman will meet ye at
+the gate; and she'll have a hand in getting ye the groom's place, wi' a'
+the gratifications and pairquisites appertaining to the same. And, mebbe,
+when yer poaket's full o' money, ye'll no' be forgetting yer aunt Chance,
+maintaining her ain unblemished widowhood&mdash;wi' Proavidence assisting&mdash;on
+thratty punds a year!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I promised to remember my aunt Chance (who had the defect, by the way, of
+being a terribly greedy person after money) on the next happy occasion
+when my poor empty pockets were to be filled at last. This done, I looked
+at my mother. She had agreed to take her sister for umpire between us, and
+her sister had given it in my favor. She raised no more objections.
+Silently, she got on her feet, and kissed me, and sighed bitterly&mdash;and so
+left the room. My aunt Chance shook her head. &quot;I doubt, Francie, yer puir
+mither has but a heathen notion of the vairtue of the cairds!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>By daylight the next morning I set forth on my journey. I looked back at
+the cottage as I opened the garden gate. At one window was my mother, with
+her handkerchief to her eyes. At the other stood my aunt Chance, holding
+up the Queen of Spades by way of encouraging me at starting. I waved my
+hands to both of them in token of farewell, and stepped out briskly into
+the road. It was then the last day of February. Be pleased to remember, in
+connection with this, that the first of March was the day, and two o'clock
+in the morning the hour of my birth.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>V</h2>
+
+
+<p>Now you know how I came to leave home. The next thing to tell is, what
+happened on the journey.</p>
+
+<p>I reached the great house in reasonably good time considering the
+distance. At the very first trial of it, the prophecy of the cards turned
+out to be wrong. The person who met me at the lodge gate was not a dark
+woman&mdash;in fact, not a woman at all&mdash;but a boy. He directed me on the way
+to the servants' offices; and there again the cards were all wrong. I
+encountered, not one woman, but three&mdash;and not one of the three was dark.
+I have stated that I am not superstitious, and I have told the truth. But
+I must own that I did feel a certain fluttering at the heart when I made
+my bow to the steward, and told him what business had brought me to the
+house. His answer completed the discomfiture of aunt Chance's
+fortune-telling. My ill-luck still pursued me. That very morning another
+man had applied for the groom's place, and had got it.</p>
+
+<p>I swallowed my disappointment as well as I could, and thanked the steward,
+and went to the inn in the village to get the rest and food which I sorely
+needed by this time.</p>
+
+<p>Before starting on my homeward walk I made some inquiries at the inn, and
+ascertained that I might save a few miles, on my return, by following a
+new road. Furnished with full instructions, several times repeated, as to
+the various turnings I was to take, I set forth, and walked on till the
+evening with only one stoppage for bread and cheese. Just as it was
+getting toward dark, the rain came on and the wind began to rise; and I
+found myself, to make matters worse, in a part of the country with which I
+was entirely unacquainted, though I guessed myself to be some fifteen
+miles from home. The first house I found to inquire at, was a lonely
+roadside inn, standing on the outskirts of a thick wood. Solitary as the
+place looked, it was welcome to a lost man who was also hungry, thirsty,
+footsore, and wet. The landlord was civil and respectable-looking; and the
+price he asked for a bed was reasonable enough. I was grieved to
+disappoint my mother. But there was no conveyance to be had, and I could
+go no farther afoot that night. My weariness fairly forced me to stop at
+the inn.</p>
+
+<p>I may say for myself that I am a temperate man. My supper simply consisted
+of some rashers of bacon, a slice of home-made bread, and a pint of ale. I
+did not go to bed immediately after this moderate meal, but sat up with
+the landlord, talking about my bad prospects and my long run of ill-luck,
+and diverging from these topics to the subjects of horse-flesh and racing.
+Nothing was said, either by myself, my host, or the few laborers who
+strayed into the tap-room, which could, in the slightest degree, excite
+my mind, or set my fancy&mdash;which is only a small fancy at the best of
+times&mdash;playing tricks with my common sense.</p>
+
+<p>At a little after eleven the house was closed. I went round with the
+landlord, and held the candle while the doors and lower windows were being
+secured. I noticed with surprise the strength of the bolts, bars, and
+iron-sheathed shutters.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see, we are rather lonely here,&quot; said the landlord. &quot;We never have
+had any attempts to break in yet, but it's always as well to be on the
+safe side. When nobody is sleeping here, I am the only man in the house.
+My wife and daughter are timid, and the servant girl takes after her
+missuses. Another glass of ale, before you turn in?&mdash;No!&mdash;Well, how such a
+sober man as you comes to be out of a place is more than I can understand
+for one.&mdash;Here's where you're to sleep. You're the only lodger to-night,
+and I think you'll say my missus has done her best to make you
+comfortable. You're quite sure you won't have another glass of ale?&mdash;Very
+well. Good night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was half-past eleven by the clock in the passage as we went upstairs to
+the bedroom. The window looked out on the wood at the back of the house.</p>
+
+<p>I locked my door, set my candle on the chest of drawers, and wearily got
+me ready for bed. The bleak wind was still blowing, and the solemn,
+surging moan of it in the wood was very dreary to hear through the night
+silence. Feeling strangely wakeful, I resolved to keep the candle alight
+until I began to grow sleepy. The truth is, I was not quite myself. I was
+depressed in mind by my disappointment of the morning; and I was worn out
+in body by my long walk. Between the two, I own I couldn't face the
+prospect of lying awake in the darkness, listening to the dismal moan of
+the wind in the wood.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep stole on me before I was aware of it; my eyes closed, and I fell off
+to rest, without having so much as thought of extinguishing the candle.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing that I remember was a faint shivering that ran through me
+from head to foot, and a dreadful sinking pain at my heart, such as I had
+never felt before. The shivering only disturbed my slumbers&mdash;the pain woke
+me instantly. In one moment I passed from a state of sleep to a state of
+wakefulness&mdash;my eyes wide open&mdash;my mind clear on a sudden as if by a
+miracle. The candle had burned down nearly to the last morsel of tallow,
+but the unsnuffed wick had just fallen off, and the light was, for the
+moment, fair and full.</p>
+
+<p>Between the foot of the bed and the closet door, I saw a person in my
+room. The person was a woman, standing looking at me, with a knife in her
+hand. It does no credit to my courage to confess it&mdash;but the truth <i>is</i>
+the truth. I was struck speechless with terror. There I lay with my eyes
+on the woman; there the woman stood (with the knife in her hand) with
+<i>her</i> eyes on <i>me</i>.</p>
+
+<p>She said not a word as we stared each other in the face; but she moved
+after a little&mdash;moved slowly toward the left-hand side of the bed.</p>
+
+<p>The light fell full on her face. A fair, fine woman, with yellowish flaxen
+hair, and light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. I noticed
+these things and fixed them in my mind, before she was quite round at the
+side of the bed. Without saying a word; without any change in the stony
+stillness of her face; without any noise following her footfall, she came
+closer and closer; stopped at the bed-head; and lifted the knife to stab
+me. I laid my arm over my throat to save it; but, as I saw the blow
+coming, I threw my hand across the bed to the right side, and jerked my
+body over that way, just as the knife came down, like lightning, within a
+hair's breadth of my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>My eyes fixed on her arm and her hand&mdash;she gave me time to look at them as
+she slowly drew the knife out of the bed. A white, well-shaped arm, with a
+pretty down lying lightly over the fair skin. A delicate lady's hand, with
+a pink flush round the finger nails.</p>
+
+<p>She drew the knife out, and passed back again slowly to the foot of the
+bed; she stopped there for a moment looking at me; then she came on
+without saying a word; without any change in the stony stillness of her
+face; without any noise following her footfall&mdash;came on to the side of the
+bed where I now lay.</p>
+
+<p>Getting near me, she lifted the knife again, and I drew myself away to the
+left side. She struck, as before right into the mattress, with a swift
+downward action of her arm; and she missed me, as before; by a hair's
+breadth. This time my eyes wandered from <i>her</i> to the knife. It was like
+the large clasp knives which laboring men use to cut their bread and bacon
+with. Her delicate little fingers did not hide more than two thirds of the
+handle; I noticed that it was made of buckhorn, clean and shining as the
+blade was, and looking like new.</p>
+
+<p>For the second time she drew the knife out of the bed, and suddenly hid it
+away in the wide sleeve of her gown. That done, she stopped by the bedside
+watching me. For an instant I saw her standing in that position&mdash;then the
+wick of the spent candle fell over into the socket. The flame dwindled to
+a little blue point, and the room grew dark.</p>
+
+<p>A moment, or less, if possible, passed so&mdash;and then the wick flared up,
+smokily, for the last time. My eyes were still looking for her over the
+right-hand side of the bed when the last flash of light came. Look as I
+might, I could see nothing. The woman with the knife was gone.</p>
+
+<p>I began to get back to myself again. I could feel my heart beating; I
+could hear the woeful moaning of the wind in the wood; I could leap up in
+bed, and give the alarm before she escaped from the house. &quot;Murder! Wake
+up there! Murder!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Nobody answered to the alarm. I rose and groped my way through the
+darkness to the door of the room. By that way she must have got in. By
+that way she must have gone out.</p>
+
+<p>The door of the room was fast locked, exactly as I had left it on going to
+bed! I looked at the window. Fast locked too!</p>
+
+<p>Hearing a voice outside, I opened the door. There was the landlord, coming
+toward me along the passage, with his burning candle in one hand, and his
+gun in the other.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it?&quot; he says, looking at me in no very friendly way.</p>
+
+<p>I could only answer in a whisper, &quot;A woman, with a knife in her hand. In
+my room. A fair, yellow-haired woman. She jabbed at me with the knife,
+twice over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He lifted his candle, and looked at me steadily from head to foot. &quot;She
+seems to have missed you&mdash;twice over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I dodged the knife as it came down. It struck the bed each time. Go in,
+and see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The landlord took his candle into the bedroom immediately. In less than a
+minute he came out again into the passage in a violent passion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The devil fly away with you and your woman with the knife! There isn't a
+mark in the bedclothes anywhere. What do you mean by coming into a man's
+place and frightening his family out of their wits by a dream?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A dream? The woman who had tried to stab me, not a living human being like
+myself? I began to shake and shiver. The horrors got hold of me at the
+bare thought of it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll leave the house,&quot; I said. &quot;Better be out on the road in the rain and
+dark, than back in that room, after what I've seen in it. Lend me the
+light to get my clothes by, and tell me what I'm to pay.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The landlord led the way back with his light into the bedroom. &quot;Pay?&quot; says
+he. &quot;You'll find your score on the slate when you go downstairs. I
+wouldn't have taken you in for all the money you've got about you, if I
+had known your dreaming, screeching ways beforehand. Look at the
+bed&mdash;where's the cut of a knife in it? Look at the window&mdash;is the lock
+bursted? Look at the door (which I heard you fasten yourself)&mdash;is it broke
+in? A murdering woman with a knife in my house! You ought to be ashamed of
+yourself!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My eyes followed his hand as it pointed first to the bed&mdash;then to the
+window&mdash;then to the door. There was no gainsaying it. The bed sheet was as
+sound as on the day it was made. The window was fast. The door hung on its
+hinges as steady as ever. I huddled my clothes on without speaking. We
+went downstairs together. I looked at the clock in the bar-room. The time
+was twenty minutes past two in the morning. I paid my bill, and the
+landlord let me out. The rain had ceased; but the night was dark, and the
+wind was bleaker than ever. Little did the darkness, or the cold, or the
+doubt about the way home matter to <i>me</i>. My mind was away from all these
+things. My mind was fixed on the vision in the bedroom. What had I seen
+trying to murder me? The creature of a dream? Or that other creature from
+the world beyond the grave, whom men call ghost? I could make nothing of
+it as I walked along in the night; I had made nothing by it by
+midday&mdash;when I stood at last, after many times missing my road, on the
+doorstep of home.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VI</h2>
+
+
+<p>My mother came out alone to welcome me back. There were no secrets between
+us two. I told her all that had happened, just as I have told it to you.
+She kept silence till I had done. And then she put a question to me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What time was it, Francis, when you saw the Woman in your Dream?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had looked at the clock when I left the inn, and I had noticed that the
+hands pointed to twenty minutes past two. Allowing for the time consumed
+in speaking to the landlord, and in getting on my clothes, I answered that
+I must have first seen the Woman at two o'clock in the morning. In other
+words, I had not only seen her on my birthday, but at the hour of my
+birth.</p>
+
+<p>My mother still kept silence. Lost in her own thoughts, she took me by the
+hand, and led me into the parlor. Her writing-desk was on the table by
+the fireplace. She opened it, and signed to me to take a chair by her
+side.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My son! your memory is a bad one, and mine is fast failing me. Tell me
+again what the Woman looked like. I want her to be as well known to both
+of us, years hence, as she is now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I obeyed; wondering what strange fancy might be working in her mind. I
+spoke; and she wrote the words as they fell from my lips:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair, with a
+golden-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon them. Little,
+lady's hands, with a rosy-red look about the finger nails.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you notice how she was dressed, Francis?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you notice the knife?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes. A large clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, as good as new.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My mother added the description of the knife. Also the year, month, day of
+the week, and hour of the day when the Dream-Woman appeared to me at the
+inn. That done, she locked up the paper in her desk.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a word, Francis, to your aunt. Not a word to any living soul. Keep
+your Dream a secret between you and me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The weeks passed, and the months passed. My mother never returned to the
+subject again. As for me, time, which wears out all things, wore out my
+remembrance of the Dream. Little by little, the image of the Woman grew
+dimmer and dimmer. Little by little, she faded out of my mind.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VII</h2>
+
+
+<p>The story of the warning is now told. Judge for yourself if it was a true
+warning or a false, when you hear what happened to me on my next birthday.</p>
+
+<p>In the Summer time of the year, the Wheel of Fortune turned the right way
+for me at last. I was smoking my pipe one day, near an old stone quarry at
+the entrance to our village, when a carriage accident happened, which gave
+a new turn, as it were, to my lot in life. It was an accident of the
+commonest kind&mdash;not worth mentioning at any length. A lady driving
+herself; a runaway horse; a cowardly man-servant in attendance, frightened
+out of his wits; and the stone quarry too near to be agreeable&mdash;that is
+what I saw, all in a few moments, between two whiffs of my pipe. I stopped
+the horse at the edge of the quarry, and got myself a little hurt by the
+shaft of the chaise. But that didn't matter. The lady declared I had saved
+her life; and her husband, coming with her to our cottage the next day,
+took me into his service then and there. The lady happened to be of a dark
+complexion; and it may amuse you to hear that my aunt Chance instantly
+pitched on that circumstance as a means of saving the credit of the cards.
+Here was the promise of the Queen of Spades performed to the very letter,
+by means of &quot;a dark woman,&quot; just as my aunt had told me. &quot;In the time to
+come, Francis, beware o' pettin' yer ain blinded intairpretation on the
+cairds. Ye're ower ready, I trow, to murmur under dispensation of
+Proavidence that ye canna fathom&mdash;like the Eesraelites of auld. I'll say
+nae mair to ye. Mebbe when the mony's powering into yer poakets, ye'll no
+forget yer aunt Chance, left like a sparrow on the housetop, wi' a sma'
+annuitee o' thratty punds a year.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I remained in my situation (at the West-end of London) until the Spring of
+the New Year. About that time, my master's health failed. The doctors
+ordered him away to foreign parts, and the establishment was broken up.
+But the turn in my luck still held good. When I left my place, I left
+it&mdash;thanks to the generosity of my kind master&mdash;with a yearly allowance
+granted to me, in remembrance of the day when I had saved my mistress's
+life. For the future, I could go back to service or not, as I pleased; my
+little income was enough to support my mother and myself.</p>
+
+<p>My master and mistress left England toward the end of February. Certain
+matters of business to do for them detained me in London until the last
+day of the month. I was only able to leave for our village by the evening
+train, to keep my birthday with my mother as usual. It was bedtime when I
+got to the cottage; and I was sorry to find that she was far from well. To
+make matters worse, she had finished her bottle of medicine on the
+previous day, and had omitted to get it replenished, as the doctor had
+strictly directed. He dispensed his own medicines, and I offered to go and
+knock him up. She refused to let me do this; and, after giving me my
+supper, sent me away to my bed.</p>
+
+<p>I fell asleep for a little, and woke again. My mother's bed-chamber was
+next to mine. I heard my aunt Chance's heavy footsteps going to and fro in
+the room, and, suspecting something wrong, knocked at the door. My
+mother's pains had returned upon her; there was a serious necessity for
+relieving her sufferings as speedily as possible, I put on my clothes, and
+ran off, with the medicine bottle in my hand, to the other end of the
+village, where the doctor lived. The church clock chimed the quarter to
+two on my birthday just as I reached his house. One ring of the night bell
+brought him to his bedroom window to speak to me. He told me to wait, and
+he would let me in at the surgery door. I noticed, while I was waiting,
+that the night was wonderfully fair and warm for the time of year. The old
+stone quarry where the carriage accident had happened was within view. The
+moon in the clear heavens lit it up almost as bright as day.</p>
+
+<p>In a minute or two the doctor let me into the surgery. I closed the door,
+noticing that he had left his room very lightly clad. He kindly pardoned
+my mother's neglect of his directions, and set to work at once at
+compounding the medicine. We were both intent on the bottle; he filling
+it, and I holding the light&mdash;when we heard the surgery door suddenly
+opened from the street.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>Who could possibly be up and about in our quiet village at the second hour
+of the morning?</p>
+
+<p>The person who opened the door appeared within range of the light of the
+candle. To complete our amazement, the person proved to be a woman! She
+walked up to the counter, and standing side by side with me, lifted her
+veil. At the moment when she showed her face, I heard the church clock
+strike two. She was a stranger to me, and a stranger to the doctor. She
+was also, beyond all comparison, the most beautiful woman I have ever seen
+in my life.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I saw the light under the door,&quot; she said. &quot;I want some medicine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She spoke quite composedly, as if there was nothing at all extraordinary
+in her being out in the village at two in the morning, and following me
+into the surgery to ask for medicine! The doctor stared at her as if he
+suspected his own eyes of deceiving him. &quot;Who are you?&quot; he asked. &quot;How do
+you come to be wandering about at this time in the morning?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She paid no heed to his questions. She only told him coolly what she
+wanted. &quot;I have got a bad toothache. I want a bottle of laudanum.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor recovered himself when she asked for the laudanum. He was on
+his own ground, you know, when it came to a matter of laudanum; and he
+spoke to her smartly enough this time.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you have got the toothache, have you? Let me look at the tooth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head, and laid a two-shilling piece on the counter. &quot;I won't
+trouble you to look at the tooth,&quot; she said. &quot;There is the money. Let me
+have the laudanum, if you please.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor put the two-shilling piece back again in her hand. &quot;I don't
+sell laudanum to strangers,&quot; he answered. &quot;If you are in any distress of
+body or mind, that is another matter. I shall be glad to help you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She put the money back in her pocket. &quot;<i>You</i> can't help me,&quot; she said, as
+quietly as ever. &quot;Good morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With that, she opened the surgery door to go out again into the street. So
+far, I had not spoken a word on my side. I had stood with the candle in my
+hand (not knowing I was holding it)&mdash;with my eyes fixed on her, with my
+mind fixed on her like a man bewitched. Her looks betrayed, even more
+plainly than her words, her resolution, in one way or another, to destroy
+herself. When she opened the door, in my alarm at what might happen I
+found the use of my tongue.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stop!&quot; I cried out. &quot;Wait for me. I want to speak to you before you go
+away.&quot; She lifted her eyes with a look of careless surprise and a mocking
+smile on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What can <i>you</i> have to say to me?&quot; She stopped, and laughed to herself.
+&quot;Why not?&quot; she said. &quot;I have got nothing to do, and nowhere to go.&quot; She
+turned back a step, and nodded to me. &quot;You're a strange man&mdash;I think I'll
+humor you&mdash;I'll wait outside.&quot; The door of the surgery closed on her. She
+was gone.</p>
+
+<p>I am ashamed to own what happened next. The only excuse for me is that I
+was really and truly a man bewitched. I turned me round to follow her out,
+without once thinking of my mother. The doctor stopped me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't forget the medicine,&quot; he said. &quot;And if you will take my advice,
+don't trouble yourself about that woman. Rouse up the constable. It's his
+business to look after her&mdash;not yours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I held out my hand for the medicine in silence: I was afraid I should fail
+in respect if I trusted myself to answer him. He must have seen, as I saw,
+that she wanted the laudanum to poison herself. He had, to my mind, taken
+a very heartless view of the matter. I just thanked him when he gave me
+the medicine&mdash;and went out.</p>
+
+<p>She was waiting for me as she had promised; walking slowly to and fro&mdash;a
+tall, graceful, solitary figure in the bright moonbeams. They shed over
+her fair complexion, her bright golden hair, her large gray eyes, just the
+light that suited them best. She looked hardly mortal when she first
+turned to speak to me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well?&quot; she said. &quot;And what do you want?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In spite of my pride, or my shyness, or my better sense&mdash;whichever it
+might me&mdash;all my heart went out to her in a moment. I caught hold of her
+by the hands, and owned what was in my thoughts, as freely as if I had
+known her for half a lifetime.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You mean to destroy yourself,&quot; I said. &quot;And I mean to prevent you from
+doing it. If I follow you about all night, I'll prevent you from doing
+it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She laughed. &quot;You saw yourself that he wouldn't sell me the laudanum. Do
+you really care whether I live or die?&quot; She squeezed my hands gently as
+she put the question: her eyes searched mine with a languid, lingering
+look in them that ran through me like fire. My voice died away on my lips;
+I couldn't answer her.</p>
+
+<p>She understood, without my answering. &quot;You have given me a fancy for
+living, by speaking kindly to me,&quot; she said. &quot;Kindness has a wonderful
+effect on women, and dogs, and other domestic animals. It is only men who
+are superior to kindness. Make your mind easy&mdash;I promise to take as much
+care of myself as if I was the happiest woman living! Don't let me keep
+you here, out of your bed. Which way are you going?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Miserable wretch that I was, I had forgotten my mother&mdash;with the medicine
+in my hand! &quot;I am going home,&quot; I said. &quot;Where are you staying? At the
+inn?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She laughed her bitter laugh, and pointed to the stone quarry. &quot;There is
+my inn for to-night,&quot; she said. &quot;When I got tired of walking about, I
+rested there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We walked on together, on my way home. I took the liberty of asking her if
+she had any friends.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought I had one friend left,&quot; she said, &quot;or you would never have met
+me in this place. It turns out I was wrong. My friend's door was closed in
+my face some hours since; my friend's servants threatened me with the
+police. I had nowhere else to go, after trying my luck in your
+neighborhood; and nothing left but my two-shilling piece and these rags on
+my back. What respectable innkeeper would take <i>me</i> into his house? I
+walked about, wondering how I could find my way out of the world without
+disfiguring myself, and without suffering much pain. You have no river in
+these parts. I didn't see my way out of the world, till I heard you
+ringing at the doctor's house. I got a glimpse at the bottles in the
+surgery, when he let you in, and I thought of the laudanum directly. What
+were you doing there? Who is that medicine for? Your wife?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not married!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She laughed again. &quot;Not married! If I was a little better dressed there
+might be a chance for ME. Where do you live? Here?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We had arrived, by this time, at my mother's door. She held out her hand
+to say good-by. Houseless and homeless as she was, she never asked me to
+give her a shelter for the night. It was my proposal that she should rest,
+under my roof, unknown to my mother and my aunt. Our kitchen was built out
+at the back of the cottage: she might remain there unseen and unheard
+until the household was astir in the morning. I led her into the kitchen,
+and set a chair for her by the dying embers of the fire. I dare say I was
+to blame&mdash;shamefully to blame, if you like. I only wonder what <i>you</i> would
+have done in my place. On your word of honor as a man, would <i>you</i> have
+let that beautiful creature wander back to the shelter of the stone quarry
+like a stray dog? God help the woman who is foolish enough to trust and
+love you, if you would have done that!</p>
+
+<p>I left her by the fire, and went to my mother's room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IX</h2>
+
+
+<p>If you have ever felt the heartache, you will know what I suffered in
+secret when my mother took my hand, and said, &quot;I am sorry, Francis, that
+your night's rest has been disturbed through <i>me</i>.&quot; I gave her the
+medicine; and I waited by her till the pains abated. My aunt Chance went
+back to her bed; and my mother and I were left alone. I noticed that her
+writing-desk, moved from its customary place, was on the bed by her side.
+She saw me looking at it. &quot;This is your birthday, Francis,&quot; she said.
+&quot;Have you anything to tell me?&quot; I had so completely forgotten my Dream,
+that I had no notion of what was passing in her mind when she said those
+words. For a moment there was a guilty fear in me that she suspected
+something. I turned away my face, and said, &quot;No, mother; I have nothing to
+tell.&quot; She signed to me to stoop down over the pillow and kiss her. &quot;God
+bless you, my love!&quot; she said; &quot;and many happy returns of the day.&quot; She
+patted my hand, and closed her weary eyes, and, little by little, fell off
+peaceably into sleep.</p>
+
+<p>I stole downstairs again. I think the good influence of my mother must
+have followed me down. At any rate, this is true: I stopped with my hand
+on the closed kitchen door, and said to myself: &quot;Suppose I leave the
+house, and leave the village, without seeing her or speaking to her more?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Should I really have fled from temptation in this way, if I had been left
+to myself to decide? Who can tell? As things were, I was not left to
+decide. While my doubt was in my mind, she heard me, and opened the
+kitchen door. My eyes and her eyes met. That ended it.</p>
+
+<p>We were together, unsuspected and undisturbed, for the next two hours.
+Time enough for her to reveal the secret of her wasted life. Time enough
+for her to take possession of me as her own, to do with me as she liked.
+It is needless to dwell here on the misfortunes which had brought her
+low; they are misfortunes too common to interest anybody.</p>
+
+<p>Her name was Alicia Warlock. She had been born and bred a lady. She had
+lost her station, her character, and her friends. Virtue shuddered at the
+sight of her; and Vice had got her for the rest of her days. Shocking and
+common, as I told you. It made no difference to <i>me</i>. I have said it
+already&mdash;I say it again&mdash;I was a man bewitched. Is there anything so very
+wonderful in that? Just remember who I was. Among the honest women in my
+own station in life, where could I have found the like of <i>her</i>? Could
+<i>they</i> walk as she walked? and look as she looked? When <i>they</i> gave me a
+kiss, did their lips linger over it as hers did? Had <i>they</i> her skin, her
+laugh, her foot, her hand, her touch? <i>She</i> never had a speck of dirt on
+her: I tell you her flesh was a perfume. When she embraced me, her arms
+folded round me like the wings of angels; and her smile covered me softly
+with its light like the sun in heaven. I leave you to laugh at me, or to
+cry over me, just as your temper may incline. I am not trying to excuse
+myself&mdash;I am trying to explain. You are gentle-folks; what dazzled and
+maddened <i>me</i>, is everyday experience to <i>you</i>. Fallen or not, angel or
+devil, it came to this&mdash;she was a lady; and I was a groom.</p>
+
+<p>Before the house was astir, I got her away (by the workmen's train) to a
+large manufacturing town in our parts.</p>
+
+<p>Here&mdash;with my savings in money to help her&mdash;she could get her outfit of
+decent clothes and her lodging among strangers who asked no questions so
+long as they were paid. Here&mdash;now on one pretense and now on another&mdash;I
+could visit her, and we could both plan together what our future lives
+were to be. I need not tell you that I stood pledged to make her my wife.
+A man in my station always marries a woman of her sort.</p>
+
+<p>Do you wonder if I was happy at this time? I should have been perfectly
+happy but for one little drawback. It was this: I was never quite at my
+ease in the presence of my promised wife.</p>
+
+<p>I don't mean that I was shy with her, or suspicious of her, or ashamed of
+her. The uneasiness I am speaking of was caused by a faint doubt in my
+mind whether I had not seen her somewhere, before the morning when we met
+at the doctor's house. Over and over again, I found myself wondering
+whether her face did not remind me of some other face&mdash;<i>what</i> other I
+never could tell. This strange feeling, this one question that could never
+be answered, vexed me to a degree that you would hardly credit. It came
+between us at the strangest times&mdash;oftenest, however, at night, when the
+candles were lit. You have known what it is to try and remember a
+forgotten name&mdash;and to fail, search as you may, to find it in your mind.
+That was my case. I failed to find my lost face, just as you failed to
+find your lost name.</p>
+
+<p>In three weeks we had talked matters over, and had arranged how I was to
+make a clean breast of it at home. By Alicia's advice, I was to describe
+her as having been one of my fellow servants during the time I was
+employed under my kind master and mistress in London. There was no fear
+now of my mother taking any harm from the shock of a great surprise. Her
+health had improved during the three weeks' interval. On the first evening
+when she was able to take her old place at tea time, I summoned my
+courage, and told her I was going to be married. The poor soul flung her
+arms round my neck, and burst out crying for joy. &quot;Oh, Francis!&quot; she says,
+&quot;I am so glad you will have somebody to comfort you and care for you when
+I am gone!&quot; As for my aunt Chance, you can anticipate what <i>she</i> did,
+without being told. Ah, me! If there had really been any prophetic virtue
+in the cards, what a terrible warning they might have given us that night!
+It was arranged that I was to bring my promised wife to dinner at the
+cottage on the next day.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>X</h2>
+
+
+<p>I own I was proud of Alicia when I led her into our little parlor at the
+appointed time. She had never, to my mind, looked so beautiful as she
+looked that day. I never noticed any other woman's dress&mdash;I noticed hers
+as carefully as if I had been a woman myself! She wore a black silk gown,
+with plain collar and cuffs, and a modest lavender-colored bonnet, with
+one white rose in it placed at the side. My mother, dressed in her Sunday
+best, rose up, all in a flutter, to welcome her daughter-in-law that was
+to be. She walked forward a few steps, half smiling, half in tears&mdash;she
+looked Alicia full in the face&mdash;and suddenly stood still. Her cheeks
+turned white in an instant; her eyes stared in horror; her hands dropped
+helplessly at her sides. She staggered back, and fell into the arms of my
+aunt, standing behind her. It was no swoon&mdash;she kept her senses. Her eyes
+turned slowly from Alicia to me. &quot;Francis,&quot; she said, &quot;does that woman's
+face remind you of nothing?&quot;.</p>
+
+<p>Before I could answer, she pointed to her writing-desk on the table at the
+fireside. &quot;Bring it!&quot; she cried, &quot;bring it!&quot;.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment I felt Alicia's hand on my shoulder, and saw Alicia's
+face red with anger&mdash;and no wonder!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What does this mean?&quot; she asked. &quot;Does your mother want to insult me?&quot;.</p>
+
+<p>I said a few words to quiet her; what they were I don't remember&mdash;I was so
+confused and astonished at the time. Before I had done, I heard my mother
+behind me.</p>
+
+<p>My aunt had fetched her desk. She had opened it; she had taken a paper
+from it. Step by step, helping herself along by the wall, she came nearer
+and nearer, with the paper in her hand. She looked at the paper&mdash;she
+looked in Alicia's face&mdash;she lifted the long, loose sleeve of her gown,
+and examined her hand and arm. I saw fear suddenly take the place of anger
+in Alicia's eyes. She shook herself free of my mother's grasp. &quot;Mad!&quot; she
+said to herself, &quot;and Francis never told me!&quot; With those words she ran out
+of the room.</p>
+
+<p>I was hastening out after her, when my mother signed to me to stop. She
+read the words written on the paper. While they fell slowly, one by one,
+from her lips, she pointed toward the open door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair, with a
+gold-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon them. Little,
+lady's hand, with a rosy-red look about the finger nails. The Dream Woman,
+Francis! The Dream Woman!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Something darkened the parlor window as those words were spoken. I looked
+sidelong at the shadow. Alicia Warlock had come back! She was peering in
+at us over the low window blind. There was the fatal face which had first
+looked at me in the bedroom of the lonely inn. There, resting on the
+window blind, was the lovely little hand which had held the murderous
+knife. I <i>had</i> seen her before we met in the village. The Dream Woman! The
+Dream Woman!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>XI</h2>
+
+
+<p>I expect nobody to approve of what I have next to tell of myself. In three
+weeks from the day when my mother had identified her with the Woman of the
+Dream, I took Alicia Warlock to church, and made her my wife. I was a man
+bewitched. Again and again I say it&mdash;I was a man bewitched!</p>
+
+<p>During the interval before my marriage, our little household at the
+cottage was broken up. My mother and my aunt quarreled. My mother,
+believing in the Dream, entreated me to break off my engagement. My aunt,
+believing in the cards, urged me to marry.</p>
+
+<p>This difference of opinion produced a dispute between them, in the course
+of which my aunt Chance&mdash;quite unconscious of having any superstitious
+feelings of her own&mdash;actually set out the cards which prophesied
+happiness to me in my married life, and asked my mother how anybody but &quot;a
+blinded heathen could be fule enough, after seeing those cairds, to
+believe in a dream!&quot; This was, naturally, too much for my mother's
+patience; hard words followed on either side; Mrs. Chance returned in
+dudgeon to her friends in Scotland. She left me a written statement of my
+future prospects, as revealed by the cards, and with it an address at
+which a post-office order would reach her. &quot;The day was not that far off,&quot;
+she remarked, &quot;when Francie might remember what he owed to his aunt
+Chance, maintaining her ain unbleemished widowhood on thratty punds a
+year.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Having refused to give her sanction to my marriage, my mother also refused
+to be present at the wedding, or to visit Alicia afterwards. There was no
+anger at the bottom of this conduct on her part. Believing as she did in
+this Dream, she was simply in mortal fear of my wife. I understood this,
+and I made allowances for her. Not a cross word passed between us. My one
+happy remembrance now&mdash;though I did disobey her in the matter of my
+marriage&mdash;is this: I loved and respected my good mother to the last.</p>
+
+<p>As for my wife, she expressed no regret at the estrangement between her
+mother-in-law and herself. By common consent, we never spoke on that
+subject. We settled in the manufacturing town which I have already
+mentioned, and we kept a lodging-house. My kind master, at my request,
+granted me a lump sum in place of my annuity. This put us into a good
+house, decently furnished. For a while things went well enough. I may
+describe myself at this time of my life as a happy man.</p>
+
+<p>My misfortunes began with a return of the complaint with which my mother
+had already suffered. The doctor confessed, when I asked him the question,
+that there was danger to be dreaded this time. Naturally, after hearing
+this, I was a good deal away at the cottage. Naturally also, I left the
+business of looking after the house, in my absence, to my wife. Little by
+little, I found her beginning to alter toward me. While my back was
+turned, she formed acquaintances with people of the doubtful and
+dissipated sort. One day, I observed something in her manner which forced
+the suspicion on me that she had been drinking. Before the week was out,
+my suspicion was a certainty. From keeping company with drunkards, she had
+grown to be a drunkard herself.</p>
+
+<p>I did all a man could do to reclaim her. Quite useless! She had never
+really returned the love I felt for her: I had no influence; I could do
+nothing. My mother, hearing of this last worse trouble, resolved to try
+what her influence could do. Ill as she was, I found her one day dressed
+to go out.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not long for this world, Francis,&quot; she said. &quot;I shall not feel easy
+on my deathbed, unless I have done my best to the last to make you happy.
+I mean to put my own fears and my own feelings out of the question, and go
+with you to your wife, and try what I can do to reclaim her. Take me home
+with you, Francis. Let me do all I can to help my son, before it is too
+late.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>How could I disobey her? We took the railway to the town: it was only half
+an hour's ride. By one o'clock in the afternoon we reached my house. It
+was our dinner hour, and Alicia was in the kitchen. I was able to take my
+mother quietly into the parlor and then to prepare my wife for the visit.
+She had drunk but little at that early hour; and, luckily, the devil in
+her was tamed for the time.</p>
+
+<p>She followed me into the parlor, and the meeting passed off better than I
+had ventured to forecast; with this one drawback, that my mother&mdash;though
+she tried hard to control herself&mdash;shrank from looking my wife in the face
+when she spoke to her. It was a relief to me when Alicia began to prepare
+the table for dinner.</p>
+
+<p>She laid the cloth, brought in the bread tray, and cut some slices for us
+from the loaf. Then she returned to the kitchen. At that moment, while I
+was still anxiously watching my mother, I was startled by seeing the same
+ghastly change pass over her face which had altered it in the morning
+when Alicia and she first met. Before I could say a word, she started up
+with a look of horror.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Take me back!&mdash;home, home again, Francis! Come with me, and never go back
+more!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was afraid to ask for an explanation; I could only sign her to be
+silent, and help her quickly to the door. As we passed the bread tray on
+the table, she stopped and pointed to it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you see what your wife cut your bread with?&quot; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, mother; I was not noticing. What was it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did look. A new clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, lay with the loaf
+in the bread tray. I stretched out my hand to possess myself of it. At the
+same moment, there was a noise in the kitchen, and my mother caught me by
+the arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The knife of the Dream! Francis, I'm faint with fear&mdash;take me away before
+she comes back!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't speak to comfort or even to answer her. Superior as I was to
+superstition, the discovery of the knife staggered me. In silence, I
+helped my mother out of the house; and took her home.</p>
+
+<p>I held out my hand to say good-by. She tried to stop me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't go back, Francis! don't go back!&quot;.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I must get the knife, mother. I must go back by the next train.&quot; I held
+to that resolution. By the next train I went back.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>XII</h2>
+
+
+<p>My wife had, of course, discovered our secret departure from the house.
+She had been drinking. She was in a fury of passion. The dinner in the
+kitchen was flung under the grate; the cloth was off the parlor table.
+Where was the knife?</p>
+
+<p>I was foolish enough to ask for it. She refused to give it to me. In the
+course of the dispute between us which followed, I discovered that there
+was a horrible story attached to the knife. It had been used in a
+murder&mdash;years since&mdash;and had been so skillfully hidden that the
+authorities had been unable to produce it at the trial. By help of some of
+her disreputable friends, my wife had been able to purchase this relic of
+a bygone crime. Her perverted nature set some horrid unacknowledged value
+on the knife. Seeing there was no hope of getting it by fair means, I
+determined to search for it, later in the day, in secret. The search was
+unsuccessful. Night came on, and I left the house to walk about the
+streets. You will understand what a broken man I was by this time, when I
+tell you I was afraid to sleep in the same room with her!</p>
+
+<p>Three weeks passed. Still she refused to give up the knife; and still that
+fear of sleeping in the same room with her possessed me. I walked about at
+night, or dozed in the parlor, or sat watching by my mother's bedside.
+Before the end of the first week in the new month, the worst misfortune of
+all befell me&mdash;my mother died. It wanted then but a short time to my
+birthday. She had longed to live till that day. I was present at her
+death. Her last words in this world were addressed to me. &quot;Don't go back,
+my son&mdash;don't go back!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was obliged to go back, if it was only to watch my wife. In the last
+days of my mother's illness she had spitefully added a sting to my grief
+by declaring she would assert her right to attend the funeral. In spite of
+all that I could do or say, she held to her word. On the day appointed for
+the burial she forced herself, inflamed and shameless with drink, into my
+presence, and swore she would walk in the funeral procession to my
+mother's grave.</p>
+
+<p>This last insult&mdash;after all I had gone through already&mdash;was more than I
+could endure. It maddened me. Try to make allowances for a man beside
+himself. I struck her.</p>
+
+<p>The instant the blow was dealt, I repented it. She crouched down, silent,
+in a corner of the room, and eyed me steadily. It was a look that cooled
+my hot blood in an instant. There was no time now to think of making
+atonement. I could only risk the worst, and make sure of her till the
+funeral was over. I locked her into her bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>When I came back, after laying my mother in the grave, I found her sitting
+by the bedside, very much altered in look and bearing, with a bundle on
+her lap. She faced me quietly; she spoke with a curious stillness in her
+voice&mdash;strangely and unnaturally composed in look and manner.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No man has ever struck me yet,&quot; she said. &quot;My husband shall have no
+second opportunity. Set the door open, and let me go.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She passed me, and left the room. I saw her walk away up the street. Was
+she gone for good?</p>
+
+<p>All that night I watched and waited. No footstep came near the house. The
+next night, overcome with fatigue, I lay down on the bed in my clothes,
+with the door locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning. My
+slumber was not disturbed. The third night, the fourth, the fifth, the
+sixth, passed, and nothing happened. I lay down on the seventh night,
+still suspicious of something happening; still in my clothes; still with
+the door locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning.</p>
+
+<p>My rest was disturbed. I awoke twice, without any sensation of uneasiness.
+The third time, that horrid shivering of the night at the lonely inn, that
+awful sinking pain at the heart, came back again, and roused me in an
+instant. My eyes turned to the left-hand side of the bed. And there stood,
+looking at me&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Dream Woman again? No! My wife. The living woman, with the face of the
+Dream&mdash;in the attitude of the Dream&mdash;the fair arm up; the knife clasped in
+the delicate white hand.</p>
+
+<p>I sprang upon her on the instant; but not quickly enough to stop her from
+hiding the knife. Without a word from me, without a cry from her, I
+pinioned her in a chair. With one hand I felt up her sleeve; and there,
+where the Dream Woman had hidden the knife, my wife had hidden it&mdash;the
+knife with the buckhorn handle, that looked like new.</p>
+
+<p>What I felt when I made that discovery I could not realize at the time,
+and I can't describe now. I took one steady look at her with the knife in
+my hand. &quot;You meant to kill me?&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; she answered; &quot;I meant to kill you.&quot; She crossed her arms over her
+bosom, and stared me coolly in the face. &quot;I shall do it yet,&quot; she said.
+&quot;With that knife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what possessed me&mdash;I swear to you I am no coward; and yet I
+acted like a coward. The horrors got hold of me. I couldn't look at her&mdash;I
+couldn't speak to her. I left her (with the knife in my hand), and went
+out into the night.</p>
+
+<p>There was a bleak wind abroad, and the smell of rain was in the air. The
+church clocks chimed the quarter as I walked beyond the last house in the
+town. I asked the first policeman I met what hour that was, of which the
+quarter past had just struck.</p>
+
+<p>The man looked at his watch, and answered, &quot;Two o'clock.&quot; Two in the
+morning. What day of the month was this day that had just begun? I
+reckoned it up from the date of my mother's funeral. The horrid parallel
+between the dream and the reality was complete&mdash;it was my birthday!</p>
+
+<p>Had I escaped, the mortal peril which the dream foretold? or had I only
+received a second warning? As that doubt crossed my mind I stopped on my
+way out of the town. The air had revived me&mdash;I felt in some degree like my
+own self again. After a little thinking, I began to see plainly the
+mistake I had made in leaving my wife free to go where she liked and to do
+as she pleased.</p>
+
+<p>I turned instantly, and made my way back to the house. It was still dark.
+I had left the candle burning in the bedchamber. When I looked up to the
+window of the room now, there was no light in it. I advanced to the house
+door. On going away, I remembered to have closed it; on trying it now, I
+found it open.</p>
+
+<p>I waited outside, never losing sight of the house till daylight. Then I
+ventured indoors&mdash;listened, and heard nothing&mdash;looked into the kitchen,
+scullery, parlor, and found nothing&mdash;went up at last into the bedroom. It
+was empty.</p>
+
+<p>A picklock lay on the floor, which told me how she had gained entrance in
+the night. And that was the one trace I could find of the Dream Woman.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>XIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>I waited in the house till the town was astir for the day, and then I went
+to consult a lawyer. In the confused state of my mind at the time, I had
+one clear notion of what I meant to do: I was determined to sell my house
+and leave the neighborhood. There were obstacles in the way which I had
+not counted on. I was told I had creditors to satisfy before I could
+leave&mdash;I, who had given my wife the money to pay my bills regularly every
+week! Inquiry showed that she had embezzled every farthing of the money I
+had intrusted to her. I had no choice but to pay over again.</p>
+
+<p>Placed in this awkward position, my first duty was to set things right,
+with the help of my lawyer. During my forced sojourn in the town I did two
+foolish things. And, as a consequence that followed, I heard once more,
+and heard for the last time, of my wife.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, having got possession of the knife, I was rash enough
+to keep it in my pocket. In the second place, having something of
+importance to say to my lawyer, at a late hour of the evening, I went to
+his house after dark&mdash;alone and on foot. I got there safely enough.
+Returning, I was seized on from behind by two men, dragged down a passage
+and robbed&mdash;not only of the little money I had about me, but also of the
+knife. It was the lawyer's opinion (as it was mine) that the thieves were
+among the disreputable acquaintances formed by my wife, and that they had
+attacked me at her instigation. To confirm this view I received a letter
+the next day, without date or address, written in Alicia's hand. The first
+line informed me that the knife was back again in her possession. The
+second line reminded me of the day when I struck her. The third line
+warned me that she would wash out the stain of that blow in my blood, and
+repeated the words, &quot;I shall do it with the knife!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>These things happened a year ago. The law laid hands on the men who had
+robbed me; but from that time to this, the law has failed completely to
+find a trace of my wife.</p>
+
+<p>My story is told. When I had paid the creditors and paid the legal
+expenses, I had barely five pounds left out of the sale of my house; and I
+had the world to begin over again. Some months since&mdash;drifting here and
+there&mdash;I found my way to Underbridge. The landlord of the inn had known
+something of my father's family in times past. He gave me (all he had to
+give) my food, and shelter in the yard. Except on market days, there is
+nothing to do. In the coming winter the inn is to be shut up, and I shall
+have to shift for myself. My old master would help me if I applied to
+him&mdash;but I don't like to apply: he has done more for me already than I
+deserve. Besides, in another year who knows but my troubles may all be at
+an end? Next winter will bring me nigh to my next birthday, and my next
+birthday may be the day of my death. Yes! it's true I sat up all last
+night; and I heard two in the morning strike: and nothing happened. Still,
+allowing for that, the time to come is a time I don't trust. My wife has
+got the knife&mdash;my wife is looking for me. I am above superstition, mind! I
+don't say I believe in dreams; I only say, Alicia Warlock is looking for
+me. It is possible I may be wrong. It is possible I may be right. Who can
+tell?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="THE_THIRD_NARRATIVE" id="THE_THIRD_NARRATIVE" />THE THIRD NARRATIVE</h3>
+
+
+
+
+<h5>THE STORY CONTINUED BY PERCY FAIRBANK</h5>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>XIV</h2>
+
+
+<p>We took leave of Francis Raven at the door of Farleigh Hall, with the
+understanding that he might expect to hear from us again.</p>
+
+<p>The same night Mrs. Fairbank and I had a discussion in the sanctuary of
+our own room. The topic was &quot;The Hostler's Story&quot;; and the question in
+dispute between us turned on the measure of charitable duty that we owed
+to the hostler himself.</p>
+
+<p>The view I took of the man's narrative was of the purely matter-of-fact
+kind. Francis Raven had, in my opinion, brooded over the misty connection
+between his strange dream and his vile wife, until his mind was in a state
+of partial delusion on that subject. I was quite willing to help him with
+a trifle of money, and to recommend him to the kindness of my lawyer, if
+he was really in any danger and wanted advice. There my idea of my duty
+toward this afflicted person began and ended.</p>
+
+<p>Confronted with this sensible view of the matter, Mrs. Fairbank's romantic
+temperament rushed, as usual, into extremes. &quot;I should no more think of
+losing sight of Francis Raven when his next birthday comes round,&quot; says my
+wife, &quot;than I should think of laying down a good story with the last
+chapters unread. I am positively determined, Percy, to take him back with
+us when we return to France, in the capacity of groom. What does one man
+more or less among the horses matter to people as rich as we are?&quot; In this
+strain the partner of my joys and sorrows ran on, perfectly impenetrable
+to everything that I could say on the side of common sense. Need I tell my
+married brethren how it ended? Of course I allowed my wife to irritate me,
+and spoke to her sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Of course my wife turned her face away indignantly on the conjugal pillow,
+and burst into tears. Of course upon that, &quot;Mr.&quot; made his excuses, and
+&quot;Mrs.&quot; had her own way.</p>
+
+<p>Before the week was out we rode over to Underbridge, and duly offered to
+Francis Raven a place in our service as supernumerary groom.</p>
+
+<p>At first the poor fellow seemed hardly able to realize his own
+extraordinary good fortune. Recovering himself, he expressed his gratitude
+modestly and becomingly. Mrs. Fairbank's ready sympathies overflowed, as
+usual, at her lips. She talked to him about our home in France, as if the
+worn, gray-headed hostler had been a child. &quot;Such a dear old house,
+Francis; and such pretty gardens! Stables! Stables ten times as big as
+your stables here&mdash;quite a choice of rooms for you. You must learn the
+name of our house&mdash;Maison Rouge. Our nearest town is Metz. We are within a
+walk of the beautiful River Moselle. And when we want a change we have
+only to take the railway to the frontier, and find ourselves in Germany.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Listening, so far, with a very bewildered face, Francis started and
+changed color when my wife reached the end of her last sentence.
+&quot;Germany?&quot; he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes. Does Germany remind you of anything?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The hostler's eyes looked down sadly on the ground. &quot;Germany reminds me of
+my wife,&quot; he replied.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed! How?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She once told me she had lived in Germany&mdash;long before I knew her&mdash;in the
+time when she was a young girl.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was she living with relations or friends?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She was living as governess in a foreign family.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In what part of Germany?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't remember, ma'am. I doubt if she told me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did she tell you the name of the family?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, ma'am. It was a foreign name, and it has slipped my memory long
+since. The head of the family was a wine grower in a large way of
+business&mdash;I remember that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you hear what sort of wine he grew? There are wine growers in our
+neighborhood. Was it Moselle wine?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I couldn't say, ma'am, I doubt if I ever heard.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There the conversation dropped. We engaged to communicate with Francis
+Raven before we left England, and took our leave. I had made arrangements
+to pay our round of visits to English friends, and to return to Maison
+Rouge in the summer. On the eve of departure, certain difficulties in
+connection with the management of some landed property of mine in Ireland
+obliged us to alter our plans. Instead of getting back to our house in
+France in the Summer, we only returned a week or two before Christmas.
+Francis Raven accompanied us, and was duly established, in the nominal
+capacity of stable keeper, among the servants at Maison Rouge.</p>
+
+<p>Before long, some of the objections to taking him into our employment,
+which I had foreseen and had vainly mentioned to my wife, forced
+themselves on our attention in no very agreeable form. Francis Raven
+failed (as I had feared he would) to get on smoothly with his
+fellow-servants They were all French; and not one of them understood
+English. Francis, on his side, was equally ignorant of French. His
+reserved manners, his melancholy temperament, his solitary ways&mdash;all told
+against him. Our servants called him &quot;the English Bear.&quot; He grew widely
+known in the neighborhood under his nickname. Quarrels took place, ending
+once or twice in blows. It became plain, even to Mrs. Fairbank herself,
+that some wise change must be made. While we were still considering what
+the change was to be, the unfortunate hostler was thrown on our hands for
+some time to come by an accident in the stables. Still pursued by his
+proverbial ill-luck, the poor wretch's leg was broken by a kick from a
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>He was attended to by our own surgeon, in his comfortable bedroom at the
+stables. As the date of his birthday drew near, he was still confined to
+his bed.</p>
+
+<p>Physically speaking, he was doing very well. Morally speaking, the surgeon
+was not satisfied. Francis Raven was suffering under some mysterious
+mental disturbance, which interfered seriously with his rest at night.
+Hearing this, I thought it my duty to tell the medical attendant what was
+preying on the patient's mind. As a practical man, he shared my opinion
+that the hostler was in a state of delusion on the subject of his Wife and
+his Dream. &quot;Curable delusion, in my opinion,&quot; the surgeon added, &quot;if the
+experiment could be fairly tried.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How can it be tried?&quot; I asked. Instead of replying, the surgeon put a
+question to me, on his side.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you happen to know,&quot; he said, &quot;that this year is Leap Year?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mrs. Fairbank reminded me of it yesterday,&quot; I answered. &quot;Otherwise I
+might <i>not</i> have known it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you think Francis Raven knows that this year is Leap Year?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>(I began to see dimly what my friend was driving at.)</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It depends,&quot; I answered, &quot;on whether he has got an English almanac.
+Suppose he has <i>not</i> got the almanac&mdash;what then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In that case,&quot; pursued the surgeon, &quot;Francis Raven is innocent of all
+suspicion that there is a twenty-ninth day in February this year. As a
+necessary consequence&mdash;what will he do? He will anticipate the appearance
+of the Woman with the Knife, at two in the morning of the twenty-ninth of
+February, instead of the first of March. Let him suffer all his
+superstitious terrors on the wrong day. Leave him, on the day that is
+really his birthday, to pass a perfectly quiet night, and to be as sound
+asleep as other people at two in the morning. And then, when he wakes
+comfortably in time for his breakfast, shame him out of his delusion by
+telling him the truth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I agreed to try the experiment. Leaving the surgeon to caution Mrs.
+Fairbank on the subject of Leap Year, I went to the stables to see Mr.
+Raven.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>XV</h2>
+
+
+<p>The poor fellow was full of forebodings of the fate in store for him on
+the ominous first of March. He eagerly entreated me to order one of the
+men servants to sit up with him on the birthday morning. In granting his
+request, I asked him to tell me on which day of the week his birthday
+fell. He reckoned the days on his fingers; and proved his innocence of all
+suspicion that it was Leap Year, by fixing on the twenty-ninth of
+February, in the full persuasion that it was the first of March. Pledged
+to try the surgeon's experiment, I left his error uncorrected, of course.
+In so doing, I took my first step blindfold toward the last act in the
+drama of the Hostler's Dream.</p>
+
+<p>The next day brought with it a little domestic difficulty, which
+indirectly and strangely associated itself with the coming end.</p>
+
+<p>My wife received a letter, inviting us to assist in celebrating the
+&quot;Silver Wedding&quot; of two worthy German neighbors of ours&mdash;Mr. and Mrs.
+Beldheimer. Mr. Beldheimer was a large wine grower on the banks of the
+Moselle. His house was situated on the frontier line of France and
+Germany; and the distance from our house was sufficiently considerable to
+make it necessary for us to sleep under our host's roof. Under these
+circumstances, if we accepted the invitation, a comparison of dates showed
+that we should be away from home on the morning of the first of March.
+Mrs. Fairbank&mdash;holding to her absurd resolution to see with her own eyes
+what might, or might not, happen to Francis Raven on his birthday&mdash;flatly
+declined to leave Maison Rouge. &quot;It's easy to send an excuse,&quot; she said,
+in her off-hand manner.</p>
+
+<p>I failed, for my part, to see any easy way out of the difficulty. The
+celebration of a &quot;Silver Wedding&quot; in Germany is the celebration of
+twenty-five years of happy married life; and the host's claim upon the
+consideration of his friends on such an occasion is something in the
+nature of a royal &quot;command.&quot; After considerable discussion, finding my
+wife's obstinacy invincible, and feeling that the absence of both of us
+from the festival would certainly offend our friends, I left Mrs. Fairbank
+to make her excuses for herself, and directed her to accept the invitation
+so far as I was concerned. In so doing, I took my second step, blindfold,
+toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.</p>
+
+<p>A week elapsed; the last days of February were at hand. Another domestic
+difficulty happened; and, again, this event also proved to be strangely
+associated with the coming end.</p>
+
+<p>My head groom at the stables was one Joseph Rigobert. He was an
+ill-conditioned fellow, inordinately vain of his personal appearance, and
+by no means scrupulous in his conduct with women. His one virtue consisted
+of his fondness for horses, and in the care he took of the animals under
+his charge. In a word, he was too good a groom to be easily replaced, or
+he would have quitted my service long since. On the occasion of which I am
+now writing, he was reported to me by my steward as growing idle and
+disorderly in his habits. The principal offense alleged against him was,
+that he had been seen that day in the city of Metz, in the company of a
+woman (supposed to be an Englishwoman), whom he was entertaining at a
+tavern, when he ought to have been on his way back to Maison Rouge. The
+man's defense was that &quot;the lady&quot; (as he called her) was an English
+stranger, unacquainted with the ways of the place, and that he had only
+shown her where she could obtain some refreshments at her own request. I
+administered the necessary reprimand, without troubling myself to inquire
+further into the matter. In failing to do this, I took my third step,
+blindfold, toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the twenty-eighth, I informed the servants at the
+stables that one of them must watch through the night by the Englishman's
+bedside. Joseph Rigobert immediately volunteered for the duty&mdash;as a means,
+no doubt, of winning his way back to my favor. I accepted his proposal.</p>
+
+<p>That day the surgeon dined with us. Toward midnight he and I left the
+smoking room, and repaired to Francis Raven's bedside. Rigobert was at his
+post, with no very agreeable expression on his face. The Frenchman and the
+Englishman had evidently not got on well together so far. Francis Raven
+lay helpless on his bed, waiting silently for two in the morning and the
+Dream Woman.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have come, Francis, to bid you good night,&quot; I said, cheerfully.
+&quot;To-morrow morning I shall look in at breakfast time, before I leave home
+on a journey.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you for all your kindness, sir. You will not see me alive to-morrow
+morning. She will find me this time. Mark my words&mdash;she will find me this
+time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My good fellow! she couldn't find you in England. How in the world is she
+to find you in France?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's borne in on my mind, sir, that she will find me here. At two in the
+morning on my birthday I shall see her again, and see her for the last
+time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you mean that she will kill you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I mean that, sir, she will kill me&mdash;with the knife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And with Rigobert in the room to protect you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am a doomed man. Fifty Rigoberts couldn't protect me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you wanted somebody to sit up with you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mere weakness, sir. I don't like to be left alone on my deathbed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I looked at the surgeon. If he had encouraged me, I should certainly, out
+of sheer compassion, have confessed to Francis Raven the trick that we
+were playing him. The surgeon held to his experiment; the surgeon's face
+plainly said&mdash;&quot;No.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The next day (the twenty-ninth of February) was the day of the &quot;Silver
+Wedding.&quot; The first thing in the morning, I went to Francis Raven's room.
+Rigobert met me at the door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How has he passed the night?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Saying his prayers, and looking for ghosts,&quot; Rigobert answered. &quot;A
+lunatic asylum is the only proper place for him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I approached the bedside. &quot;Well, Francis, here you are, safe and sound, in
+spite of what you said to me last night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His eyes rested on mine with a vacant, wondering look.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't understand it,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you see anything of your wife when the clock struck two?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did anything happen?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing happened, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Doesn't <i>this</i> satisfy you that you were wrong?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His eyes still kept their vacant, wondering look. He only repeated the
+words he had spoken already: &quot;I don't understand it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I made a last attempt to cheer him. &quot;Come, come, Francis! keep a good
+heart. You will be out of bed in a fortnight.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head on the pillow. &quot;There's something wrong,&quot; he said. &quot;I
+don't expect you to believe me, sir. I only say there's something
+wrong&mdash;and time will show it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I left the room. Half an hour later I started for Mr. Beldheimer's house;
+leaving the arrangements for the morning of the first of March in the
+hands of the doctor and my wife.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>XVI</h2>
+
+
+<p>The one thing which principally struck me when I joined the guests at the
+&quot;Silver Wedding&quot; is also the one thing which it is necessary to mention
+here. On this joyful occasion a noticeable lady present was out of
+spirits. That lady was no other than the heroine of the festival, the
+mistress of the house!</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the evening I spoke to Mr. Beldheimer's eldest son on the
+subject of his mother. As an old friend of the family, I had a claim on
+his confidence which the young man willingly recognized.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have had a very disagreeable matter to deal with,&quot; he said; &quot;and my
+mother has not recovered the painful impression left on her mind. Many
+years since, when my sisters were children, we had an English governess in
+the house. She left us, as we then understood, to be married. We heard no
+more of her until a week or ten days since, when my mother received a
+letter, in which our ex-governess described herself as being in a
+condition of great poverty and distress. After much hesitation she had
+ventured&mdash;at the suggestion of a lady who had been kind to her&mdash;to write
+to her former employers, and to appeal to their remembrance of old times.
+You know my mother: she is not only the most kind-hearted, but the most
+innocent of women&mdash;it is impossible to persuade her of the wickedness that
+there is in the world. She replied by return of post, inviting the
+governess to come here and see her, and inclosing the money for her
+traveling expenses. When my father came home, and heard what had been
+done, he wrote at once to his agent in London to make inquiries, inclosing
+the address on the governess' letter. Before he could receive the agent's
+reply the governess, arrived. She produced the worst possible impression
+on his mind. The agent's letter, arriving a few days later, confirmed his
+suspicions. Since we had lost sight of her, the woman had led a most
+disreputable life. My father spoke to her privately: he offered&mdash;on
+condition of her leaving the house&mdash;a sum of money to take her back to
+England. If she refused, the alternative would be an appeal to the
+authorities and a public scandal. She accepted the money, and left the
+house. On her way back to England she appears to have stopped at Metz. You
+will understand what sort of woman she is when I tell you that she was
+seen the other day in a tavern, with your handsome groom, Joseph
+Rigobert.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>While my informant was relating these circumstances, my memory was at
+work. I recalled what Francis Raven had vaguely told us of his wife's
+experience in former days as governess in a German family. A suspicion of
+the truth suddenly flashed across my mind. &quot;What was the woman's name?&quot; I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beldheimer's son answered: &quot;Alicia Warlock.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had but one idea when I heard that reply&mdash;to get back to my house
+without a moment's needless delay. It was then ten o'clock at night&mdash;the
+last train to Metz had left long since. I arranged with my young
+friend&mdash;after duly informing him of the circumstances&mdash;that I should go by
+the first train in the morning, instead of staying to breakfast with the
+other guests who slept in the house.</p>
+
+<p>At intervals during the night I wondered uneasily how things were going on
+at Maison Rouge. Again and again the same question occurred to me, on my
+journey home in the early morning&mdash;the morning of the first of March. As
+the event proved, but one person in my house knew what really happened at
+the stables on Francis Raven's birthday. Let Joseph Rigobert take my place
+as narrator, and tell the story of the end to You&mdash;as he told it, in times
+past, to his lawyer and to Me.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="FOURTH_AND_LAST_NARRATIVE" id="FOURTH_AND_LAST_NARRATIVE" />FOURTH (AND LAST) NARRATIVE</h3>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h5>STATEMENT OF JOSEPH RIGOBERT: ADDRESSED TO THE ADVOCATE WHO DEFENDED HIM AT HIS TRIAL</h5>
+
+
+<p>Respected Sir,&mdash;On the twenty-seventh of February I was sent, on business
+connected with the stables at Maison Rouge, to the city of Metz. On the
+public promenade I met a magnificent woman. Complexion, blond.
+Nationality, English. We mutually admired each other; we fell into
+conversation. (She spoke French perfectly&mdash;with the English accent.) I
+offered refreshment; my proposal was accepted. We had a long and
+interesting interview&mdash;we discovered that we were made for each other. So
+far, Who is to blame?</p>
+
+<p>Is it my fault that I am a handsome man&mdash;universally agreeable as such to
+the fair sex? Is it a criminal offense to be accessible to the amiable
+weakness of love? I ask again, Who is to blame? Clearly, nature. Not the
+beautiful lady&mdash;not my humble self.</p>
+
+<p>To resume. The most hard-hearted person living will understand that two
+beings made for each other could not possibly part without an appointment
+to meet again.</p>
+
+<p>I made arrangements for the accommodation of the lady in the village near
+Maison Rouge. She consented to honor me with her company at supper, in my
+apartment at the stables, on the night of the twenty-ninth. The time fixed
+on was the time when the other servants were accustomed to retire&mdash;eleven
+o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>Among the grooms attached to the stables was an Englishman, laid up with a
+broken leg. His name was Francis. His manners were repulsive; he was
+ignorant of the French language. In the kitchen he went by the nickname of
+the &quot;English Bear.&quot; Strange to say, he was a great favorite with my master
+and my mistress. They even humored certain superstitious terrors to which
+this repulsive person was subject&mdash;terrors into the nature of which I, as
+an advanced freethinker, never thought it worth my while to inquire.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the twenty-eighth the Englishman, being a prey to the
+terrors which I have mentioned, requested that one of his fellow servants
+might sit up with him for that night only. The wish that he expressed was
+backed by Mr. Fairbank's authority. Having already incurred my master's
+displeasure&mdash;in what way, a proper sense of my own dignity forbids me to
+relate&mdash;I volunteered to watch by the bedside of the English Bear. My
+object was to satisfy Mr. Fairbank that I bore no malice, on my side,
+after what had occurred between us. The wretched Englishman passed a night
+of delirium. Not understanding his barbarous language, I could only gather
+from his gesture that he was in deadly fear of some fancied apparition at
+his bedside. From time to time, when this madman disturbed my slumbers, I
+quieted him by swearing at him. This is the shortest and best way of
+dealing with persons in his condition.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the twenty-ninth, Mr. Fairbank left us on a journey.
+Later in the day, to my unspeakable disgust, I found that I had not done
+with the Englishman yet. In Mr. Fairbank's absence, Mrs. Fairbank took an
+incomprehensible interest in the question of my delirious fellow servant's
+repose at night. Again, one or the other of us was to watch at his
+bedside, and report it, if anything happened. Expecting my fair friend to
+supper, it was necessary to make sure that the other servants at the
+stables would be safe in their beds that night. Accordingly, I volunteered
+once more to be the man who kept watch. Mrs. Fairbank complimented me on
+my humanity. I possess great command over my feelings. I accepted the
+compliment without a blush.</p>
+
+<p>Twice, after nightfall, my mistress and the doctor (the last staying in
+the house in Mr. Fairbank's absence) came to make inquiries. Once <i>before</i>
+the arrival of my fair friend&mdash;and once <i>after</i>. On the second occasion
+(my apartment being next door to the Englishman's) I was obliged to hide
+my charming guest in the harness room. She consented, with angelic
+resignation, to immolate her dignity to the servile necessities of my
+position. A more amiable woman (so far) I never met with!</p>
+
+<p>After the second visit I was left free. It was then close on midnight. Up
+to that time there was nothing in the behavior of the mad Englishman to
+reward Mrs. Fairbank and the doctor for presenting themselves at his
+bedside. He lay half awake, half asleep, with an odd wondering kind of
+look in his face. My mistress at parting warned me to be particularly
+watchful of him toward two in the morning. The doctor (in case anything
+happened) left me a large hand bell to ring, which could easily be heard
+at the house.</p>
+
+<p>Restored to the society of my fair friend, I spread the supper table. A
+p&acirc;t&eacute;, a sausage, and a few bottles of generous Moselle wine, composed our
+simple meal. When persons adore each other, the intoxicating illusion of
+Love transforms the simplest meal into a banquet. With immeasurable
+capacities for enjoyment, we sat down to table. At the very moment when I
+placed my fascinating companion in a chair, the infamous Englishman in the
+next room took that occasion, of all others, to become restless and noisy
+once more. He struck with his stick on the floor; he cried out, in a
+delirious access of terror, &quot;Rigobert! Rigobert!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The sound of that lamentable voice, suddenly assailing our ears, terrified
+my fair friend. She lost all her charming color in an instant. &quot;Good
+heavens!&quot; she exclaimed. &quot;Who is that in the next room?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A mad Englishman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;An Englishman?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Compose yourself, my angel. I will quiet him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lamentable voice called out on me again, &quot;Rigobert! Rigobert!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My fair friend caught me by the arm. &quot;Who is he?&quot; she cried. &quot;What is his
+name?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Something in her face struck me as she put that question. A spasm of
+jealousy shook me to the soul. &quot;You know him?&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His name!&quot; she vehemently repeated; &quot;his name!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Francis,&quot; I answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Francis&mdash;<i>what</i>?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I shrugged my shoulders. I could neither remember nor pronounce the
+barbarous English surname. I could only tell her it began with an &quot;R.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She dropped back into the chair. Was she going to faint? No: she
+recovered, and more than recovered, her lost color. Her eyes flashed
+superbly. What did it mean? Profoundly as I understand women in general, I
+was puzzled by <i>this</i> woman!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You know him?&quot; I repeated.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed at me. &quot;What nonsense! How should I know him? Go and quiet the
+wretch.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My looking-glass was near. One glance at it satisfied me that no woman in
+her senses could prefer the Englishman to Me. I recovered my self-respect.
+I hastened to the Englishman's bedside.</p>
+
+<p>The moment I appeared he pointed eagerly toward my room. He overwhelmed me
+with a torrent of words in his own language. I made out, from his gestures
+and his looks, that he had, in some incomprehensible manner, discovered
+the presence of my guest; and, stranger still, that he was scared by the
+idea of a person in my room. I endeavored to compose him on the system
+which I have already mentioned&mdash;that is to say, I swore at him in <i>my</i>
+language. The result not proving satisfactory, I own I shook my fist in
+his face, and left the bedchamber.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to my fair friend, I found her walking backward and forward in a
+state of excitement wonderful to behold. She had not waited for me to fill
+her glass&mdash;she had begun the generous Moselle in my absence. I prevailed
+on her with difficulty to place herself at the table. Nothing would induce
+her to eat. &quot;My appetite is gone,&quot; she said. &quot;Give me wine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The generous Moselle deserves its name&mdash;delicate on the palate, with
+prodigious &quot;body.&quot; The strength of this fine wine produced no stupefying
+effect on my remarkable guest. It appeared to strengthen and exhilarate
+her&mdash;nothing more. She always spoke in the same low tone, and always, turn
+the conversation as I might, brought it back with the same dexterity to
+the subject of the Englishman in the next room. In any other woman this
+persistency would have offended me. My lovely guest was irresistible; I
+answered her questions with the docility of a child. She possessed all the
+amusing eccentricity of her nation. When I told her of the accident which
+confined the Englishman to his bed, she sprang to her feet. An
+extraordinary smile irradiated her countenance. She said, &quot;Show me the
+horse who broke the Englishman's leg! I must see that horse!&quot; I took her
+to the stables. She kissed the horse&mdash;on my word of honor, she kissed the
+horse! That struck me. I said. &quot;You <i>do</i> know the man; and he has wronged
+you in some way.&quot; No! she would not admit it, even then. &quot;I kiss all
+beautiful animals,&quot; she said. &quot;Haven't I kissed <i>you</i>?&quot; With that charming
+explanation of her conduct, she ran back up the stairs. I only remained
+behind to lock the stable door again. When I rejoined her, I made a
+startling discovery. I caught her coming out of the Englishman's room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was just going downstairs again to call you,&quot; she said. &quot;The man in
+there is getting noisy once more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The mad Englishman's voice assailed our ears once again. &quot;Rigobert!
+Rigobert!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was a frightful object to look at when I saw him this time. His eyes
+were staring wildly; the perspiration was pouring over his face. In a
+panic of terror he clasped his hands; he pointed up to heaven. By every
+sign and gesture that a man can make, he entreated me not to leave him
+again. I really could not help smiling. The idea of my staying with <i>him</i>,
+and leaving my fair friend by herself in the next room!</p>
+
+<p>I turned to the door. When the mad wretch saw me leaving him he burst out
+into a screech of despair&mdash;so shrill that I feared it might awaken the
+sleeping servants.</p>
+
+<p>My presence of mind in emergencies is proverbial among those who know me.
+I tore open the cupboard in which he kept his linen&mdash;seized a handful of
+his handkerchiefs&mdash;gagged him with one of them, and secured his hands with
+the others. There was now no danger of his alarming the servants. After
+tying the last knot, I looked up.</p>
+
+<p>The door between the Englishman's room and mine was open. My fair friend
+was standing on the threshold&mdash;watching <i>him</i> as he lay helpless on the
+bed; watching <i>me</i> as I tied the last knot.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you doing there?&quot; I asked. &quot;Why did you open the door?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She stepped up to me, and whispered her answer in my ear, with her eyes
+all the time upon the man on the bed:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I heard him scream.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought you had killed him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I drew back from her in horror. The suspicion of me which her words
+implied was sufficiently detestable in itself. But her manner when she
+uttered the words was more revolting still. It so powerfully affected me
+that I started back from that beautiful creature as I might have recoiled
+from a reptile crawling over my flesh.</p>
+
+<p>Before I had recovered myself sufficiently to reply, my nerves were
+assailed by another shock. I suddenly heard my mistress's voice calling to
+me from the stable yard.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time to think&mdash;there was only time to act. The one thing
+needed was to keep Mrs. Fairbank from ascending the stairs, and
+discovering&mdash;not my lady guest only&mdash;but the Englishman also, gagged and
+bound on his bed. I instantly hurried to the yard. As I ran down the
+stairs I heard the stable clock strike the quarter to two in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>My mistress was eager and agitated. The doctor (in attendance on her) was
+smiling to himself, like a man amused at his own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is Francis awake or asleep?&quot; Mrs. Fairbank inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has been a little restless, madam. But he is now quiet again. If he is
+not disturbed&quot; (I added those words to prevent her from ascending the
+stairs), &quot;he will soon fall off into a quiet sleep.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Has nothing happened since I was here last?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing, madam.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor lifted his eyebrows with a comical look of distress. &quot;Alas,
+alas, Mrs. Fairbank!&quot; he said. &quot;Nothing has happened! The days of romance
+are over!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is not two o'clock yet,&quot; my mistress answered, a little irritably.</p>
+
+<p>The smell of the stables was strong on the morning air. She put her
+handkerchief to her nose and led the way out of the yard by the north
+entrance&mdash;the entrance communicating with the gardens and the house. I was
+ordered to follow her, along with the doctor. Once out of the smell of the
+stables she began to question me again. She was unwilling to believe that
+nothing had occurred in her absence. I invented the best answers I could
+think of on the spur of the moment; and the doctor stood by laughing. So
+the minutes passed till the clock struck two. Upon that, Mrs. Fairbank
+announced her intention of personally visiting the Englishman in his room.
+To my great relief, the doctor interfered to stop her from doing this.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have heard that Francis is just falling asleep,&quot; he said. &quot;If you
+enter his room you may disturb him. It is essential to the success of my
+experiment that he should have a good night's rest, and that he should own
+it himself, before I tell him the truth. I must request, madam, that you
+will not disturb the man. Rigobert will ring the alarm bell if anything
+happens.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My mistress was unwilling to yield. For the next five minutes, at least,
+there was a warm discussion between the two. In the end Mrs. Fairbank was
+obliged to give way&mdash;for the time. &quot;In half an hour,&quot; she said, &quot;Francis
+will either be sound asleep, or awake again. In half an hour I shall come
+back.&quot; She took the doctor's arm. They returned together to the house.</p>
+
+<p>Left by myself, with half an hour before me, I resolved to take the
+Englishwoman back to the village&mdash;then, returning to the stables, to
+remove the gag and the bindings from Francis, and to let him screech to
+his heart's content. What would his alarming the whole establishment
+matter to <i>me</i> after I had got rid of the compromising presence of my
+guest?</p>
+
+<p>Returning to the yard I heard a sound like the creaking of an open door on
+its hinges. The gate of the north entrance I had just closed with my own
+hand. I went round to the west entrance, at the back of the stables. It
+opened on a field crossed by two footpaths in Mr. Fairbank's grounds. The
+nearest footpath led to the village. The other led to the highroad and the
+river.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at the west entrance I found the door open&mdash;swinging to and fro
+slowly in the fresh morning breeze. I had myself locked and bolted that
+door after admitting my fair friend at eleven o'clock. A vague dread of
+something wrong stole its way into my mind. I hurried back to the stables.</p>
+
+<p>I looked into my own room. It was empty. I went to the harness room. Not a
+sign of the woman was there. I returned to my room, and approached the
+door of the Englishman's bedchamber. Was it possible that she had remained
+there during my absence? An unaccountable reluctance to open the door made
+me hesitate, with my hand on the lock. I listened. There was not a sound
+inside. I called softly. There was no answer. I drew back a step, still
+hesitating. I noticed something dark moving slowly in the crevice between
+the bottom of the door and the boarded floor. Snatching up the candle from
+the table, I held it low, and looked. The dark, slowly moving object was a
+stream of blood!</p>
+
+<p>That horrid sight roused me. I opened the door. The Englishman lay on his
+bed&mdash;alone in the room. He was stabbed in two places&mdash;in the throat and in
+the heart. The weapon was left in the second wound. It was a knife of
+English manufacture, with a handle of buckhorn as good as new.</p>
+
+<p>I instantly gave the alarm. Witnesses can speak to what followed. It is
+monstrous to suppose that I am guilty of the murder. I admit that I am
+capable of committing follies: but I shrink from the bare idea of a crime.
+Besides, I had no motive for killing the man. The woman murdered him in my
+absence. The woman escaped by the west entrance while I was talking to my
+mistress. I have no more to say. I swear to you what I have here written
+is a true statement of all that happened on the morning of the first of
+March.</p>
+
+<p>Accept, sir, the assurance of my sentiments of profound gratitude and
+respect.</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 60%">
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">JOSEPH RIGOBERT.</span><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>LAST LINES.&mdash;ADDED BY PERCY FAIRBANK</h3>
+
+
+<p>Tried for the murder of Francis Raven, Joseph Rigobert was found Not
+Guilty; the papers of the assassinated man presented ample evidence of the
+deadly animosity felt toward him by his wife.</p>
+
+<p>The investigations pursued on the morning when the crime was committed
+showed that the murderess, after leaving the stable, had taken the
+footpath which led to the river. The river was dragged&mdash;without result. It
+remains doubtful to this day whether she died by drowning or not. The one
+thing certain is&mdash;that Alicia Warlock was never seen again.</p>
+
+<p>So&mdash;beginning in mystery, ending in mystery&mdash;the Dream Woman passes from
+your view. Ghost; demon; or living human creature&mdash;say for yourselves
+which she is. Or, knowing what unfathomed wonders are around you, what
+unfathomed wonders are <i>in</i> you, let the wise words of the greatest of all
+poets be explanation enough:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">&quot;We are such stuff<br /></span>
+<span>As dreams are made of, and our little life<br /></span>
+<span>Is rounded with, a sleep.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Anonymous</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Lost_Duchess" id="The_Lost_Duchess" /><i>The Lost Duchess</i></h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Has the duchess returned?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, your grace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Knowles came farther into the room. He had a letter on a salver. When the
+duke had taken it, Knowles still lingered. The duke glanced at him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is an answer required?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, your grace.&quot; Still Knowles lingered. &quot;Something a little singular has
+happened. The carriage has returned without the duchess, and the men say
+that they thought her grace was in it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you mean?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hardly understand myself, your grace. Perhaps you would like to see
+Barnes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Barnes was the coachman.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Send him up.&quot; When Knowles had gone, and he was alone, his grace showed
+signs of being slightly annoyed. He looked at his watch. &quot;I told her she'd
+better be in by four. She says that she's not feeling well, and yet one
+would think that she was not aware of the fatigue entailed in having the
+prince come to dinner, and a mob of people to follow. I particularly
+wished her to lie down for a couple of hours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Knowles ushered in not only Barnes, the coachman, but Moysey, the footman,
+too. Both these persons seemed to be ill at ease. The duke glanced at them
+sharply. In his voice there was a suggestion of impatience.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the matter?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Barnes explained as best he could.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you please, your grace, we waited for the duchess outside Cane and
+Wilson's, the drapers. The duchess came out, got into the carriage, and
+Moysey shut the door, and her grace said, 'Home!' and yet when we got home
+she wasn't there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She wasn't where?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Her grace wasn't in the carriage, your grace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What on earth do you mean?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Her grace did get into the carriage; you shut the door, didn't you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Barnes turned to Moysey. Moysey brought his hand up to his brow in a sort
+of military salute&mdash;he had been a soldier in the regiment in which, once
+upon a time, the duke had been a subaltern.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She did. The duchess came out of the shop. She seemed rather in a hurry,
+I thought. She got into the carriage, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!' I shut
+the door, and Barnes drove straight home. We never stopped anywhere, and
+we never noticed nothing happen on the way; and yet when we got home the
+carriage was empty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke started.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you mean to tell me that the duchess got out of the carriage while you
+were driving full pelt through the streets without saying anything to you,
+and without you noticing it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The carriage was empty when we got home, your grace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was either of the doors open?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, your grace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You fellows have been up to some infernal mischief. You have made a mess
+of it. You never picked up the duchess, and you're trying to palm this
+tale off on me to save yourselves.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Barnes was moved to adjuration:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll take my Bible oath, your grace, that the duchess got into the
+carriage outside Cane and Wilson's.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Moysey seconded his colleague.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will swear to that, your grace. She got into that carriage, and I shut
+the door, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke looked as if he did not know what to make of the story and its
+tellers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What carriage did you have?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Her grace's brougham, your grace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Knowles interposed:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The brougham was ordered because I understood that the duchess was not
+feeling very well, and there's rather a high wind, your grace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke snapped at him:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What has that to do with it? Are you suggesting that the duchess was more
+likely to jump out of a brougham while it was dashing through the streets
+than out of any other kind of vehicle?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke's glance fell on the letter which Knowles had brought him when he
+first had entered. He had placed it on his writing table. Now he took it
+up. It was addressed:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;<i>To His Grace the Duke of Datchet</i>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>Private!</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">VERY PRESSING!!!&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The name was written in a fine, clear, almost feminine hand. The words in
+the left-hand corner of the envelope were written in a different hand.
+They were large and bold; almost as though they had been painted with the
+end of the penholder instead of being written with the pen. The envelope
+itself was of an unusual size, and bulged out as though it contained
+something else besides a letter.</p>
+
+<p>The duke tore the envelope open. As he did so something fell out of it on
+to the writing table. It looked as though it was a lock of a woman's hair.
+As he glanced at it the duke seemed to be a trifle startled. The duke read
+the letter:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&quot;Your grace will be so good as to bring five hundred pounds in
+ gold to the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade within an
+ hour of the receipt of this. The Duchess of Datchet has been
+ kidnaped. An imitation duchess got into the carriage, which was
+ waiting outside Cane and Wilson's, and she alighted on the road.
+ Unless your grace does as you are requested, the Duchess of
+ Datchet's left-hand little finger will be at once cut off, and
+ sent home in time to receive the prince to dinner. Other portions
+ of her grace will follow. A lock of her grace's hair is inclosed
+ with this as an earnest of our good intentions.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;<i>Before</i> 5:30 p.m. your grace is requested to be at the
+ Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade with five hundred pounds
+ in gold. You will there be accosted by an individual in a white
+ top hat, and with a gardenia in his buttonhole. You will be
+ entirely at liberty to give him into custody, or to have him
+ followed by the police, in which case the duchess's left arm, cut
+ off at the shoulder, will be sent home for dinner&mdash;not to mention
+ other extremely possible contingencies. But you are <i>advised</i> to
+ give the individual in question the five hundred pounds in gold,
+ because in that case the duchess herself will be home in time to
+ receive the prince to dinner, and with one of the best stories
+ with which to entertain your distinguished guests they ever
+ heard.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Remember! <i>not later than</i> 5:30, unless you wish to receive her
+ grace's little finger.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<p>The duke stared at this amazing epistle when he had read it as though he
+found it difficult to believe the evidence of his eyes. He was not a
+demonstrative person, as a rule, but this little communication astonished
+even him. He read it again. Then his hands dropped to his sides, and he
+swore.</p>
+
+<p>He took up the lock of hair which had fallen out of the envelope. Was it
+possible that it could be his wife's, the duchess? Was it possible that a
+Duchess of Datchet could be kidnaped, in broad daylight, in the heart of
+London, and be sent home, as it were, in pieces? Had sacrilegious hands
+already been playing pranks with that great lady's hair? Certainly,
+<i>that</i> hair was so like <i>her</i> hair that the mere resemblance made his
+grace's blood run cold. He turned on Messrs. Barnes and Moysey as though
+he would have liked to rend them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You scoundrels!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He moved forward as though the intention had entered his ducal heart to
+knock his servants down. But, if that were so, he did not act quite up to
+his intention. Instead, he stretched out his arm, pointing at them as if
+he were an accusing spirit:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will you swear that it was the duchess who got into the carriage outside
+Cane and Wilson's?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Barnes began to stammer:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll swear, your grace, that I&mdash;I thought&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke stormed an interruption:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't ask what you thought. I ask you, will you swear it was?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke's anger was more than Barnes could face. He was silent. Moysey
+showed a larger courage.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I could have sworn that it was at the time, your grace. But now it seems
+to me that it's a rummy go.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A rummy go!&quot; The peculiarity of the phrase did not seem to strike the
+duke just then&mdash;at least, he echoed it as if it didn't. &quot;You call it a
+rummy go! Do you know that I am told in this letter that the woman who
+entered the carriage was not the duchess? What you were thinking about, or
+what case you will be able to make out for yourselves, you know better
+than I; but I can tell you this&mdash;that in an hour you will leave my
+service, and you may esteem yourselves fortunate if, to-night, you are not
+both of you sleeping in jail.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One might almost have suspected that the words were spoken in irony. But
+before they could answer, another servant entered, who also brought a
+letter for the duke. When his grace's glance fell on it he uttered an
+exclamation. The writing on the envelope was the same writing that had
+been on the envelope which had contained the very singular
+communication&mdash;like it in all respects, down to the broomstick-end
+thickness of the &quot;Private!&quot; and &quot;Very pressing!!!&quot; in the corner.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who brought this?&quot; stormed the duke.</p>
+
+<p>The servant appeared to be a little startled by the violence of his
+grace's manner.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A lady&mdash;or, at least, your grace, she seemed to be a lady.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where is she?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She came in a hansom, your grace. She gave me that letter, and said,
+'Give that to the Duke of Datchet at once&mdash;without a moment's delay!' Then
+she got into the hansom again, and drove away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why didn't you stop her?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your grace!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man seemed surprised, as though the idea of stopping chance visitors
+to the ducal mansion <i>vi et armis</i> had not, until that moment, entered
+into his philosophy. The duke continued to regard the man as if he could
+say a good deal, if he chose. Then he pointed to the door. His lips said
+nothing, but his gesture much. The servant vanished.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Another hoax!&quot; the duke said grimly, as he tore the envelope open.</p>
+
+<p>This time the envelope contained a sheet of paper, and in the sheet of
+paper another envelope. The duke unfolded the sheet of paper. On it some
+words were written. These:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The duchess appears so particularly anxious to drop you a line, that one
+really hasn't the heart to refuse her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Her grace's communication&mdash;written amidst blinding tears!&mdash;you will find
+inclosed with this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Knowles,&quot; said the duke, in a voice which actually trembled, &quot;Knowles,
+hoax or no hoax, I will be even with the gentleman who wrote that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Handing the sheet of paper to Mr. Knowles, his grace turned his attention
+to the envelope which had been inclosed. It was a small, square envelope,
+of the finest quality, and it reeked with perfume. The duke's countenance
+assumed an added frown&mdash;he had no fondness for envelopes which were
+scented. In the center of the envelope were the words, &quot;To the Duke of
+Datchet,&quot; written in the big, bold, sprawling hand which he knew so well.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mabel's writing,&quot; he said, half to himself, as, with shaking fingers, he
+tore the envelope open.</p>
+
+<p>The sheet of paper which he took out was almost as stiff as cardboard. It,
+too, emitted what his grace deemed the nauseous odors of the perfumer's
+shop. On it was written this letter:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&quot;MY DEAR HEREWARD&mdash;For Heaven's sake do what these people
+ require! I don't know what has happened or where I am, but I am
+ nearly distracted! They have already cut off some of my hair, and
+ they tell me that, if you don't let them have five hundred pounds
+ in gold by half-past five, they will cut off my little finger
+ too. I would sooner die than lose my little finger&mdash;and&mdash;I don't
+ know what else besides.</p>
+
+<p> &quot;By the token which I send you, and which has never, until now,
+ been off my breast, I conjure you to help me.</p>
+
+
+<p> &quot;Hereward&mdash;<i>help me</i>!&quot;</p></div>
+
+<p>When he read that letter the duke turned white&mdash;very white, as white as
+the paper on which it was written. He passed the epistle on to Knowles.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose that also is a hoax?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Knowles was silent. He still yielded to his constitutional disrelish
+to commit himself. At last he asked:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it that your grace proposes to do?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke spoke with a bitterness which almost suggested a personal
+animosity toward the inoffensive Mr. Knowles.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I propose, with your permission, to release the duchess from the custody
+of my estimable correspondent. I propose&mdash;always with your permission&mdash;to
+comply with his modest request, and to take him his five hundred pounds in
+gold.&quot; He paused, then continued in a tone which, coming from him, meant
+volumes: &quot;Afterwards, I propose to cry quits with the concocter of this
+pretty little hoax, even if it costs me every penny I possess. He shall
+pay more for that five hundred pounds than he supposes.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+
+<p>The Duke of Datchet, coming out of the bank, lingered for a moment on the
+steps. In one hand he carried a canvas bag which seemed well weighted. On
+his countenance there was an expression which to a casual observer might
+have suggested that his grace was not completely at his ease. That casual
+observer happened to come strolling by. It took the form of Ivor Dacre.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre looked the Duke of Datchet up and down in that languid way he
+has. He perceived the canvas bag. Then he remarked, possibly intending to
+be facetious:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Been robbing the bank? Shall I call a cart?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Nobody minds what Ivor Dacre says. Besides, he is the duke's own cousin.
+Perhaps a little removed; still, there it is. So the duke smiled a sickly
+smile, as if Mr. Dacre's delicate wit had given him a passing touch of
+indigestion.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre noticed that the duke looked sallow, so he gave his pretty sense
+of humor another airing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Kitchen boiler burst? When I saw the duchess just now I wondered if it
+had.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His grace distinctly started. He almost dropped the canvas bag.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You saw the duchess just now, Ivor! When?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke was evidently moved. Mr. Dacre was stirred to languid curiosity.
+&quot;I can't say I clocked it. Perhaps half an hour ago; perhaps a little
+more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Half an hour ago! Are you sure? Where did you see her?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre wondered. The Duchess of Datchet could scarcely have been
+eloping in broad daylight. Moreover, she had not yet been married a year.
+Everyone knew that she and the duke were still as fond of each other as if
+they were not man and wife. So, although the duke, for some cause or
+other, was evidently in an odd state of agitation, Mr. Dacre saw no reason
+why he should not make a clean breast of all he knew.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She was going like blazes in a hansom cab.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In a hansom cab? Where?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Down Waterloo Place.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was she alone?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre reflected. He glanced at the duke out of the corners of his
+eyes. His languid utterance became a positive drawl.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I rather fancy that she wasn't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who was with her?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear fellow, if you were to offer me the bank I couldn't tell you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was it a man?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre's drawl became still more pronounced.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I rather fancy that it was.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre expected something. The duke was so excited. But he by no means
+expected what actually came.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ivor, she's been kidnaped!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre did what he had never been known to do before within the memory
+of man&mdash;he dropped his eyeglass.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Datchet!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She has! Some scoundrel has decoyed her away, and trapped her. He's
+already sent me a lock of her hair, and he tells me that if I don't let
+him have five hundred pounds in gold by half-past five he'll let me have
+her little finger.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre did not know what to make of his grace at all. He was a sober
+man&mdash;it <i>couldn't</i> be that! Mr. Dacre felt really concerned.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll call a cab, old man, and you'd better let me see you home.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre half raised his stick to hail a passing hansom. The duke caught
+him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You ass! What do you mean? I am telling you the simple truth. My wife's
+been kidnaped.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre's countenance was a thing to be seen&mdash;and remembered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh! I hadn't heard that there was much of that sort of thing about just
+now. They talk of poodles being kidnaped, but as for duchesses&mdash;You'd
+really better let me call that cab.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ivor, do you want me to kick you? Don't you see that to me it's a
+question of life and death? I've been in there to get the money.&quot; His
+grace motioned toward the bank. &quot;I'm going to take it to the scoundrel who
+has my darling at his mercy. Let me but have her hand in mine again, and
+he shall continue to pay for every sovereign with tears of blood until he
+dies.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look here, Datchet, I don't know if you're having a joke with me, or if
+you're not well&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke stepped impatiently into the roadway.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ivor, you're a fool! Can't you tell jest from earnest, health from
+disease? I'm off! Are you coming with me? It would be as well that I
+should have a witness.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where are you off to?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To the other end of the Arcade.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who is the gentleman you expect to have the pleasure of meeting there?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How should I know?&quot; The duke took a letter from his pocket&mdash;it was the
+letter which had just arrived. &quot;The fellow is to wear a white top hat, and
+a gardenia in his buttonhole.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it you have there?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's the letter which brought the news&mdash;look for yourself and see; but,
+for God's sake, make haste!&quot; His grace glanced at his watch. &quot;It's already
+twenty after five.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And do you mean to say that on the strength of a letter such as this you
+are going to hand over five hundred pounds to&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke cut Mr. Dacre short.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are five hundred pounds to me? Besides, you don't know all. There is
+another letter. And I have heard from Mabel. But I will tell you all about
+it later. If you are coming, come!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Folding up the letter, Mr. Dacre returned it to the duke.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As you say, what are five hundred pounds to you? It's as well they are
+not as much to you as they are to me, or I'm afraid&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hang it, Ivor, do prose afterwards!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke hurried across the road. Mr. Dacre hastened after him. As they
+entered the Arcade they passed a constable. Mr. Dacre touched his
+companion's arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't you think we'd better ask our friend in blue to walk behind us? His
+neighborhood might be handy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense!&quot; The duke stopped short. &quot;Ivor, this is my affair, not yours.
+If you are not content to play the part of silent witness, be so good as
+to leave me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Datchet, I'm entirely at your service. I can be every whit as
+insane as you, I do assure you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Side by side they moved rapidly down the Burlington Arcade. The duke was
+obviously in a state of the extremest nervous tension. Mr. Dacre was
+equally obviously in a state of the most supreme enjoyment. People stared
+as they rushed past. The duke saw nothing. Mr. Dacre saw everything, and
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>When they reached the Piccadilly end of the Arcade the duke pulled up. He
+looked about him. Mr. Dacre also looked about him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I see nothing of your white-hatted and gardenia-buttonholed friend,&quot; said
+Ivor.</p>
+
+<p>The duke referred to his watch.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's not yet half-past five. I'm up to time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre held his stick in front of him and leaned on it. He indulged
+himself with a beatific smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It strikes me, my dear Datchet, that you've been the victim of one of the
+finest things in hoaxes&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope I haven't kept you waiting.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The voice which interrupted Mr. Dacre came from the rear. While they were
+looking in front of them some one approached them from behind, apparently
+coming out of the shop which was at their backs.</p>
+
+<p>The speaker looked a gentleman. He sounded like one, too. Costume,
+appearance, manner, were beyond reproach&mdash;even beyond the criticism of
+two such keen critics as were these. The glorious attire of a London dandy
+was surmounted with a beautiful white top hat. In his buttonhole was a
+magnificent gardenia.</p>
+
+<p>In age the stranger was scarcely more than a boy, and a sunny-faced,
+handsome boy at that. His cheeks were hairless, his eyes were blue. His
+smile was not only innocent, it was bland. Never was there a more
+conspicuous illustration of that repose which stamps the caste of Vere de
+Vere.</p>
+
+<p>The duke looked at him and glowered. Mr. Dacre looked at him and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who are you?&quot; asked the duke.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah&mdash;that is the question!&quot; The newcomer's refined and musical voice
+breathed the very soul of affability. &quot;I am an individual who is so
+unfortunate as to be in want of five hundred pounds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you the scoundrel who sent me that infamous letter?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The charming stranger never turned a hair.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am the scoundrel mentioned in that infamous letter who wants to accost
+you at the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade before half-past
+five&mdash;as witness my white hat and my gardenia.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where's my wife?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger gently swung his stick in front of him with his two hands. He
+regarded the duke as a merry-hearted son might regard his father. The
+thing was beautiful!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Her grace will be home almost as soon as you are&mdash;when you have given me
+the money which I perceive you have all ready for me in that scarcely
+elegant-looking canvas bag.&quot; He shrugged his shoulders quite gracefully.
+&quot;Unfortunately, in these matters one has no choice&mdash;one is forced to ask
+for gold.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And suppose, instead of giving you what is in this canvas bag, I take you
+by the throat and choke the life right out of you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or suppose,&quot; amended Mr. Dacre, &quot;that you do better, and commend this
+gentleman to the tender mercies of the first policeman we encounter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger turned to Mr. Dacre. He condescended to become conscious of
+his presence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is this gentleman your grace's friend? Ah&mdash;Mr. Dacre, I perceive! I have
+the honor of knowing Mr. Dacre, though, possibly, I am unknown to him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You were&mdash;until this moment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With an airy little laugh the stranger returned to the duke. He brushed an
+invisible speck of dust off the sleeve of his coat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As has been intimated in that infamous letter, his grace is at perfect
+liberty to give me into custody&mdash;why not? Only&quot;&mdash;he said it with his
+boyish smile&mdash;&quot;if a particular communication is not received from me in
+certain quarters within a certain time the Duchess of Datchet's beautiful
+white arm will be hacked off at the shoulder.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You hound!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke would have taken the stranger by the throat, and have done his
+best to choke the life right out of him then and there, if Mr. Dacre had
+not intervened.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Steady, old man!&quot; Mr. Dacre turned to the stranger. &quot;You appear to be a
+pretty sort of a scoundrel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger gave his shoulders that almost imperceptible shrug.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, my dear Dacre, I am in want of money! I believe that you sometimes
+are in want of money, too.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Everybody knows that nobody knows where Ivor Dacre gets his money from, so
+the allusion must have tickled him immensely.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You're a cool hand,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Some men are born that way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I should imagine. Men like you must be born, not made.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Precisely&mdash;as you say!&quot; The stranger turned, with his graceful smile, to
+the duke: &quot;But are we not wasting precious time? I can assure your grace
+that, in this particular matter, moments are of value.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre interposed before the duke could answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you take my strongly urged advice, Datchet, you will summon this
+constable who is now coming down the Arcade, and hand this gentleman over
+to his keeping. I do not think that you need fear that the duchess will
+lose her arm, or even her little finger. Scoundrels of this one's kidney
+are most amenable to reason when they have handcuffs on their wrists.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke plainly hesitated. He would&mdash;and he would not. The stranger, as
+he eyed him, seemed much amused.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear duke, by all means act on Mr. Dacre's valuable suggestion. As I
+said before, why not? It would at least be interesting to see if the
+duchess does or does not lose her arm&mdash;almost as interesting to you as to
+Mr. Dacre. Those blackmailing, kidnaping scoundrels do use such empty
+menaces. Besides, you would have the pleasure of seeing me locked up. My
+imprisonment for life would recompense you even for the loss of her
+grace's arm. And five hundred pounds is such a sum to have to pay&mdash;merely
+for a wife! Why not, therefore, act on Mr. Dacre's suggestion? Here comes
+the constable.&quot; The constable referred to was advancing toward them&mdash;he
+was not a dozen yards away. &quot;Let me beckon to him&mdash;I will with pleasure.&quot;
+He took out his watch&mdash;a gold chronograph repeater. &quot;There are scarcely
+ten minutes left during which it will be possible for me to send the
+communication which I spoke of, so that it may arrive in time. As it will
+then be too late, and the instruments are already prepared for the little
+operation which her grace is eagerly anticipating, it would, perhaps, be
+as well, after all, that you should give me into charge. You would have
+saved your five hundred pounds, and you would, at any rate, have something
+in exchange for her grace's mutilated limb. Ah, here is the constable!
+Officer!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger spoke with such a pleasant little air of easy geniality that
+it was impossible to tell if he were in jest or in earnest. This fact
+impressed the duke much more than if he had gone in for a liberal
+indulgence of the&mdash;under the circumstances&mdash;orthodox melodramatic
+scowling. And, indeed, in the face of his own common sense, it impressed
+Mr. Ivor Dacre too.</p>
+
+<p>This well-bred, well-groomed youth was just the being to realize&mdash;<i>aux
+bouts des ongles</i>&mdash;a modern type of the devil, the type which depicts him
+as a perfect gentleman, who keeps smiling all the time.</p>
+
+<p>The constable whom this audacious rogue had signaled approached the little
+group. He addressed the stranger:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you want me, sir?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I do not want you. I think it is the Duke of Datchet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The constable, who knew the duke very well by sight, saluted him as he
+turned to receive instructions.</p>
+
+<p>The duke looked white, even savage. There was not a pleasant look in his
+eyes and about his lips. He appeared to be endeavoring to put a great
+restraint upon himself. There was a momentary silence. Mr. Dacre made a
+movement as if to interpose. The duke caught him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>He spoke: &quot;No, constable, I do not want you. This person is mistaken.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The constable looked as if he could not quite make out how such a mistake
+could have arisen, hesitated, then, with another salute, he moved away.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger was still holding his watch in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Only eight minutes,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>The duke seemed to experience some difficulty in giving utterance to what
+he had to say.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I give you this five hundred pounds, you&mdash;you&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As the duke paused, as if at a loss for language which was strong enough
+to convey his meaning, the stranger laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let us take the adjectives for granted. Besides, it is only boys who call
+each other names&mdash;men do things. If you give me the five hundred
+sovereigns, which you have in that bag, at once&mdash;in five minutes it will
+be too late&mdash;I will promise&mdash;I will not swear; if you do not credit my
+simple promise, you will not believe my solemn affirmation&mdash;I will
+promise that, possibly within an hour, certainly within an hour and a
+half, the Duchess of Datchet shall return to you absolutely
+uninjured&mdash;except, of course, as you are already aware, with regard to a
+few of the hairs of her head. I will promise this on the understanding
+that you do not yourself attempt to see where I go, and that you will
+allow no one else to do so.&quot; This with a glance at Ivor Dacre. &quot;I shall
+know at once if I am followed. If you entertain such intentions, you had
+better, on all accounts, remain in possession of your five hundred
+pounds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke eyed him very grimly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I entertain no such intentions&mdash;until the duchess returns.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Again the stranger indulged in that musical laugh of his.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, until the duchess returns! Of course, then the bargain's at an end.
+When you are once more in the enjoyment of her grace's society, you will
+be at liberty to set all the dogs in Europe at my heels. I assure you I
+fully expect that you will do so&mdash;why not?&quot; The duke raised the canvas
+bag. &quot;My dear duke, ten thousand thanks! You shall see her grace at
+Datchet House, 'pon my honor, probably within the hour.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; commented Ivor Dacre, when the stranger had vanished, with the
+bag, into Piccadilly, and as the duke and himself moved toward Burlington
+Gardens, &quot;if a gentleman is to be robbed, it is as well that he should
+have another gentleman rob him.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre eyed his companion covertly as they progressed. His Grace of
+Datchet appeared to have some fresh cause for uneasiness. All at once he
+gave it utterance, in a tone of voice which was extremely somber:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ivor, do you think that scoundrel will dare to play me false?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think,&quot; murmured Mr. Dacre, &quot;that he has dared to play you pretty false
+already.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't mean that. But I mean how am I to know, now that he has his
+money, that he will still not keep Mabel in his clutches?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There came an echo from Mr. Dacre.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just so&mdash;how are you to know?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe that something of this sort has been done in the States.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought that there they were content to kidnap them after they were
+dead. I was not aware that they had, as yet, got quite so far as the
+living.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe that I have heard of something just like this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Possibly; they are giants over there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And in that case the scoundrels, when their demands were met, refused to
+keep to the letter of their bargain and asked for more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke stood still. He clinched his fists, and swore:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ivor, if that&mdash;villain doesn't keep his word, and Mabel isn't home within
+the hour, by&mdash;I shall go mad!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Datchet&quot;&mdash;Mr. Dacre loved strong language as little as he loved a
+scene&mdash;&quot;let us trust to time and, a little, to your white-hatted and
+gardenia-buttonholed friend's word of honor. You should have thought of
+possible eventualities before you showed your confidence&mdash;really. Suppose,
+instead of going mad, we first of all go home?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A hansom stood waiting for a fare at the end of the Arcade. Mr. Dacre had
+handed the duke into it before his grace had quite realized that the
+vehicle was there.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tell the fellow to drive faster.&quot; That was what the duke said when the
+cab had started.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Datchet, the man's already driving his geerage off its legs. If a
+bobby catches sight of him he'll take his number.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, a murmur from the duke:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know if you're aware that the prince is coming to dinner?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am perfectly aware of it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You take it uncommonly cool. How easy it is to bear our brother's
+burdens! Ivor, if Mabel doesn't turn up I shall feel like murder.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I sympathize with you, Datchet, with all my heart, though, I may observe,
+parenthetically, that I very far from realize the situation even yet. Take
+my advice. If the duchess does not show quite as soon as we both of us
+desire, don't make a scene; just let me see what I can do.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Judging from the expression of his countenance, the duke was conscious of
+no overwhelming desire to witness an exhibition of Mr. Dacre's prowess.</p>
+
+<p>When the cab reached Datchet House his grace dashed up the steps three at
+a time. The door flew open.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Has the duchess returned?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A voice floated downward from above. Some one came running down the
+stairs. It was her Grace of Datchet.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mabel!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She actually rushed into the duke's extended arms. And he kissed her, and
+she kissed him&mdash;before the servants.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So you're not quite dead?&quot; she cried.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am almost,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>She drew herself a little away from him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward, were you seriously hurt?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you suppose that I could have been otherwise than seriously hurt?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My darling! Was it a Pickford's van?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke stared.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A Pickford's van? I don't understand. But come in here. Come along, Ivor.
+Mabel, you don't see Ivor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How do you do, Mr. Dacre?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then the trio withdrew into a little anteroom; it was really time. Even
+then the pair conducted themselves as if Mr. Dacre had been nothing and no
+one. The duke took the lady's two hands in his. He eyed her fondly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So you are uninjured, with the exception of that lock of hair. Where did
+the villain take it from?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lady looked a little puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What lock of hair?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>From an envelope which he took from his pocket the duke produced a shining
+tress. It was the lock of hair which had arrived in the first
+communication. &quot;I will have it framed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will have what framed?&quot; The duchess glanced at what the duke was so
+tenderly caressing, almost, as it seemed, a little dubiously. &quot;Whatever is
+it you have there?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is the lock of hair which that scoundrel sent me.&quot; Something in the
+lady's face caused him to ask a question; &quot;Didn't he tell you he had sent
+it to me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did the brute tell you that he meant to cut off your little finger?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A very curious look came into the lady's face. She glanced at the duke as
+if she, all at once, was half afraid of him. She cast at Mr. Dacre what
+really seemed to be a look of inquiry. Her voice was tremulously anxious.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward, did&mdash;did the accident affect you mentally?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How could it not have affected me mentally? Do you think that my mental
+organization is of steel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you look so well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course I look well, now that I have you back again. Tell me, darling,
+did that hound actually threaten you with cutting off your arm? If he did,
+I shall feel half inclined to kill him yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duchess seemed positively to shrink from her better half's near
+neighborhood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward, was it a Pickford's van?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke seemed puzzled. Well he might be.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was what a Pickford's van?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lady turned to Mr. Dacre. In her voice there was a ring of anguish.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Dacre, tell me, was it a Pickford's van?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Ivor could only imitate his relative's repetition of her inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't quite catch you&mdash;was what a Pickford's van?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duchess clasped her hands in front of her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it you are keeping from me? What is it you are trying to hide? I
+implore you to tell me the worst, whatever it may be! Do not keep me any
+longer in suspense; you do not know what I already have endured. Mr.
+Dacre, is my husband mad?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One need scarcely observe that the lady's amazing appeal to Mr. Dacre as
+to her husband's sanity was received with something like surprise. As the
+duke continued to stare at her, a dreadful fear began to loom in his
+brain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My darling, your brain is unhinged!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He advanced to take her two hands again in his; but, to his unmistakable
+distress, she shrank away from him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward&mdash;don't touch me. How is it that I missed you? Why did you not
+wait until I came?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wait until you came?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke's bewilderment increased.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surely, if your injuries turned out, after all, to be slight, that was
+all the more reason why you should have waited, after sending for me like
+that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I sent for you&mdash;I?&quot; The duke's tone was grave. &quot;My darling, perhaps you
+had better come upstairs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not until we have had an explanation. You must have known that I should
+come. Why did you not wait for me after you had sent me that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duchess held out something to the duke. He took it. It was a card&mdash;his
+own visiting card. Something was written on the back of it. He read aloud
+what was written.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mabel, come to me at once with the bearer. They tell me that they cannot
+take me home.&quot; It looks like my own writing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Looks like it! It is your writing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It looks like it&mdash;and written with a shaky pen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear child, one's hand would shake at such a moment as that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mabel, where did you get this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was brought to me in Cane and Wilson's.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who brought it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who brought it? Why, the man you sent.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The man I sent!&quot; A light burst upon the duke's brain. He fell back a
+pace. &quot;It's the decoy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Her grace echoed the words:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The decoy?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The scoundrel! To set a trap with such a bait! My poor innocent darling,
+did you think it came from me? Tell me, Mabel, where did he cut off your
+hair?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Cut off my hair?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Her grace put her hand to her head as if to make sure that her hair was
+there.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where did he take you to?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He took me to Draper's Buildings.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Draper's Buildings?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have never been in the City before, but he told me it was Draper's
+Buildings. Isn't that near the Stock Exchange?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Near the Stock Exchange?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It seemed rather a curious place to which to take a kidnaped victim. The
+man's audacity!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He told me that you were coming out of the Stock Exchange when a van
+knocked you over. He said that he thought it was a Pickford's van&mdash;was it
+a Pickford's van?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, it was not a Pickford's van. Mabel, were you in Draper's Buildings
+when you wrote that letter?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wrote what letter?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you forgotten it already? I do not believe that there is a word in
+it which will not be branded on my brain until I die.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward! What do you mean?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surely you cannot have written me such a letter as that, and then have
+forgotten it already?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He handed her the letter which had arrived in the second communication.
+She glanced at it, askance. Then she took it with a little gasp.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward, if you don't mind, I think I'll take a chair.&quot; She took a
+chair. &quot;Whatever&mdash;whatever's this?&quot; As she read the letter the varying
+expressions which passed across her face were, in themselves, a study in
+psychology. &quot;Is it possible that you can imagine that, under any
+conceivable circumstances, I could have written such a letter as this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mabel!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She rose to her feet with emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward, don't say that you thought this came from me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not from you?&quot; He remembered Knowles's diplomatic reception of the
+epistle on its first appearance. &quot;I suppose that you will say next that
+this is not a lock of your hair?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear child, what bee have you got in your bonnet? This a lock of my
+hair! Why, it's not in the least bit like my hair!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Which was certainly inaccurate. As far as color was concerned it was an
+almost perfect match. The duke turned to Mr. Dacre.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ivor, I've had to go through a good deal this afternoon. If I have to go
+through much more, something will crack!&quot; He touched his forehead. &quot;I
+think it's my turn to take a chair.&quot; Not the one which the duchess had
+vacated, but one which faced it. He stretched out his legs in front of
+him; he thrust his hands into his trousers pockets; he said, in a tone
+which was not gloomy but absolutely grewsome:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Might I ask, Mabel, if you have been kidnaped?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Kidnaped?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The word I used was 'kidnaped.' But I will spell it if you like. Or I
+will get a dictionary, that you may see its meaning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duchess looked as if she was beginning to be not quite sure if she was
+awake or sleeping. She turned to Ivor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Dacre, has the accident affected Hereward's brain?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke took the words out of his cousin's mouth.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On that point, my dear, let me ease your mind. I don't know if you are
+under the impression that I should be the same shape after a Pickford's
+van had run over me as I was before; but, in any case, I have not been run
+over by a Pickford's van. So far as I am concerned there has been no
+accident. Dismiss that delusion from your mind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You appear surprised. One might even think that you were sorry. But may I
+now ask what you did when you arrived at Draper's Buildings?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did! I looked for you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed! And when you had looked in vain, what was the next item in your
+programme?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lady shrank still farther from him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward, have you been having a jest at my expense? Can you have been so
+cruel?&quot; Tears stood in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Rising, the duke laid his hand upon her arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mabel, tell me&mdash;what did you do when you had looked for me in vain?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I looked for you upstairs and downstairs and everywhere. It was quite a
+large place, it took me ever such a time. I thought that I should go
+distracted. Nobody seemed to know anything about you, or even that there
+had been an accident at all&mdash;it was all offices. I couldn't make it out in
+the least, and the people didn't seem to be able to make me out either. So
+when I couldn't find you anywhere I came straight home again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke was silent for a moment. Then with funereal gravity he turned to
+Mr. Dacre. He put to him this question:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ivor, what are you laughing at?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre drew his hand across his mouth with rather a suspicious gesture.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear fellow, only a smile!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duchess looked from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What have you two been doing? What is the joke?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With an air of preternatural solemnity the duke took two letters from the
+breast pocket of his coat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mabel, you have already seen your letter. You have already seen the lock
+of your hair. Just look at this&mdash;and that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He gave her the two very singular communications which had arrived in such
+a mysterious manner, and so quickly one after the other. She read them
+with wide-open eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward! Wherever did these come from?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duke was standing with his legs apart, and his hands in his trousers
+pockets. &quot;I would give&mdash;I would give another five hundred pounds to know.
+Shall I tell you, madam, what I have been doing? I have been presenting
+five hundred golden sovereigns to a perfect stranger, with a top hat, and
+a gardenia in his buttonhole.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whatever for?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you have perused those documents which you have in your hand, you will
+have some faint idea. Ivor, when it's your funeral, I'll smile. Mabel,
+Duchess of Datchet, it is beginning to dawn upon the vacuum which
+represents my brain that I've been the victim of one of the prettiest
+things in practical jokes that ever yet was planned. When that fellow
+brought you that card at Cane and Wilson's&mdash;which, I need scarcely tell
+you, never came from me&mdash;some one walked out of the front entrance who was
+so exactly like you that both Barnes and Moysey took her for you. Moysey
+showed her into the carriage, and Barnes drove her home. But when the
+carriage reached home it was empty. Your double had got out upon the
+road.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duchess uttered a sound which was half gasp, half sigh.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Barnes and Moysey, with beautiful and childlike innocence, when they
+found that they had brought the thing home empty, came straightway and
+told me that you had jumped out of the brougham while it had been driving
+full pelt through the streets. While I was digesting that piece of
+information there came the first epistle, with the lock of your hair.
+Before I had time to digest that there came the second epistle, with yours
+inside.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seems incredible!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It sounds incredible; but unfathomable is the folly of man, especially of
+a man who loves his wife.&quot; The duke crossed to Mr. Dacre. &quot;I don't want,
+Ivor, to suggest anything in the way of bribery and corruption, but if you
+could keep this matter to yourself, and not mention it to your friends,
+our white-hatted and gardenia-buttonholed acquaintance is welcome to his
+five hundred pounds, and&mdash;Mabel, what on earth are you laughing at?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The duchess appeared, all at once, to be seized with inextinguishable
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hereward,&quot; she cried, &quot;just think how that man must be laughing at you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And the Duke of Datchet thought of it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Minor_Canon" id="The_Minor_Canon" /><i>The Minor Canon</i></h2>
+
+
+<p>It was Monday, and in the afternoon, as I was walking along the High
+Street of Marchbury, I was met by a distinguished-looking person whom I
+had observed at the services in the cathedral on the previous day. Now it
+chanced on that Sunday that I was singing the service. Properly speaking,
+it was not my turn; but, as my brother minor canons were either away from
+Marchbury or ill in bed, I was the only one left to perform the necessary
+duty. The distinguished-looking person was a tall, big man with a round
+fat face and small features. His eyes, his hair and mustache (his face was
+bare but for a small mustache) were quite black, and he had a very
+pleasant and genial expression. He wore a tall hat, set rather jauntily on
+his head, and he was dressed in black with a long frock coat buttoned
+across the chest and fitting him close to the body. As he came, with a
+half saunter, half swagger, along the street, I knew him again at once by
+his appearance; and, as he came nearer, I saw from his manner that he was
+intending to stop and speak to me, for he slightly raised his hat and in
+a soft, melodious voice with a colonial &quot;twang&quot; which was far from being
+disagreeable, and which, indeed, to my ear gave a certain additional
+interest to his remarks, he saluted me with &quot;Good day, sir!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good day,&quot; I answered, with just a little reserve in my tone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope, sir,&quot; he began, &quot;you will excuse my stopping you in the street,
+but I wish to tell you how very much I enjoyed the music at your cathedral
+yesterday. I am an Australian, sir, and we have no such music in my
+country.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose not,&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir,&quot; he went on, &quot;nothing nearly so fine. I am very fond of music,
+and as my business brought me in this direction, I thought I would stop at
+your city and take the opportunity of paying a visit to your grand
+cathedral. And I am delighted I came; so pleased, indeed, that I should
+like to leave some memorial of my visit behind me. I should like, sir, to
+do something for your choir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am sure it is very kind of you,&quot; I replied.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I should certainly be glad if you could suggest to me something I
+might do in this way. As regards money, I may say that I have plenty of
+it. I am the owner of a most valuable property. My business relations
+extend throughout the world, and if I am as fortunate in the projects of
+the future as I have been in the past, I shall probably one day achieve
+the proud position of being the richest man in the world.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did not like to undertake myself the responsibility of advising or
+suggesting, so I simply said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot venture to say, offhand, what would be the most acceptable way
+of showing your great kindness and generosity, but I should certainly
+recommend you to put yourself in communication with the dean.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, sir,&quot; said my Australian friend, &quot;I will do so. And now, sir,&quot;
+he continued, &quot;let me say how much I admire your voice. It is, without
+exception, the very finest and clearest voice I have ever heard.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Really,&quot; I answered, quite overcome with such unqualified praise, &quot;really
+it is very good of you to say so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, but I feel it, my dear sir. I have been round the world, from Sydney
+to Frisco, across the continent of America&quot; (he called it Amerrker) &quot;to
+New York City, then on to England, and to-morrow I shall leave your city
+to continue my travels. But in all my experience I have never heard so
+grand a voice as your own.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This and a great deal more he said in the same strain, which modesty
+forbids me to reproduce.</p>
+
+<p>Now I am not without some knowledge of the world outside the close of
+Marchbury Cathedral, and I could not listen to such a &quot;flattering tale&quot;
+without having my suspicions aroused. Who and what is this man? thought I.
+I looked at him narrowly. At first the thought flashed across me that he
+might be a &quot;swell mobsman.&quot; But no, his face was too good for that;
+besides, no man with that huge frame, that personality so marked and so
+easily recognizable, could be a swindler; he could not escape detection a
+single hour. I dismissed the ungenerous thought. Perhaps he is rich, as he
+says. We do hear of munificent donations by benevolent millionaires now
+and then. What if this Australian, attracted by the glories of the old
+cathedral, should now appear as a <i>deus ex machina</i> to re&euml;ndow the choir,
+or to found a musical professoriate in connection with the choir,
+appointing me the first occupant of the professorial chair?</p>
+
+<p>These thoughts flashed across my mind in the momentary pause of his fluent
+tongue.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As for yourself, sir,&quot; he began again, &quot;I have something to propose which
+I trust may not prove unwelcome. But the public street is hardly a
+suitable place to discuss my proposal. May I call upon you this evening at
+your house in the close? I know which it is, for I happened to see you go
+into it yesterday after the morning service.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall be very pleased to see you,&quot; I replied. &quot;We are going out to
+dinner this evening, but I shall be at home and disengaged till about
+seven.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you very much. Then I shall do myself the pleasure of calling upon
+you about six o'clock. Till then, farewell!&quot; A graceful wave of the hand,
+and my unknown friend had disappeared round the corner of the street.</p>
+
+<p>Now at last, I thought, something is going to happen in my uneventful
+life&mdash;something to break the monotony of existence. Of course, he must
+have inquired my name&mdash;he could get that from any of the cathedral
+vergers&mdash;and, as he said, he had observed whereabouts in the close I
+lived. What is he coming to see me for? I wondered. I spent the rest of
+the afternoon in making the wildest surmises. I was castle-building in
+Spain at a furious rate. At one time I imagined that this faithful son of
+the church&mdash;as he appeared to me&mdash;was going to build and endow a grand
+cathedral in Australia on condition that I should be appointed dean at a
+yearly stipend of, say, ten thousand pounds. Or perhaps, I said to myself,
+he will beg me to accept a sum of money&mdash;I never thought of it as less
+than a thousand pounds&mdash;as a slight recognition of and tribute to my
+remarkable vocal ability.</p>
+
+<p>I took a long, lonely walk into the country to correct these ridiculous
+fancies and to steady my mind, and when I reached home and had refreshed
+myself with a quiet cup of afternoon tea, I felt I was morally and
+physically prepared for my interview with the opulent stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Punctually as the cathedral clock struck six there was a ring at the
+visitor's bell. In a moment or two my unknown friend was shown into the
+drawing-room, which he entered with the easy air of a man of the world. I
+noticed he was carrying a small black bag.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How do you do again, Mr. Dale?&quot; he said as though we were old
+acquaintances; &quot;you see I have come sharp to my time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; I answered, &quot;and I am pleased to see you; do sit down.&quot; He sank
+into my best armchair, and placed his bag on the floor beside him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Since we met in the afternoon,&quot; he said, &quot;I have written a letter to
+your dean, expressing the great pleasure I felt in listening to your
+choir, and at the same time I inclosed a five-pound note, which I begged
+him to divide among the choir boys and men, from Alexander Poulter, Esq.,
+of Poulter's Pills. You have of course heard of the world-renowned
+Poulter's Pills. I am Poulter!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Poulter of Poulter's Pills! My heart sank within me! A five-pound note! My
+airy castles were tottering!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I also sent him a couple of hundred of my pamphlets, which I said I
+trusted he would be so kind as to distribute in the close.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was aghast!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now, with regard to the special object of my call, Mr. Dale. If you
+will allow me to say so, you are not making the most of that grand voice
+of yours; you are hidden under an ecclesiastical bushel here&mdash;lost to the
+world. You are wasting your vocal strength and sweetness on the desert
+air, so to speak. Why, if I may hazard a guess, I don't suppose you make
+five hundred a year here, at the outside?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could say nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, now, I can put you into the way of making at least three or four
+times as much as that. Listen! I am Alexander Poulter, of Poulter's Pills.
+I have a proposal to make to you. The scheme is bound to succeed, but I
+want your help. Accept my proposal and your fortune's made. Did you ever
+hear Moody and Sankey?&quot; he asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>The man is an idiot, thought I; he is now fairly carried away with his
+particular mania. Will it last long? Shall I ring?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Novelty, my dear sir,&quot; he went on, &quot;is the rule of the day; and there
+must be novelty in advertising, as in everything else, to catch the public
+interest. So I intend to go on a tour, lecturing on the merits of
+Poulter's Pills in all the principal halls of all the principal towns all
+over the world. But I have been delayed in carrying out my idea till I
+could associate myself with a gentleman such as yourself. Will you join
+me? I should be the Moody of the tour; you would be its Sankey. I would
+speak my patter, and you would intersperse my orations with melodious
+ballads bearing upon the virtues of Poulter's Pills. The ballads are all
+ready!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he opened that bag and drew forth from its recesses nothing
+more alarming than a thick roll of manuscript music.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The verses are my own,&quot; he said, with a little touch of pride; &quot;and as
+for the music, I thought it better to make use of popular melodies, so as
+to enable an audience to join in the chorus. See, here is one of the
+ballads: 'Darling, I am better now.' It describes the woes of a fond
+lover, or rather his physical ailments, until he went through a course of
+Poulter. Here's another: 'I'm ninety-five! I'm ninety-five!' You catch the
+drift of that, of course&mdash;a healthy old age, secured by taking Poulter's
+Pills. Ah! what's this? 'Little sister's last request.' I fancy the idea
+of that is to beg the family never to be without Poulter's Pills. Here
+again: 'Then you'll remember me!' I'm afraid that title is not original;
+never mind, the song is. And here is&mdash;but there are many more, and I won't
+detain you with them now.&quot; He saw, perhaps, I was getting impatient. Thank
+Heaven, however, he was no escaped lunatic. I was safe!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Poulter,&quot; said I, &quot;I took you this afternoon for a disinterested and
+philanthropic millionaire; you take me for&mdash;for&mdash;something different from
+what I am. We have both made mistakes. In a word, it is impossible for me
+to accept your offer!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is that final?&quot; asked Poulter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly,&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>Poulter gathered his manuscripts together and replaced them in the bag,
+and got up to leave the room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good evening, Mr. Dale,&quot; he said mournfully, as I opened the door of the
+room. &quot;Good evening&quot;&mdash;he kept on talking till he was fairly out of the
+house&mdash;&quot;mark my words, you'll be sorry&mdash;very sorry&mdash;one day that you did
+not fall in with my scheme. Offers like mine don't come every day, and you
+will one day regret having refused it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With these words he left the house.</p>
+
+<p>I had little appetite for my dinner that evening.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Pipe" id="The_Pipe" /><i>The Pipe</i></h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&quot;RANDOLPH CRESCENT, N.W.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;MY DEAR PUGH&mdash;I hope you will like the pipe which I send with
+ this. It is rather a curious example of a certain school of
+ Indian carving. And is a present from</p>
+
+<p> &quot;Yours truly, Joseph Tress.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<p>It was really very handsome of Tress&mdash;very handsome! The more especially
+as I was aware that to give presents was not exactly in Tress's line. The
+truth is that when I saw what manner of pipe it was I was amazed. It was
+contained in a sandalwood box, which was itself illustrated with some
+remarkable specimens of carving. I use the word &quot;remarkable&quot; advisedly,
+because, although the workmanship was undoubtedly, in its way, artistic,
+the result could not be described as beautiful. The carver had thought
+proper to ornament the box with some of the ugliest figures I remember to
+have seen. They appeared to me to be devils. Or perhaps they were intended
+to represent deities appertaining to some mythological system with which,
+thank goodness, I am unacquainted. The pipe itself was worthy of the case
+in which it was contained. It was of meerschaum, with an amber mouthpiece.
+It was rather too large for ordinary smoking. But then, of course, one
+doesn't smoke a pipe like that. There are pipes in my collection which I
+should as soon think of smoking as I should of eating. Ask a china maniac
+to let you have afternoon tea out of his Old Chelsea, and you will learn
+some home truths as to the durability of human friendships. The glory of
+the pipe, as Tress had suggested, lay in its carving. Not that I claim
+that it was beautiful, any more than I make such a claim for the carving
+on the box, but, as Tress said in his note, it was curious.</p>
+
+<p>The stem and the bowl were quite plain, but on the edge of the bowl was
+perched some kind of lizard. I told myself it was an octopus when I first
+saw it, but I have since had reason to believe that it was some almost
+unique member of the lizard tribe. The creature was represented as
+climbing over the edge of the bowl down toward the stem, and its legs, or
+feelers, or tentacula, or whatever the things are called, were, if I may
+use a vulgarism, sprawling about &quot;all over the place.&quot; For instance, two
+or three of them were twined about the bowl, two or three of them were
+twisted round the stem, and one, a particularly horrible one, was uplifted
+in the air, so that if you put the pipe in your mouth the thing was
+pointing straight at your nose.</p>
+
+<p>Not the least agreeable feature about the creature was that it was
+hideously lifelike. It appeared to have been carved in amber, but some
+coloring matter must have been introduced, for inside the amber the
+creature was of a peculiarly ghastly green. The more I examined the pipe
+the more amazed I was at Tress's generosity. He and I are rival
+collectors. I am not going to say, in so many words, that his collection
+of pipes contains nothing but rubbish, because, as a matter of fact, he
+has two or three rather decent specimens. But to compare his collection to
+mine would be absurd. Tress is conscious of this, and he resents it. He
+resents it to such an extent that he has been known, at least on one
+occasion, to declare that one single pipe of his&mdash;I believe he alluded to
+the Brummagem relic preposterously attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh&mdash;was
+worth the whole of my collection put together. Although I have forgiven
+this, as I hope I always shall forgive remarks made when envious passions
+get the better of our nobler nature, even of a Joseph Tress, it is not to
+be supposed that I have forgotten it. He was, therefore, not at all the
+sort of person from whom I expected to receive a present. And such a
+present! I do not believe that he himself had a finer pipe in his
+collection. And to have given it to me! I had misjudged the man. I
+wondered where he had got it from. I had seen his pipes; I knew them off
+by heart&mdash;and some nice trumpery he has among them, too! but I had never
+seen <i>that</i> pipe before. The more I looked at it, the more my amazement
+grew. The beast perched upon the edge of the bowl was so lifelike. Its two
+bead-like eyes seemed to gleam at me with positively human intelligence.
+The pipe fascinated me to such an extent that I actually resolved
+to&mdash;smoke it!</p>
+
+<p>I filled it with Perique. Ordinarily I use Birdseye, but on those very
+rare occasions on which I use a specimen I smoke Perique. I lit up with
+quite a small sensation of excitement. As I did so I kept my eyes perforce
+fixed upon the beast. The beast pointed its upraised tentacle directly at
+me. As I inhaled the pungent tobacco that tentacle impressed me with a
+feeling of actual uncanniness. It was broad daylight, and I was smoking in
+front of the window, yet to such an extent was I affected that it seemed
+to me that the tentacle was not only vibrating, which, owing to the
+peculiarity of its position, was quite within the range of probability,
+but actually moving, elongating&mdash;stretching forward, that is, farther
+toward me, and toward the tip of my nose. So impressed was I by this idea
+that I took the pipe out of my mouth and minutely examined the beast.
+Really, the delusion was excusable. So cunningly had the artist wrought
+that he succeeded in producing a creature which, such was its uncanniness,
+I could only hope had no original in nature.</p>
+
+<p>Replacing the pipe between my lips I took several whiffs. Never had
+smoking had such an effect on me before. Either the pipe, or the creature
+on it, exercised some singular fascination. I seemed, without an instant's
+warning, to be passing into some land of dreams. I saw the beast, which
+was perched upon the bowl, writhe and twist. I saw it lift itself bodily
+from the meerschaum.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Feeling better now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I looked up. Joseph Tress was speaking.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's the matter? Have I been ill?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You appear to have been in some kind of swoon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tress's tone was peculiar, even a little dry.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Swoon! I never was guilty of such a thing in my life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor was I, until I smoked that pipe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I sat up. The act of sitting up made me conscious of the fact that I had
+been lying down. Conscious, too, that I was feeling more than a little
+dazed. It seemed as though I was waking out of some strange, lethargic
+sleep&mdash;a kind of feeling which I have read of and heard about, but never
+before experienced.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where am I?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You're on the couch in your own room. You <i>were</i> on the floor; but I
+thought it would be better to pick you up and place you on the
+couch&mdash;though no one performed the same kind office to me when I was on
+the floor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Again Tress's tone was distinctly dry.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How came <i>you</i> here?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, that's the question.&quot; He rubbed his chin&mdash;a habit of his which has
+annoyed me more than once before. &quot;Do you think you're sufficiently
+recovered to enable you to understand a little simple explanation?&quot; I
+stared at him, amazed. He went on stroking his chin. &quot;The truth is that
+when I sent you the pipe I made a slight omission.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;An omission?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I omitted to advise you not to smoke it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And why?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because&mdash;well, I've reason to believe the thing is drugged.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Drugged!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or poisoned.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poisoned!&quot; I was wide awake enough then. I jumped off the couch with a
+celerity which proved it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is this way. I became its owner in rather a singular manner.&quot; He
+paused, as if for me to make a remark; but I was silent. &quot;It is not often
+that I smoke a specimen, but, for some reason, I did smoke this. I
+commenced to smoke it, that is. How long I continued to smoke it is more
+than I can say. It had on me the same peculiar effect which it appears to
+have had on you. When I recovered consciousness I was lying on the floor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the floor?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the floor. In about as uncomfortable a position as you can easily
+conceive. I was lying face downward, with my legs bent under me. I was
+never so surprised in my life as I was when I found myself <i>where</i> I was.
+At first I supposed that I had had a stroke. But by degrees it dawned upon
+me that I didn't <i>feel</i> as though I had had a stroke.&quot; Tress, by the way,
+has been an army surgeon. &quot;I was conscious of distinct nausea. Looking
+about, I saw the pipe. With me it had fallen on to the floor. I took it
+for granted, considering the delicacy of the carving, that the fall had
+broken it. But when I picked it up I found it quite uninjured. While I was
+examining it a thought flashed to my brain. Might it not be answerable for
+what had happened to me? Suppose, for instance, it was drugged? I had
+heard of such things. Besides, in my case were present all the symptoms of
+drug poisoning, though what drug had been used I couldn't in the least
+conceive. I resolved that I would give the pipe another trial.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On yourself? or on another party, meaning me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On myself, my dear Pugh&mdash;on myself! At that point of my investigations I
+had not begun to think of you. I lit up and had another smoke.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With what result?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, that depends on the standpoint from which you regard the thing.
+From one point of view the result was wholly satisfactory&mdash;I proved that
+the thing was drugged, and more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you have another fall?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did. And something else besides.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On that account, I presume, you resolved to pass the treasure on to me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Partly on that account, and partly on another.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On my word, I appreciate your generosity. You might have labeled the
+thing as poison.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Exactly. But then you must remember how often you have told me that you
+<i>never</i> smoke your specimens.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That was no reason why you shouldn't have given me a hint that the thing
+was more dangerous than dynamite.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That did occur to me afterwards. Therefore I called to supply the slight
+omission.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Slight</i> omission, you call it! I wonder what you would have called it if
+you had found me dead.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I had known that you <i>intended</i> smoking it I should not have been at
+all surprised if I had.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Really, Tress, I appreciate your kindness more and more! And where is
+this example of your splendid benevolence? Have you pocketed it,
+regretting your lapse into the unaccustomed paths of generosity? Or is it
+smashed to atoms?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Neither the one nor the other. You will find the pipe upon the table. I
+neither desire its restoration nor is it in any way injured. It is merely
+an expression of personal opinion when I say that I don't believe that it
+<i>could</i> be injured. Of course, having discovered its deleterious
+properties, you will not want to smoke it again. You will therefore be
+able to enjoy the consciousness of being the possessor of what I honestly
+believe to be the most remarkable pipe in existence. Good day, Pugh.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was gone before I could say a word. I immediately concluded, from the
+precipitancy of his flight, that the pipe <i>was</i> injured. But when I
+subjected it to close examination I could discover no signs of damage.
+While I was still eying it with jealous scrutiny the door reopened, and
+Tress came in again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By the way, Pugh, there is one thing I might mention, especially as I
+know it won't make any difference to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That depends on what it is. If you have changed your mind, and want the
+pipe back again, I tell you frankly that it won't. In my opinion, a thing
+once given is given for good.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite so; I don't want it back again. You may make your mind easy on that
+point. I merely wanted to tell you <i>why</i> I gave it you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have told me that already.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Only partly, my dear Pugh&mdash;only partly. You don't suppose I should have
+given you such a pipe as that merely because it happened to be drugged?
+Scarcely! I gave it you because I discovered from indisputable evidence,
+and to my cost, that it was haunted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Haunted?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, haunted. Good day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was gone again. I ran out of the room, and shouted after him down the
+stairs. He was already at the bottom of the flight.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress! Come back! What do you mean by talking such nonsense?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course it's only nonsense. We know that that sort of thing always is
+nonsense. But if you should have reason to suppose that there is something
+in it besides nonsense, you may think it worth your while to make
+inquiries of me. But I won't have that pipe back again in my possession on
+any terms&mdash;mind that!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The bang of the front door told me that he had gone out into the street. I
+let him go. I laughed to myself as I re&euml;ntered the room. Haunted! That was
+not a bad idea of his. I saw the whole position at a glance. The truth of
+the matter was that he did regret his generosity, and he was ready to go
+any lengths if he could only succeed in cajoling me into restoring his
+gift. He was aware that I have views upon certain matters which are not
+wholly in accordance with those which are popularly supposed to be the
+views of the day, and particularly that on the question of what are
+commonly called supernatural visitations I have a standpoint of my own.
+Therefore, it was not a bad move on his part to try to make me believe
+that about the pipe on which he knew I had set my heart there was
+something which could not be accounted for by ordinary laws. Yet, as his
+own sense would have told him it would do, if he had only allowed himself
+to reflect for a moment, the move failed. Because I am not yet so far gone
+as to suppose that a pipe, a thing of meerschaum and of amber, in the
+sense in which I understand the word, <i>could</i> be haunted&mdash;a pipe, a mere
+pipe.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hollo! I thought the creature's legs were twined right round the bowl!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was holding the pipe in my hand, regarding it with the affectionate eyes
+with which a connoisseur does regard a curio, when I was induced to make
+this exclamation. I was certainly under the impression that, when I first
+took the pipe out of the box, two, if not three of the feelers had been
+twined about the bowl&mdash;twined tightly, so that you could not see daylight
+between them and it. Now they were almost entirely detached, only the tips
+touching the meerschaum, and those particular feelers were gathered up as
+though the creature were in the act of taking a spring. Of course I was
+under a misapprehension: the feelers <i>couldn't</i> have been twined; a moment
+before I should have been ready to bet a thousand to one that they were.
+Still, one does make mistakes, and very egregious mistakes, at times. At
+the same time, I confess that when I saw that dreadful-looking animal
+poised on the extreme edge of the bowl, for all the world as though it
+were just going to spring at me, I was a little startled. I remembered
+that when I was smoking the pipe I did think I saw the uplifted tentacle
+moving, as though it were reaching out to me. And I had a clear
+recollection that just as I had been sinking into that strange state of
+unconsciousness, I had been under the impression that the creature was
+writhing and twisting, as though it had suddenly become instinct with
+life. Under the circumstances, these reflections were not pleasant. I
+wished Tress had not talked that nonsense about the thing being haunted.
+It was surely sufficient to know that it was drugged and poisonous,
+without anything else.</p>
+
+<p>I replaced it in the sandalwood box. I locked the box in a cabinet. Quite
+apart from the question as to whether that pipe was or was not haunted, I
+know it haunted me. It was with me in a figurative&mdash;which was worse than
+actual&mdash;sense all the day. Still worse, it was with me all the night. It
+was with me in my dreams. Such dreams! Possibly I had not yet wholly
+recovered from the effects of that insidious drug, but, whether or no, it
+was very wrong of Tress to set my thoughts into such a channel. He knows
+that I am of a highly imaginative temperament, and that it is easier to
+get morbid thoughts into my mind than to get them out again. Before that
+night was through I wished very heartily that I had never seen the pipe! I
+woke from one nightmare to fall into another. One dreadful dream was with
+me all the time&mdash;of a hideous, green reptile which advanced toward me out
+of some awful darkness, slowly, inch by inch, until it clutched me round
+the neck, and, gluing its lips to mine, sucked the life's blood out of my
+veins as it embraced me with a slimy kiss. Such dreams are not restful. I
+woke anything but refreshed when the morning came. And when I got up and
+dressed I felt that, on the whole, it would perhaps have been better if I
+never had gone to bed. My nerves were unstrung, and I had that generally
+tremulous feeling which is, I believe, an inseparable companion of the
+more advanced stages of dipsomania. I ate no breakfast. I am no breakfast
+eater as a rule, but that morning I ate absolutely nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If this sort of thing is to continue, I will let Tress have his pipe
+again. He may have the laugh of me, but anything is better than this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was with almost funereal forebodings that I went to the cabinet in
+which I had placed the sandalwood box. But when I opened it my feelings of
+gloom partially vanished. Of what phantasies had I been guilty! It must
+have been an entire delusion on my part to have supposed that those
+tentacula had ever been twined about the bowl. The creature was in
+exactly the same position in which I had left it the day before&mdash;as, of
+course, I knew it would be&mdash;poised, as if about to spring. I was telling
+myself how foolish I had been to allow myself to dwell for a moment on
+Tress's words, when Martin Brasher was shown in.</p>
+
+<p>Brasher is an old friend of mine. We have a common ground&mdash;ghosts. Only we
+approach them from different points of view. He takes the
+scientific&mdash;psychological&mdash;inquiry side. He is always anxious to hear of a
+ghost, so that he may have an opportunity of &quot;showing it up.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've something in your line here,&quot; I observed, as he came in.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In my line? How so? <i>I'm</i> not pipe mad.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No; but you're ghost mad. And this is a haunted pipe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A haunted pipe! I think you're rather more mad about ghosts, my dear
+Pugh, than I am.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then I told him all about it. He was deeply interested, especially when I
+told him that the pipe was drugged. But when I repeated Tress's words
+about its being haunted, and mentioned my own delusion about the creature
+moving, he took a more serious view of the case than I had expected he
+would do.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I propose that we act on Tress's suggestion, and go and make inquiries of
+him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you don't really think that there is anything in it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On these subjects I never allow myself to think at all. There are Tress's
+words, and there is your story. It is agreed on all hands that the pipe
+has peculiar properties. It seems to me that there is a sufficient case
+here to merit inquiry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He persuaded me. I went with him. The pipe, in the sandalwood box, went
+too. Tress received us with a grin&mdash;a grin which was accentuated when I
+placed the sandalwood box on the table.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You understand,&quot; he said, &quot;that a gift is a gift. On no terms will I
+consent to receive that pipe back in my possession.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was rather nettled by his tone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You need be under no alarm. I have no intention of suggesting anything of
+the kind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our business here,&quot; began Brasher&mdash;I must own that his manner is a little
+ponderous&mdash;&quot;is of a scientific, I may say also, and at the same time, of a
+judicial nature. Our object is the Pursuit of Truth and the Advancement of
+Inquiry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you been trying another smoke?&quot; inquired Tress, nodding his head
+toward me.</p>
+
+<p>Before I had time to answer, Brasher went droning on:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our friend here tells me that you say this pipe is haunted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I say it is haunted because it <i>is</i> haunted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I looked at Tress. I half suspected that he was poking fun at us. But he
+appeared to be serious enough.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In these matters,&quot; remarked Brasher, as though he were giving utterance
+to a new and important truth, &quot;there is a scientific and nonscientific
+method of inquiry. The scientific method is to begin at the beginning. May
+I ask how this pipe came into your possession?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tress paused before he answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You may ask.&quot; He paused again. &quot;Oh, you certainly may ask. But it doesn't
+follow that I shall tell you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surely your object, like ours, can be but the Spreading About of the
+Truth?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't see it at all. It is possible to imagine a case in which the
+spreading about of the truth might make me look a little awkward.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed!&quot; Brasher pursed up his lips. &quot;Your words would almost lead one to
+suppose that there was something about your method of acquiring the pipe
+which you have good and weighty reasons for concealing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know why I should conceal the thing from you. I don't suppose
+either of you is any better than I am. I don't mind telling you how I got
+the pipe. I stole it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stole it!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Brasher seemed both amazed and shocked. But I, who had previous experience
+of Tress's methods of adding to his collection, was not at all surprised.
+Some of the pipes which he calls his, if only the whole truth about them
+were publicly known, would send him to jail.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's nothing!&quot; he continued. &quot;All collectors steal! The eighth
+commandment was not intended to apply to them. Why, Pugh there has
+'conveyed' three fourths of the pipes which he flatters himself are his.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was so dumfoundered by the charge that it took my breath away. I sat in
+astounded silence. Tress went raving on:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was so shy of this particular pipe when I had obtained it, that I put
+it away for quite three months. When I took it out to have a look at it
+something about the thing so tickled me that I resolved to smoke it. Owing
+to peculiar circumstances attending the manner in which the thing came
+into my possession, and on which I need not dwell&mdash;you don't like to dwell
+on those sort of things, do you, Pugh?&mdash;I knew really nothing about the
+pipe. As was the case with Pugh, one peculiarity I learned from actual
+experience. It was also from actual experience that I learned that the
+thing was&mdash;well, I said haunted, but you may use any other word you like.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tell us, as briefly as possible, what it was you really did discover.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Take the pipe out of the box!&quot; Brasher took the pipe out of the box and
+held it in his hand. &quot;You see that creature on it. Well, when I first had
+it it was underneath the pipe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How do you mean that it was underneath the pipe?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was bunched together underneath the stem, just at the end of the
+mouthpiece, in the same way in which a fly might be suspended from the
+ceiling. When I began to smoke the pipe I saw the creature move.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I thought that unconsciousness immediately followed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It did follow, but not before I saw that the thing was moving. It was
+because I thought that I had been, in a way, a victim of delirium that I
+tried the second smoke. Suspecting that the thing was drugged I swallowed
+what I believed would prove a powerful antidote. It enabled me to resist
+the influence of the narcotic much longer than before, and while I still
+retained my senses I saw the creature crawl along under the stem and over
+the bowl. It was that sight, I believe, as much as anything else, which
+sent me silly. When I came to I then and there decided to present the pipe
+to Pugh. There is one more thing I would remark. When the pipe left me the
+creature's legs were twined about the bowl. Now they are withdrawn.
+Possibly you, Pugh, are able to cap my story with a little one which is
+all your own.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I certainly did imagine that I saw the creature move. But I supposed that
+while I was under the influence of the drug imagination had played me a
+trick.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a bit of it! Depend upon it, the beast is bewitched. Even to my eye
+it looks as though it were, and to a trained eye like yours, Pugh! You've
+been looking for the devil a long time, and you've got him at last.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I&mdash;I wish you wouldn't make those remarks, Tress. They jar on me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I confess,&quot; interpolated Brasher&mdash;I noticed that he had put the pipe down
+on the table as though he were tired of holding it&mdash;&quot;that, to <i>my</i>
+thinking, such remarks are not appropriate. At the same time what you have
+told us is, I am bound to allow, a little curious. But of course what I
+require is ocular demonstration. I haven't seen the movement myself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, but you very soon will do if you care to have a pull at the pipe on
+your own account. Do, Brasher, to oblige me! There's a dear!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It appears, then, that the movement is only observable when the pipe is
+smoked. We have at least arrived at step No. 1.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here's a match, Brasher! Light up, and we shall have arrived at step No.
+2.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tress lit a match and held it out to Brasher. Brasher retreated from its
+neighborhood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, Mr. Tress, I am no smoker, as you are aware. And I have no
+desire to acquire the art of smoking by means of a poisoned pipe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tress laughed. He blew out the match and threw it into the grate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I tell you what I'll do&mdash;I'll have up Bob.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bob&mdash;why Bob?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bob&quot;&mdash;whose real name was Robert Haines, though I should think he must
+have forgotten the fact, so seldom was he addressed by it&mdash;was Tress's
+servant. He had been an old soldier, and had accompanied his master when
+he left the service. He was as depraved a character as Tress himself. I am
+not sure even that he was not worse than his master. I shall never forget
+how he once behaved toward myself. He actually had the assurance to accuse
+me of attempting to steal the Wardour Street relic which Tress fondly
+deludes himself was once the property of Sir Walter Raleigh. The truth is
+that I had slipped it with my handkerchief into my pocket in a fit of
+absence of mind. A man who could accuse <i>me</i> of such a thing would be
+guilty of anything. I was therefore quite at one with Brasher when he
+asked what Bob could possibly be wanted for. Tress explained.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll get him to smoke the pipe,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Brasher and I exchanged glances, but we refrained from speech.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It won't do him any harm,&quot; said Tress.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What&mdash;not a poisoned pipe?&quot; asked Brasher.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's not poisoned&mdash;it's only drugged.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Only</i> drugged!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing hurts Bob. He is like an ostrich. He has digestive organs which
+are peculiarly his own. It will only serve him as it served me&mdash;and
+Pugh&mdash;it will knock him over. It is all done in the Pursuit of Truth and
+for the Advancement of Inquiry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could see that Brasher did not altogether like the tone in which Tress
+repeated his words. As for me, it was not to be supposed that I should put
+myself out in a matter which in no way concerned me. If Tress chose to
+poison the man, it was his affair, not mine. He went to the door and
+shouted:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bob! Come here, you scoundrel!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That is the way in which he speaks to him. No really decent servant would
+stand it. I shouldn't care to address Nalder, my servant, in such a way.
+He would give me notice on the spot. Bob came in. He is a great hulking
+fellow who is always on the grin. Tress had a decanter of brandy in his
+hand. He filled a tumbler with the neat spirit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bob, what would you say to a glassful of brandy&mdash;the real thing&mdash;my boy?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what would you say to a pull at a pipe when the brandy is drunk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A pipe?&quot; The fellow is sharp enough when he likes. I saw him look at the
+pipe upon the table, and then at us, and then a gleam of intelligence came
+into his eyes. &quot;I'd do it for a dollar, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A dollar, you thief?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I meant ten shillings, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ten shillings, you brazen vagabond?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should have said a pound.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A pound! Was ever the like of that! Do I understand you to ask a pound
+for taking a pull at your master's pipe?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm thinking that I'll have to make it two.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The deuce you are! Here, Pugh, lend me a pound.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm afraid I've left my purse behind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then lend me ten shillings&mdash;Ananias!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I doubt if I have more than five.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then give me the five. And, Brasher, lend me the other fifteen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Brasher lent him the fifteen. I doubt if we shall either of us ever see
+our money again. He handed the pound to Bob.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here's the brandy&mdash;drink it up!&quot; Bob drank it without a word, draining
+the glass of every drop. &quot;And here's the pipe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it poisoned, sir?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poisoned, you villain! What do you mean?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It isn't the first time I've seen your tricks, sir&mdash;is it now? And you're
+not the one to give a pound for nothing at all. If it kills me you'll send
+my body to my mother&mdash;she'd like to know that I was dead.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Send your body to your grandmother! You idiot, sit down and smoke!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Bob sat down. Tress had filled the pipe, and handed it, with a lighted
+match, to Bob. The fellow declined the match. He handled the pipe very
+gingerly, turning it over and over, eying it with all his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, sir&mdash;I'll light up myself if it's the same to you. I carry
+matches of my own. It's a beautiful pipe, entirely. I never see the like
+of it for ugliness. And what's the slimy-looking varmint that looks as
+though it would like to have my life? Is it living, or is it dead?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, we don't want to sit here all day, my man!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, sir, the look of this here pipe has quite upset my stomach. I'd
+like another drop of liquor, if it's the same to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Another drop! Why, you've had a tumblerful already! Here's another
+tumblerful to put on top of that. You won't want the pipe to kill
+you&mdash;you'll be killed before you get to it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And isn't it better to die a natural death?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Bob emptied the second tumbler of brandy as though it were water. I
+believe he would empty a hogshead without turning a hair! Then he gave
+another look at the pipe. Then, taking a match from his waistcoat pocket,
+he drew a long breath, as though he were resigning himself to fate.
+Striking the match on the seat of his trousers, while, shaded by his hand,
+the flame was gathering strength, he looked at each of us in turn. When he
+looked at Tress I distinctly saw him wink his eye. What my feelings would
+have been if a servant of mine had winked his eye at me I am unable to
+imagine! The match was applied to the tobacco, a puff of smoke came
+through his lips&mdash;the pipe was alight!</p>
+
+<p>During this process of lighting the pipe we had sat&mdash;I do not wish to use
+exaggerated language, but we had sat and watched that alcoholic scamp's
+proceedings as though we were witnessing an action which would leave its
+mark upon the age. When we saw the pipe was lighted we gave a simultaneous
+start. Brasher put his hands under his coat tails and gave a kind of hop.
+I raised myself a good six inches from my chair, and Tress rubbed his
+palms together with a chuckle. Bob alone was calm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now,&quot; cried Tress, &quot;you'll see the devil moving.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Bob took the pipe from between his lips.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See what?&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bob, you rascal, put that pipe back into your mouth, and smoke it for
+your life!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Bob was eying the pipe askance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I dare say, but what I want to know is whether this here varmint's dead
+or whether he isn't. I don't want to have him flying at my nose&mdash;and he
+looks vicious enough for anything.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give me back that pound, you thief, and get out of my house, and bundle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I ain't going to give you back no pound.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then smoke that pipe!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am smoking it, ain't I?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With the utmost deliberation Bob returned the pipe to his mouth. He
+emitted another whiff or two of smoke.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now&mdash;now!&quot; cried Tress, all excitement, and wagging his hand in the air.</p>
+
+<p>We gathered round. As we did so Bob again withdrew the pipe.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the meaning of all this here? I ain't going to have you playing
+none of your larks on me. I know there's something up, but I ain't going
+to throw my life away for twenty shillings&mdash;not quite I ain't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tress, whose temper is not at any time one of the best, was seized with
+quite a spasm of rage.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As I live, my lad, if you try to cheat me by taking that pipe from
+between your lips until I tell you, you leave this room that instant,
+never again to be a servant of mine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I presume the fellow knew from long experience when his master meant what
+he said, and when he didn't. Without an attempt at remonstrance he
+replaced the pipe. He continued stolidly to puff away. Tress caught me by
+the arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What did I tell you? There&mdash;there! That tentacle is moving.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The uplifted tentacle <i>was</i> moving. It was doing what I had seen it do, as
+I supposed, in my distorted imagination&mdash;it was reaching forward.
+Undoubtedly Bob saw what it was doing; but, whether in obedience to his
+master's commands, or whether because the drug was already beginning to
+take effect, he made no movement to withdraw the pipe. He watched the
+slowly advancing tentacle, coming closer and closer toward his nose, with
+an expression of such intense horror on his countenance that it became
+quite shocking. Farther and farther the creature reached forward, until on
+a sudden, with a sort of jerk, the movement assumed a downward direction,
+and the tentacle was slowly lowered until the tip rested on the stem of
+the pipe. For a moment the creature remained motionless. I was quieting my
+nerves with the reflection that this thing was but some trick of the
+carver's art, and that what we had seen we had seen in a sort of
+nightmare, when the whole hideous reptile was seized with what seemed to
+be a fit of convulsive shuddering. It seemed to be in agony. It trembled
+so violently that I expected to see it loosen its hold of the stem and
+fall to the ground. I was sufficiently master of myself to steal a glance
+at Bob. We had had an inkling of what might happen. He was wholly
+unprepared. As he saw that dreadful, human-looking creature, coming to
+life, as it seemed, within an inch or two of his nose, his eyes dilated to
+twice their usual size. I hoped, for his sake, that unconsciousness would
+supervene, through the action of the drug, before through sheer fright
+his senses left him. Perhaps mechanically he puffed steadily on.</p>
+
+<p>The creature's shuddering became more violent. It appeared to swell before
+our eyes. Then, just as suddenly as it began, the shuddering ceased. There
+was another instant of quiescence. Then the creature began to crawl along
+the stem of the pipe! It moved with marvelous caution, the merest fraction
+of an inch at a time. But still it moved! Our eyes were riveted on it with
+a fascination which was absolutely nauseous. I am unpleasantly affected
+even as I think of it now. My dreams of the night before had been nothing
+to this.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, slowly, it went, nearer and nearer to the smoker's nose. Its mode
+of progression was in the highest degree unsightly. It glided, never, so
+far as I could see, removing its tentacles from the stem of the pipe. It
+slipped its hindmost feelers onward until they came up to those which were
+in advance. Then, in their turn, it advanced those which were in front. It
+seemed, too, to move with the utmost labor, shuddering as though it were
+in pain.</p>
+
+<p>We were all, for our parts, speechless. I was momentarily hoping that the
+drug would take effect on Bob. Either his constitution enabled him to
+offer a strong resistance to narcotics, or else the large quantity of neat
+spirit which he had drunk acted&mdash;as Tress had malevolently intended that
+it should&mdash;as an antidote. It seemed to me that he would <i>never</i> succumb.
+On went the creature&mdash;on, and on, in its infinitesimal progression. I was
+spellbound. I would have given the world to scream, to have been able to
+utter a sound. I could do nothing else but watch.</p>
+
+<p>The creature had reached the end of the stem. It had gained the amber
+mouthpiece. It was within an inch of the smoker's nose. Still on it went.
+It seemed to move with greater freedom on the amber. It increased its rate
+of progress. It was actually touching the foremost feature on the smoker's
+countenance. I expected to see it grip the wretched Bob, when it began to
+oscillate from side to side. Its oscillations increased in violence. It
+fell to the floor. That same instant the narcotic prevailed. Bob slipped
+sideways from the chair, the pipe still held tightly between his rigid
+jaws.</p>
+
+<p>We were silent. There lay Bob. Close beside him lay the creature. A few
+more inches to the left, and he would have fallen on and squashed it flat.
+It had fallen on its back. Its feelers were extended upward. They were
+writhing and twisting and turning in the air.</p>
+
+<p>Tress was the first to speak.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think a little brandy won't be amiss.&quot; Emptying the remainder of the
+brandy into a glass, he swallowed it at a draught. &quot;Now for a closer
+examination of our friend.&quot; Taking a pair of tongs from the grate he
+nipped the creature between them. He deposited it upon the table. &quot;I
+rather fancy that this is a case for dissection.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He took a penknife from his waistcoat pocket. Opening the large blade, he
+thrust its point into the object on the table. Little or no resistance
+seemed to be offered to the passage of the blade, but as it was inserted
+the tentacula simultaneously began to writhe and twist. Tress withdrew the
+knife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought so!&quot; He held the blade out for our inspection. The point was
+covered with some viscid-looking matter. &quot;That's blood! The thing's
+alive!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Alive!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Alive! That's the secret of the whole performance!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But me no buts, my Pugh! The mystery's exploded! One more ghost is lost
+to the world! The person from whom I <i>obtained</i> that pipe was an Indian
+juggler&mdash;up to many tricks of the trade. He, or some one for him, got hold
+of this sweet thing in reptiles&mdash;and a sweeter thing would, I imagine, be
+hard to find&mdash;and covered it with some preparation of, possibly, gum
+arabic. He allowed this to harden. Then he stuck the thing&mdash;still living,
+for those sort of gentry are hard to kill&mdash;to the pipe. The consequence
+was that when anyone lit up, the warmth was communicated to the adhesive
+agent&mdash;again some preparation of gum, no doubt&mdash;it moistened it, and the
+creature, with infinite difficulty, was able to move. But I am open to lay
+odds with any gentleman of sporting tastes that <i>this</i> time the creature's
+traveling days <i>are</i> done. It has given me rather a larger taste of the
+horrors than is good for my digestion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With the aid of the tongs he removed the creature from the table. He
+placed it on the hearth. Before Brasher or I had a notion of what it was
+he intended to do he covered it with a heavy marble paper weight. Then he
+stood upon the weight, and between the marble and the hearth he ground the
+creature flat.</p>
+
+<p>While the execution was still proceeding, Bob sat up upon the floor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hollo!&quot; he asked, &quot;what's happened?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We've emptied the bottle, Bob,&quot; said Tress. &quot;But there's another where
+that came from. Perhaps you could drink another tumblerful, my boy?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Bob drank it!</p>
+
+
+<h5>FOOTNOTE</h5>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&quot;Those gentry are hard to kill.&quot; Here is fact, not fantasy.
+ Lizard yarns no less sensational than this Mystery Story can be
+ found between the covers of solemn, zoological textbooks.</p>
+
+<p> Reptiles, indeed, are far from finicky in the matters of air,
+ space, and especially warmth. Frogs and other such
+ sluggish-blooded creatures have lived after being frozen fast in
+ ice. Their blood is little warmer than air or water, enjoying no
+ extra casing of fur or feathers.</p>
+
+<p> Air and food seem held in light esteem by lizards. Their blood
+ need not be highly oxygenated; it nourishes just as well when
+ impure. In temperate climes lizards lie torpid and buried all
+ winter; some species of the tropic deserts sleep peacefully all
+ summer. Their anatomy includes no means for the continuous
+ introduction and expulsion of air; reptilian lungs are little
+ more than closed sacs, without cell structure.</p>
+
+<p> If any further zoological fact were needed to verify the
+ d&eacute;nouement of &quot;The Pipe,&quot; it might be the general statement that
+ lizards are abnormal brutes anyhow. Consider the chameleons of
+ unsettled hue. And what is one to think of an animal which, when
+ captured by the tail, is able to make its escape by willfully
+ shuffling off that appendage?&mdash;EDITOR.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Puzzle" id="The_Puzzle" />The Puzzle</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+
+<p>Pugh came into my room holding something wrapped in a piece of brown
+paper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress, I have brought you something on which you may exercise your
+ingenuity.&quot; He began, with exasperating deliberation, to untie the string
+which bound his parcel; he is one of those persons who would not cut a
+knot to save their lives. The process occupied him the better part of a
+quarter of an hour. Then he held out the contents of the paper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you think of that?&quot; he asked. I thought nothing of it, and I told
+him so. &quot;I was prepared for that confession. I have noticed, Tress, that
+you generally do think nothing of an article which really deserves the
+attention of a truly thoughtful mind. Possibly, as you think so little of
+it, you will be able to solve the puzzle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I took what he held out to me. It was an oblong box, perhaps seven inches
+long by three inches broad.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where's the puzzle?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you will examine the lid of the box, you will see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I turned it over and over; it was difficult to see which was the lid. Then
+I perceived that on one side were printed these words:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;PUZZLE: TO OPEN THE BOX&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The words were so faintly printed that it was not surprising that I had
+not noticed them at first. Pugh explained.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I observed that box on a tray outside a second-hand furniture shop. It
+struck my eye. I took it up. I examined it. I inquired of the proprietor
+of the shop in what the puzzle lay. He replied that that was more than he
+could tell me. He himself had made several attempts to open the box, and
+all of them had failed. I purchased it. I took it home. I have tried, and
+I have failed. I am aware, Tress, of how you pride yourself upon your
+ingenuity. I cannot doubt that, if you try, you will not fail.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>While Pugh was prosing, I was examining the box. It was at least well
+made. It weighed certainly under two ounces. I struck it with my knuckles;
+it sounded hollow. There was no hinge; nothing of any kind to show that it
+ever had been opened, or, for the matter of that, that it ever could be
+opened. The more I examined the thing, the more it whetted my curiosity.
+That it could be opened, and in some ingenious manner, I made no
+doubt&mdash;but how?</p>
+
+<p>The box was not a new one. At a rough guess I should say that it had been
+a box for a good half century; there were certain signs of age about it
+which could not escape a practiced eye. Had it remained unopened all that
+time? When opened, what would be found inside? It <i>sounded</i> hollow;
+probably nothing at all&mdash;who could tell?</p>
+
+<p>It was formed of small pieces of inlaid wood. Several woods had been used;
+some of them were strange to me. They were of different colors; it was
+pretty obvious that they must all of them have been hard woods. The pieces
+were of various shapes&mdash;hexagonal, octagonal, triangular, square, oblong,
+and even circular. The process of inlaying them had been beautifully done.
+So nicely had the parts been joined that the lines of meeting were
+difficult to discover with the naked eye; they had been joined solid, so
+to speak. It was an excellent example of marquetry. I had been over-hasty
+in my deprecation; I owed as much to Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This box of yours is better worth looking at than I first supposed. Is it
+to be sold?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, it is not to be sold. Nor&quot;&mdash;he &quot;fixed&quot; me with his spectacles&mdash;&quot;is it
+to be given away. I have brought it to you for the simple purpose of
+ascertaining if you have ingenuity enough to open it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will engage to open it in two seconds&mdash;with a hammer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I dare say. <i>I</i> will open it with a hammer. The thing is to open it
+without.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me see.&quot; I began, with the aid of a microscope, to examine the box
+more closely. &quot;I will give you one piece of information, Pugh. Unless I am
+mistaken, the secret lies in one of these little pieces of inlaid wood.
+You push it, or you press it, or something, and the whole affair flies
+open.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Such was my own first conviction. I am not so sure of it now. I have
+pressed every separate piece of wood; I have tried to move each piece in
+every direction. No result has followed. My theory was a hidden spring.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But there must be a hidden spring of some sort, unless you are to open it
+by a mere exercise of force. I suppose the box is empty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought it was at first, but now I am not so sure of that either. It
+all depends on the position in which you hold it. Hold it in this
+position&mdash;like this&mdash;close to your ear. Have you a small hammer?&quot; I took a
+small hammer. &quot;Tap it softly, with the hammer. Don't you notice a sort of
+reverberation within?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Pugh was right, there certainly was something within; something which
+seemed to echo back my tapping, almost as if it were a living thing. I
+mentioned this to Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you don't think that there is something alive inside the box? There
+can't be. The box must be air-tight, probably as much air-tight as an
+exhausted receiver.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How do we know that? How can we tell that no minute interstices have been
+left for the express purpose of ventilation?&quot; I continued tapping with the
+hammer. I noticed one peculiarity, that it was only when I held the box in
+a particular position, and tapped at a certain spot, there came the
+answering taps from within. &quot;I tell you what it is, Pugh, what I hear is
+the reverberation of some machinery.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you think so?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm sure of it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give the box to me.&quot; Pugh put the box to his ear. He tapped. &quot;It sounds
+to me like the echoing tick, tick of some great beetle; like the sort of
+noise which a deathwatch makes, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Trust Pugh to find a remarkable explanation for a simple fact; if the
+explanation leans toward the supernatural, so much the more satisfactory
+to Pugh. I knew better.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The sound which you hear is merely the throbbing or the trembling of the
+mechanism with which it is intended that the box should be opened. The
+mechanism is placed just where you are tapping it with the hammer. Every
+tap causes it to jar.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It sounds to me like the ticking of a deathwatch. However, on such
+subjects, Tress, I know what you are.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Pugh, give it an extra hard tap, and you will see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He gave it an extra hard tap. The moment he had done so, he started.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've done it now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What have you done?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Broken something, I fancy.&quot; He listened intently, with his ear to the
+box. &quot;No&mdash;it seems all right. And yet I could have sworn I had damaged
+something; I heard it smash.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give me the box.&quot; He gave it me. In my turn, I listened. I shook the box.
+Pugh must have been mistaken. Nothing rattled; there was not a sound; the
+box was as empty as before. I gave a smart tap with the hammer, as Pugh
+had done. Then there certainly was a curious sound. To my ear, it sounded
+like the smashing of glass. &quot;I wonder if there is anything fragile inside
+your precious puzzle, Pugh, and, if so, if we are shivering it by
+degrees?&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;What <i>is</i> that noise?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I lay in bed in that curious condition which is between sleep and waking.
+When, at last, I <i>knew</i> that I was awake, I asked myself what it was that
+had woke me. Suddenly I became conscious that something was making itself
+audible in the silence of the night. For some seconds I lay and listened.
+Then I sat up in bed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What <i>is</i> that noise?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was like the tick, tick of some large and unusually clear-toned clock.
+It might have been a clock, had it not been that the sound was varied,
+every half dozen ticks or so, by a sort of stifled screech, such as might
+have been uttered by some small creature in an extremity of anguish. I got
+out of bed; it was ridiculous to think of sleep during the continuation of
+that uncanny shrieking. I struck a light. The sound seemed to come from
+the neighborhood of my dressing-table. I went to the dressing-table, the
+lighted match in my hand, and, as I did so, my eyes fell on Pugh's
+mysterious box. That same instant there issued, from the bowels of the
+box, a more uncomfortable screech than any I had previously heard. It took
+me so completely by surprise that I let the match fall from my hand to the
+floor. The room was in darkness. I stood, I will not say trembling,
+listening&mdash;considering their volume&mdash;to the <i>eeriest</i> shrieks I ever
+heard. All at once they ceased. Then came the tick, tick, tick again. I
+struck another match and lit the gas.</p>
+
+<p>Pugh had left his puzzle box behind him. We had done all we could,
+together, to solve the puzzle. He had left it behind to see what I could
+do with it alone. So much had it engrossed my attention that I had even
+brought it into my bedroom, in order that I might, before retiring to
+rest, make a final attempt at the solution of the mystery. <i>Now</i> what
+possessed the thing?</p>
+
+<p>As I stood, and looked, and listened, one thing began to be clear to me,
+that some sort of machinery had been set in motion inside the box. How it
+had been set in motion was another matter. But the box had been subjected
+to so much handling, to such pressing and such hammering, that it was not
+strange if, after all, Pugh or I had unconsciously hit upon the spring
+which set the whole thing going. Possibly the mechanism had got so rusty
+that it had refused to act at once. It had hung fire, and only after some
+hours had something or other set the imprisoned motive power free.</p>
+
+<p>But what about the screeching? Could there be some living creature
+concealed within the box? Was I listening to the cries of some small
+animal in agony? Momentary reflection suggested that the explanation of
+the one thing was the explanation of the other. Rust!&mdash;there was the
+mystery. The same rust which had prevented the mechanism from acting at
+once was causing the screeching now. The uncanny sounds were caused by
+nothing more nor less than the want of a drop or two of oil. Such an
+explanation would not have satisfied Pugh, it satisfied me.</p>
+
+<p>Picking up the box, I placed it to my ear.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wonder how long this little performance is going to continue. And what
+is going to happen when it is good enough to cease? I hope&quot;&mdash;an
+uncomfortable thought occurred to me&mdash;&quot;I hope Pugh hasn't picked up some
+pleasant little novelty in the way of an infernal machine. It would be a
+first-rate joke if he and I had been endeavoring to solve the puzzle of
+how to set it going.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I don't mind owning that as this reflection crossed my mind I replaced
+Pugh's puzzle on the dressing-table. The idea did not commend itself to me
+at all. The box evidently contained some curious mechanism. It might be
+more curious than comfortable. Possibly some agreeable little device in
+clockwork. The tick, tick, tick suggested clockwork which had been planned
+to go a certain time, and then&mdash;then, for all I knew, ignite an explosive,
+and&mdash;blow up. It would be a charming solution to the puzzle if it were to
+explode while I stood there, in my nightshirt, looking on. It is true that
+the box weighed very little. Probably, as I have said, the whole affair
+would not have turned the scale at a couple of ounces. But then its very
+lightness might have been part of the ingenious inventor's little game.
+There are explosives with which one can work a very satisfactory amount of
+damage with considerably less than a couple of ounces.</p>
+
+<p>While I was hesitating&mdash;I own it!&mdash;whether I had not better immerse Pugh's
+puzzle in a can of water, or throw it out of the window, or call down Bob
+with a request to at once remove it to his apartment, both the tick, tick,
+tick, and the screeching ceased, and all within the box was still. If it
+<i>was</i> going to explode, it was now or never. Instinctively I moved in the
+direction of the door.</p>
+
+<p>I waited with a certain sense of anxiety. I waited in vain. Nothing
+happened, not even a renewal of the sound.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish Pugh had kept his precious puzzle at home. This sort of thing
+tries one's nerves.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>When I thought that I perceived that nothing seemed likely to happen, I
+returned to the neighborhood of the table. I looked at the box askance. I
+took it up gingerly. Something might go off at any moment for all I knew.
+It would be too much of a joke if Pugh's precious puzzle exploded in my
+hand. I shook it doubtfully; nothing rattled. I held it to my ear. There
+was not a sound. What had taken place? Had the clockwork run down, and was
+the machine arranged with such a diabolical ingenuity that a certain,
+interval was required, after the clockwork had run down, before an
+explosion could occur? Or had rust caused the mechanism to again hang
+fire?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After making all that commotion the thing might at least come open.&quot; I
+banged the box viciously against the corner of the table. I felt that I
+would almost rather that an explosion should take place than that nothing
+should occur. One does not care to be disturbed from one's sound slumber
+in the small hours of the morning for a trifle.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've half a mind to get a hammer, and try, as they say in the cookery
+books, another way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately I had promised Pugh to abstain from using force. I might
+have shivered the box open with my hammer, and then explained that it had
+fallen, or got trod upon, or sat upon, or something, and so got shattered,
+only I was afraid that Pugh would not believe me. The man is himself such
+an untruthful man that he is in a chronic state of suspicion about the
+truthfulness of others.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, if you're not going to blow up, or open, or something, I'll say
+good night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I gave the box a final rap with my knuckles and a final shake, replaced it
+on the table, put out the gas, and returned to bed.</p>
+
+<p>I was just sinking again into slumber, when that box began again. It was
+true that Pugh had purchased the puzzle, but it was evident that the whole
+enjoyment of the purchase was destined to be mine. It was useless to think
+of sleep while that performance was going on. I sat up in bed once more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It strikes me that the puzzle consists in finding out how it is possible
+to go to sleep with Pugh's purchase in your bedroom. This is far better
+than the old-fashioned prescription of cats on the tiles.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It struck me the noise was distinctly louder than before; this applied
+both to the tick, tick, tick, and the screeching.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Possibly,&quot; I told myself, as I relighted the gas, &quot;the explosion is to
+come off this time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I turned to look at the box. There could be no doubt about it; the noise
+was louder. And, if I could trust my eyes, the box was moving&mdash;giving a
+series of little jumps. This might have been an optical delusion, but it
+seemed to me that at each tick the box gave a little bound. During the
+screeches&mdash;which sounded more like the cries of an animal in an agony of
+pain even than before&mdash;if it did not tilt itself first on one end, and
+then on another, I shall never be willing to trust the evidence of my own
+eyes again. And surely the box had increased in size; I could have sworn
+not only that it had increased, but that it was increasing, even as I
+stood there looking on. It had grown, and still was growing, both broader,
+and longer, and deeper. Pugh, of course, would have attributed it to
+supernatural agency; there never was a man with such a nose for a ghost. I
+could picture him occupying my position, shivering in his nightshirt, as
+he beheld that miracle taking place before his eyes. The solution which at
+once suggested itself to me&mdash;and which would <i>never</i> have suggested itself
+to Pugh!&mdash;was that the box was fashioned, as it were, in layers, and that
+the ingenious mechanism it contained was forcing the sides at once both
+upward and outward. I took it in my hand. I could feel something striking
+against the bottom of the box, like the tap, tap, tapping of a tiny
+hammer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is a pretty puzzle of Pugh's. He would say that that is the tapping
+of a deathwatch. For my part I have not much faith in deathwatches, <i>et
+hoc genus omne</i>, but it certainly is a curious tapping; I wonder what is
+going to happen next?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Apparently nothing, except a continuation of those mysterious sounds. That
+the box had increased in size I had, and have, no doubt whatever. I should
+say that it had increased a good inch in every direction, at least half an
+inch while I had been looking on. But while I stood looking its growth was
+suddenly and perceptibly stayed; it ceased to move. Only the noise
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wonder how long it will be before anything worth happening does happen!
+I suppose something is going to happen; there can't be all this to-do for
+nothing. If it is anything in the infernal machine line, and there is
+going to be an explosion, I might as well be here to see it. I think I'll
+have a pipe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I put on my dressing-gown. I lit my pipe. I sat and stared at the box. I
+dare say I sat there for quite twenty minutes when, as before, without any
+sort of warning, the sound was stilled. Its sudden cessation rather
+startled me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Has the mechanism again hung fire? Or, this time, is the explosion
+coming off?&quot; It did not come off; nothing came off. &quot;Isn't the box even
+going to open?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It did not open. There was simply silence all at once, and that was all. I
+sat there in expectation for some moments longer. But I sat for nothing. I
+rose. I took the box in my hand. I shook it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This puzzle <i>is</i> a puzzle.&quot; I held the box first to one ear, then to the
+other. I gave it several sharp raps with my knuckles. There was not an
+answering sound, not even the sort of reverberation which Pugh and I had
+noticed at first. It seemed hollower than ever. It was as though the soul
+of the box was dead. &quot;I suppose if I put you down, and extinguish the gas
+and return to bed, in about half an hour or so, just as I am dropping off
+to sleep, the performance will be recommenced. Perhaps the third time will
+be lucky.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But I was mistaken&mdash;there was no third time. When I returned to bed that
+time I returned to sleep, and I was allowed to sleep; there was no
+continuation of the performance, at least so far as I know. For no sooner
+was I once more between the sheets than I was seized with an irresistible
+drowsiness, a drowsiness which so mastered me that I&mdash;I imagine it must
+have been instantly&mdash;sank into slumber which lasted till long after day
+had dawned. Whether or not any more mysterious sounds issued from the
+bowels of Pugh's puzzle is more than I can tell. If they did, they did not
+succeed in rousing me.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, when at last I did awake, I had a sort of consciousness that my
+waking had been caused by something strange. What it was I could not
+surmise. My own impression was that I had been awakened by the touch of a
+person's hand. But that impression must have been a mistaken one, because,
+as I could easily see by looking round the room, there was no one in the
+room to touch me.</p>
+
+<p>It was broad daylight. I looked at my watch; it was nearly eleven o'clock.
+I am a pretty late sleeper as a rule, but I do not usually sleep as late
+as that. That scoundrel Bob would let me sleep all day without thinking it
+necessary to call me. I was just about to spring out of bed with the
+intention of ringing the bell so that I might give Bob a piece of my mind
+for allowing me to sleep so late, when my glance fell on the
+dressing-table on which, the night before, I had placed Pugh's puzzle. It
+had gone!</p>
+
+<p>Its absence so took me by surprise that I ran to the table. It <i>had</i> gone.
+But it had not gone far; it had gone to pieces! There were the pieces
+lying where the box had been. The puzzle had solved itself. The box was
+open, open with a vengeance, one might say. Like that unfortunate Humpty
+Dumpty, who, so the chroniclers tell us, sat on a wall, surely &quot;all the
+king's horses and all the king's men&quot; never could put Pugh's puzzle
+together again!</p>
+
+<p>The marquetry had resolved itself into its component parts. How those
+parts had ever been joined was a mystery. They had been laid upon no
+foundation, as is the case with ordinary inlaid work. The several pieces
+of wood were not only of different shapes and sizes, but they were as thin
+as the thinnest veneer; yet the box had been formed by simply joining them
+together. The man who made that box must have been possessed of ingenuity
+worthy of a better cause.</p>
+
+<p>I perceived how the puzzle had been worked. The box had contained an
+arrangement of springs, which, on being released, had expanded themselves
+in different directions until their mere expansion had rent the box to
+pieces. There were the springs, lying amid the ruin they had caused.</p>
+
+<p>There was something else amid that ruin besides those springs; there was a
+small piece of writing paper. I took it up. On the reverse side of it was
+written in a minute, crabbed hand: &quot;A Present For You.&quot; What was a present
+for me? I looked, and, not for the first time since I had caught sight of
+Pugh's precious puzzle, could scarcely believe my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>There, poised between two upright wires, the bent ends of which held it
+aloft in the air, was either a piece of glass or&mdash;a crystal. The scrap of
+writing paper had exactly covered it. I understood what it was, when Pugh
+and I had tapped with the hammer, had caused the answering taps to proceed
+from within. Our taps caused the wires to oscillate, and in these
+oscillations the crystal, which they held suspended, had touched the side
+of the box.</p>
+
+<p>I looked again at the piece of paper. &quot;A Present For You.&quot; Was <i>this</i> the
+present&mdash;this crystal? I regarded it intently.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It <i>can't</i> be a diamond.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The idea was ridiculous, absurd. No man in his senses would place a
+diamond inside a twopenny-halfpenny puzzle box. The thing was as big as a
+walnut! And yet&mdash;I am a pretty good judge of precious stones&mdash;if it was
+not an uncut diamond it was the best imitation I had seen. I took it up. I
+examined it closely. The more closely I examined it, the more my wonder
+grew.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It <i>is</i> a diamond!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And yet the idea was too preposterous for credence. Who would present a
+diamond as big as a walnut with a trumpery puzzle? Besides, all the
+diamonds which the world contains of that size are almost as well known as
+the Koh-i-noor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If it is a diamond, it is worth&mdash;it is worth&mdash;Heaven only knows what it
+isn't worth if it's a diamond.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I regarded it through a strong pocket lens. As I did so I could not
+restrain an exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The world to a China orange, it <i>is</i> a diamond!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The words had scarcely escaped my lips than there came a tapping at the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come in!&quot; I cried, supposing it was Bob. It was not Bob, it was Pugh.
+Instinctively I put the lens and the crystal behind my back. At sight of
+me in my nightshirt Pugh began to shake his head.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What hours, Tress, what hours! Why, my dear Tress, I've breakfasted, read
+the papers and my letters, came all the way from my house here, and you're
+not up!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't I look as though I were up?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Tress! Tress!&quot; He approached the dressing-table. His eye fell upon
+the ruins. &quot;What's this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the solution to the puzzle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you&mdash;have you solved it fairly, Tress?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It has solved itself. Our handling, and tapping, and hammering must have
+freed the springs which the box contained, and during the night, while I
+slept, they have caused it to come open.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;While you slept? Dear me! How strange! And&mdash;what are these?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He had discovered the two upright wires on which the crystal had been
+poised.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose they're part of the puzzle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And was there anything in the box? What's this?&quot; He picked up the scrap
+of paper; I had left it on the table. He read what was written on it: &quot;'A
+Present For You.' What's it mean? Tress, was this in the box?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's it mean about a present? Was there anything in the box besides?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pugh, if you will leave the room I shall be able to dress; I am not in
+the habit of receiving quite such early calls, or I should have been
+prepared to receive you. If you will wait in the next room, I will be with
+you as soon as I'm dressed. There is a little subject in connection with
+the box which I wish to discuss with you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A subject in connection with the box? What is the subject?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will tell you, Pugh, when I have performed my toilet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why can't you tell me now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you propose, then, that I should stand here shivering in my shirt
+while you are prosing at your ease? Thank you; I am obliged, but I
+decline. May I ask you once more, Pugh, to wait for me in the adjoining
+apartment?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He moved toward the door. When he had taken a couple of steps, he halted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I&mdash;I hope, Tress, that you're&mdash;you're going to play no tricks on me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tricks on you! Is it likely that I am going to play tricks upon my oldest
+friend?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone&mdash;he vanished, it seemed to me, with a somewhat doubtful
+visage&mdash;I took the crystal to the window. I drew the blind. I let the
+sunshine fall on it. I examined it again, closely and minutely, with the
+aid of my pocket lens. It <i>was</i> a diamond; there could not be a doubt of
+it. If, with my knowledge of stones, I was deceived, then I was deceived
+as never man had been deceived before. My heart beat faster as I
+recognized the fact that I was holding in my hand what was, in all
+probability, a fortune for a man of moderate desires. Of course, Pugh knew
+nothing of what I had discovered, and there was no reason why he should
+know. Not the least! The only difficulty was that if I kept my own
+counsel, and sold the stone and utilized the proceeds of the sale, I
+should have to invent a story which would account for my sudden accession
+to fortune. Pugh knows almost as much of my affairs as I do myself. That
+is the worst of these old friends!</p>
+
+<p>When I joined Pugh I found him dancing up and down the floor like a bear
+upon hot plates. He scarcely allowed me to put my nose inside the door
+before attacking me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress, give me what was in the box.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Pugh, how do you know that there was something in the box to give
+you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know there was!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed! If you know that there was something in the box, perhaps you will
+tell me what that something was.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He eyed me doubtfully. Then, advancing, he laid upon my arm a hand which
+positively trembled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress, you&mdash;you wouldn't play tricks on an old friend.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are right, Pugh, I wouldn't, though I believe there have been
+occasions on which you have had doubts upon the subject. By the way, Pugh,
+I believe that I am the oldest friend you have.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I&mdash;I don't know about that. There's&mdash;there's Brasher.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Brasher! Who's Brasher? You wouldn't compare my friendship to the
+friendship of such a man as Brasher? Think of the tastes we have in
+common, you and I. We're both collectors.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ye-es, we're both collectors.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I make my interests yours, and you make your interests mine. Isn't that
+so, Pugh?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress, what&mdash;what was in the box?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will be frank with you, Pugh. If there had been something in the box,
+would you have been willing to go halves with me in my discovery?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go halves! In your discovery, Tress! Give me what is mine!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With pleasure, Pugh, if you will tell me what is yours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If&mdash;if you don't give me what was in the box I'll&mdash;I'll send for the
+police.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do! Then I shall be able to hand to them what was in the box in order
+that it may be restored to its proper owner.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Its proper owner! I'm its proper owner!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Excuse me, but I don't understand how that can be; at least, until the
+police have made inquiries. I should say that the proper owner was the
+person from whom you purchased the box, or, more probably, the person from
+whom he purchased it, and by whom, doubtless, it was sold in ignorance, or
+by mistake. Thus, Pugh, if you will only send for the police, we shall
+earn the gratitude of a person of whom we never heard in our lives&mdash;I for
+discovering the contents of the box, and you for returning them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As I said this, Pugh's face was a study. He gasped for breath. He actually
+took out his handkerchief to wipe his brow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress, I&mdash;I don't think you need to use a tone like that to me. It isn't
+friendly. What&mdash;what was in the box?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let us understand each other, Pugh. If you don't hand over what was in
+the box to the police, I go halves.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Pugh began to dance about the floor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What a fool I was to trust you with the box! I knew I couldn't trust
+you.&quot; I said nothing. I turned and rang the bell. &quot;What's that for?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That, my dear Pugh, is for breakfast, and, if you desire it, for the
+police. You know, although you have breakfasted, I haven't. Perhaps while
+I am breaking my fast, you would like to summon the representatives of law
+and order.&quot; Bob came in. I ordered breakfast. Then I turned to Pugh. &quot;Is
+there anything you would like?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I&mdash;I've breakfasted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It wasn't of breakfast I was thinking. It was of&mdash;something else. Bob is
+at your service, if, for instance, you wish to send him on an errand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I want nothing. Bob can go.&quot; Bob went. Directly he was gone, Pugh
+turned to me. &quot;You shall have half. What was in the box?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall have half?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You shall!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't think it is necessary that the terms of our little understanding
+should be expressly embodied in black and white. I fancy that, under the
+circumstance, I can trust you, Pugh. I believe that I am capable of seeing
+that, in this matter, you don't do me. That was in the box.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I held out the crystal between my finger and thumb.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is what I desire to learn.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me look at it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are welcome to look at it where it is. Look at it as long as you
+like, and as closely.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Pugh leaned over my hand. His eyes began to gleam. He is himself not a bad
+judge of precious stones, is Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's&mdash;it's&mdash;Tress!&mdash;is it a diamond?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That question I have already asked myself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me look at it! It will be safe with me! It's mine!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I immediately put the thing behind my back.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pardon me, it belongs neither to you nor to me. It belongs, in all
+probability, to the person who sold that puzzle to the man from whom you
+bought it&mdash;perhaps some weeping widow, Pugh, or hopeless orphan&mdash;think of
+it. Let us have no further misunderstanding upon that point, my dear old
+friend. Still, because you are my dear old friend, I am willing to trust
+you with this discovery of mine, on condition that you don't attempt to
+remove it from my sight, and that you return it to me the moment I require
+you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You're&mdash;you're very hard on me.&quot; I made a movement toward my waistcoat
+pocket. &quot;I'll return it to you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I handed him the crystal, and with it I handed him my pocket lens.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With the aid of that glass I imagine that you will be able to subject it
+to a more acute examination, Pugh.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He began to examine it through the lens. Directly he did so, he gave an
+exclamation. In a few moments he looked up at me. His eyes were glistening
+behind his spectacles. I could see he trembled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress, it's&mdash;it's a diamond, a Brazil diamond. It's worth a fortune!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm glad you think so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Glad I think so! Don't you think that it's a diamond?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It appears to be a diamond. Under ordinary conditions I should say,
+without hesitation, that it was a diamond. But when I consider the
+circumstances of its discovery, I am driven to doubts. How much did you
+give for that puzzle, Pugh?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ninepence; the fellow wanted a shilling, but I gave him ninepence. He
+seemed content.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ninepence! Does it seem reasonable that we should find a diamond, which,
+if it is a diamond, is the finest stone I ever saw and handled, in a
+ninepenny puzzle? It is not as though it had got into the thing by
+accident, it had evidently been placed there to be found, and, apparently,
+by anyone who chanced to solve the puzzle; witness the writing on the
+scrap of paper.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Pugh reexamined the crystal.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is a diamond! I'll stake my life that it's a diamond!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Still, though it be a diamond, I smell a rat!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you mean?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I strongly suspect that the person who placed that diamond inside that
+puzzle intended to have a joke at the expense of the person who discovered
+it. What was to be the nature of the joke is more than I can say at
+present, but I should like to have a bet with you that the man who
+compounded that puzzle was an ingenious practical joker. I may be wrong,
+Pugh; we shall see. But, until I have proved the contrary, I don't believe
+that the maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond worth,
+apparently, shall we say a thousand pounds?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A thousand pounds! This diamond is worth a good deal more than a thousand
+pounds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, that only makes my case the stronger; I don't believe that the
+maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond worth more than a
+thousand pounds with such utter wantonness as seems to have characterized
+the action of the original owner of the stone which I found in your
+ninepenny puzzle, Pugh.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There have been some eccentric characters in the world, some very
+eccentric characters. However, as you say, we shall see. I fancy that I
+know somebody who would be quite willing to have such a diamond as this,
+and who, moreover, would be willing to pay a fair price for its
+possession; I will take it to him and see what he says.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pugh, hand me back that diamond.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Tress, I was only going&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Bob came in with the breakfast tray.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pugh, you will either hand me that at once, or Bob shall summon the
+representatives of law and order.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He handed me the diamond. I sat down to breakfast with a hearty appetite.
+Pugh stood and scowled at me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Joseph Tress, it is my solemn conviction, and I have no hesitation in
+saying so in plain English, that you're a thief.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Pugh, it seems to me that we show every promise of becoming a
+couple of thieves.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't bracket me with you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not at all, you are worse than I. It is you who decline to return the
+contents of the box to its proper owner. Put it to yourself, you have
+<i>some</i> common sense, my dear old friend!&mdash;do you suppose that a diamond
+worth more than a thousand pounds is to be <i>honestly</i> bought for
+ninepence?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He resumed his old trick of dancing about the room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was a fool ever to let you have the box! I ought to have known better
+than to have trusted you; goodness knows you have given me sufficient
+cause to mistrust you! Over and over again! Your character is only too
+notorious! You have plundered friend and foe alike&mdash;friend and foe alike!
+As for the rubbish which you call your collection, nine tenths of it, I
+know as a positive fact, you have stolen out and out.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who stole my Sir Walter Raleigh pipe? Wasn't it a man named Pugh?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look here, Joseph Tress!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm looking.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, it's no good talking to you, not the least! You're&mdash;you're dead to
+all the promptings of conscience! May I inquire, Mr. Tress, what it is you
+propose to do?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I <i>propose</i> to do nothing, except summon the representatives of law and
+order. Failing that, my dear Pugh, I had some faint, vague, very vague
+idea of taking the contents of your ninepenny puzzle to a certain firm in
+Hatton Garden, who are dealers in precious stones, and to learn from them
+if they are disposed to give anything for it, and if so, what.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall come with you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With pleasure, on condition that you pay the cab.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I pay the cab! I will pay half.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not at all. You will either pay the whole fare, or else I will have one
+cab and you shall have another. It is a three-shilling cab fare from here
+to Hatton Garden. If you propose to share my cab, you will be so good as
+to hand over that three shillings before we start.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He gasped, but he handed over the three shillings. There are few things I
+enjoy so much as getting money out of Pugh!</p>
+
+<p>On the road to Hatton Garden we wrangled nearly all the way. I own that I
+feel a certain satisfaction in irritating Pugh, he is such an irritable
+man. He wanted to know what I thought we should get for the diamond.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You can't expect to get much for the contents of a ninepenny puzzle, not
+even the price of a cab fare, Pugh.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He eyed me, but for some minutes he was silent. Then he began again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tress, I don't think we ought to let it go for less than&mdash;than five
+thousand pounds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Seriously, Pugh, I doubt whether, when the whole affair is ended, we
+shall get five thousand pence for it, or, for the matter of that, five
+thousand farthings.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But why not? Why not? It's a magnificent stone&mdash;magnificent! I'll stake
+my life on it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I tapped my breast with the tips of my fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There's a warning voice within my breast that ought to be in yours, Pugh!
+Something tells me, perhaps it is the unusually strong vein of common
+sense which I possess, that the contents of your ninepenny puzzle will be
+found to be a magnificent do&mdash;an ingenious practical joke, my friend.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't believe it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But I think he did; at any rate, I had unsettled the foundations of his
+faith.</p>
+
+<p>We entered the Hatton Garden office side by side; in his anxiety not to
+let me get before him, Pugh actually clung to my arm. The office was
+divided into two parts by a counter which ran from wall to wall. I
+advanced to a man who stood on the other side of this counter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I want to sell you a diamond.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>We</i> want to sell you a diamond,&quot; interpolated Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>I turned to Pugh. I &quot;fixed&quot; him with my glance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>I</i> want to sell you a diamond. Here it is. What will you give me for
+it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Taking the crystal from my waistcoat pocket I handed it to the man on the
+other side of the counter. Directly, he got it between his fingers, and
+saw that it was that he had got, I noticed a sudden gleam come into his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is&mdash;this is rather a fine stone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Pugh nudged my arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I told you so.&quot; I paid no attention to Pugh. &quot;What will you give me for
+it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you mean, what will I give you for it cash down upon the nail?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just so&mdash;what will you give me for it cash down upon the nail?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man turned the crystal over and over in his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, that's rather a large order. We don't often get a chance of buying
+such a stone as this across the counter. What do you say to&mdash;well&mdash;to ten
+thousand pounds?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Ten thousand pounds! It was beyond my wildest imaginings. Pugh gasped. He
+lurched against the counter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ten thousand pounds!&quot; he echoed.</p>
+
+<p>The man on the other side glanced at him, I thought, a little curiously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you can give me references, or satisfy me in any way as to your <i>bona
+fides</i>, I am prepared to give you for this diamond an open check for ten
+thousand pounds, or if you prefer it, the cash instead.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I stared; I was not accustomed to see business transacted on quite such
+lines as those.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We'll take it,&quot; murmured Pugh; I believe he was too much overcome by his
+feelings to do more than murmur. I interposed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear sir, you will excuse my saying that you arrive very rapidly at
+your conclusions. In the first place, how can you make sure that it is a
+diamond?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man behind the counter smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should be very ill-fitted for the position which I hold if I could not
+tell a diamond directly I get a sight of it, especially such a stone as
+this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But have you no tests you can apply?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have tests which we apply in cases in which doubt exists, but in this
+case there is no doubt whatever. I am as sure that this is a diamond as I
+am sure that it is air I breathe. However, here is a test.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was a wheel close by the speaker. It was worked by a treadle. It was
+more like a superior sort of traveling-tinker's grindstone than anything
+else. The man behind the counter put his foot upon the treadle. The wheel
+began to revolve. He brought the crystal into contact with the swiftly
+revolving wheel. There was a s&mdash;s&mdash;sh! And, in an instant, his hand was
+empty; the crystal had vanished into air.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good heavens!&quot; he gasped. I never saw such a look of amazement on a human
+countenance before. &quot;It's splintered!&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>POSTSCRIPT</h3>
+
+
+<p>It <i>was</i> a diamond, although it <i>had</i> splintered. In that fact lay the
+point of the joke. The man behind the counter had not been wrong;
+examination of such dust as could be collected proved that fact beyond a
+doubt. It was declared by experts that the diamond, at some period of its
+history, had been subjected to intense and continuing heat. The result had
+been to make it as brittle as glass.</p>
+
+<p>There could be no doubt that its original owner had been an expert too. He
+knew where he got it from, and he probably knew what it had endured. He
+was aware that, from a mercantile point of view, it was worthless; it
+could never have been cut. So, having a turn for humor of a peculiar kind,
+he had devoted days, and weeks, and possibly months, to the construction
+of that puzzle. He had placed the diamond inside, and he had enjoyed, in
+anticipation and in imagination, the Alnaschar visions of the lucky
+finder.</p>
+
+<p>Pugh blamed me for the catastrophe. He said, and still says, that if I had
+not, in a measure, and quite gratuitously, insisted on a test, the man
+behind the counter would have been satisfied with the evidence of his
+organs of vision, and we should have been richer by ten thousand pounds.
+But I satisfy my conscience with the reflection that what I did at any
+rate was honest, though, at the same time, I am perfectly well aware that
+such a reflection gives Pugh no sort of satisfaction.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Great_Valdez_Sapphire" id="The_Great_Valdez_Sapphire" /><i>The Great Valdez Sapphire</i></h2>
+
+
+<p>I know more about it than anyone else in the world, its present owner not
+excepted. I can give its whole history, from the Cingalese who found it,
+the Spanish adventurer who stole it, the cardinal who bought it, the Pope
+who graciously accepted it, the favored son of the Church who received it,
+the gay and giddy duchess who pawned it, down to the eminent prelate who
+now holds it in trust as a family heirloom.</p>
+
+<p>It will occupy a chapter to itself in my forthcoming work on &quot;Historic
+Stones,&quot; where full details of its weight, size, color, and value may be
+found. At present I am going to relate an incident in its history which,
+for obvious reasons, will not be published&mdash;which, in fact, I trust the
+reader will consider related in strict confidence.</p>
+
+<p>I had never seen the stone itself when I began to write about it, and it
+was not till one evening last spring, while staying with my nephew, Sir
+Thomas Acton, that I came within measurable distance of it. A dinner party
+was impending, and, at my instigation, the Bishop of Northchurch and Miss
+Panton, his daughter and heiress, were among the invited guests.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner was a particularly good one, I remember that distinctly. In
+fact, I felt myself partly responsible for it, having engaged the new
+cook&mdash;a talented young Italian, pupil of the admirable old <i>chef</i> at my
+club. We had gone over the <i>menu</i> carefully together, with a result
+refreshing in its novelty, but not so daring as to disturb the minds of
+the innocent country guests who were bidden thereto.</p>
+
+<p>The first spoonful of soup was reassuring, and I looked to the end of the
+table to exchange a congratulatory glance with Leta. What was amiss? No
+response. Her pretty face was flushed, her smile constrained, she was
+talking with quite unnecessary <i>empressement</i> to her neighbor, Sir Harry
+Landor, though Leta is one of those few women who understand the
+importance of letting a man settle down tranquilly and with an undisturbed
+mind to the business of dining, allowing no topic of serious interest to
+come on before the <i>relev&eacute;s</i>, and reserving mere conversational brilliancy
+for the <i>entremets</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Guests all right? No disappointments? I had gone through the list with
+her, selecting just the right people to be asked to meet the Landors, our
+new neighbors. Not a mere cumbrous county gathering, nor yet a showy
+imported party from town, but a skillful blending of both. Had anything
+happened already? I had been late for dinner and missed the arrivals in
+the drawing-room. It was Leta's fault. She has got into a way of coming
+into my room and putting the last touches to my toilet. I let her, for I
+am doubtful of myself nowadays after many years' dependence on the best of
+valets. Her taste is generally beyond dispute, but to-day she had indulged
+in a feminine vagary that provoked me and made me late for dinner.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you going to wear your sapphire, Uncle Paul!&quot; she cried in a tone of
+dismay. &quot;Oh, why not the ruby?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You <i>would</i> have your way about the table decorations,&quot; I gently reminded
+her. &quot;With that service of Crown Derby <i>repouss&eacute;</i> and orchids, the ruby
+would look absolutely barbaric. Now if you would have had the Limoges set,
+white candles, and a yellow silk center&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, but&mdash;I'm <i>so</i> disappointed&mdash;I wanted the bishop to see your ruby&mdash;or
+one of your engraved gems&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear, it is on the bishop's account I put this on. You know his
+daughter is heiress of the great Valdez sapphire&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course she is, and when he has the charge of a stone three times as
+big as yours, what's the use of wearing it? The ruby, dear Uncle Paul,
+<i>please</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She was desperately in earnest I could see, and considering the
+obligations which I am supposed to be under to her and Tom, it was but a
+little matter to yield, but it involved a good deal of extra trouble.
+Studs, sleeve-links, watch-guard, all carefully selected to go with the
+sapphire, had to be changed, the emerald which I chose as a compromise
+requiring more florid accompaniments of a deeper tone of gold; and the
+dinner hour struck as I replaced my jewel case, the one relic left me of a
+once handsome fortune, in my fireproof safe.</p>
+
+<p>The emerald looked very well that evening, however. I kept my eyes upon it
+for comfort when Miss Panton proved trying.</p>
+
+<p>She was a lean, yellow, dictatorial young person with no conversation. I
+spoke of her father's celebrated sapphires. &quot;<i>My</i> sapphires,&quot; she amended
+sourly; &quot;though I am legally debarred from making any profitable use of
+them.&quot; She furthermore informed me that she viewed them as useless gauds,
+which ought to be disposed of for the benefit of the heathen. I gave the
+subject up, and while she discoursed of the work of the Blue Ribbon Army
+among the Bosjesmans I tried to understand a certain dislocation in the
+arrangement of the table. Surely we were more or less in number than we
+should be? Opposite side all right. Who was extra on ours? I leaned
+forward. Lady Landor on one side of Tom, on the other who? I caught
+glimpses of plumes pink and green nodding over a dinner plate, and beneath
+them a pink nose in a green visage with a nutcracker chin altogether
+unknown to me. A sharp gray eye shot a sideway glance down the table and
+caught me peeping, and I retreated, having only marked in addition two
+clawlike hands, with pointed ruffles and a mass of brilliant rings, making
+good play with a knife and fork. Who was she? At intervals a high acid
+voice could be heard addressing Tom, and a laugh that made me shudder; it
+had the quality of the scream of a bird of prey or the yell of a jackal. I
+had heard that sort of laugh before, and it always made me feel like a
+defenseless rabbit. Every time it sounded I saw Leta's fan flutter more
+furiously and her manner grow more nervously animated. Poor dear girl! I
+never in all my recollection wished a dinner at an end so earnestly so as
+to assure her of my support and sympathy, though without the faintest
+conception why either should be required.</p>
+
+<p>The ices at last. A <i>menu</i> card folded in two was laid beside me. I read
+it unobserved. &quot;Keep the B. from joining us in the drawing-room.&quot; The B.?
+The bishop, of course. With pleasure. But why? And how? <i>That's</i> the
+question, never mind &quot;why.&quot; Could I lure him into the library&mdash;the
+billiard room&mdash;the conservatory? I doubted it, and I doubted still more
+what I should do with him when I got him there.</p>
+
+<p>The bishop is a grand and stately ecclesiastic of the medi&aelig;val type,
+broad-chested, deep-voiced, martial of bearing. I could picture him
+charging mace in hand at the head of his vassals, or delivering over a
+dissenter of the period to the rack and thumbscrew, but not pottering
+among rare editions, tall copies and Grolier bindings, nor condescending
+to a quiet cigar among the tree ferns and orchids. Leta must and should be
+obeyed, I swore, nevertheless, even if I were driven to lock the door in
+the fearless old fashion of a bygone day, and declare I'd shoot any man
+who left while a drop remained in the bottles.</p>
+
+<p>The ladies were rising. The lady at the head of the line smirked and
+nodded her pink plumes coquettishly at Tom, while her hawk's eyes roved
+keen and predatory over us all. She stopped suddenly, creating a block and
+confusion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, the dear bishop! <i>You</i> there, and I never saw you! You must come and
+have a nice long chat presently. By-by&mdash;!&quot; She shook her fan at him over
+my shoulder and tripped off. Leta, passing me last, gave me a look of
+profound despair.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lady Carwitchet!&quot; somebody exclaimed. &quot;I couldn't believe my eyes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thought she was dead or in penal servitude. Never should have expected
+to see her <i>here</i>,&quot; said some one else behind me confidentially.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What Carwitchet? Not the mother of the Carwitchet who&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just so. The Carwitchet who&mdash;&quot; Tom assented with a shrug. &quot;We needn't go
+farther, as she's my guest. Just my luck. I met them at Buxton, thought
+them uncommonly good company&mdash;in fact, Carwitchet laid me under a great
+obligation about a horse I was nearly let in for buying&mdash;and gave them a
+general invitation here, as one does, you know. Never expected her to turn
+up with her luggage this afternoon just before dinner, to stay a week, or
+a fortnight if Carwitchet can join her.&quot; A groan of sympathy ran round the
+table. &quot;It can't be helped. I've told you this just to show that I
+shouldn't have asked you here to meet this sort of people of my own free
+will; but, as it is, please say no more about them.&quot; The subject was not
+dropped by any means, and I took care that it should not be. At our end of
+the table one story after another went buzzing round&mdash;<i>sotto voce</i>, out of
+deference to Tom&mdash;but perfectly audible.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Carwitchet? Ah, yes. Mixed up in that Rawlings divorce case, wasn't he? A
+bad lot. Turned out of the Dragoon Guards for cheating at cards, or
+picking pockets, or something&mdash;remember the row at the Cerulean Club?
+Scandalous exposure&mdash;and that forged letter business&mdash;oh, that was the
+mother&mdash;prosecution hushed up somehow. Ought to be serving her fourteen
+years&mdash;and that business of poor Farrars, the banker&mdash;got hold of some of
+his secrets and blackmailed him till he blew his brains out&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was so exciting that I clean forgot the bishop, till a low gasp at my
+elbow startled me. He was lying back in his chair, his mighty shaven jowl
+a ghastly white, his fierce imperious eyebrows drooping limp over his
+fishlike eyes, his splendid figure shrunk and contracted. He was trying
+with a shaken hand to pour out wine. The decanter clattered against the
+glass and the wine spilled on the cloth.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm afraid you find the room too warm. Shall we go into the library?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He rose hastily and followed me like a lamb.</p>
+
+<p>He recovered himself once we got into the hall, and affably rejected all
+my proffers of brandy and soda&mdash;medical advice&mdash;everything else my limited
+experience could suggest. He only demanded his carriage &quot;directly&quot; and
+that Miss Panton should be summoned forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>I made the best use I could of the time left me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm uncommonly sorry you do not feel equal to staying a little longer, my
+lord. I counted on showing you my few trifles of precious stones, the
+salvage from the wreck of my possessions. Nothing in comparison with your
+own collection.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The bishop clasped his hand over his heart. His breath came short and
+quick.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A return of that dizziness,&quot; he explained with a faint smile. &quot;You are
+thinking of the Valdez sapphire, are you not? Some day,&quot; he went on with
+forced composure, &quot;I may have the pleasure of showing it to you. It is at
+my banker's just now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Miss Panton's steps were heard in the hall. &quot;You are well known as a
+connoisseur, Mr. Acton,&quot; he went on hurriedly. &quot;Is your collection
+valuable? If so, <i>keep it safe; don't trust a ring off your hand, or the
+key of your jewel case out of your pocket till the house is clear again</i>.&quot;
+The words rushed from his lips in an impetuous whisper, he gave me a
+meaning glance, and departed with his daughter. I went back to the
+drawing-room, my head swimming with bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What! The dear bishop gone!&quot; screamed Lady Carwitchet from the central
+ottoman where she sat, surrounded by most of the gentlemen, all apparently
+well entertained by her conversation. &quot;And I wanted to talk over old times
+with him so badly. His poor wife was my greatest friend. Mira Montanaro,
+daughter of the great banker, you know. It's not possible that that
+miserable little prig is my poor Mira's girl. The heiress of all the
+Montanaros in a black lace gown worth twopence! When I think of her
+mother's beauty and her toilets! Does she ever wear the sapphires? Has
+anyone ever seen her in them? Eleven large stones in a lovely antique
+setting, and the great Valdez sapphire&mdash;worth thousands and thousands&mdash;for
+the pendant.&quot; No one replied. &quot;I wanted to get a rise out of the bishop
+to-night. It used to make him so mad when I wore this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She fumbled among the laces at her throat, and clawed out a pendant that
+hung to a velvet band around her neck. I fairly gasped when she removed
+her hand. A sapphire of irregular shape flashed out its blue lightning on
+us. Such a stone! A true, rich, cornflower blue even by that wretched
+artificial light, with soft velvety depths of color and dazzling clearness
+of tint in its lights and shades&mdash;a stone to remember! I stretched out my
+hand involuntarily, but Lady Carwitchet drew back with a coquettish
+squeal. &quot;No! no! You mustn't look any closer. Tell me what you think of it
+now. Isn't it pretty?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Superb!&quot; was all I could ejaculate, staring at the azure splendor of that
+miraculous jewel in a sort of trance.</p>
+
+<p>She gave a shrill cackling laugh of mockery.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The great Mr. Acton taken in by a bit of Palais Royal gimcrackery! What
+an advertisement for Bogaerts et Cie! They are perfect artists in frauds.
+Don't you remember their stand at the first Paris Exhibition? They had
+imitation there of every celebrated stone; but I never expected anything
+made by man could delude Mr. Acton, never!&quot; And she went off into another
+mocking cackle, and all the idiots round her haw-hawed knowingly, as if
+they had seen the joke all along. I was too bewildered to reply, which was
+on the whole lucky. &quot;I suppose I mustn't tell why I came to give quite a
+big sum in francs for this?&quot; she went on, tapping her closed lips with her
+closed fan, and cocking her eye at us all like a parrot wanting to be
+coaxed to talk. &quot;It's a queer story.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I didn't want to hear her anecdote, especially as I saw she wanted to tell
+it. What I <i>did</i> want was to see that pendant again. She had thrust it
+back among her laces, only the loop which held it to the velvet being
+visible. It was set with three small sapphires, and even from a distance I
+clearly made them out to be imitations, and poor ones. I felt a queer
+thrill of self-mistrust. Was the large stone no better? Could I, even for
+an instant, have been dazzled by a sham, and a sham of that quality? The
+events of the evening had flurried and confused me. I wished to think them
+over in quiet. I would go to bed.</p>
+
+<p>My rooms at the Manor are the best in the house. Leta will have it so. I
+must explain their position for a reason to be understood later. My
+bedroom is in the southeast angle of the house; it opens on one side into
+a sitting-room in the east corridor, the rest of which is taken up by the
+suite of rooms occupied by Tom and Leta; and on the other side into my
+bathroom, the first room in the south corridor, where the principal guest
+chambers are, to one of which it was originally the dressing-room. Passing
+this room I noticed a couple of housemaids preparing it for the night, and
+discovered with a shiver that Lady Carwitchet was to be my next-door
+neighbor. It gave me a turn.</p>
+
+<p>The bishop's strange warning must have unnerved me. I was perfectly safe
+from her ladyship. The disused door into her room was locked, and the key
+safe on the housekeeper's bunch. It was also undiscoverable on her side,
+the recess in which it stood being completely filled by a large wardrobe.
+On my side hung a thick sound-proof <i>porti&egrave;re</i>. Nevertheless, I resolved
+not to use that room while she inhabited the next one. I removed my
+possessions, fastened the door of communication with my bedroom, and
+dragged a heavy ottoman across it.</p>
+
+<p>Then I stowed away my emerald in my strong-box. It is built into the wall
+of my sitting-room, and masked by the lower part of an old carved oak
+bureau. I put away even the rings I wore habitually, keeping out only an
+inferior cat's-eye for workaday wear. I had just made all safe when Leta
+tapped at the door and came in to wish me good night. She looked flushed
+and harassed and ready to cry. &quot;Uncle Paul,&quot; she began, &quot;I want you to go
+up to town at once, and stay away till I send for you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear&mdash;!&quot; I was too amazed to expostulate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We've got a&mdash;a pestilence among us,&quot; she declared, her foot tapping the
+ground angrily, &quot;and the least we can do is to go into quarantine. Oh, I'm
+so sorry and so ashamed! The poor bishop! I'll take good care that no one
+else shall meet that woman here. You did your best for me, Uncle Paul, and
+managed admirably, but it was all no use. I hoped against hope that what
+between the dusk of the drawing-room before dinner, and being put at
+opposite ends of the table, we might get through without a meeting&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But, my dear, explain. Why shouldn't the bishop and Lady Carwitchet meet?
+Why is it worse for him than anyone else?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why? I thought everybody had heard of that dreadful wife of his who
+nearly broke his heart. If he married her for her money it served him
+right, but Lady Landor says she was very handsome and really in love with
+him at first. Then Lady Carwitchet got hold of her and led her into all
+sorts of mischief. She left her husband&mdash;he was only a rector with a
+country living in those days&mdash;and went to live in town, got into a horrid
+fast set, and made herself notorious. You <i>must</i> have heard of her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I heard of her sapphires, my dear. But I was in Brazil at the time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish you had been at home. You might have found her out. She was
+furious because her husband refused to let her wear the great Valdez
+sapphire. It had been in the Montanaro family for some generations, and
+her father settled it first on her and then on her little girl&mdash;the bishop
+being trustee. He felt obliged to take away the little girl, and send her
+off to be brought up by some old aunts in the country, and he locked up
+the sapphire. Lady Carwitchet tells as a splendid joke how they got the
+copy made in Paris, and it did just as well for the people to stare at. No
+wonder the bishop hates the very name of the stone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How long will she stay here?&quot; I asked dismally.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Till Lord Carwitchet can come and escort her to Paris to visit some
+American friends. Goodness knows when that will be! Do go up to town,
+Uncle Paul!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I refused indignantly. The very least I could do was to stand by my poor
+young relatives in their troubles and help them through. I did so. I wore
+that inferior cat's eye for six weeks!</p>
+
+<p>It is a time I cannot think of even now without a shudder. The more I saw
+of that terrible old woman the more I detested her, and we saw a very
+great deal of her. Leta kept her word, and neither accepted nor gave
+invitations all that time. We were cut off from all society but that of
+old General Fairford, who would go anywhere and meet anyone to get a
+rubber after dinner; the doctor, a sporting widower; and the Duberlys, a
+giddy, rather rackety young, couple who had taken the Dower House for a
+year. Lady Carwitchet seemed perfectly content. She reveled in the soft
+living and good fare of the Manor House, the drives in Leta's big
+barouche, and Domenico's dinners, as one to whom short commons were not
+unknown. She had a hungry way of grabbing and grasping at everything she
+could&mdash;the shillings she won at whist, the best fruit at dessert, the
+postage stamps in the library inkstand&mdash;that was infinitely suggestive.
+Sometimes I could have pitied her, she was so greedy, so spiteful, so
+friendless. She always made me think of some wicked old pirate putting
+into a peaceful port to provision and repair his battered old hulk,
+obliged to live on friendly terms with the natives, but his piratical old
+nostrils asniff for plunder and his piratical old soul longing to be off
+marauding once more. When would that be? Not till the arrival in Paris of
+her distinguished American friends, of whom we heard a great deal.
+&quot;Charming people, the Bokums of Chicago, the American branch of the
+English Beauchamps, you know!&quot; They seemed to be taking an unconscionable
+time to get there. She would have insisted on being driven over to
+Northchurch to call at the palace, but that the bishop was understood to
+be holding confirmations at the other end of the diocese.</p>
+
+<p>I was alone in the house one afternoon sitting by my window, toying with
+the key of my safe, and wondering whether I dare treat myself to a peep at
+my treasures, when a suspicious movement in the park below caught my
+attention. A black figure certainly dodged from behind one tree to the
+next, and then into the shadow of the park paling instead of keeping to
+the footpath. It looked queer. I caught up my field glass and marked him
+at one point where he was bound to come into the open for a few steps. He
+crossed the strip of turf with giant strides and got into cover again, but
+not quick enough to prevent me recognizing him. It was&mdash;great
+heavens!&mdash;the bishop! In a soft hat pulled over his forehead, with a long
+cloak and a big stick, he looked like a poacher.</p>
+
+<p>Guided by some mysterious instinct I hurried to meet him. I opened the
+conservatory door, and in he rushed like a hunted rabbit. Without
+explanation I led him up the wide staircase to my room, where he dropped
+into a chair and wiped his face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are astonished, Mr. Acton,&quot; he panted. &quot;I will explain directly.
+Thanks.&quot; He tossed off the glass of brandy I had poured out without
+waiting for the qualifying soda, and looked better.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am in serious trouble. You can help me. I've had a shock to-day&mdash;a
+grievous shock.&quot; He stopped and tried to pull himself together. &quot;I must
+trust you implicitly, Mr. Acton, I have no choice. Tell me what you think
+of this.&quot; He drew a case from his breast pocket and opened it. &quot;I promised
+you should see the Valdez sapphire. Look there!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Valdez sapphire! A great big shining lump of blue crystal&mdash;flawless
+and of perfect color&mdash;that was all. I took it up, breathed on it, drew out
+my magnifier, looked at it in one light and another. What was wrong with
+it? I could not say. Nine experts out of ten would undoubtedly have
+pronounced the stone genuine. I, by virtue of some mysterious instinct
+that has hitherto always guided me aright, was the unlucky tenth. I looked
+at the bishop. His eyes met mine. There was no need of spoken word
+between us.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Has Lady Carwitchet shown you her sapphire?&quot; was his most unexpected
+question. &quot;She has? Now, Mr. Acton, on your honor as a connoisseur and a
+gentleman, which of the two is the Valdez?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not this one.&quot; I could say naught else.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You were my last hope.&quot; He broke off, and dropped his face on his folded
+arms with a groan that shook the table on which he rested, while I stood
+dismayed at myself for having let so hasty a judgment escape me. He lifted
+a ghastly countenance to me. &quot;She vowed she would see me ruined and
+disgraced. I made her my enemy by crossing some of her schemes once, and
+she never forgives. She will keep her word. I shall appear before the
+world as a fraudulent trustee. I can neither produce the valuable confided
+to my charge nor make the loss good. I have only an incredible story to
+tell,&quot; he dropped his head and groaned again. &quot;Who will believe me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will, for one.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, you? Yes, you know her. She took my wife from me, Mr. Acton. Heaven
+only knows what the hold was that she had over poor Mira. She encouraged
+her to set me at defiance and eventually to leave me. She was answerable
+for all the scandalous folly and extravagance of poor Mira's life in
+Paris&mdash;spare me the telling of the story. She left her at last to die
+alone and uncared for. I reached my wife to find her dying of a fever from
+which Lady Carwitchet and her crew had fled. She was raving in delirium,
+and died without recognizing me. Some trouble she had been in which I must
+never know oppressed her. At the very last she roused from a long stupor
+and spoke to the nurse. 'Tell him to get the sapphire back&mdash;she stole it.
+She has robbed my child.' Those were her last words. The nurse understood
+no English, and treated them as wandering; but <i>I</i> heard them, and knew
+she was sane when she spoke.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What did you do?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What could I? I saw Lady Carwitchet, who laughed at me, and defied me to
+make her confess or disgorge. I took the pendant to more than one eminent
+jeweler on pretense of having the setting seen to, and all have examined
+and admired without giving a hint of there being anything wrong. I allowed
+a celebrated mineralogist to see it; he gave no sign&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Perhaps they are right and we are wrong.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no. Listen. I heard of an old Dutchman celebrated for his imitations.
+I went to him, and he told me at once that he had been allowed by
+Montanaro to copy the Valdez&mdash;setting and all&mdash;for the Paris Exhibition. I
+showed him this, and he claimed it for his own work at once, and pointed
+out his private mark upon it. You must take your magnifier to find it; a
+Greek Beta. He also told me that he had sold it to Lady Carwitchet more
+than a year ago.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is a terrible position.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is. My co-trustee died lately. I have never dared to have another
+appointed. I am bound to hand over the sapphire to my daughter on her
+marriage, if her husband consents to take the name of Montanaro.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The bishop's face was ghastly pale, and the moisture started on his brow.
+I racked my brain for some word of comfort.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Panton may never marry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But she will!&quot; he shouted. &quot;That is the blow that has been dealt me
+to-day. My chaplain&mdash;actually, my chaplain&mdash;tells me that he is going out
+as a temperance missionary to equatorial Africa, and has the assurance to
+add that he believes my daughter is not indisposed to accompany him!&quot; His
+consummating wrath acted as a momentary stimulant. He sat upright, his
+eyes flashing and his brow thunderous. I felt for that chaplain. Then he
+collapsed miserably. &quot;The sapphires will have to be produced, identified,
+revalued. How shall I come out of it? Think of the disgrace, the ripping
+up of old scandals! Even if I were to compound with Lady Carwitchet, the
+sum she hinted at was too monstrous. She wants more than my money. Help
+me, Mr. Acton! For the sake of your own family interests, help me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I beg your pardon&mdash;family interests? I don't understand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If my daughter is childless, her next of kin is poor Marmaduke Panton,
+who is dying at Cannes, not married, or likely to marry; and failing him,
+your nephew, Sir Thomas Acton, succeeds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My nephew Tom! Leta, or Leta's baby, might come to be the possible
+inheritor of the great Valdez sapphire! The blood rushed to my head as I
+looked at the great shining swindle before me. &quot;What diabolic jugglery was
+at work when the exchange was made?&quot; I demanded fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It must have been on the last occasion of her wearing the sapphires in
+London. I ought never to have let her out of my sight.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must put a stop to Miss Panton's marriage in the first place,&quot; I
+pronounced as autocratically as he could have done himself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not to be thought of,&quot; he admitted helplessly. &quot;Mira has my force of
+character. She knows her rights, and she will have her jewels. I want you
+to take charge of the&mdash;thing for me. If it's in the house she'll make me
+produce it. She'll inquire at the banker's. If <i>you</i> have it we can gain
+time, if but for a day or two.&quot; He broke off. Carriage wheels were
+crashing on the gravel outside. We looked at one another in consternation.
+Flight was imperative. I hurried him downstairs and out of the
+conservatory just as the door bell rang. I think we both lost our heads in
+the confusion. He shoved the case into my hands, and I pocketed it,
+without a thought of the awful responsibility I was incurring, and saw him
+disappear into the shelter of the friendly night.</p>
+
+<p>When I think of what my feelings were that evening&mdash;of my murderous hatred
+of that smirking, jesting Jezebel who sat opposite me at dinner, my
+wrathful indignation at the thought of the poor little expected heir
+defrauded ere his birth; of the crushing contempt I felt for myself and
+the bishop as a pair of witless idiots unable to see our way out of the
+dilemma; all this boiling and surging through my soul, I can only
+wonder&mdash;Domenico having given himself a holiday, and the kitchen maid
+doing her worst and wickedest&mdash;that gout or jaundice did not put an end to
+this story at once.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Uncle Paul!&quot; Leta was looking her sweetest when she tripped into my room
+next morning. &quot;I've news for you. She,&quot; pointing a delicate forefinger in
+the direction of the corridor, &quot;is going! Her Bokums have reached Paris at
+last, and sent for her to join them at the Grand Hotel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was thunderstruck. The longed-for deliverance had but come to remove
+hopelessly and forever out of my reach Lady Carwitchet and the great
+Valdez sapphire.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, aren't you overjoyed? I am. We are going to celebrate the event by a
+dinner party. Tom's hospitable soul is vexed by the lack of entertainment
+we had provided her. We must ask the Brownleys some day or other, and they
+will be delighted to meet anything in the way of a ladyship, or such smart
+folks as the Duberly-Parkers. Then we may as well have the Blomfields, and
+air that awful modern S&egrave;vres dessert service she gave us when we were
+married.&quot; I had no objection to make, and she went on, rubbing her soft
+cheek against my shoulder like the purring little cat she was: &quot;Now I want
+you to do something to please me&mdash;and Mrs. Blomfield. She has set her
+heart on seeing your rubies, and though I know you hate her about as much
+as you do that S&egrave;vres china&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What! Wear my rubies with that! I won't. I'll tell you what I will do,
+though. I've got some carbuncles as big as prize gooseberries, a whole
+set. Then you have only to put those Bohemian glass vases and candelabra
+on the table, and let your gardener do his worst with his great forced,
+scentless, vulgar blooms, and we shall all be in keeping.&quot; Leta pouted. An
+idea struck me. &quot;Or I'll do as you wish, on one condition. You get Lady
+Carwitchet to wear her big sapphire, and don't tell her I wish it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I lived through the next few days as one in some evil dream. The
+sapphires, like twin specters, haunted me day and night. Was ever man so
+tantalized? To hold the shadow and see the substance dangled temptingly
+within reach. The bishop made no sign of ridding me of my unwelcome
+charge, and the thought of what might happen in a case of
+burglary&mdash;fire&mdash;earthquake&mdash;made me start and tremble at all sorts of
+inopportune moments.</p>
+
+<p>I kept faith with Leta, and reluctantly produced my beautiful rubies on
+the night of her dinner party. Emerging from my room I came full upon Lady
+Carwitchet in the corridor. She was dressed for dinner, and at her throat
+I caught the blue gleam of the great sapphire. Leta had kept faith with
+me. I don't know what I stammered in reply to her ladyship's remarks; my
+whole soul was absorbed in the contemplation of the intoxicating
+loveliness of the gem. <i>That</i> a Palais Royal deception! Incredible! My
+fingers twitched, my breath came short and fierce with the lust of
+possession. She must have seen the covetous glare in my eyes. A look of
+gratified spiteful complacency overspread her features, as she swept on
+ahead and descended the stairs before me. I followed her to the
+drawing-room door. She stopped suddenly, and murmuring something
+unintelligible hurried back again.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody was assembled there that I expected to see, with an addition.
+Not a welcome one by the look on Tom's face. He stood on the hearthrug
+conversing with a great hulking, high-shouldered fellow, sallow-faced,
+with a heavy mustache and drooping eyelids, from the corners of which
+flashed out a sudden suspicious look as I approached, which lighted up
+into a greedy one as it rested on my rubies, and seemed unaccountably
+familiar to me, till Lady Carwitchet tripping past me exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has come at last! My naughty, naughty boy! Mr. Acton, this is my son,
+Lord Carwitchet!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I broke off short in the midst of my polite acknowledgments to stare
+blankly at her. The sapphire was gone! A great gilt cross, with a Scotch
+pebble like an acid drop, was her sole decoration.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had to put my pendant away,&quot; she explained confidentially; &quot;the clasp
+had got broken somehow.&quot; I didn't believe a word.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Carwitchet contributed little to the general entertainment at dinner,
+but fell into confidential talk with Mrs. Duberly-Parker. I caught a few
+unintelligible remarks across the table. They referred, I subsequently
+discovered, to the lady's little book on Northchurch races, and I
+recollected that the Spring Meeting was on, and to-morrow &quot;Cup Day.&quot; After
+dinner there was great talk about getting up a party to go on General
+Fairford's drag. Lady Carwitchet was in ecstasies and tried to coax me
+into joining. Leta declined positively. Tom accepted sulkily.</p>
+
+<p>The look in Lord Carwitchet's eye returned to my mind as I locked up my
+rubies that night. It made him look so like his mother! I went round my
+fastenings with unusual care. Safe and closets and desk and doors, I tried
+them all. Coming at last to the bathroom, it opened at once. It was the
+housemaid's doing. She had evidently taken advantage of my having
+abandoned the room to give it &quot;a thorough spring cleaning,&quot; and I
+anathematized her. The furniture was all piled together and veiled with
+sheets, the carpet and felt curtain were gone, there were new brooms
+about. As I peered around, a voice close at my ear made me jump&mdash;Lady
+Carwitchet's!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I tell you I have nothing, not a penny! I shall have to borrow my train
+fare before I can leave this. They'll be glad enough to lend it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Not only had the <i>porti&egrave;re</i> been removed, but the door behind it had been
+unlocked and left open for convenience of dusting behind the wardrobe. I
+might as well have been in the bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't tell me,&quot; I recognized Carwitchet's growl. &quot;You've not been here
+all this time for nothing. You've been collecting for a Kilburn cot or
+getting subscriptions for the distressed Irish landlords. I know you. Now
+I'm not going to see myself ruined for the want of a paltry hundred or so.
+I tell you the colt is a dead certainty. If I could have got a thousand or
+two on him last week, we might have ended our dog days millionaires. Hand
+over what you can. You've money's worth, if not money. Where's that
+sapphire you stole?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I didn't. I can show you the receipted bill. All <i>I</i> possess is honestly
+come by. What could you do with it, even if I gave it you? You couldn't
+sell it as the Valdez, and you can't get it cut up as you might if it were
+real.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If it's only bogus, why are you always in such a flutter about it? I'll
+do something with it, never fear. Hand over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can't. I haven't got it. I had to raise something on it before I left
+town.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will you swear it's not in that wardrobe? I dare say you will. I mean to
+see. Give me those keys.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I heard a struggle and a jingle, then the wardrobe door must have been
+flung open, for a streak of light struck through a crack in the wood of
+the back. Creeping close and peeping through, I could see an awful sight.
+Lady Carwitchet in a flannel wrapper, minus hair, teeth, complexion,
+pointing a skinny forefinger that quivered with rage at her son, who was
+out of the range of my vision.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stop that, and throw those keys down here directly, or I'll rouse the
+house. Sir Thomas is a magistrate, and will lock you up as soon as look at
+you.&quot; She clutched at the bell rope as she spoke. &quot;I'll swear I'm in
+danger of my life from you and give you in charge. Yes, and when you're in
+prison I'll keep you there till you die. I've often thought I'd do it. How
+about the hotel robberies last summer at Cowes, eh? Mightn't the police be
+grateful for a hint or two? And how about&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The keys fell with a crash on the bed, accompanied by some bad language in
+an apologetic tone, and the door slammed to. I crept trembling to bed.</p>
+
+<p>This new and horrible complication of the situation filled me with
+dismay. Lord Carwitchet's wolfish glance at my rubies took a new meaning.
+They were safe enough, I believed&mdash;but the sapphire! If he disbelieved his
+mother, how long would she be able to keep it from his clutches? That she
+had some plot of her own of which the bishop would eventually be the
+victim I did not doubt, or why had she not made her bargain with him long
+ago? But supposing she took fright, lost her head, allowed her son to
+wrest the jewel from her, or gave consent to its being mutilated, divided!
+I lay in a cold perspiration till morning.</p>
+
+<p>My terrors haunted me all day. They were with me at breakfast time when
+Lady Carwitchet, tripping in smiling, made a last attempt to induce me to
+accompany her and keep her &quot;bad, bad boy&quot; from getting among &quot;those horrid
+betting men.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>They haunted me through the long peaceful day with Leta and the
+<i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> dinner, but they swarmed around and beset me sorest when,
+sitting alone over my sitting-room fire, I listened for the return of the
+drag party. I read my newspaper and brewed myself some hot strong drink,
+but there comes a time of night when no fire can warm and no drink can
+cheer. The bishop's despairing face kept me company, and his troubles and
+the wrongs of the future heir took possession of me. Then the uncanny
+noises that make all old houses ghostly during the small hours began to
+make themselves heard. Muffled footsteps trod the corridor, stopping to
+listen at every door, door latches gently clicked, boards creaked
+unreasonably, sounds of stealthy movements came from the locked-up
+bathroom. The welcome crash of wheels at last, and the sound of the
+front-door bell. I could hear Lady Carwitchet making her shrill <i>adieux</i>
+to her friends and her steps in the corridor. She was softly humming a
+little song as she approached. I heard her unlock her bedroom door before
+she entered&mdash;an odd thing to do. Tom came sleepily stumbling to his room
+later. I put my head out. &quot;Where is Lord Carwitchet?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Haven't you seen him? He left us hours ago. Not come home, eh? Well,
+he's welcome to stay away. I don't want to see more of him.&quot; Tom's brow
+was dark and his voice surly. &quot;I gave him to understand as much.&quot; Whatever
+had happened, Tom was evidently too disgusted to explain just then.</p>
+
+<p>I went back to my fire unaccountably relieved, and brewed myself another
+and a stronger brew. It warmed me this time, but excited me foolishly.
+There must be some way out of the difficulty. I felt now as if I could
+almost see it if I gave my mind to it. Why&mdash;suppose&mdash;there might be no
+difficulty after all! The bishop was a nervous old gentleman. He might
+have been mistaken all through, Bogaerts might have been mistaken, I
+might&mdash;no. I could not have been mistaken&mdash;or I thought not. I fidgeted
+and fumed and argued with myself till I found I should have no peace of
+mind without a look at the stone in my possession, and I actually went to
+the safe and took the case out.</p>
+
+<p>The sapphire certainly looked different by lamplight. I sat and stared,
+and all but overpersuaded my better judgment into giving it a verdict.
+Bogaerts's mark&mdash;I suddenly remembered it. I took my magnifier and held
+the pendant to the light. There, scratched upon the stone, was the Greek
+Beta! There came a tap on my door, and before I could answer, the handle
+turned softly and Lord Carwitchet stood before me. I whipped the case into
+my dressing-gown pocket and stared at him. He was not pleasant to look at,
+especially at that time of night. He had a disheveled, desperate air, his
+voice was hoarse, his red-rimmed eyes wild.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I beg your pardon,&quot; he began civilly enough. &quot;I saw your light burning,
+and thought, as we go by the early train to-morrow, you might allow me to
+consult you now on a little business of my mother's.&quot; His eyes roved about
+the room. Was he trying to find the whereabouts of my safe? &quot;You know a
+lot about precious stones, don't you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So my friends are kind enough to say. Won't you sit down? I have
+unluckily little chance of indulging the taste on my own account,&quot; was my
+cautious reply.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you've written a book about them, and know them when you see them,
+don't you? Now my mother has given me something, and would like you to
+give a guess at its value. Perhaps you can put me in the way of disposing
+of it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I certainly can do so if it is worth anything. Is that it?&quot; I was in a
+fever of excitement, for I guessed what was clutched in his palm. He held
+out to me the Valdez sapphire.</p>
+
+<p>How it shone and sparkled like a great blue star! I made myself a
+deprecating smile as I took it from him, but how dare I call it false to
+its face? As well accuse the sun in heaven of being a cheap imitation. I
+faltered and prevaricated feebly. Where was my moral courage, and where
+was the good, honest, thumping lie that should have aided me? &quot;I have the
+best authority for recognizing this as a very good copy of a famous stone
+in the possession of the Bishop of Northchurch.&quot; His scowl grew so black
+that I saw he believed me, and I went on more cheerily: &quot;This was
+manufactured by Johannes Bogaerts&mdash;I can give you his address, and you can
+make inquiries yourself&mdash;by special permission of the then owner, the late
+Leone Montanaro.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hand it back!&quot; he interrupted (his other remarks were outrageous, but
+satisfactory to hear); but I waved him off. I couldn't give it up. It
+fascinated me. I toyed with it, I caressed it. I made it display its
+different tones of color. I must see the two stones together. I must see
+it outshine its paltry rival. It was a whimsical frenzy that seized me&mdash;I
+can call it by no other name.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would you like to see the original? Curiously enough, I have it here. The
+bishop has left it in my charge.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The wolfish light flamed up in Carwitchet's eyes as I drew forth the case.
+He laid the Valdez down on a sheet of paper, and I placed the other, still
+in its case, beside it. In that moment they looked identical, except for
+the little loop of sham stones, replaced by a plain gold band in the
+bishop's jewel. Carwitchet leaned across the table eagerly, the table gave
+a lurch, the lamp tottered, crashed over, and we were left in
+semidarkness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't stir!&quot; Carwitchet shouted. &quot;The paraffin is all over the place!&quot; He
+seized my sofa blanket, and flung it over the table while I stood
+helpless. &quot;There, that's safe now. Have you candles on the chimney-piece?
+I've got matches.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He looked very white and excited as he lit up. &quot;Might have been an awkward
+job with all that burning paraffin, running about,&quot; he said quite
+pleasantly. &quot;I hope no real harm is done.&quot; I was lifting the rug with
+shaking hands. The two stones lay as I had placed them. No! I nearly
+dropped it back again. It was the stone in the case that had the loop with
+the three sham sapphires!</p>
+
+<p>Carwitchet picked the other up hastily. &quot;So you say this is rubbish?&quot; he
+asked, his eyes sparkling wickedly, and an attempt at mortification in his
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Utter rubbish!&quot; I pronounced, with truth and decision, snapping up the
+case and pocketing it. &quot;Lady Carwitchet must have known it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, well, it's disappointing, isn't it? Good-by, we shall not meet
+again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I shook hands with him most cordially. &quot;Good-by, Lord Carwitchet. <i>So</i>
+glad to have met you and your mother. It has been a source of the
+<i>greatest</i> pleasure, I assure you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I have never seen the Carwitchets since. The bishop drove over next day in
+rather better spirits. Miss Panton had refused the chaplain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It doesn't matter, my lord,&quot; I said to him heartily. &quot;We've all been
+under some strange misconception. The stone in your possession is the
+veritable one. I could swear to that anywhere. The sapphire Lady
+Carwitchet wears is only an excellent imitation, and&mdash;I have seen it with
+my own eyes&mdash;is the one bearing Bogaerts's mark, the Greek Beta.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY</h2>
+
+
+<h3>CLASSIC MYSTERY AND DETECTIVE</h3>
+<h3>STORIES OF ALL NATIONS</h3>
+
+
+<h5>TEN VOLUMES</h5>
+
+
+<p class='center'>NORTH EUROPE&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;MEDITERRANEAN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;GERMAN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CLASSIC FRENCH</p>
+
+<p class='center'>MODERN FRENCH&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; FRENCH NOVELS&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;OLD TIME ENGLISH</p>
+
+<p class='center'>MODERN ENGLISH&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;AMERICAN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;REAL LIFE</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lock And Key Library, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 2038-h.htm or 2038-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/0/3/2038/
+
+Produced by Don Lainson. Text file originally posted in
+January, 2000 with an html conversion added by Walter
+Deboeuf in 2003. The present text and html files were
+produced by Suzanne Shell, M, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net;
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/2038-h/images/1-tb.jpg b/2038-h/images/1-tb.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0285f24
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h/images/1-tb.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038-h/images/1.jpg b/2038-h/images/1.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..36557b9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h/images/1.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038-h/images/cover-tb.jpg b/2038-h/images/cover-tb.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..16cfa68
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h/images/cover-tb.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038-h/images/cover.jpg b/2038-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..72442d4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038-h/images/title-tb.jpg b/2038-h/images/title-tb.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4a9d0bd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h/images/title-tb.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038-h/images/title.jpg b/2038-h/images/title.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8e3a687
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038-h/images/title.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2038.txt b/2038.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9285d83
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14051 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lock And Key Library, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Lock And Key Library
+ Classic Mystery And Detective Stories, Modern English
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Julian Hawthorne
+
+Release Date: June 4, 2005 [EBook #2038]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Don Lainson. Text file originally posted in
+January, 2000 with an html conversion added by Walter
+Deboeuf in 2003. The present text and html files were
+produced by Suzanne Shell, M, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+LOCK AND KEY
+LIBRARY
+
+CLASSIC MYSTERY AND
+DETECTIVE STORIES
+
+_EDITED BY_
+JULIAN HAWTHORNE
+
+MODERN ENGLISH
+
+ Rudyard Kipling A. Conan Doyle
+
+ Egerton Castle
+
+ Stanley J. Weyman Wilkie Collins
+
+ Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO.
+ 1909
+
+[Illustration: "And Sent out a Jet of Fire from His Nostrils"
+
+Drawing by Power O'Malley. To illustrate "In the House of Suddhoo," by
+Rudyard Kipling]
+
+
+
+
+Rudyard Kipling
+
+
+
+
+_My Own True Ghost Story_
+
+ As I came through the Desert thus it was--
+ As I came through the Desert.
+ _The City of Dreadful Night._
+
+
+Somewhere in the Other World, where there are books and pictures and plays
+and shop windows to look at, and thousands of men who spend their lives in
+building up all four, lives a gentleman who writes real stories about the
+real insides of people; and his name is Mr. Walter Besant. But he will
+insist upon treating his ghosts--he has published half a workshopful of
+them--with levity. He makes his ghost-seers talk familiarly, and, in some
+cases, flirt outrageously, with the phantoms. You may treat anything, from
+a Viceroy to a Vernacular Paper, with levity; but you must behave
+reverently toward a ghost, and particularly an Indian one.
+
+There are, in this land, ghosts who take the form of fat, cold, pobby
+corpses, and hide in trees near the roadside till a traveler passes. Then
+they drop upon his neck and remain. There are also terrible ghosts of
+women who have died in child-bed. These wander along the pathways at dusk,
+or hide in the crops near a village, and call seductively. But to answer
+their call is death in this world and the next. Their feet are turned
+backward that all sober men may recognize them. There are ghosts of little
+children who have been thrown into wells. These haunt well curbs and the
+fringes of jungles, and wail under the stars, or catch women by the wrist
+and beg to be taken up and carried. These and the corpse ghosts, however,
+are only vernacular articles and do not attack Sahibs. No native ghost has
+yet been authentically reported to have frightened an Englishman; but
+many English ghosts have scared the life out of both white and black.
+
+Nearly every other Station owns a ghost. There are said to be two at
+Simla, not counting the woman who blows the bellows at Syree dak-bungalow
+on the Old Road; Mussoorie has a house haunted of a very lively Thing; a
+White Lady is supposed to do night-watchman round a house in Lahore;
+Dalhousie says that one of her houses "repeats" on autumn evenings all the
+incidents of a horrible horse-and-precipice accident; Murree has a merry
+ghost, and, now that she has been swept by cholera, will have room for a
+sorrowful one; there are Officers' Quarters in Mian Mir whose doors open
+without reason, and whose furniture is guaranteed to creak, not with the
+heat of June but with the weight of Invisibles who come to lounge in the
+chairs; Peshawur possesses houses that none will willingly rent; and there
+is something--not fever--wrong with a big bungalow in Allahabad. The older
+Provinces simply bristle with haunted houses, and march phantom armies
+along their main thoroughfares.
+
+Some of the dak-bungalows on the Grand Trunk Road have handy little
+cemeteries in their compound--witnesses to the "changes and chances of
+this mortal life" in the days when men drove from Calcutta to the
+Northwest. These bungalows are objectionable places to put up in. They are
+generally very old, always dirty, while the _khansamah_ is as ancient as
+the bungalow. He either chatters senilely, or falls into the long trances
+of age. In both moods he is useless. If you get angry with him, he refers
+to some Sahib dead and buried these thirty years, and says that when he
+was in that Sahib's service not a _khansamah_ in the Province could touch
+him. Then he jabbers and mows and trembles and fidgets among the dishes,
+and you repent of your irritation.
+
+In these dak-bungalows, ghosts are most likely to be found, and when
+found, they should be made a note of. Not long ago it was my business to
+live in dak-bungalows. I never inhabited the same house for three nights
+running, and grew to be learned in the breed. I lived in Government-built
+ones with red brick walls and rail ceilings, an inventory of the furniture
+posted in every room, and an excited snake at the threshold to give
+welcome. I lived in "converted" ones--old houses officiating as
+dak-bungalows--where nothing was in its proper place and there wasn't even
+a fowl for dinner. I lived in second-hand palaces where the wind blew
+through open-work marble tracery just as uncomfortably as through a broken
+pane. I lived in dak-bungalows where the last entry in the visitors' book
+was fifteen months old, and where they slashed off the curry-kid's head
+with a sword. It was my good luck to meet all sorts of men, from sober
+traveling missionaries and deserters flying from British Regiments, to
+drunken loafers who threw whisky bottles at all who passed; and my still
+greater good fortune just to escape a maternity case. Seeing that a fair
+proportion of the tragedy of our lives out here acted itself in
+dak-bungalows, I wondered that I had met no ghosts. A ghost that would
+voluntarily hang about a dak-bungalow would be mad of course; but so many
+men have died mad in dak-bungalows that there must be a fair percentage of
+lunatic ghosts.
+
+In due time I found my ghost, or ghosts rather, for there were two of
+them. Up till that hour I had sympathized with Mr. Besant's method of
+handling them, as shown in "The Strange Case of Mr. Lucraft and Other
+Stories." I am now in the Opposition.
+
+We will call the bungalow Katmal dak-bungalow. But _that_ was the smallest
+part of the horror. A man with a sensitive hide has no right to sleep in
+dak-bungalows. He should marry. Katmal dak-bungalow was old and rotten and
+unrepaired. The floor was of worn brick, the walls were filthy, and the
+windows were nearly black with grime. It stood on a bypath largely used by
+native Sub-Deputy Assistants of all kinds, from Finance to Forests; but
+real Sahibs were rare. The _khansamah_, who was nearly bent double with
+old age, said so.
+
+When I arrived, there was a fitful, undecided rain on the face of the
+land, accompanied by a restless wind, and every gust made a noise like the
+rattling of dry bones in the stiff toddy palms outside. The _khansamah_
+completely lost his head on my arrival. He had served a Sahib once. Did I
+know that Sahib? He gave me the name of a well-known man who has been
+buried for more than a quarter of a century, and showed me an ancient
+daguerreotype of that man in his prehistoric youth. I had seen a steel
+engraving of him at the head of a double volume of Memoirs a month before,
+and I felt ancient beyond telling.
+
+The day shut in and the _khansamah_ went to get me food. He did not go
+through the, pretense of calling it "_khana_"--man's victuals. He said
+"_ratub_," and that means, among other things, "grub"--dog's rations.
+There was no insult in his choice of the term. He had forgotten the other
+word, I suppose.
+
+While he was cutting up the dead bodies of animals, I settled myself down,
+after exploring the dak-bungalow. There were three rooms, beside my own,
+which was a corner kennel, each giving into the other through dingy white
+doors fastened with long iron bars. The bungalow was a very solid one, but
+the partition walls of the rooms were almost jerry-built in their
+flimsiness. Every step or bang of a trunk echoed from my room down the
+other three, and every footfall came back tremulously from the far walls.
+For this reason I shut the door. There were no lamps--only candles in long
+glass shades. An oil wick was set in the bathroom.
+
+For bleak, unadulterated misery that dak-bungalow was the worst of the
+many that I had ever set foot in. There was no fireplace, and the windows
+would not open; so a brazier of charcoal would have been useless. The rain
+and the wind splashed and gurgled and moaned round the house, and the
+toddy palms rattled and roared. Half a dozen jackals went through the
+compound singing, and a hyena stood afar off and mocked them. A hyena
+would convince a Sadducee of the Resurrection of the Dead--the worst sort
+of Dead. Then came the _ratub_--a curious meal, half native and half
+English in composition--with the old _khansamah_ babbling behind my chair
+about dead and gone English people, and the wind-blown candles playing
+shadow-bo-peep with the bed and the mosquito-curtains. It was just the
+sort of dinner and evening to make a man think of every single one of his
+past sins, and of all the others that he intended to commit if he lived.
+
+Sleep, for several hundred reasons, was not easy. The lamp in the bathroom
+threw the most absurd shadows into the room, and the wind was beginning to
+talk nonsense.
+
+Just when the reasons were drowsy with blood-sucking I heard the
+regular--"Let-us-take-and-heave-him-over" grunt of doolie-bearers in the
+compound. First one doolie came in, then a second, and then a third. I
+heard the doolies dumped on the ground, and the shutter in front of my
+door shook. "That's some one trying to come in," I said. But no one spoke,
+and I persuaded myself that it was the gusty wind. The shutter of the room
+next to mine was attacked, flung back, and the inner door opened. "That's
+some Sub-Deputy Assistant," I said, "and he has brought his friends with
+him. Now they'll talk and spit and smoke for an hour."
+
+But there were no voices and no footsteps. No one was putting his luggage
+into the next room. The door shut, and I thanked Providence that I was to
+be left in peace. But I was curious to know where the doolies had gone. I
+got out of bed and looked into the darkness. There was never a sign of a
+doolie. Just as I was getting into bed again, I heard, in the next room,
+the sound that no man in his senses can possibly mistake--the whir of a
+billiard ball down the length of the slates when the striker is stringing
+for break. No other sound is like it. A minute afterwards there was
+another whir, and I got into bed. I was not frightened--indeed I was not.
+I was very curious to know what had become of the doolies. I jumped into
+bed for that reason.
+
+Next minute I heard the double click of a cannon and my hair sat up. It is
+a mistake to say that hair stands up. The skin of the head tightens and
+you can feel a faint, prickly, bristling all over the scalp. That is the
+hair sitting up.
+
+There was a whir and a click, and both sounds could only have been made by
+one thing--a billiard ball. I argued the matter out at great length with
+myself; and the more I argued the less probable it seemed that one bed,
+one table, and two chairs--all the furniture of the room next to
+mine--could so exactly duplicate the sounds of a game of billiards. After
+another cannon, a three-cushion one to judge by the whir, I argued no
+more. I had found my ghost and would have given worlds to have escaped
+from that dak-bungalow. I listened, and with each listen the game grew
+clearer. There was whir on whir and click on click. Sometimes there was a
+double click and a whir and another click. Beyond any sort of doubt,
+people were playing billiards in the next room. And the next room was not
+big enough to hold a billiard table!
+
+Between the pauses of the wind I heard the game go forward--stroke after
+stroke. I tried to believe that I could not hear voices; but that attempt
+was a failure.
+
+Do you know what fear is? Not ordinary fear of insult, injury or death,
+but abject, quivering dread of something that you cannot see--fear that
+dries the inside of the mouth and half of the throat--fear that makes you
+sweat on the palms of the hands, and gulp in order to keep the uvula at
+work? This is a fine Fear--a great cowardice, and must be felt to be
+appreciated. The very improbability of billiards in a dak-bungalow proved
+the reality of the thing. No man--drunk or sober--could imagine a game at
+billiards, or invent the spitting crack of a "screw-cannon."
+
+A severe course of dak-bungalows has this disadvantage--it breeds infinite
+credulity. If a man said to a confirmed dak-bungalow-haunter:--"There is a
+corpse in the next room, and there's a mad girl in the next but one, and
+the woman and man on that camel have just eloped from a place sixty miles
+away," the hearer would not disbelieve because he would know that nothing
+is too wild, grotesque, or horrible to happen in a dak-bungalow.
+
+This credulity, unfortunately, extends to ghosts. A rational person fresh
+from his own house would have turned on his side and slept. I did not. So
+surely as I was given up as a bad carcass by the scores of things in the
+bed because the bulk of my blood was in my heart, so surely did I hear
+every stroke of a long game at billiards played in the echoing room behind
+the iron-barred door. My dominant fear was that the players might want a
+marker. It was an absurd fear; because creatures who could play in the
+dark would be above such superfluities. I only know that that was my
+terror; and it was real.
+
+After a long, long while the game stopped, and the door banged. I slept
+because I was dead tired. Otherwise I should have preferred to have kept
+awake. Not for everything in Asia would I have dropped the door-bar and
+peered into the dark of the next room.
+
+When the morning came, I considered that I had done well and wisely, and
+inquired for the means of departure.
+
+"By the way, _khansamah_," I said, "what were those three doolies doing in
+my compound in the night?"
+
+"There were no doolies," said the _khansamah_.
+
+I went into the next room and the daylight streamed through the open door.
+I was immensely brave. I would, at that hour, have played Black Pool with
+the owner of the big Black Pool down below.
+
+"Has this place always been a dak-bungalow?" I asked.
+
+"No," said the _khansamah_. "Ten or twenty years ago, I have forgotten how
+long, it was a billiard room."
+
+"A how much?"
+
+"A billiard room for the Sahibs who built the Railway. I was _khansamah_
+then in the big house where all the Railway-Sahibs lived, and I used to
+come across with brandy-_shrab_. These three rooms were all one, and they
+held a big table on which the Sahibs played every evening. But the Sahibs
+are all dead now, and the Railway runs, you say, nearly to Kabul."
+
+"Do you remember anything about the Sahibs?"
+
+"It is long ago, but I remember that one Sahib, a fat man and always
+angry, was playing here one night, and he said to me:--'Mangal Khan,
+brandy-_pani do_,' and I filled the glass, and he bent over the table to
+strike, and his head fell lower and lower till it hit the table, and his
+spectacles came off, and when we--the Sahibs and I myself--ran to lift him
+he was dead. I helped to carry him out. Aha, he was a strong Sahib! But he
+is dead and I, old Mangal Khan, am still living, by your favor."
+
+That was more than enough! I had my ghost--a first-hand, authenticated
+article. I would write to the Society for Psychical Research--I would
+paralyze the Empire with the news! But I would, first of all, put eighty
+miles of assessed crop land between myself and that dak-bungalow before
+nightfall. The Society might send their regular agent to investigate later
+on.
+
+I went into my own room and prepared to pack after noting down the facts
+of the case. As I smoked I heard the game begin again,--with a miss in
+balk this time, for the whir was a short one.
+
+The door was open and I could see into the room. _Click--click!_ That was
+a cannon. I entered the room without fear, for there was sunlight within
+and a fresh breeze without. The unseen game was going on at a tremendous
+rate. And well it might, when a restless little rat was running to and fro
+inside the dingy ceiling-cloth, and a piece of loose window-sash was
+making fifty breaks off the window-bolt as it shook in the breeze!
+
+Impossible to mistake the sound of billiard balls! Impossible to mistake
+the whir of a ball over the slate! But I was to be excused. Even when I
+shut my enlightened eyes the sound was marvelously like that of a fast
+game.
+
+Entered angrily the faithful partner of my sorrows, Kadir Baksh.
+
+"This bungalow is very bad and low-caste! No wonder the Presence was
+disturbed and is speckled. Three sets of doolie-bearers came to the
+bungalow late last night when I was sleeping outside, and said that it was
+their custom to rest in the rooms set apart for the English people! What
+honor has the _khansamah_? They tried to enter, but I told them to go. No
+wonder, if these _Oorias_ have been here, that the Presence is sorely
+spotted. It is shame, and the work of a dirty man!"
+
+Kadir Baksh did not say that he had taken from each gang two annas for
+rent in advance, and then, beyond my earshot, had beaten them with the big
+green umbrella whose use I could never before divine. But Kadir Baksh has
+no notions of morality.
+
+There was an interview with the _khansamah_, but as he promptly lost his
+head, wrath gave place to pity, and pity led to a long conversation, in
+the course of which he put the fat Engineer-Sahib's tragic death in three
+separate stations--two of them fifty miles away. The third shift was to
+Calcutta, and there the Sahib died while driving a dog-cart.
+
+If I had encouraged him the _khansamah_ would have wandered all through
+Bengal with his corpse.
+
+I did not go away as soon as I intended. I stayed for the night, while the
+wind and the rat and the sash and the window-bolt played a ding-dong
+"hundred and fifty up." Then the wind ran out and the billiards stopped,
+and I felt that I had ruined my one genuine, hall-marked ghost story.
+
+Had I only stopped at the proper time, I could have made _anything_ out of
+it.
+
+That was the bitterest thought of all!
+
+
+
+
+_The Sending of Dana Da_
+
+ When the Devil rides on your chest, remember the _chamar_.
+ _--Native Proverb._
+
+
+Once upon a time some people in India made a new heaven and a new earth
+out of broken teacups, a missing brooch or two, and a hair brush. These
+were hidden under bushes, or stuffed into holes in the hillside, and an
+entire civil service of subordinate gods used to find or mend them again;
+and everyone said: "There are more things in heaven and earth than are
+dreamed of in our philosophy." Several other things happened also, but the
+religion never seemed to get much beyond its first manifestations; though
+it added an air-line postal _dak_, and orchestral effects in order to keep
+abreast of the times, and stall off competition.
+
+This religion was too elastic for ordinary use. It stretched itself and
+embraced pieces of everything that medicine men of all ages have
+manufactured. It approved and stole from Freemasonry; looted the
+Latter-day Rosicrucians of half their pet words; took any fragments of
+Egyptian philosophy that it found in the Encyclopaedia Britannica; annexed
+as many of the Vedas as had been translated into French or English, and
+talked of all the rest; built in the German versions of what is left of
+the Zend Avesta; encouraged white, gray, and black magic, including
+Spiritualism, palmistry, fortune-telling by cards, hot chestnuts,
+double-kerneled nuts and tallow droppings; would have adopted Voodoo and
+Oboe had it known anything about them, and showed itself, in every way,
+one of the most accommodating arrangements that had ever been invented
+since the birth of the sea.
+
+When it was in thorough working order, with all the machinery down to the
+subscriptions complete, Dana Da came from nowhere, with nothing in his
+hands, and wrote a chapter in its history which has hitherto been
+unpublished. He said that his first name was Dana, and his second was Da.
+Now, setting aside Dana of the New York _Sun_, Dana is a Bhil name, and Da
+fits no native of India unless you accept the Bengali De as the original
+spelling. Da is Lap or Finnish; and Dana Da was neither Finn, Chin, Bhil,
+Bengali, Lap, Nair, Gond, Romaney, Magh, Bokhariot, Kurd, Armenian,
+Levantine, Jew, Persian, Punjabi, Madrasi, Parsee, nor anything else known
+to ethnologists. He was simply Dana Da, and declined to give further
+information. For the sake of brevity, and as roughly indicating his
+origin, he was called "The Native." He might have been the original Old
+Man of the Mountains, who is said to be the only authorized head of the
+Teacup Creed. Some people said that he was; but Dana Da used to smile and
+deny any connection with the cult; explaining that he was an "independent
+experimenter."
+
+As I have said, he came from nowhere, with his hands behind his back, and
+studied the creed for three weeks; sitting at the feet of those best
+competent to explain its mysteries. Then he laughed aloud and went away,
+but the laugh might have been either of devotion or derision.
+
+When he returned he was without money, but his pride was unabated. He
+declared that he knew more about the things in heaven and earth than those
+who taught him, and for this contumacy was abandoned altogether.
+
+His next appearance in public life was at a big cantonment in Upper India,
+and he was then telling fortunes with the help of three leaden dice, a
+very dirty old cloth, and a little tin box of opium pills. He told better
+fortunes when he was allowed half a bottle of whisky; but the things which
+he invented on the opium were quite worth the money. He was in reduced
+circumstances. Among other people's he told the fortune of an Englishman
+who had once been interested in the Simla creed, but who, later on, had
+married and forgotten all his old knowledge in the study of babies and
+Exchange. The Englishman allowed Dana Da to tell a fortune for charity's
+sake, and, gave him five rupees, a dinner, and some old clothes. When he
+had eaten, Dana Da professed gratitude, and asked if there were anything
+he could do for his host--in the esoteric line.
+
+"Is there anyone that you love?" said Dana Da. The Englishman loved his
+wife, but had no desire to drag her name into the conversation. He
+therefore shook his head.
+
+"Is there anyone that you hate?" said Dana Da. The Englishman said that
+there were several men whom he hated deeply.
+
+"Very good," said Dana Da, upon whom the whisky and the opium were
+beginning to tell. "Only give me their names, and I will dispatch a
+Sending to them and kill them."
+
+Now a Sending is a horrible arrangement, first invented, they say, in
+Iceland. It is a thing sent by a wizard, and may take any form, but most
+generally wanders about the land in the shape of a little purple cloud
+till it finds the sendee, and him it kills by changing into the form of a
+horse, or a cat, or a man without a face. It is not strictly a native
+patent, though _chamars_ can, if irritated, dispatch a Sending which sits
+on the breast of their enemy by night and nearly kills him. Very few
+natives care to irritate _chamars_ for this reason.
+
+"Let me dispatch a Sending," said Dana Da; "I am nearly dead now with
+want, and drink, and opium; but I should like to kill a man before I die.
+I can send a Sending anywhere you choose, and in any form except in the
+shape of a man."
+
+The Englishman had no friends that he wished to kill, but partly to soothe
+Dana Da, whose eyes were rolling, and partly to see what would be done, he
+asked whether a modified Sending could not be arranged for--such a Sending
+as should make a man's life a burden to him, and yet do him no harm. If
+this were possible, he notified his willingness to give Dana Da ten rupees
+for the job.
+
+"I am not what I was once," said Dana Da, "and I must take the money
+because I am poor. To what Englishman shall I send it?"
+
+"Send a Sending to Lone Sahib," said the Englishman, naming a man who had
+been most bitter in rebuking him for his apostasy from the Teacup Creed.
+Dana Da laughed and nodded.
+
+"I could have chosen no better man myself," said he. "I will see that he
+finds the Sending about his path and about his bed."
+
+He lay down on the hearthrug, turned up the whites of his eyes, shivered
+all over, and began to snort. This was magic, or opium, or the Sending, or
+all three. When he opened his eyes he vowed that the Sending had started
+upon the warpath, and was at that moment flying up to the town where Lone
+Sahib lives.
+
+"Give me my ten rupees," said Dana Da, wearily, "and write a letter to
+Lone Sahib, telling him, and all who believe with him, that you and a
+friend are using a power greater than theirs. They will see that you are
+speaking the truth."
+
+He departed unsteadily, with the promise of some more rupees if anything
+came of the Sending.
+
+The Englishman sent a letter to Lone Sahib, couched in what he remembered
+of the terminology of the creed. He wrote: "I also, in the days of what
+you held to be my backsliding, have obtained enlightenment, and with
+enlightenment has come power." Then he grew so deeply mysterious that the
+recipient of the letter could make neither head nor tail of it, and was
+proportionately impressed; for he fancied that his friend had become a
+"fifth rounder." When a man is a "fifth rounder" he can do more than Slade
+and Houdin combined.
+
+Lone Sahib read the letter in five different fashions, and was beginning a
+sixth interpretation, when his bearer dashed in with the news that there
+was a cat on the bed. Now, if there was one thing that Lone Sahib hated
+more than another it was a cat. He rated the bearer for not turning it out
+of the house. The bearer said that he was afraid. All the doors of the
+bedroom had been shut throughout the morning, and no real cat could
+possibly have entered the room. He would prefer not to meddle with the
+creature.
+
+Lone Sahib entered the room gingerly, and there, on the pillow of his bed,
+sprawled and whimpered a wee white kitten, not a jumpsome, frisky little
+beast, but a sluglike crawler with its eyes barely opened and its paws
+lacking strength or direction--a kitten that ought to have been in a
+basket with its mamma. Lone Sahib caught it by the scruff of its neck,
+handed it over to the sweeper to be drowned, and fined the bearer four
+annas.
+
+That evening, as he was reading in his room, he fancied that he saw
+something moving about on the hearthrug, outside the circle of light from
+his reading lamp. When the thing began to myowl, he realized that it was a
+kitten--a wee white kitten, nearly blind and very miserable. He was
+seriously angry, and spoke bitterly to his bearer, who said that there was
+no kitten in the room when he brought in the lamp, and real kittens of
+tender age generally had mother cats in attendance.
+
+"If the Presence will go out into the veranda and listen," said the
+bearer, "he will hear no cats. How, therefore, can the kitten on the bed
+and the kitten on the hearthrug be real kittens?"
+
+Lone Sahib went out to listen, and the bearer followed him, but there was
+no sound of Rachel mewing for her children. He returned to his room,
+having hurled the kitten down the hillside, and wrote out the incidents of
+the day for the benefit of his coreligionists. Those people were so
+absolutely free from superstition that they ascribed anything a little out
+of the common to agencies. As it was their business to know all about the
+agencies, they were on terms of almost indecent familiarity with
+manifestations of every kind. Their letters dropped from the
+ceiling--unstamped--and spirits used to squatter up and down their
+staircases all night. But they had never come into contact with kittens.
+Lone Sahib wrote out the facts, noting the hour and the minute, as every
+psychical observer is bound to do, and appending the Englishman's letter
+because it was the most mysterious document and might have had a bearing
+upon anything in this world or the next. An outsider would have
+translated all the tangle thus: "Look out! You laughed at me once, and now
+I am going to make you sit up."
+
+Lone Sahib's coreligionists found that meaning in it; but their
+translation was refined and full of four-syllable words. They held a
+sederunt, and were filled with tremulous joy, for, in spite of their
+familiarity with all the other worlds and cycles, they had a very human
+awe of things sent from ghostland. They met in Lone Sahib's room in
+shrouded and sepulchral gloom, and their conclave was broken up by a
+clinking among the photo frames on the mantelpiece. A wee white kitten,
+nearly blind, was looping and writhing itself between the clock and the
+candlesticks. That stopped all investigations or doubtings. Here was the
+manifestation in the flesh. It was, so far as could be seen, devoid of
+purpose, but it was a manifestation of undoubted authenticity.
+
+They drafted a round robin to the Englishman, the backslider of old days,
+adjuring him in the interests of the creed to explain whether there was
+any connection between the embodiment of some Egyptian god or other (I
+have forgotten the name) and his communication. They called the kitten Ra,
+or Toth, or Shem, or Noah, or something; and when Lone Sahib confessed
+that the first one had, at his most misguided instance, been drowned by
+the sweeper, they said consolingly that in his next life he would be a
+"bounder," and not even a "rounder" of the lowest grade. These words may
+not be quite correct, but they express the sense of the house accurately.
+
+When the Englishman received the round robin--it came by post--he was
+startled and bewildered. He sent into the bazaar for Dana Da, who read the
+letter and laughed. "That is my Sending," said he. "I told you I would
+work well. Now give me another ten rupees."
+
+"But what in the world is this gibberish about Egyptian gods?" asked the
+Englishman.
+
+"Cats," said Dana Da, with a hiccough, for he had discovered the
+Englishman's whisky bottle. "Cats and cats and cats! Never was such a
+Sending. A hundred of cats. Now give me ten more rupees and write as I
+dictate."
+
+Dana Da's letter was a curiosity. It bore the Englishman's signature, and
+hinted at cats--at a Sending of cats. The mere words on paper were creepy
+and uncanny to behold.
+
+"What have you done, though?" said the Englishman; "I am as much in the
+dark as ever. Do you mean to say that you can actually send this absurd
+Sending you talk about?"
+
+"Judge for yourself," said Dana Da. "What does that letter mean? In a
+little time they will all be at my feet and yours, and I, oh, glory! will
+be drugged or drunk all day long."
+
+Dana Da knew his people.
+
+When a man who hates cats wakes up in the morning and finds a little
+squirming kitten on his breast, or puts his hand into his ulster pocket
+and finds a little half-dead kitten where his gloves should be, or opens
+his trunk and finds a vile kitten among his dress shirts, or goes for a
+long ride with his mackintosh strapped on his saddle-bow and shakes a
+little sprawling kitten from its folds when he opens it, or goes out to
+dinner and finds a little blind kitten under his chair, or stays at home
+and finds a writhing kitten under the quilt, or wriggling among his boots,
+or hanging, head downward, in his tobacco jar, or being mangled by his
+terrier in the veranda--when such a man finds one kitten, neither more nor
+less, once a day in a place where no kitten rightly could or should be, he
+is naturally upset. When he dare not murder his daily trove because he
+believes it to be a manifestation, an emissary, an embodiment, and half a
+dozen other things all out of the regular course of nature, he is more
+than upset. He is actually distressed. Some of Lone Sahib's coreligionists
+thought that he was a highly favored individual; but many said that if he
+had treated the first kitten with proper respect--as suited a Toth-Ra
+Tum-Sennacherib Embodiment--all his trouble would have been averted. They
+compared him to the Ancient Mariner, but none the less they were proud of
+him and proud of the Englishman who had sent the manifestation. They did
+not call it a Sending because Icelandic magic was not in their programme.
+
+After sixteen kittens--that is to say, after one fortnight, for there were
+three kittens on the first day to impress the fact of the Sending, the
+whole camp was uplifted by a letter--it came flying through a window--from
+the Old Man of the Mountains--the head of all the creed--explaining the
+manifestation in the most beautiful language and soaking up all the credit
+of it for himself. The Englishman, said the letter, was not there at all.
+He was a backslider without power or asceticism, who couldn't even raise a
+table by force of volition, much less project an army of kittens through
+space. The entire arrangement, said the letter, was strictly orthodox,
+worked and sanctioned by the highest authorities within the pale of the
+creed. There was great joy at this, for some of the weaker brethren seeing
+that an outsider who had been working on independent lines could create
+kittens, whereas their own rulers had never gone beyond crockery--and
+broken at that--were showing a desire to break line on their own trail. In
+fact, there was the promise of a schism. A second round robin was drafted
+to the Englishman, beginning: "Oh, Scoffer," and ending with a selection
+of curses from the rites of Mizraim and Memphis and the Commination of
+Jugana; who was a "fifth rounder," upon whose name an upstart "third
+rounder" once traded. A papal excommunication is a _billet-doux_ compared
+to the Commination of Jugana. The Englishman had been proved under the
+hand and seal of the Old Man of the Mountains to have appropriated virtue
+and pretended to have power which, in reality, belonged only to the
+supreme head. Naturally the round robin did not spare him.
+
+He handed the letter to Dana Da to translate into decent English. The
+effect on Dana Da was curious. At first he was furiously angry, and then
+he laughed for five minutes.
+
+"I had thought," he said, "that they would have come to me. In another
+week I would have shown that I sent the Sending, and they would have
+discrowned the Old Man of the Mountains who has sent this Sending of mine.
+Do you do nothing. The time has come for me to act. Write as I dictate,
+and I will put them to shame. But give me ten more rupees."
+
+At Dana Da's dictation the Englishman wrote nothing less than a formal
+challenge to the Old Man of the Mountains. It wound up: "And if this
+manifestation be from your hand, then let it go forward; but if it be from
+my hand, I will that the Sending shall cease in two days' time. On that
+day there shall be twelve kittens and thenceforward none at all. The
+people shall judge between us." This was signed by Dana Da, who added
+pentacles and pentagrams, and a _crux ansata_, and half a dozen
+_swastikas_, and a Triple Tau to his name, just to show that he was all he
+laid claim to be.
+
+The challenge was read out to the gentlemen and ladies, and they
+remembered then that Dana Da had laughed at them some years ago. It was
+officially announced that the Old Man of the Mountains would treat the
+matter with contempt; Dana Da being an independent investigator without a
+single "round" at the back of him. But this did not soothe his people.
+They wanted to see a fight. They were very human for all their
+spirituality. Lone Sahib, who was really being worn out with kittens,
+submitted meekly to his fate. He felt that he was being "kittened to prove
+the power of Dana Da," as the poet says.
+
+When the stated day dawned, the shower of kittens began. Some were white
+and some were tabby, and all were about the same loathsome age. Three were
+on his hearthrug, three in his bathroom, and the other six turned up at
+intervals among the visitors who came to see the prophecy break down.
+Never was a more satisfactory Sending. On the next day there were no
+kittens, and the next day and all the other days were kittenless and
+quiet. The people murmured and looked to the Old Man of the Mountains for
+an explanation. A letter, written on a palm leaf, dropped from the
+ceiling, but everyone except Lone Sahib felt that letters were not what
+the occasion demanded. There should have been cats, there should have been
+cats--full-grown ones. The letter proved conclusively that there had been
+a hitch in the psychic current which, colliding with a dual identity, had
+interfered with the percipient activity all along the main line. The
+kittens were still going on, but owing to some failure in the developing
+fluid, they were not materialized. The air was thick with letters for a
+few days afterwards. Unseen hands played Glueck and Beethoven on
+finger-bowls and clock shades; but all men felt that psychic life was a
+mockery without materialized kittens. Even Lone Sahib shouted with the
+majority on this head. Dana Da's letters were very insulting, and if he
+had then offered to lead a new departure, there is no knowing what might
+not have happened.
+
+But Dana Da was dying of whisky and opium in the Englishman's go-down, and
+had small heart for new creeds.
+
+"They have been put to shame," said he. "Never was such a Sending. It has
+killed me."
+
+"Nonsense," said the Englishman, "you are going to die, Dana Da, and that
+sort of stuff must be left behind. I'll admit that you have made some
+queer things come about. Tell me honestly, now, how was it done?"
+
+"Give me ten more rupees," said Dana Da, faintly, "and if I die before I
+spend them, bury them with me." The silver was counted out while Dana Da
+was fighting with death. His hand closed upon the money and he smiled a
+grim smile.
+
+"Bend low," he whispered. The Englishman bent.
+
+"_Bunnia_--mission school--expelled--_box-wallah_ (peddler)--Ceylon pearl
+merchant--all mine English education--outcasted, and made up name Dana
+Da--England with American thought-reading man and--and--you gave me ten
+rupees several times--I gave the Sahib's bearer two-eight a month for
+cats--little, little cats. I wrote, and he put them about--very clever
+man. Very few kittens now in the bazaar. Ask Lone Sahib's sweeper's wife."
+
+So saying, Dana Da gasped and passed away into a land where, if all be
+true, there are no materializations and the making of new creeds is
+discouraged.
+
+But consider the gorgeous simplicity of it all!
+
+
+
+
+_In the House of Suddhoo_
+
+ A stone's throw out on either hand
+ From that well-ordered road we tread,
+ And all the world is wild and strange;
+ _Churel_ and ghoul and _Djinn_ and sprite
+ Shall bear us company to-night,
+ For we have reached the Oldest Land
+ Wherein the Powers of Darkness range.
+
+ _--From the Dusk to the Dawn._
+
+
+The house of Suddhoo, near the Taksali Gate, is two storied, with four
+carved windows of old brown wood, and a flat roof. You may recognize it by
+five red handprints arranged like the Five of Diamonds on the whitewash
+between the upper windows. Bhagwan Dass, the bunnia, and a man who says he
+gets his living by seal-cutting live in the lower story with a troop of
+wives, servants, friends, and retainers. The two upper rooms used to be
+occupied by Janoo and Azizun and a little black-and-tan terrier that was
+stolen from an Englishman's house and given to Janoo by a soldier. To-day,
+only Janoo lives in the upper rooms. Suddhoo sleeps on the roof generally,
+except when he sleeps in the street. He used to go to Peshawar in the cold
+weather to visit his son, who sells curiosities near the Edwardes' Gate,
+and then he slept under a real mud roof. Suddhoo is a great friend of
+mine, because his cousin had a son who secured, thanks to my
+recommendation, the post of head messenger to a big firm in the Station.
+Suddhoo says that God will make me a Lieutenant-Governor one of these
+days. I daresay his prophecy will come true. He is very, very old, with
+white hair and no teeth worth showing, and he has outlived his
+wits--outlived nearly everything except his fondness for his son at
+Peshawar. Janoo and Azizun are Kashmiris, Ladies of the City, and theirs
+was an ancient and more or less honorable profession; but Azizun has since
+married a medical student from the Northwest and has settled down to a
+most respectable life somewhere near Bareilly. Bhagwan Dass is an
+extortionate and an adulterator. He is very rich. The man who is supposed
+to get his living by seal cutting pretends to be very poor. This lets you
+know as much as is necessary of the four principal tenants in the house of
+Suddhoo. Then there is Me, of course; but I am only the chorus that comes
+in at the end to explain things. So I do not count.
+
+Suddhoo was not clever. The man who pretended to cut seals was the
+cleverest of them all--Bhagwan Dass only knew how to lie--except Janoo.
+She was also beautiful, but that was her own affair.
+
+Suddhoo's son at Peshawar was attacked by pleurisy, and old Suddhoo was
+troubled. The seal-cutter man heard of Suddhoo's anxiety and made capital
+out of it. He was abreast of the times. He got a friend in Peshawar to
+telegraph daily accounts of the son's health. And here the story begins.
+
+Suddhoo's cousin's son told me, one evening, that Suddhoo wanted to see
+me; that he was too old and feeble to come personally, and that I should
+be conferring an everlasting honor on the House of Suddhoo if I went to
+him. I went; but I think, seeing how well off Suddhoo was then, that he
+might have sent something better than an _ekka_, which jolted fearfully,
+to haul out a future Lieutenant-Governor to the City on a muggy April
+evening. The _ekka_ did not run quickly. It was full dark when we pulled
+up opposite the door of Ranjit Singh's Tomb near the main gate of the
+Fort. Here was Suddhoo and he said that by reason of my condescension, it
+was absolutely certain that I should become a Lieutenant-Governor while
+my hair was yet black. Then we talked about the weather and the state of
+my health, and the wheat crops, for fifteen minutes, in the Huzuri Bagh,
+under the stars.
+
+Suddhoo came to the point at last. He said that Janoo had told him that
+there was an order of the _Sirkar_ against magic, because it was feared
+that magic might one day kill the Empress of India. I didn't know anything
+about the state of the law; but I fancied that something interesting was
+going to happen. I said that so far from magic being discouraged by the
+Government it was highly commended. The greatest officials of the State
+practiced it themselves. (If the Financial Statement isn't magic, I don't
+know what is.) Then, to encourage him further, I said that, if there was
+any _jadoo_ afoot, I had not the least objection to giving it my
+countenance and sanction, and to seeing that it was clean _jadoo_--white
+magic, as distinguished from the unclean _jadoo_ which kills folk. It took
+a long time before Suddhoo admitted that this was just what he had asked
+me to come for. Then he told me, in jerks and quavers, that the man who
+said he cut seals was a sorcerer of the cleanest kind; that every day he
+gave Suddhoo news of his sick son in Peshawar more quickly than the
+lightning could fly, and that this news was always corroborated by the
+letters. Further, that he had told Suddhoo how a great danger was
+threatening his son, which could be removed by clean _jadoo_; and, of
+course, heavy payment. I began to see exactly how the land lay, and told
+Suddhoo that _I_ also understood a little _jadoo_ in the Western line, and
+would go to his house to see that everything was done decently and in
+order. We set off together; and on the way Suddhoo told me that he had
+paid the seal cutter between one hundred and two hundred rupees already;
+and the _jadoo_ of that night would cost two hundred more. Which was
+cheap, he said, considering the greatness of his son's danger; but I do
+not think he meant it.
+
+The lights were all cloaked in the front of the house when we arrived. I
+could hear awful noises from behind the seal cutter's shop front, as if
+some one were groaning his soul out. Suddhoo shook all over, and while we
+groped our way upstairs told me that the _jadoo_ had begun. Janoo and
+Azizun met us at the stair head, and told us that the _jadoo_ work was
+coming off in their rooms, because there was more space there. Janoo is a
+lady of a freethinking turn of mind. She whispered that the _jadoo_ was an
+invention to get money out of Suddhoo, and that the seal cutter would go
+to a hot place when he died. Suddhoo was nearly crying with fear and old
+age. He kept walking up and down the room in the half light, repeating his
+son's name over and over again, and asking Azizun if the seal cutter ought
+not to make a reduction in the case of his own landlord. Janoo pulled me
+over to the shadow in the recess of the carved bow-windows. The boards
+were up, and the rooms were only lit by one tiny oil lamp. There was no
+chance of my being seen if I stayed still.
+
+Presently, the groans below ceased, and we heard steps on the staircase.
+That was the seal cutter. He stopped outside the door as the terrier
+barked and Azizun fumbled at the chain, and he told Suddhoo to blow out
+the lamp. This left the place in jet darkness, except for the red glow
+from the two _huqas_ that belonged to Janoo and Azizun. The seal cutter
+came in, and I heard Suddhoo throw himself down on the floor and groan.
+Azizun caught her breath, and Janoo backed on to one of the beds with a
+shudder. There was a clink of something metallic, and then shot up a pale
+blue-green flame near the ground. The light was just enough to show
+Azizun, pressed against one corner of the room with the terrier between
+her knees; Janoo, with her hands clasped, leaning forward as she sat on
+the bed; Suddhoo, face down, quivering, and the seal cutter.
+
+I hope I may never see another man like that seal cutter. He was stripped
+to the waist, with a wreath of white jasmine as thick as my wrist round
+his forehead, a salmon-colored loin-cloth round his middle, and a steel
+bangle on each ankle. This was not awe-inspiring. It was the face of the
+man that turned me cold. It was blue-gray in the first place. In the
+second, the eyes were rolled back till you could only see the whites of
+them; and, in the third, the face was the face of a demon--a
+ghoul--anything you please except of the sleek, oily old ruffian who sat
+in the daytime over his turning-lathe downstairs. He was lying on his
+stomach with his arms turned and crossed behind him, as if he had been
+thrown down pinioned. His head and neck were the only parts of him off the
+floor. They were nearly at right angles to the body, like the head of a
+cobra at spring. It was ghastly. In the center of the room, on the bare
+earth floor, stood a big, deep, brass basin, with a pale blue-green light
+floating in the center like a night-light. Round that basin the man on the
+floor wriggled himself three times. How he did it I do not know. I could
+see the muscles ripple along his spine and fall smooth again; but I could
+not see any other motion. The head seemed the only thing alive about him,
+except that slow curl and uncurl of the laboring back muscles. Janoo from
+the bed was breathing seventy to the minute; Azizun held her hands before
+her eyes; and old Suddhoo, fingering at the dirt that had got into his
+white beard, was crying to himself. The horror of it was that the
+creeping, crawly thing made no sound--only crawled! And, remember, this
+lasted for ten minutes, while the terrier whined, and Azizun shuddered,
+and Janoo gasped and Suddhoo cried.
+
+I felt the hair lift at the back of my head, and my heart thump like a
+thermantidote paddle. Luckily, the seal cutter betrayed himself by his
+most impressive trick and made me calm again. After he had finished that
+unspeakable crawl, he stretched his head away from the floor as high as he
+could, and sent out a jet of fire from his nostrils. Now I knew how
+fire--spouting is done--I can do it myself--so I felt at ease. The
+business was a fraud. If he had only kept to that crawl without trying to
+raise the effect, goodness knows what I might not have thought. Both the
+girls shrieked at the jet of fire, and the head dropped, chin down on the
+floor, with a thud; the whole body lying then like a corpse with its arms
+trussed. There was a pause of five full minutes after this, and the
+blue-green flame died down. Janoo stooped to settle one of her anklets,
+while Azizun turned her face to the wall and took the terrier in her arms.
+Suddhoo put out an arm mechanically to Janoo's _huqa_, and she slid it
+across the floor with her foot. Directly above the body and on the wall
+were a couple of flaming portraits, in stamped paper frames, of the Queen
+and the Prince of Wales. They looked down on the performance, and, to my
+thinking, seemed to heighten the grotesqueness of it all.
+
+Just when the silence was getting unendurable, the body turned over and
+rolled away from the basin to the side of the room, where it lay stomach
+up. There was a faint "plop" from the basin--exactly like the noise a fish
+makes when it takes a fly--and the green light in the center revived.
+
+I looked at the basin, and saw, bobbing in the water the dried, shriveled,
+black head of a native baby--open eyes, open mouth and shaved scalp. It
+was worse, being so very sudden, than the crawling exhibition. We had no
+time to say anything before it began to speak.
+
+Read Poe's account of the voice that came from the mesmerized dying man,
+and you will realize less than one half of the horror of that head's
+voice.
+
+There was an interval of a second or two between each word, and a sort of
+"ring, ring, ring," in the note of the voice like the timbre of a bell. It
+pealed slowly, as if talking to itself, for several minutes before I got
+rid of my cold sweat. Then the blessed solution struck me. I looked at the
+body lying near the doorway, and saw, just where the hollow of the throat
+joins on the shoulders, a muscle that had nothing to do with any man's
+regular breathing, twitching away steadily. The whole thing was a careful
+reproduction of the Egyptian teraphin that one reads about sometimes; and
+the voice was as clever and as appalling a piece of ventriloquism as one
+could wish to hear. All this time the head was "lip-lip-lapping" against
+the side of the basin, and speaking. It told Suddhoo, on his face again
+whining, of his son's illness and of the state of the illness up to the
+evening of that very night. I always shall respect the seal cutter for
+keeping so faithfully to the time of the Peshawar telegrams. It went on to
+say that skilled doctors were night and day watching over the man's life;
+and that he would eventually recover if the fee to the potent sorcerer,
+whose servant was the head in the basin, were doubled.
+
+Here the mistake from the artistic point of view came in. To ask for twice
+your stipulated fee in a voice that Lazarus might have used when he rose
+from the dead, is absurd. Janoo, who is really a woman of masculine
+intellect, saw this as quickly as I did. I heard her say "_Ash nahin!
+Fareib!_" scornfully under her breath; and just as she said so, the light
+in the basin died out, the head stopped talking, and we heard the room
+door creak on its hinges. Then Janoo struck a match, lit the lamp, and we
+saw that head, basin, and seal cutter were gone. Suddhoo was wringing his
+hands and explaining to anyone who cared to listen, that, if his chances
+of eternal salvation depended on it, he could not raise another two
+hundred rupees. Azizun was nearly in hysterics in the corner; while Janoo
+sat down composedly on one of the beds to discuss the probabilities of the
+whole thing being a _bunao_, or "make-up."
+
+I explained as much as I knew of the seal cutter's way of _jadoo_; but her
+argument was much more simple:--"The magic that is always demanding gifts
+is no true magic," said she. "My mother told me that the only potent love
+spells are those which are told you for love. This seal cutter man is a
+liar and a devil. I dare not tell, do anything, or get anything done,
+because I am in debt to Bhagwan Dass the bunnia for two gold rings and a
+heavy anklet. I must get my food from his shop. The seal cutter is the
+friend of Bhagwan Dass, and he would poison my food. A fool's _jadoo_ has
+been going on for ten days, and has cost Suddhoo many rupees each night.
+The seal cutter used black hens and lemons and _mantras_ before. He never
+showed us anything like this till to-night. Azizun is a fool, and will be
+a _pur dahnashin_ soon. Suddhoo has lost his strength and his wits. See
+now! I had hoped to get from Suddhoo many rupees while he lived, and many
+more after his death; and behold, he is spending everything on that
+offspring of a devil and a she-ass, the seal cutter!"
+
+Here I said: "But what induced Suddhoo to drag me into the business? Of
+course I can speak to the seal cutter, and he shall refund. The whole
+thing is child's talk--shame--and senseless."
+
+"Suddhoo _is_ an old child," said Janoo. "He has lived on the roofs these
+seventy years and is as senseless as a milch goat. He brought you here to
+assure himself that he was not breaking any law of the _Sirkar_, whose
+salt he ate many years ago. He worships the dust off the feet of the seal
+cutter, and that cow devourer has forbidden him to go and see his son.
+What does Suddhoo know of your laws or the lightning post? I have to watch
+his money going day by day to that lying beast below."
+
+Janoo stamped her foot on the floor and nearly cried with vexation; while
+Suddhoo was whimpering under a blanket in the corner, and Azizun was
+trying to guide the pipe-stem to his foolish old mouth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now the case stands thus. Unthinkingly, I have laid myself open to the
+charge of aiding and abetting the seal cutter in obtaining money under
+false pretenses, which is forbidden by Section 420 of the Indian Penal
+Code. I am helpless in the matter for these reasons, I cannot inform the
+police. What witnesses would support my statements? Janoo refuses flatly,
+and Azizun is a veiled woman somewhere near Bareilly--lost in this big
+India of ours. I dare not again take the law into my own hands, and speak
+to the seal cutter; for certain am I that, not only would Suddhoo
+disbelieve me, but this step would end in the poisoning of Janoo, who is
+bound hand and foot by her debt to the _bunnia_. Suddhoo is an old dotard;
+and whenever we meet mumbles my idiotic joke that the _Sirkar_ rather
+patronizes the Black Art than otherwise. His son is well now; but Suddhoo
+is completely under the influence of the seal cutter, by whose advice he
+regulates the affairs of his life. Janoo watches daily the money that she
+hoped to wheedle out of Suddhoo taken by the seal cutter, and becomes
+daily more furious and sullen.
+
+She will never tell, because she dare not; but, unless something happens
+to prevent her, I am afraid that the seal cutter will die of cholera--the
+white arsenic kind--about the middle of May. And thus I shall have to be
+privy to a murder in the house of Suddhoo.
+
+
+
+
+_His Wedded Wife_
+
+ Cry "Murder!" in the market-place, and each
+ Will turn upon his neighbor anxious eyes
+ That ask:--"Art thou the man?" We hunted Cain
+ Some centuries ago, across the world,
+ That bred the fear our own misdeeds maintain
+ To-day.
+
+ _--Vibart's Moralities._
+
+
+Shakespeare says something about worms, or it may be giants or beetles,
+turning if you tread on them too severely. The safest plan is never to
+tread on a worm--not even on the last new subaltern from Home, with his
+buttons hardly out of their tissue paper, and the red of sappy English
+beef in his cheeks. This is the story of the worm that turned. For the
+sake of brevity, we will call Henry Augustus Ramsay Faizanne, "The Worm,"
+although he really was an exceedingly pretty boy, without a hair on his
+face, and with a waist like a girl's, when he came out to the Second
+"Shikarris" and was made unhappy in several ways. The "Shikarris" are a
+high-caste regiment, and you must be able to do things well--play a banjo,
+or ride more than little, or sing, or act--to get on with them.
+
+The Worm did nothing except fall off his pony, and knock chips out of gate
+posts with his trap. Even that became monotonous after a time. He objected
+to whist, cut the cloth at billiards, sang out of tune, kept very much to
+himself, and wrote to his Mamma and sisters at Home. Four of these five
+things were vices which the "Shikarris" objected to and set themselves to
+eradicate. Everyone knows how subalterns are, by brother subalterns,
+softened and not permitted to be ferocious. It is good and wholesome, and
+does no one any harm, unless tempers are lost; and then there is trouble.
+There was a man once--but that is another story.
+
+The "Shikarris" _shikarred_ The Worm very much, and he bore everything
+without winking. He was so good and so anxious to learn, and flushed so
+pink, that his education was cut short, and he was left to his own devices
+by everyone except the Senior Subaltern who continued to make life a
+burden to The Worm. The Senior Subaltern meant no harm; but his chaff was
+coarse, and he didn't quite understand where to stop. He had been waiting
+too long for his Company; and that always sours a man. Also he was in
+love, which made him worse.
+
+One day, after he had borrowed The Worm's trap for a lady who never
+existed, had used it himself all the afternoon, had sent a note to The
+Worm, purporting to come from the lady, and was telling the Mess all about
+it, The Worm rose in his place and said, in his quiet, ladylike
+voice:--"That was a very pretty sell; but I'll lay you a month's pay to a
+month's pay when you get your step, that I work a sell on you that you'll
+remember for the rest of your days, and the Regiment after you when you're
+dead or broke." The Worm wasn't angry in the least, and the rest of the
+Mess shouted. Then the Senior Subaltern looked at The Worm from the boots
+upward, and down again and said: "Done, Baby." The Worm took the rest of
+the Mess to witness that the bet had been taken, and retired into a book
+with a sweet smile.
+
+Two months passed, and the Senior Subaltern still educated The Worm, who
+began to move about a little more as the hot weather came on. I have said
+that the Senior Subaltern was in love. The curious thing is that a girl
+was in love with the Senior Subaltern. Though the Colonel said awful
+things, and the Majors snorted, and married Captains looked unutterable
+wisdom, and the juniors scoffed, those two were engaged.
+
+The Senior Subaltern was so pleased with getting his Company and his
+acceptance at the same time that he forgot to bother The Worm. The girl
+was a pretty girl, and had money of her own. She does not come into this
+story at all.
+
+One night, at beginning of the hot weather, all the Mess, except The Worm
+who had gone to his own room to write Home letters, were sitting on the
+platform outside the Mess House. The Band had finished playing, but no one
+wanted to go in. And the Captains' wives were there also. The folly of a
+man in love is unlimited. The Senior Subaltern had been holding forth on
+the merits of the girl he was engaged to, and the ladies were purring
+approval, while the men yawned, when there was a rustle of skirts in the
+dark, and a tired, faint voice lifted itself.
+
+"Where's my husband?"
+
+I do not wish in the least to reflect on the morality of the "Shikarris";
+but it is on record that four men jumped up as if they had been shot.
+Three of them were married men. Perhaps they were afraid that their wives
+had come from Home unbeknownst. The fourth said that he had acted on the
+impulse of the moment. He explained this afterwards.
+
+Then the voice cried: "Oh Lionel!" Lionel was the Senior Subaltern's name.
+A woman came into the little circle of light by the candles on the peg
+tables, stretching out her hands to the dark where the Senior Subaltern
+was, and sobbing. We rose to our feet, feeling that things were going to
+happen and ready to believe the worst. In this bad, small world of ours,
+one knows so little of the life of the next man--which, after all, is
+entirely his own concern--that one is not surprised when a crash comes.
+Anything might turn up any day for anyone. Perhaps the Senior Subaltern
+had been trapped in his youth. Men are crippled that way occasionally. We
+didn't know; we wanted to hear; and the Captains' wives were as anxious as
+we. If he _had_ been trapped, he was to be excused; for the woman from
+nowhere, in the dusty shoes and gray traveling dress, was very lovely,
+with black hair and great eyes full of tears. She was tall, with a fine
+figure, and her voice had a running sob in it pitiful to hear. As soon as
+the Senior Subaltern stood up, she threw her arms round his neck, and
+called him "my darling" and said she could not bear waiting alone in
+England, and his letters were so short and cold, and she was his to the
+end of the world, and would he forgive her? This did not sound quite like
+a lady's way of speaking. It was too demonstrative.
+
+Things seemed black indeed, and the Captains' wives peered under their
+eyebrows at the Senior Subaltern, and the Colonel's face set like the Day
+of Judgment framed in gray bristles, and no one spoke for a while.
+
+Next the Colonel said, very shortly: "Well, sir?" and the woman sobbed
+afresh. The Senior Subaltern was half choked with the arms round his neck,
+but he gasped out: "It's a d----d lie! I never had a wife in my life!"
+"Don't swear," said the Colonel. "Come into the Mess. We must sift this
+clear somehow," and he sighed to himself, for he believed in his
+"Shikarris," did the Colonel.
+
+We trooped into the anteroom, under the full lights, and there we saw how
+beautiful the woman was. She stood up in the middle of us all, sometimes
+choking with crying, then hard and proud, and then holding out her arms to
+the Senior Subaltern. It was like the fourth act of a tragedy. She told us
+how the Senior Subaltern had married her when he was Home on leave
+eighteen months before; and she seemed to know all that we knew, and more
+too, of his people and his past life. He was white and ashy gray, trying
+now and again to break into the torrent of her words; and we, noting how
+lovely she was and what a criminal he looked, esteemed him a beast of the
+worst kind. We felt sorry for him, though.
+
+I shall never forget the indictment of the Senior Subaltern by his wife.
+Nor will he. It was so sudden, rushing out of the dark, unannounced, into
+our dull lives. The Captains' wives stood back; but their eyes were
+alight, and you could see that they had already convicted and sentenced
+the Senior Subaltern. The Colonel seemed five years older. One Major was
+shading his eyes with his hand and watching the woman from underneath it.
+Another was chewing his mustache and smiling quietly as if he were
+witnessing a play. Full in the open space in the center, by the whist
+tables, the Senior Subaltern's terrier was hunting for fleas. I remember
+all this as clearly as though a photograph were in my hand. I remember the
+look of horror on the Senior Subaltern's face. It was rather like seeing a
+man hanged; but much more interesting. Finally, the woman wound up by
+saying that the Senior Subaltern carried a double F.M. in tattoo on his
+left shoulder. We all knew that, and to our innocent minds it seemed to
+clinch the matter. But one of the Bachelor Majors said very politely: "I
+presume that your marriage certificate would be more to the purpose?"
+
+That roused the woman. She stood up and sneered at the Senior Subaltern
+for a cur, and abused the Major and the Colonel and all the rest. Then she
+wept, and then she pulled a paper from her breast, saying imperially:
+"Take that! And let my husband--my lawfully wedded husband--read it
+aloud--if he dare!"
+
+There was a hush, and the men looked into each other's eyes as the Senior
+Subaltern came forward in a dazed and dizzy way, and took the paper. We
+were wondering, as we stared, whether there was anything against any one
+of us that might turn up later on. The Senior Subaltern's throat was dry;
+but, as he ran his eye over the paper, he broke out into a hoarse cackle
+of relief, and said to the woman: "You young blackguard!"
+
+But the woman had fled through a door, and on the paper was written: "This
+is to certify that I, The Worm, have paid in full my debts to the Senior
+Subaltern, and, further, that the Senior Subaltern is my debtor, by
+agreement on the 23d of February, as by the Mess attested, to the extent
+of one month's Captain's pay, in the lawful currency of the India Empire."
+
+Then a deputation set off for The Worm's quarters and found him, betwixt
+and between, unlacing his stays, with the hat, wig, serge dress, etc., on
+the bed. He came over as he was, and the "Shikarris" shouted till the
+Gunners' Mess sent over to know if they might have a share of the fun. I
+think we were all, except the Colonel and the Senior Subaltern, a little
+disappointed that the scandal had come to nothing. But that is human
+nature. There could be no two words about The Worm's acting. It leaned as
+near to a nasty tragedy as anything this side of a joke can. When most of
+the Subalterns sat upon him with sofa cushions to find out why he had not
+said that acting was his strong point, he answered very quietly: "I don't
+think you ever asked me. I used to act at Home with my sisters." But no
+acting with girls could account for The Worm's display that night.
+Personally, I think it was in bad taste. Besides being dangerous. There is
+no sort of use in playing with fire, even for fun.
+
+The "Shikarris" made him President of the Regimental Dramatic Club; and,
+when the Senior Subaltern paid up his debt, which he did at once, The Worm
+sank the money in scenery and dresses. He was a good Worm; and the
+"Shikarris" are proud of him. The only drawback is that he has been
+christened "Mrs. Senior Subaltern"; and, as there are now two Mrs. Senior
+Subalterns in the Station, this is sometimes confusing to strangers.
+
+Later on, I will tell you of a case something like this, but with all the
+jest left out and nothing in it but real trouble.
+
+
+
+
+A. Conan Doyle
+
+
+
+
+
+_A Case of Identity_
+
+
+"My dear fellow," said Sherlock Holmes, as we sat on either side of the
+fire in his lodgings at Baker Street, "life is infinitely stranger than
+anything which the mind of man can invent. We would not dare to conceive
+the things which are really mere commonplaces of existence. If we could
+fly out of that window hand in hand, hover over this great city, gently
+remove the roofs, and peep in at the queer things which are going on, the
+strange coincidences, the plannings, the cross-purposes, the wonderful
+chains of events, working through generations, and leading to the most
+_outre_ results, it would make all fiction, with its conventionalities and
+foreseen conclusions, most stale and unprofitable."
+
+"And yet I am not convinced of it," I answered. "The cases which come to
+light in the papers are, as a rule, bald enough, and vulgar enough. We
+have in our police reports realism pushed to its extreme limits, and yet
+the result is, it must be confessed, neither fascinating nor artistic."
+
+"A certain selection and discretion must be used in producing a realistic
+effect," remarked Holmes. "This is wanting in the police report, where
+more stress is laid perhaps upon the platitudes of the magistrate than
+upon the details, which to an observer contain the vital essence of the
+whole matter. Depend upon it, there is nothing so unnatural as the
+commonplace."
+
+I smiled and shook my head. "I can quite understand your thinking so," I
+said. "Of course, in your position of unofficial adviser and helper to
+everybody who is absolutely puzzled, throughout three continents, you are
+brought in contact with all that is strange and _bizarre_. But here"--I
+picked up the morning paper from the ground--"let us put it to a practical
+test. Here is the first heading upon which I come. 'A husband's cruelty to
+his wife.' There is half a column of print, but I know without reading it
+that it is all perfectly familiar to me. There is, of course, the other
+woman, the drink, the push, the blow, the bruise, the unsympathetic sister
+or landlady. The crudest of writers could invent nothing more crude."
+
+"Indeed your example is an unfortunate one for your argument," said
+Holmes, taking the paper, and glancing his eye down it. "This is the
+Dundas separation case, and, as it happens, I was engaged in clearing up
+some small points in connection with it. The husband was a teetotaler,
+there was no other woman, and the conduct complained of was that he had
+drifted into the habit of winding up every meal by taking out his false
+teeth and hurling them at his wife, which you will allow is not an action
+likely to occur to the imagination of the average story teller. Take a
+pinch of snuff, doctor, and acknowledge that I have scored over you in
+your example."
+
+He held out his snuffbox of old gold, with a great amethyst in the center
+of the lid. Its splendor was in such contrast to his homely ways and
+simple life that I could not help commenting upon it.
+
+"Ah!" said he, "I forgot that I had not seen you for some weeks. It is a
+little souvenir from the King of Bohemia, in return for my assistance in
+the case of the Irene Adler papers."
+
+"And the ring?" I asked, glancing at a remarkable brilliant which sparkled
+upon his finger.
+
+"It was from the reigning family of Holland, though the matter in which I
+served them was of such delicacy that I cannot confide it even to you, who
+have been good enough to chronicle one or two of my little problems."
+
+"And have you any on hand just now?" I asked with interest.
+
+"Some ten or twelve, but none which present any features of interest. They
+are important, you understand, without being interesting. Indeed I have
+found that it is usually in unimportant matters that there is a field for
+the observation, and for the quick analysis of cause and effect which
+gives the charm to an investigation. The larger crimes are apt to be the
+simpler, for the bigger the crime, the more obvious, as a rule, is the
+motive. In these cases, save for one rather intricate matter which has
+been referred to me from Marseilles, there is nothing which presents any
+features of interest. It is possible, however, that I may have something
+better before very many minutes are over, for this is one of my clients,
+or I am much mistaken."
+
+He had risen from his chair, and was standing between the parted blinds,
+gazing down into the dull, neutral-tinted London street. Looking over his
+shoulder, I saw that on the pavement opposite there stood a large woman
+with a heavy fur boa round her neck, and a large curling red feather in a
+broad-brimmed hat which was tilted in a coquettish Duchess-of-Devonshire
+fashion over her ear.
+
+From under this great panoply she peeped up in a nervous, hesitating
+fashion at our windows, while her body oscillated backward and forward,
+and her fingers fidgeted with her glove buttons. Suddenly, with a plunge,
+as of the swimmer who leaves the bank, she hurried across the road, and we
+heard the sharp clang of the bell.
+
+"I have seen those symptoms before," said Holmes, throwing his cigarette
+into the fire. "Oscillation upon the pavement always means an _affaire de
+coeur_. She would like advice, but is not sure that the matter is not too
+delicate for communication. And yet even here we may discriminate. When a
+woman has been seriously wronged by a man, she no longer oscillates, and
+the usual symptom is a broken bell wire. Here we may take it that there is
+a love matter, but that the maiden is not so much angry as perplexed or
+grieved. But here she comes in person to resolve our doubts."
+
+As he spoke, there was a tap at the door, and the boy in buttons entered
+to announce Miss Mary Sutherland, while the lady herself loomed behind
+his small black figure like a full-sailed merchantman behind a tiny pilot
+boat. Sherlock Holmes welcomed her with the easy courtesy for which he was
+remarkable, and having closed the door, and bowed her into an armchair, he
+looked her over in the minute and yet abstracted fashion which was
+peculiar to him.
+
+"Do you not find," he said, "that with your short sight it is a little
+trying to do so much typewriting?"
+
+"I did at first," she answered, "but now I know where the letters are
+without looking." Then, suddenly realizing the full purport of his words,
+she gave a violent start, and looked up with fear and astonishment upon
+her broad, good-humored face. "You've heard about me, Mr. Holmes," she
+cried, "else how could you know all that?"
+
+"Never mind," said Holmes, laughing, "it is my business to know things.
+Perhaps I have trained myself to see what others overlook. If not, why
+should you come to consult me?"
+
+"I came to you, sir, because I heard of you from Mrs. Etherege, whose
+husband you found so easily when the police and everyone had given him up
+for dead. Oh, Mr. Holmes, I wish you would do as much for me. I'm not
+rich, but still I have a hundred a year in my own right, besides the
+little that I make by the machine, and I would give it all to know what
+has become of Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+"Why did you come away to consult me in such a hurry?" asked Sherlock
+Holmes, with his finger tips together, and his eyes to the ceiling.
+
+Again a startled look came over the somewhat vacuous face of Miss Mary
+Sutherland. "Yes, I did bang out of the house," she said, "for it made me
+angry to see the easy way in which Mr. Windibank--that is, my father--took
+it all. He would not go to the police, and he would not go to you, and so
+at last, as he would do nothing, and kept on saying that there was no harm
+done, it made me mad, and I just on with my things and came right away to
+you."
+
+"Your father?" said Holmes. "Your stepfather, surely, since the name is
+different."
+
+"Yes, my stepfather. I call him father, though it sounds funny, too, for
+he is only five years and two months older than myself."
+
+"And your mother is alive?"
+
+"Oh, yes; mother is alive and well. I wasn't best pleased, Mr. Holmes,
+when she married again so soon after father's death, and a man who was
+nearly fifteen years younger than herself. Father was a plumber in the
+Tottenham Court Road, and he left a tidy business behind him, which mother
+carried on with Mr. Hardy, the foreman; but when Mr. Windibank came he
+made her sell the business, for he was very superior, being a traveler in
+wines. They got four thousand seven hundred for the good-will and
+interest, which wasn't near as much as father could have got if he had
+been alive."
+
+I had expected to see Sherlock Holmes impatient under this rambling and
+inconsequential narrative, but, on the contrary, he had listened with the
+greatest concentration of attention.
+
+"Your own little income," he asked, "does it come out of the business?"
+
+"Oh, no, sir. It is quite separate, and was left me by my Uncle Ned in
+Auckland. It is in New Zealand stock, paying four and half per cent. Two
+thousand five hundred pounds was the amount, but I can only touch the
+interest."
+
+"You interest me extremely," said Holmes. "And since you draw so large a
+sum as a hundred a year, with what you earn into the bargain, you no doubt
+travel a little, and indulge yourself in every way. I believe that a
+single lady can get on very nicely upon an income of about sixty pounds."
+
+"I could do with much less than that, Mr. Holmes, but you understand that
+as long as I live at home I don't wish to be a burden to them, and so they
+have the use of the money just while I am staying with them. Of course
+that is only just for the time. Mr. Windibank draws my interest every
+quarter, and pays it over to mother, and I find that I can do pretty well
+with what I earn at typewriting. It brings me twopence a sheet, and I can
+often do from fifteen to twenty sheets in a day."
+
+"You have made your position very clear to me," said Holmes. "This is my
+friend, Doctor Watson, before whom you can speak as freely as before
+myself. Kindly tell us now all about your connection with Mr. Hosmer
+Angel."
+
+A flush stole over Miss Sutherland's face, and she picked nervously at the
+fringe of her jacket. "I met him first at the gasfitters' ball," she said.
+"They used to send father tickets when he was alive, and then afterwards
+they remembered us, and sent them to mother. Mr. Windibank did not wish us
+to go. He never did wish us to go anywhere. He would get quite mad if I
+wanted so much as to join a Sunday School treat. But this time I was set
+on going, and I would go, for what right had he to prevent? He said the
+folk were not fit for us to know, when all father's friends were to be
+there. And he said that I had nothing fit to wear, when I had my purple
+plush that I had never so much as taken out of the drawer. At last, when
+nothing else would do, he went off to France upon the business of the
+firm; but we went, mother and I, with Mr. Hardy, who used to be our
+foreman, and it was there I met Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+"I suppose," said Holmes, "that when Mr. Windibank came back from France,
+he was very annoyed at your having gone to the ball?"
+
+"Oh, well, he was very good about it. He laughed, I remember, and shrugged
+his shoulders, and said there was no use denying anything to a woman, for
+she would have her way."
+
+"I see. Then at the gasfitters' ball you met, as I understand, a gentleman
+called Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I met him that night, and he called next day to ask if we had
+got home all safe, and after that we met him--that is to say, Mr. Holmes,
+I met him twice for walks, but after that father came back again, and Mr.
+Hosmer Angel could not come to the house any more."
+
+"No?"
+
+"Well, you know, father didn't like anything of the sort. He wouldn't have
+any visitors if he could help it, and he used to say that a woman should
+be happy in her own family circle. But then, as I used to say to mother, a
+woman wants her own circle to begin with, and I had not got mine yet."
+
+"But how about Mr. Hosmer Angel? Did he make no attempt to see you?"
+
+"Well, father was going off to France again in a week, and Hosmer wrote
+and said that it would be safer and better not to see each other until he
+had gone. We could write in the meantime, and he used to write every day.
+I took the letters in the morning, so there was no need for father to
+know."
+
+"Were you engaged to the gentleman at this time?"
+
+"Oh, yes, Mr. Holmes. We were engaged after the first walk that we took.
+Hosmer--Mr. Angel--was a cashier in an office in Leadenhall Street--and--"
+
+"What office?"
+
+"That's the worst of it, Mr. Holmes; I don't know."
+
+"Where did he live, then?"
+
+"He slept on the premises."
+
+"And you don't know his address?"
+
+"No--except that it was Leadenhall Street."
+
+"Where did you address your letters, then?"
+
+"To the Leadenhall Street Post Office, to be left till called for. He said
+that if they were sent to the office he would be chaffed by all the other
+clerks about having letters from a lady, so I offered to typewrite them,
+like he did his, but he wouldn't have that, for he said that when I wrote
+them they seemed to come from me, but when they were typewritten he always
+felt that the machine had come between us. That will just show you how
+fond he was of me, Mr. Holmes, and the little things that he would think
+of."
+
+"It was most suggestive," said Holmes. "It has long been an axiom of mine
+that the little things are infinitely the most important. Can you remember
+any other little things about Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"He was a very shy man, Mr. Holmes. He would rather walk with me in the
+evening than in the daylight, for he said that he hated to be conspicuous.
+Very retiring and gentlemanly he was. Even his voice was gentle. He'd had
+the quinsy and swollen glands when he was young, he told me, and it had
+left him with a weak throat and a hesitating, whispering fashion of
+speech. He was always well dressed, very neat and plain, but his eyes were
+weak, just as mine are, and he wore tinted glasses against the glare."
+
+"Well, and what happened when Mr. Windibank, your stepfather, returned to
+France?"
+
+"Mr. Hosmer Angel came to the house again, and proposed that we should
+marry before father came back. He was in dreadful earnest, and made me
+swear, with my hands on the Testament, that whatever happened I would
+always be true to him. Mother said he was quite right to make me swear,
+and that it was a sign of his passion. Mother was all in his favor from
+the first, and was even fonder of him than I was. Then, when they talked
+of marrying within the week, I began to ask about father; but they both
+said never to mind about father, but just to tell him afterwards and
+mother said she would make it all right with him. I didn't quite like
+that, Mr. Holmes. It seemed funny that I should ask his leave, as he was
+only a few years older than me; but I didn't want to do anything on the
+sly, so I wrote to father at Bordeaux, where the company has its French
+offices, but the letter came back to me on the very morning of the
+wedding."
+
+"It missed him, then?"
+
+"Yes, sir, for he had started to England just before it arrived."
+
+"Ha! that was unfortunate. Your wedding was arranged, then, for the
+Friday. Was it to be in church?"
+
+"Yes, sir, but very quietly. It was to be at St. Saviour's, near King's
+Cross, and we were to have breakfast afterwards at the St. Pancras Hotel.
+Hosmer came for us in a hansom, but as there were two of us, he put us
+both into it, and stepped himself into a four-wheeler, which happened to
+be the only other cab in the street. We got to the church first, and when
+the four-wheeler drove up we waited for him to step out, but he never did,
+and when the cabman got down from the box and looked, there was no one
+there! The cabman said that he could not imagine what had become of him,
+for he had seen him get in with his own eyes. That was last Friday, Mr.
+Holmes, and I have never seen or heard anything since then to throw any
+light upon what became of him."
+
+"It seems to me that you have been very shamefully treated," said Holmes.
+
+"Oh, no, sir! He was too good and kind to leave me so. Why, all the
+morning he was saying to me that, whatever happened, I was to be true; and
+that even if something quite unforeseen occurred to separate us, I was
+always to remember that I was pledged to him, and that he would claim his
+pledge sooner or later. It seemed strange talk for a wedding morning, but
+what has happened since gives a meaning to it."
+
+"Most certainly it does. Your own opinion is, then, that some unforeseen
+catastrophe has occurred to him?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I believe that he foresaw some danger, or else he would not
+have talked so. And then I think that what he foresaw happened."
+
+"But you have no notion as to what it could have been?"
+
+"None."
+
+"One more question. How did your mother take the matter?"
+
+"She was angry, and said that I was never to speak of the matter again."
+
+"And your father? Did you tell him?"
+
+"Yes, and he seemed to think, with me, that something had happened, and
+that I should hear of Hosmer again. As he said, what interest could
+anyone have in bringing me to the door of the church, and then leaving me?
+Now, if he had borrowed my money, or if he had married me and got my money
+settled on him, there might be some reason; but Hosmer was very
+independent about money, and never would look at a shilling of mine. And
+yet what could have happened? And why could he not write? Oh! it drives me
+half mad to think of, and I can't sleep a wink at night." She pulled a
+little handkerchief out of her muff, and began to sob heavily into it.
+
+"I shall glance into the case for you," said Holmes, rising, "and I have
+no doubt that we shall reach some definite result. Let the weight of the
+matter rest upon me now, and do not let your mind dwell upon it further.
+Above all, try to let Mr. Hosmer Angel vanish from your memory, as he has
+done from your life."
+
+"Then you don't think I'll see him again?"
+
+"I fear not."
+
+"Then what has happened to him?"
+
+"You will leave that question in my hands. I should like an accurate
+description of him, and any letters of his which you can spare."
+
+"I advertised for him in last Saturday's _Chronicle_," said she. "Here is
+the slip, and here are four letters from him."
+
+"Thank you. And your address?"
+
+"No. 31 Lyon Place, Camberwell."
+
+"Mr. Angel's address you never had, I understand. Where is your father's
+place of business?"
+
+"He travels for Westhouse & Marbank, the great claret importers of
+Fenchurch Street."
+
+"Thank you. You have made your statement very clearly. You will leave the
+papers here, and remember the advice which I have given you. Let the whole
+incident be a sealed book, and do not allow it to affect your life."
+
+"You are very kind, Mr. Holmes, but I cannot do that. I shall be true to
+Hosmer. He shall find me ready when he comes back."
+
+For all the preposterous hat and the vacuous face, there was something
+noble in the simple faith of our visitor which compelled our respect. She
+laid her little bundle of papers upon the table, and went her way, with a
+promise to come again whenever she might be summoned.
+
+Sherlock Holmes sat silent for a few minutes with his finger tips still
+pressed together, his legs stretched out in front of him, and his gaze
+directed upward to the ceiling. Then he took down from the rack the old
+and oily clay pipe, which was to him as a counselor, and, having lighted
+it, he leaned back in his chair, with thick blue cloud wreaths spinning up
+from him, and a look of infinite languor in his face.
+
+"Quite an interesting study, that maiden," he observed. "I found her more
+interesting than her little problem, which, by the way, is rather a trite
+one. You will find parallel cases, if you consult my index, in Andover in
+'77, and there was something of the sort at The Hague last year. Old as is
+the idea, however, there were one or two details which were new to me. But
+the maiden herself was most instructive."
+
+"You appeared to read a good deal upon her which was quite invisible to
+me," I remarked.
+
+"Not invisible, but unnoticed, Watson. You did not know where to look, and
+so you missed all that was important. I can never bring you to realize the
+importance of sleeves, the suggestiveness of thumb nails, or the great
+issues that may hang from a boot lace. Now, what did you gather from that
+woman's appearance? Describe it."
+
+"Well, she had a slate-colored, broad-brimmed straw hat, with a feather of
+a brickish red. Her jacket was black, with black beads sewed upon it and a
+fringe of little black jet ornaments. Her dress was brown, rather darker
+than coffee color, with a little purple plush at the neck and sleeves. Her
+gloves were grayish, and were worn through at the right forefinger. Her
+boots I didn't observe. She had small round, hanging gold earrings, and a
+general air of being fairly well-to-do, in a vulgar, comfortable,
+easy-going way."
+
+Sherlock Holmes clapped his hands softly together and chuckled.
+
+"'Pon my word, Watson, you are coming along wonderfully. You have really
+done very well indeed. It is true that you have missed everything of
+importance, but you have hit upon the method, and you have a quick eye for
+color. Never trust to general impressions, my boy, but concentrate
+yourself upon details. My first glance is always at a woman's sleeve. In a
+man it is perhaps better first to take the knee of the trouser. As you
+observe, this woman had plush upon her sleeve, which is a most useful
+material for showing traces. The double line a little above the wrist,
+where the typewritist presses against the table, was beautifully defined.
+The sewing machine, of the hand type, leaves a similar mark, but only on
+the left arm, and on the side of it farthest from the thumb, instead of
+being right across the broadest part, as this was. I then glanced at her
+face, and observing the dint of a _pince-nez_ at either side of her nose,
+I ventured a remark upon short sight and typewriting, which seemed to
+surprise her."
+
+"It surprised me."
+
+"But, surely, it was very obvious. I was then much surprised and
+interested on glancing down to observe that, though the boots which she
+was wearing were not unlike each other, they were really odd ones, the one
+having a slightly decorated toe cap and the other a plain one. One was
+buttoned only in the two lower buttons out of five, and the other at the
+first, third, and fifth. Now, when you see that a young lady, otherwise
+neatly dressed, has come away from home with odd boots, half-buttoned, it
+is no great deduction to say that she came away in a hurry."
+
+"And what else?" I asked, keenly interested, as I always was, by my
+friend's incisive reasoning.
+
+"I noted, in passing, that she had written a note before leaving home, but
+after being fully dressed. You observed that her right glove was torn at
+the forefinger, but you did not, apparently, see that both glove and
+finger were stained with violet ink. She had written in a hurry, and
+dipped her pen too deep. It must have been this morning, or the mark would
+not remain clear upon the finger. All this is amusing, though rather
+elementary, but I must go back to business, Watson. Would you mind reading
+me the advertised description of Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+I held the little printed slip to the light. "Missing," it said, "on the
+morning of the fourteenth, a gentleman named Hosmer Angel. About five feet
+seven inches in height; strongly built, sallow complexion, black hair, a
+little bald in the center, bushy black side-whiskers and mustache; tinted
+glasses; slight infirmity of speech. Was dressed, when last seen, in black
+frock-coat faced with silk, black waistcoat, gold Albert chain, and gray
+Harris tweed trousers, with brown gaiters over elastic-sided boots. Known
+to have been employed in an office in Leadenhall Street. Anybody
+bringing," etc., etc.
+
+"That will do," said Holmes. "As to the letters," he continued, glancing
+over them, "they are very commonplace. Absolutely no clew in them to Mr.
+Angel, save that he quotes Balzac once. There is one remarkable point,
+however, which will no doubt strike you."
+
+"They are typewritten," I remarked.
+
+"Not only that, but the signature is typewritten. Look at the neat little
+'Hosmer Angel' at the bottom. There is a date, you see, but no
+superscription except Leadenhall Street, which is rather vague. The point
+about the signature is very suggestive--in fact, we may call it
+conclusive."
+
+"Of what?"
+
+"My dear fellow, is it possible you do not see how strongly it bears upon
+the case?"
+
+"I cannot say that I do, unless it were that he wished to be able to deny
+his signature if an action for breach of promise were instituted."
+
+"No, that was not the point. However, I shall write two letters which
+should settle the matter. One is to a firm in the City, the other is to
+the young lady's stepfather, Mr. Windibank, asking him whether he could
+meet us here at six o'clock to-morrow evening. It is just as well that we
+should do business with the male relatives. And now, doctor, we can do
+nothing until the answers to those letters come, so we may put our little
+problem upon the shelf for the interim."
+
+I had had so many reasons to believe in my friend's subtle powers of
+reasoning, and extraordinary energy in action, that I felt that he must
+have some solid grounds for the assured and easy demeanor with which he
+treated the singular mystery which he had been called upon to fathom. Once
+only had I known him to fail, in the case of the King of Bohemia and the
+Irene Adler photograph, but when I looked back to the weird business of
+the "Sign of the Four," and the extraordinary circumstances connected with
+the "Study in Scarlet," I felt that it would be a strange tangle indeed
+which he could not unravel.
+
+I left him then, still puffing at his black clay pipe, with the conviction
+that when I came again on the next evening I would find that he held in
+his hands all the clews which would lead up to the identity of the
+disappearing bridegroom of Miss Mary Sutherland.
+
+A professional case of great gravity was engaging my own attention at the
+time, and the whole of next day I was busy at the bedside of the sufferer.
+It was not until close upon six o'clock that I found myself free, and was
+able to spring into a hansom and drive to Baker Street, half afraid that I
+might be too late to assist at the _denouement_ of the little mystery. I
+found Sherlock Holmes alone, however, half asleep, with his long, thin
+form curled up in the recesses of his armchair. A formidable array of
+bottles and test-tubes, with the pungent, cleanly smell of hydrochloric
+acid, told me that he had spent his day in the chemical work which was so
+dear to him.
+
+"Well, have you solved it?" I asked as I entered.
+
+"Yes. It was the bisulphate of baryta."
+
+"No, no; the mystery!" I cried.
+
+"Oh, that! I thought of the salt that I have been working upon. There was
+never any mystery in the matter, though, as I said yesterday, some of the
+details are of interest. The only drawback is that there is no law, I
+fear, that can touch the scoundrel."
+
+"Who was he, then, and what was his object in deserting Miss Sutherland?"
+
+The question was hardly out of my mouth, and Holmes had not yet opened his
+lips to reply, when we heard a heavy footfall in the passage, and a tap at
+the door.
+
+"This is the girl's stepfather, Mr. James Windibank," said Holmes. "He has
+written to me to say that he would be here at six. Come in!"
+
+The man who entered was a sturdy, middle-sized fellow, some thirty years
+of age, clean shaven, and sallow-skinned, with a bland, insinuating
+manner, and a pair of wonderfully sharp and penetrating gray eyes. He shot
+a questioning glance at each of us, placed his shiny top hat upon the
+sideboard, and, with a slight bow, sidled down into the nearest chair.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. James Windibank," said Holmes. "I think this
+typewritten letter is from you, in which you made an appointment with me
+for six o'clock?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I am afraid that I am a little late, but I am not quite my own
+master, you know. I am sorry that Miss Sutherland has troubled you about
+this little matter, for I think it is far better not to wash linen of the
+sort in public. It was quite against my wishes that she came, but she is a
+very excitable, impulsive girl, as you may have noticed, and she is not
+easily controlled when she has made up her mind on a point. Of course, I
+did not mind you so much, as you are not connected with the official
+police, but it is not pleasant to have a family misfortune like this
+noised abroad. Besides, it is a useless expense, for how could you
+possibly find this Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"On the contrary," said Holmes, quietly, "I have every reason to believe
+that I will succeed in discovering Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+Mr. Windibank gave a violent start, and dropped his gloves. "I am
+delighted to hear it," he said.
+
+"It is a curious thing," remarked Holmes, "that a typewriter has really
+quite as much individuality as a man's handwriting. Unless they are quite
+new no two of them write exactly alike. Some letters get more worn than
+others, and some wear only on one side. Now, you remark in this note of
+yours, Mr. Windibank, that in every case there is some little slurring
+over the _e_, and a slight defect in the tail of the _r_. There are
+fourteen other characteristics, but those are the more obvious."
+
+"We do all our correspondence with this machine at the office, and no
+doubt it is a little worn," our visitor answered, glancing keenly at
+Holmes with his bright little eyes.
+
+"And now I will show you what is really a very interesting study, Mr.
+Windibank," Holmes continued. "I think of writing another little monograph
+some of these days on the typewriter and its relation to crime. It is a
+subject to which I have devoted some little attention. I have here four
+letters which purport to come from the missing man. They are all
+typewritten. In each case, not only are the _e_'s slurred and the _r_'s
+tailless, but you will observe, if you care to use my magnifying lens,
+that the fourteen other characteristics to which I have alluded are there
+as well."
+
+Mr. Windibank sprung out of his chair, and picked up his hat. "I cannot
+waste time over this sort of fantastic talk, Mr. Holmes," he said. "If you
+can catch the man, catch him, and let me know when you have done it."
+
+"Certainly," said Holmes, stepping over and turning the key in the door.
+"I let you know, then, that I have caught him!"
+
+"What! where?" shouted Mr. Windibank, turning white to his lips, and
+glancing about him like a rat in a trap.
+
+"Oh, it won't do--really it won't," said Holmes, suavely. "There is no
+possible getting out of it, Mr. Windibank. It is quite too transparent,
+and it was a very bad compliment when you said that it was impossible for
+me to solve so simple a question. That's right! Sit down, and let us talk
+it over."
+
+Our visitor collapsed into a chair, with a ghastly face, and a glitter of
+moisture on his brow. "It--it's not actionable," he stammered.
+
+"I am very much afraid that it is not; but between ourselves, Windibank,
+it was as cruel, and selfish, and heartless a trick in a petty way as ever
+came before me. Now, let me just run over the course of events, and you
+will contradict me if I go wrong."
+
+The man sat huddled up in his chair, with his head sunk upon his breast,
+like one who is utterly crushed. Holmes stuck his feet up on the corner of
+the mantelpiece, and, leaning back with his hands in his pockets, began
+talking, rather to himself, as it seemed, than to us.
+
+"The man married a woman very much older than himself for her money," said
+he, "and he enjoyed the use of the money of the daughter as long as she
+lived with them. It was a considerable sum, for people in their position,
+and the loss of it would have made a serious difference. It was worth an
+effort to preserve it. The daughter was of a good, amiable disposition,
+but affectionate and warm-hearted in her ways, so that it was evident that
+with her fair personal advantages, and her little income, she would not be
+allowed to remain single long. Now her marriage would mean, of course, the
+loss of a hundred a year, so what does her stepfather do to prevent it? He
+takes the obvious course of keeping her at home, and forbidding her to
+seek the company of people of her own age. But soon he found that that
+would not answer forever. She became restive, insisted upon her rights,
+and finally announced her positive intention of going to a certain ball.
+What does her clever stepfather do then? He conceives an idea more
+creditable to his head than to his heart. With the connivance and
+assistance of his wife, he disguised himself, covered those keen eyes with
+tinted glasses masked the face with a mustache and a pair of bushy
+whiskers, sunk that clear voice into an insinuating whisper, and doubly
+secure on account of the girl's short sight, he appears as Mr. Hosmer
+Angel, and keeps off other lovers by making love himself."
+
+"It was only a joke at first," groaned our visitor. "We never thought that
+she would have been so carried away."
+
+"Very likely not. However that may be, the young lady was very decidedly
+carried away, and having quite made up her mind that her stepfather was in
+France, the suspicion of treachery never for an instant entered her mind.
+She was flattered by the gentleman's attentions, and the effect was
+increased by the loudly expressed admiration of her mother. Then Mr. Angel
+began to call, for it was obvious that the matter should be pushed as far
+as if would go, if a real effect were to be produced. There were meetings,
+and an engagement, which would finally secure the girl's affections from
+turning toward anyone else. But the deception could not be kept up
+forever. These pretended journeys to France were rather cumbrous. The
+thing to do was clearly to bring the business to an end in such a dramatic
+manner that it would leave a permanent impression upon the young lady's
+mind, and prevent her from looking upon any other suitor for some time to
+come. Hence those vows of fidelity exacted upon a Testament, and hence
+also the allusions to a possibility of something happening on the very
+morning of the wedding. James Windibank wished Miss Sutherland to be so
+bound to Hosmer Angel, and so uncertain as to his fate, that for ten years
+to come, at any rate, she would not listen to another man. As far as the
+church door he brought her, and then, as he could go no farther, he
+conveniently vanished away by the old trick of stepping in at one door of
+a four-wheeler and out at the other. I think that that was the chain of
+events, Mr. Windibank!"
+
+Our visitor had recovered something of his assurance while Holmes had been
+talking, and he rose from his chair now with a cold sneer upon his pale
+face.
+
+"It may be so, or it may not, Mr. Holmes," said he; "but if you are so
+very sharp you ought to be sharp enough to know that it is you who are
+breaking the law now, and not me. I have done nothing actionable from the
+first, but as long as you keep that door locked you lay yourself open to
+an action for assault and illegal constraint."
+
+"The law cannot, as you say, touch you," said Holmes, unlocking and
+throwing open the door, "yet there never was a man who deserved punishment
+more. If the young lady has a brother or a friend, he ought to lay a whip
+across your shoulders. By Jove!" he continued, flushing up at the sight of
+the bitter sneer upon the man's face, "it is not part of my duties to my
+client, but here's a hunting crop handy, and I think I shall just treat
+myself to--" He took two swift steps to the whip, but before he could
+grasp it there was a wild clatter of steps upon the stairs, the heavy hall
+door banged, and from the window we could see Mr. James Windibank running
+at the top of his speed down the road.
+
+"There's a cold-blooded scoundrel!" said Holmes, laughing as he threw
+himself down into his chair once more. "That fellow will rise from crime
+to crime until he does something very bad and ends on a gallows. The case
+has, in some respects, been not entirely devoid of interest."
+
+"I cannot now entirely see all the steps of your reasoning," I remarked.
+
+"Well, of course it was obvious from the first that this Mr. Hosmer Angel
+must have some strong object for his curious conduct, and it was equally
+clear that the only man who really profited by the incident, as far as we
+could see, was the stepfather. Then the fact that the two men were never
+together, but that the one always appeared when the other was away, was
+suggestive. So were the tinted spectacles and the curious voice, which
+both hinted at a disguise, as did the bushy whiskers. My suspicions were
+all confirmed by his peculiar action in typewriting his signature, which,
+of course, inferred that his handwriting was so familiar to her that she
+would recognize even the smallest sample of it. You see all these isolated
+facts, together with many minor ones, all pointed in the same direction."
+
+"And how did you verify them?"
+
+"Having once spotted my man, it was easy to get corroboration. I knew the
+firm for which this man worked. Having taken the printed description, I
+eliminated everything from it which could be the result of a
+disguise,--the whiskers, the glasses, the voice,--and I sent it to the
+firm with a request that they would inform me whether it answered to the
+description of any of their travelers. I had already noticed the
+peculiarities of the typewriter, and I wrote to the man himself at his
+business address, asking him if he would come here. As I expected, his
+reply was typewritten, and revealed the same trivial but characteristic
+defects. The same post brought me a letter from Westhouse & Marbank, of
+Fenchurch Street, to say that the description tallied in every respect
+with that of their employee, James Windibank. _Voila tout!_"
+
+"And Miss Sutherland?"
+
+"If I tell her she will not believe me. You may remember the old Persian
+saying, 'There is danger for him who taketh the tiger cub, and danger also
+for whoso snatcheth a delusion from a woman.' There is as much sense in
+Hafiz as in Horace, and as much knowledge of the world."
+
+
+
+
+
+_A Scandal in Bohemia_
+
+
+I
+
+To Sherlock Holmes she is always _the_ woman. I have seldom heard him
+mention her under any other name. In his eyes she eclipses and
+predominates the whole of her sex. It was not that he felt any emotion
+akin to love for Irene Adler. All emotions, and that one particularly,
+were abhorrent to his cold, precise but admirably balanced mind. He was,
+I take it, the most perfect reasoning and observing machine that the world
+has seen; but as a lover, he would have placed himself in a false
+position. He never spoke of the softer passions, save with a gibe and a
+sneer. They were admirable things for the observer--excellent for drawing
+the veil from men's motives and actions. But for the trained reasoner to
+admit such intrusions into his own delicate and finely adjusted
+temperament was to introduce a distracting factor which might throw a
+doubt upon all his mental results. Grit in a sensitive instrument, or a
+crack in one of his own high-power lenses, would not be more disturbing
+that a strong emotion in a nature such as his. And yet there was but one
+woman to him, and that woman was the late Irene Adler, of dubious and
+questionable memory.
+
+I had seen little of Holmes lately. My marriage had drifted us away from
+each other. My own complete happiness, and the home-centered interests
+which rise up around the man who first finds himself master of his own
+establishment, were sufficient to absorb all my attention; while Holmes,
+who loathed every form of society with his whole Bohemian soul, remained
+in our lodgings in Baker Street, buried among his old books, and
+alternating from week to week between cocaine and ambition, the drowsiness
+of the drug and the fierce energy of his own keen nature. He was still, as
+ever, deeply attracted by the study of crime, and occupied his immense
+faculties and extraordinary powers of observation in following out those
+clews, and clearing up those mysteries, which had been abandoned as
+hopeless by the official police. From time to time I heard some vague
+account of his doings; of his summons to Odessa in the case of the Trepoff
+murder, of his clearing up of the singular tragedy of the Atkinson
+brothers at Trincomalee, and finally of the mission which he had
+accomplished so delicately and successfully for the reigning family of
+Holland. Beyond these signs of his activity, however, which I merely
+shared with all the readers of the daily press, I knew little of my former
+friend and companion.
+
+One night--it was on the 20th of March, 1888--I was returning from a
+journey to a patient (for I had now returned to civil practice), when my
+way led me through Baker Street. As I passed the well-remembered door,
+which must always be associated in my mind with my wooing, and with the
+dark incidents of the Study in Scarlet, I was seized with a keen desire to
+see Holmes again, and to know how he was employing his extraordinary
+powers. His rooms were brilliantly lighted, and even as I looked up, I saw
+his tall, spare figure pass twice in a dark silhouette against the blind.
+He was pacing the room swiftly, eagerly, with his head sunk upon his
+chest, and his hands clasped behind him. To me, who knew his every mood
+and habit, his attitude and manner told their own story. He was at work
+again. He had risen out of his drug-created dreams, and was hot upon the
+scent of some new problem. I rang the bell, and was shown up to the
+chamber which had formerly been in part my own.
+
+His manner was not effusive. It seldom was; but he was glad, I think, to
+see me. With hardly a word spoken, but with a kindly eye, he waved me to
+an armchair, threw across his case of cigars, and indicated a spirit case
+and a gasogene in the corner. Then he stood before the fire, and looked me
+over in his singular introspective fashion.
+
+"Wedlock suits you," he remarked. "I think, Watson, that you have put on
+seven and a half pounds since I saw you."
+
+"Seven," I answered.
+
+"Indeed, I should have thought a little more. Just a trifle more, I fancy,
+Watson. And in practice again, I observe. You did not tell me that you
+intended to go into harness."
+
+"Then how do you know?"
+
+"I see it, I deduce it. How do I know that you have been getting yourself
+very wet lately, and that you have a most clumsy and careless servant
+girl?"
+
+"My dear Holmes," said I, "this is too much. You would certainly have been
+burned had you lived a few centuries ago. It is true that I had a country
+walk on Thursday and came home in a dreadful mess; but as I have changed
+my clothes, I can't imagine how you deduce it. As to Mary Jane, she is
+incorrigible, and my wife has given her notice; but there again I fail to
+see how you work it out."
+
+He chuckled to himself and rubbed his long nervous hands together.
+
+"It is simplicity itself," said he, "my eyes tell me that on the inside of
+your left shoe, just where the firelight strikes it, the leather is scored
+by six almost parallel cuts. Obviously they have been caused by some one
+who has very carelessly scraped round the edges of the sole in order to
+remove crusted mud from it. Hence, you see, my double deduction that you
+had been out in vile weather, and that you had a particularly malignant
+boot-slicking specimen of the London slavey. As to your practice, if a
+gentleman walks into my rooms, smelling of iodoform, with a black mark of
+nitrate of silver upon his right forefinger, and a bulge on the side of
+his top hat to show where he has secreted his stethoscope, I must be dull
+indeed if I do not pronounce him to be an active member of the medical
+profession."
+
+I could not help laughing at the ease with which he, explained his process
+of deduction. "When I hear you give your reasons," I remarked, "the thing
+always appears to me so ridiculously simple that I could easily do it
+myself, though at each successive instance of your reasoning I am baffled,
+until you explain your process. And yet, I believe that my eyes are as
+good as yours."
+
+"Quite so," he answered, lighting a cigarette, and throwing himself down
+into an armchair. "You see, but you do not observe. The distinction is
+clear. For example, you have frequently seen the steps which lead up from
+the hall to this room."
+
+"Frequently."
+
+"How often?"
+
+"Well, some hundreds of times."
+
+"Then how many are there?"
+
+"How many? I don't know."
+
+"Quite so! You have not observed. And yet you have seen. That is just my
+point. Now, I know there are seventeen steps, because I have both seen and
+observed. By the way, since you are interested in these little problems,
+and since you are good enough to chronicle one or two of my trifling
+experiences, you may be interested in this." He threw over a sheet of
+thick pink-tinted note paper which had been lying open upon the table. "It
+came by the last post," said he. "Read it aloud."
+
+The note was undated, and without either signature or address.
+
+"There will call upon you to-night, at a quarter to eight o'clock," it
+said, "a gentleman who desires to consult you upon a matter of the very
+deepest moment. Your recent services to one of the royal houses of Europe
+have shown that you are one who may safely be trusted with matters which
+are of an importance which can hardly be exaggerated. This account of you
+we have from all quarters received. Be in your chamber, then, at that
+hour, and do not take it amiss if your visitor wears a mask."
+
+"This is indeed a mystery," I remarked. "What do you imagine that it
+means?"
+
+"I have no data yet. It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has
+data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of
+theories to suit facts. But the note itself--what do you deduce from it?"
+
+I carefully examined the writing, and the paper upon which it was written.
+
+"The man who wrote it was presumably well to do," I remarked, endeavoring
+to imitate my companion's processes. "Such paper could not be bought under
+half a crown a packet. It is peculiarly strong and stiff."
+
+"Peculiar--that is the very word," said Holmes. "It is not an English
+paper at all. Hold it up to the light"
+
+I did so, and saw a large _E_ with a small _g_, a _P_ and a large _G_ with
+a small _t_ woven into the texture of the paper.
+
+"What do you make of that?" asked Holmes.
+
+"The name of the maker, no doubt; or his monogram, rather."
+
+"Not all. The _G_ with the small _t_ stands for 'Gesellschaft,' which is
+the German for 'Company.' It is a customary contraction like our 'Co.'
+_P_, of course, stands for 'Papier.' Now for the _Eg_. Let us glance at
+our 'Continental Gazetteer'." He took down a heavy brown volume from his
+shelves. "Eglow, Eglonitz--here we are, Egria. It is in a German-speaking
+country--in Bohemia, not far from Carlsbad. 'Remarkable as being the scene
+of the death of Wallenstein, and for its numerous glass factories and
+paper mills.' Ha! ha! my boy, what do you make of that?" His eyes
+sparkled, and he sent up a great blue triumphant cloud from his cigarette.
+
+"The paper was made in Bohemia," I said.
+
+"Precisely. And the man who wrote the note is a German. Do you note the
+peculiar construction of the sentence--'This account of you we have from
+all quarters received'? A Frenchman or Russian could not have written
+that. It is the German who is so uncourteous to his verbs. It only
+remains, therefore, to discover what is wanted by this German who writes
+upon Bohemian paper, and prefers wearing a mask to showing his face. And
+here he comes, if I am not mistaken, to resolve all our doubts."
+
+As he spoke there was the sharp sound of horses' hoofs and grating wheels
+against the curb, followed by a sharp pull at the bell. Holmes whistled.
+
+"A pair, by the sound," said he. "Yes," he continued, glancing out of the
+window. "A nice little brougham and a pair of beauties. A hundred and
+fifty guineas apiece. There's money in this case, Watson, if there is
+nothing else."
+
+"I think I had better go, Holmes."
+
+"Not a bit, doctor. Stay where you are. I am lost without my Boswell. And
+this promises to be interesting. It would be a pity to miss it."
+
+"But your client--"
+
+"Never mind him. I may want your help, and so may he. Here he comes. Sit
+down in that armchair, doctor, and give us your best attention."
+
+A slow and heavy step, which had been heard upon the stairs and in the
+passage, paused immediately outside the door. Then there was a loud and
+authoritative tap.
+
+"Come in!" said Holmes.
+
+A man entered who could hardly have been less than six feet six inches in
+height, with the chest and limbs of a Hercules. His dress was rich with a
+richness which would, in England, be looked upon as akin to bad taste.
+Heavy bands of astrakhan were slashed across the sleeves and front of his
+double-breasted coat, while the deep blue cloak which was thrown over his
+shoulders was lined with flame-colored silk, and secured at the neck with
+a brooch which consisted of a single flaming beryl. Boots which extended
+halfway up his calves, and which were trimmed at the tops with rich brown
+fur, completed the impression of barbaric opulence which was suggested by
+his whole appearance. He carried a broad-brimmed hat in his hand, while he
+wore across the upper part of his face, extending down past the
+cheek-bones, a black visard mask, which he had apparently adjusted that
+very moment, for his hand was still raised to it as he entered. From the
+lower part of the face he appeared to be a man of strong character, with a
+thick, hanging lip, and a long, straight chin, suggestive of resolution
+pushed to the length of obstinacy.
+
+"You had my note?" he asked, with a deep, harsh voice and a strongly
+marked German accent. "I told you that I would call." He looked from one
+to the other of us, as if uncertain which to address.
+
+"Pray take a seat," said Holmes. "This is my friend and colleague, Doctor
+Watson, who is occasionally good enough to help me in my cases. Whom have
+I the honor to address?"
+
+"You may address me as the Count von Kramm, a Bohemian nobleman. I
+understand that this gentleman, your friend, is a man of honor and
+discretion, whom I may trust with a matter of the most extreme
+importance. If not, I should much prefer to communicate with you alone."
+
+I rose to go, but Holmes caught me by the wrist and pushed me back into my
+chair. "It is both, or none," said he. "You may say before this gentleman
+anything which you may say to me."
+
+The count shrugged his broad shoulders. "Then I must begin," said he, "by
+binding you both to absolute secrecy for two years; at the end of that
+time the matter will be of no importance. At present it is not too much to
+say that it is of such weight that it may have an influence upon European
+history."
+
+"I promise," said Holmes.
+
+"And I."
+
+"You will excuse this mask," continued our strange visitor. "The august
+person who employs me wishes his agent to be unknown to you, and I may
+confess at once that the title by which I have just called myself is not
+exactly my own."
+
+"I was aware of it," said Holmes, dryly.
+
+"The circumstances are of great delicacy, and every precaution has to be
+taken to quench what might grow to be an immense scandal, and seriously
+compromise one of the reigning families of Europe. To speak plainly, the
+matter implicates the great House of Ormstein, hereditary kings of
+Bohemia."
+
+"I was also aware of that," murmured Holmes, settling himself down in his
+armchair, and closing his eyes.
+
+Our visitor glanced with some apparent surprise at the languid, lounging
+figure of the man who had been, no doubt, depicted to him as the most
+incisive reasoner and most energetic agent in Europe. Holmes slowly
+reopened his eyes and looked impatiently at his gigantic client.
+
+"If your majesty would condescend to state your case," he remarked, "I
+should be better able to advise you."
+
+The man sprung from his chair, and paced up and down the room in
+uncontrollable agitation. Then, with a gesture of desperation, he tore
+the mask from his face and hurled it upon the ground.
+
+"You are right," he cried, "I am the king. Why should I attempt to conceal
+it?"
+
+"Why, indeed?" murmured Holmes. "Your majesty had not spoken before I was
+aware that I was addressing Wilhelm Gottsreich Sigismond von Ormstein,
+Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein, and hereditary King of Bohemia."
+
+"But you can understand," said our strange visitor, sitting down once more
+and passing his hand over his high, white forehead, "you can understand
+that I am not accustomed to doing such business in my own person. Yet the
+matter was so delicate that I could not confide it to an agent without
+putting myself in his power. I have come incognito from Prague for the
+purpose of consulting you."
+
+"Then, pray consult," said Holmes, shutting his eyes once more.
+
+"The facts are briefly these: Some five years ago, during a lengthy visit
+to Warsaw, I made the acquaintance of the well-known adventuress Irene
+Adler. The name is no doubt familiar to you."
+
+"Kindly look her up in my index, doctor," murmured Holmes, without opening
+his eyes. For many years he had adopted a system for docketing all
+paragraphs concerning men and things, so that it was difficult to name a
+subject or a person on which he could not at once furnish information. In
+this case I found her biography sandwiched in between that of a Hebrew
+rabbi and that of a staff commander who had written a monograph upon the
+deep-sea fishes.
+
+"Let me see!" said Holmes. "Hum! Born in New Jersey in the year 1858.
+Contralto--hum! La Scala--hum! Prima donna Imperial Opera of Warsaw--yes!
+Retired from operatic stage--ha! Living in London--quite so! Your majesty,
+as I understand, became entangled with this young person, wrote her some
+compromising letters, and is now desirous of getting those letters back."
+
+"Precisely so. But how--"
+
+"Was there a secret marriage?"
+
+"None."
+
+"No legal papers or certificates?"
+
+"None."
+
+"Then I fail to follow your majesty. If this young person should produce
+her letters for blackmailing or other purposes, how is she to prove their
+authenticity?"
+
+"There is the writing."
+
+"Pooh-pooh! Forgery."
+
+"My private note paper."
+
+"Stolen."
+
+"My own seal."
+
+"Imitated."
+
+"My photograph."
+
+"Bought."
+
+"We were both in the photograph."
+
+"Oh, dear! That is very bad. Your majesty has indeed committed an
+indiscretion."
+
+"I was mad--insane."
+
+"You have compromised yourself seriously."
+
+"I was only crown prince then. I was young. I am but thirty now."
+
+"It must be recovered."
+
+"We have tried and failed."
+
+"Your majesty must pay. It must be bought."
+
+"She will not sell."
+
+"Stolen, then."
+
+"Five attempts have been made. Twice burglars in my pay ransacked her
+house. Once we diverted her luggage when she traveled. Twice she has been
+waylaid. There has been no result."
+
+"No sign of it?"
+
+"Absolutely none."
+
+Holmes laughed. "It is quite a pretty little problem," said he.
+
+"But a very serious one to me," returned the king, reproachfully.
+
+"Very, indeed. And what does she propose to do with the photograph?"
+
+"To ruin me."
+
+"But how?"
+
+"I am about to be married."
+
+"So I have heard."
+
+"To Clotilde Lothman von Saxe-Meiningen, second daughter of the King of
+Scandinavia. You may know the strict principles of her family. She is
+herself the very soul of delicacy. A shadow of a doubt as to my conduct
+would bring the matter to an end."
+
+"And Irene Adler?"
+
+"Threatens to send them the photograph. And she will do it. I know that
+she will do it. You do not know her, but she has a soul of steel. She has
+the face of the most beautiful of women and the mind of the most resolute
+of men. Rather than I should marry another woman, there are no lengths to
+which she would not go--none."
+
+"You are sure she has not sent it yet?"
+
+"I am sure."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"Because she has said that she would send it on the day when the betrothal
+was publicly proclaimed. That will be next Monday."
+
+"Oh, then we have three days yet," said Holmes, with a yawn. "That is very
+fortunate, as I have one or two matters of importance to look into just at
+present. Your majesty will, of course, stay in London for the present?"
+
+"Certainly. You will find me at the Langham, under the name of the Count
+von Kramm."
+
+"Then I shall drop you a line to let you know how we progress."
+
+"Pray do so; I shall be all anxiety."
+
+"Then, as to money?"
+
+"You have _carte blanche_."
+
+"Absolutely?"
+
+"I tell you that I would give one of the provinces of my kingdom to have
+that photograph."
+
+"And for present expenses?"
+
+The king took a heavy chamois-leather bag from under his cloak, and laid
+it on the table.
+
+"There are three hundred pounds in gold, and seven hundred in notes," he
+said.
+
+Holmes scribbled a receipt upon a sheet of his notebook, and handed it to
+him.
+
+"And mademoiselle's address?" he asked.
+
+"Is Briony Lodge, Serpentine Avenue, St. John's Wood."
+
+Holmes took a note of it. "One other question," said he, thoughtfully.
+"Was the photograph a cabinet?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"Then, good-night, your majesty, and I trust that we shall soon have some
+good news for you. And good-night, Watson," he added, as the wheels of the
+royal brougham rolled down the street. "If you will be good enough to call
+to-morrow afternoon, at three o'clock, I should like to chat this little
+matter over with you."
+
+
+II
+
+At three o'clock precisely I was at Baker Street, but Holmes had not yet
+returned. The landlady informed me that he had left the house shortly
+after eight o'clock in the morning. I sat down beside the fire, however,
+with the intention of awaiting him, however long he might be. I was
+already deeply interested in his inquiry, for, though it was surrounded by
+none of the grim and strange features which were associated with the two
+crimes which I have already recorded, still, the nature of the case and
+the exalted station of his client gave it a character of its own. Indeed,
+apart from the nature of the investigation which my friend had on hand,
+there was something in his masterly grasp of a situation, and his keen,
+incisive reasoning, which made it a pleasure to me to study his system of
+work, and to follow the quick, subtle methods by which he disentangled the
+most inextricable mysteries. So accustomed was I to his invariable
+success that the very possibility of his failing had ceased to enter into
+my head.
+
+It was close upon four before the door opened, and a drunken-looking
+groom, ill-kempt and side-whiskered, with an inflamed face and
+disreputable clothes, walked into the room. Accustomed as I was to my
+friend's amazing powers in the use of disguises, I had to look three times
+before I was certain that it was indeed he. With a nod he vanished into
+the bedroom, whence he emerged in five minutes tweed-suited and
+respectable, as of old. Putting his hands into his pockets, he stretched
+out his legs in front of the fire, and laughed heartily for some minutes.
+
+"Well, really!" he cried, and then he choked, and laughed again until he
+was obliged to lie back, limp and helpless, in the chair.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"It's quite too funny. I am sure you could never guess how I employed my
+morning, or what I ended by doing."
+
+"I can't imagine. I suppose that you have been watching the habits, and,
+perhaps, the house, of Miss Irene Adler."
+
+"Quite so, but the sequel was rather unusual. I will tell you, however. I
+left the house a little after eight o'clock this morning in the character
+of a groom out of work. There is a wonderful sympathy and freemasonry
+among horsey men. Be one of them, and you will know all that there is to
+know. I soon found Briony Lodge. It is a bijou villa, with a garden at the
+back, but built out in the front right up to the road, two stories. Chubb
+lock to the door. Large sitting room on the right side, well furnished,
+with long windows almost to the floor, and those preposterous English
+window fasteners which a child could open. Behind there was nothing
+remarkable, save that the passage window could be reached from the top of
+the coach-house. I walked round it and examined it closely from every
+point of view, but without noting anything else of interest.
+
+"I then lounged down the street, and found, as I expected, that there was
+a mews in a lane which runs down by one wall of the garden. I lent the
+hostlers a hand in rubbing down their horses, and I received in exchange
+twopence, a glass of half and half, two fills of shag tobacco, and as much
+information as I could desire about Miss Adler, to say nothing of half a
+dozen other people in the neighborhood, in whom I was not in the least
+interested, but whose biographies I was compelled to listen to."
+
+"And what of Irene Adler?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, she has turned all the men's heads down in that part. She is the
+daintiest thing under a bonnet on this planet. So say the Serpentine Mews,
+to a man. She lives quietly, sings at concerts, drives out at five every
+day, and returns at seven sharp for dinner. Seldom goes out at other
+times, except when she sings. Has only one male visitor, but a good deal
+of him. He is dark, handsome, and dashing; never calls less than once a
+day, and often twice. He is a Mr. Godfrey Norton of the Inner Temple. See
+the advantages of a cabman as a confidant. They had driven him home a
+dozen times from Serpentine Mews, and knew all about him. When I had
+listened to all that they had to tell, I began to walk up and down near
+Briony Lodge once more, and to think over my plan of campaign.
+
+"This Godfrey Norton was evidently an important factor in the matter. He
+was a lawyer. That sounded ominous. What was the relation between them,
+and what the object of his repeated visits? Was she his client, his
+friend, or his mistress? If the former, she had probably transferred the
+photograph to his keeping. If the latter, it was less likely. On the issue
+of this question depended whether I should continue my work at Briony
+Lodge, or turn my attention to the gentleman's chambers in the Temple. It
+was a delicate point, and it widened the field of my inquiry. I fear that
+I bore you with these details, but I have to let you see my little
+difficulties, if you are to understand the situation."
+
+"I am following you closely," I answered.
+
+"I was still balancing the matter in my mind, when a hansom cab drove up
+to Briony Lodge, and a gentleman sprung out. He was a remarkably handsome
+man, dark, aquiline, and mustached--evidently the man of whom I had heard.
+He appeared to be in a great hurry, shouted to the cabman to wait, and
+brushed past the maid who opened the door, with the air of a man who was
+thoroughly at home.
+
+"He was in the house about half an hour, and I could catch glimpses of him
+in the windows of the sitting room, pacing up and down, talking excitedly
+and waving his arms. Of her I could see nothing. Presently he emerged,
+looking even more flurried than before. As he stepped up to the cab, he
+pulled a gold watch from his pocket and looked at it earnestly. 'Drive
+like the devil!' he shouted, 'first to Gross & Hankey's in Regent Street,
+and then to the Church of St. Monica in the Edgeware Road. Half a guinea
+if you do it in twenty minutes!'
+
+"Away they went, and I was just wondering whether I should not do well to
+follow them, when up the lane came a neat little landau, the coachman with
+his coat only half buttoned, and his tie under his ear, while all the tags
+of his harness were sticking out of the buckles. It hadn't pulled up
+before she shot out of the hall door and into it. I only caught a glimpse
+of her at the moment, but she was a lovely woman, with a face that a man
+might die for.
+
+"'The Church of St. Monica, John,' she cried; 'and half a sovereign if you
+reach it in twenty minutes.'
+
+"This was quite too good to lose, Watson. I was just balancing whether I
+should run for it, or whether I should perch behind her landau, when a cab
+came through the street. The driver looked twice at such a shabby fare;
+but I jumped in before he could object. 'The Church of St. Monica,' said
+I, 'and half a sovereign if you reach it in twenty minutes.' It was
+twenty-five minutes to twelve, and of course it was clear enough what was
+in the wind.
+
+"My cabby drove fast. I don't think I ever drove faster, but the others
+were there before us. The cab and landau with their steaming horses were
+in front of the door when I arrived. I paid the man, and hurried into the
+church. There was not a soul there save the two whom I had followed, and
+a surpliced clergyman, who seemed to be expostulating with them. They were
+all three standing in a knot in front of the altar. I lounged up the side
+aisle like any other idler who has dropped into a church. Suddenly, to my
+surprise, the three at the altar faced round to me, and Godfrey Norton
+came running as hard as he could toward me.
+
+"'Thank God!' he cried. 'You'll do. Come! Come!'
+
+"'What then?' I asked.
+
+"'Come, man, come; only three minutes, or it won't be legal.'
+
+"I was half dragged up to the altar, and, before I knew where I was, I
+found myself mumbling responses which were whispered in my ear, and
+vouching for things of which I knew nothing, and generally assisting in
+the secure tying up of Irene Adler, spinster, to Godfrey Norton, bachelor.
+It was all done in an instant, and there was the gentleman thanking me on
+the one side and the lady on the other, while the clergyman beamed on me
+in front. It was the most preposterous position in which I ever found
+myself in my life, and it was the thought of it that started me laughing
+just now. It seems that there had been some informality about their
+license; that the clergyman absolutely refused to marry them without a
+witness of some sort, and that my lucky appearance saved the bridegroom
+from having to sally out into the streets in search of a best man. The
+bride gave me a sovereign, and I mean to wear it on my watch chain in
+memory of the occasion."
+
+"This is a very unexpected turn of affairs," said I; "and what then?"
+
+"Well, I found my plans very seriously menaced. It looked as if the pair
+might take an immediate departure, and so necessitate very prompt and
+energetic measures on my part. At the church door, however, they
+separated, he driving back to the Temple, and she to her own house. 'I
+shall drive out in the park at five as usual,' she said, as she left him.
+I heard no more. They drove away in different directions, and I went off
+to make my own arrangements."
+
+"Which are?"
+
+"Some cold beef and a glass of beer," he answered, ringing the bell. "I
+have been too busy to think of food, and I am likely to be busier still
+this evening. By the way, doctor, I shall want your cooperation."
+
+"I shall be delighted."
+
+"You don't mind breaking the law?"
+
+"Not in the least."
+
+"Nor running a chance of arrest?"
+
+"Not in a good cause."
+
+"Oh, the cause is excellent!"
+
+"Then I am your man."
+
+"I was sure that I might rely on you."
+
+"But what is it you wish?"
+
+"When Mrs. Turner has brought in the tray I will make it clear to you.
+Now," he said, as he turned hungrily on the simple fare that our landlady
+had provided, "I must discuss it while I eat, for I have not much time. It
+is nearly five now. In two hours we must be on the scene of action. Miss
+Irene, or Madame, rather, returns from her drive at seven. We must be at
+Briony Lodge to meet her."
+
+"And what then?"
+
+"You must leave that to me. I have already arranged what is to occur.
+There is only one point on which I must insist. You must not interfere,
+come what may. You understand?"
+
+"I am to be neutral?"
+
+"To do nothing whatever. There will probably be some small unpleasantness.
+Do not join in it. It will end in my being conveyed into the house. Four
+or five minutes afterwards the sitting-room window will open. You are to
+station yourself close to that open window."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You are to watch me, for I will be visible to you."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And when I raise my hand--so--you will throw into the room what I give
+you to throw, and will, at the same time, raise the cry of fire. You quite
+follow me?"
+
+"Entirely."
+
+"It is nothing very formidable," he said, taking a long, cigar-shaped roll
+from his pocket. "It is an ordinary plumber's smoke-rocket, fitted with a
+cap at either end, to make it self-lighting. Your task is confined to
+that. When you raise your cry of fire, it will be taken up by quite a
+number of people. You may then walk to the end of the street, and I will
+rejoin you in ten minutes. I hope that I have made myself clear?"
+
+"I am to remain neutral, to get near the window, to watch you, and, at the
+signal, to throw in this object, then to raise the cry of fire and to wait
+you at the corner of the street."
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"Then you may entirely rely on me."
+
+"That is excellent. I think, perhaps, it is almost time that I prepared
+for the new role I have to play."
+
+He disappeared into his bedroom, and returned in a few minutes in the
+character of an amiable and simple-minded Nonconformist clergyman. His
+broad, black hat, his baggy trousers, his white tie, his sympathetic
+smile, and general look of peering and benevolent curiosity were such as
+Mr. John Hare alone could have equaled. It was not merely that Holmes
+changed his costume. His expression, his manner, his very soul seemed to
+vary with every fresh part that he assumed. The stage lost a fine actor,
+even as science lost an acute reasoner, when he became a specialist in
+crime.
+
+It was a quarter past six when we left Baker Street, and it still wanted
+ten minutes to the hour when we found ourselves in Serpentine Avenue. It
+was already dusk, and the lamps were just being lighted as we paced up and
+down in front of Briony Lodge, waiting for the coming of its occupant. The
+house was just such as I had pictured it from Sherlock Holmes's succinct
+description, but the locality appeared to be less private than I expected.
+On the contrary, for a small street in a quiet neighborhood, it was
+remarkably animated. There was a group of shabbily dressed men smoking and
+laughing in a corner, a scissors grinder with his wheel, two guardsmen who
+were flirting with a nurse girl, and several well-dressed young men who
+were lounging up and down with cigars in their mouths.
+
+"You see," remarked Holmes, as we paced to and fro in front of the house,
+"this marriage rather simplifies matters. The photograph becomes a
+double-edged weapon now. The chances are that she would be as averse to
+its being seen by Mr. Godfrey Norton as our client is to its coming to the
+eyes of his princess. Now the question is--where are we to find the
+photograph?"
+
+"Where, indeed?"
+
+"It is most unlikely that she carries it about with her. It is cabinet
+size. Too large for easy concealment about a woman's dress. She knows that
+the king is capable of having her waylaid and searched. Two attempts of
+the sort have already been made. We may take it, then, that she does not
+carry it about with her."
+
+"Where, then?"
+
+"Her banker or her lawyer. There is that double possibility. But I am
+inclined to think neither. Women are naturally secretive, and they like to
+do their own secreting. Why should she hand it over to anyone else? She
+could trust her own guardianship, but she could not tell what indirect or
+political influence might be brought to bear upon a business man. Besides,
+remember that she had resolved to use it within a few days. It must be
+where she can lay her hands upon it. It must be in her own house."
+
+"But it has twice been burglarized."
+
+"Pshaw! They did not know how to look."
+
+"But how will you look?"
+
+"I will not look."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"I will get her to show me."
+
+"But she will refuse."
+
+"She will not be able to. But I hear the rumble of wheels. It is her
+carriage. Now carry out my orders to the letter."
+
+As he spoke, the gleam of the sidelights of a carriage came round the
+curve of the avenue. It was a smart little landau which rattled up to the
+door of Briony Lodge. As it pulled up one of the loafing men at the corner
+dashed forward to open the door in the hope of earning a copper, but was
+elbowed away by another loafer who had rushed up with the same intention.
+A fierce quarrel broke out which was increased by the two guardsmen, who
+took sides with one of the loungers, and by the scissors grinder, who was
+equally hot upon the other side. A blow was struck, and in an instant the
+lady, who had stepped from her carriage, was the center of a little knot
+of struggling men who struck savagely at each other with their fists and
+sticks. Holmes dashed into the crowd to protect the lady; but, just as he
+reached her, he gave a cry and dropped to the ground, with the blood
+running freely down his face. At his fall the guardsmen took to their
+heels in one direction and the loungers in the other, while a number of
+better-dressed people who had watched the scuffle without taking part in
+it crowded in to help the lady and to attend to the injured man. Irene
+Adler, as I will still call her, had hurried up the steps; but she stood
+at the top, with her superb figure outlined against the lights of the
+hall, looking back into the street.
+
+"Is the poor gentleman much hurt?" she asked.
+
+"He is dead," cried several voices.
+
+"No, no, there's life in him," shouted another. "But he'll be gone before
+you can get him to the hospital."
+
+"He's a brave fellow," said a woman. "They would have had the lady's purse
+and watch if it hadn't been for him. They were a gang, and a rough one,
+too. Ah! he's breathing now."
+
+"He can't lie in the street. May we bring him in, marm?"
+
+"Surely. Bring him into the sitting room. There is a comfortable sofa.
+This way, please." Slowly and solemnly he was borne into Briony Lodge, and
+laid out in the principal room, while I still observed the proceedings
+from my post by the window. The lamps had been lighted, but the blinds had
+not been drawn, so that I could see Holmes as he lay upon the couch. I do
+not know whether he was seized with compunction at that moment for the
+part he was playing, but I know that I never felt more heartily ashamed of
+myself in my life than when I saw the beautiful creature against whom I
+was conspiring, or the grace and kindliness with which she waited upon the
+injured man. And yet it would be the blackest treachery to Holmes to draw
+back now from the part which he had intrusted to me. I hardened my heart,
+and took the smoke-rocket from under my ulster. After all, I thought, we
+are not injuring her. We are but preventing her from injuring another.
+
+Holmes had sat upon the couch, and I saw him motion like a man who is in
+need of air. A maid rushed across and threw open the window. At the same
+instant I saw him raise his hand, and at the signal I tossed my rocket
+into the room with a cry of "Fire!" The word was no sooner out of my mouth
+than the whole crowd of spectators, well dressed and ill--gentlemen,
+hostlers, and servant maids--joined in a general shriek of "Fire!" Thick
+clouds of smoke curled through the room, and out at the open window. I
+caught a glimpse of rushing figures, and a moment later the voice of
+Holmes from within assuring them that it was a false alarm. Slipping
+through the shouting crowd, I made my way to the corner of the street, and
+in ten minutes was rejoiced to find my friend's arm in mine, and to get
+away from the scene of uproar. He walked swiftly and in silence for some
+few minutes, until we had turned down one of the quiet streets which led
+toward the Edgeware Road.
+
+"You did it very nicely, doctor," he remarked. "Nothing could have been
+better. It is all right."
+
+"You have the photograph?"
+
+"I know where it is."
+
+"And how did you find out?"
+
+"She showed me, as I told you that she would."
+
+"I am still in the dark."
+
+"I do not wish to make a mystery," said he, laughing. "The matter was
+perfectly simple. You, of course, saw that everyone in the street was an
+accomplice. They were all engaged for the evening."
+
+"I guessed as much."
+
+"Then, when the row broke out, I had a little moist red paint in the palm
+of my hand. I rushed forward, fell down, clapped my hand to my face, and
+became a piteous spectacle. It is an old trick."
+
+"That also I could fathom."
+
+"Then they carried me in. She was bound to have me in. What else could she
+do? And into her sitting room, which was the very room which I suspected.
+It lay between that and her bedroom, and I was determined to see which.
+They laid me on a couch, I motioned for air, they were compelled to open
+the window, and you had your chance."
+
+"How did that help you?"
+
+"It was all-important. When a woman thinks that her house is on fire, her
+instinct is at once to rush to the thing which she values most. It is a
+perfectly overpowering impulse, and I have more than once taken advantage
+of it. In the case of the Darlington Substitution Scandal it was of use to
+me, and also in the Arnsworth Castle business. A married woman grabs at
+her baby--an unmarried one reaches for her jewel box. Now it was clear to
+me that our lady of to-day had nothing in the house more precious to her
+than what we are in quest of. She would rush to secure it. The alarm of
+fire was admirably done. The smoke and shouting were enough to shake
+nerves of steel. She responded beautifully. The photograph is in a recess
+behind a sliding panel just above the right bell-pull. She was there in an
+instant, and I caught a glimpse of it as she drew it out. When I cried out
+that it was a false alarm, she replaced it, glanced at the rocket, rushed
+from the room, and I have not seen her since. I rose, and, making my
+excuses, escaped from the house. I hesitated whether to attempt to secure
+the photograph at once; but the coachman had come in, and as he was
+watching me narrowly, it seemed safer to wait. A little over-precipitance
+may ruin all."
+
+"And now?" I asked.
+
+"Our quest is practically finished. I shall call with the king to-morrow,
+and with you, if you care to come with us. We will be shown into the
+sitting room to wait for the lady, but it is probable that when she comes
+she may find neither us nor the photograph. It might be a satisfaction to
+his majesty to regain it with his own hands."
+
+"And when will you call?"
+
+"At eight in the morning. She will not be up, so that we shall have a
+clear field. Besides, we must be prompt, for this marriage may mean a
+complete change in her life and habits. I must wire to the king without
+delay."
+
+We had reached Baker Street, and had stopped at the door. He was searching
+his pockets for the key, when some one passing said:
+
+"Good night, Mister Sherlock Holmes."
+
+There were several people on the pavement at the time, but the greeting
+appeared to come from a slim youth in an ulster who had hurried by.
+
+"I've heard that voice before," said Holmes, staring down the dimly
+lighted street. "Now, I wonder who the deuce that could have been?"
+
+
+III
+
+I slept at Baker Street that night, and we were engaged upon our toast and
+coffee in the morning, when the King of Bohemia rushed into the room.
+
+"You have really got it?" he cried, grasping Sherlock Holmes by either
+shoulder, and looking eagerly into his face.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"But you have hopes?"
+
+"I have hopes."
+
+"Then come. I am all impatience to be gone."
+
+"We must have a cab."
+
+"No, my brougham is waiting."
+
+"Then that will simplify matters." We descended, and started off once more
+for Briony Lodge.
+
+"Irene Adler is married," remarked Holmes.
+
+"Married! When?"
+
+"Yesterday."
+
+"But to whom?"
+
+"To an English lawyer named Norton."
+
+"But she could not love him."
+
+"I am in hopes that she does."
+
+"And why in hopes?"
+
+"Because it would spare your majesty all fear of future annoyance. If the
+lady loves her husband, she does not love your majesty. If she does not
+love your majesty, there is no reason why she should interfere with your
+majesty's plan."
+
+"It is true. And yet--Well, I wish she had been of my own station. What a
+queen she would have made!" He relapsed into a moody silence, which was
+not broken until we drew up in Serpentine Avenue.
+
+The door of Briony Lodge was open, and an elderly woman stood upon the
+steps. She watched us with a sardonic eye as we stepped from the
+brougham.
+
+"Mr. Sherlock Holmes, I believe?" said she.
+
+"I am Mr. Holmes," answered my companion, looking at her with a
+questioning and rather startled gaze.
+
+"Indeed! My mistress told me that you were likely to call. She left this
+morning, with her husband, by the 5:15 train from Charing Cross, for the
+Continent."
+
+"What!" Sherlock Holmes staggered back, white with chagrin and surprise.
+
+"Do you mean that she has left England?"
+
+"Never to return."
+
+"And the papers?" asked the king hoarsely. "All is lost!"
+
+"We shall see." He pushed past the servant, and rushed into the
+drawing-room, followed by the king and myself. The furniture was scattered
+about in every direction, with dismantled shelves, and open drawers, as if
+the lady had hurriedly ransacked them before her flight. Holmes rushed at
+the bell-pull, tore back a small sliding shutter, and plunging in his
+hand, pulled out a photograph and a letter. The photograph was of Irene
+Adler herself in evening dress; the letter was superscribed to "Sherlock
+Holmes, Esq. To be left till called for." My friend tore it open, and we
+all three read it together. It was dated at midnight of the preceding
+night, and ran in this way:
+
+ "MY DEAR MR. SHERLOCK HOLMES,--You really did it very well. You
+ took me in completely. Until after the alarm of the fire, I had
+ not a suspicion. But then, when I found how I had betrayed
+ myself, I began to think. I had been warned against you months
+ ago. I had been told that if the king employed an agent, it would
+ certainly be you. And your address had been given me. Yet, with
+ all this, you made me reveal what you wanted to know. Even after
+ I became suspicious, I found it hard to think evil of such a
+ dear, kind old clergyman. But, you know, I have been trained as
+ an actress myself. Male costume is nothing new to me. I often
+ take advantage of the freedom which it gives. I sent John, the
+ coachman, to watch you, ran upstairs, got into my walking
+ clothes, as I call them, and came down just as you departed.
+
+ "Well, I followed you to the door, and so made sure that I was
+ really an object of interest to the celebrated Mr. Sherlock
+ Holmes. Then I, rather imprudently, wished you good night, and
+ started for the Temple to see my husband.
+
+ "We both thought the best resource was flight when pursued by so
+ formidable an antagonist; so you will find the nest empty when
+ you call to-morrow. As to the photograph, your client may rest in
+ peace. I love and am loved by a better man than he. The king may
+ do what he will without hindrance from one whom he has cruelly
+ wronged. I keep it only to safeguard myself, and preserve a
+ weapon which will always secure me from any steps which he might
+ take in the future. I leave a photograph which he might care to
+ possess; and I remain, dear Mr. Sherlock Holmes, very truly
+ yours,
+
+ "IRENE NORTON, _nee_ ADLER."
+
+"What a woman--oh, what a woman!" cried the King of Bohemia, when we had
+all three read this epistle. "Did I not tell you how quick and resolute
+she was? Would she not have made an admirable queen? Is it not a pity that
+she was not on my level?"
+
+"From what I have seen of the lady, she seems indeed to be on a very
+different level to your majesty," said Holmes coldly. "I am sorry that I
+have not been able to bring your majesty's business to a more successful
+conclusion."
+
+"On the contrary, my dear sir," cried the king, "nothing could be more
+successful. I know that her word is inviolate. The photograph is now as
+safe as if it were in the fire."
+
+"I am glad to hear your majesty say so."
+
+"I am immensely indebted to you. Pray tell me in what way I can reward
+you. This ring--" He slipped an emerald snake ring from his finger, and
+held it out upon the palm of his hand.
+
+"Your majesty has something which I should value even more highly," said
+Holmes.
+
+"You have but to name it."
+
+"This photograph!"
+
+The king stared at him in amazement.
+
+"Irene's photograph!" he cried. "Certainly, if you wish it."
+
+"I thank your majesty. Then there is no more to be done in the matter. I
+have the honor to wish you a very good morning." He bowed, and turning
+away without observing the hand which the king had stretched out to him,
+he set off in my company for his chambers.
+
+And that was how a great scandal threatened to affect the kingdom of
+Bohemia, and how the best plans of Mr. Sherlock Holmes were beaten by a
+woman's wit. He used to make merry over the cleverness of women, but I
+have not heard him do it of late. And when he speaks of Irene Adler, or
+when he refers to her photograph, it is always under the honorable title
+of _the_ woman.
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Red-Headed League_
+
+
+I had called upon my friend, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, one day in the autumn of
+last year, and found him in deep conversation with a very stout,
+florid-faced elderly gentleman, with fiery red hair. With an apology for
+my intrusion, I was about to withdraw, when Holmes pulled me abruptly into
+the room and closed the door behind me.
+
+"You could not possibly have come at a better time, my dear Watson," he
+said, cordially.
+
+"I was afraid that you were engaged."
+
+"So I am. Very much so."
+
+"Then I can wait in the next room."
+
+"Not at all. This gentleman, Mr. Wilson, has been my partner and helper in
+many of my most successful cases, and I have no doubt that he will be of
+the utmost use to me in yours also."
+
+The stout gentleman half rose from his chair and gave a bob of greeting,
+with a quick little questioning glance from his small, fat-encircled eyes.
+
+"Try the settee," said Holmes, relapsing into his armchair, and putting
+his finger tips together, as was his custom when in judicial moods. "I
+know, my dear Watson, that you share my love of all that is bizarre and
+outside the conventions and humdrum routine of everyday life. You have
+shown your relish for it by the enthusiasm which has prompted you to
+chronicle, and, if you will excuse my saying so, somewhat to embellish so
+many of my own little adventures."
+
+"Your cases have indeed been of the greatest interest to me," I observed.
+
+"You will remember that I remarked the other day, just before we went into
+the very simple problem presented by Miss Mary Sutherland, that for
+strange effects and extraordinary combinations we must go to life itself,
+which is always far more daring than any effort of the imagination."
+
+"A proposition which I took the liberty of doubting."
+
+"You did, doctor, but none the less you must come round to my view, for
+otherwise I shall keep on piling fact upon fact on you, until your reason
+breaks down under them and acknowledge me to be right. Now, Mr. Jabez
+Wilson here has been good enough to call upon me this morning, and to
+begin a narrative which promises to be one of the most singular which I
+have listened to for some time. You have heard me remark that the
+strangest and most unique things are very often connected not with the
+larger but with the smaller crimes, and occasionally, indeed, where there
+is room for doubt whether any positive crime has been committed. As far as
+I have heard, it is impossible for me to say whether the present case is
+an instance of crime or not, but the course of events is certainly among
+the most singular that I have ever listened to. Perhaps, Mr. Wilson, you
+would have the great kindness to recommence your narrative. I ask you, not
+merely because my friend, Dr. Watson, has not heard the opening part, but
+also because the peculiar nature of the story makes me anxious to have
+every possible detail from your lips. As a rule, when I have heard some
+slight indication of the course of events I am able to guide myself by the
+thousands of other similar cases which occur to my memory. In the present
+instance I am forced to admit that the facts are, to the best of my
+belief, unique."
+
+The portly client puffed out his chest with an appearance of some little
+pride, and pulled a dirty and wrinkled newspaper from the inside pocket of
+his greatcoat. As he glanced down the advertisement column, with his head
+thrust forward, and the paper flattened out upon his knee, I took a good
+look at the man, and endeavored, after the fashion of my companion, to
+read the indications which might be presented by his dress or appearance.
+
+I did not gain very much, however, by my inspection. Our visitor bore
+every mark of being an average commonplace British tradesman, obese,
+pompous, and slow. He wore rather baggy gray shepherd's check trousers, a
+not overclean black frock coat, unbuttoned in the front, and a drab
+waistcoat with a heavy brassy Albert chain, and a square pierced bit of
+metal dangling down as an ornament. A frayed top hat and a faded brown
+overcoat with a wrinkled velvet collar lay upon a chair beside him.
+Altogether, look as I would, there was nothing remarkable about the man
+save his blazing red head and the expression of extreme chagrin and
+discontent upon his features.
+
+Sherlock Holmes's quick eye took in my occupation, and he shook his head
+with a smile as he noticed my questioning glances. "Beyond the obvious
+facts that he has at some time done manual labor, that he takes snuff,
+that he is a Freemason, that he has been in China, and that he has done a
+considerable amount of writing lately, I can deduce nothing else."
+
+Mr. Jabez Wilson started up in his chair, with his forefinger upon the
+paper, but his eyes upon my companion.
+
+"How, in the name of good fortune, did you know all that, Mr. Holmes?" he
+asked. "How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? It's as
+true as gospel, for I began as a ship's carpenter."
+
+"Your hands, my dear sir. Your right hand is quite a size larger than your
+left. You have worked with it and the muscles are more developed."
+
+"Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry?"
+
+"I won't insult your intelligence by telling you how I read that,
+especially as, rather against the strict rules of your order, you use an
+arc and compass breastpin."
+
+"Ah, of course, I forgot that. But the writing?"
+
+"What else can be indicated by that right cuff so very shiny for five
+inches, and the left one with the smooth patch near the elbow where you
+rest it upon the desk."
+
+"Well, but China?"
+
+"The fish which you have tattooed immediately above your wrist could only
+have been done in China. I have made a small study of tattoo marks, and
+have even contributed to the literature of the subject. That trick of
+staining the fishes' scales of a delicate pink is quite peculiar to China.
+When, in addition, I see a Chinese coin hanging from your watch chain, the
+matter becomes even more simple."
+
+Mr. Jabez Wilson laughed heavily. "Well, I never!" said he. "I thought at
+first that you had done something clever, but I see that there was nothing
+in it after all."
+
+"I begin to think, Watson," said Holmes, "that I make a mistake in
+explaining. '_Omne ignotom pro magnifico_,' you know, and my poor little
+reputation, such as it is, will suffer shipwreck if I am so candid. Can
+you not find the advertisement, Mr. Wilson?"
+
+"Yes, I have got it now," he answered, with his thick, red finger planted
+halfway down the column. "Here it is. This is what began it all. You just
+read it for yourself, sir."
+
+I took the paper from him and read as follows:
+
+ "To the Red-headed League: On account of the bequest of the late
+ Ezekiah Hopkins, of Lebanon, Pa., U.S.A., there is now another
+ vacancy open which entitles a member of the League to a salary of
+ four pounds a week for purely nominal services. All red-headed
+ men who are sound in body and mind and above the age of
+ twenty-one years are eligible. Apply in person on Monday, at
+ eleven o'clock, to Duncan Ross, at the offices of the League, 7
+ Pope's Court, Fleet Street."
+
+"What on earth does this mean?" I ejaculated, after I had twice read over
+the extraordinary announcement.
+
+Holmes chuckled and wriggled in his chair, as was his habit when in high
+spirits. "It is a little off the beaten track, isn't it?" said he. "And
+now, Mr. Wilson, off you go at scratch, and tell us all about yourself,
+your household, and the effect which this advertisement had upon your
+fortunes. You will first make a note, doctor, of the paper and the date."
+
+"It is _The Morning Chronicle_ of April 27, 1890. Just two months ago."
+
+"Very good. Now, Mr. Wilson."
+
+"Well, it is just as I have been telling you, Mr. Sherlock Holmes," said
+Jabez Wilson, mopping his forehead, "I have a small pawnbroker's business
+at Saxe-Coburg Square, near the City. It's not a very large affair, and of
+late years it has not done more than just give me a living. I used to be
+able to keep two assistants, but now I only keep one; and I would have a
+job to pay him but that he is willing to come for half wages, so as to
+learn the business."
+
+"What is the name of this obliging youth?" asked Sherlock Holmes.
+
+"His name is Vincent Spaulding, and he's not such a youth either. It's
+hard to say his age. I should not wish a smarter assistant, Mr. Holmes;
+and I know very well that he could better himself, and earn twice what I
+am able to give him. But, after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put
+ideas in his head?"
+
+"Why, indeed? You seem most fortunate in having an employee who comes
+under the full market price. It is not a common experience among employers
+in this age. I don't know that your assistant is not as remarkable as your
+advertisement."
+
+"Oh, he has his faults, too," said Mr. Wilson. "Never was such a fellow
+for photography. Snapping away with a camera when he ought to be improving
+his mind, and then diving down into the cellar like a rabbit into its hole
+to develop his pictures. That is his main fault; but, on the whole, he's a
+good worker. There's no vice in him."
+
+"He is still with you, I presume?"
+
+"Yes, sir. He and a girl of fourteen, who does a bit of simple cooking,
+and keeps the place clean--that's all I have in the house, for I am a
+widower, and never had any family. We live very quietly, sir, the three of
+us; and we keep a roof over our heads, and pay our debts, if we do nothing
+more.
+
+"The first thing that put us out was that advertisement. Spaulding, he
+came down into the office just this day eight weeks, with this very paper
+in his hand, and he says:
+
+"'I wish to the Lord, Mr. Wilson, that I was a red-headed man.'
+
+"'Why that?' I asks.
+
+"'Why,' says he, 'here's another vacancy on the League of the Red-headed
+Men. It's worth quite a little fortune to any man who gets it, and I
+understand that there are more vacancies than there are men, so that the
+trustees are at their wits' end what to do with the money. If my hair
+would only change color here's a nice little crib all ready for me to step
+into.'
+
+"'Why, what is it, then?' I asked. You see, Mr. Holmes, I am a very
+stay-at-home man, and, as my business came to me instead of my having to
+go to it, I was often weeks on end without putting my foot over the door
+mat. In that way I didn't know much of what was going on outside, and I
+was always glad of a bit of news.
+
+"'Have you never heard of the League of the Red-headed Men?' he asked,
+with his eyes open.
+
+"'Never.'
+
+"'Why, I wonder at that, for you are eligible yourself for one of the
+vacancies.'
+
+"'And what are they worth?' I asked.
+
+"'Oh, merely a couple of hundred a year, but the work is slight, and it
+need not interfere very much with one's other occupations.'
+
+"Well, you can easily think that that made me prick up my ears, for the
+business has not been over good for some years, and an extra couple of
+hundred would have been very handy.
+
+"'Tell me all about it,' said I.
+
+"'Well,' said he, showing me the advertisement, 'you can see for yourself
+that the League has a vacancy, and there is the address where you should
+apply for particulars. As far as I can make out, the League was founded by
+an American millionaire, Ezekiah Hopkins, who was very peculiar in his
+ways. He was himself red-headed, and he had a great sympathy for all
+red-headed men; so, when he died, it was found that he had left his
+enormous fortune in the hands of trustees, with instructions to apply the
+interest to the providing of easy berths to men whose hair is of that
+color. From all I hear it is splendid pay, and very little to do.'
+
+"'But,' said I, 'there would be millions of red-headed men who would
+apply.'
+
+"'Not so many as you might think,' he answered. 'You see it is really
+confined to Londoners, and to grown men. This American had started from
+London when he was young, and he wanted to do the old town a good turn.
+Then, again, I have heard it is of no use your applying if your hair is
+light red, or dark red, or anything but real, bright, blazing, fiery red.
+Now, if you cared to apply, Mr. Wilson, you would just walk in; but
+perhaps it would hardly be worth your while to put yourself out of the way
+for the sake of a few hundred pounds.'
+
+"Now it is a fact, gentlemen, as you may see for yourselves, that my hair
+is of a very full and rich tint, so that it seemed to me that, if there
+was to be any competition in the matter, I stood as good a chance as any
+man that I had ever met. Vincent Spaulding seemed to know so much about it
+that I thought he might prove useful, so I just ordered him to put up the
+shutters for the day, and to come right away with me. He was very willing
+to have a holiday, so we shut the business up, and started off for the
+address that was given us in the advertisement.
+
+"I never hope to see such a sight as that again, Mr. Holmes. From north,
+south, east, and west every man who had a shade of red in his hair had
+tramped into the City to answer the advertisement. Fleet Street was choked
+with red-headed folk, and Pope's Court looked like a coster's orange
+barrow. I should not have thought there were so many in the whole country
+as were brought together by that single advertisement. Every shade of
+color they were--straw, lemon, orange, brick, Irish setter, liver, clay;
+but, as Spaulding said, there were not many who had the real vivid
+flame-colored tint. When I saw how many were waiting, I would have given
+it up in despair; but Spaulding would not hear of it. How he did it I
+could not imagine, but he pushed and pulled and butted until he got me
+through the crowd, and right up to the steps which led to the office.
+There was a double stream upon the stair, some going up in hope, and some
+coming back dejected; but we wedged in as well as we could, and soon found
+ourselves in the office."
+
+"Your experience has been a most entertaining one," remarked Holmes, as
+his client paused and refreshed his memory with a huge pinch of snuff.
+"Pray continue your very interesting statement."
+
+"There was nothing in the office but a couple of wooden chairs and a deal
+table, behind which sat a small man, with a head that was even redder than
+mine. He said a few words to each candidate as he came up, and then he
+always managed to find some fault in them which would disqualify them.
+Getting a vacancy did not seem to be such a very easy matter after all.
+However, when our turn came, the little man was much more favorable to me
+than to any of the others, and he closed the door as we entered, so that
+he might have a private word with us.
+
+"'This is Mr. Jabez Wilson,' said my assistant, 'and he is willing to fill
+a vacancy in the League.'
+
+"'And he is admirably suited for it,' the other answered. 'He has every
+requirement. I cannot recall when I have seen anything so fine.' He took a
+step backward, cocked his head on one side, and gazed at my hair until I
+felt quite bashful. Then suddenly he plunged forward, wrung my hand, and
+congratulated me warmly on my success.
+
+"'It would be injustice to hesitate,' said he. 'You will, however, I am
+sure, excuse me for taking an obvious precaution.' With that he seized my
+hair in both his hands, and tugged until I yelled with the pain. 'There is
+water in your eyes,' said he, as he released me. 'I perceive that all is
+as it should be. But we have to be careful, for we have twice been
+deceived by wigs and once by paint. I could tell you tales of cobbler's
+wax which would disgust you with human nature.' He stepped over to the
+window and shouted through it at the top of his voice that the vacancy was
+filled. A groan of disappointment came up from below, and the folk all
+trooped away in different directions, until there was not a red head to be
+seen except my own and that of the manager.
+
+"'My name,' said he, 'is Mr. Duncan Ross, and I am myself one of the
+pensioners upon the fund left by our noble benefactor. Are you a married
+man, Mr. Wilson? Have you a family?'
+
+"I answered that I had not.
+
+"His face fell immediately.
+
+"'Dear me!' he said, gravely, 'that is very serious indeed! I am sorry to
+hear you say that. The fund was, of course, for the propagation and spread
+of the red heads as well as for their maintenance. It is exceedingly
+unfortunate that you should be a bachelor.'
+
+"My face lengthened at this, Mr. Holmes, for I thought that I was not to
+have the vacancy after all; but, after thinking it over for a few
+minutes, he said that it would be all right.
+
+"'In the case of another,' said he, 'the objection might be fatal, but we
+must stretch a point in favor of a man with such a head of hair as yours.
+When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?'
+
+"'Well, it is a little awkward, for I have a business already,' said I.
+
+"'Oh, never mind about that, Mr. Wilson!' said Vincent Spaulding. 'I shall
+be able to look after that for you.'
+
+"'What would be the hours?' I asked.
+
+"'Ten to two.'
+
+"Now a pawnbroker's business is mostly done of an evening, Mr. Holmes,
+especially Thursday and Friday evenings, which is just before pay day; so
+it would suit me very well to earn a little in the mornings. Besides, I
+knew that my assistant was a good man, and that he would see to anything
+that turned up.
+
+"'That would suit me very well,' said I. 'And the pay?'
+
+"'Is four pounds a week.'
+
+"'And the work?'
+
+"'Is purely nominal.'
+
+"'What do you call purely nominal?'
+
+"'Well, you have to be in the office, or at least in the building, the
+whole time. If you leave, you forfeit your whole position forever. The
+will is very clear upon that point. You don't comply with the conditions
+if you budge from the office during that time.'
+
+"'It's only four hours a day, and I should not think of leaving,' said I.
+
+"'No excuse will avail,' said Mr. Duncan Ross, 'neither sickness, nor
+business, nor anything else. There you must stay, or you lose your
+billet.'
+
+"'And the work?'
+
+"'Is to copy out the "Encyclopaedia Britannica." There is the first volume
+of it in that press. You must find your own ink, pens, and blotting
+paper, but we provide this table and chair. Will you be ready to-morrow?'
+
+"'Certainly,' I answered.
+
+"'Then, good-by, Mr. Jabez Wilson, and let me congratulate you once more
+on the important position which you have been fortunate enough to gain.'
+He bowed me out of the room, and I went home with my assistant hardly
+knowing what to say or do, I was so pleased at my own good fortune.
+
+"Well, I thought over the matter all day, and by evening I was in low
+spirits again; for I had quite persuaded myself that the whole affair must
+be some great hoax or fraud, though what its object might be I could not
+imagine. It seemed altogether past belief that anyone could make such a
+will, or that they would pay such a sum for doing anything so simple as
+copying out the 'Encyclopaedia Britannica.' Vincent Spaulding did what he
+could to cheer me up, but by bed time I had reasoned myself out of the
+whole thing. However, in the morning I determined to have a look at it
+anyhow, so I bought a penny bottle of ink, and with a quill pen and seven
+sheets of foolscap paper I started off for Pope's Court.
+
+"Well, to my surprise and delight everything was as right as possible. The
+table was set out ready for me, and Mr. Duncan Ross was there to see that
+I got fairly to work. He started me off upon the letter A, and then he
+left me; but he would drop in from time to time to see that all was right
+with me. At two o'clock he bade me good-day, complimented me upon the
+amount that I had written, and locked the door of the office after me.
+
+"This went on day after day, Mr. Holmes, and on Saturday the manager came
+in and planked down four golden sovereigns for my week's work. It was the
+same next week, and the same the week after. Every morning I was there at
+ten, and every afternoon I left at two. By degrees Mr. Duncan Ross took to
+coming in only once of a morning, and then, after a time, he did not come
+in at all. Still, of course, I never dared to leave the room for an
+instant, for I was not sure when he might come, and the billet was such a
+good one, and suited me so well, that I would not risk the loss of it.
+
+"Eight weeks passed away like this, and I had written about Abbots, and
+Archery, and Armor, and Architecture, and Attica, and hoped with diligence
+that I might get on to the Bs before very long. It cost me something in
+foolscap, and I had pretty nearly filled a shelf with my writings. And
+then suddenly the whole business came to an end."
+
+"To an end?"
+
+"Yes, sir. And no later than this morning. I went to my work as usual at
+ten o'clock, but the door was shut and locked, with a little square of
+cardboard hammered onto the middle of the panel with a tack. Here it is,
+and you can read for yourself."
+
+He held up a piece of white cardboard, about the size of a sheet of note
+paper. It read in this fashion:
+
+ "THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE IS DISSOLVED.
+ Oct. 9, 1890."
+
+Sherlock Holmes and I surveyed this curt announcement and the rueful face
+behind it, until the comical side of the affair so completely overtopped
+every consideration that we both burst out into a roar of laughter.
+
+"I cannot see that there is anything very funny," cried our client,
+flushing up to the roots of his flaming head. "If you can do nothing
+better than laugh at me, I can go elsewhere."
+
+"No, no," cried Holmes, shoving him back into the chair from which he had
+half risen. "I really wouldn't miss your case for the world. It is most
+refreshingly unusual. But there is, if you will excuse my saying so,
+something just a little funny about it. Pray what steps did you take when
+you found the card upon the door?"
+
+"I was staggered, sir. I did not know what to do. Then I called at the
+offices round, but none of them seemed to know anything about it. Finally,
+I went to the landlord, who is an accountant living on the ground floor,
+and I asked him if he could tell me what had become of the Red-headed
+League. He said that he had never heard of any such body. Then I asked him
+who Mr. Duncan Ross was. He answered that the name was new to him.
+
+"'Well' said I, 'the gentleman at No. 4.'
+
+"'What, the red-headed man?'
+
+"'Yes.'
+
+"'Oh,' said he, 'his name was William Morris. He was a solicitor, and was
+using my room as a temporary convenience until his new premises were
+ready. He moved out yesterday.'
+
+"'Where could I find him?'
+
+"'Oh, at his new offices. He did tell me the address. Yes, 17 King Edward
+Street, near St. Paul's.'
+
+"I started off, Mr. Holmes, but when I got to that address it was a
+manufactory of artificial knee-caps, and no one in it had ever heard of
+either Mr. William Morris or Mr. Duncan Ross."
+
+"And what did you do then?" asked Holmes.
+
+"I went home to Saxe-Coburg Square, and I took the advice of my assistant.
+But he could not help me in any way. He could only say that if I waited I
+should hear by post. But that was not quite good enough, Mr. Holmes. I did
+not wish to lose such a place without a struggle, so, as I had heard that
+you were good enough to give advice to poor folk who were in need of it, I
+came right away to you."
+
+"And you did very wisely," said Holmes. "Your case is an exceedingly
+remarkable one, and I shall be happy to look into it. From what you have
+told me I think that it is possible that graver issues hang from it than
+might at first sight appear."
+
+"Grave enough!" said Mr. Jabez Wilson. "Why, I have lost four pound a
+week."
+
+"As far as you are personally concerned," remarked Holmes, "I do not see
+that you have any grievance against this extraordinary league. On the
+contrary, you are, as I understand, richer by some thirty pounds, to say
+nothing of the minute knowledge which you have gained on every subject
+which comes under the letter A. You have lost nothing by them."
+
+"No, sir. But I want to find out about them, and who they are, and what
+their object was in playing this prank--if it was a prank--upon me. It was
+a pretty expensive joke for them, for it cost them two-and-thirty pounds."
+
+"We shall endeavor to clear up these points for you. And, first, one or
+two questions, Mr. Wilson. This assistant of yours who first called your
+attention to the advertisement--how long had he been with you?"
+
+"About a month then."
+
+"How did he come?"
+
+"In answer to an advertisement."
+
+"Was he the only applicant?"
+
+"No, I had a dozen."
+
+"Why did you pick him?"
+
+"Because he was handy and would come cheap."
+
+"At half wages, in fact."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding?"
+
+"Small, stout-built, very quick in his ways, no hair on his face, though
+he's not short of thirty. Has a white splash of acid upon his forehead."
+
+Holmes sat up in his chair in considerable excitement. "I thought as
+much," said he. "Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for
+earrings?"
+
+"Yes, sir. He told me that a gypsy had done it for him when he was a lad."
+
+"Hum!" said Holmes, sinking back in deep thought. "He is still with you?"
+
+"Oh, yes, sir; I have only just left him."
+
+"And has your business been attended to in your absence?"
+
+"Nothing to complain of, sir. There's never very much to do of a morning."
+
+"That will do, Mr. Wilson. I shall be happy to give you an opinion upon
+the subject in the course of a day or two. To-day is Saturday, and I hope
+that by Monday we may come to a conclusion."
+
+"Well, Watson," said Holmes, when our visitor had left us, "what do you
+make of it all?"
+
+"I make nothing of it," I answered frankly. "It is a most mysterious
+business."
+
+"As a rule," said Holmes, "the more bizarre a thing is the less mysterious
+it proves to be. It is your commonplace, featureless crimes which are
+really puzzling, just as a commonplace face is the most difficult to
+identify. But I must be prompt over this matter."
+
+"What are you going to do, then?" I asked.
+
+"To smoke," he answered. "It is quite a three-pipe problem, and I beg that
+you won't speak to me for fifty minutes." He curled himself up in his
+chair, with his thin knees drawn up to his hawklike nose, and there he sat
+with his eyes closed and his black clay pipe thrusting out like the bill
+of some strange bird. I had come to the conclusion that he had dropped
+asleep, and indeed was nodding myself, when he suddenly sprang out of his
+chair with the gesture of a man who has made up his mind, and put his pipe
+down upon the mantelpiece.
+
+"Sarasate plays at St. James's Hall this afternoon," he remarked. "What do
+you think, Watson? Could your patients spare you for a few hours?"
+
+"I have nothing to do to-day. My practice is never very absorbing."
+
+"Then put on your hat and come. I am going through the City first, and we
+can have some lunch on the way. I observe that there is a good deal of
+German music on the programme, which is rather more to my taste than
+Italian or French. It is introspective, and I want to introspect. Come
+along!"
+
+We traveled by the Underground as far as Aldersgate; and a short walk took
+us to Saxe-Coburg Square, the scene of the singular story which we had
+listened to in the morning. It was a poky, little, shabby-genteel place,
+where four lines of dingy, two-storied brick houses looked out into a
+small railed-in inclosure, where a lawn of weedy grass, and a few clumps
+of faded laurel bushes made a hard fight against a smoke-laden and
+uncongenial atmosphere. Three gilt balls and a brown board with JABEZ
+WILSON in white letters, upon a corner house, announced the place where
+our red-headed client carried on his business. Sherlock Holmes stopped in
+front of it with his head on one side, and looked it all over, with his
+eyes shining brightly between puckered lids. Then he walked slowly up the
+street, and then down again to the corner, still looking keenly at the
+houses. Finally he returned to the pawnbroker's and, having thumped
+vigorously upon the pavement with his stick two or three times, he went up
+to the door and knocked. It was instantly opened by a bright-looking,
+clean-shaven young fellow, who asked him to step in.
+
+"Thank you," said Holmes, "I only wished to ask you how you would go from
+here to the Strand."
+
+"Third right, fourth left," answered the assistant, promptly, closing the
+door.
+
+"Smart fellow, that," observed Holmes as we walked away. "He is, in my
+judgment, the fourth smartest man in London, and for daring I am not sure
+that he has not a claim to be third. I have known something of him
+before."
+
+"Evidently," said I, "Mr. Wilson's assistant counts for a good deal in
+this mystery of the Red-headed League. I am sure that you inquired your
+way merely in order that you might see him."
+
+"Not him."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"The knees of his trousers."
+
+"And what did you see?"
+
+"What I expected to see."
+
+"Why did you beat the pavement?"
+
+"My dear doctor, this is a time for observation, not for talk. We are
+spies in an enemy's country. We know something of Saxe-Coburg Square. Let
+us now explore the parts which lie behind it."
+
+The road in which we found ourselves as we turned round the corner from
+the retired Saxe-Coburg Square presented as great a contrast to it as the
+front of a picture does to the back. It was one of the main arteries which
+convey the traffic of the City to the north and west. The roadway was
+blocked with the immense stream of commerce flowing in a double tide
+inward and outward, while the footpaths were black with the hurrying swarm
+of pedestrians. It was difficult to realize, as we looked at the line of
+fine shops and stately business premises, that they really abutted on the
+other side upon the faded and stagnant square which we had just quitted.
+
+"Let me see," said Holmes, standing at the corner, and glancing along the
+line, "I should like just to remember the order of the houses here. It is
+a hobby of mine to have an exact knowledge of London. There is Mortimer's,
+the tobacconist; the little newspaper shop, the Coburg branch of the City
+and Suburban Bank, the Vegetarian Restaurant, and McFarlane's
+carriage-building depot. That carries us right on to the other block. And
+now, doctor, we've done our work, so it's time we had some play. A
+sandwich and a cup of coffee, and then off to violin-land, where all is
+sweetness, and delicacy, and harmony, and there are no red-headed clients
+to vex us with their conundrums."
+
+My friend was an enthusiastic musician, being himself not only a very
+capable performer, but a composer of no ordinary merit. All the afternoon
+he sat in the stalls wrapped in the most perfect happiness, gently waving
+his long thin fingers in time to the music, while his gently smiling face
+and his languid, dreamy eyes were as unlike those of Holmes the
+sleuth-hound, Holmes the relentless, keen-witted, ready-handed criminal
+agent, as it was possible to conceive. In his singular character the dual
+nature alternately asserted itself, and his extreme exactness and
+astuteness represented, as I have often thought, the reaction against the
+poetic and contemplative mood which occasionally predominated in him. The
+swing of his nature took him from extreme languor to devouring energy;
+and, as I knew well, he was never so truly formidable as when, for days on
+end, he had been lounging in his armchair amid his improvisations and his
+black-letter editions. Then it was that the lust of the chase would
+suddenly come upon him, and that his brilliant reasoning power would rise
+to the level of intuition, until those who were unacquainted with his
+methods would look askance at him as on a man whose knowledge was not that
+of other mortals. When I saw him that afternoon so enwrapped in the music
+at St. James's Hall, I felt that an evil time might be coming upon those
+whom he had set himself to hunt down.
+
+"You want to go home, no doubt, doctor," he remarked, as we emerged.
+
+"Yes, it would be as well."
+
+"And I have some business to do which will take some hours. This business
+at Saxe-Coburg Square is serious."
+
+"Why serious?"
+
+"A considerable crime is in contemplation. I have every reason to believe
+that we shall be in time to stop it. But to-day being Saturday rather
+complicates matters. I shall want your help to-night."
+
+"At what time?"
+
+"Ten will be early enough."
+
+"I shall be at Baker Street at ten."
+
+"Very well. And, I say, doctor! there may be some little danger, so kindly
+put your army revolver in your pocket." He waved his hand, turned on his
+heel, and disappeared in an instant among the crowd.
+
+I trust that I am not more dense than my neighbors, but I was always
+oppressed with a sense of my own stupidity in my dealings with Sherlock
+Holmes. Here I had heard what he had heard, I had seen what he had seen,
+and yet from his words it was evident that he saw clearly not only what
+had happened, but what was about to happen, while to me the whole
+business was still confused and grotesque. As I drove home to my house in
+Kensington I thought over it all, from the extraordinary story of the
+red-headed copier of the "Encyclopaedia" down to the visit to Saxe-Coburg
+Square, and the ominous words with which he had parted from me. What was
+this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed? Where were we going,
+and what were we to do? I had the hint from Holmes that this smooth-faced
+pawnbroker's assistant was a formidable man--a man who might play a deep
+game. I tried to puzzle it out, but gave it up in despair, and set the
+matter aside until night should bring an explanation.
+
+It was a quarter-past nine when I started from home and made my way across
+the Park, and so through Oxford Street to Baker Street. Two hansoms were
+standing at the door, and, as I entered the passage, I heard the sound of
+voices from above. On entering his room, I found Holmes in animated
+conversation with two men, one of whom I recognized as Peter Jones, the
+official police agent; while the other was a long, thin, sad-faced man,
+with a very shiny hat and oppressively respectable frock coat.
+
+"Ha! our party is complete," said Holmes, buttoning up his pea-jacket, and
+taking his heavy hunting crop from the rack. "Watson, I think you know Mr.
+Jones, of Scotland Yard? Let me introduce you to Mr. Merryweather, who is
+to be our companion in to-night's adventure."
+
+"We're hunting in couples again, doctor, you see," said Jones, in his
+consequential way. "Our friend here is a wonderful man for starting a
+chase. All he wants is an old dog to help him do the running down."
+
+"I hope a wild goose may not prove to be the end of our chase," observed
+Mr. Merryweather gloomily.
+
+"You may place considerable confidence in Mr. Holmes, sir," said the
+police agent loftily. "He has his own little methods, which are, if he
+won't mind my saying so, just a little too theoretical and fantastic, but
+he has the makings of a detective in him. It is not too much to say that
+once or twice, as in that business of the Sholto murder and the Agra
+treasure, he has been more nearly correct than the official force."
+
+"Oh, if you say so, Mr. Jones, it is all right!" said the stranger, with
+deference. "Still, I confess that I miss my rubber. It is the first
+Saturday night for seven-and-twenty years that I have not had my rubber."
+
+"I think you will find," said Sherlock Holmes, "that you will play for a
+higher stake to-night than you have ever done yet, and that the play will
+be more exciting. For you, Mr. Merryweather, the stake will be some thirty
+thousand pounds; and for you, Jones, it will be the man upon whom you wish
+to lay your hands."
+
+"John Clay, the murderer, thief, smasher, and forger. He's a young man,
+Mr. Merryweather, but he is at the head of his profession, and I would
+rather have my bracelets on him than on any criminal in London. He's a
+remarkable man, is young John Clay. His grandfather was a Royal Duke, and
+he himself has been to Eton and Oxford. His brain is as cunning as his
+fingers, and though we meet signs of him at every turn, we never know
+where to find the man himself. He'll crack a crib in Scotland one week,
+and be raising money to build an orphanage in Cornwall the next. I've been
+on his track for years, and have never set eyes on him yet."
+
+"I hope that I may have the pleasure of introducing you to-night. I've had
+one or two little turns also with Mr. John Clay, and I agree with you that
+he is at the head of his profession. It is past ten, however, and quite
+time that we started. If you two will take the first hansom, Watson and I
+will follow in the second."
+
+Sherlock Holmes was not very communicative during the long drive, and lay
+back in the cab humming the tunes which he had heard in the afternoon. We
+rattled through an endless labyrinth of gaslit streets until we emerged
+into Farringdon Street.
+
+"We are close there now," my friend remarked. "This fellow Merryweather
+is a bank director and personally interested in the matter. I thought it
+as well to have Jones with us also. He is not a bad fellow, though an
+absolute imbecile in his profession. He has one positive virtue. He is as
+brave as a bulldog, and as tenacious as a lobster if he gets his claws
+upon anyone. Here we are, and they are waiting for us."
+
+We had reached the same crowded thoroughfare in which we had found
+ourselves in the morning. Our cabs were dismissed, and following the
+guidance of Mr. Merryweather, we passed down a narrow passage, and through
+a side door which he opened for us. Within there was a small corridor,
+which ended in a very massive iron gate. This also was opened, and led
+down a flight of winding stone steps, which terminated at another
+formidable gate. Mr. Merryweather stopped to light a lantern, and then
+conducted us down a dark, earth-smelling passage, and so, after opening a
+third door, into a huge vault or cellar, which was piled all round with
+crates and massive boxes.
+
+"You are not very vulnerable from above," Holmes remarked, as he held up
+the lantern and gazed about him.
+
+"Nor from below," said Mr. Merryweather, striking his stick upon the flags
+which lined the floor. "Why, dear me, it sounds quite hollow!" he
+remarked, looking up in surprise.
+
+"I must really ask you to be a little more quiet," said Holmes severely.
+"You have already imperiled the whole success of our expedition. Might I
+beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes,
+and not to interfere?"
+
+The solemn Mr. Merryweather perched himself upon a crate, with a very
+injured expression upon his face, while Holmes fell upon his knees upon
+the floor, and, with the lantern and a magnifying lens, began to examine
+minutely the cracks between the stones. A few seconds sufficed to satisfy
+him, for he sprang to his feet again, and put his glass in his pocket.
+
+"We have at least an hour before us," he remarked, "for they can hardly
+take any steps until the good pawnbroker is safely in bed. Then they will
+not lose a minute, for the sooner they do their work the longer time they
+will have for their escape. We are at present, doctor--as no doubt you
+have divined--in the cellar of the City branch of one of the principal
+London banks. Mr. Merryweather is the chairman of directors, and he will
+explain to you that there are reasons why the more daring criminals of
+London should take a considerable interest in this cellar at present."
+
+"It is our French gold," whispered the director. "We have had several
+warnings that an attempt might be made upon it."
+
+"Your French gold?"
+
+"Yes. We had occasion some months ago to strengthen our resources, and
+borrowed, for that purpose, thirty thousand napoleons from the Bank of
+France. It has become known that we have never had occasion to unpack the
+money, and that it is still lying in our cellar. The crate upon which I
+sit contains two thousand napoleons packed between layers of lead foil.
+Our reserve of bullion is much larger at present than is usually kept in a
+single branch office, and the directors have had misgivings upon the
+subject."
+
+"Which were very well justified," observed Holmes.
+
+"And now it is time that we arranged our little plans. I expect that
+within an hour matters will come to a head. In the meantime, Mr.
+Merryweather, we must put the screen over that dark lantern."
+
+"And sit in the dark?"
+
+"I am afraid so. I had brought a pack of cards in my pocket, and I thought
+that, as we were a _partie carree_, you might have your rubber after all.
+But I see that the enemy's preparations have gone so far that we cannot
+risk the presence of a light. And, first of all, we must choose our
+positions. These are daring men, and, though we shall take them at a
+disadvantage, they may do us some harm, unless we are careful. I shall
+stand behind this crate, and do you conceal yourself behind those. Then,
+when I flash a light upon them, close in swiftly. If they fire, Watson,
+have no compunction about shooting them down."
+
+I placed my revolver, cocked, upon the top of the wooden case behind which
+I crouched. Holmes shot the slide across the front of his lantern, and
+left us in pitch darkness--such an absolute darkness as I have never
+before experienced. The smell of hot metal remained to assure us that the
+light was still there, ready to flash out at a moment's notice. To me,
+with my nerves worked up to a pitch of expectancy, there was something
+depressing and subduing in the sudden gloom, and in the cold, dank air of
+the vault.
+
+"They have but one retreat," whispered Holmes. "That is back through the
+house into Saxe-Coburg Square. I hope that you have done what I asked you,
+Jones?"
+
+"I have an inspector and two officers waiting at the front door."
+
+"Then we have stopped all the holes. And now we must be silent and wait."
+
+What a time it seemed! From comparing notes afterwards, it was but an hour
+and a quarter, yet it appeared to me that the night must have almost gone,
+and the dawn be breaking above us. My limbs were weary and stiff, for I
+feared to change my position, yet my nerves were worked up to the highest
+pitch of tension, and my hearing was so acute that I could not only hear
+the gentle breathing of my companions, but I could distinguish the deeper,
+heavier inbreath of the bulky Jones from the thin, sighing note of the
+bank director. From my position I could look over the case in the
+direction of the floor. Suddenly my eyes caught the glint of a light.
+
+At first it was but a lurid spark upon the stone pavement. Then it
+lengthened out until it became a yellow line, and then, without any
+warning or sound, a gash seemed to open and a hand appeared, a white,
+almost womanly hand, which felt about in the center of the little area of
+light. For a minute or more the hand, with its writhing fingers,
+protruded out of the floor. Then it was withdrawn as suddenly as it
+appeared, and all was dark again save the single lurid spark, which marked
+a chink between the stones.
+
+Its disappearance, however, was but momentary. With a rending, tearing
+sound, one of the broad white stones turned over upon its side, and left a
+square, gaping hole, through which streamed the light of a lantern. Over
+the edge there peeped a clean-cut, boyish face, which looked keenly about
+it, and then, with a hand on either side of the aperture, drew itself
+shoulder-high and waist-high, until one knee rested upon the edge. In
+another instant he stood at the side of the hole, and was hauling after
+him a companion, lithe and small like himself, with a pale face and a
+shock of very red hair.
+
+"It's all clear," he whispered. "Have you the chisel and the bags? Great
+Scott! Jump, Archie, jump, and I'll swing for it!"
+
+Sherlock Holmes had sprung out and seized the intruder by the collar. The
+other dived down the hole, and I heard the sound of rending cloth as Jones
+clutched at his skirts. The light flashed upon the barrel of a revolver,
+but Holmes's hunting crop came down on the man's wrist, and the pistol
+clinked upon the stone floor.
+
+"It's no use, John Clay," said Holmes blandly, "you have no chance at
+all."
+
+"So I see," the other answered, with the utmost coolness. "I fancy that my
+pal is all right, though I see you have got his coat-tails."
+
+"There are three men waiting for him at the door," said Holmes.
+
+"Oh, indeed. You seem to have done the thing very completely. I must
+compliment you."
+
+"And I you," Holmes answered. "Your red-headed idea was very new and
+effective."
+
+"You'll see your pal again presently," said Jones. "He's quicker at
+climbing down holes than I am. Just hold out while I fix the derbies."
+
+"I beg that you will not touch me with your filthy hands," remarked our
+prisoner, as the handcuffs clattered upon his wrists. "You may not be
+aware that I have royal blood in my veins. Have the goodness also, when
+you address me, always to say 'sir' and 'please.'"
+
+"All right," said Jones, with a stare and a snigger. "Well, would you
+please, sir, march upstairs where we can get a cab to carry your highness
+to the police station?"
+
+"That is better," said John Clay serenely. He made a sweeping bow to the
+three of us, and walked quietly off in the custody of the detective.
+
+"Really, Mr. Holmes," said Mr. Merryweather, as we followed them from the
+cellar, "I do not know how the bank can thank you or repay you. There is
+no doubt that you have detected and defeated in the most complete manner
+one of the most determined attempts at bank robbery, that have ever come
+within my experience."
+
+"I have had one or two little scores of my own to settle with Mr. John
+Clay," said Holmes. "I have been at some small expense over this matter,
+which I shall expect the bank to refund, but beyond that I am amply repaid
+by having had an experience which is in many ways unique, and by hearing
+the very remarkable narrative of the Red-headed League."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"You see, Watson," he explained, in the early hours of the morning, as we
+sat over a glass of whisky and soda in Baker Street, "it was perfectly
+obvious from the first that the only possible object of this rather
+fantastic business of the advertisement of the League, and the copying of
+the 'Encyclopaedia,' must be to get this not over-bright pawnbroker out of
+the way for a number of hours every day. It was a curious way of managing
+it, but really it would be difficult to suggest a better. The method was
+no doubt suggested to Clay's ingenious mind by the color of his
+accomplice's hair. The four pounds a week was a lure which must draw him,
+and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands? They put in the
+advertisement, one rogue has the temporary office, the other rogue incites
+the man to apply for it, and together they manage to secure his absence
+every morning in the week. From the time that I heard of the assistant
+having come for half wages, it was obvious to me that he had some strong
+motive for securing the situation."
+
+"But how could you guess what the motive was?"
+
+"Had there been women in the house, I should have suspected a mere vulgar
+intrigue. That, however, was out of the question. The man's business was a
+small one, and there was nothing in his house which could account for such
+elaborate preparations, and such an expenditure as they were at. It must
+then be something out of the house. What could it be? I thought of the
+assistant's fondness for photography, and his trick of vanishing into the
+cellar. The cellar! There was the end of this tangled clew. Then I made
+inquiries as to this mysterious assistant, and found that I had to deal
+with one of the coolest and most daring criminals in London. He was doing
+something in the cellar--something which took many hours a day for months
+on end. What could it be, once more? I could think of nothing save that he
+was running a tunnel to some other building.
+
+"So far I had got when we went to visit the scene of action. I surprised
+you by beating upon the pavement with my stick. I was ascertaining whether
+the cellar stretched out in front or behind. It was not in front. Then I
+rang the bell, and, as I hoped, the assistant answered it. We have had
+some skirmishes, but we had never set eyes upon each other before. I
+hardly looked at his face. His knees were what I wished to see. You must
+yourself have remarked how worn, wrinkled, and stained they were. They
+spoke of those hours of burrowing. The only remaining point was what they
+were burrowing for. I walked round the corner, saw that the City and
+Suburban Bank abutted on our friend's premises, and felt that I had solved
+my problem. When you drove home after the concert I called upon Scotland
+Yard, and upon the chairman of the bank directors, with the result that
+you have seen."
+
+"And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to-night?" I
+asked.
+
+"Well, when they closed their League offices that was a sign that they
+cared no longer about Mr. Jabez Wilson's presence; in other words, that
+they had completed their tunnel. But it was essential that they should use
+it soon, as it might be discovered, or the bullion might be removed.
+Saturday would suit them better than any other day, as it would give them
+two days for their escape. For all these reasons I expected them to come
+to-night."
+
+"You reasoned it out beautifully," I exclaimed, in unfeigned admiration.
+"It is so long a chain, and yet every link rings true."
+
+"It saved me from ennui," he answered, yawning. "Alas! I already feel it
+closing in upon me. My life is spent in one long effort to escape from the
+commonplaces of existence. These little problems help me to do so."
+
+"And you are a benefactor of the race," said I. He shrugged his shoulders.
+"Well, perhaps, after all, it is of some little use," he remarked.
+"'L'homme c'est rien--l'oeuvre c'est tout,' as Gustave Flaubert wrote to
+Georges Sands."
+
+
+
+
+Egerton Castle
+
+
+
+
+_The Baron's Quarry_
+
+
+"Oh, no, I assure you, you are not boring Mr. Marshfield," said this
+personage himself in his gentle voice--that curious voice that could flow
+on for hours, promulgating profound and startling theories on every
+department of human knowledge or conducting paradoxical arguments without
+a single inflection or pause of hesitation. "I am, on the contrary, much
+interested in your hunting talk. To paraphrase a well-worn quotation
+somewhat widely, _nihil humanum a me alienum est_. Even hunting stories
+may have their point of biological interest; the philologist sometimes
+pricks his ear to the jargon of the chase; moreover, I am not incapable of
+appreciating the subject matter itself. This seems to excite some
+derision. I admit I am not much of a sportsman to look at, nor, indeed, by
+instinct, yet I have had some out-of-the-way experiences in that
+line--generally when intent on other pursuits. I doubt, for instance, if
+even you, Major Travers, notwithstanding your well-known exploits against
+man and beast, notwithstanding that doubtful smile of yours, could match
+the strangeness of a certain hunting adventure in which I played an
+important part."
+
+The speaker's small, deep-set, black eyes, that never warmed to anything
+more human than a purely speculative scientific interest in his
+surroundings, here wandered round the skeptical yet expectant circle with
+bland amusement. He stretched out his bloodless fingers for another of his
+host's superfine cigars and proceeded, with only such interruptions as
+were occasioned by the lighting and careful smoking of the latter.
+
+"I was returning home after my prolonged stay in Petersburg, intending to
+linger on my way and test with mine own ears certain among the many
+dialects of Eastern Europe--anent which there is a symmetrical little
+cluster of philological knotty points it is my modest intention one day to
+unravel. However, that is neither here nor there. On the road to Hungary I
+bethought myself opportunely of proving the once pressingly offered
+hospitality of the Baron Kossowski.
+
+"You may have met the man, Major Travers; he was a tremendous sportsman,
+if you like. I first came across him at McNeil's place in remote Ireland.
+Now, being in Bukowina, within measurable distance of his Carpathian
+abode, and curious to see a Polish lord at home, I remembered his
+invitation. It was already of long standing, but it had been warm, born in
+fact of a sudden fit of enthusiasm for me"--here a half-mocking smile
+quivered an instant under the speaker's black mustache--"which, as it was
+characteristic, I may as well tell you about.
+
+"It was on the day of, or, rather, to be accurate, on the day after my
+arrival, toward the small hours of the morning, in the smoking room at
+Rathdrum. Our host was peacefully snoring over his empty pipe and his
+seventh glass of whisky, also empty. The rest of the men had slunk off to
+bed. The baron, who all unknown to himself had been a subject of most
+interesting observation to me the whole evening, being now practically
+alone with me, condescended to turn an eye, as wide awake as a fox's,
+albeit slightly bloodshot, upon the contemptible white-faced person who
+had preferred spending the raw hours over his papers, within the radius of
+a glorious fire's warmth, to creeping slyly over treacherous quagmires in
+the pursuit of timid bog creatures (snipe shooting had been the order of
+the day)-the baron, I say, became aware of my existence and entered into
+conversation with me.
+
+"He would no doubt have been much surprised could he have known that he
+was already mapped out, craniologically and physiognomically, catalogued
+with care and neatly laid by in his proper ethnological box, in my private
+type museum; that, as I sat and examined him from my different coigns of
+vantage in library, in dining and smoking room that evening, not a look of
+his, not a gesture went forth but had significance for me.
+
+"You, I had thought, with your broad shoulders and deep chest; your
+massive head that should have gone with a tall stature, not with those
+short sturdy limbs; with your thick red hair, that should have been black
+for that matter, as should your wide-set yellow eyes--you would be a real
+puzzle to one who did not recognize in you equal mixtures of the fair,
+stalwart and muscular Slav with the bilious-sanguine, thick-set, wiry
+Turanian. Your pedigree would no doubt bear me out: there is as much of
+the Magyar as of the Pole in your anatomy. Athlete, and yet a tangle of
+nerves; a ferocious brute at bottom, I dare say, for your broad forehead
+inclines to flatness; under your bristling beard your jaw must protrude,
+and the base of your skull is ominously thick. And, with all that, capable
+of ideal transports: when that girl played and sang to-night I saw the
+swelling of your eyelid veins, and how that small, tenacious, claw-like
+hand of yours twitched! You would be a fine leader of men--but God help
+the wretches in your power!
+
+"So had I mused upon him. Yet I confess that when we came in closer
+contact with each other, even I was not proof against the singular
+courtesy of his manner and his unaccountable personal charm.
+
+"Our conversation soon grew interesting; to me as a matter of course, and
+evidently to him also. A few general words led to interchange of remarks
+upon the country we were both visitors in and so to national
+characteristics--Pole and Irishman have not a few in common, both in their
+nature and history. An observation which he made, not without a certain
+flash in his light eyes and a transient uncovering of the teeth, on the
+Irish type of female beauty suddenly suggested to me a stanza of an
+ancient Polish ballad, very full of milk-and-blood imagery, of alternating
+ferocity and voluptuousness. This I quoted to the astounded foreigner in
+the vernacular, and this it was that metamorphosed his mere perfection of
+civility into sudden warmth, and, in fact, procured me the invitation in
+question.
+
+"When I left Rathdrum the baron's last words to me were that if I ever
+thought of visiting his country otherwise than in books, he held me bound
+to make Yany, his Galician seat, my headquarters of study.
+
+"From Czernowicz, therefore, where I stopped some time, I wrote, received
+in due time a few lines of prettily worded reply, and ultimately entered
+my sled in the nearest town to, yet at a most forbidding distance from,
+Yany, and started on my journey thither.
+
+"The undertaking meant many long hours of undulation and skidding over the
+November snow, to the somniferous bell jangle of my dirty little horses,
+the only impression of interest being a weird gypsy concert I came in for
+at a miserable drinking-booth half buried in the snow where we halted for
+the refreshment of man and beast. Here, I remember, I discovered a very
+definite connection between the characteristic run of the tsimbol, the
+peculiar bite of the Zigeuner's bow on his fiddle-string, and some
+distinctive points of Turanian tongues. In other countries, in Spain, for
+instance, your gypsy speaks differently on his instrument. But, oddly
+enough, when I later attempted to put this observation on paper I could
+find no word to express it."
+
+A few of our company evinced signs of sleepiness, but most of us who knew
+Marshfield, and that he could, unless he had something novel to say, be as
+silent and retiring as he now evinced signs of being copious, awaited
+further developments with patience. He has his own deliberate way of
+speaking, which he evidently enjoys greatly, though it be occasionally
+trying to his listeners.
+
+"On the afternoon of my second day's drive, the snow, which till then had
+fallen fine and continuous, ceased, and my Jehu, suddenly interrupting
+himself in the midst of some exciting wolf story quite in keeping with the
+time of year and the wild surroundings, pointed to a distant spot against
+the gray sky to the northwest, between two wood-covered folds of
+ground--the first eastern spurs of the great Carpathian chain.
+
+"'There stands Yany,' said he. I looked at my far-off goal with interest.
+As we drew nearer, the sinking sun, just dipping behind the hills, tinged
+the now distinct frontage with a cold copper-like gleam, but it was only
+for a minute; the next the building became nothing more to the eye than a
+black irregular silhouette against the crimson sky.
+
+"Before we entered the long, steep avenue of poplars, the early winter
+darkness was upon us, rendered all the more depressing by gray mists which
+gave a ghostly aspect to such objects as the sheen of the snow rendered
+visible. Once or twice there were feeble flashes of light looming in
+iridescent halos as we passed little clusters of hovels, but for which I
+should have been induced to fancy that the great Hof stood alone in the
+wilderness, such was the deathly stillness around. But even as the tall,
+square building rose before us above the vapor, yellow lighted in various
+stories, and mighty in height and breadth, there broke upon my ear a
+deep-mouthed, menacing bay, which gave at once almost alarming reality to
+the eerie surroundings. 'His lordship's boar and wolf hounds,' quoth my
+charioteer calmly, unmindful of the regular pandemonium, of howls and
+barks which ensued as he skillfully turned his horses through the gateway
+and flogged the tired beasts into a sort of shambling canter that we might
+land with glory before the house door: a weakness common, I believe, to
+drivers of all nations.
+
+"I alighted in the court of honor, and while awaiting an answer to my tug
+at the bell, stood, broken with fatigue, depressed, chilled and aching,
+questioning the wisdom of my proceedings and the amount of comfort,
+physical and moral, that was likely to await me in a _tete-a-tete_ visit
+with a well-mannered savage in his own home.
+
+"The unkempt tribe of stable retainers who began to gather round me and my
+rough vehicle in the gloom, with their evil-smelling sheepskins and their
+resigned, battered visages, were not calculated to reassure me. Yet when
+the door opened, there stood a smart chasseur and a solemn major-domo who
+might but just have stepped out of Mayfair; and there was displayed a
+spreading vista of warm, deep-colored halls, with here a statue and there
+a stuffed bear, and under foot pile carpets strewn with rarest skins.
+
+"Marveling, yet comforted withal, I followed the solemn butler, who
+received me with the deference due to an expected guest and expressed the
+master's regret for his enforced absence till dinner time. I traversed
+vast rooms, each more sumptuous than the last, feeling the strangeness of
+the contrast between the outer desolation and this sybaritic excess of
+luxury growing ever more strongly upon me; caught a glimpse of a picture
+gallery, where peculiar yet admirably executed latter-day French pictures
+hung side by side with ferocious boar hunts of Snyder and such kin; and,
+at length, was ushered into a most cheerful room, modern to excess in its
+comfortable promise, where, in addition to the tall stove necessary for
+warmth, there burned on an open hearth a vastly pleasant fire of resinous
+logs, and where, on a low table, awaited me a dainty service of fragrant
+Russian tea.
+
+"My impression of utter novelty seemed somehow enhanced by this unexpected
+refinement in the heart of the solitudes and in such a rugged shell, and
+yet, when I came to reflect, it was only characteristic of my cosmopolitan
+host. But another surprise was in store for me.
+
+"When I had recovered bodily warmth and mental equilibrium in my downy
+armchair, before the roaring logs, and during the delicious absorption of
+my second glass of tea, I turned my attention to the French valet,
+evidently the baron's own man, who was deftly unpacking my portmanteau,
+and who, unless my practiced eye deceived me, asked for nothing better
+than to entertain me with agreeable conversation the while.
+
+"'Your master is out, then?' quoth I, knowing that the most trivial remark
+would suffice to start him.
+
+"True, Monseigneur was out; he was desolated in despair (this with the
+national amiable and imaginative instinct); 'but it was doubtless
+important business. M. le Baron had the visit of his factor during the
+midday meal; had left the table hurriedly, and had not been seen since.
+Madame la Baronne had been a little suffering, but she would receive
+monsieur!'
+
+"'Madame!' exclaimed I, astounded, 'is your master then married?--since
+when?'--visions of a fair Tartar, fit mate for my baron, immediately
+springing somewhat alluringly before my mental vision. But the answer
+dispelled the picturesque fancy.
+
+"'Oh, yes,' said the man, with a somewhat peculiar expression. 'Yes,
+Monseigneur is married. Did Monsieur not know? And yet it was from England
+that Monseigneur brought back his wife.'
+
+"'An Englishwoman!'
+
+"My first thought was one of pity; an Englishwoman alone in this
+wilderness--two days' drive from even a railway station--and at the mercy
+of Kossowski! But the next minute I reversed my judgment. Probably she
+adored her rufous lord, took his veneer of courtesy--a veneer of the most
+exquisite polish, I grant you, but perilously thin--for the very
+perfection of chivalry. Or perchance it was his inner savageness itself
+that charmed her; the most refined women often amaze one by the
+fascination which the preponderance of the brute in the opposite sex seems
+to have for them.
+
+"I was anxious to hear more.
+
+"'Is it not dull for the lady here at this time of the year?'
+
+"The valet raised his shoulders with a gesture of despair that was almost
+passionate.
+
+"Dull! Ah, monsieur could not conceive to himself the dullness of it. That
+poor Madame la Baronne! not even a little child to keep her company on the
+long, long days when there was nothing but snow in the heaven and on the
+earth and the howling of the wind and the dogs to cheer her. At the
+beginning, indeed, it had been different; when the master first brought
+home his bride the house was gay enough. It was all redecorated and
+refurnished to receive her (monsieur should have seen it before, a mere
+_rendezvous-de-chasse_--for the matter of that so were all the country
+houses in these parts). Ah, that was the good time! There were visits
+month after month; parties, sleighing, dancing, trips to St. Petersburg
+and Vienna. But this year it seemed they were to have nothing but boars
+and wolves. How madame could stand it--well, it was not for him to
+speak--and heaving a deep sigh he delicately inserted my white tie round
+my collar, and with a flourish twisted it into an irreproachable bow
+beneath my chin. I did not think it right to cross-examine the willing
+talker any further, especially as, despite his last asseveration, there
+were evidently volumes he still wished to pour forth; but I confess that,
+as I made my way slowly out of my room along the noiseless length of
+passage, I was conscious of an unwonted, not to say vulgar, curiosity
+concerning the woman who had captivated such a man as the Baron Kossowski.
+
+"In a fit of speculative abstraction I must have taken the wrong turning,
+for I presently found myself in a long, narrow passage. I did not
+remember. I was retracing my steps when there came the sound of rapid
+footfalls upon stone flags; a little door flew open in the wall close to
+me, and a small, thick-set man, huddled in the rough sheepskin of the
+Galician peasant, with a mangy fur cap on his head, nearly ran headlong
+into my arms. I was about condescendingly to interpellate him in my best
+Polish, when I caught the gleam of an angry yellow eye and noted the
+bristle of a red beard--Kossowski!
+
+"Amazed, I fell back a step in silence. With a growl like an uncouth
+animal disturbed, he drew his filthy cap over his brow with a savage
+gesture and pursued his way down the corridor at a sort of wild-boar trot.
+
+"This first meeting between host and guest was so odd, so incongruous,
+that it afforded me plenty of food for a fresh line of conjecture as I
+traced my way back to the picture gallery, and from thence successfully to
+the drawing room, which, as the door was ajar, I could not this time
+mistake.
+
+"It was large and lofty and dimly lit by shaded lamps; through the rosy
+gloom I could at first only just make out a slender figure by the hearth;
+but as I advanced, this was resolved into a singularly graceful woman in
+clinging, fur-trimmed velvet gown, who, with one hand resting on the high
+mantelpiece, the other hanging listlessly by her side, stood gazing down
+at the crumbling wood fire as if in a dream.
+
+"My friends are kind enough to say that I have a cat-like tread; I know
+not how that may be; at any rate the carpet I was walking upon was thick
+enough to smother a heavier footfall: not until I was quite close to her
+did my hostess become aware of my presence. Then she started violently and
+looked over her shoulder at me with dilating eyes. Evidently a nervous
+creature, I saw the pulse in her throat, strained by her attitude, flutter
+like a terrified bird.
+
+"The next instant she had stretched out her hand with sweet English words
+of welcome, and the face, which I had been comparing in my mind to that of
+Guido's Cenci, became transformed by the arch and exquisite smile of a
+Greuse. For more than two years I had had no intercourse with any of my
+nationality. I could conceive the sound of his native tongue under such
+circumstances moving a man in a curious unexpected fashion.
+
+"I babbled some commonplace reply, after which there was silence while we
+stood opposite each other, she looking at me expectantly. At length, with
+a sigh checked by a smile and an overtone of sadness in a voice that yet
+tried to be sprightly:
+
+"'Am I then so changed, Mr. Marshfield?' she asked. And all at once I knew
+her: the girl whose nightingale throat had redeemed the desolation of the
+evenings at Rathdrum, whose sunny beauty had seemed (even to my
+celebrated cold-blooded aestheticism) worthy to haunt a man's dreams. Yes,
+there was the subtle curve of the waist, the warm line of throat, the
+dainty foot, the slender tip-tilted fingers--witty fingers, as I had
+classified them--which I now shook like a true Briton, instead of availing
+myself of the privilege the country gave me, and kissing her slender
+wrist.
+
+"But she was changed; and I told her so with unconventional frankness,
+studying her closely as I spoke.
+
+"'I am afraid,' I said gravely, 'that this place does not agree with you.'
+
+"She shrank from my scrutiny with a nervous movement and flushed to the
+roots of her red-brown hair. Then she answered coldly that I was wrong,
+that she was in excellent health, but that she could not expect any more
+than other people to preserve perennial youth (I rapidly calculated she
+might be two-and-twenty), though, indeed, with a little forced laugh, it
+was scarcely flattering to hear one had altered out of all recognition.
+Then, without allowing me time to reply, she plunged into a general topic
+of conversation which, as I should have been obtuse indeed not to take the
+hint, I did my best to keep up.
+
+"But while she talked of Vienna and Warsaw, of her distant neighbors, and
+last year's visitors, it was evident that her mind was elsewhere; her eye
+wandered, she lost the thread of her discourse, answered me at random, and
+smiled her piteous smile incongruously.
+
+"However lonely she might be in her solitary splendor, the company of a
+countryman was evidently no such welcome diversion.
+
+"After a little while she seemed to feel herself that she was lacking in
+cordiality, and, bringing her absent gaze to bear upon me with a puzzled
+strained look: 'I fear you will find it very dull,' she said, 'my husband
+is so wrapped up this winter in his country life and his sport. You are
+the first visitor we have had. There is nothing but guns and horses here,
+and you do not care for these things.'
+
+"The door creaked behind us; and the baron entered, in faultless evening
+dress. Before she turned toward him I was sharp enough to catch again the
+upleaping of a quick dread in her eyes, not even so much dread perhaps, I
+thought afterwards, as horror--the horror we notice in some animals at the
+nearing of a beast of prey. It was gone in a second, and she was smiling.
+But it was a revelation.
+
+"Perhaps he beat her in Russian fashion, and she, as an Englishwoman, was
+narrow-minded enough to resent this; or perhaps, merely, I had the
+misfortune to arrive during a matrimonial misunderstanding.
+
+"The baron would not give me leisure to reflect; he was so very effusive
+in his greeting--not a hint of our previous meeting--unlike my hostess,
+all in all to me; eager to listen, to reply; almost affectionate, full of
+references to old times and genial allusions. No doubt when he chose he
+could be the most charming of men; there were moments when, looking at him
+in his quiet smile and restrained gesture, the almost exaggerated
+politeness of his manner to his wife, whose fingers he had kissed with
+pretty, old-fashioned gallantry upon his entrance, I asked myself, Could
+that encounter in the passage have been a dream? Could that savage in the
+sheepskin be my courteous entertainer?
+
+"Just as I came in, did I hear my wife say there was nothing for you to do
+in this place?" he said presently to me. Then, turning to her:
+
+"You do not seem to know Mr. Marshfield. Wherever he can open his eyes
+there is for him something to see which might not interest other men. He
+will find things in my library which I have no notion of. He will discover
+objects for scientific observation in all the members of my household, not
+only in the good-looking maids--though he could, I have no doubt, tell
+their points as I could those of a horse. We have maidens here of several
+distinct races, Marshfield. We have also witches, and Jew leeches, and
+holy daft people. In any case, Yany, with all its dependencies, material,
+male and female, are at your disposal, for what you can make out of them.
+
+"'It is good," he went on gayly, 'that you should happen to have this
+happy disposition, for I fear that, no later than to-morrow, I may have to
+absent myself from home. I have heard that there are news of wolves--they
+threaten to be a greater pest than usual this winter, but I am going to
+drive them on quite a new plan, and it will go hard with me if I don't
+come even with them. Well for you, by the way, Marshfield, that you did
+not pass within their scent to-day.' Then, musingly: 'I should not give
+much for the life of a traveler who happened to wander in these parts just
+now.' Here he interrupted himself hastily and went over to his wife, who
+had sunk back on her chair, livid, seemingly on the point of swooning.
+
+"His gaze was devouring; so might a man look at the woman he adored, in
+his anxiety.
+
+"'What! faint, Violet, alarmed!' His voice was subdued, yet there was an
+unmistakable thrill of emotion in it.
+
+"'Pshaw!' thought I to myself, 'the man is a model husband.'
+
+"She clinched her hands, and by sheer force of will seemed to pull herself
+together. These nervous women have often an unexpected fund of strength.
+
+"'Come, that is well,' said the baron with a flickering smile; 'Mr.
+Marshfield will think you but badly acclimatized to Poland if a little
+wolf scare can upset you. My dear wife is so soft-hearted,' he went on to
+me, 'that she is capable of making herself quite ill over the sad fate
+that might have, but has not, overcome you. Or, perhaps,' he added, in a
+still gentler voice, 'her fear is that I may expose myself to danger for
+the public weal.'
+
+"She turned her head away, but I saw her set her teeth as if to choke a
+sob. The baron chuckled in his throat and seemed to luxuriate in the
+pleasant thought.
+
+"At this moment folding doors were thrown open, and supper was announced.
+I offered my arm, she rose and took it in silence. This silence she
+maintained during the first part of the meal, despite her husband's
+brilliant conversation and almost uproarious spirits. But by and by a
+bright color mounted to her cheeks and luster to her eyes. I suppose you
+will think me horribly unpoetical if I add that she drank several glasses
+of champagne one after the other, a fact which perhaps may account for the
+change.
+
+"At any rate she spoke and laughed and looked lovely, and I did not wonder
+that the baron could hardly keep his eyes off her. But whether it was her
+wifely anxiety or not--it was evident her mind was not at ease through it
+all, and I fancied that her brightness was feverish, her merriment
+slightly hysterical.
+
+"After supper--an exquisite one it was--we adjourned together, in foreign
+fashion, to the drawing-room; the baron threw himself into a chair and,
+somewhat with the air of a pasha, demanded music. He was flushed; the
+veins of his forehead were swollen and stood out like cords; the wine
+drunk at table was potent: even through my phlegmatic frame it ran hotly.
+
+"She hesitated a moment or two, then docilely sat down to the piano. That
+she could sing I have already made clear: how she could sing, with what
+pathos, passion, as well as perfect art, I had never realized before.
+
+"When the song was ended she remained for a while, with eyes lost in
+distance, very still, save for her quick breathing. It was clear she was
+moved by the music; indeed she must have thrown her whole soul into it.
+
+"At first we, the audience, paid her the rare compliment of silence. Then
+the baron broke forth into loud applause. 'Brava, brava! that was really
+said _con amore_. A delicious love song, delicious--but French! You must
+sing one of our Slav melodies for Marshfield before you allow us to go and
+smoke.'
+
+"She started from her reverie with a flush, and after a pause struck
+slowly a few simple chords, then began one of those strangely sweet, yet
+intensely pathetic Russian airs, which give one a curious revelation of
+the profound, endless melancholy lurking in the national mind.
+
+"'What do you think of it?' asked the baron of me when it ceased.
+
+"'What I have always thought of such music--it is that of a hopeless
+people; poetical, crushed, and resigned.'
+
+"He gave a loud laugh. 'Hear the analyst, the psychologue--why, man, it is
+a love song! Is it possible that we, uncivilized, are truer realists than
+our hypercultured Western neighbors? Have we gone to the root of the
+matter, in our simple way?'
+
+"The baroness got up abruptly. She looked white and spent; there were
+bister circles round her eyes.
+
+"'I am tired,' she said, with dry lips. 'You will excuse me, Mr.
+Marshfield, I must really go to bed.'
+
+"'Go to bed, go to bed,' cried her husband gayly. Then, quoting in Russian
+from the song she had just sung: 'Sleep, my little soft white dove: my
+little innocent tender lamb!' She hurried from the room. The baron laughed
+again, and, taking me familiarly by the arm, led me to his own set of
+apartments for the promised smoke. He ensconced me in an armchair, placed
+cigars of every description and a Turkish pipe ready to my hand, and a
+little table on which stood cut-glass flasks and beakers in tempting
+array.
+
+"After I had selected my cigar with some precautions, I glanced at him
+over a careless remark, and was startled to see a sudden alteration in his
+whole look and attitude.
+
+"'You will forgive me, Marshfield,' he said, as he caught my eye, speaking
+with spasmodic politeness. 'It is more than probable that I shall have to
+set out upon this chase I spoke of to-night, and I must now go and change
+my clothes, that I may be ready to start at any moment. This is the hour
+when it is most likely these hell beasts are to be got at. You have all
+you want, I hope,' interrupting an outbreak of ferocity by an effort after
+his former courtesy.
+
+"It was curious to watch the man of the world struggling with the
+primitive man.
+
+"'But, baron,' said I, 'I do not at all see the fun of sticking at home
+like this. You know my passion for witnessing everything new, strange, and
+outlandish. You will surely not refuse me such an opportunity for
+observation as a midnight wolf raid. I will do my best not to be in the
+way if you will take me with you.'
+
+"At first it seemed as if he had some difficulty in realizing the drift of
+my words, he was so engrossed by some inner thought. But as I repeated
+them, he gave vent to a loud cachinnation.
+
+"'By heaven! I like your spirit,' he exclaimed, clapping me strongly on
+the shoulder. 'Of course you shall come. You shall,' he repeated, 'and I
+promise you a sight, a hunt such as you never heard or dreamed of--you
+will be able to tell them in England the sort of thing we can do here in
+that line--such wolves are rare quarry,' he added, looking slyly at me,
+'and I have a new plan for getting at them.'
+
+"There was a long pause, and then there rose in the stillness the
+unearthly howling of the baron's hounds, a cheerful sound which only their
+owner's somewhat loud converse of the evening had kept from becoming
+excessively obtrusive.
+
+"'Hark at them--the beauties!' cried he, showing his short, strong teeth,
+pointed like a dog's in a wide grin of anticipative delight. 'They have
+been kept on pretty short commons, poor things! They are hungry. By the
+way, Marshfield, you can sit tight to a horse, I trust? If you were to
+roll off, you know, these splendid fellows--they would chop you up in a
+second. They would chop you up,' he repeated unctuously, 'snap, crunch,
+gobble, and there would be an end of you!'
+
+"'If I could not ride a decent horse without being thrown,' I retorted, a
+little stung by his manner, 'after my recent three months' torture with
+the Guard Cossacks, I should indeed be a hopeless subject. Do not think of
+frightening me from the exploit, but say frankly if my company would be
+displeasing.'
+
+"'Tut!' he said, waving his hand impatiently, 'it is your affair. I have
+warned you. Go and get ready if you want to come. Time presses.'
+
+"I was determined to be of the fray; my blood was up. I have hinted that
+the baron's Tokay had stirred it.
+
+"I went to my room and hurriedly donned clothes more suitable for rough
+night work. My last care was to slip into my pockets a brace of
+double-barreled pistols which formed part of my traveling kit. When I
+returned I found the baron already booted and spurred; this without
+metaphor. He was stretched full length on the divan, and did not speak as
+I came in, or even look at me. Chewing an unlit cigar, with eyes fixed on
+the ceiling, he was evidently following some absorbing train of ideas.
+
+"The silence was profound; time went by; it grew oppressive; at length,
+wearied out, I fell, over my chibouque, into a doze filled with puzzling
+visions, out of which I was awakened with a start. My companion had sprung
+up, very lightly, to his feet. In his throat was an odd, half-suppressed
+cry, grewsome to hear. He stood on tiptoe, with eyes fixed, as though
+looking through the wall, and I distinctly saw his ears point in the
+intensity of his listening.
+
+"After a moment, with hasty, noiseless energy, and without the slightest
+ceremony, he blew the lamps out, drew back the heavy curtains and threw
+the tall window wide open. A rush of icy air, and the bright rays of the
+moon--gibbous, I remember, in her third quarter--filled the room. Outside
+the mist had condensed, and the view was unrestricted over the white
+plains at the foot of the hill.
+
+"The baron stood motionless in the open window, callous to the cold in
+which, after a minute, I could hardly keep my teeth from chattering, his
+head bent forward, still listening. I listened too, with 'all my ears,'
+but could not catch a sound; indeed the silence over the great expanse of
+snow might have been called awful; even the dogs were mute.
+
+"Presently, far, far away, came a faint tinkle of bells; so faint, at
+first, that I thought it was but fancy, then distincter. It was even more
+eerie than the silence, I thought, though I knew it could come but from
+some passing sleigh. All at once that ceased, and again my duller senses
+could perceive nothing, though I saw by my host's craning neck that he was
+more on the alert than ever. But at last I too heard once more, this time
+not bells, but as it were the tread of horses muffled by the snow,
+intermittent and dull, yet drawing nearer. And then in the inner silence
+of the great house it seemed to me I caught the noise of closing doors;
+but here the hounds, as if suddenly becoming alive to some disturbance,
+raised the same fearsome concert of yells and barks with which they had
+greeted my arrival, and listening became useless.
+
+"I had risen to my feet. My host, turning from the window, seized my
+shoulder with a fierce grip, and bade me 'hold my noise'; for a second or
+two I stood motionless under his iron talons, then he released me with an
+exultant whisper: "Now for our chase!" and made for the door with a
+spring. Hastily gulping down a mouthful of arrack from one of the bottles
+on the table, I followed him, and, guided by the sound of his footsteps
+before me, groped my way through passages as black as Erebus.
+
+"After a time, which seemed a long one, a small door was flung open in
+front, and I saw Kossowski glide into the moonlit courtyard and cross the
+square. When I too came out he was disappearing into the gaping darkness
+of the open stable door, and there I overtook him.
+
+"A man who seemed to have been sleeping in a corner jumped up at our
+entrance, and led out a horse ready saddled. In obedience to a gruff order
+from his master, as the latter mounted, he then brought forward another
+which he had evidently thought to ride himself and held the stirrup for
+me.
+
+"We came delicately forth, and the Cossack hurriedly barred the great door
+behind us. I caught a glimpse of his worn, scarred face by the moonlight,
+as he peeped after us for a second before shutting himself in; it was
+stricken with terror.
+
+"The baron trotted briskly toward the kennels, from whence there was now
+issuing a truly infernal clangor, and, as my steed followed suit of his
+own accord, I could see how he proceeded dexterously to unbolt the gates
+without dismounting, while the beasts within dashed themselves against
+them and tore the ground in their fury of impatience.
+
+"He smiled, as he swung back the barriers at last, and his 'beauties' came
+forth. Seven or eight monstrous brutes, hounds of a kind unknown to me:
+fulvous and sleek of coat, tall on their legs, square-headed, long-tailed,
+deep-chested; with terrible jaws slobbering in eagerness. They leaped
+around and up at us, much to our horses' distaste. Kossowski, still
+smiling, lashed at them unsparingly with his hunting whip, and they
+responded, not with yells of pain, but with snarls of fury.
+
+"Managing his restless steed and his cruel whip with consummate ease, my
+host drove the unruly crew before him out of the precincts, then halted
+and bent down from his saddle to examine some slight prints in the snow
+which led, not the way I had come, but toward what seemed another avenue.
+In a second or two the hounds were gathered round this spot, their great
+snake-like tails quivering, nose to earth, yelping with excitement. I had
+some ado to manage my horse, and my eyesight was far from being as keen as
+the baron's, but I had then no doubt he had come already upon wolf tracks,
+and I shuddered mentally, thinking of the sleigh bells.
+
+"Suddenly Kossowski raised himself from his strained position; under his
+low fur cap his face, with its fixed smile, looked scarcely human in the
+white light: and then we broke into a hand canter just as the hounds
+dashed, in a compact body, along the trail.
+
+"But we had not gone more than a few hundred yards before they began to
+falter, then straggled, stopped and ran back and about with dismal cries.
+It was clear to me they had lost the scent. My companion reined in his
+horse, and mine, luckily a well-trained brute, halted of himself.
+
+"We had reached a bend in a broad avenue of firs and larches, and just
+where we stood, and where the hounds ever returned and met nose to nose in
+frantic conclave, the snow was trampled and soiled, and a little farther
+on planed in a great sweep, as if by a turning sleigh. Beyond was a
+double-furrowed track of skaits and regular hoof prints leading far away.
+
+"Before I had time to reflect upon the bearing of this unexpected
+interruption, Kossowski, as if suddenly possessed by a devil, fell upon
+the hounds with his whip, flogging them upon the new track, uttering the
+while the most savage cries I have ever heard issue from human throat. The
+disappointed beasts were nothing loath to seize upon another trail; after
+a second of hesitation they had understood, and were off upon it at a
+tearing pace, we after them at the best speed of our horses.
+
+"Some unformed idea that we were going to escort, or rescue, benighted
+travelers flickered dimly in my mind as I galloped through the night air;
+but when I managed to approach my companion and called out to him for
+explanation, he only turned half round and grinned at me.
+
+"Before us lay now the white plain, scintillating under the high moon's
+rays. That light is deceptive; I could be sure of nothing upon the wide
+expanse but of the dark, leaping figures of the hounds already spread out
+in a straggling line, some right ahead, others just in front of us. In a
+short time also the icy wind, cutting my face mercilessly as we increased
+our pace, well nigh blinded me with tears of cold.
+
+"I can hardly realize how long this pursuit after an unseen prey lasted; I
+can only remember that I was getting rather faint with fatigue, and
+ignominiously held on to my pommel, when all of a sudden the black outline
+of a sleigh merged into sight in front of us.
+
+"I rubbed my smarting eyes with my benumbed hand; we were gaining upon it
+second by second; two of those hell hounds of the baron's were already
+within a few leaps of it.
+
+"Soon I was able to make out two figures, one standing up and urging the
+horses on with whip and voice, the other clinging to the back seat and
+looking toward us in an attitude of terror. A great fear crept into my
+half-frozen brain--were we not bringing deadly danger instead of help to
+these travelers? Great God! did the baron mean to use them as a bait for
+his new method of wolf hunting?
+
+"I would have turned upon Kossowski with a cry of expostulation or
+warning, but he, urging on his hounds as he galloped on their flank,
+howling and gesticulating like a veritable Hun, passed me by like a
+flash--and all at once I knew."
+
+Marshfield paused for a moment and sent his pale smile round upon his
+listeners, who now showed no signs of sleepiness; he knocked the ash from
+his cigar, twisted the latter round in his mouth, and added dryly:
+
+"And I confess it seemed to me a little strong even for a baron in the
+Carpathians. The travelers were our quarry. But the reason why the Lord of
+Yany had turned man-hunter I was yet to learn. Just then I had to direct
+my energies to frustrating his plans. I used my spurs mercilessly. While I
+drew up even with him I saw the two figures in the sleigh change places;
+he who had hitherto driven now faced back, while his companion took the
+reins, there was the pale blue sheen of a revolver barrel under the
+moonlight, followed by a yellow flash, and the nearest hound rolled over
+in the snow.
+
+"With an oath the baron twisted round in his saddle to call up and urge on
+the remainder. My horse had taken fright at the report and dashed
+irresistibly forward, bringing me at once almost level with the fugitives,
+and the next instant the revolver was turned menacingly toward me. There
+was no time to explain; my pistol was already drawn, and as another of the
+brutes bounded up, almost under my horse's feet, I loosed it upon him. I
+must have let off both barrels at once, for the weapon flew out of my
+hand, but the hound's back was broken. I presume the traveler understood;
+at any rate, he did not fire at me.
+
+"In moments of intense excitement like these, strangely enough, the mind
+is extraordinarily open to impressions. I shall never forget that man's
+countenance in the sledge, as he stood upright and defied us in his mortal
+danger; it was young, very handsome, the features not distorted, but set
+into a sort of desperate, stony calm, and I knew it, beyond all doubt, for
+that of an Englishman. And then I saw his companion--it was the baron's
+wife. And I understood why the bells had been removed.
+
+"It takes a long time to say this; it only required an instant to see it.
+The loud explosion of my pistol had hardly ceased to ring before the
+baron, with a fearful imprecation, was upon me. First he lashed at me with
+his whip as we tore along side by side, and then I saw him wind the reins
+round his off arm and bend over, and I felt his angry fingers close
+tightly on my right foot. The next instant I should have been lifted out
+of my saddle, but there came another shot from the sledge. The baron's
+horse plunged and stumbled, and the baron, hanging on to my foot with a
+fierce grip, was wrenched from his seat. His horse, however, was up again
+immediately, and I was released, and then I caught a confused glimpse of
+the frightened and wounded animal galloping wildly away to the right,
+leaving a black track of blood behind him in the snow, his master,
+entangled in the reins, running with incredible swiftness by his side and
+endeavoring to vault back into the saddle.
+
+"And now came to pass a terrible thing which, in his savage plans, my host
+had doubtless never anticipated.
+
+"One of the hounds that had during this short check recovered lost ground,
+coming across this hot trail of blood, turned away from his course, and
+with a joyous yell darted after the running man. In another instant the
+remainder of the pack was upon the new scent.
+
+"As soon as I could stop my horse, I tried to turn him in the direction
+the new chase had taken, but just then, through the night air, over the
+receding sound of the horse's scamper and the sobbing of the pack in full
+cry, there came a long scream, and after that a sickening silence. And I
+knew that somewhere yonder, under the beautiful moonlight, the Baron
+Kossowski was being devoured by his starving dogs.
+
+"I looked round, with the sweat on my face, vaguely, for some human being
+to share the horror of the moment, and I saw, gliding away, far away in
+the white distance, the black silhouette of the sledge."
+
+"Well?" said we, in divers tones of impatience, curiosity, or horror,
+according to our divers temperaments, as the speaker uncrossed his legs
+and gazed at us in mild triumph, with all the air of having said his say,
+and satisfactorily proved his point.
+
+"Well," repeated he, "what more do you want to know? It will interest you
+but slightly, I am sure, to hear how I found my way back to the Hof; or
+how I told as much as I deemed prudent of the evening's grewsome work to
+the baron's servants, who, by the way, to my amazement, displayed the
+profoundest and most unmistakable sorrow at the tidings, and sallied forth
+(at their head the Cossack who had seen us depart) to seek for his
+remains. Excuse the unpleasantness of the remark: I fear the dogs must
+have left very little of him, he had dieted them so carefully. However,
+since it was to have been a case of 'chop, crunch, and gobble,' as the
+baron had it, I preferred that that particular fate should have overtaken
+him rather than me--or, for that matter, either of those two country
+people of ours in the sledge.
+
+"Nor am I going to inflict upon you," continued Marshfield, after draining
+his glass, "a full account of my impressions when I found myself once more
+in that immense, deserted, and stricken house, so luxuriously prepared for
+the mistress who had fled from it; how I philosophized over all this,
+according to my wont; the conjectures I made as to the first acts of the
+drama; the untold sufferings my countrywoman must have endured from the
+moment her husband first grew jealous till she determined on this
+desperate step; as to how and when she had met her lover, how they
+communicated, and how the baron had discovered the intended flitting in
+time to concoct his characteristic revenge.
+
+"One thing you may be sure of, I had no mind to remain at Yany an hour
+longer than necessary. I even contrived to get well clear of the
+neighborhood before the lady's absence was discovered. Luckily for me--or
+I might have been taxed with connivance, though indeed the simple
+household did not seem to know what suspicion was, and accepted my account
+with childlike credence--very typical, and very convenient to me at the
+same time."
+
+"But how do you know," said one of us, "that the man was her lover? He
+might have been her brother or some other relative."
+
+"That," said Marshfield, with his little flat laugh, "I happen to have
+ascertained--and, curiously enough, only a few weeks ago. It was at the
+play, between the acts, from my comfortable seat (the first row in the
+pit). I was looking leisurely round the house when I caught sight of a
+woman, in a box close by, whose head was turned from me, and who presented
+the somewhat unusual spectacle of a young neck and shoulders of the most
+exquisite contour--and perfectly gray hair; and not dull gray, but rather
+of a pleasing tint like frosted silver. This aroused my curiosity. I
+brought my glasses to a focus on her and waited patiently till she turned
+round. Then I recognized the Baroness Kassowski, and I no longer wondered
+at the young hair being white.
+
+"Yet she looked placid and happy; strangely so, it seemed to me, under the
+sudden reviving in my memory of such scenes as I have now described. But
+presently I understood further: beside her, in close attendance, was the
+man of the sledge, a handsome fellow with much of a military air about
+him.
+
+"During the course of the evening, as I watched, I saw a friend of mine
+come into the box, and at the end I slipped out into the passage to catch
+him as he came out.
+
+"'Who is the woman with the white hair?' I asked. Then, in the fragmentary
+style approved of by ultra-fashionable young men--this earnest-languid
+mode of speech presents curious similarities in all languages--he told me:
+'Most charming couple in London--awfully pretty, wasn't she?--he had been
+in the Guards--attache at Vienna once--they adored each other. White hair,
+devilish queer, wasn't it? Suited her, somehow. And then she had been
+married to a Russian, or something, somewhere in the wilds, and their
+names were--' But do you know," said Marshfield, interrupting himself, "I
+think I had better let you find that out for yourselves, if you care."
+
+
+
+
+Stanley J. Weyman
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Fowl in the Pot_
+
+_An Episode Adapted from the Memoirs of Maximilian de Bethune, Duke of
+Sully_
+
+
+What I am going to relate may seem to some merely to be curious and on a
+party with the diverting story of M. Boisrose, which I have set down in an
+earlier part of my memoirs. But among the calumnies of those who have
+never ceased to attack me since the death of the late king, the statement
+that I kept from his majesty things which should have reached his ears has
+always had a prominent place, though a thousand times refuted by my
+friends, and those who from an intimate acquaintance with events could
+judge how faithfully I labored to deserve the confidence with which my
+master honored me. Therefore, I take it in hand to show by an example,
+trifling in itself, the full knowledge of affairs which the king had, and
+to prove that in many matters, which were never permitted to become known
+to the idlers of the court, he took a personal share, worthy as much of
+Haroun as of Alexander.
+
+It was my custom, before I entered upon those negotiations with the Prince
+of Conde which terminated in the recovery of the estate of Villebon, where
+I now principally reside, to spend a part of the autumn and winter at
+Rosny. On these occasions I was in the habit of leaving Paris with a
+considerable train of Swiss, pages, valets, and grooms, together with the
+maids of honor and waiting women of the duchess. We halted to take dinner
+at Poissy, and generally contrived to reach Rosny toward nightfall, so as
+to sup by the light of flambeaux in a manner enjoyable enough, though
+devoid of that state which I have ever maintained, and enjoined upon my
+children, as at once the privilege and burden of rank.
+
+At the time of which I am speaking I had for my favorite charger the
+sorrel horse which the Duke of Mercoeur presented to me with a view to my
+good offices at the time of the king's entry into Paris; and which I
+honestly transferred to his majesty in accordance with a principle laid
+down in another place. The king insisted on returning it to me, and for
+several years I rode it on these annual visits to Rosny. What was more
+remarkable was that on each of these occasions it cast a shoe about the
+middle of the afternoon, and always when we were within a short league of
+the village of Aubergenville. Though I never had with me less than half a
+score of led horses, I had such an affection for the sorrel that I
+preferred to wait until it was shod, rather than accommodate myself to a
+nag of less easy paces; and would allow my household to precede me,
+staying behind myself with at most a guard or two, my valet, and a page.
+
+The forge at Aubergenville was kept by a smith of some skill, a cheerful
+fellow, whom I always remembered to reward, considering my own position
+rather than his services, with a gold livre. His joy at receiving what was
+to him the income of a year was great, and never failed to reimburse me;
+in addition to which I took some pleasure in unbending, and learning from
+this simple peasant and loyal man, what the taxpayers were saying of me
+and my reforms--a duty I always felt I owed to the king my master.
+
+As a man of breeding it would ill become me to set down the homely truths
+I thus learned. The conversations of the vulgar are little suited to a
+nobleman's memoirs; but in this I distinguish between the Duke of Sully
+and the king's minister, and it is in the latter capacity that I relate
+what passed on these diverting occasions. "Ho, Simon," I would say,
+encouraging the poor man as he came bowing and trembling before me, "how
+goes it, my friend?"
+
+"Badly," he would answer, "very badly until your lordship came this way."
+
+"And how is that, little man?"
+
+"Oh, it is the roads," he always replied, shaking his bald head as he
+began to set about his business. "The roads since your lordship became
+surveyor-general are so good that not one horse in a hundred casts a shoe;
+and then there are so few highwaymen now that not one robber's plates do I
+replace in a twelvemonth. There is where it is."
+
+At this I was highly delighted.
+
+"Still, since I began to pass this way times have not been so bad with
+you, Simon," I would answer.
+
+Thereto he had one invariable reply.
+
+"No; thanks to Ste. Genevieve and your lordship, whom we call in this
+village the poor man's friend, I have a fowl in the pot."
+
+This phrase so pleased me that I repeated it to the king. It tickled his
+fancy also, and for some years it was a very common remark of that good
+and great ruler, that he hoped to live to see every peasant with a fowl in
+his pot.
+
+"But why," I remember I once asked this honest fellow--it was on the last
+occasion of the sorrel falling lame there--"do you thank Ste. Genevieve?"
+
+"She is my patron saint," he answered.
+
+"Then you are a Parisian?"
+
+"Your lordship is always right."
+
+"But does her saintship do you any good?" I asked curiously.
+
+"Certainly, by your lordship's leave. My wife prays to her and she loosens
+the nails in the sorrel's shoes."
+
+"In fact she pays off an old grudge," I answered, "for there was a time
+when Paris liked me little; but hark ye, master smith, I am not sure that
+this is not an act of treason to conspire with Madame Genevieve against
+the comfort of the king's minister. What think you, you rascal; can you
+pass the justice elm without a shiver?"
+
+This threw the simple fellow into a great fear, which the sight of the
+livre of gold speedily converted into joy as stupendous. Leaving him still
+staring at his fortune I rode away; but when we had gone some little
+distance, the aspect of his face, when I charged him with treason, or my
+own unassisted discrimination suggested a clew to the phenomenon.
+
+"La Trape," I said to my valet--the same who was with me at Cahors--"what
+is the name of the innkeeper at Poissy, at whose house we are accustomed
+to dine?"
+
+"Andrew, may it please your lordship."
+
+"Andrew! I thought so!" I exclaimed, smiting my thigh. "Simon and Andrew
+his brother! Answer, knave, and, if you have permitted me to be robbed
+these many times, tremble for your ears. Is he not brother to the smith at
+Aubergenville who has just shod my horse?"
+
+La Trape professed to be ignorant on this point, but a groom who had
+stayed behind with me, having sought my permission to speak, said it was
+so, adding that Master Andrew had risen in the world through large
+dealings in hay, which he was wont to take daily into Paris and sell, and
+that he did not now acknowledge or see anything of his brother the smith,
+though it was believed that he retained a sneaking liking for him.
+
+On receiving this confirmation of my suspicions, my vanity as well as my
+sense of justice led me to act with the promptitude which I have exhibited
+in greater emergencies. I rated La Trape for his carelessness of my
+interests in permitting this deception to be practiced on me; and the main
+body of my attendants being now in sight, I ordered him to take two Swiss
+and arrest both brothers without delay. It wanted yet three hours of
+sunset, and I judged that, by hard riding, they might reach Rosny with
+their prisoners before bedtime.
+
+I spent some time while still on the road in considering what punishment I
+should inflict on the culprits; and finally laid aside the purpose I had
+at first conceived of putting them to death--an infliction they had richly
+deserved--in favor of a plan which I thought might offer me some
+amusement. For the execution of this I depended upon Maignan, my equerry,
+who was a man of lively imagination, being the same who had of his own
+motion arranged and carried out the triumphal procession, in which I was
+borne to Rosny after the battle of Ivry. Before I sat down to supper I
+gave him his directions; and as I had expected, news was brought to me
+while I was at table that the prisoners had arrived.
+
+Thereupon I informed the duchess and the company generally, for, as was
+usual, a number of my country neighbors had come to compliment me on my
+return, that there was some sport of a rare kind on foot; and we
+adjourned, Maignan, followed by four pages bearing lights, leading the way
+to that end of the terrace which abuts on the linden avenue. Here, a score
+of grooms holding torches aloft had been arranged in a circle so that the
+impromptu theater thus formed, which Maignan had ordered with much taste,
+was as light as in the day. On a sloping bank at one end seats had been
+placed for those who had supped at my table, while the rest of the company
+found such places of vantage as they could; their number, indeed,
+amounting, with my household, to two hundred persons. In the center of the
+open space a small forge fire had been kindled, the red glow of which
+added much to the strangeness of the scene; and on the anvil beside it
+were ranged a number of horses' and donkeys' shoes, with a full complement
+of the tools used by smiths. All being ready I gave the word to bring in
+the prisoners, and escorted by La Trape and six of my guards, they were
+marched into the arena. In their pale and terrified faces, and the shaking
+limbs which could scarce support them to their appointed stations, I read
+both the consciousness of guilt and the apprehension of immediate death;
+it was plain that they expected nothing less. I was very willing to play
+with their fears, and for some time looked at them in silence, while all
+wondered with lively curiosity what would ensue. I then addressed them
+gravely, telling the innkeeper that I knew well he had loosened each year
+a shoe of my horse, in order that his brother might profit by the job of
+replacing it; and went on to reprove the smith for the ingratitude which
+had led him to return my bounty by the conception of so knavish a trick.
+
+Upon this they confessed their guilt, and flinging themselves upon their
+knees with many tears and prayers begged for mercy. This, after a decent
+interval, I permitted myself to grant. "Your lives, which are forfeited,
+shall be spared," I pronounced. "But punished you must be. I therefore
+ordain that Simon, the smith, at once fit, nail, and properly secure a
+pair of iron shoes to Andrew's heels, and that then Andrew, who by that
+time will have picked up something of the smith's art, do the same to
+Simon. So will you both learn to avoid such shoeing tricks for the
+future."
+
+It may well be imagined that a judgment so whimsical, and so justly
+adapted to the offense, charmed all save the culprits; and in a hundred
+ways the pleasure of those present was evinced, to such a degree, indeed,
+that Maignan had some difficulty in restoring silence and gravity to the
+assemblage. This done, however, Master Andrew was taken in hand and his
+wooden shoes removed. The tools of his trade were placed before the smith,
+who cast glances so piteous, first at his brother's feet and then at the
+shoes on the anvil, as again gave rise to a prodigious amount of
+merriment, my pages in particular well-nigh forgetting my presence, and
+rolling about in a manner unpardonable at another time. However, I rebuked
+them sharply, and was about to order the sentence to be carried into
+effect, when the remembrance of the many pleasant simplicities which the
+smith had uttered to me, acting upon a natural disposition to mercy, which
+the most calumnious of my enemies have never questioned, induced me to
+give the prisoners a chance of escape. "Listen," I said, "Simon and
+Andrew. Your sentence has been pronounced, and will certainly be executed
+unless you can avail yourself of the condition I now offer. You shall have
+three minutes; if in that time either of you can make a good joke, he
+shall go free. If not, let a man attend to the bellows, La Trape!"
+
+This added a fresh satisfaction to my neighbors, who were well assured now
+that I had not promised them a novel entertainment without good grounds;
+for the grimaces of the two knaves thus bidden to jest if they would save
+their skins, were so diverting they would have made a nun laugh. They
+looked at me with their eyes as wide as plates, and for the whole of the
+time of grace never a word could they utter save howls for mercy. "Simon,"
+I said gravely, when the time was up, "have you a joke? No. Andrew, my
+friend, have you a joke? No. Then--"
+
+I was going on to order the sentence to be carried out, when the innkeeper
+flung himself again upon his knees, and cried out loudly--as much to my
+astonishment as to the regret of the bystanders, who were bent on seeing
+so strange a shoeing feat--"One word, my lord; I can give you no joke, but
+I can do a service, an eminent service to the king. I can disclose a
+conspiracy!"
+
+I was somewhat taken aback by this sudden and public announcement. But I
+had been too long in the king's employment not to have remarked how
+strangely things are brought to light. On hearing the man's words
+therefore--which were followed by a stricken silence--I looked sharply at
+the faces of such of those present as it was possible to suspect, but
+failed to observe any sign of confusion or dismay, or anything more
+particular than so abrupt a statement was calculated to produce. Doubting
+much whether the man was not playing with me, I addressed him sternly,
+warning him to beware, lest in his anxiety to save his heels by falsely
+accusing others, he should lose his head. For that if his conspiracy
+should prove to be an invention of his own, I should certainly consider it
+my duty to hang him forthwith.
+
+He heard me out, but nevertheless persisted in his story, adding
+desperately, "It is a plot, my lord, to assassinate you and the king on
+the same day."
+
+This statement struck me a blow; for I had good reason to know that at
+that time the king had alienated many by his infatuation for Madame de
+Verneuil; while I had always to reckon firstly with all who hated him, and
+secondly with all whom my pursuit of his interests injured, either in
+reality or appearance. I therefore immediately directed that the prisoners
+should be led in close custody to the chamber adjoining my private closet,
+and taking the precaution to call my guards about me, since I knew not
+what attempt despair might not breed, I withdrew myself, making such
+apologies to the company as the nature of the case permitted.
+
+I ordered Simon the smith to be first brought to me, and in the presence
+of Maignan only, I severely examined him as to his knowledge of any
+conspiracy. He denied, however, that he had ever heard of the matters
+referred to by his brother, and persisted so firmly in the denial that I
+was inclined to believe him. In the end he was taken out and Andrew was
+brought in. The innkeeper's demeanor was such as I have often observed in
+intriguers brought suddenly to book. He averred the existence of the
+conspiracy, and that its objects were those which he had stated. He also
+offered to give up his associates, but conditioned that he should do this
+in his own way; undertaking to conduct me and one other person--but no
+more, lest the alarm should be given--to a place in Paris on the following
+night, where we could hear the plotters state their plans and designs. In
+this way only, he urged, could proof positive be obtained.
+
+I was much startled by this proposal, and inclined to think it a trap; but
+further consideration dispelled my fears. The innkeeper had held no parley
+with anyone save his guards and myself since his arrest, and could neither
+have warned his accomplices, nor acquainted them with any design the
+execution of which should depend on his confession to me. I therefore
+accepted his terms--with a private reservation that I should have help at
+hand--and before daybreak next morning left Rosny, which I had only seen
+by torchlight, with my prisoner and a select body of Swiss. We entered
+Paris in the afternoon in three parties, with as little parade as
+possible, and went straight to the Arsenal, whence, as soon as evening
+fell, I hurried with only two armed attendants to the Louvre.
+
+A return so sudden and unexpected was as great a surprise to the court as
+to the king, and I was not slow to mark with an inward smile the
+discomposure which appeared very clearly on the faces of several, as the
+crowd in the chamber fell back for me to approach my master. I was
+careful, however, to remember that this might arise from other causes than
+guilt. The king received me with his wonted affection; and divining at
+once that I must have something important to communicate, withdrew with me
+to the farther end of the chamber, where we were out of earshot of the
+court. I there related the story to his majesty, keeping back nothing.
+
+He shook his head, saying merely: "The fish to escape the frying pan,
+grand master, will jump into the fire. And human nature, save in the case
+of you and me, who can trust one another, is very fishy."
+
+I was touched by this gracious compliment, but not convinced. "You have
+not seen the man, sire," I said, "and I have had that advantage."
+
+"And believe him?"
+
+"In part," I answered with caution. "So far at least as to be assured that
+he thinks to save his skin, which he will only do if he be telling the
+truth. May I beg you, sire," I added hastily, seeing the direction of his
+glance, "not to look so fixedly at the Duke of Epernon? He grows uneasy."
+
+"Conscience makes--you know the rest."
+
+"Nay, sire, with submission," I replied, "I will answer for him; if he be
+not driven by fear to do something reckless."
+
+"Good! I take your warranty, Duke of Sully," the king said, with the easy
+grace which came so natural to him. "But now in this matter what would you
+have me do?"
+
+"Double your guards, sire, for to-night--that is all. I will answer for
+the Bastile and the Arsenal; and holding these we hold Paris."
+
+But thereupon I found that the king had come to a decision, which I felt
+it to be my duty to combat with all my influence. He had conceived the
+idea of being the one to accompany me to the rendezvous. "I am tired of
+the dice," he complained, "and sick of tennis, at which I know everybody's
+strength. Madame de Verneuil is at Fontainebleau, the queen is unwell. Ah,
+Sully, I would the old days were back when we had Nerac for our Paris, and
+knew the saddle better than the armchair!"
+
+"A king must think of his people," I reminded him.
+
+"The fowl in the pot? To be sure. So I will--to-morrow," he replied. And
+in the end he would be obeyed. I took my leave of him as if for the night,
+and retired, leaving him at play with the Duke of Epernon. But an hour
+later, toward eight o'clock, his majesty, who had made an excuse to
+withdraw to his closet, met me outside the eastern gate of the Louvre.
+
+He was masked, and attended only by Coquet, his master of the household. I
+too wore a mask and was esquired by Maignan, under whose orders were four
+Swiss--whom I had chosen because they were unable to speak
+French--guarding the prisoner Andrew. I bade Maignan follow the
+innkeeper's directions, and we proceeded in two parties through the
+streets on the left bank of the river, past the Chatelet and Bastile,
+until we reached an obscure street near the water, so narrow that the
+decrepit wooden houses shut out well-nigh all view of the sky. Here the
+prisoner halted and called upon me to fulfill the terms of my agreement. I
+bade Maignan therefore to keep with the Swiss at a distance of fifty
+paces, but to come up should I whistle or otherwise give the alarm; and
+myself with the king and Andrew proceeded onward in the deep shadow of the
+houses. I kept my hand on my pistol, which I had previously shown to the
+prisoner, intimating that on the first sign of treachery I should blow out
+his brains. However, despite precaution, I felt uncomfortable to the last
+degree. I blamed myself severely for allowing the king to expose himself
+and the country to this unnecessary danger; while the meanness of the
+locality, the fetid air, the darkness of the night, which was wet and
+tempestuous, and the uncertainty of the event lowered my spirits, and made
+every splash in the kennel and stumble on the reeking, slippery
+pavements--matters over which the king grew merry--seem no light troubles
+to me.
+
+Arriving at a house, which, if we might judge in the darkness, seemed to
+be of rather greater pretensions than its fellows, our guide stopped, and
+whispered to us to mount some steps to a raised wooden gallery, which
+intervened between the lane and the doorway. On this, besides the door, a
+couple of unglazed windows looked out. The shutter of one was ajar, and
+showed us a large, bare room, lighted by a couple of rushlights. Directing
+us to place ourselves close to this shutter, the innkeeper knocked at the
+door in a peculiar fashion, and almost immediately entered, going at once
+into the lighted room. Peering cautiously through the window we were
+surprised to find that the only person within, save the newcomer, was a
+young woman, who, crouching over a smoldering fire, was crooning a lullaby
+while she attended to a large black pot.
+
+"Good evening, mistress!" said the innkeeper, advancing to the fire with a
+fair show of nonchalance.
+
+"Good evening, Master Andrew," the girl replied, looking up and nodding,
+but showing no sign of surprise at his appearance. "Martin is away, but he
+may return at any moment."
+
+"Is he still of the same mind?"
+
+"Quite."
+
+"And what of Sully? Is he to die then?" he asked.
+
+"They have decided he must," the girl answered gloomily. It may be
+believed that I listened with all my ears, while the king by a nudge in my
+side seemed to rally me on the destiny so coolly arranged for me. "Martin
+says it is no good killing the other unless he goes too--they have been so
+long together. But it vexes me sadly, Master Andrew," she added with a
+sudden break in her voice. "Sadly it vexes me. I could not sleep last
+night for thinking of it, and the risk Martin runs. And I shall sleep less
+when it is done."
+
+"Pooh-pooh!" said that rascally innkeeper. "Think less about it. Things
+will grow worse and worse if they are let live. The King has done harm
+enough already. And he grows old besides."
+
+"That is true!" said the girl. "And no doubt the sooner he is put out of
+the way the better. He is changed sadly. I do not say a word for him. Let
+him die. It is killing Sully that troubles me--that and the risk Martin
+runs."
+
+At this I took the liberty of gently touching the king. He answered by an
+amused grimace; then by a motion of his hand he enjoined silence. We
+stooped still farther forward so as better to command the room. The girl
+was rocking herself to and fro in evident distress of mind. "If we killed
+the King," she continued, "Martin declares we should be no better off, as
+long as Sully lives. Both or neither, he says. But I do not know. I cannot
+bear to think of it. It was a sad day when we brought Epernon here, Master
+Andrew; and one I fear we shall rue as long as we live."
+
+It was now the king's turn to be moved. He grasped my wrist so forcibly
+that I restrained a cry with difficulty. "Epernon!" he whispered harshly
+in my ear. "They are Epernon's tools! Where is your guaranty now, Rosny?"
+
+I confess that I trembled. I knew well that the king, particular in small
+courtesies, never forgot to call his servants by their correct titles,
+save in two cases; when he indicated by the seeming error, as once in
+Marshal Biron's affair, his intention to promote or degrade them; or when
+he was moved to the depths of his nature and fell into an old habit. I did
+not dare to reply, but listened greedily for more information.
+
+"When is it to be done?" asked the innkeeper, sinking his voice and
+glancing round, as if he would call especial attention to this.
+
+"That depends upon Master la Riviere," the girl answered. "To-morrow
+night, I understand, if Master la Riviere can have the stuff ready."
+
+I met the king's eyes. They shone fiercely in the faint light, which
+issuing from the window fell on him. Of all things he hated treachery
+most, and La Riviere was his first body physician, and at this very time,
+as I well knew, was treating him for a slight derangement which the king
+had brought upon himself by his imprudence. This doctor had formerly been
+in the employment of the Bouillon family, who had surrendered his services
+to the king. Neither I nor his majesty had trusted the Duke of Bouillon
+for the last year past, so that we were not surprised by this hint that he
+was privy to the design.
+
+Despite our anxiety not to miss a word, an approaching step warned us at
+this moment to draw back. More than once before we had done so to escape
+the notice of a wayfarer passing up and down. But this time I had a
+difficulty in inducing the king to adopt the precaution. Yet it was well
+that I succeeded, for the person who came stumbling along toward us did
+not pass, but, mounting the steps, walked by within touch of us and
+entered the house.
+
+"The plot thickens," muttered the king. "Who is this?"
+
+At the moment he asked I was racking my brain to remember. I have a good
+eye and a fair recollection for faces, and this was one I had seen several
+times. The features were so familiar that I suspected the man of being a
+courtier in disguise, and I ran over the names of several persons whom I
+knew to be Bouillon's secret agents. But he was none of these, and obeying
+the king's gesture, I bent myself again to the task of listening.
+
+The girl looked up on the man's entrance, but did not rise. "You are late,
+Martin," she said.
+
+"A little," the newcomer answered. "How do you do, Master Andrew? What
+cheer? What, still vexing, mistress?" he added contemptuously to the girl.
+"You have too soft a heart for this business!"
+
+She sighed, but made no answer.
+
+"You have made up your mind to it, I hear?" said the innkeeper.
+
+"That is it. Needs must when the devil drives!" replied the man jauntily.
+He had a downcast, reckless, luckless air, yet in his face I thought I
+still saw traces of a better spirit.
+
+"The devil in this case was Epernon," quoth Andrew.
+
+"Aye, curse him! I would I had cut his dainty throat before he crossed my
+threshold," cried the desperado. "But there, it is too late to say that
+now. What has to be done, has to be done."
+
+"How are you going about it? Poison, the mistress says."
+
+"Yes; but if I had my way," the man growled fiercely, "I would out one of
+these nights and cut the dogs' throats in the kennel!"
+
+"You could never escape, Martin!" the girl cried, rising in excitement.
+"It would be hopeless. It would merely be throwing away your own life."
+
+"Well, it is not to be done that way, so there is an end of it," quoth the
+man wearily. "Give me my supper. The devil take the king and Sully too! He
+will soon have them."
+
+On this Master Andrew rose, and I took his movement toward the door for a
+signal for us to retire. He came out at once, shutting the door behind him
+as he bade the pair within a loud good night. He found us standing in the
+street waiting for him and forthwith fell on his knees in the mud and
+looked up at me, the perspiration standing thick on his white face. "My
+lord," he cried hoarsely, "I have earned my pardon!"
+
+"If you go on," I said encouragingly, "as you have begun, have no fear."
+Without more ado I whistled up the Swiss and bade Maignan go with them and
+arrest the man and woman with as little disturbance as possible. While
+this was being done we waited without, keeping a sharp eye upon the
+informer, whose terror, I noted with suspicion, seemed to be in no degree
+diminished. He did not, however, try to escape, and Maignan presently came
+to tell us that he had executed the arrest without difficulty or
+resistance.
+
+The importance of arriving at the truth before Epernon and the greater
+conspirators should take the alarm was so vividly present to the minds of
+the king and myself, that we did not hesitate to examine the prisoners in
+their house, rather than hazard the delay and observation which their
+removal to a more fit place must occasion. Accordingly, taking the
+precaution to post Coquet in the street outside, and to plant a burly
+Swiss in the doorway, the king and I entered. I removed my mask as I did
+so, being aware of the necessity of gaining the prisoners' confidence, but
+I begged the king to retain his. As I had expected, the man immediately
+recognized me and fell on his knees, a nearer view confirming the notion I
+had previously entertained that his features were familiar to me, though I
+could not remember his name. I thought this a good starting-point for my
+examination, and bidding Maignan withdraw, I assumed an air of mildness
+and asked the fellow his name.
+
+"Martin, only, please your lordship," he answered; adding, "once I sold
+you two dogs, sir, for the chase, and to your lady a lapdog called Ninette
+no larger than her hand."
+
+I remembered the knave, then, as a fashionable dog dealer, who had been
+much about the court in the reign of Henry the Third and later; and I saw
+at once how convenient a tool he might be made, since he could be seen in
+converse with people of all ranks without arousing suspicion. The man's
+face as he spoke expressed so much fear and surprise that I determined to
+try what I had often found successful in the case of greater criminals, to
+squeeze him for a confession while still excited by his arrest, and before
+he should have had time to consider what his chances of support at the
+hands of his confederates might be. I charged him therefore solemnly to
+tell the whole truth as he hoped for the king's mercy. He heard me, gazing
+at me piteously; but his only answer, to my surprise, was that he had
+nothing to confess.
+
+"Come, come," I replied sternly, "this will avail you nothing; if you do
+not speak quickly, rogue, and to the point, we shall find means to compel
+you. Who counseled you to attempt his majesty's life?"
+
+On this he stared so stupidly at me, and exclaimed with so real an
+appearance of horror: "How? I attempt the king's life? God forbid!" that I
+doubted that we had before us a more dangerous rascal than I had thought,
+and I hastened to bring him to the point.
+
+"What, then," I cried, frowning, "of the stuff Master la Riviere is to
+give you to take the king's life to-morrow night? Oh, we know something, I
+assure you; bethink you quickly, and find your tongue if you would have an
+easy death."
+
+I expected to see his self-control break down at this proof of our
+knowledge of his design, but he only stared at me with the same look of
+bewilderment. I was about to bid them bring in the informer that I might
+see the two front to front, when the female prisoner, who had hitherto
+stood beside her companion in such distress and terror as might be
+expected in a woman of that class, suddenly stopped her tears and
+lamentations. It occurred to me that she might make a better witness. I
+turned to her, but when I would have questioned her she broke into a wild
+scream of hysterical laughter.
+
+From that I remember that I learned nothing, though it greatly annoyed me.
+But there was one present who did--the king. He laid his hand on my
+shoulder, gripping it with a force that I read as a command to be silent.
+
+"Where," he said to the man, "do you keep the King and Sully and Epernon,
+my friend?"
+
+"The King and Sully--with the lordship's leave," said the man quickly,
+with a frightened glance at me--"are in the kennels at the back of the
+house, but it is not safe to go near them. The King is raving mad,
+and--and the other dog is sickening. Epernon we had to kill a month back.
+He brought the disease here, and I have had such losses through him as
+have nearly ruined me, please your lordship."
+
+"Get up--get up, man!" cried the king, and tearing off his mask he stamped
+up and down the room, so torn by paroxysms of laughter that he choked
+himself when again and again he attempted to speak.
+
+I too now saw the mistake, but I could not at first see it in the same
+light. Commanding myself as well as I could, I ordered one of the Swiss to
+fetch in the innkeeper, but to admit no one else.
+
+The knave fell on his knees as soon as he saw me, his cheeks shaking like
+a jelly.
+
+"Mercy, mercy!" was all he could say.
+
+"You have dared to play with me?" I whispered.
+
+"You bade me joke," he sobbed, "you bade me."
+
+I was about to say that it would be his last joke in this world--for my
+anger was fully aroused--when the king intervened.
+
+"Nay," he said, laying his hand softly on my shoulder. "It has been the
+most glorious jest. I would not have missed it for a kingdom. I command
+you, Sully, to forgive him."
+
+Thereupon his majesty strictly charged the three that they should not on
+peril of their lives mention the circumstances to anyone. Nor to the best
+of my belief did they do so, being so shrewdly scared when they recognized
+the king that I verily think they never afterwards so much as spoke of the
+affair to one another. My master further gave me on his own part his most
+gracious promise that he would not disclose the matter even to Madame de
+Verneuil or the queen, and upon these representations he induced me freely
+to forgive the innkeeper. So ended this conspiracy, on the diverting
+details of which I may seem to have dwelt longer than I should; but alas!
+in twenty-one years of power I investigated many, and this one only can I
+regard with satisfaction. The rest were so many warnings and predictions
+of the fate which, despite all my care and fidelity, was in store for the
+great and good master I served.
+
+
+
+
+Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Pavilion on the Links_
+
+
+I
+
+I was a great solitary when I was young. I made it my pride to keep aloof
+and suffice for my own entertainment; and I may say that I had neither
+friends nor acquaintances until I met that friend who became my wife and
+the mother of my children. With one man only was I on private terms; this
+was R. Northmour, Esquire, of Graden Easter, in Scotland. We had met at
+college; and though there was not much liking between us, nor even much
+intimacy, we were so nearly of a humor that we could associate with ease
+to both. Misanthropes, we believed ourselves to be; but I have thought
+since that we were only sulky fellows. It was scarcely a companionship,
+but a co-existence in unsociability. Northmour's exceptional violence of
+temper made it no easy affair for him to keep the peace with anyone but
+me; and as he respected my silent ways, and let me come and go as I
+pleased, I could tolerate his presence without concern. I think we called
+each other friends.
+
+When Northmour took his degree and I decided to leave the university
+without one, he invited me on a long visit to Graden Easter; and it was
+thus that I first became acquainted with the scene of my adventures. The
+mansion house of Graden stood in a bleak stretch of country some three
+miles from the shore of the German Ocean. It was as large as a barrack;
+and as it had been built of a soft stone, liable to consume in the eager
+air of the seaside, it was damp and draughty within and half ruinous
+without. It was impossible for two young men to lodge with comfort in
+such a dwelling. But there stood in the northern part of the estate, in a
+wilderness of links and blowing sand hills, and between a plantation and
+the sea, a small pavilion or belvedere, of modern design, which was
+exactly suited to our wants; and in this hermitage, speaking little,
+reading much, and rarely associating except at meals, Northmour and I
+spent four tempestuous winter months. I might have stayed longer; but one
+March night there sprung up between us a dispute, which rendered my
+departure necessary. Northmour spoke hotly, I remember, and I suppose I
+must have made some tart rejoinder. He leaped from his chair and grappled
+me; I had to fight, without exaggeration, for my life; and it was only
+with a great effort that I mastered him, for he was near as strong in body
+as myself, and seemed filled with the devil. The next morning, we met on
+our usual terms; but I judged it more delicate to withdraw; nor did he
+attempt to dissuade me.
+
+It was nine years before I revisited the neighborhood. I traveled at that
+time with a tilt-cart, a tent, and a cooking stove, tramping all day
+beside the wagon, and at night, whenever it was possible, gypsying in a
+cove of the hills, or by the side of a wood. I believe I visited in this
+manner most of the wild and desolate regions both in England and Scotland;
+and, as I had neither friends nor relations, I was troubled with no
+correspondence, and had nothing in the nature of headquarters, unless it
+was the office of my solicitors, from whom I drew my income twice a year.
+It was a life in which I delighted; and I fully thought to have grown old
+upon the march, and at last died in a ditch.
+
+It was my whole business to find desolate corners, where I could camp
+without the fear of interruption; and hence, being in another part of the
+same shire, I bethought me suddenly of the Pavilion on the Links. No
+thoroughfare passed within three miles of it. The nearest town, and that
+was but a fisher village, was at a distance of six or seven. For ten miles
+of length, and from a depth varying from three miles to half a mile, this
+belt of barren country lay along the sea. The beach, which was the natural
+approach, was full of quicksands. Indeed I may say there is hardly a
+better place of concealment in the United Kingdom. I determined to pass a
+week in the Sea-Wood of Graden Easter, and making a long stage, reached it
+about sundown on a wild September day.
+
+The country, I have said, was mixed sand hill and links; _links_ being a
+Scottish name for sand which has ceased drifting and become more or less
+solidly covered with turf. The pavilion stood on an even space: a little
+behind it, the wood began in a hedge of elders huddled together by the
+wind; in front, a few tumbled sand hills stood between it and the sea. An
+outcropping of rock had formed a bastion for the sand, so that there was
+here a promontory in the coast line between two shallow bays; and just
+beyond the tides, the rock again cropped out and formed an islet of small
+dimensions but strikingly designed. The quicksands were of great extent at
+low water, and had an infamous reputation in the country. Close in shore,
+between the islet and the promontory, it was said they would swallow a man
+in four minutes and a half; but there may have been little ground for this
+precision. The district was alive with rabbits, and haunted by gulls which
+made a continual piping about the pavilion. On summer days the outlook was
+bright and even gladsome; but at sundown in September, with a high wind,
+and a heavy surf rolling in close along the links, the place told of
+nothing but dead mariners and sea disaster. A ship beating to windward on
+the horizon, and a huge truncheon of wreck half buried in the sands at my
+feet, completed the innuendo of the scene.
+
+The pavilion--it had been built by the last proprietor, Northmour's uncle,
+a silly and prodigal virtuoso--presented little signs of age. It was two
+stories in height, Italian in design, surrounded by a patch of garden in
+which nothing had prospered but a few coarse flowers; and looked, with its
+shuttered windows, not like a house that had been deserted, but like one
+that had never been tenanted by man. Northmour was plainly from home;
+whether, as usual, sulking in the cabin of his yacht, or in one of his
+fitful and extravagant appearances in the world of society, I had, of
+course, no means of guessing. The place had an air of solitude that
+daunted even a solitary like myself; the wind cried in the chimneys with a
+strange and wailing note; and it was with a sense of escape, as if I were
+going indoors, that I turned away and, driving my cart before me, entered
+the skirts of the wood.
+
+The Sea-Wood of Graden had been planted to shelter the cultivated fields
+behind, and check the encroachments of the blowing sand. As you advanced
+into it from coastward, elders were succeeded by other hardy shrubs; but
+the timber was all stunted and bushy; it led a life of conflict; the trees
+were accustomed to swing there all night long in fierce winter tempests;
+and even in early spring, the leaves were already flying, and autumn was
+beginning, in this exposed plantation. Inland the ground rose into a
+little hill, which, along with the islet, served as a sailing mark for
+seamen. When the hill was open of the islet to the north, vessels must
+bear well to the eastward to clear Graden Ness and the Graden Bullers. In
+the lower ground, a streamlet ran among the trees, and, being dammed with
+dead leaves and clay of its own carrying, spread out every here and there,
+and lay in stagnant pools. One or two ruined cottages were dotted about
+the wood; and, according to Northmour, these were ecclesiastical
+foundations, and in their time had sheltered pious hermits.
+
+I found a den, or small hollow, where there was a spring of pure water;
+and there, clearing away the brambles, I pitched the tent, and made a fire
+to cook my supper. My horse I picketed farther in the wood where there was
+a patch of sward. The banks of the den not only concealed the light of my
+fire, but sheltered me from the wind, which was cold as well as high.
+
+The life I was leading made me both hardy and frugal. I never drank but
+water, and rarely eat anything more costly than oatmeal; and I required so
+little sleep, that, although I rose with the peep of day, I would often
+lie long awake in the dark or starry watches of the night. Thus in Graden
+Sea-Wood, although I fell thankfully asleep by eight in the evening I was
+awake again before eleven with a full possession of my faculties, and no
+sense of drowsiness or fatigue. I rose and sat by the fire, watching the
+trees and clouds tumultuously tossing and fleeing overhead, and hearkening
+to the wind and the rollers along the shore; till at length, growing weary
+of inaction, I quitted the den, and strolled toward the borders of the
+wood. A young moon, buried in mist, gave a faint illumination to my steps;
+and the light grew brighter as I walked forth into the links. At the same
+moment, the wind, smelling salt of the open ocean and carrying particles
+of sand, struck me with its full force, so that I had to bow my head.
+
+When I raised it again to look about me, I was aware of a light in the
+pavilion. It was not stationary; but passed from one window to another, as
+though some one were reviewing the different apartments with a lamp or
+candle. I watched it for some seconds in great surprise. When I had
+arrived in the afternoon the house had been plainly deserted; now it was
+as plainly occupied. It was my first idea that a gang of thieves might
+have broken in and be now ransacking Northmour's cupboards, which were
+many and not ill supplied. But what should bring thieves at Graden Easter?
+And, again, all the shutters had been thrown open, and it would have been
+more in the character of such gentry to close them. I dismissed the
+notion, and fell back upon another. Northmour himself must have arrived,
+and was now airing and inspecting the pavilion.
+
+I have said that there was no real affection between this man and me; but,
+had I loved him like a brother, I was then so much more in love with
+solitude that I should none the less have shunned his company. As it was,
+I turned and ran for it; and it was with genuine satisfaction that I found
+myself safely back beside the fire. I had escaped an acquaintance; I
+should have one more night in comfort. In the morning, I might either slip
+away before Northmour was abroad, or pay him as short a visit as I chose.
+
+But when morning came, I thought the situation so diverting that I forgot
+my shyness. Northmour was at my mercy; I arranged a good practical jest,
+though I knew well that my neighbor was not the man to jest with in
+security; and, chuckling beforehand over its success, took my place among
+the elders at the edge of the wood, whence I could command the door of the
+pavilion. The shutters were all once more closed, which I remember
+thinking odd; and the house, with its white walls and green venetians,
+looked spruce and habitable in the morning light. Hour after hour passed,
+and still no sign of Northmour. I knew him for a sluggard in the morning;
+but, as it drew on toward noon, I lost my patience. To say the truth, I
+had promised myself to break my fast in the pavilion, and hunger began to
+prick me sharply. It was a pity to let the opportunity go by without some
+cause for mirth; but the grosser appetite prevailed, and I relinquished my
+jest with regret, and sallied from the wood.
+
+The appearance of the house affected me, as I drew near, with disquietude.
+It seemed unchanged since last evening; and I had expected it, I scarce
+knew why, to wear some external signs of habitation. But no: the windows
+were all closely shuttered, the chimneys breathed no smoke, and the front
+door itself was closely padlocked. Northmour, therefore, had entered by
+the back; this was the natural, and indeed, the necessary conclusion; and
+you may judge of my surprise when, on turning the house, I found the back
+door similarly secured.
+
+My mind at once reverted to the original theory of thieves; and I blamed
+myself sharply for my last night's inaction. I examined all the windows on
+the lower story, but none of them had been tampered with; I tried the
+padlocks, but they were both secure. It thus became a problem how the
+thieves, if thieves they were, had managed to enter the house. They must
+have got, I reasoned, upon the roof of the outhouse where Northmour used
+to keep his photographic battery; and from thence, either by the window of
+the study or that of my old bedroom, completed their burglarious entry.
+
+I followed what I supposed was their example; and, getting on the roof,
+tried the shutters of each room. Both were secure; but I was not to be
+beaten; and, with a little force, one of them flew open, grazing, as it
+did so, the back of my hand. I remember, I put the wound to my mouth, and
+stood for perhaps half a minute licking it like a dog, and mechanically
+gazing behind me over the waste links and the sea; and, in that space of
+time, my eye made note of a large schooner yacht some miles to the
+northeast. Then I threw up the window and climbed in.
+
+I went over the house, and nothing can express my mystification. There was
+no sign of disorder, but, on the contrary, the rooms were unusually clean
+and pleasant. I found fires laid, ready for lighting; three bedrooms
+prepared with a luxury quite foreign to Northmour's habits, and with water
+in the ewers and the beds turned down; a table set for three in the
+dining-room; and an ample supply of cold meats, game, and vegetables on
+the pantry shelves. There were guests expected, that was plain; but why
+guests, when Northmour hated society? And, above all, why was the house
+thus stealthily prepared at dead of night? and why were the shutters
+closed and the doors padlocked?
+
+I effaced all traces of my visit, and came forth from the window feeling
+sobered and concerned.
+
+The schooner yacht was still in the same place; and it flashed for a
+moment through my mind that this might be the "Red Earl" bringing the
+owner of the pavilion and his guests. But the vessel's head was set the
+other way.
+
+
+II
+
+I returned to the den to cook myself a meal, of which I stood in great
+need, as well as to care for my horse, whom I had somewhat neglected in
+the morning. From time to time I went down to the edge of the wood; but
+there was no change in the pavilion, and not a human creature was seen all
+day upon the links. The schooner in the offing was the one touch of life
+within my range of vision. She, apparently with no set object, stood off
+and on or lay to, hour after hour; but as the evening deepened, she drew
+steadily nearer. I became more convinced that she carried Northmour and
+his friends, and that they would probably come ashore after dark; not only
+because that was of a piece with the secrecy of the preparations, but
+because the tide would not have flowed sufficiently before eleven to cover
+Graden Floe and the other sea quags that fortified the shore against
+invaders.
+
+All day the wind had been going down, and the sea along with it; but there
+was a return toward sunset of the heavy weather of the day before. The
+night set in pitch dark. The wind came off the sea in squalls, like the
+firing of a battery of cannon; now and then there was a flaw of rain, and
+the surf rolled heavier with the rising tide. I was down at my observatory
+among the elders, when a light was run up to the masthead of the schooner,
+and showed she was closer in than when I had last seen her by the dying
+daylight. I concluded that this must be a signal to Northmour's associates
+on shore; and, stepping forth into the links, looked around me for
+something in response.
+
+A small footpath ran along the margin of the wood, and formed the most
+direct communication between the pavilion and the mansion house; and, as I
+cast my eyes to that side, I saw a spark of light, not a quarter of a mile
+away, and rapidly approaching. From its uneven course it appeared to be
+the light of a lantern carried by a person who followed the windings of
+the path, and was often staggered, and taken aback by the more violent
+squalls. I concealed myself once more among the elders, and waited eagerly
+for the newcomer's advance. It proved to be a woman; and, as she passed
+within half a rod of my ambush, I was able to recognize the features. The
+deaf and silent old dame, who had nursed Northmour in his childhood, was
+his associate in this underhand affair.
+
+I followed her at a little distance, taking advantage of the innumerable
+heights and hollows, concealed by the darkness, and favored not only by
+the nurse's deafness, but by the uproar of the wind and surf. She entered
+the pavilion, and, going at once to the upper story, opened and set a
+light in one of the windows that looked toward the sea. Immediately
+afterwards the light at the schooner's masthead was run down and
+extinguished. Its purpose had been attained, and those on board were sure
+that they were expected. The old woman resumed her preparations; although
+the other shutters remained closed, I could see a glimmer going to and fro
+about the house; and a gush of sparks from one chimney after another soon
+told me that the fires were being kindled.
+
+Northmour and his guests, I was now persuaded, would come ashore as soon
+as there was water on the floe. It was a wild night for boat service; and
+I felt some alarm mingle with my curiosity as I reflected on the danger of
+the landing. My old acquaintance, it was true, was the most eccentric of
+men; but the present eccentricity was both disquieting and lugubrious to
+consider. A variety of feelings thus led me toward the beach, where I lay
+flat on my face in a hollow within six feet of the track that led to the
+pavilion. Thence, I should have the satisfaction of recognizing the
+arrivals, and, if they should prove to be acquaintances, greeting them as
+soon as they landed.
+
+Some time before eleven, while the tide was still dangerously low, a
+boat's lantern appeared close in shore; and, my attention being thus
+awakened, I could perceive another still far to seaward, violently tossed,
+and sometimes hidden by the billows. The weather, which was getting
+dirtier as the night went on, and the perilous situation of the yacht upon
+a lee shore, had probably driven them to attempt a landing at the earliest
+possible moment.
+
+A little afterwards, four yachtsmen carrying a very heavy chest, and
+guided by a fifth with a lantern, passed close in front of me as I lay,
+and were admitted to the pavilion by the nurse. They returned to the
+beach, and passed me a third time with another chest, larger but
+apparently not so heavy as the first. A third time they made the transit;
+and on this occasion one of the yachtsmen carried a leather portmanteau,
+and the others a lady's trunk and carriage bag. My curiosity was sharply
+excited. If a woman were among the guests of Northmour, it would show a
+change in his habits, and an apostasy from his pet theories of life, well
+calculated to fill me with surprise. When he and I dwelt there together,
+the pavilion had been a temple of misogyny. And now, one of the detested
+sex was to be installed under its roof. I remembered one or two
+particulars, a few notes of daintiness and almost of coquetry which had
+struck me the day before as I surveyed the preparations in the house;
+their purpose was now clear, and I thought myself dull not to have
+perceived it from the first.
+
+While I was thus reflecting, a second lantern drew near me from the beach.
+It was carried by a yachtsman whom I had not yet seen, and who was
+conducting two other persons to the pavilion. These two persons were
+unquestionably the guests for whom the house was made ready; and,
+straining eye and ear, I set myself to watch them as they passed. One was
+an unusually tall man, in a traveling hat slouched over his eyes, and a
+highland cape closely buttoned and turned up so as to conceal his face.
+You could make out no more of him than that he was, as I have said,
+unusually tall, and walked feebly with a heavy stoop. By his side, and
+either clinging to him or giving him support--I could not make out
+which--was a young, tall, and slender figure of a woman. She was extremely
+pale; but in the light of the lantern her face was so marred by strong and
+changing shadows, that she might equally well have been as ugly as sin or
+as beautiful as I afterwards found her to be.
+
+When they were just abreast of me, the girl made some remark which was
+drowned by the noise of the wind.
+
+"Hush!" said her companion; and there was something in the tone with which
+the word was uttered that thrilled and rather shook my spirits. It seemed
+to breathe from a bosom laboring under the deadliest terror; I have never
+heard another syllable so expressive; and I still hear it again when I am
+feverish at night, and my mind runs upon old times. The man turned toward
+the girl as he spoke; I had a glimpse of much red beard and a nose which
+seemed to have been broken in youth; and his light eyes seemed shining in
+his face with some strong and unpleasant emotion.
+
+But these two passed on and were admitted in their turn to the pavilion.
+
+One by one, or in groups, the seamen returned to the beach. The wind
+brought me the sound of a rough voice crying, "Shove off!" Then, after a
+pause, another lantern drew near. It was Northmour alone.
+
+My wife and I, a man and a woman, have often agreed to wonder how a person
+could be, at the same time, so handsome and so repulsive as Northmour. He
+had the appearance of a finished gentleman; his face bore every mark of
+intelligence and courage; but you had only to look at him, even in his
+most amiable moment, to see that he had the temper of a slaver captain. I
+never knew a character that was both explosive and revengeful to the same
+degree; he combined the vivacity of the south with the sustained and
+deadly hatreds of the north; and both traits were plainly written on his
+face, which was a sort of danger signal. In person, he was tall, strong,
+and active; his hair and complexion very dark; his features handsomely
+designed, but spoiled by a menacing expression.
+
+At that moment he was somewhat paler than by nature; he wore a heavy
+frown; and his lips worked, and he looked sharply round him as he walked,
+like a man besieged with apprehensions. And yet I thought he had a look of
+triumph underlying all, as though he had already done much, and was near
+the end of an achievement.
+
+Partly from a scruple of delicacy--which I dare say came too late--partly
+from the pleasure of startling an acquaintance, I desired to make my
+presence known to him without delay.
+
+I got suddenly to my feet, and stepped forward.
+
+"Northmour!" said I.
+
+I have never had so shocking a surprise in all my days. He leaped on me
+without a word; something shone in his hand; and he struck for my heart
+with a dagger. At the same moment I knocked him head over heels. Whether
+it was my quickness, or his own uncertainty, I know not; but the blade
+only grazed my shoulder, while the hilt and his fist struck me violently
+on the mouth.
+
+I fled, but not far. I had often and often observed the capabilities of
+the sand hills for protracted ambush or stealthy advances and retreats;
+and, not ten yards from the scene of the scuffle, plumped down again upon
+the grass. The lantern had fallen and gone out. But what was my
+astonishment to see Northmour slip at a bound into the pavilion, and hear
+him bar the door behind him with a clang of iron!
+
+He had not pursued me. He had run away. Northmour, whom I knew for the
+most implacable and daring of men, had run away! I could scarce believe my
+reason; and yet in this strange business, where all was incredible, there
+was nothing to make a work about in an incredibility more or less. For why
+was the pavilion secretly prepared? Why had Northmour landed with his
+guests at dead of night, in half a gale of wind, and with the floe scarce
+covered? Why had he sought to kill me? Had he not recognized my voice? I
+wondered. And, above all, how had he come to have a dagger ready in his
+hand? A dagger, or even a sharp knife, seemed out of keeping with the age
+in which we lived; and a gentleman landing from his yacht on the shore of
+his own estate, even although it was at night and with some mysterious
+circumstances, does not usually, as a matter of fact, walk thus prepared
+for deadly onslaught. The more I reflected, the further I felt at sea. I
+recapitulated the elements of mystery, counting them on my fingers: the
+pavilion secretly prepared for guests; the guests landed at the risk of
+their lives and to the imminent peril of the yacht; the guests, or at
+least one of them, in undisguised and seemingly causeless terror;
+Northmour with a naked weapon; Northmour stabbing his most intimate
+acquaintance at a word; last, and not least strange, Northmour fleeing
+from the man whom he had sought to murder, and barricading himself, like a
+hunted creature, behind the door of the pavilion. Here were at least six
+separate causes for extreme surprise; each part and parcel with the
+others, and forming all together one consistent story. I felt almost
+ashamed to believe my own senses.
+
+As I thus stood, transfixed with wonder, I began to grow painfully
+conscious of the injuries I had received in the scuffle; skulked round
+among the sand hills; and, by a devious path, regained the shelter of the
+wood. On the way, the old nurse passed again within several yards of me,
+still carrying her lantern, on the return journey to the mansion house of
+Graden. This made a seventh suspicious feature in the case. Northmour and
+his guests, it appeared, were to cook and do the cleaning for themselves,
+while the old woman continued to inhabit the big empty barrack among the
+policies. There must surely be great cause for secrecy, when so many
+inconveniences were confronted to preserve it.
+
+So thinking, I made my way to the den. For greater security, I trod out
+the embers of the fire, and lighted my lantern to examine the wound upon
+my shoulder. It was a trifling hurt, although it bled somewhat freely, and
+I dressed it as well as I could (for its position made it difficult to
+reach) with some rag and cold water from the spring. While I was thus
+busied, I mentally declared war against Northmour and his mystery. I am
+not an angry man by nature, and I believe there was more curiosity than
+resentment in my heart. But war I certainly declared; and, by way of
+preparation, I got out my revolver, and, having drawn the charges, cleaned
+and reloaded it with scrupulous care. Next I became preoccupied about my
+horse. It might break loose, or fall to neighing, and so betray my camp in
+the Sea-Wood. I determined to rid myself of its neighborhood; and long
+before dawn I was leading it over the links in the direction of the fisher
+village.
+
+
+III
+
+For two days I skulked round the pavilion, profiting by the uneven surface
+of the links. I became an adept in the necessary tactics. These low
+hillocks and shallow dells, running one into another, became a kind of
+cloak of darkness for my inthralling, but perhaps dishonorable, pursuit.
+
+Yet, in spite of this advantage, I could learn but little of Northmour or
+his guests.
+
+Fresh provisions were brought under cover of darkness by the old woman
+from the mansion house. Northmour, and the young lady, sometimes together,
+but more often singly, would walk for an hour or two at a time on the
+beach beside the quicksand. I could not but conclude that this promenade
+was chosen with an eye to secrecy; for the spot was open only to seaward.
+But it suited me not less excellently; the highest and most accidented of
+the sand hills immediately adjoined; and from these, lying flat in a
+hollow, I could overlook Northmour or the young lady as they walked.
+
+The tall man seemed to have disappeared. Not only did he never cross the
+threshold, but he never so much as showed face at a window; or, at least,
+not so far as I could see; for I dared not creep forward beyond a certain
+distance in the day, since the upper floors commanded the bottoms of the
+links; and at night, when I could venture further, the lower windows were
+barricaded as if to stand a siege. Sometimes I thought the tall man must
+be confined to bed, for I remembered the feebleness of his gait; and
+sometimes I thought he must have gone clear away, and that Northmour and
+the young lady remained alone together in the pavilion. The idea, even
+then, displeased me.
+
+Whether or not this pair were man and wife, I had seen abundant reason to
+doubt the friendliness of their relation. Although I could hear nothing of
+what they said, and rarely so much as glean a decided expression on the
+face of either, there was a distance, almost a stiffness, in their
+bearing which showed them to be either unfamiliar or at enmity. The girl
+walked faster when she was with Northmour than when she was alone; and I
+conceived that any inclination between a man and a woman would rather
+delay than accelerate the step. Moreover, she kept a good yard free of
+him, and trailed her umbrella, as if it were a barrier, on the side
+between them. Northmour kept sidling closer; and, as the girl retired from
+his advance, their course lay at a sort of diagonal across the beach, and
+would have landed them in the surf had it been long enough continued. But,
+when this was imminent, the girl would unostentatiously change sides and
+put Northmour between her and the sea. I watched these maneuvers, for my
+part, with high enjoyment and approval, and chuckled to myself at every
+move.
+
+On the morning of the third day, she walked alone for some time, and I
+perceived, to my great concern, that she was more than once in tears. You
+will see that my heart was already interested more than I supposed. She
+had a firm yet airy motion of the body, and carried her head with
+unimaginable grace; every step was a thing to look at, and she seemed in
+my eyes to breathe sweetness and distinction.
+
+The day was so agreeable, being calm and sunshiny, with a tranquil sea,
+and yet with a healthful piquancy and vigor in the air, that, contrary to
+custom, she was tempted forth a second time to walk. On this occasion she
+was accompanied by Northmour, and they had been but a short while on the
+beach, when I saw him take forcible possession of her hand. She struggled,
+and uttered a cry that was almost a scream. I sprung to my feet, unmindful
+of my strange position; but, ere I had taken a step, I saw Northmour
+bareheaded and bowing very low, as if to apologize; and dropped again at
+once into my ambush. A few words were interchanged; and then, with another
+bow, he left the beach to return to the pavilion. He passed not far from
+me, and I could see him, flushed and lowering, and cutting savagely with
+his cane among the grass. It was not without satisfaction that I
+recognized my own handiwork in a great cut under his right eye, and a
+considerable discoloration round the socket.
+
+For some time the girl remained where he had left her, looking out past
+the islet and over the bright sea. Then with a start, as one who throws
+off preoccupation and puts energy again upon its mettle, she broke into a
+rapid and decisive walk. She also was much incensed by what had passed.
+She had forgotten where she was. And I beheld her walk straight into the
+borders of the quicksand where it is most abrupt and dangerous. Two or
+three steps farther and her life would have been in serious jeopardy, when
+I slid down the face of the sand hill, which is there precipitous, and,
+running halfway forward, called to her to stop.
+
+She did so, and turned round. There was not a tremor of fear in her
+behavior, and she marched directly up to me like a queen. I was barefoot,
+and clad like a common sailor, save for an Egyptian scarf round my waist;
+and she probably took me at first for some one from the fisher village,
+straying after bait. As for her, when I thus saw her face to face, her
+eyes set steadily and imperiously upon mine, I was filled with admiration
+and astonishment, and thought her even more beautiful than I had looked to
+find her. Nor could I think enough of one who, acting with so much
+boldness, yet preserved a maidenly air that was both quaint and engaging;
+for my wife kept an old-fashioned precision of manner through all her
+admirable life--an excellent thing in woman, since it sets another value
+on her sweet familiarities.
+
+"What does this mean?" she asked.
+
+"You were walking," I told her, "directly into Graden Floe."
+
+"You do not belong to these parts," she said again. "You speak like an
+educated man."
+
+"I believe I have a right to that name," said I, "although in this
+disguise."
+
+But her woman's eye had already detected the sash.
+
+"Oh!" she said; "your sash betrays you."
+
+"You have said the word _betray_," I resumed. "May I ask you not to betray
+me? I was obliged to disclose myself in your interest; but if Northmour
+learned my presence it might be worse than disagreeable for me."
+
+"Do you know," she asked, "to whom you are speaking?"
+
+"Not to Mr. Northmour's wife?" I asked, by way of answer.
+
+She shook her head. All this while she was studying my face with an
+embarrassing intentness. Then she broke out--
+
+"You have an honest face. Be honest like your face, sir, and tell me what
+you want and what you are afraid of. Do you think I could hurt you? I
+believe you have far more power to injure me! And yet you do not look
+unkind. What do you mean--you, a gentleman--by skulking like a spy about
+this desolate place? Tell me," she said, "who is it you hate?"
+
+"I hate no one," I answered; "and I fear no one face to face. My name is
+Cassilis--Frank Cassilis. I lead the life of a vagabond for my own good
+pleasure. I am one of Northmour's oldest friends; and three nights ago,
+when I addressed him on these links, he stabbed me in the shoulder with a
+knife."
+
+"It was you!" she said.
+
+"Why he did so," I continued, disregarding the interruption, "is more than
+I can guess, and more than I care to know. I have not many friends, nor am
+I very susceptible to friendship; but no man shall drive me from a place
+by terror. I had camped in the Graden Sea-Wood ere he came; I camp in it
+still. If you think I mean harm to you or yours, madame, the remedy is in
+your hand. Tell him that my camp is in the Hemlock Den, and to-night he
+can stab me in safety while I sleep."
+
+With this I doffed my cap to her, and scrambled up once more among the
+sand hills. I do not know why, but I felt a prodigious sense of injustice,
+and felt like a hero and a martyr; while as a matter of fact, I had not a
+word to say in my defense, nor so much as one plausible reason to offer
+for my conduct. I had stayed at Graden out of a curiosity natural enough,
+but undignified; and though there was another motive growing in along with
+the first, it was not one which, at that period, I could have properly
+explained to the lady of my heart.
+
+Certainly, that night, I thought of no one else; and, though her whole
+conduct and position seemed suspicious, I could not find it in my heart to
+entertain a doubt of her integrity. I could have staked my life that she
+was clear of blame, and, though all was dark at the present, that the
+explanation of the mystery would show her part in these events to be both
+right and needful. It was true, let me cudgel my imagination as I pleased,
+that I could invent no theory of her relations to Northmour; but I felt
+none the less sure of my conclusion because it was founded on instinct in
+place of reason, and, as I may say, went to sleep that night with the
+thought of her under my pillow.
+
+Next day she came out about the same hour alone, and, as soon as the sand
+hills concealed her from the pavilion, drew nearer to the edge, and called
+me by name in guarded tones. I was astonished to observe that she was
+deadly pale, and seemingly under the influence of strong emotion.
+
+"Mr. Cassilis!" she cried; "Mr. Cassilis!"
+
+I appeared at once, and leaped down upon the beach. A remarkable air of
+relief overspread her countenance as soon as she saw me.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, with a hoarse sound, like one whose bosom had been
+lightened of a weight. And then, "Thank God you are still safe!" she
+added; "I knew, if you were, you would be here." (Was not this strange? So
+swiftly and wisely does Nature prepare our hearts for these great lifelong
+intimacies, that both my wife and I had been given a presentiment on this
+the second day of our acquaintance. I had even then hoped that she would
+seek me; she had felt sure that she would find me.) "Do not," she went on
+swiftly, "do not stay in this place. Promise me that you sleep no longer
+in that wood. You do not know how I suffer; all last night I could not
+sleep for thinking of your peril."
+
+"Peril!" I repeated. "Peril from whom? From Northmour?"
+
+"Not so," she said. "Did you think I would tell him after what you said?"
+
+"Not from Northmour?" I repeated. "Then how? From whom? I see none to be
+afraid of."
+
+"You must not ask me," was her reply, "for I am not free to tell you. Only
+believe me, and go hence--believe me, and go away quickly, quickly, for
+your life!"
+
+An appeal to his alarm is never a good plan to rid oneself of a spirited
+young man. My obstinacy was but increased by what she said, and I made it
+a point of honor to remain. And her solicitude for my safety still more
+confirmed me in the resolve.
+
+"You must not think me inquisitive, madame," I replied, "but, if Graden
+is so dangerous a place, you yourself perhaps remain here at some risk."
+
+She only looked at me reproachfully.
+
+"You and your father--" I resumed; but she interrupted me almost with a
+gasp.
+
+"My father! How do you know that?" she cried.
+
+"I saw you together when you landed," was my answer; and I do not know
+why, but it seemed satisfactory to both of us, as indeed it was truth.
+"But," I continued, "you need have no fear from me. I see you have some
+reason to be secret, and, you may believe me, your secret is as safe with
+me as if I were in Graden Floe. I have scarce spoken to anyone for years;
+my horse is my only companion, and even he, poor beast, is not beside me.
+You see, then, you may count on me for silence. So tell me the truth, my
+dear young lady, are you not in danger?"
+
+"Mr. Northmour says you are an honorable man," she returned, "and I
+believe it when I see you. I will tell you so much; you are right: we are
+in dreadful, dreadful danger, and you share it by remaining where you
+are."
+
+"Ah!" said I; "you have heard of me from Northmour? And he gives me a good
+character?"
+
+"I asked him about you last night," was her reply. "I pretended," she
+hesitated, "I pretended to have met you long ago, and spoken to you of
+him. It was not true; but I could not help myself without betraying you,
+and you had put me in a difficulty. He praised you highly."
+
+"And--you may permit me one question--does this danger come from
+Northmour?" I asked.
+
+"From Mr. Northmour?" she cried. "Oh, no, he stays with us to share it."
+
+"While you propose that I should run away?" I said. "You do not rate me
+very high."
+
+"Why should you stay?" she asked. "You are no friend of ours."
+
+I know not what came over me, for I had not been conscious of a similar
+weakness since I was a child, but I was so mortified by this retort that
+my eyes pricked and filled with tears, as I continued to gaze upon her
+face.
+
+"No, no," she said, in a changed voice; "I did not mean the words
+unkindly."
+
+"It was I who offended," I said; and I held out my hand with a look of
+appeal that somehow touched her, for she gave me hers at once, and even
+eagerly. I held it for awhile in mine, and gazed into her eyes. It was she
+who first tore her hand away, and, forgetting all about her request and
+the promise she had sought to extort, ran at the top of her speed, and
+without turning, till she was out of sight. And then I knew that I loved
+her, and thought in my glad heart that she--she herself--was not
+indifferent to my suit. Many a time she has denied it in after days, but
+it was with a smiling and not a serious denial. For my part, I am sure our
+hands would not have lain so closely in each other if she had not begun to
+melt to me already. And, when all is said, it is no great contention,
+since, by her own avowal, she began to love me on the morrow.
+
+And yet on the morrow very little took place. She came and called me down
+as on the day before, upbraided me for lingering at Graden, and, when she
+found I was still obdurate, began to ask me more particularly as to my
+arrival. I told her by what series of accidents I had come to witness
+their disembarkation, and how I had determined to remain, partly from the
+interest which had been awakened in me by Northmour's guests, and partly
+because of his own murderous attack. As to the former, I fear I was
+disingenuous, and led her to regard herself as having been an attraction
+to me from the first moment that I saw her on the links. It relieves my
+heart to make this confession even now, when my wife is with God, and
+already knows all things, and the honesty of my purpose even in this; for
+while she lived, although it often pricked my conscience, I had never the
+hardihood to undeceive her. Even a little secret, in such a married life
+as ours, is like the rose leaf which kept the princess from her sleep.
+
+From this the talk branched into other subjects, and I told her much about
+my lonely and wandering existence; she, for her part, giving ear, and
+saying little. Although we spoke very naturally, and latterly on topics
+that might seem indifferent, we were both sweetly agitated. Too soon it
+was time for her to go; and we separated, as if by mutual consent, without
+shaking hands, for both knew that, between us, it was no idle ceremony.
+
+The next, and that was the fourth day of our acquaintance, we met in the
+same spot, but early in the morning, with much familiarity and yet much
+timidity on either side. While she had once more spoken about my
+danger--and that, I understood, was her excuse for coming--I, who had
+prepared a great deal of talk during the night, began to tell her how
+highly I valued her kind interest, and how no one had ever cared to hear
+about my life, nor had I ever cared to relate it, before yesterday.
+Suddenly she interrupted me, saying with vehemence--
+
+"And yet, if you knew who I was, you would not so much as speak to me!"
+
+I told her such a thought was madness, and, little as we had met, I
+counted her already a dear friend; but my protestations seemed only to
+make her more desperate.
+
+"My father is in hiding!" she cried.
+
+"My dear," I said, forgetting for the first time to add "young lady,"
+"what do I care? If I were in hiding twenty times over, would it make one
+thought of change in you?"
+
+"Ah, but the cause!" she cried, "the cause! It is"--she faltered for a
+second--"it is disgraceful to us!"
+
+
+IV
+
+This was my wife's story, as I drew it from her among tears and sobs. Her
+name was Clara Huddlestone: it sounded very beautiful in my ears; but not
+so beautiful as that other name of Clara Cassilis, which she wore during
+the longer and, I thank God, the happier portion of her life. Her father,
+Bernard Huddlestone, had been a private banker in a very large way of
+business. Many years before, his affairs becoming disordered, he had been
+led to try dangerous, and at last criminal, expedients to retrieve himself
+from ruin. All was in vain; he became more and more cruelly involved, and
+found his honor lost at the same moment with his fortune. About this
+period, Northmour had been courting his daughter with great assiduity,
+though with small encouragement; and to him, knowing him thus disposed in
+his favor, Bernard Huddlestone turned for help in his extremity. It was
+not merely ruin and dishonor, nor merely a legal condemnation, that the
+unhappy man had brought upon his head. It seems he could have gone to
+prison with a light heart. What he feared, what kept him awake at night or
+recalled him from slumber into frenzy, was some secret, sudden, and
+unlawful attempt upon his life. Hence, he desired to bury his existence
+and escape to one of the islands in the South Pacific, and it was in
+Northmour's yacht, the "Red Earl," that he designed to go. The yacht
+picked them up clandestinely upon the coast of Wales, and had once more
+deposited them at Graden, till she could be refitted and provisioned for
+the longer voyage. Nor could Clara doubt that her hand had been stipulated
+as the price of passage. For, although Northmour was neither unkind, nor
+even discourteous, he had shown himself in several instances somewhat
+overbold in speech and manner.
+
+I listened, I need not say, with fixed attention, and put many questions
+as to the more mysterious part. It was in vain. She had no clear idea of
+what the blow was, nor of how it was expected to fall. Her father's alarm
+was unfeigned and physically prostrating, and he had thought more than
+once of making an unconditional surrender to the police. But the scheme
+was finally abandoned, for he was convinced that not even the strength of
+our English prisons could shelter him from his pursuers. He had had many
+affairs in Italy, and with Italians resident in London, in the latter
+years of his business; and these last, as Clara fancied, were somehow
+connected with the doom that threatened him. He had shown great terror at
+the presence of an Italian seaman on board the "Red Earl," and had
+bitterly and repeatedly accused Northmour in consequence. The latter had
+protested that Beppo (that was the seaman's name) was a capital fellow,
+and could be trusted to the death; but Mr. Huddlestone had continued ever
+since to declare that all was lost, that it was only a question of days,
+and that Beppo would be the ruin of him yet.
+
+I regarded the whole story as the hallucination of a mind shaken by
+calamity. He had suffered heavy loss by his Italian transactions; and
+hence the sight of an Italian was hateful to him, and the principal part
+in his nightmare would naturally enough be played by one of that nation.
+
+"What your father wants," I said, "is a good doctor and some calming
+medicine."
+
+"But Mr. Northmour?" objected Clara. "He is untroubled by losses, and yet
+he shares in this terror."
+
+I could not help laughing at what I considered her simplicity.
+
+"My dear," said I, "you have told me yourself what reward he has to look
+for. All is fair in love, you must remember; and if Northmour foments your
+father's terrors, it is not at all because he is afraid of any Italian
+man, but simply because he is infatuated with a charming English woman."
+
+She reminded me of his attack upon myself on the night of the
+disembarkation, and this I was unable to explain. In short, and from one
+thing to another, it was agreed between us that I should set out at once
+for the fisher village, Graden Wester, as it was called, look up all the
+newspapers I could find, and see for myself if there seemed any basis of
+fact for these continued alarms. The next morning, at the same hour and
+place, I was to make my report to Clara. She said no more on that occasion
+about my departure; nor, indeed, did she make it a secret that she clung
+to the thought of my proximity as something helpful and pleasant; and, for
+my part, I could not have left her, if she had gone upon her knees to ask
+it.
+
+I reached Graden Wester before ten in the forenoon; for in those days I
+was an excellent pedestrian, and the distance, as I think I have said, was
+little over seven miles; fine walking all the way upon the springy turf.
+The village is one of the bleakest on that coast, which is saying much:
+there is a church in the hollow; a miserable haven in the rocks, where
+many boats have been lost as they returned from fishing; two or three
+score of stone houses arranged along the beach and in two streets, one
+leading from the harbor, and another striking out from it at right angles;
+and, at the corner of these two, a very dark and cheerless tavern, by way
+of principal hotel.
+
+I had dressed myself somewhat more suitably to my station in life, and at
+once called upon the minister in his little manse beside the graveyard. He
+knew me, although it was more than nine years since we had met; and when I
+told him that I had been long upon a walking tour, and was behind with the
+news, readily lent me an armful of newspapers, dating from a month back to
+the day before. With these I sought the tavern, and, ordering some
+breakfast, sat down to study the "Huddlestone Failure."
+
+It had been, it appeared, a very flagrant case. Thousands of persons were
+reduced to poverty; and one in particular had blown out his brains as soon
+as payment was suspended. It was strange to myself that, while I read
+these details, I continued rather to sympathize with Mr. Huddlestone than
+with his victims; so complete already was the empire of my love for my
+wife. A price was naturally set upon the banker's head; and, as the case
+was inexcusable and the public indignation thoroughly aroused, the unusual
+figure of L750 was offered for his capture. He was reported to have large
+sums of money in his possession. One day, he had been heard of in Spain;
+the next, there was sure intelligence that he was still lurking between
+Manchester and Liverpool, or along the border of Wales; and the day after,
+a telegram would announce his arrival in Cuba or Yucatan. But in all this
+there was no word of an Italian, nor any sign of mystery.
+
+In the very last paper, however, there was one item not so clear. The
+accountants who were charged to verify the failure had, it seemed, come
+upon the traces of a very large number of thousands, which figured for
+some time in the transactions of the house of Huddlestone; but which came
+from nowhere, and disappeared in the same mysterious fashion. It was only
+once referred to by name, and then under the initials "X.X."; but it had
+plainly been floated for the first time into the business at a period of
+great depression some six years ago. The name of a distinguished royal
+personage had been mentioned by rumor in connection with this sum. "The
+cowardly desperado"--such, I remember, was the editorial expression--was
+supposed to have escaped with a large part of this mysterious fund still
+in his possession.
+
+I was still brooding over the fact, and trying to torture it into some
+connection with Mr. Huddlestone's danger, when a man entered the tavern
+and asked for some bread and cheese with a decided foreign accent.
+
+"_Siete Italiano_?" said I.
+
+"_Si, Signor_," was his reply.
+
+I said it was unusually far north to find one of his compatriots; at which
+he shrugged his shoulders, and replied that a man would go anywhere to
+find work. What work he could hope to find at Graden Wester, I was totally
+unable to conceive; and the incident struck so unpleasantly upon my mind,
+that I asked the landlord, while he was counting me some change, whether
+he had ever before seen an Italian in the village. He said he had once
+seen some Norwegians, who had been shipwrecked on the other side of Graden
+Ness and rescued by the lifeboat from Cauldhaven.
+
+"No!" said I; "but an Italian, like the man who has just had bread and
+cheese."
+
+"What?" cried he, "yon black-avised fellow wi' the teeth? Was he an
+I-talian? Weel, yon's the first that ever I saw, an' I dare say he's like
+to be the last."
+
+Even as he was speaking, I raised my eyes, and, casting a glance into the
+street, beheld three men in earnest conversation together, and not thirty
+yards away. One of them was my recent companion in the tavern parlor; the
+other two, by their handsome sallow features and soft hats, should
+evidently belong to the same race. A crowd of village children stood
+around them, gesticulating and talking gibberish in imitation. The trio
+looked singularly foreign to the bleak dirty street in which they were
+standing and the dark gray heaven that overspread them; and I confess my
+incredulity received at that moment a shock from which it never recovered.
+I might reason with myself as I pleased, but I could not argue down the
+effect of what I had seen, and I began to share in the Italian terror.
+
+It was already drawing toward the close of the day before I had returned
+the newspapers to the manse, and got well forward on to the links on my
+way home. I shall never forget that walk. It grew very cold and
+boisterous; the wind sung in the short grass about my feet; thin rain
+showers came running on the gusts; and an immense mountain range of
+clouds began to arise out of the bosom of the sea. It would be hard to
+imagine a more dismal evening; and whether it was from these external
+influences, or because my nerves were already affected by what I had heard
+and seen, my thoughts were as gloomy as the weather.
+
+The upper windows of the pavilion commanded a considerable spread of links
+in the direction of Graden Wester. To avoid observation, it was necessary
+to hug the beach until I had gained cover from the higher sand hills on
+the little headland, when I might strike across, through the hollows, for
+the margin of the wood. The sun was about setting; the tide was low, and
+all the quicksands uncovered; and I was moving along, lost in unpleasant
+thought, when I was suddenly thunderstruck to perceive the prints of human
+feet. They ran parallel to my own course, but low down upon the beach,
+instead of along the border of the turf; and, when I examined them, I saw
+at once, by the size and coarseness of the impression, that it was a
+stranger to me and to those of the pavilion who had recently passed that
+way. Not only so; but from the recklessness of the course which he had
+followed, steering near to the most formidable portions of the sand, he
+was evidently a stranger to the country and to the ill-repute of Graden
+beach.
+
+Step by step I followed the prints; until, a quarter of a mile farther, I
+beheld them die away into the southeastern boundary of Graden Floe. There,
+whoever he was, the miserable man had perished. One or two gulls, who had,
+perhaps, seen him disappear, wheeled over his sepulcher with their usual
+melancholy piping. The sun had broken through the clouds by a last effort,
+and colored the wide level of quicksands with a dusky purple. I stood for
+some time gazing at the spot, chilled and disheartened by my own
+reflections, and with a strong and commanding consciousness of death. I
+remember wondering how long the tragedy had taken, and whether his screams
+had been audible at the pavilion. And then, making a strong resolution, I
+was about to tear myself away, when a gust fiercer than usual fell upon
+this quarter of the beach, and I saw, now whirling high in air, now
+skimming lightly across the surface of the sands, a soft, black, felt hat,
+somewhat conical in shape, such as I had remarked already on the heads of
+the Italians.
+
+I believe, but I am not sure, that I uttered a cry. The wind was driving
+the hat shoreward, and I ran round the border of the floe to be ready
+against its arrival. The gust fell, dropping the hat for awhile upon the
+quicksand, and then, once more freshening, landed it a few yards from
+where I stood. I seized it with the interest you may imagine. It had seen
+some service; indeed, it was rustier than either of those I had seen that
+day upon the street. The lining was red, stamped with the name of the
+maker, which I have forgotten, and that of the place of manufacture,
+_Venedig_. This (it is not yet forgotten) was the name given by the
+Austrians to the beautiful city of Venice, then, and for long after, a
+part of their dominions.
+
+The shock was complete. I saw imaginary Italians upon every side; and for
+the first, and, I may say, for the last time in my experience, became
+overpowered by what is called a panic terror. I knew nothing, that is, to
+be afraid of, and yet I admit that I was heartily afraid; and it was with
+sensible reluctance that I returned to my exposed and solitary camp in the
+Sea-Wood.
+
+There I eat some cold porridge which had been left over from the night
+before, for I was disinclined to make a fire; and, feeling strengthened
+and reassured, dismissed all these fanciful terrors from my mind, and lay
+down to sleep with composure.
+
+How long I may have slept it is impossible for me to guess; but I was
+awakened at last by a sudden, blinding flash of light into my face. It
+woke me like a blow. In an instant I was upon my knees. But the light had
+gone as suddenly as it came. The darkness was intense. And, as it was
+blowing great guns from the sea, and pouring with rain, the noises of the
+storm effectually concealed all others.
+
+It was, I dare say, half a minute before I regained my self-possession.
+But for two circumstances, I should have thought I had been awakened by
+some new and vivid form of nightmare. First, the flap of my tent, which I
+had shut carefully when I retired, was now unfastened; and, second, I
+could still perceive, with a sharpness that excluded any theory of
+hallucination, the smell of hot metal and of burning oil. The conclusion
+was obvious. I had been awakened by some one flashing a bull's-eye lantern
+in my face. It had been but a flash, and away. He had seen my face, and
+then gone. I asked myself the object of so strange a proceeding, and the
+answer came pat. The man, whoever he was, had thought to recognize me, and
+he had not. There was another question unresolved; and to this, I may say,
+I feared to give an answer; if he had recognized me, what would he have
+done?
+
+My fears were immediately diverted from myself, for I saw that I had been
+visited in a mistake; and I became persuaded that some dreadful danger
+threatened the pavilion. It required some nerve to issue forth into the
+black and intricate thicket which surrounded and overhung the den; but I
+groped my way to the links, drenched with rain, beaten upon and deafened
+by the gusts, and fearing at every step to lay my hand upon some lurking
+adversary. The darkness was so complete that I might have been surrounded
+by an army and yet none the wiser, and the uproar of the gale so loud that
+my hearing was as useless as my sight.
+
+For the rest of that night, which seemed interminably long, I patrolled
+the vicinity of the pavilion, without seeing a living creature or hearing
+any noise but the concert of the wind, the sea, and the rain. A light in
+the upper story filtered through a cranny of the shutter, and kept me
+company till the approach of dawn.
+
+
+V
+
+With the first peep of day, I retired from the open to my old lair among
+the sand hills, there to await the coming of my wife. The morning was
+gray, wild, and melancholy; the wind moderated before sunrise, and then
+went about, and blew in puffs from the shore; the sea began to go down,
+but the rain still fell without mercy. Over all the wilderness of links
+there was not a creature to be seen. Yet I felt sure the neighborhood was
+alive with skulking foes. The light that had been so suddenly and
+surprisingly flashed upon my face as I lay sleeping, and the hat that had
+been blown ashore by the wind from over Graden Floe, were two speaking
+signals of the peril that environed Clara and the party in the pavilion.
+
+It was, perhaps, half-past seven, or nearer eight, before I saw the door
+open, and that dear figure come toward me in the rain. I was waiting for
+her on the beach before she had crossed the sand hills.
+
+"I have had such trouble to come!" she cried. "They did not wish me to go
+walking in the rain."
+
+"Clara," I said, "you are not frightened!"
+
+"No," said she, with a simplicity that filled my heart with confidence.
+For my wife was the bravest as well as the best of women; in my
+experience, I have not found the two go always together, but with her they
+did; and she combined the extreme of fortitude with the most endearing and
+beautiful virtues.
+
+I told her what had happened; and, though her cheek grew visibly paler,
+she retained perfect control over her senses.
+
+"You see now that I am safe," said I, in conclusion. "They do not mean to
+harm me; for, had they chosen, I was a dead man last night."
+
+She laid her hand upon my arm.
+
+"And I had no presentiment!" she cried.
+
+Her accent thrilled me with delight. I put my arm about her, and strained
+her to my side; and, before either of us was aware, her hands were on my
+shoulders and my lips upon her mouth. Yet up to that moment no word of
+love had passed between us. To this day I remember the touch of her cheek,
+which was wet and cold with the rain; and many a time since, when she has
+been washing her face, I have kissed it again for the sake of that morning
+on the beach. Now that she is taken from me, and I finish my pilgrimage
+alone, I recall our old loving kindnesses and the deep honesty and
+affection which united us, and my present loss seems but a trifle in
+comparison.
+
+We may have thus stood for some seconds--for time passes quickly with
+lovers--before we were startled by a peal of laughter close at hand. It
+was not natural mirth, but seemed to be affected in order to conceal an
+angrier feeling. We both turned, though I still kept my left arm about
+Clara's waist; nor did she seek to withdraw herself; and there, a few
+paces off upon the beach, stood Northmour, his head lowered, his hands
+behind his back, his nostrils white with passion.
+
+"Ah! Cassilis!" he said, as I disclosed my face.
+
+"That same," said I; for I was not at all put about.
+
+"And so, Miss Huddlestone," he continued slowly, but savagely, "this is
+how you keep your faith to your father and to me? This is the value you
+set upon your father's life? And you are so infatuated with this young
+gentleman that you must brave ruin, and decency, and common human
+caution--"
+
+"Miss Huddlestone--" I was beginning to interrupt him, when he, in his
+turn, cut in brutally--
+
+"You hold your tongue," said he; "I am speaking to that girl."
+
+"That girl, as you call her, is my wife," said I; and my wife only leaned
+a little nearer, so that I knew she had affirmed my words.
+
+"Your what?" he cried. "You lie!"
+
+"Northmour," I said, "we all know you have a bad temper, and I am the last
+man to be irritated by words. For all that, I propose that you speak
+lower, for I am convinced that we are not alone."
+
+He looked round him, and it was plain my remark had in some degree sobered
+his passion. "What do you mean?" he asked.
+
+I only said one word: "Italians."
+
+He swore a round oath, and looked at us, from one to the other.
+
+"Mr. Cassilis knows all that I know," said my wife.
+
+"What I want to know," he broke out, "is where the devil Mr. Cassilis
+comes from, and what the devil Mr. Cassilis is doing here. You say you are
+married; that I do not believe. If you were, Graden Floe would soon
+divorce you; four minutes and a half, Cassilis. I keep my private cemetery
+for my friends."
+
+"It took somewhat longer," said I, "for that Italian."
+
+He looked at me for a moment half daunted, and then, almost civilly, asked
+me to tell my story. "You have too much the advantage of me, Cassilis," he
+added. I complied of course; and he listened, with several ejaculations,
+while I told him how I had come to Graden: that it was I whom he had tried
+to murder on the night of landing; and what I had subsequently seen and
+heard of the Italians.
+
+"Well," said he, when I had done, "it is here at last; there is no mistake
+about that. And what, may I ask, do you propose to do?"
+
+"I propose to stay with you and lend a hand," said I.
+
+"You are a brave man," he returned, with a peculiar intonation.
+
+"I am not afraid," said I.
+
+"And so," he continued, "I am to understand that you two are married? And
+you stand up to it before my face, Miss Huddlestone?"
+
+"We are not yet married," said Clara; "but we shall be as soon as we can."
+
+"Bravo!" cried Northmour. "And the bargain? D----n it, you're not a fool,
+young woman; I may call a spade a spade with you. How about the bargain?
+You know as well as I do what your father's life depends upon. I have
+only to put my hands under my coat tails and walk away, and his throat
+would be cut before the evening."
+
+"Yes, Mr. Northmour," returned Clara, with great spirit; "but that is what
+you will never do. You made a bargain that was unworthy of a gentleman;
+but you are a gentleman for all that, and you will never desert a man whom
+you have begun to help."
+
+"Aha!" said he. "You think I will give my yacht for nothing? You think I
+will risk my life and liberty for love of the old gentleman; and then, I
+suppose, be best man at the wedding, to wind up? Well," he added, with an
+odd smile, "perhaps you are not altogether wrong. But ask Cassilis here.
+_He_ knows me. Am I a man to trust? Am I safe and scrupulous? Am I kind?"
+
+"I know you talk a great deal, and sometimes, I think, very foolishly,"
+replied Clara, "but I know you are a gentleman, and I am not the least
+afraid."
+
+He looked at her with a peculiar approval and admiration; then, turning to
+me, "Do you think I would give her up without a struggle, Frank?" said he.
+"I tell you plainly, you look out. The next time we come to blows--"
+
+"Will make the third," I interrupted, smiling.
+
+"Aye, true; so it will," he said. "I had forgotten. Well, the third time's
+lucky."
+
+"The third time, you mean, you will have the crew of the 'Red Earl' to
+help," I said.
+
+"Do you hear him?" he asked, turning to my wife.
+
+"I hear two men speaking like cowards," said she. "I should despise myself
+either to think or speak like that. And neither of you believe one word
+that you are saying, which makes it the more wicked and silly."
+
+"She's a trump!" cried Northmour. "But she's not yet Mrs. Cassilis. I say
+no more. The present is not for me."
+
+Then my wife surprised me.
+
+"I leave you here," she said suddenly. "My father has been too long alone.
+But remember this: you are to be friends, for you are both good friends to
+me."
+
+She has since told me her reason for this step. As long as she remained,
+she declares that we two would have continued to quarrel; and I suppose
+that she was right, for when she was gone we fell at once into a sort of
+confidentiality.
+
+Northmour stared after her as she went away over the sand hill.
+
+"She is the only woman in the world!" he exclaimed with an oath. "Look at
+her action."
+
+I, for my part, leaped at this opportunity for a little further light.
+
+"See here, Northmour," said I; "we are all in a tight place, are we not?"
+
+"I believe you, my boy," he answered, looking me in the eyes, and with
+great emphasis. "We have all hell upon us, that's the truth. You may
+believe me or not, but I'm afraid of my life."
+
+"Tell me one thing," said I. "What are they after, these Italians? What do
+they want with Mr. Huddlestone?"
+
+"Don't you know?" he cried. "The black old scamp had _carbonari_ funds on
+a deposit--two hundred and eighty thousand; and of course he gambled it
+away on stocks. There was to have been a revolution in the Tridentino, or
+Parma; but the revolution is off, and the whole wasp's nest is after
+Huddlestone. We shall all be lucky if we can save our skins."
+
+"The _carbonari_!" I exclaimed; "God help him indeed!"
+
+"Amen!" said Northmour. "And now, look here: I have said that we are in a
+fix; and, frankly, I shall be glad of your help. If I can't save
+Huddlestone, I want at least to save the girl. Come and stay in the
+pavilion; and, there's my hand on it, I shall act as your friend until the
+old man is either clear or dead. But," he added, "once that is settled,
+you become my rival once again, and I warn you--mind yourself."
+
+"Done!" said I; and we shook hands.
+
+"And now let us go directly to the fort," said Northmour; and he began to
+lead the way through the rain.
+
+
+VI
+
+We were admitted to the pavilion by Clara, and I was surprised by the
+completeness and security of the defenses. A barricade of great strength,
+and yet easy to displace, supported the door against any violence from
+without; and the shutters of the dining-room, into which I was led
+directly, and which was feebly illuminated by a lamp, were even more
+elaborately fortified. The panels were strengthened by bars and crossbars;
+and these, in their turn, were kept in position by a system of braces and
+struts, some abutting on the floor, some on the roof, and others, in fine,
+against the opposite wall of the apartment. It was at once a solid and
+well-designed piece of carpentry; and I did not seek to conceal my
+admiration.
+
+"I am the engineer," said Northmour. "You remember the planks in the
+garden? Behold them?"
+
+"I did not know you had so many talents," said I.
+
+"Are you armed?" he continued, pointing to an array of guns and pistols,
+all in admirable order, which stood in line against the wall or were
+displayed upon the sideboard.
+
+"Thank you," I returned; "I have gone armed since our last encounter. But,
+to tell you the truth, I have had nothing to eat since early yesterday
+evening."
+
+Northmour produced some cold meat, to which I eagerly set myself, and a
+bottle of good Burgundy, by which, wet as I was, I did not scruple to
+profit. I have always been an extreme temperance man on principle; but it
+is useless to push principle to excess, and on this occasion I believe
+that I finished three quarters of the bottle. As I eat, I still continued
+to admire the preparations for defense.
+
+"We could stand a siege," I said at length.
+
+"Ye--es," drawled Northmour; "a very little one, per--haps. It is not so
+much the strength of the pavilion I misdoubt; it is the double danger that
+kills me. If we get to shooting, wild as the country is, some one is sure
+to hear it, and then--why then it's the same thing, only different, as
+they say: caged by law, or killed by _carbonari_. There's the choice. It
+is a devilish bad thing to have the law against you in this world, and so
+I tell the old gentleman upstairs. He is quite of my way of thinking."
+
+"Speaking of that," said I, "what kind of person is he?"
+
+"Oh, he!" cried the other; "he's a rancid fellow, as far as he goes. I
+should like to have his neck wrung to-morrow by all the devils in Italy. I
+am not in this affair for him. You take me? I made a bargain for missy's
+hand, and I mean to have it too."
+
+"That, by the way," said I. "I understand. But how will Mr. Huddlestone
+take my intrusion?"
+
+"Leave that to Clara," returned Northmour.
+
+I could have struck him in the face for his coarse familiarity; but I
+respected the truce, as, I am bound to say, did Northmour, and so long as
+the danger continued not a cloud arose in our relation. I bear him this
+testimony with the most unfeigned satisfaction; nor am I without pride
+when I look back upon my own behavior. For surely no two men were ever
+left in a position so invidious and irritating.
+
+As soon as I had done eating, we proceeded to inspect the lower floor.
+Window by window we tried the different supports, now and then making an
+inconsiderable change; and the strokes of the hammer sounded with
+startling loudness through the house. I proposed, I remember, to make
+loop-holes; but he told me they were already made in the windows of the
+upper story. It was an anxious business, this inspection, and left me
+down-hearted. There were two doors and five windows to protect, and,
+counting Clara, only four of us to defend them against an unknown number
+of foes. I communicated my doubts to Northmour, who assured me, with
+unmoved composure, that he entirely shared them.
+
+"Before morning," said he, "we shall all be butchered and buried in Graden
+Floe. For me, that is written."
+
+I could not help shuddering at the mention of the quicksand, but reminded
+Northmour that our enemies had spared me in the wood.
+
+"Do not flatter yourself," said he. "Then you were not in the same boat
+with the old gentleman; now you are. It's the floe for all of us, mark my
+words."
+
+I trembled for Clara; and just then her dear voice was heard calling us to
+come upstairs. Northmour showed me the way, and, when he had reached the
+landing, knocked at the door of what used to be called My Uncle's Bedroom,
+as the founder of the pavilion had designed it especially for himself.
+
+"Come in, Northmour; come in, dear Mr. Cassilis," said a voice from
+within.
+
+Pushing open the door, Northmour admitted me before him into the
+apartment. As I came in I could see the daughter slipping out by the side
+door into the study, which had been prepared as her bedroom. In the bed,
+which was drawn back against the wall, instead of standing, as I had last
+seen it, boldly across the window, sat Bernard Huddlestone, the defaulting
+banker. Little as I had seen of him by the shifting light of the lantern
+on the links, I had no difficulty in recognizing him for the same. He had
+a long and sallow countenance, surrounded by a long red beard and
+side-whiskers. His broken nose and high cheek-bones gave him somewhat the
+air of a Kalmuck, and his light eyes shone with the excitement of a high
+fever. He wore a skull-cap of black silk; a huge Bible lay open before him
+on the bed, with a pair of gold spectacles in the place, and a pile of
+other books lay on the stand by his side. The green curtains lent a
+cadaverous shade to his cheek; and, as he sat propped on pillows, his
+great stature was painfully hunched, and his head protruded till it
+overhung his knees. I believe if he had not died otherwise, he must have
+fallen a victim to consumption in the course of but a very few weeks.
+
+He held out to me a hand, long, thin, and disagreeably hairy.
+
+"Come in, come in, Mr. Cassilis," said he. "Another
+protector--ahem!--another protector. Always welcome as a friend of my
+daughter's, Mr. Cassilis. How they have rallied about me, my daughter's
+friends! May God in heaven bless and reward them for it!"
+
+I gave him my hand, of course, because I could not help it; but the
+sympathy I had been prepared to feel for Clara's father was immediately
+soured by his appearance, and the wheedling, unreal tones in which he
+spoke.
+
+"Cassilis is a good man," said Northmour; "worth ten."
+
+"So I hear," cried Mr. Huddlestone eagerly; "so my girl tells me. Ah, Mr.
+Cassilis, my sin has found me out, you see! I am very low, very low; but I
+hope equally penitent. We must all come to the throne of grace at last,
+Mr. Cassilis. For my part, I come late indeed; but with unfeigned
+humility, I trust."
+
+"Fiddle-de-dee!" said Northmour roughly.
+
+"No, no, dear Northmour!" cried the banker. "You must not say that; you
+must not try to shake me. You forget, my dear, good boy, you forget I may
+be called this very night before my Maker."
+
+His excitement was pitiful to behold; and I felt myself grow indignant
+with Northmour, whose infidel opinions I well knew, and heartily despised,
+as he continued to taunt the poor sinner out of his humor of repentance.
+
+"Pooh, my dear Huddlestone!" said he. "You do yourself injustice. You are
+a man of the world inside and out, and were up to all kinds of mischief
+before I was born. Your conscience is tanned like South American
+leather--only you forgot to tan your liver, and that, if you will believe
+me, is the seat of the annoyance."
+
+"Rogue, rogue! bad boy!" said Mr. Huddlestone, shaking his finger. "I am
+no precisian, if you come to that; I always hated a precisian; but I never
+lost hold of something better through it all. I have been a bad boy, Mr.
+Cassilis; I do not seek to deny that; but it was after my wife's death,
+and you know, with a widower, it's a different thing: sinful--I won't say
+no; but there is a gradation, we shall hope. And talking of that--Hark!"
+he broke out suddenly, his hand raised, his fingers spread, his face
+racked with interest and terror. "Only the rain, bless God!" he added,
+after a pause, and with indescribable relief.
+
+For some seconds he lay back among the pillows like a man near to
+fainting; then he gathered himself together, and, in somewhat tremulous
+tones, began once more to thank me for the share I was prepared to take in
+his defense.
+
+"One question, sir," said I, when he had paused. "Is it true that you have
+money with you?"
+
+He seemed annoyed by the question, but admitted with reluctance that he
+had a little.
+
+"Well," I continued, "it is their money they are after, is it not? Why not
+give it up to them?"
+
+"Ah!" replied he, shaking his head, "I have tried that already, Mr.
+Cassilis; and alas! that it should be so, but it is blood they want."
+
+"Huddlestone, that's a little less than fair," said Northmour. "You should
+mention that what you offered them was upward of two hundred thousand
+short. The deficit is worth a reference; it is for what they call a cool
+sum, Frank. Then, you see, the fellows reason in their clear Italian way;
+and it seems to them, as indeed it seems to me, that they may just as well
+have both while they're about it--money and blood together, by George, and
+no more trouble for the extra pleasure."
+
+"Is it in the pavilion?" I asked.
+
+"It is; and I wish it were in the bottom of the sea instead," said
+Northmour; and then suddenly--"What are you making faces at me for?" he
+cried to Mr. Huddlestone, on whom I had unconsciously turned my back. "Do
+you think Cassilis would sell you?"
+
+Mr. Huddlestone protested that nothing had been further from his mind.
+
+"It is a good thing," retorted Northmour in his ugliest manner. "You might
+end by wearying us. What were you going to say?" he added, turning to me.
+
+"I was going to propose an occupation for the afternoon," said I. "Let us
+carry that money out, piece by piece, and lay it down before the pavilion
+door. If the _carbonari_ come, why, it's theirs at any rate."
+
+"No, no," cried Mr. Huddlestone; "it does not, it cannot, belong to them!
+It should be distributed _pro rata_ among all my creditors."
+
+"Come now, Huddlestone," said Northmour, "none of that."
+
+"Well, but my daughter," moaned the wretched man.
+
+"Your daughter will do well enough. Here are two suitors, Cassilis and I,
+neither of us beggars, between whom she has to choose. And as for
+yourself, to make an end of arguments, you have no right to a farthing,
+and, unless I'm much mistaken, you are going to die."
+
+It was certainly very cruelly said; but Mr. Huddlestone was a man who
+attracted little sympathy; and, although I saw him wince and shudder, I
+mentally indorsed the rebuke; nay, I added a contribution of my own.
+
+"Northmour and I," I said, "are willing enough to help you to save your
+life, but not to escape with stolen property."
+
+He struggled for awhile with himself, as though he were on the point of
+giving way to anger, but prudence had the best of the controversy.
+
+"My dear boys," he said, "do with me or my money what you will. I leave
+all in your hands. Let me compose myself."
+
+And so we left him, gladly enough I am sure.
+
+The last that I saw, he had once more taken up his great Bible, and with
+tremulous hands was adjusting his spectacles to read.
+
+
+VII
+
+The recollection of that afternoon will always be graven on my mind.
+Northmour and I were persuaded that an attack was imminent; and if it had
+been in our power to alter in any way the order of events, that power
+would have been used to precipitate rather than delay the critical moment.
+The worst was to be anticipated; yet we could conceive no extremity so
+miserable as the suspense we were now suffering. I have never been an
+eager, though always a great, reader; but I never knew books so insipid
+as those which I took up and cast aside that afternoon in the pavilion.
+Even talk became impossible, as the hours went on. One or other was always
+listening for some sound, or peering from an upstairs window over the
+links. And yet not a sign indicated the presence of our foes.
+
+We debated over and over again my proposal with regard to the money; and
+had we been in complete possession of our faculties, I am sure we should
+have condemned it as unwise; but we were flustered with alarm, grasped at
+a straw, and determined, although it was as much as advertising Mr.
+Huddlestone's presence in the pavilion, to carry my proposal into effect.
+
+The sum was part in specie, part in bank paper, and part in circular notes
+payable to the name of James Gregory. We took it out, counted it, inclosed
+it once more in a dispatch box belonging to Northmour, and prepared a
+letter in Italian which he tied to the handle. It was signed by both of us
+under oath, and declared that this was all the money which had escaped the
+failure of the house of Huddlestone. This was, perhaps, the maddest action
+ever perpetrated by two persons professing to be sane. Had the dispatch
+box fallen into other hands than those for which it was intended, we stood
+criminally convicted on our own written testimony; but, as I have said, we
+were neither of us in a condition to judge soberly, and had a thirst for
+action that drove us to do something, right or wrong, rather than endure
+the agony of waiting. Moreover, as we were both convinced that the hollows
+of the links were alive with hidden spies upon our movements, we hoped
+that our appearance with the box might lead to a parley, and, perhaps, a
+compromise.
+
+It was nearly three when we issued from the pavilion. The rain had taken
+off; the sun shone quite cheerfully. I had never seen the gulls fly so
+close about the house or approach so fearlessly to human beings. On the
+very doorstep one flapped heavily past our heads, and uttered its wild cry
+in my very ear.
+
+"There is an omen for you," said Northmour, who like all freethinkers was
+much under the influence of superstition. "They think we are already
+dead."
+
+I made some light rejoinder, but it was with half my heart; for the
+circumstance had impressed me.
+
+A yard or two before the gate, on a patch of smooth turf, we set down the
+dispatch box; and Northmour waved a white handkerchief over his head.
+Nothing replied. We raised our voices, and cried aloud in Italian that we
+were there as ambassadors to arrange the quarrel, but the stillness
+remained unbroken save by the seagulls and the surf. I had a weight at my
+heart when we desisted; and I saw that even Northmour was unusually pale.
+He looked over his shoulder nervously, as though he feared that some one
+had crept between him and the pavilion door.
+
+"By God," he said in a whisper, "this is too much for me!"
+
+I replied in the same key: "Suppose there should be none, after all!"
+
+"Look there," he returned, nodding with his head, as though he had been
+afraid to point.
+
+I glanced in the direction indicated; and there, from the northern quarter
+of the Sea-Wood, beheld a thin column of smoke rising steadily against the
+now cloudless sky.
+
+"Northmour," I said (we still continued to talk in whispers), "it is not
+possible to endure this suspense. I prefer death fifty times over. Stay
+you here to watch the pavilion; I will go forward and make sure, if I have
+to walk right into their camp."
+
+He looked once again all round him with puckered eyes, and then nodded
+assentingly to my proposal.
+
+My heart beat like a sledge hammer as I set out walking rapidly in the
+direction of the smoke; and, though up to that moment I had felt chill and
+shivering, I was suddenly conscious of a glow of heat all over my body.
+The ground in this direction was very uneven; a hundred men might have
+lain hidden in as many square yards about my path. But I who had not
+practiced the business in vain, chose such routes as cut at the very root
+of concealment, and, by keeping along the most convenient ridges,
+commanded several hollows at a time. It was not long before I was rewarded
+for my caution. Coming suddenly on to a mound somewhat more elevated than
+the surrounding hummocks, I saw, not thirty yards away, a man bent almost
+double, and running as fast as his attitude permitted, along the bottom of
+a gully. I had dislodged one of the spies from his ambush. As soon as I
+sighted him, I called loudly both in English and Italian; and he, seeing
+concealment was no longer possible, straightened himself out, leaped from
+the gully, and made off as straight as an arrow for the borders of the
+wood. It was none of my business to pursue; I had learned what I
+wanted--that we were beleaguered and watched in the pavilion; and I
+returned at once, and walked as nearly as possible in my old footsteps, to
+where Northmour awaited me beside the dispatch box. He was even paler than
+when I had left him, and his voice shook a little.
+
+"Could you see what he was like?" he asked.
+
+"He kept his back turned," I replied.
+
+"Let us get into the house, Frank. I don't think I'm a coward, but I can
+stand no more of this," he whispered.
+
+All was still and sunshiny about the pavilion, as we turned to reenter it;
+even the gulls had flown in a wider circuit, and were seen flickering
+along the beach and sand hills; and this loneliness terrified me more than
+a regiment under arms. It was not until the door was barricaded that I
+could draw a full inspiration and relieve the weight that lay upon my
+bosom. Northmour and I exchanged a steady glance; and I suppose each made
+his own reflections on the white and startled aspect of the other.
+
+"You were right," I said. "All is over. Shake hands, old man, for the last
+time."
+
+"Yes," replied he, "I will shake hands; for, as sure as I am here, I bear
+no malice. But, remember, if, by some impossible accident, we should give
+the slip to these blackguards, I'll take the upper hand of you by fair or
+foul."
+
+"Oh," said I, "you weary me!"
+
+He seemed hurt, and walked away in silence to the foot of the stairs,
+where he paused.
+
+"You do not understand," said he. "I am not a swindler, and I guard
+myself; that is all. I may weary you or not, Mr. Cassilis, I do not care a
+rush; I speak for my own satisfaction, and not for your amusement. You had
+better go upstairs and court the girl; for my part, I stay here."
+
+"And I stay with you," I returned. "Do you think I would steal a march,
+even with your permission?"
+
+"Frank," he said, smiling, "it's a pity you are an ass, for you have the
+makings of a man. I think I must be _fey_ to-day; you cannot irritate me
+even when you try. Do you know," he continued softly, "I think we are the
+two most miserable men in England, you and I? we have got on to thirty
+without wife or child, or so much as a shop to look after--poor, pitiful,
+lost devils, both! And now we clash about a girl! As if there were not
+several millions in the United Kingdom! Ah, Frank, Frank, the one who
+loses his throw, be it you or me, he has my pity! It were better for
+him--how does the Bible say?--that a millstone were hanged about his neck
+and he were cast into the depth of the sea. Let us take a drink," he
+concluded suddenly, but without any levity of tone.
+
+I was touched by his words, and consented. He sat down on the table in the
+dining-room, and held up the glass of sherry to his eye.
+
+"If you beat me, Frank," he said, "I shall take to drink. What will you
+do, if it goes the other way?"
+
+"God knows," I returned.
+
+"Well," said he, "here is a toast in the meantime: '_Italia irredenta_!'"
+
+The remainder of the day was passed in the same dreadful tedium and
+suspense. I laid the table for dinner, while Northmour and Clara prepared
+the meal together in the kitchen. I could hear their talk as I went to and
+fro, and was surprised to find it ran all the time upon myself. Northmour
+again bracketed us together, and rallied Clara on a choice of husbands;
+but he continued to speak of me with some feeling, and uttered nothing to
+my prejudice unless he included himself in the condemnation. This awakened
+a sense of gratitude in my heart, which combined with the immediateness of
+our peril to fill my eyes with tears. After all, I thought--and perhaps
+the thought was laughably vain--we were here three very noble human beings
+to perish in defense of a thieving banker.
+
+Before we sat down to table, I looked forth from an upstairs window. The
+day was beginning to decline; the links were utterly deserted; the
+dispatch box still lay untouched where we had left it hours before.
+
+Mr. Huddlestone, in a long yellow dressing gown, took one end of the
+table, Clara the other; while Northmour and I faced each other from the
+sides. The lamp was brightly trimmed; the wine was good; the viands,
+although mostly cold, excellent of their sort. We seemed to have agreed
+tacitly; all reference to the impending catastrophe was carefully avoided;
+and, considering our tragic circumstances, we made a merrier party than
+could have been expected. From time to time, it is true, Northmour or I
+would rise from table and make a round of the defenses; and, on each of
+these occasions, Mr. Huddlestone was recalled to a sense of his tragic
+predicament, glanced up with ghastly eyes, and bore for an instant on his
+countenance the stamp of terror. But he hastened to empty his glass, wiped
+his forehead with his handkerchief, and joined again in the conversation.
+
+I was astonished at the wit and information he displayed. Mr.
+Huddlestone's was certainly no ordinary character; he had read and
+observed for himself; his gifts were sound; and, though I could never have
+learned to love the man, I began to understand his success in business,
+and the great respect in which he had been held before his failure. He
+had, above all, the talent of society; and though I never heard him speak
+but on this one and most unfavorable occasion, I set him down among the
+most brilliant conversationalists I ever met.
+
+He was relating with great gusto, and seemingly no feeling of shame, the
+maneuvers of a scoundrelly commission merchant whom he had known and
+studied in his youth, and we were all listening with an odd mixture of
+mirth and embarrassment, when our little party was brought abruptly to an
+end in the most startling manner.
+
+A noise like that of a wet finger on the window pane interrupted Mr.
+Huddlestone's tale; and in an instant we were all four as white as paper,
+and sat tongue-tied and motionless round the table.
+
+"A snail," I said at last; for I had heard that these animals make a noise
+somewhat similar in character.
+
+"Snail be d----d!" said Northmour. "Hush!"
+
+The same sound was repeated twice at regular intervals; and then a
+formidable voice shouted through the shutters the Italian word,
+_"Traditore!"_
+
+Mr. Huddlestone threw his head in the air; his eyelids quivered; next
+moment he fell insensible below the table. Northmour and I had each run to
+the armory and seized a gun. Clara was on her feet with her hand at her
+throat.
+
+So we stood waiting, for we thought the hour of attack was certainly come;
+but second passed after second, and all but the surf remained silent in
+the neighborhood of the pavilion.
+
+"Quick," said Northmour; "upstairs with him before they come."
+
+
+VIII
+
+Somehow or other, by hook and crook, and between the three of us, we got
+Bernard Huddlestone bundled upstairs and laid upon the bed in My Uncle's
+Room. During the whole process, which was rough enough, he gave no sign of
+consciousness, and he remained, as we had thrown him, without changing the
+position of a finger. His daughter opened his shirt and began to wet his
+head and bosom; while Northmour and I ran to the window. The weather
+continued clear; the moon, which was now about full, had risen and shed a
+very clear light upon the links; yet, strain our eyes as we might, we
+could distinguish nothing moving. A few dark spots, more or less, on the
+uneven expanse were not to be identified; they might be crouching men,
+they might be shadows; it was impossible to be sure.
+
+"Thank God," said Northmour, "Aggie is not coming to-night."
+
+Aggie was the name of the old nurse; he had not thought of her until now;
+but that he should think of her at all was a trait that surprised me in
+the man.
+
+We were again reduced to waiting. Northmour went to the fireplace and
+spread his hands before the red embers, as if he were cold. I followed him
+mechanically with my eyes, and in so doing turned my back upon the window.
+At that moment a very faint report was audible from without, and a ball
+shivered a pane of glass, and buried itself in the shutter two inches from
+my head. I heard Clara scream; and though I whipped instantly out of range
+and into a corner, she was there, so to speak, before me, beseeching to
+know if I were hurt. I felt that I could stand to be shot at every day and
+all day long, with such remarks of solicitude for a reward; and I
+continued to reassure her, with, the tenderest caresses and in complete
+forgetfulness of our situation, till the voice of Northmour recalled me to
+myself.
+
+"An air gun," he said. "They wish to make no noise."
+
+I put Clara aside, and looked at him. He was standing with his back to the
+fire and his hands clasped behind him; and I knew by the black look on his
+face, that passion was boiling within. I had seen just such a look before
+he attacked me, that March night, in the adjoining chamber; and, though I
+could make every allowance for his anger, I confess I trembled for the
+consequences. He gazed straight before him; but he could see us with the
+tail of his eye, and his temper kept rising like a gale of wind. With
+regular battle awaiting us outside, this prospect of an internecine strife
+within the walls began to daunt me.
+
+Suddenly, as I was thus closely watching his expression and prepared
+against the worst, I saw a change, a flash, a look of relief, upon his
+face. He took up the lamp which stood beside him on the table, and turned
+to us with an air of some excitement.
+
+"There is one point that we must know," said he. "Are they going to
+butcher the lot of us, or only Huddlestone? Did they take you for him, or
+fire at you for your own _beaux yeux_?"
+
+"They took me for him, for certain," I replied. "I am near as tall, and my
+head is fair."
+
+"I am going to make sure," returned Northmour; and he stepped up to the
+window, holding the lamp above his head, and stood there, quietly
+affronting death, for half a minute.
+
+Clara sought to rush forward and pull him from the place of danger; but I
+had the pardonable selfishness to hold her back by force.
+
+"Yes," said Northmour, turning coolly from the window, "it's only
+Huddlestone they want."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Northmour!" cried Clara; but found no more to add; the temerity
+she had just witnessed seeming beyond, the reach of words.
+
+He, on his part, looked at me, cocking his head, with a fire of triumph in
+his eyes; and I understood at once that he had thus hazarded his life,
+merely to attract Clara's notice, and depose me from my position as the
+hero of the hour. He snapped his fingers.
+
+"The fire is only beginning," said he. "When they warm up to their work,
+they won't be so particular."
+
+A voice was now heard hailing us from the entrance. From the window we
+could see the figure of a man in the moonlight; he stood motionless, his
+face uplifted to ours, and a rag of something white on his extended arm;
+and as we looked right down upon him, though he was a good many yards
+distant on the links, we could see the moonlight glitter on his eyes.
+
+He opened his lips again, and spoke for some minutes on end, in a key so
+loud that he might have been heard in every corner of the pavilion, and as
+far away as the borders of the wood. It was the same voice that had
+already shouted, _"Traditore!"_ through the shutters of the dining-room;
+this time it made a complete and clear statement. If the traitor
+"Oddlestone" were given up, all others should be spared; if not, no one
+should escape to tell the tale.
+
+"Well, Huddlestone, what do you say to that?" asked Northmour, turning to
+the bed.
+
+Up to that moment the banker had given no sign of life, and I, at least,
+had supposed him to be still lying in a faint; but he replied at once, and
+in such tones as I have never heard elsewhere, save from a delirious
+patient, adjured and besought us not to desert him. It was the most
+hideous and abject performance that my imagination can conceive.
+
+"Enough," cried Northmour; and then he threw open the window, leaned out
+into the night, and in a tone of exultation, and with a total
+forgetfulness of what was due to the presence of a lady, poured out upon
+the ambassador a string of the most abominable raillery both in English
+and Italian, and bade him be gone where he had come from. I believe that
+nothing so delighted Northmour at that moment as the thought that we must
+all infallibly perish before the night was out.
+
+Meantime, the Italian put his flag of truce into his pocket, and
+disappeared, at a leisurely pace, among the sand hills.
+
+"They make honorable war," said Northmour. "They are all gentlemen and
+soldiers. For the credit of the thing, I wish we could change sides--you
+and I, Frank, and you, too, missy, my darling--and leave that being on the
+bed to some one else. Tut! Don't look shocked! We are all going post to
+what they call eternity, and may as well be above board while there's
+time. As far as I am concerned, if I could first strangle Huddlestone and
+then get Clara in my arms, I could die with some pride and satisfaction.
+And as it is, by God, I'll have a kiss!"
+
+Before I could do anything to interfere, he had rudely embraced and
+repeatedly kissed the resisting girl. Next moment I had pulled him away
+with fury, and flung him heavily against the wall. He laughed loud and
+long, and I feared his wits had given way under the strain; for even in
+the best of days he had been a sparing and a quiet laugher.
+
+"Now, Frank," said he, when his mirth was somewhat appeased, "it's your
+turn. Here's my hand. Good-bye, farewell!" Then, seeing me stand rigid and
+indignant, and holding Clara to my side--"Man!" he broke out, "are you
+angry? Did you think we were going to die with all the airs and graces of
+society? I took a kiss; I'm glad I did it; and now you can take another if
+you like, and square accounts."
+
+I turned from him with a feeling of contempt which I did not seek to
+dissemble.
+
+"As you please," said he. "You've been a prig in life; a prig you'll die."
+
+And with that he sat down in a chair, a rifle over his knee, and amused
+himself with snapping the lock; but I could see that his ebullition of
+light spirits (the only one I ever knew him to display) had already come
+to an end, and was succeeded by a sullen, scowling humor.
+
+All this time our assailants might have been entering the house, and we
+been none the wiser; we had in truth almost forgotten the danger that so
+imminently overhung our days. But just then Mr. Huddlestone uttered a cry,
+and leaped from the bed.
+
+I asked him what was wrong.
+
+"Fire!" he cried. "They have set the house on fire!"
+
+Northmour was on his feet in an instant, and he and I ran through the door
+of communication with the study. The room was illuminated by a red and
+angry light. Almost at the moment of our entrance, a tower of flame arose
+in front of the window, and, with a tingling report, a pane fell inward on
+the carpet. They had set fire to the lean-to outhouse, where Northmour
+used to nurse his negatives.
+
+"Hot work," said Northmour. "Let us try in your old room."
+
+We ran thither in a breath, threw up the casement, and looked forth. Along
+the whole back wall of the pavilion piles of fuel had been arranged and
+kindled; and it is probable they had been drenched with mineral oil, for,
+in spite of the morning's rain, they all burned bravely. The fire had
+taken a firm hold already on the outhouse, which blazed higher and higher
+every moment; the back door was in the center of a red-hot bonfire; the
+eaves we could see, as we looked upward, were already smoldering, for the
+roof overhung, and was supported by considerable beams of wood. At the
+same time, hot, pungent, and choking volumes of smoke began to fill the
+house. There was not a human being to be seen to right or left.
+
+"Ah, well!" said Northmour, "here's the end, thank God!"
+
+And we returned to My Uncle's Room. Mr. Huddlestone was putting on his
+boots, still violently trembling, but with an air of determination such as
+I had not hitherto observed. Clara stood close by him, with her cloak in
+both hands ready to throw about her shoulders, and a strange look in her
+eyes, as if she were half hopeful, half doubtful of her father.
+
+"Well, boys and girls," said Northmour, "how about a sally? The oven is
+heating; it is not good to stay here and be baked; and, for my part, I
+want to come to my hands with them, and be done."
+
+"There's nothing else left," I replied.
+
+And both Clara and Mr. Huddlestone, though with a very different
+intonation, added, "Nothing."
+
+As we went downstairs the heat was excessive, and the roaring of the fire
+filled our ears; and we had scarce reached the passage before the stairs
+window fell in, a branch of flame shot brandishing through the aperture,
+and the interior of the pavilion became lighted up with that dreadful and
+fluctuating glare. At the same moment we heard the fall of something heavy
+and inelastic in the upper story. The whole pavilion, it was plain, had
+gone alight like a box of matches, and now not only flamed sky high to
+land and sea, but threatened with every moment to crumble and fall in
+about our ears.
+
+Northmour and I cocked our revolvers. Mr. Huddlestone, who had already
+refused a firearm, put us behind him with a manner of command.
+
+"Let Clara open the door," said he. "So, if they fire a volley, she will
+be protected. And in the meantime stand behind me. I am the scapegoat; my
+sins have found me out."
+
+I heard him, as I stood breathless by his shoulder, with my pistol ready,
+pattering off prayers in a tremulous, rapid whisper; and, I confess,
+horrid as the thought may seem, I despised him for thinking of
+supplications in a moment so critical and thrilling. In the meantime,
+Clara, who was dead white but still possessed her faculties, had displaced
+the barricade from the front door. Another moment, and she had pulled it
+open. Firelight and moonlight illuminated the links with confused and
+changeful luster, and far away against the sky we could see a long trail
+of glowing smoke.
+
+Mr. Huddlestone, filled for the moment with a strength greater than his
+own, struck Northmour and myself a back-hander in the chest; and while we
+were thus for the moment incapacitated from action, lifting his arms above
+his head like one about to dive, he ran straight forward out of the
+pavilion.
+
+"Here am I!" he cried--"Huddlestone! Kill me, and spare the others!"
+
+His sudden appearance daunted, I suppose, our hidden enemies; for
+Northmour and I had time to recover, to seize Clara between us, one by
+each arm, and to rush forth to his assistance, ere anything further had
+taken place. But scarce had we passed the threshold when there came near a
+dozen reports and flashes from every direction among the hollows of the
+links. Mr. Huddlestone staggered, uttered a weird and freezing cry, threw
+up his arms over his head, and fell backward on the turf.
+
+_"Traditore! Traditore!"_ cried the invisible avengers.
+
+And just then a part of the roof of the pavilion fell in, so rapid was the
+progress of the fire. A loud, vague, and horrible noise accompanied the
+collapse, and a vast volume of flame went soaring up to heaven. It must
+have been visible at that moment from twenty miles out at sea, from the
+shore at Graden Wester, and far inland from the peak of Graystiel, the
+most eastern summit of the Caulder Hills. Bernard Huddlestone, although
+God knows what were his obsequies, had a fine pyre at the moment of his
+death.
+
+
+IX
+
+I should have the greatest difficulty to tell you what followed next after
+this tragic circumstance. It is all to me, as I look back upon it, mixed,
+strenuous, and ineffectual, like the struggles of a sleeper in a
+nightmare. Clara, I remember, uttered a broken sigh and would have fallen
+forward to earth, had not Northmour and I supported her insensible body. I
+do not think we were attacked: I do not remember even to have seen an
+assailant; and I believe we deserted Mr. Huddlestone without a glance. I
+only remember running like a man in a panic, now carrying Clara altogether
+in my own arms, now sharing her weight with Northmour, now scuffling
+confusedly for the possession of that dear burden. Why we should have made
+for my camp in the Hemlock Den, or how we reached it, are points lost
+forever to my recollection. The first moment at which I became definitely
+sure, Clara had been suffered to fall against the outside of my little
+tent, Northmour and I were tumbling together on the ground, and he, with
+contained ferocity, was striking for my head with the butt of his
+revolver. He had already twice wounded me on the scalp; and it is to the
+consequent loss of blood that I am tempted to attribute the sudden
+clearness of my mind.
+
+I caught him by the wrist.
+
+"Northmour," I remember saying, "you can kill me afterwards. Let us first
+attend to Clara."
+
+He was at that moment uppermost. Scarcely had the words passed my lips,
+when he had leaped to his feet and ran toward the tent; and the next
+moment, he was straining Clara to his heart and covering her unconscious
+hands and face with his caresses.
+
+"Shame!" I cried. "Shame to you, Northmour!"
+
+And, giddy though I still was, I struck him repeatedly upon the head and
+shoulders.
+
+He relinquished his grasp, and faced me in the broken moonlight.
+
+"I had you under, and I let you go," said he; "and now you strike me!
+Coward!"
+
+"You are the coward," I retorted. "Did she wish your kisses while she was
+still sensible of what you wanted? Not she! And now she may be dying; and
+you waste this precious time, and abuse her helplessness. Stand aside, and
+let me help her."
+
+He confronted me for a moment, white and menacing; then suddenly he
+stepped aside.
+
+"Help her then," said he.
+
+I threw myself on my knees beside her, and loosened, as well as I was
+able, her dress and corset; but while I was thus engaged, a grasp
+descended on my shoulder.
+
+"Keep your hands off her," said Northmour, fiercely. "Do you think I have
+no blood in my veins?"
+
+"Northmour," I cried, "if you will neither help her yourself, nor let me
+do so, do you know that I shall have to kill you?"
+
+"That is better!" he cried. "Let her die also, where's the harm? Step
+aside from that girl! and stand up to fight."
+
+"You will observe," said I, half rising, "that I have not kissed her yet."
+
+"I dare you to," he cried.
+
+I do not know what possessed me; it was one of the things I am most
+ashamed of in my life, though, as my wife used to say, I knew that my
+kisses would be always welcome were she dead or living; down I fell again
+upon my knees, parted the hair from her forehead, and, with the dearest
+respect, laid my lips for a moment on that cold brow. It was such a caress
+as a father might have given; it was such a one as was not unbecoming
+from a man soon to die to a woman already dead.
+
+"And now," said I, "I am at your service, Mr. Northmour."
+
+
+But I saw, to my surprise, that he had turned his back upon me.
+
+"Do you hear?" I asked.
+
+"Yes," said he, "I do. If you wish to fight, I am ready. If not, go on and
+save Clara. All is one to me."
+
+I did not wait to be twice bidden; but, stooping again over Clara,
+continued my efforts to revive her. She still lay white and lifeless; I
+began to fear that her sweet spirit had indeed fled beyond recall, and
+horror and a sense of utter desolation seized upon my heart. I called her
+by name with the most endearing inflections; I chafed and beat her hands;
+now I laid her head low, now supported it against my knee; but all seemed
+to be in vain, and the lids still lay heavy on her eyes.
+
+"Northmour," I said, "there is my hat. For God's sake bring some water
+from the spring."
+
+Almost in a moment he was by my side with the water.
+
+"I have brought it in my own," he said. "You do not grudge me the
+privilege?"
+
+"Northmour," I was beginning to say, as I laved her head and breast; but
+he interrupted me savagely.
+
+"Oh, you hush up!" he said. "The best thing you can do is to say nothing."
+
+I had certainly no desire to talk, my mind being swallowed up in concern
+for my dear love and her condition; so I continued in silence to do my
+best toward her recovery, and, when the hat was empty, returned it to him,
+with one word--"More." He had, perhaps, gone several times upon this
+errand, when Clara reopened her eyes.
+
+"Now," said he, "since she is better, you can spare me, can you not? I
+wish you a good night, Mr. Cassilis."
+
+And with that he was gone among the thicket. I made a fire, for I had now
+no fear of the Italians, who had even spared all the little possessions
+left in my encampment; and, broken as she was by the excitement and the
+hideous catastrophe of the evening, I managed, in one way or another--by
+persuasion, encouragement, warmth, and such simple remedies as I could lay
+my hand on--to bring her back to some composure of mind and strength of
+body.
+
+Day had already come, when a sharp "Hist!" sounded from the thicket. I
+started from the ground; but the voice of Northmour was heard adding, in
+the most tranquil tones: "Come here, Cassilis, and alone; I want to show
+you something."
+
+I consulted Clara with my eyes, and, receiving her tacit permission, left
+her alone, and clambered out of the den. At some distance off I saw
+Northmour leaning against an elder; and, as soon as he perceived me, he
+began walking seaward. I had almost overtaken him as he reached the
+outskirts of the wood.
+
+"Look," said he, pausing.
+
+A couple of steps more brought me out of the foliage. The light of the
+morning lay cold and clear over that well-known scene. The pavilion was
+but a blackened wreck; the roof had fallen in, one of the gables had
+fallen out; and, far and near, the face of the links was cicatrized with
+little patches of burned furze. Thick smoke still went straight upward in
+the windless air of the morning, and a great pile of ardent cinders filled
+the bare walls of the house, like coals in an open grate. Close by the
+islet a schooner yacht lay to, and a well-manned boat was pulling
+vigorously for the shore.
+
+"The 'Red Earl'!" I cried. "The 'Red Earl' twelve hours too late!"
+
+"Feel in your pocket, Frank. Are you armed?" asked Northmour.
+
+I obeyed him, and I think I must have become deadly pale. My revolver had
+been taken from me.
+
+"You see, I have you in my power," he continued. "I disarmed you last
+night while you were nursing Clara; but this morning--here--take your
+pistol. No thanks!" he cried, holding up his hand. "I do not like them;
+that is the only way you can annoy me now."
+
+He began to walk forward across the links to meet the boat, and I followed
+a step or two behind. In front of the pavilion I paused to see where Mr.
+Huddlestone had fallen; but there was no sign of him, nor so much as a
+trace of blood.
+
+"Graden Floe," said Northmour.
+
+He continued to advance till we had come to the head of the beach.
+
+"No farther, please," said he. "Would you like to take her to Graden
+House?"
+
+"Thank you," replied I; "I shall try to get her to the minister at Graden
+Wester."
+
+The prow of the boat here grated on the beach, and a sailor jumped ashore
+with a line in his hand.
+
+"Wait a minute, lads!" cried Northmour; and then lower and to my private
+ear, "You had better say nothing of all this to her," he added.
+
+"On the contrary!" I broke out, "she shall know everything that I can
+tell."
+
+"You do not understand," he returned, with an air of great dignity. "It
+will be nothing to her; she expects it of me. Good-by!" he added, with a
+nod.
+
+I offered him my hand.
+
+"Excuse me," said he. "It's small, I know; but I can't push things quite
+so far as that. I don't wish any sentimental business, to sit by your
+hearth a white-haired wanderer, and all that. Quite the contrary: I hope
+to God I shall never again clap eyes on either one of you."
+
+"Well, God bless you, Northmour!" I said heartily.
+
+"Oh, yes," he returned.
+
+He walked down the beach; and the man who was ashore gave him an arm on
+board, and then shoved off and leaped into the bows himself. Northmour
+took the tiller; the boat rose to the waves, and the oars between the
+tholepins sounded crisp and measured in the morning air.
+
+They were not yet half way to the "Red Earl," and I was still watching
+their progress, when the sun rose out of the sea.
+
+One word more, and my story is done. Years after, Northmour was killed
+fighting under the colors of Garibaldi for the liberation of the Tyrol.
+
+
+
+
+Wilkie Collins
+
+
+
+
+_The Dream Woman_
+
+_A Mystery in Four Narratives_
+
+THE FIRST NARRATIVE
+
+INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT OF THE FACTS BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+I
+
+"Hullo, there! Hostler! Hullo-o-o!"
+
+"My dear! why don't you look for the bell?"
+
+"I have looked--there is no bell."
+
+"And nobody in the yard. How very extraordinary! Call again, dear."
+
+"Hostler! Hullo, there! Hostler-r-r!"
+
+My second call echoes through empty space, and rouses nobody--produces, in
+short, no visible result. I am at the end of my resources--I don't know
+what to say or what to do next. Here I stand in the solitary inn yard of a
+strange town, with two horses to hold, and a lady to take care of. By way
+of adding to my responsibilities, it so happens that one of the horses is
+dead lame, and that the lady is my wife.
+
+Who am I?--you will ask.
+
+There is plenty of time to answer the question. Nothing happens; and
+nobody appears to receive us. Let me introduce myself and my wife.
+
+I am Percy Fairbank--English gentleman--age (let us say) forty--no
+profession--moderate politics--middle height--fair complexion--easy
+character--plenty of money.
+
+My wife is a French lady. She was Mademoiselle Clotilde Delorge--when I
+was first presented to her at her father's house in France. I fell in love
+with her--I really don't know why. It might have been because I was
+perfectly idle, and had nothing else to do at the time. Or it might have
+been because all my friends said she was the very last woman whom I ought
+to think of marrying. On the surface, I must own, there is nothing in
+common between Mrs. Fairbank and me. She is tall; she is dark; she is
+nervous, excitable, romantic; in all her opinions she proceeds to
+extremes. What could such a woman see in me? what could I see in her? I
+know no more than you do. In some mysterious manner we exactly suit each
+other. We have been man and wife for ten years, and our only regret is,
+that we have no children. I don't know what you may think; I call
+that--upon the whole--a happy marriage.
+
+So much for ourselves. The next question is--what has brought us into the
+inn yard? and why am I obliged to turn groom, and hold the horses?
+
+We live for the most part in France--at the country house in which my wife
+and I first met. Occasionally, by way of variety, we pay visits to my
+friends in England. We are paying one of those visits now. Our host is an
+old college friend of mine, possessed of a fine estate in Somersetshire;
+and we have arrived at his house--called Farleigh Hall--toward the close
+of the hunting season.
+
+On the day of which I am now writing--destined to be a memorable day in
+our calendar--the hounds meet at Farleigh Hall. Mrs. Fairbank and I are
+mounted on two of the best horses in my friend's stables. We are quite
+unworthy of that distinction; for we know nothing and care nothing about
+hunting. On the other hand, we delight in riding, and we enjoy the breezy
+Spring morning and the fair and fertile English landscape surrounding us
+on every side. While the hunt prospers, we follow the hunt. But when a
+check occurs--when time passes and patience is sorely tried; when the
+bewildered dogs run hither and thither, and strong language falls from
+the lips of exasperated sportsmen--we fail to take any further interest in
+the proceedings. We turn our horses' heads in the direction of a grassy
+lane, delightfully shaded by trees. We trot merrily along the lane, and
+find ourselves on an open common. We gallop across the common, and follow
+the windings of a second lane. We cross a brook, we pass through a
+village, we emerge into pastoral solitude among the hills. The horses toss
+their heads, and neigh to each other, and enjoy it as much as we do. The
+hunt is forgotten. We are as happy as a couple of children; we are
+actually singing a French song--when in one moment our merriment comes to
+an end. My wife's horse sets one of his forefeet on a loose stone, and
+stumbles. His rider's ready hand saves him from falling. But, at the first
+attempt he makes to go on, the sad truth shows itself--a tendon is
+strained; the horse is lame.
+
+What is to be done? We are strangers in a lonely part of the country. Look
+where we may, we see no signs of a human habitation. There is nothing for
+it but to take the bridle road up the hill, and try what we can discover
+on the other side. I transfer the saddles, and mount my wife on my own
+horse. He is not used to carry a lady; he misses the familiar pressure of
+a man's legs on either side of him; he fidgets, and starts, and kicks up
+the dust. I follow on foot, at a respectful distance from his heels,
+leading the lame horse. Is there a more miserable object on the face of
+creation than a lame horse? I have seen lame men and lame dogs who were
+cheerful creatures; but I never yet saw a lame horse who didn't look
+heartbroken over his own misfortune.
+
+For half an hour my wife capers and curvets sideways along the bridle
+road. I trudge on behind her; and the heartbroken horse halts behind _me_.
+Hard by the top of the hill, our melancholy procession passes a
+Somersetshire peasant at work in a field. I summon the man to approach us;
+and the man looks at me stolidly, from the middle of the field, without
+stirring a step. I ask at the top of my voice how far it is to Farleigh
+Hall. The Somersetshire peasant answers at the top of _his_ voice:
+
+"Vourteen mile. Gi' oi a drap o' zyder."
+
+I translate (for my wife's benefit) from the Somersetshire language into
+the English language. We are fourteen miles from Farleigh Hall; and our
+friend in the field desires to be rewarded, for giving us that
+information, with a drop of cider. There is the peasant, painted by
+himself! Quite a bit of character, my dear! Quite a bit of character!
+
+Mrs. Fairbank doesn't view the study of agricultural human nature with my
+relish. Her fidgety horse will not allow her a moment's repose; she is
+beginning to lose her temper.
+
+"We can't go fourteen miles in this way," she says. "Where is the nearest
+inn? Ask that brute in the field!"
+
+I take a shilling from my pocket and hold it up in the sun. The shilling
+exercises magnetic virtues. The shilling draws the peasant slowly toward
+me from the middle of the field. I inform him that we want to put up the
+horses and to hire a carriage to take us back to Farleigh Hall. Where can
+we do that? The peasant answers (with his eye on the shilling):
+
+"At Oonderbridge, to be zure." (At Underbridge, to be sure.)
+
+"Is it far to Underbridge?"
+
+The peasant repeats, "Var to Oonderbridge?"--and laughs at the question.
+"Hoo-hoo-hoo!" (Underbridge is evidently close by--if we could only find
+it.) "Will you show us the way, my man?" "Will you gi' oi a drap of
+zyder?" I courteously bend my head, and point to the shilling. The
+agricultural intelligence exerts itself. The peasant joins our melancholy
+procession. My wife is a fine woman, but he never once looks at my
+wife--and, more extraordinary still, he never even looks at the horses.
+His eyes are with his mind--and his mind is on the shilling.
+
+We reach the top of the hill--and, behold on the other side, nestling in
+a valley, the shrine of our pilgrimage, the town of Underbridge! Here our
+guide claims his shilling, and leaves us to find out the inn for
+ourselves. I am constitutionally a polite man. I say "Good morning" at
+parting. The guide looks at me with the shilling between his teeth to make
+sure that it is a good one. "Marnin!" he says savagely--and turns his back
+on us, as if we had offended him. A curious product, this, of the growth
+of civilization. If I didn't see a church spire at Underbridge, I might
+suppose that we had lost ourselves on a savage island.
+
+
+II
+
+Arriving at the town, we had no difficulty in finding the inn. The town is
+composed of one desolate street; and midway in that street stands the
+inn--an ancient stone building sadly out of repair. The painting on the
+sign-board is obliterated. The shutters over the long range of front
+windows are all closed. A cock and his hens are the only living creatures
+at the door. Plainly, this is one of the old inns of the stage-coach
+period, ruined by the railway. We pass through the open arched doorway,
+and find no one to welcome us. We advance into the stable yard behind; I
+assist my wife to dismount--and there we are in the position already
+disclosed to view at the opening of this narrative. No bell to ring. No
+human creature to answer when I call. I stand helpless, with the bridles
+of the horses in my hand. Mrs. Fairbank saunters gracefully down the
+length of the yard and does--what all women do, when they find themselves
+in a strange place. She opens every door as she passes it, and peeps in.
+On my side, I have just recovered my breath, I am on the point of shouting
+for the hostler for the third and last time, when I hear Mrs. Fairbank
+suddenly call to me:
+
+"Percy! come here!"
+
+Her voice is eager and agitated. She has opened a last door at the end of
+the yard, and has started back from some sight which has suddenly met her
+view. I hitch the horses' bridles on a rusty nail in the wall near me, and
+join my wife. She has turned pale, and catches me nervously by the arm.
+
+"Good heavens!" she cries; "look at that!"
+
+I look--and what do I see? I see a dingy little stable, containing two
+stalls. In one stall a horse is munching his corn. In the other a man is
+lying asleep on the litter.
+
+A worn, withered, woebegone man in a hostler's dress. His hollow wrinkled
+cheeks, his scanty grizzled hair, his dry yellow skin, tell their own tale
+of past sorrow or suffering. There is an ominous frown on his
+eyebrows--there is a painful nervous contraction on the side of his mouth.
+I hear him breathing convulsively when I first look in; he shudders and
+sighs in his sleep. It is not a pleasant sight to see, and I turn round
+instinctively to the bright sunlight in the yard. My wife turns me back
+again in the direction of the stable door.
+
+"Wait!" she says. "Wait! he may do it again."
+
+"Do what again?"
+
+"He was talking in his sleep, Percy, when I first looked in. He was
+dreaming some dreadful dream. Hush! he's beginning again."
+
+I look and listen. The man stirs on his miserable bed. The man speaks in a
+quick, fierce whisper through his clinched teeth. "Wake up! Wake up,
+there! Murder!"
+
+There is an interval of silence. He moves one lean arm slowly until it
+rests over his throat; he shudders, and turns on his straw; he raises his
+arm from his throat, and feebly stretches it out; his hand clutches at the
+straw on the side toward which he has turned; he seems to fancy that he is
+grasping at the edge of something. I see his lips begin to move again; I
+step softly into the stable; my wife follows me, with her hand fast
+clasped in mine. We both bend over him. He is talking once more in his
+sleep--strange talk, mad talk, this time.
+
+"Light gray eyes" (we hear him say), "and a droop in the left
+eyelid--flaxen hair, with a gold-yellow streak in it--all right, mother!
+fair, white arms with a down on them--little, lady's hand, with a reddish
+look round the fingernails--the knife--the cursed knife--first on one
+side, then on the other--aha, you she-devil! where is the knife?"
+
+He stops and grows restless on a sudden. We see him writhing on the straw.
+He throws up both his hands and gasps hysterically for breath. His eyes
+open suddenly. For a moment they look at nothing, with a vacant glitter in
+them--then they close again in deeper sleep. Is he dreaming still? Yes;
+but the dream seems to have taken a new course. When he speaks next, the
+tone is altered; the words are few--sadly and imploringly repeated over
+and over again. "Say you love me! I am so fond of _you_. Say you love me!
+say you love me!" He sinks into deeper and deeper sleep, faintly repeating
+those words. They die away on his lips. He speaks no more.
+
+By this time Mrs. Fairbank has got over her terror; she is devoured by
+curiosity now. The miserable creature on the straw has appealed to the
+imaginative side of her character. Her illimitable appetite for romance
+hungers and thirsts for more. She shakes me impatiently by the arm.
+
+"Do you hear? There is a woman at the bottom of it, Percy! There is love
+and murder in it, Percy! Where are the people of the inn? Go into the
+yard, and call to them again."
+
+My wife belongs, on her mother's side, to the South of France. The South
+of France breeds fine women with hot tempers. I say no more. Married men
+will understand my position. Single men may need to be told that there are
+occasions when we must not only love and honor--we must also obey--our
+wives.
+
+I turn to the door to obey _my_ wife, and find myself confronted by a
+stranger who has stolen on us unawares. The stranger is a tiny, sleepy,
+rosy old man, with a vacant pudding-face, and a shining bald head. He
+wears drab breeches and gaiters, and a respectable square-tailed ancient
+black coat. I feel instinctively that here is the landlord of the inn.
+
+"Good morning, sir," says the rosy old man. "I'm a little hard of hearing.
+Was it you that was a-calling just now in the yard?"
+
+Before I can answer, my wife interposes. She insists (in a shrill voice,
+adapted to our host's hardness of hearing) on knowing who that unfortunate
+person is sleeping on the straw. "Where does he come from? Why does he say
+such dreadful things in his sleep? Is he married or single? Did he ever
+fall in love with a murderess? What sort of a looking woman was she? Did
+she really stab him or not? In short, dear Mr. Landlord, tell us the whole
+story!"
+
+Dear Mr. Landlord waits drowsily until Mrs. Fairbank has quite done--then
+delivers himself of his reply as follows:
+
+"His name's Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He was
+forty-five year old last birthday. And he's my hostler. That's his story."
+
+My wife's hot southern temper finds its way to her foot, and expresses
+itself by a stamp on the stable yard.
+
+The landlord turns himself sleepily round, and looks at the horses. "A
+fine pair of horses, them two in the yard. Do you want to put 'em in my
+stables?" I reply in the affirmative by a nod. The landlord, bent on
+making himself agreeable to my wife, addresses her once more. "I'm a-going
+to wake Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He was forty-five
+year old last birthday. And he's my hostler. That's his story."
+
+Having issued this second edition of his interesting narrative, the
+landlord enters the stable. We follow him to see how he will wake Francis
+Raven, and what will happen upon that. The stable broom stands in a
+corner; the landlord takes it--advances toward the sleeping hostler--and
+coolly stirs the man up with a broom as if he was a wild beast in a cage.
+Francis Raven starts to his feet with a cry of terror--looks at us wildly,
+with a horrid glare of suspicion in his eyes--recovers himself the next
+moment--and suddenly changes into a decent, quiet, respectable
+serving-man.
+
+"I beg your pardon, ma'am. I beg your pardon, sir."
+
+The tone and manner in which he makes his apologies are both above his
+apparent station in life. I begin to catch the infection of Mrs.
+Fairbank's interest in this man. We both follow him out into the yard to
+see what he will do with the horses. The manner in which he lifts the
+injured leg of the lame horse tells me at once that he understands his
+business. Quickly and quietly, he leads the animal into an empty stable;
+quickly and quietly, he gets a bucket of hot water, and puts the lame
+horse's leg into it. "The warm water will reduce the swelling, sir. I will
+bandage the leg afterwards." All that he does is done intelligently; all
+that he says, he says to the purpose.
+
+Nothing wild, nothing strange about him now. Is this the same man whom we
+heard talking in his sleep?--the same man who woke with that cry of terror
+and that horrid suspicion in his eyes? I determine to try him with one or
+two questions.
+
+
+III
+
+"Not much to do here," I say to the hostler.
+
+"Very little to do, sir," the hostler replies.
+
+"Anybody staying in the house?"
+
+"The house is quite empty, sir."
+
+"I thought you were all dead. I could make nobody hear me."
+
+"The landlord is very deaf, sir, and the waiter is out on an errand."
+
+"Yes; and _you_ were fast asleep in the stable. Do you often take a nap in
+the daytime?"
+
+The worn face of the hostler faintly flushes. His eyes look away from my
+eyes for the first time. Mrs. Fairbank furtively pinches my arm. Are we on
+the eve of a discovery at last? I repeat my question. The man has no civil
+alternative but to give me an answer. The answer is given in these words:
+
+"I was tired out, sir. You wouldn't have found me asleep in the daytime
+but for that."
+
+"Tired out, eh? You had been hard at work, I suppose?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"What was it, then?"
+
+He hesitates again, and answers unwillingly, "I was up all night."
+
+"Up all night? Anything going on in the town?"
+
+"Nothing going on, sir."
+
+"Anybody ill?"
+
+"Nobody ill, sir."
+
+That reply is the last. Try as I may, I can extract nothing more from him.
+He turns away and busies himself in attending to the horse's leg. I leave
+the stable to speak to the landlord about the carriage which is to take us
+back to Farleigh Hall. Mrs. Fairbank remains with the hostler, and favors
+me with a look at parting. The look says plainly, "_I_ mean to find out
+why he was up all night. Leave him to Me."
+
+The ordering of the carriage is easily accomplished. The inn possesses one
+horse and one chaise. The landlord has a story to tell of the horse, and a
+story to tell of the chaise. They resemble the story of Francis
+Raven--with this exception, that the horse and chaise belong to no
+religious persuasion. "The horse will be nine year old next birthday. I've
+had the shay for four-and-twenty year. Mr. Max, of Underbridge, he bred
+the horse; and Mr. Pooley, of Yeovil, he built the shay. It's my horse and
+my shay. And that's _their_ story!" Having relieved his mind of these
+details, the landlord proceeds to put the harness on the horse. By way of
+assisting him, I drag the chaise into the yard. Just as our preparations
+are completed, Mrs. Fairbank appears. A moment or two later the hostler
+follows her out. He has bandaged the horse's leg, and is now ready to
+drive us to Farleigh Hall. I observe signs of agitation in his face and
+manner, which suggest that my wife has found her way into his confidence.
+I put the question to her privately in a corner of the yard. "Well? Have
+you found out why Francis Raven was up all night?"
+
+Mrs. Fairbank has an eye to dramatic effect. Instead of answering plainly,
+Yes or No, she suspends the interest and excites the audience by putting a
+question on her side.
+
+"What is the day of the month, dear?"
+
+"The day of the month is the first of March."
+
+"The first of March, Percy, is Francis Raven's birthday."
+
+I try to look as if I was interested--and don't succeed.
+
+"Francis was born," Mrs. Fairbank proceeds gravely, "at two o'clock in the
+morning."
+
+I begin to wonder whether my wife's intellect is going the way of the
+landlord's intellect. "Is that all?" I ask.
+
+"It is _not_ all," Mrs. Fairbank answers. "Francis Raven sits up on the
+morning of his birthday because he is afraid to go to bed."
+
+"And why is he afraid to go to bed?"
+
+"Because he is in peril of his life."
+
+"On his birthday?"
+
+"On his birthday. At two o'clock in the morning. As regularly as the
+birthday comes round."
+
+There she stops. Has she discovered no more than that? No more thus far. I
+begin to feel really interested by this time. I ask eagerly what it means?
+Mrs. Fairbank points mysteriously to the chaise--with Francis Raven
+(hitherto our hostler, now our coachman) waiting for us to get in. The
+chaise has a seat for two in front, and a seat for one behind. My wife
+casts a warning look at me, and places herself on the seat in front.
+
+The necessary consequence of this arrangement is that Mrs. Fairbank sits
+by the side of the driver during a journey of two hours and more. Need I
+state the result? It would be an insult to your intelligence to state the
+result. Let me offer you my place in the chaise. And let Francis Raven
+tell his terrible story in his own words.
+
+
+
+
+THE SECOND NARRATIVE
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HOSTLER'S STORY.--TOLD BY HIMSELF
+
+
+IV
+
+It is now ten years ago since I got my first warning of the great trouble
+of my life in the Vision of a Dream.
+
+I shall be better able to tell you about it if you will please suppose
+yourselves to be drinking tea along with us in our little cottage in
+Cambridgeshire, ten years since.
+
+The time was the close of day, and there were three of us at the table,
+namely, my mother, myself, and my mother's sister, Mrs. Chance. These two
+were Scotchwomen by birth, and both were widows. There was no other
+resemblance between them that I can call to mind. My mother had lived all
+her life in England, and had no more of the Scotch brogue on her tongue
+than I have. My aunt Chance had never been out of Scotland until she came
+to keep house with my mother after her husband's death. And when _she_
+opened her lips you heard broad Scotch, I can tell you, if you ever heard
+it yet!
+
+As it fell out, there was a matter of some consequence in debate among us
+that evening. It was this: whether I should do well or not to take a long
+journey on foot the next morning.
+
+Now the next morning happened to be the day before my birthday; and the
+purpose of the journey was to offer myself for a situation as groom at a
+great house in the neighboring county to ours. The place was reported as
+likely to fall vacant in about three weeks' time. I was as well fitted to
+fill it as any other man. In the prosperous days of our family, my father
+had been manager of a training stable, and he had kept me employed among
+the horses from my boyhood upward. Please to excuse my troubling you with
+these small matters. They all fit into my story farther on, as you will
+soon find out. My poor mother was dead against my leaving home on the
+morrow.
+
+"You can never walk all the way there and all the way back again by
+to-morrow night," she says. "The end of it will be that you will sleep
+away from home on your birthday. You have never done that yet, Francis,
+since your father's death, I don't like your doing it now. Wait a day
+longer, my son--only one day."
+
+For my own part, I was weary of being idle, and I couldn't abide the
+notion of delay. Even one day might make all the difference. Some other
+man might take time by the forelock, and get the place.
+
+"Consider how long I have been out of work," I says, "and don't ask me to
+put off the journey. I won't fail you, mother. I'll get back by to-morrow
+night, if I have to pay my last sixpence for a lift in a cart.
+
+My mother shook her head. "I don't like it, Francis--I don't like it!"
+There was no moving her from that view. We argued and argued, until we
+were both at a deadlock. It ended in our agreeing to refer the difference
+between us to my mother's sister, Mrs. Chance.
+
+While we were trying hard to convince each other, my aunt Chance sat as
+dumb as a fish, stirring her tea and thinking her own thoughts. When we
+made our appeal to her, she seemed as it were to wake up. "Ye baith refer
+it to my puir judgment?" she says, in her broad Scotch. We both answered
+Yes. Upon that my aunt Chance first cleared the tea-table, and then pulled
+out from the pocket of her gown a pack of cards.
+
+Don't run away, if you please, with the notion that this was done lightly,
+with a view to amuse my mother and me. My aunt Chance seriously believed
+that she could look into the future by telling fortunes on the cards. She
+did nothing herself without first consulting the cards. She could give no
+more serious proof of her interest in my welfare than the proof which she
+was offering now. I don't say it profanely; I only mention the fact--the
+cards had, in some incomprehensible way, got themselves jumbled up
+together with her religious convictions. You meet with people nowadays who
+believe in spirits working by way of tables and chairs. On the same
+principle (if there _is_ any principle in it) my aunt Chance believed in
+Providence working by way of the cards.
+
+"Whether _you_ are right, Francie, or your mither--whether ye will do weel
+or ill, the morrow, to go or stay--the cairds will tell it. We are a' in
+the hands of Proavidence. The cairds will tell it."
+
+Hearing this, my mother turned her head aside, with something of a sour
+look in her face. Her sister's notions about the cards were little better
+than flat blasphemy to her mind. But she kept her opinion to herself. My
+aunt Chance, to own the truth, had inherited, through her late husband, a
+pension of thirty pounds a year. This was an important contribution to our
+housekeeping, and we poor relations were bound to treat her with a certain
+respect. As for myself, if my poor father never did anything else for me
+before he fell into difficulties, he gave me a good education, and raised
+me (thank God) above superstitions of all sorts. However, a very little
+amused me in those days; and I waited to have my fortune told, as
+patiently as if I believed in it too!
+
+My aunt began her hocus pocus by throwing out all the cards in the pack
+under seven. She shuffled the rest with her left hand for luck; and then
+she gave them to me to cut. "Wi' yer left hand, Francie. Mind that! Pet
+your trust in Proavidence--but dinna forget that your luck's in yer left
+hand!" A long and roundabout shifting of the cards followed, reducing them
+in number until there were just fifteen of them left, laid out neatly
+before my aunt in a half circle. The card which happened to lie outermost,
+at the right-hand end of the circle, was, according to rule in such cases,
+the card chosen to represent Me. By way of being appropriate to my
+situation as a poor groom out of employment, the card was--the King of
+Diamonds.
+
+"I tak' up the King o' Diamants," says my aunt. "I count seven cairds fra'
+richt to left; and I humbly ask a blessing on what follows." My aunt shut
+her eyes as if she was saying grace before meat, and held up to me the
+seventh card. I called the seventh card--the Queen of Spades. My aunt
+opened her eyes again in a hurry, and cast a sly look my way. "The Queen
+o' Spades means a dairk woman. Ye'll be thinking in secret, Francie, of a
+dairk woman?"
+
+When a man has been out of work for more than three months, his mind isn't
+troubled much with thinking of women--light or dark. I was thinking of the
+groom's place at the great house, and I tried to say so. My aunt Chance
+wouldn't listen. She treated my interpretation with contempt. "Hoot-toot!
+there's the caird in your hand! If ye're no thinking of her the day, ye'll
+be thinking of her the morrow. Where's the harm of thinking of a dairk
+woman! I was ance a dairk woman myself, before my hair was gray. Haud yer
+peace, Francie, and watch the cairds."
+
+I watched the cards as I was told. There were seven left on the table. My
+aunt removed two from one end of the row and two from the other, and
+desired me to call the two outermost of the three cards now left on the
+table. I called the Ace of Clubs and the Ten of Diamonds. My aunt Chance
+lifted her eyes to the ceiling with a look of devout gratitude which
+sorely tried my mother's patience. The Ace of Clubs and the Ten of
+Diamonds, taken together, signified--first, good news (evidently the news
+of the groom's place); secondly, a journey that lay before me (pointing
+plainly to my journey to-morrow!); thirdly and lastly, a sum of money
+(probably the groom's wages!) waiting to find its way into my pockets.
+Having told my fortune in these encouraging terms, my aunt declined to
+carry the experiment any further. "Eh, lad! it's a clean tempting o'
+Proavidence to ask mair o' the cairds than the cairds have tauld us noo.
+Gae yer ways to-morrow to the great hoose. A dairk woman will meet ye at
+the gate; and she'll have a hand in getting ye the groom's place, wi' a'
+the gratifications and pairquisites appertaining to the same. And, mebbe,
+when yer poaket's full o' money, ye'll no' be forgetting yer aunt Chance,
+maintaining her ain unblemished widowhood--wi' Proavidence assisting--on
+thratty punds a year!"
+
+I promised to remember my aunt Chance (who had the defect, by the way, of
+being a terribly greedy person after money) on the next happy occasion
+when my poor empty pockets were to be filled at last. This done, I looked
+at my mother. She had agreed to take her sister for umpire between us, and
+her sister had given it in my favor. She raised no more objections.
+Silently, she got on her feet, and kissed me, and sighed bitterly--and so
+left the room. My aunt Chance shook her head. "I doubt, Francie, yer puir
+mither has but a heathen notion of the vairtue of the cairds!"
+
+By daylight the next morning I set forth on my journey. I looked back at
+the cottage as I opened the garden gate. At one window was my mother, with
+her handkerchief to her eyes. At the other stood my aunt Chance, holding
+up the Queen of Spades by way of encouraging me at starting. I waved my
+hands to both of them in token of farewell, and stepped out briskly into
+the road. It was then the last day of February. Be pleased to remember, in
+connection with this, that the first of March was the day, and two o'clock
+in the morning the hour of my birth.
+
+
+V
+
+Now you know how I came to leave home. The next thing to tell is, what
+happened on the journey.
+
+I reached the great house in reasonably good time considering the
+distance. At the very first trial of it, the prophecy of the cards turned
+out to be wrong. The person who met me at the lodge gate was not a dark
+woman--in fact, not a woman at all--but a boy. He directed me on the way
+to the servants' offices; and there again the cards were all wrong. I
+encountered, not one woman, but three--and not one of the three was dark.
+I have stated that I am not superstitious, and I have told the truth. But
+I must own that I did feel a certain fluttering at the heart when I made
+my bow to the steward, and told him what business had brought me to the
+house. His answer completed the discomfiture of aunt Chance's
+fortune-telling. My ill-luck still pursued me. That very morning another
+man had applied for the groom's place, and had got it.
+
+I swallowed my disappointment as well as I could, and thanked the steward,
+and went to the inn in the village to get the rest and food which I sorely
+needed by this time.
+
+Before starting on my homeward walk I made some inquiries at the inn, and
+ascertained that I might save a few miles, on my return, by following a
+new road. Furnished with full instructions, several times repeated, as to
+the various turnings I was to take, I set forth, and walked on till the
+evening with only one stoppage for bread and cheese. Just as it was
+getting toward dark, the rain came on and the wind began to rise; and I
+found myself, to make matters worse, in a part of the country with which I
+was entirely unacquainted, though I guessed myself to be some fifteen
+miles from home. The first house I found to inquire at, was a lonely
+roadside inn, standing on the outskirts of a thick wood. Solitary as the
+place looked, it was welcome to a lost man who was also hungry, thirsty,
+footsore, and wet. The landlord was civil and respectable-looking; and the
+price he asked for a bed was reasonable enough. I was grieved to
+disappoint my mother. But there was no conveyance to be had, and I could
+go no farther afoot that night. My weariness fairly forced me to stop at
+the inn.
+
+I may say for myself that I am a temperate man. My supper simply consisted
+of some rashers of bacon, a slice of home-made bread, and a pint of ale. I
+did not go to bed immediately after this moderate meal, but sat up with
+the landlord, talking about my bad prospects and my long run of ill-luck,
+and diverging from these topics to the subjects of horse-flesh and racing.
+Nothing was said, either by myself, my host, or the few laborers who
+strayed into the tap-room, which could, in the slightest degree, excite
+my mind, or set my fancy--which is only a small fancy at the best of
+times--playing tricks with my common sense.
+
+At a little after eleven the house was closed. I went round with the
+landlord, and held the candle while the doors and lower windows were being
+secured. I noticed with surprise the strength of the bolts, bars, and
+iron-sheathed shutters.
+
+"You see, we are rather lonely here," said the landlord. "We never have
+had any attempts to break in yet, but it's always as well to be on the
+safe side. When nobody is sleeping here, I am the only man in the house.
+My wife and daughter are timid, and the servant girl takes after her
+missuses. Another glass of ale, before you turn in?--No!--Well, how such a
+sober man as you comes to be out of a place is more than I can understand
+for one.--Here's where you're to sleep. You're the only lodger to-night,
+and I think you'll say my missus has done her best to make you
+comfortable. You're quite sure you won't have another glass of ale?--Very
+well. Good night."
+
+It was half-past eleven by the clock in the passage as we went upstairs to
+the bedroom. The window looked out on the wood at the back of the house.
+
+I locked my door, set my candle on the chest of drawers, and wearily got
+me ready for bed. The bleak wind was still blowing, and the solemn,
+surging moan of it in the wood was very dreary to hear through the night
+silence. Feeling strangely wakeful, I resolved to keep the candle alight
+until I began to grow sleepy. The truth is, I was not quite myself. I was
+depressed in mind by my disappointment of the morning; and I was worn out
+in body by my long walk. Between the two, I own I couldn't face the
+prospect of lying awake in the darkness, listening to the dismal moan of
+the wind in the wood.
+
+Sleep stole on me before I was aware of it; my eyes closed, and I fell off
+to rest, without having so much as thought of extinguishing the candle.
+
+The next thing that I remember was a faint shivering that ran through me
+from head to foot, and a dreadful sinking pain at my heart, such as I had
+never felt before. The shivering only disturbed my slumbers--the pain woke
+me instantly. In one moment I passed from a state of sleep to a state of
+wakefulness--my eyes wide open--my mind clear on a sudden as if by a
+miracle. The candle had burned down nearly to the last morsel of tallow,
+but the unsnuffed wick had just fallen off, and the light was, for the
+moment, fair and full.
+
+Between the foot of the bed and the closet door, I saw a person in my
+room. The person was a woman, standing looking at me, with a knife in her
+hand. It does no credit to my courage to confess it--but the truth _is_
+the truth. I was struck speechless with terror. There I lay with my eyes
+on the woman; there the woman stood (with the knife in her hand) with
+_her_ eyes on _me_.
+
+She said not a word as we stared each other in the face; but she moved
+after a little--moved slowly toward the left-hand side of the bed.
+
+The light fell full on her face. A fair, fine woman, with yellowish flaxen
+hair, and light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. I noticed
+these things and fixed them in my mind, before she was quite round at the
+side of the bed. Without saying a word; without any change in the stony
+stillness of her face; without any noise following her footfall, she came
+closer and closer; stopped at the bed-head; and lifted the knife to stab
+me. I laid my arm over my throat to save it; but, as I saw the blow
+coming, I threw my hand across the bed to the right side, and jerked my
+body over that way, just as the knife came down, like lightning, within a
+hair's breadth of my shoulder.
+
+My eyes fixed on her arm and her hand--she gave me time to look at them as
+she slowly drew the knife out of the bed. A white, well-shaped arm, with a
+pretty down lying lightly over the fair skin. A delicate lady's hand, with
+a pink flush round the finger nails.
+
+She drew the knife out, and passed back again slowly to the foot of the
+bed; she stopped there for a moment looking at me; then she came on
+without saying a word; without any change in the stony stillness of her
+face; without any noise following her footfall--came on to the side of the
+bed where I now lay.
+
+Getting near me, she lifted the knife again, and I drew myself away to the
+left side. She struck, as before right into the mattress, with a swift
+downward action of her arm; and she missed me, as before; by a hair's
+breadth. This time my eyes wandered from _her_ to the knife. It was like
+the large clasp knives which laboring men use to cut their bread and bacon
+with. Her delicate little fingers did not hide more than two thirds of the
+handle; I noticed that it was made of buckhorn, clean and shining as the
+blade was, and looking like new.
+
+For the second time she drew the knife out of the bed, and suddenly hid it
+away in the wide sleeve of her gown. That done, she stopped by the bedside
+watching me. For an instant I saw her standing in that position--then the
+wick of the spent candle fell over into the socket. The flame dwindled to
+a little blue point, and the room grew dark.
+
+A moment, or less, if possible, passed so--and then the wick flared up,
+smokily, for the last time. My eyes were still looking for her over the
+right-hand side of the bed when the last flash of light came. Look as I
+might, I could see nothing. The woman with the knife was gone.
+
+I began to get back to myself again. I could feel my heart beating; I
+could hear the woeful moaning of the wind in the wood; I could leap up in
+bed, and give the alarm before she escaped from the house. "Murder! Wake
+up there! Murder!"
+
+Nobody answered to the alarm. I rose and groped my way through the
+darkness to the door of the room. By that way she must have got in. By
+that way she must have gone out.
+
+The door of the room was fast locked, exactly as I had left it on going to
+bed! I looked at the window. Fast locked too!
+
+Hearing a voice outside, I opened the door. There was the landlord, coming
+toward me along the passage, with his burning candle in one hand, and his
+gun in the other.
+
+"What is it?" he says, looking at me in no very friendly way.
+
+I could only answer in a whisper, "A woman, with a knife in her hand. In
+my room. A fair, yellow-haired woman. She jabbed at me with the knife,
+twice over."
+
+He lifted his candle, and looked at me steadily from head to foot. "She
+seems to have missed you--twice over."
+
+"I dodged the knife as it came down. It struck the bed each time. Go in,
+and see."
+
+The landlord took his candle into the bedroom immediately. In less than a
+minute he came out again into the passage in a violent passion.
+
+"The devil fly away with you and your woman with the knife! There isn't a
+mark in the bedclothes anywhere. What do you mean by coming into a man's
+place and frightening his family out of their wits by a dream?"
+
+A dream? The woman who had tried to stab me, not a living human being like
+myself? I began to shake and shiver. The horrors got hold of me at the
+bare thought of it.
+
+"I'll leave the house," I said. "Better be out on the road in the rain and
+dark, than back in that room, after what I've seen in it. Lend me the
+light to get my clothes by, and tell me what I'm to pay."
+
+The landlord led the way back with his light into the bedroom. "Pay?" says
+he. "You'll find your score on the slate when you go downstairs. I
+wouldn't have taken you in for all the money you've got about you, if I
+had known your dreaming, screeching ways beforehand. Look at the
+bed--where's the cut of a knife in it? Look at the window--is the lock
+bursted? Look at the door (which I heard you fasten yourself)--is it broke
+in? A murdering woman with a knife in my house! You ought to be ashamed of
+yourself!"
+
+My eyes followed his hand as it pointed first to the bed--then to the
+window--then to the door. There was no gainsaying it. The bed sheet was as
+sound as on the day it was made. The window was fast. The door hung on its
+hinges as steady as ever. I huddled my clothes on without speaking. We
+went downstairs together. I looked at the clock in the bar-room. The time
+was twenty minutes past two in the morning. I paid my bill, and the
+landlord let me out. The rain had ceased; but the night was dark, and the
+wind was bleaker than ever. Little did the darkness, or the cold, or the
+doubt about the way home matter to _me_. My mind was away from all these
+things. My mind was fixed on the vision in the bedroom. What had I seen
+trying to murder me? The creature of a dream? Or that other creature from
+the world beyond the grave, whom men call ghost? I could make nothing of
+it as I walked along in the night; I had made nothing by it by
+midday--when I stood at last, after many times missing my road, on the
+doorstep of home.
+
+
+VI
+
+My mother came out alone to welcome me back. There were no secrets between
+us two. I told her all that had happened, just as I have told it to you.
+She kept silence till I had done. And then she put a question to me.
+
+"What time was it, Francis, when you saw the Woman in your Dream?"
+
+I had looked at the clock when I left the inn, and I had noticed that the
+hands pointed to twenty minutes past two. Allowing for the time consumed
+in speaking to the landlord, and in getting on my clothes, I answered that
+I must have first seen the Woman at two o'clock in the morning. In other
+words, I had not only seen her on my birthday, but at the hour of my
+birth.
+
+My mother still kept silence. Lost in her own thoughts, she took me by the
+hand, and led me into the parlor. Her writing-desk was on the table by
+the fireplace. She opened it, and signed to me to take a chair by her
+side.
+
+"My son! your memory is a bad one, and mine is fast failing me. Tell me
+again what the Woman looked like. I want her to be as well known to both
+of us, years hence, as she is now."
+
+I obeyed; wondering what strange fancy might be working in her mind. I
+spoke; and she wrote the words as they fell from my lips:
+
+"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair, with a
+golden-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon them. Little,
+lady's hands, with a rosy-red look about the finger nails."
+
+"Did you notice how she was dressed, Francis?"
+
+"No, mother."
+
+"Did you notice the knife?"
+
+"Yes. A large clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, as good as new."
+
+My mother added the description of the knife. Also the year, month, day of
+the week, and hour of the day when the Dream-Woman appeared to me at the
+inn. That done, she locked up the paper in her desk.
+
+"Not a word, Francis, to your aunt. Not a word to any living soul. Keep
+your Dream a secret between you and me."
+
+The weeks passed, and the months passed. My mother never returned to the
+subject again. As for me, time, which wears out all things, wore out my
+remembrance of the Dream. Little by little, the image of the Woman grew
+dimmer and dimmer. Little by little, she faded out of my mind.
+
+
+VII
+
+The story of the warning is now told. Judge for yourself if it was a true
+warning or a false, when you hear what happened to me on my next birthday.
+
+In the Summer time of the year, the Wheel of Fortune turned the right way
+for me at last. I was smoking my pipe one day, near an old stone quarry at
+the entrance to our village, when a carriage accident happened, which gave
+a new turn, as it were, to my lot in life. It was an accident of the
+commonest kind--not worth mentioning at any length. A lady driving
+herself; a runaway horse; a cowardly man-servant in attendance, frightened
+out of his wits; and the stone quarry too near to be agreeable--that is
+what I saw, all in a few moments, between two whiffs of my pipe. I stopped
+the horse at the edge of the quarry, and got myself a little hurt by the
+shaft of the chaise. But that didn't matter. The lady declared I had saved
+her life; and her husband, coming with her to our cottage the next day,
+took me into his service then and there. The lady happened to be of a dark
+complexion; and it may amuse you to hear that my aunt Chance instantly
+pitched on that circumstance as a means of saving the credit of the cards.
+Here was the promise of the Queen of Spades performed to the very letter,
+by means of "a dark woman," just as my aunt had told me. "In the time to
+come, Francis, beware o' pettin' yer ain blinded intairpretation on the
+cairds. Ye're ower ready, I trow, to murmur under dispensation of
+Proavidence that ye canna fathom--like the Eesraelites of auld. I'll say
+nae mair to ye. Mebbe when the mony's powering into yer poakets, ye'll no
+forget yer aunt Chance, left like a sparrow on the housetop, wi' a sma'
+annuitee o' thratty punds a year."
+
+I remained in my situation (at the West-end of London) until the Spring of
+the New Year. About that time, my master's health failed. The doctors
+ordered him away to foreign parts, and the establishment was broken up.
+But the turn in my luck still held good. When I left my place, I left
+it--thanks to the generosity of my kind master--with a yearly allowance
+granted to me, in remembrance of the day when I had saved my mistress's
+life. For the future, I could go back to service or not, as I pleased; my
+little income was enough to support my mother and myself.
+
+My master and mistress left England toward the end of February. Certain
+matters of business to do for them detained me in London until the last
+day of the month. I was only able to leave for our village by the evening
+train, to keep my birthday with my mother as usual. It was bedtime when I
+got to the cottage; and I was sorry to find that she was far from well. To
+make matters worse, she had finished her bottle of medicine on the
+previous day, and had omitted to get it replenished, as the doctor had
+strictly directed. He dispensed his own medicines, and I offered to go and
+knock him up. She refused to let me do this; and, after giving me my
+supper, sent me away to my bed.
+
+I fell asleep for a little, and woke again. My mother's bed-chamber was
+next to mine. I heard my aunt Chance's heavy footsteps going to and fro in
+the room, and, suspecting something wrong, knocked at the door. My
+mother's pains had returned upon her; there was a serious necessity for
+relieving her sufferings as speedily as possible, I put on my clothes, and
+ran off, with the medicine bottle in my hand, to the other end of the
+village, where the doctor lived. The church clock chimed the quarter to
+two on my birthday just as I reached his house. One ring of the night bell
+brought him to his bedroom window to speak to me. He told me to wait, and
+he would let me in at the surgery door. I noticed, while I was waiting,
+that the night was wonderfully fair and warm for the time of year. The old
+stone quarry where the carriage accident had happened was within view. The
+moon in the clear heavens lit it up almost as bright as day.
+
+In a minute or two the doctor let me into the surgery. I closed the door,
+noticing that he had left his room very lightly clad. He kindly pardoned
+my mother's neglect of his directions, and set to work at once at
+compounding the medicine. We were both intent on the bottle; he filling
+it, and I holding the light--when we heard the surgery door suddenly
+opened from the street.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Who could possibly be up and about in our quiet village at the second hour
+of the morning?
+
+The person who opened the door appeared within range of the light of the
+candle. To complete our amazement, the person proved to be a woman! She
+walked up to the counter, and standing side by side with me, lifted her
+veil. At the moment when she showed her face, I heard the church clock
+strike two. She was a stranger to me, and a stranger to the doctor. She
+was also, beyond all comparison, the most beautiful woman I have ever seen
+in my life.
+
+"I saw the light under the door," she said. "I want some medicine."
+
+She spoke quite composedly, as if there was nothing at all extraordinary
+in her being out in the village at two in the morning, and following me
+into the surgery to ask for medicine! The doctor stared at her as if he
+suspected his own eyes of deceiving him. "Who are you?" he asked. "How do
+you come to be wandering about at this time in the morning?"
+
+She paid no heed to his questions. She only told him coolly what she
+wanted. "I have got a bad toothache. I want a bottle of laudanum."
+
+The doctor recovered himself when she asked for the laudanum. He was on
+his own ground, you know, when it came to a matter of laudanum; and he
+spoke to her smartly enough this time.
+
+"Oh, you have got the toothache, have you? Let me look at the tooth."
+
+She shook her head, and laid a two-shilling piece on the counter. "I won't
+trouble you to look at the tooth," she said. "There is the money. Let me
+have the laudanum, if you please."
+
+The doctor put the two-shilling piece back again in her hand. "I don't
+sell laudanum to strangers," he answered. "If you are in any distress of
+body or mind, that is another matter. I shall be glad to help you."
+
+She put the money back in her pocket. "_You_ can't help me," she said, as
+quietly as ever. "Good morning."
+
+With that, she opened the surgery door to go out again into the street. So
+far, I had not spoken a word on my side. I had stood with the candle in my
+hand (not knowing I was holding it)--with my eyes fixed on her, with my
+mind fixed on her like a man bewitched. Her looks betrayed, even more
+plainly than her words, her resolution, in one way or another, to destroy
+herself. When she opened the door, in my alarm at what might happen I
+found the use of my tongue.
+
+"Stop!" I cried out. "Wait for me. I want to speak to you before you go
+away." She lifted her eyes with a look of careless surprise and a mocking
+smile on her lips.
+
+"What can _you_ have to say to me?" She stopped, and laughed to herself.
+"Why not?" she said. "I have got nothing to do, and nowhere to go." She
+turned back a step, and nodded to me. "You're a strange man--I think I'll
+humor you--I'll wait outside." The door of the surgery closed on her. She
+was gone.
+
+I am ashamed to own what happened next. The only excuse for me is that I
+was really and truly a man bewitched. I turned me round to follow her out,
+without once thinking of my mother. The doctor stopped me.
+
+"Don't forget the medicine," he said. "And if you will take my advice,
+don't trouble yourself about that woman. Rouse up the constable. It's his
+business to look after her--not yours."
+
+I held out my hand for the medicine in silence: I was afraid I should fail
+in respect if I trusted myself to answer him. He must have seen, as I saw,
+that she wanted the laudanum to poison herself. He had, to my mind, taken
+a very heartless view of the matter. I just thanked him when he gave me
+the medicine--and went out.
+
+She was waiting for me as she had promised; walking slowly to and fro--a
+tall, graceful, solitary figure in the bright moonbeams. They shed over
+her fair complexion, her bright golden hair, her large gray eyes, just the
+light that suited them best. She looked hardly mortal when she first
+turned to speak to me.
+
+"Well?" she said. "And what do you want?"
+
+In spite of my pride, or my shyness, or my better sense--whichever it
+might me--all my heart went out to her in a moment. I caught hold of her
+by the hands, and owned what was in my thoughts, as freely as if I had
+known her for half a lifetime.
+
+"You mean to destroy yourself," I said. "And I mean to prevent you from
+doing it. If I follow you about all night, I'll prevent you from doing
+it."
+
+She laughed. "You saw yourself that he wouldn't sell me the laudanum. Do
+you really care whether I live or die?" She squeezed my hands gently as
+she put the question: her eyes searched mine with a languid, lingering
+look in them that ran through me like fire. My voice died away on my lips;
+I couldn't answer her.
+
+She understood, without my answering. "You have given me a fancy for
+living, by speaking kindly to me," she said. "Kindness has a wonderful
+effect on women, and dogs, and other domestic animals. It is only men who
+are superior to kindness. Make your mind easy--I promise to take as much
+care of myself as if I was the happiest woman living! Don't let me keep
+you here, out of your bed. Which way are you going?"
+
+Miserable wretch that I was, I had forgotten my mother--with the medicine
+in my hand! "I am going home," I said. "Where are you staying? At the
+inn?"
+
+She laughed her bitter laugh, and pointed to the stone quarry. "There is
+my inn for to-night," she said. "When I got tired of walking about, I
+rested there."
+
+We walked on together, on my way home. I took the liberty of asking her if
+she had any friends.
+
+"I thought I had one friend left," she said, "or you would never have met
+me in this place. It turns out I was wrong. My friend's door was closed in
+my face some hours since; my friend's servants threatened me with the
+police. I had nowhere else to go, after trying my luck in your
+neighborhood; and nothing left but my two-shilling piece and these rags on
+my back. What respectable innkeeper would take _me_ into his house? I
+walked about, wondering how I could find my way out of the world without
+disfiguring myself, and without suffering much pain. You have no river in
+these parts. I didn't see my way out of the world, till I heard you
+ringing at the doctor's house. I got a glimpse at the bottles in the
+surgery, when he let you in, and I thought of the laudanum directly. What
+were you doing there? Who is that medicine for? Your wife?"
+
+"I am not married!"
+
+She laughed again. "Not married! If I was a little better dressed there
+might be a chance for ME. Where do you live? Here?"
+
+We had arrived, by this time, at my mother's door. She held out her hand
+to say good-by. Houseless and homeless as she was, she never asked me to
+give her a shelter for the night. It was my proposal that she should rest,
+under my roof, unknown to my mother and my aunt. Our kitchen was built out
+at the back of the cottage: she might remain there unseen and unheard
+until the household was astir in the morning. I led her into the kitchen,
+and set a chair for her by the dying embers of the fire. I dare say I was
+to blame--shamefully to blame, if you like. I only wonder what _you_ would
+have done in my place. On your word of honor as a man, would _you_ have
+let that beautiful creature wander back to the shelter of the stone quarry
+like a stray dog? God help the woman who is foolish enough to trust and
+love you, if you would have done that!
+
+I left her by the fire, and went to my mother's room.
+
+
+IX
+
+If you have ever felt the heartache, you will know what I suffered in
+secret when my mother took my hand, and said, "I am sorry, Francis, that
+your night's rest has been disturbed through _me_." I gave her the
+medicine; and I waited by her till the pains abated. My aunt Chance went
+back to her bed; and my mother and I were left alone. I noticed that her
+writing-desk, moved from its customary place, was on the bed by her side.
+She saw me looking at it. "This is your birthday, Francis," she said.
+"Have you anything to tell me?" I had so completely forgotten my Dream,
+that I had no notion of what was passing in her mind when she said those
+words. For a moment there was a guilty fear in me that she suspected
+something. I turned away my face, and said, "No, mother; I have nothing to
+tell." She signed to me to stoop down over the pillow and kiss her. "God
+bless you, my love!" she said; "and many happy returns of the day." She
+patted my hand, and closed her weary eyes, and, little by little, fell off
+peaceably into sleep.
+
+I stole downstairs again. I think the good influence of my mother must
+have followed me down. At any rate, this is true: I stopped with my hand
+on the closed kitchen door, and said to myself: "Suppose I leave the
+house, and leave the village, without seeing her or speaking to her more?"
+
+Should I really have fled from temptation in this way, if I had been left
+to myself to decide? Who can tell? As things were, I was not left to
+decide. While my doubt was in my mind, she heard me, and opened the
+kitchen door. My eyes and her eyes met. That ended it.
+
+We were together, unsuspected and undisturbed, for the next two hours.
+Time enough for her to reveal the secret of her wasted life. Time enough
+for her to take possession of me as her own, to do with me as she liked.
+It is needless to dwell here on the misfortunes which had brought her
+low; they are misfortunes too common to interest anybody.
+
+Her name was Alicia Warlock. She had been born and bred a lady. She had
+lost her station, her character, and her friends. Virtue shuddered at the
+sight of her; and Vice had got her for the rest of her days. Shocking and
+common, as I told you. It made no difference to _me_. I have said it
+already--I say it again--I was a man bewitched. Is there anything so very
+wonderful in that? Just remember who I was. Among the honest women in my
+own station in life, where could I have found the like of _her_? Could
+_they_ walk as she walked? and look as she looked? When _they_ gave me a
+kiss, did their lips linger over it as hers did? Had _they_ her skin, her
+laugh, her foot, her hand, her touch? _She_ never had a speck of dirt on
+her: I tell you her flesh was a perfume. When she embraced me, her arms
+folded round me like the wings of angels; and her smile covered me softly
+with its light like the sun in heaven. I leave you to laugh at me, or to
+cry over me, just as your temper may incline. I am not trying to excuse
+myself--I am trying to explain. You are gentle-folks; what dazzled and
+maddened _me_, is everyday experience to _you_. Fallen or not, angel or
+devil, it came to this--she was a lady; and I was a groom.
+
+Before the house was astir, I got her away (by the workmen's train) to a
+large manufacturing town in our parts.
+
+Here--with my savings in money to help her--she could get her outfit of
+decent clothes and her lodging among strangers who asked no questions so
+long as they were paid. Here--now on one pretense and now on another--I
+could visit her, and we could both plan together what our future lives
+were to be. I need not tell you that I stood pledged to make her my wife.
+A man in my station always marries a woman of her sort.
+
+Do you wonder if I was happy at this time? I should have been perfectly
+happy but for one little drawback. It was this: I was never quite at my
+ease in the presence of my promised wife.
+
+I don't mean that I was shy with her, or suspicious of her, or ashamed of
+her. The uneasiness I am speaking of was caused by a faint doubt in my
+mind whether I had not seen her somewhere, before the morning when we met
+at the doctor's house. Over and over again, I found myself wondering
+whether her face did not remind me of some other face--_what_ other I
+never could tell. This strange feeling, this one question that could never
+be answered, vexed me to a degree that you would hardly credit. It came
+between us at the strangest times--oftenest, however, at night, when the
+candles were lit. You have known what it is to try and remember a
+forgotten name--and to fail, search as you may, to find it in your mind.
+That was my case. I failed to find my lost face, just as you failed to
+find your lost name.
+
+In three weeks we had talked matters over, and had arranged how I was to
+make a clean breast of it at home. By Alicia's advice, I was to describe
+her as having been one of my fellow servants during the time I was
+employed under my kind master and mistress in London. There was no fear
+now of my mother taking any harm from the shock of a great surprise. Her
+health had improved during the three weeks' interval. On the first evening
+when she was able to take her old place at tea time, I summoned my
+courage, and told her I was going to be married. The poor soul flung her
+arms round my neck, and burst out crying for joy. "Oh, Francis!" she says,
+"I am so glad you will have somebody to comfort you and care for you when
+I am gone!" As for my aunt Chance, you can anticipate what _she_ did,
+without being told. Ah, me! If there had really been any prophetic virtue
+in the cards, what a terrible warning they might have given us that night!
+It was arranged that I was to bring my promised wife to dinner at the
+cottage on the next day.
+
+
+X
+
+I own I was proud of Alicia when I led her into our little parlor at the
+appointed time. She had never, to my mind, looked so beautiful as she
+looked that day. I never noticed any other woman's dress--I noticed hers
+as carefully as if I had been a woman myself! She wore a black silk gown,
+with plain collar and cuffs, and a modest lavender-colored bonnet, with
+one white rose in it placed at the side. My mother, dressed in her Sunday
+best, rose up, all in a flutter, to welcome her daughter-in-law that was
+to be. She walked forward a few steps, half smiling, half in tears--she
+looked Alicia full in the face--and suddenly stood still. Her cheeks
+turned white in an instant; her eyes stared in horror; her hands dropped
+helplessly at her sides. She staggered back, and fell into the arms of my
+aunt, standing behind her. It was no swoon--she kept her senses. Her eyes
+turned slowly from Alicia to me. "Francis," she said, "does that woman's
+face remind you of nothing?".
+
+Before I could answer, she pointed to her writing-desk on the table at the
+fireside. "Bring it!" she cried, "bring it!".
+
+At the same moment I felt Alicia's hand on my shoulder, and saw Alicia's
+face red with anger--and no wonder!
+
+"What does this mean?" she asked. "Does your mother want to insult me?".
+
+I said a few words to quiet her; what they were I don't remember--I was so
+confused and astonished at the time. Before I had done, I heard my mother
+behind me.
+
+My aunt had fetched her desk. She had opened it; she had taken a paper
+from it. Step by step, helping herself along by the wall, she came nearer
+and nearer, with the paper in her hand. She looked at the paper--she
+looked in Alicia's face--she lifted the long, loose sleeve of her gown,
+and examined her hand and arm. I saw fear suddenly take the place of anger
+in Alicia's eyes. She shook herself free of my mother's grasp. "Mad!" she
+said to herself, "and Francis never told me!" With those words she ran out
+of the room.
+
+I was hastening out after her, when my mother signed to me to stop. She
+read the words written on the paper. While they fell slowly, one by one,
+from her lips, she pointed toward the open door.
+
+"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair, with a
+gold-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon them. Little,
+lady's hand, with a rosy-red look about the finger nails. The Dream Woman,
+Francis! The Dream Woman!"
+
+Something darkened the parlor window as those words were spoken. I looked
+sidelong at the shadow. Alicia Warlock had come back! She was peering in
+at us over the low window blind. There was the fatal face which had first
+looked at me in the bedroom of the lonely inn. There, resting on the
+window blind, was the lovely little hand which had held the murderous
+knife. I _had_ seen her before we met in the village. The Dream Woman! The
+Dream Woman!
+
+
+XI
+
+I expect nobody to approve of what I have next to tell of myself. In three
+weeks from the day when my mother had identified her with the Woman of the
+Dream, I took Alicia Warlock to church, and made her my wife. I was a man
+bewitched. Again and again I say it--I was a man bewitched!
+
+During the interval before my marriage, our little household at the
+cottage was broken up. My mother and my aunt quarreled. My mother,
+believing in the Dream, entreated me to break off my engagement. My aunt,
+believing in the cards, urged me to marry.
+
+This difference of opinion produced a dispute between them, in the course
+of which my aunt Chance--quite unconscious of having any superstitious
+feelings of her own--actually set out the cards which prophesied
+happiness to me in my married life, and asked my mother how anybody but "a
+blinded heathen could be fule enough, after seeing those cairds, to
+believe in a dream!" This was, naturally, too much for my mother's
+patience; hard words followed on either side; Mrs. Chance returned in
+dudgeon to her friends in Scotland. She left me a written statement of my
+future prospects, as revealed by the cards, and with it an address at
+which a post-office order would reach her. "The day was not that far off,"
+she remarked, "when Francie might remember what he owed to his aunt
+Chance, maintaining her ain unbleemished widowhood on thratty punds a
+year."
+
+Having refused to give her sanction to my marriage, my mother also refused
+to be present at the wedding, or to visit Alicia afterwards. There was no
+anger at the bottom of this conduct on her part. Believing as she did in
+this Dream, she was simply in mortal fear of my wife. I understood this,
+and I made allowances for her. Not a cross word passed between us. My one
+happy remembrance now--though I did disobey her in the matter of my
+marriage--is this: I loved and respected my good mother to the last.
+
+As for my wife, she expressed no regret at the estrangement between her
+mother-in-law and herself. By common consent, we never spoke on that
+subject. We settled in the manufacturing town which I have already
+mentioned, and we kept a lodging-house. My kind master, at my request,
+granted me a lump sum in place of my annuity. This put us into a good
+house, decently furnished. For a while things went well enough. I may
+describe myself at this time of my life as a happy man.
+
+My misfortunes began with a return of the complaint with which my mother
+had already suffered. The doctor confessed, when I asked him the question,
+that there was danger to be dreaded this time. Naturally, after hearing
+this, I was a good deal away at the cottage. Naturally also, I left the
+business of looking after the house, in my absence, to my wife. Little by
+little, I found her beginning to alter toward me. While my back was
+turned, she formed acquaintances with people of the doubtful and
+dissipated sort. One day, I observed something in her manner which forced
+the suspicion on me that she had been drinking. Before the week was out,
+my suspicion was a certainty. From keeping company with drunkards, she had
+grown to be a drunkard herself.
+
+I did all a man could do to reclaim her. Quite useless! She had never
+really returned the love I felt for her: I had no influence; I could do
+nothing. My mother, hearing of this last worse trouble, resolved to try
+what her influence could do. Ill as she was, I found her one day dressed
+to go out.
+
+"I am not long for this world, Francis," she said. "I shall not feel easy
+on my deathbed, unless I have done my best to the last to make you happy.
+I mean to put my own fears and my own feelings out of the question, and go
+with you to your wife, and try what I can do to reclaim her. Take me home
+with you, Francis. Let me do all I can to help my son, before it is too
+late."
+
+How could I disobey her? We took the railway to the town: it was only half
+an hour's ride. By one o'clock in the afternoon we reached my house. It
+was our dinner hour, and Alicia was in the kitchen. I was able to take my
+mother quietly into the parlor and then to prepare my wife for the visit.
+She had drunk but little at that early hour; and, luckily, the devil in
+her was tamed for the time.
+
+She followed me into the parlor, and the meeting passed off better than I
+had ventured to forecast; with this one drawback, that my mother--though
+she tried hard to control herself--shrank from looking my wife in the face
+when she spoke to her. It was a relief to me when Alicia began to prepare
+the table for dinner.
+
+She laid the cloth, brought in the bread tray, and cut some slices for us
+from the loaf. Then she returned to the kitchen. At that moment, while I
+was still anxiously watching my mother, I was startled by seeing the same
+ghastly change pass over her face which had altered it in the morning
+when Alicia and she first met. Before I could say a word, she started up
+with a look of horror.
+
+"Take me back!--home, home again, Francis! Come with me, and never go back
+more!"
+
+I was afraid to ask for an explanation; I could only sign her to be
+silent, and help her quickly to the door. As we passed the bread tray on
+the table, she stopped and pointed to it.
+
+"Did you see what your wife cut your bread with?" she asked.
+
+"No, mother; I was not noticing. What was it?"
+
+"Look!"
+
+I did look. A new clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, lay with the loaf
+in the bread tray. I stretched out my hand to possess myself of it. At the
+same moment, there was a noise in the kitchen, and my mother caught me by
+the arm.
+
+"The knife of the Dream! Francis, I'm faint with fear--take me away before
+she comes back!"
+
+I couldn't speak to comfort or even to answer her. Superior as I was to
+superstition, the discovery of the knife staggered me. In silence, I
+helped my mother out of the house; and took her home.
+
+I held out my hand to say good-by. She tried to stop me.
+
+"Don't go back, Francis! don't go back!".
+
+"I must get the knife, mother. I must go back by the next train." I held
+to that resolution. By the next train I went back.
+
+
+XII
+
+My wife had, of course, discovered our secret departure from the house.
+She had been drinking. She was in a fury of passion. The dinner in the
+kitchen was flung under the grate; the cloth was off the parlor table.
+Where was the knife?
+
+I was foolish enough to ask for it. She refused to give it to me. In the
+course of the dispute between us which followed, I discovered that there
+was a horrible story attached to the knife. It had been used in a
+murder--years since--and had been so skillfully hidden that the
+authorities had been unable to produce it at the trial. By help of some of
+her disreputable friends, my wife had been able to purchase this relic of
+a bygone crime. Her perverted nature set some horrid unacknowledged value
+on the knife. Seeing there was no hope of getting it by fair means, I
+determined to search for it, later in the day, in secret. The search was
+unsuccessful. Night came on, and I left the house to walk about the
+streets. You will understand what a broken man I was by this time, when I
+tell you I was afraid to sleep in the same room with her!
+
+Three weeks passed. Still she refused to give up the knife; and still that
+fear of sleeping in the same room with her possessed me. I walked about at
+night, or dozed in the parlor, or sat watching by my mother's bedside.
+Before the end of the first week in the new month, the worst misfortune of
+all befell me--my mother died. It wanted then but a short time to my
+birthday. She had longed to live till that day. I was present at her
+death. Her last words in this world were addressed to me. "Don't go back,
+my son--don't go back!"
+
+I was obliged to go back, if it was only to watch my wife. In the last
+days of my mother's illness she had spitefully added a sting to my grief
+by declaring she would assert her right to attend the funeral. In spite of
+all that I could do or say, she held to her word. On the day appointed for
+the burial she forced herself, inflamed and shameless with drink, into my
+presence, and swore she would walk in the funeral procession to my
+mother's grave.
+
+This last insult--after all I had gone through already--was more than I
+could endure. It maddened me. Try to make allowances for a man beside
+himself. I struck her.
+
+The instant the blow was dealt, I repented it. She crouched down, silent,
+in a corner of the room, and eyed me steadily. It was a look that cooled
+my hot blood in an instant. There was no time now to think of making
+atonement. I could only risk the worst, and make sure of her till the
+funeral was over. I locked her into her bedroom.
+
+When I came back, after laying my mother in the grave, I found her sitting
+by the bedside, very much altered in look and bearing, with a bundle on
+her lap. She faced me quietly; she spoke with a curious stillness in her
+voice--strangely and unnaturally composed in look and manner.
+
+"No man has ever struck me yet," she said. "My husband shall have no
+second opportunity. Set the door open, and let me go."
+
+She passed me, and left the room. I saw her walk away up the street. Was
+she gone for good?
+
+All that night I watched and waited. No footstep came near the house. The
+next night, overcome with fatigue, I lay down on the bed in my clothes,
+with the door locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning. My
+slumber was not disturbed. The third night, the fourth, the fifth, the
+sixth, passed, and nothing happened. I lay down on the seventh night,
+still suspicious of something happening; still in my clothes; still with
+the door locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning.
+
+My rest was disturbed. I awoke twice, without any sensation of uneasiness.
+The third time, that horrid shivering of the night at the lonely inn, that
+awful sinking pain at the heart, came back again, and roused me in an
+instant. My eyes turned to the left-hand side of the bed. And there stood,
+looking at me--
+
+The Dream Woman again? No! My wife. The living woman, with the face of the
+Dream--in the attitude of the Dream--the fair arm up; the knife clasped in
+the delicate white hand.
+
+I sprang upon her on the instant; but not quickly enough to stop her from
+hiding the knife. Without a word from me, without a cry from her, I
+pinioned her in a chair. With one hand I felt up her sleeve; and there,
+where the Dream Woman had hidden the knife, my wife had hidden it--the
+knife with the buckhorn handle, that looked like new.
+
+What I felt when I made that discovery I could not realize at the time,
+and I can't describe now. I took one steady look at her with the knife in
+my hand. "You meant to kill me?" I said.
+
+"Yes," she answered; "I meant to kill you." She crossed her arms over her
+bosom, and stared me coolly in the face. "I shall do it yet," she said.
+"With that knife."
+
+I don't know what possessed me--I swear to you I am no coward; and yet I
+acted like a coward. The horrors got hold of me. I couldn't look at her--I
+couldn't speak to her. I left her (with the knife in my hand), and went
+out into the night.
+
+There was a bleak wind abroad, and the smell of rain was in the air. The
+church clocks chimed the quarter as I walked beyond the last house in the
+town. I asked the first policeman I met what hour that was, of which the
+quarter past had just struck.
+
+The man looked at his watch, and answered, "Two o'clock." Two in the
+morning. What day of the month was this day that had just begun? I
+reckoned it up from the date of my mother's funeral. The horrid parallel
+between the dream and the reality was complete--it was my birthday!
+
+Had I escaped, the mortal peril which the dream foretold? or had I only
+received a second warning? As that doubt crossed my mind I stopped on my
+way out of the town. The air had revived me--I felt in some degree like my
+own self again. After a little thinking, I began to see plainly the
+mistake I had made in leaving my wife free to go where she liked and to do
+as she pleased.
+
+I turned instantly, and made my way back to the house. It was still dark.
+I had left the candle burning in the bedchamber. When I looked up to the
+window of the room now, there was no light in it. I advanced to the house
+door. On going away, I remembered to have closed it; on trying it now, I
+found it open.
+
+I waited outside, never losing sight of the house till daylight. Then I
+ventured indoors--listened, and heard nothing--looked into the kitchen,
+scullery, parlor, and found nothing--went up at last into the bedroom. It
+was empty.
+
+A picklock lay on the floor, which told me how she had gained entrance in
+the night. And that was the one trace I could find of the Dream Woman.
+
+
+XIII
+
+I waited in the house till the town was astir for the day, and then I went
+to consult a lawyer. In the confused state of my mind at the time, I had
+one clear notion of what I meant to do: I was determined to sell my house
+and leave the neighborhood. There were obstacles in the way which I had
+not counted on. I was told I had creditors to satisfy before I could
+leave--I, who had given my wife the money to pay my bills regularly every
+week! Inquiry showed that she had embezzled every farthing of the money I
+had intrusted to her. I had no choice but to pay over again.
+
+Placed in this awkward position, my first duty was to set things right,
+with the help of my lawyer. During my forced sojourn in the town I did two
+foolish things. And, as a consequence that followed, I heard once more,
+and heard for the last time, of my wife.
+
+In the first place, having got possession of the knife, I was rash enough
+to keep it in my pocket. In the second place, having something of
+importance to say to my lawyer, at a late hour of the evening, I went to
+his house after dark--alone and on foot. I got there safely enough.
+Returning, I was seized on from behind by two men, dragged down a passage
+and robbed--not only of the little money I had about me, but also of the
+knife. It was the lawyer's opinion (as it was mine) that the thieves were
+among the disreputable acquaintances formed by my wife, and that they had
+attacked me at her instigation. To confirm this view I received a letter
+the next day, without date or address, written in Alicia's hand. The first
+line informed me that the knife was back again in her possession. The
+second line reminded me of the day when I struck her. The third line
+warned me that she would wash out the stain of that blow in my blood, and
+repeated the words, "I shall do it with the knife!"
+
+These things happened a year ago. The law laid hands on the men who had
+robbed me; but from that time to this, the law has failed completely to
+find a trace of my wife.
+
+My story is told. When I had paid the creditors and paid the legal
+expenses, I had barely five pounds left out of the sale of my house; and I
+had the world to begin over again. Some months since--drifting here and
+there--I found my way to Underbridge. The landlord of the inn had known
+something of my father's family in times past. He gave me (all he had to
+give) my food, and shelter in the yard. Except on market days, there is
+nothing to do. In the coming winter the inn is to be shut up, and I shall
+have to shift for myself. My old master would help me if I applied to
+him--but I don't like to apply: he has done more for me already than I
+deserve. Besides, in another year who knows but my troubles may all be at
+an end? Next winter will bring me nigh to my next birthday, and my next
+birthday may be the day of my death. Yes! it's true I sat up all last
+night; and I heard two in the morning strike: and nothing happened. Still,
+allowing for that, the time to come is a time I don't trust. My wife has
+got the knife--my wife is looking for me. I am above superstition, mind! I
+don't say I believe in dreams; I only say, Alicia Warlock is looking for
+me. It is possible I may be wrong. It is possible I may be right. Who can
+tell?
+
+
+
+
+THE THIRD NARRATIVE
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY CONTINUED BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+XIV
+
+We took leave of Francis Raven at the door of Farleigh Hall, with the
+understanding that he might expect to hear from us again.
+
+The same night Mrs. Fairbank and I had a discussion in the sanctuary of
+our own room. The topic was "The Hostler's Story"; and the question in
+dispute between us turned on the measure of charitable duty that we owed
+to the hostler himself.
+
+The view I took of the man's narrative was of the purely matter-of-fact
+kind. Francis Raven had, in my opinion, brooded over the misty connection
+between his strange dream and his vile wife, until his mind was in a state
+of partial delusion on that subject. I was quite willing to help him with
+a trifle of money, and to recommend him to the kindness of my lawyer, if
+he was really in any danger and wanted advice. There my idea of my duty
+toward this afflicted person began and ended.
+
+Confronted with this sensible view of the matter, Mrs. Fairbank's romantic
+temperament rushed, as usual, into extremes. "I should no more think of
+losing sight of Francis Raven when his next birthday comes round," says my
+wife, "than I should think of laying down a good story with the last
+chapters unread. I am positively determined, Percy, to take him back with
+us when we return to France, in the capacity of groom. What does one man
+more or less among the horses matter to people as rich as we are?" In this
+strain the partner of my joys and sorrows ran on, perfectly impenetrable
+to everything that I could say on the side of common sense. Need I tell my
+married brethren how it ended? Of course I allowed my wife to irritate me,
+and spoke to her sharply.
+
+Of course my wife turned her face away indignantly on the conjugal pillow,
+and burst into tears. Of course upon that, "Mr." made his excuses, and
+"Mrs." had her own way.
+
+Before the week was out we rode over to Underbridge, and duly offered to
+Francis Raven a place in our service as supernumerary groom.
+
+At first the poor fellow seemed hardly able to realize his own
+extraordinary good fortune. Recovering himself, he expressed his gratitude
+modestly and becomingly. Mrs. Fairbank's ready sympathies overflowed, as
+usual, at her lips. She talked to him about our home in France, as if the
+worn, gray-headed hostler had been a child. "Such a dear old house,
+Francis; and such pretty gardens! Stables! Stables ten times as big as
+your stables here--quite a choice of rooms for you. You must learn the
+name of our house--Maison Rouge. Our nearest town is Metz. We are within a
+walk of the beautiful River Moselle. And when we want a change we have
+only to take the railway to the frontier, and find ourselves in Germany."
+
+Listening, so far, with a very bewildered face, Francis started and
+changed color when my wife reached the end of her last sentence.
+"Germany?" he repeated.
+
+"Yes. Does Germany remind you of anything?"
+
+The hostler's eyes looked down sadly on the ground. "Germany reminds me of
+my wife," he replied.
+
+"Indeed! How?"
+
+"She once told me she had lived in Germany--long before I knew her--in the
+time when she was a young girl."
+
+"Was she living with relations or friends?"
+
+"She was living as governess in a foreign family."
+
+"In what part of Germany?"
+
+"I don't remember, ma'am. I doubt if she told me."
+
+"Did she tell you the name of the family?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. It was a foreign name, and it has slipped my memory long
+since. The head of the family was a wine grower in a large way of
+business--I remember that."
+
+"Did you hear what sort of wine he grew? There are wine growers in our
+neighborhood. Was it Moselle wine?"
+
+"I couldn't say, ma'am, I doubt if I ever heard."
+
+There the conversation dropped. We engaged to communicate with Francis
+Raven before we left England, and took our leave. I had made arrangements
+to pay our round of visits to English friends, and to return to Maison
+Rouge in the summer. On the eve of departure, certain difficulties in
+connection with the management of some landed property of mine in Ireland
+obliged us to alter our plans. Instead of getting back to our house in
+France in the Summer, we only returned a week or two before Christmas.
+Francis Raven accompanied us, and was duly established, in the nominal
+capacity of stable keeper, among the servants at Maison Rouge.
+
+Before long, some of the objections to taking him into our employment,
+which I had foreseen and had vainly mentioned to my wife, forced
+themselves on our attention in no very agreeable form. Francis Raven
+failed (as I had feared he would) to get on smoothly with his
+fellow-servants They were all French; and not one of them understood
+English. Francis, on his side, was equally ignorant of French. His
+reserved manners, his melancholy temperament, his solitary ways--all told
+against him. Our servants called him "the English Bear." He grew widely
+known in the neighborhood under his nickname. Quarrels took place, ending
+once or twice in blows. It became plain, even to Mrs. Fairbank herself,
+that some wise change must be made. While we were still considering what
+the change was to be, the unfortunate hostler was thrown on our hands for
+some time to come by an accident in the stables. Still pursued by his
+proverbial ill-luck, the poor wretch's leg was broken by a kick from a
+horse.
+
+He was attended to by our own surgeon, in his comfortable bedroom at the
+stables. As the date of his birthday drew near, he was still confined to
+his bed.
+
+Physically speaking, he was doing very well. Morally speaking, the surgeon
+was not satisfied. Francis Raven was suffering under some mysterious
+mental disturbance, which interfered seriously with his rest at night.
+Hearing this, I thought it my duty to tell the medical attendant what was
+preying on the patient's mind. As a practical man, he shared my opinion
+that the hostler was in a state of delusion on the subject of his Wife and
+his Dream. "Curable delusion, in my opinion," the surgeon added, "if the
+experiment could be fairly tried."
+
+"How can it be tried?" I asked. Instead of replying, the surgeon put a
+question to me, on his side.
+
+"Do you happen to know," he said, "that this year is Leap Year?"
+
+"Mrs. Fairbank reminded me of it yesterday," I answered. "Otherwise I
+might _not_ have known it."
+
+"Do you think Francis Raven knows that this year is Leap Year?"
+
+(I began to see dimly what my friend was driving at.)
+
+"It depends," I answered, "on whether he has got an English almanac.
+Suppose he has _not_ got the almanac--what then?"
+
+"In that case," pursued the surgeon, "Francis Raven is innocent of all
+suspicion that there is a twenty-ninth day in February this year. As a
+necessary consequence--what will he do? He will anticipate the appearance
+of the Woman with the Knife, at two in the morning of the twenty-ninth of
+February, instead of the first of March. Let him suffer all his
+superstitious terrors on the wrong day. Leave him, on the day that is
+really his birthday, to pass a perfectly quiet night, and to be as sound
+asleep as other people at two in the morning. And then, when he wakes
+comfortably in time for his breakfast, shame him out of his delusion by
+telling him the truth."
+
+I agreed to try the experiment. Leaving the surgeon to caution Mrs.
+Fairbank on the subject of Leap Year, I went to the stables to see Mr.
+Raven.
+
+
+XV
+
+The poor fellow was full of forebodings of the fate in store for him on
+the ominous first of March. He eagerly entreated me to order one of the
+men servants to sit up with him on the birthday morning. In granting his
+request, I asked him to tell me on which day of the week his birthday
+fell. He reckoned the days on his fingers; and proved his innocence of all
+suspicion that it was Leap Year, by fixing on the twenty-ninth of
+February, in the full persuasion that it was the first of March. Pledged
+to try the surgeon's experiment, I left his error uncorrected, of course.
+In so doing, I took my first step blindfold toward the last act in the
+drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+The next day brought with it a little domestic difficulty, which
+indirectly and strangely associated itself with the coming end.
+
+My wife received a letter, inviting us to assist in celebrating the
+"Silver Wedding" of two worthy German neighbors of ours--Mr. and Mrs.
+Beldheimer. Mr. Beldheimer was a large wine grower on the banks of the
+Moselle. His house was situated on the frontier line of France and
+Germany; and the distance from our house was sufficiently considerable to
+make it necessary for us to sleep under our host's roof. Under these
+circumstances, if we accepted the invitation, a comparison of dates showed
+that we should be away from home on the morning of the first of March.
+Mrs. Fairbank--holding to her absurd resolution to see with her own eyes
+what might, or might not, happen to Francis Raven on his birthday--flatly
+declined to leave Maison Rouge. "It's easy to send an excuse," she said,
+in her off-hand manner.
+
+I failed, for my part, to see any easy way out of the difficulty. The
+celebration of a "Silver Wedding" in Germany is the celebration of
+twenty-five years of happy married life; and the host's claim upon the
+consideration of his friends on such an occasion is something in the
+nature of a royal "command." After considerable discussion, finding my
+wife's obstinacy invincible, and feeling that the absence of both of us
+from the festival would certainly offend our friends, I left Mrs. Fairbank
+to make her excuses for herself, and directed her to accept the invitation
+so far as I was concerned. In so doing, I took my second step, blindfold,
+toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+A week elapsed; the last days of February were at hand. Another domestic
+difficulty happened; and, again, this event also proved to be strangely
+associated with the coming end.
+
+My head groom at the stables was one Joseph Rigobert. He was an
+ill-conditioned fellow, inordinately vain of his personal appearance, and
+by no means scrupulous in his conduct with women. His one virtue consisted
+of his fondness for horses, and in the care he took of the animals under
+his charge. In a word, he was too good a groom to be easily replaced, or
+he would have quitted my service long since. On the occasion of which I am
+now writing, he was reported to me by my steward as growing idle and
+disorderly in his habits. The principal offense alleged against him was,
+that he had been seen that day in the city of Metz, in the company of a
+woman (supposed to be an Englishwoman), whom he was entertaining at a
+tavern, when he ought to have been on his way back to Maison Rouge. The
+man's defense was that "the lady" (as he called her) was an English
+stranger, unacquainted with the ways of the place, and that he had only
+shown her where she could obtain some refreshments at her own request. I
+administered the necessary reprimand, without troubling myself to inquire
+further into the matter. In failing to do this, I took my third step,
+blindfold, toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+On the evening of the twenty-eighth, I informed the servants at the
+stables that one of them must watch through the night by the Englishman's
+bedside. Joseph Rigobert immediately volunteered for the duty--as a means,
+no doubt, of winning his way back to my favor. I accepted his proposal.
+
+That day the surgeon dined with us. Toward midnight he and I left the
+smoking room, and repaired to Francis Raven's bedside. Rigobert was at his
+post, with no very agreeable expression on his face. The Frenchman and the
+Englishman had evidently not got on well together so far. Francis Raven
+lay helpless on his bed, waiting silently for two in the morning and the
+Dream Woman.
+
+"I have come, Francis, to bid you good night," I said, cheerfully.
+"To-morrow morning I shall look in at breakfast time, before I leave home
+on a journey."
+
+"Thank you for all your kindness, sir. You will not see me alive to-morrow
+morning. She will find me this time. Mark my words--she will find me this
+time."
+
+"My good fellow! she couldn't find you in England. How in the world is she
+to find you in France?"
+
+"It's borne in on my mind, sir, that she will find me here. At two in the
+morning on my birthday I shall see her again, and see her for the last
+time."
+
+"Do you mean that she will kill you?"
+
+"I mean that, sir, she will kill me--with the knife."
+
+"And with Rigobert in the room to protect you?"
+
+"I am a doomed man. Fifty Rigoberts couldn't protect me."
+
+"And you wanted somebody to sit up with you?"
+
+"Mere weakness, sir. I don't like to be left alone on my deathbed."
+
+I looked at the surgeon. If he had encouraged me, I should certainly, out
+of sheer compassion, have confessed to Francis Raven the trick that we
+were playing him. The surgeon held to his experiment; the surgeon's face
+plainly said--"No."
+
+The next day (the twenty-ninth of February) was the day of the "Silver
+Wedding." The first thing in the morning, I went to Francis Raven's room.
+Rigobert met me at the door.
+
+"How has he passed the night?" I asked.
+
+"Saying his prayers, and looking for ghosts," Rigobert answered. "A
+lunatic asylum is the only proper place for him."
+
+I approached the bedside. "Well, Francis, here you are, safe and sound, in
+spite of what you said to me last night."
+
+His eyes rested on mine with a vacant, wondering look.
+
+"I don't understand it," he said.
+
+"Did you see anything of your wife when the clock struck two?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Did anything happen?"
+
+"Nothing happened, sir."
+
+"Doesn't _this_ satisfy you that you were wrong?"
+
+His eyes still kept their vacant, wondering look. He only repeated the
+words he had spoken already: "I don't understand it."
+
+I made a last attempt to cheer him. "Come, come, Francis! keep a good
+heart. You will be out of bed in a fortnight."
+
+He shook his head on the pillow. "There's something wrong," he said. "I
+don't expect you to believe me, sir. I only say there's something
+wrong--and time will show it."
+
+I left the room. Half an hour later I started for Mr. Beldheimer's house;
+leaving the arrangements for the morning of the first of March in the
+hands of the doctor and my wife.
+
+
+XVI
+
+The one thing which principally struck me when I joined the guests at the
+"Silver Wedding" is also the one thing which it is necessary to mention
+here. On this joyful occasion a noticeable lady present was out of
+spirits. That lady was no other than the heroine of the festival, the
+mistress of the house!
+
+In the course of the evening I spoke to Mr. Beldheimer's eldest son on the
+subject of his mother. As an old friend of the family, I had a claim on
+his confidence which the young man willingly recognized.
+
+"We have had a very disagreeable matter to deal with," he said; "and my
+mother has not recovered the painful impression left on her mind. Many
+years since, when my sisters were children, we had an English governess in
+the house. She left us, as we then understood, to be married. We heard no
+more of her until a week or ten days since, when my mother received a
+letter, in which our ex-governess described herself as being in a
+condition of great poverty and distress. After much hesitation she had
+ventured--at the suggestion of a lady who had been kind to her--to write
+to her former employers, and to appeal to their remembrance of old times.
+You know my mother: she is not only the most kind-hearted, but the most
+innocent of women--it is impossible to persuade her of the wickedness that
+there is in the world. She replied by return of post, inviting the
+governess to come here and see her, and inclosing the money for her
+traveling expenses. When my father came home, and heard what had been
+done, he wrote at once to his agent in London to make inquiries, inclosing
+the address on the governess' letter. Before he could receive the agent's
+reply the governess, arrived. She produced the worst possible impression
+on his mind. The agent's letter, arriving a few days later, confirmed his
+suspicions. Since we had lost sight of her, the woman had led a most
+disreputable life. My father spoke to her privately: he offered--on
+condition of her leaving the house--a sum of money to take her back to
+England. If she refused, the alternative would be an appeal to the
+authorities and a public scandal. She accepted the money, and left the
+house. On her way back to England she appears to have stopped at Metz. You
+will understand what sort of woman she is when I tell you that she was
+seen the other day in a tavern, with your handsome groom, Joseph
+Rigobert."
+
+While my informant was relating these circumstances, my memory was at
+work. I recalled what Francis Raven had vaguely told us of his wife's
+experience in former days as governess in a German family. A suspicion of
+the truth suddenly flashed across my mind. "What was the woman's name?" I
+asked.
+
+Mr. Beldheimer's son answered: "Alicia Warlock."
+
+I had but one idea when I heard that reply--to get back to my house
+without a moment's needless delay. It was then ten o'clock at night--the
+last train to Metz had left long since. I arranged with my young
+friend--after duly informing him of the circumstances--that I should go by
+the first train in the morning, instead of staying to breakfast with the
+other guests who slept in the house.
+
+At intervals during the night I wondered uneasily how things were going on
+at Maison Rouge. Again and again the same question occurred to me, on my
+journey home in the early morning--the morning of the first of March. As
+the event proved, but one person in my house knew what really happened at
+the stables on Francis Raven's birthday. Let Joseph Rigobert take my place
+as narrator, and tell the story of the end to You--as he told it, in times
+past, to his lawyer and to Me.
+
+
+
+
+FOURTH (AND LAST) NARRATIVE
+
+
+
+
+
+STATEMENT OF JOSEPH RIGOBERT: ADDRESSED TO THE ADVOCATE WHO DEFENDED HIM
+AT HIS TRIAL
+
+
+
+
+Respected Sir,--On the twenty-seventh of February I was sent, on business
+connected with the stables at Maison Rouge, to the city of Metz. On the
+public promenade I met a magnificent woman. Complexion, blond.
+Nationality, English. We mutually admired each other; we fell into
+conversation. (She spoke French perfectly--with the English accent.) I
+offered refreshment; my proposal was accepted. We had a long and
+interesting interview--we discovered that we were made for each other. So
+far, Who is to blame?
+
+Is it my fault that I am a handsome man--universally agreeable as such to
+the fair sex? Is it a criminal offense to be accessible to the amiable
+weakness of love? I ask again, Who is to blame? Clearly, nature. Not the
+beautiful lady--not my humble self.
+
+To resume. The most hard-hearted person living will understand that two
+beings made for each other could not possibly part without an appointment
+to meet again.
+
+I made arrangements for the accommodation of the lady in the village near
+Maison Rouge. She consented to honor me with her company at supper, in my
+apartment at the stables, on the night of the twenty-ninth. The time fixed
+on was the time when the other servants were accustomed to retire--eleven
+o'clock.
+
+Among the grooms attached to the stables was an Englishman, laid up with a
+broken leg. His name was Francis. His manners were repulsive; he was
+ignorant of the French language. In the kitchen he went by the nickname of
+the "English Bear." Strange to say, he was a great favorite with my master
+and my mistress. They even humored certain superstitious terrors to which
+this repulsive person was subject--terrors into the nature of which I, as
+an advanced freethinker, never thought it worth my while to inquire.
+
+On the evening of the twenty-eighth the Englishman, being a prey to the
+terrors which I have mentioned, requested that one of his fellow servants
+might sit up with him for that night only. The wish that he expressed was
+backed by Mr. Fairbank's authority. Having already incurred my master's
+displeasure--in what way, a proper sense of my own dignity forbids me to
+relate--I volunteered to watch by the bedside of the English Bear. My
+object was to satisfy Mr. Fairbank that I bore no malice, on my side,
+after what had occurred between us. The wretched Englishman passed a night
+of delirium. Not understanding his barbarous language, I could only gather
+from his gesture that he was in deadly fear of some fancied apparition at
+his bedside. From time to time, when this madman disturbed my slumbers, I
+quieted him by swearing at him. This is the shortest and best way of
+dealing with persons in his condition.
+
+On the morning of the twenty-ninth, Mr. Fairbank left us on a journey.
+Later in the day, to my unspeakable disgust, I found that I had not done
+with the Englishman yet. In Mr. Fairbank's absence, Mrs. Fairbank took an
+incomprehensible interest in the question of my delirious fellow servant's
+repose at night. Again, one or the other of us was to watch at his
+bedside, and report it, if anything happened. Expecting my fair friend to
+supper, it was necessary to make sure that the other servants at the
+stables would be safe in their beds that night. Accordingly, I volunteered
+once more to be the man who kept watch. Mrs. Fairbank complimented me on
+my humanity. I possess great command over my feelings. I accepted the
+compliment without a blush.
+
+Twice, after nightfall, my mistress and the doctor (the last staying in
+the house in Mr. Fairbank's absence) came to make inquiries. Once _before_
+the arrival of my fair friend--and once _after_. On the second occasion
+(my apartment being next door to the Englishman's) I was obliged to hide
+my charming guest in the harness room. She consented, with angelic
+resignation, to immolate her dignity to the servile necessities of my
+position. A more amiable woman (so far) I never met with!
+
+After the second visit I was left free. It was then close on midnight. Up
+to that time there was nothing in the behavior of the mad Englishman to
+reward Mrs. Fairbank and the doctor for presenting themselves at his
+bedside. He lay half awake, half asleep, with an odd wondering kind of
+look in his face. My mistress at parting warned me to be particularly
+watchful of him toward two in the morning. The doctor (in case anything
+happened) left me a large hand bell to ring, which could easily be heard
+at the house.
+
+Restored to the society of my fair friend, I spread the supper table. A
+pate, a sausage, and a few bottles of generous Moselle wine, composed our
+simple meal. When persons adore each other, the intoxicating illusion of
+Love transforms the simplest meal into a banquet. With immeasurable
+capacities for enjoyment, we sat down to table. At the very moment when I
+placed my fascinating companion in a chair, the infamous Englishman in the
+next room took that occasion, of all others, to become restless and noisy
+once more. He struck with his stick on the floor; he cried out, in a
+delirious access of terror, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"
+
+The sound of that lamentable voice, suddenly assailing our ears, terrified
+my fair friend. She lost all her charming color in an instant. "Good
+heavens!" she exclaimed. "Who is that in the next room?"
+
+"A mad Englishman."
+
+"An Englishman?"
+
+"Compose yourself, my angel. I will quiet him."
+
+The lamentable voice called out on me again, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"
+
+My fair friend caught me by the arm. "Who is he?" she cried. "What is his
+name?"
+
+Something in her face struck me as she put that question. A spasm of
+jealousy shook me to the soul. "You know him?" I said.
+
+"His name!" she vehemently repeated; "his name!"
+
+"Francis," I answered.
+
+"Francis--_what_?"
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. I could neither remember nor pronounce the
+barbarous English surname. I could only tell her it began with an "R."
+
+She dropped back into the chair. Was she going to faint? No: she
+recovered, and more than recovered, her lost color. Her eyes flashed
+superbly. What did it mean? Profoundly as I understand women in general, I
+was puzzled by _this_ woman!
+
+"You know him?" I repeated.
+
+She laughed at me. "What nonsense! How should I know him? Go and quiet the
+wretch."
+
+My looking-glass was near. One glance at it satisfied me that no woman in
+her senses could prefer the Englishman to Me. I recovered my self-respect.
+I hastened to the Englishman's bedside.
+
+The moment I appeared he pointed eagerly toward my room. He overwhelmed me
+with a torrent of words in his own language. I made out, from his gestures
+and his looks, that he had, in some incomprehensible manner, discovered
+the presence of my guest; and, stranger still, that he was scared by the
+idea of a person in my room. I endeavored to compose him on the system
+which I have already mentioned--that is to say, I swore at him in _my_
+language. The result not proving satisfactory, I own I shook my fist in
+his face, and left the bedchamber.
+
+Returning to my fair friend, I found her walking backward and forward in a
+state of excitement wonderful to behold. She had not waited for me to fill
+her glass--she had begun the generous Moselle in my absence. I prevailed
+on her with difficulty to place herself at the table. Nothing would induce
+her to eat. "My appetite is gone," she said. "Give me wine."
+
+The generous Moselle deserves its name--delicate on the palate, with
+prodigious "body." The strength of this fine wine produced no stupefying
+effect on my remarkable guest. It appeared to strengthen and exhilarate
+her--nothing more. She always spoke in the same low tone, and always, turn
+the conversation as I might, brought it back with the same dexterity to
+the subject of the Englishman in the next room. In any other woman this
+persistency would have offended me. My lovely guest was irresistible; I
+answered her questions with the docility of a child. She possessed all the
+amusing eccentricity of her nation. When I told her of the accident which
+confined the Englishman to his bed, she sprang to her feet. An
+extraordinary smile irradiated her countenance. She said, "Show me the
+horse who broke the Englishman's leg! I must see that horse!" I took her
+to the stables. She kissed the horse--on my word of honor, she kissed the
+horse! That struck me. I said. "You _do_ know the man; and he has wronged
+you in some way." No! she would not admit it, even then. "I kiss all
+beautiful animals," she said. "Haven't I kissed _you_?" With that charming
+explanation of her conduct, she ran back up the stairs. I only remained
+behind to lock the stable door again. When I rejoined her, I made a
+startling discovery. I caught her coming out of the Englishman's room.
+
+"I was just going downstairs again to call you," she said. "The man in
+there is getting noisy once more."
+
+The mad Englishman's voice assailed our ears once again. "Rigobert!
+Rigobert!"
+
+He was a frightful object to look at when I saw him this time. His eyes
+were staring wildly; the perspiration was pouring over his face. In a
+panic of terror he clasped his hands; he pointed up to heaven. By every
+sign and gesture that a man can make, he entreated me not to leave him
+again. I really could not help smiling. The idea of my staying with _him_,
+and leaving my fair friend by herself in the next room!
+
+I turned to the door. When the mad wretch saw me leaving him he burst out
+into a screech of despair--so shrill that I feared it might awaken the
+sleeping servants.
+
+My presence of mind in emergencies is proverbial among those who know me.
+I tore open the cupboard in which he kept his linen--seized a handful of
+his handkerchiefs--gagged him with one of them, and secured his hands with
+the others. There was now no danger of his alarming the servants. After
+tying the last knot, I looked up.
+
+The door between the Englishman's room and mine was open. My fair friend
+was standing on the threshold--watching _him_ as he lay helpless on the
+bed; watching _me_ as I tied the last knot.
+
+"What are you doing there?" I asked. "Why did you open the door?"
+
+She stepped up to me, and whispered her answer in my ear, with her eyes
+all the time upon the man on the bed:
+
+"I heard him scream."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I thought you had killed him."
+
+I drew back from her in horror. The suspicion of me which her words
+implied was sufficiently detestable in itself. But her manner when she
+uttered the words was more revolting still. It so powerfully affected me
+that I started back from that beautiful creature as I might have recoiled
+from a reptile crawling over my flesh.
+
+Before I had recovered myself sufficiently to reply, my nerves were
+assailed by another shock. I suddenly heard my mistress's voice calling to
+me from the stable yard.
+
+There was no time to think--there was only time to act. The one thing
+needed was to keep Mrs. Fairbank from ascending the stairs, and
+discovering--not my lady guest only--but the Englishman also, gagged and
+bound on his bed. I instantly hurried to the yard. As I ran down the
+stairs I heard the stable clock strike the quarter to two in the morning.
+
+My mistress was eager and agitated. The doctor (in attendance on her) was
+smiling to himself, like a man amused at his own thoughts.
+
+"Is Francis awake or asleep?" Mrs. Fairbank inquired.
+
+"He has been a little restless, madam. But he is now quiet again. If he is
+not disturbed" (I added those words to prevent her from ascending the
+stairs), "he will soon fall off into a quiet sleep."
+
+"Has nothing happened since I was here last?"
+
+"Nothing, madam."
+
+The doctor lifted his eyebrows with a comical look of distress. "Alas,
+alas, Mrs. Fairbank!" he said. "Nothing has happened! The days of romance
+are over!"
+
+"It is not two o'clock yet," my mistress answered, a little irritably.
+
+The smell of the stables was strong on the morning air. She put her
+handkerchief to her nose and led the way out of the yard by the north
+entrance--the entrance communicating with the gardens and the house. I was
+ordered to follow her, along with the doctor. Once out of the smell of the
+stables she began to question me again. She was unwilling to believe that
+nothing had occurred in her absence. I invented the best answers I could
+think of on the spur of the moment; and the doctor stood by laughing. So
+the minutes passed till the clock struck two. Upon that, Mrs. Fairbank
+announced her intention of personally visiting the Englishman in his room.
+To my great relief, the doctor interfered to stop her from doing this.
+
+"You have heard that Francis is just falling asleep," he said. "If you
+enter his room you may disturb him. It is essential to the success of my
+experiment that he should have a good night's rest, and that he should own
+it himself, before I tell him the truth. I must request, madam, that you
+will not disturb the man. Rigobert will ring the alarm bell if anything
+happens."
+
+My mistress was unwilling to yield. For the next five minutes, at least,
+there was a warm discussion between the two. In the end Mrs. Fairbank was
+obliged to give way--for the time. "In half an hour," she said, "Francis
+will either be sound asleep, or awake again. In half an hour I shall come
+back." She took the doctor's arm. They returned together to the house.
+
+Left by myself, with half an hour before me, I resolved to take the
+Englishwoman back to the village--then, returning to the stables, to
+remove the gag and the bindings from Francis, and to let him screech to
+his heart's content. What would his alarming the whole establishment
+matter to _me_ after I had got rid of the compromising presence of my
+guest?
+
+Returning to the yard I heard a sound like the creaking of an open door on
+its hinges. The gate of the north entrance I had just closed with my own
+hand. I went round to the west entrance, at the back of the stables. It
+opened on a field crossed by two footpaths in Mr. Fairbank's grounds. The
+nearest footpath led to the village. The other led to the highroad and the
+river.
+
+Arriving at the west entrance I found the door open--swinging to and fro
+slowly in the fresh morning breeze. I had myself locked and bolted that
+door after admitting my fair friend at eleven o'clock. A vague dread of
+something wrong stole its way into my mind. I hurried back to the stables.
+
+I looked into my own room. It was empty. I went to the harness room. Not a
+sign of the woman was there. I returned to my room, and approached the
+door of the Englishman's bedchamber. Was it possible that she had remained
+there during my absence? An unaccountable reluctance to open the door made
+me hesitate, with my hand on the lock. I listened. There was not a sound
+inside. I called softly. There was no answer. I drew back a step, still
+hesitating. I noticed something dark moving slowly in the crevice between
+the bottom of the door and the boarded floor. Snatching up the candle from
+the table, I held it low, and looked. The dark, slowly moving object was a
+stream of blood!
+
+That horrid sight roused me. I opened the door. The Englishman lay on his
+bed--alone in the room. He was stabbed in two places--in the throat and in
+the heart. The weapon was left in the second wound. It was a knife of
+English manufacture, with a handle of buckhorn as good as new.
+
+I instantly gave the alarm. Witnesses can speak to what followed. It is
+monstrous to suppose that I am guilty of the murder. I admit that I am
+capable of committing follies: but I shrink from the bare idea of a crime.
+Besides, I had no motive for killing the man. The woman murdered him in my
+absence. The woman escaped by the west entrance while I was talking to my
+mistress. I have no more to say. I swear to you what I have here written
+is a true statement of all that happened on the morning of the first of
+March.
+
+Accept, sir, the assurance of my sentiments of profound gratitude and
+respect.
+
+ JOSEPH RIGOBERT.
+
+
+
+
+LAST LINES.--ADDED BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+Tried for the murder of Francis Raven, Joseph Rigobert was found Not
+Guilty; the papers of the assassinated man presented ample evidence of the
+deadly animosity felt toward him by his wife.
+
+The investigations pursued on the morning when the crime was committed
+showed that the murderess, after leaving the stable, had taken the
+footpath which led to the river. The river was dragged--without result. It
+remains doubtful to this day whether she died by drowning or not. The one
+thing certain is--that Alicia Warlock was never seen again.
+
+So--beginning in mystery, ending in mystery--the Dream Woman passes from
+your view. Ghost; demon; or living human creature--say for yourselves
+which she is. Or, knowing what unfathomed wonders are around you, what
+unfathomed wonders are _in_ you, let the wise words of the greatest of all
+poets be explanation enough:
+
+ "We are such stuff
+ As dreams are made of, and our little life
+ Is rounded with, a sleep."
+
+
+
+
+Anonymous
+
+
+
+
+
+_The Lost Duchess_
+
+
+I
+
+"Has the duchess returned?"
+
+"No, your grace."
+
+Knowles came farther into the room. He had a letter on a salver. When the
+duke had taken it, Knowles still lingered. The duke glanced at him.
+
+"Is an answer required?"
+
+"No, your grace." Still Knowles lingered. "Something a little singular has
+happened. The carriage has returned without the duchess, and the men say
+that they thought her grace was in it."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I hardly understand myself, your grace. Perhaps you would like to see
+Barnes."
+
+Barnes was the coachman.
+
+"Send him up." When Knowles had gone, and he was alone, his grace showed
+signs of being slightly annoyed. He looked at his watch. "I told her she'd
+better be in by four. She says that she's not feeling well, and yet one
+would think that she was not aware of the fatigue entailed in having the
+prince come to dinner, and a mob of people to follow. I particularly
+wished her to lie down for a couple of hours."
+
+Knowles ushered in not only Barnes, the coachman, but Moysey, the footman,
+too. Both these persons seemed to be ill at ease. The duke glanced at them
+sharply. In his voice there was a suggestion of impatience.
+
+"What is the matter?"
+
+Barnes explained as best he could.
+
+"If you please, your grace, we waited for the duchess outside Cane and
+Wilson's, the drapers. The duchess came out, got into the carriage, and
+Moysey shut the door, and her grace said, 'Home!' and yet when we got home
+she wasn't there."
+
+"She wasn't where?"
+
+"Her grace wasn't in the carriage, your grace."
+
+"What on earth do you mean?"
+
+"Her grace did get into the carriage; you shut the door, didn't you?"
+
+Barnes turned to Moysey. Moysey brought his hand up to his brow in a sort
+of military salute--he had been a soldier in the regiment in which, once
+upon a time, the duke had been a subaltern.
+
+"She did. The duchess came out of the shop. She seemed rather in a hurry,
+I thought. She got into the carriage, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!' I shut
+the door, and Barnes drove straight home. We never stopped anywhere, and
+we never noticed nothing happen on the way; and yet when we got home the
+carriage was empty."
+
+The duke started.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that the duchess got out of the carriage while you
+were driving full pelt through the streets without saying anything to you,
+and without you noticing it?"
+
+"The carriage was empty when we got home, your grace."
+
+"Was either of the doors open?"
+
+"No, your grace."
+
+"You fellows have been up to some infernal mischief. You have made a mess
+of it. You never picked up the duchess, and you're trying to palm this
+tale off on me to save yourselves."
+
+Barnes was moved to adjuration:
+
+"I'll take my Bible oath, your grace, that the duchess got into the
+carriage outside Cane and Wilson's."
+
+Moysey seconded his colleague.
+
+"I will swear to that, your grace. She got into that carriage, and I shut
+the door, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!'"
+
+The duke looked as if he did not know what to make of the story and its
+tellers.
+
+"What carriage did you have?"
+
+"Her grace's brougham, your grace."
+
+Knowles interposed:
+
+"The brougham was ordered because I understood that the duchess was not
+feeling very well, and there's rather a high wind, your grace."
+
+The duke snapped at him:
+
+"What has that to do with it? Are you suggesting that the duchess was more
+likely to jump out of a brougham while it was dashing through the streets
+than out of any other kind of vehicle?"
+
+The duke's glance fell on the letter which Knowles had brought him when he
+first had entered. He had placed it on his writing table. Now he took it
+up. It was addressed:
+
+ "_To His Grace the Duke of Datchet_.
+ _Private!_
+ VERY PRESSING!!!"
+
+The name was written in a fine, clear, almost feminine hand. The words in
+the left-hand corner of the envelope were written in a different hand.
+They were large and bold; almost as though they had been painted with the
+end of the penholder instead of being written with the pen. The envelope
+itself was of an unusual size, and bulged out as though it contained
+something else besides a letter.
+
+The duke tore the envelope open. As he did so something fell out of it on
+to the writing table. It looked as though it was a lock of a woman's hair.
+As he glanced at it the duke seemed to be a trifle startled. The duke read
+the letter:
+
+ "Your grace will be so good as to bring five hundred pounds in
+ gold to the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade within an
+ hour of the receipt of this. The Duchess of Datchet has been
+ kidnaped. An imitation duchess got into the carriage, which was
+ waiting outside Cane and Wilson's, and she alighted on the road.
+ Unless your grace does as you are requested, the Duchess of
+ Datchet's left-hand little finger will be at once cut off, and
+ sent home in time to receive the prince to dinner. Other portions
+ of her grace will follow. A lock of her grace's hair is inclosed
+ with this as an earnest of our good intentions.
+
+ "_Before_ 5:30 p.m. your grace is requested to be at the
+ Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade with five hundred pounds
+ in gold. You will there be accosted by an individual in a white
+ top hat, and with a gardenia in his buttonhole. You will be
+ entirely at liberty to give him into custody, or to have him
+ followed by the police, in which case the duchess's left arm, cut
+ off at the shoulder, will be sent home for dinner--not to mention
+ other extremely possible contingencies. But you are _advised_ to
+ give the individual in question the five hundred pounds in gold,
+ because in that case the duchess herself will be home in time to
+ receive the prince to dinner, and with one of the best stories
+ with which to entertain your distinguished guests they ever
+ heard.
+
+ "Remember! _not later than_ 5:30, unless you wish to receive her
+ grace's little finger."
+
+The duke stared at this amazing epistle when he had read it as though he
+found it difficult to believe the evidence of his eyes. He was not a
+demonstrative person, as a rule, but this little communication astonished
+even him. He read it again. Then his hands dropped to his sides, and he
+swore.
+
+He took up the lock of hair which had fallen out of the envelope. Was it
+possible that it could be his wife's, the duchess? Was it possible that a
+Duchess of Datchet could be kidnaped, in broad daylight, in the heart of
+London, and be sent home, as it were, in pieces? Had sacrilegious hands
+already been playing pranks with that great lady's hair? Certainly,
+_that_ hair was so like _her_ hair that the mere resemblance made his
+grace's blood run cold. He turned on Messrs. Barnes and Moysey as though
+he would have liked to rend them.
+
+"You scoundrels!"
+
+He moved forward as though the intention had entered his ducal heart to
+knock his servants down. But, if that were so, he did not act quite up to
+his intention. Instead, he stretched out his arm, pointing at them as if
+he were an accusing spirit:
+
+"Will you swear that it was the duchess who got into the carriage outside
+Cane and Wilson's?"
+
+Barnes began to stammer:
+
+"I'll swear, your grace, that I--I thought--"
+
+The duke stormed an interruption:
+
+"I don't ask what you thought. I ask you, will you swear it was?"
+
+The duke's anger was more than Barnes could face. He was silent. Moysey
+showed a larger courage.
+
+"I could have sworn that it was at the time, your grace. But now it seems
+to me that it's a rummy go."
+
+"A rummy go!" The peculiarity of the phrase did not seem to strike the
+duke just then--at least, he echoed it as if it didn't. "You call it a
+rummy go! Do you know that I am told in this letter that the woman who
+entered the carriage was not the duchess? What you were thinking about, or
+what case you will be able to make out for yourselves, you know better
+than I; but I can tell you this--that in an hour you will leave my
+service, and you may esteem yourselves fortunate if, to-night, you are not
+both of you sleeping in jail."
+
+One might almost have suspected that the words were spoken in irony. But
+before they could answer, another servant entered, who also brought a
+letter for the duke. When his grace's glance fell on it he uttered an
+exclamation. The writing on the envelope was the same writing that had
+been on the envelope which had contained the very singular
+communication--like it in all respects, down to the broomstick-end
+thickness of the "Private!" and "Very pressing!!!" in the corner.
+
+"Who brought this?" stormed the duke.
+
+The servant appeared to be a little startled by the violence of his
+grace's manner.
+
+"A lady--or, at least, your grace, she seemed to be a lady."
+
+"Where is she?"
+
+"She came in a hansom, your grace. She gave me that letter, and said,
+'Give that to the Duke of Datchet at once--without a moment's delay!' Then
+she got into the hansom again, and drove away."
+
+"Why didn't you stop her?"
+
+"Your grace!"
+
+The man seemed surprised, as though the idea of stopping chance visitors
+to the ducal mansion _vi et armis_ had not, until that moment, entered
+into his philosophy. The duke continued to regard the man as if he could
+say a good deal, if he chose. Then he pointed to the door. His lips said
+nothing, but his gesture much. The servant vanished.
+
+"Another hoax!" the duke said grimly, as he tore the envelope open.
+
+This time the envelope contained a sheet of paper, and in the sheet of
+paper another envelope. The duke unfolded the sheet of paper. On it some
+words were written. These:
+
+"The duchess appears so particularly anxious to drop you a line, that one
+really hasn't the heart to refuse her.
+
+"Her grace's communication--written amidst blinding tears!--you will find
+inclosed with this."
+
+"Knowles," said the duke, in a voice which actually trembled, "Knowles,
+hoax or no hoax, I will be even with the gentleman who wrote that."
+
+Handing the sheet of paper to Mr. Knowles, his grace turned his attention
+to the envelope which had been inclosed. It was a small, square envelope,
+of the finest quality, and it reeked with perfume. The duke's countenance
+assumed an added frown--he had no fondness for envelopes which were
+scented. In the center of the envelope were the words, "To the Duke of
+Datchet," written in the big, bold, sprawling hand which he knew so well.
+
+"Mabel's writing," he said, half to himself, as, with shaking fingers, he
+tore the envelope open.
+
+The sheet of paper which he took out was almost as stiff as cardboard. It,
+too, emitted what his grace deemed the nauseous odors of the perfumer's
+shop. On it was written this letter:
+
+ "MY DEAR HEREWARD--For Heaven's sake do what these people
+ require! I don't know what has happened or where I am, but I am
+ nearly distracted! They have already cut off some of my hair, and
+ they tell me that, if you don't let them have five hundred pounds
+ in gold by half-past five, they will cut off my little finger
+ too. I would sooner die than lose my little finger--and--I don't
+ know what else besides.
+
+ "By the token which I send you, and which has never, until now,
+ been off my breast, I conjure you to help me.
+
+
+ "Hereward--_help me_!"
+
+When he read that letter the duke turned white--very white, as white as
+the paper on which it was written. He passed the epistle on to Knowles.
+
+"I suppose that also is a hoax?"
+
+Mr. Knowles was silent. He still yielded to his constitutional disrelish
+to commit himself. At last he asked:
+
+"What is it that your grace proposes to do?"
+
+The duke spoke with a bitterness which almost suggested a personal
+animosity toward the inoffensive Mr. Knowles.
+
+"I propose, with your permission, to release the duchess from the custody
+of my estimable correspondent. I propose--always with your permission--to
+comply with his modest request, and to take him his five hundred pounds in
+gold." He paused, then continued in a tone which, coming from him, meant
+volumes: "Afterwards, I propose to cry quits with the concocter of this
+pretty little hoax, even if it costs me every penny I possess. He shall
+pay more for that five hundred pounds than he supposes."
+
+
+II
+
+The Duke of Datchet, coming out of the bank, lingered for a moment on the
+steps. In one hand he carried a canvas bag which seemed well weighted. On
+his countenance there was an expression which to a casual observer might
+have suggested that his grace was not completely at his ease. That casual
+observer happened to come strolling by. It took the form of Ivor Dacre.
+
+Mr. Dacre looked the Duke of Datchet up and down in that languid way he
+has. He perceived the canvas bag. Then he remarked, possibly intending to
+be facetious:
+
+"Been robbing the bank? Shall I call a cart?"
+
+Nobody minds what Ivor Dacre says. Besides, he is the duke's own cousin.
+Perhaps a little removed; still, there it is. So the duke smiled a sickly
+smile, as if Mr. Dacre's delicate wit had given him a passing touch of
+indigestion.
+
+Mr. Dacre noticed that the duke looked sallow, so he gave his pretty sense
+of humor another airing.
+
+"Kitchen boiler burst? When I saw the duchess just now I wondered if it
+had."
+
+His grace distinctly started. He almost dropped the canvas bag.
+
+"You saw the duchess just now, Ivor! When?"
+
+The duke was evidently moved. Mr. Dacre was stirred to languid curiosity.
+"I can't say I clocked it. Perhaps half an hour ago; perhaps a little
+more."
+
+"Half an hour ago! Are you sure? Where did you see her?"
+
+Mr. Dacre wondered. The Duchess of Datchet could scarcely have been
+eloping in broad daylight. Moreover, she had not yet been married a year.
+Everyone knew that she and the duke were still as fond of each other as if
+they were not man and wife. So, although the duke, for some cause or
+other, was evidently in an odd state of agitation, Mr. Dacre saw no reason
+why he should not make a clean breast of all he knew.
+
+"She was going like blazes in a hansom cab."
+
+"In a hansom cab? Where?"
+
+"Down Waterloo Place."
+
+"Was she alone?"
+
+Mr. Dacre reflected. He glanced at the duke out of the corners of his
+eyes. His languid utterance became a positive drawl.
+
+"I rather fancy that she wasn't."
+
+"Who was with her?"
+
+"My dear fellow, if you were to offer me the bank I couldn't tell you."
+
+"Was it a man?"
+
+Mr. Dacre's drawl became still more pronounced.
+
+"I rather fancy that it was."
+
+Mr. Dacre expected something. The duke was so excited. But he by no means
+expected what actually came.
+
+"Ivor, she's been kidnaped!"
+
+Mr. Dacre did what he had never been known to do before within the memory
+of man--he dropped his eyeglass.
+
+"Datchet!"
+
+"She has! Some scoundrel has decoyed her away, and trapped her. He's
+already sent me a lock of her hair, and he tells me that if I don't let
+him have five hundred pounds in gold by half-past five he'll let me have
+her little finger."
+
+Mr. Dacre did not know what to make of his grace at all. He was a sober
+man--it _couldn't_ be that! Mr. Dacre felt really concerned.
+
+"I'll call a cab, old man, and you'd better let me see you home."
+
+Mr. Dacre half raised his stick to hail a passing hansom. The duke caught
+him by the arm.
+
+"You ass! What do you mean? I am telling you the simple truth. My wife's
+been kidnaped."
+
+Mr. Dacre's countenance was a thing to be seen--and remembered.
+
+"Oh! I hadn't heard that there was much of that sort of thing about just
+now. They talk of poodles being kidnaped, but as for duchesses--You'd
+really better let me call that cab."
+
+"Ivor, do you want me to kick you? Don't you see that to me it's a
+question of life and death? I've been in there to get the money." His
+grace motioned toward the bank. "I'm going to take it to the scoundrel who
+has my darling at his mercy. Let me but have her hand in mine again, and
+he shall continue to pay for every sovereign with tears of blood until he
+dies."
+
+"Look here, Datchet, I don't know if you're having a joke with me, or if
+you're not well--"
+
+The duke stepped impatiently into the roadway.
+
+"Ivor, you're a fool! Can't you tell jest from earnest, health from
+disease? I'm off! Are you coming with me? It would be as well that I
+should have a witness."
+
+"Where are you off to?"
+
+"To the other end of the Arcade."
+
+"Who is the gentleman you expect to have the pleasure of meeting there?"
+
+"How should I know?" The duke took a letter from his pocket--it was the
+letter which had just arrived. "The fellow is to wear a white top hat, and
+a gardenia in his buttonhole."
+
+"What is it you have there?"
+
+"It's the letter which brought the news--look for yourself and see; but,
+for God's sake, make haste!" His grace glanced at his watch. "It's already
+twenty after five."
+
+"And do you mean to say that on the strength of a letter such as this you
+are going to hand over five hundred pounds to--"
+
+The duke cut Mr. Dacre short.
+
+"What are five hundred pounds to me? Besides, you don't know all. There is
+another letter. And I have heard from Mabel. But I will tell you all about
+it later. If you are coming, come!"
+
+Folding up the letter, Mr. Dacre returned it to the duke.
+
+"As you say, what are five hundred pounds to you? It's as well they are
+not as much to you as they are to me, or I'm afraid--"
+
+"Hang it, Ivor, do prose afterwards!"
+
+The duke hurried across the road. Mr. Dacre hastened after him. As they
+entered the Arcade they passed a constable. Mr. Dacre touched his
+companion's arm.
+
+"Don't you think we'd better ask our friend in blue to walk behind us? His
+neighborhood might be handy."
+
+"Nonsense!" The duke stopped short. "Ivor, this is my affair, not yours.
+If you are not content to play the part of silent witness, be so good as
+to leave me."
+
+"My dear Datchet, I'm entirely at your service. I can be every whit as
+insane as you, I do assure you."
+
+Side by side they moved rapidly down the Burlington Arcade. The duke was
+obviously in a state of the extremest nervous tension. Mr. Dacre was
+equally obviously in a state of the most supreme enjoyment. People stared
+as they rushed past. The duke saw nothing. Mr. Dacre saw everything, and
+smiled.
+
+When they reached the Piccadilly end of the Arcade the duke pulled up. He
+looked about him. Mr. Dacre also looked about him.
+
+"I see nothing of your white-hatted and gardenia-buttonholed friend," said
+Ivor.
+
+The duke referred to his watch.
+
+"It's not yet half-past five. I'm up to time."
+
+Mr. Dacre held his stick in front of him and leaned on it. He indulged
+himself with a beatific smile.
+
+"It strikes me, my dear Datchet, that you've been the victim of one of the
+finest things in hoaxes--"
+
+"I hope I haven't kept you waiting."
+
+The voice which interrupted Mr. Dacre came from the rear. While they were
+looking in front of them some one approached them from behind, apparently
+coming out of the shop which was at their backs.
+
+The speaker looked a gentleman. He sounded like one, too. Costume,
+appearance, manner, were beyond reproach--even beyond the criticism of
+two such keen critics as were these. The glorious attire of a London dandy
+was surmounted with a beautiful white top hat. In his buttonhole was a
+magnificent gardenia.
+
+In age the stranger was scarcely more than a boy, and a sunny-faced,
+handsome boy at that. His cheeks were hairless, his eyes were blue. His
+smile was not only innocent, it was bland. Never was there a more
+conspicuous illustration of that repose which stamps the caste of Vere de
+Vere.
+
+The duke looked at him and glowered. Mr. Dacre looked at him and smiled.
+
+"Who are you?" asked the duke.
+
+"Ah--that is the question!" The newcomer's refined and musical voice
+breathed the very soul of affability. "I am an individual who is so
+unfortunate as to be in want of five hundred pounds."
+
+"Are you the scoundrel who sent me that infamous letter?"
+
+The charming stranger never turned a hair.
+
+"I am the scoundrel mentioned in that infamous letter who wants to accost
+you at the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade before half-past
+five--as witness my white hat and my gardenia."
+
+"Where's my wife?"
+
+The stranger gently swung his stick in front of him with his two hands. He
+regarded the duke as a merry-hearted son might regard his father. The
+thing was beautiful!
+
+"Her grace will be home almost as soon as you are--when you have given me
+the money which I perceive you have all ready for me in that scarcely
+elegant-looking canvas bag." He shrugged his shoulders quite gracefully.
+"Unfortunately, in these matters one has no choice--one is forced to ask
+for gold."
+
+"And suppose, instead of giving you what is in this canvas bag, I take you
+by the throat and choke the life right out of you?"
+
+"Or suppose," amended Mr. Dacre, "that you do better, and commend this
+gentleman to the tender mercies of the first policeman we encounter."
+
+The stranger turned to Mr. Dacre. He condescended to become conscious of
+his presence.
+
+"Is this gentleman your grace's friend? Ah--Mr. Dacre, I perceive! I have
+the honor of knowing Mr. Dacre, though, possibly, I am unknown to him."
+
+"You were--until this moment."
+
+With an airy little laugh the stranger returned to the duke. He brushed an
+invisible speck of dust off the sleeve of his coat.
+
+"As has been intimated in that infamous letter, his grace is at perfect
+liberty to give me into custody--why not? Only"--he said it with his
+boyish smile--"if a particular communication is not received from me in
+certain quarters within a certain time the Duchess of Datchet's beautiful
+white arm will be hacked off at the shoulder."
+
+"You hound!"
+
+The duke would have taken the stranger by the throat, and have done his
+best to choke the life right out of him then and there, if Mr. Dacre had
+not intervened.
+
+"Steady, old man!" Mr. Dacre turned to the stranger. "You appear to be a
+pretty sort of a scoundrel."
+
+The stranger gave his shoulders that almost imperceptible shrug.
+
+"Oh, my dear Dacre, I am in want of money! I believe that you sometimes
+are in want of money, too."
+
+Everybody knows that nobody knows where Ivor Dacre gets his money from, so
+the allusion must have tickled him immensely.
+
+"You're a cool hand," he said.
+
+"Some men are born that way."
+
+"So I should imagine. Men like you must be born, not made."
+
+"Precisely--as you say!" The stranger turned, with his graceful smile, to
+the duke: "But are we not wasting precious time? I can assure your grace
+that, in this particular matter, moments are of value."
+
+Mr. Dacre interposed before the duke could answer.
+
+"If you take my strongly urged advice, Datchet, you will summon this
+constable who is now coming down the Arcade, and hand this gentleman over
+to his keeping. I do not think that you need fear that the duchess will
+lose her arm, or even her little finger. Scoundrels of this one's kidney
+are most amenable to reason when they have handcuffs on their wrists."
+
+The duke plainly hesitated. He would--and he would not. The stranger, as
+he eyed him, seemed much amused.
+
+"My dear duke, by all means act on Mr. Dacre's valuable suggestion. As I
+said before, why not? It would at least be interesting to see if the
+duchess does or does not lose her arm--almost as interesting to you as to
+Mr. Dacre. Those blackmailing, kidnaping scoundrels do use such empty
+menaces. Besides, you would have the pleasure of seeing me locked up. My
+imprisonment for life would recompense you even for the loss of her
+grace's arm. And five hundred pounds is such a sum to have to pay--merely
+for a wife! Why not, therefore, act on Mr. Dacre's suggestion? Here comes
+the constable." The constable referred to was advancing toward them--he
+was not a dozen yards away. "Let me beckon to him--I will with pleasure."
+He took out his watch--a gold chronograph repeater. "There are scarcely
+ten minutes left during which it will be possible for me to send the
+communication which I spoke of, so that it may arrive in time. As it will
+then be too late, and the instruments are already prepared for the little
+operation which her grace is eagerly anticipating, it would, perhaps, be
+as well, after all, that you should give me into charge. You would have
+saved your five hundred pounds, and you would, at any rate, have something
+in exchange for her grace's mutilated limb. Ah, here is the constable!
+Officer!"
+
+The stranger spoke with such a pleasant little air of easy geniality that
+it was impossible to tell if he were in jest or in earnest. This fact
+impressed the duke much more than if he had gone in for a liberal
+indulgence of the--under the circumstances--orthodox melodramatic
+scowling. And, indeed, in the face of his own common sense, it impressed
+Mr. Ivor Dacre too.
+
+This well-bred, well-groomed youth was just the being to realize--_aux
+bouts des ongles_--a modern type of the devil, the type which depicts him
+as a perfect gentleman, who keeps smiling all the time.
+
+The constable whom this audacious rogue had signaled approached the little
+group. He addressed the stranger:
+
+"Do you want me, sir?"
+
+"No, I do not want you. I think it is the Duke of Datchet."
+
+The constable, who knew the duke very well by sight, saluted him as he
+turned to receive instructions.
+
+The duke looked white, even savage. There was not a pleasant look in his
+eyes and about his lips. He appeared to be endeavoring to put a great
+restraint upon himself. There was a momentary silence. Mr. Dacre made a
+movement as if to interpose. The duke caught him by the arm.
+
+He spoke: "No, constable, I do not want you. This person is mistaken."
+
+The constable looked as if he could not quite make out how such a mistake
+could have arisen, hesitated, then, with another salute, he moved away.
+
+The stranger was still holding his watch in his hand.
+
+"Only eight minutes," he said.
+
+The duke seemed to experience some difficulty in giving utterance to what
+he had to say.
+
+"If I give you this five hundred pounds, you--you--"
+
+As the duke paused, as if at a loss for language which was strong enough
+to convey his meaning, the stranger laughed.
+
+"Let us take the adjectives for granted. Besides, it is only boys who call
+each other names--men do things. If you give me the five hundred
+sovereigns, which you have in that bag, at once--in five minutes it will
+be too late--I will promise--I will not swear; if you do not credit my
+simple promise, you will not believe my solemn affirmation--I will
+promise that, possibly within an hour, certainly within an hour and a
+half, the Duchess of Datchet shall return to you absolutely
+uninjured--except, of course, as you are already aware, with regard to a
+few of the hairs of her head. I will promise this on the understanding
+that you do not yourself attempt to see where I go, and that you will
+allow no one else to do so." This with a glance at Ivor Dacre. "I shall
+know at once if I am followed. If you entertain such intentions, you had
+better, on all accounts, remain in possession of your five hundred
+pounds."
+
+The duke eyed him very grimly.
+
+"I entertain no such intentions--until the duchess returns."
+
+Again the stranger indulged in that musical laugh of his.
+
+"Ah, until the duchess returns! Of course, then the bargain's at an end.
+When you are once more in the enjoyment of her grace's society, you will
+be at liberty to set all the dogs in Europe at my heels. I assure you I
+fully expect that you will do so--why not?" The duke raised the canvas
+bag. "My dear duke, ten thousand thanks! You shall see her grace at
+Datchet House, 'pon my honor, probably within the hour."
+
+"Well," commented Ivor Dacre, when the stranger had vanished, with the
+bag, into Piccadilly, and as the duke and himself moved toward Burlington
+Gardens, "if a gentleman is to be robbed, it is as well that he should
+have another gentleman rob him."
+
+
+III
+
+Mr. Dacre eyed his companion covertly as they progressed. His Grace of
+Datchet appeared to have some fresh cause for uneasiness. All at once he
+gave it utterance, in a tone of voice which was extremely somber:
+
+"Ivor, do you think that scoundrel will dare to play me false?"
+
+"I think," murmured Mr. Dacre, "that he has dared to play you pretty false
+already."
+
+"I don't mean that. But I mean how am I to know, now that he has his
+money, that he will still not keep Mabel in his clutches?"
+
+There came an echo from Mr. Dacre.
+
+"Just so--how are you to know?"
+
+"I believe that something of this sort has been done in the States."
+
+"I thought that there they were content to kidnap them after they were
+dead. I was not aware that they had, as yet, got quite so far as the
+living."
+
+"I believe that I have heard of something just like this."
+
+"Possibly; they are giants over there."
+
+"And in that case the scoundrels, when their demands were met, refused to
+keep to the letter of their bargain and asked for more."
+
+The duke stood still. He clinched his fists, and swore:
+
+"Ivor, if that--villain doesn't keep his word, and Mabel isn't home within
+the hour, by--I shall go mad!"
+
+"My dear Datchet"--Mr. Dacre loved strong language as little as he loved a
+scene--"let us trust to time and, a little, to your white-hatted and
+gardenia-buttonholed friend's word of honor. You should have thought of
+possible eventualities before you showed your confidence--really. Suppose,
+instead of going mad, we first of all go home?"
+
+A hansom stood waiting for a fare at the end of the Arcade. Mr. Dacre had
+handed the duke into it before his grace had quite realized that the
+vehicle was there.
+
+"Tell the fellow to drive faster." That was what the duke said when the
+cab had started.
+
+"My dear Datchet, the man's already driving his geerage off its legs. If a
+bobby catches sight of him he'll take his number."
+
+A moment later, a murmur from the duke:
+
+"I don't know if you're aware that the prince is coming to dinner?"
+
+"I am perfectly aware of it."
+
+"You take it uncommonly cool. How easy it is to bear our brother's
+burdens! Ivor, if Mabel doesn't turn up I shall feel like murder."
+
+"I sympathize with you, Datchet, with all my heart, though, I may observe,
+parenthetically, that I very far from realize the situation even yet. Take
+my advice. If the duchess does not show quite as soon as we both of us
+desire, don't make a scene; just let me see what I can do."
+
+Judging from the expression of his countenance, the duke was conscious of
+no overwhelming desire to witness an exhibition of Mr. Dacre's prowess.
+
+When the cab reached Datchet House his grace dashed up the steps three at
+a time. The door flew open.
+
+"Has the duchess returned?"
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+A voice floated downward from above. Some one came running down the
+stairs. It was her Grace of Datchet.
+
+"Mabel!"
+
+She actually rushed into the duke's extended arms. And he kissed her, and
+she kissed him--before the servants.
+
+"So you're not quite dead?" she cried.
+
+"I am almost," he said.
+
+She drew herself a little away from him.
+
+"Hereward, were you seriously hurt?"
+
+"Do you suppose that I could have been otherwise than seriously hurt?"
+
+"My darling! Was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duke stared.
+
+"A Pickford's van? I don't understand. But come in here. Come along, Ivor.
+Mabel, you don't see Ivor."
+
+"How do you do, Mr. Dacre?"
+
+Then the trio withdrew into a little anteroom; it was really time. Even
+then the pair conducted themselves as if Mr. Dacre had been nothing and no
+one. The duke took the lady's two hands in his. He eyed her fondly.
+
+"So you are uninjured, with the exception of that lock of hair. Where did
+the villain take it from?"
+
+The lady looked a little puzzled.
+
+"What lock of hair?"
+
+From an envelope which he took from his pocket the duke produced a shining
+tress. It was the lock of hair which had arrived in the first
+communication. "I will have it framed."
+
+"You will have what framed?" The duchess glanced at what the duke was so
+tenderly caressing, almost, as it seemed, a little dubiously. "Whatever is
+it you have there?"
+
+"It is the lock of hair which that scoundrel sent me." Something in the
+lady's face caused him to ask a question; "Didn't he tell you he had sent
+it to me?"
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+"Did the brute tell you that he meant to cut off your little finger?"
+
+A very curious look came into the lady's face. She glanced at the duke as
+if she, all at once, was half afraid of him. She cast at Mr. Dacre what
+really seemed to be a look of inquiry. Her voice was tremulously anxious.
+
+"Hereward, did--did the accident affect you mentally?"
+
+"How could it not have affected me mentally? Do you think that my mental
+organization is of steel?"
+
+"But you look so well."
+
+"Of course I look well, now that I have you back again. Tell me, darling,
+did that hound actually threaten you with cutting off your arm? If he did,
+I shall feel half inclined to kill him yet."
+
+The duchess seemed positively to shrink from her better half's near
+neighborhood.
+
+"Hereward, was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duke seemed puzzled. Well he might be.
+
+"Was what a Pickford's van?"
+
+The lady turned to Mr. Dacre. In her voice there was a ring of anguish.
+
+"Mr. Dacre, tell me, was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+Ivor could only imitate his relative's repetition of her inquiry.
+
+"I don't quite catch you--was what a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duchess clasped her hands in front of her.
+
+"What is it you are keeping from me? What is it you are trying to hide? I
+implore you to tell me the worst, whatever it may be! Do not keep me any
+longer in suspense; you do not know what I already have endured. Mr.
+Dacre, is my husband mad?"
+
+One need scarcely observe that the lady's amazing appeal to Mr. Dacre as
+to her husband's sanity was received with something like surprise. As the
+duke continued to stare at her, a dreadful fear began to loom in his
+brain.
+
+"My darling, your brain is unhinged!"
+
+He advanced to take her two hands again in his; but, to his unmistakable
+distress, she shrank away from him.
+
+"Hereward--don't touch me. How is it that I missed you? Why did you not
+wait until I came?"
+
+"Wait until you came?"
+
+The duke's bewilderment increased.
+
+"Surely, if your injuries turned out, after all, to be slight, that was
+all the more reason why you should have waited, after sending for me like
+that."
+
+"I sent for you--I?" The duke's tone was grave. "My darling, perhaps you
+had better come upstairs."
+
+"Not until we have had an explanation. You must have known that I should
+come. Why did you not wait for me after you had sent me that?"
+
+The duchess held out something to the duke. He took it. It was a card--his
+own visiting card. Something was written on the back of it. He read aloud
+what was written.
+
+"Mabel, come to me at once with the bearer. They tell me that they cannot
+take me home." It looks like my own writing."
+
+"Looks like it! It is your writing."
+
+"It looks like it--and written with a shaky pen."
+
+"My dear child, one's hand would shake at such a moment as that."
+
+"Mabel, where did you get this?"
+
+"It was brought to me in Cane and Wilson's."
+
+"Who brought it?"
+
+"Who brought it? Why, the man you sent."
+
+"The man I sent!" A light burst upon the duke's brain. He fell back a
+pace. "It's the decoy!"
+
+Her grace echoed the words:
+
+"The decoy?"
+
+"The scoundrel! To set a trap with such a bait! My poor innocent darling,
+did you think it came from me? Tell me, Mabel, where did he cut off your
+hair?"
+
+"Cut off my hair?"
+
+Her grace put her hand to her head as if to make sure that her hair was
+there.
+
+"Where did he take you to?"
+
+"He took me to Draper's Buildings."
+
+"Draper's Buildings?"
+
+"I have never been in the City before, but he told me it was Draper's
+Buildings. Isn't that near the Stock Exchange?"
+
+"Near the Stock Exchange?"
+
+It seemed rather a curious place to which to take a kidnaped victim. The
+man's audacity!
+
+"He told me that you were coming out of the Stock Exchange when a van
+knocked you over. He said that he thought it was a Pickford's van--was it
+a Pickford's van?"
+
+"No, it was not a Pickford's van. Mabel, were you in Draper's Buildings
+when you wrote that letter?"
+
+"Wrote what letter?"
+
+"Have you forgotten it already? I do not believe that there is a word in
+it which will not be branded on my brain until I die."
+
+"Hereward! What do you mean?"
+
+"Surely you cannot have written me such a letter as that, and then have
+forgotten it already?"
+
+He handed her the letter which had arrived in the second communication.
+She glanced at it, askance. Then she took it with a little gasp.
+
+"Hereward, if you don't mind, I think I'll take a chair." She took a
+chair. "Whatever--whatever's this?" As she read the letter the varying
+expressions which passed across her face were, in themselves, a study in
+psychology. "Is it possible that you can imagine that, under any
+conceivable circumstances, I could have written such a letter as this?"
+
+"Mabel!"
+
+She rose to her feet with emphasis.
+
+"Hereward, don't say that you thought this came from me!"
+
+"Not from you?" He remembered Knowles's diplomatic reception of the
+epistle on its first appearance. "I suppose that you will say next that
+this is not a lock of your hair?"
+
+"My dear child, what bee have you got in your bonnet? This a lock of my
+hair! Why, it's not in the least bit like my hair!"
+
+Which was certainly inaccurate. As far as color was concerned it was an
+almost perfect match. The duke turned to Mr. Dacre.
+
+"Ivor, I've had to go through a good deal this afternoon. If I have to go
+through much more, something will crack!" He touched his forehead. "I
+think it's my turn to take a chair." Not the one which the duchess had
+vacated, but one which faced it. He stretched out his legs in front of
+him; he thrust his hands into his trousers pockets; he said, in a tone
+which was not gloomy but absolutely grewsome:
+
+"Might I ask, Mabel, if you have been kidnaped?"
+
+"Kidnaped?"
+
+"The word I used was 'kidnaped.' But I will spell it if you like. Or I
+will get a dictionary, that you may see its meaning."
+
+The duchess looked as if she was beginning to be not quite sure if she was
+awake or sleeping. She turned to Ivor.
+
+"Mr. Dacre, has the accident affected Hereward's brain?"
+
+The duke took the words out of his cousin's mouth.
+
+"On that point, my dear, let me ease your mind. I don't know if you are
+under the impression that I should be the same shape after a Pickford's
+van had run over me as I was before; but, in any case, I have not been run
+over by a Pickford's van. So far as I am concerned there has been no
+accident. Dismiss that delusion from your mind."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"You appear surprised. One might even think that you were sorry. But may I
+now ask what you did when you arrived at Draper's Buildings?"
+
+"Did! I looked for you!"
+
+"Indeed! And when you had looked in vain, what was the next item in your
+programme?"
+
+The lady shrank still farther from him.
+
+"Hereward, have you been having a jest at my expense? Can you have been so
+cruel?" Tears stood in her eyes.
+
+Rising, the duke laid his hand upon her arm.
+
+"Mabel, tell me--what did you do when you had looked for me in vain?"
+
+"I looked for you upstairs and downstairs and everywhere. It was quite a
+large place, it took me ever such a time. I thought that I should go
+distracted. Nobody seemed to know anything about you, or even that there
+had been an accident at all--it was all offices. I couldn't make it out in
+the least, and the people didn't seem to be able to make me out either. So
+when I couldn't find you anywhere I came straight home again."
+
+The duke was silent for a moment. Then with funereal gravity he turned to
+Mr. Dacre. He put to him this question:
+
+"Ivor, what are you laughing at?"
+
+Mr. Dacre drew his hand across his mouth with rather a suspicious gesture.
+
+"My dear fellow, only a smile!"
+
+The duchess looked from one to the other.
+
+"What have you two been doing? What is the joke?"
+
+With an air of preternatural solemnity the duke took two letters from the
+breast pocket of his coat.
+
+"Mabel, you have already seen your letter. You have already seen the lock
+of your hair. Just look at this--and that."
+
+He gave her the two very singular communications which had arrived in such
+a mysterious manner, and so quickly one after the other. She read them
+with wide-open eyes.
+
+"Hereward! Wherever did these come from?"
+
+The duke was standing with his legs apart, and his hands in his trousers
+pockets. "I would give--I would give another five hundred pounds to know.
+Shall I tell you, madam, what I have been doing? I have been presenting
+five hundred golden sovereigns to a perfect stranger, with a top hat, and
+a gardenia in his buttonhole."
+
+"Whatever for?"
+
+"If you have perused those documents which you have in your hand, you will
+have some faint idea. Ivor, when it's your funeral, I'll smile. Mabel,
+Duchess of Datchet, it is beginning to dawn upon the vacuum which
+represents my brain that I've been the victim of one of the prettiest
+things in practical jokes that ever yet was planned. When that fellow
+brought you that card at Cane and Wilson's--which, I need scarcely tell
+you, never came from me--some one walked out of the front entrance who was
+so exactly like you that both Barnes and Moysey took her for you. Moysey
+showed her into the carriage, and Barnes drove her home. But when the
+carriage reached home it was empty. Your double had got out upon the
+road."
+
+The duchess uttered a sound which was half gasp, half sigh.
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+"Barnes and Moysey, with beautiful and childlike innocence, when they
+found that they had brought the thing home empty, came straightway and
+told me that you had jumped out of the brougham while it had been driving
+full pelt through the streets. While I was digesting that piece of
+information there came the first epistle, with the lock of your hair.
+Before I had time to digest that there came the second epistle, with yours
+inside."
+
+"It seems incredible!"
+
+"It sounds incredible; but unfathomable is the folly of man, especially of
+a man who loves his wife." The duke crossed to Mr. Dacre. "I don't want,
+Ivor, to suggest anything in the way of bribery and corruption, but if you
+could keep this matter to yourself, and not mention it to your friends,
+our white-hatted and gardenia-buttonholed acquaintance is welcome to his
+five hundred pounds, and--Mabel, what on earth are you laughing at?"
+
+The duchess appeared, all at once, to be seized with inextinguishable
+laughter.
+
+"Hereward," she cried, "just think how that man must be laughing at you!"
+
+And the Duke of Datchet thought of it.
+
+
+
+
+_The Minor Canon_
+
+
+It was Monday, and in the afternoon, as I was walking along the High
+Street of Marchbury, I was met by a distinguished-looking person whom I
+had observed at the services in the cathedral on the previous day. Now it
+chanced on that Sunday that I was singing the service. Properly speaking,
+it was not my turn; but, as my brother minor canons were either away from
+Marchbury or ill in bed, I was the only one left to perform the necessary
+duty. The distinguished-looking person was a tall, big man with a round
+fat face and small features. His eyes, his hair and mustache (his face was
+bare but for a small mustache) were quite black, and he had a very
+pleasant and genial expression. He wore a tall hat, set rather jauntily on
+his head, and he was dressed in black with a long frock coat buttoned
+across the chest and fitting him close to the body. As he came, with a
+half saunter, half swagger, along the street, I knew him again at once by
+his appearance; and, as he came nearer, I saw from his manner that he was
+intending to stop and speak to me, for he slightly raised his hat and in
+a soft, melodious voice with a colonial "twang" which was far from being
+disagreeable, and which, indeed, to my ear gave a certain additional
+interest to his remarks, he saluted me with "Good day, sir!"
+
+"Good day," I answered, with just a little reserve in my tone.
+
+"I hope, sir," he began, "you will excuse my stopping you in the street,
+but I wish to tell you how very much I enjoyed the music at your cathedral
+yesterday. I am an Australian, sir, and we have no such music in my
+country."
+
+"I suppose not," I said.
+
+"No, sir," he went on, "nothing nearly so fine. I am very fond of music,
+and as my business brought me in this direction, I thought I would stop at
+your city and take the opportunity of paying a visit to your grand
+cathedral. And I am delighted I came; so pleased, indeed, that I should
+like to leave some memorial of my visit behind me. I should like, sir, to
+do something for your choir."
+
+"I am sure it is very kind of you," I replied.
+
+"Yes, I should certainly be glad if you could suggest to me something I
+might do in this way. As regards money, I may say that I have plenty of
+it. I am the owner of a most valuable property. My business relations
+extend throughout the world, and if I am as fortunate in the projects of
+the future as I have been in the past, I shall probably one day achieve
+the proud position of being the richest man in the world."
+
+I did not like to undertake myself the responsibility of advising or
+suggesting, so I simply said:
+
+"I cannot venture to say, offhand, what would be the most acceptable way
+of showing your great kindness and generosity, but I should certainly
+recommend you to put yourself in communication with the dean."
+
+"Thank you, sir," said my Australian friend, "I will do so. And now, sir,"
+he continued, "let me say how much I admire your voice. It is, without
+exception, the very finest and clearest voice I have ever heard."
+
+"Really," I answered, quite overcome with such unqualified praise, "really
+it is very good of you to say so."
+
+"Ah, but I feel it, my dear sir. I have been round the world, from Sydney
+to Frisco, across the continent of America" (he called it Amerrker) "to
+New York City, then on to England, and to-morrow I shall leave your city
+to continue my travels. But in all my experience I have never heard so
+grand a voice as your own."
+
+This and a great deal more he said in the same strain, which modesty
+forbids me to reproduce.
+
+Now I am not without some knowledge of the world outside the close of
+Marchbury Cathedral, and I could not listen to such a "flattering tale"
+without having my suspicions aroused. Who and what is this man? thought I.
+I looked at him narrowly. At first the thought flashed across me that he
+might be a "swell mobsman." But no, his face was too good for that;
+besides, no man with that huge frame, that personality so marked and so
+easily recognizable, could be a swindler; he could not escape detection a
+single hour. I dismissed the ungenerous thought. Perhaps he is rich, as he
+says. We do hear of munificent donations by benevolent millionaires now
+and then. What if this Australian, attracted by the glories of the old
+cathedral, should now appear as a _deus ex machina_ to reendow the choir,
+or to found a musical professoriate in connection with the choir,
+appointing me the first occupant of the professorial chair?
+
+These thoughts flashed across my mind in the momentary pause of his fluent
+tongue.
+
+"As for yourself, sir," he began again, "I have something to propose which
+I trust may not prove unwelcome. But the public street is hardly a
+suitable place to discuss my proposal. May I call upon you this evening at
+your house in the close? I know which it is, for I happened to see you go
+into it yesterday after the morning service."
+
+"I shall be very pleased to see you," I replied. "We are going out to
+dinner this evening, but I shall be at home and disengaged till about
+seven."
+
+"Thank you very much. Then I shall do myself the pleasure of calling upon
+you about six o'clock. Till then, farewell!" A graceful wave of the hand,
+and my unknown friend had disappeared round the corner of the street.
+
+Now at last, I thought, something is going to happen in my uneventful
+life--something to break the monotony of existence. Of course, he must
+have inquired my name--he could get that from any of the cathedral
+vergers--and, as he said, he had observed whereabouts in the close I
+lived. What is he coming to see me for? I wondered. I spent the rest of
+the afternoon in making the wildest surmises. I was castle-building in
+Spain at a furious rate. At one time I imagined that this faithful son of
+the church--as he appeared to me--was going to build and endow a grand
+cathedral in Australia on condition that I should be appointed dean at a
+yearly stipend of, say, ten thousand pounds. Or perhaps, I said to myself,
+he will beg me to accept a sum of money--I never thought of it as less
+than a thousand pounds--as a slight recognition of and tribute to my
+remarkable vocal ability.
+
+I took a long, lonely walk into the country to correct these ridiculous
+fancies and to steady my mind, and when I reached home and had refreshed
+myself with a quiet cup of afternoon tea, I felt I was morally and
+physically prepared for my interview with the opulent stranger.
+
+Punctually as the cathedral clock struck six there was a ring at the
+visitor's bell. In a moment or two my unknown friend was shown into the
+drawing-room, which he entered with the easy air of a man of the world. I
+noticed he was carrying a small black bag.
+
+"How do you do again, Mr. Dale?" he said as though we were old
+acquaintances; "you see I have come sharp to my time."
+
+"Yes," I answered, "and I am pleased to see you; do sit down." He sank
+into my best armchair, and placed his bag on the floor beside him.
+
+"Since we met in the afternoon," he said, "I have written a letter to
+your dean, expressing the great pleasure I felt in listening to your
+choir, and at the same time I inclosed a five-pound note, which I begged
+him to divide among the choir boys and men, from Alexander Poulter, Esq.,
+of Poulter's Pills. You have of course heard of the world-renowned
+Poulter's Pills. I am Poulter!"
+
+Poulter of Poulter's Pills! My heart sank within me! A five-pound note! My
+airy castles were tottering!
+
+"I also sent him a couple of hundred of my pamphlets, which I said I
+trusted he would be so kind as to distribute in the close."
+
+I was aghast!
+
+"And now, with regard to the special object of my call, Mr. Dale. If you
+will allow me to say so, you are not making the most of that grand voice
+of yours; you are hidden under an ecclesiastical bushel here--lost to the
+world. You are wasting your vocal strength and sweetness on the desert
+air, so to speak. Why, if I may hazard a guess, I don't suppose you make
+five hundred a year here, at the outside?"
+
+I could say nothing.
+
+"Well, now, I can put you into the way of making at least three or four
+times as much as that. Listen! I am Alexander Poulter, of Poulter's Pills.
+I have a proposal to make to you. The scheme is bound to succeed, but I
+want your help. Accept my proposal and your fortune's made. Did you ever
+hear Moody and Sankey?" he asked abruptly.
+
+The man is an idiot, thought I; he is now fairly carried away with his
+particular mania. Will it last long? Shall I ring?
+
+"Novelty, my dear sir," he went on, "is the rule of the day; and there
+must be novelty in advertising, as in everything else, to catch the public
+interest. So I intend to go on a tour, lecturing on the merits of
+Poulter's Pills in all the principal halls of all the principal towns all
+over the world. But I have been delayed in carrying out my idea till I
+could associate myself with a gentleman such as yourself. Will you join
+me? I should be the Moody of the tour; you would be its Sankey. I would
+speak my patter, and you would intersperse my orations with melodious
+ballads bearing upon the virtues of Poulter's Pills. The ballads are all
+ready!"
+
+So saying, he opened that bag and drew forth from its recesses nothing
+more alarming than a thick roll of manuscript music.
+
+"The verses are my own," he said, with a little touch of pride; "and as
+for the music, I thought it better to make use of popular melodies, so as
+to enable an audience to join in the chorus. See, here is one of the
+ballads: 'Darling, I am better now.' It describes the woes of a fond
+lover, or rather his physical ailments, until he went through a course of
+Poulter. Here's another: 'I'm ninety-five! I'm ninety-five!' You catch the
+drift of that, of course--a healthy old age, secured by taking Poulter's
+Pills. Ah! what's this? 'Little sister's last request.' I fancy the idea
+of that is to beg the family never to be without Poulter's Pills. Here
+again: 'Then you'll remember me!' I'm afraid that title is not original;
+never mind, the song is. And here is--but there are many more, and I won't
+detain you with them now." He saw, perhaps, I was getting impatient. Thank
+Heaven, however, he was no escaped lunatic. I was safe!
+
+"Mr. Poulter," said I, "I took you this afternoon for a disinterested and
+philanthropic millionaire; you take me for--for--something different from
+what I am. We have both made mistakes. In a word, it is impossible for me
+to accept your offer!"
+
+"Is that final?" asked Poulter.
+
+"Certainly," said I.
+
+Poulter gathered his manuscripts together and replaced them in the bag,
+and got up to leave the room.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Dale," he said mournfully, as I opened the door of the
+room. "Good evening"--he kept on talking till he was fairly out of the
+house--"mark my words, you'll be sorry--very sorry--one day that you did
+not fall in with my scheme. Offers like mine don't come every day, and you
+will one day regret having refused it."
+
+With these words he left the house.
+
+I had little appetite for my dinner that evening.
+
+
+
+
+_The Pipe_
+
+ "RANDOLPH CRESCENT, N.W.
+
+ "MY DEAR PUGH--I hope you will like the pipe which I send with
+ this. It is rather a curious example of a certain school of
+ Indian carving. And is a present from
+
+ "Yours truly, Joseph Tress."
+
+It was really very handsome of Tress--very handsome! The more especially
+as I was aware that to give presents was not exactly in Tress's line. The
+truth is that when I saw what manner of pipe it was I was amazed. It was
+contained in a sandalwood box, which was itself illustrated with some
+remarkable specimens of carving. I use the word "remarkable" advisedly,
+because, although the workmanship was undoubtedly, in its way, artistic,
+the result could not be described as beautiful. The carver had thought
+proper to ornament the box with some of the ugliest figures I remember to
+have seen. They appeared to me to be devils. Or perhaps they were intended
+to represent deities appertaining to some mythological system with which,
+thank goodness, I am unacquainted. The pipe itself was worthy of the case
+in which it was contained. It was of meerschaum, with an amber mouthpiece.
+It was rather too large for ordinary smoking. But then, of course, one
+doesn't smoke a pipe like that. There are pipes in my collection which I
+should as soon think of smoking as I should of eating. Ask a china maniac
+to let you have afternoon tea out of his Old Chelsea, and you will learn
+some home truths as to the durability of human friendships. The glory of
+the pipe, as Tress had suggested, lay in its carving. Not that I claim
+that it was beautiful, any more than I make such a claim for the carving
+on the box, but, as Tress said in his note, it was curious.
+
+The stem and the bowl were quite plain, but on the edge of the bowl was
+perched some kind of lizard. I told myself it was an octopus when I first
+saw it, but I have since had reason to believe that it was some almost
+unique member of the lizard tribe. The creature was represented as
+climbing over the edge of the bowl down toward the stem, and its legs, or
+feelers, or tentacula, or whatever the things are called, were, if I may
+use a vulgarism, sprawling about "all over the place." For instance, two
+or three of them were twined about the bowl, two or three of them were
+twisted round the stem, and one, a particularly horrible one, was uplifted
+in the air, so that if you put the pipe in your mouth the thing was
+pointing straight at your nose.
+
+Not the least agreeable feature about the creature was that it was
+hideously lifelike. It appeared to have been carved in amber, but some
+coloring matter must have been introduced, for inside the amber the
+creature was of a peculiarly ghastly green. The more I examined the pipe
+the more amazed I was at Tress's generosity. He and I are rival
+collectors. I am not going to say, in so many words, that his collection
+of pipes contains nothing but rubbish, because, as a matter of fact, he
+has two or three rather decent specimens. But to compare his collection to
+mine would be absurd. Tress is conscious of this, and he resents it. He
+resents it to such an extent that he has been known, at least on one
+occasion, to declare that one single pipe of his--I believe he alluded to
+the Brummagem relic preposterously attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh--was
+worth the whole of my collection put together. Although I have forgiven
+this, as I hope I always shall forgive remarks made when envious passions
+get the better of our nobler nature, even of a Joseph Tress, it is not to
+be supposed that I have forgotten it. He was, therefore, not at all the
+sort of person from whom I expected to receive a present. And such a
+present! I do not believe that he himself had a finer pipe in his
+collection. And to have given it to me! I had misjudged the man. I
+wondered where he had got it from. I had seen his pipes; I knew them off
+by heart--and some nice trumpery he has among them, too! but I had never
+seen _that_ pipe before. The more I looked at it, the more my amazement
+grew. The beast perched upon the edge of the bowl was so lifelike. Its two
+bead-like eyes seemed to gleam at me with positively human intelligence.
+The pipe fascinated me to such an extent that I actually resolved
+to--smoke it!
+
+I filled it with Perique. Ordinarily I use Birdseye, but on those very
+rare occasions on which I use a specimen I smoke Perique. I lit up with
+quite a small sensation of excitement. As I did so I kept my eyes perforce
+fixed upon the beast. The beast pointed its upraised tentacle directly at
+me. As I inhaled the pungent tobacco that tentacle impressed me with a
+feeling of actual uncanniness. It was broad daylight, and I was smoking in
+front of the window, yet to such an extent was I affected that it seemed
+to me that the tentacle was not only vibrating, which, owing to the
+peculiarity of its position, was quite within the range of probability,
+but actually moving, elongating--stretching forward, that is, farther
+toward me, and toward the tip of my nose. So impressed was I by this idea
+that I took the pipe out of my mouth and minutely examined the beast.
+Really, the delusion was excusable. So cunningly had the artist wrought
+that he succeeded in producing a creature which, such was its uncanniness,
+I could only hope had no original in nature.
+
+Replacing the pipe between my lips I took several whiffs. Never had
+smoking had such an effect on me before. Either the pipe, or the creature
+on it, exercised some singular fascination. I seemed, without an instant's
+warning, to be passing into some land of dreams. I saw the beast, which
+was perched upon the bowl, writhe and twist. I saw it lift itself bodily
+from the meerschaum.
+
+
+II
+
+"Feeling better now?"
+
+I looked up. Joseph Tress was speaking.
+
+"What's the matter? Have I been ill?"
+
+"You appear to have been in some kind of swoon."
+
+Tress's tone was peculiar, even a little dry.
+
+"Swoon! I never was guilty of such a thing in my life."
+
+"Nor was I, until I smoked that pipe."
+
+I sat up. The act of sitting up made me conscious of the fact that I had
+been lying down. Conscious, too, that I was feeling more than a little
+dazed. It seemed as though I was waking out of some strange, lethargic
+sleep--a kind of feeling which I have read of and heard about, but never
+before experienced.
+
+"Where am I?"
+
+"You're on the couch in your own room. You _were_ on the floor; but I
+thought it would be better to pick you up and place you on the
+couch--though no one performed the same kind office to me when I was on
+the floor."
+
+Again Tress's tone was distinctly dry.
+
+"How came _you_ here?"
+
+"Ah, that's the question." He rubbed his chin--a habit of his which has
+annoyed me more than once before. "Do you think you're sufficiently
+recovered to enable you to understand a little simple explanation?" I
+stared at him, amazed. He went on stroking his chin. "The truth is that
+when I sent you the pipe I made a slight omission."
+
+"An omission?"
+
+"I omitted to advise you not to smoke it."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"Because--well, I've reason to believe the thing is drugged."
+
+"Drugged!"
+
+"Or poisoned."
+
+"Poisoned!" I was wide awake enough then. I jumped off the couch with a
+celerity which proved it.
+
+"It is this way. I became its owner in rather a singular manner." He
+paused, as if for me to make a remark; but I was silent. "It is not often
+that I smoke a specimen, but, for some reason, I did smoke this. I
+commenced to smoke it, that is. How long I continued to smoke it is more
+than I can say. It had on me the same peculiar effect which it appears to
+have had on you. When I recovered consciousness I was lying on the floor."
+
+"On the floor?"
+
+"On the floor. In about as uncomfortable a position as you can easily
+conceive. I was lying face downward, with my legs bent under me. I was
+never so surprised in my life as I was when I found myself _where_ I was.
+At first I supposed that I had had a stroke. But by degrees it dawned upon
+me that I didn't _feel_ as though I had had a stroke." Tress, by the way,
+has been an army surgeon. "I was conscious of distinct nausea. Looking
+about, I saw the pipe. With me it had fallen on to the floor. I took it
+for granted, considering the delicacy of the carving, that the fall had
+broken it. But when I picked it up I found it quite uninjured. While I was
+examining it a thought flashed to my brain. Might it not be answerable for
+what had happened to me? Suppose, for instance, it was drugged? I had
+heard of such things. Besides, in my case were present all the symptoms of
+drug poisoning, though what drug had been used I couldn't in the least
+conceive. I resolved that I would give the pipe another trial."
+
+"On yourself? or on another party, meaning me?"
+
+"On myself, my dear Pugh--on myself! At that point of my investigations I
+had not begun to think of you. I lit up and had another smoke."
+
+"With what result?"
+
+"Well, that depends on the standpoint from which you regard the thing.
+From one point of view the result was wholly satisfactory--I proved that
+the thing was drugged, and more."
+
+"Did you have another fall?"
+
+"I did. And something else besides."
+
+"On that account, I presume, you resolved to pass the treasure on to me?"
+
+"Partly on that account, and partly on another."
+
+"On my word, I appreciate your generosity. You might have labeled the
+thing as poison."
+
+"Exactly. But then you must remember how often you have told me that you
+_never_ smoke your specimens."
+
+"That was no reason why you shouldn't have given me a hint that the thing
+was more dangerous than dynamite."
+
+"That did occur to me afterwards. Therefore I called to supply the slight
+omission."
+
+"_Slight_ omission, you call it! I wonder what you would have called it if
+you had found me dead."
+
+"If I had known that you _intended_ smoking it I should not have been at
+all surprised if I had."
+
+"Really, Tress, I appreciate your kindness more and more! And where is
+this example of your splendid benevolence? Have you pocketed it,
+regretting your lapse into the unaccustomed paths of generosity? Or is it
+smashed to atoms?"
+
+"Neither the one nor the other. You will find the pipe upon the table. I
+neither desire its restoration nor is it in any way injured. It is merely
+an expression of personal opinion when I say that I don't believe that it
+_could_ be injured. Of course, having discovered its deleterious
+properties, you will not want to smoke it again. You will therefore be
+able to enjoy the consciousness of being the possessor of what I honestly
+believe to be the most remarkable pipe in existence. Good day, Pugh."
+
+He was gone before I could say a word. I immediately concluded, from the
+precipitancy of his flight, that the pipe _was_ injured. But when I
+subjected it to close examination I could discover no signs of damage.
+While I was still eying it with jealous scrutiny the door reopened, and
+Tress came in again.
+
+"By the way, Pugh, there is one thing I might mention, especially as I
+know it won't make any difference to you."
+
+"That depends on what it is. If you have changed your mind, and want the
+pipe back again, I tell you frankly that it won't. In my opinion, a thing
+once given is given for good."
+
+"Quite so; I don't want it back again. You may make your mind easy on that
+point. I merely wanted to tell you _why_ I gave it you."
+
+"You have told me that already."
+
+"Only partly, my dear Pugh--only partly. You don't suppose I should have
+given you such a pipe as that merely because it happened to be drugged?
+Scarcely! I gave it you because I discovered from indisputable evidence,
+and to my cost, that it was haunted."
+
+"Haunted?"
+
+"Yes, haunted. Good day."
+
+He was gone again. I ran out of the room, and shouted after him down the
+stairs. He was already at the bottom of the flight.
+
+"Tress! Come back! What do you mean by talking such nonsense?"
+
+"Of course it's only nonsense. We know that that sort of thing always is
+nonsense. But if you should have reason to suppose that there is something
+in it besides nonsense, you may think it worth your while to make
+inquiries of me. But I won't have that pipe back again in my possession on
+any terms--mind that!"
+
+The bang of the front door told me that he had gone out into the street. I
+let him go. I laughed to myself as I reentered the room. Haunted! That was
+not a bad idea of his. I saw the whole position at a glance. The truth of
+the matter was that he did regret his generosity, and he was ready to go
+any lengths if he could only succeed in cajoling me into restoring his
+gift. He was aware that I have views upon certain matters which are not
+wholly in accordance with those which are popularly supposed to be the
+views of the day, and particularly that on the question of what are
+commonly called supernatural visitations I have a standpoint of my own.
+Therefore, it was not a bad move on his part to try to make me believe
+that about the pipe on which he knew I had set my heart there was
+something which could not be accounted for by ordinary laws. Yet, as his
+own sense would have told him it would do, if he had only allowed himself
+to reflect for a moment, the move failed. Because I am not yet so far gone
+as to suppose that a pipe, a thing of meerschaum and of amber, in the
+sense in which I understand the word, _could_ be haunted--a pipe, a mere
+pipe.
+
+"Hollo! I thought the creature's legs were twined right round the bowl!"
+
+I was holding the pipe in my hand, regarding it with the affectionate eyes
+with which a connoisseur does regard a curio, when I was induced to make
+this exclamation. I was certainly under the impression that, when I first
+took the pipe out of the box, two, if not three of the feelers had been
+twined about the bowl--twined tightly, so that you could not see daylight
+between them and it. Now they were almost entirely detached, only the tips
+touching the meerschaum, and those particular feelers were gathered up as
+though the creature were in the act of taking a spring. Of course I was
+under a misapprehension: the feelers _couldn't_ have been twined; a moment
+before I should have been ready to bet a thousand to one that they were.
+Still, one does make mistakes, and very egregious mistakes, at times. At
+the same time, I confess that when I saw that dreadful-looking animal
+poised on the extreme edge of the bowl, for all the world as though it
+were just going to spring at me, I was a little startled. I remembered
+that when I was smoking the pipe I did think I saw the uplifted tentacle
+moving, as though it were reaching out to me. And I had a clear
+recollection that just as I had been sinking into that strange state of
+unconsciousness, I had been under the impression that the creature was
+writhing and twisting, as though it had suddenly become instinct with
+life. Under the circumstances, these reflections were not pleasant. I
+wished Tress had not talked that nonsense about the thing being haunted.
+It was surely sufficient to know that it was drugged and poisonous,
+without anything else.
+
+I replaced it in the sandalwood box. I locked the box in a cabinet. Quite
+apart from the question as to whether that pipe was or was not haunted, I
+know it haunted me. It was with me in a figurative--which was worse than
+actual--sense all the day. Still worse, it was with me all the night. It
+was with me in my dreams. Such dreams! Possibly I had not yet wholly
+recovered from the effects of that insidious drug, but, whether or no, it
+was very wrong of Tress to set my thoughts into such a channel. He knows
+that I am of a highly imaginative temperament, and that it is easier to
+get morbid thoughts into my mind than to get them out again. Before that
+night was through I wished very heartily that I had never seen the pipe! I
+woke from one nightmare to fall into another. One dreadful dream was with
+me all the time--of a hideous, green reptile which advanced toward me out
+of some awful darkness, slowly, inch by inch, until it clutched me round
+the neck, and, gluing its lips to mine, sucked the life's blood out of my
+veins as it embraced me with a slimy kiss. Such dreams are not restful. I
+woke anything but refreshed when the morning came. And when I got up and
+dressed I felt that, on the whole, it would perhaps have been better if I
+never had gone to bed. My nerves were unstrung, and I had that generally
+tremulous feeling which is, I believe, an inseparable companion of the
+more advanced stages of dipsomania. I ate no breakfast. I am no breakfast
+eater as a rule, but that morning I ate absolutely nothing.
+
+"If this sort of thing is to continue, I will let Tress have his pipe
+again. He may have the laugh of me, but anything is better than this."
+
+It was with almost funereal forebodings that I went to the cabinet in
+which I had placed the sandalwood box. But when I opened it my feelings of
+gloom partially vanished. Of what phantasies had I been guilty! It must
+have been an entire delusion on my part to have supposed that those
+tentacula had ever been twined about the bowl. The creature was in
+exactly the same position in which I had left it the day before--as, of
+course, I knew it would be--poised, as if about to spring. I was telling
+myself how foolish I had been to allow myself to dwell for a moment on
+Tress's words, when Martin Brasher was shown in.
+
+Brasher is an old friend of mine. We have a common ground--ghosts. Only we
+approach them from different points of view. He takes the
+scientific--psychological--inquiry side. He is always anxious to hear of a
+ghost, so that he may have an opportunity of "showing it up."
+
+"I've something in your line here," I observed, as he came in.
+
+"In my line? How so? _I'm_ not pipe mad."
+
+"No; but you're ghost mad. And this is a haunted pipe."
+
+"A haunted pipe! I think you're rather more mad about ghosts, my dear
+Pugh, than I am."
+
+Then I told him all about it. He was deeply interested, especially when I
+told him that the pipe was drugged. But when I repeated Tress's words
+about its being haunted, and mentioned my own delusion about the creature
+moving, he took a more serious view of the case than I had expected he
+would do.
+
+"I propose that we act on Tress's suggestion, and go and make inquiries of
+him."
+
+"But you don't really think that there is anything in it?"
+
+"On these subjects I never allow myself to think at all. There are Tress's
+words, and there is your story. It is agreed on all hands that the pipe
+has peculiar properties. It seems to me that there is a sufficient case
+here to merit inquiry."
+
+He persuaded me. I went with him. The pipe, in the sandalwood box, went
+too. Tress received us with a grin--a grin which was accentuated when I
+placed the sandalwood box on the table.
+
+"You understand," he said, "that a gift is a gift. On no terms will I
+consent to receive that pipe back in my possession."
+
+I was rather nettled by his tone.
+
+"You need be under no alarm. I have no intention of suggesting anything of
+the kind."
+
+"Our business here," began Brasher--I must own that his manner is a little
+ponderous--"is of a scientific, I may say also, and at the same time, of a
+judicial nature. Our object is the Pursuit of Truth and the Advancement of
+Inquiry."
+
+"Have you been trying another smoke?" inquired Tress, nodding his head
+toward me.
+
+Before I had time to answer, Brasher went droning on:
+
+"Our friend here tells me that you say this pipe is haunted."
+
+"I say it is haunted because it _is_ haunted."
+
+I looked at Tress. I half suspected that he was poking fun at us. But he
+appeared to be serious enough.
+
+"In these matters," remarked Brasher, as though he were giving utterance
+to a new and important truth, "there is a scientific and nonscientific
+method of inquiry. The scientific method is to begin at the beginning. May
+I ask how this pipe came into your possession?"
+
+Tress paused before he answered.
+
+"You may ask." He paused again. "Oh, you certainly may ask. But it doesn't
+follow that I shall tell you."
+
+"Surely your object, like ours, can be but the Spreading About of the
+Truth?"
+
+"I don't see it at all. It is possible to imagine a case in which the
+spreading about of the truth might make me look a little awkward."
+
+"Indeed!" Brasher pursed up his lips. "Your words would almost lead one to
+suppose that there was something about your method of acquiring the pipe
+which you have good and weighty reasons for concealing."
+
+"I don't know why I should conceal the thing from you. I don't suppose
+either of you is any better than I am. I don't mind telling you how I got
+the pipe. I stole it."
+
+"Stole it!"
+
+Brasher seemed both amazed and shocked. But I, who had previous experience
+of Tress's methods of adding to his collection, was not at all surprised.
+Some of the pipes which he calls his, if only the whole truth about them
+were publicly known, would send him to jail.
+
+"That's nothing!" he continued. "All collectors steal! The eighth
+commandment was not intended to apply to them. Why, Pugh there has
+'conveyed' three fourths of the pipes which he flatters himself are his."
+
+I was so dumfoundered by the charge that it took my breath away. I sat in
+astounded silence. Tress went raving on:
+
+"I was so shy of this particular pipe when I had obtained it, that I put
+it away for quite three months. When I took it out to have a look at it
+something about the thing so tickled me that I resolved to smoke it. Owing
+to peculiar circumstances attending the manner in which the thing came
+into my possession, and on which I need not dwell--you don't like to dwell
+on those sort of things, do you, Pugh?--I knew really nothing about the
+pipe. As was the case with Pugh, one peculiarity I learned from actual
+experience. It was also from actual experience that I learned that the
+thing was--well, I said haunted, but you may use any other word you like."
+
+"Tell us, as briefly as possible, what it was you really did discover."
+
+"Take the pipe out of the box!" Brasher took the pipe out of the box and
+held it in his hand. "You see that creature on it. Well, when I first had
+it it was underneath the pipe."
+
+"How do you mean that it was underneath the pipe?"
+
+"It was bunched together underneath the stem, just at the end of the
+mouthpiece, in the same way in which a fly might be suspended from the
+ceiling. When I began to smoke the pipe I saw the creature move."
+
+"But I thought that unconsciousness immediately followed."
+
+"It did follow, but not before I saw that the thing was moving. It was
+because I thought that I had been, in a way, a victim of delirium that I
+tried the second smoke. Suspecting that the thing was drugged I swallowed
+what I believed would prove a powerful antidote. It enabled me to resist
+the influence of the narcotic much longer than before, and while I still
+retained my senses I saw the creature crawl along under the stem and over
+the bowl. It was that sight, I believe, as much as anything else, which
+sent me silly. When I came to I then and there decided to present the pipe
+to Pugh. There is one more thing I would remark. When the pipe left me the
+creature's legs were twined about the bowl. Now they are withdrawn.
+Possibly you, Pugh, are able to cap my story with a little one which is
+all your own."
+
+"I certainly did imagine that I saw the creature move. But I supposed that
+while I was under the influence of the drug imagination had played me a
+trick."
+
+"Not a bit of it! Depend upon it, the beast is bewitched. Even to my eye
+it looks as though it were, and to a trained eye like yours, Pugh! You've
+been looking for the devil a long time, and you've got him at last."
+
+"I--I wish you wouldn't make those remarks, Tress. They jar on me."
+
+"I confess," interpolated Brasher--I noticed that he had put the pipe down
+on the table as though he were tired of holding it--"that, to _my_
+thinking, such remarks are not appropriate. At the same time what you have
+told us is, I am bound to allow, a little curious. But of course what I
+require is ocular demonstration. I haven't seen the movement myself."
+
+"No, but you very soon will do if you care to have a pull at the pipe on
+your own account. Do, Brasher, to oblige me! There's a dear!"
+
+"It appears, then, that the movement is only observable when the pipe is
+smoked. We have at least arrived at step No. 1."
+
+"Here's a match, Brasher! Light up, and we shall have arrived at step No.
+2."
+
+Tress lit a match and held it out to Brasher. Brasher retreated from its
+neighborhood.
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Tress, I am no smoker, as you are aware. And I have no
+desire to acquire the art of smoking by means of a poisoned pipe."
+
+Tress laughed. He blew out the match and threw it into the grate.
+
+"Then I tell you what I'll do--I'll have up Bob."
+
+"Bob--why Bob?"
+
+"Bob"--whose real name was Robert Haines, though I should think he must
+have forgotten the fact, so seldom was he addressed by it--was Tress's
+servant. He had been an old soldier, and had accompanied his master when
+he left the service. He was as depraved a character as Tress himself. I am
+not sure even that he was not worse than his master. I shall never forget
+how he once behaved toward myself. He actually had the assurance to accuse
+me of attempting to steal the Wardour Street relic which Tress fondly
+deludes himself was once the property of Sir Walter Raleigh. The truth is
+that I had slipped it with my handkerchief into my pocket in a fit of
+absence of mind. A man who could accuse _me_ of such a thing would be
+guilty of anything. I was therefore quite at one with Brasher when he
+asked what Bob could possibly be wanted for. Tress explained.
+
+"I'll get him to smoke the pipe," he said.
+
+Brasher and I exchanged glances, but we refrained from speech.
+
+"It won't do him any harm," said Tress.
+
+"What--not a poisoned pipe?" asked Brasher.
+
+"It's not poisoned--it's only drugged."
+
+"_Only_ drugged!"
+
+"Nothing hurts Bob. He is like an ostrich. He has digestive organs which
+are peculiarly his own. It will only serve him as it served me--and
+Pugh--it will knock him over. It is all done in the Pursuit of Truth and
+for the Advancement of Inquiry."
+
+I could see that Brasher did not altogether like the tone in which Tress
+repeated his words. As for me, it was not to be supposed that I should put
+myself out in a matter which in no way concerned me. If Tress chose to
+poison the man, it was his affair, not mine. He went to the door and
+shouted:
+
+"Bob! Come here, you scoundrel!"
+
+That is the way in which he speaks to him. No really decent servant would
+stand it. I shouldn't care to address Nalder, my servant, in such a way.
+He would give me notice on the spot. Bob came in. He is a great hulking
+fellow who is always on the grin. Tress had a decanter of brandy in his
+hand. He filled a tumbler with the neat spirit.
+
+"Bob, what would you say to a glassful of brandy--the real thing--my boy?"
+
+"Thank you, sir."
+
+"And what would you say to a pull at a pipe when the brandy is drunk!"
+
+"A pipe?" The fellow is sharp enough when he likes. I saw him look at the
+pipe upon the table, and then at us, and then a gleam of intelligence came
+into his eyes. "I'd do it for a dollar, sir."
+
+"A dollar, you thief?"
+
+"I meant ten shillings, sir."
+
+"Ten shillings, you brazen vagabond?"
+
+"I should have said a pound."
+
+"A pound! Was ever the like of that! Do I understand you to ask a pound
+for taking a pull at your master's pipe?"
+
+"I'm thinking that I'll have to make it two."
+
+"The deuce you are! Here, Pugh, lend me a pound."
+
+"I'm afraid I've left my purse behind."
+
+"Then lend me ten shillings--Ananias!"
+
+"I doubt if I have more than five."
+
+"Then give me the five. And, Brasher, lend me the other fifteen."
+
+Brasher lent him the fifteen. I doubt if we shall either of us ever see
+our money again. He handed the pound to Bob.
+
+"Here's the brandy--drink it up!" Bob drank it without a word, draining
+the glass of every drop. "And here's the pipe."
+
+"Is it poisoned, sir?"
+
+"Poisoned, you villain! What do you mean?"
+
+"It isn't the first time I've seen your tricks, sir--is it now? And you're
+not the one to give a pound for nothing at all. If it kills me you'll send
+my body to my mother--she'd like to know that I was dead."
+
+"Send your body to your grandmother! You idiot, sit down and smoke!"
+
+Bob sat down. Tress had filled the pipe, and handed it, with a lighted
+match, to Bob. The fellow declined the match. He handled the pipe very
+gingerly, turning it over and over, eying it with all his eyes.
+
+"Thank you, sir--I'll light up myself if it's the same to you. I carry
+matches of my own. It's a beautiful pipe, entirely. I never see the like
+of it for ugliness. And what's the slimy-looking varmint that looks as
+though it would like to have my life? Is it living, or is it dead?"
+
+"Come, we don't want to sit here all day, my man!"
+
+"Well, sir, the look of this here pipe has quite upset my stomach. I'd
+like another drop of liquor, if it's the same to you."
+
+"Another drop! Why, you've had a tumblerful already! Here's another
+tumblerful to put on top of that. You won't want the pipe to kill
+you--you'll be killed before you get to it."
+
+"And isn't it better to die a natural death?"
+
+Bob emptied the second tumbler of brandy as though it were water. I
+believe he would empty a hogshead without turning a hair! Then he gave
+another look at the pipe. Then, taking a match from his waistcoat pocket,
+he drew a long breath, as though he were resigning himself to fate.
+Striking the match on the seat of his trousers, while, shaded by his hand,
+the flame was gathering strength, he looked at each of us in turn. When he
+looked at Tress I distinctly saw him wink his eye. What my feelings would
+have been if a servant of mine had winked his eye at me I am unable to
+imagine! The match was applied to the tobacco, a puff of smoke came
+through his lips--the pipe was alight!
+
+During this process of lighting the pipe we had sat--I do not wish to use
+exaggerated language, but we had sat and watched that alcoholic scamp's
+proceedings as though we were witnessing an action which would leave its
+mark upon the age. When we saw the pipe was lighted we gave a simultaneous
+start. Brasher put his hands under his coat tails and gave a kind of hop.
+I raised myself a good six inches from my chair, and Tress rubbed his
+palms together with a chuckle. Bob alone was calm.
+
+"Now," cried Tress, "you'll see the devil moving."
+
+Bob took the pipe from between his lips.
+
+"See what?" he said.
+
+"Bob, you rascal, put that pipe back into your mouth, and smoke it for
+your life!"
+
+Bob was eying the pipe askance.
+
+"I dare say, but what I want to know is whether this here varmint's dead
+or whether he isn't. I don't want to have him flying at my nose--and he
+looks vicious enough for anything."
+
+"Give me back that pound, you thief, and get out of my house, and bundle."
+
+"I ain't going to give you back no pound."
+
+"Then smoke that pipe!"
+
+"I am smoking it, ain't I?"
+
+With the utmost deliberation Bob returned the pipe to his mouth. He
+emitted another whiff or two of smoke.
+
+"Now--now!" cried Tress, all excitement, and wagging his hand in the air.
+
+We gathered round. As we did so Bob again withdrew the pipe.
+
+"What is the meaning of all this here? I ain't going to have you playing
+none of your larks on me. I know there's something up, but I ain't going
+to throw my life away for twenty shillings--not quite I ain't."
+
+Tress, whose temper is not at any time one of the best, was seized with
+quite a spasm of rage.
+
+"As I live, my lad, if you try to cheat me by taking that pipe from
+between your lips until I tell you, you leave this room that instant,
+never again to be a servant of mine."
+
+I presume the fellow knew from long experience when his master meant what
+he said, and when he didn't. Without an attempt at remonstrance he
+replaced the pipe. He continued stolidly to puff away. Tress caught me by
+the arm.
+
+"What did I tell you? There--there! That tentacle is moving."
+
+The uplifted tentacle _was_ moving. It was doing what I had seen it do, as
+I supposed, in my distorted imagination--it was reaching forward.
+Undoubtedly Bob saw what it was doing; but, whether in obedience to his
+master's commands, or whether because the drug was already beginning to
+take effect, he made no movement to withdraw the pipe. He watched the
+slowly advancing tentacle, coming closer and closer toward his nose, with
+an expression of such intense horror on his countenance that it became
+quite shocking. Farther and farther the creature reached forward, until on
+a sudden, with a sort of jerk, the movement assumed a downward direction,
+and the tentacle was slowly lowered until the tip rested on the stem of
+the pipe. For a moment the creature remained motionless. I was quieting my
+nerves with the reflection that this thing was but some trick of the
+carver's art, and that what we had seen we had seen in a sort of
+nightmare, when the whole hideous reptile was seized with what seemed to
+be a fit of convulsive shuddering. It seemed to be in agony. It trembled
+so violently that I expected to see it loosen its hold of the stem and
+fall to the ground. I was sufficiently master of myself to steal a glance
+at Bob. We had had an inkling of what might happen. He was wholly
+unprepared. As he saw that dreadful, human-looking creature, coming to
+life, as it seemed, within an inch or two of his nose, his eyes dilated to
+twice their usual size. I hoped, for his sake, that unconsciousness would
+supervene, through the action of the drug, before through sheer fright
+his senses left him. Perhaps mechanically he puffed steadily on.
+
+The creature's shuddering became more violent. It appeared to swell before
+our eyes. Then, just as suddenly as it began, the shuddering ceased. There
+was another instant of quiescence. Then the creature began to crawl along
+the stem of the pipe! It moved with marvelous caution, the merest fraction
+of an inch at a time. But still it moved! Our eyes were riveted on it with
+a fascination which was absolutely nauseous. I am unpleasantly affected
+even as I think of it now. My dreams of the night before had been nothing
+to this.
+
+Slowly, slowly, it went, nearer and nearer to the smoker's nose. Its mode
+of progression was in the highest degree unsightly. It glided, never, so
+far as I could see, removing its tentacles from the stem of the pipe. It
+slipped its hindmost feelers onward until they came up to those which were
+in advance. Then, in their turn, it advanced those which were in front. It
+seemed, too, to move with the utmost labor, shuddering as though it were
+in pain.
+
+We were all, for our parts, speechless. I was momentarily hoping that the
+drug would take effect on Bob. Either his constitution enabled him to
+offer a strong resistance to narcotics, or else the large quantity of neat
+spirit which he had drunk acted--as Tress had malevolently intended that
+it should--as an antidote. It seemed to me that he would _never_ succumb.
+On went the creature--on, and on, in its infinitesimal progression. I was
+spellbound. I would have given the world to scream, to have been able to
+utter a sound. I could do nothing else but watch.
+
+The creature had reached the end of the stem. It had gained the amber
+mouthpiece. It was within an inch of the smoker's nose. Still on it went.
+It seemed to move with greater freedom on the amber. It increased its rate
+of progress. It was actually touching the foremost feature on the smoker's
+countenance. I expected to see it grip the wretched Bob, when it began to
+oscillate from side to side. Its oscillations increased in violence. It
+fell to the floor. That same instant the narcotic prevailed. Bob slipped
+sideways from the chair, the pipe still held tightly between his rigid
+jaws.
+
+We were silent. There lay Bob. Close beside him lay the creature. A few
+more inches to the left, and he would have fallen on and squashed it flat.
+It had fallen on its back. Its feelers were extended upward. They were
+writhing and twisting and turning in the air.
+
+Tress was the first to speak.
+
+"I think a little brandy won't be amiss." Emptying the remainder of the
+brandy into a glass, he swallowed it at a draught. "Now for a closer
+examination of our friend." Taking a pair of tongs from the grate he
+nipped the creature between them. He deposited it upon the table. "I
+rather fancy that this is a case for dissection."
+
+He took a penknife from his waistcoat pocket. Opening the large blade, he
+thrust its point into the object on the table. Little or no resistance
+seemed to be offered to the passage of the blade, but as it was inserted
+the tentacula simultaneously began to writhe and twist. Tress withdrew the
+knife.
+
+"I thought so!" He held the blade out for our inspection. The point was
+covered with some viscid-looking matter. "That's blood! The thing's
+alive!"
+
+"Alive!"
+
+"Alive! That's the secret of the whole performance!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"But me no buts, my Pugh! The mystery's exploded! One more ghost is lost
+to the world! The person from whom I _obtained_ that pipe was an Indian
+juggler--up to many tricks of the trade. He, or some one for him, got hold
+of this sweet thing in reptiles--and a sweeter thing would, I imagine, be
+hard to find--and covered it with some preparation of, possibly, gum
+arabic. He allowed this to harden. Then he stuck the thing--still living,
+for those sort of gentry are hard to kill--to the pipe. The consequence
+was that when anyone lit up, the warmth was communicated to the adhesive
+agent--again some preparation of gum, no doubt--it moistened it, and the
+creature, with infinite difficulty, was able to move. But I am open to lay
+odds with any gentleman of sporting tastes that _this_ time the creature's
+traveling days _are_ done. It has given me rather a larger taste of the
+horrors than is good for my digestion."
+
+With the aid of the tongs he removed the creature from the table. He
+placed it on the hearth. Before Brasher or I had a notion of what it was
+he intended to do he covered it with a heavy marble paper weight. Then he
+stood upon the weight, and between the marble and the hearth he ground the
+creature flat.
+
+While the execution was still proceeding, Bob sat up upon the floor.
+
+"Hollo!" he asked, "what's happened?"
+
+"We've emptied the bottle, Bob," said Tress. "But there's another where
+that came from. Perhaps you could drink another tumblerful, my boy?"
+
+Bob drank it!
+
+
+FOOTNOTE
+
+ "Those gentry are hard to kill." Here is fact, not fantasy.
+ Lizard yarns no less sensational than this Mystery Story can be
+ found between the covers of solemn, zoological textbooks.
+
+ Reptiles, indeed, are far from finicky in the matters of air,
+ space, and especially warmth. Frogs and other such
+ sluggish-blooded creatures have lived after being frozen fast in
+ ice. Their blood is little warmer than air or water, enjoying no
+ extra casing of fur or feathers.
+
+ Air and food seem held in light esteem by lizards. Their blood
+ need not be highly oxygenated; it nourishes just as well when
+ impure. In temperate climes lizards lie torpid and buried all
+ winter; some species of the tropic deserts sleep peacefully all
+ summer. Their anatomy includes no means for the continuous
+ introduction and expulsion of air; reptilian lungs are little
+ more than closed sacs, without cell structure.
+
+ If any further zoological fact were needed to verify the
+ denouement of "The Pipe," it might be the general statement that
+ lizards are abnormal brutes anyhow. Consider the chameleons of
+ unsettled hue. And what is one to think of an animal which, when
+ captured by the tail, is able to make its escape by willfully
+ shuffling off that appendage?--EDITOR.
+
+
+
+
+The Puzzle
+
+
+I
+
+Pugh came into my room holding something wrapped in a piece of brown
+paper.
+
+"Tress, I have brought you something on which you may exercise your
+ingenuity." He began, with exasperating deliberation, to untie the string
+which bound his parcel; he is one of those persons who would not cut a
+knot to save their lives. The process occupied him the better part of a
+quarter of an hour. Then he held out the contents of the paper.
+
+"What do you think of that?" he asked. I thought nothing of it, and I told
+him so. "I was prepared for that confession. I have noticed, Tress, that
+you generally do think nothing of an article which really deserves the
+attention of a truly thoughtful mind. Possibly, as you think so little of
+it, you will be able to solve the puzzle."
+
+I took what he held out to me. It was an oblong box, perhaps seven inches
+long by three inches broad.
+
+"Where's the puzzle?" I asked.
+
+"If you will examine the lid of the box, you will see."
+
+I turned it over and over; it was difficult to see which was the lid. Then
+I perceived that on one side were printed these words:
+
+ "PUZZLE: TO OPEN THE BOX"
+
+The words were so faintly printed that it was not surprising that I had
+not noticed them at first. Pugh explained.
+
+"I observed that box on a tray outside a second-hand furniture shop. It
+struck my eye. I took it up. I examined it. I inquired of the proprietor
+of the shop in what the puzzle lay. He replied that that was more than he
+could tell me. He himself had made several attempts to open the box, and
+all of them had failed. I purchased it. I took it home. I have tried, and
+I have failed. I am aware, Tress, of how you pride yourself upon your
+ingenuity. I cannot doubt that, if you try, you will not fail."
+
+While Pugh was prosing, I was examining the box. It was at least well
+made. It weighed certainly under two ounces. I struck it with my knuckles;
+it sounded hollow. There was no hinge; nothing of any kind to show that it
+ever had been opened, or, for the matter of that, that it ever could be
+opened. The more I examined the thing, the more it whetted my curiosity.
+That it could be opened, and in some ingenious manner, I made no
+doubt--but how?
+
+The box was not a new one. At a rough guess I should say that it had been
+a box for a good half century; there were certain signs of age about it
+which could not escape a practiced eye. Had it remained unopened all that
+time? When opened, what would be found inside? It _sounded_ hollow;
+probably nothing at all--who could tell?
+
+It was formed of small pieces of inlaid wood. Several woods had been used;
+some of them were strange to me. They were of different colors; it was
+pretty obvious that they must all of them have been hard woods. The pieces
+were of various shapes--hexagonal, octagonal, triangular, square, oblong,
+and even circular. The process of inlaying them had been beautifully done.
+So nicely had the parts been joined that the lines of meeting were
+difficult to discover with the naked eye; they had been joined solid, so
+to speak. It was an excellent example of marquetry. I had been over-hasty
+in my deprecation; I owed as much to Pugh.
+
+"This box of yours is better worth looking at than I first supposed. Is it
+to be sold?"
+
+"No, it is not to be sold. Nor"--he "fixed" me with his spectacles--"is it
+to be given away. I have brought it to you for the simple purpose of
+ascertaining if you have ingenuity enough to open it."
+
+"I will engage to open it in two seconds--with a hammer."
+
+"I dare say. _I_ will open it with a hammer. The thing is to open it
+without."
+
+"Let me see." I began, with the aid of a microscope, to examine the box
+more closely. "I will give you one piece of information, Pugh. Unless I am
+mistaken, the secret lies in one of these little pieces of inlaid wood.
+You push it, or you press it, or something, and the whole affair flies
+open."
+
+"Such was my own first conviction. I am not so sure of it now. I have
+pressed every separate piece of wood; I have tried to move each piece in
+every direction. No result has followed. My theory was a hidden spring."
+
+"But there must be a hidden spring of some sort, unless you are to open it
+by a mere exercise of force. I suppose the box is empty."
+
+"I thought it was at first, but now I am not so sure of that either. It
+all depends on the position in which you hold it. Hold it in this
+position--like this--close to your ear. Have you a small hammer?" I took a
+small hammer. "Tap it softly, with the hammer. Don't you notice a sort of
+reverberation within?"
+
+Pugh was right, there certainly was something within; something which
+seemed to echo back my tapping, almost as if it were a living thing. I
+mentioned this to Pugh.
+
+"But you don't think that there is something alive inside the box? There
+can't be. The box must be air-tight, probably as much air-tight as an
+exhausted receiver."
+
+"How do we know that? How can we tell that no minute interstices have been
+left for the express purpose of ventilation?" I continued tapping with the
+hammer. I noticed one peculiarity, that it was only when I held the box in
+a particular position, and tapped at a certain spot, there came the
+answering taps from within. "I tell you what it is, Pugh, what I hear is
+the reverberation of some machinery."
+
+"Do you think so?"
+
+"I'm sure of it."
+
+"Give the box to me." Pugh put the box to his ear. He tapped. "It sounds
+to me like the echoing tick, tick of some great beetle; like the sort of
+noise which a deathwatch makes, you know."
+
+Trust Pugh to find a remarkable explanation for a simple fact; if the
+explanation leans toward the supernatural, so much the more satisfactory
+to Pugh. I knew better.
+
+"The sound which you hear is merely the throbbing or the trembling of the
+mechanism with which it is intended that the box should be opened. The
+mechanism is placed just where you are tapping it with the hammer. Every
+tap causes it to jar."
+
+"It sounds to me like the ticking of a deathwatch. However, on such
+subjects, Tress, I know what you are."
+
+"My dear Pugh, give it an extra hard tap, and you will see."
+
+He gave it an extra hard tap. The moment he had done so, he started.
+
+"I've done it now."
+
+"What have you done?"
+
+"Broken something, I fancy." He listened intently, with his ear to the
+box. "No--it seems all right. And yet I could have sworn I had damaged
+something; I heard it smash."
+
+"Give me the box." He gave it me. In my turn, I listened. I shook the box.
+Pugh must have been mistaken. Nothing rattled; there was not a sound; the
+box was as empty as before. I gave a smart tap with the hammer, as Pugh
+had done. Then there certainly was a curious sound. To my ear, it sounded
+like the smashing of glass. "I wonder if there is anything fragile inside
+your precious puzzle, Pugh, and, if so, if we are shivering it by
+degrees?"
+
+
+II
+
+"What _is_ that noise?"
+
+I lay in bed in that curious condition which is between sleep and waking.
+When, at last, I _knew_ that I was awake, I asked myself what it was that
+had woke me. Suddenly I became conscious that something was making itself
+audible in the silence of the night. For some seconds I lay and listened.
+Then I sat up in bed.
+
+"What _is_ that noise?"
+
+It was like the tick, tick of some large and unusually clear-toned clock.
+It might have been a clock, had it not been that the sound was varied,
+every half dozen ticks or so, by a sort of stifled screech, such as might
+have been uttered by some small creature in an extremity of anguish. I got
+out of bed; it was ridiculous to think of sleep during the continuation of
+that uncanny shrieking. I struck a light. The sound seemed to come from
+the neighborhood of my dressing-table. I went to the dressing-table, the
+lighted match in my hand, and, as I did so, my eyes fell on Pugh's
+mysterious box. That same instant there issued, from the bowels of the
+box, a more uncomfortable screech than any I had previously heard. It took
+me so completely by surprise that I let the match fall from my hand to the
+floor. The room was in darkness. I stood, I will not say trembling,
+listening--considering their volume--to the _eeriest_ shrieks I ever
+heard. All at once they ceased. Then came the tick, tick, tick again. I
+struck another match and lit the gas.
+
+Pugh had left his puzzle box behind him. We had done all we could,
+together, to solve the puzzle. He had left it behind to see what I could
+do with it alone. So much had it engrossed my attention that I had even
+brought it into my bedroom, in order that I might, before retiring to
+rest, make a final attempt at the solution of the mystery. _Now_ what
+possessed the thing?
+
+As I stood, and looked, and listened, one thing began to be clear to me,
+that some sort of machinery had been set in motion inside the box. How it
+had been set in motion was another matter. But the box had been subjected
+to so much handling, to such pressing and such hammering, that it was not
+strange if, after all, Pugh or I had unconsciously hit upon the spring
+which set the whole thing going. Possibly the mechanism had got so rusty
+that it had refused to act at once. It had hung fire, and only after some
+hours had something or other set the imprisoned motive power free.
+
+But what about the screeching? Could there be some living creature
+concealed within the box? Was I listening to the cries of some small
+animal in agony? Momentary reflection suggested that the explanation of
+the one thing was the explanation of the other. Rust!--there was the
+mystery. The same rust which had prevented the mechanism from acting at
+once was causing the screeching now. The uncanny sounds were caused by
+nothing more nor less than the want of a drop or two of oil. Such an
+explanation would not have satisfied Pugh, it satisfied me.
+
+Picking up the box, I placed it to my ear.
+
+"I wonder how long this little performance is going to continue. And what
+is going to happen when it is good enough to cease? I hope"--an
+uncomfortable thought occurred to me--"I hope Pugh hasn't picked up some
+pleasant little novelty in the way of an infernal machine. It would be a
+first-rate joke if he and I had been endeavoring to solve the puzzle of
+how to set it going."
+
+I don't mind owning that as this reflection crossed my mind I replaced
+Pugh's puzzle on the dressing-table. The idea did not commend itself to me
+at all. The box evidently contained some curious mechanism. It might be
+more curious than comfortable. Possibly some agreeable little device in
+clockwork. The tick, tick, tick suggested clockwork which had been planned
+to go a certain time, and then--then, for all I knew, ignite an explosive,
+and--blow up. It would be a charming solution to the puzzle if it were to
+explode while I stood there, in my nightshirt, looking on. It is true that
+the box weighed very little. Probably, as I have said, the whole affair
+would not have turned the scale at a couple of ounces. But then its very
+lightness might have been part of the ingenious inventor's little game.
+There are explosives with which one can work a very satisfactory amount of
+damage with considerably less than a couple of ounces.
+
+While I was hesitating--I own it!--whether I had not better immerse Pugh's
+puzzle in a can of water, or throw it out of the window, or call down Bob
+with a request to at once remove it to his apartment, both the tick, tick,
+tick, and the screeching ceased, and all within the box was still. If it
+_was_ going to explode, it was now or never. Instinctively I moved in the
+direction of the door.
+
+I waited with a certain sense of anxiety. I waited in vain. Nothing
+happened, not even a renewal of the sound.
+
+"I wish Pugh had kept his precious puzzle at home. This sort of thing
+tries one's nerves."
+
+When I thought that I perceived that nothing seemed likely to happen, I
+returned to the neighborhood of the table. I looked at the box askance. I
+took it up gingerly. Something might go off at any moment for all I knew.
+It would be too much of a joke if Pugh's precious puzzle exploded in my
+hand. I shook it doubtfully; nothing rattled. I held it to my ear. There
+was not a sound. What had taken place? Had the clockwork run down, and was
+the machine arranged with such a diabolical ingenuity that a certain,
+interval was required, after the clockwork had run down, before an
+explosion could occur? Or had rust caused the mechanism to again hang
+fire?
+
+"After making all that commotion the thing might at least come open." I
+banged the box viciously against the corner of the table. I felt that I
+would almost rather that an explosion should take place than that nothing
+should occur. One does not care to be disturbed from one's sound slumber
+in the small hours of the morning for a trifle.
+
+"I've half a mind to get a hammer, and try, as they say in the cookery
+books, another way."
+
+Unfortunately I had promised Pugh to abstain from using force. I might
+have shivered the box open with my hammer, and then explained that it had
+fallen, or got trod upon, or sat upon, or something, and so got shattered,
+only I was afraid that Pugh would not believe me. The man is himself such
+an untruthful man that he is in a chronic state of suspicion about the
+truthfulness of others.
+
+"Well, if you're not going to blow up, or open, or something, I'll say
+good night."
+
+I gave the box a final rap with my knuckles and a final shake, replaced it
+on the table, put out the gas, and returned to bed.
+
+I was just sinking again into slumber, when that box began again. It was
+true that Pugh had purchased the puzzle, but it was evident that the whole
+enjoyment of the purchase was destined to be mine. It was useless to think
+of sleep while that performance was going on. I sat up in bed once more.
+
+"It strikes me that the puzzle consists in finding out how it is possible
+to go to sleep with Pugh's purchase in your bedroom. This is far better
+than the old-fashioned prescription of cats on the tiles."
+
+It struck me the noise was distinctly louder than before; this applied
+both to the tick, tick, tick, and the screeching.
+
+"Possibly," I told myself, as I relighted the gas, "the explosion is to
+come off this time."
+
+I turned to look at the box. There could be no doubt about it; the noise
+was louder. And, if I could trust my eyes, the box was moving--giving a
+series of little jumps. This might have been an optical delusion, but it
+seemed to me that at each tick the box gave a little bound. During the
+screeches--which sounded more like the cries of an animal in an agony of
+pain even than before--if it did not tilt itself first on one end, and
+then on another, I shall never be willing to trust the evidence of my own
+eyes again. And surely the box had increased in size; I could have sworn
+not only that it had increased, but that it was increasing, even as I
+stood there looking on. It had grown, and still was growing, both broader,
+and longer, and deeper. Pugh, of course, would have attributed it to
+supernatural agency; there never was a man with such a nose for a ghost. I
+could picture him occupying my position, shivering in his nightshirt, as
+he beheld that miracle taking place before his eyes. The solution which at
+once suggested itself to me--and which would _never_ have suggested itself
+to Pugh!--was that the box was fashioned, as it were, in layers, and that
+the ingenious mechanism it contained was forcing the sides at once both
+upward and outward. I took it in my hand. I could feel something striking
+against the bottom of the box, like the tap, tap, tapping of a tiny
+hammer.
+
+"This is a pretty puzzle of Pugh's. He would say that that is the tapping
+of a deathwatch. For my part I have not much faith in deathwatches, _et
+hoc genus omne_, but it certainly is a curious tapping; I wonder what is
+going to happen next?"
+
+Apparently nothing, except a continuation of those mysterious sounds. That
+the box had increased in size I had, and have, no doubt whatever. I should
+say that it had increased a good inch in every direction, at least half an
+inch while I had been looking on. But while I stood looking its growth was
+suddenly and perceptibly stayed; it ceased to move. Only the noise
+continued.
+
+"I wonder how long it will be before anything worth happening does happen!
+I suppose something is going to happen; there can't be all this to-do for
+nothing. If it is anything in the infernal machine line, and there is
+going to be an explosion, I might as well be here to see it. I think I'll
+have a pipe."
+
+I put on my dressing-gown. I lit my pipe. I sat and stared at the box. I
+dare say I sat there for quite twenty minutes when, as before, without any
+sort of warning, the sound was stilled. Its sudden cessation rather
+startled me.
+
+"Has the mechanism again hung fire? Or, this time, is the explosion
+coming off?" It did not come off; nothing came off. "Isn't the box even
+going to open?"
+
+It did not open. There was simply silence all at once, and that was all. I
+sat there in expectation for some moments longer. But I sat for nothing. I
+rose. I took the box in my hand. I shook it.
+
+"This puzzle _is_ a puzzle." I held the box first to one ear, then to the
+other. I gave it several sharp raps with my knuckles. There was not an
+answering sound, not even the sort of reverberation which Pugh and I had
+noticed at first. It seemed hollower than ever. It was as though the soul
+of the box was dead. "I suppose if I put you down, and extinguish the gas
+and return to bed, in about half an hour or so, just as I am dropping off
+to sleep, the performance will be recommenced. Perhaps the third time will
+be lucky."
+
+But I was mistaken--there was no third time. When I returned to bed that
+time I returned to sleep, and I was allowed to sleep; there was no
+continuation of the performance, at least so far as I know. For no sooner
+was I once more between the sheets than I was seized with an irresistible
+drowsiness, a drowsiness which so mastered me that I--I imagine it must
+have been instantly--sank into slumber which lasted till long after day
+had dawned. Whether or not any more mysterious sounds issued from the
+bowels of Pugh's puzzle is more than I can tell. If they did, they did not
+succeed in rousing me.
+
+And yet, when at last I did awake, I had a sort of consciousness that my
+waking had been caused by something strange. What it was I could not
+surmise. My own impression was that I had been awakened by the touch of a
+person's hand. But that impression must have been a mistaken one, because,
+as I could easily see by looking round the room, there was no one in the
+room to touch me.
+
+It was broad daylight. I looked at my watch; it was nearly eleven o'clock.
+I am a pretty late sleeper as a rule, but I do not usually sleep as late
+as that. That scoundrel Bob would let me sleep all day without thinking it
+necessary to call me. I was just about to spring out of bed with the
+intention of ringing the bell so that I might give Bob a piece of my mind
+for allowing me to sleep so late, when my glance fell on the
+dressing-table on which, the night before, I had placed Pugh's puzzle. It
+had gone!
+
+Its absence so took me by surprise that I ran to the table. It _had_ gone.
+But it had not gone far; it had gone to pieces! There were the pieces
+lying where the box had been. The puzzle had solved itself. The box was
+open, open with a vengeance, one might say. Like that unfortunate Humpty
+Dumpty, who, so the chroniclers tell us, sat on a wall, surely "all the
+king's horses and all the king's men" never could put Pugh's puzzle
+together again!
+
+The marquetry had resolved itself into its component parts. How those
+parts had ever been joined was a mystery. They had been laid upon no
+foundation, as is the case with ordinary inlaid work. The several pieces
+of wood were not only of different shapes and sizes, but they were as thin
+as the thinnest veneer; yet the box had been formed by simply joining them
+together. The man who made that box must have been possessed of ingenuity
+worthy of a better cause.
+
+I perceived how the puzzle had been worked. The box had contained an
+arrangement of springs, which, on being released, had expanded themselves
+in different directions until their mere expansion had rent the box to
+pieces. There were the springs, lying amid the ruin they had caused.
+
+There was something else amid that ruin besides those springs; there was a
+small piece of writing paper. I took it up. On the reverse side of it was
+written in a minute, crabbed hand: "A Present For You." What was a present
+for me? I looked, and, not for the first time since I had caught sight of
+Pugh's precious puzzle, could scarcely believe my eyes.
+
+There, poised between two upright wires, the bent ends of which held it
+aloft in the air, was either a piece of glass or--a crystal. The scrap of
+writing paper had exactly covered it. I understood what it was, when Pugh
+and I had tapped with the hammer, had caused the answering taps to proceed
+from within. Our taps caused the wires to oscillate, and in these
+oscillations the crystal, which they held suspended, had touched the side
+of the box.
+
+I looked again at the piece of paper. "A Present For You." Was _this_ the
+present--this crystal? I regarded it intently.
+
+"It _can't_ be a diamond."
+
+The idea was ridiculous, absurd. No man in his senses would place a
+diamond inside a twopenny-halfpenny puzzle box. The thing was as big as a
+walnut! And yet--I am a pretty good judge of precious stones--if it was
+not an uncut diamond it was the best imitation I had seen. I took it up. I
+examined it closely. The more closely I examined it, the more my wonder
+grew.
+
+"It _is_ a diamond!"
+
+And yet the idea was too preposterous for credence. Who would present a
+diamond as big as a walnut with a trumpery puzzle? Besides, all the
+diamonds which the world contains of that size are almost as well known as
+the Koh-i-noor.
+
+"If it is a diamond, it is worth--it is worth--Heaven only knows what it
+isn't worth if it's a diamond."
+
+I regarded it through a strong pocket lens. As I did so I could not
+restrain an exclamation.
+
+"The world to a China orange, it _is_ a diamond!"
+
+The words had scarcely escaped my lips than there came a tapping at the
+door.
+
+"Come in!" I cried, supposing it was Bob. It was not Bob, it was Pugh.
+Instinctively I put the lens and the crystal behind my back. At sight of
+me in my nightshirt Pugh began to shake his head.
+
+"What hours, Tress, what hours! Why, my dear Tress, I've breakfasted, read
+the papers and my letters, came all the way from my house here, and you're
+not up!"
+
+"Don't I look as though I were up?"
+
+"Ah, Tress! Tress!" He approached the dressing-table. His eye fell upon
+the ruins. "What's this?"
+
+"That's the solution to the puzzle."
+
+"Have you--have you solved it fairly, Tress?"
+
+"It has solved itself. Our handling, and tapping, and hammering must have
+freed the springs which the box contained, and during the night, while I
+slept, they have caused it to come open."
+
+"While you slept? Dear me! How strange! And--what are these?"
+
+He had discovered the two upright wires on which the crystal had been
+poised.
+
+"I suppose they're part of the puzzle."
+
+"And was there anything in the box? What's this?" He picked up the scrap
+of paper; I had left it on the table. He read what was written on it: "'A
+Present For You.' What's it mean? Tress, was this in the box?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"What's it mean about a present? Was there anything in the box besides?"
+
+"Pugh, if you will leave the room I shall be able to dress; I am not in
+the habit of receiving quite such early calls, or I should have been
+prepared to receive you. If you will wait in the next room, I will be with
+you as soon as I'm dressed. There is a little subject in connection with
+the box which I wish to discuss with you."
+
+"A subject in connection with the box? What is the subject?"
+
+"I will tell you, Pugh, when I have performed my toilet."
+
+"Why can't you tell me now?"
+
+"Do you propose, then, that I should stand here shivering in my shirt
+while you are prosing at your ease? Thank you; I am obliged, but I
+decline. May I ask you once more, Pugh, to wait for me in the adjoining
+apartment?"
+
+He moved toward the door. When he had taken a couple of steps, he halted.
+
+"I--I hope, Tress, that you're--you're going to play no tricks on me?"
+
+"Tricks on you! Is it likely that I am going to play tricks upon my oldest
+friend?"
+
+When he had gone--he vanished, it seemed to me, with a somewhat doubtful
+visage--I took the crystal to the window. I drew the blind. I let the
+sunshine fall on it. I examined it again, closely and minutely, with the
+aid of my pocket lens. It _was_ a diamond; there could not be a doubt of
+it. If, with my knowledge of stones, I was deceived, then I was deceived
+as never man had been deceived before. My heart beat faster as I
+recognized the fact that I was holding in my hand what was, in all
+probability, a fortune for a man of moderate desires. Of course, Pugh knew
+nothing of what I had discovered, and there was no reason why he should
+know. Not the least! The only difficulty was that if I kept my own
+counsel, and sold the stone and utilized the proceeds of the sale, I
+should have to invent a story which would account for my sudden accession
+to fortune. Pugh knows almost as much of my affairs as I do myself. That
+is the worst of these old friends!
+
+When I joined Pugh I found him dancing up and down the floor like a bear
+upon hot plates. He scarcely allowed me to put my nose inside the door
+before attacking me.
+
+"Tress, give me what was in the box."
+
+"My dear Pugh, how do you know that there was something in the box to give
+you?"
+
+"I know there was!"
+
+"Indeed! If you know that there was something in the box, perhaps you will
+tell me what that something was."
+
+He eyed me doubtfully. Then, advancing, he laid upon my arm a hand which
+positively trembled.
+
+"Tress, you--you wouldn't play tricks on an old friend."
+
+"You are right, Pugh, I wouldn't, though I believe there have been
+occasions on which you have had doubts upon the subject. By the way, Pugh,
+I believe that I am the oldest friend you have."
+
+"I--I don't know about that. There's--there's Brasher."
+
+"Brasher! Who's Brasher? You wouldn't compare my friendship to the
+friendship of such a man as Brasher? Think of the tastes we have in
+common, you and I. We're both collectors."
+
+"Ye-es, we're both collectors."
+
+"I make my interests yours, and you make your interests mine. Isn't that
+so, Pugh?"
+
+"Tress, what--what was in the box?"
+
+"I will be frank with you, Pugh. If there had been something in the box,
+would you have been willing to go halves with me in my discovery?"
+
+"Go halves! In your discovery, Tress! Give me what is mine!"
+
+"With pleasure, Pugh, if you will tell me what is yours."
+
+"If--if you don't give me what was in the box I'll--I'll send for the
+police."
+
+"Do! Then I shall be able to hand to them what was in the box in order
+that it may be restored to its proper owner."
+
+"Its proper owner! I'm its proper owner!"
+
+"Excuse me, but I don't understand how that can be; at least, until the
+police have made inquiries. I should say that the proper owner was the
+person from whom you purchased the box, or, more probably, the person from
+whom he purchased it, and by whom, doubtless, it was sold in ignorance, or
+by mistake. Thus, Pugh, if you will only send for the police, we shall
+earn the gratitude of a person of whom we never heard in our lives--I for
+discovering the contents of the box, and you for returning them."
+
+As I said this, Pugh's face was a study. He gasped for breath. He actually
+took out his handkerchief to wipe his brow.
+
+"Tress, I--I don't think you need to use a tone like that to me. It isn't
+friendly. What--what was in the box?"
+
+"Let us understand each other, Pugh. If you don't hand over what was in
+the box to the police, I go halves."
+
+Pugh began to dance about the floor.
+
+"What a fool I was to trust you with the box! I knew I couldn't trust
+you." I said nothing. I turned and rang the bell. "What's that for?"
+
+"That, my dear Pugh, is for breakfast, and, if you desire it, for the
+police. You know, although you have breakfasted, I haven't. Perhaps while
+I am breaking my fast, you would like to summon the representatives of law
+and order." Bob came in. I ordered breakfast. Then I turned to Pugh. "Is
+there anything you would like?"
+
+"No, I--I've breakfasted."
+
+"It wasn't of breakfast I was thinking. It was of--something else. Bob is
+at your service, if, for instance, you wish to send him on an errand."
+
+"No, I want nothing. Bob can go." Bob went. Directly he was gone, Pugh
+turned to me. "You shall have half. What was in the box?"
+
+"I shall have half?"
+
+"You shall!"
+
+"I don't think it is necessary that the terms of our little understanding
+should be expressly embodied in black and white. I fancy that, under the
+circumstance, I can trust you, Pugh. I believe that I am capable of seeing
+that, in this matter, you don't do me. That was in the box."
+
+I held out the crystal between my finger and thumb.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"That is what I desire to learn."
+
+"Let me look at it."
+
+"You are welcome to look at it where it is. Look at it as long as you
+like, and as closely."
+
+Pugh leaned over my hand. His eyes began to gleam. He is himself not a bad
+judge of precious stones, is Pugh.
+
+"It's--it's--Tress!--is it a diamond?"
+
+"That question I have already asked myself."
+
+"Let me look at it! It will be safe with me! It's mine!"
+
+I immediately put the thing behind my back.
+
+"Pardon me, it belongs neither to you nor to me. It belongs, in all
+probability, to the person who sold that puzzle to the man from whom you
+bought it--perhaps some weeping widow, Pugh, or hopeless orphan--think of
+it. Let us have no further misunderstanding upon that point, my dear old
+friend. Still, because you are my dear old friend, I am willing to trust
+you with this discovery of mine, on condition that you don't attempt to
+remove it from my sight, and that you return it to me the moment I require
+you."
+
+"You're--you're very hard on me." I made a movement toward my waistcoat
+pocket. "I'll return it to you!"
+
+I handed him the crystal, and with it I handed him my pocket lens.
+
+"With the aid of that glass I imagine that you will be able to subject it
+to a more acute examination, Pugh."
+
+He began to examine it through the lens. Directly he did so, he gave an
+exclamation. In a few moments he looked up at me. His eyes were glistening
+behind his spectacles. I could see he trembled.
+
+"Tress, it's--it's a diamond, a Brazil diamond. It's worth a fortune!"
+
+"I'm glad you think so."
+
+"Glad I think so! Don't you think that it's a diamond?"
+
+"It appears to be a diamond. Under ordinary conditions I should say,
+without hesitation, that it was a diamond. But when I consider the
+circumstances of its discovery, I am driven to doubts. How much did you
+give for that puzzle, Pugh?"
+
+"Ninepence; the fellow wanted a shilling, but I gave him ninepence. He
+seemed content."
+
+"Ninepence! Does it seem reasonable that we should find a diamond, which,
+if it is a diamond, is the finest stone I ever saw and handled, in a
+ninepenny puzzle? It is not as though it had got into the thing by
+accident, it had evidently been placed there to be found, and, apparently,
+by anyone who chanced to solve the puzzle; witness the writing on the
+scrap of paper."
+
+Pugh reexamined the crystal.
+
+"It is a diamond! I'll stake my life that it's a diamond!"
+
+"Still, though it be a diamond, I smell a rat!"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I strongly suspect that the person who placed that diamond inside that
+puzzle intended to have a joke at the expense of the person who discovered
+it. What was to be the nature of the joke is more than I can say at
+present, but I should like to have a bet with you that the man who
+compounded that puzzle was an ingenious practical joker. I may be wrong,
+Pugh; we shall see. But, until I have proved the contrary, I don't believe
+that the maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond worth,
+apparently, shall we say a thousand pounds?"
+
+"A thousand pounds! This diamond is worth a good deal more than a thousand
+pounds."
+
+"Well, that only makes my case the stronger; I don't believe that the
+maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond worth more than a
+thousand pounds with such utter wantonness as seems to have characterized
+the action of the original owner of the stone which I found in your
+ninepenny puzzle, Pugh."
+
+"There have been some eccentric characters in the world, some very
+eccentric characters. However, as you say, we shall see. I fancy that I
+know somebody who would be quite willing to have such a diamond as this,
+and who, moreover, would be willing to pay a fair price for its
+possession; I will take it to him and see what he says."
+
+"Pugh, hand me back that diamond."
+
+"My dear Tress, I was only going--"
+
+Bob came in with the breakfast tray.
+
+"Pugh, you will either hand me that at once, or Bob shall summon the
+representatives of law and order."
+
+He handed me the diamond. I sat down to breakfast with a hearty appetite.
+Pugh stood and scowled at me.
+
+"Joseph Tress, it is my solemn conviction, and I have no hesitation in
+saying so in plain English, that you're a thief."
+
+"My dear Pugh, it seems to me that we show every promise of becoming a
+couple of thieves."
+
+"Don't bracket me with you!"
+
+"Not at all, you are worse than I. It is you who decline to return the
+contents of the box to its proper owner. Put it to yourself, you have
+_some_ common sense, my dear old friend!--do you suppose that a diamond
+worth more than a thousand pounds is to be _honestly_ bought for
+ninepence?"
+
+He resumed his old trick of dancing about the room.
+
+"I was a fool ever to let you have the box! I ought to have known better
+than to have trusted you; goodness knows you have given me sufficient
+cause to mistrust you! Over and over again! Your character is only too
+notorious! You have plundered friend and foe alike--friend and foe alike!
+As for the rubbish which you call your collection, nine tenths of it, I
+know as a positive fact, you have stolen out and out."
+
+"Who stole my Sir Walter Raleigh pipe? Wasn't it a man named Pugh?"
+
+"Look here, Joseph Tress!"
+
+"I'm looking."
+
+"Oh, it's no good talking to you, not the least! You're--you're dead to
+all the promptings of conscience! May I inquire, Mr. Tress, what it is you
+propose to do?"
+
+"I _propose_ to do nothing, except summon the representatives of law and
+order. Failing that, my dear Pugh, I had some faint, vague, very vague
+idea of taking the contents of your ninepenny puzzle to a certain firm in
+Hatton Garden, who are dealers in precious stones, and to learn from them
+if they are disposed to give anything for it, and if so, what."
+
+"I shall come with you."
+
+"With pleasure, on condition that you pay the cab."
+
+"I pay the cab! I will pay half."
+
+"Not at all. You will either pay the whole fare, or else I will have one
+cab and you shall have another. It is a three-shilling cab fare from here
+to Hatton Garden. If you propose to share my cab, you will be so good as
+to hand over that three shillings before we start."
+
+He gasped, but he handed over the three shillings. There are few things I
+enjoy so much as getting money out of Pugh!
+
+On the road to Hatton Garden we wrangled nearly all the way. I own that I
+feel a certain satisfaction in irritating Pugh, he is such an irritable
+man. He wanted to know what I thought we should get for the diamond.
+
+"You can't expect to get much for the contents of a ninepenny puzzle, not
+even the price of a cab fare, Pugh."
+
+He eyed me, but for some minutes he was silent. Then he began again.
+
+"Tress, I don't think we ought to let it go for less than--than five
+thousand pounds."
+
+"Seriously, Pugh, I doubt whether, when the whole affair is ended, we
+shall get five thousand pence for it, or, for the matter of that, five
+thousand farthings."
+
+"But why not? Why not? It's a magnificent stone--magnificent! I'll stake
+my life on it."
+
+I tapped my breast with the tips of my fingers.
+
+"There's a warning voice within my breast that ought to be in yours, Pugh!
+Something tells me, perhaps it is the unusually strong vein of common
+sense which I possess, that the contents of your ninepenny puzzle will be
+found to be a magnificent do--an ingenious practical joke, my friend."
+
+"I don't believe it."
+
+But I think he did; at any rate, I had unsettled the foundations of his
+faith.
+
+We entered the Hatton Garden office side by side; in his anxiety not to
+let me get before him, Pugh actually clung to my arm. The office was
+divided into two parts by a counter which ran from wall to wall. I
+advanced to a man who stood on the other side of this counter.
+
+"I want to sell you a diamond."
+
+"_We_ want to sell you a diamond," interpolated Pugh.
+
+I turned to Pugh. I "fixed" him with my glance.
+
+"_I_ want to sell you a diamond. Here it is. What will you give me for
+it?"
+
+Taking the crystal from my waistcoat pocket I handed it to the man on the
+other side of the counter. Directly, he got it between his fingers, and
+saw that it was that he had got, I noticed a sudden gleam come into his
+eyes.
+
+"This is--this is rather a fine stone."
+
+Pugh nudged my arm.
+
+"I told you so." I paid no attention to Pugh. "What will you give me for
+it?"
+
+"Do you mean, what will I give you for it cash down upon the nail?"
+
+"Just so--what will you give me for it cash down upon the nail?"
+
+The man turned the crystal over and over in his fingers.
+
+"Well, that's rather a large order. We don't often get a chance of buying
+such a stone as this across the counter. What do you say to--well--to ten
+thousand pounds?"
+
+Ten thousand pounds! It was beyond my wildest imaginings. Pugh gasped. He
+lurched against the counter.
+
+"Ten thousand pounds!" he echoed.
+
+The man on the other side glanced at him, I thought, a little curiously.
+
+"If you can give me references, or satisfy me in any way as to your _bona
+fides_, I am prepared to give you for this diamond an open check for ten
+thousand pounds, or if you prefer it, the cash instead."
+
+I stared; I was not accustomed to see business transacted on quite such
+lines as those.
+
+"We'll take it," murmured Pugh; I believe he was too much overcome by his
+feelings to do more than murmur. I interposed.
+
+"My dear sir, you will excuse my saying that you arrive very rapidly at
+your conclusions. In the first place, how can you make sure that it is a
+diamond?"
+
+The man behind the counter smiled.
+
+"I should be very ill-fitted for the position which I hold if I could not
+tell a diamond directly I get a sight of it, especially such a stone as
+this."
+
+"But have you no tests you can apply?"
+
+"We have tests which we apply in cases in which doubt exists, but in this
+case there is no doubt whatever. I am as sure that this is a diamond as I
+am sure that it is air I breathe. However, here is a test."
+
+There was a wheel close by the speaker. It was worked by a treadle. It was
+more like a superior sort of traveling-tinker's grindstone than anything
+else. The man behind the counter put his foot upon the treadle. The wheel
+began to revolve. He brought the crystal into contact with the swiftly
+revolving wheel. There was a s--s--sh! And, in an instant, his hand was
+empty; the crystal had vanished into air.
+
+"Good heavens!" he gasped. I never saw such a look of amazement on a human
+countenance before. "It's splintered!"
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT
+
+It _was_ a diamond, although it _had_ splintered. In that fact lay the
+point of the joke. The man behind the counter had not been wrong;
+examination of such dust as could be collected proved that fact beyond a
+doubt. It was declared by experts that the diamond, at some period of its
+history, had been subjected to intense and continuing heat. The result had
+been to make it as brittle as glass.
+
+There could be no doubt that its original owner had been an expert too. He
+knew where he got it from, and he probably knew what it had endured. He
+was aware that, from a mercantile point of view, it was worthless; it
+could never have been cut. So, having a turn for humor of a peculiar kind,
+he had devoted days, and weeks, and possibly months, to the construction
+of that puzzle. He had placed the diamond inside, and he had enjoyed, in
+anticipation and in imagination, the Alnaschar visions of the lucky
+finder.
+
+Pugh blamed me for the catastrophe. He said, and still says, that if I had
+not, in a measure, and quite gratuitously, insisted on a test, the man
+behind the counter would have been satisfied with the evidence of his
+organs of vision, and we should have been richer by ten thousand pounds.
+But I satisfy my conscience with the reflection that what I did at any
+rate was honest, though, at the same time, I am perfectly well aware that
+such a reflection gives Pugh no sort of satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+_The Great Valdez Sapphire_
+
+
+I know more about it than anyone else in the world, its present owner not
+excepted. I can give its whole history, from the Cingalese who found it,
+the Spanish adventurer who stole it, the cardinal who bought it, the Pope
+who graciously accepted it, the favored son of the Church who received it,
+the gay and giddy duchess who pawned it, down to the eminent prelate who
+now holds it in trust as a family heirloom.
+
+It will occupy a chapter to itself in my forthcoming work on "Historic
+Stones," where full details of its weight, size, color, and value may be
+found. At present I am going to relate an incident in its history which,
+for obvious reasons, will not be published--which, in fact, I trust the
+reader will consider related in strict confidence.
+
+I had never seen the stone itself when I began to write about it, and it
+was not till one evening last spring, while staying with my nephew, Sir
+Thomas Acton, that I came within measurable distance of it. A dinner party
+was impending, and, at my instigation, the Bishop of Northchurch and Miss
+Panton, his daughter and heiress, were among the invited guests.
+
+The dinner was a particularly good one, I remember that distinctly. In
+fact, I felt myself partly responsible for it, having engaged the new
+cook--a talented young Italian, pupil of the admirable old _chef_ at my
+club. We had gone over the _menu_ carefully together, with a result
+refreshing in its novelty, but not so daring as to disturb the minds of
+the innocent country guests who were bidden thereto.
+
+The first spoonful of soup was reassuring, and I looked to the end of the
+table to exchange a congratulatory glance with Leta. What was amiss? No
+response. Her pretty face was flushed, her smile constrained, she was
+talking with quite unnecessary _empressement_ to her neighbor, Sir Harry
+Landor, though Leta is one of those few women who understand the
+importance of letting a man settle down tranquilly and with an undisturbed
+mind to the business of dining, allowing no topic of serious interest to
+come on before the _releves_, and reserving mere conversational brilliancy
+for the _entremets_.
+
+Guests all right? No disappointments? I had gone through the list with
+her, selecting just the right people to be asked to meet the Landors, our
+new neighbors. Not a mere cumbrous county gathering, nor yet a showy
+imported party from town, but a skillful blending of both. Had anything
+happened already? I had been late for dinner and missed the arrivals in
+the drawing-room. It was Leta's fault. She has got into a way of coming
+into my room and putting the last touches to my toilet. I let her, for I
+am doubtful of myself nowadays after many years' dependence on the best of
+valets. Her taste is generally beyond dispute, but to-day she had indulged
+in a feminine vagary that provoked me and made me late for dinner.
+
+"Are you going to wear your sapphire, Uncle Paul!" she cried in a tone of
+dismay. "Oh, why not the ruby?"
+
+"You _would_ have your way about the table decorations," I gently reminded
+her. "With that service of Crown Derby _repousse_ and orchids, the ruby
+would look absolutely barbaric. Now if you would have had the Limoges set,
+white candles, and a yellow silk center--"
+
+"Oh, but--I'm _so_ disappointed--I wanted the bishop to see your ruby--or
+one of your engraved gems--"
+
+"My dear, it is on the bishop's account I put this on. You know his
+daughter is heiress of the great Valdez sapphire--"
+
+"Of course she is, and when he has the charge of a stone three times as
+big as yours, what's the use of wearing it? The ruby, dear Uncle Paul,
+_please_!"
+
+She was desperately in earnest I could see, and considering the
+obligations which I am supposed to be under to her and Tom, it was but a
+little matter to yield, but it involved a good deal of extra trouble.
+Studs, sleeve-links, watch-guard, all carefully selected to go with the
+sapphire, had to be changed, the emerald which I chose as a compromise
+requiring more florid accompaniments of a deeper tone of gold; and the
+dinner hour struck as I replaced my jewel case, the one relic left me of a
+once handsome fortune, in my fireproof safe.
+
+The emerald looked very well that evening, however. I kept my eyes upon it
+for comfort when Miss Panton proved trying.
+
+She was a lean, yellow, dictatorial young person with no conversation. I
+spoke of her father's celebrated sapphires. "_My_ sapphires," she amended
+sourly; "though I am legally debarred from making any profitable use of
+them." She furthermore informed me that she viewed them as useless gauds,
+which ought to be disposed of for the benefit of the heathen. I gave the
+subject up, and while she discoursed of the work of the Blue Ribbon Army
+among the Bosjesmans I tried to understand a certain dislocation in the
+arrangement of the table. Surely we were more or less in number than we
+should be? Opposite side all right. Who was extra on ours? I leaned
+forward. Lady Landor on one side of Tom, on the other who? I caught
+glimpses of plumes pink and green nodding over a dinner plate, and beneath
+them a pink nose in a green visage with a nutcracker chin altogether
+unknown to me. A sharp gray eye shot a sideway glance down the table and
+caught me peeping, and I retreated, having only marked in addition two
+clawlike hands, with pointed ruffles and a mass of brilliant rings, making
+good play with a knife and fork. Who was she? At intervals a high acid
+voice could be heard addressing Tom, and a laugh that made me shudder; it
+had the quality of the scream of a bird of prey or the yell of a jackal. I
+had heard that sort of laugh before, and it always made me feel like a
+defenseless rabbit. Every time it sounded I saw Leta's fan flutter more
+furiously and her manner grow more nervously animated. Poor dear girl! I
+never in all my recollection wished a dinner at an end so earnestly so as
+to assure her of my support and sympathy, though without the faintest
+conception why either should be required.
+
+The ices at last. A _menu_ card folded in two was laid beside me. I read
+it unobserved. "Keep the B. from joining us in the drawing-room." The B.?
+The bishop, of course. With pleasure. But why? And how? _That's_ the
+question, never mind "why." Could I lure him into the library--the
+billiard room--the conservatory? I doubted it, and I doubted still more
+what I should do with him when I got him there.
+
+The bishop is a grand and stately ecclesiastic of the mediaeval type,
+broad-chested, deep-voiced, martial of bearing. I could picture him
+charging mace in hand at the head of his vassals, or delivering over a
+dissenter of the period to the rack and thumbscrew, but not pottering
+among rare editions, tall copies and Grolier bindings, nor condescending
+to a quiet cigar among the tree ferns and orchids. Leta must and should be
+obeyed, I swore, nevertheless, even if I were driven to lock the door in
+the fearless old fashion of a bygone day, and declare I'd shoot any man
+who left while a drop remained in the bottles.
+
+The ladies were rising. The lady at the head of the line smirked and
+nodded her pink plumes coquettishly at Tom, while her hawk's eyes roved
+keen and predatory over us all. She stopped suddenly, creating a block and
+confusion.
+
+"Ah, the dear bishop! _You_ there, and I never saw you! You must come and
+have a nice long chat presently. By-by--!" She shook her fan at him over
+my shoulder and tripped off. Leta, passing me last, gave me a look of
+profound despair.
+
+"Lady Carwitchet!" somebody exclaimed. "I couldn't believe my eyes."
+
+"Thought she was dead or in penal servitude. Never should have expected
+to see her _here_," said some one else behind me confidentially.
+
+"What Carwitchet? Not the mother of the Carwitchet who--"
+
+"Just so. The Carwitchet who--" Tom assented with a shrug. "We needn't go
+farther, as she's my guest. Just my luck. I met them at Buxton, thought
+them uncommonly good company--in fact, Carwitchet laid me under a great
+obligation about a horse I was nearly let in for buying--and gave them a
+general invitation here, as one does, you know. Never expected her to turn
+up with her luggage this afternoon just before dinner, to stay a week, or
+a fortnight if Carwitchet can join her." A groan of sympathy ran round the
+table. "It can't be helped. I've told you this just to show that I
+shouldn't have asked you here to meet this sort of people of my own free
+will; but, as it is, please say no more about them." The subject was not
+dropped by any means, and I took care that it should not be. At our end of
+the table one story after another went buzzing round--_sotto voce_, out of
+deference to Tom--but perfectly audible.
+
+"Carwitchet? Ah, yes. Mixed up in that Rawlings divorce case, wasn't he? A
+bad lot. Turned out of the Dragoon Guards for cheating at cards, or
+picking pockets, or something--remember the row at the Cerulean Club?
+Scandalous exposure--and that forged letter business--oh, that was the
+mother--prosecution hushed up somehow. Ought to be serving her fourteen
+years--and that business of poor Farrars, the banker--got hold of some of
+his secrets and blackmailed him till he blew his brains out--"
+
+It was so exciting that I clean forgot the bishop, till a low gasp at my
+elbow startled me. He was lying back in his chair, his mighty shaven jowl
+a ghastly white, his fierce imperious eyebrows drooping limp over his
+fishlike eyes, his splendid figure shrunk and contracted. He was trying
+with a shaken hand to pour out wine. The decanter clattered against the
+glass and the wine spilled on the cloth.
+
+"I'm afraid you find the room too warm. Shall we go into the library?"
+
+He rose hastily and followed me like a lamb.
+
+He recovered himself once we got into the hall, and affably rejected all
+my proffers of brandy and soda--medical advice--everything else my limited
+experience could suggest. He only demanded his carriage "directly" and
+that Miss Panton should be summoned forthwith.
+
+I made the best use I could of the time left me.
+
+"I'm uncommonly sorry you do not feel equal to staying a little longer, my
+lord. I counted on showing you my few trifles of precious stones, the
+salvage from the wreck of my possessions. Nothing in comparison with your
+own collection."
+
+The bishop clasped his hand over his heart. His breath came short and
+quick.
+
+"A return of that dizziness," he explained with a faint smile. "You are
+thinking of the Valdez sapphire, are you not? Some day," he went on with
+forced composure, "I may have the pleasure of showing it to you. It is at
+my banker's just now."
+
+Miss Panton's steps were heard in the hall. "You are well known as a
+connoisseur, Mr. Acton," he went on hurriedly. "Is your collection
+valuable? If so, _keep it safe; don't trust a ring off your hand, or the
+key of your jewel case out of your pocket till the house is clear again_."
+The words rushed from his lips in an impetuous whisper, he gave me a
+meaning glance, and departed with his daughter. I went back to the
+drawing-room, my head swimming with bewilderment.
+
+"What! The dear bishop gone!" screamed Lady Carwitchet from the central
+ottoman where she sat, surrounded by most of the gentlemen, all apparently
+well entertained by her conversation. "And I wanted to talk over old times
+with him so badly. His poor wife was my greatest friend. Mira Montanaro,
+daughter of the great banker, you know. It's not possible that that
+miserable little prig is my poor Mira's girl. The heiress of all the
+Montanaros in a black lace gown worth twopence! When I think of her
+mother's beauty and her toilets! Does she ever wear the sapphires? Has
+anyone ever seen her in them? Eleven large stones in a lovely antique
+setting, and the great Valdez sapphire--worth thousands and thousands--for
+the pendant." No one replied. "I wanted to get a rise out of the bishop
+to-night. It used to make him so mad when I wore this."
+
+She fumbled among the laces at her throat, and clawed out a pendant that
+hung to a velvet band around her neck. I fairly gasped when she removed
+her hand. A sapphire of irregular shape flashed out its blue lightning on
+us. Such a stone! A true, rich, cornflower blue even by that wretched
+artificial light, with soft velvety depths of color and dazzling clearness
+of tint in its lights and shades--a stone to remember! I stretched out my
+hand involuntarily, but Lady Carwitchet drew back with a coquettish
+squeal. "No! no! You mustn't look any closer. Tell me what you think of it
+now. Isn't it pretty?"
+
+"Superb!" was all I could ejaculate, staring at the azure splendor of that
+miraculous jewel in a sort of trance.
+
+She gave a shrill cackling laugh of mockery.
+
+"The great Mr. Acton taken in by a bit of Palais Royal gimcrackery! What
+an advertisement for Bogaerts et Cie! They are perfect artists in frauds.
+Don't you remember their stand at the first Paris Exhibition? They had
+imitation there of every celebrated stone; but I never expected anything
+made by man could delude Mr. Acton, never!" And she went off into another
+mocking cackle, and all the idiots round her haw-hawed knowingly, as if
+they had seen the joke all along. I was too bewildered to reply, which was
+on the whole lucky. "I suppose I mustn't tell why I came to give quite a
+big sum in francs for this?" she went on, tapping her closed lips with her
+closed fan, and cocking her eye at us all like a parrot wanting to be
+coaxed to talk. "It's a queer story."
+
+I didn't want to hear her anecdote, especially as I saw she wanted to tell
+it. What I _did_ want was to see that pendant again. She had thrust it
+back among her laces, only the loop which held it to the velvet being
+visible. It was set with three small sapphires, and even from a distance I
+clearly made them out to be imitations, and poor ones. I felt a queer
+thrill of self-mistrust. Was the large stone no better? Could I, even for
+an instant, have been dazzled by a sham, and a sham of that quality? The
+events of the evening had flurried and confused me. I wished to think them
+over in quiet. I would go to bed.
+
+My rooms at the Manor are the best in the house. Leta will have it so. I
+must explain their position for a reason to be understood later. My
+bedroom is in the southeast angle of the house; it opens on one side into
+a sitting-room in the east corridor, the rest of which is taken up by the
+suite of rooms occupied by Tom and Leta; and on the other side into my
+bathroom, the first room in the south corridor, where the principal guest
+chambers are, to one of which it was originally the dressing-room. Passing
+this room I noticed a couple of housemaids preparing it for the night, and
+discovered with a shiver that Lady Carwitchet was to be my next-door
+neighbor. It gave me a turn.
+
+The bishop's strange warning must have unnerved me. I was perfectly safe
+from her ladyship. The disused door into her room was locked, and the key
+safe on the housekeeper's bunch. It was also undiscoverable on her side,
+the recess in which it stood being completely filled by a large wardrobe.
+On my side hung a thick sound-proof _portiere_. Nevertheless, I resolved
+not to use that room while she inhabited the next one. I removed my
+possessions, fastened the door of communication with my bedroom, and
+dragged a heavy ottoman across it.
+
+Then I stowed away my emerald in my strong-box. It is built into the wall
+of my sitting-room, and masked by the lower part of an old carved oak
+bureau. I put away even the rings I wore habitually, keeping out only an
+inferior cat's-eye for workaday wear. I had just made all safe when Leta
+tapped at the door and came in to wish me good night. She looked flushed
+and harassed and ready to cry. "Uncle Paul," she began, "I want you to go
+up to town at once, and stay away till I send for you."
+
+"My dear--!" I was too amazed to expostulate.
+
+"We've got a--a pestilence among us," she declared, her foot tapping the
+ground angrily, "and the least we can do is to go into quarantine. Oh, I'm
+so sorry and so ashamed! The poor bishop! I'll take good care that no one
+else shall meet that woman here. You did your best for me, Uncle Paul, and
+managed admirably, but it was all no use. I hoped against hope that what
+between the dusk of the drawing-room before dinner, and being put at
+opposite ends of the table, we might get through without a meeting--"
+
+"But, my dear, explain. Why shouldn't the bishop and Lady Carwitchet meet?
+Why is it worse for him than anyone else?"
+
+"Why? I thought everybody had heard of that dreadful wife of his who
+nearly broke his heart. If he married her for her money it served him
+right, but Lady Landor says she was very handsome and really in love with
+him at first. Then Lady Carwitchet got hold of her and led her into all
+sorts of mischief. She left her husband--he was only a rector with a
+country living in those days--and went to live in town, got into a horrid
+fast set, and made herself notorious. You _must_ have heard of her."
+
+"I heard of her sapphires, my dear. But I was in Brazil at the time."
+
+"I wish you had been at home. You might have found her out. She was
+furious because her husband refused to let her wear the great Valdez
+sapphire. It had been in the Montanaro family for some generations, and
+her father settled it first on her and then on her little girl--the bishop
+being trustee. He felt obliged to take away the little girl, and send her
+off to be brought up by some old aunts in the country, and he locked up
+the sapphire. Lady Carwitchet tells as a splendid joke how they got the
+copy made in Paris, and it did just as well for the people to stare at. No
+wonder the bishop hates the very name of the stone."
+
+"How long will she stay here?" I asked dismally.
+
+"Till Lord Carwitchet can come and escort her to Paris to visit some
+American friends. Goodness knows when that will be! Do go up to town,
+Uncle Paul!"
+
+I refused indignantly. The very least I could do was to stand by my poor
+young relatives in their troubles and help them through. I did so. I wore
+that inferior cat's eye for six weeks!
+
+It is a time I cannot think of even now without a shudder. The more I saw
+of that terrible old woman the more I detested her, and we saw a very
+great deal of her. Leta kept her word, and neither accepted nor gave
+invitations all that time. We were cut off from all society but that of
+old General Fairford, who would go anywhere and meet anyone to get a
+rubber after dinner; the doctor, a sporting widower; and the Duberlys, a
+giddy, rather rackety young, couple who had taken the Dower House for a
+year. Lady Carwitchet seemed perfectly content. She reveled in the soft
+living and good fare of the Manor House, the drives in Leta's big
+barouche, and Domenico's dinners, as one to whom short commons were not
+unknown. She had a hungry way of grabbing and grasping at everything she
+could--the shillings she won at whist, the best fruit at dessert, the
+postage stamps in the library inkstand--that was infinitely suggestive.
+Sometimes I could have pitied her, she was so greedy, so spiteful, so
+friendless. She always made me think of some wicked old pirate putting
+into a peaceful port to provision and repair his battered old hulk,
+obliged to live on friendly terms with the natives, but his piratical old
+nostrils asniff for plunder and his piratical old soul longing to be off
+marauding once more. When would that be? Not till the arrival in Paris of
+her distinguished American friends, of whom we heard a great deal.
+"Charming people, the Bokums of Chicago, the American branch of the
+English Beauchamps, you know!" They seemed to be taking an unconscionable
+time to get there. She would have insisted on being driven over to
+Northchurch to call at the palace, but that the bishop was understood to
+be holding confirmations at the other end of the diocese.
+
+I was alone in the house one afternoon sitting by my window, toying with
+the key of my safe, and wondering whether I dare treat myself to a peep at
+my treasures, when a suspicious movement in the park below caught my
+attention. A black figure certainly dodged from behind one tree to the
+next, and then into the shadow of the park paling instead of keeping to
+the footpath. It looked queer. I caught up my field glass and marked him
+at one point where he was bound to come into the open for a few steps. He
+crossed the strip of turf with giant strides and got into cover again, but
+not quick enough to prevent me recognizing him. It was--great
+heavens!--the bishop! In a soft hat pulled over his forehead, with a long
+cloak and a big stick, he looked like a poacher.
+
+Guided by some mysterious instinct I hurried to meet him. I opened the
+conservatory door, and in he rushed like a hunted rabbit. Without
+explanation I led him up the wide staircase to my room, where he dropped
+into a chair and wiped his face.
+
+"You are astonished, Mr. Acton," he panted. "I will explain directly.
+Thanks." He tossed off the glass of brandy I had poured out without
+waiting for the qualifying soda, and looked better.
+
+"I am in serious trouble. You can help me. I've had a shock to-day--a
+grievous shock." He stopped and tried to pull himself together. "I must
+trust you implicitly, Mr. Acton, I have no choice. Tell me what you think
+of this." He drew a case from his breast pocket and opened it. "I promised
+you should see the Valdez sapphire. Look there!"
+
+The Valdez sapphire! A great big shining lump of blue crystal--flawless
+and of perfect color--that was all. I took it up, breathed on it, drew out
+my magnifier, looked at it in one light and another. What was wrong with
+it? I could not say. Nine experts out of ten would undoubtedly have
+pronounced the stone genuine. I, by virtue of some mysterious instinct
+that has hitherto always guided me aright, was the unlucky tenth. I looked
+at the bishop. His eyes met mine. There was no need of spoken word
+between us.
+
+"Has Lady Carwitchet shown you her sapphire?" was his most unexpected
+question. "She has? Now, Mr. Acton, on your honor as a connoisseur and a
+gentleman, which of the two is the Valdez?"
+
+"Not this one." I could say naught else.
+
+"You were my last hope." He broke off, and dropped his face on his folded
+arms with a groan that shook the table on which he rested, while I stood
+dismayed at myself for having let so hasty a judgment escape me. He lifted
+a ghastly countenance to me. "She vowed she would see me ruined and
+disgraced. I made her my enemy by crossing some of her schemes once, and
+she never forgives. She will keep her word. I shall appear before the
+world as a fraudulent trustee. I can neither produce the valuable confided
+to my charge nor make the loss good. I have only an incredible story to
+tell," he dropped his head and groaned again. "Who will believe me?"
+
+"I will, for one."
+
+"Ah, you? Yes, you know her. She took my wife from me, Mr. Acton. Heaven
+only knows what the hold was that she had over poor Mira. She encouraged
+her to set me at defiance and eventually to leave me. She was answerable
+for all the scandalous folly and extravagance of poor Mira's life in
+Paris--spare me the telling of the story. She left her at last to die
+alone and uncared for. I reached my wife to find her dying of a fever from
+which Lady Carwitchet and her crew had fled. She was raving in delirium,
+and died without recognizing me. Some trouble she had been in which I must
+never know oppressed her. At the very last she roused from a long stupor
+and spoke to the nurse. 'Tell him to get the sapphire back--she stole it.
+She has robbed my child.' Those were her last words. The nurse understood
+no English, and treated them as wandering; but _I_ heard them, and knew
+she was sane when she spoke."
+
+"What did you do?"
+
+"What could I? I saw Lady Carwitchet, who laughed at me, and defied me to
+make her confess or disgorge. I took the pendant to more than one eminent
+jeweler on pretense of having the setting seen to, and all have examined
+and admired without giving a hint of there being anything wrong. I allowed
+a celebrated mineralogist to see it; he gave no sign--"
+
+"Perhaps they are right and we are wrong."
+
+"No, no. Listen. I heard of an old Dutchman celebrated for his imitations.
+I went to him, and he told me at once that he had been allowed by
+Montanaro to copy the Valdez--setting and all--for the Paris Exhibition. I
+showed him this, and he claimed it for his own work at once, and pointed
+out his private mark upon it. You must take your magnifier to find it; a
+Greek Beta. He also told me that he had sold it to Lady Carwitchet more
+than a year ago."
+
+"It is a terrible position."
+
+"It is. My co-trustee died lately. I have never dared to have another
+appointed. I am bound to hand over the sapphire to my daughter on her
+marriage, if her husband consents to take the name of Montanaro."
+
+The bishop's face was ghastly pale, and the moisture started on his brow.
+I racked my brain for some word of comfort.
+
+"Miss Panton may never marry."
+
+"But she will!" he shouted. "That is the blow that has been dealt me
+to-day. My chaplain--actually, my chaplain--tells me that he is going out
+as a temperance missionary to equatorial Africa, and has the assurance to
+add that he believes my daughter is not indisposed to accompany him!" His
+consummating wrath acted as a momentary stimulant. He sat upright, his
+eyes flashing and his brow thunderous. I felt for that chaplain. Then he
+collapsed miserably. "The sapphires will have to be produced, identified,
+revalued. How shall I come out of it? Think of the disgrace, the ripping
+up of old scandals! Even if I were to compound with Lady Carwitchet, the
+sum she hinted at was too monstrous. She wants more than my money. Help
+me, Mr. Acton! For the sake of your own family interests, help me!"
+
+"I beg your pardon--family interests? I don't understand."
+
+"If my daughter is childless, her next of kin is poor Marmaduke Panton,
+who is dying at Cannes, not married, or likely to marry; and failing him,
+your nephew, Sir Thomas Acton, succeeds."
+
+My nephew Tom! Leta, or Leta's baby, might come to be the possible
+inheritor of the great Valdez sapphire! The blood rushed to my head as I
+looked at the great shining swindle before me. "What diabolic jugglery was
+at work when the exchange was made?" I demanded fiercely.
+
+"It must have been on the last occasion of her wearing the sapphires in
+London. I ought never to have let her out of my sight."
+
+"You must put a stop to Miss Panton's marriage in the first place," I
+pronounced as autocratically as he could have done himself.
+
+"Not to be thought of," he admitted helplessly. "Mira has my force of
+character. She knows her rights, and she will have her jewels. I want you
+to take charge of the--thing for me. If it's in the house she'll make me
+produce it. She'll inquire at the banker's. If _you_ have it we can gain
+time, if but for a day or two." He broke off. Carriage wheels were
+crashing on the gravel outside. We looked at one another in consternation.
+Flight was imperative. I hurried him downstairs and out of the
+conservatory just as the door bell rang. I think we both lost our heads in
+the confusion. He shoved the case into my hands, and I pocketed it,
+without a thought of the awful responsibility I was incurring, and saw him
+disappear into the shelter of the friendly night.
+
+When I think of what my feelings were that evening--of my murderous hatred
+of that smirking, jesting Jezebel who sat opposite me at dinner, my
+wrathful indignation at the thought of the poor little expected heir
+defrauded ere his birth; of the crushing contempt I felt for myself and
+the bishop as a pair of witless idiots unable to see our way out of the
+dilemma; all this boiling and surging through my soul, I can only
+wonder--Domenico having given himself a holiday, and the kitchen maid
+doing her worst and wickedest--that gout or jaundice did not put an end to
+this story at once.
+
+"Uncle Paul!" Leta was looking her sweetest when she tripped into my room
+next morning. "I've news for you. She," pointing a delicate forefinger in
+the direction of the corridor, "is going! Her Bokums have reached Paris at
+last, and sent for her to join them at the Grand Hotel."
+
+I was thunderstruck. The longed-for deliverance had but come to remove
+hopelessly and forever out of my reach Lady Carwitchet and the great
+Valdez sapphire.
+
+"Why, aren't you overjoyed? I am. We are going to celebrate the event by a
+dinner party. Tom's hospitable soul is vexed by the lack of entertainment
+we had provided her. We must ask the Brownleys some day or other, and they
+will be delighted to meet anything in the way of a ladyship, or such smart
+folks as the Duberly-Parkers. Then we may as well have the Blomfields, and
+air that awful modern Sevres dessert service she gave us when we were
+married." I had no objection to make, and she went on, rubbing her soft
+cheek against my shoulder like the purring little cat she was: "Now I want
+you to do something to please me--and Mrs. Blomfield. She has set her
+heart on seeing your rubies, and though I know you hate her about as much
+as you do that Sevres china--"
+
+"What! Wear my rubies with that! I won't. I'll tell you what I will do,
+though. I've got some carbuncles as big as prize gooseberries, a whole
+set. Then you have only to put those Bohemian glass vases and candelabra
+on the table, and let your gardener do his worst with his great forced,
+scentless, vulgar blooms, and we shall all be in keeping." Leta pouted. An
+idea struck me. "Or I'll do as you wish, on one condition. You get Lady
+Carwitchet to wear her big sapphire, and don't tell her I wish it."
+
+I lived through the next few days as one in some evil dream. The
+sapphires, like twin specters, haunted me day and night. Was ever man so
+tantalized? To hold the shadow and see the substance dangled temptingly
+within reach. The bishop made no sign of ridding me of my unwelcome
+charge, and the thought of what might happen in a case of
+burglary--fire--earthquake--made me start and tremble at all sorts of
+inopportune moments.
+
+I kept faith with Leta, and reluctantly produced my beautiful rubies on
+the night of her dinner party. Emerging from my room I came full upon Lady
+Carwitchet in the corridor. She was dressed for dinner, and at her throat
+I caught the blue gleam of the great sapphire. Leta had kept faith with
+me. I don't know what I stammered in reply to her ladyship's remarks; my
+whole soul was absorbed in the contemplation of the intoxicating
+loveliness of the gem. _That_ a Palais Royal deception! Incredible! My
+fingers twitched, my breath came short and fierce with the lust of
+possession. She must have seen the covetous glare in my eyes. A look of
+gratified spiteful complacency overspread her features, as she swept on
+ahead and descended the stairs before me. I followed her to the
+drawing-room door. She stopped suddenly, and murmuring something
+unintelligible hurried back again.
+
+Everybody was assembled there that I expected to see, with an addition.
+Not a welcome one by the look on Tom's face. He stood on the hearthrug
+conversing with a great hulking, high-shouldered fellow, sallow-faced,
+with a heavy mustache and drooping eyelids, from the corners of which
+flashed out a sudden suspicious look as I approached, which lighted up
+into a greedy one as it rested on my rubies, and seemed unaccountably
+familiar to me, till Lady Carwitchet tripping past me exclaimed:
+
+"He has come at last! My naughty, naughty boy! Mr. Acton, this is my son,
+Lord Carwitchet!"
+
+I broke off short in the midst of my polite acknowledgments to stare
+blankly at her. The sapphire was gone! A great gilt cross, with a Scotch
+pebble like an acid drop, was her sole decoration.
+
+"I had to put my pendant away," she explained confidentially; "the clasp
+had got broken somehow." I didn't believe a word.
+
+Lord Carwitchet contributed little to the general entertainment at dinner,
+but fell into confidential talk with Mrs. Duberly-Parker. I caught a few
+unintelligible remarks across the table. They referred, I subsequently
+discovered, to the lady's little book on Northchurch races, and I
+recollected that the Spring Meeting was on, and to-morrow "Cup Day." After
+dinner there was great talk about getting up a party to go on General
+Fairford's drag. Lady Carwitchet was in ecstasies and tried to coax me
+into joining. Leta declined positively. Tom accepted sulkily.
+
+The look in Lord Carwitchet's eye returned to my mind as I locked up my
+rubies that night. It made him look so like his mother! I went round my
+fastenings with unusual care. Safe and closets and desk and doors, I tried
+them all. Coming at last to the bathroom, it opened at once. It was the
+housemaid's doing. She had evidently taken advantage of my having
+abandoned the room to give it "a thorough spring cleaning," and I
+anathematized her. The furniture was all piled together and veiled with
+sheets, the carpet and felt curtain were gone, there were new brooms
+about. As I peered around, a voice close at my ear made me jump--Lady
+Carwitchet's!
+
+"I tell you I have nothing, not a penny! I shall have to borrow my train
+fare before I can leave this. They'll be glad enough to lend it."
+
+Not only had the _portiere_ been removed, but the door behind it had been
+unlocked and left open for convenience of dusting behind the wardrobe. I
+might as well have been in the bedroom.
+
+"Don't tell me," I recognized Carwitchet's growl. "You've not been here
+all this time for nothing. You've been collecting for a Kilburn cot or
+getting subscriptions for the distressed Irish landlords. I know you. Now
+I'm not going to see myself ruined for the want of a paltry hundred or so.
+I tell you the colt is a dead certainty. If I could have got a thousand or
+two on him last week, we might have ended our dog days millionaires. Hand
+over what you can. You've money's worth, if not money. Where's that
+sapphire you stole?"
+
+"I didn't. I can show you the receipted bill. All _I_ possess is honestly
+come by. What could you do with it, even if I gave it you? You couldn't
+sell it as the Valdez, and you can't get it cut up as you might if it were
+real."
+
+"If it's only bogus, why are you always in such a flutter about it? I'll
+do something with it, never fear. Hand over."
+
+"I can't. I haven't got it. I had to raise something on it before I left
+town."
+
+"Will you swear it's not in that wardrobe? I dare say you will. I mean to
+see. Give me those keys."
+
+I heard a struggle and a jingle, then the wardrobe door must have been
+flung open, for a streak of light struck through a crack in the wood of
+the back. Creeping close and peeping through, I could see an awful sight.
+Lady Carwitchet in a flannel wrapper, minus hair, teeth, complexion,
+pointing a skinny forefinger that quivered with rage at her son, who was
+out of the range of my vision.
+
+"Stop that, and throw those keys down here directly, or I'll rouse the
+house. Sir Thomas is a magistrate, and will lock you up as soon as look at
+you." She clutched at the bell rope as she spoke. "I'll swear I'm in
+danger of my life from you and give you in charge. Yes, and when you're in
+prison I'll keep you there till you die. I've often thought I'd do it. How
+about the hotel robberies last summer at Cowes, eh? Mightn't the police be
+grateful for a hint or two? And how about--"
+
+The keys fell with a crash on the bed, accompanied by some bad language in
+an apologetic tone, and the door slammed to. I crept trembling to bed.
+
+This new and horrible complication of the situation filled me with
+dismay. Lord Carwitchet's wolfish glance at my rubies took a new meaning.
+They were safe enough, I believed--but the sapphire! If he disbelieved his
+mother, how long would she be able to keep it from his clutches? That she
+had some plot of her own of which the bishop would eventually be the
+victim I did not doubt, or why had she not made her bargain with him long
+ago? But supposing she took fright, lost her head, allowed her son to
+wrest the jewel from her, or gave consent to its being mutilated, divided!
+I lay in a cold perspiration till morning.
+
+My terrors haunted me all day. They were with me at breakfast time when
+Lady Carwitchet, tripping in smiling, made a last attempt to induce me to
+accompany her and keep her "bad, bad boy" from getting among "those horrid
+betting men."
+
+They haunted me through the long peaceful day with Leta and the
+_tete-a-tete_ dinner, but they swarmed around and beset me sorest when,
+sitting alone over my sitting-room fire, I listened for the return of the
+drag party. I read my newspaper and brewed myself some hot strong drink,
+but there comes a time of night when no fire can warm and no drink can
+cheer. The bishop's despairing face kept me company, and his troubles and
+the wrongs of the future heir took possession of me. Then the uncanny
+noises that make all old houses ghostly during the small hours began to
+make themselves heard. Muffled footsteps trod the corridor, stopping to
+listen at every door, door latches gently clicked, boards creaked
+unreasonably, sounds of stealthy movements came from the locked-up
+bathroom. The welcome crash of wheels at last, and the sound of the
+front-door bell. I could hear Lady Carwitchet making her shrill _adieux_
+to her friends and her steps in the corridor. She was softly humming a
+little song as she approached. I heard her unlock her bedroom door before
+she entered--an odd thing to do. Tom came sleepily stumbling to his room
+later. I put my head out. "Where is Lord Carwitchet?"
+
+"Haven't you seen him? He left us hours ago. Not come home, eh? Well,
+he's welcome to stay away. I don't want to see more of him." Tom's brow
+was dark and his voice surly. "I gave him to understand as much." Whatever
+had happened, Tom was evidently too disgusted to explain just then.
+
+I went back to my fire unaccountably relieved, and brewed myself another
+and a stronger brew. It warmed me this time, but excited me foolishly.
+There must be some way out of the difficulty. I felt now as if I could
+almost see it if I gave my mind to it. Why--suppose--there might be no
+difficulty after all! The bishop was a nervous old gentleman. He might
+have been mistaken all through, Bogaerts might have been mistaken, I
+might--no. I could not have been mistaken--or I thought not. I fidgeted
+and fumed and argued with myself till I found I should have no peace of
+mind without a look at the stone in my possession, and I actually went to
+the safe and took the case out.
+
+The sapphire certainly looked different by lamplight. I sat and stared,
+and all but overpersuaded my better judgment into giving it a verdict.
+Bogaerts's mark--I suddenly remembered it. I took my magnifier and held
+the pendant to the light. There, scratched upon the stone, was the Greek
+Beta! There came a tap on my door, and before I could answer, the handle
+turned softly and Lord Carwitchet stood before me. I whipped the case into
+my dressing-gown pocket and stared at him. He was not pleasant to look at,
+especially at that time of night. He had a disheveled, desperate air, his
+voice was hoarse, his red-rimmed eyes wild.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he began civilly enough. "I saw your light burning,
+and thought, as we go by the early train to-morrow, you might allow me to
+consult you now on a little business of my mother's." His eyes roved about
+the room. Was he trying to find the whereabouts of my safe? "You know a
+lot about precious stones, don't you?"
+
+"So my friends are kind enough to say. Won't you sit down? I have
+unluckily little chance of indulging the taste on my own account," was my
+cautious reply.
+
+"But you've written a book about them, and know them when you see them,
+don't you? Now my mother has given me something, and would like you to
+give a guess at its value. Perhaps you can put me in the way of disposing
+of it?"
+
+"I certainly can do so if it is worth anything. Is that it?" I was in a
+fever of excitement, for I guessed what was clutched in his palm. He held
+out to me the Valdez sapphire.
+
+How it shone and sparkled like a great blue star! I made myself a
+deprecating smile as I took it from him, but how dare I call it false to
+its face? As well accuse the sun in heaven of being a cheap imitation. I
+faltered and prevaricated feebly. Where was my moral courage, and where
+was the good, honest, thumping lie that should have aided me? "I have the
+best authority for recognizing this as a very good copy of a famous stone
+in the possession of the Bishop of Northchurch." His scowl grew so black
+that I saw he believed me, and I went on more cheerily: "This was
+manufactured by Johannes Bogaerts--I can give you his address, and you can
+make inquiries yourself--by special permission of the then owner, the late
+Leone Montanaro."
+
+"Hand it back!" he interrupted (his other remarks were outrageous, but
+satisfactory to hear); but I waved him off. I couldn't give it up. It
+fascinated me. I toyed with it, I caressed it. I made it display its
+different tones of color. I must see the two stones together. I must see
+it outshine its paltry rival. It was a whimsical frenzy that seized me--I
+can call it by no other name.
+
+"Would you like to see the original? Curiously enough, I have it here. The
+bishop has left it in my charge."
+
+The wolfish light flamed up in Carwitchet's eyes as I drew forth the case.
+He laid the Valdez down on a sheet of paper, and I placed the other, still
+in its case, beside it. In that moment they looked identical, except for
+the little loop of sham stones, replaced by a plain gold band in the
+bishop's jewel. Carwitchet leaned across the table eagerly, the table gave
+a lurch, the lamp tottered, crashed over, and we were left in
+semidarkness.
+
+"Don't stir!" Carwitchet shouted. "The paraffin is all over the place!" He
+seized my sofa blanket, and flung it over the table while I stood
+helpless. "There, that's safe now. Have you candles on the chimney-piece?
+I've got matches."
+
+He looked very white and excited as he lit up. "Might have been an awkward
+job with all that burning paraffin, running about," he said quite
+pleasantly. "I hope no real harm is done." I was lifting the rug with
+shaking hands. The two stones lay as I had placed them. No! I nearly
+dropped it back again. It was the stone in the case that had the loop with
+the three sham sapphires!
+
+Carwitchet picked the other up hastily. "So you say this is rubbish?" he
+asked, his eyes sparkling wickedly, and an attempt at mortification in his
+tone.
+
+"Utter rubbish!" I pronounced, with truth and decision, snapping up the
+case and pocketing it. "Lady Carwitchet must have known it."
+
+"Ah, well, it's disappointing, isn't it? Good-by, we shall not meet
+again."
+
+I shook hands with him most cordially. "Good-by, Lord Carwitchet. _So_
+glad to have met you and your mother. It has been a source of the
+_greatest_ pleasure, I assure you."
+
+I have never seen the Carwitchets since. The bishop drove over next day in
+rather better spirits. Miss Panton had refused the chaplain.
+
+"It doesn't matter, my lord," I said to him heartily. "We've all been
+under some strange misconception. The stone in your possession is the
+veritable one. I could swear to that anywhere. The sapphire Lady
+Carwitchet wears is only an excellent imitation, and--I have seen it with
+my own eyes--is the one bearing Bogaerts's mark, the Greek Beta."
+
+
+
+ THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY
+
+
+ CLASSIC MYSTERY AND DETECTIVE
+ STORIES OF ALL NATIONS
+
+
+ TEN VOLUMES
+
+
+ NORTH EUROPE MEDITERRANEAN GERMAN CLASSIC FRENCH
+
+ MODERN FRENCH FRENCH NOVELS OLD TIME ENGLISH
+
+ MODERN ENGLISH AMERICAN REAL LIFE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lock And Key Library, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 2038.txt or 2038.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/0/3/2038/
+
+Produced by Don Lainson. Text file originally posted in
+January, 2000 with an html conversion added by Walter
+Deboeuf in 2003. The present text and html files were
+produced by Suzanne Shell, M, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net;
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/2038.zip b/2038.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f21ed0f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2038.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3261296
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #2038 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2038)
diff --git a/old/sbmea10.txt b/old/sbmea10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..642f54c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/sbmea10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14981 @@
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Stories by Modern English Authors
+#3 in our series edited by Julian Hawthorne
+
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
+the copyright laws for your country before posting these files!!
+
+Please take a look at the important information in this header.
+We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
+electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
+further information is included below. We need your donations.
+
+
+Stories by Modern English Authors
+
+CLASSIC MYSTERY AND DETECTIVE STORIES
+
+EDITED BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE
+
+January, 2000 [Etext #2038]
+
+MODERN ENGLISH
+Table of Contents
+
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING (1865-)
+ My Own True Ghost Story
+ The Sending of Dana Da
+ In the House of Suddhoo
+ His Wedded Wife
+
+A. CONAN DOYLE (1859-)
+ A Case of Identity
+ A Scandal in Bohemia
+ The Red-Headed League
+
+EGERTON CASTLE (1858-)
+ The Baron's Quarry
+
+STANLEY J. WEYMAN (1855-)
+ The Fowl in the Pot
+
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON (1850-94)
+ The Pavilion on the Links
+
+WILKIE COLLINS (1824-89)
+ The Dream Woman
+
+ANONYMOUS
+ The Lost Duchess
+ The Minor Canon
+ The Pipe
+ The Puzzle
+ The Great Valdez Sapphire
+
+
+
+Modern English Mystery Stories
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Stories by Modern English Authors
+******This file should be named sbmea10.txt or sbmea10.zip******
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, sbmea11.txt.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, sbmea10a.txt.
+
+
+This etext was prepared by Donald Lainson, charlie@idirect.com.
+
+
+We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance
+of the official release dates, for time for better editing.
+
+Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
+up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
+in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
+a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
+look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
+new copy has at least one byte more or less.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+fifty hours is one conservative estimate for how long it we take
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour this year as we release thirty-two text
+files per month, or 384 more Etexts in 1997 for a total of 1000+
+If these reach just 10% of the computerized population, then the
+total should reach over 100 billion Etexts given away.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by the December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000=Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only 10% of the present number of computer users. 2001
+should have at least twice as many computer users as that, so it
+will require us reaching less than 5% of the users in 2001.
+
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+
+All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/CMU": and are
+tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. (CMU = Carnegie-
+Mellon University).
+
+For these and other matters, please mail to:
+
+Project Gutenberg
+P. O. Box 2782
+Champaign, IL 61825
+
+When all other email fails try our Executive Director:
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+We would prefer to send you this information by email
+(Internet, Bitnet, Compuserve, ATTMAIL or MCImail).
+
+******
+If you have an FTP program (or emulator), please
+FTP directly to the Project Gutenberg archives:
+[Mac users, do NOT point and click. . .type]
+
+ftp uiarchive.cso.uiuc.edu
+login: anonymous
+password: your@login
+cd etext/etext90 through /etext96
+or cd etext/articles [get suggest gut for more information]
+dir [to see files]
+get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
+GET INDEX?00.GUT
+for a list of books
+and
+GET NEW GUT for general information
+and
+MGET GUT* for newsletters.
+
+**Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
+(Three Pages)
+
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-
+tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
+Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at
+Carnegie-Mellon University (the "Project"). Among other
+things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this
+etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
+officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
+and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or
+indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause:
+[1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification,
+or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word pro-
+ cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the
+ net profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Association/Carnegie-Mellon
+ University" within the 60 days following each
+ date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare)
+ your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
+scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
+free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
+you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
+Association / Carnegie-Mellon University".
+
+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+This etext was prepared by Donald Lainson, charlie@idirect.com.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY
+
+CLASSIC MYSTERY AND DETECTIVE STORIES
+
+EDITED BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE
+
+
+MODERN ENGLISH
+
+
+
+Table of Contents
+
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING (1865-)
+
+ My Own True Ghost Story
+
+ The Sending of Dana Da
+
+ In the House of Suddhoo
+
+ His Wedded Wife
+
+
+A. CONAN DOYLE (1859-)
+
+ A Case of Identity
+
+ A Scandal in Bohemia
+
+ The Red-Headed League
+
+
+EGERTON CASTLE (1858-)
+
+ The Baron's Quarry
+
+
+STANLEY J. WEYMAN (1855-)
+
+ The Fowl in the Pot
+
+
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON (1850-94)
+
+ The Pavilion on the Links
+
+
+WILKIE COLLINS (1824-89)
+
+ The Dream Woman
+
+
+ANONYMOUS
+
+ The Lost Duchess
+
+ The Minor Canon
+
+ The Pipe
+
+ The Puzzle
+
+ The Great Valdez Sapphire
+
+
+
+Modern English Mystery Stories
+
+
+Rudyard Kipling
+
+My Own True Ghost Story
+
+
+As I came through the Desert thus it was--
+As I came through the Desert.
+ The City of Dreadful Night.
+
+
+Somewhere in the Other World, where there are books and pictures
+and plays and shop windows to look at, and thousands of men who
+spend their lives in building up all four, lives a gentleman who
+writes real stories about the real insides of people; and his name
+is Mr. Walter Besant. But he will insist upon treating his ghosts--
+he has published half a workshopful of them--with levity. He
+makes his ghost-seers talk familiarly, and, in some cases, flirt
+outrageously, with the phantoms. You may treat anything, from a
+Viceroy to a Vernacular Paper, with levity; but you must behave
+reverently toward a ghost, and particularly an Indian one.
+
+There are, in this land, ghosts who take the form of fat, cold,
+pobby corpses, and hide in trees near the roadside till a traveler
+passes. Then they drop upon his neck and remain. There are also
+terrible ghosts of women who have died in child-bed. These wander
+along the pathways at dusk, or hide in the crops near a village,
+and call seductively. But to answer their call is death in this
+world and the next. Their feet are turned backward that all sober
+men may recognize them. There are ghosts of little children who
+have been thrown into wells. These haunt well curbs and the
+fringes of jungles, and wail under the stars, or catch women by the
+wrist and beg to be taken up and carried. These and the corpse
+ghosts, however, are only vernacular articles and do not attack
+Sahibs. No native ghost has yet been authentically reported to
+have frightened an Englishman; but many English ghosts have scared
+the life out of both white and black.
+
+Nearly every other Station owns a ghost. There are said to be two
+at Simla, not counting the woman who blows the bellows at Syree
+dak-bungalow on the Old Road; Mussoorie has a house haunted of a
+very lively Thing; a White Lady is supposed to do night-watchman
+round a house in Lahore; Dalhousie says that one of her houses
+"repeats" on autumn evenings all the incidents of a horrible horse-
+and-precipice accident; Murree has a merry ghost, and, now that she
+has been swept by cholera, will have room for a sorrowful one;
+there are Officers' Quarters in Mian Mir whose doors open without
+reason, and whose furniture is guaranteed to creak, not with the
+heat of June but with the weight of Invisibles who come to lounge
+in the chairs; Peshawur possesses houses that none will willingly
+rent; and there is something--not fever--wrong with a big bungalow
+in Allahabad. The older Provinces simply bristle with haunted
+houses, and march phantom armies along their main thoroughfares.
+
+Some of the dak-bungalows on the Grand Trunk Road have handy little
+cemeteries in their compound--witnesses to the "changes and chances
+of this mortal life" in the days when men drove from Calcutta to
+the Northwest. These bungalows are objectionable places to put up
+in. They are generally very old, always dirty, while the khansamah
+is as ancient as the bungalow. He either chatters senilely, or
+falls into the long trances of age. In both moods he is useless.
+If you get angry with him, he refers to some Sahib dead and buried
+these thirty years, and says that when he was in that Sahib's
+service not a khansamah in the Province could touch him. Then he
+jabbers and mows and trembles and fidgets among the dishes, and you
+repent of your irritation.
+
+In these dak-bungalows, ghosts are most likely to be found, and
+when found, they should be made a note of. Not long ago it was my
+business to live in dak-bungalows. I never inhabited the same
+house for three nights running, and grew to be learned in the
+breed. I lived in Government-built ones with red brick walls and
+rail ceilings, an inventory of the furniture posted in every room,
+and an excited snake at the threshold to give welcome. I lived in
+"converted" ones--old houses officiating as dak-bungalows--where
+nothing was in its proper place and there wasn't even a fowl for
+dinner. I lived in second-hand palaces where the wind blew through
+open-work marble tracery just as uncomfortably as through a broken
+pane. I lived in dak-bungalows where the last entry in the
+visitors' book was fifteen months old, and where they slashed off
+the curry-kid's head with a sword. It was my good luck to meet all
+sorts of men, from sober traveling missionaries and deserters
+flying from British Regiments, to drunken loafers who threw whisky
+bottles at all who passed; and my still greater good fortune just
+to escape a maternity case. Seeing that a fair proportion of the
+tragedy of our lives out here acted itself in dak-bungalows, I
+wondered that I had met no ghosts. A ghost that would voluntarily
+hang about a dak-bungalow would be mad of course; but so many men
+have died mad in dak-bungalows that there must be a fair percentage
+of lunatic ghosts.
+
+In due time I found my ghost, or ghosts rather, for there were two
+of them. Up till that hour I had sympathized with Mr. Besant's
+method of handling them, as shown in "The Strange Case of Mr.
+Lucraft and Other Stories." I am now in the Opposition.
+
+We will call the bungalow Katmal dak-bungalow. But THAT was the
+smallest part of the horror. A man with a sensitive hide has no
+right to sleep in dak-bungalows. He should marry. Katmal dak-
+bungalow was old and rotten and unrepaired. The floor was of worn
+brick, the walls were filthy, and the windows were nearly black
+with grime. It stood on a bypath largely used by native Sub-Deputy
+Assistants of all kinds, from Finance to Forests; but real Sahibs
+were rare. The khansamah, who was nearly bent double with old age,
+said so.
+
+When I arrived, there was a fitful, undecided rain on the face of
+the land, accompanied by a restless wind, and every gust made a
+noise like the rattling of dry bones in the stiff toddy palms
+outside. The khansamah completely lost his head on my arrival. He
+had served a Sahib once. Did I know that Sahib? He gave me the
+name of a well-known man who has been buried for more than a
+quarter of a century, and showed me an ancient daguerreotype of
+that man in his prehistoric youth. I had seen a steel engraving of
+him at the head of a double volume of Memoirs a month before, and I
+felt ancient beyond telling.
+
+The day shut in and the khansamah went to get me food. He did not
+go through the pretense of calling it "khana"--man's victuals. He
+said "ratub," and that means, among other things, "grub"--dog's
+rations. There was no insult in his choice of the term. He had
+forgotten the other word, I suppose.
+
+While he was cutting up the dead bodies of animals, I settled
+myself down, after exploring the dak-bungalow. There were three
+rooms, beside my own, which was a corner kennel, each giving into
+the other through dingy white doors fastened with long iron bars.
+The bungalow was a very solid one, but the partition walls of the
+rooms were almost jerry-built in their flimsiness. Every step or
+bang of a trunk echoed from my room down the other three, and every
+footfall came back tremulously from the far walls. For this reason
+I shut the door. There were no lamps--only candles in long glass
+shades. An oil wick was set in the bathroom.
+
+For bleak, unadulterated misery that dak-bungalow was the worst of
+the many that I had ever set foot in. There was no fireplace, and
+the windows would not open; so a brazier of charcoal would have
+been useless. The rain and the wind splashed and gurgled and
+moaned round the house, and the toddy palms rattled and roared.
+Half a dozen jackals went through the compound singing, and a hyena
+stood afar off and mocked them. A hyena would convince a Sadducee
+of the Resurrection of the Dead--the worst sort of Dead. Then came
+the ratub--a curious meal, half native and half English in
+composition--with the old khansamah babbling behind my chair about
+dead and gone English people, and the wind-blown candles playing
+shadow-bo-peep with the bed and the mosquito-curtains. It was just
+the sort of dinner and evening to make a man think of every single
+one of his past sins, and of all the others that he intended to
+commit if he lived.
+
+Sleep, for several hundred reasons, was not easy. The lamp in the
+bath-room threw the most absurd shadows into the room, and the wind
+was beginning to talk nonsense.
+
+Just when the reasons were drowsy with blood-sucking I heard the
+regular--"Let--us--take--and--heave--him--over" grunt of doolie-
+bearers in the compound. First one doolie came in, then a second,
+and then a third. I heard the doolies dumped on the ground, and
+the shutter in front of my door shook. "That's some one trying to
+come in," I said. But no one spoke, and I persuaded myself that it
+was the gusty wind. The shutter of the room next to mine was
+attacked, flung back, and the inner door opened. "That's some Sub-
+Deputy Assistant," I said, "and he has brought his friends with
+him. Now they'll talk and spit and smoke for an hour."
+
+But there were no voices and no footsteps. No one was putting his
+luggage into the next room. The door shut, and I thanked
+Providence that I was to be left in peace. But I was curious to
+know where the doolies had gone. I got out of bed and looked into
+the darkness. There was never a sign of a doolie. Just as I was
+getting into bed again, I heard, in the next room, the sound that
+no man in his senses can possibly mistake--the whir of a billiard
+ball down the length of the slates when the striker is stringing
+for break. No other sound is like it. A minute afterwards there
+was another whir, and I got into bed. I was not frightened--indeed
+I was not. I was very curious to know what had become of the
+doolies. I jumped into bed for that reason.
+
+Next minute I heard the double click of a cannon and my hair sat
+up. It is a mistake to say that hair stands up. The skin of the
+head tightens and you can feel a faint, prickly, bristling all over
+the scalp. That is the hair sitting up.
+
+There was a whir and a click, and both sounds could only have been
+made by one thing--a billiard ball. I argued the matter out at
+great length with myself; and the more I argued the less probable
+it seemed that one bed, one table, and two chairs--all the
+furniture of the room next to mine--could so exactly duplicate the
+sounds of a game of billiards. After another cannon, a three-
+cushion one to judge by the whir, I argued no more. I had found my
+ghost and would have given worlds to have escaped from that dak-
+bungalow. I listened, and with each listen the game grew clearer.
+There was whir on whir and click on click. Sometimes there was a
+double click and a whir and another click. Beyond any sort of
+doubt, people were playing billiards in the next room. And the
+next room was not big enough to hold a billiard table!
+
+Between the pauses of the wind I heard the game go forward--stroke
+after stroke. I tried to believe that I could not hear voices; but
+that attempt was a failure.
+
+Do you know what fear is? Not ordinary fear of insult, injury or
+death, but abject, quivering dread of something that you cannot
+see--fear that dries the inside of the mouth and half of the
+throat--fear that makes you sweat on the palms of the hands, and
+gulp in order to keep the uvula at work? This is a fine Fear--a
+great cowardice, and must be felt to be appreciated. The very
+improbability of billiards in a dak-bungalow proved the reality of
+the thing. No man--drunk or sober--could imagine a game at
+billiards, or invent the spitting crack of a "screw-cannon."
+
+A severe course of dak-bungalows has this disadvantage--it breeds
+infinite credulity. If a man said to a confirmed dak-bungalow-
+haunter:--"There is a corpse in the next room, and there's a mad
+girl in the next but one, and the woman and man on that camel have
+just eloped from a place sixty miles away," the hearer would not
+disbelieve because he would know that nothing is too wild,
+grotesque, or horrible to happen in a dak-bungalow.
+
+This credulity, unfortunately, extends to ghosts. A rational
+person fresh from his own house would have turned on his side and
+slept. I did not. So surely as I was given up as a bad carcass by
+the scores of things in the bed because the bulk of my blood was in
+my heart, so surely did I hear every stroke of a long game at
+billiards played in the echoing room behind the iron-barred door.
+My dominant fear was that the players might want a marker. It was
+an absurd fear; because creatures who could play in the dark would
+be above such superfluities. I only know that that was my terror;
+and it was real.
+
+After a long, long while the game stopped, and the door banged. I
+slept because I was dead tired. Otherwise I should have preferred
+to have kept awake. Not for everything in Asia would I have
+dropped the door-bar and peered into the dark of the next room.
+
+When the morning came, I considered that I had done well and
+wisely, and inquired for the means of departure.
+
+"By the way, khansamah," I said, "what were those three doolies
+doing in my compound in the night?"
+
+"There were no doolies," said the khansamah.
+
+I went into the next room and the daylight streamed through the
+open door. I was immensely brave. I would, at that hour, have
+played Black Pool with the owner of the big Black Pool down below.
+
+"Has this place always been a dak-bungalow?" I asked.
+
+"No," said the khansamah. "Ten or twenty years ago, I have
+forgotten how long, it was a billiard room."
+
+"A how much?"
+
+"A billiard room for the Sahibs who built the Railway. I was
+khansamah then in the big house where all the Railway-Sahibs lived,
+and I used to come across with brandy-shrab. These three rooms
+were all one, and they held a big table on which the Sahibs played
+every evening. But the Sahibs are all dead now, and the Railway
+runs, you say, nearly to Kabul."
+
+"Do you remember anything about the Sahibs?"
+
+"It is long ago, but I remember that one Sahib, a fat man and
+always angry, was playing here one night, and he said to me:--
+'Mangal Khan, brandy-pani do,' and I filled the glass, and he bent
+over the table to strike, and his head fell lower and lower till it
+hit the table, and his spectacles came off, and when we--the Sahibs
+and I myself--ran to lift him he was dead. I helped to carry him
+out. Aha, he was a strong Sahib! But he is dead and I, old Mangal
+Khan, am still living, by your favor."
+
+That was more than enough! I had my ghost--a firsthand,
+authenticated article. I would write to the Society for Psychical
+Research--I would paralyze the Empire with the news! But I would,
+first of all, put eighty miles of assessed crop land between myself
+and that dak-bungalow before nightfall. The Society might send
+their regular agent to investigate later on.
+
+I went into my own room and prepared to pack after noting down the
+facts of the case. As I smoked I heard the game begin again,--with
+a miss in balk this time, for the whir was a short one.
+
+The door was open and I could see into the room. Click--c1ick!
+That was a cannon. I entered the room without fear, for there was
+sunlight within and a fresh breeze without. The unseen game was
+going on at a tremendous rate. And well it might, when a restless
+little rat was running to and fro inside the dingy ceiling-cloth,
+and a piece of loose window-sash was making fifty breaks off the
+window-bolt as it shook in the breeze!
+
+Impossible to mistake the sound of billiard balls! Impossible to
+mistake the whir of a ball over the slate! But I was to be
+excused. Even when I shut my enlightened eyes the sound was
+marvelously like that of a fast game.
+
+Entered angrily the faithful partner of my sorrows, Kadir Baksh.
+
+"This bungalow is very bad and low-caste! No wonder the Presence
+was disturbed and is speckled. Three sets of doolie-bearers came
+to the bungalow late last night when I was sleeping outside, and
+said that it was their custom to rest in the rooms set apart for
+the English people! What honor has the khansamah? They tried to
+enter, but I told them to go. No wonder, if these Oorias have been
+here, that the Presence is sorely spotted. It is shame, and the
+work of a dirty man!"
+
+Kadir Baksh did not say that he had taken from each gang two annas
+for rent in advance, and then, beyond my earshot, had beaten them
+with the big green umbrella whose use I could never before divine.
+But Kadir Baksh has no notions of morality.
+
+There was an interview with the khansamah, but as he promptly lost
+his head, wrath gave place to pity, and pity led to a long
+conversation, in the course of which he put the fat Engineer-
+Sahib's tragic death in three separate stations--two of them fifty
+miles away. The third shift was to Calcutta, and there the Sahib
+died while driving a dogcart.
+
+If I had encouraged him the khansamah would have wandered all
+through Bengal with his corpse.
+
+I did not go away as soon as I intended. I stayed for the night,
+while the wind and the rat and the sash and the window-bolt played
+a ding-dong "hundred and fifty up." Then the wind ran out and the
+billiards stopped, and I felt that I had ruined my one genuine,
+hall-marked ghost story.
+
+Had I only stopped at the proper time, I could have made ANYTHING
+out of it.
+
+That was the bitterest thought of all!
+
+
+
+The Sending of Dana Da
+
+
+When the Devil rides on your chest, remember the chamar.
+ --Native Proverb.
+
+
+Once upon a time some people in India made a new heaven and a new
+earth out of broken teacups, a missing brooch or two, and a hair
+brush. These were hidden under bushes, or stuffed into holes in
+the hillside, and an entire civil service of subordinate gods used
+to find or mend them again; and everyone said: "There are more
+things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our philosophy."
+Several other things happened also, but the religion never seemed
+to get much beyond its first manifestations; though it added an
+air-line postal dak, and orchestral effects in order to keep
+abreast of the times, and stall off competition.
+
+This religion was too elastic for ordinary use. It stretched
+itself and embraced pieces of everything that medicine men of all
+ages have manufactured. It approved and stole from Freemasonry;
+looted the Latter-day Rosicrucians of half their pet words; took
+any fragments of Egyptian philosophy that it found in the
+Encyclopaedia Britannica; annexed as many of the Vedas as had been
+translated into French or English, and talked of all the rest;
+built in the German versions of what is left of the Zend Avesta;
+encouraged white, gray, and black magic, including Spiritualism,
+palmistry, fortune-telling by cards, hot chestnuts, double-kerneled
+nuts and tallow droppings; would have adopted Voodoo and Oboe had
+it known anything about them, and showed itself, in every way, one
+of the most accommodating arrangements that had ever been invented
+since the birth of the sea.
+
+When it was in thorough working order, with all the machinery down
+to the subscriptions complete, Dana Da came from nowhere, with
+nothing in his hands, and wrote a chapter in its history which has
+hitherto been unpublished. He said that his first name was Dana,
+and his second was Da. Now, setting aside Dana of the New York
+Sun, Dana is a Bhil name, and Da fits no native of India unless you
+accept the Bengali De as the original spelling. Da is Lap or
+Finnish; and Dana Da was neither Finn, Chin, Bhil, Bengali, Lap,
+Nair, Gond, Romaney, Magh, Bokhariot, Kurd, Armenian, Levantine,
+Jew, Persian, Punjabi, Madrasi, Parsee, nor anything else known to
+ethnologists. He was simply Dana Da, and declined to give further
+information. For the sake of brevity, and as roughly indicating
+his origin, he was called "The Native." He might have been the
+original Old Man of the Mountains, who is said to be the only
+authorized head of the Teacup Creed. Some, people said that he
+was; but Dana Da used to smile and deny any connection with the
+cult; explaining that he was an "independent experimenter."
+
+As I have said, he came from nowhere, with his hands behind his
+back, and studied the creed for three weeks; sitting at the feet of
+those best competent to explain its mysteries. Then he laughed
+aloud and went away, but the laugh might have been either of
+devotion or derision.
+
+When he returned he was without money, but his pride was unabated.
+He declared that he knew more about the things in heaven and earth
+than those who taught him, and for this contumacy was abandoned
+altogether.
+
+His next appearance in public life was at a big cantonment in Upper
+India, and he was then telling fortunes with the help of three
+leaden dice, a very dirty old cloth, and a little tin box of opium
+pills. He told better fortunes when he was allowed half a bottle
+of whisky; but the things which he invented on the opium were quite
+worth the money. He was in reduced circumstances. Among other
+people's he told the fortune of an Englishman who had once been
+interested in the Simla creed, but who, later on, had married and
+forgotten all his old knowledge in the study of babies and
+Exchange. The Englishman allowed Dana Da to tell a fortune for
+charity's sake, and gave him five rupees, a dinner, and some old
+clothes. When he had eaten, Dana Da professed gratitude, and asked
+if there were anything he could do for his host--in the esoteric
+line.
+
+"Is there anyone that you love?" said Dana Da. The Englishman
+loved his wife, but had no desire to drag her name into the
+conversation. He therefore shook his head.
+
+"Is there anyone that you hate?" said Dana Da. The Englishman said
+that there were several men whom he hated deeply.
+
+"Very good," said Dana Da, upon whom the whisky and the opium were
+beginning to tell. "Only give me their names, and I will dispatch
+a Sending to them and kill them."
+
+Now a Sending is a horrible arrangement, first invented, they say,
+in Iceland. It is a thing sent by a wizard, and may take any form,
+but most generally wanders about the land in the shape of a little
+purple cloud till it finds the sendee, and him it kills by changing
+into the form of a horse, or a cat, or a man without a face. It is
+not strictly a native patent, though chamars can, if irritated,
+dispatch a Sending which sits on the breast of their enemy by night
+and nearly kills him. Very few natives care to irritate chamars
+for this reason.
+
+"Let me dispatch a Sending," said Dana Da; "I am nearly dead now
+with want, and drink, and opium; but I should like to kill a man
+before I die. I can send a Sending anywhere you choose, and in any
+form except in the shape of a man."
+
+The Englishman had no friends that he wished to kill, but partly to
+soothe Dana Da, whose eyes were rolling, and partly to see what
+would be done, he asked whether a modified Sending could not be
+arranged for--such a Sending as should make a man's life a burden
+to him, and yet do him no harm. If this were possible, he notified
+his willingness to give Dana Da ten rupees for the job.
+
+"I am not what I was once," said Dana Da, "and I must take the
+money because I am poor. To what Englishman shall I send it?"
+
+"Send a Sending to Lone Sahib," said the Englishman, naming a man
+who had been most bitter in rebuking him for his apostasy from the
+Teacup Creed. Dana Da laughed and nodded.
+
+"I could have chosen no better man myself," said he. "I will see
+that he finds the Sending about his path and about his bed."
+
+He lay down on the hearthrug, turned up the whites of his eyes,
+shivered all over, and began to snort. This was magic, or opium,
+or the Sending, or all three. When he opened his eyes he vowed
+that the Sending had started upon the warpath, and was at that
+moment flying up to the town where Lone Sahib lives.
+
+"Give me my ten rupees," said Dana Da, wearily, "and write a letter
+to Lone Sahib, telling him, and all who believe with him, that you
+and a friend are using a power greater than theirs. They will see
+that you are speaking the truth."
+
+He departed unsteadily, with the promise of some more rupees if
+anything came of the Sending.
+
+The Englishman sent a letter to Lone Sahib, couched in what he
+remembered of the terminology of the creed. He wrote: "I also, in
+the days of what you held to be my backsliding, have obtained
+enlightenment, and with enlightenment has come power." Then he
+grew so deeply mysterious that the recipient of the letter could
+make neither head nor tail of it, and was proportionately
+impressed; for he fancied that his friend had become a "fifth
+rounder." When a man is a "fifth rounder" he can do more than
+Slade and Houdin combined.
+
+Lone Sahib read the letter in five different fashions, and was
+beginning a sixth interpretation, when his bearer dashed in with
+the news that there was a cat on the bed. Now, if there was one
+thing that Lone Sahib hated more than another it was a cat. He
+rated the bearer for not turning it out of the house. The bearer
+said that he was afraid. All the doors of the bedroom had been
+shut throughout the morning, and no real cat could possibly have
+entered the room. He would prefer not to meddle with the creature.
+
+Lone Sahib entered the room gingerly, and there, on the pillow of
+his bed, sprawled and whimpered a wee white kitten, not a jumpsome,
+frisky little beast, but a sluglike crawler with its eyes barely
+opened and its paws lacking strength or direction--a kitten that
+ought to have been in a basket with its mamma. Lone Sahib caught
+it by the scruff of its neck, handed it over to the sweeper to be
+drowned, and fined the bearer four annas.
+
+That evening, as he was reading in his room, he fancied that he saw
+something moving about on the hearthrug, outside the circle of
+light from his reading lamp. When the thing began to myowl, he
+realized that it was a kitten--a wee white kitten, nearly blind and
+very miserable. He was seriously angry, and spoke bitterly to his
+bearer, who said that there was no kitten in the room when he
+brought in the lamp, and real kittens of tender age generally had
+mother cats in attendance.
+
+"If the Presence will go out into the veranda and listen," said the
+bearer, "he will hear no cats. How, therefore, can the kitten on
+the bed and the kitten on the hearthrug be real kittens?"
+
+Lone Sahib went out to listen, and the bearer followed him, but
+there was no sound of Rachel mewing for her children. He returned
+to his room, having hurled the kitten down the hillside, and wrote
+out the incidents of the day for the benefit of his coreligionists.
+Those people were so absolutely free from superstition that they
+ascribed anything a little out of the common to agencies. As it
+was their business to know all about the agencies, they were on
+terms of almost indecent familiarity with manifestations of every
+kind. Their letters dropped from the ceiling--un-stamped--and
+spirits used to squatter up and down their staircases all night.
+But they had never come into contact with kittens. Lone Sahib
+wrote out the facts, noting the hour and the minute, as every
+psychical observer is bound to do, and appending the Englishman's
+letter because it was the most mysterious document and might have
+had a bearing upon anything in this world or the next. An outsider
+would have translated all the tangle thus: "Look out! You laughed
+at me once, and now I am going to make you sit up."
+
+Lone Sahib's coreligionists found that meaning in it; but their
+translation was refined and full of four-syllable words. They held
+a sederunt, and were filled with tremulous joy, for, in spite of
+their familiarity with all the other worlds and cycles, they had a
+very human awe of things sent from ghostland. They met in Lone
+Sahib's room in shrouded and sepulchral gloom, and their conclave
+was broken up by a clinking among the photo frames on the
+mantelpiece. A wee white kitten, nearly blind, was looping and
+writhing itself between the clock and the candlesticks. That
+stopped all investigations or doubtings. Here was the
+manifestation in the flesh. It was, so far as could be seen,
+devoid of purpose, but it was a manifestation of undoubted
+authenticity.
+
+They drafted a round robin to the Englishman, the backslider of old
+days, adjuring him in the interests of the creed to explain whether
+there was any connection between the embodiment of some Egyptian
+god or other (I have forgotten the name) and his communication.
+They called the kitten Ra, or Toth, or Shem, or Noah, or something;
+and when Lone Sahib confessed that the first one had, at his most
+misguided instance, been drowned by the sweeper, they said
+consolingly that in his next life he would be a "bounder," and not
+even a "rounder" of the lowest grade. These words may not be quite
+correct, but they express the sense of the house accurately.
+
+When the Englishman received the round robin--it came by post--he
+was startled and bewildered. He sent into the bazaar for Dana Da,
+who read the letter and laughed. "That is my Sending," said he.
+"I told you I would work well. Now give me another ten rupees."
+
+"But what in the world is this gibberish about Egyptian gods?"
+asked the Englishman.
+
+"Cats," said Dana Da, with a hiccough, for he had discovered the
+Englishman's whisky bottle. "Cats and cats and cats! Never was
+such a Sending. A hundred of cats. Now give me ten more rupees
+and write as I dictate."
+
+Dana Da's letter was a curiosity. It bore the Englishman's
+signature, and hinted at cats--at a Sending of cats. The mere
+words on paper were creepy and uncanny to behold.
+
+"What have you done, though?" said the Englishman; "I am as much in
+the dark as ever. Do you mean to say that you can actually send
+this absurd Sending you talk about?"
+
+"Judge for yourself," said Dana Da. "What does that letter mean?
+In a little time they will all be at my feet and yours, and I, oh,
+glory! will be drugged or drunk all day long."
+
+Dana Da knew his people.
+
+When a man who hates cats wakes up in the morning and finds a
+little squirming kitten on his breast, or puts his hand into his
+ulster pocket and finds a little half-dead kitten where his gloves
+should be, or opens his trunk and finds a vile kitten among his
+dress shirts, or goes for a long ride with his mackintosh strapped
+on his saddle-bow and shakes a little sprawling kitten from its
+folds when he opens it, or goes out to dinner and finds a little
+blind kitten under his chair, or stays at home and finds a writhing
+kitten under the quilt, or wriggling among his boots, or hanging,
+head downward, in his tobacco jar, or being mangled by his terrier
+in the veranda--when such a man finds one kitten, neither more nor
+less, once a day in a place where no kitten rightly could or should
+be, he is naturally upset. When he dare not murder his daily trove
+because he believes it to be a manifestation, an emissary, an
+embodiment, and half a dozen other things all out of the regular
+course of nature, he is more than upset. He is actually
+distressed. Some of Lone Sahib's coreligionists thought that he
+was a highly favored individual; but many said that if he had
+treated the first kitten with proper respect--as suited a Toth-Ra
+Tum-Sennacherib Embodiment--all his trouble would have been
+averted. They compared him to the Ancient Mariner, but none the
+less they were proud of him and proud of the Englishman who had
+sent the manifestation. They did not call it a Sending because
+Icelandic magic was not in their programme.
+
+After sixteen kittens--that is to say, after one fortnight, for
+there were three kittens on the first day to impress the fact of
+the Sending, the whole camp was uplifted by a letter--it came
+flying through a window--from the Old Man of the Mountains--the
+head of all the creed--explaining the manifestation in the most
+beautiful language and soaking up all the credit of it for himself.
+The Englishman, said the letter, was not there at all. He was a
+backslider without power or asceticism, who couldn't even raise a
+table by force of volition, much less project an army of kittens
+through space. The entire arrangement, said the letter, was
+strictly orthodox, worked and sanctioned by the highest authorities
+within the pale of the creed. There was great joy at this, for
+some of the weaker brethren seeing that an outsider who had been
+working on independent lines could create kittens, whereas their
+own rulers had never gone beyond crockery--and broken at that--were
+showing a desire to break line on their own trail. In fact, there
+was the promise of a schism. A second round robin was drafted to
+the Englishman, beginning: "Oh, Scoffer," and ending with a
+selection of curses from the rites of Mizraim and Memphis and the
+Commination of Jugana; who was a "fifth rounder," upon whose name
+an upstart "third rounder" once traded. A papal excommunication is
+a billet-doux compared to the Commination of Jugana. The
+Englishman had been proved under the hand and seal of the Old Man
+of the Mountains to have appropriated virtue and pretended to have
+power which, in reality, belonged only to the supreme head.
+Naturally the round robin did not spare him.
+
+He handed the letter to Dana Da to translate into decent English.
+The effect on Dana Da was curious. At first he was furiously
+angry, and then he laughed for five minutes.
+
+"I had thought," he said, "that they would have come to me. In
+another week I would have shown that I sent the Sending, and they
+would have discrowned the Old Man of the Mountains who has sent
+this Sending of mine. Do you do nothing. The time has come for me
+to act. Write as I dictate, and I will put them to shame. But
+give me ten more rupees."
+
+At Dana Da's dictation the Englishman wrote nothing less than a
+formal challenge to the Old Man of the Mountains. It wound up:
+"And if this manifestation be from your hand, then let it go
+forward; but if it be from my hand, I will that the Sending shall
+cease in two days' time. On that day there shall be twelve kittens
+and thenceforward none at all. The people shall judge between us."
+This was signed by Dana Da, who added pentacles and pentagrams, and
+a crux ansata, and half a dozen swastikas, and a Triple Tau to his
+name, just to show that he was all he laid claim to be.
+
+The challenge was read out to the gentlemen and ladies, and they
+remembered then that Dana Da had laughed at them some years ago.
+It was officially announced that the Old Man of the Mountains would
+treat the matter with contempt; Dana Da being an independent
+investigator without a single "round" at the back of him. But this
+did not soothe his people. They wanted to see a fight. They were
+very human for all their spirituality. Lone Sahib, who was really
+being worn out with kittens, submitted meekly to his fate. He felt
+that he was being "kittened to prove the power of Dana Da," as the
+poet says.
+
+When the stated day dawned, the shower of kittens began. Some were
+white and some were tabby, and all were about the same loathsome
+age. Three were on his hearth-rug, three in his bathroom, and the
+other six turned up at intervals among the visitors who came to see
+the prophecy break down. Never was a more satisfactory Sending.
+On the next day there were no kittens, and the next day and all the
+other days were kittenless and quiet. The people murmured and
+looked to the Old Man of the Mountains for an explanation. A
+letter, written on a palm leaf, dropped from the ceiling, but
+everyone except Lone Sahib felt that letters were not what the
+occasion demanded. There should have been cats, there should have
+been cats--full-grown ones. The letter proved conclusively that
+there had been a hitch in the psychic current which, colliding with
+a dual identity, had interfered with the percipient activity all
+along the main line. The kittens were still going on, but owing to
+some failure in the developing fluid, they were not materialized.
+The air was thick with letters for a few days afterwards. Unseen
+hands played Gluck and Beethoven on finger-bowls and clock shades;
+but all men felt that psychic life was a mockery without
+materialized kittens. Even Lone Sahib shouted with the majority on
+this head. Dana Da's letters were very insulting, and if he had
+then offered to lead a new departure, there is no knowing what
+might not have happened.
+
+But Dana Da was dying of whisky and opium in the Englishman's go-
+down, and had small heart for new creeds.
+
+"They have been put to shame," said he. "Never was such a Sending.
+It has killed me."
+
+"Nonsense," said the Englishman, "you are going to die, Dana Da,
+and that sort of stuff must be left behind. I'll admit that you
+have made some queer things come about. Tell me honestly, now, how
+was it done?"
+
+"Give me ten more rupees," said Dana Da, faintly, "and if I die
+before I spend them, bury them with me." The silver was counted
+out while Dana Da was fighting with death. His hand closed upon
+the money and he smiled a grim smile.
+
+"Bend low," he whispered. The Englishman bent.
+
+"Bunnia--mission school--expelled--box-wallah (peddler)--Ceylon
+pearl merchant--all mine English education--outcasted, and made up
+name Dana Da--England with American thought-reading man and--and--
+you gave me ten rupees several times--I gave the Sahib's bearer
+two-eight a month for cats--little, little cats. I wrote, and he
+put them about--very clever man. Very few kittens now in the
+bazaar. Ask Lone Sahib's sweeper's wife."
+
+So saying, Dana Da gasped and passed away into a land where, if all
+be true, there are no materializations and the making of new creeds
+is discouraged.
+
+But consider the gorgeous simplicity of it all!
+
+
+
+IN THE HOUSE OF SUDDHOO
+
+
+A stone's throw out on either hand
+From that well-ordered road we tread,
+ And all the world is wild and strange;
+Churel and ghoul and Djinn and sprite
+Shall bear us company to-night,
+For we have reached the Oldest Land
+ Wherein the Powers of Darkness range.
+
+ From the Dusk to the Dawn.
+
+
+The house of Suddhoo, near the Taksali Gate, is two-storied, with
+four carved windows of old brown wood, and a flat roof. You may
+recognize it by five red hand-prints arranged like the Five of
+Diamonds on the whitewash between the upper windows. Bhagwan Dass,
+the bunnia, and a man who says he gets his living by seal-cutting,
+live in the lower story with a troop of wives, servants, friends,
+and retainers. The two upper rooms used to be occupied by Janoo
+and Azizun and a little black-and-tan terrier that was stolen from
+an Englishman's house and given to Janoo by a soldier. To-day,
+only Janoo lives in the upper rooms. Suddhoo sleeps on the roof
+generally, except when he sleeps in the street. He used to go to
+Peshawar in the cold weather to visit his son, who sells
+curiosities near the Edwardes' Gate, and then he slept under a real
+mud roof. Suddhoo is a great friend of mine, because his cousin had
+a son who secured, thanks to my recommendation, the post of head-
+messenger to a big firm in the Station. Suddhoo says that God will
+make me a Lieutenant-Governor one of these days. I daresay his
+prophecy will come true. He is very, very old, with white hair and
+no teeth worth showing, and he has outlived his wits--outlived
+nearly everything except his fondness for his son at Peshawar.
+Janoo and Azizun are Kashmiris, Ladies of the City, and theirs was
+an ancient and more or less honorable profession; but Azizun has
+since married a medical student from the North-West and has settled
+down to a most respectable life somewhere near Bareilly. Bhagwan
+Dass is an extortionate and an adulterator. He is very rich. The
+man who is supposed to get his living by seal-cutting pretends to
+be very poor. This lets you know as much as is necessary of the
+four principal tenants in the house of Suddhoo. Then there is Me,
+of course; but I am only the chorus that comes in at the end to
+explain things. So I do not count.
+
+Suddhoo was not clever. The man who pretended to cut seals was the
+cleverest of them all--Bhagwan Dass only knew how to lie--except
+Janoo. She was also beautiful, but that was her own affair.
+
+Suddhoo's son at Peshawar was attacked by pleurisy, and old Suddhoo
+was troubled. The seal-cutter man heard of Suddhoo's anxiety and
+made capital out of it. He was abreast of the times. He got a
+friend in Peshawar to telegraph daily accounts of the son's health.
+And here the story begins.
+
+Suddhoo's cousin's son told me, one evening, that Suddhoo wanted to
+see me; that he was too old and feeble to come personally, and that
+I should be conferring an everlasting honor on the House of Suddhoo
+if I went to him. I went; but I think, seeing how well-off Suddhoo
+was then, that he might have sent something better than an ekka,
+which jolted fearfully, to haul out a future Lieutenant-Governor to
+the City on a muggy April evening. The ekka did not run quickly.
+It was full dark when we pulled up opposite the door of Ranjit
+Singh's Tomb near the main gate of the Fort. Here was Suddhoo and
+he said that, by reason of my condescension, it was absolutely
+certain that I should become a Lieutenant-Governor while my hair
+was yet black. Then we talked about the weather and the state of
+my health, and the wheat crops, for fifteen minutes, in the Huzuri
+Bagh, under the stars.
+
+Suddhoo came to the point at last. He said that Janoo had told him
+that there was an order of the Sirkar against magic, because it was
+feared that magic might one day kill the Empress of India. I
+didn't know anything about the state of the law; but I fancied that
+something interesting was going to happen. I said that so far from
+magic being discouraged by the Government it was highly commended.
+The greatest officials of the State practiced it themselves. (If
+the Financial Statement isn't magic, I don't know what is.) Then,
+to encourage him further, I said that, if there was any jadoo
+afoot, I had not the least objection to giving it my countenance
+and sanction, and to seeing that it was clean jadoo--white magic,
+as distinguished from the unclean jadoo which kills folk. It took
+a long time before Suddhoo admitted that this was just what he had
+asked me to come for. Then he told me, in jerks and quavers, that
+the man who said he cut seals was a sorcerer of the cleanest kind;
+that every day he gave Suddhoo news of the sick son in Peshawar
+more quickly than the lightning could fly, and that this news was
+always corroborated by the letters. Further, that he had told
+Suddhoo how a great danger was threatening his son, which could be
+removed by clean jadoo; and, of course, heavy payment. I began to
+see how the land lay, and told Suddhoo that I also understood a
+little jadoo in the Western line, and would go to his house to see
+that everything was done decently and in order. We set off
+together; and on the way Suddhoo told me he had paid the seal-
+cutter between one hundred and two hundred rupees already; and the
+jadoo of that night would cost two hundred more. Which was cheap,
+he said, considering the greatness of his son's danger; but I do
+not think he meant it.
+
+The lights were all cloaked in the front of the house when we
+arrived. I could hear awful noises from behind the seal-cutter's
+shop-front, as if some one were groaning his soul out. Suddhoo
+shook all over, and while we groped our way upstairs told me that
+the jadoo had begun. Janoo and Azizun met us at the stair-head,
+and told us that the jadoo-work was coming off in their rooms,
+because there was more space there. Janoo is a lady of a
+freethinking turn of mind. She whispered that the jadoo was an
+invention to get money out of Suddhoo, and that the seal-cutter
+would go to a hot place when he died. Suddhoo was nearly crying
+with fear and old age. He kept walking up and down the room in the
+half light, repeating his son's name over and over again, and
+asking Azizun if the seal-cutter ought not to make a reduction in
+the case of his own landlord. Janoo pulled me over to the shadow in
+the recess of the carved bow- windows. The boards were up, and the
+rooms were only lit by one tiny lamp. There was no chance of my
+being seen if I stayed still.
+
+Presently, the groans below ceased, and we heard steps on the
+staircase. That was the seal-cutter. He stopped outside the door
+as the terrier barked and Azizun fumbled at the chain, and he told
+Suddhoo to blow out the lamp. This left the place in jet darkness,
+except for the red glow from the two huqas that belonged to Janoo
+and Azizun. The seal-cutter came in, and I heard Suddhoo throw
+himself down on the floor and groan. Azizun caught her breath, and
+Janoo backed to one of the beds with a shudder. There was a clink
+of something metallic, and then shot up a pale blue-green flame
+near the ground. The light was just enough to show Azizun, pressed
+against one corner of the room with the terrier between her knees;
+Janoo, with her hands clasped, leaning forward as she sat on the
+bed; Suddhoo, face down, quivering, and the seal-cutter.
+
+I hope I may never see another man like that seal-cutter. He was
+stripped to the waist, with a wreath of white jasmine as thick as
+my wrist round his forehead, a salmon-colored loin-cloth round his
+middle, and a steel bangle on each ankle. This was not awe-
+inspiring. It was the face of the man that turned me cold. It was
+blue-gray in the first place. In the second, the eyes were rolled
+back till you could only see the whites of them; and, in the third,
+the face was the face of a demon--a ghoul--anything you please
+except of the sleek, oily old ruffian who sat in the day-time over
+his turning-lathe downstairs. He was lying on his stomach, with
+his arms turned and crossed behind him, as if he had been thrown
+down pinioned. His head and neck were the only parts of him off
+the floor. They were nearly at right angles to the body, like the
+head of a cobra at spring. It was ghastly. In the centre of the
+room, on the bare earth floor, stood a big, deep, brass basin, with
+a pale blue-green light floating in the centre like a night-light.
+Round that basin the man on the floor wriggled himself three times.
+How he did it I do not know. I could see the muscles ripple along
+his spine and fall smooth again; but I could not see any other
+motion. The head seemed the only thing alive about him, except that
+slow curl and uncurl of the laboring back-muscles. Janoo from the
+bed was breathing seventy to the minute; Azizun held her hands
+before her eyes; and old Suddhoo, fingering at the dirt that had
+got into his white beard, was crying to himself. The horror of it
+was that the creeping, crawly thing made no sound--only crawled!
+And, remember, this lasted for ten minutes, while the terrier
+whined, and Azizun shuddered, and Janoo gasped, and Suddhoo cried.
+
+I felt the hair lift at the back of my head, and my heart thump
+like a thermantidote paddle. Luckily, the seal-cutter betrayed
+himself by his most impressive trick and made me calm again. After
+he had finished that unspeakable triple crawl, he stretched his
+head away from the floor as high as he could, and sent out a jet of
+fire from his nostrils. Now, I knew how fire-spouting is done--I
+can do it myself--so I felt at ease. The business was a fraud. If
+he had only kept to that crawl without trying to raise the effect,
+goodness knows what I might not have thought. Both the girls
+shrieked at the jet of fire and the head dropped, chin down, on the
+floor with a thud; the whole body lying then like a corpse with its
+arms trussed. There was a pause of five full minutes after this,
+and the blue- green flame died down. Janoo stooped to settle one
+of her anklets, while Azizun turned her face to the wall and took
+the terrier in her arms. Suddhoo put out an arm mechanically to
+Janoo's huqa, and she slid it across the floor with her foot.
+Directly above the body and on the wall, were a couple of flaming
+portraits, in stamped paper frames, of the Queen and the Prince of
+Wales. They looked down on the performance, and, to my thinking,
+seemed to heighten the grotesqueness of it all.
+
+Just when the silence was getting unendurable, the body turned over
+and rolled away from the basin to the side of the room, where it
+lay stomach up. There was a faint "plop" from the basin--exactly
+like the noise a fish makes when it takes a fly--and the green
+light in the centre revived.
+
+I looked at the basin, and saw, bobbing in the water, the dried,
+shrivelled, black head of a native baby--open eyes, open mouth and
+shaved scalp. It was worse, being so very sudden, than the
+crawling exhibition. We had no time to say anything before it
+began to speak.
+
+Read Poe's account of the voice that came from the mesmerized dying
+man, and you will realize less than one-half of the horror of that
+head's voice.
+
+There was an interval of a second or two between each word, and a
+sort of "ring, ring, ring," in the note of the voice, like the
+timbre of a bell. It pealed slowly, as if talking to itself, for
+several minutes before I got rid of my cold sweat. Then the
+blessed solution struck me. I looked at the body lying near the
+doorway, and saw, just where the hollow of the throat joins on the
+shoulders, a muscle that had nothing to do with any man's regular
+breathing, twitching away steadily. The whole thing was a careful
+reproduction of the Egyptian teraphin that one read about sometimes
+and the voice was as clever and as appalling a piece of
+ventriloquism as one could wish to hear. All this time the head
+was "lip-lip-lapping" against the side of the basin, and speaking.
+It told Suddhoo, on his face again whining, of his son's illness
+and of the state of the illness up to the evening of that very
+night. I always shall respect the seal-cutter for keeping so
+faithfully to the time of the Peshawar telegrams. It went on to
+say that skilled doctors were night and day watching over the man's
+life; and that he would eventually recover if the fee to the potent
+sorcerer, whose servant was the head in the basin, were doubled.
+
+Here the mistake from the artistic point of view came in. To ask
+for twice your stipulated fee in a voice that Lazarus might have
+used when he rose from the dead, is absurd. Janoo, who is really a
+woman of masculine intellect, saw this as quickly as I did. I
+heard her say "Asli nahin! Fareib!" scornfully under her breath;
+and just as she said so, the light in the basin died out, the head
+stopped talking, and we heard the room door creak on its hinges.
+Then Janoo struck a match, lit the lamp, and we saw that head,
+basin, and seal- cutter were gone. Suddhoo was wringing his hands
+and explaining to any one who cared to listen, that, if his chances
+of eternal salvation depended on it, he could not raise another two
+hundred rupees. Azizun was nearly in hysterics in the corner;
+while Janoo sat down composedly on one of the beds to discuss the
+probabilities of the whole thing being a bunao, or "make-up."
+
+I explained as much as I knew of the seal-cutter's way of jadoo;
+but her argument was much more simple:--"The magic that is always
+demanding gifts is no true magic," said she. "My mother told me
+that the only potent love-spells are those which are told you for
+love. This seal-cutter man is a liar and a devil. I dare not
+tell, do anything, or get anything done, because I am in debt to
+Bhagwan Dass the bunnia for two gold rings and a heavy anklet. I
+must get my food from his shop. The seal-cutter is the friend of
+Bhagwan Dass, and he would poison my food. A fool's jadoo has been
+going on for ten days, and has cost Suddhoo many rupees each night.
+The seal-cutter used black hens and lemons and mantras before. He
+never showed us anything like this till to-night. Azizun is a
+fool, and will be a pur dahnashin soon. Suddhoo has lost his
+strength and his wits. See now! I had hoped to get from Suddhoo
+many rupees while he lived, and many more after his death; and
+behold, he is spending everything on that offspring of a devil and
+a she-ass, the seal- cutter!"
+
+Here I said:--"But what induced Suddhoo to drag me into the
+business? Of course I can speak to the seal-cutter, and he shall
+refund. The whole thing is child's talk--shame--and senseless."
+
+"Suddhoo IS an old child," said Janoo. "He has lived on the roofs
+these seventy years and is as senseless as a milch-goat. He
+brought you here to assure himself that he was not breaking any law
+of the Sirkar, whose salt he ate many years ago. He worships the
+dust off the feet of the seal-cutter, and that cow-devourer has
+forbidden him to go and see his son. What does Suddhoo know of
+your laws or the lightning-post? I have to watch his money going
+day by day to that lying beast below."
+
+Janoo stamped her foot on the floor and nearly cried with vexation;
+while Suddhoo was whimpering under a blanket in the corner, and
+Azizun was trying to guide the pipe-stem to his foolish old mouth.
+
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+Now the case stands thus. Unthinkingly, I have laid myself open to
+the charge of aiding and abetting the seal-cutter in obtaining
+money under false pretences, which is forbidden by Section 420 of
+the Indian Penal Code. I am helpless in the matter for these
+reasons, I cannot inform the Police. What witnesses would support
+my statements? Janoo refuses flatly, Azizun is a veiled woman
+somewhere near Bareilly--lost in this big India of ours. I cannot
+again take the law into my own hands, and speak to the seal-cutter;
+for certain am I that, not only would Suddhoo disbelieve me, but
+this step would end in the poisoning of Janoo, who is bound hand
+and foot by her debt to the bunnia. Suddhoo is an old dotard; and
+whenever we meet mumbles my idiotic joke that the Sirkar rather
+patronizes the Black Art than otherwise. His son is well now; but
+Suddhoo is completely under the influence of the seal-cutter, by
+whose advice he regulates the affairs of his life. Janoo watches
+daily the money that she hoped to wheedle out of Suddhoo taken by
+the seal-cutter, and becomes daily more furious and sullen.
+
+She will never tell, because she dare not; but, unless something
+happens to prevent her, I am afraid that the seal-cutter will die
+of cholera--the white arsenic kind--about the middle of May. And
+thus I shall have to be privy to a murder in the House of Suddhoo.
+
+
+HIS WEDDED WIFE.
+
+
+Cry "Murder!" in the market-place, and each
+Will turn upon his neighbor anxious eyes
+That ask:--"Art thou the man?" We hunted Cain,
+Some centuries ago, across the world,
+That bred the fear our own misdeeds maintain
+To-day.
+
+ Vibart's Moralities.
+
+
+Shakespeare says something about worms, or it may be giants or
+beetles, turning if you tread on them too severely. The safest
+plan is never to tread on a worm--not even on the last new
+subaltern from Home, with his buttons hardly out of their tissue
+paper, and the red of sappy English beef in his cheeks. This is
+the story of the worm that turned. For the sake of brevity, we
+will call Henry Augustus Ramsay Faizanne, "The Worm," although he
+really was an exceedingly pretty boy, without a hair on his face,
+and with a waist like a girl's when he came out to the Second
+"Shikarris" and was made unhappy in several ways. The "Shikarris"
+are a high-caste regiment, and you must be able to do things well--
+play a banjo or ride more than a little, or sing, or act--to get on
+with them.
+
+The Worm did nothing except fall off his pony, and knock chips out
+of gate-posts with his trap. Even that became monotonous after a
+time. He objected to whist, cut the cloth at billiards, sang out
+of tune, kept very much to himself, and wrote to his Mamma and
+sisters at Home. Four of these five things were vices which the
+"Shikarris" objected to and set themselves to eradicate. Every one
+knows how subalterns are, by brother subalterns, softened and not
+permitted to be ferocious. It is good and wholesome, and does no
+one any harm, unless tempers are lost; and then there is trouble.
+There was a man once--but that is another story.
+
+The "Shikarris" shikarred The Worm very much, and he bore
+everything without winking. He was so good and so anxious to
+learn, and flushed so pink, that his education was cut short, and
+he was left to his own devices by every one except the Senior
+Subaltern, who continued to make life a burden to The Worm. The
+Senior Subaltern meant no harm; but his chaff was coarse, and he
+didn't quite understand where to stop. He had been waiting too
+long for his company; and that always sours a man. Also he was in
+love, which made him worse.
+
+One day, after he had borrowed The Worm's trap for a lady who never
+existed, had used it himself all the afternoon, had sent a note to
+The Worm purporting to come from the lady, and was telling the Mess
+all about it, The Worm rose in his place and said, in his quiet,
+ladylike voice: "That was a very pretty sell; but I'll lay you a
+month's pay to a month's pay when you get your step, that I work a
+sell on you that you'll remember for the rest of your days, and the
+Regiment after you when you're dead or broke." The Worm wasn't
+angry in the least, and the rest of the Mess shouted. Then the
+Senior Subaltern looked at The Worm from the boots upwards, and
+down again, and said, "Done, Baby." The Worm took the rest of the
+Mess to witness that the bet had been taken, and retired into a
+book with a sweet smile.
+
+Two months passed, and the Senior Subaltern still educated The
+Worm, who began to move about a little more as the hot weather came
+on. I have said that the Senior Subaltern was in love. The
+curious thing is that a girl was in love with the Senior Subaltern.
+Though the Colonel said awful things, and the Majors snorted, and
+married Captains looked unutterable wisdom, and the juniors
+scoffed, those two were engaged.
+
+The Senior Subaltern was so pleased with getting his Company and
+his acceptance at the same time that he forgot to bother The Worm.
+The girl was a pretty girl, and had money of her own. She does not
+come into this story at all.
+
+One night, at the beginning of the hot weather, all the Mess,
+except The Worm, who had gone to his own room to write Home
+letters, were sitting on the platform outside the Mess House. The
+Band had finished playing, but no one wanted to go in. And the
+Captains' wives were there also. The folly of a man in love is
+unlimited. The Senior Subaltern had been holding forth on the
+merits of the girl he was engaged to, and the ladies were purring
+approval, while the men yawned, when there was a rustle of skirts
+in the dark, and a tired, faint voice lifted itself:
+
+"Where's my husband?"
+
+I do not wish in the least to reflect on the morality of the
+"Shikarris;" but it is on record that four men jumped up as if they
+had been shot. Three of them were married men. Perhaps they were
+afraid that their wives had come from Home unbeknownst. The fourth
+said that he had acted on the impulse of the moment. He explained
+this afterwards.
+
+Then the voice cried:--"Oh, Lionel!" Lionel was the Senior
+Subaltern's name. A woman came into the little circle of light by
+the candles on the peg-tables, stretching out her hands to the dark
+where the Senior Subaltern was, and sobbing. We rose to our feet,
+feeling that things were going to happen and ready to believe the
+worst. In this bad, small world of ours, one knows so little of
+the life of the next man--which, after all, is entirely his own
+concern-- that one is not surprised when a crash comes. Anything
+might turn up any day for any one. Perhaps the Senior Subaltern
+had been trapped in his youth. Men are crippled that way
+occasionally. We didn't know; we wanted to hear; and the Captains'
+wives were as anxious as we. If he HAD been trapped, he was to be
+excused; for the woman from nowhere, in the dusty shoes, and gray
+travelling dress, was very lovely, with black hair and great eyes
+full of tears. She was tall, with a fine figure, and her voice had
+a running sob in it pitiful to hear. As soon as the Senior
+Subaltern stood up, she threw her arms round his neck, and called
+him "my darling," and said she could not bear waiting alone in
+England, and his letters were so short and cold, and she was his to
+the end of the world, and would he forgive her. This did not sound
+quite like a lady's way of speaking. It was too demonstrative.
+
+Things seemed black indeed, and the Captains' wives peered under
+their eyebrows at the Senior Subaltern, and the Colonel's face set
+like the Day of Judgment framed in gray bristles, and no one spoke
+for a while.
+
+Next the Colonel said, very shortly:--"Well, Sir?" and the woman
+sobbed afresh. The Senior Subaltern was half choked with the arms
+round his neck, but he gasped out:--"It's a d----d lie! I never
+had a wife in my life!" "Don't swear," said the Colonel. "Come
+into the Mess. We must sift this clear somehow," and he sighed to
+himself, for he believed in his "Shikarris," did the Colonel.
+
+We trooped into the ante-room, under the full lights, and there we
+saw how beautiful the woman was. She stood up in the middle of us
+all, sometimes choking with crying, then hard and proud, and then
+holding out her arms to the Senior Subaltern. It was like the
+fourth act of a tragedy. She told us how the Senior Subaltern had
+married her when he was Home on leave eighteen months before; and
+she seemed to know all that we knew, and more too, of his people
+and his past life. He was white and ashy gray, trying now and
+again to break into the torrent of her words; and we, noting how
+lovely she was and what a criminal he looked, esteemed him a beast
+of the worst kind. We felt sorry for him, though.
+
+I shall never forget the indictment of the Senior Subaltern by his
+wife. Nor will he. It was so sudden, rushing out of the dark,
+unannounced, into our dull lives. The Captains' wives stood back;
+but their eyes were alight, and you could see that they had already
+convicted and sentenced the Senior Subaltern. The Colonel seemed
+five years older. One Major was shading his eyes with his hand and
+watching the woman from underneath it. Another was chewing his
+moustache and smiling quietly as if he were witnessing a play.
+Full in the open space in the centre, by the whist-tables, the
+Senior Subaltern's terrier was hunting for fleas. I remember all
+this as clearly as though a photograph were in my hand. I remember
+the look of horror on the Senior Subaltern's face. It was rather
+like seeing a man hanged; but much more interesting. Finally, the
+woman wound up by saying that the Senior Subaltern carried a double
+F. M. in tattoo on his left shoulder. We all knew that, and to our
+innocent minds it seemed to clinch the matter. But one of the
+Bachelor Majors said very politely:--"I presume that your marriage
+certificate would be more to the purpose?"
+
+That roused the woman. She stood up and sneered at the Senior
+Subaltern for a cur, and abused the Major and the Colonel and all
+the rest. Then she wept, and then she pulled a paper from her
+breast, saying imperially:--"Take that! And let my husband--my
+lawfully wedded husband--read it aloud--if he dare!"
+
+There was a hush, and the men looked into each other's eyes as the
+Senior Subaltern came forward in a dazed and dizzy way, and took
+the paper. We were wondering as we stared, whether there was
+anything against any one of us that might turn up later on. The
+Senior Subaltern's throat was dry; but, as he ran his eye over the
+paper, he broke out into a hoarse cackle of relief, and said to the
+woman:--"You young blackguard!"
+
+But the woman had fled through a door, and on the paper was
+written:--"This is to certify that I, The Worm, have paid in full
+my debts to the Senior Subaltern, and, further, that the Senior
+Subaltern is my debtor, by agreement on the 23d of February, as by
+the Mess attested, to the extent of one month's Captain's pay, in
+the lawful currency of the India Empire."
+
+Then a deputation set off for The Worm's quarters and found him,
+betwixt and between, unlacing his stays, with the hat, wig, serge
+dress, etc., on the bed. He came over as he was, and the
+"Shikarris" shouted till the Gunners' Mess sent over to know if
+they might have a share of the fun. I think we were all, except
+the Colonel and the Senior Subaltern, a little disappointed that
+the scandal had come to nothing. But that is human nature. There
+could be no two words about The Worm's acting. It leaned as near
+to a nasty tragedy as anything this side of a joke can. When most
+of the Subalterns sat upon him with sofa-cushions to find out why
+he had not said that acting was his strong point, he answered very
+quietly:--"I don't think you ever asked me. I used to act at Home
+with my sisters." But no acting with girls could account for The
+Worm's display that night. Personally, I think it was in bad
+taste. Besides being dangerous. There is no sort of use in playing
+with fire, even for fun.
+
+The "Shikarris" made him President of the Regimental Dramatic Club;
+and, when the Senior Subaltern paid up his debt, which he did at
+once, The Worm sank the money in scenery and dresses. He was a
+good Worm; and the "Shikarris" are proud of him. The only drawback
+is that he has been christened "Mrs. Senior Subaltern;" and as
+there are now two Mrs. Senior Subalterns in the Station, this is
+sometimes confusing to strangers.
+
+Later on, I will tell you of a case something like, this, but with
+all the jest left out and nothing in it but real trouble.
+
+
+
+A. Conan Doyle
+
+A Case of Identity
+
+
+"My dear fellow," said Sherlock Holmes, as we sat on either side of
+the fire in his lodgings at Baker Street, "life is infinitely
+stranger than anything which the mind of man can invent. We would
+not dare to conceive the things which are really mere commonplaces
+of existence. If we could fly out of that window hand in hand,
+hover over this great city, gently remove the roofs, and peep in at
+the queer things which are going on, the strange coincidences, the
+plannings, the cross-purposes, the wonderful chains of events,
+working through generations, and leading to the most outre results,
+it would make all fiction, with its conventionalities and foreseen
+conclusions, most stale and unprofitable."
+
+"And yet I am not convinced of it," I answered. "The cases which
+come to light in the papers are, as a rule, bald enough, and vulgar
+enough. We have in our police reports realism pushed to its
+extreme limits, and yet the result is, it must be confessed,
+neither fascinating nor artistic."
+
+"A certain selection and discretion must be used in producing a
+realistic effect," remarked Holmes. "This is wanting in the police
+report, where more stress is laid perhaps upon the platitudes of
+the magistrate than upon the details, which to an observer contain
+the vital essence of the whole matter. Depend upon it, there is
+nothing so unnatural as the commonplace."
+
+I smiled and shook my head. "I can quite understand your thinking
+so," I said. "Of course, in your position of unofficial adviser
+and helper to everybody who is absolutely puzzled, throughout three
+continents, you are brought in contact with all that is strange and
+bizarre. But here,"--I picked up the morning paper from the
+ground--"let us put it to a practical test. Here is the first
+heading upon which I come. 'A husband's cruelty to his wife.'
+There is half a column of print, but I know without reading it that
+it is all perfectly familiar to me. There is, of course, the other
+woman, the drink, the push, the blow, the bruise, the unsympathetic
+sister or landlady. The crudest of writers could invent nothing
+more crude."
+
+"Indeed your example is an unfortunate one for your argument," said
+Holmes, taking the paper, and glancing his eye down it. "This is
+the Dundas separation case, and, as it happens, I was engaged in
+clearing up some small points in connection with it. The husband
+was a teetotaler, there was no other woman, and the conduct
+complained of was that he had drifted into the habit of winding up
+every meal by taking out his false teeth and hurling them at his
+wife, which you will allow is not an action likely to occur to the
+imagination of the average story teller. Take a pinch of snuff,
+doctor, and acknowledge that I have scored over you in your
+example."
+
+He held out his snuffbox of old gold, with a great amethyst in the
+center of the lid. Its splendor was in such contrast to his homely
+ways and simple life that I could not help commenting upon it.
+
+"Ah!" said he, "I forgot that I had not seen you for some weeks.
+It is a little souvenir from the King of Bohemia, in return for my
+assistance in the case of the Irene Adler papers."
+
+"And the ring?" I asked, glancing at a remarkable brilliant which
+sparkled upon his finger.
+
+"It was from the reigning family of Holland, though the matter in
+which I served them was of such delicacy that I cannot confide it
+even to you, who have been good enough to chronicle one or two of
+my little problems."
+
+"And have you any on hand just now?" I asked with interest.
+
+"Some ten or twelve, but none which present any features of
+interest. They are important, you understand, without being
+interesting. Indeed I have found that it is usually in unimportant
+matters that there is a field for the observation, and for the
+quick analysis of cause and effect which gives the charm to an
+investigation. The larger crimes are apt to be the simpler, for
+the bigger the crime, the more obvious, as a rule, is the motive.
+In these cases, save for one rather intricate matter which has been
+referred to me from Marseilles, there is nothing which presents any
+features of interest. It is possible, however, that I may have
+something better before very many minutes are over, for this is one
+of my clients, or I am much mistaken."
+
+He had risen from his chair, and was standing between the parted
+blinds, gazing down into the dull, neutral-tinted London street.
+Looking over his shoulder, I saw that on the pavement opposite
+there stood a large woman with a heavy fur boa round her neck, and
+a large curling red feather in a broad-brimmed hat which was tilted
+in a coquettish Duchess-of-Devonshire fashion over her ear.
+
+From under this great panoply she peeped up in a nervous,
+hesitating fashion at our windows, while her body oscillated
+backward and forward, and her fingers fidgeted with her glove
+buttons. Suddenly, with a plunge, as of the swimmer who leaves the
+bank, she hurried across the road, and we heard the sharp clang of
+the bell.
+
+"I have seen those symptoms before," said Holmes, throwing his
+cigarette into the fire. "Oscillation upon the pavement always
+means an affaire de coeur. She would like advice, but is not sure
+that the matter is not too delicate for communication. And yet
+even here we may discriminate. When a woman has been seriously
+wronged by a man, she no longer oscillates, and the usual symptom
+is a broken bell wire. Here we may take it that there is a love
+matter, but that the maiden is not so much angry as perplexed or
+grieved. But here she comes in person to resolve our doubts."
+
+As he spoke, there was a tap at the door, and the boy in buttons
+entered to announce Miss Mary Sutherland, while the lady herself
+loomed behind his small black figure like a full-sailed merchantman
+behind a tiny pilot boat. Sherlock Holmes welcomed her with the
+easy courtesy for which he was remarkable, and having closed the
+door, and bowed her into an armchair, he looked her over in the
+minute and yet abstracted fashion which was peculiar to him.
+
+"Do you not find," he said, "that with your short sight it is a
+little trying to do so much typewriting?"
+
+"I did at first," she answered, "but now I know where the letters
+are without looking." Then, suddenly realizing the full purport of
+his words, she gave a violent start, and looked up with fear and
+astonishment upon her broad, good-humored face. "You've heard
+about me, Mr. Holmes," she cried, "else how could you know all
+that?"
+
+"Never mind," said Holmes, laughing, "it is my business to know
+things. Perhaps I have trained myself to see what others overlook.
+If not, why should you come to consult me?"
+
+"I came to you, sir, because I heard of you from Mrs. Etherege,
+whose husband you found so easily when the police and everyone had
+given him up for dead. Oh, Mr. Holmes, I wish you would do as much
+for me. I'm not rich, but still I have a hundred a year in my own
+right, besides the little that I make by the machine, and I would
+give it all to know what has become of Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+"Why did you come away to consult me in such a hurry?" asked
+Sherlock Holmes, with his finger tips together, and his eyes to the
+ceiling.
+
+Again a startled look came over the somewhat vacuous face of Miss
+Mary Sutherland. "Yes, I did bang out of the house," she said,
+"for it made me angry to see the easy way in which Mr. Windibank--
+that is, my father--took it all. He would not go to the police,
+and he would not go to you, and so at last, as he would do nothing,
+and kept on saying that there was no harm done, it made me mad, and
+I just on with my things and came right away to you."
+
+"Your father?" said Holmes. "Your stepfather, surely, since the
+name is different."
+
+"Yes, my stepfather. I call him father, though it sounds funny,
+too, for he is only five years and two months older than myself."
+
+"And your mother is alive?"
+
+"Oh, yes; mother is alive and well. I wasn't best pleased, Mr.
+Holmes, when she married again so soon after father's death, and a
+man who was nearly fifteen years younger than herself. Father was
+a plumber in the Tottenham Court Road, and he left a tidy business
+behind him, which mother carried on with Mr. Hardy, the foreman;
+but when Mr. Windibank came he made her sell the business, for he
+was very superior, being a traveler in wines. They got four
+thousand seven hundred for the good-will and interest, which wasn't
+near as much as father could have got if he had been alive."
+
+I had expected to see Sherlock Holmes impatient under this rambling
+and inconsequential narrative, but, on the contrary, he had
+listened with the greatest concentration of attention.
+
+"Your own little income," he asked, "does it come out of the
+business?"
+
+"Oh, no, sir. It is quite separate, and was left me by my Uncle
+Ned in Auckland. It is in New Zealand stock, paying four and half
+per cent. Two thousand five hundred pounds was the amount, but I
+can only touch the interest."
+
+"You interest me extremely," said Holmes. "And since you draw so
+large a sum as a hundred a year, with what you earn into the
+bargain, you no doubt travel a little, and indulge yourself in
+every way. I believe that a single lady can get on very nicely
+upon an income of about sixty pounds."
+
+"I could do with much less than that, Mr. Holmes, but you
+understand that as long as I live at home I don't wish to be a
+burden to them, and so they have the use of the money just while I
+am staying with them. Of course that is only just for the time.
+Mr. Windibank draws my interest every quarter, and pays it over to
+mother, and I find that I can do pretty well with what I earn at
+typewriting. It brings me twopence a sheet, and I can often do
+from fifteen to twenty sheets in a day."
+
+"You have made your position very clear to me," said Holmes. "This
+is my friend, Doctor Watson, before whom you can speak as freely as
+before myself. Kindly tell us now all about your connection with
+Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+A flush stole over Miss Sutherland's face, and she picked nervously
+at the fringe of her jacket. "I met him first at the gasfitters'
+ball," she said. "They used to send father tickets when he was
+alive, and then afterwards they remembered us, and sent them to
+mother. Mr. Windibank did not wish us to go. He never did wish us
+to go anywhere. He would get quite mad if I wanted so much as to
+join a Sunday School treat. But this time I was set on going, and
+I would go, for what right had he to prevent? He said the folk
+were not fit for us to know, when all father's friends were to be
+there. And he said that I had nothing fit to wear, when I had my
+purple plush that I had never so much as taken out of the drawer.
+At last, when nothing else would do, he went off to France upon the
+business of the firm; but we went, mother and I, with Mr. Hardy,
+who used to be our foreman, and it was there I met Mr. Hosmer
+Angel."
+
+"I suppose," said Holmes, "that when Mr. Windibank came back from
+France, he was very annoyed at your having gone to the ball?"
+
+"Oh, well, he was very good about it. He laughed, I remember, and
+shrugged his shoulders, and said there was no use denying anything
+to a woman, for she would have her way."
+
+"I see. Then at the gasfitters' ball you met, as I understand, a
+gentleman called Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I met him that night, and he called next day to ask if
+we had got home all safe, and after that we met him--that is to
+say, Mr. Holmes, I met him twice for walks, but after that father
+came back again, and Mr. Hosmer Angel could not come to the house
+any more."
+
+"No?"
+
+"Well, you know, father didn't like anything of the sort. He
+wouldn't have any visitors if he could help it, and he used to say
+that a woman should be happy in her own family circle. But then,
+as I used to say to mother, a woman wants her own circle to begin
+with, and I had not got mine yet."
+
+"But how about Mr. Hosmer Angel? Did he make no attempt to see
+you?"
+
+"Well, father was going off to France again in a week, and Hosmer
+wrote and said that it would be safer and better not to see each
+other until he had gone. We could write in the meantime, and he
+used to write every day. I took the letters in the morning, so
+there was no need for father to know."
+
+"Were you engaged to the gentleman at this time?"
+
+"Oh, yes, Mr. Holmes. We were engaged after the first walk that we
+took. Hosmer--Mr. Angel--was a cashier in an office in Leadenhall
+Street--and--"
+
+"What office?"
+
+"That's the worst of it, Mr. Holmes; I don't know."
+
+"Where did he live, then?"
+
+"He slept on the premises."
+
+"And you don't know his address?"
+
+"No--except that it was Leadenhall Street."
+
+"Where did you address your letters, then?"
+
+"To the Leadenhall Street Post Office, to be left till called for.
+He said that if they were sent to the office he would be chaffed by
+all the other clerks about having letters from a lady, so I offered
+to typewrite them, like he did his, but he wouldn't have that, for
+he said that when I wrote them they seemed to come from me, but
+when they were typewritten he always felt that the machine had come
+between us. That will just show you how fond he was of me, Mr.
+Holmes, and the little things that he would think of."
+
+"It was most suggestive," said Holmes. "It has long been an axiom
+of mine that the little things are infinitely the most important.
+Can you remember any other little things about Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"He was a very shy man, Mr. Holmes. He would rather walk with me
+in the evening than in the daylight, for he said that he hated to
+be conspicuous. Very retiring and gentlemanly he was. Even his
+voice was gentle. He'd had the quinsy and swollen glands when he
+was young, he told me, and it had left him with a weak throat and a
+hesitating, whispering fashion of speech. He was always well
+dressed, very neat and plain, but his eyes were weak, just as mine
+are, and he wore tinted glasses against the glare."
+
+"Well, and what happened when Mr. Windibank, your stepfather,
+returned to France?"
+
+"Mr. Hosmer Angel came to the house again, and proposed that we
+should marry before father came back. He was in dreadful earnest,
+and made me swear, with my hands on the Testament, that whatever
+happened I would always be true to him. Mother said he was quite
+right to make me swear, and that it was a sign of his passion.
+Mother was all in his favor from the first, and was even fonder of
+him than I was. Then, when they talked of marrying within the
+week, I began to ask about father; but they both said never to mind
+about father, but just to tell him afterwards and mother said she
+would make it all right with him. I didn't quite like that, Mr.
+Holmes. It seemed funny that I should ask his leave, as he was
+only a few years older than me; but I didn't want to do anything on
+the sly, so I wrote to father at Bordeaux, where the company has
+its French offices, but the letter came back to me on the very
+morning of the wedding."
+
+"It missed him, then?"
+
+"Yes, sir, for he had started to England just before it arrived."
+
+"Ha! that was unfortunate. Your wedding was arranged, then, for
+the Friday. Was it to be in church?"
+
+"Yes, sir, but very quietly. It was to be at St. Saviour's, near
+King's Cross, and we were to have breakfast afterwards at the St.
+Pancras Hotel. Hosmer came for us in a hansom, but as there were
+two of us, he put us both into it, and stepped himself into a four-
+wheeler, which happened to be the only other cab in the street. We
+got to the church first, and when the four-wheeler drove up we
+waited for him to step out, but he never did, and when the cabman
+got down from the box and looked, there was no one there! The
+cabman said that he could not imagine what had become of him, for
+he had seen him get in with his own eyes. That was last Friday,
+Mr. Holmes, and I have never seen or heard anything since then to
+throw any light upon what became of him."
+
+"It seems to me that you have been very shamefully treated," said
+Holmes.
+
+"Oh, no, sir! He was too good and kind to leave me so. Why, all
+the morning he was saying to me that, whatever happened, I was to
+be true; and that even if something quite unforeseen occurred to
+separate us, I was always to remember that I was pledged to him,
+and that he would claim his pledge sooner or later. It seemed
+strange talk for a wedding morning, but what has happened since
+gives a meaning to it."
+
+"Most certainly it does. Your own opinion is, then, that some
+unforeseen catastrophe has occurred to him?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I believe that he foresaw some danger, or else he would
+not have talked so. And then I think that what he foresaw
+happened."
+
+"But you have no notion as to what it could have been?"
+
+"None."
+
+"One more question. How did your mother take the matter?"
+
+"She was angry, and said that I was never to speak of the matter
+again."
+
+"And your father? Did you tell him?"
+
+"Yes, and he seemed to think, with me, that something had happened,
+and that I should hear of Hosmer again. As he said, what interest
+could anyone have in bringing me to the door of the church, and
+then leaving me? Now, if he had borrowed my money, or if he had
+married me and got my money settled on him, there might be some
+reason; but Hosmer was very independent about money, and never
+would look at a shilling of mine. And yet what could have
+happened? And why could he not write? Oh! it drives me half mad
+to think of, and I can't sleep a wink at night." She pulled a
+little handkerchief out of her muff, and began to sob heavily into
+it.
+
+"I shall glance into the case for you," said Holmes, rising, "and I
+have no doubt that we shall reach some definite result. Let the
+weight of the matter rest upon me now, and do not let your mind
+dwell upon it further. Above all, try to let Mr. Hosmer Angel
+vanish from your memory, as he has done from your life."
+
+"Then you don't think I'll see him again?"
+
+"I fear not."
+
+"Then what has happened to him?"
+
+"You will leave that question in my hands. I should like an
+accurate description of him, and any letters of his which you can
+spare."
+
+"I advertised for him in last Saturday's Chronicle," said she.
+"Here is the slip, and here are four letters from him."
+
+"Thank you. And your address?"
+
+"No. 31 Lyon Place, Camberwell."
+
+"Mr. Angel's address you never had, I understand. Where is your
+father's place of business?"
+
+"He travels for Westhouse & Marbank, the great claret importers of
+Fenchurch Street."
+
+"Thank you. You have made your statement very clearly. You will
+leave the papers here, and remember the advice which I have given
+you. Let the whole incident be a sealed book, and do not allow it
+to affect your life."
+
+"You are very kind, Mr. Holmes, but I cannot do that. I shall be
+true to Hosmer. He shall find me ready when he comes back."
+
+For all the preposterous hat and the vacuous face, there was
+something noble in the simple faith of our visitor which compelled
+our respect. She laid her little bundle of papers upon the table,
+and went her way, with a promise to come again whenever she might
+be summoned.
+
+Sherlock Holmes sat silent for a few minutes with his finger tips
+still pressed together, his legs stretched out in front of him, and
+his gaze directed upward to the ceiling. Then he took down from
+the rack the old and oily clay pipe, which was to him as a
+counselor, and, having lighted it, he leaned back in his chair,
+with thick blue cloud wreaths spinning up from him, and a look of
+infinite languor in his face.
+
+"Quite an interesting study, that maiden," he observed. "I found
+her more interesting than her little problem, which, by the way, is
+rather a trite one. You will find parallel cases, if you consult
+my index, in Andover in '77, and there was something of the sort at
+The Hague last year. Old as is the idea, however, there were one
+or two details which were new to me. But the maiden herself was
+most instructive."
+
+"You appeared to read a good deal upon her which was quite
+invisible to me," I remarked.
+
+"Not invisible, but unnoticed, Watson. You did not know where to
+look, and so you missed all that was important. I can never bring
+you to realize the importance of sleeves, the suggestiveness of
+thumb nails, or the great issues that may hang from a boot lace.
+Now, what did you gather from that woman's appearance? Describe
+it."
+
+"Well, she had a slate-colored, broad-brimmed straw hat, with a
+feather of a brickish red. Her jacket was black, with black beads
+sewed upon it and a fringe of little black jet ornaments. Her
+dress was brown, rather darker than coffee color, with a little
+purple plush at the neck and sleeves. Her gloves were grayish, and
+were worn through at the right forefinger. Her boots I didn't
+observe. She had small round, hanging gold earrings, and a general
+air of being fairly well-to-do, in a vulgar, comfortable, easygoing
+way."
+
+Sherlock Holmes clapped his hands softly together and chuckled.
+
+"'Pon my word, Watson, you are coming along wonderfully. You have
+really done very well indeed. It is true that you have missed
+everything of importance, but you have hit upon the method, and you
+have a quick eye for color. Never trust to general impressions, my
+boy, but concentrate yourself upon details. My first glance is
+always at a woman's sleeve. In a man it is perhaps better first to
+take the knee of the trouser. As you observe, this woman had plush
+upon her sleeve, which is a most useful material for showing
+traces. The double line a little above the wrist, where the
+typewritist presses against the table, was beautifully defined.
+The sewing machine, of the hand type, leaves a similar mark, but
+only on the left arm, and on the side of it farthest from the
+thumb, instead of being right across the broadest part, as this
+was. I then glanced at her face, and observing the dint of a
+pince-nez at either side of her nose, I ventured a remark upon
+short sight and typewriting, which seemed to surprise her."
+
+"It surprised me."
+
+"But, surely, it was very obvious. I was then much surprised and
+interested on glancing down to observe that, though the boots which
+she was wearing were not unlike each other, they were really odd
+ones, the one having a slightly decorated toe cap and the other a
+plain one. One was buttoned only in the two lower buttons out of
+five, and the other at the first, third, and fifth. Now, when you
+see that a young lady, otherwise neatly dressed, has come away from
+home with odd boots, half-buttoned, it is no great deduction to say
+that she came away in a hurry."
+
+"And what else?" I asked, keenly interested, as I always was, by my
+friend's incisive reasoning.
+
+"I noted, in passing, that she had written a note before leaving
+home, but after being fully dressed. You observed that her right
+glove was torn at the forefinger, but you did not, apparently, see
+that both glove and finger were stained with violet ink. She had
+written in a hurry, and dipped her pen too deep. It must have been
+this morning, or the mark would not remain clear upon the finger.
+All this is amusing, though rather elementary, but I must go back
+to business, Watson. Would you mind reading me the advertised
+description of Mr. Hosmer Angel?"
+
+I held the little printed slip to the light. "Missing," it said,
+"on the morning of the fourteenth, a gentleman named Hosmer Angel.
+About five feet seven inches in height; strongly built, sallow
+complexion, black hair, a little bald in the center, bushy black
+side-whiskers and mustache; tinted glasses; slight infirmity of
+speech. Was dressed, when last seen, in black frock-coat faced
+with silk, black waistcoat, gold Albert chain, and gray Harris
+tweed trousers, with brown gaiters over elastic-sided boots. Known
+to have been employed in an office in Leadenhall Street. Anybody
+bringing," etc., etc.
+
+"That will do," said Holmes. "As to the letters," he continued,
+glancing over them, "they are very commonplace. Absolutely no clew
+in them to Mr. Angel, save that he quotes Balzac once. There is
+one remarkable point, however, which will no doubt strike you."
+
+"They are typewritten," I remarked.
+
+"Not only that, but the signature is typewritten. Look at the neat
+little 'Hosmer Angel' at the bottom. There is a date, you see, but
+no superscription except Leadenhall Street, which is rather vague.
+The point about the signature is very suggestive--in fact, we may
+call it conclusive."
+
+"Of what?"
+
+"My dear fellow, is it possible you do not see how strongly it
+bears upon the case?"
+
+"I cannot say that I do, unless it were that he wished to be able
+to deny his signature if an action for breach of promise were
+instituted."
+
+"No, that was not the point. However, I shall write two letters
+which should settle the matter. One is to a firm in the City, the
+other is to the young lady's stepfather, Mr. Windibank, asking him
+whether he could meet us here at six o'clock to-morrow evening. It
+is just as well that we should do business with the male relatives.
+And now, doctor, we can do nothing until the answers to those
+letters come, so we may put our little problem upon the shelf for
+the interim."
+
+I had had so many reasons to believe in my friend's subtle powers
+of reasoning, and extraordinary energy in action, that I felt that
+he must have some solid grounds for the assured and easy demeanor
+with which he treated the singular mystery which he had been called
+upon to fathom. Once only had I known him to fail, in the case of
+the King of Bohemia and the Irene Adler photograph, but when I
+looked back to the weird business of the "Sign of the Four," and
+the extraordinary circumstances connected with the "Study in
+Scarlet," I felt that it would be a strange tangle indeed which he
+could not unravel.
+
+I left him then, still puffing at his black clay pipe, with the
+conviction that when I came again on the next evening I would find
+that he held in his hands all the clews which would lead up to the
+identity of the disappearing bridegroom of Miss Mary Sutherland.
+
+A professional case of great gravity was engaging my own attention
+at the time, and the whole of next day I was busy at the bedside of
+the sufferer. It was not until close upon six o'clock that I found
+myself free, and was able to spring into a hansom and drive to
+Baker Street, half afraid that I might be too late to assist at the
+denouement of the little mystery. I found Sherlock Holmes alone,
+however, half asleep, with his long, thin form curled up in the
+recesses of his armchair. A formidable array of bottles and test-
+tubes, with the pungent, cleanly smell of hydrochloric acid, told
+me that he had spent his day in the chemical work which was so dear
+to him.
+
+"Well, have you solved it?" I asked as I entered.
+
+"Yes. It was the bisulphate of baryta."
+
+"No, no; the mystery!" I cried.
+
+"Oh, that! I thought of the salt that I have been working upon.
+There was never any mystery in the matter, though, as I said
+yesterday, some of the details are of interest. The only drawback
+is that there is no law, I fear, that can touch the scoundrel."
+
+"Who was he, then, and what was his object in deserting Miss
+Sutherland?"
+
+The question was hardly out of my mouth, and Holmes had not yet
+opened his lips to reply, when we heard a heavy footfall in the
+passage, and a tap at the door.
+
+"This is the girl's stepfather, Mr. James Windibank," said Holmes.
+"He has written to me to say that he would be here at six. Come
+in!"
+
+The man who entered was a sturdy, middle-sized fellow, some thirty
+years of age, clean shaven, and sallow-skinned, with a bland,
+insinuating manner, and a pair of wonderfully sharp and penetrating
+gray eyes. He shot a questioning glance at each of us, placed his
+shiny top hat upon the sideboard, and, with a slight bow, sidled
+down into the nearest chair.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. James Windibank," said Holmes. "I think this
+typewritten letter is from you, in which you made an appointment
+with me for six o'clock?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I am afraid that I am a little late, but I am not quite
+my own master, you know. I am sorry that Miss Sutherland has
+troubled you about this little matter, for I think it is far better
+not to wash linen of the sort in public. It was quite against my
+wishes that she came, but she is a very excitable, impulsive girl,
+as you may have noticed, and she is not easily controlled when she
+has made up her mind on a point. Of course, I did not mind you so
+much, as you are not connected with the official police, but it is
+not pleasant to have a family misfortune like this noised abroad.
+Besides, it is a useless expense, for how could you possibly find
+this Hosmer Angel?"
+
+"On the contrary," said Holmes, quietly, "I have every reason to
+believe that I will succeed in discovering Mr. Hosmer Angel."
+
+Mr. Windibank gave a violent start, and dropped his gloves. "I am
+delighted to hear it," he said.
+
+"It is a curious thing," remarked Holmes, "that a typewriter has
+really quite as much individuality as a man's handwriting. Unless
+they are quite new no two of them write exactly alike. Some
+letters get more worn than others, and some wear only on one side.
+Now, you remark in this note of yours, Mr. Windibank, that in every
+case there is some little slurring over the e, and a slight defect
+in the tail of the r. There are fourteen other characteristics,
+but those are the more obvious."
+
+"We do all our correspondence with this machine at the office, and
+no doubt it is a little worn," our visitor answered, glancing
+keenly at Holmes with his bright little eyes.
+
+"And now I will show you what is really a very interesting study,
+Mr. Windibank," Holmes continued. "I think of writing another
+little monograph some of these days on the typewriter and its
+relation to crime. It is a subject to which I have devoted some
+little attention. I have here four letters which purport to come
+from the missing man. They are all typewritten. In each case, not
+only are the e's slurred and the r's tailless, but you will
+observe, if you care to use my magnifying lens, that the fourteen
+other characteristics to which I have alluded are there as well."
+
+Mr. Windibank sprung out of his chair, and picked up his hat. "I
+cannot waste time over this sort of fantastic talk, Mr. Holmes," he
+said. "If you can catch the man, catch him, and let me know when
+you have done it."
+
+"Certainly," said Holmes, stepping over and turning the key in the
+door. "I let you know, then, that I have caught him!"
+
+"What! where?" shouted Mr. Windibank, turning white to his lips,
+and glancing about him like a rat in a trap.
+
+"Oh, it won't do--really it won't," said Holmes, suavely. "There
+is no possible getting out of it, Mr. Windibank. It is quite too
+transparent, and it was a very bad compliment when you said that it
+was impossible for me to solve so simple a question. That's right!
+Sit down, and let us talk it over."
+
+Our visitor collapsed into a chair, with a ghastly face, and a
+glitter of moisture on his brow. "It--it's not actionable," he
+stammered.
+
+"I am very much afraid that it is not; but between ourselves,
+Windibank, it was as cruel, and selfish, and heartless a trick in a
+petty way as ever came before me. Now, let me just run over the
+course of events, and you will contradict me if I go wrong."
+
+The man sat huddled up in his chair, with his head sunk upon his
+breast, like one who is utterly crushed. Holmes stuck his feet up
+on the corner of the mantelpiece, and, leaning back with his hands
+in his pockets, began talking, rather to himself, as it seemed,
+than to us.
+
+"The man married a woman very much older than himself for her
+money," said he, "and he enjoyed the use of the money of the
+daughter as long as she lived with them. It was a considerable
+sum, for people in their position, and the loss of it would have
+made a serious difference. It was worth an effort to preserve it.
+The daughter was of a good, amiable disposition, but affectionate
+and warmhearted in her ways, so that it was evident that with her
+fair personal advantages, and her little income, she would not be
+allowed to remain single long. Now her marriage would mean, of
+course, the loss of a hundred a year, so what does her stepfather
+do to prevent it? He takes the obvious course of keeping her at
+home, and forbidding her to seek the company of people of her own
+age. But soon he found that that would not answer forever. She
+became restive, insisted upon her rights, and finally announced her
+positive intention of going to a certain ball. What does her
+clever stepfather do then? He conceives an idea more creditable to
+his head than to his heart. With the connivance and assistance of
+his wife, he disguised himself, covered those keen eyes with tinted
+glasses, masked the face with a mustache and a pair of bushy
+whiskers, sunk that clear voice into an insinuating whisper, and
+doubly secure on account of the girl's short sight, he appears as
+Mr. Hosmer Angel, and keeps off other lovers by making love
+himself."
+
+"It was only a joke at first," groaned our visitor. "We never
+thought that she would have been so carried away."
+
+"Very likely not. However that may be, the young lady was very
+decidedly carried away, and having quite made up her mind that her
+stepfather was in France, the suspicion of treachery never for an
+instant entered her mind. She was flattered by the gentleman's
+attentions, and the effect was increased by the loudly expressed
+admiration of her mother. Then Mr. Angel began to call, for it was
+obvious that the matter should be pushed as far as if would go, if
+a real effect were to be produced. There were meetings, and an
+engagement, which would finally secure the girl's affections from
+turning toward anyone else. But the deception could not be kept up
+forever. These pretended journeys to France were rather cumbrous.
+The thing to do was clearly to bring the business to an end in such
+a dramatic manner that it would leave a permanent impression upon
+the young lady's mind, and prevent her from looking upon any other
+suitor for some time to come. Hence those vows of fidelity exacted
+upon a Testament, and hence also the allusions to a possibility of
+something happening on the very morning of the wedding. James
+Windibank wished Miss Sutherland to be so bound to Hosmer Angel,
+and so uncertain as to his fate, that for ten years to come, at any
+rate, she would not listen to another man. As far as the church
+door he brought her, and then, as he could go no farther, he
+conveniently vanished away by the old trick of stepping in at one
+door of a four-wheeler and out at the other. I think that that was
+the chain of events, Mr. Windibank!"
+
+Our visitor had recovered something of his assurance while Holmes
+had been talking, and he rose from his chair now with a cold sneer
+upon his pale face.
+
+"It may be so, or it may not, Mr. Holmes," said he; "but if you are
+so very sharp you ought to be sharp enough to know that it is you
+who are breaking the law now, and not me. I have done nothing
+actionable from the first, but as long as you keep that door locked
+you lay yourself open to an action for assault and illegal
+constraint."
+
+"The law cannot, as you say, touch you," said Holmes, unlocking and
+throwing open the door, "yet there never was a man who deserved
+punishment more. If the young lady has a brother or a friend, he
+ought to lay a whip across your shoulders. By Jove!" he continued,
+flushing up at the sight of the bitter sneer upon the man's face,
+"it is not part of my duties to my client, but here's a hunting
+crop handy, and I think I shall just treat myself to--" He took
+two swift steps to the whip, but before he could grasp it there was
+a wild clatter of steps upon the stairs, the heavy hall door
+banged, and from the window we could see Mr. James Windibank
+running at the top of his speed down the road.
+
+"There's a cold-blooded scoundrel!" said Holmes, laughing as he
+threw himself down into his chair once more. "That fellow will
+rise from crime to crime until he does something very bad and ends
+on a gallows. The case has, in some respects, been not entirely
+devoid of interest."
+
+"I cannot now entirely see all the steps of your reasoning," I
+remarked.
+
+"Well, of course it was obvious from the first that this Mr. Hosmer
+Angel must have some strong object for his curious conduct, and it
+was equally clear that the only man who really profited by the
+incident, as far as we could see, was the stepfather. Then the
+fact that the two men were never together, but that the one always
+appeared when the other was away, was suggestive. So were the
+tinted spectacles and the curious voice, which both hinted at a
+disguise, as did the bushy whiskers. My suspicions were all
+confirmed by his peculiar action in typewriting his signature,
+which, of course, inferred that his handwriting was so familiar to
+her that she would recognize even the smallest sample of it. You
+see all these isolated facts, together with many minor ones, all
+pointed in the same direction."
+
+"And how did you verify them?"
+
+"Having once spotted my man, it was easy to get corroboration. I
+knew the firm for which this man worked. Having taken the printed
+description, I eliminated everything from it which could be the
+result of a disguise,--the whiskers, the glasses, the voice,--and I
+sent it to the firm with a request that they would inform me
+whether it answered to the description of any of their travelers.
+I had already noticed the peculiarities of the typewriter, and I
+wrote to the man himself at his business address, asking him if he
+would come here. As I expected, his reply was typewritten, and
+revealed the same trivial but characteristic defects. The same
+post brought me a letter from Westhouse & Marbank, of Fenchurch
+Street, to say that the description tallied in every respect with
+that of their employee, James Windibank. Voila tout!"
+
+"And Miss Sutherland?"
+
+"If I tell her she will not believe me. You may remember the old
+Persian saying, 'There is danger for him who taketh the tiger cub,
+and danger also for whoso snatcheth a delusion from a woman.'
+There is as much sense in Hafiz as in Horace, and as much knowledge
+of the world."
+
+
+
+A Scandal in Bohemia
+
+I
+
+
+To Sherlock Holmes she is always THE woman. I have seldom heard
+him mention her under any other name. In his eyes she eclipses and
+predominates the whole of her sex. It was not that he felt any
+emotion akin to love for Irene Adler. All emotions, and that one
+particularly, were abhorrent to his cold, precise but admirably
+balanced mind. He was, I take it, the most perfect reasoning and
+observing machine that the world has seen; but as a lover, he would
+have placed himself in a false position. He never spoke of the
+softer passions, save with a gibe and a sneer. They were admirable
+things for the observer--excellent for drawing the veil from men's
+motives and actions. But for the trained reasoner to admit such
+intrusions into his own delicate and finely adjusted temperament
+was to introduce a distracting factor which might throw a doubt
+upon all his mental results. Grit in a sensitive instrument, or a
+crack in one of his own high-power lenses, would not be more
+disturbing that a strong emotion in a nature such as his. And yet
+there was but one woman to him, and that woman was the late Irene
+Adler, of dubious and questionable memory.
+
+I had seen little of Holmes lately. My marriage had drifted us
+away from each other. My own complete happiness, and the home-
+centered interests which rise up around the man who first finds
+himself master of his own establishment, were sufficient to absorb
+all my attention; while Holmes, who loathed every form of society
+with his whole Bohemian soul, remained in our lodgings in Baker
+Street, buried among his old books, and alternating from week to
+week between cocaine and ambition, the drowsiness of the drug and
+the fierce energy of his own keen nature. He was still, as ever,
+deeply attracted by the study of crime, and occupied his immense
+faculties and extraordinary powers of observation in following out
+those clews, and clearing up those mysteries, which had been
+abandoned as hopeless by the official police. From time to time I
+heard some vague account of his doings; of his summons to Odessa in
+the case of the Trepoff murder, of his clearing up of the singular
+tragedy of the Atkinson brothers at Trincomalee, and finally of the
+mission which he had accomplished so delicately and successfully
+for the reigning family of Holland. Beyond these signs of his
+activity, however, which I merely shared with all the readers of
+the daily press, I knew little of my former friend and companion.
+
+One night--it was on the 20th of March, 1888--I was returning from
+a journey to a patient (for I had now returned to civil practice),
+when my way led me through Baker Street. As I passed the well-
+remembered door, which must always be associated in my mind with my
+wooing, and with the dark incidents of the Study in Scarlet, I was
+seized with a keen desire to see Holmes again, and to know how he
+was employing his extraordinary powers. His rooms were brilliantly
+lighted, and even as I looked up, I saw his tall, spare figure pass
+twice in a dark silhouette against the blind. He was pacing the
+room swiftly, eagerly, with his head sunk upon his chest, and his
+hands clasped behind him. To me, who knew his every mood and
+habit, his attitude and manner told their own story. He was at
+work again. He had risen out of his drug-created dreams, and was
+hot upon the scent of some new problem. I rang the bell, and was
+shown up to the chamber which had formerly been in part my own.
+
+His manner was not effusive. It seldom was; but he was glad, I
+think, to see me. With hardly a word spoken, but with a kindly
+eye, he waved me to an armchair, threw across his case of cigars,
+and indicated a spirit case and a gasogene in the corner. Then he
+stood before the fire, and looked me over in his singular
+introspective fashion.
+
+"Wedlock suits you," he remarked. "I think, Watson, that you have
+put on seven and a half pounds since I saw you."
+
+"Seven," I answered.
+
+"Indeed, I should have thought a little more. Just a trifle more,
+I fancy, Watson. And in practice again, I observe. You did not
+tell me that you intended to go into harness."
+
+"Then how do you know?"
+
+"I see it, I deduce it. How do I know that you have been getting
+yourself very wet lately, and that you have a most clumsy and
+careless servant girl?"
+
+"My dear Holmes," said I, "this is too much. You would certainly
+have been burned had you lived a few centuries ago. It is true
+that I had a country walk on Thursday and came home in a dreadful
+mess; but as I have changed my clothes, I can't imagine how you
+deduce it. As to Mary Jane, she is incorrigible, and my wife has
+given her notice; but there again I fail to see how you work it
+out."
+
+He chuckled to himself and rubbed his long nervous hands together.
+
+"It is simplicity itself," said he, "my eyes tell me that on the
+inside of your left shoe, just where the firelight strikes it, the
+leather is scored by six almost parallel cuts. Obviously they have
+been caused by some one who has very carelessly scraped round the
+edges of the sole in order to remove crusted mud from it. Hence,
+you see, my double deduction that you had been out in vile weather,
+and that you had a particularly malignant boot-slicking specimen of
+the London slavey. As to your practice, if a gentleman walks into
+my rooms, smelling of iodoform, with a black mark of nitrate of
+silver upon his right forefinger, and a bulge on the side of his
+top hat to show where he has secreted his stethoscope, I must be
+dull indeed if I do not pronounce him to be an active member of the
+medical profession."
+
+I could not help laughing at the ease with which he explained his
+process of deduction. "When I hear you give your reasons," I
+remarked, "the thing always appears to me so ridiculously simple
+that I could easily do it myself, though at each successive
+instance of your reasoning I am baffled, until you explain your
+process. And yet, I believe that my eyes are as good as yours."
+
+"Quite so," he answered, lighting a cigarette, and throwing himself
+down into an armchair. "You see, but you do not observe. The
+distinction is clear. For example, you have frequently seen the
+steps which lead up from the hall to this room."
+
+"Frequently."
+
+"How often?"
+
+"Well, some hundreds of times."
+
+"Then how many are there?"
+
+"How many? I don't know."
+
+"Quite so! You have not observed. And yet you have seen. That is
+just my point. Now, I know there are seventeen steps, because I
+have both seen and observed. By the way, since you are interested
+in these little problems, and since you are good enough to
+chronicle one or two of my trifling experiences, you may be
+interested in this." He threw over a sheet of thick pink-tinted
+note paper which had been lying open upon the table. "It came by
+the last post," said he. "Read it aloud."
+
+The note was undated, and without either signature or address.
+
+"There will call upon you to-night, at a quarter to eight o'clock,"
+it said, "a gentleman who desires to consult you upon a matter of
+the very deepest moment. Your recent services to one of the royal
+houses of Europe have shown that you are one who may safely be
+trusted with matters which are of an importance which can hardly be
+exaggerated. This account of you we have from all quarters
+received. Be in your chamber, then, at that hour, and do not take
+it amiss if your visitor wears a mask."
+
+"This is indeed a mystery," I remarked. "What do you imagine that
+it means?"
+
+"I have no data yet. It is a capital mistake to theorize before
+one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit
+theories, instead of theories to suit facts. But the note itself--
+what do you deduce from it?"
+
+I carefully examined the writing, and the paper upon which it was
+written.
+
+"The man who wrote it was presumably well to do," I remarked,
+endeavoring to imitate my companion's processes. "Such paper could
+not be bought under half a crown a packet. It is peculiarly strong
+and stiff."
+
+"Peculiar--that is the very word," said Holmes. "It is not an
+English paper at all. Hold it up to the light."
+
+I did so, and saw a large E with a small g, a P and a large G with
+a small t woven into the texture of the paper.
+
+"What do you make of that?" asked Holmes.
+
+"The name of the maker, no doubt; or his monogram, rather."
+
+"Not all. The G with the small t stands for 'Gesellschaft,' which
+is the German for 'Company.' It is a customary contraction like
+our 'Co.' P, of course, stands for 'Papier.' Now for the Eg. Let
+us glance at our 'Continental Gazetteer." He took down a heavy
+brown volume from his shelves. "Eglow, Eglonitz--here we are,
+Egria. It is in a German-speaking country--in Bohemia, not far
+from Carlsbad. 'Remarkable as being the scene of the death of
+Wallenstein, and for its numerous glass factories and paper mills.'
+Ha! ha! my boy, what do you make of that?" His eyes sparkled, and
+he sent up a great blue triumphant cloud from his cigarette.
+
+"The paper was made in Bohemia," I said.
+
+"Precisely. And the man who wrote the note is a German. Do you
+note the peculiar construction of the sentence--'This account of
+you we have from all quarters received'? A Frenchman or Russian
+could not have written that. It is the German who is so
+uncourteous to his verbs. It only remains, therefore, to discover
+what is wanted by this German who writes upon Bohemian paper, and
+prefers wearing a mask to showing his face. And here he comes, if
+I am not mistaken, to resolve all our doubts."
+
+As he spoke there was the sharp sound of horses' hoofs and grating
+wheels against the curb, followed by a sharp pull at the bell.
+Holmes whistled.
+
+"A pair, by the sound," said he. "Yes," he continued, glancing out
+of the window. "A nice little brougham and a pair of beauties. A
+hundred and fifty guineas apiece. There's money in this case,
+Watson, if there is nothing else."
+
+"I think I had better go, Holmes."
+
+"Not a bit, doctor. Stay where you are. I am lost without my
+Boswell. And this promises to be interesting. It would be a pity
+to miss it."
+
+"But your client--"
+
+"Never mind him. I may want your help, and so may he. Here he
+comes. Sit down in that armchair, doctor, and give us your best
+attention."
+
+A slow and heavy step, which had been heard upon the stairs and in
+the passage, paused immediately outside the door. Then there was a
+loud and authoritative tap.
+
+"Come in!" said Holmes.
+
+A man entered who could hardly have been less than six feet six
+inches in height, with the chest and limbs of a Hercules. His
+dress was rich with a richness which would, in England, be looked
+upon as akin to bad taste. Heavy bands of astrakhan were slashed
+across the sleeves and front of his double-breasted coat, while the
+deep blue cloak which was thrown over his shoulders was lined with
+flame-colored silk, and secured at the neck with a brooch which
+consisted of a single flaming beryl. Boots which extended halfway
+up his calves, and which were trimmed at the tops with rich brown
+fur, completed the impression of barbaric opulence which was
+suggested by his whole appearance. He carried a broad-brimmed hat
+in his hand, while he wore across the upper part of his face,
+extending down past the cheek-bones, a black visard mask, which he
+had apparently adjusted that very moment, for his hand was still
+raised to it as he entered. From the lower part of the face he
+appeared to be a man of strong character, with a thick, hanging
+lip, and a long, straight chin, suggestive of resolution pushed to
+the length of obstinacy.
+
+"You had my note?" he asked, with a deep, harsh voice and a
+strongly marked German accent. "I told you that I would call." He
+looked from one to the other of us, as if uncertain which to
+address.
+
+"Pray take a seat," said Holmes. "This is my friend and colleague,
+Doctor Watson, who is occasionally good enough to help me in my
+cases. Whom have I the honor to address?"
+
+"You may address me as the Count von Kramm, a Bohemian nobleman. I
+understand that this gentleman, your friend, is a man of honor and
+discretion, whom I may trust with a matter of the most extreme
+importance. If not, I should much prefer to communicate with you
+alone."
+
+I rose to go, but Holmes caught me by the wrist and pushed me back
+into my chair. "It is both, or none," said he. "You may say
+before this gentleman anything which you may say to me."
+
+The count shrugged his broad shoulders. "Then I must begin," said
+he, "by binding you both to absolute secrecy for two years; at the
+end of that time the matter will be of no importance. At present
+it is not too much to say that it is of such weight that it may
+have an influence upon European history."
+
+"I promise," said Holmes.
+
+"And I."
+
+"You will excuse this mask," continued our strange visitor. "The
+august person who employs me wishes his agent to be unknown to you,
+and I may confess at once that the title by which I have just
+called myself is not exactly my own."
+
+"I was aware of it," said Holmes, dryly.
+
+"The circumstances are of great delicacy, and every precaution has
+to be taken to quench what might grow to be an immense scandal, and
+seriously compromise one of the reigning families of Europe. To
+speak plainly, the matter implicates the great House of Ormstein,
+hereditary kings of Bohemia."
+
+"I was also aware of that," murmured Holmes, settling himself down
+in his armchair, and closing his eyes.
+
+Our visitor glanced with some apparent surprise at the languid,
+lounging figure of the man who had been, no doubt, depicted to him
+as the most incisive reasoner and most energetic agent in Europe.
+Holmes slowly reopened his eyes and looked impatiently at his
+gigantic client.
+
+"If your majesty would condescend to state your case," he remarked,
+"I should be better able to advise you."
+
+The man sprung from his chair, and paced up and down the room in
+uncontrollable agitation. Then, with a gesture of desperation, he
+tore the mask from his face and hurled it upon the ground.
+
+"You are right," he cried, "I am the king. Why should I attempt to
+conceal it?"
+
+"Why, indeed?" murmured Holmes. "Your majesty had not spoken
+before I was aware that I was addressing Wilhelm Gottsreich
+Sigismond von Ormstein, Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein, and
+hereditary King of Bohemia."
+
+"But you can understand," said our strange visitor, sitting down
+once more and passing his hand over his high, white forehead, "you
+can understand that I am not accustomed to doing such business in
+my own person. Yet the matter was so delicate that I could not
+confide it to an agent without putting myself in his power. I have
+come incognito from Prague for the purpose of consulting you."
+
+"Then, pray consult," said Holmes, shutting his eyes once more.
+
+"The facts are briefly these: Some five years ago, during a lengthy
+visit to Warsaw, I made the acquaintance of the well-known
+adventuress Irene Adler. The name is no doubt familiar to you."
+
+"Kindly look her up in my index, doctor," murmured Holmes, without
+opening his eyes. For many years he had adopted a system for
+docketing all paragraphs concerning men and things, so that it was
+difficult to name a subject or a person on which he could not at
+once furnish information. In this case I found her biography
+sandwiched in between that of a Hebrew rabbi and that of a staff
+commander who had written a monograph upon the deep-sea fishes.
+
+"Let me see!" said Holmes. "Hum! Born in New Jersey in the year
+1858. Contralto--hum! La Scala--hum! Prima donna Imperial Opera
+of Warsaw--yes! Retired from operatic stage--ha! Living in
+London--quite so! Your majesty, as I understand, became entangled
+with this young person, wrote her some compromising letters, and is
+now desirous of getting those letters back."
+
+"Precisely so. But how--"
+
+"Was there a secret marriage?"
+
+"None."
+
+"No legal papers or certificates?"
+
+"None."
+
+"Then I fail to follow your majesty. If this young person should
+produce her letters for blackmailing or other purposes, how is she
+to prove their authenticity?"
+
+"There is the writing."
+
+"Pooh-pooh! Forgery."
+
+"My private note paper."
+
+"Stolen."
+
+"My own seal."
+
+"Imitated."
+
+"My photograph."
+
+"Bought."
+
+"We were both in the photograph."
+
+"Oh, dear! That is very bad. Your majesty has indeed committed an
+indiscretion."
+
+"I was mad--insane."
+
+"You have compromised yourself seriously."
+
+"I was only crown prince then. I was young. I am but thirty now."
+
+"It must be recovered."
+
+"We have tried and failed."
+
+"Your majesty must pay. It must be bought."
+
+"She will not sell."
+
+"Stolen, then."
+
+"Five attempts have been made. Twice burglars in my pay ransacked
+her house. Once we diverted her luggage when she traveled. Twice
+she has been waylaid. There has been no result."
+
+"No sign of it?"
+
+"Absolutely none."
+
+Holmes laughed. "It is quite a pretty little problem," said he.
+
+"But a very serious one to me," returned the king, reproachfully.
+
+"Very, indeed. And what does she propose to do with the
+photograph?"
+
+"To ruin me."
+
+"But how?"
+
+"I am about to be married."
+
+"So I have heard."
+
+"To Clotilde Lothman von Saxe-Meiningen, second daughter of the
+King of Scandinavia. You may know the strict principles of her
+family. She is herself the very soul of delicacy. A shadow of a
+doubt as to my conduct would bring the matter to an end."
+
+"And Irene Adler?"
+
+"Threatens to send them the photograph. And she will do it. I
+know that she will do it. You do not know her, but she has a soul
+of steel. She has the face of the most beautiful of women and the
+mind of the most resolute of men. Rather than I should marry
+another woman, there are no lengths to which she would not go--
+none."
+
+"You are sure she has not sent it yet?"
+
+"I am sure."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"Because she has said that she would send it on the day when the
+betrothal was publicly proclaimed. That will be next Monday."
+
+"Oh, then we have three days yet," said Holmes, with a yawn. "That
+is very fortunate, as I have one or two matters of importance to
+look into just at present. Your majesty will, of course, stay in
+London for the present?"
+
+"Certainly. You will find me at the Langham, under the name of the
+Count von Kramm."
+
+"Then I shall drop you a line to let you know how we progress."
+
+"Pray do so; I shall be all anxiety."
+
+"Then, as to money?"
+
+ "You have carte blanche."
+
+"Absolutely?"
+
+"I tell you that I would give one of the provinces of my kingdom to
+have that photograph."
+
+"And for present expenses?"
+
+The king took a heavy chamois-leather bag from under his cloak, and
+laid it on the table.
+
+"There are three hundred pounds in gold, and seven hundred in
+notes," he said.
+
+Holmes scribbled a receipt upon a sheet of his notebook, and handed
+it to him.
+
+"And mademoiselle's address?" he asked.
+
+"Is Briony Lodge, Serpentine Avenue, St. John's Wood."
+
+Holmes took a note of it. "One other question," said he,
+thoughtfully. "Was the photograph a cabinet?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"Then, good-night, your majesty, and I trust that we shall soon
+have some good news for you. And good-night, Watson," he added, as
+the wheels of the royal brougham rolled down the street. "If you
+will be good enough to call to-morrow afternoon, at three o'clock,
+I should like to chat this little matter over with you."
+
+
+II
+
+
+At three o'clock precisely I was at Baker Street, but Holmes had
+not yet returned. The landlady informed me that he had left the
+house shortly after eight o'clock in the morning. I sat down
+beside the fire, however, with the intention of awaiting him,
+however long he might be. I was already deeply interested in his
+inquiry, for, though it was surrounded by none of the grim and
+strange features which were associated with the two crimes which I
+have already recorded, still, the nature of the case and the
+exalted station of his client gave it a character of its own.
+Indeed, apart from the nature of the investigation which my friend
+had on hand, there was something in his masterly grasp of a
+situation, and his keen, incisive reasoning, which made it a
+pleasure to me to study his system of work, and to follow the
+quick, subtle methods by which he disentangled the most
+inextricable mysteries. So accustomed was I to his invariable
+success that the very possibility of his failing had ceased to
+enter into my head.
+
+It was close upon four before the door opened, and a drunken-
+looking groom, ill-kempt and side-whiskered, with an inflamed face
+and disreputable clothes, walked into the room. Accustomed as I
+was to my friend's amazing powers in the use of disguises, I had to
+look three times before I was certain that it was indeed he. With
+a nod he vanished into the bedroom, whence he emerged in five
+minutes tweed-suited and respectable, as of old. Putting his hands
+into his pockets, he stretched out his legs in front of the fire,
+and laughed heartily for some minutes.
+
+"Well, really!" he cried, and then he choked, and laughed again
+until he was obliged to lie back, limp and helpless, in the chair.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"It's quite too funny. I am sure you could never guess how I
+employed my morning, or what I ended by doing."
+
+"I can't imagine. I suppose that you have been watching the
+habits, and, perhaps, the house, of Miss Irene Adler."
+
+"Quite so, but the sequel was rather unusual. I will tell you,
+however. I left the house a little after eight o'clock this
+morning in the character of a groom out of work. There is a
+wonderful sympathy and freemasonry among horsey men. Be one of
+them, and you will know all that there is to know. I soon found
+Briony Lodge. It is a bijou villa, with a garden at the back, but
+built out in the front right up to the road, two stories. Chubb
+lock to the door. Large sitting room on the right side, well
+furnished, with long windows almost to the floor, and those
+preposterous English window fasteners which a child could open.
+Behind there was nothing remarkable, save that the passage window
+could be reached from the top of the coach-house. I walked round
+it and examined it closely from every point of view, but without
+noting anything else of interest.
+
+"I then lounged down the street, and found, as I expected, that
+there was a mews in a lane which runs down by one wall of the
+garden. I lent the hostlers a hand in rubbing down their horses,
+and I received in exchange two-pence, a glass of half and half, two
+fills of shag tobacco, and as much information as I could desire
+about Miss Adler, to say nothing of half a dozen other people in
+the neighborhood, in whom I was not in the least interested, but
+whose biographies I was compelled to listen to."
+
+"And what of Irene Adler?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, she has turned all the men's heads down in that part. She is
+the daintiest thing under a bonnet on this planet. So say the
+Serpentine Mews, to a man. She lives quietly, sings at concerts,
+drives out at five every day, and returns at seven sharp for
+dinner. Seldom goes out at other times, except when she sings.
+Has only one male visitor, but a good deal of him. He is dark,
+handsome, and dashing; never calls less than once a day, and often
+twice. He is a Mr. Godfrey Norton of the Inner Temple. See the
+advantages of a cabman as a confidant. They had driven him home a
+dozen times from Serpentine Mews, and knew all about him. When I
+had listened to all that they had to tell, I began to walk up and
+down near Briony Lodge once more, and to think over my plan of
+campaign.
+
+"This Godfrey Norton was evidently an important factor in the
+matter. He was a lawyer. That sounded ominous. What was the
+relation between them, and what the object of his repeated visits?
+Was she his client, his friend, or his mistress? If the former,
+she had probably transferred the photograph to his keeping. If the
+latter, it was less likely. On the issue of this question depended
+whether I should continue my work at Briony Lodge, or turn my
+attention to the gentleman's chambers in the Temple. It was a
+delicate point, and it widened the field of my inquiry. I fear
+that I bore you with these details, but I have to let you see my
+little difficulties, if you are to understand the situation."
+
+"I am following you closely," I answered.
+
+"I was still balancing the matter in my mind, when a hansom cab
+drove up to Briony Lodge, and a gentleman sprung out. He was a
+remarkably handsome man, dark, aquiline, and mustached--evidently
+the man of whom I had heard. He appeared to be in a great hurry,
+shouted to the cabman to wait, and brushed past the maid who opened
+the door, with the air of a man who was thoroughly at home.
+
+"He was in the house about half an hour, and I could catch glimpses
+of him in the windows of the sitting room, pacing up and down,
+talking excitedly and waving his arms. Of her I could see nothing.
+Presently he emerged, looking even more flurried than before. As
+he stepped up to the cab, he pulled a gold watch from his pocket
+and looked at it earnestly. 'Drive like the devil!' he shouted,
+'first to Gross & Hankey's in Regent Street, and then to the Church
+of St. Monica in the Edgeware Road. Half a guinea if you do it in
+twenty minutes!'
+
+"Away they went, and I was just wondering whether I should not do
+well to follow them, when up the lane came a neat little landau,
+the coachman with his coat only half buttoned, and his tie under
+his ear, while all the tags of his harness were sticking out of the
+buckles. It hadn't pulled up before she shot out of the hall door
+and into it. I only caught a glimpse of her at the moment, but she
+was a lovely woman, with a face that a man might die for.
+
+"'The Church of St. Monica, John,' she cried; 'and half a sovereign
+if you reach it in twenty minutes.'
+
+"This was quite too good to lose, Watson. I was just balancing
+whether I should run for it, or whether I should perch behind her
+landau, when a cab came through the street. The driver looked
+twice at such a shabby fare; but I jumped in before he could
+object. 'The Church of St. Monica,' said I, 'and half a sovereign
+if you reach it in twenty minutes.' It was twenty-five minutes to
+twelve, and of course it was clear enough what was in the wind.
+
+"My cabby drove fast. I don't think I ever drove faster, but the
+others were there before us. The cab and landau with their
+steaming horses were in front of the door when I arrived. I paid
+the man, and hurried into the church. There was not a soul there
+save the two whom I had followed, and a surpliced clergyman, who
+seemed to be expostulating with them. They were all three standing
+in a knot in front of the altar. I lounged up the side aisle like
+any other idler who has dropped into a church. Suddenly, to my
+surprise, the three at the altar faced round to me, and Godfrey
+Norton came running as hard as he could toward me.
+
+"'Thank God!' he cried. 'You'll do. Come! Come!'
+
+"'What then?' I asked.
+
+"'Come, man, come; only three minutes, or it won't be legal.'
+
+"I was half dragged up to the altar, and, before I knew where I
+was, I found myself mumbling responses which were whispered in my
+ear, and vouching for things of which I knew nothing, and generally
+assisting in the secure tying up of Irene Adler, spinster, to
+Godfrey Norton, bachelor. It was all done in an instant, and there
+was the gentleman thanking me on the one side and the lady on the
+other, while the clergyman beamed on me in front. It was the most
+preposterous position in which I ever found myself in my life, and
+it was the thought of it that started me laughing just now. It
+seems that there had been some informality about their license;
+that the clergyman absolutely refused to marry them without a
+witness of some sort, and that my lucky appearance saved the
+bridegroom from having to sally out into the streets in search of a
+best man. The bride gave me a sovereign, and I mean to wear it on
+my watch chain in memory of the occasion."
+
+"This is a very unexpected turn of affairs," said I; "and what
+then?"
+
+"Well, I found my plans very seriously menaced. It looked as if
+the pair might take an immediate departure, and so necessitate very
+prompt and energetic measures on my part. At the church door,
+however, they separated, he driving back to the Temple, and she to
+her own house. 'I shall drive out in the park at five as usual,'
+she said, as she left him. I heard no more. They drove away in
+different directions, and I went off to make my own arrangements."
+
+"Which are?"
+
+"Some cold beef and a glass of beer," he answered, ringing the
+bell. "I have been too busy to think of food, and I am likely to
+be busier still this evening. By the way, doctor, I shall want
+your cooperation."
+
+"I shall be delighted."
+
+"You don't mind breaking the law?"
+
+"Not in the least."
+
+"Nor running a chance of arrest?"
+
+"Not in a good cause."
+
+"Oh, the cause is excellent!"
+
+"Then I am your man."
+
+"I was sure that I might rely on you."
+
+"But what is it you wish?"
+
+"When Mrs. Turner has brought in the tray I will make it clear to
+you. Now," he said, as he turned hungrily on the simple fare that
+our landlady had provided, "I must discuss it while I eat, for I
+have not much time. It is nearly five now. In two hours we must
+be on the scene of action. Miss Irene, or Madame, rather, returns
+from her drive at seven. We must be at Briony Lodge to meet her."
+
+"And what then?"
+
+"You must leave that to me. I have already arranged what is to
+occur. There is only one point on which I must insist. You must
+not interfere, come what may. You understand?"
+
+"I am to be neutral?"
+
+"To do nothing whatever. There will probably be some small
+unpleasantness. Do not join in it. It will end in my being
+conveyed into the house. Four or five minutes afterwards the
+sitting-room window will open. You are to station yourself close
+to that open window."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You are to watch me, for I will be visible to you."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And when I raise my hand--so--you will throw into the room what I
+give you to throw, and will, at the same time, raise the cry of
+fire. You quite follow me?"
+
+"Entirely."
+
+"It is nothing very formidable," he said, taking a long, cigar-
+shaped roll from his pocket. "It is an ordinary plumber's smoke-
+rocket, fitted with a cap at either end, to make it self-lighting.
+Your task is confined to that. When you raise your cry of fire, it
+will be taken up by quite a number of people. You may then walk to
+the end of the street, and I will rejoin you in ten minutes. I
+hope that I have made myself clear?"
+
+"I am to remain neutral, to get near the window, to watch you, and,
+at the signal, to throw in this object, then to raise the cry of
+fire and to wait you at the corner of the street."
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"Then you may entirely rely on me."
+
+"That is excellent. I think, perhaps, it is almost time that I
+prepared for the new role I have to play."
+
+He disappeared into his bedroom, and returned in a few minutes in
+the character of an amiable and simple-minded Nonconformist
+clergyman. His broad, black hat, his baggy trousers, his white
+tie, his sympathetic smile, and general look of peering and
+benevolent curiosity were such as Mr. John Hare alone could have
+equaled. It was not merely that Holmes changed his costume. His
+expression, his manner, his very soul seemed to vary with every
+fresh part that he assumed. The stage lost a fine actor, even as
+science lost an acute reasoner, when he became a specialist in
+crime.
+
+It was a quarter past six when we left Baker Street, and it still
+wanted ten minutes to the hour when we found ourselves in
+Serpentine Avenue. It was already dusk, and the lamps were just
+being lighted as we paced up and down in front of Briony Lodge,
+waiting for the coming of its occupant. The house was just such as
+I had pictured it from Sherlock Holmes's succinct description, but
+the locality appeared to be less private than I expected. On the
+contrary, for a small street in a quiet neighborhood, it was
+remarkably animated. There was a group of shabbily dressed men
+smoking and laughing in a corner, a scissors grinder with his
+wheel, two guardsmen who were flirting with a nurse girl, and
+several well-dressed young men who were lounging up and down with
+cigars in their mouths.
+
+"You see," remarked Holmes, as we paced to and fro in front of the
+house, "this marriage rather simplifies matters. The photograph
+becomes a double-edged weapon now. The chances are that she would
+be as averse to its being seen by Mr. Godfrey Norton as our client
+is to its coming to the eyes of his princess. Now the question is--
+where are we to find the photograph?"
+
+"Where, indeed?"
+
+"It is most unlikely that she carries it about with her. It is
+cabinet size. Too large for easy concealment about a woman's
+dress. She knows that the king is capable of having her waylaid
+and searched. Two attempts of the sort have already been made. We
+may take it, then, that she does not carry it about with her."
+
+"Where, then?"
+
+"Her banker or her lawyer. There is that double possibility. But
+I am inclined to think neither. Women are naturally secretive, and
+they like to do their own secreting. Why should she hand it over
+to anyone else? She could trust her own guardianship, but she
+could not tell what indirect or political influence might be
+brought to bear upon a business man. Besides, remember that she
+had resolved to use it within a few days. It must be where she can
+lay her hands upon it. It must be in her own house."
+
+"But it has twice been burglarized."
+
+"Pshaw! They did not know how to look."
+
+"But how will you look?"
+
+"I will not look."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"I will get her to show me."
+
+"But she will refuse."
+
+"She will not be able to. But I hear the rumble of wheels. It is
+her carriage. Now carry out my orders to the letter."
+
+As he spoke, the gleam of the sidelights of a carriage came round
+the curve of the avenue. It was a smart little landau which
+rattled up to the door of Briony Lodge. As it pulled up one of the
+loafing men at the corner dashed forward to open the door in the
+hope of earning a copper, but was elbowed away by another loafer
+who had rushed up with the same intention. A fierce quarrel broke
+out which was increased by the two guardsmen, who took sides with
+one of the loungers, and by the scissors grinder, who was equally
+hot upon the other side. A blow was struck, and in an instant the
+lady, who had stepped from her carriage, was the center of a little
+knot of struggling men who struck savagely at each other with their
+fists and sticks. Holmes dashed into the crowd to protect the
+lady; but, just as he reached her, he gave a cry and dropped to the
+ground, with the blood running freely down his face. At his fall
+the guardsmen took to their heels in one direction and the loungers
+in the other, while a number of better-dressed people who had
+watched the scuffle without taking part in it crowded in to help
+the lady and to attend to the injured man. Irene Adler, as I will
+still call her, had hurried up the steps; but she stood at the top,
+with her superb figure outlined against the lights of the ball,
+looking back into the street.
+
+"Is the poor gentleman much hurt?" she asked.
+
+"He is dead," cried several voices.
+
+"No, no, there's life in him," shouted another. "But he'll be gone
+before you can get him to the hospital."
+
+"He's a brave fellow," said a woman. "They would have had the
+lady's purse and watch if it hadn't been for him. They were a
+gang, and a rough one, too. Ah! he's breathing now."
+
+"He can't lie in the street. May we bring him in, marm?"
+
+"Surely. Bring him into the sitting room. There is a comfortable
+sofa. This way, please." Slowly and solemnly he was borne into
+Briony Lodge, and laid out in the principal room, while I still
+observed the proceedings from my post by the window. The lamps had
+been lighted, but the blinds had not been drawn, so that I could
+see Holmes as he lay upon the couch. I do not know whether he was
+seized with compunction at that moment for the part he was playing,
+but I know that I never felt more heartily ashamed of myself in my
+life than when I saw the beautiful creature against whom I was
+conspiring, or the grace and kindliness with which she waited upon
+the injured man. And yet it would be the blackest treachery to
+Holmes to draw back now from the part which he had intrusted to me.
+I hardened my heart, and took the smoke-rocket from under my
+ulster. After all, I thought, we are not injuring her. We are but
+preventing her from injuring another.
+
+Holmes had sat upon the couch, and I saw him motion like a man who
+is in need of air. A maid rushed across and threw open the window.
+At the same instant I saw him raise his hand, and at the signal I
+tossed my rocket into the room with a cry of "Fire!" The word was
+no sooner out of my mouth than the whole crowd of spectators, well
+dressed and ill--gentlemen, hostlers, and servant maids--joined in
+a general shriek of "Fire!" Thick clouds of smoke curled through
+the room, and out at the open window. I caught a glimpse of
+rushing figures, and a moment later the voice of Holmes from within
+assuring them that it was a false alarm. Slipping through the
+shouting crowd, I made my way to the corner of the street, and in
+ten minutes was rejoiced to find my friend's arm in mine, and to
+get away from the scene of uproar. He walked swiftly and in
+silence for some few minutes, until we had turned down one of the
+quiet streets which led toward the Edgeware Road.
+
+"You did it very nicely, doctor," he remarked. "Nothing could have
+been better. It is all right."
+
+"You have the photograph?"
+
+"I know where it is."
+
+"And how did you find out?"
+
+"She showed me, as I told you that she would."
+
+"I am still in the dark."
+
+"I do not wish to make a mystery," said he, laughing. "The matter
+was perfectly simple. You, of course, saw that everyone in the
+street was an accomplice. They were all engaged for the evening."
+
+"I guessed as much."
+
+"Then, when the row broke out, I had a little moist red paint in
+the palm of my hand. I rushed forward, fell down, clapped my hand
+to my face, and became a piteous spectacle. It is an old trick."
+
+"That also I could fathom."
+
+"Then they carried me in. She was bound to have me in. What else
+could she do? And into her sitting room, which was the very room
+which I suspected. It lay between that and her bedroom, and I was
+determined to see which. They laid me on a couch, I motioned for
+air, they were compelled to open the window, and you had your
+chance."
+
+"How did that help you?"
+
+"It was all-important. When a woman thinks that her house is on
+fire, her instinct is at once to rush to the thing which she values
+most. It is a perfectly overpowering impulse, and I have more than
+once taken advantage of it. In the case of the Darlington
+Substitution Scandal it was of use to me, and also in the Arnsworth
+Castle business. A married woman grabs at her baby--an unmarried
+one reaches for her jewel box. Now it was clear to me that our
+lady of to-day had nothing in the house more precious to her than
+what we are in quest of. She would rush to secure it. The alarm
+of fire was admirably done. The smoke and shouting were enough to
+shake nerves of steel. She responded beautifully. The photograph
+is in a recess behind a sliding panel just above the right bell-
+pull. She was there in an instant, and I caught a glimpse of it as
+she drew it out. When I cried out that it was a false alarm, she
+replaced it, glanced at the rocket, rushed from the room, and I
+have not seen her since. I rose, and, making my excuses, escaped
+from the house. I hesitated whether to attempt to secure the
+photograph at once; but the coachman had come in, and as he was
+watching me narrowly, it seemed safer to wait. A little over-
+precipitance may ruin all."
+
+"And now?" I asked.
+
+"Our quest is practically finished. I shall call with the king to-
+morrow, and with you, if you care to come with us. We will be
+shown into the sitting room to wait for the lady, but it is
+probable that when she comes she may find neither us nor the
+photograph. It might be a satisfaction to his majesty to regain it
+with his own hands."
+
+"And when will you call?"
+
+"At eight in the morning. She will not be up, so that we shall
+have a clear field. Besides, we must be prompt, for this marriage
+may mean a complete change in her life and habits. I must wire to
+the king without delay."
+
+We had reached Baker Street, and had stopped at the door. He was
+searching his pockets for the key, when some one passing said:
+
+"Good night, Mister Sherlock Holmes."
+
+There were several people on the pavement at the time, but the
+greeting appeared to come from a slim youth in an ulster who had
+hurried by.
+
+"I've heard that voice before," said Holmes, staring down the dimly
+lighted street. "Now, I wonder who the deuce that could have
+been?"
+
+
+III
+
+
+I slept at Baker Street that night, and we were engaged upon our
+toast and coffee in the morning, when the King of Bohemia rushed
+into the room.
+
+"You have really got it?" he cried, grasping Sherlock Holmes by
+either shoulder, and looking eagerly into his face.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"But you have hopes?"
+
+"I have hopes."
+
+"Then come. I am all impatience to be gone."
+
+"We must have a cab."
+
+"No, my brougham is waiting."
+
+"Then that will simplify matters." We descended, and started off
+once more for Briony Lodge.
+
+"Irene Adler is married," remarked Holmes.
+
+"Married! When?"
+
+"Yesterday."
+
+"But to whom?"
+
+"To an English lawyer named Norton."
+
+"But she could not love him."
+
+"I am in hopes that she does."
+
+"And why in hopes?"
+
+"Because it would spare your majesty all fear of future annoyance.
+If the lady loves her husband, she does not love your majesty. If
+she does not love your majesty, there is no reason why she should
+interfere with your majesty's plan."
+
+"It is true. And yet-- Well, I wish she had been of my own
+station. What a queen she would have made!" He relapsed into a
+moody silence, which was not broken until we drew up in Serpentine
+Avenue.
+
+The door of Briony Lodge was open, and an elderly woman stood upon
+the steps. She watched us with a sardonic eye as we stepped from
+the brougham.
+
+"Mr. Sherlock Holmes, I believe?" said she.
+
+"I am Mr. Holmes," answered my companion, looking at her with a
+questioning and rather startled gaze.
+
+"Indeed! My mistress told me that you were likely to call. She
+left this morning, with her husband, by the 5:15 train from Charing
+Cross, for the Continent."
+
+"What!" Sherlock Holmes staggered back, white with chagrin and
+surprise.
+
+"Do you mean that she has left England?"
+
+"Never to return."
+
+"And the papers?" asked the king hoarsely. "All is lost!"
+
+"We shall see." He pushed past the servant, and rushed into the
+drawing-room, followed by the king and myself. The furniture was
+scattered about in every direction, with dismantled shelves, and
+open drawers, as if the lady had hurriedly ransacked them before
+her flight. Holmes rushed at the bell-pull, tore back a small
+sliding shutter, and plunging in his hand, pulled out a photograph
+and a letter. The photograph was of Irene Adler herself in evening
+dress; the letter was superscribed to "Sherlock Holmes, Esq. To be
+left till called for." My friend tore it open, and we all three
+read it together. It was dated at midnight of the preceding night,
+and ran in this way:
+
+
+"MY DEAR MR. SHERLOCK HOLMES,--You really did it very well. You
+took me in completely. Until after the alarm of the fire, I had
+not a suspicion. But then, when I found how I had betrayed myself,
+I began to think. I had been warned against you months ago. I had
+been told that if the king employed an agent, it would certainly be
+you. And your address had been given me. Yet, with all this, you
+made me reveal what you wanted to know. Even after I became
+suspicious, I found it hard to think evil of such a dear, kind old
+clergyman. But, you know, I have been trained as an actress
+myself. Male costume is nothing new to me. I often take advantage
+of the freedom which it gives. I sent John, the coachman, to watch
+you, ran upstairs, got into my walking clothes, as I call them, and
+came down just as you departed.
+
+"Well, I followed you to the door, and so made sure that I was
+really an object of interest to the celebrated Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
+Then I, rather imprudently, wished you good night, and started for
+the Temple to see my husband.
+
+"We both thought the best resource was flight when pursued by so
+formidable an antagonist; so you will find the nest empty when you
+call to-morrow. As to the photograph, your client may rest in
+peace. I love and am loved by a better man than he. The king may
+do what he will without hindrance from one whom he has cruelly
+wronged. I keep it only to safeguard myself, and preserve a weapon
+which will always secure me from any steps which he might take in
+the future. I leave a photograph which he might care to possess;
+and I remain, dear Mr. Sherlock Holmes, very truly yours,
+
+"IRENE NORTON, nee ADLER."
+
+
+"What a woman--oh, what a woman!" cried the King of Bohemia, when
+we had all three read this epistle. "Did I not tell you how quick
+and resolute she was? Would she not have made an admirable queen?
+Is it not a pity that she was not on my level?"
+
+"From what I have seen of the lady, she seems indeed to be on a
+very different level to your majesty," said Holmes coldly. "I am
+sorry that I have not been able to bring your majesty's business to
+a more successful conclusion."
+
+"On the contrary, my dear sir," cried the king, "nothing could be
+more successful. I know that her word is inviolate. The
+photograph is now as safe as if it were in the fire."
+
+"I am glad to hear your majesty say so."
+
+"I am immensely indebted to you. Pray tell me in what way I can
+reward you. This ring--" He slipped an emerald snake ring from
+his finger, and held it out upon the palm of his hand.
+
+"Your majesty has something which I should value even more highly,"
+said Holmes.
+
+"You have but to name it."
+
+"This photograph!"
+
+The king stared at him in amazement.
+
+"Irene's photograph!" he cried. "Certainly, if you wish it."
+
+"I thank your majesty. Then there is no more to be done in the
+matter. I have the honor to wish you a very good morning." He
+bowed, and turning away without observing the hand which the king
+had stretched out to him, he set off in my company for his
+chambers.
+
+And that was how a great scandal threatened to affect the kingdom
+of Bohemia, and how the best plans of Mr. Sherlock Holmes were
+beaten by a woman's wit. He used to make merry over the cleverness
+of women, but I have not heard him do it of late. And when he
+speaks of Irene Adler, or when he refers to her photograph, it is
+always under the honorable title of THE woman.
+
+
+
+The Red-Headed League
+
+
+I had called upon my friend, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, one day in the
+autumn of last year, and found him in deep conversation with a very
+stout, florid-faced elderly gentleman, with fiery red hair. With
+an apology for my intrusion, I was about to withdraw, when Holmes
+pulled me abruptly into the room and closed the door behind me.
+
+"You could not possibly have come at a better time, my dear
+Watson," he said, cordially.
+
+"I was afraid that you were engaged."
+
+"So I am. Very much so."
+
+"Then I can wait in the next room."
+
+"Not at all. This gentleman, Mr. Wilson, has been my partner and
+helper in many of my most successful cases, and I have no doubt
+that he will be of the utmost use to me in yours also."
+
+The stout gentleman half rose from his chair and gave a bob of
+greeting, with a quick little questioning glance from his small,
+fat-encircled eyes.
+
+"Try the settee," said Holmes, relapsing into his armchair, and
+putting his finger tips together, as was his custom when in
+judicial moods. "I know, my dear Watson, that you share my love of
+all that is bizarre and outside the conventions and humdrum routine
+of everyday life. You have shown your relish for it by the
+enthusiasm which has prompted you to chronicle, and, if you will
+excuse my saying so, somewhat to embellish so many of my own little
+adventures."
+
+"Your cases have indeed been of the greatest interest to me," I
+observed.
+
+"You will remember that I remarked the other day, just before we
+went into the very simple problem presented by Miss Mary
+Sutherland, that for strange effects and extraordinary combinations
+we must go to life itself, which is always far more daring than any
+effort of the imagination."
+
+"A proposition which I took the liberty of doubting."
+
+"You did, doctor, but none the less you must come round to my view,
+for otherwise I shall keep on piling fact upon fact on you, until
+your reason breaks down under them and acknowledge me to be right.
+Now, Mr. Jabez Wilson here has been good enough to call upon me
+this morning, and to begin a narrative which promises to be one of
+the most singular which I have listened to for some time. You have
+heard me remark that the strangest and most unique things are very
+often connected not with the larger but with the smaller crimes,
+and occasionally, indeed, where there is room for doubt whether any
+positive crime has been committed. As far as I have heard, it is
+impossible for me to say whether the present case is an instance of
+crime or not, but the course of events is certainly among the most
+singular that I have ever listened to. Perhaps, Mr. Wilson, you
+would have the great kindness to recommence your narrative. I ask
+you, not merely because my friend, Dr. Watson, has not heard the
+opening part, but also because the peculiar nature of the story
+makes me anxious to have every possible detail from your lips. As
+a rule, when I have heard some slight indication of the course of
+events I am able to guide myself by the thousands of other similar
+cases which occur to my memory. In the present instance I am
+forced to admit that the facts are, to the best of my belief,
+unique."
+
+The portly client puffed out his chest with an appearance of some
+little pride, and pulled a dirty and wrinkled newspaper from the
+inside pocket of his greatcoat. As he glanced down the
+advertisement column, with his head thrust forward, and the paper
+flattened out upon his knee, I took a good look at the man, and
+endeavored, after the fashion of my companion, to read the
+indications which might be presented by his dress or appearance.
+
+I did not gain very much, however, by my inspection. Our visitor
+bore every mark of being an average commonplace British tradesman,
+obese, pompous, and slow. He wore rather baggy gray shepherd's
+check trousers, a not over-clean black frock coat, unbuttoned in
+the front, and a drab waistcoat with a heavy brassy Albert chain,
+and a square pierced bit of metal dangling down as an ornament. A
+frayed top hat and a faded brown overcoat with a wrinkled velvet
+collar lay upon a chair beside him. Altogether, look as I would,
+there was nothing remarkable about the man save his blazing red
+head and the expression of extreme chagrin and discontent upon his
+features.
+
+Sherlock Holmes's quick eye took in my occupation, and he shook his
+head with a smile as he noticed my questioning glances. "Beyond
+the obvious facts that he has at some time done manual labor, that
+he takes snuff, that he is a Freemason, that he has been in China,
+and that he has done a considerable amount of writing lately, I can
+deduce nothing else."
+
+Mr. Jabez Wilson started up in his chair, with his forefinger upon
+the paper, but his eyes upon my companion.
+
+How, in the name of good fortune, did you know all that, Mr.
+Holmes?" he asked. "How did you know, for example, that I did
+manual labor? It's as true as gospel, for I began as a ship's
+carpenter."
+
+"Your hands, my dear sir. Your right hand is quite a size larger
+than your left. You have worked with it and the muscles are more
+developed."
+
+"Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry?"
+
+"I won't insult your intelligence by telling you how I read that,
+especially as, rather against the strict rules of your order, you
+use an arc and compass breastpin."
+
+"Ah, of course, I forgot that. But the writing?"
+
+"What else can be indicated by that right cuff so very shiny for
+five inches, and the left one with the smooth patch near the elbow
+where you rest it upon the desk."
+
+"Well, but China?"
+
+"The fish which you have tattooed immediately above your wrist
+could only have been done in China. I have made a small study of
+tattoo marks, and have even contributed to the literature of the
+subject. That trick of staining the fishes' scales of a delicate
+pink is quite peculiar to China. When, in addition, I see a
+Chinese coin hanging from your watch chain, the matter becomes even
+more simple."
+
+Mr. Jabez Wilson laughed heavily. "Well, I never!" said he. "I
+thought at first that you had done something clever, but I see that
+there was nothing in it after all."
+
+"I begin to think, Watson," said Holmes, "that I make a mistake in
+explaining. 'Omne ignotom pro magnifico,' you know, and my poor
+little reputation, such as it is, will suffer shipwreck if I am so
+candid. Can you not find the advertisement, Mr. Wilson?"
+
+"Yes, I have got it now," he answered, with his thick, red finger
+planted halfway down the column. "Here it is. This is what began
+it all. You just read it for yourself, sir."
+
+I took the paper from him and read as follows:
+
+
+"TO THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE: On account of the bequest of the late
+Ezekiah Hopkins, of Lebanon, Pa., U. S. A., there is now another
+vacancy open which entitles a member of the League to a salary of
+four pounds a week for purely nominal services. All red-headed men
+who are sound in body and mind and above the age of twenty-one
+years are eligible. Apply in person on Monday, at eleven o'clock,
+to Duncan Ross, at the offices of the League, 7 Pope's Court, Fleet
+Street."
+
+
+"What on earth does this mean?" I ejaculated, after I had twice
+read over the extraordinary announcement.
+
+Holmes chuckled and wriggled in his chair, as was his habit when in
+high spirits. "It is a little off the beaten track, isn't it?"
+said he. "And now, Mr. Wilson, off you go at scratch, and tell us
+all about yourself, your household, and the effect which this
+advertisement had upon your fortunes. You will first make a note,
+doctor, of the paper and the date."
+
+"It is The Morning Chronicle of April 27, 1890. Just two months
+ago."
+
+"Very good. Now, Mr. Wilson."
+
+"Well, it is just as I have been telling you, Mr. Sherlock Holmes,"
+said Jabez Wilson, mopping his forehead, "I have a small
+pawnbroker's business at Saxe-Coburg Square, near the City. It's
+not a very large affair, and of late years it has not done more
+than just give me a living. I used to be able to keep two
+assistants, but now I only keep one; and I would have a job to pay
+him but that he is willing to come for half wages, so as to learn
+the business."
+
+"What is the name of this obliging youth?" asked Sherlock Holmes.
+
+"His name is Vincent Spaulding, and he's not such a youth either.
+It's hard to say his age. I should not wish a smarter assistant,
+Mr. Holmes; and I know very well that he could better himself, and
+earn twice what I am able to give him. But, after all, if he is
+satisfied, why should I put ideas in his head?"
+
+"Why, indeed? You seem most fortunate in having an employee who
+comes under the full market price. It is not a common experience
+among employers in this age. I don't know that your assistant is
+not as remarkable as your advertisement."
+
+"Oh, he has his faults, too," said Mr. Wilson. "Never was such a
+fellow for photography. Snapping away with a camera when he ought
+to be improving his mind, and then diving down into the cellar like
+a rabbit into its hole to develop his pictures. That is his main
+fault; but, on the whole, he's a good worker. There's no vice in
+him."
+
+"He is still with you, I presume?"
+
+"Yes, sir. He and a girl of fourteen, who does a bit of simple
+cooking, and keeps the place clean--that's all I have in the house,
+for I am a widower, and never had any family. We live very
+quietly, sir, the three of us; and we keep a roof over our heads,
+and pay our debts, if we do nothing more.
+
+"The first thing that put us out was that advertisement.
+Spaulding, he came down into the office just this day eight weeks,
+with this very paper in his hand, and he says:
+
+"'I wish to the Lord, Mr. Wilson, that I was a redheaded man.'
+
+"'Why that?' I asks.
+
+"'Why,' says he, 'here's another vacancy on the League of the Red-
+headed Men. It's worth quite a little fortune to any man who gets
+it, and I understand that there are more vacancies than there are
+men, so that the trustees are at their wits' end what to do with
+the money. If my hair would only change color here's a nice little
+crib all ready for me to step into.'
+
+"'Why, what is it, then?' I asked. You see, Mr. Holmes, I am a
+very stay-at-home man, and, as my business came to me instead of my
+having to go to it, I was often weeks on end without putting my
+foot over the door mat. In that way I didn't know much of what was
+going on outside, and I was always glad of a bit of news.
+
+"'Have you never heard of the League of the Red-headed Men?' he
+asked, with his eyes open.
+
+"'Never.'
+
+"'Why, I wonder at that, for you are eligible yourself for one of
+the vacancies.'
+
+"'And what are they worth?' I asked.
+
+"'Oh, merely a couple of hundred a year, but the work is slight,
+and it need not interfere very much with one's other occupations.'
+
+"Well, you can easily think that that made me prick up my ears, for
+the business has not been over good for some years, and an extra
+couple of hundred would have been very handy.
+
+"'Tell me all about it,' said I.
+
+"'Well,' said he, showing me the advertisement, 'you can see for
+yourself that the League has a vacancy, and there is the address
+where you should apply for particulars. As far as I can make out,
+the League was founded by an American millionaire, Ezekiah Hopkins,
+who was very peculiar in his ways. He was himself red-headed, and
+he had a great sympathy for all red-headed men; so, when he died,
+it was found that he had left his enormous fortune in the hands of
+trustees, with instructions to apply the interest to the providing
+of easy berths to men whose hair is of that color. From all I hear
+it is splendid pay, and very little to do.'
+
+"'But,' said I, 'there would be millions of red-headed men who
+would apply.'
+
+"'Not so many as you might think,' he answered. 'You see it is
+really confined to Londoners, and to grown men. This American had
+started from London when he was young, and he wanted to do the old
+town a good turn. Then, again, I have heard it is of no use your
+applying if your hair is light red, or dark red, or anything but
+real, bright, blazing, fiery red. Now, if you cared to apply, Mr.
+Wilson, you would just walk in; but perhaps it would hardly be
+worth your while to put yourself out of the way for the sake of a
+few hundred pounds.'
+
+"Now it is a fact, gentlemen, as you may see for yourselves, that
+my hair is of a very full and rich tint, so that it seemed to me
+that, if there was to be any competition in the matter, I stood as
+good a chance as any man that I had ever met. Vincent Spaulding
+seemed to know so much about it that I thought he might prove
+useful, so I just ordered him to put up the shutters for the day,
+and to come right away with me. He was very willing to have a
+holiday, so we shut the business up, and started off for the
+address that was given us in the advertisement.
+
+"I never hope to see such a sight as that again, Mr. Holmes. From
+north, south, east, and west every man who had a shade of red in
+his hair had tramped into the City to answer the advertisement.
+Fleet Street was choked with red-headed folk, and Pope's Court
+looked like a coster's orange barrow. I should not have thought
+there were so many in the whole country as were brought together by
+that single advertisement. Every shade of color they were--straw,
+lemon, orange, brick, Irish setter, liver, clay; but, as Spaulding
+said, there were not many who had the real vivid flame-colored
+tint. When I saw how many were waiting, I would have given it up
+in despair; but Spaulding would not hear of it. How he did it I
+could not imagine, but he pushed and pulled and butted until he got
+me through the crowd, and right up to the steps which led to the
+office. There was a double stream upon the stair, some going up in
+hope, and some coming back dejected; but we wedged in as well as we
+could, and soon found ourselves in the office."
+
+"Your experience has been a most entertaining one," remarked
+Holmes, as his client paused and refreshed his memory with a huge
+pinch of snuff. "Pray continue your very interesting statement."
+
+"There was nothing in the office but a couple of wooden chairs and
+a deal table, behind which sat a small man, with a head that was
+even redder than mine. He said a few words to each candidate as he
+came up, and then he always managed to find some fault in them
+which would disqualify them. Getting a vacancy did not seem to be
+such a very easy matter after all. However, when our turn came,
+the little man was much more favorable to me than to any of the
+others, and he closed the door as we entered, so that he might have
+a private word with us.
+
+"'This is Mr. Jabez Wilson,' said my assistant, 'and he is willing
+to fill a vacancy in the League.'
+
+"'And he is admirably suited for it,' the other answered. 'He has
+every requirement. I cannot recall when I have seen anything so
+fine.' He took a step backward, cocked his head on one side, and
+gazed at my hair until I felt quite bashful. Then suddenly he
+plunged forward, wrung my hand, and congratulated me warmly on my
+success.
+
+"'It would be injustice to hesitate,' said he. 'You will, however,
+I am sure, excuse me for taking an obvious precaution.' With that
+he seized my hair in both his hands, and tugged until I yelled with
+the pain. 'There is water in your eyes,' said he, as he released
+me. 'I perceive that all is as it should be. But we have to be
+careful, for we have twice been deceived by wigs and once by paint.
+I could tell you tales of cobbler's wax which would disgust you
+with human nature.' He stepped over to the window and shouted
+through it at the top of his voice that the vacancy was filled. A
+groan of disappointment came up from below, and the folk all
+trooped away in different directions, until there was not a red
+head to be seen except my own and that of the manager.
+
+"'My name,' said he, 'is Mr. Duncan Ross, and I am myself one of
+the pensioners upon the fund left by our noble benefactor. Are you
+a married man, Mr. Wilson? Have you a family?'
+
+"I answered that I had not.
+
+"His face fell immediately.
+
+"'Dear me!' he said, gravely, 'that is very serious indeed! I am
+sorry to hear you say that. The fund was, of course, for the
+propagation and spread of the red heads as well as for their
+maintenance. It is exceedingly unfortunate that you should be a
+bachelor.'
+
+"My face lengthened at this, Mr. Holmes, for I thought that I was
+not to have the vacancy after all; but, after thinking it over for
+a few minutes, he said that it would be all right.
+
+"'In the case of another,' said he, 'the objection might be fatal,
+but we must stretch a point in favor of a man with such a head of
+hair as yours. When shall you be able to enter upon your new
+duties?'
+
+"'Well, it is a little awkward, for I have a business already,'
+said I.
+
+"'Oh, never mind about that, Mr. Wilson!' said Vincent Spaulding.
+'I shall be able to look after that for you.'
+
+"'What would be the hours?' I asked.
+
+"'Ten to two.'
+
+"Now a pawnbroker's business is mostly done of an evening, Mr.
+Holmes, especially Thursday and Friday evenings, which is just
+before pay day; so it would suit me very well to earn a little in
+the mornings. Besides, I knew that my assistant was a good man,
+and that he would see to anything that turned up.
+
+"'That would suit me very well,' said I. 'And the pay?'
+
+"'Is four pounds a week.'
+
+"'And the work?'
+
+"'Is purely nominal.'
+
+"'What do you call purely nominal?'
+
+"'Well, you have to be in the office, or at least in the building,
+the whole time. If you leave, you forfeit your whole position
+forever. The will is very clear upon that point. You don't comply
+with the conditions if you budge from the office during that time.'
+
+"'It's only four hours a day, and I should not think of leaving,'
+said I.
+
+"'No excuse will avail,' said Mr. Duncan Ross, 'neither sickness,
+nor business, nor anything else. There you must stay, or you lose
+your billet.'
+
+"'And the work?'
+
+"'Is to copy out the "Encyclopaedia Britannica." There is the
+first volume of it in that press. You must find your own ink,
+pens, and blotting paper, but we provide this table and chair.
+Will you be ready to-morrow?'
+
+"'Certainly,' I answered.
+
+"'Then, good-by, Mr. Jabez Wilson, and let me congratulate you once
+more on the important position which you have been fortunate enough
+to gain.' He bowed me out of the room, and I went home with my
+assistant hardly knowing what to say or do, I was so pleased at my
+own good fortune.
+
+"Well, I thought over the matter all day, and by evening I was in
+low spirits again; for I had quite persuaded myself that the whole
+affair must be some great hoax or fraud, though what its object
+might be I could not imagine. It seemed altogether past belief
+that anyone could make such a will, or that they would pay such a
+sum for doing anything so simple as copying out the 'Encyclopaedia
+Britannica.' Vincent Spaulding did what he could to cheer me up,
+but by bed time I had reasoned myself out of the whole thing.
+However, in the morning I determined to have a look at it anyhow,
+so I bought a penny bottle of ink, and with a quill pen and seven
+sheets of foolscap paper I started off for Pope's Court.
+
+"Well, to my surprise and delight everything was as right as
+possible. The table was set out ready for me, and Mr. Duncan Ross
+was there to see that I got fairly to work. He started me off upon
+the letter A, and then he left me; but he would drop in from time
+to time to see that all was right with me. At two o'clock he bade
+me good-day, complimented me upon the amount that I had written,
+and locked the door of the office after me.
+
+"This went on day after day, Mr. Holmes, and on Saturday the
+manager came in and planked down four golden sovereigns for my
+week's work. It was the same next week, and the same the week
+after. Every morning I was there at ten, and every afternoon I
+left at two. By degrees Mr. Duncan Ross took to coming in only
+once of a morning, and then, after a time, he did not come in at
+all. Still, of course. I never dared to leave the room for an
+instant, for I was not sure when he might come, and the billet was
+such a good one, and suited me so well, that I would not risk the
+loss of it.
+
+"Eight weeks passed away like this, and I had written about Abbots,
+and Archery, and Armor, and Architecture, and Attica, and hoped
+with diligence that I might get on to the Bs before very long. It
+cost me something in foolscap, and I had pretty nearly filled a
+shelf with my writings. And then suddenly the whole business came
+to an end."
+
+"To an end?"
+
+"Yes, sir. And no later than this morning. I went to my work as
+usual at ten o'clock, but the door was shut and locked, with a
+little square of cardboard hammered onto the middle of the panel
+with a tack. Here it is, and you can read for yourself."
+
+He held up a piece of white cardboard, about the size of a sheet of
+note paper. It read in this fashion:
+
+
+"THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE IS DISSOLVED.
+
+Oct. 9, 1890."
+
+
+Sherlock Holmes and I surveyed this curt announcement and the
+rueful face behind it, until the comical side of the affair so
+completely overtopped every consideration that we both burst out
+into a roar of laughter.
+
+"I cannot see that there is anything very funny," cried our client,
+flushing up to the roots of his flaming head. "If you can do
+nothing better than laugh at me, I can go elsewhere."
+
+"No, no," cried Holmes, shoving him back into the chair from which
+he had half risen. "I really wouldn't miss your case for the
+world. It is most refreshingly unusual. But there is, if you will
+excuse my saying so, something just a little funny about it. Pray
+what steps did you take when you found the card upon the door?"
+
+"I was staggered, sir. I did not know what to do. Then I called
+at the offices round, but none of them seemed to know anything
+about it. Finally, I went to the landlord, who is an accountant
+living on the ground floor, and I asked him if he could tell me
+what had become of the Red-headed League. He said that he had
+never heard of any such body. Then I asked him who Mr. Duncan Ross
+was. He answered that the name was new to him.
+
+"'Well,' said I, 'the gentleman at No. 4.'
+
+"'What, the red-headed man?'
+
+"'Yes.'
+
+"'Oh,' said he, 'his name was William Morris. He was a solicitor,
+and was using my room as a temporary convenience until his new
+premises were ready. He moved out yesterday.'
+
+"'Where could I find him?'
+
+"'Oh, at his new offices. He did tell me the address. Yes, 17
+King Edward Street, near St. Paul's.'
+
+"I started off, Mr. Holmes, but when I got to that address it was a
+manufactory of artificial knee-caps, and no one in it had ever
+heard of either Mr. William Morris or Mr. Duncan Ross."
+
+"And what did you do then?" asked Holmes.
+
+"I went home to Saxe-Coburg Square, and I took the advice of my
+assistant. But he could not help me in any way. He could only say
+that if I waited I should hear by post. But that was not quite
+good enough, Mr. Holmes. I did not wish to lose such a place
+without a struggle, so, as I had heard that you were good enough to
+give advice to poor folk who were in need of it, I came right away
+to you."
+
+"And you did very wisely," said Holmes. "Your case is an
+exceedingly remarkable one, and I shall be happy to look into it.
+From what you have told me I think that it is possible that graver
+issues hang from it than might at first sight appear."
+
+"Grave enough!" said Mr. Jabez Wilson. "Why, I have lost four
+pound a week."
+
+"As far as you are personally concerned," remarked Holmes, "I do
+not see that you have any grievance against this extraordinary
+league. On the contrary, you are, as I understand, richer by some
+thirty pounds, to say nothing of the minute knowledge which you
+have gained on every subject which comes under the letter A. You
+have lost nothing by them."
+
+"No, sir. But I want to find out about them, and who they are, and
+what their object was in playing this prank--if it was a prank--
+upon me. It was a pretty expensive joke for them, for it cost them
+two-and-thirty pounds."
+
+"We shall endeavor to clear up these points for you. And, first,
+one or two questions, Mr. Wilson. This assistant of yours who
+first called your attention to the advertisement--how long had he
+been with you?"
+
+"About a month then."
+
+"How did he come?"
+
+"In answer to an advertisement."
+
+"Was he the only applicant?"
+
+"No, I had a dozen."
+
+"Why did you pick him?"
+
+"Because he was handy and would come cheap."
+
+"At half wages, in fact."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding?"
+
+"Small, stout-built, very quick in his ways, no hair on his face,
+though he's not short of thirty. Has a white splash of acid upon
+his forehead."
+
+Holmes sat up in his chair in considerable excitement. I thought
+as much," said he. "Have you ever observed that his ears are
+pierced for earrings?"
+
+"Yes, sir. He told me that a gypsy had done it for him when he was
+a lad."
+
+"Hum!" said Holmes, sinking back in deep thought. "He is still
+with you?"
+
+"Oh, yes, sir; I have only just left him."
+
+"And has your business been attended to in your absence?"
+
+"Nothing to complain of, sir. There's never very much to do of a
+morning."
+
+"That will do, Mr. Wilson. I shall be happy to give you an opinion
+upon the subject in the course of a day or two. To-day is
+Saturday, and I hope that by Monday we may come to a conclusion."
+
+"Well, Watson," said Holmes, when our visitor had left us, "what do
+you make of it all?"
+
+"I make nothing of it," I answered frankly. "It is a most
+mysterious business."
+
+"As a rule," said Holmes, "the more bizarre a thing is the less
+mysterious it proves to be. It is your commonplace, featureless
+crimes which are really puzzling, just as a commonplace face is the
+most difficult to identify. But I must be prompt over this
+matter."
+
+"What are you going to do, then?" I asked.
+
+"To smoke," he answered. "It is quite a three-pipe problem, and I
+beg that you won't speak to me for fifty minutes." He curled
+himself up in his chair, with his thin knees drawn up to his
+hawklike nose, and there he sat with his eyes closed and his black
+clay pipe thrusting out like the bill of some strange bird. I had
+come to the conclusion that he had dropped asleep, and indeed was
+nodding myself, when he suddenly sprang out of his chair with the
+gesture of a man who has made up his mind, and put his pipe down
+upon the mantelpiece.
+
+"Sarasate plays at St. James's Hall this afternoon," he remarked.
+"What do you think, Watson? Could your patients spare you for a
+few hours?"
+
+"I have nothing to do to-day. My practice is never very
+absorbing."
+
+"Then put on your hat and come. I am going through the City first,
+and we can have some lunch on the way. I observe that there is a
+good deal of German music on the programme, which is rather more to
+my taste than Italian or French. It is introspective, and I want
+to introspect. Come along!"
+
+We traveled by the Underground as far as Aldersgate; and a short
+walk took us to Saxe-Coburg Square, the scene of the singular story
+which we had listened to in the morning. It was a poky, little,
+shabby-genteel place, where four lines of dingy, two-storied brick
+houses looked out into a small railed-in inclosure, where a lawn of
+weedy grass, and a few clumps of faded laurel bushes made a hard
+fight against a smoke-laden and uncongenial atmosphere. Three gilt
+balls and a brown board with JABEZ WILSON in white letters, upon a
+corner house, announced the place where our red-headed client
+carried on his business. Sherlock Holmes stopped in front of it
+with his head on one side, and looked it all over, with his eyes
+shining brightly between puckered lids. Then he walked slowly up
+the street, and then down again to the corner, still looking keenly
+at the houses. Finally he returned to the pawnbroker's and, having
+thumped vigorously upon the pavement with his stick two or three
+times, he went up to the door and knocked. It was instantly opened
+by a bright-looking, clean-shaven young fellow, who asked him to
+step in.
+
+"Thank you," said Holmes, "I only wished to ask you how you would
+go from here to the Strand."
+
+"Third right, fourth left," answered the assistant, promptly,
+closing the door.
+
+"Smart fellow, that," observed Holmes as we walked away. "He is,
+in my judgment, the fourth smartest man in London, and for daring I
+am not sure that he has not a claim to be third. I have known
+something of him before."
+
+"Evidently," said I, "Mr. Wilson's assistant counts for a good deal
+in this mystery of the Red-headed League. I am sure that you
+inquired your way merely in order that you might see him."
+
+"Not him."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"The knees of his trousers."
+
+"And what did you see?"
+
+"What I expected to see."
+
+"Why did you beat the pavement?"
+
+"My dear doctor, this is a time for observation, not for talk. We
+are spies in an enemy's country. We know something of Saxe-Coburg
+Square. Let us now explore the parts which lie behind it."
+
+The road in which we found ourselves as we turned round the corner
+from the retired Saxe-Coburg Square presented as great a contrast
+to it as the front of a picture does to the back. It was one of
+the main arteries which convey the traffic of the City to the north
+and west. The roadway was blocked with the immense stream of
+commerce flowing in a double tide inward and outward, while the
+footpaths were black with the hurrying swarm of pedestrians. It
+was difficult to realize, as we looked at the line of fine shops
+and stately business premises, that they really abutted on the
+other side upon the faded and stagnant square which we had just
+quitted.
+
+"Let me see," said Holmes, standing at the corner, and glancing
+along the line, "I should like just to remember the order of the
+houses here. It is a hobby of mine to have an exact knowledge of
+London. There is Mortimer's, the tobacconist; the little newspaper
+shop, the Coburg branch of the City and Suburban Bank, the
+Vegetarian Restaurant, and McFarlane's carriage-building depot.
+That carries us right on to the other block. And now, doctor,
+we've done our work, so it's time we had some play. A sandwich and
+a cup of coffee, and then off to violin-land, where all is
+sweetness, and delicacy, and harmony, and there are no red-headed
+clients to vex us with their conundrums."
+
+My friend was an enthusiastic musician, being himself not only a
+very capable performer, but a composer of no ordinary merit. All
+the afternoon he sat in the stalls wrapped in the most perfect
+happiness, gently waving his long thin fingers in time to the
+music, while his gently smiling face and his languid, dreamy eyes
+were as unlike those of Holmes the sleuth-hound, Holmes the
+relentless, keen-witted, ready-handed criminal agent, as it was
+possible to conceive. In his singular character the dual nature
+alternately asserted itself, and his extreme exactness and
+astuteness represented, as I have often thought, the reaction
+against the poetic and contemplative mood which occasionally
+predominated in him. The swing of his nature took him from extreme
+languor to devouring energy; and, as I knew well, he was never so
+truly formidable as when, for days on end, he had been lounging in
+his armchair amid his improvisations and his black-letter editions.
+Then it was that the lust of the chase would suddenly come upon
+him, and that his brilliant reasoning power would rise to the level
+of intuition, until those who were unacquainted with his methods
+would look askance at him as on a man whose knowledge was not that
+of other mortals. When I saw him that afternoon so enwrapped in
+the music at St. James's Hall, I felt that an evil time might be
+coming upon those whom he had set himself to hunt down.
+
+"You want to go home, no doubt, doctor," he remarked, as we
+emerged.
+
+"Yes, it would be as well."
+
+"And I have some business to do which will take some hours. This
+business at Saxe-Coburg Square is serious."
+
+"Why serious?"
+
+"A considerable crime is in contemplation. I have every reason to
+believe that we shall be in time to stop it. But to-day being
+Saturday rather complicates matters. I shall want your help to-
+night."
+
+"At what time?"
+
+"Ten will be early enough."
+
+I shall be at Baker Street at ten."
+
+"Very well. And, I say, doctor! there may be some little danger,
+so kindly put your army revolver in your pocket." He waved his
+hand, turned on his heel, and disappeared in an instant among the
+crowd.
+
+I trust that I am not more dense than my neighbors, but I was
+always oppressed with a sense of my own stupidity in my dealings
+with Sherlock Holmes. Here I had heard what he had heard, I had
+seen what he had seen, and yet from his words it was evident that
+he saw clearly not only what had happened, but what was about to
+happen, while to me the whole business was still confused and
+grotesque. As I drove home to my house in Kensington I thought
+over it all, from the extraordinary story of the red-headed copier
+of the "Encyclopaedia" down to the visit to Saxe-Coburg Square, and
+the ominous words with which he had parted from me. What was this
+nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed? Where were we
+going, and what were we to do? I had the hint from Holmes that
+this smooth-faced pawnbroker's assistant was a formidable man--a
+man who might play a deep game. I tried to puzzle it out, but gave
+it up in despair, and set the matter aside until night should bring
+an explanation.
+
+It was a quarter-past nine when I started from home and made my way
+across the Park, and so through Oxford Street to Baker Street. Two
+hansoms were standing at the door, and, as I entered the passage, I
+heard the sound of voices from above. On entering his room, I
+found Holmes in animated conversation with two men, one of whom I
+recognized as Peter Jones, the official police agent; while the
+other was a long, thin, sad-faced man, with a very shiny hat and
+oppressively respectable frock coat.
+
+"Ha! our party is complete," said Holmes, buttoning up his pea-
+jacket, and taking his heavy hunting crop from the rack. "Watson,
+I think you know Mr. Jones, of Scotland Yard? Let me introduce you
+to Mr. Merryweather, who is to be our companion in to-night's
+adventure."
+
+"We're hunting in couples again, doctor, you see," said Jones, in
+his consequential way. "Our friend here is a wonderful man for
+starting a chase. All he wants is an old dog to help him do the
+running down."
+
+"I hope a wild goose may not prove to be the end of our chase,"
+observed Mr. Merryweather gloomily.
+
+"You may place considerable confidence in Mr. Holmes, sir," said
+the police agent loftily. "He has his own little methods, which
+are, if he won't mind my saying so, just a little too theoretical
+and fantastic, but he has the makings of a detective in him. It is
+not too much to say that once or twice, as in that business of the
+Sholto murder and the Agra treasure, he has been more nearly
+correct than the official force."
+
+"Oh, if you say so, Mr. Jones, it is all right!" said the stranger,
+with deference. "Still, I confess that I miss my rubber. It is
+the first Saturday night for seven-and-twenty years that I have not
+had my rubber."
+
+"I think you will find," said Sherlock Holmes, "that you will play
+for a higher stake to-night than you have ever done yet, and that
+the play will be more exciting. For you, Mr. Merryweather, the
+stake will be some thirty thousand pounds; and for you, Jones, it
+will be the man upon whom you wish to lay your hands."
+
+"John Clay, the murderer, thief, smasher, and forger. He's a young
+man, Mr. Merryweather, but he is at the head of his profession, and
+I would rather have my bracelets on him than on any criminal in
+London. He's a remarkable man, is young John Clay. His
+grandfather was a Royal Duke, and he himself has been to Eton and
+Oxford. His brain is as cunning as his fingers, and though we meet
+signs of him at every turn, we never know where to find the man
+himself. He'll crack a crib in Scotland one week, and be raising
+money to build an orphanage in Cornwall the next. I've been on his
+track for years, and have never set eyes on him yet."
+
+"I hope that I may have the pleasure of introducing you to-night.
+I've had one or two little turns also with Mr. John Clay, and I
+agree with you that he is at the head of his profession. It is
+past ten, however, and quite time that we started. If you two will
+take the first hansom, Watson and I will follow in the second."
+
+Sherlock Holmes was not very communicative during the long drive,
+and lay back in the cab humming the tunes which he had heard in the
+afternoon. We rattled through an endless labyrinth of gaslit
+streets until we emerged into Farringdon Street.
+
+"We are close there now," my friend remarked. "This fellow
+Merryweather is a bank director and personally interested in the
+matter. I thought it as well to have Jones with us also. He is
+not a bad fellow, though an absolute imbecile in his profession.
+He has one positive virtue. He is as brave as a bulldog, and as
+tenacious as a lobster if he gets his claws upon anyone. Here we
+are, and they are waiting for us."
+
+We had reached the same crowded thoroughfare in which we had found
+ourselves in the morning. Our cabs were dismissed, and following
+the guidance of Mr. Merryweather, we passed down a narrow passage,
+and through a side door which he opened for us. Within there was a
+small corridor, which ended in a very massive iron gate. This also
+was opened, and led down a flight of winding stone steps, which
+terminated at another formidable gate. Mr. Merryweather stopped to
+light a lantern, and then conducted us down a dark, earth-smelling
+passage, and so, after opening a third door, into a huge vault or
+cellar, which was piled all round with crates and massive boxes.
+
+"You are not very vulnerable from above," Holmes remarked, as he
+held up the lantern and gazed about him.
+
+"Nor from below," said Mr. Merryweather, striking his stick upon
+the flags which lined the floor. "Why, dear me, it sounds quite
+hollow!" he remarked, looking up in surprise.
+
+"I must really ask you to be a little more quiet," said Holmes
+severely. "You have already imperiled the whole success of our
+expedition. Might I beg that you would have the goodness to sit
+down upon one of those boxes, and not to interfere?"
+
+The solemn Mr. Merryweather perched himself upon a crate, with a
+very injured expression upon his face, while Holmes fell upon his
+knees upon the floor, and, with the lantern and a magnifying lens,
+began to examine minutely the cracks between the stones. A few
+seconds sufficed to satisfy him, for he sprang to his feet again,
+and put his glass in his pocket.
+
+"We have at least an hour before us," he remarked, "for they can
+hardly take any steps until the good pawnbroker is safely in bed.
+Then they will not lose a minute, for the sooner they do their work
+the longer time they will have for their escape. We are at
+present, doctor--as no doubt you have divined--in the cellar of the
+City branch of one of the principal London banks. Mr. Merryweather
+is the chairman of directors, and he will explain to you that there
+are reasons why the more daring criminals of London should take a
+considerable interest in this cellar at present."
+
+"It is our French gold," whispered the director. "We have had
+several warnings that an attempt might be made upon it."
+
+"Your French gold?"
+
+"Yes. We had occasion some months ago to strengthen our resources,
+and borrowed, for that purpose, thirty thousand napoleons from the
+Bank of France. It has become known that we have never had
+occasion to unpack the money, and that it is still lying in our
+cellar. The crate upon which I sit contains two thousand napoleons
+packed between layers of lead foil. Our reserve of bullion is much
+larger at present than is usually kept in a single branch office,
+and the directors have had misgivings upon the subject."
+
+"Which were very well justified," observed Holmes. "And now it is
+time that we arranged our little plans. I expect that within an
+hour matters will come to a head. In the meantime, Mr.
+Merryweather, we must put the screen over that dark lantern."
+
+"And sit in the dark?"
+
+"I am afraid so. I had brought a pack of cards in my pocket, and I
+thought that, as we were a partie carree, you might have your
+rubber after all. But I see that the enemy's preparations have
+gone so far that we cannot risk the presence of a light. And,
+first of all, we must choose our positions. These are daring men,
+and, though we shall take them at a disadvantage, they may do us
+some harm, unless we are careful. I shall stand behind this crate,
+and do you conceal yourself behind those. Then, when I flash a
+light upon them, close in swiftly. If they fire, Watson, have no
+compunction about shooting them down."
+
+I placed my revolver, cocked, upon the top of the wooden case
+behind which I crouched. Holmes shot the slide across the front of
+his lantern, and left us in pitch darkness--such an absolute
+darkness as I have never before experienced. The smell of hot
+metal remained to assure us that the light was still there, ready
+to flash out at a moment's notice. To me, with my nerves worked up
+to a pitch of expectancy, there was something depressing and
+subduing in the sudden gloom, and in the cold, dank air of the
+vault.
+
+"They have but one retreat," whispered Holmes. "That is back
+through the house into Saxe-Coburg Square. I hope that you have
+done what I asked you, Jones?"
+
+"I have an inspector and two officers waiting at the front door."
+
+"Then we have stopped all the holes. And now we must be silent and
+wait."
+
+What a time it seemed! From comparing notes afterwards, it was but
+an hour and a quarter, yet it appeared to me that the night must
+have almost gone, and the dawn be breaking above us. My limbs were
+weary and stiff, for I feared to change my position, yet my nerves
+were worked up to the highest pitch of tension, and my hearing was
+so acute that I could not only hear the gentle breathing of my
+companions, but I could distinguish the deeper, heavier inbreath of
+the bulky Jones from the thin, sighing note of the bank director.
+From my position I could look over the case in the direction of the
+floor. Suddenly my eyes caught the glint of a light.
+
+At first it was but a lurid spark upon the stone pavement. Then it
+lengthened out until it became a yellow line, and then, without any
+warning or sound, a gash seemed to open and a hand appeared, a
+white, almost womanly hand, which felt about in the center of the
+little area of light. For a minute or more the hand, with its
+writhing fingers, protruded out of the floor. Then it was
+withdrawn as suddenly as it appeared, and all was dark again save
+the single lurid spark, which marked a chink between the stones.
+
+Its disappearance, however, was but momentary. With a rending,
+tearing sound, one of the broad white stones turned over upon its
+side, and left a square, gaping hole, through which streamed the
+light of a lantern. Over the edge there peeped a clean-cut, boyish
+face, which looked keenly about it, and then, with a hand on either
+side of the aperture, drew itself shoulder-high and waist-high,
+until one knee rested upon the edge. In another instant he stood
+at the side of the hole, and was hauling after him a companion,
+lithe and small like himself, with a pale face and a shock of very
+red hair.
+
+"It's all clear," he whispered. "Have you the chisel and the bags?
+Great Scott! Jump, Archie, jump, and I'll swing for it!"
+
+Sherlock Holmes had sprung out and seized the intruder by the
+collar. The other dived down the hole, and I heard the sound of
+rending cloth as Jones clutched at his skirts. The light flashed
+upon the barrel of a revolver, but Holmes's hunting crop came down
+on the man's wrist, and the pistol clinked upon the stone floor.
+
+"It's no use, John Clay," said Holmes blandly, "you have no chance
+at all."
+
+"So I see," the other answered, with the utmost coolness. "I fancy
+that my pal is all right, though I see you have got his coat-
+tails."
+
+"There are three men waiting for him at the door," said Holmes.
+
+"Oh, indeed. You seem to have done the thing very completely. I
+must compliment you."
+
+"And I you," Holmes answered. "Your red-headed idea was very new
+and effective."
+
+"You'll see your pal again presently," said Jones. "He's quicker
+at climbing down holes than I am. Just hold out while I fix the
+derbies."
+
+"I beg that you will not touch me with your filthy hands," remarked
+our prisoner, as the handcuffs clattered upon his wrists. "You may
+not be aware that I have royal blood in my veins. Have the
+goodness also, when you address me, always to say 'sir' and
+'please.'"
+
+"All right," said Jones, with a stare and a snigger. "Well, would
+you please, sir, march upstairs where we can get a cab to carry
+your highness to the police station?"
+
+"That is better," said John Clay serenely. He made a sweeping bow
+to the three of us, and walked quietly off in the custody of the
+detective.
+
+"Really, Mr. Holmes," said Mr. Merryweather, as we followed them
+from the cellar, "I do not know how the bank can thank you or repay
+you. There is no doubt that you have detected and defeated in the
+most complete manner one of the most determined attempts at bank
+robbery that have ever come within my experience."
+
+"I have had one or two little scores of my own to settle with Mr.
+John Clay," said Holmes. "I have been at some small expense over
+this matter, which I shall expect the bank to refund, but beyond
+that I am amply repaid by having had an experience which is in many
+ways unique, and by hearing the very remarkable narrative of the
+Red-headed League."
+
+
+"You see, Watson," he explained, in the early hours of the morning,
+as we sat over a glass of whisky and soda in Baker Street, "it was
+perfectly obvious from the first that the only possible object of
+this rather fantastic business of the advertisement of the League,
+and the copying of the 'Encyclopaedia,' must be to get this not
+over-bright pawnbroker out of the way for a number of hours every
+day. It was a curious way of managing it, but really it would be
+difficult to suggest a better. The method was no doubt suggested
+to Clay's ingenious mind by the color of his accomplice's hair.
+The four pounds a week was a lure which must draw him, and what was
+it to them, who were playing for thousands? They put in the
+advertisement, one rogue has the temporary office, the other rogue
+incites the man to apply for it, and together they manage to secure
+his absence every morning in the week. From the time that I heard
+of the assistant having come for half wages, it was obvious to me
+that he had some strong motive for securing the situation."
+
+"But how could you guess what the motive was?"
+
+"Had there been women in the house, I should have suspected a mere
+vulgar intrigue. That, however, was out of the question. The
+man's business was a small one, and there was nothing in his house
+which could account for such elaborate preparations, and such an
+expenditure as they were at. It must then be something out of the
+house. What could it be? I thought of the assistant's fondness
+for photography, and his trick of vanishing into the cellar. The
+cellar! There was the end of this tangled clew. Then I made
+inquiries as to this mysterious assistant, and found that I had to
+deal with one of the coolest and most daring criminals in London.
+He was doing something in the cellar--something which took many
+hours a day for months on end. What could it be, once more? I
+could think of nothing save that he was running a tunnel to some
+other building.
+
+"So far I had got when we went to visit the scene of action. I
+surprised you by beating upon the pavement with my stick. I was
+ascertaining whether the cellar stretched out in front or behind.
+It was not in front. Then I rang the bell, and, as I hoped, the
+assistant answered it. We have had some skirmishes, but we had
+never set eyes upon each other before. I hardly looked at his
+face. His knees were what I wished to see. You must yourself have
+remarked how worn, wrinkled, and stained they were. They spoke of
+those hours of burrowing. The only remaining point was what they
+were burrowing for. I walked round the corner, saw that the City
+and Suburban Bank abutted on our friend's premises, and felt that I
+had solved my problem. When you drove home after the concert I
+called upon Scotland Yard, and upon the chairman of the bank
+directors, with the result that you have seen."
+
+"And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to-
+night?" I asked.
+
+"Well, when they closed their League offices that was a sign that
+they cared no longer about Mr. Jabez Wilson's presence; in other
+words, that they had completed their tunnel. But it was essential
+that they should use it soon, as it might be discovered, or the
+bullion might be removed. Saturday would suit them better than any
+other day, as it would give them two days for their escape. For
+all these reasons I expected them to come to-night."
+
+"You reasoned it out beautifully," I exclaimed, in unfeigned
+admiration. "It is so long a chain, and yet every link rings
+true."
+
+"It saved me from ennui," he answered, yawning. "Alas! I already
+feel it closing in upon me. My life is spent in one long effort to
+escape from the commonplaces of existence. These little problems
+help me to do so."
+
+"And you are a benefactor of the race," said I. He shrugged his
+shoulders. "Well, perhaps, after all, it is of some little use,"
+he remarked. "'L'homme c'est rien--l'oeuvre c'est tout,' as
+Gustave Flaubert wrote to Georges Sands."
+
+
+
+Egerton Castle
+
+The Baron's Quarry
+
+
+"Oh, no, I assure you, you are not boring Mr. Marshfield," said
+this personage himself in his gentle voice--that curious voice that
+could flow on for hours, promulgating profound and startling
+theories on every department of human knowledge or conducting
+paradoxical arguments without a single inflection or pause of
+hesitation. "I am, on the contrary, much interested in your
+hunting talk. To paraphrase a well-worn quotation somewhat widely,
+nihil humanum a me alienum est. Even hunting stories may have
+their point of biological interest; the philologist sometimes
+pricks his ear to the jargon of the chase; moreover, I am not
+incapable of appreciating the subject matter itself. This seems to
+excite some derision. I admit I am not much of a sportsman to look
+at, nor, indeed, by instinct, yet I have had some out-of-the-way
+experiences in that line--generally when intent on other pursuits.
+I doubt, for instance, if even you, Major Travers, notwithstanding
+your well-known exploits against man and beast, notwithstanding
+that doubtful smile of yours, could match the strangeness of a
+certain hunting adventure in which I played an important part."
+
+The speaker's small, deep-set, black eyes, that never warmed to
+anything more human than a purely speculative scientific interest
+in his surroundings, here wandered round the skeptical yet
+expectant circle with bland amusement. He stretched out his
+bloodless fingers for another of his host's superfine cigars and
+proceeded, with only such interruptions as were occasioned by the
+lighting and careful smoking of the latter.
+
+"I was returning home after my prolonged stay in Petersburg,
+intending to linger on my way and test with mine own ears certain
+among the many dialects of Eastern Europe--anent which there is a
+symmetrical little cluster of philological knotty points it is my
+modest intention one day to unravel. However, that is neither here
+nor there. On the road to Hungary I bethought myself opportunely
+of proving the once pressingly offered hospitality of the Baron
+Kossowski.
+
+"You may have met the man, Major Travers; he was a tremendous
+sportsman, if you like. I first came across him at McNeil's place
+in remote Ireland. Now, being in Bukowina, within measurable
+distance of his Carpathian abode, and curious to see a Polish lord
+at home, I remembered his invitation. It was already of long
+standing, but it had been warm, born in fact of a sudden fit of
+enthusiasm for me"--here a half-mocking smile quivered an instant
+under the speaker's black mustache--"which, as it was
+characteristic, I may as well tell you about.
+
+"It was on the day of, or, rather, to be accurate, on the day after
+my arrival, toward the small hours of the morning, in the smoking
+room at Rathdrum. Our host was peacefully snoring over his empty
+pipe and his seventh glass of whisky, also empty. The rest of the
+men had slunk off to bed. The baron, who all unknown to himself
+had been a subject of most interesting observation to me the whole
+evening, being now practically alone with me, condescended to turn
+an eye, as wide awake as a fox's, albeit slightly bloodshot, upon
+the contemptible white-faced person who had preferred spending the
+raw hours over his papers, within the radius of a glorious fire's
+warmth, to creeping slyly over treacherous quagmires in the pursuit
+of timid bog creatures (snipe shooting had been the order of the
+day)--the baron, I say, became aware of my existence and entered
+into conversation with me.
+
+"He would no doubt have been much surprised could he have known
+that he was already mapped out, craniologically and
+physiognomically, catalogued with care and neatly laid by in his
+proper ethnological box, in my private type museum; that, as I sat
+and examined him from my different coigns of vantage in library, in
+dining and smoking room that evening, not a look of his, not a
+gesture went forth but had significance for me.
+
+"You, I had thought, with your broad shoulders and deep chest; your
+massive head that should have gone with a tall stature, not with
+those short sturdy limbs; with your thick red hair, that should
+have been black for that matter, as should your wide-set yellow
+eyes--you would be a real puzzle to one who did not recognize in
+you equal mixtures of the fair, stalwart and muscular Slav with the
+bilious-sanguine, thick-set, wiry Turanian. Your pedigree would no
+doubt bear me out: there is as much of the Magyar as of the Pole in
+your anatomy. Athlete, and yet a tangle of nerves; a ferocious
+brute at bottom, I dare say, for your broad forehead inclines to
+flatness; under your bristling beard your jaw must protrude, and
+the base of your skull is ominously thick. And, with all that,
+capable of ideal transports: when that girl played and sang to-
+night I saw the swelling of your eyelid veins, and how that small,
+tenacious, claw-like hand of yours twitched! You would be a fine
+leader of men--but God help the wretches in your power!
+
+"So had I mused upon him. Yet I confess that when we came in
+closer contact with each other, even I was not proof against the
+singular courtesy of his manner and his unaccountable personal
+charm.
+
+"Our conversation soon grew interesting; to me as a matter of
+course, and evidently to him also. A few general words led to
+interchange of remarks upon the country we were both visitors in
+and so to national characteristics--Pole and Irishman have not a
+few in common, both in their nature and history. An observation
+which he made, not without a certain flash in his light eyes and a
+transient uncovering of the teeth, on the Irish type of female
+beauty suddenly suggested to me a stanza of an ancient Polish
+ballad, very full of milk-and-blood imagery, of alternating
+ferocity and voluptuousness. This I quoted to the astounded
+foreigner in the vernacular, and this it was that metamorphosed his
+mere perfection of civility into sudden warmth, and, in fact,
+procured me the invitation in question.
+
+"When I left Rathdrum the baron's last words to me were that if I
+ever thought of visiting his country otherwise than in books, he
+held me bound to make Yany, his Galician seat, my headquarters of
+study.
+
+"From Czernowicz, therefore, where I stopped some time, I wrote,
+received in due time a few lines of prettily worded reply, and
+ultimately entered my sled in the nearest town to, yet at a most
+forbidding distance from, Yany, and started on my journey thither.
+
+"The undertaking meant many long hours of undulation and skidding
+over the November snow, to the somniferous bell jangle of my dirty
+little horses, the only impression of interest being a weird gypsy
+concert I came in for at a miserable drinking-booth half buried in
+the snow where we halted for the refreshment of man and beast.
+Here, I remember, I discovered a very definite connection between
+the characteristic run of the tsimbol, the peculiar bite of the
+Zigeuner's bow on his fiddle-string, and some distinctive points of
+Turanian tongues. In other countries, in Spain, for instance, your
+gypsy speaks differently on his instrument. But, oddly enough,
+when I later attempted to put this observation on paper I could
+find no word to express it."
+
+A few of our company evinced signs of sleepiness, but most of us
+who knew Marshfield, and that he could, unless he had something
+novel to say, be as silent and retiring as he now evinced signs of
+being copious, awaited further developments with patience. He has
+his own deliberate way of speaking, which he evidently enjoys
+greatly, though it be occasionally trying to his listeners.
+
+"On the afternoon of my second day's drive, the snow, which till
+then had fallen fine and continuous, ceased, and my Jehu, suddenly
+interrupting himself in the midst of some exciting wolf story quite
+in keeping with the time of year and the wild surroundings, pointed
+to a distant spot against the gray sky to the northwest, between
+two wood-covered folds of ground--the first eastern spurs of the
+great Carpathian chain.
+
+"'There stands Yany,' said he. I looked at my far-off goal with
+interest. As we drew nearer, the sinking sun, just dipping behind
+the hills, tinged the now distinct frontage with a cold copper-like
+gleam, but it was only for a minute; the next the building became
+nothing more to the eye than a black irregular silhouette against
+the crimson sky.
+
+"Before we entered the long, steep avenue of poplars, the early
+winter darkness was upon us, rendered all the more depressing by
+gray mists which gave a ghostly aspect to such objects as the sheen
+of the snow rendered visible. Once or twice there were feeble
+flashes of light looming in iridescent halos as we passed little
+clusters of hovels, but for which I should have been induced to
+fancy that the great Hof stood alone in the wilderness, such was
+the deathly stillness around. But even as the tall, square
+building rose before us above the vapor, yellow lighted in various
+stories, and mighty in height and breadth, there broke upon my ear
+a deep-mouthed, menacing bay, which gave at once almost alarming
+reality to the eerie surroundings. 'His lordship's boar and wolf
+hounds,' quoth my charioteer calmly, unmindful of the regular
+pandemonium of howls and barks which ensued as he skillfully turned
+his horses through the gateway and flogged the tired beasts into a
+sort of shambling canter that we might land with glory before the
+house door: a weakness common, I believe, to drivers of all
+nations.
+
+"I alighted in the court of honor, and while awaiting an answer to
+my tug at the bell, stood, broken with fatigue, depressed, chilled
+and aching, questioning the wisdom of my proceedings and the amount
+of comfort, physical and moral, that was likely to await me in a
+tete-a-tete visit with a well-mannered savage in his own home.
+
+"The unkempt tribe of stable retainers who began to gather round me
+and my rough vehicle in the gloom, with their evil-smelling
+sheepskins and their resigned, battered visages, were not
+calculated to reassure me. Yet when the door opened, there stood a
+smart chasseur and a solemn major-domo who might but just have
+stepped out of Mayfair; and there was displayed a spreading vista
+of warm, deep-colored halls, with here a statue and there a stuffed
+bear, and under foot pile carpets strewn with rarest skins.
+
+"Marveling, yet comforted withal, I followed the solemn butler, who
+received me with the deference due to an expected guest and
+expressed the master's regret for his enforced absence till dinner
+time. I traversed vast rooms, each more sumptuous than the last,
+feeling the strangeness of the contrast between the outer
+desolation and this sybaritic excess of luxury growing ever more
+strongly upon me; caught a glimpse of a picture gallery, where
+peculiar yet admirably executed latter-day French pictures hung
+side by side with ferocious boar hunts of Snyder and such kin; and,
+at length, was ushered into a most cheerful room, modern to excess
+in its comfortable promise, where, in addition to the tall stove
+necessary for warmth, there burned on an open hearth a vastly
+pleasant fire of resinous logs, and where, on a low table, awaited
+me a dainty service of fragrant Russian tea.
+
+"My impression of utter novelty seemed somehow enhanced by this
+unexpected refinement in the heart of the solitudes and in such a
+rugged shell, and yet, when I came to reflect, it was only
+characteristic of my cosmopolitan host. But another surprise was
+in store for me.
+
+"When I had recovered bodily warmth and mental equilibrium in my
+downy armchair, before the roaring logs, and during the delicious
+absorption of my second glass of tea, I turned my attention to the
+French valet, evidently the baron's own man, who was deftly
+unpacking my portmanteau, and who, unless my practiced eye deceived
+me, asked for nothing better than to entertain me with agreeable
+conversation the while.
+
+"'Your master is out, then?' quoth I, knowing that the most trivial
+remark would suffice to start him.
+
+"True, Monseigneur was out; he was desolated in despair (this with
+the national amiable and imaginative instinct); 'but it was
+doubtless important business. M. le Baron had the visit of his
+factor during the midday meal; had left the table hurriedly, and
+had not been seen since. Madame la Baronne had been a little
+suffering, but she would receive monsieur!'
+
+"'Madame!' exclaimed I, astounded, 'is your master then married?--
+since when?'--visions of a fair Tartar, fit mate for my baron,
+immediately springing somewhat alluringly before my mental vision.
+But the answer dispelled the picturesque fancy.
+
+"'Oh, yes,' said the man, with a somewhat peculiar expression.
+Yes, Monseigneur is married. Did Monsieur not know? And yet it
+was from England that Monseigneur brought back his wife.'
+
+"'An Englishwoman!'
+
+"My first thought was one of pity; an Englishwoman alone in this
+wilderness--two days' drive from even a railway station--and at the
+mercy of Kossowski! But the next minute I reversed my judgment.
+Probably she adored her rufous lord, took his veneer of courtesy--a
+veneer of the most exquisite polish, I grant you, but perilously
+thin--for the very perfection of chivalry. Or perchance it was his
+inner savageness itself that charmed her; the most refined women
+often amaze one by the fascination which the preponderance of the
+brute in the opposite sex seems to have for them.
+
+"I was anxious to hear more.
+
+"'Is it not dull for the lady here at this time of the year?'
+
+"The valet raised his shoulders with a gesture of despair that was
+almost passionate.
+
+"Dull! Ah, monsieur could not conceive to himself the dullness of
+it. That poor Madame la Baronne! not even a little child to keep
+her company on the long, long days when there was nothing but snow
+in the heaven and on the earth and the howling of the wind and the
+dogs to cheer her. At the beginning, indeed, it had been
+different; when the master first brought home his bride the house
+was gay enough. It was all redecorated and refurnished to receive
+her (monsieur should have seen it before, a mere rendezvous-de-
+chasse--for the matter of that so were all the country houses in
+these parts). Ah, that was the good time! There were visits month
+after month; parties, sleighing, dancing, trips to St. Petersburg
+and Vienna. But this year it seemed they were to have nothing but
+boars and wolves. How madame could stand it--well, it was not for
+him to speak--and heaving a deep sigh he delicately inserted my
+white tie round my collar, and with a flourish twisted it into an
+irreproachable bow beneath my chin. I did not think it right to
+cross-examine the willing talker any further, especially as,
+despite his last asseveration, there were evidently volumes he
+still wished to pour forth; but I confess that, as I made my way
+slowly out of my room along the noiseless length of passage, I was
+conscious of an unwonted, not to say vulgar, curiosity concerning
+the woman who had captivated such a man as the Baron Kossowski.
+
+"In a fit of speculative abstraction I must have taken the wrong
+turning, for I presently found myself in a long, narrow passage. I
+did not remember. I was retracing my steps when there came the
+sound of rapid footfalls upon stone flags; a little door flew open
+in the wall close to me, and a small, thick-set man, huddled in the
+rough sheepskin of the Galician peasant, with a mangy fur cap on
+his head, nearly ran headlong into my arms. I was about
+condescendingly to interpellate him in my best Polish, when I
+caught the gleam of an angry yellow eye and noted the bristle of a
+red beard--Kossowski!
+
+"Amazed, I fell back a step in silence. With a growl like an
+uncouth animal disturbed, he drew his filthy cap over his brow with
+a savage gesture and pursued his way down the corridor at a sort of
+wild-boar trot.
+
+"This first meeting between host and guest was so odd, so
+incongruous, that it afforded me plenty of food for a fresh line of
+conjecture as I traced my way back to the picture gallery, and from
+thence successfully to the drawing-room, which, as the door was
+ajar, I could not this time mistake.
+
+"It was large and lofty and dimly lit by shaded lamps; through the
+rosy gloom I could at first only just make out a slender figure by
+the hearth; but as I advanced, this was resolved into a singularly
+graceful woman in clinging, fur-trimmed velvet gown, who, with one
+hand resting on the high mantelpiece, the other banging listlessly
+by her side, stood gazing down at the crumbling wood fire as if in
+a dream.
+
+"My friends are kind enough to say that I have a catlike tread; I
+know not how that may be; at any rate the carpet I was walking upon
+was thick enough to smother a heavier footfall: not until I was
+quite close to her did my hostess become aware of my presence.
+Then she started violently and looked over her shoulder at me with
+dilating eyes. Evidently a nervous creature, I saw the pulse in
+her throat, strained by her attitude, flutter like a terrified
+bird.
+
+"The next instant she had stretched out her hand with sweet English
+words of welcome, and the face, which I had been comparing in my
+mind to that of Guido's Cenci, became transformed by the arch and
+exquisite smile of a Greuse. For more than two years I had had no
+intercourse with any of my nationality. I could conceive the sound
+of his native tongue under such circumstances moving a man in a
+curious unexpected fashion.
+
+"I babbled some commonplace reply, after which there was silence
+while we stood opposite each other, she looking at me expectantly.
+At length, with a sigh checked by a smile and an overtone of
+sadness in a voice that yet tried to be sprightly:
+
+"'Am I then so changed, Mr. Marshfield?' she asked. And all at
+once I knew her: the girl whose nightingale throat had redeemed the
+desolation of the evenings at Rathdrum, whose sunny beauty had
+seemed (even to my celebrated cold-blooded aestheticism) worthy to
+haunt a man's dreams. Yes, there was the subtle curve of the
+waist, the warm line of throat, the dainty foot, the slender tip-
+tilted fingers--witty fingers, as I had classified them--which I
+now shook like a true Briton, instead of availing myself of the
+privilege the country gave me, and kissing her slender wrist.
+
+"But she was changed; and I told her so with unconventional
+frankness, studying her closely as I spoke.
+
+"'I am afraid,' I said gravely, 'that this place does not agree
+with you.'
+
+"She shrank from my scrutiny with a nervous movement and flushed to
+the roots of her red-brown hair. Then she answered coldly that I
+was wrong, that she was in excellent health, but that she could not
+expect any more than other people to preserve perennial youth (I
+rapidly calculated she might be two-and-twenty), though, indeed,
+with a little forced laugh, it was scarcely flattering to hear one
+had altered out of all recognition. Then, without allowing me time
+to reply, she plunged into a general topic of conversation which,
+as I should have been obtuse indeed not to take the hint, I did my
+best to keep up.
+
+"But while she talked of Vienna and Warsaw, of her distant
+neighbors, and last year's visitors, it was evident that her mind
+was elsewhere; her eye wandered, she lost the thread of her
+discourse, answered me at random, and smiled her piteous smile
+incongruously.
+
+"However lonely she might be in her solitary splendor, the company
+of a countryman was evidently no such welcome diversion.
+
+"After a little while she seemed to feel herself that she was
+lacking in cordiality, and, bringing her absent gaze to bear upon
+me with a puzzled strained look: 'I fear you will find it very
+dull,' she said, 'my husband is so wrapped up this winter in his
+country life and his sport. You are the first visitor we have had.
+There is nothing but guns and horses here, and you do not care for
+these things.'
+
+"The door creaked behind us; and the baron entered, in faultless
+evening dress. Before she turned toward him I was sharp enough to
+catch again the upleaping of a quick dread in her eyes, not even so
+much dread perhaps, I thought afterwards, as horror--the horror we
+notice in some animals at the nearing of a beast of prey. It was
+gone in a second, and she was smiling. But it was a revelation.
+
+"Perhaps he beat her in Russian fashion, and she, as an
+Englishwoman, was narrow-minded enough to resent this; or perhaps,
+merely, I had the misfortune to arrive during a matrimonial
+misunderstanding.
+
+"The baron would not give me leisure to reflect; he was so very
+effusive in his greeting--not a hint of our previous meeting--
+unlike my hostess, all in all to me; eager to listen, to reply;
+almost affectionate, full of references to old times and genial
+allusions. No doubt when he chose he could be the most charming of
+men; there were moments when, looking at him in his quiet smile and
+restrained gesture, the almost exaggerated politeness of his manner
+to his wife, whose fingers he had kissed with pretty, old-fashioned
+gallantry upon his entrance, I asked myself, Could that encounter
+in the passage have been a dream? Could that savage in the
+sheepskin be my courteous entertainer?
+
+"'Just as I came in, did I hear my wife say there was nothing for
+you to do in this place?' he said presently to me. Then, turning
+to her:
+
+ "'You do not seem to know Mr. Marshfield. Wherever he can open
+his eyes there is for him something to see which might not interest
+other men. He will find things in my library which I have no
+notion of. He will discover objects for scientific observation in
+all the members of my household, not only in the good-looking
+maids--though he could, I have no doubt, tell their points as I
+could those of a horse. We have maidens here of several distinct
+races, Marshfield. We have also witches, and Jew leeches, and holy
+daft people. In any case, Yany, with all its dependencies,
+material, male and female, are at your disposal, for what you can
+make out of them.
+
+"'It is good,' he went on gayly, 'that you should happen to have
+this happy disposition, for I fear that, no later than to-morrow, I
+may have to absent myself from home. I have heard that there are
+news of wolves--they threaten to be a greater pest than usual this
+winter, but I am going to drive them on quite a new plan, and it
+will go hard with me if I don't come even with them. Well for you,
+by the way, Marshfield, that you did not pass within their scent
+today.' Then, musingly: 'I should not give much for the life of a
+traveler who happened to wander in these parts just now.' Here he
+interrupted himself hastily and went over to his wife, who had sunk
+back on her chair, livid, seemingly on the point of swooning.
+
+"His gaze was devouring; so might a man look at the woman he
+adored, in his anxiety.
+
+"'What! faint, Violet, alarmed!' His voice was subdued, yet there
+was an unmistakable thrill of emotion in it.
+
+"'Pshaw!' thought I to myself, 'the man is a model husband.'
+
+"She clinched her hands, and by sheer force of will seemed to pull
+herself together. These nervous women have often an unexpected
+fund of strength.
+
+"'Come, that is well,' said the baron with a flickering smile; 'Mr.
+Marshfield will think you but badly acclimatized to Poland if a
+little wolf scare can upset you. My dear wife is so soft-hearted,'
+he went on to me, 'that she is capable of making herself quite ill
+over the sad fate that might have, but has not, overcome you. Or,
+perhaps,' he added, in a still gentler voice, 'her fear is that I
+may expose myself to danger for the public weal.'
+
+"She turned her head away, but I saw her set her teeth as if to
+choke a sob. The baron chuckled in his throat and seemed to
+luxuriate in the pleasant thought.
+
+"At this moment folding doors were thrown open, and supper was
+announced. I offered my arm, she rose and took it in silence.
+This silence she maintained during the first part of the meal,
+despite her husband's brilliant conversation and almost uproarious
+spirits. But by and by a bright color mounted to her cheeks and
+luster to her eyes. I suppose you will think me horribly
+unpoetical if I add that she drank several glasses of champagne one
+after the other, a fact which perhaps may account for the change.
+
+"At any rate she spoke and laughed and looked lovely, and I did not
+wonder that the baron could hardly keep his eyes off her. But
+whether it was her wifely anxiety or not--it was evident her mind
+was not at ease through it all, and I fancied that her brightness
+was feverish, her merriment slightly hysterical.
+
+"After supper--an exquisite one it was--we adjourned together, in
+foreign fashion, to the drawing-room; the baron threw himself into
+a chair and, somewhat with the air of a pasha, demanded music. He
+was flushed; the veins of his forehead were swollen and stood out
+like cords; the wine drunk at table was potent: even through my
+phlegmatic frame it ran hotly.
+
+"She hesitated a moment or two, then docilely sat down to the
+piano. That she could sing I have already made clear: how she
+could sing, with what pathos, passion, as well as perfect art, I
+had never realized before.
+
+"When the song was ended she remained for a while, with eyes lost
+in distance, very still, save for her quick breathing. It was
+clear she was moved by the music; indeed she must have thrown her
+whole soul into it.
+
+"At first we, the audience, paid her the rare compliment of
+silence. Then the baron broke forth into loud applause. 'Brava,
+brava! that was really said con amore. A delicious love song,
+delicious--but French! You must sing one of our Slav melodies for
+Marshfield before you allow us to go and smoke.'
+
+"She started from her reverie with a flush, and after a pause
+struck slowly a few simple chords, then began one of those
+strangely sweet, yet intensely pathetic Russian airs, which give
+one a curious revelation of the profound, endless melancholy
+lurking in the national mind.
+
+"'What do you think of it?' asked the baron of me when it ceased.
+
+"'What I have always thought of such music--it is that of a
+hopeless people; poetical, crushed, and resigned.'
+
+"He gave a loud laugh. 'Hear the analyst, the psychologue--why,
+man, it is a love song! Is it possible that we, uncivilized, are
+truer realists than our hypercultured Western neighbors? Have we
+gone to the root of the matter, in our simple way?'
+
+"The baroness got up abruptly. She looked white and spent; there
+were bister circles round her eyes.
+
+"'I am tired,' she said, with dry lips. 'You will excuse me, Mr.
+Marshfield, I must really go to bed.'
+
+"'Go to bed, go to bed,' cried her husband gayly. Then, quoting in
+Russian from the song she had just sung: 'Sleep, my little soft
+white dove: my little innocent tender lamb!' She hurried from the
+room. The baron laughed again, and, taking me familiarly by the
+arm, led me to his own set of apartments for the promised smoke.
+He ensconced me in an armchair, placed cigars of every description
+and a Turkish pipe ready to my hand, and a little table on which
+stood cut-glass flasks and beakers in tempting array.
+
+"After I had selected my cigar with some precautions, I glanced at
+him over a careless remark, and was startled to see a sudden
+alteration in his whole look and attitude.
+
+"'You will forgive me, Marshfield,' he said, as he caught my eye,
+speaking with spasmodic politeness. 'It is more than probable that
+I shall have to set out upon this chase I spoke of to-night, and I
+must now go and change my clothes, that I may be ready to start at
+any moment. This is the hour when it is most likely these hell
+beasts are to be got at. You have all you want, I hope,'
+interrupting an outbreak of ferocity by an effort after his former
+courtesy.
+
+"It was curious to watch the man of the world struggling with the
+primitive man.
+
+"'But, baron,' said I, 'I do not at all see the fun of sticking at
+home like this. You know my passion for witnessing everything new,
+strange, and outlandish. You will surely not refuse me such an
+opportunity for observation as a midnight wolf raid. I will do my
+best not to be in the way if you will take me with you.'
+
+"At first it seemed as if he had some difficulty in realizing the
+drift of my words, he was so engrossed by some inner thought. But
+as I repeated them, he gave vent to a loud cachinnation.
+
+"'By heaven! I like your spirit,' he exclaimed, clapping me
+strongly on the shoulder. 'Of course you shall come. You shall,'
+he repeated, 'and I promise you a sight, a hunt such as you never
+heard or dreamed of--you will be able to tell them in England the
+sort of thing we can do here in that line--such wolves are rare
+quarry,' he added, looking slyly at me, 'and I have a new plan for
+getting at them.'
+
+"There was a long pause, and then there rose in the stillness the
+unearthly howling of the baron's hounds, a cheerful sound which
+only their owner's somewhat loud converse of the evening had kept
+from becoming excessively obtrusive.
+
+"'Hark at them--the beauties!' cried he, showing his short, strong
+teeth, pointed like a dog's in a wide grin of anticipative delight.
+'They have been kept on pretty short commons, poor things! They
+are hungry. By the way, Marshfield, you can sit tight to a horse,
+I trust? If you were to roll off, you know, these splendid
+fellows--they would chop you up in a second. They would chop you
+up,' he repeated unctuously, 'snap, crunch, gobble, and there would
+be an end of you!'
+
+"'If I could not ride a decent horse without being thrown,' I
+retorted, a little stung by his manner, 'after my recent three
+months' torture with the Guard Cossacks, I should indeed be a
+hopeless subject. Do not think of frightening me from the exploit,
+but say frankly if my company would be displeasing.'
+
+"'Tut!' he said, waving his hand impatiently, 'it is your affair.
+I have warned you. Go and get ready if you want to come. Time
+presses.'
+
+"I was determined to be of the fray; my blood was up. I have
+hinted that the baron's Tokay had stirred it.
+
+"I went to my room and hurriedly donned clothes more suitable for
+rough night work. My last care was to slip into my pockets a brace
+of double-barreled pistols which formed part of my traveling kit.
+When I returned I found the baron already booted and spurred; this
+without metaphor. He was stretched full length on the divan, and
+did not speak as I came in, or even look at me. Chewing an unlit
+cigar, with eyes fixed on the ceiling, he was evidently following
+some absorbing train of ideas.
+
+"The silence was profound; time went by; it grew oppressive; at
+length, wearied out, I fell, over my chibouque, into a doze filled
+with puzzling visions, out of which I was awakened with a start.
+My companion had sprung up, very lightly, to his feet. In his
+throat was an odd, half-suppressed cry, grewsome to hear. He stood
+on tiptoe, with eyes fixed, as though looking through the wall, and
+I distinctly saw his ears point in the intensity of his listening.
+
+"After a moment, with hasty, noiseless energy, and without the
+slightest ceremony, he blew the lamps out, drew back the heavy
+curtains and threw the tall window wide open. A rush of icy air,
+and the bright rays of the moon--gibbous, I remember, in her third
+quarter--filled the room. Outside the mist had condensed, and the
+view was unrestricted over the white plains at the foot of the
+hill.
+
+"The baron stood motionless in the open window, callous to the cold
+in which, after a minute, I could hardly keep my teeth from
+chattering, his head bent forward, still listening. I listened
+too, with 'all my ears,' but could not catch a sound; indeed the
+silence over the great expanse of snow might have been called
+awful; even the dogs were mute.
+
+"Presently, far, far away, came a faint tinkle of bells; so faint,
+at first, that I thought it was but fancy, then distincter. It was
+even more eerie than the silence, I thought, though I knew it could
+come but from some passing sleigh. All at once that ceased, and
+again my duller senses could perceive nothing, though I saw by my
+host's craning neck that he was more on the alert than ever. But
+at last I too heard once more, this time not bells, but as it were
+the tread of horses muffled by the snow, intermittent and dull, yet
+drawing nearer. And then in the inner silence of the great house
+it seemed to me I caught the noise of closing doors; but here the
+hounds, as if suddenly becoming alive to some disturbance, raised
+the same fearsome concert of yells and barks with which they had
+greeted my arrival, and listening became useless.
+
+"I had risen to my feet. My host, turning from the window, seized
+my shoulder with a fierce grip, and bade me 'hold my noise'; for a
+second or two I stood motionless under his iron talons, then he
+released me with an exultant whisper: "Now for our chase!" and made
+for the door with a spring. Hastily gulping down a mouthful of
+arrack from one of the bottles on the table, I followed him, and,
+guided by the sound of his footsteps before me, groped my way
+through passages as black as Erebus.
+
+"After a time, which seemed a long one, a small door was flung open
+in front, and I saw Kossowski glide into the moonlit courtyard and
+cross the square. When I too came out he was disappearing into the
+gaping darkness of the open stable door, and there I overtook him.
+
+"A man who seemed to have been sleeping in a corner jumped up at
+our entrance, and led out a horse ready saddled. In obedience to a
+gruff order from his master, as the latter mounted, he then brought
+forward another which he had evidently thought to ride himself and
+held the stirrup for me.
+
+"We came delicately forth, and the Cossack hurriedly barred the
+great door behind us. I caught a glimpse of his worn, scarred face
+by the moonlight, as he peeped after us for a second before
+shutting himself in; it was stricken with terror.
+
+"The baron trotted briskly toward the kennels, from whence there
+was now issuing a truly infernal clangor, and, as my steed followed
+suit of his own accord, I could see how he proceeded dexterously to
+unbolt the gates without dismounting, while the beasts within
+dashed themselves against them and tore the ground in their fury of
+impatience.
+
+"He smiled, as he swung back the barriers at last, and his
+'beauties' came forth. Seven or eight monstrous brutes, hounds of
+a kind unknown to me: fulvous and sleek of coat, tall on their
+legs, square-headed, long-tailed, deep-chested; with terrible jaws
+slobbering in eagerness. They leaped around and up at us, much to
+our horses' distaste. Kossowski, still smiling, lashed at them
+unsparingly with his hunting whip, and they responded, not with
+yells of pain, but with snarls of fury.
+
+"Managing his restless steed and his cruel whip with consummate
+ease, my host drove the unruly crew before him out of the
+precincts, then halted and bent down from his saddle to examine
+some slight prints in the snow which led, not the way I had come,
+but toward what seemed another avenue. In a second or two the
+hounds were gathered round this spot, their great snake-like tails
+quivering, nose to earth, yelping with excitement. I had some ado
+to manage my horse, and my eyesight was far from being as keen as
+the baron's, but I had then no doubt he had come already upon wolf
+tracks, and I shuddered mentally, thinking of the sleigh bells.
+
+"Suddenly Kossowski raised himself from his strained position;
+under his low fur cap his face, with its fixed smile, looked
+scarcely human in the white light: and then we broke into a hand
+canter just as the hounds dashed, in a compact body, along the
+trail.
+
+"But we had not gone more than a few hundred yards before they
+began to falter, then straggled, stopped and ran back and about
+with dismal cries. It was clear to me they had lost the scent. My
+companion reined in his horse, and mine, luckily a well-trained
+brute, halted of himself.
+
+"We had reached a bend in a broad avenue of firs and larches, and
+just where we stood, and where the hounds ever returned and met
+nose to nose in frantic conclave, the snow was trampled and soiled,
+and a little farther on planed in a great sweep, as if by a turning
+sleigh. Beyond was a double-furrowed track of skaits and regular
+hoof prints leading far away.
+
+"Before I had time to reflect upon the bearing of this unexpected
+interruption, Kossowski, as if suddenly possessed by a devil, fell
+upon the hounds with his whip, flogging them upon the new track,
+uttering the while the most savage cries I have ever heard issue
+from human throat. The disappointed beasts were nothing loath to
+seize upon another trail; after a second of hesitation they had
+understood, and were off upon it at a tearing pace, we after them
+at the best speed of our horses.
+
+"Some unformed idea that we were going to escort, or rescue,
+benighted travelers flickered dimly in my mind as I galloped
+through the night air; but when I managed to approach my companion
+and called out to him for explanation, he only turned half round
+and grinned at me.
+
+"Before us lay now the white plain, scintillating under the high
+moon's rays. That light is deceptive; I could be sure of nothing
+upon the wide expanse but of the dark, leaping figures of the
+hounds already spread out in a straggling line, some right ahead,
+others just in front of us. In a short time also the icy wind,
+cutting my face mercilessly as we increased our pace, well nigh
+blinded me with tears of cold.
+
+"I can hardly realize how long this pursuit after an unseen prey
+lasted; I can only remember that I was getting rather faint with
+fatigue, and ignominiously held on to my pommel, when all of a
+sudden the black outline of a sleigh merged into sight in front of
+us.
+
+"I rubbed my smarting eyes with my benumbed hand; we were gaining
+upon it second by second; two of those hell hounds of the baron's
+were already within a few leaps of it.
+
+"Soon I was able to make out two figures, one standing up and
+urging the horses on with whip and voice, the other clinging to the
+back seat and looking toward us in an attitude of terror. A great
+fear crept into my half-frozen brain--were we not bringing deadly
+danger instead of help to these travelers? Great God! did the
+baron mean to use them as a bait for his new method of wolf
+hunting?
+
+"I would have turned upon Kossowski with a cry of expostulation or
+warning, but he, urging on his hounds as he galloped on their
+flank, howling and gesticulating like a veritable Hun, passed me by
+like a flash--and all at once I knew."
+
+Marshfield paused for a moment and sent his pale smile round upon
+his listeners, who now showed no signs of sleepiness; he knocked
+the ash from his cigar, twisted the latter round in his mouth, and
+added dryly:
+
+"And I confess it seemed to me a little strong even for a baron in
+the Carpathians. The travelers were our quarry. But the reason
+why the Lord of Yany had turned man-hunter I was yet to learn.
+Just then I had to direct my energies to frustrating his plans. I
+used my spurs mercilessly. While I drew up even with him I saw the
+two figures in the sleigh change places; he who had hitherto driven
+now faced back, while his companion took the reins; there was the
+pale blue sheen of a revolver barrel under the moonlight, followed
+by a yellow flash, and the nearest hound rolled over in the snow.
+
+"With an oath the baron twisted round in his saddle to call up and
+urge on the remainder. My horse had taken fright at the report and
+dashed irresistibly forward, bringing me at once almost level with
+the fugitives, and the next instant the revolver was turned
+menacingly toward me. There was no time to explain; my pistol was
+already drawn, and as another of the brutes bounded up, almost
+under my horse's feet, I loosed it upon him. I must have let off
+both barrels at once, for the weapon flew out of my hand, but the
+hound's back was broken. I presume the traveler understood; at any
+rate, he did not fire at me.
+
+"In moments of intense excitement like these, strangely enough, the
+mind is extraordinarily open to impressions. I shall never forget
+that man's countenance in the sledge, as he stood upright and
+defied us in his mortal danger; it was young, very handsome, the
+features not distorted, but set into a sort of desperate, stony
+calm, and I knew it, beyond all doubt, for that of an Englishman.
+And then I saw his companion--it was the baron's wife. And I
+understood why the bells had been removed.
+
+"It takes a long time to say this; it only required an instant to
+see it. The loud explosion of my pistol had hardly ceased to ring
+before the baron, with a fearful imprecation, was upon me. First
+he lashed at me with his whip as we tore along side by side, and
+then I saw him wind the reins round his off arm and bend over, and
+I felt his angry fingers close tightly on my right foot. The next
+instant I should have been lifted out of my saddle, but there came
+another shot from the sledge. The baron's horse plunged and
+stumbled, and the baron, hanging on to my foot with a fierce grip,
+was wrenched from his seat. His horse, however, was up again
+immediately, and I was released, and then I caught a confused
+glimpse of the frightened and wounded animal galloping wildly away
+to the right, leaving a black track of blood behind him in the
+snow, his master, entangled in the reins, running with incredible
+swiftness by his side and endeavoring to vault back into the
+saddle.
+
+"And now came to pass a terrible thing which, in his savage plans,
+my host had doubtless never anticipated.
+
+"One of the hounds that had during this short check recovered lost
+ground, coming across this hot trail of blood, turned away from his
+course, and with a joyous yell darted after the running man. In
+another instant the remainder of the pack was upon the new scent.
+
+"As soon as I could stop my horse, I tried to turn him in the
+direction the new chase had taken, but just then, through the night
+air, over the receding sound of the horse's scamper and the sobbing
+of the pack in full cry, there came a long scream, and after that a
+sickening silence. And I knew that somewhere yonder, under the
+beautiful moonlight, the Baron Kossowski was being devoured by his
+starving dogs.
+
+"I looked round, with the sweat on my face, vaguely, for some human
+being to share the horror of the moment, and I saw, gliding away,
+far away in the white distance, the black silhouette of the
+sledge."
+
+"Well?" said we, in divers tones of impatience, curiosity, or
+horror, according to our divers temperaments, as the speaker
+uncrossed his legs and gazed at us in mild triumph, with all the
+air of having said his say, and satisfactorily proved his point.
+
+"Well," repeated he, "what more do you want to know? It will
+interest you but slightly, I am sure, to hear how I found my way
+back to the Hof; or how I told as much as I deemed prudent of the
+evening's grewsome work to the baron's servants, who, by the way,
+to my amazement, displayed the profoundest and most unmistakable
+sorrow at the tidings, and sallied forth (at their head the Cossack
+who had seen us depart) to seek for his remains. Excuse the
+unpleasantness of the remark: I fear the dogs must have left very
+little of him, he had dieted them so carefully. However, since it
+was to have been a case of 'chop, crunch, and gobble,' as the baron
+had it, I preferred that that particular fate should have overtaken
+him rather than me--or, for that matter, either of those two
+country people of ours in the sledge.
+
+"Nor am I going to inflict upon you," continued Marshfield, after
+draining his glass, "a full account of my impressions when I found
+myself once more in that immense, deserted, and stricken house, so
+luxuriously prepared for the mistress who had fled from it; how I
+philosophized over all this, according to my wont; the conjectures
+I made as to the first acts of the drama; the untold sufferings my
+countrywoman must have endured from the moment her husband first
+grew jealous till she determined on this desperate step; as to how
+and when she had met her lover, how they communicated, and how the
+baron had discovered the intended flitting in time to concoct his
+characteristic revenge.
+
+"One thing you may be sure of, I had no mind to remain at Yany an
+hour longer than necessary. I even contrived to get well clear of
+the neighborhood before the lady's absence was discovered. Luckily
+for me--or I might have been taxed with connivance, though indeed
+the simple household did not seem to know what suspicion was, and
+accepted my account with childlike credence--very typical, and very
+convenient to me at the same time."
+
+"But how do you know," said one of us, "that the man was her lover?
+He might have been her brother or some other relative."
+
+"That," said Marshfield, with his little flat laugh, "I happen to
+have ascertained--and, curiously enough, only a few weeks ago. It
+was at the play, between the acts, from my comfortable seat (the
+first row in the pit). I was looking leisurely round the house
+when I caught sight of a woman, in a box close by, whose head was
+turned from me, and who presented the somewhat unusual spectacle of
+a young neck and shoulders of the most exquisite contour--and
+perfectly gray hair; and not dull gray, but rather of a pleasing
+tint like frosted silver. This aroused my curiosity. I brought my
+glasses to a focus on her and waited patiently till she turned
+round. Then I recognized the Baroness Kassowski, and I no longer
+wondered at the young hair being white.
+
+"Yet she looked placid and happy; strangely so, it seemed to me,
+under the sudden reviving in my memory of such scenes as I have now
+described. But presently I understood further: beside her, in
+close attendance, was the man of the sledge, a handsome fellow with
+much of a military air about him.
+
+"During the course of the evening, as I watched, I saw a friend of
+mine come into the box, and at the end I slipped out into the
+passage to catch him as he came out.
+
+"'Who is the woman with the white hair?' I asked. Then, in the
+fragmentary style approved of by ultra-fashionable young men--this
+earnest-languid mode of speech presents curious similarities in all
+languages--he told me: 'Most charming couple in London--awfully
+pretty, wasn't she?--he had been in the Guards--attache at Vienna
+once--they adored each other. White hair, devilish queer, wasn't
+it? Suited her, somehow. And then she had been married to a
+Russian, or something, somewhere in the wilds, and their names
+were--' But do you know," said Marshfield, interrupting himself,
+"I think I had better let you find that out for yourselves, if you
+care."
+
+
+
+Stanley J. Weyman
+
+The Fowl in the Pot
+
+An Episode Adapted from the Memoirs of Maximilian de Bethune, Duke
+of Sully
+
+
+What I am going to relate may seem to some merely to be curious and
+on a party with the diverting story of M. Boisrose, which I have
+set down in an earlier part of my memoirs. But among the calumnies
+of those who have never ceased to attack me since the death of the
+late king, the statement that I kept from his majesty things which
+should have reached his ears has always had a prominent place,
+though a thousand times refuted by my friends, and those who from
+an intimate acquaintance with events could judge how faithfully I
+labored to deserve the confidence with which my master honored me.
+Therefore, I take it in hand to show by an example, trifling in
+itself, the full knowledge of affairs which the king had, and to
+prove that in many matters, which were never permitted to become
+known to the idlers of the court, he took a personal share, worthy
+as much of Haroun as of Alexander.
+
+It was my custom, before I entered upon those negotiations with the
+Prince of Conde which terminated in the recovery of the estate of
+Villebon, where I now principally reside, to spend a part of the
+autumn and winter at Rosny. On these occasions I was in the habit
+of leaving Paris with a considerable train of Swiss, pages, valets,
+and grooms, together with the maids of honor and waiting women of
+the duchess. We halted to take dinner at Poissy, and generally
+contrived to reach Rosny toward nightfall, so as to sup by the
+light of flambeaux in a manner enjoyable enough, though devoid of
+that state which I have ever maintained, and enjoined upon my
+children, as at once the privilege and burden of rank.
+
+At the time of which I am speaking I had for my favorite charger
+the sorrel horse which the Duke of Mercoeur presented to me with a
+view to my good offices at the time of the king's entry into Paris;
+and which I honestly transferred to his majesty in accordance with
+a principle laid down in another place. The king insisted on
+returning it to me, and for several years I rode it on these annual
+visits to Rosny. What was more remarkable was that on each of
+these occasions it cast a shoe about the middle of the afternoon,
+and always when we were within a short league of the village of
+Aubergenville. Though I never had with me less than half a score
+of led horses, I had such an affection for the sorrel that I
+preferred to wait until it was shod, rather than accommodate myself
+to a nag of less easy paces; and would allow my household to
+precede me, staying behind myself with at most a guard or two, my
+valet, and a page.
+
+The forge at Aubergenville was kept by a smith of some skill, a
+cheerful fellow, whom I always remembered to reward, considering my
+own position rather than his services, with a gold livre. His joy
+at receiving what was to him the income of a year was great, and
+never failed to reimburse me; in addition to which I took some
+pleasure in unbending, and learning from this simple peasant and
+loyal man, what the taxpayers were saying of me and my reforms--a
+duty I always felt I owed to the king my master.
+
+As a man of breeding it would ill become me to set down the homely
+truths I thus learned. The conversations of the vulgar are little
+suited to a nobleman's memoirs; but in this I distinguish between
+the Duke of Sully and the king's minister, and it is in the latter
+capacity that I relate what passed on these diverting occasions.
+"Ho, Simon," I would say, encouraging the poor man as he came
+bowing and trembling before me, "how goes it, my friend?"
+
+"Badly," he would answer, "very badly until your lordship came this
+way."
+
+"And how is that, little man?"
+
+"Oh, it is the roads," he always replied, shaking his bald head as
+he began to set about his business. "The roads since your lordship
+became surveyor-general are so good that not one horse in a hundred
+casts a shoe; and then there are so few highwaymen now that not one
+robber's plates do I replace in a twelvemonth. There is where it
+is."
+
+At this I was highly delighted.
+
+"Still, since I began to pass this way times have not been so bad
+with you, Simon," I would answer.
+
+Thereto he had one invariable reply.
+
+"No; thanks to Ste. Genevieve and your lordship, whom we call in
+this village the poor man's friend, I have a fowl in the pot."
+
+This phrase so pleased me that I repeated it to the king. It
+tickled his fancy also, and for some years it was a very common
+remark of that good and great ruler, that he hoped to live to see
+every peasant with a fowl in his pot.
+
+"But why," I remember I once asked this honest fellow--it was on
+the last occasion of the sorrel falling lame there--"do you thank
+Ste. Genevieve?"
+
+"She is my patron saint," he answered.
+
+"Then you are a Parisian?"
+
+"Your lordship is always right."
+
+"But does her saintship do you any good?" I asked curiously.
+
+"Certainly, by your lordship's leave. My wife prays to her and she
+loosens the nails in the sorrel's shoes."
+
+"In fact she pays off an old grudge," I answered, "for there was a
+time when Paris liked me little; but hark ye, master smith, I am
+not sure that this is not an act of treason to conspire with Madame
+Genevieve against the comfort of the king's minister. What think
+you, you rascal; can you pass the justice elm without a shiver?"
+
+This threw the simple fellow into a great fear, which the sight of
+the livre of gold speedily converted into joy as stupendous.
+Leaving him still staring at his fortune I rode away; but when we
+had gone some little distance, the aspect of his face, when I
+charged him with treason, or my own unassisted discrimination
+suggested a clew to the phenomenon.
+
+"La Trape," I said to my valet--the same who was with me at Cahors--
+"what is the name of the innkeeper at Poissy, at whose house we
+are accustomed to dine?"
+
+"Andrew, may it please your lordship."
+
+"Andrew! I thought so!" I exclaimed, smiting my thigh. "Simon and
+Andrew his brother! Answer, knave, and, if you have permitted me
+to be robbed these many times, tremble for your ears. Is he not
+brother to the smith at Aubergenville who has just shod my horse?"
+
+La Trape professed to be ignorant on this point, but a groom who
+had stayed behind with me, having sought my permission to speak,
+said it was so, adding that Master Andrew had risen in the world
+through large dealings in hay, which he was wont to take daily into
+Paris and sell, and that he did not now acknowledge or see anything
+of his brother the smith, though it was believed that he retained a
+sneaking liking for him.
+
+On receiving this confirmation of my suspicions, my vanity as well
+as my sense of justice led me to act with the promptitude which I
+have exhibited in greater emergencies. I rated La Trape for his
+carelessness of my interests in permitting this deception to be
+practiced on me; and the main body of my attendants being now in
+sight, I ordered him to take two Swiss and arrest both brothers
+without delay. It wanted yet three hours of sunset, and I judged
+that, by hard riding, they might reach Rosny with their prisoners
+before bedtime.
+
+I spent some time while still on the road in considering what
+punishment I should inflict on the culprits; and finally laid aside
+the purpose I had at first conceived of putting them to death--an
+infliction they had richly deserved--in favor of a plan which I
+thought might offer me some amusement. For the execution of this I
+depended upon Maignan, my equerry, who was a man of lively
+imagination, being the same who had of his own motion arranged and
+carried out the triumphal procession, in which I was borne to Rosny
+after the battle of Ivry. Before I sat down to supper I gave him
+his directions; and as I had expected, news was brought to me while
+I was at table that the prisoners had arrived.
+
+Thereupon I informed the duchess and the company generally, for, as
+was usual, a number of my country neighbors had come to compliment
+me on my return, that there was some sport of a rare kind on foot;
+and we adjourned, Maignan, followed by four pages bearing lights,
+leading the way to that end of the terrace which abuts on the
+linden avenue. Here, a score of grooms holding torches aloft had
+been arranged in a circle so that the impromptu theater thus
+formed, which Maignan had ordered with much taste, was as light as
+in the day. On a sloping bank at one end seats had been placed for
+those who had supped at my table, while the rest of the company
+found such places of vantage as they could; their number, indeed,
+amounting, with my household, to two hundred persons. In the
+center of the open space a small forge fire had been kindled, the
+red glow of which added much to the strangeness of the scene; and
+on the anvil beside it were ranged a number of horses' and donkeys'
+shoes, with a full complement of the tools used by smiths. All
+being ready I gave the word to bring in the prisoners, and escorted
+by La Trape and six of my guards, they were marched into the arena.
+In their pale and terrified faces, and the shaking limbs which
+could scarce support them to their appointed stations, I read both
+the consciousness of guilt and the apprehension of immediate death;
+it was plain that they expected nothing less. I was very willing
+to play with their fears, and for some time looked at them in
+silence, while all wondered with lively curiosity what would ensue.
+I then addressed them gravely, telling the innkeeper that I knew
+well he had loosened each year a shoe of my horse, in order that
+his brother might profit by the job of replacing it; and went on to
+reprove the smith for the ingratitude which had led him to return
+my bounty by the conception of so knavish a trick.
+
+Upon this they confessed their guilt, and flinging themselves upon
+their knees with many tears and prayers begged for mercy. This,
+after a decent interval, I permitted myself to grant. "Your lives,
+which are forfeited, shall be spared," I pronounced. "But punished
+you must be. I therefore ordain that Simon, the smith, at once
+fit, nail, and properly secure a pair of iron shoes to Andrew's
+heels, and that then Andrew, who by that time will have picked up
+something of the smith's art, do the same to Simon. So will you
+both learn to avoid such shoeing tricks for the future."
+
+It may well be imagined that a judgment so whimsical, and so justly
+adapted to the offense, charmed all save the culprits; and in a
+hundred ways the pleasure of those present was evinced, to such a
+degree, indeed, that Maignan had some difficulty in restoring
+silence and gravity to the assemblage. This done, however, Master
+Andrew was taken in hand and his wooden shoes removed. The tools
+of his trade were placed before the smith, who cast glances so
+piteous, first at his brother's feet and then at the shoes on the
+anvil, as again gave rise to a prodigious amount of merriment, my
+pages in particular well-nigh forgetting my presence, and rolling
+about in a manner unpardonable at another time. However, I rebuked
+them sharply, and was about to order the sentence to be carried
+into effect, when the remembrance of the many pleasant simplicities
+which the smith had uttered to me, acting upon a natural
+disposition to mercy, which the most calumnious of my enemies have
+never questioned, induced me to give the prisoners a chance of
+escape. "Listen," I said, "Simon and Andrew. Your sentence has
+been pronounced, and will certainly be executed unless you can
+avail yourself of the condition I now offer. You shall have three
+minutes; if in that time either of you can make a good joke, he
+shall go free. If not, let a man attend to the bellows, La Trape!"
+
+This added a fresh satisfaction to my neighbors, who were well
+assured now that I had not promised them a novel entertainment
+without good grounds; for the grimaces of the two knaves thus
+bidden to jest if they would save their skins, were so diverting
+they would have made a nun laugh. They looked at me with their
+eyes as wide as plates, and for the whole of the time of grace
+never a word could they utter save howls for mercy. "Simon," I
+said gravely, when the time was up, "have you a joke? No. Andrew,
+my friend, have you a joke? No. Then--"
+
+I was going on to order the sentence to be carried out, when the
+innkeeper flung himself again upon his knees, and cried out loudly--
+as much to my astonishment as to the regret of the bystanders, who
+were bent on seeing so strange a shoeing feat--"One word, my lord;
+I can give you no joke, but I can do a service, an eminent service
+to the king. I can disclose a conspiracy!"
+
+I was somewhat taken aback by this sudden and public announcement.
+But I had been too long in the king's employment not to have
+remarked how strangely things are brought to light. On hearing the
+man's words therefore--which were followed by a stricken silence--I
+looked sharply at the faces of such of those present as it was
+possible to suspect, but failed to observe any sign of confusion or
+dismay, or anything more particular than so abrupt a statement was
+calculated to produce. Doubting much whether the man was not
+playing with me, I addressed him sternly, warning him to beware,
+lest in his anxiety to save his heels by falsely accusing others,
+he should lose his head. For that if his conspiracy should prove
+to be an invention of his own, I should certainly consider it my
+duty to hang him forthwith.
+
+He heard me out, but nevertheless persisted in his story, adding
+desperately, "It is a plot, my lord, to assassinate you and the
+king on the same day."
+
+This statement struck me a blow; for I had good reason to know that
+at that time the king had alienated many by his infatuation for
+Madame de Verneuil; while I had always to reckon firstly with all
+who hated him, and secondly with all whom my pursuit of his
+interests injured, either in reality or appearance. I therefore
+immediately directed that the prisoners should be led in close
+custody to the chamber adjoining my private closet, and taking the
+precaution to call my guards about me, since I knew not what
+attempt despair might not breed, I withdrew myself, making such
+apologies to the company as the nature of the case permitted.
+
+I ordered Simon the smith to be first brought to me, and in the
+presence of Maignan only, I severely examined him as to his
+knowledge of any conspiracy. He denied, however, that he had ever
+heard of the matters referred to by his brother, and persisted so
+firmly in the denial that I was inclined to believe him. In the
+end he was taken out and Andrew was brought in. The innkeeper's
+demeanor was such as I have often observed in intriguers brought
+suddenly to book. He averred the existence of the conspiracy, and
+that its objects were those which he had stated. He also offered
+to give up his associates, but conditioned that he should do this
+in his own way; undertaking to conduct me and one other person--but
+no more, lest the alarm should be given--to a place in Paris on the
+following night, where we could hear the plotters state their plans
+and designs. In this way only, he urged, could proof positive be
+obtained.
+
+I was much startled by this proposal, and inclined to think it a
+trap; but further consideration dispelled my fears. The innkeeper
+had held no parley with anyone save his guards and myself since his
+arrest, and could neither have warned his accomplices, nor
+acquainted them with any design the execution of which should
+depend on his confession to me. I therefore accepted his terms--
+with a private reservation that I should have help at hand--and
+before daybreak next morning left Rosny, which I had only seen by
+torchlight, with my prisoner and a select body of Swiss. We
+entered Paris in the afternoon in three parties, with as little
+parade as possible, and went straight to the Arsenal, whence, as
+soon as evening fell, I hurried with only two armed attendants to
+the Louvre.
+
+A return so sudden and unexpected was as great a surprise to the
+court as to the king, and I was not slow to mark with an inward
+smile the discomposure which appeared very clearly, on the faces of
+several, as the crowd in the chamber fell back for me to approach
+my master. I was careful, however, to remember that this might
+arise from other causes than guilt. The king received me with his
+wonted affection; and divining at once that I must have something
+important to communicate, withdrew with me to the farther end of
+the chamber, where we were out of earshot of the court. I there
+related the story to his majesty, keeping back nothing.
+
+He shook his head, saying merely: "The fish to escape the frying
+pan, grand master, will jump into the fire. And human nature, save
+in the case of you and me, who can trust one another, is very
+fishy."
+
+I was touched by this gracious compliment, but not convinced. "You
+have not seen the man, sire," I said, "and I have had that
+advantage."
+
+"And believe him?"
+
+"In part," I answered with caution. "So far at least as to be
+assured that he thinks to save his skin, which he will only do if
+he be telling the truth. May I beg you, sire," I added hastily,
+seeing the direction of his glance, "not to look so fixedly at the
+Duke of Epernon? He grows uneasy."
+
+"Conscience makes--you know the rest."
+
+"Nay, sire, with submission," I replied, "I will answer for him; if
+he be not driven by fear to do something reckless."
+
+"Good! I take your warranty, Duke of Sully," the king said, with
+the easy grace which came so natural to him. "But now in this
+matter what would you have me do?"
+
+"Double your guards, sire, for to-night--that is all. I will
+answer for the Bastile and the Arsenal; and holding these we hold
+Paris."
+
+But thereupon I found that the king had come to a decision, which I
+felt it to be my duty to combat with all my influence. He had
+conceived the idea of being the one to accompany me to the
+rendezvous. "I am tired of the dice," he complained, "and sick of
+tennis, at which I know everybody's strength. Madame de Verneuil
+is at Fontainebleau, the queen is unwell. Ah, Sully, I would the
+old days were back when we had Nerac for our Paris, and knew the
+saddle better than the armchair!"
+
+"A king must think of his people," I reminded him.
+
+"The fowl in the pot? To be sure. So I will--to-morrow," he
+replied. And in the end he would be obeyed. I took my leave of
+him as if for the night, and retired, leaving him at play with the
+Duke of Epernon. But an hour later, toward eight o'clock, his
+majesty, who had made an excuse to withdraw to his closet, met me
+outside the eastern gate of the Louvre.
+
+He was masked, and attended only by Coquet, his master of the
+household. I too wore a mask and was esquired by Maignan, under
+whose orders were four Swiss--whom I had chosen because they were
+unable to speak French--guarding the prisoner Andrew. I bade
+Maignan follow the innkeeper's directions, and we proceeded in two
+parties through the streets on the left bank of the river, past the
+Chatelet and Bastile, until we reached an obscure street near the
+water, so narrow that the decrepit wooden houses shut out well-nigh
+all view of the sky. Here the prisoner halted and called upon me
+to fulfill the terms of my agreement. I bade Maignan therefore to
+keep with the Swiss at a distance of fifty paces, but to come up
+should I whistle or otherwise give the alarm; and myself with the
+king and Andrew proceeded onward in the deep shadow of the houses.
+I kept my hand on my pistol, which I had previously shown to the
+prisoner, intimating that on the first sign of treachery I should
+blow out his brains. However, despite precaution, I felt
+uncomfortable to the last degree. I blamed myself severely for
+allowing the king to expose himself and the country to this
+unnecessary danger; while the meanness of the locality, the fetid
+air, the darkness of the night, which was wet and tempestuous, and
+the uncertainty of the event lowered my spirits, and made every
+splash in the kennel and stumble on the reeking, slippery
+pavements--matters over which the king grew merry--seem no light
+troubles to me.
+
+Arriving at a house, which, if we might judge in the darkness,
+seemed to be of rather greater pretensions than its fellows, our
+guide stopped, and whispered to us to mount some steps to a raised
+wooden gallery, which intervened between the lane and the doorway.
+On this, besides the door, a couple of unglazed windows looked out.
+The shutter of one was ajar, and showed us a large, bare room,
+lighted by a couple of rushlights. Directing us to place ourselves
+close to this shutter, the innkeeper knocked at the door in a
+peculiar fashion, and almost immediately entered, going at once
+into the lighted room. Peering cautiously through the window we
+were surprised to find that the only person within, save the
+newcomer, was a young woman, who, crouching over a smoldering fire,
+was crooning a lullaby while she attended to a large black pot.
+
+"Good evening, mistress!" said the innkeeper, advancing to the fire
+with a fair show of nonchalance.
+
+"Good evening, Master Andrew," the girl replied, looking up and
+nodding, but showing no sign of surprise at his appearance.
+"Martin is away, but he may return at any moment."
+
+"Is he still of the same mind?"
+
+"Quite."
+
+"And what of Sully? Is he to die then?" he asked.
+
+"They have decided he must," the girl answered gloomily. It may be
+believed that I listened with all my ears, while the king by a
+nudge in my side seemed to rally me on the destiny so coolly
+arranged for me. "Martin says it is no good killing the other
+unless he goes too--they have been so long together. But it vexes
+me sadly, Master Andrew," she added with a sudden break in her
+voice. "Sadly it vexes me. I could not sleep last night for
+thinking of it, and the risk Martin runs. And I shall sleep less
+when it is done."
+
+"Pooh-pooh!" said that rascally innkeeper. "Think less about it.
+Things will grow worse and worse if they are let live. The King
+has done harm enough already. And he grows old besides."
+
+"That is true!" said the girl. "And no doubt the sooner he is put
+out of the way the better. He is changed sadly. I do not say a
+word for him. Let him die. It is killing Sully that troubles me--
+that and the risk Martin runs."
+
+At this I took the liberty of gently touching the king. He
+answered by an amused grimace; then by a motion of his hand he
+enjoined silence. We stooped still farther forward so as better to
+command the room. The girl was rocking herself to and fro in
+evident distress of mind. "If we killed the King," she continued,
+"Martin declares we should be no better off, as long as Sully
+lives. Both or neither, he says. But I do not know. I cannot
+bear to think of it. It was a sad day when we brought Epernon
+here, Master Andrew; and one I fear we shall rue as long as we
+live."
+
+It was now the king's turn to be moved. He grasped my wrist so
+forcibly that I restrained a cry with difficulty. "Epernon!" he
+whispered harshly in my ear. "They are Epernon's tools! Where is
+your guaranty now, Rosny?"
+
+I confess that I trembled. I knew well that the king, particular
+in small courtesies, never forgot to call his servants by their
+correct titles, save in two cases; when he indicated by the seeming
+error, as once in Marshal Biron's affair, his intention to promote
+or degrade them; or when he was moved to the depths of his nature
+and fell into an old habit. I did not dare to reply, but listened
+greedily for more information.
+
+"When is it to be done?" asked the innkeeper, sinking his voice and
+glancing round, as if he would call especial attention to this.
+
+"That depends upon Master la Riviere," the girl answered. "To-
+morrow night, I understand, if Master la Riviere can have the stuff
+ready."
+
+I met the king's eyes. They shone fiercely in the faint light,
+which issuing from the window fell on him. Of all things he hated
+treachery most, and La Riviere was his first body physician, and at
+this very time, as I well knew, was treating him for a slight
+derangement which the king had brought upon himself by his
+imprudence. This doctor had formerly been in the employment of the
+Bouillon family, who had surrendered his services to the king.
+Neither I nor his majesty had trusted the Duke of Bouillon for the
+last year past, so that we were not surprised by this hint that he
+was privy to the design.
+
+Despite our anxiety not to miss a word, an approaching step warned
+us at this moment to draw back. More than once before we had done
+so to escape the notice of a wayfarer passing up and down. But
+this time I had a difficulty in inducing the king to adopt the
+precaution. Yet it was well that I succeeded, for the person who
+came stumbling along toward us did not pass, but, mounting the
+steps, walked by within touch of us and entered the house.
+
+"The plot thickens," muttered the king. "Who is this?"
+
+At the moment he asked I was racking my brain to remember. I have
+a good eye and a fair recollection for faces, and this was one I
+had seen several times. The features were so familiar that I
+suspected the man of being a courtier in disguise, and I ran over
+the names of several persons whom I knew to be Bouillon's secret
+agents. But he was none of these, and obeying the king's gesture,
+I bent myself again to the task of listening.
+
+The girl looked up on the man's entrance, but did not rise. "You
+are late, Martin," she said.
+
+"A little," the newcomer answered. "How do you do, Master Andrew?
+What cheer? What, still vexing, mistress?" he added contemptuously
+to the girl. "You have too soft a heart for this business!"
+
+She sighed, but made no answer.
+
+"You have made up your mind to it, I hear?" said the innkeeper.
+
+"That is it. Needs must when the devil drives!" replied the man
+jauntily. He had a downcast, reckless, luckless air, yet in his
+face I thought I still saw traces of a better spirit.
+
+"The devil in this case was Epernon," quoth Andrew.
+
+"Aye, curse him! I would I had cut his dainty throat before he
+crossed my threshold," cried the desperado. "But there, it is too
+late to say that now. What has to be done, has to be done."
+
+"How are you going about it? Poison, the mistress says."
+
+"Yes; but if I had my way," the man growled fiercely, "I would out
+one of these nights and cut the dogs' throats in the kennel!"
+
+"You could never escape, Martin!" the girl cried, rising in
+excitement. "It would be hopeless. It would merely be throwing
+away your own life."
+
+"Well, it is not to be done that way, so there is an end of it,"
+quoth the man wearily. "Give me my supper. The devil take the
+king and Sully too! He will soon have them."
+
+On this Master Andrew rose, and I took his movement toward the door
+for a signal for us to retire. He came out at once, shutting the
+door behind him as he bade the pair within a loud good night. He
+found us standing in the street waiting for him and forthwith fell
+on his knees in the mud and looked up at me, the perspiration
+standing thick on his white face. "My lord," he cried hoarsely, "I
+have earned my pardon!"
+
+"If you go on," I said encouragingly, "as you have begun, have no
+fear." Without more ado I whistled up the Swiss and bade Maignan
+go with them and arrest the man and woman with as little
+disturbance as possible. While this was being done we waited
+without, keeping a sharp eye upon the informer, whose terror, I
+noted with suspicion, seemed to be in no degree diminished. He did
+not, however, try to escape, and Maignan presently came to tell us
+that he had executed the arrest without difficulty or resistance.
+
+The importance of arriving at the truth before Epernon and the
+greater conspirators should take the alarm was so vividly present
+to the minds of the king and myself, that we did not hesitate to
+examine the prisoners in their house, rather than hazard the delay
+and observation which their removal to a more fit place must
+occasion. Accordingly, taking the precaution to post Coquet in the
+street outside, and to plant a burly Swiss in the doorway, the king
+and I entered. I removed my mask as I did so, being aware of the
+necessity of gaining the prisoners' confidence, but I begged the
+king to retain his. As I had expected, the man immediately
+recognized me and fell on his knees, a nearer view confirming the
+notion I had previously entertained that his features were familiar
+to me, though I could not remember his name. I thought this a good
+starting-point for my examination, and bidding Maignan withdraw, I
+assumed an air of mildness and asked the fellow his name.
+
+"Martin, only, please your lordship," he answered; adding, "once I
+sold you two dogs, sir, for the chase, and to your lady a lapdog
+called Ninette no larger than her hand."
+
+I remembered the knave, then, as a fashionable dog dealer, who had
+been much about the court in the reign of Henry the Third and
+later; and I saw at once how convenient a tool he might be made,
+since he could be seen in converse with people of all ranks without
+arousing suspicion. The man's face as he spoke expressed so much
+fear and surprise that I determined to try what I had often found
+successful in the case of greater criminals, to squeeze him for a
+confession while still excited by his arrest, and before he should
+have had time to consider what his chances of support at the hands
+of his confederates might be. I charged him therefore solemnly to
+tell the whole truth as he hoped for the king's mercy. He heard
+me, gazing at me piteously; but his only answer, to my surprise,
+was that he had nothing to confess.
+
+"Come, come," I replied sternly, "this will avail you nothing; if
+you do not speak quickly, rogue, and to the point, we shall find
+means to compel you. Who counseled you to attempt his majesty's
+life?"
+
+On this he stared so stupidly at me, and exclaimed with so real an
+appearance of horror: "How? I attempt the king's life? God
+forbid!" that I doubted that we had before us a more dangerous
+rascal than I had thought, and I hastened to bring him to the
+point.
+
+"What, then," I cried, frowning, "of the stuff Master la Riviere is
+to give you to take the king's life to-morrow night? Oh, we know
+something, I assure you; bethink you quickly, and find your tongue
+if you would have an easy death."
+
+I expected to see his self-control break down at this proof of our
+knowledge of his design, but he only stared at me with the same
+look of bewilderment. I was about to bid them bring in the
+informer that I might see the two front to front, when the female
+prisoner, who had hitherto stood beside her companion in such
+distress and terror as might be expected in a woman of that class,
+suddenly stopped her tears and lamentations. It occurred to me
+that she might make a better witness. I turned to her, but when I
+would have questioned her she broke into a wild scream of
+hysterical laughter.
+
+From that I remember that I learned nothing, though it greatly
+annoyed me. But there was one present who did--the king. He laid
+his hand on my shoulder, gripping it with a force that I read as a
+command to be silent.
+
+"Where," he said to the man, "do you keep the King and Sully and
+Epernon, my friend?"
+
+"The King and Sully--with the lordship's leave," said the man
+quickly, with a frightened glance at me--"are in the kennels at the
+back of the house, but it is not safe to go near them. The King is
+raving mad, and--and the other dog is sickening. Epernon we had to
+kill a month back. He brought the disease here, and I have had
+such losses through him as have nearly ruined me, please your
+lordship."
+
+"Get up--get up, man!" cried the king, and tearing off his mask he
+stamped up and down the room, so torn by paroxysms of laughter that
+he choked himself when again and again he attempted to speak.
+
+I too now saw the mistake, but I could not at first see it in the
+same light. Commanding myself as well as I could, I ordered one of
+the Swiss to fetch in the innkeeper, but to admit no one else.
+
+The knave fell on his knees as soon as he saw me, his cheeks
+shaking like a jelly.
+
+"Mercy, mercy!" was all he could say.
+
+"You have dared to play with me?" I whispered.
+
+"You bade me joke," he sobbed, "you bade me."
+
+I was about to say that it would be his last joke in this world--
+for my anger was fully aroused--when the king intervened.
+
+"Nay," he said, laying his hand softly on my shoulder. "It has
+been the most glorious jest. I would not have missed it for a
+kingdom. I command you, Sully, to forgive him."
+
+Thereupon his majesty strictly charged the three that they should
+not on peril of their lives mention the circumstances to anyone.
+Nor to the best of my belief did they do so, being so shrewdly
+scared when they recognized the king that I verily think they never
+afterwards so much as spoke of the affair to one another. My
+master further gave me on his own part his most gracious promise
+that he would not disclose the matter even to Madame de Verneuil or
+the queen, and upon these representations he induced me freely to
+forgive the innkeeper. So ended this conspiracy, on the diverting
+details of which I may seem to have dwelt longer than I should; but
+alas! in twenty-one years of power I investigated many, and this
+one only can I regard with satisfaction. The rest were so many
+warnings and predictions of the fate which, despite all my care and
+fidelity, was in store for the great and good master I served.
+
+
+
+Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+The Pavilion on the Links
+
+
+I
+
+
+I was a great solitary when I was young. I made it my pride to
+keep aloof and suffice for my own entertainment; and I may say that
+I had neither friends nor acquaintances until I met that friend who
+became my wife and the mother of my children. With one man only
+was I on private terms; this was R. Northmour, Esquire, of Graden
+Easter, in Scotland. We had met at college; and though there was
+not much liking between us, nor even much intimacy, we were so
+nearly of a humor that we could associate with ease to both.
+Misanthropes, we believed ourselves to be; but I have thought since
+that we were only sulky fellows. It was scarcely a companionship,
+but a coexistence in unsociability. Northmour's exceptional
+violence of temper made it no easy affair for him to keep the peace
+with anyone but me; and as he respected my silent ways, and let me
+come and go as I pleased, I could tolerate his presence without
+concern. I think we called each other friends.
+
+When Northmour took his degree and I decided to leave the
+university without one, he invited me on a long visit to Graden
+Easter; and it was thus that I first became acquainted with the
+scene of my adventures. The mansion house of Graden stood in a
+bleak stretch of country some three miles from the shore of the
+German Ocean. It was as large as a barrack; and as it had been
+built of a soft stone, liable to consume in the eager air of the
+seaside, it was damp and draughty within and half ruinous without.
+It was impossible for two young men to lodge with comfort in such a
+dwelling. But there stood in the northern part of the estate, in a
+wilderness of links and blowing sand hills, and between a
+plantation and the sea, a small pavilion or belvedere, of modern
+design, which was exactly suited to our wants; and in this
+hermitage, speaking little, reading much, and rarely associating
+except at meals, Northmour and I spent four tempestuous winter
+months. I might have stayed longer; but one March night there
+sprung up between us a dispute, which rendered my departure
+necessary. Northmour spoke hotly, I remember, and I suppose I must
+have made some tart rejoinder. He leaped from his chair and
+grappled me; I had to fight, without exaggeration, for my life; and
+it was only with a great effort that I mastered him, for he was
+near as strong in body as myself, and seemed filled with the devil.
+The next morning, we met on our usual terms; but I judged it more
+delicate to withdraw; nor did he attempt to dissuade me.
+
+It was nine years before I revisited the neighborhood. I traveled
+at that time with a tilt-cart, a tent, and a cooking stove,
+tramping all day beside the wagon, and at night, whenever it was
+possible, gypsying in a cove of the hills, or by the side of a
+wood. I believe I visited in this manner most of the wild and
+desolate regions both in England and Scotland; and, as I had
+neither friends nor relations, I was troubled with no
+correspondence, and had nothing in the nature of headquarters,
+unless it was the office of my solicitors, from whom I drew my
+income twice a year. It was a life in which I delighted; and I
+fully thought to have grown old upon the march, and at last died in
+a ditch.
+
+It was my whole business to find desolate corners, where I could
+camp without the fear of interruption; and hence, being in another
+part of the same shire, I bethought me suddenly of the Pavilion on
+the Links. No thoroughfare passed within three miles of it. The
+nearest town, and that was but a fisher village, was at a distance
+of six or seven. For ten miles of length, and from a depth varying
+from three miles to half a mile, this belt of barren country lay
+along the sea. The beach, which was the natural approach, was full
+of quicksands. Indeed I may say there is hardly a better place of
+concealment in the United Kingdom. I determined to pass a week in
+the Sea-Wood of Graden Easter, and making a long stage, reached it
+about sundown on a wild September day.
+
+The country, I have said, was mixed sand hill and links, LINKS
+being a Scottish name for sand which has ceased drifting and become
+more or less solidly covered with turf. The pavilion stood on an
+even space: a little behind it, the wood began in a hedge of elders
+huddled together by the wind; in front, a few tumbled sand hills
+stood between it and the sea. An outcropping of rock had formed a
+bastion for the sand, so that there was here a promontory in the
+coast line between two shallow bays; and just beyond the tides, the
+rock again cropped out and formed an islet of small dimensions but
+strikingly designed. The quicksands were of great extent at low
+water, and had an infamous reputation in the country. Close in
+shore, between the islet and the promontory, it was said they would
+swallow a man in four minutes and a half; but there may have been
+little ground for this precision. The district was alive with
+rabbits, and haunted by gulls which made a continual piping about
+the pavilion. On summer days the outlook was bright and even
+gladsome; but at sundown in September, with a high wind, and a
+heavy surf rolling in close along the links, the place told of
+nothing but dead mariners and sea disaster. A ship beating to
+windward on the horizon, and a huge truncheon of wreck half buried
+in the sands at my feet, completed the innuendo of the scene.
+
+The pavilion--it had been built by the last proprietor, Northmour's
+uncle, a silly and prodigal virtuoso--presented little signs of
+age. It was two stories in height, Italian in design, surrounded
+by a patch of garden in which nothing had prospered but a few
+coarse flowers; and looked, with its shuttered windows, not like a
+house that had been deserted, but like one that had never been
+tenanted by man. Northmour was plainly from home; whether, as
+usual, sulking in the cabin of his yacht, or in one of his fitful
+and extravagant appearances in the world of society, I had, of
+course, no means of guessing. The place had an air of solitude
+that daunted even a solitary like myself; the wind cried in the
+chimneys with a strange and wailing note; and it was with a sense
+of escape, as if I were going indoors, that I turned away and,
+driving my cart before me, entered the skirts of the wood.
+
+The Sea-Wood of Graden had been planted to shelter the cultivated
+fields behind, and check the encroachments of the blowing sand. As
+you advanced into it from coastward, elders were succeeded by other
+hardy shrubs; but the timber was all stunted and bushy; it led a
+life of conflict; the trees were accustomed to swing there all
+night long in fierce winter tempests; and even in early spring, the
+leaves were already flying, and autumn was beginning, in this
+exposed plantation. Inland the ground rose into a little hill,
+which, along with the islet, served as a sailing mark for seamen.
+When the hill was open of the islet to the north, vessels must bear
+well to the eastward to clear Graden Ness and the Graden Bullers.
+In the lower ground, a streamlet ran among the trees, and, being
+dammed with dead leaves and clay of its own carrying, spread out
+every here and there, and lay in stagnant pools. One or two ruined
+cottages were dotted about the wood; and, according to Northmour,
+these were ecclesiastical foundations, and in their time had
+sheltered pious hermits.
+
+I found a den, or small hollow, where there was a spring of pure
+water; and there, clearing away the brambles, I pitched the tent,
+and made a fire to cook my supper. My horse I picketed farther in
+the wood where there was a patch of sward. The banks of the den
+not only concealed the light of my fire, but sheltered me from the
+wind, which was cold as well as high.
+
+The life I was leading made me both hardy and frugal. I never
+drank but water, and rarely eat anything more costly than oatmeal;
+and I required so little sleep, that, although I rose with the peep
+of day, I would often lie long awake in the dark or starry watches
+of the night. Thus in Graden Sea-Wood, although I fell thankfully
+asleep by eight in the evening I was awake again before eleven with
+a full possession of my faculties, and no sense of drowsiness or
+fatigue. I rose and sat by the fire, watching the trees and clouds
+tumultuously tossing and fleeing overhead, and hearkening to the
+wind and the rollers along the shore; till at length, growing weary
+of inaction, I quitted the den, and strolled toward the borders of
+the wood. A young moon, buried in mist, gave a faint illumination
+to my steps; and the light grew brighter as I walked forth into the
+links. At the same moment, the wind, smelling salt of the open
+ocean and carrying particles of sand, struck me with its full
+force, so that I had to bow my head.
+
+When I raised it again to look about me, I was aware of a light in
+the pavilion. It was not stationary; but passed from one window to
+another, as though some one were reviewing the different apartments
+with a lamp or candle. I watched it for some seconds in great
+surprise. When I had arrived in the afternoon the house had been
+plainly deserted; now it was as plainly occupied. It was my first
+idea that a gang of thieves might have broken in and be now
+ransacking Northmour's cupboards, which were many and not ill
+supplied. But what should bring thieves at Graden Easter? And,
+again, all the shutters had been thrown open, and it would have
+been more in the character of such gentry to close them. I
+dismissed the notion, and fell back upon another. Northmour
+himself must have arrived, and was now airing and inspecting the
+pavilion.
+
+I have said that there was no real affection between this man and
+me; but, had I loved him like a brother, I was then so much more in
+love with solitude that I should none the less have shunned his
+company. As it was, I turned and ran for it; and it was with
+genuine satisfaction that I found myself safely back beside the
+fire. I had escaped an acquaintance; I should have one more night
+in comfort. In the morning, I might either slip away before
+Northmour was abroad, or pay him as short a visit as I chose.
+
+But when morning came, I thought the situation so diverting that I
+forgot my shyness. Northmour was at my mercy; I arranged a good
+practical jest, though I knew well that my neighbor was not the man
+to jest with in security; and, chuckling beforehand over its
+success, took my place among the elders at the edge of the wood,
+whence I could command the door of the pavilion. The shutters were
+all once more closed, which I remember thinking odd; and the house,
+with its white walls and green venetians, looked spruce and
+habitable in the morning light. Hour after hour passed, and still
+no sign of Northmour. I knew him for a sluggard in the morning;
+but, as it drew on toward noon, I lost my patience. To say the
+truth, I had promised myself to break my fast in the pavilion, and
+hunger began to prick me sharply. It was a pity to let the
+opportunity go by without some cause for mirth; but the grosser
+appetite prevailed, and I relinquished my jest with regret, and
+sallied from the wood.
+
+The appearance of the house affected me, as I drew near; with
+disquietude. It seemed unchanged since last evening; and I had
+expected it, I scarce knew why, to wear some external signs of
+habitation. But no: the windows were all closely shuttered, the
+chimneys breathed no smoke, and the front door itself was closely
+padlocked. Northmour, therefore, had entered by the back; this was
+the natural, and indeed, the necessary conclusion; and you may
+judge of my surprise when, on turning the house, I found the back
+door similarly secured.
+
+My mind at once reverted to the original theory of thieves; and I
+blamed myself sharply for my last night's inaction. I examined all
+the windows on the lower story, but none of them had been tampered
+with; I tried the padlocks, but they were both secure. It thus
+became a problem how the thieves, if thieves they were, had managed
+to enter the house. They must have got, I reasoned, upon the roof
+of the outhouse where Northmour used to keep his photographic
+battery; and from thence, either by the window of the study or that
+of my old bedroom, completed their burglarious entry.
+
+I followed what I supposed was their example; and, getting on the
+roof, tried the shutters of each room. Both were secure; but I was
+not to be beaten; and, with a little force, one of them flew open,
+grazing, as it did so, the back of my hand. I remember, I put the
+wound to my mouth, and stood for perhaps half a minute licking it
+like a dog, and mechanically gazing behind me over the waste links
+and the sea; and, in that space of time, my eye made note of a
+large schooner yacht some miles to the north-east. Then I threw up
+the window and climbed in.
+
+I went over the house, and nothing can express my mystification.
+There was no sign of disorder, but, on the contrary, the rooms were
+unusually clean and pleasant. I found fires laid, ready for
+lighting; three bedrooms prepared with a luxury quite foreign to
+Northmour's habits, and with water in the ewers and the beds turned
+down; a table set for three in the dining-room; and an ample supply
+of cold meats, game, and vegetables on the pantry shelves. There
+were guests expected, that was plain; but why guests, when
+Northmour hated society? And, above all, why was the house thus
+stealthily prepared at dead of night? and why were the shutters
+closed and the doors padlocked?
+
+I effaced all traces of my visit, and came forth from the window
+feeling sobered and concerned.
+
+The schooner yacht was still in the same place; and it flashed for
+a moment through my mind that this might be the Red Earl bringing
+the owner of the pavilion and his guests. But the vessel's head
+was set the other way.
+
+
+II
+
+
+I returned to the den to cook myself a meal, of which I stood in
+great need, as well as to care for my horse, whom I had somewhat
+neglected in the morning. From time to time I went down to the
+edge of the wood; but there was no change in the pavilion, and not
+a human creature was seen all day upon the links. The schooner in
+the offing was the one touch of life within my range of vision.
+She, apparently with no set object, stood off and on or lay to,
+hour after hour; but as the evening deepened, she drew steadily
+nearer. I became more convinced that she carried Northmour and his
+friends, and that they would probably come ashore after dark; not
+only because that was of a piece with the secrecy of the
+preparations, but because the tide would not have flowed
+sufficiently before eleven to cover Graden Floe and the other sea
+quags that fortified the shore against invaders.
+
+All day the wind had been going down, and the sea along with it;
+but there was a return towards sunset of the heavy weather of the
+day before. The night set in pitch dark. The wind came off the
+sea in squalls, like the firing of a battery of cannon; now and
+then there was a flaw of rain, and the surf rolled heavier with the
+rising tide. I was down at my observatory among the elders, when a
+light was run up to the masthead of the schooner, and showed she
+was closer in than when I had last seen her by the dying daylight.
+I concluded that this must be a signal to Northmour's associates on
+shore; and, stepping forth into the links, looked around me for
+something in response.
+
+A small footpath ran along the margin of the wood, and formed the
+most direct communication between the pavilion and the mansion-
+house; and, as I cast my eyes to that side, I saw a spark of light,
+not a quarter of a mile away, and rapidly approaching. From its
+uneven course it appeared to be the light of a lantern carried by a
+person who followed the windings of the path, and was often
+staggered and taken aback by the more violent squalls. I concealed
+myself once more among the elders, and waited eagerly for the
+newcomer's advance. It proved to be a woman; and, as she passed
+within half a rod of my ambush, I was able to recognise the
+features. The deaf and silent old dame, who had nursed Northmour
+in his childhood, was his associate in this underhand affair.
+
+I followed her at a little distance, taking advantage of the
+innumerable heights and hollows, concealed by the darkness, and
+favored not only by the nurse's deafness, but by the uproar of the
+wind and surf. She entered the pavilion, and, going at once to the
+upper story, opened and set a light in one of the windows that
+looked toward the sea. Immediately afterwards the light at the
+schooner's masthead was run down and extinguished. Its purpose had
+been attained, and those on board were sure that they were
+expected. The old woman resumed her preparations; although the
+other shutters remained closed, I could see a glimmer going to and
+fro about the house; and a gush of sparks from one chimney after
+another soon told me that the fires were being kindled.
+
+Northmour and his guests, I was now persuaded, would come ashore as
+soon as there was water on the floe. It was a wild night for boat
+service; and I felt some alarm mingle with my curiosity as I
+reflected on the danger of the landing. My old acquaintance, it
+was true, was the most eccentric of men; but the present
+eccentricity was both disquieting and lugubrious to consider. A
+variety of feelings thus led me toward the beach, where I lay flat
+on my face in a hollow within six feet of the track that led to the
+pavilion. Thence, I should have the satisfaction of recognizing
+the arrivals, and, if they should prove to be acquaintances,
+greeting them as soon as they landed.
+
+Some time before eleven, while the tide was still dangerously low,
+a boat's lantern appeared close in shore; and, my attention being
+thus awakened, I could perceive another still far to seaward,
+violently tossed, and sometimes hidden by the billows. The
+weather, which was getting dirtier as the night went on, and the
+perilous situation of the yacht upon a lee shore, had probably
+driven them to attempt a landing at the earliest possible moment.
+
+A little afterwards, four yachtsmen carrying a very heavy chest,
+and guided by a fifth with a lantern, passed close in front of me
+as I lay, and were admitted to the pavilion by the nurse. They
+returned to the beach, and passed me a third time with another
+chest, larger but apparently not so heavy as the first. A third
+time they made the transit; and on this occasion one of the
+yachtsmen carried a leather portmanteau, and the others a lady's
+trunk and carriage bag. My curiosity was sharply excited. If a
+woman were among the guests of Northmour, it would show a change in
+his habits, and an apostasy from his pet theories of life, well
+calculated to fill me with surprise. When he and I dwelt there
+together, the pavilion had been a temple of misogyny. And now, one
+of the detested sex was to be installed under its roof. I
+remembered one or two particulars, a few notes of daintiness and
+almost of coquetry which had struck me the day before as I surveyed
+the preparations in the house; their purpose was now clear, and I
+thought myself dull not to have perceived it from the first.
+
+While I was thus reflecting, a second lantern drew near me from the
+beach. It was carried by a yachtsman whom I had not yet seen, and
+who was conducting two other persons to the pavilion. These two
+persons were unquestionably the guests for whom the house was made
+ready; and, straining eye and ear, I set myself to watch them as
+they passed. One was an unusually tall man, in a traveling hat
+slouched over his eyes, and a highland cape closely buttoned and
+turned up so as to conceal his face. You could make out no more of
+him than that he was, as I have said, unusually tall, and walked
+feebly with a heavy stoop. By his side, and either clinging to him
+or giving him support--I could not make out which--was a young,
+tall, and slender figure of a woman. She was extremely pale; but
+in the light of the lantern her face was so marred by strong and
+changing shadows, that she might equally well have been as ugly as
+sin or as beautiful as I afterwards found her to be.
+
+When they were just abreast of me, the girl made some remark which
+was drowned by the noise of the wind.
+
+"Hush!" said her companion; and there was something in the tone
+with which the word was uttered that thrilled and rather shook my
+spirits. It seemed to breathe from a bosom laboring under the
+deadliest terror; I have never heard another syllable so
+expressive; and I still hear it again when I am feverish at night,
+and my mind runs upon old times. The man turned toward the girl as
+he spoke; I had a glimpse of much red beard and a nose which seemed
+to have been broken in youth; and his light eyes seemed shining in
+his face with some strong and unpleasant emotion.
+
+But these two passed on and were admitted in their turn to the
+pavilion.
+
+One by one, or in groups, the seamen returned to the beach. The
+wind brought me the sound of a rough voice crying, "Shove off!"
+Then, after a pause, another lantern drew near. It was Northmour
+alone.
+
+My wife and I, a man and a woman, have often agreed to wonder how a
+person could be, at the same time, so handsome and so repulsive as
+Northmour. He had the appearance of a finished gentleman; his face
+bore every mark of intelligence and courage; but you had only to
+look at him, even in his most amiable moment, to see that he had
+the temper of a slaver captain. I never knew a character that was
+both explosive and revengeful to the same degree; he combined the
+vivacity of the south with the sustained and deadly hatreds of the
+north; and both traits were plainly written on his face, which was
+a sort of danger signal. In person, he was tall, strong, and
+active; his hair and complexion very dark; his features handsomely
+designed, but spoiled by a menacing expression.
+
+At that moment he was somewhat paler than by nature; he wore a
+heavy frown; and his lips worked, and he looked sharply round him
+as he walked, like a man besieged with apprehensions. And yet I
+thought he had a look of triumph underlying all, as though he had
+already done much, and was near the end of an achievement.
+
+Partly from a scruple of delicacy--which I dare say came too late--
+partly from the pleasure of startling an acquaintance, I desired to
+make my presence known to him without delay.
+
+I got suddenly to my feet, and stepped forward.
+
+"Northmour!" said I.
+
+I have never had so shocking a surprise in all my days. He leaped
+on me without a word; something shone in his hand; and he struck
+for my heart with a dagger. At the same moment I knocked him head
+over heels. Whether it was my quickness, or his own uncertainty, I
+know not; but the blade only grazed my shoulder, while the hilt and
+his fist struck me violently on the mouth.
+
+I fled, but not far. I had often and often observed the
+capabilities of the sand hills for protracted ambush or stealthy
+advances and retreats; and, not ten yards from the scene of the
+scuffle, plumped down again upon the grass. The lantern had fallen
+and gone out. But what was my astonishment to see Northmour slip
+at a bound into the pavilion, and hear him bar the door behind him
+with a clang of iron!
+
+He had not pursued me. He had run away. Northmour, whom I knew
+for the most implacable and daring of men, had run away! I could
+scarce believe my reason; and yet in this strange business, where
+all was incredible, there was nothing to make a work about in an
+incredibility more or less. For why was the pavilion secretly
+prepared? Why had Northmour landed with his guests at dead of
+night, in half a gale of wind, and with the floe scarce covered?
+Why had he sought to kill me? Had he not recognized my voice? I
+wondered. And, above all, how had he come to have a dagger ready
+in his hand? A dagger, or even a sharp knife, seemed out of
+keeping with the age in which we lived; and a gentleman landing
+from his yacht on the shore of his own estate, even although it was
+at night and with some mysterious circumstances, does not usually,
+as a matter of fact, walk thus prepared for deadly onslaught. The
+more I reflected, the further I felt at sea. I recapitulated the
+elements of mystery, counting them on my fingers: the pavilion
+secretly prepared for guests; the guests landed at the risk of
+their lives and to the imminent peril of the yacht; the guests, or
+at least one of them, in undisguised and seemingly causeless
+terror; Northmour with a naked weapon; Northmour stabbing his most
+intimate acquaintance at a word; last, and not least strange,
+Northmour fleeing from the man whom he had sought to murder, and
+barricading himself, like a hunted creature, behind the door of the
+pavilion. Here were at least six separate causes for extreme
+surprise; each part and parcel with the others, and forming all
+together one consistent story. I felt almost ashamed to believe my
+own senses.
+
+As I thus stood, transfixed with wonder, I began to grow painfully
+conscious of the injuries I had received in the scuffle; skulked
+round among the sand hills; and, by a devious path, regained the
+shelter of the wood. On the way, the old nurse passed again within
+several yards of me, still carrying her lantern, on the return
+journey to the mansion house of Graden. This made a seventh
+suspicious feature in the case. Northmour and his guests, it
+appeared, were to cook and do the cleaning for themselves, while
+the old woman continued to inhabit the big empty barrack among the
+policies. There must surely be great cause for secrecy, when so
+many inconveniences were confronted to preserve it.
+
+So thinking, I made my way to the den. For greater security, I
+trod out the embers of the fire, and lighted my lantern to examine
+the wound upon my shoulder. It was a trifling hurt, although it
+bled somewhat freely, and I dressed it as well as I could (for its
+position made it difficult to reach) with some rag and cold water
+from the spring. While I was thus busied, I mentally declared war
+against Northmour and his mystery. I am not an angry man by
+nature, and I believe there was more curiosity than resentment in
+my heart. But war I certainly declared; and, by way of
+preparation, I got out my revolver, and, having drawn the charges,
+cleaned and reloaded it with scrupulous care. Next I became
+preoccupied about my horse. It might break loose, or fall to
+neighing, and so betray my camp in the Sea-Wood. I determined to
+rid myself of its neighborhood; and long before dawn I was leading
+it over the links in the direction of the fisher village.
+
+
+III
+
+
+For two days I skulked round the pavilion, profiting by the uneven
+surface of the links. I became an adept in the necessary tactics.
+These low hillocks and shallow dells, running one into another,
+became a kind of cloak of darkness for my inthralling, but perhaps
+dishonorable, pursuit.
+
+Yet, in spite of this advantage, I could learn but little of
+Northmour or his guests.
+
+Fresh provisions were brought under cover of darkness by the old
+woman from the mansion house. Northmour, and the young lady,
+sometimes together, but more often singly, would walk for an hour
+or two at a time on the beach beside the quicksand. I could not
+but conclude that this promenade was chosen with an eye to secrecy;
+for the spot was open only to seaward. But it suited me not less
+excellently; the highest and most accidented of the sand hills
+immediately adjoined; and from these, lying flat in a hollow, I
+could overlook Northmour or the young lady as they walked.
+
+The tall man seemed to have disappeared. Not only did he never
+cross the threshold, but he never so much as showed face at a
+window; or, at least, not so far as I could see; for I dared not
+creep forward beyond a certain distance in the day, since the upper
+floors commanded the bottoms of the links; and at night, when I
+could venture further, the lower windows were barricaded as if to
+stand a siege. Sometimes I thought the tall man must be confined
+to bed, for I remembered the feebleness of his gait; and sometimes
+I thought he must have gone clear away, and that Northmour and the
+young lady remained alone together in the pavilion. The idea, even
+then, displeased me.
+
+Whether or not this pair were man and wife, I had seen abundant
+reason to doubt the friendliness of their relation. Although I
+could hear nothing of what they said, and rarely so much as glean a
+decided expression on the face of either, there was a distance,
+almost a stiffness, in their bearing which showed them to be either
+unfamiliar or at enmity. The girl walked faster when she was with
+Northmour than when she was alone; and I conceived that any
+inclination between a man and a woman would rather delay than
+accelerate the step. Moreover, she kept a good yard free of him,
+and trailed her umbrella, as if it were a barrier, on the side
+between them. Northmour kept sidling closer; and, as the girl
+retired from his advance, their course lay at a sort of diagonal
+across the beach, and would have landed them in the surf had it
+been long enough continued. But, when this was imminent, the girl
+would unostentatiously change sides and put Northmour between her
+and the sea. I watched these maneuvers, for my part, with high
+enjoyment and approval, and chuckled to myself at every move.
+
+On the morning of the third day, she walked alone for some time,
+and I perceived, to my great concern, that she was more than once
+in tears. You will see that my heart was already interested more
+than I supposed. She had a firm yet airy motion of the body, and
+carried her head with unimaginable grace; every step was a thing to
+look at, and she seemed in my eyes to breathe sweetness and
+distinction.
+
+The day was so agreeable, being calm and sunshiny, with a tranquil
+sea, and yet with a healthful piquancy and vigor in the air, that,
+contrary to custom, she was tempted forth a second time to walk.
+On this occasion she was accompanied by Northmour, and they had
+been but a short while on the beach, when I saw him take forcible
+possession of her hand. She struggled, and uttered a cry that was
+almost a scream. I sprung to my feet, unmindful of my strange
+position; but, ere I had taken a step, I saw Northmour bareheaded
+and bowing very low, as if to apologize; and dropped again at once
+into my ambush. A few words were interchanged; and then, with
+another bow, he left the beach to return to the pavilion. He
+passed not far from me, and I could see him, flushed and lowering,
+and cutting savagely with his cane among the grass. It was not
+without satisfaction that I recognized my own handiwork in a great
+cut under his right eye, and a considerable discoloration round the
+socket.
+
+For some time the girl remained where he had left her, looking out
+past the islet and over the bright sea. Then with a start, as one
+who throws off preoccupation and puts energy again upon its mettle,
+she broke into a rapid and decisive walk. She also was much
+incensed by what had passed. She had forgotten where she was. And
+I beheld her walk straight into the borders of the quicksand where
+it is most abrupt and dangerous. Two or three steps farther and
+her life would have been in serious jeopardy, when I slid down the
+face of the sand hill, which is there precipitous, and, running
+halfway forward, called to her to stop.
+
+She did so, and turned round. There was not a tremor of fear in
+her behavior, and she marched directly up to me like a queen. I
+was barefoot, and clad like a common sailor, save for an Egyptian
+scarf round my waist; and she probably took me at first for some
+one from the fisher village, straying after bait. As for her, when
+I thus saw her face to face, her eyes set steadily and imperiously
+upon mine, I was filled with admiration and astonishment, and
+thought her even more beautiful than I had looked to find her. Nor
+could I think enough of one who, acting with so much boldness, yet
+preserved a maidenly air that was both quaint and engaging; for my
+wife kept an old-fashioned precision of manner through all her
+admirable life--an excellent thing in woman, since it sets another
+value on her sweet familiarities.
+
+"What does this mean?" she asked.
+
+"You were walking," I told her, "directly into Graden Floe."
+
+"You do not belong to these parts," she said again. "You speak
+like an educated man."
+
+"I believe I have a right to that name," said I, "although in this
+disguise."
+
+But her woman's eye had already detected the sash.
+
+"Oh!" she said; "your sash betrays you."
+
+"You have said the word BETRAY," I resumed. "May I ask you not to
+betray me? I was obliged to disclose myself in your interest; but
+if Northmour learned my presence it might be worse than
+disagreeable for me."
+
+"Do you know," she asked, "to whom you are speaking?"
+
+"Not to Mr. Northmour's wife?" I asked, by way of answer.
+
+She shook her head. All this while she was studying my face with
+an embarrassing intentness. Then she broke out--
+
+"You have an honest face. Be honest like your face, sir, and tell
+me what you want and what you are afraid of. Do you think I could
+hurt you? I believe you have far more power to injure me! And yet
+you do not look unkind. What do you mean--you, a gentleman--by
+skulking like a spy about this desolate place? Tell me," she said,
+"who is it you hate?"
+
+"I hate no one," I answered; "and I fear no one face to face. My
+name is Cassilis--Frank Cassilis. I lead the life of a vagabond
+for my own good pleasure. I am one of Northmour's oldest friends;
+and three nights ago, when I addressed him on these links, he
+stabbed me in the shoulder with a knife."
+
+"It was you!" she said.
+
+"Why he did so," I continued, disregarding the interruption, "is
+more than I can guess, and more than I care to know. I have not
+many friends, nor am I very susceptible to friendship; but no man
+shall drive me from a place by terror. I had camped in the Graden
+Sea-Wood ere he came; I camp in it still. If you think I mean harm
+to you or yours, madame, the remedy is in your hand. Tell him that
+my camp is in the Hemlock Den, and tonight he can stab me in safety
+while I sleep."
+
+With this I doffed my cap to her, and scrambled up once more among
+the sand hills. I do not know why, but I felt a prodigious sense
+of injustice, and felt like a hero and a martyr; while as a matter
+of fact, I had not a word to say in my defense, nor so much as one
+plausible reason to offer for my conduct. I had stayed at Graden
+out of a curiosity natural enough, but undignified; and though
+there was another motive growing in along with the first, it was
+not one which, at that period, I could have properly explained to
+the lady of my heart.
+
+Certainly, that night, I thought of no one else; and, though her
+whole conduct and position seemed suspicious, I could not find it
+in my heart to entertain a doubt of her integrity. I could have
+staked my life that she was clear of blame, and, though all was
+dark at the present, that the explanation of the mystery would show
+her part in these events to be both right and needful. It was
+true, let me cudgel my imagination as I pleased, that I could
+invent no theory of her relations to Northmour; but I felt none the
+less sure of my conclusion because it was founded on instinct in
+place of reason, and, as I may say, went to sleep that night with
+the thought of her under my pillow.
+
+Next day she came out about the same hour alone, and, as soon as
+the sand hills concealed her from the pavilion, drew nearer to the
+edge, and called me by name in guarded tones. I was astonished to
+observe that she was deadly pale, and seemingly under the influence
+of strong emotion.
+
+"Mr. Cassilis!" she cried; "Mr. Cassilis!"
+
+I appeared at once, and leaped down upon the beach. A remarkable
+air of relief overspread her countenance as soon as she saw me.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, with a hoarse sound, like one whose bosom had been
+lightened of a weight. And then, "Thank God you are still safe!"
+she added; "I knew, if you were, you would be here." (Was not this
+strange? So swiftly and wisely does Nature prepare our hearts for
+these great lifelong intimacies, that both my wife and I had been
+given a presentiment on this the second day of our acquaintance. I
+had even then hoped that she would seek me; she had felt sure that
+she would find me.) "Do not," she went on swiftly, "do not stay in
+this place. Promise me that you will sleep no longer in that wood.
+You do not know how I suffer; all last night I could not sleep for
+thinking of your peril."
+
+"Peril!" I repeated. "Peril from whom? From Northmour?"
+
+"Not so," she said. "Did you think I would tell him after what you
+said?"
+
+"Not from Northmour?" I repeated. "Then how? From whom? I see
+none to be afraid of."
+
+"You must not ask me," was her reply, "for I am not free to tell
+you. Only believe me, and go hence--believe me, and go away
+quickly, quickly, for your life!"
+
+An appeal to his alarm is never a good plan to rid oneself of a
+spirited young man. My obstinacy was but increased by what she
+said, and I made it a point of honor to remain. And her solicitude
+for my safety still more confirmed me in the resolve.
+
+"You must not think me inquisitive, madame," I replied; "but, if
+Graden is so dangerous a place, you yourself perhaps remain here at
+some risk."
+
+She only looked at me reproachfully.
+
+"You and your father--" I resumed; but she interrupted me almost
+with a gasp.
+
+"My father! How do you know that?" she cried.
+
+"I saw you together when you landed," was my answer; and I do not
+know why, but it seemed satisfactory to both of us, as indeed it
+was truth. "But," I continued, "you need have no fear from me. I
+see you have some reason to be secret, and, you may believe me,
+your secret is as safe with me as if I were in Graden Floe. I have
+scarce spoken to anyone for years; my horse is my only companion,
+and even he, poor beast, is not beside me. You see, then, you may
+count on me for silence. So tell me the truth, my dear young lady,
+are you not in danger?"
+
+"Mr. Northmour says you are an honorable man," she returned, "and I
+believe it when I see you. I will tell you so much; you are right;
+we are in dreadful, dreadful danger, and you share it by remaining
+where you are."
+
+"Ah!" said I; "you have heard of me from Northmour? And he gives
+me a good character?"
+
+"I asked him about you last night," was her reply. "I pretended,"
+she hesitated, "I pretended to have met you long ago, and spoken to
+you of him. It was not true; but I could not help myself without
+betraying you, and you had put me in a difficulty. He praised you
+highly."
+
+"And--you may permit me one question--does this danger come from
+Northmour?" I asked.
+
+"From Mr. Northmour?" she cried. "Oh, no, he stays with us to
+share it."
+
+"While you propose that I should run away?" I said. "You do not
+rate me very high."
+
+"Why should you stay?" she asked. "You are no friend of ours."
+
+I know not what came over me, for I had not been conscious of a
+similar weakness since I was a child, but I was so mortified by
+this retort that my eyes pricked and filled with tears, as I
+continued to gaze upon her face.
+
+"No, no," she said, in a changed voice; "I did not mean the words
+unkindly."
+
+"It was I who offended," I said; and I held out my hand with a look
+of appeal that somehow touched her, for she gave me hers at once,
+and even eagerly. I held it for awhile in mine, and gazed into her
+eyes. It was she who first tore her hand away, and, forgetting all
+about her request and the promise she had sought to extort, ran at
+the top of her speed, and without turning, till she was out of
+sight. And then I knew that I loved her, and thought in my glad
+heart that she--she herself--was not indifferent to my suit. Many
+a time she has denied it in after days, but it was with a smiling
+and not a serious denial. For my part, I am sure our hands would
+not have lain so closely in each other if she had not begun to melt
+to me already. And, when all is said, it is no great contention,
+since, by her own avowal, she began to love me on the morrow.
+
+And yet on the morrow very little took place. She came and called
+me down as on the day before, upbraided me for lingering at Graden,
+and, when she found I was still obdurate, began to ask me more
+particularly as to my arrival. I told her by what series of
+accidents I had come to witness their disembarkation, and how I had
+determined to remain, partly from the interest which had been
+awakened in me by Northmour's guests, and partly because of his own
+murderous attack. As to the former, I fear I was disingenuous, and
+led her to regard herself as having been an attraction to me from
+the first moment that I saw her on the links. It relieves my heart
+to make this confession even now, when my wife is with God, and
+already knows all things, and the honesty of my purpose even in
+this; for while she lived, although it often pricked my conscience,
+I had never the hardihood to undeceive her. Even a little secret,
+in such a married life as ours, is like the rose leaf which kept
+the princess from her sleep.
+
+From this the talk branched into other subjects, and I told her
+much about my lonely and wandering existence; she, for her part,
+giving ear, and saying little. Although we spoke very naturally,
+and latterly on topics that might seem indifferent, we were both
+sweetly agitated. Too soon it was time for her to go; and we
+separated, as if by mutual consent, without shaking hands, for both
+knew that, between us, it was no idle ceremony.
+
+The next, and that was the fourth day of our acquaintance, we met
+in the same spot, but early in the morning, with much familiarity
+and yet much timidity on either side. While she had once more
+spoken about my danger--and that, I understood, was her excuse for
+coming--I, who had prepared a great deal of talk during the night,
+began to tell her how highly I valued her kind interest, and how no
+one had ever cared to hear about my life, nor had I ever cared to
+relate it, before yesterday. Suddenly she interrupted me, saying
+with vehemence--
+
+"And yet, if you knew who I was, you would not so much as speak to
+me!"
+
+I told her such a thought was madness, and, little as we had met, I
+counted her already a dear friend; but my protestations seemed only
+to make her more desperate.
+
+"My father is in hiding!" she cried.
+
+"My dear," I said, forgetting for the first time to add "young
+lady," "what do I care? If I were in hiding twenty times over,
+would it make one thought of change in you?"
+
+"Ah, but the cause!" she cried, "the cause! It is"--she faltered
+for a second--"it is disgraceful to us!"
+
+
+IV
+
+
+This was my wife's story, as I drew it from her among tears and
+sobs. Her name was Clara Huddlestone: it sounded very beautiful in
+my ears; but not so beautiful as that other name of Clara Cassilis,
+which she wore during the longer and, I thank God, the happier
+portion of her life. Her father, Bernard Huddlestone, had been a
+private banker in a very large way of business. Many years before,
+his affairs becoming disordered, he had been led to try dangerous,
+and at last criminal, expedients to retrieve himself from ruin.
+All was in vain; he became more and more cruelly involved, and
+found his honor lost at the same moment with his fortune. About
+this period, Northmour had been courting his daughter with great
+assiduity, though with small encouragement; and to him, knowing him
+thus disposed in his favor, Bernard Huddlestone turned for help in
+his extremity. It was not merely ruin and dishonor, nor merely a
+legal condemnation, that the unhappy man had brought upon his head.
+It seems he could have gone to prison with a light heart. What he
+feared, what kept him awake at night or recalled him from slumber
+into frenzy, was some secret, sudden, and unlawful attempt upon his
+life. Hence, he desired to bury his existence and escape to one of
+the islands in the South Pacific, and it was in Northmour's yacht,
+the "Red Earl," that he designed to go. The yacht picked them up
+clandestinely upon the coast of Wales, and had once more deposited
+them at Graden, till she could be refitted and provisioned for the
+longer voyage. Nor could Clara doubt that her hand had been
+stipulated as the price of passage. For, although Northmour was
+neither unkind, nor even discourteous, he had shown himself in
+several instances somewhat overbold in speech and manner.
+
+I listened, I need not say, with fixed attention, and put many
+questions as to the more mysterious part. It was in vain. She had
+no clear idea of what the blow was, nor of how it was expected to
+fall. Her father's alarm was unfeigned and physically prostrating,
+and he had thought more than once of making an unconditional
+surrender to the police. But the scheme was finally abandoned, for
+he was convinced that not even the strength of our English prisons
+could shelter him from his pursuers. He had had many affairs in
+Italy, and with Italians resident in London, in the latter years of
+his business; and these last, as Clara fancied, were somehow
+connected with the doom that threatened him. He had shown great
+terror at the presence of an Italian seaman on board the "Red
+Earl," and had bitterly and repeatedly accused Northmour in
+consequence. The latter had protested that Beppo (that was the
+seaman's name) was a capital fellow, and could be trusted to the
+death; but Mr. Huddlestone had continued ever since to declare that
+all was lost, that it was only a question of days, and that Beppo
+would be the ruin of him yet.
+
+I regarded the whole story as the hallucination of a mind shaken by
+calamity. He had suffered heavy loss by his Italian transactions;
+and hence the sight of an Italian was hateful to him, and the
+principal part in his nightmare would naturally enough be played by
+one of that nation.
+
+"What your father wants," I said, "is a good doctor and some
+calming medicine."
+
+"But Mr. Northmour?" objected Clara. "He is untroubled by losses,
+and yet he shares in this terror."
+
+I could not help laughing at what I considered her simplicity.
+
+"My dear," said I, "you have told me yourself what reward he has to
+look for. All is fair in love, you must remember; and if Northmour
+foments your father's terrors, it is not at all because he is
+afraid of any Italian man, but simply because he is infatuated with
+a charming English woman."
+
+She reminded me of his attack upon myself on the night of the
+disembarkation, and this I was unable to explain. In short, and
+from one thing to another, it was agreed between us that I should
+set out at once for the fisher village, Graden Wester, as it was
+called, look up all the newspapers I could find, and see for myself
+if there seemed any basis of fact for these continued alarms. The
+next morning, at the same hour and place, I was to make my report
+to Clara. She said no more on that occasion about my departure;
+nor, indeed, did she make it a secret that she clung to the thought
+of my proximity as something helpful and pleasant; and, for my
+part, I could not have left her, if she had gone upon her knees to
+ask it.
+
+I reached Graden Wester before ten in the forenoon; for in those
+days I was an excellent pedestrian, and the distance, as I think I
+have said, was little over seven miles; fine walking all the way
+upon the springy turf. The village is one of the bleakest on that
+coast, which is saying much: there is a church in the hollow; a
+miserable haven in the rocks, where many boats have been lost as
+they returned from fishing; two or three score of stone houses
+arranged along the beach and in two streets, one leading from the
+harbor, and another striking out from it at right angles; and, at
+the corner of these two, a very dark and cheerless tavern, by way
+of principal hotel.
+
+I had dressed myself somewhat more suitably to my station in life,
+and at once called upon the minister in his little manse beside the
+graveyard. He knew me, although it was more than nine years since
+we had met; and when I told him that I had been long upon a walking
+tour, and was behind with the news, readily lent me an armful of
+newspapers, dating from a month back to the day before. With these
+I sought the tavern, and, ordering some breakfast, sat down to
+study the "Huddlestone Failure."
+
+It had been, it appeared, a very flagrant case. Thousands of
+persons were reduced to poverty; and one in particular had blown
+out his brains as soon as payment was suspended. It was strange to
+myself that, while I read these details, I continued rather to
+sympathize with Mr. Huddlestone than with his victims; so complete
+already was the empire of my love for my wife. A price was
+naturally set upon the banker's head; and, as the case was
+inexcusable and the public indignation thoroughly aroused, the
+unusual figure of 750 pounds was offered for his capture. He was
+reported to have large sums of money in his possession. One day,
+he had been heard of in Spain; the next, there was sure
+intelligence that he was still lurking between Manchester and
+Liverpool, or along the border of Wales; and the day after, a
+telegram would announce his arrival in Cuba or Yucatan. But in all
+this there was no word of an Italian, nor any sign of mystery.
+
+In the very last paper, however, there was one item not so clear.
+The accountants who were charged to verify the failure had, it
+seemed, come upon the traces of a very large number of thousands,
+which figured for some time in the transactions of the house of
+Huddlestone; but which came from nowhere, and disappeared in the
+same mysterious fashion. It was only once referred to by name, and
+then under the initials "X. X."; but it had plainly been floated
+for the first time into the business at a period of great
+depression some six years ago. The name of a distinguished royal
+personage had been mentioned by rumor in connection with this sum.
+"The cowardly desperado"--such, I remember, was the editorial
+expression--was supposed to have escaped with a large part of this
+mysterious fund still in his possession.
+
+I was still brooding over the fact, and trying to torture it into
+some connection with Mr. Huddlestone's danger, when a man entered
+the tavern and asked for some bread and cheese with a decided
+foreign accent.
+
+"Siete Italiano?" said I.
+
+"Si, Signor," was his reply.
+
+I said it was unusually far north to find one of his compatriots;
+at which he shrugged his shoulders, and replied that a man would go
+anywhere to find work. What work he could hope to find at Graden
+Wester, I was totally unable to conceive; and the incident struck
+so unpleasantly upon my mind, that I asked the landlord, while he
+was counting me some change, whether he had ever before seen an
+Italian in the village. He said he had once seen some Norwegians,
+who had been shipwrecked on the other side of Graden Ness and
+rescued by the lifeboat from Cauldhaven.
+
+"No!" said I; "but an Italian, like the man who has just had bread
+and cheese."
+
+"What?" cried he, "yon black-avised fellow wi' the teeth? Was he
+an I-talian? Weel, yon's the first that ever I saw, an' I dare say
+he's like to be the last."
+
+Even as he was speaking, I raised my eyes, and, casting a glance
+into the street, beheld three men in earnest conversation together,
+and not thirty yards away. One of them was my recent companion in
+the tavern parlor; the other two, by their handsome sallow features
+and soft hats, should evidently belong to the same race. A crowd
+of village children stood around them, gesticulating and talking
+gibberish in imitation. The trio looked singularly foreign to the
+bleak dirty street in which they were standing and the dark gray
+heaven that overspread them; and I confess my incredulity received
+at that moment a shock from which it never recovered. I might
+reason with myself as I pleased, but I could not argue down the
+effect of what I had seen, and I began to share in the Italian
+terror.
+
+It was already drawing toward the close of the day before I had
+returned the newspapers to the manse, and got well forward on to
+the links on my way home. I shall never forget that walk. It grew
+very cold and boisterous; the wind sung in the short grass about my
+feet; thin rain showers came running on the gusts; and an immense
+mountain range of clouds began to arise out of the bosom of the
+sea. It would be hard to imagine a more dismal evening; and
+whether it was from these external influences, or because my nerves
+were already affected by what I had heard and seen, my thoughts
+were as gloomy as the weather.
+
+The upper windows of the pavilion commanded a considerable spread
+of links in the direction of Graden Wester. To avoid observation,
+it was necessary to hug the beach until I had gained cover from the
+higher sand hills on the little headland, when I might strike
+across, through the hollows, for the margin of the wood. The sun
+was about setting; the tide was low, and all the quicksands
+uncovered; and I was moving along, lost in unpleasant thought, when
+I was suddenly thunderstruck to perceive the prints of human feet.
+They ran parallel to my own course, but low down upon the beach,
+instead of along the border of the turf; and, when I examined them,
+I saw at once, by the size and coarseness of the impression, that
+it was a stranger to me and to those of the pavilion who had
+recently passed that way. Not only so; but from the recklessness
+of the course which he had followed, steering near to the most
+formidable portions of the sand, he was evidently a stranger to the
+country and to the ill-repute of Graden beach.
+
+Step by step I followed the prints; until, a quarter of a mile
+farther, I beheld them die away into the southeastern boundary of
+Graden Floe. There, whoever he was, the miserable man had
+perished. One or two gulls, who had, perhaps, seen him disappear,
+wheeled over his sepulcher with their usual melancholy piping. The
+sun had broken through the clouds by a last effort, and colored the
+wide level of quicksands with a dusky purple. I stood for some
+time gazing at the spot, chilled and disheartened by my own
+reflections, and with a strong and commanding consciousness of
+death. I remember wondering how long the tragedy had taken, and
+whether his screams had been audible at the pavilion. And then,
+making a strong resolution, I was about to tear myself away, when a
+gust fiercer than usual fell upon this quarter of the beach, and I
+saw, now whirling high in air, now skimming lightly across the
+surface of the sands, a soft, black, felt hat, somewhat conical in
+shape, such as I had remarked already on the heads of the Italians.
+
+I believe, but I am not sure, that I uttered a cry. The wind was
+driving the hat shoreward, and I ran round the border of the floe
+to be ready against its arrival. The gust fell, dropping the hat
+for awhile upon the quicksand, and then, once more freshening,
+landed it a few yards from where I stood. I seized it with the
+interest you may imagine. It had seen some service; indeed, it was
+rustier than either of those I had seen that day upon the street.
+The lining was red, stamped with the name of the maker, which I
+have forgotten, and that of the place of manufacture, Venedig.
+This (it is not yet forgotten) was the name given by the Austrians
+to the beautiful city of Venice, then, and for long after, a part
+of their dominions.
+
+The shock was complete. I saw imaginary Italians upon every side;
+and for the first, and, I may say, for the last time in my
+experience, became overpowered by what is called a panic terror. I
+knew nothing, that is, to be afraid of, and yet I admit that I was
+heartily afraid; and it was with sensible reluctance that I
+returned to my exposed and solitary camp in the Sea-Wood.
+
+There I eat some cold porridge which had been left over from the
+night before, for I was disinclined to make a fire; and, feeling
+strengthened and reassured, dismissed all these fanciful terrors
+from my mind, and lay down to sleep with composure.
+
+How long I may have slept it is impossible for me to guess; but I
+was awakened at last by a sudden, blinding flash of light into my
+face. It woke me like a blow. In an instant I was upon my knees.
+But the light had gone as suddenly as it came. The darkness was
+intense. And, as it was blowing great guns from the sea, and
+pouring with rain, the noises of the storm effectually concealed
+all others.
+
+It was, I dare say, half a minute before I regained my self-
+possession. But for two circumstances, I should have thought I had
+been awakened by some new and vivid form of nightmare. First, the
+flap of my tent, which I had shut carefully when I retired, was now
+unfastened; and, second, I could still perceive, with a sharpness
+that excluded any theory of hallucination, the smell of hot metal
+and of burning oil. The conclusion was obvious. I had been
+awakened by some one flashing a bull's-eye lantern in my face. It
+had been but a flash, and away. He had seen my face, and then
+gone. I asked myself the object of so strange a proceeding, and
+the answer came pat. The man, whoever he was, had thought to
+recognize me, and he had not. There was another question
+unresolved; and to this, I may say, I feared to give an answer; if
+he had recognized me, what would he have done?
+
+My fears were immediately diverted from myself, for I saw that I
+had been visited in a mistake; and I became persuaded that some
+dreadful danger threatened the pavilion. It required some nerve to
+issue forth into the black and intricate thicket which surrounded
+and overhung the den; but I groped my way to the links, drenched
+with rain, beaten upon and deafened by the gusts, and fearing at
+every step to lay my hand upon some lurking adversary. The
+darkness was so complete that I might have been surrounded by an
+army and yet none the wiser, and the uproar of the gale so loud
+that my hearing was as useless as my sight.
+
+For the rest of that night, which seemed interminably long, I
+patrolled the vicinity of the pavilion, without seeing a living
+creature or hearing any noise but the concert of the wind, the sea,
+and the rain. A light in the upper story filtered through a cranny
+of the shutter, and kept me company till the approach of dawn.
+
+
+V
+
+
+With the first peep of day, I retired from the open to my old lair
+among the sand hills, there to await the coming of my wife. The
+morning was gray, wild, and melancholy; the wind moderated before
+sunrise, and then went about, and blew in puffs from the shore; the
+sea began to go down, but the rain still fell without mercy. Over
+all the wilderness of links there was not a creature to be seen.
+Yet I felt sure the neighborhood was alive with skulking foes. The
+light that had been so suddenly and surprisingly flashed upon my
+face as I lay sleeping, and the hat that had been blown ashore by
+the wind from over Graden Floe, were two speaking signals of the
+peril that environed Clara and the party in the pavilion.
+
+It was, perhaps, half-past seven, or nearer eight, before I saw the
+door open, and that dear figure come toward me in the rain. I was
+waiting for her on the beach before she had crossed the sand hills.
+
+"I have had such trouble to come!" she cried. "They did not wish
+me to go walking in the rain."
+
+"Clara," I said, "you are not frightened!"
+
+"No," said she, with a simplicity that filled my heart with
+confidence. For my wife was the bravest as well as the best of
+women; in my experience, I have not found the two go always
+together, but with her they did; and she combined the extreme of
+fortitude with the most endearing and beautiful virtues.
+
+I told her what had happened; and, though her cheek grew visibly
+paler, she retained perfect control over her senses.
+
+"You see now that I am safe," said I, in conclusion. "They do not
+mean to harm me; for, had they chosen, I was a dead man last
+night."
+
+She laid her hand upon my arm.
+
+"And I had no presentiment!" she cried.
+
+Her accent thrilled me with delight. I put my arm about her, and
+strained her to my side; and, before either of us was aware, her
+hands were on my shoulders and my lips upon her mouth. Yet up to
+that moment no word of love had passed between us. To this day I
+remember the touch of her cheek, which was wet and cold with the
+rain; and many a time since, when she has been washing her face, I
+have kissed it again for the sake of that morning on the beach.
+Now that she is taken from me, and I finish my pilgrimage alone, I
+recall our old loving kindnesses and the deep honesty and affection
+which united us, and my present loss seems but a trifle in
+comparison.
+
+We may have thus stood for some seconds--for time passes quickly
+with lovers--before we were startled by a peal of laughter close at
+hand. It was not natural mirth, but seemed to be affected in order
+to conceal an angrier feeling. We both turned, though I still kept
+my left arm about Clara's waist; nor did she seek to withdraw
+herself; and there, a few paces off upon the beach, stood
+Northmour, his head lowered, his hands behind his back, his
+nostrils white with passion.
+
+"Ah! Cassilis!" he said, as I disclosed my face.
+
+"That same," said I; for I was not at all put about.
+
+"And so, Miss Huddlestone," he continued slowly but savagely, "this
+is how you keep your faith to your father and to me? This is the
+value you set upon your father's life? And you are so infatuated
+with this young gentleman that you must brave ruin, and decency,
+and common human caution--"
+
+"Miss Huddlestone--" I was beginning to interrupt him, when he, in
+his turn, cut in brutally--
+
+"You hold your tongue," said he; "I am speaking to that girl."
+
+"That girl, as you call her, is my wife," said I; and my wife only
+leaned a little nearer, so that I knew she had affirmed my words.
+
+"Your what?" he cried. "You lie!"
+
+"Northmour," I said, "we all know you have a bad temper, and I am
+the last man to be irritated by words. For all that, I propose
+that you speak lower, for I am convinced that we are not alone."
+
+He looked round him, and it was plain my remark had in some degree
+sobered his passion. "What do you mean?" he asked.
+
+I only said one word: "Italians."
+
+He swore a round oath, and looked at us, from one to the other.
+
+"Mr. Cassilis knows all that I know," said my wife.
+
+"What I want to know," he broke out, "is where the devil Mr.
+Cassilis comes from, and what the devil Mr. Cassilis is doing here.
+You say you are married; that I do not believe. If you were,
+Graden Floe would soon divorce you; four minutes and a half,
+Cassilis. I keep my private cemetery for my friends."
+
+"It took somewhat longer," said I, "for that Italian."
+
+He looked at me for a moment half daunted, and then, almost
+civilly, asked me to tell my story. "You have too much the
+advantage of me, Cassilis," he added. I complied of course; and he
+listened, with several ejaculations, while I told him how I had
+come to Graden: that it was I whom he had tried to murder on the
+night of landing; and what I had subsequently seen and heard of the
+Italians.
+
+"Well," said he, when I had done, "it is here at last; there is no
+mistake about that. And what, may I ask, do you propose to do?"
+
+"I propose to stay with you and lend a hand," said I.
+
+"You are a brave man," he returned, with a peculiar intonation.
+
+"I am not afraid," said I.
+
+"And so," he continued, "I am to understand that you two are
+married? And you stand up to it before my face, Miss Huddlestone?"
+
+"We are not yet married," said Clara; "but we shall be as soon as
+we can."
+
+"Bravo!" cried Northmour. "And the bargain? D--n it, you're not a
+fool, young woman; I may call a spade a spade with you. How about
+the bargain? You know as well as I do what your father's life
+depends upon. I have only to put my hands under my coat tails and
+walk away, and his throat would be cut before the evening."
+
+"Yes, Mr. Northmour," returned Clara, with great spirit; "but that
+is what you will never do. You made a bargain that was unworthy of
+a gentleman; but you are a gentleman for all that, and you will
+never desert a man whom you have begun to help."
+
+"Aha!" said he. "You think I will give my yacht for nothing? You
+think I will risk my life and liberty for love of the old
+gentleman; and then, I suppose, he best man at the wedding, to wind
+up? Well," he added, with an odd smile, "perhaps you are not
+altogether wrong. But ask Cassilis here. HE knows me. Am I a man
+to trust? Am I safe and scrupulous? Am I kind?"
+
+"I know you talk a great deal, and sometimes, I think, very
+foolishly," replied Clara, "but I know you are a gentleman, and I
+am not the least afraid."
+
+He looked at her with a peculiar approval and admiration; then,
+turning to me, "Do you think I would give her up without a
+struggle, Frank?" said he. "I tell you plainly, you look out. The
+next time we come to blows--"
+
+"Will make the third," I interrupted, smiling.
+
+"Aye, true; so it will," he said. "I had forgotten. Well, the
+third time's lucky."
+
+"The third time, you mean, you will have the crew of the 'Red Earl'
+to help," I said.
+
+"Do you hear him?" he asked, turning to my wife.
+
+"I hear two men speaking like cowards," said she. "I should
+despise myself either to think or speak like that. And neither of
+you believe one word that you are saying, which makes it the more
+wicked and silly."
+
+"She's a trump!" cried Northmour. "But she's not yet Mrs.
+Cassilis. I say no more. The present is not for me."
+
+Then my wife surprised me.
+
+"I leave you here," she said suddenly. "My father has been too
+long alone. But remember this: you are to be friends, for you are
+both good friends to me."
+
+She has since told me her reason for this step. As long as she
+remained, she declares that we two would have continued to quarrel;
+and I suppose that she was right, for when she was gone we fell at
+once into a sort of confidentiality.
+
+Northmour stared after her as she went away over the sand hill.
+
+"She is the only woman in the world!" he exclaimed with an oath.
+"Look at her action."
+
+I, for my part, leaped at this opportunity for a little further
+light.
+
+"See here, Northmour," said I; "we are all in a tight place, are we
+not?"
+
+"I believe you, my boy," he answered, looking me in the eyes, and
+with great emphasis. "We have all hell upon us, that's the truth.
+You may believe me or not, but I'm afraid of my life."
+
+"Tell me one thing," said I. "What are they after, these Italians?
+What do they want with Mr. Huddlestone?"
+
+"Don't you know?" he cried. "The black old scamp had carbonari
+funds on a deposit--two hundred and eighty thousand; and of course
+he gambled it away on stocks. There was to have been a revolution
+in the Tridentino, or Parma; but the revolution is off, and the
+whole wasp's nest is after Huddlestone. We shall all be lucky if
+we can save our skins."
+
+"The carbonari!" I exclaimed; "God help him indeed!"
+
+"Amen!" said Northmour. "And now, look here: I have said that we
+are in a fix; and, frankly, I shall be glad of your help. If I
+can't save Huddlestone, I want at least to save the girl. Come and
+stay in the pavilion; and, there's my hand on it, I shall act as
+your friend until the old man is either clear or dead. But," he
+added, "once that is settled, you become my rival once again, and I
+warn you--mind yourself."
+
+"Done!" said I; and we shook hands.
+
+"And now let us go directly to the fort," said Northmour; and he
+began to lead the way through the rain.
+
+
+VI
+
+
+We were admitted to the pavilion by Clara, and I was surprised by
+the completeness and security of the defenses. A barricade of
+great strength, and yet easy to displace, supported the door
+against any violence from without; and the shutters of the dining-
+room, into which I was led directly, and which was feebly
+illuminated by a lamp, were even more elaborately fortified. The
+panels were strengthened by bars and crossbars; and these, in their
+turn, were kept in position by a system of braces and struts, some
+abutting on the floor, some on the roof, and others, in fine,
+against the opposite wall of the apartment. It was at once a solid
+and well-designed piece of carpentry; and I did not seek to conceal
+my admiration.
+
+"I am the engineer," said Northmour. "You remember the planks in
+the garden? Behold them?"
+
+"I did not know you had so many talents," said I.
+
+"Are you armed?" he continued, pointing to an array of guns and
+pistols, all in admirable order, which stood in line against the
+wall or were displayed upon the sideboard.
+
+"Thank you," I returned; "I have gone armed since our last
+encounter. But, to tell you the truth, I have had nothing to eat
+since early yesterday evening."
+
+Northmour produced some cold meat, to which I eagerly set myself,
+and a bottle of good Burgundy, by which, wet as I was, I did not
+scruple to profit. I have always been an extreme temperance man on
+principle; but it is useless to push principle to excess, and on
+this occasion I believe that I finished three quarters of the
+bottle. As I eat, I still continued to admire the preparations for
+defense.
+
+"We could stand a siege," I said at length.
+
+"Ye--es," drawled Northmour; "a very little one, perhaps. It is
+not so much the strength of the pavilion I misdoubt; it is the
+double danger that kills me. If we get to shooting, wild as the
+country is, some one is sure to hear it, and then--why then it's
+the same thing, only different, as they say: caged by law, or
+killed by carbonari. There's the choice. It is a devilish bad
+thing to have the law against you in this world, and so I tell the
+old gentleman upstairs. He is quite of my way of thinking."
+
+"Speaking of that," said I, "what kind of person is he?"
+
+"Oh, he!" cried the other; "he's a rancid fellow, as far as he
+goes. I should like to have his neck wrung to-morrow by all the
+devils in Italy. I am not in this affair for him. You take me? I
+made a bargain for missy's hand, and I mean to have it too."
+
+"That, by the way," said I. "I understand. But how will Mr.
+Huddlestone take my intrusion?"
+
+"Leave that to Clara," returned Northmour.
+
+I could have struck him in the face for his coarse familiarity; but
+I respected the truce, as, I am bound to say, did Northmour, and so
+long as the danger continued not a cloud arose in our relation. I
+bear him this testimony with the most unfeigned satisfaction; nor
+am I without pride when I look back upon my own behavior. For
+surely no two men were ever left in a position so invidious and
+irritating.
+
+As soon as I had done eating, we proceeded to inspect the lower
+floor. Window by window we tried the different supports, now and
+then making an inconsiderable change; and the strokes of the hammer
+sounded with startling loudness through the house. I proposed, I
+remember, to make loopholes; but he told me they were already made
+in the windows of the upper story. It was an anxious business,
+this inspection, and left me down-hearted. There were two doors
+and five windows to protect, and, counting Clara, only four of us
+to defend them against an unknown number of foes. I communicated
+my doubts to Northmour, who assured me, with unmoved composure,
+that he entirely shared them.
+
+"Before morning," said he, "we shall all be butchered and buried in
+Graden Floe. For me, that is written."
+
+I could not help shuddering at the mention of the quicksand, but
+reminded Northmour that our enemies had spared me in the wood.
+
+"Do not flatter yourself," said he. "Then you were not in the same
+boat with the old gentleman; now you are. It's the floe for all of
+us, mark my words."
+
+I trembled for Clara; and just then her dear voice was heard
+calling us to come upstairs. Northmour showed me the way, and,
+when he had reached the landing, knocked at the door of what used
+to be called My Uncle's Bedroom, as the founder of the pavilion had
+designed it especially for himself.
+
+"Come in, Northmour; come in, dear Mr. Cassilis," said a voice from
+within.
+
+Pushing open the door, Northmour admitted me before him into the
+apartment. As I came in I could see the daughter slipping out by
+the side door into the study, which had been prepared as her
+bedroom. In the bed, which was drawn back against the wall,
+instead of standing, as I had last seen it, boldly across the
+window, sat Bernard Huddlestone, the defaulting banker. Little as
+I had seen of him by the shifting light of the lantern on the
+links, I had no difficulty in recognizing him for the same. He had
+a long and sallow countenance, surrounded by a long red beard and
+side-whiskers. His broken nose and high cheek-hones gave him
+somewhat the air of a Kalmuck, and his light eyes shone with the
+excitement of a high fever. He wore a skull-cap of black silk; a
+huge Bible lay open before him on the bed, with a pair of gold
+spectacles in the place, and a pile of other books lay on the stand
+by his side. The green curtains lent a cadaverous shade to his
+cheek; and, as he sat propped on pillows, his great stature was
+painfully hunched, and his head protruded till it overhung his
+knees. I believe if he had not died otherwise, he must have fallen
+a victim to consumption in the course of but a very few weeks.
+
+He held out to me a hand, long, thin, and disagreeably hairy.
+
+"Come in, come in, Mr. Cassilis," said he. "Another protector--
+ahem!--another protector. Always welcome as a friend of my
+daughter's, Mr. Cassilis. How they have rallied about me, my
+daughter's friends! May God in heaven bless and reward them for
+it!"
+
+I gave him my hand, of course, because I could not help it; but the
+sympathy I had been prepared to feel for Clara's father was
+immediately soured by his appearance, and the wheedling, unreal
+tones in which he spoke.
+
+"Cassilis is a good man," said Northmour; "worth ten."
+
+"So I hear," cried Mr. Huddlestone eagerly; "so my girl tells me.
+Ah, Mr. Cassilis, my sin has found me out, you see! I am very low,
+very low; but I hope equally penitent. We must all come to the
+throne of grace at last, Mr. Cassilis. For my part, I come late
+indeed; but with unfeigned humility, I trust."
+
+"Fiddle-de-dee!" said Northmour roughly.
+
+"No, no, dear Northmour!" cried the banker. "You must not say
+that; you must not try to shake me. You forget, my dear, good boy,
+you forget I may be called this very night before my Maker."
+
+His excitement was pitiful to behold; and I felt myself grow
+indignant with Northmour, whose infidel opinions I well knew, and
+heartily despised, as he continued to taunt the poor sinner out of
+his humor of repentance.
+
+"Pooh, my dear Huddlestone!" said he. "You do yourself injustice.
+You are a man of the world inside and out, and were up to all kinds
+of mischief before I was born. Your conscience is tanned like
+South American leather--only you forgot to tan your liver, and
+that, if you will believe me, is the seat of the annoyance."
+
+"Rogue, rogue! bad boy!" said Mr. Huddlestone, shaking his finger.
+"I am no precisian, if you come to that; I always hated a
+precisian; but I never lost hold of something better through it
+all. I have been a bad boy, Mr. Cassilis; I do not seek to deny
+that; but it was after my wife's death, and you know, with a
+widower, it's a different thing: sinful--I won't say no; but there
+is a gradation, we shall hope. And talking of that-- Hark!" he
+broke out suddenly, his hand raised, his fingers spread, his face
+racked with interest and terror. "Only the rain, bless God!" he
+added, after a pause, and with indescribable relief.
+
+For some seconds he lay back among the pillows like a man near to
+fainting; then he gathered himself together, and, in somewhat
+tremulous tones, began once more to thank me for the share I was
+prepared to take in his defense.
+
+"One question, sir," said I, when he had paused. "Is it true that
+you have money with you?"
+
+He seemed annoyed by the question, but admitted with reluctance
+that he had a little.
+
+"Well," I continued, "it is their money they are after, is it not?
+Why not give it up to them?"
+
+"Ah!" replied he, shaking his head, "I have tried that already, Mr.
+Cassilis; and alas! that it should be so, but it is blood they
+want."
+
+"Huddlestone, that's a little less than fair," said Northmour.
+"You should mention that what you offered them was upward of two
+hundred thousand short. The deficit is worth a reference; it is
+for what they call a cool sum, Frank. Then, you see, the fellows
+reason in their clear Italian way; and it seems to them, as indeed
+it seems to me, that they may just as well have both while they're
+about it--money and blood together, by George, and no more trouble
+for the extra pleasure."
+
+"Is it in the pavilion?" I asked.
+
+"It is; and I wish it were in the bottom of the sea instead," said
+Northmour; and then suddenly--"What are you making faces at me
+for?" he cried to Mr. Huddlestone, on whom I had unconsciously
+turned my back. "Do you think Cassilis would sell you?"
+
+Mr. Huddlestone protested that nothing had been further from his
+mind.
+
+"It is a good thing," retorted Northmour in his ugliest manner.
+"You might end by wearying us. What were you going to say?" he
+added, turning to me.
+
+"I was going to propose an occupation for the afternoon," said I.
+"Let us carry that money out, piece by piece, and lay it down
+before the pavilion door. If the carbonari come, why, it's theirs
+at any rate."
+
+"No, no," cried Mr. Huddlestone; "it does not, it cannot, belong to
+them! It should be distributed pro rata among all my creditors."
+
+"Come now, Huddlestone," said Northmour, "none of that."
+
+"Well, but my daughter," moaned the wretched man. "Your daughter
+will do well enough. Here are two suitors, Cassilis and I, neither
+of us beggars, between whom she has to choose. And as for
+yourself, to make an end of arguments, you have no right to a
+farthing, and, unless I'm much mistaken, you are going to die."
+
+It was certainly very cruelly said; but Mr. Huddlestone was a man
+who attracted little sympathy; and, although I saw him wince and
+shudder, I mentally indorsed the rebuke; nay, I added a
+contribution of my own.
+
+"Northmour and I," I said, "are willing enough to help you to save
+your life, but not to escape with stolen property."
+
+He struggled for awhile with himself, as though he were on the
+point of giving way to anger, but prudence had the best of the
+controversy.
+
+"My dear boys," he said, "do with me or my money what you will. I
+leave all in your hands. Let me compose myself."
+
+And so we left him, gladly enough I am sure.
+
+The last that I saw, he had once more taken up his great Bible, and
+with tremulous hands was adjusting his spectacles to read.
+
+
+VII
+
+
+The recollection of that afternoon will always be graven on my
+mind. Northmour and I were persuaded that an attack was imminent;
+and if it had been in our power to alter in any way the order of
+events, that power would have been used to precipitate rather than
+delay the critical moment. The worst was to be anticipated; yet we
+could conceive no extremity so miserable as the suspense we were
+now suffering. I have never been an eager, though always a great,
+reader; but I never knew books so insipid as those which I took up
+and cast aside that afternoon in the pavilion. Even talk became
+impossible, as the hours went on. One or other was always
+listening for some sound, or peering from an upstairs window over
+the links. And yet not a sign indicated the presence of our foes.
+
+We debated over and over again my proposal with regard to the
+money; and had we been in complete possession of our faculties, I
+am sure we should have condemned it as unwise; but we were
+flustered with alarm, grasped at a straw, and determined, although
+it was as much as advertising Mr. Huddlestone's presence in the
+pavilion, to carry my proposal into effect.
+
+The sum was part in specie, part in bank paper, and part in
+circular notes payable to the name of James Gregory. We took it
+out, counted it, inclosed it once more in a dispatch box belonging
+to Northmour, and prepared a letter in Italian which he tied to the
+handle. It was signed by both of us under oath, and declared that
+this was all the money which had escaped the failure of the house
+of Huddlestone. This was, perhaps, the maddest action ever
+perpetrated by two persons professing to be sane. Had the dispatch
+box fallen into other hands than those for which it was intended,
+we stood criminally convicted on our own written testimony; but, as
+I have said, we were neither of us in a condition to judge soberly,
+and had a thirst for action that drove us to do something, right or
+wrong, rather than endure the agony of waiting. Moreover, as we
+were both convinced that the hollows of the links were alive with
+hidden spies upon our movements, we hoped that our appearance with
+the box might lead to a parley, and, perhaps, a compromise.
+
+It was nearly three when we issued from the pavilion. The rain had
+taken off; the sun shone quite cheerfully. I had never seen the
+gulls fly so close about the house or approach so fearlessly to
+human beings. On the very doorstep one flapped heavily past our
+heads, and uttered its wild cry in my very ear.
+
+"There is an omen for you," said Northmour, who like all
+freethinkers was much under the influence of superstition. "They
+think we are already dead."
+
+I made some light rejoinder, but it was with half my heart; for the
+circumstance had impressed me.
+
+A yard or two before the gate, on a patch of smooth turf, we set
+down the dispatch box; and Northmour waved a white handkerchief
+over his head. Nothing replied. We raised our voices, and cried
+aloud in Italian that we were there as ambassadors to arrange the
+quarrel, but the stillness remained unbroken save by the seagulls
+and the surf. I had a weight at my heart when we desisted; and I
+saw that even Northmour was unusually pale. He looked over his
+shoulder nervously, as though he feared that some one had crept
+between him and the pavilion door.
+
+"By God," he said in a whisper, "this is too much for me!"
+
+I replied in the same key: "Suppose there should be none, after
+all!"
+
+"Look there," he returned, nodding with his head, as though he had
+been afraid to point.
+
+I glanced in the direction indicated; and there, from the northern
+quarter of the Sea-Wood, beheld a thin column of smoke rising
+steadily against the now cloudless sky.
+
+"Northmour," I said (we still continued to talk in whispers), "it
+is not possible to endure this suspense. I prefer death fifty
+times over. Stay you here to watch the pavilion; I will go forward
+and make sure, if I have to walk right into their camp."
+
+He looked once again all round him with puckered eyes, and then
+nodded assentingly to my proposal.
+
+My heart heat like a sledge hammer as I set out walking rapidly in
+the direction of the smoke; and, though up to that moment I had
+felt chill and shivering, I was suddenly conscious of a glow of
+heat all over my body. The ground in this direction was very
+uneven; a hundred men might have lain hidden in as many square
+yards about my path. But I who had not practiced the business in
+vain, chose such routes as cut at the very root of concealment,
+and, by keeping along the most convenient ridges, commanded several
+hollows at a time. It was not long before I was rewarded for my
+caution. Coming suddenly on to a mound somewhat more elevated than
+the surrounding hummocks, I saw, not thirty yards away, a man bent
+almost double, and running as fast as his attitude permitted, along
+the bottom of a gully. I had dislodged one of the spies from his
+ambush. As soon as I sighted him, I called loudly both in English
+and Italian; and he, seeing concealment was no longer possible,
+straightened himself out, leaped from the gully, and made off as
+straight as an arrow for the borders of the wood. It was none of
+my business to pursue; I had learned what I wanted--that we were
+beleaguered and watched in the pavilion; and I returned at once,
+and walked as nearly as possible in my old footsteps, to where
+Northmour awaited me beside the dispatch box. He was even paler
+than when I had left him, and his voice shook a little.
+
+"Could you see what he was like?" he asked.
+
+"He kept his back turned," I replied.
+
+"Let us get into the house, Frank. I don't think I'm a coward, but
+I can stand no more of this," he whispered.
+
+All was still and sunshiny about the pavilion, as we turned to
+reenter it; even the gulls had flown in a wider circuit, and were
+seen flickering along the beach and sand hills; and this loneliness
+terrified me more than a regiment under arms. It was not until the
+door was barricaded that I could draw a full inspiration and
+relieve the weight that lay upon my bosom. Northmour and I
+exchanged a steady glance; and I suppose each made his own
+reflections on the white and startled aspect of the other.
+
+"You were right," I said. "All is over. Shake hands, old man, for
+the last time."
+
+"Yes," replied he, "I will shake hands; for, as sure as I am here,
+I bear no malice. But, remember, if, by some impossible accident,
+we should give the slip to these blackguards, I'll take the upper
+hand of you by fair or foul."
+
+"Oh," said I, "you weary me!"
+
+He seemed hurt, and walked away in silence to the foot of the
+stairs, where he paused.
+
+"You do not understand," said he. "I am not a swindler, and I
+guard myself; that is all. I may weary you or not, Mr. Cassilis, I
+do not care a rush; I speak for my own satisfaction, and not for
+your amusement. You had better go upstairs and court the girl; for
+my part, I stay here."
+
+"And I stay with you," I returned. "Do you think I would steal a
+march, even with your permission?"
+
+"Frank," he said, smiling, "it's a pity you are an ass, for you
+have the makings of a man. I think I must be fey to-day; you
+cannot irritate me even when you try. Do you know," he continued
+softly, "I think we are the two most miserable men in England, you
+and I? we have got on to thirty without wife or child, or so much
+as a shop to look after--poor, pitiful, lost devils, both! And now
+we clash about a girl! As if there were not several millions in
+the United Kingdom! Ah, Frank, Frank, the one who loses his throw,
+be it you or me, he has my pity! It were better for him--how does
+the Bible say?--that a millstone were hanged about his neck and he
+were cast into the depth of the sea. Let us take a drink," he
+concluded suddenly, but without any levity of tone.
+
+I was touched by his words, and consented. He sat down on the
+table in the dining-room, and held up the glass of sherry to his
+eye.
+
+"If you beat me, Frank," he said, "I shall take to drink. What
+will you do, if it goes the other way?"
+
+"God knows," I returned.
+
+"Well," said he, "here is a toast in the meantime: 'Italia
+irredenta!'"
+
+The remainder of the day was passed in the same dreadful tedium and
+suspense. I laid the table for dinner, while Northmour and Clara
+prepared the meal together in the kitchen. I could hear their talk
+as I went to and fro, and was surprised to find it ran all the time
+upon myself. Northmour again bracketed us together, and rallied
+Clara on a choice of husbands; but he continued to speak of me with
+some feeling, and uttered nothing to my prejudice unless he
+included himself in the condemnation. This awakened a sense of
+gratitude in my heart, which combined with the immediateness of our
+peril to fill my eyes with tears. After all, I thought--and
+perhaps the thought was laughably vain--we were here three very
+noble human beings to perish in defense of a thieving banker.
+
+Before we sat down to table, I looked forth from an upstairs
+window. The day was beginning to decline; the links were utterly
+deserted; the dispatch box still lay untouched where we had left it
+hours before.
+
+Mr. Huddlestone, in a long yellow dressing gown, took one end of
+the table, Clara the other; while Northmour and I faced each other
+from the sides. The lamp was brightly trimmed; the wine was good;
+the viands, although mostly cold, excellent of their sort. We
+seemed to have agreed tacitly; all reference to the impending
+catastrophe was carefully avoided; and, considering our tragic
+circumstances, we made a merrier party than could have been
+expected. From time to time, it is true, Northmour or I would rise
+from table and make a round of the defenses; and, on each of these
+occasions, Mr. Huddlestone was recalled to a sense of his tragic
+predicament, glanced up with ghastly eyes, and bore for an instant
+on his countenance the stamp of terror. But he hastened to empty
+his glass, wiped his forehead with his handkerchief, and joined
+again in the conversation.
+
+I was astonished at the wit and information he displayed. Mr.
+Huddlestone's was certainly no ordinary character; he had read and
+observed for himself; his gifts were sound; and, though I could
+never have learned to love the man, I began to understand his
+success in business, and the great respect in which he had been
+held before his failure. He had, above all, the talent of society;
+and though I never heard him speak but on this one and most
+unfavorable occasion, I set him down among the most brilliant
+conversationalists I ever met.
+
+He was relating with great gusto, and seemingly no feeling of
+shame, the maneuvers of a scoundrelly commission merchant whom he
+had known and studied in his youth, and we were all listening with
+an odd mixture of mirth and embarrassment, when our little party
+was brought abruptly to an end in the most startling manner.
+
+A noise like that of a wet finger on the window pane interrupted
+Mr. Huddlestone's tale; and in an instant we were all four as white
+as paper, and sat tongue-tied and motionless round the table.
+
+"A snail," I said at last; for I had heard that these animals make
+a noise somewhat similar in character.
+
+"Snail be d--d!" said Northmour. "Hush!"
+
+The same sound was repeated twice at regular intervals; and then a
+formidable voice shouted through the shutters the Italian word,
+"Traditore!"
+
+Mr. Huddlestone threw his head in the air; his eyelids quivered;
+next moment he fell insensible below the table. Northmour and I
+had each run to the armory and seized a gun. Clara was on her feet
+with her hand at her throat.
+
+So we stood waiting, for we thought the hour of attack was
+certainly come; but second passed after second, and all but the
+surf remained silent in the neighborhood of the pavilion.
+
+"Quick," said Northmour; "upstairs with him before they come."
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+Somehow or other, by hook and crook, and between the three of us,
+we got Bernard Huddlestone bundled upstairs and laid upon the bed
+in My Uncle's Room. During the whole process, which was rough
+enough, he gave no sign of consciousness, and he remained, as we
+had thrown him, without changing the position of a finger. His
+daughter opened his shirt and began to wet his head and bosom;
+while Northmour and I ran to the window. The weather continued
+clear; the moon, which was now about full, had risen and shed a
+very clear light upon the links; yet, strain our eyes as we might,
+we could distinguish nothing moving. A few dark spots, more or
+less, on the uneven expanse were not to be identified; they might
+be crouching men, they might be shadows; it was impossible to be
+sure.
+
+"Thank God," said Northmour, "Aggie is not coming to-night."
+
+Aggie was the name of the old nurse; he had not thought of her
+until now; but that he should think of her at all was a trait that
+surprised me in the man.
+
+We were again reduced to waiting. Northmour went to the fireplace
+and spread his hands before the red embers, as if he were cold. I
+followed him mechanically with my eyes, and in so doing turned my
+back upon the window. At that moment a very faint report was
+audible from without, and a ball shivered a pane of glass, and
+buried itself in the shutter two inches from my head. I heard
+Clara scream; and though I whipped instantly out of range and into
+a corner, she was there, so to speak, before me, beseeching to know
+if I were hurt. I felt that I could stand to be shot at every day
+and all day long, with such remarks of solicitude for a reward; and
+I continued to reassure her, with the tenderest caresses and in
+complete forgetfulness of our situation, till the voice of
+Northmour recalled me to myself.
+
+"An air gun," he said. "They wish to make no noise."
+
+I put Clara aside, and looked at him. He was standing with his
+back to the fire and his hands clasped behind him; and I knew by
+the black look on his face, that passion was boiling within. I had
+seen just such a look before he attacked me, that March night, in
+the adjoining chamber; and, though I could make every allowance for
+his anger, I confess I trembled for the consequences. He gazed
+straight before him; but he could see us with the tail of his eye,
+and his temper kept rising like a gale of wind. With regular
+battle awaiting us outside, this prospect of an internecine strife
+within the walls began to daunt me.
+
+Suddenly, as I was thus closely watching his expression and
+prepared against the worst, I saw a change, a flash, a look of
+relief, upon his face. He took up the lamp which stood beside him
+on the table, and turned to us with an air of some excitement.
+
+"There is one point that we must know," said he. "Are they going
+to butcher the lot of us, or only Huddlestone? Did they take you
+for him, or fire at you for your own beaux yeux?"
+
+"They took me for him, for certain," I replied. "I am near as
+tall, and my head is fair."
+
+"I am going to make sure," returned Northmour; and he stepped up to
+the window, holding the lamp above his head, and stood there,
+quietly affronting death, for half a minute.
+
+Clara sought to rush forward and pull him from the place of danger;
+but I had the pardonable selfishness to hold her back by force.
+
+"Yes," said Northmour, turning coolly from the window, "it's only
+Huddlestone they want."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Northmour!" cried Clara; but found no more to add; the
+temerity she had just witnessed seeming beyond the reach of words.
+
+He, on his part, looked at me, cocking his head, with a fire of
+triumph in his eyes; and I understood at once that he had thus
+hazarded his life, merely to attract Clara's notice, and depose me
+from my position as the hero of the hour. He snapped his fingers.
+
+"The fire is only beginning," said he. "When they warm up to their
+work, they won't be so particular."
+
+A voice was now heard hailing us from the entrance. From the
+window we could see the figure of a man in the moonlight; he stood
+motionless, his face uplifted to ours, and a rag of something white
+on his extended arm; and as we looked right down upon him, though
+he was a good many yards distant on the links, we could see the
+moonlight glitter on his eyes.
+
+He opened his lips again, and spoke for some minutes on end, in a
+key so loud that he might have been heard in every corner of the
+pavilion, and as far away as the borders of the wood. It was the
+same voice that had already shouted, "Traditore!" through the
+shutters of the dining-room; this time it made a complete and clear
+statement. If the traitor "Oddlestone" were given up, all others
+should be spared; if not, no one should escape to tell the tale.
+
+"Well, Huddlestone, what do you say to that?" asked Northmour,
+turning to the bed.
+
+Up to that moment the banker had given no sign of life, and I, at
+least, had supposed him to be still lying in a faint; but he
+replied at once, and in such tones as I have never heard elsewhere,
+save from a delirious patient, adjured and besought us not to
+desert him. It was the most hideous and abject performance that my
+imagination can conceive.
+
+"Enough," cried Northmour; and then he threw open the window,
+leaned out into the night, and in a tone of exultation, and with a
+total forgetfulness of what was due to the presence of a lady,
+poured out upon the ambassador a string of the most abominable
+raillery both in English and Italian, and bade him be gone where he
+had come from. I believe that nothing so delighted Northmour at
+that moment as the thought that we must all infallibly perish
+before the night was out.
+
+Meantime, the Italian put his flag of truce into his pocket, and
+disappeared, at a leisurely pace, among the sand hills.
+
+"They make honorable war," said Northmour. "They are all gentlemen
+and soldiers. For the credit of the thing, I wish we could change
+sides--you and I, Frank, and you, too, missy, my darling--and leave
+that being on the bed to some one else. Tut! Don't look shocked!
+We are all going post to what they call eternity, and may as well
+be above board while there's time. As far as I am concerned, if I
+could first strangle Huddlestone and then get Clara in my arms, I
+could die with some pride and satisfaction. And as it is, by God,
+I'll have a kiss!"
+
+Before I could do anything to interfere, he had rudely embraced and
+repeatedly kissed the resisting girl. Next moment I had pulled him
+away with fury, and flung him heavily against the wall. He laughed
+loud and long, and I feared his wits had given way under the
+strain; for even in the best of days he had been a sparing and a
+quiet laugher.
+
+"Now, Frank," said he, when his mirth was somewhat appeased, "it's
+your turn. Here's my hand. Good-bye, farewell!" Then, seeing me
+stand rigid and indignant, and holding Clara to my side--"Man!" he
+broke out, "are you angry? Did you think we were going to die with
+all the airs and graces of society? I took a kiss; I'm glad I did
+it; and now you can take another if you like, and square accounts."
+
+I turned from him with a feeling of contempt which I did not seek
+to dissemble.
+
+"As you please," said he. "You've been a prig in life; a prig
+you'll die."
+
+And with that he sat down in a chair, a rifle over his knee, and
+amused himself with snapping the lock; but I could see that his
+ebullition of light spirits (the only one I ever knew him to
+display) had already come to an end, and was succeeded by a sullen,
+scowling humor.
+
+All this time our assailants might have been entering the house,
+and we been none the wiser; we had in truth almost forgotten the
+danger that so imminently overhung our days. But just then Mr.
+Huddlestone uttered a cry, and leaped from the bed.
+
+I asked him what was wrong.
+
+"Fire!" he cried. "They have set the house on fire!"
+
+Northmour was on his feet in an instant, and he and I ran through
+the door of communication with the study. The room was illuminated
+by a red and angry light. Almost at the moment of our entrance, a
+tower of flame arose in front of the window, and, with a tingling
+report, a pane fell inward on the carpet. They had set fire to the
+lean-to outhouse, where Northmour used to nurse his negatives.
+
+"Hot work," said Northmour. "Let us try in your old room."
+
+We ran thither in a breath, threw up the casement, and looked
+forth. Along the whole back wall of the pavilion piles of fuel had
+been arranged and kindled; and it is probable they had been
+drenched with mineral oil, for, in spite of the morning's rain,
+they all burned bravely. The fire had taken a firm hold already on
+the outhouse, which blazed higher and higher every moment; the back
+door was in the center of a red-hot bonfire; the eaves we could
+see, as we looked upward, were already smoldering, for the roof
+overhung, and was supported by considerable beams of wood. At the
+same time, hot, pungent, and choking volumes of smoke began to fill
+the house. There was not a human being to be seen to right or
+left.
+
+"Ah, well!" said Northmour, "here's the end, thank God!"
+
+And we returned to My Uncle's Room. Mr. Huddlestone was putting on
+his boots, still violently trembling, but with an air of
+determination such as I had not hitherto observed. Clara stood
+close by him, with her cloak in both hands ready to throw about her
+shoulders, and a strange look in her eyes, as if she were half
+hopeful, half doubtful of her father.
+
+"Well, boys and girls," said Northmour, "how about a sally? The
+oven is heating; it is not good to stay here and be baked; and, for
+my part, I want to come to my hands with them, and be done."
+
+"There's nothing else left," I replied.
+
+And both Clara and Mr. Huddlestone, though with a very different
+intonation, added, "Nothing."
+
+As we went downstairs the heat was excessive, and the roaring of
+the fire filled our ears; and we had scarce reached the passage
+before the stairs window fell in, a branch of flame shot
+brandishing through the aperture, and the interior of the pavilion
+became lighted up with that dreadful and fluctuating glare. At the
+same moment we heard the fall of something heavy and inelastic in
+the upper story. The whole pavilion, it was plain, had gone alight
+like a box of matches, and now not only flamed sky high to land and
+sea, but threatened with every moment to crumble and fall in about
+our ears.
+
+Northmour and I cocked our revolvers. Mr. Huddlestone, who had
+already refused a firearm, put us behind him with a manner of
+command.
+
+"Let Clara open the door," said he. "So, if they fire a volley,
+she will be protected. And in the meantime stand behind me. I am
+the scapegoat; my sins have found me out."
+
+I heard him, as I stood breathless by his shoulder, with my pistol
+ready, pattering off prayers in a tremulous, rapid whisper; and, I
+confess, horrid as the thought may seem, I despised him for
+thinking of supplications in a moment so critical and thrilling.
+In the meantime, Clara, who was dead white but still possessed her
+faculties, had displaced the barricade from the front door.
+Another moment, and she had pulled it open. Firelight and
+moonlight illuminated the links with confused and changeful luster,
+and far away against the sky we could see a long trail of glowing
+smoke.
+
+Mr. Huddlestone, filled for the moment with a strength greater than
+his own, struck Northmour and myself a back-hander in the chest;
+and while we were thus for the moment incapacitated from action,
+lifting his arms above his head like one about to dive, he ran
+straight forward out of the pavilion.
+
+"Here am I!" he cried--"Huddlestone! Kill me, and spare the
+others!"
+
+His sudden appearance daunted, I suppose, our hidden enemies; for
+Northmour and I had time to recover, to seize Clara between us, one
+by each arm, and to rush forth to his assistance, ere anything
+further had taken place. But scarce had we passed the threshold
+when there came near a dozen reports and flashes from every
+direction among the hollows of the links. Mr. Huddlestone
+staggered, uttered a weird and freezing cry, threw up his arms over
+his head, and fell backward on the turf.
+
+"Traditore! Traditore!" cried the invisible avengers.
+
+And just then a part of the roof of the pavilion fell in, so rapid
+was the progress of the fire. A loud, vague, and horrible noise
+accompanied the collapse, and a vast volume of flame went soaring
+up to heaven. It must have been visible at that moment from twenty
+miles out at sea, from the shore at Graden Wester, and far inland
+from the peak of Graystiel, the most eastern summit of the Caulder
+Hills. Bernard Huddlestone, although God knows what were his
+obsequies, had a fine pyre at the moment of his death.
+
+
+IX
+
+
+I should have the greatest difficulty to tell you what followed
+next after this tragic circumstance. It is all to me, as I look
+back upon it, mixed, strenuous, and ineffectual, like the struggles
+of a sleeper in a nightmare. Clara, I remember, uttered a broken
+sigh and would have fallen forward to earth, had not Northmour and
+I supported her insensible body. I do not think we were attacked:
+I do not remember even to have seen an assailant; and I believe we
+deserted Mr. Huddlestone without a glance. I only remember running
+like a man in a panic, now carrying Clara altogether in my own
+arms, now sharing her weight with Northmour, now scuffling
+confusedly for the possession of that dear burden. Why we should
+have made for my camp in the Hemlock Den, or how we reached it, are
+points lost forever to my recollection. The first moment at which
+I became definitely sure, Clara had been suffered to fall against
+the outside of my little tent, Northmour and I were tumbling
+together on the ground, and he, with contained ferocity, was
+striking for my head with the butt of his revolver. He had already
+twice wounded me on the scalp; and it is to the consequent loss of
+blood that I am tempted to attribute the sudden clearness of my
+mind.
+
+I caught him by the wrist.
+
+"Northmour," I remember saying, "you can kill me afterwards. Let
+us first attend to Clara."
+
+He was at that moment uppermost. Scarcely had the words passed my
+lips, when he had leaped to his feet and ran toward the tent; and
+the next moment, he was straining Clara to his heart and covering
+her unconscious hands and face with his caresses.
+
+"Shame!" I cried. "Shame to you, Northmour!"
+
+And, giddy though I still was, I struck him repeatedly upon the
+head and shoulders.
+
+He relinquished his grasp, and faced me in the broken moonlight.
+
+"I had you under, and I let you go," said he; "and now you strike
+me! Coward!"
+
+"You are the coward," I retorted. "Did she wish your kisses while
+she was still sensible of what you wanted? Not she! And now she
+may be dying; and you waste this precious time, and abuse her
+helplessness. Stand aside, and let me help her."
+
+He confronted me for a moment, white and menacing; then suddenly he
+stepped aside.
+
+"Help her then," said he.
+
+I threw myself on my knees beside her, and loosened, as well as I
+was able, her dress and corset; but while I was thus engaged, a
+grasp descended on my shoulder.
+
+"Keep your hands off her," said Northmour, fiercely. "Do you think
+I have no blood in my veins?"
+
+"Northmour," I cried, "if you will neither help her yourself, nor
+let me do so, do you know that I shall have to kill you?"
+
+"That is better!" he cried. "Let her die also, where's the harm?
+Step aside from that girl! and stand up to fight."
+
+"You will observe," said I, half rising, "that I have not kissed
+her yet."
+
+"I dare you to," he cried.
+
+I do not know what possessed me; it was one of the things I am most
+ashamed of in my life, though, as my wife used to say, I knew that
+my kisses would be always welcome were she dead or living; down I
+fell again upon my knees, parted the hair from her forehead, and,
+with the dearest respect, laid my lips for a moment on that cold
+brow. It was such a caress as a father might have given; it was
+such a one as was not unbecoming from a man soon to die to a woman
+already dead.
+
+"And now," said I, "I am at your service, Mr. Northmour."
+
+But I saw, to my surprise, that he had turned his back upon me.
+
+"Do you hear?" I asked.
+
+"Yes," said he, "I do. If you wish to fight, I am ready. If not,
+go on and save Clara. All is one to me."
+
+I did not wait to be twice bidden; but, stooping again over Clara,
+continued my efforts to revive her. She still lay white and
+lifeless; I began to fear that her sweet spirit had indeed fled
+beyond recall, and horror and a sense of utter desolation seized
+upon my heart. I called her by name with the most endearing
+inflections; I chafed and beat her hands; now I laid her head low,
+now supported it against my knee; but all seemed to be in vain, and
+the lids still lay heavy on her eyes.
+
+"Northmour," I said, "there is my hat. For God's sake bring some
+water from the spring."
+
+Almost in a moment he was by my side with the water.
+
+"I have brought it in my own," he said. "You do not grudge me the
+privilege?"
+
+"Northmour," I was beginning to say, as I laved her head and
+breast; but he interrupted me savagely.
+
+"Oh, you hush up!" he said. "The best thing you can do is to say
+nothing."
+
+I had certainly no desire to talk, my mind being swallowed up in
+concern for my dear love and her condition; so I continued in
+silence to do my best toward her recovery, and, when the hat was
+empty, returned it to him, with one word--"More." He had, perhaps,
+gone several times upon this errand, when Clara reopened her eyes.
+
+"Now," said he, "since she is better, you can spare me, can you
+not? I wish you a good night, Mr. Cassilis."
+
+And with that he was gone among the thicket. I made a fire, for I
+had now no fear of the Italians, who had even spared all the little
+possessions left in my encampment; and, broken as she was by the
+excitement and the hideous catastrophe of the evening, I managed,
+in one way or another--by persuasion, encouragement, warmth, and
+such simple remedies as I could lay my hand on--to bring her back
+to some composure of mind and strength of body.
+
+Day had already come, when a sharp "Hist!" sounded from the
+thicket. I started from the ground; but the voice of Northmour was
+heard adding, in the most tranquil tones: "Come here, Cassilis, and
+alone; I want to show you something."
+
+I consulted Clara with my eyes, and, receiving her tacit
+permission, left her alone, and clambered out of the den. At some
+distance off I saw Northmour leaning against an elder; and, as soon
+as he perceived me, he began walking seaward. I had almost
+overtaken him as he reached the outskirts of the wood.
+
+"Look," said he, pausing.
+
+A couple of steps more brought me out of the foliage. The light of
+the morning lay cold and clear over that well-known scene. The
+pavilion was but a blackened wreck; the roof had fallen in, one of
+the gables had fallen out; and, far and near, the face of the links
+was cicatrized with little patches of burned furze. Thick smoke
+still went straight upward in the windless air of the morning, and
+a great pile of ardent cinders filled the bare walls of the house,
+like coals in an open grate. Close by the islet a schooner yacht
+lay to, and a well-manned boat was pulling vigorously for the
+shore.
+
+"The 'Red Earl'!" I cried. "The 'Red Earl' twelve hours too late!"
+
+"Feel in your pocket, Frank. Are you armed?" asked Northmour.
+
+I obeyed him, and I think I must have become deadly pale. My
+revolver had been taken from me.
+
+"You see, I have you in my power," he continued. "I disarmed you
+last night while you were nursing Clara; but this morning--here--
+take your pistol. No thanks!" he cried, holding up his hand. "I
+do not like them; that is the only way you can annoy me now."
+
+He began to walk forward across the links to meet the boat, and I
+followed a step or two behind. In front of the pavilion I paused
+to see where Mr. Huddlestone had fallen; but there was no sign of
+him, nor so much as a trace of blood.
+
+"Graden Floe," said Northmour.
+
+He continued to advance till we had come to the head of the beach.
+
+"No farther, please," said he. "Would you like to take her to
+Graden House?"
+
+"Thank you," replied I; "I shall try to get her to the minister at
+Graden Wester."
+
+The prow of the boat here grated on the beach, and a sailor jumped
+ashore with a line in his hand.
+
+"Wait a minute, lads!" cried Northmour; and then lower and to my
+private ear, "You had better say nothing of all this to her," he
+added.
+
+"On the contrary!" I broke out, "she shall know everything that I
+can tell."
+
+"You do not understand," he returned, with an air of great dignity.
+"It will be nothing to her; she expects it of me. Good-by!" he
+added, with a nod.
+
+I offered him my hand.
+
+"Excuse me," said he. "It's small, I know; but I can't push things
+quite so far as that. I don't wish any sentimental business, to
+sit by your hearth a white-haired wanderer, and all that. Quite
+the contrary: I hope to God I shall never again clap eyes on either
+one of you."
+
+"Well, God bless you, Northmour!" I said heartily.
+
+"Oh, yes," he returned.
+
+He walked down the beach; and the man who was ashore gave him an
+arm on board, and then shoved off and leaped into the bows himself.
+Northmour took the tiller; the boat rose to the waves, and the oars
+between the tholepins sounded crisp and measured in the morning
+air.
+
+They were not yet half way to the "Red Earl," and I was still
+watching their progress, when the sun rose out of the sea.
+
+One word more, and my story is done. Years after, Northmour was
+killed fighting under the colors of Garibaldi for the liberation of
+the Tyrol.
+
+
+
+Wilkie Collins
+
+
+The Dream Woman
+
+A Mystery in Four Narratives
+
+
+THE FIRST NARRATIVE
+
+INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT OF THE FACTS BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+I
+
+
+"Hullo, there! Hostler! Hullo-o-o!"
+
+"My dear! why don't you look for the bell?"
+
+"I HAVE looked--there is no bell."
+
+"And nobody in the yard. How very extraordinary! Call again,
+dear."
+
+"Hostler! Hullo, there! Hostler-r-r!"
+
+My second call echoes through empty space, and rouses nobody--
+produces, in short, no visible result. I am at the end of my
+resources--I don't know what to say or what to do next. Here I
+stand in the solitary inn yard of a strange town, with two horses
+to hold, and a lady to take care of. By way of adding to my
+responsibilities, it so happens that one of the horses is dead
+lame, and that the lady is my wife.
+
+Who am I?--you will ask.
+
+There is plenty of time to answer the question. Nothing happens;
+and nobody appears to receive us. Let me introduce myself and my
+wife.
+
+I am Percy Fairbank--English gentleman--age (let us say) forty--no
+profession--moderate politics--middle height--fair complexion--easy
+character--plenty of money.
+
+My wife is a French lady. She was Mademoiselle Clotilde Delorge--
+when I was first presented to her at her father's house in France.
+I fell in love with her--I really don't know why. It might have
+been because I was perfectly idle, and had nothing else to do at
+the time. Or it might have been because all my friends said she
+was the very last woman whom I ought to think of marrying. On the
+surface, I must own, there is nothing in common between Mrs.
+Fairbank and me. She is tall; she is dark; she is nervous,
+excitable, romantic; in all her opinions she proceeds to extremes.
+What could such a woman see in me? what could I see in her? I know
+no more than you do. In some mysterious manner we exactly suit
+each other. We have been man and wife for ten years, and our only
+regret is, that we have no children. I don't know what YOU may
+think; I call that--upon the whole--a happy marriage.
+
+So much for ourselves. The next question is--what has brought us
+into the inn yard? and why am I obliged to turn groom, and hold the
+horses?
+
+We live for the most part in France--at the country house in which
+my wife and I first met. Occasionally, by way of variety, we pay
+visits to my friends in England. We are paying one of those visits
+now. Our host is an old college friend of mine, possessed of a
+fine estate in Somersetshire; and we have arrived at his house--
+called Farleigh Hall--toward the close of the hunting season.
+
+On the day of which I am now writing--destined to be a memorable
+day in our calendar--the hounds meet at Farleigh Hall. Mrs.
+Fairbank and I are mounted on two of the best horses in my friend's
+stables. We are quite unworthy of that distinction; for we know
+nothing and care nothing about hunting. On the other hand, we
+delight in riding, and we enjoy the breezy Spring morning and the
+fair and fertile English landscape surrounding us on every side.
+While the hunt prospers, we follow the hunt. But when a check
+occurs--when time passes and patience is sorely tried; when the
+bewildered dogs run hither and thither, and strong language falls
+from the lips of exasperated sportsmen--we fail to take any further
+interest in the proceedings. We turn our horses' heads in the
+direction of a grassy lane, delightfully shaded by trees. We trot
+merrily along the lane, and find ourselves on an open common. We
+gallop across the common, and follow the windings of a second lane.
+We cross a brook, we pass through a village, we emerge into
+pastoral solitude among the hills. The horses toss their heads,
+and neigh to each other, and enjoy it as much as we do. The hunt
+is forgotten. We are as happy as a couple of children; we are
+actually singing a French song--when in one moment our merriment
+comes to an end. My wife's horse sets one of his forefeet on a
+loose stone, and stumbles. His rider's ready hand saves him from
+falling. But, at the first attempt he makes to go on, the sad
+truth shows itself--a tendon is strained; the horse is lame.
+
+What is to be done? We are strangers in a lonely part of the
+country. Look where we may, we see no signs of a human habitation.
+There is nothing for it but to take the bridle road up the hill,
+and try what we can discover on the other side. I transfer the
+saddles, and mount my wife on my own horse. He is not used to
+carry a lady; he misses the familiar pressure of a man's legs on
+either side of him; he fidgets, and starts, and kicks up the dust.
+I follow on foot, at a respectful distance from his heels, leading
+the lame horse. Is there a more miserable object on the face of
+creation than a lame horse? I have seen lame men and lame dogs who
+were cheerful creatures; but I never yet saw a lame horse who
+didn't look heartbroken over his own misfortune.
+
+For half an hour my wife capers and curvets sideways along the
+bridle road. I trudge on behind her; and the heartbroken horse
+halts behind me. Hard by the top of the hill, our melancholy
+procession passes a Somersetshire peasant at work in a field. I
+summon the man to approach us; and the man looks at me stolidly,
+from the middle of the field, without stirring a step. I ask at
+the top of my voice how far it is to Farleigh Hall. The
+Somersetshire peasant answers at the top of HIS voice:
+
+"Vourteen mile. Gi' oi a drap o' zyder."
+
+I translate (for my wife's benefit) from the Somersetshire language
+into the English language. We are fourteen miles from Farleigh
+Hall; and our friend in the field desires to be rewarded, for
+giving us that information, with a drop of cider. There is the
+peasant, painted by himself! Quite a bit of character, my dear!
+Quite a bit of character!
+
+Mrs. Fairbank doesn't view the study of agricultural human nature
+with my relish. Her fidgety horse will not allow her a moment's
+repose; she is beginning to lose her temper.
+
+"We can't go fourteen miles in this way," she says. "Where is the
+nearest inn? Ask that brute in the field!"
+
+I take a shilling from my pocket and hold it up in the sun. The
+shilling exercises magnetic virtues. The shilling draws the
+peasant slowly toward me from the middle of the field. I inform
+him that we want to put up the horses and to hire a carriage to
+take us back to Farleigh Hall. Where can we do that? The peasant
+answers (with his eye on the shilling):
+
+"At Oonderbridge, to be zure." (At Underbridge, to be sure.)
+
+"Is it far to Underbridge?"
+
+The peasant repeats, "Var to Oonderbridge?"--and laughs at the
+question. "Hoo-hoo-hoo!" (Underbridge is evidently close by--if
+we could only find it.) "Will you show us the way, my man?" "Will
+you gi' oi a drap of zyder?" I courteously bend my head, and point
+to the shilling. The agricultural intelligence exerts itself. The
+peasant joins our melancholy procession. My wife is a fine woman,
+but he never once looks at my wife--and, more extraordinary still,
+he never even looks at the horses. His eyes are with his mind--and
+his mind is on the shilling.
+
+We reach the top of the hill--and, behold on the other side,
+nestling in a valley, the shrine of our pilgrimage, the town of
+Underbridge! Here our guide claims his shilling, and leaves us to
+find out the inn for ourselves. I am constitutionally a polite
+man. I say "Good morning" at parting. The guide looks at me with
+the shilling between his teeth to make sure that it is a good one.
+"Marnin!" he says savagely--and turns his back on us, as if we had
+offended him. A curious product, this, of the growth of
+civilization. If I didn't see a church spire at Underbridge, I
+might suppose that we had lost ourselves on a savage island.
+
+
+II
+
+
+Arriving at the town, we had no difficulty in finding the inn. The
+town is composed of one desolate street; and midway in that street
+stands the inn--an ancient stone building sadly out of repair. The
+painting on the sign-board is obliterated. The shutters over the
+long range of front windows are all closed. A cock and his hens
+are the only living creatures at the door. Plainly, this is one of
+the old inns of the stage-coach period, ruined by the railway. We
+pass through the open arched doorway, and find no one to welcome
+us. We advance into the stable yard behind; I assist my wife to
+dismount--and there we are in the position already disclosed to
+view at the opening of this narrative. No bell to ring. No human
+creature to answer when I call. I stand helpless, with the bridles
+of the horses in my hand. Mrs. Fairbank saunters gracefully down
+the length of the yard and does--what all women do, when they find
+themselves in a strange place. She opens every door as she passes
+it, and peeps in. On my side, I have just recovered my breath, I
+am on the point of shouting for the hostler for the third and last
+time, when I hear Mrs. Fairbank suddenly call to me:
+
+"Percy! come here!"
+
+Her voice is eager and agitated. She has opened a last door at the
+end of the yard, and has started back from some sight which has
+suddenly met her view. I hitch the horses' bridles on a rusty nail
+in the wall near me, and join my wife. She has turned pale, and
+catches me nervously by the arm.
+
+"Good heavens!" she cries; "look at that!"
+
+I look--and what do I see? I see a dingy little stable, containing
+two stalls. In one stall a horse is munching his corn. In the
+other a man is lying asleep on the litter.
+
+A worn, withered, woebegone man in a hostler's dress. His hollow
+wrinkled cheeks, his scanty grizzled hair, his dry yellow skin,
+tell their own tale of past sorrow or suffering. There is an
+ominous frown on his eyebrows--there is a painful nervous
+contraction on the side of his mouth. I hear him breathing
+convulsively when I first look in; he shudders and sighs in his
+sleep. It is not a pleasant sight to see, and I turn round
+instinctively to the bright sunlight in the yard. My wife turns me
+back again in the direction of the stable door.
+
+"Wait!" she says. "Wait! he may do it again."
+
+"Do what again?"
+
+"He was talking in his sleep, Percy, when I first looked in. He
+was dreaming some dreadful dream. Hush! he's beginning again."
+
+I look and listen. The man stirs on his miserable bed. The man
+speaks in a quick, fierce whisper through his clinched teeth.
+"Wake up! Wake up, there! Murder!"
+
+There is an interval of silence. He moves one lean arm slowly
+until it rests over his throat; he shudders, and turns on his
+straw; he raises his arm from his throat, and feebly stretches it
+out; his hand clutches at the straw on the side toward which he has
+turned; he seems to fancy that he is grasping at the edge of
+something. I see his lips begin to move again; I step softly into
+the stable; my wife follows me, with her hand fast clasped in mine.
+We both bend over him. He is talking once more in his sleep--
+strange talk, mad talk, this time.
+
+"Light gray eyes" (we hear him say), "and a droop in the left
+eyelid--flaxen hair, with a gold-yellow streak in it--all right,
+mother! fair, white arms with a down on them--little, lady's hand,
+with a reddish look round the fingernails--the knife--the cursed
+knife--first on one side, then on the other--aha, you she-devil!
+where is the knife?"
+
+He stops and grows restless on a sudden. We see him writhing on
+the straw. He throws up both his hands and gasps hysterically for
+breath. His eyes open suddenly. For a moment they look at
+nothing, with a vacant glitter in them--then they close again in
+deeper sleep. Is he dreaming still? Yes; but the dream seems to
+have taken a new course. When he speaks next, the tone is altered;
+the words are few--sadly and imploringly repeated over and over
+again. "Say you love me! I am so fond of YOU. Say you love me!
+say you love me!" He sinks into deeper and deeper sleep, faintly
+repeating those words. They die away on his lips. He speaks no
+more.
+
+By this time Mrs. Fairbank has got over her terror; she is devoured
+by curiosity now. The miserable creature on the straw has appealed
+to the imaginative side of her character. Her illimitable appetite
+for romance hungers and thirsts for more. She shakes me
+impatiently by the arm.
+
+"Do you hear? There is a woman at the bottom of it, Percy! There
+is love and murder in it, Percy! Where are the people of the inn?
+Go into the yard, and call to them again."
+
+My wife belongs, on her mother's side, to the South of France. The
+South of France breeds fine women with hot tempers. I say no more.
+Married men will understand my position. Single men may need to be
+told that there are occasions when we must not only love and honor-
+-we must also obey--our wives.
+
+I turn to the door to obey MY wife, and find myself confronted by a
+stranger who has stolen on us unawares. The stranger is a tiny,
+sleepy, rosy old man, with a vacant pudding-face, and a shining
+bald head. He wears drab breeches and gaiters, and a respectable
+square-tailed ancient black coat. I feel instinctively that here
+is the landlord of the inn.
+
+"Good morning, sir," says the rosy old man. "I'm a little hard of
+hearing. Was it you that was a-calling just now in the yard?"
+
+Before I can answer, my wife interposes. She insists (in a shrill
+voice, adapted to our host's hardness of hearing) on knowing who
+that unfortunate person is sleeping on the straw. "Where does he
+come from? Why does he say such dreadful things in his sleep? Is
+he married or single? Did he ever fall in love with a murderess?
+What sort of a looking woman was she? Did she really stab him or
+not? In short, dear Mr. Landlord, tell us the whole story!"
+
+Dear Mr. Landlord waits drowsily until Mrs. Fairbank has quite
+done--then delivers himself of his reply as follows:
+
+"His name's Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He was
+forty-five year old last birthday. And he's my hostler. That's
+his story."
+
+My wife's hot southern temper finds its way to her foot, and
+expresses itself by a stamp on the stable yard.
+
+The landlord turns himself sleepily round, and looks at the horses.
+"A fine pair of horses, them two in the yard. Do you want to put
+'em in my stables?" I reply in the affirmative by a nod. The
+landlord, bent on making himself agreeable to my wife, addresses
+her once more. "I'm a-going to wake Francis Raven. He's an
+Independent Methodist. He was forty-five year old last birthday.
+And he's my hostler. That's his story."
+
+Having issued this second edition of his interesting narrative, the
+landlord enters the stable. We follow him to see how he will wake
+Francis Raven, and what will happen upon that. The stable broom
+stands in a corner; the landlord takes it--advances toward the
+sleeping hostler--and coolly stirs the man up with a broom as if he
+was a wild beast in a cage. Francis Raven starts to his feet with
+a cry of terror--looks at us wildly, with a horrid glare of
+suspicion in his eyes--recovers himself the next moment--and
+suddenly changes into a decent, quiet, respectable serving-man.
+
+"I beg your pardon, ma'am. I beg your pardon, sir."
+
+The tone and manner in which he makes his apologies are both above
+his apparent station in life. I begin to catch the infection of
+Mrs. Fairbank's interest in this man. We both follow him out into
+the yard to see what he will do with the horses. The manner in
+which he lifts the injured leg of the lame horse tells me at once
+that he understands his business. Quickly and quietly, he leads
+the animal into an empty stable; quickly and quietly, he gets a
+bucket of hot water, and puts the lame horse's leg into it. "The
+warm water will reduce the swelling, sir. I will bandage the leg
+afterwards." All that he does is done intelligently; all that he
+says, he says to the purpose.
+
+Nothing wild, nothing strange about him now. Is this the same man
+whom we heard talking in his sleep?--the same man who woke with
+that cry of terror and that horrid suspicion in his eyes? I
+determine to try him with one or two questions.
+
+
+III
+
+
+"Not much to do here," I say to the hostler.
+
+"Very little to do, sir," the hostler replies.
+
+"Anybody staying in the house?"
+
+"The house is quite empty, sir."
+
+"I thought you were all dead. I could make nobody hear me."
+
+"The landlord is very deaf, sir, and the waiter is out on an
+errand."
+
+"Yes; and YOU were fast asleep in the stable. Do you often take a
+nap in the daytime?"
+
+The worn face of the hostler faintly flushes. His eyes look away
+from my eyes for the first time. Mrs. Fairbank furtively pinches
+my arm. Are we on the eve of a discovery at last? I repeat my
+question. The man has no civil alternative but to give me an
+answer. The answer is given in these words:
+
+"I was tired out, sir. You wouldn't have found me asleep in the
+daytime but for that."
+
+"Tired out, eh? You had been hard at work, I suppose?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"What was it, then?"
+
+He hesitates again, and answers unwillingly, "I was up all night."
+
+"Up all night? Anything going on in the town?"
+
+"Nothing going on, sir."
+
+"Anybody ill?"
+
+"Nobody ill, sir."
+
+That reply is the last. Try as I may, I can extract nothing more
+from him. He turns away and busies himself in attending to the
+horse's leg. I leave the stable to speak to the landlord about the
+carriage which is to take us back to Farleigh Hall. Mrs. Fairbank
+remains with the hostler, and favors me with a look at parting.
+The look says plainly, "I mean to find out why he was up all night.
+Leave him to Me."
+
+The ordering of the carriage is easily accomplished. The inn
+possesses one horse and one chaise. The landlord has a story to
+tell of the horse, and a story to tell of the chaise. They
+resemble the story of Francis Raven--with this exception, that the
+horse and chaise belong to no religious persuasion. "The horse
+will be nine year old next birthday. I've had the shay for four-
+and-twenty year. Mr. Max, of Underbridge, he bred the horse; and
+Mr. Pooley, of Yeovil, he built the shay. It's my horse and my
+shay. And that's THEIR story!" Having relieved his mind of these
+details, the landlord proceeds to put the harness on the horse. By
+way of assisting him, I drag the chaise into the yard. Just as our
+preparations are completed, Mrs. Fairbank appears. A moment or two
+later the hostler follows her out. He has bandaged the horse's
+leg, and is now ready to drive us to Farleigh Hall. I observe
+signs of agitation in his face and manner, which suggest that my
+wife has found her way into his confidence. I put the question to
+her privately in a corner of the yard. "Well? Have you found out
+why Francis Raven was up all night?"
+
+Mrs. Fairbank has an eye to dramatic effect. Instead of answering
+plainly, Yes or No, she suspends the interest and excites the
+audience by putting a question on her side.
+
+"What is the day of the month, dear?"
+
+"The day of the month is the first of March."
+
+"The first of March, Percy, is Francis Raven's birthday."
+
+I try to look as if I was interested--and don't succeed.
+
+"Francis was born," Mrs. Fairbank proceeds gravely, "at two o'clock
+in the morning."
+
+I begin to wonder whether my wife's intellect is going the way of
+the landlord's intellect. "Is that all?" I ask.
+
+"It is NOT all," Mrs. Fairbank answers. "Francis Raven sits up on
+the morning of his birthday because he is afraid to go to bed."
+
+"And why is he afraid to go to bed?"
+
+"Because he is in peril of his life."
+
+"On his birthday?"
+
+"On his birthday. At two o'clock in the morning. As regularly as
+the birthday comes round."
+
+There she stops. Has she discovered no more than that? No more
+thus far. I begin to feel really interested by this time. I ask
+eagerly what it means? Mrs. Fairbank points mysteriously to the
+chaise--with Francis Raven (hitherto our hostler, now our coachman)
+waiting for us to get in. The chaise has a seat for two in front,
+and a seat for one behind. My wife casts a warning look at me, and
+places herself on the seat in front.
+
+The necessary consequence of this arrangement is that Mrs. Fairhank
+sits by the side of the driver during a journey of two hours and
+more. Need I state the result? It would be an insult to your
+intelligence to state the result. Let me offer you my place in the
+chaise. And let Francis Raven tell his terrible story in his own
+words.
+
+
+THE SECOND NARRATIVE
+
+THE HOSTLER'S STORY.--TOLD BY HIMSELF
+
+
+IV
+
+
+It is now ten years ago since I got my first warning of the great
+trouble of my life in the Vision of a Dream.
+
+I shall be better able to tell you about it if you will please
+suppose yourselves to be drinking tea along with us in our little
+cottage in Cambridgeshire, ten years since.
+
+The time was the close of day, and there were three of us at the
+table, namely, my mother, myself, and my mother's sister, Mrs.
+Chance. These two were Scotchwomen by birth, and both were widows.
+There was no other resemblance between them that I can call to
+mind. My mother had lived all her life in England, and had no more
+of the Scotch brogue on her tongue than I have. My aunt Chance had
+never been out of Scotland until she came to keep house with my
+mother after her husband's death. And when SHE opened her lips you
+heard broad Scotch, I can tell you, if you ever heard it yet!
+
+As it fell out, there was a matter of some consequence in debate
+among us that evening. It was this: whether I should do well or
+not to take a long journey on foot the next morning.
+
+Now the next morning happened to be the day before my birthday; and
+the purpose of the journey was to offer myself for a situation as
+groom at a great house in the neighboring county to ours. The
+place was reported as likely to fall vacant in about three weeks'
+time. I was as well fitted to fill it as any other man. In the
+prosperous days of our family, my father had been manager of a
+training stable, and he had kept me employed among the horses from
+my boyhood upward. Please to excuse my troubling you with these
+small matters. They all fit into my story farther on, as you will
+soon find out. My poor mother was dead against my leaving home on
+the morrow.
+
+"You can never walk all the way there and all the way back again by
+to-morrow night," she says. "The end of it will be that you will
+sleep away from home on your birthday. You have never done that
+yet, Francis, since your father's death, I don't like your doing it
+now. Wait a day longer, my son--only one day."
+
+For my own part, I was weary of being idle, and I couldn't abide
+the notion of delay. Even one day might make all the difference.
+Some other man might take time by the forelock, and get the place.
+
+"Consider how long I have been out of work," I says, "and don't ask
+me to put off the journey. I won't fail you, mother. I'll get
+back by to-morrow night, if I have to pay my last sixpence for a
+lift in a cart."
+
+My mother shook her head. "I don't like it, Francis--I don't like
+it!" There was no moving her from that view. We argued and
+argued, until we were both at a deadlock. It ended in our agreeing
+to refer the difference between us to my mother's sister, Mrs.
+Chance.
+
+While we were trying hard to convince each other, my aunt Chance
+sat as dumb as a fish, stirring her tea and thinking her own
+thoughts. When we made our appeal to her, she seemed as it were to
+wake up. "Ye baith refer it to my puir judgment?" she says, in her
+broad Scotch. We both answered Yes. Upon that my aunt Chance
+first cleared the tea-table, and then pulled out from the pocket of
+her gown a pack of cards.
+
+Don't run away, if you please, with the notion that this was done
+lightly, with a view to amuse my mother and me. My aunt Chance
+seriously believed that she could look into the future by telling
+fortunes on the cards. She did nothing herself without first
+consulting the cards. She could give no more serious proof of her
+interest in my welfare than the proof which she was offering now.
+I don't say it profanely; I only mention the fact--the cards had,
+in some incomprehensible way, got themselves jumbled up together
+with her religious convictions. You meet with people nowadays who
+believe in spirits working by way of tables and chairs. On the
+same principle (if there IS any principle in it) my aunt Chance
+believed in Providence working by way of the cards.
+
+"Whether YOU are right, Francie, or your mither--whether ye will do
+weel or ill, the morrow, to go or stay--the cairds will tell it.
+We are a' in the hands of Proavidence. The cairds will tell it."
+
+Hearing this, my mother turned her head aside, with something of a
+sour look in her face. Her sister's notions about the cards were
+little better than flat blasphemy to her mind. But she kept her
+opinion to herself. My aunt Chance, to own the truth, had
+inherited, through her late husband, a pension of thirty pounds a
+year. This was an important contribution to our housekeeping, and
+we poor relations were bound to treat her with a certain respect.
+As for myself, if my poor father never did anything else for me
+before he fell into difficulties, he gave me a good education, and
+raised me (thank God) above superstitions of all sorts. However, a
+very little amused me in those days; and I waited to have my
+fortune told, as patiently as if I believed in it too!
+
+My aunt began her hocus pocus by throwing out all the cards in the
+pack under seven. She shuffled the rest with her left hand for
+luck; and then she gave them to me to cut. "Wi' yer left hand,
+Francie. Mind that! Pet your trust in Proavidence--but dinna
+forget that your luck's in yer left hand!" A long and roundabout
+shifting of the cards followed, reducing them in number until there
+were just fifteen of them left, laid out neatly before my aunt in a
+half circle. The card which happened to lie outermost, at the
+right-hand end of the circle, was, according to rule in such cases,
+the card chosen to represent Me. By way of being appropriate to my
+situation as a poor groom out of employment, the card was--the King
+of Diamonds.
+
+"I tak' up the King o' Diamants," says my aunt. "I count seven
+cairds fra' richt to left; and I humbly ask a blessing on what
+follows." My aunt shut her eyes as if she was saying grace before
+meat, and held up to me the seventh card. I called the seventh
+card--the Queen of Spades. My aunt opened her eyes again in a
+hurry, and cast a sly look my way. "The Queen o' Spades means a
+dairk woman. Ye'll be thinking in secret, Francie, of a dairk
+woman?"
+
+When a man has been out of work for more than three months, his
+mind isn't troubled much with thinking of women--light or dark. I
+was thinking of the groom's place at the great house, and I tried
+to say so. My aunt Chance wouldn't listen. She treated my
+interpretation with contempt. "Hoot-toot! there's the caird in
+your hand! If ye're no thinking of her the day, ye'll be thinking
+of her the morrow. Where's the harm of thinking of a dairk woman!
+I was ance a dairk woman myself, before my hair was gray. Haud yer
+peace, Francie, and watch the cairds."
+
+I watched the cards as I was told. There were seven left on the
+table. My aunt removed two from one end of the row and two from
+the other, and desired me to call the two outermost of the three
+cards now left on the table. I called the Ace of Clubs and the Ten
+of Diamonds. My aunt Chance lifted her eyes to the ceiling with a
+look of devout gratitude which sorely tried my mother's patience.
+The Ace of Clubs and the Ten of Diamonds, taken together,
+signified--first, good news (evidently the news of the groom's
+place); secondly, a journey that lay before me (pointing plainly to
+my journey to-morrow!); thirdly and lastly, a sum of money
+(probably the groom's wages!) waiting to find its way into my
+pockets. Having told my fortune in these encouraging terms, my
+aunt declined to carry the experiment any further. "Eh, lad! it's
+a clean tempting o' Proavidence to ask mair o' the cairds than the
+cairds have tauld us noo. Gae yer ways to-morrow to the great
+hoose. A dairk woman will meet ye at the gate; and she'll have a
+hand in getting ye the groom's place, wi' a' the gratifications and
+pairquisites appertaining to the same. And, mebbe, when yer
+poaket's full o' money, ye'll no' be forgetting yer aunt Chance,
+maintaining her ain unblemished widowhood--wi' Proavidence
+assisting--on thratty punds a year!"
+
+I promised to remember my aunt Chance (who had the defect, by the
+way, of being a terribly greedy person after money) on the next
+happy occasion when my poor empty pockets were to be filled at
+last. This done, I looked at my mother. She had agreed to take
+her sister for umpire between us, and her sister had given it in my
+favor. She raised no more objections. Silently, she got on her
+feet, and kissed me, and sighed bitterly--and so left the room. My
+aunt Chance shook her head. "I doubt, Francie, yer puir mither has
+but a heathen notion of the vairtue of the cairds!"
+
+By daylight the next morning I set forth on my journey. I looked
+back at the cottage as I opened the garden gate. At one window was
+my mother, with her handkerchief to her eyes. At the other stood
+my aunt Chance, holding up the Queen of Spades by way of
+encouraging me at starting. I waved my hands to both of them in
+token of farewell, and stepped out briskly into the road. It was
+then the last day of February. Be pleased to remember, in
+connection with this, that the first of March was the day, and two
+o'clock in the morning the hour of my birth.
+
+
+V
+
+
+Now you know how I came to leave home. The next thing to tell is,
+what happened on the journey.
+
+I reached the great house in reasonably good time considering the
+distance. At the very first trial of it, the prophecy of the cards
+turned out to be wrong. The person who met me at the lodge gate
+was not a dark woman--in fact, not a woman at all--but a boy. He
+directed me on the way to the servants' offices; and there again
+the cards were all wrong. I encountered, not one woman, but three-
+-and not one of the three was dark. I have stated that I am not
+superstitious, and I have told the truth. But I must own that I
+did feel a certain fluttering at the heart when I made my bow to
+the steward, and told him what business had brought me to the
+house. His answer completed the discomfiture of aunt Chance's
+fortune-telling. My ill-luck still pursued me. That very morning
+another man had applied for the groom's place, and had got it.
+
+I swallowed my disappointment as well as I could, and thanked the
+steward, and went to the inn in the village to get the rest and
+food which I sorely needed by this time.
+
+Before starting on my homeward walk I made some inquiries at the
+inn, and ascertained that I might save a few miles, on my return,
+by following a new road. Furnished with full instructions, several
+times repeated, as to the various turnings I was to take, I set
+forth, and walked on till the evening with only one stoppage for
+bread and cheese. Just as it was getting toward dark, the rain
+came on and the wind began to rise; and I found myself, to make
+matters worse, in a part of the country with which I was entirely
+unacquainted, though I guessed myself to be some fifteen miles from
+home. The first house I found to inquire at, was a lonely roadside
+inn, standing on the outskirts of a thick wood. Solitary as the
+place looked, it was welcome to a lost man who was also hungry,
+thirsty, footsore, and wet. The landlord was civil and
+respectable-looking; and the price he asked for a bed was
+reasonable enough. I was grieved to disappoint my mother. But
+there was no conveyance to be had, and I could go no farther afoot
+that night. My weariness fairly forced me to stop at the inn.
+
+I may say for myself that I am a temperate man. My supper simply
+consisted of some rashers of bacon, a slice of home-made bread, and
+a pint of ale. I did not go to bed immediately after this moderate
+meal, but sat up with the landlord, talking about my bad prospects
+and my long run of ill-luck, and diverging from these topics to the
+subjects of horse-flesh and racing. Nothing was said, either by
+myself, my host, or the few laborers who strayed into the tap-room,
+which could, in the slightest degree, excite my mind, or set my
+fancy--which is only a small fancy at the best of times--playing
+tricks with my common sense.
+
+At a little after eleven the house was closed. I went round with
+the landlord, and held the candle while the doors and lower windows
+were being secured. I noticed with surprise the strength of the
+bolts, bars, and iron-sheathed shutters.
+
+"You see, we are rather lonely here," said the landlord. "We never
+have had any attempts to break in yet, but it's always as well to
+be on the safe side. When nobody is sleeping here, I am the only
+man in the house. My wife and daughter are timid, and the servant
+girl takes after her missuses. Another glass of ale, before you
+turn in?--No!--Well, how such a sober man as you comes to be out of
+a place is more than I can understand for one.--Here's where you're
+to sleep. You're the only lodger to-night, and I think you'll say
+my missus has done her best to make you comfortable. You're quite
+sure you won't have another glass of ale?--Very well. Good night."
+
+It was half-past eleven by the clock in the passage as we went
+upstairs to the bedroom. The window looked out on the wood at the
+back of the house.
+
+I locked my door, set my candle on the chest of drawers, and
+wearily got me ready for bed. The bleak wind was still blowing,
+and the solemn, surging moan of it in the wood was very dreary to
+hear through the night silence. Feeling strangely wakeful, I
+resolved to keep the candle alight until I began to grow sleepy.
+The truth is, I was not quite myself. I was depressed in mind by
+my disappointment of the morning; and I was worn out in body by my
+long walk. Between the two, I own I couldn't face the prospect of
+lying awake in the darkness, listening to the dismal moan of the
+wind in the wood.
+
+Sleep stole on me before I was aware of it; my eyes closed, and I
+fell off to rest, without having so much as thought of
+extinguishing the candle.
+
+The next thing that I remember was a faint shivering that ran
+through me from head to foot, and a dreadful sinking pain at my
+heart, such as I had never felt before. The shivering only
+disturbed my slumbers--the pain woke me instantly. In one moment I
+passed from a state of sleep to a state of wakefulness--my eyes
+wide open--my mind clear on a sudden as if by a miracle. The
+candle had burned down nearly to the last morsel of tallow, but the
+unsnuffed wick had just fallen off, and the light was, for the
+moment, fair and full.
+
+Between the foot of the bed and the closet door, I saw a person in
+my room. The person was a woman, standing looking at me, with a
+knife in her hand. It does no credit to my courage to confess it--
+but the truth IS the truth. I was struck speechless with terror.
+There I lay with my eyes on the woman; there the woman stood (with
+the knife in her hand) with HER eyes on ME.
+
+She said not a word as we stared each other in the face; but she
+moved after a little--moved slowly toward the left-hand side of the
+bed.
+
+The light fell full on her face. A fair, fine woman, with
+yellowish flaxen hair, and light gray eyes, with a droop in the
+left eyelid. I noticed these things and fixed them in my mind,
+before she was quite round at the side of the bed. Without saying
+a word; without any change in the stony stillness of her face;
+without any noise following her footfall, she came closer and
+closer; stopped at the bed-head; and lifted the knife to stab me.
+I laid my arm over my throat to save it; but, as I saw the blow
+coming, I threw my hand across the bed to the right side, and
+jerked my body over that way, just as the knife came down, like
+lightning, within a hair's breadth of my shoulder.
+
+My eyes fixed on her arm and her hand--she gave me time to look at
+them as she slowly drew the knife out of the bed. A white, well-
+shaped arm, with a pretty down lying lightly over the fair skin. A
+delicate lady's hand, with a pink flush round the finger nails.
+
+She drew the knife out, and passed back again slowly to the foot of
+the bed; she stopped there for a moment looking at me; then she
+came on without saying a word; without any change in the stony
+stillness of her face; without any noise following her footfall--
+came on to the side of the bed where I now lay.
+
+Getting near me, she lifted the knife again, and I drew myself away
+to the left side. She struck, as before right into the mattress,
+with a swift downward action of her arm; and she missed me, as
+before; by a hair's breadth. This time my eyes wandered from HER
+to the knife. It was like the large clasp knives which laboring
+men use to cut their bread and bacon with. Her delicate little
+fingers did not hide more than two thirds of the handle; I noticed
+that it was made of buckhorn, clean and shining as the blade was,
+and looking like new.
+
+For the second time she drew the knife out of the bed, and suddenly
+hid it away in the wide sleeve of her gown. That done, she stopped
+by the bedside watching me. For an instant I saw her standing in
+that position--then the wick of the spent candle fell over into the
+socket. The flame dwindled to a little blue point, and the room
+grew dark.
+
+A moment, or less, if possible, passed so--and then the wick flared
+up, smokily, for the last time. My eyes were still looking for her
+over the right-hand side of the bed when the last flash of light
+came. Look as I might, I could see nothing. The woman with the
+knife was gone.
+
+I began to get back to myself again. I could feel my heart
+beating; I could hear the woeful moaning of the wind in the wood; I
+could leap up in bed, and give the alarm before she escaped from
+the house. "Murder! Wake up there! Murder!"
+
+Nobody answered to the alarm. I rose and groped my way through the
+darkness to the door of the room. By that way she must have got
+in. By that way she must have gone out.
+
+The door of the room was fast locked, exactly as I had left it on
+going to bed! I looked at the window. Fast locked too!
+
+Hearing a voice outside, I opened the door. There was the
+landlord, coming toward me along the passage, with his burning
+candle in one hand, and his gun in the other.
+
+"What is it?" he says, looking at me in no very friendly way.
+
+I could only answer in a whisper, "A woman, with a knife in her
+hand. In my room. A fair, yellow-haired woman. She jabbed at me
+with the knife, twice over."
+
+He lifted his candle, and looked at me steadily from head to foot.
+"She seems to have missed you--twice over."
+
+"I dodged the knife as it came down. It struck the bed each time.
+Go in, and see."
+
+The landlord took his candle into the bedroom immediately. In less
+than a minute he came out again into the passage in a violent
+passion.
+
+"The devil fly away with you and your woman with the knife! There
+isn't a mark in the bedclothes anywhere. What do you mean by
+coming into a man's place and frightening his family out of their
+wits by a dream?"
+
+A dream? The woman who had tried to stab me, not a living human
+being like myself? I began to shake and shiver. The horrors got
+hold of me at the bare thought of it.
+
+"I'll leave the house," I said. "Better be out on the road in the
+rain and dark, than back in that room, after what I've seen in it.
+Lend me the light to get my clothes by, and tell me what I'm to
+pay."
+
+The landlord led the way back with his light into the bedroom.
+"Pay?" says he. "You'll find your score on the slate when you go
+downstairs. I wouldn't have taken you in for all the money you've
+got about you, if I had known your dreaming, screeching ways
+beforehand. Look at the bed--where's the cut of a knife in it?
+Look at the window--is the lock bursted? Look at the door (which I
+heard you fasten yourself)--is it broke in? A murdering woman with
+a knife in my house! You ought to be ashamed of yourself!"
+
+My eyes followed his hand as it pointed first to the bed--then to
+the window--then to the door. There was no gainsaying it. The bed
+sheet was as sound as on the day it was made. The window was fast.
+The door hung on its hinges as steady as ever. I huddled my
+clothes on without speaking. We went downstairs together. I
+looked at the clock in the bar-room. The time was twenty minutes
+past two in the morning. I paid my bill, and the landlord let me
+out. The rain had ceased; but the night was dark, and the wind was
+bleaker than ever. Little did the darkness, or the cold, or the
+doubt about the way home matter to ME. My mind was away from all
+these things. My mind was fixed on the vision in the bedroom.
+What had I seen trying to murder me? The creature of a dream? Or
+that other creature from the world beyond the grave, whom men call
+ghost? I could make nothing of it as I walked along in the night;
+I had made nothing by it by midday--when I stood at last, after
+many times missing my road, on the doorstep of home.
+
+
+VI
+
+
+My mother came out alone to welcome me back. There were no secrets
+between us two. I told her all that had happened, just as I have
+told it to you. She kept silence till I had done. And then she
+put a question to me.
+
+"What time was it, Francis, when you saw the Woman in your Dream?"
+
+I had looked at the clock when I left the inn, and I had noticed
+that the hands pointed to twenty minutes past two. Allowing for
+the time consumed in speaking to the landlord, and in getting on my
+clothes, I answered that I must have first seen the Woman at two
+o'clock in the morning. In other words, I had not only seen her on
+my birthday, but at the hour of my birth.
+
+My mother still kept silence. Lost in her own thoughts, she took
+me by the hand, and led me into the parlor. Her writing-desk was
+on the table by the fireplace. She opened it, and signed to me to
+take a chair by her side.
+
+"My son! your memory is a bad one, and mine is fast failing me.
+Tell me again what the Woman looked like. I want her to be as well
+known to both of us, years hence, as she is now."
+
+I obeyed; wondering what strange fancy might be working in her
+mind. I spoke; and she wrote the words as they fell from my lips:
+
+"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair,
+with a golden-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon
+them. Little, lady's hands, with a rosy-red look about the finger
+nails."
+
+"Did you notice how she was dressed, Francis?"
+
+"No, mother."
+
+"Did you notice the knife?"
+
+"Yes. A large clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, as good as
+new."
+
+My mother added the description of the knife. Also the year,
+month, day of the week, and hour of the day when the Dream-Woman
+appeared to me at the inn. That done, she locked up the paper in
+her desk.
+
+"Not a word, Francis, to your aunt. Not a word to any living soul.
+Keep your Dream a secret between you and me."
+
+The weeks passed, and the months passed. My mother never returned
+to the subject again. As for me, time, which wears out all things,
+wore out my remembrance of the Dream. Little by little, the image
+of the Woman grew dimmer and dimmer. Little by little, she faded
+out of my mind.
+
+
+VII
+
+
+The story of the warning is now told. Judge for yourself if it was
+a true warning or a false, when you hear what happened to me on my
+next birthday.
+
+In the Summer time of the year, the Wheel of Fortune turned the
+right way for me at last. I was smoking my pipe one day, near an
+old stone quarry at the entrance to our village, when a carriage
+accident happened, which gave a new turn, as it were, to my lot in
+life. It was an accident of the commonest kind--not worth
+mentioning at any length. A lady driving herself; a runaway horse;
+a cowardly man-servant in attendance, frightened out of his wits;
+and the stone quarry too near to be agreeable--that is what I saw,
+all in a few moments, between two whiffs of my pipe. I stopped the
+horse at the edge of the quarry, and got myself a little hurt by
+the shaft of the chaise. But that didn't matter. The lady
+declared I had saved her life; and her husband, coming with her to
+our cottage the next day, took me into his service then and there.
+The lady happened to be of a dark complexion; and it may amuse you
+to hear that my aunt Chance instantly pitched on that circumstance
+as a means of saving the credit of the cards. Here was the promise
+of the Queen of Spades performed to the very letter, by means of "a
+dark woman," just as my aunt had told me. "In the time to come,
+Francis, beware o' pettin' yer ain blinded intairpretation on the
+cairds. Ye're ower ready, I trow, to murmur under dispensation of
+Proavidence that ye canna fathom--like the Eesraelites of auld.
+I'll say nae mair to ye. Mebbe when the mony's powering into yer
+poakets, ye'll no forget yer aunt Chance, left like a sparrow on
+the housetop, wi a sma' annuitee o' thratty punds a year."
+
+I remained in my situation (at the West-end of London) until the
+Spring of the New Year. About that time, my master's health
+failed. The doctors ordered him away to foreign parts, and the
+establishment was broken up. But the turn in my luck still held
+good. When I left my place, I left it--thanks to the generosity of
+my kind master--with a yearly allowance granted to me, in
+remembrance of the day when I had saved my mistress's life. For
+the future, I could go back to service or not, as I pleased; my
+little income was enough to support my mother and myself.
+
+My master and mistress left England toward the end of February.
+Certain matters of business to do for them detained me in London
+until the last day of the month. I was only able to leave for our
+village by the evening train, to keep my birthday with my mother as
+usual. It was bedtime when I got to the cottage; and I was sorry
+to find that she was far from well. To make matters worse, she had
+finished her bottle of medicine on the previous day, and had
+omitted to get it replenished, as the doctor had strictly directed.
+He dispensed his own medicines, and I offered to go and knock him
+up. She refused to let me do this; and, after giving me my supper,
+sent me away to my bed.
+
+I fell asleep for a little, and woke again. My mother's bed-
+chamber was next to mine. I heard my aunt Chance's heavy footsteps
+going to and fro in the room, and, suspecting something wrong,
+knocked at the door. My mother's pains had returned upon her;
+there was a serious necessity for relieving her sufferings as
+speedily as possible, I put on my clothes, and ran off, with the
+medicine bottle in my hand, to the other end of the village, where
+the doctor lived. The church clock chimed the quarter to two on my
+birthday just as I reached his house. One ring of the night bell
+brought him to his bedroom window to speak to me. He told me to
+wait, and he would let me in at the surgery door. I noticed, while
+I was waiting, that the night was wonderfully fair and warm for the
+time of year. The old stone quarry where the carriage accident had
+happened was within view. The moon in the clear heavens lit it up
+almost as bright as day.
+
+In a minute or two the doctor let me into the surgery. I closed
+the door, noticing that he had left his room very lightly clad. He
+kindly pardoned my mother's neglect of his directions, and set to
+work at once at compounding the medicine. We were both intent on
+the bottle; he filling it, and I holding the light--when we heard
+the surgery door suddenly opened from the street.
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+Who could possibly be up and about in our quiet village at the
+second hour of the morning?
+
+The person who opened the door appeared within range of the light
+of the candle. To complete our amazement, the person proved to be
+a woman! She walked up to the counter, and standing side by side
+with me, lifted her veil. At the moment when she showed her face,
+I heard the church clock strike two. She was a stranger to me, and
+a stranger to the doctor. She was also, beyond all comparison, the
+most beautiful woman I have ever seen in my life.
+
+"I saw the light under the door," she said. "I want some
+medicine."
+
+She spoke quite composedly, as if there was nothing at all
+extraordinary in her being out in the village at two in the
+morning, and following me into the surgery to ask for medicine!
+The doctor stared at her as if he suspected his own eyes of
+deceiving him. "Who are you?" be asked. "How do you come to be
+wandering about at this time in the morning?"
+
+She paid no heed to his questions. She only told him coolly what
+she wanted. "I have got a bad toothache. I want a bottle of
+laudanum."
+
+The doctor recovered himself when she asked for the laudanum. He
+was on his own ground, you know, when it came to a matter of
+laudanum; and he spoke to her smartly enough this time.
+
+"Oh, you have got the toothache, have you? Let me look at the
+tooth."
+
+She shook her bead, and laid a two-shilling piece on the counter.
+"I won't trouble you to look at the tooth," she said. "There is
+the money. Let me have the laudanum, if you please."
+
+The doctor put the two-shilling piece back again in her hand. "I
+don't sell laudanum to strangers," he answered. "If you are in any
+distress of body or mind, that is another matter. I shall be glad
+to help you."
+
+She put the money back in her pocket. "YOU can't help me," she
+said, as quietly as ever. "Good morning."
+
+With that, she opened the surgery door to go out again into the
+street. So far, I had not spoken a word on my side. I had stood
+with the candle in my hand (not knowing I was holding it)--with my
+eyes fixed on her, with my mind fixed on her like a man bewitched.
+Her looks betrayed, even more plainly than her words, her
+resolution, in one way or another, to destroy herself. When she
+opened the door, in my alarm at what might happen I found the use
+of my tongue.
+
+"Stop!" I cried out. "Wait for me. I want to speak to you before
+you go away." She lifted her eyes with a look of careless surprise
+and a mocking smile on her lips.
+
+"What can YOU have to say to me?" She stopped, and laughed to
+herself. "Why not?" she said. "I have got nothing to do, and
+nowhere to go." She turned back a step, and nodded to me. "You're
+a strange man--I think I'll humor you--I'll wait outside." The
+door of the surgery closed on her. She was gone.
+
+I am ashamed to own what happened next. The only excuse for me is
+that I was really and truly a man bewitched. I turned me round to
+follow her out, without once thinking of my mother. The doctor
+stopped me.
+
+"Don't forget the medicine," he said. "And if you will take my
+advice, don't trouble yourself about that woman. Rouse up the
+constable. It's his business to look after her--not yours."
+
+I held out my hand for the medicine in silence: I was afraid I
+should fail in respect if I trusted myself to answer him. He must
+have seen, as I saw, that she wanted the laudanum to poison
+herself. He had, to my mind, taken a very heartless view of the
+matter. I just thanked him when he gave me the medicine--and went
+out.
+
+She was waiting for me as she had promised; walking slowly to and
+fro--a tall, graceful, solitary figure in the bright moonbeams.
+They shed over her fair complexion, her bright golden hair, her
+large gray eyes, just the light that suited them best. She looked
+hardly mortal when she first turned to speak to me.
+
+"Well?" she said. "And what do you want?"
+
+In spite of my pride, or my shyness, or my better sense--whichever
+it might be--all my heart went out to her in a moment. I caught
+hold of her by the hands, and owned what was in my thoughts, as
+freely as if I had known her for half a lifetime.
+
+"You mean to destroy yourself," I said. "And I mean to prevent you
+from doing it. If I follow you about all night, I'll prevent you
+from doing it."
+
+She laughed. "You saw yourself that he wouldn't sell me the
+laudanum. Do you really care whether I live or die?" She squeezed
+my hands gently as she put the question: her eyes searched mine
+with a languid, lingering look in them that ran through me like
+fire. My voice died away on my lips; I couldn't answer her.
+
+She understood, without my answering. "You have given me a fancy
+for living, by speaking kindly to me," she said. "Kindness has a
+wonderful effect on women, and dogs, and other domestic animals.
+It is only men who are superior to kindness. Make your mind easy--
+I promise to take as much care of myself as if I was the happiest
+woman living! Don't let me keep you here, out of your bed. Which
+way are you going?"
+
+Miserable wretch that I was, I had forgotten my mother--with the
+medicine in my hand! "I am going home," I said. "Where are you
+staying? At the inn?"
+
+She laughed her bitter laugh, and pointed to the stone quarry.
+"There is MY inn for to-night," she said. "When I got tired of
+walking about, I rested there."
+
+We walked on together, on my way home. I took the liberty of
+asking her if she had any friends.
+
+"I thought I had one friend left," she said, "or you would never
+have met me in this place. It turns out I was wrong. My friend's
+door was closed in my face some hours since; my friend's servants
+threatened me with the police. I had nowhere else to go, after
+trying my luck in your neighborhood; and nothing left but my two-
+shilling piece and these rags on my back. What respectable
+innkeeper would take ME into his house? I walked about, wondering
+how I could find my way out of the world without disfiguring
+myself, and without suffering much pain. You have no river in
+these parts. I didn't see my way out of the world, till I heard
+you ringing at the doctor's house. I got a glimpse at the bottles
+in the surgery, when he let you in, and I thought of the laudanum
+directly. What were you doing there? Who is that medicine for?
+Your wife?"
+
+"I am not married!"
+
+She laughed again. "Not married! If I was a little better dressed
+there might be a chance for ME. Where do you live? Here?"
+
+We had arrived, by this time, at my mother's door. She held out
+her hand to say good-by. Houseless and homeless as she was, she
+never asked me to give her a shelter for the night. It was MY
+proposal that she should rest, under my roof, unknown to my mother
+and my aunt. Our kitchen was built out at the back of the cottage:
+she might remain there unseen and unheard until the household was
+astir in the morning. I led her into the kitchen, and set a chair
+for her by the dying embers of the fire. I dare say I was to
+blame--shamefully to blame, if you like. I only wonder what YOU
+would have done in my place. On your word of honor as a man, would
+YOU have let that beautiful creature wander back to the shelter of
+the stone quarry like a stray dog? God help the woman who is
+foolish enough to trust and love you, if you would have done that!
+
+I left her by the fire, and went to my mother's room.
+
+
+IX
+
+
+If you have ever felt the heartache, you will know what I suffered
+in secret when my mother took my hand, and said, "I am sorry,
+Francis, that your night's rest has been disturbed through ME." I
+gave her the medicine; and I waited by her till the pains abated.
+My aunt Chance went back to her bed; and my mother and I were left
+alone. I noticed that her writing-desk, moved from its customary
+place, was on the bed by her side. She saw me looking at it.
+"This is your birthday, Francis," she said. "Have you anything to
+tell me?" I had so completely forgotten my Dream, that I had no
+notion of what was passing in her mind when she said those words.
+For a moment there was a guilty fear in me that she suspected
+something. I turned away my face, and said, "No, mother; I have
+nothing to tell." She signed to me to stoop down over the pillow
+and kiss her. "God bless you, my love!" she said; and many happy
+returns of the day." She patted my hand, and closed her weary
+eyes, and, little by little, fell off peaceably into sleep.
+
+I stole downstairs again. I think the good influence of my mother
+must have followed me down. At any rate, this is true: I stopped
+with my hand on the closed kitchen door, and said to myself:
+"Suppose I leave the house, and leave the village, without seeing
+her or speaking to her more?"
+
+Should I really have fled from temptation in this way, if I had
+been left to myself to decide? Who can tell? As things were, I
+was not left to decide. While my doubt was in my mind, she heard
+me, and opened the kitchen door. My eyes and her eyes met. That
+ended it.
+
+We were together, unsuspected and undisturbed, for the next two
+hours. Time enough for her to reveal the secret of her wasted
+life. Time enough for her to take possession of me as her own, to
+do with me as she liked. It is needless to dwell here on the
+misfortunes which had brought her low; they are misfortunes too
+common to interest anybody.
+
+Her name was Alicia Warlock. She had been born and bred a lady.
+She had lost her station, her character, and her friends. Virtue
+shuddered at the sight of her; and Vice had got her for the rest of
+her days. Shocking and common, as I told you. It made no
+difference to ME. I have said it already--I say it again--I was a
+man bewitched. Is there anything so very wonderful in that? Just
+remember who I was. Among the honest women in my own station in
+life, where could I have found the like of HER? Could THEY walk as
+she walked? and look as she looked? When THEY gave me a kiss, did
+their lips linger over it as hers did? Had THEY her skin, her
+laugh, her foot, her hand, her touch? SHE never had a speck of
+dirt on her: I tell you her flesh was a perfume. When she embraced
+me, her arms folded round me like the wings of angels; and her
+smile covered me softly with its light like the sun in heaven. I
+leave you to laugh at me, or to cry over me, just as your temper
+may incline. I am not trying to excuse myself--I am trying to
+explain. You are gentle-folks; what dazzled and maddened ME, is
+everyday experience to YOU. Fallen or not, angel or devil, it came
+to this--she was a lady; and I was a groom.
+
+Before the house was astir, I got her away (by the workmen's train)
+to a large manufacturing town in our parts.
+
+Here--with my savings in money to help her--she could get her
+outfit of decent clothes and her lodging among strangers who asked
+no questions so long as they were paid. Here--now on one pretense
+and now on another--I could visit her, and we could both plan
+together what our future lives were to be. I need not tell you
+that I stood pledged to make her my wife. A man in my station
+always marries a woman of her sort.
+
+Do you wonder if I was happy at this time? I should have been
+perfectly happy but for one little drawback. It was this: I was
+never quite at my ease in the presence of my promised wife.
+
+I don't mean that I was shy with her, or suspicious of her, or
+ashamed of her. The uneasiness I am speaking of was caused by a
+faint doubt in my mind whether I had not seen her somewhere, before
+the morning when we met at the doctor's house. Over and over
+again, I found myself wondering whether her face did not remind me
+of some other face--what other I never could tell. This strange
+feeling, this one question that could never be answered, vexed me
+to a degree that you would hardly credit. It came between us at
+the strangest times--oftenest, however, at night, when the candles
+were lit. You have known what it is to try and remember a
+forgotten name--and to fail, search as you may, to find it in your
+mind. That was my case. I failed to find my lost face, just as
+you failed to find your lost name.
+
+In three weeks we had talked matters over, and had arranged how I
+was to make a clean breast of it at home. By Alicia's advice, I
+was to describe her as having been one of my fellow servants during
+the time I was employed under my kind master and mistress in
+London. There was no fear now of my mother taking any harm from
+the shock of a great surprise. Her health had improved during the
+three weeks' interval. On the first evening when she was able to
+take her old place at tea time, I summoned my courage, and told her
+I was going to be married. The poor soul flung her arms round my
+neck, and burst out crying for joy. "Oh, Francis!" she says, "I am
+so glad you will have somebody to comfort you and care for you when
+I am gone!" As for my aunt Chance, you can anticipate what SHE
+did, without being told. Ah, me! If there had really been any
+prophetic virtue in the cards, what a terrible warning they might
+have given us that night! It was arranged that I was to bring my
+promised wife to dinner at the cottage on the next day.
+
+
+X
+
+
+I own I was proud of Alicia when I led her into our little parlor
+at the appointed time. She had never, to my mind, looked so
+beautiful as she looked that day. I never noticed any other
+woman's dress--I noticed hers as carefully as if I had been a woman
+myself! She wore a black silk gown, with plain collar and cuffs,
+and a modest lavender-colored bonnet, with one white rose in it
+placed at the side. My mother, dressed in her Sunday best, rose
+up, all in a flutter, to welcome her daughter-in-law that was to
+be. She walked forward a few steps, half smiling, half in tears--
+she looked Alicia full in the face--and suddenly stood still. Her
+cheeks turned white in an instant; her eyes stared in horror; her
+hands dropped helplessly at her sides. She staggered back, and
+fell into the arms of my aunt, standing behind her. It was no
+swoon--she kept her senses. Her eyes turned slowly from Alicia to
+me. "Francis," she said, "does that woman's face remind you of
+nothing?"
+
+Before I could answer, she pointed to her writing-desk on the table
+at the fireside. "Bring it!" she cried, "bring it!"
+
+At the same moment I felt Alicia's hand on my shoulder, and saw
+Alicia's face red with anger--and no wonder!
+
+"What does this mean?" she asked. "Does your mother want to insult
+me?"
+
+I said a few words to quiet her; what they were I don't remember--I
+was so confused and astonished at the time. Before I had done, I
+heard my mother behind me.
+
+My aunt had fetched her desk. She had opened it; she had taken a
+paper from it. Step by step, helping herself along by the wall,
+she came nearer and nearer, with the paper in her hand. She looked
+at the paper--she looked in Alicia's face--she lifted the long,
+loose sleeve of her gown, and examined her hand and arm. I saw
+fear suddenly take the place of anger in Alicia's eyes. She shook
+herself free of my mother's grasp. "Mad!" she said to herself,
+"and Francis never told me!" With those words she ran out of the
+room.
+
+I was hastening out after her, when my mother signed to me to stop.
+She read the words written on the paper. While they fell slowly,
+one by one, from her lips, she pointed toward the open door.
+
+"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen hair,
+with a gold-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down upon
+them. Little, lady's hand, with a rosy-red look about the finger
+nails. The Dream Woman, Francis! The Dream Woman!"
+
+Something darkened the parlor window as those words were spoken. I
+looked sidelong at the shadow. Alicia Warlock had come back! She
+was peering in at us over the low window blind. There was the
+fatal face which had first looked at me in the bedroom of the
+lonely inn. There, resting on the window blind, was the lovely
+little hand which had held the murderous knife. I HAD seen her
+before we met in the village. The Dream Woman! The Dream Woman!
+
+
+XI
+
+
+I expect nobody to approve of what I have next to tell of myself.
+In three weeks from the day when my mother had identified her with
+the Woman of the Dream, I took Alicia Warlock to church, and made
+her my wife. I was a man bewitched. Again and again I say it--I
+was a man bewitched!
+
+During the interval before my marriage, our little household at the
+cottage was broken up. My mother and my aunt quarreled. My
+mother, believing in the Dream, entreated me to break off my
+engagement. My aunt, believing in the cards, urged me to marry.
+
+This difference of opinion produced a dispute between them, in the
+course of which my aunt Chance--quite unconscious of having any
+superstitious feelings of her own--actually set out the cards which
+prophesied happiness to me in my married life, and asked my mother
+how anybody but "a blinded heathen could be fule enough, after
+seeing those cairds, to believe in a dream!" This was, naturally,
+too much for my mother's patience; hard words followed on either
+side; Mrs. Chance returned in dudgeon to her friends in Scotland.
+She left me a written statement of my future prospects, as revealed
+by the cards, and with it an address at which a post-office order
+would reach her. "The day was not that far off," she remarked,
+"when Francie might remember what he owed to his aunt Chance,
+maintaining her ain unbleemished widowhood on thratty punds a
+year."
+
+Having refused to give her sanction to my marriage, my mother also
+refused to be present at the wedding, or to visit Alicia
+afterwards. There was no anger at the bottom of this conduct on
+her part. Believing as she did in this Dream, she was simply in
+mortal fear of my wife. I understood this, and I made allowances
+for her. Not a cross word passed between us. My one happy
+remembrance now--though I did disobey her in the matter of my
+marriage--is this: I loved and respected my good mother to the
+last.
+
+As for my wife, she expressed no regret at the estrangement between
+her mother-in-law and herself. By common consent, we never spoke
+on that subject. We settled in the manufacturing town which I have
+already mentioned, and we kept a lodging-house. My kind master, at
+my request, granted me a lump sum in place of my annuity. This put
+us into a good house, decently furnished. For a while things went
+well enough. I may describe myself at this time of my life as a
+happy man.
+
+My misfortunes began with a return of the complaint with which my
+mother had already suffered. The doctor confessed, when I asked
+him the question, that there was danger to be dreaded this time.
+Naturally, after hearing this, I was a good deal away at the
+cottage. Naturally also, I left the business of looking after the
+house, in my absence, to my wife. Little by little, I found her
+beginning to alter toward me. While my back was turned, she formed
+acquaintances with people of the doubtful and dissipated sort. One
+day, I observed something in her manner which forced the suspicion
+on me that she had been drinking. Before the week was out, my
+suspicion was a certainty. From keeping company with drunkards,
+she had grown to be a drunkard herself.
+
+I did all a man could do to reclaim her. Quite useless! She had
+never really returned the love I felt for her: I had no influence;
+I could do nothing. My mother, hearing of this last worse trouble,
+resolved to try what her influence could do. Ill as she was, I
+found her one day dressed to go out.
+
+"I am not long for this world, Francis," she said. "I shall not
+feel easy on my deathbed, unless I have done my best to the last to
+make you happy. I mean to put my own fears and my own feelings out
+of the question, and go with you to your wife, and try what I can
+do to reclaim her. Take me home with you, Francis. Let me do all
+I can to help my son, before it is too late."
+
+How could I disobey her? We took the railway to the town: it was
+only half an hour's ride. By one o'clock in the afternoon we
+reached my house. It was our dinner hour, and Alicia was in the
+kitchen. I was able to take my mother quietly into the parlor and
+then to prepare my wife for the visit. She had drunk but little at
+that early hour; and, luckily, the devil in her was tamed for the
+time.
+
+She followed me into the parlor, and the meeting passed off better
+than I had ventured to forecast; with this one drawback, that my
+mother--though she tried hard to control herself--shrank from
+looking my wife in the face when she spoke to her. It was a relief
+to me when Alicia began to prepare the table for dinner.
+
+She laid the cloth, brought in the bread tray, and cut some slices
+for us from the loaf. Then she returned to the kitchen. At that
+moment, while I was still anxiously watching my mother, I was
+startled by seeing the same ghastly change pass over her face which
+had altered it in the morning when Alicia and she first met.
+Before I could say a word, she started up with a look of horror.
+
+"Take me back!--home, home again, Francis! Come with me, and never
+go back more!"
+
+I was afraid to ask for an explanation; I could only sign her to be
+silent, and help her quickly to the door. As we passed the bread
+tray on the table, she stopped and pointed to it.
+
+"Did you see what your wife cut your bread with?" she asked.
+
+"No, mother; I was not noticing. What was it?"
+
+"Look!"
+
+I did look. A new clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, lay with
+the loaf in the bread tray. I stretched out my hand to possess
+myself of it. At the same moment, there was a noise in the
+kitchen, and my mother caught me by the arm.
+
+"The knife of the Dream! Francis, I'm faint with fear--take me
+away before she comes back!"
+
+I couldn't speak to comfort or even to answer her. Superior as I
+was to superstition, the discovery of the knife staggered me. In
+silence, I helped my mother out of the house; and took her home.
+
+I held out my hand to say good-by. She tried to stop me.
+
+"Don't go back, Francis! don't go back!"
+
+"I must get the knife, mother. I must go back by the next train."
+I held to that resolution. By the next train I went back.
+
+
+XII
+
+
+My wife had, of course, discovered our secret departure from the
+house. She had been drinking. She was in a fury of passion. The
+dinner in the kitchen was flung under the grate; the cloth was off
+the parlor table. Where was the knife?
+
+I was foolish enough to ask for it. She refused to give it to me.
+In the course of the dispute between us which followed, I
+discovered that there was a horrible story attached to the knife.
+It had been used in a murder--years since--and had been so
+skillfully hidden that the authorities had been unable to produce
+it at the trial. By help of some of her disreputable friends, my
+wife had been able to purchase this relic of a bygone crime. Her
+perverted nature set some horrid unacknowledged value on the knife.
+Seeing there was no hope of getting it by fair means, I determined
+to search for it, later in the day, in secret. The search was
+unsuccessful. Night came on, and I left the house to walk about
+the streets. You will understand what a broken man I was by this
+time, when I tell you I was afraid to sleep in the same room with
+her!
+
+Three weeks passed. Still she refused to give up the knife; and
+still that fear of sleeping in the same room with her possessed me.
+I walked about at night, or dozed in the parlor, or sat watching by
+my mother's bedside. Before the end of the first week in the new
+month, the worst misfortune of all befell me--my mother died. It
+wanted then but a short time to my birthday. She had longed to
+live till that day. I was present at her death. Her last words in
+this world were addressed to me. "Don't go back, my son--don't go
+back!"
+
+I was obliged to go back, if it was only to watch my wife. In the
+last days of my mother's illness she had spitefully added a sting
+to my grief by declaring she would assert her right to attend the
+funeral. In spite of all that I could do or say, she held to her
+word. On the day appointed for the burial she forced herself,
+inflamed and shameless with drink, into my presence, and swore she
+would walk in the funeral procession to my mother's grave.
+
+This last insult--after all I had gone through already--was more
+than I could endure. It maddened me. Try to make allowances for a
+man beside himself. I struck her.
+
+The instant the blow was dealt, I repented it. She crouched down,
+silent, in a corner of the room, and eyed me steadily. It was a
+look that cooled my hot blood in an instant. There was no time now
+to think of making atonement. I could only risk the worst, and
+make sure of her till the funeral was over. I locked her into her
+bedroom.
+
+When I came back, after laying my mother in the grave, I found her
+sitting by the bedside, very much altered in look and bearing, with
+a bundle on her lap. She faced me quietly; she spoke with a
+curious stillness in her voice--strangely and unnaturally composed
+in look and manner.
+
+"No man has ever struck me yet," she said. "My husband shall have
+no second opportunity. Set the door open, and let me go."
+
+She passed me, and left the room. I saw her walk away up the
+street. Was she gone for good?
+
+All that night I watched and waited. No footstep came near the
+house. The next night, overcome with fatigue, I lay down on the
+bed in my clothes, with the door locked, the key on the table, and
+the candle burning. My slumber was not disturbed. The third
+night, the fourth, the fifth, the sixth, passed, and nothing
+happened. I lay down on the seventh night, still suspicious of
+something happening; still in my clothes; still with the door
+locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning.
+
+My rest was disturbed. I awoke twice, without any sensation of
+uneasiness. The third time, that horrid shivering of the night at
+the lonely inn, that awful sinking pain at the heart, came back
+again, and roused me in an instant. My eyes turned to the left-
+hand side of the bed. And there stood, looking at me--
+
+The Dream Woman again? No! My wife. The living woman, with the
+face of the Dream--in the attitude of the Dream--the fair arm up;
+the knife clasped in the delicate white hand.
+
+I sprang upon her on the instant; but not quickly enough to stop
+her from hiding the knife. Without a word from me, without a cry
+from her, I pinioned her in a chair. With one hand I felt up her
+sleeve; and there, where the Dream Woman had hidden the knife, my
+wife had hidden it--the knife with the buckhorn handle, that looked
+like new.
+
+What I felt when I made that discovery I could not realize at the
+time, and I can't describe now. I took one steady look at her with
+the knife in my hand. "You meant to kill me?" I said.
+
+"Yes," she answered; "I meant to kill you." She crossed her arms
+over her bosom, and stared me coolly in the face. "I shall do it
+yet," she said. "With that knife."
+
+I don't know what possessed me--I swear to you I am no coward; and
+yet I acted like a coward. The horrors got hold of me. I couldn't
+look at her--I couldn't speak to her. I left her (with the knife
+in my hand), and went out into the night.
+
+There was a bleak wind abroad, and the smell of rain was in the
+air. The church clocks chimed the quarter as I walked beyond the
+last house in the town. I asked the first policeman I met what
+hour that was, of which the quarter past had just struck.
+
+The man looked at his watch, and answered, "Two o'clock." Two in
+the morning. What day of the month was this day that had just
+begun? I reckoned it up from the date of my mother's funeral. The
+horrid parallel between the dream and the reality was complete--it
+was my birthday!
+
+Had I escaped the mortal peril which the dream foretold? or had I
+only received a second warning? As that doubt crossed my mind I
+stopped on my way out of the town. The air had revived me--I felt
+in some degree like my own self again. After a little thinking, I
+began to see plainly the mistake I had made in leaving my wife free
+to go where she liked and to do as she pleased.
+
+I turned instantly, and made my way back to the house. It was
+still dark. I had left the candle burning in the bedchamber. When
+I looked up to the window of the room now, there was no light in
+it. I advanced to the house door. On going away, I remembered to
+have closed it; on trying it now, I found it open.
+
+I waited outside, never losing sight of the house till daylight.
+Then I ventured indoors--listened, and heard nothing--looked into
+the kitchen, scullery, parlor, and found nothing--went up at last
+into the bedroom. It was empty.
+
+A picklock lay on the floor, which told me how she had gained
+entrance in the night. And that was the one trace I could find of
+the Dream Woman.
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+I waited in the house till the town was astir for the day, and then
+I went to consult a lawyer. In the confused state of my mind at
+the time, I had one clear notion of what I meant to do: I was
+determined to sell my house and leave the neighborhood. There were
+obstacles in the way which I had not counted on. I was told I had
+creditors to satisfy before I could leave--I, who had given my wife
+the money to pay my bills regularly every week! Inquiry showed
+that she had embezzled every farthing of the money I had intrusted
+to her. I had no choice but to pay over again.
+
+Placed in this awkward position, my first duty was to set things
+right, with the help of my lawyer. During my forced sojourn in the
+town I did two foolish things. And, as a consequence that
+followed, I heard once more, and heard for the last time, of my
+wife.
+
+In the first place, having got possession of the knife, I was rash
+enough to keep it in my pocket. In the second place, having
+something of importance to say to my lawyer, at a late hour of the
+evening, I went to his house after dark--alone and on foot. I got
+there safely enough. Returning, I was seized on from behind by two
+men, dragged down a passage and robbed--not only of the little
+money I had about me, but also of the knife. It was the lawyer's
+opinion (as it was mine) that the thieves were among the
+disreputable acquaintances formed by my wife, and that they, had
+attacked me at her instigation. To confirm this view I received a
+letter the next day, without date or address, written in Alicia's
+hand. The first line informed me that the knife was back again in
+her possession. The second line reminded me of the day when I
+struck her. The third line warned me that she would wash out the
+stain of that blow in my blood, and repeated the words, "I shall do
+it with the knife!"
+
+These things happened a year ago. The law laid hands on the men
+who had robbed me; but from that time to this, the law has failed
+completely to find a trace of my wife.
+
+My story is told. When I had paid the creditors and paid the legal
+expenses, I had barely five pounds left out of the sale of my
+house; and I had the world to begin over again. Some months since--
+drifting here and there--I found my way to Underbridge. The
+landlord of the inn had known something of my father's family in
+times past. He gave me (all he had to give) my food, and shelter
+in the yard. Except on market days, there is nothing to do. In
+the coming winter the inn is to be shut up, and I shall have to
+shift for myself. My old master would help me if I applied to him--
+but I don't like to apply: he has done more for me already than I
+deserve. Besides, in another year who knows but my troubles may
+all be at an end? Next winter will bring me nigh to my next
+birthday, and my next birthday may be the day of my death. Yes!
+it's true I sat up all last night; and I heard two in the morning
+strike: and nothing happened. Still, allowing for that, the time
+to come is a time I don't trust. My wife has got the knife--my
+wife is looking for me. I am above superstition, mind! I don't
+say I believe in dreams; I only say, Alicia Warlock is looking for
+me. It is possible I may be wrong. It is possible I may be right.
+Who can tell?
+
+
+
+THE THIRD NARRATIVE
+
+THE STORY CONTINUED BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+We took leave of Francis Raven at the door of Farleigh Hall, with
+the understanding that he might expect to hear from us again.
+
+The same night Mrs. Fairbank and I had a discussion in the
+sanctuary of our own room. The topic was "The Hostler's Story";
+and the question in dispute between us turned on the measure of
+charitable duty that we owed to the hostler himself.
+
+The view I took of the man's narrative was of the purely matter-of-
+fact kind. Francis Raven had, in my opinion, brooded over the
+misty connection between his strange dream and his vile wife, until
+his mind was in a state of partial delusion on that subject. I was
+quite willing to help him with a trifle of money, and to recommend
+him to the kindness of my lawyer, if he was really in any danger
+and wanted advice. There my idea of my duty toward this afflicted
+person began and ended.
+
+Confronted with this sensible view of the matter, Mrs. Fairbank's
+romantic temperament rushed, as usual, into extremes. "I should no
+more think of losing sight of Francis Raven when his next birthday
+comes round," says my wife, "than I should think of laying down a
+good story with the last chapters unread. I am positively
+determined, Percy, to take him back with us when we return to
+France, in the capacity of groom. What does one man more or less
+among the horses matter to people as rich as we are?" In this
+strain the partner of my joys and sorrows ran on, perfectly
+impenetrable to everything that I could say on the side of common
+sense. Need I tell my married brethren how it ended? Of course I
+allowed my wife to irritate me, and spoke to her sharply.
+
+Of course my wife turned her face away indignantly on the conjugal
+pillow, and burst into tears. Of course upon that, "Mr." made his
+excuses, and "Mrs." had her own way.
+
+Before the week was out we rode over to Underbridge, and duly
+offered to Francis Raven a place in our service as supernumerary
+groom.
+
+At first the poor fellow seemed hardly able to realize his own
+extraordinary good fortune. Recovering himself, he expressed his
+gratitude modestly and becomingly. Mrs. Fairbank's ready
+sympathies overflowed, as usual, at her lips. She talked to him
+about our home in France, as if the worn, gray-headed hostler had
+been a child. "Such a dear old house, Francis; and such pretty
+gardens! Stables! Stables ten times as big as your stables here--
+quite a choice of rooms for you. You must learn the name of our
+house--Maison Rouge. Our nearest town is Metz. We are within a
+walk of the beautiful River Moselle. And when we want a change we
+have only to take the railway to the frontier, and find ourselves
+in Germany."
+
+Listening, so far, with a very bewildered face, Francis started and
+changed color when my wife reached the end of her last sentence.
+"Germany?" he repeated.
+
+"Yes. Does Germany remind you of anything?"
+
+The hostler's eyes looked down sadly on the ground. "Germany
+reminds me of my wife," he replied.
+
+"Indeed! How?"
+
+"She once told me she had lived in Germany--long before I knew her-
+-in the time when she was a young girl."
+
+"Was she living with relations or friends?"
+
+"She was living as governess in a foreign family."
+
+"In what part of Germany?"
+
+"I don't remember, ma'am. I doubt if she told me."
+
+"Did she tell you the name of the family?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. It was a foreign name, and it has slipped my memory
+long since. The head of the family was a wine grower in a large
+way of business--I remember that."
+
+"Did you hear what sort of wine he grew? There are wine growers in
+our neighborhood. Was it Moselle wine?"
+
+"I couldn't say, ma'am, I doubt if I ever heard."
+
+There the conversation dropped. We engaged to communicate with
+Francis Raven before we left England, and took our leave. I had
+made arrangements to pay our round of visits to English friends,
+and to return to Maison Rouge in the summer. On the eve of
+departure, certain difficulties in connection with the management
+of some landed property of mine in Ireland obliged us to alter our
+plans. Instead of getting back to our house in France in the
+Summer, we only returned a week or two before Christmas. Francis
+Raven accompanied us, and was duly established, in the nominal
+capacity of stable keeper, among the servants at Maison Rouge.
+
+Before long, some of the objections to taking him into our
+employment, which I had foreseen and had vainly mentioned to my
+wife, forced themselves on our attention in no very agreeable form.
+Francis Raven failed (as I had feared he would) to get on smoothly
+with his fellow-servants. They were all French; and not one of
+them understood English. Francis, on his side, was equally
+ignorant of French. His reserved manners, his melancholy
+temperament, his solitary ways--all told against him. Our servants
+called him "the English Bear." He grew widely known in the
+neighborhood under his nickname. Quarrels took place, ending once
+or twice in blows. It became plain, even to Mrs. Fairbank herself,
+that some wise change must be made. While we were still
+considering what the change was to be, the unfortunate hostler was
+thrown on our hands for some time to come by an accident in the
+stables. Still pursued by his proverbial ill-luck, the poor
+wretch's leg was broken by a kick from a horse.
+
+He was attended to by our own surgeon, in his comfortable bedroom
+at the stables. As the date of his birthday drew near, he was
+still confined to his bed.
+
+Physically speaking, he was doing very well. Morally speaking, the
+surgeon was not satisfied. Francis Raven was suffering under some
+mysterious mental disturbance, which interfered seriously with his
+rest at night. Hearing this, I thought it my duty to tell the
+medical attendant what was preying on the patient's mind. As a
+practical man, he shared my opinion that the hostler was in a state
+of delusion on the subject of his Wife and his Dream. "Curable
+delusion, in my opinion," the surgeon added, "if the experiment
+could be fairly tried."
+
+"How can it be tried?" I asked. Instead of replying, the surgeon
+put a question to me, on his side.
+
+"Do you happen to know," he said, "that this year is Leap Year?"
+
+"Mrs. Fairbank reminded me of it yesterday," I answered.
+"Otherwise I might NOT have known it."
+
+"Do you think Francis Raven knows that this year is Leap Year?"
+
+(I began to see dimly what my friend was driving at.)
+
+"It depends," I answered, "on whether he has got an English
+almanac. Suppose he has NOT got the almanac--what then?"
+
+"In that case," pursued the surgeon, "Francis Raven is innocent of
+all suspicion that there is a twenty-ninth day in February this
+year. As a necessary consequence--what will he do? He will
+anticipate the appearance of the Woman with the Knife, at two in
+the morning of the twenty-ninth of February, instead of the first
+of March. Let him suffer all his superstitious terrors on the
+wrong day. Leave him, on the day that is really his birthday, to
+pass a perfectly quiet night, and to be as sound asleep as other
+people at two in the morning. And then, when he wakes comfortably
+in time for his breakfast, shame him out of his delusion by telling
+him the truth."
+
+I agreed to try the experiment. Leaving the surgeon to caution
+Mrs. Fairbank on the subject of Leap Year, I went to the stables to
+see Mr. Raven.
+
+
+XV
+
+
+The poor fellow was full of forebodings of the fate in store for
+him on the ominous first of March. He eagerly entreated me to
+order one of the men servants to sit up with him on the birthday
+morning. In granting his request, I asked him to tell me on which
+day of the week his birthday fell. He reckoned the days on his
+fingers; and proved his innocence of all suspicion that it was Leap
+Year, by fixing on the twenty-ninth of February, in the full
+persuasion that it was the first of March. Pledged to try the
+surgeon's experiment, I left his error uncorrected, of course. In
+so doing, I took my first step blindfold toward the last act in the
+drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+The next day brought with it a little domestic difficulty, which
+indirectly and strangely associated itself with the coming end.
+
+My wife received a letter, inviting us to assist in celebrating the
+"Silver Wedding" of two worthy German neighbors of ours--Mr. and
+Mrs. Beldheimer. Mr. Beldheimer was a large wine grower on the
+banks of the Moselle. His house was situated on the frontier line
+of France and Germany; and the distance from our house was
+sufficiently considerable to make it necessary for us to sleep
+under our host's roof. Under these circumstances, if we accepted
+the invitation, a comparison of dates showed that we should be away
+from home on the morning of the first of March. Mrs. Fairbank--
+holding to her absurd resolution to see with her own eyes what
+might, or might not, happen to Francis Raven on his birthday--
+flatly declined to leave Maison Rouge. "It's easy to send an
+excuse," she said, in her off-hand manner.
+
+I failed, for my part, to see any easy way out of the difficulty.
+The celebration of a "Silver Wedding" in Germany is the celebration
+of twenty-five years of happy married life; and the host's claim
+upon the consideration of his friends on such an occasion is
+something in the nature of a royal "command." After considerable
+discussion, finding my wife's obstinacy invincible, and feeling
+that the absence of both of us from the festival would certainly
+offend our friends, I left Mrs. Fairbank to make her excuses for
+herself, and directed her to accept the invitation so far as I was
+concerned. In so doing, I took my second step, blindfold, toward
+the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+A week elapsed; the last days of February were at hand. Another
+domestic difficulty happened; and, again, this event also proved to
+be strangely associated with the coming end.
+
+My head groom at the stables was one Joseph Rigobert. He was an
+ill-conditioned fellow, inordinately vain of his personal
+appearance, and by no means scrupulous in his conduct with women.
+His one virtue consisted of his fondness for horses, and in the
+care he took of the animals under his charge. In a word, he was
+too good a groom to be easily replaced, or he would have quitted my
+service long since. On the occasion of which I am now writing, he
+was reported to me by my steward as growing idle and disorderly in
+his habits. The principal offense alleged against him was, that he
+had been seen that day in the city of Metz, in the company of a
+woman (supposed to be an Englishwoman), whom he was entertaining at
+a tavern, when he ought to have been on his way back to Maison
+Rouge. The man's defense was that "the lady" (as he called her)
+was an English stranger, unacquainted with the ways of the place,
+and that he had only shown her where she could obtain some
+refreshments at her own request. I administered the necessary
+reprimand, without troubling myself to inquire further into the
+matter. In failing to do this, I took my third step, blindfold,
+toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.
+
+On the evening of the twenty-eighth, I informed the servants at the
+stables that one of them must watch through the night by the
+Englishman's bedside. Joseph Rigobert immediately volunteered for
+the duty--as a means, no doubt, of winning his way back to my
+favor. I accepted his proposal.
+
+That day the surgeon dined with us. Toward midnight he and I left
+the smoking room, and repaired to Francis Raven's bedside.
+Rigobert was at his post, with no very agreeable expression on his
+face. The Frenchman and the Englishman had evidently not got on
+well together so far. Francis Raven lay helpless on his bed,
+waiting silently for two in the morning and the Dream Woman.
+
+"I have come, Francis, to bid you good night," I said, cheerfully.
+"To-morrow morning I shall look in at breakfast time, before I
+leave home on a journey."
+
+"Thank you for all your kindness, sir. You will not see me alive
+to-morrow morning. She will find me this time. Mark my words--she
+will find me this time."
+
+"My good fellow! she couldn't find you in England. How in the
+world is she to find you in France?"
+
+"It's borne in on my mind, sir, that she will find me here. At two
+in the morning on my birthday I shall see her again, and see her
+for the last time."
+
+"Do you mean that she will kill you?"
+
+"I mean that, sir, she will kill me--with the knife."
+
+"And with Rigobert in the room to protect you?"
+
+"I am a doomed man. Fifty Rigoberts couldn't protect me."
+
+"And you wanted somebody to sit up with you?"
+
+"Mere weakness, sir. I don't like to be left alone on my
+deathbed."
+
+I looked at the surgeon. If he had encouraged me, I should
+certainly, out of sheer compassion, have confessed to Francis Raven
+the trick that we were playing him. The surgeon held to his
+experiment; the surgeon's face plainly said--"No."
+
+The next day (the twenty-ninth of February) was the day of the
+"Silver Wedding." The first thing in the morning, I went to
+Francis Raven's room. Rigobert met me at the door.
+
+"How has he passed the night?" I asked.
+
+"Saying his prayers, and looking for ghosts," Rigobert answered.
+"A lunatic asylum is the only proper place for him."
+
+I approached the bedside. "Well, Francis, here you are, safe and
+sound, in spite of what you said to me last night."
+
+His eyes rested on mine with a vacant, wondering look.
+
+"I don't understand it," he said.
+
+"Did you see anything of your wife when the clock struck two?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Did anything happen?"
+
+"Nothing happened, sir."
+
+"Doesn't THIS satisfy you that you were wrong?"
+
+His eyes still kept their vacant, wondering look. He only repeated
+the words he had spoken already: "I don't understand it."
+
+I made a last attempt to cheer him. "Come, come, Francis! keep a
+good heart. You will be out of bed in a fortnight."
+
+He shook his head on the pillow. "There's something wrong," he
+said. "I don't expect you to believe me, sir. I only say there's
+something wrong--and time will show it."
+
+I left the room. Half an hour later I started for Mr. Beldheimer's
+house; leaving the arrangements for the morning of the first of
+March in the hands of the doctor and my wife.
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+The one thing which principally struck me when I joined the guests
+at the "Silver Wedding" is also the one thing which it is necessary
+to mention here. On this joyful occasion a noticeable lady present
+was out of spirits. That lady was no other than the heroine of the
+festival, the mistress of the house!
+
+In the course of the evening I spoke to Mr. Beldheimer's eldest son
+on the subject of his mother. As an old friend of the family, I
+had a claim on his confidence which the young man willingly
+recognized.
+
+"We have had a very disagreeable matter to deal with," he said;
+"and my mother has not recovered the painful impression left on her
+mind. Many years since, when my sisters were children, we had an
+English governess in the house. She left us, as we then
+understood, to be married. We heard no more of her until a week or
+ten days since, when my mother received a letter, in which our ex-
+governess described herself as being in a condition of great
+poverty and distress. After much hesitation she had ventured--at
+the suggestion of a lady who had been kind to her--to write to her
+former employers, and to appeal to their remembrance of old times.
+You know my mother she is not only the most kind-headed, but the
+most innocent of women--it is impossible to persuade her of the
+wickedness that there is in the world. She replied by return of
+post, inviting the governess to come here and see her, and
+inclosing the money for her traveling expenses. When my father
+came home, and heard what had been done, he wrote at once to his
+agent in London to make inquiries, inclosing the address on the
+governess' letter. Before he could receive the agent's reply the
+governess arrived. She produced the worst possible impression on
+his mind. The agent's letter, arriving a few days later, confirmed
+his suspicions. Since we had lost sight of her, the woman had led
+a most disreputable life. My father spoke to her privately: he
+offered--on condition of her leaving the house--a sum of money to
+take her back to England. If she refused, the alternative would be
+an appeal to the authorities and a public scandal. She accepted
+the money, and left the house. On her way back to England she
+appears to have stopped at Metz. You will understand what sort of
+woman she is when I tell you that she was seen the other day in a
+tavern with your handsome groom, Joseph Rigobert."
+
+While my informant was relating these circumstances, my memory was
+at work. I recalled what Francis Raven had vaguely told us of his
+wife's experience in former days as governess in a German family.
+A suspicion of the truth suddenly flashed across my mind. "What
+was the woman's name?" I asked.
+
+Mr. Beldheimer's son answered: "Alicia Warlock."
+
+I had but one idea when I heard that reply--to get back to my house
+without a moment's needless delay. It was then ten o'clock at
+night--the last train to Metz had left long since. I arranged with
+my young friend--after duly informing him of the circumstances--
+that I should go by the first train in the morning, instead of
+staying to breakfast with the other guests who slept in the house.
+
+At intervals during the night I wondered uneasily how things were
+going on at Maison Rouge. Again and again the same question
+occurred to me, on my journey home in the early morning--the
+morning of the first of March. As the event proved, but one person
+in my house knew what really happened at the stables on Francis
+Raven's birthday. Let Joseph Rigobert take my place as narrator,
+and tell the story of the end to You--as he told it, in times past,
+to his lawyer and to Me.
+
+
+FOURTH (AND LAST) NARRATIVE
+
+STATEMENT OF JOSEPH RIGOBERT: ADDRESSED TO THE ADVOCATE WHO
+DEFENDED HIM AT HIS TRIAL
+
+
+RESPECTED SIR,--On the twenty-seventh of February I was sent, on
+business connected with the stables at Maison Rouge, to the city of
+Metz. On the public promenade I met a magnificent woman.
+Complexion, blond. Nationality, English. We mutually admired each
+other; we fell into conversation. (She spoke French perfectly--
+with the English accent.) I offered refreshment; my proposal was
+accepted. We had a long and interesting interview--we discovered
+that we were made for each other. So far, Who is to blame?
+
+Is it my fault that I am a handsome man--universally agreeable as
+such to the fair sex? Is it a criminal offense to be accessible to
+the amiable weakness of love? I ask again, Who is to blame?
+Clearly, nature. Not the beautiful lady--not my humble self.
+
+To resume. The most hard-hearted person living will understand
+that two beings made for each other could not possibly part without
+an appointment to meet again.
+
+I made arrangements for the accommodation of the lady in the
+village near Maison Rouge. She consented to honor me with her
+company at supper, in my apartment at the stables, on the night of
+the twenty-ninth. The time fixed on was the time when the other
+servants were accustomed to retire--eleven o'clock.
+
+Among the grooms attached to the stables was an Englishman, laid up
+with a broken leg. His name was Francis. His manners were
+repulsive; he was ignorant of the French language. In the kitchen
+he went by the nickname of the "English Bear." Strange to say, he
+was a great favorite with my master and my mistress. They even
+humored certain superstitious terrors to which this repulsive
+person was subject--terrors into the nature of which I, as an
+advanced freethinker, never thought it worth my while to inquire.
+
+On the evening of the twenty-eighth the Englishman, being a prey to
+the terrors which I have mentioned, requested that one of his
+fellow-servants might sit up with him for that night only. The
+wish that he expressed was backed by Mr. Fairbank's authority.
+Having already incurred my master's displeasure--in what way, a
+proper sense of my own dignity forbids me to relate--I volunteered
+to watch by the bedside of the English Bear. My object was to
+satisfy Mr. Fairbank that I bore no malice, on my side, after what
+had occurred between us. The wretched Englishman passed a night of
+delirium. Not understanding his barbarous language, I could only
+gather from his gesture that he was in deadly fear of some fancied
+apparition at his bedside. From time to time, when this madman
+disturbed my slumbers, I quieted him by swearing at him. This is
+the shortest and best way of dealing with persons in his condition.
+
+On the morning of the twenty-ninth, Mr. Fairbank left us on a
+journey. Later in the day, to my unspeakable disgust, I found that
+I had not done with the Englishman yet. In Mr. Fairbank's absence,
+Mrs. Fairbank took an incomprehensible interest in the question of
+my delirious fellow-servant's repose at night. Again, one or the
+other of us was to watch at his bedside, and report it, if anything
+happened. Expecting my fair friend to supper, it was necessary to
+make sure that the other servants at the stables would be safe in
+their beds that night. Accordingly, I volunteered once more to be
+the man who kept watch. Mrs. Fairbank complimented me on my
+humanity. I possess great command over my feelings. I accepted
+the compliment without a blush.
+
+Twice, after nightfall, my mistress and the doctor (the last
+staying in the house in Mr. Fairbank's absence) came to make
+inquiries. Once BEFORE the arrival of my fair friend--and once
+AFTER. On the second occasion (my apartment being next door to the
+Englishman's) I was obliged to hide my charming guest in the
+harness room. She consented, with angelic resignation, to immolate
+her dignity to the servile necessities of my position. A more
+amiable woman (so far) I never met with!
+
+After the second visit I was left free. It was then close on
+midnight. Up to that time there was nothing in the behavior of the
+mad Englishman to reward Mrs. Fairbank and the doctor for
+presenting themselves at his bedside. He lay half awake, half
+asleep, with an odd wondering kind of look in his face. My
+mistress at parting warned me to be particularly watchful of him
+toward two in the morning. The doctor (in case anything happened)
+left me a large hand bell to ring, which could easily be heard at
+the house.
+
+Restored to the society of my fair friend, I spread the supper
+table. A pate, a sausage, and a few bottles of generous Moselle
+wine, composed our simple meal. When persons adore each other, the
+intoxicating illusion of Love transforms the simplest meal into a
+banquet. With immeasurable capacities for enjoyment, we sat down
+to table. At the very moment when I placed my fascinating
+companion in a chair, the infamous Englishman in the next room took
+that occasion, of all others, to become restless and noisy once
+more. He struck with his stick on the floor; he cried out, in a
+delirious access of terror, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"
+
+The sound of that lamentable voice, suddenly assailing our ears,
+terrified my fair friend. She lost all her charming color in an
+instant. "Good heavens!" she exclaimed. "Who is that in the next
+room?"
+
+"A mad Englishman."
+
+"An Englishman?"
+
+"Compose yourself, my angel. I will quiet him." The lamentable
+voice called out on me again, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"
+
+My fair friend caught me by the arm. "Who is he?" she cried.
+"What is his name?"
+
+Something in her face struck me as she put that question. A spasm
+of jealousy shook me to the soul. "You know him?" I said.
+
+"His name!" she vehemently repeated; "his name!"
+
+"Francis," I answered.
+
+"Francis--WHAT?"
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. I could neither remember nor pronounce
+the barbarous English surname. I could only tell her it began with
+an "R."
+
+She dropped back into the chair. Was she going to faint? No: she
+recovered, and more than recovered, her lost color. Her eyes
+flashed superbly. What did it mean? Profoundly as I understand
+women in general, I was puzzled by THIS woman!
+
+"You know him?" I repeated.
+
+She laughed at me. "What nonsense! How should I know him? Go and
+quiet the wretch."
+
+My looking-glass was near. One glance at it satisfied me that no
+woman in her senses could prefer the Englishman to Me. I recovered
+my self-respect. I hastened to the Englishman's bedside.
+
+The moment I appeared he pointed eagerly toward my room. He
+overwhelmed me with a torrent of words in his own language. I made
+out, from his gestures and his looks, that he had, in some
+incomprehensible manner, discovered the presence of my guest; and,
+stranger still, that he was scared by the idea of a person in my
+room. I endeavored to compose him on the system which I have
+already mentioned--that is to say, I swore at him in MY language.
+The result not proving satisfactory, I own I shook my fist in his
+face, and left the bedchamber.
+
+Returning to my fair friend, I found her walking backward and
+forward in a state of excitement wonderful to behold. She had not
+waited for me to fill her glass--she had begun the generous Moselle
+in my absence. I prevailed on her with difficulty to place herself
+at the table. Nothing would induce her to eat. "My appetite is
+gone," she said. "Give me wine."
+
+The generous Moselle deserves its name--delicate on the palate,
+with prodigious "body." The strength of this fine wine produced no
+stupefying effect on my remarkable guest. It appeared to
+strengthen and exhilarate her--nothing more. She always spoke in
+the same low tone, and always, turn the conversation as I might,
+brought it back with the same dexterity to the subject of the
+Englishman in the next room. In any other woman this persistency
+would have offended me. My lovely guest was irresistible; I
+answered her questions with the docility of a child. She possessed
+all the amusing eccentricity of her nation. When I told her of the
+accident which confined the Englishman to his bed, she sprang to
+her feet. An extraordinary smile irradiated her countenance. She
+said, "Show me the horse who broke the Englishman's leg! I must
+see that horse!" I took her to the stables. She kissed the horse-
+-on my word of honor, she kissed the horse! That struck me. I
+said. "You DO know the man; and he has wronged you in some way."
+No! she would not admit it, even then. "I kiss all beautiful
+animals," she said. "Haven't I kissed YOU?" With that charming
+explanation of her conduct, she ran back up the stairs. I only
+remained behind to lock the stable door again. When I rejoined
+her, I made a startling discovery. I caught her coming out of the
+Englishman's room.
+
+"I was just going downstairs again to call you," she said. "The
+man in there is getting noisy once more."
+
+The mad Englishman's voice assailed our ears once again.
+"Rigobert! Rigobert!"
+
+He was a frightful object to look at when I saw him this time. His
+eyes were staring wildly; the perspiration was pouring over his
+face. In a panic of terror he clasped his hands; he pointed up to
+heaven. By every sign and gesture that a man can make, he
+entreated me not to leave him again. I really could not help
+smiling. The idea of my staying with HIM, and leaving my fair
+friend by herself in the next room!
+
+I turned to the door. When the mad wretch saw me leaving him he
+burst out into a screech of despair--so shrill that I feared it
+might awaken the sleeping servants.
+
+My presence of mind in emergencies is proverbial among those who
+know me. I tore open the cupboard in which he kept his linen--
+seized a handful of his handkerchief's--gagged him with one of
+them, and secured his hands with the others. There was now no
+danger of his alarming the servants. After tying the last knot, I
+looked up.
+
+The door between the Englishman's room and mine was open. My fair
+friend was standing on the threshold--watching HIM as he lay
+helpless on the bed; watching ME as I tied the last knot.
+
+"What are you doing there?" I asked. "Why did you open the door?"
+
+She stepped up to me, and whispered her answer in my ear, with her
+eyes all the time upon the man on the bed:
+
+"I heard him scream."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I thought you had killed him."
+
+I drew back from her in horror. The suspicion of me which her
+words implied was sufficiently detestable in itself. But her
+manner when she uttered the words was more revolting still. It so
+powerfully affected me that I started back from that beautiful
+creature as I might have recoiled from a reptile crawling over my
+flesh.
+
+Before I had recovered myself sufficiently to reply, my nerves were
+assailed by another shock. I suddenly heard my mistress's voice
+calling to me from the stable yard.
+
+There was no time to think--there was only time to act. The one
+thing needed was to keep Mrs. Fairbank from ascending the stairs,
+and discovering--not my lady guest only--but the Englishman also,
+gagged and bound on his bed. I instantly hurried to the yard. As
+I ran down the stairs I heard the stable clock strike the quarter
+to two in the morning.
+
+My mistress was eager and agitated. The doctor (in attendance on
+her) was smiling to himself, like a man amused at his own thoughts.
+
+"Is Francis awake or asleep?" Mrs. Fairbank inquired.
+
+"He has been a little restless, madam. But he is now quiet again.
+If he is not disturbed" (I added those words to prevent her from
+ascending the stairs), "he will soon fall off into a quiet sleep."
+
+"Has nothing happened since I was here last?"
+
+"Nothing, madam."
+
+The doctor lifted his eyebrows with a comical look of distress.
+"Alas, alas, Mrs. Fairbank!" he said. "Nothing has happened! The
+days of romance are over!"
+
+"It is not two o'clock yet," my mistress answered, a little
+irritably.
+
+The smell of the stables was strong on the morning air. She put
+her handkerchief to her nose and led the way out of the yard by the
+north entrance--the entrance communicating with the gardens and the
+house. I was ordered to follow her, along with the doctor. Once
+out of the smell of the stables she began to question me again.
+She was unwilling to believe that nothing had occurred in her
+absence. I invented the best answers I could think of on the spur
+of the moment; and the doctor stood by laughing. So the minutes
+passed till the clock struck two. Upon that, Mrs. Fairbank
+announced her intention of personally visiting the Englishman in
+his room. To my great relief, the doctor interfered to stop her
+from doing this.
+
+"You have heard that Francis is just falling asleep," he said. "If
+you enter his room you may disturb him. It is essential to the
+success of my experiment that he should have a good night's rest,
+and that he should own it himself, before I tell him the truth. I
+must request, madam, that you will not disturb the man. Rigobert
+will ring the alarm bell if anything happens."
+
+My mistress was unwilling to yield. For the next five minutes, at
+least, there was a warm discussion between the two. In the end
+Mrs. Fairbank was obliged to give way--for the time. "In half an
+hour," she said, "Francis will either be sound asleep, or awake
+again. In half an hour I shall come back." She took the doctor's
+arm. They returned together to the house.
+
+Left by myself, with half an hour before me, I resolved to take the
+Englishwoman back to the village--then, returning to the stables,
+to remove the gag and the bindings from Francis, and to let him
+screech to his heart's content. What would his alarming the whole
+establishment matter to ME after I had got rid of the compromising
+presence of my guest?
+
+Returning to the yard I heard a sound like the creaking of an open
+door on its hinges. The gate of the north entrance I had just
+closed with my own hand. I went round to the west entrance, at the
+back of the stables. It opened on a field crossed by two footpaths
+in Mr. Fairbank's grounds. The nearest footpath led to the
+village. The other led to the highroad and the river.
+
+Arriving at the west entrance I found the door open--swinging to
+and fro slowly in the fresh morning breeze. I had myself locked
+and bolted that door after admitting my fair friend at eleven
+o'clock. A vague dread of something wrong stole its way into my
+mind. I hurried back to the stables.
+
+I looked into my own room. It was empty. I went to the harness
+room. Not a sign of the woman was there. I returned to my room,
+and approached the door of the Englishman's bedchamber. Was it
+possible that she had remained there during my absence? An
+unaccountable reluctance to open the door made me hesitate, with my
+hand on the lock. I listened. There was not a sound inside. I
+called softly. There was no answer. I drew back a step, still
+hesitating. I noticed something dark moving slowly in the crevice
+between the bottom of the door and the boarded floor. Snatching up
+the candle from the table, I held it low, and looked. The dark,
+slowly moving object was a stream of blood!
+
+That horrid sight roused me. I opened the door. The Englishman
+lay on his bed--alone in the room. He was stabbed in two places--
+in the throat and in the heart. The weapon was left in the second
+wound. It was a knife of English manufacture, with a handle of
+buckhorn as good as new.
+
+I instantly gave the alarm. Witnesses can speak to what followed.
+It is monstrous to suppose that I am guilty of the murder. I admit
+that I am capable of committing follies: but I shrink from the bare
+idea of a crime. Besides, I had no motive for killing the man.
+The woman murdered him in my absence. The woman escaped by the
+west entrance while I was talking to my mistress. I have no more
+to say. I swear to you what I have here written is a true
+statement of all that happened on the morning of the first of
+March.
+
+Accept, sir, the assurance of my sentiments of profound gratitude
+and respect.
+
+JOSEPH RIGOBERT.
+
+
+LAST LINES--ADDED BY PERCY FAIRBANK
+
+
+Tried for the murder of Francis Raven, Joseph Rigobert was found
+Not Guilty; the papers of the assassinated man presented ample
+evidence of the deadly animosity felt toward him by his wife.
+
+The investigations pursued on the morning when the crime was
+committed showed that the murderess, after leaving the stable, had
+taken the footpath which led to the river. The river was dragged--
+without result. It remains doubtful to this day whether she died
+by drowning or not. The one thing certain is--that Alicia Warlock
+was never seen again.
+
+So--beginning in mystery, ending in mystery--the Dream Woman passes
+from your view. Ghost; demon; or living human creature--say for
+yourselves which she is. Or, knowing what unfathomed wonders are
+around you, what unfathomed wonders are IN you, let the wise words
+of the greatest of all poets be explanation enough:
+
+
+ "We are such stuff
+ As dreams are made of, and our little life
+ Is rounded with a sleep."
+
+
+
+Anonymous
+
+The Lost Duchess
+
+
+I
+
+
+"Has the duchess returned?"
+
+"No, your grace."
+
+Knowles came farther into the room. He had a letter on a salver.
+When the duke had taken it, Knowles still lingered. The duke
+glanced at him.
+
+"Is an answer required?"
+
+"No, your grace." Still Knowles lingered. "Something a little
+singular has happened. The carriage has returned without the
+duchess, and the men say that they thought her grace was in it."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I hardly understand myself, your grace. Perhaps you would like to
+see Barnes."
+
+Barnes was the coachman.
+
+"Send him up." When Knowles had gone, and he was alone, his grace
+showed signs of being slightly annoyed. He looked at his watch.
+"I told her she'd better be in by four. She says that she's not
+feeling well, and yet one would think that she was not aware of the
+fatigue entailed in having the prince come to dinner, and a mob of
+people to follow. I particularly wished her to lie down for a
+couple of hours."
+
+Knowles ushered in not only Barnes, the coachman, but Moysey, the
+footman, too. Both these persons seemed to be ill at ease. The
+duke glanced at them sharply. In his voice there was a suggestion
+of impatience.
+
+"What is the matter?"
+
+Barnes explained as best he could.
+
+"If you please, your grace, we waited for the duchess outside Cane
+and Wilson's, the drapers. The duchess came out, got into the
+carriage, and Moysey shut the door, and her grace said, 'Home!' and
+yet when we got home she wasn't there."
+
+"She wasn't where?"
+
+"Her grace wasn't in the carriage, your grace."
+
+"What on earth do you mean?"
+
+"Her grace did get into the carriage; you shut the door, didn't
+you?"
+
+Barnes turned to Moysey. Moysey brought his hand up to his brow in
+a sort of military salute--he had been a soldier in the regiment in
+which, once upon a time, the duke had been a subaltern.
+
+"She did. The duchess came out of the shop. She seemed rather in
+a hurry, I thought. She got into the carriage, and she said,
+'Home, Moysey!' I shut the door, and Barnes drove straight home.
+We never stopped anywhere, and we never noticed nothing happen on
+the way; and yet when we got home the carriage was empty."
+
+The duke started.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that the duchess got out of the carriage
+while you were driving full pelt through the streets without saying
+anything to you, and without you noticing it?"
+
+"The carriage was empty when we got home, your grace."
+
+"Was either of the doors open?"
+
+"No, your grace."
+
+"You fellows have been up to some infernal mischief. You have made
+a mess of it. You never picked up the duchess, and you're trying
+to palm this tale off on me to save yourselves."
+
+Barnes was moved to adjuration:
+
+"I'll take my Bible oath, your grace, that the duchess got into the
+carriage outside Cane and Wilson's."
+
+Moysey seconded his colleague.
+
+"I will swear to that, your grace. She got into that carriage, and
+I shut the door, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!'"
+
+The duke looked as if he did not know what to make of the story and
+its tellers.
+
+"What carriage did you have?"
+
+"Her grace's brougham, your grace."
+
+Knowles interposed:
+
+"The brougham was ordered because I understood that the duchess was
+not feeling very well, and there's rather a high wind, your grace."
+
+The duke snapped at him:
+
+"What has that to do with it? Are you suggesting that the duchess
+was more likely to jump out of a brougham while it was dashing
+through the streets than out of any other kind of vehicle?"
+
+The duke's glance fell on the letter which Knowles had brought him
+when he first had entered. He had placed it on his writing table.
+Now he took it up. It was, addressed:
+
+
+"To His Grace the Duke of Datchet.
+
+ Private!
+
+ VERY PRESSING! ! !"
+
+
+The name was written in a fine, clear, almost feminine hand. The
+words in the left-hand corner of the envelope were written in a
+different hand. They were large and bold; almost as though they
+had been painted with the end of the penholder instead of being
+written with the pen. The envelope itself was of an unusual size,
+and bulged out as though it contained something else besides a
+letter.
+
+The duke tore the envelope open. As he did so something fell out
+of it on to the writing table. It looked as though it was a lock
+of a woman's hair. As he glanced at it the duke seemed to be a
+trifle startled. The duke read the letter:
+
+
+"Your grace will be so good as to bring five hundred pounds in gold
+to the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade within an hour of
+the receipt of this. The Duchess of Datchet has been kidnaped. An
+imitation duchess got into the carriage, which was waiting outside
+Cane and Wilson's, and she alighted on the road. Unless your grace
+does as you are requested, the Duchess of Datchet's left-hand
+little finger will be at once cut off, and sent home in time to
+receive the prince to dinner. Other portions of her grace will
+follow. A lock of her grace's hair is inclosed with this as an
+earnest of our good intentions.
+
+"BEFORE 5:30 P.M. your grace is requested to be at the Piccadilly
+end of the Burlington Arcade with five hundred pounds in gold. You
+will there be accosted by an individual in a white top hat, and
+with a gardenia in his buttonhole. You will be entirely at liberty
+to give him into custody, or to have him followed by the police, in
+which case the duchess's left arm, cut off at the shoulder, will be
+sent home for dinner--not to mention other extremely possible
+contingencies. But you are ADVISED to give the individual in
+question the five hundred pounds in gold, because in that case the
+duchess herself will he home in time to receive the prince to
+dinner, and with one of the best stories with which to entertain
+your distinguished guests they ever heard.
+
+"Remember! NOT LATER THAN 5:30, unless you wish to receive her
+grace's little finger."
+
+
+The duke stared at this amazing epistle when he had read it as
+though he found it difficult to believe the evidence of his eyes.
+He was not a demonstrative person, as a rule, but this little
+communication astonished even him. He read it again. Then his
+hands dropped to his sides, and he swore.
+
+He took up the lock of hair which had fallen out of the envelope.
+Was it possible that it could be his wife's, the duchess? Was it
+possible that a Duchess of Datchet could be kidnaped, in broad
+daylight, in the heart of London, and be sent home, as it were, in
+pieces? Had sacrilegious hands already been playing pranks with
+that great lady's hair? Certainly, THAT hair was so like HER hair
+that the mere resemblance made his grace's blood run cold. He
+turned on Messrs. Barnes and Moysey as though he would have liked
+to rend them.
+
+"You scoundrels!"
+
+He moved forward as though the intention had entered his ducal
+heart to knock his servants down. But, if that were so, he did not
+act quite up to his intention. Instead, he stretched out his arm,
+pointing at them as if he were an accusing spirit:
+
+"Will you swear that it was the duchess who got into the carriage
+outside Cane and Wilson's?"
+
+Barnes began to stammer:
+
+"I'll swear, your grace, that I--I thought--"
+
+The duke stormed an interruption:
+
+"I don't ask what you thought. I ask you, will you swear it was?"
+
+The duke's anger was more than Barnes could face. He was silent.
+Moysey showed a larger courage.
+
+"I could have sworn that it was at the time, your grace. But now
+it seems to me that it's a rummy go."
+
+"A rummy go!" The peculiarity of the phrase did not seem to strike
+the duke just then--at least, he echoed it as if it didn't. "You
+call it a rummy go! Do you know that I am told in this letter that
+the woman who entered the carriage was not the duchess? What you
+were thinking about, or what case you will be able to make out for
+yourselves, you know better than I; but I can tell you this--that
+in an hour you will leave my service, and you may esteem yourselves
+fortunate if, to-night, you are not both of you sleeping in jail."
+
+One might almost have suspected that the words were spoken in
+irony. But before they could answer, another servant entered, who
+also brought a letter for the duke. When his grace's glance fell
+on it he uttered an exclamation. The writing on the envelope was
+the same writing that had been on the envelope which had contained
+the very singular communication--like it in all respects, down to
+the broomstick-end thickness of the "Private!" and "Very
+pressing!!!" in the corner.
+
+"Who brought this?" stormed the duke.
+
+The servant appeared to be a little startled by the violence of his
+grace's manner.
+
+"A lady--or, at least, your grace, she seemed to be a lady."
+
+"Where is she?"
+
+"She came in a hansom, your grace. She gave me that letter, and
+said, 'Give that to the Duke of Datchet at once--without a moment's
+delay!' Then she got into the hansom again, and drove away."
+
+"Why didn't you stop her?"
+
+"Your grace!"
+
+The man seemed surprised, as though the idea of stopping chance
+visitors to the ducal mansion vi et armis had not, until that
+moment, entered into his philosophy. The duke continued to regard
+the man as if he could say a good deal, if he chose. Then he
+pointed to the door. His lips said nothing, but his gesture much.
+The servant vanished.
+
+"Another hoax!" the duke said grimly, as he tore the envelope open.
+
+This time the envelope contained a sheet of paper, and in the sheet
+of paper another envelope. The duke unfolded the sheet of paper.
+On it some words were written. These:
+
+"The duchess appears so particularly anxious to drop you a line,
+that one really hasn't the heart to refuse her.
+
+"Her grace's communication--written amidst blinding tears!--you
+will find inclosed with this."
+
+"Knowles," said the duke, in a voice which actually trembled,
+"Knowles, hoax or no hoax, I will be even with the gentleman who
+wrote that."
+
+Handing the sheet of paper to Mr. Knowles, his grace turned his
+attention to the envelope which had been inclosed. It was a small,
+square envelope, of the finest quality, and it reeked with perfume.
+The duke's countenance assumed an added frown--he had no fondness
+for envelopes which were scented. In the center of the envelope
+were the words, "To the Duke of Datchet," written in the big, bold,
+sprawling hand which he knew so well.
+
+"Mabel's writing," he said, half to himself, as, with shaking
+fingers, he tore the envelope open.
+
+The sheet of paper which he took out was almost as stiff as
+cardboard. It, too, emitted what his grace deemed the nauseous
+odors of the perfumer's shop. On it was written this letter:
+
+
+"MY DEAR HEREWARD--For Heaven's sake do what these people require!
+I don't know what has happened or where I am, but I am nearly
+distracted! They have already cut off some of my hair, and they
+tell me that, if you don't let them have five hundred pounds in
+gold by half-past five, they will cut off my little finger too. I
+would sooner die than lose my little finger--and--I don't know what
+else besides.
+
+"By the token which I send you, and which has never, until now,
+been off my breast, I conjure you to help me.
+
+"Hereward--HELP ME!"
+
+
+When he read that letter the duke turned white--very white, as
+white as the paper on which it was written. He passed the epistle
+on to Knowles.
+
+"I suppose that also is a hoax?"
+
+Mr. Knowles was silent. He still yielded to his constitutional
+disrelish to commit himself. At last he asked:
+
+"What is it that your grace proposes to do?"
+
+The duke spoke with a bitterness which almost suggested a personal
+animosity toward the inoffensive Mr. Knowles.
+
+"I propose, with your permission, to release the duchess from the
+custody of my estimable correspondent. I propose--always with your
+permission--to comply with his modest request, and to take him his
+five hundred pounds in gold." He paused, then continued in a tone
+which, coming from him, meant volumes: "Afterwards, I propose to
+cry quits with the concocter of this pretty little hoax, even if it
+costs me every penny I possess. He shall pay more for that five
+hundred pounds than he supposes."
+
+
+II
+
+
+The Duke of Datchet, coming out of the bank, lingered for a moment
+on the steps. In one hand he carried a canvas bag which seemed
+well weighted. On his countenance there was an expression which to
+a casual observer might have suggested that his grace was not
+completely at his ease. That casual observer happened to come
+strolling by. It took the form of Ivor Dacre.
+
+Mr. Dacre looked the Duke of Datchet up and down in that languid
+way he has. He perceived the canvas bag. Then he remarked,
+possibly intending to be facetious:
+
+"Been robbing the bank? Shall I call a cart?"
+
+Nobody minds what Ivor Dacre says. Besides, he is the duke's own
+cousin. Perhaps a little removed; still, there it is. So the duke
+smiled a sickly smile, as if Mr. Dacre's delicate wit had given him
+a passing touch of indigestion.
+
+Mr. Dacre noticed that the duke looked sallow, so he gave his
+pretty sense of humor another airing.
+
+"Kitchen boiler burst? When I saw the duchess just now I wondered
+if it had."
+
+His grace distinctly started. He almost dropped the canvas bag.
+
+"You saw the duchess just now, Ivor! When?"
+
+The duke was evidently moved. Mr. Dacre was stirred to languid
+curiosity. "I can't say I clocked it. Perhaps half an hour ago;
+perhaps a little more."
+
+"Half an hour ago! Are you sure? Where did you see her?"
+
+Mr. Dacre wondered. The Duchess of Datchet could scarcely have
+been eloping in broad daylight. Moreover, she had not yet been
+married a year. Everyone knew that she and the duke were still as
+fond of each other as if they were not man and wife. So, although
+the duke, for some cause or other, was evidently in an odd state of
+agitation, Mr. Dacre saw no reason why he should not make a clean
+breast of all he knew.
+
+"She was going like blazes in a hansom cab."
+
+"In a hansom cab? Where?"
+
+"Down Waterloo Place."
+
+"Was she alone?"
+
+Mr. Dacre reflected. He glanced at the duke out of the corners of
+his eyes. His languid utterance became a positive drawl.
+
+"I rather fancy that she wasn't."
+
+"Who was with her?"
+
+"My dear fellow, if you were to offer me the bank I couldn't tell
+you."
+
+"Was it a man?"
+
+Mr. Dacre's drawl became still more pronounced.
+
+"I rather fancy that it was."
+
+Mr. Dacre expected something. The duke was so excited. But he by
+no means expected what actually came.
+
+"Ivor, she's been kidnaped!"
+
+Mr. Dacre did what he had never been known to do before within the
+memory of man--he dropped his eyeglass.
+
+"Datchet!"
+
+"She has! Some scoundrel has decoyed her away, and trapped her.
+He's already sent me a lock of her hair, and he tells me that if I
+don't let him have five hundred pounds in gold by half-past five
+he'll let me have her little finger."
+
+Mr. Dacre did not know what to make of his grace at all. He was a
+sober man--it COULDN'T be that! Mr. Dacre felt really concerned.
+
+"I'll call a cab, old man, and you'd better let me see you home."
+
+Mr. Dacre half raised his stick to hail a passing hansom. The duke
+caught him by the arm.
+
+"You ass! What do you mean? I am telling you the simple truth.
+My wife's been kidnaped."
+
+Mr. Dacre's countenance was a thing to be seen--and remembered.
+
+"Oh! I hadn't heard that there was much of that sort of thing about
+just now. They talk of poodles being kidnaped, but as for
+duchesses-- You'd really better let me call that cab."
+
+"Ivor, do you want me to kick you? Don't you see that to me it's a
+question of life and death? I've been in there to get the money."
+His grace motioned toward the bank. "I'm going to take it to the
+scoundrel who has my darling at his mercy. Let me but have her
+hand in mine again, and he shall continue to pay for every
+sovereign with tears of blood until he dies."
+
+"Look here, Datchet, I don't know if you're having a joke with me,
+or if you're not well--"
+
+The duke stepped impatiently into the roadway.
+
+"Ivor, you're a fool! Can't you tell jest from earnest, health
+from disease? I'm off! Are you coming with me? It would be as
+well that I should have a witness."
+
+"Where are you off to?"
+
+"To the other end of the Arcade."
+
+"Who is the gentleman you expect to have the pleasure of meeting
+there?"
+
+"How should I know?" The duke took a letter from his pocket--it
+was the letter which had just arrived. "The fellow is to wear a
+white top hat, and a gardenia in his buttonhole."
+
+"What is it you have there?"
+
+"It's the letter which brought the news--look for yourself and see;
+but, for God's sake, make haste!" His grace glanced at his watch.
+"It's already twenty after five."
+
+"And do you mean to say that on the strength of a letter such as
+this you are going to hand over five hundred pounds to--"
+
+The duke cut Mr. Dacre short.
+
+"What are five hundred pounds to me? Besides, you don't know all.
+There is another letter. And I have heard from Mabel. But I will
+tell you all about it later. If you are coming, come!"
+
+Folding up the letter, Mr. Dacre returned it to the duke.
+
+"As you say, what are five hundred pounds to you? It's as well
+they are not as much to you as they are to me, or I'm afraid--"
+
+"Hang it, Ivor, do prose afterwards!"
+
+The duke hurried across the road. Mr. Dacre hastened after him.
+As they entered the Arcade they passed a constable. Mr. Dacre
+touched his companion's arm.
+
+"Don't you think we'd better ask our friend in blue to walk behind
+us? His neighborhood might be handy."
+
+"Nonsense!" The duke stopped short. "Ivor, this is my affair, not
+yours. If you are not content to play the part of silent witness,
+be so good as to leave me."
+
+"My dear Datchet, I'm entirely at your service. I can be every
+whit as insane as you, I do assure you."
+
+Side by side they moved rapidly down the Burlington Arcade. The
+duke was obviously in a state of the extremest nervous tension.
+Mr. Dacre was equally obviously in a state of the most supreme
+enjoyment. People stared as they rushed past. The duke saw
+nothing. Mr. Dacre saw everything, and smiled.
+
+When they reached the Piccadilly end of the Arcade the duke pulled
+up. He looked about him. Mr. Dacre also looked about him.
+
+"I see nothing of your white-hatted and gardenia-buttonholed
+friend," said Ivor.
+
+The duke referred to his watch.
+
+"It's not yet half-past five. I'm up to time."
+
+Mr. Dacre held his stick in front of him and leaned on it. He
+indulged himself with a beatific smile.
+
+"It strikes me, my dear Datchet, that you've been the victim of one
+of the finest things in hoaxes--"
+
+"I hope I haven't kept you waiting."
+
+The voice which interrupted Mr. Dacre came from the rear. While
+they were looking in front of them some one approached them from
+behind, apparently coming out of the shop which was at their backs.
+
+The speaker looked a gentleman. He sounded like one, too.
+Costume, appearance, manner, were beyond reproach--even beyond the
+criticism of two such keen critics as were these. The glorious
+attire of a London dandy was surmounted with a beautiful white top
+hat. In his buttonhole was a magnificent gardenia.
+
+In age the stranger was scarcely more than a boy, and a sunny-
+faced, handsome boy at that. His cheeks were hairless, his eyes
+were blue. His smile was not only innocent, it was bland. Never
+was there a more conspicuous illustration of that repose which
+stamps the caste of Vere de Vere.
+
+The duke looked at him and glowered. Mr. Dacre looked at him and
+smiled.
+
+"Who are you?" asked the duke.
+
+"Ah--that is the question!" The newcomer's refined and musical
+voice breathed the very soul of affability. "I am an individual
+who is so unfortunate as to be in want of five hundred pounds."
+
+"Are you the scoundrel who sent me that infamous letter?"
+
+The charming stranger never turned a hair.
+
+"I am the scoundrel mentioned in that infamous letter who wants to
+accost you at the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade before
+half-past five--as witness my white hat and my gardenia."
+
+"Where's my wife?"
+
+The stranger gently swung his stick in front of him with his two
+hands. He regarded the duke as a merry-hearted son might regard
+his father. The thing was beautiful!
+
+"Her grace will be home almost as soon as you are--when you have
+given me the money which I perceive you have all ready for me in
+that scarcely elegant-looking canvas bag." He shrugged his
+shoulders quite gracefully. "Unfortunately, in these matters one
+has no choice--one is forced to ask for gold."
+
+"And suppose, instead of giving you what is in this canvas bag, I
+take you by the throat and choke the life right out of you?"
+
+"Or suppose," amended Mr. Dacre, "that you do better, and commend
+this gentleman to the tender mercies of the first policeman we
+encounter."
+
+The stranger turned to Mr. Dacre. He condescended to become
+conscious of his presence.
+
+"Is this gentleman your grace's friend? Ah--Mr. Dacre, I perceive!
+I have the honor of knowing Mr. Dacre, though, possibly, I am
+unknown to him."
+
+"You were--until this moment."
+
+With an airy little laugh the stranger returned to the duke. He
+brushed an invisible speck of dust off the sleeve of his coat.
+
+"As has been intimated in that infamous letter, his grace is at
+perfect liberty to give me into custody--why not? Only"--he said
+it with his boyish smile--"if a particular communication is not
+received from me in certain quarters within a certain time the
+Duchess of Datchet's beautiful white arm will be hacked off at the
+shoulder."
+
+"You hound!"
+
+The duke would have taken the stranger by the throat, and have done
+his best to choke the life right out of him then and there, if Mr.
+Dacre had not intervened.
+
+"Steady, old man!" Mr. Dacre turned to the stranger. "You appear
+to be a pretty sort of a scoundrel."
+
+The stranger gave his shoulders that almost imperceptible shrug.
+
+"Oh, my dear Dacre, I am in want of money! I believe that you
+sometimes are in want of money, too."
+
+Everybody knows that nobody knows where Ivor Dacre gets his money
+from, so the allusion must have tickled him immensely.
+
+"You're a cool hand," he said.
+
+"Some men are born that way."
+
+"So I should imagine. Men like you must be born, not made."
+
+"Precisely--as you say!" The stranger turned, with his graceful
+smile, to the duke: "But are we not wasting precious time? I can
+assure your grace that, in this particular matter, moments are of
+value."
+
+Mr. Dacre interposed before the duke could answer.
+
+"If you take my strongly urged advice, Datchet, you will summon
+this constable who is now coming down the Arcade, and hand this
+gentleman over to his keeping. I do not think that you need fear
+that the duchess will lose her arm, or even her little finger.
+Scoundrels of this one's kidney are most amenable to reason when
+they have handcuffs on their wrists."
+
+The duke plainly hesitated. He would--and he would not. The
+stranger, as he eyed him, seemed much amused.
+
+"My dear duke, by all means act on Mr. Dacre's valuable suggestion.
+As I said before, why not? It would at least be interesting to see
+if the duchess does or does not lose her arm--almost as interesting
+to you as to Mr. Dacre. Those blackmailing, kidnaping scoundrels
+do use such empty menaces. Besides, you would have the pleasure of
+seeing me locked up. My imprisonment for life would recompense you
+even for the loss of her grace's arm. And five hundred pounds is
+such a sum to have to pay--merely for a wife! Why not, therefore,
+act on Mr. Dacre's suggestion? Here comes the constable." The
+constable referred to was advancing toward them--he was not a dozen
+yards away. "Let me beckon to him--I will with pleasure." He took
+out his watch--a gold chronograph repeater. "There are scarcely
+ten minutes left during which it will be possible for me to send
+the communication which I spoke of, so that it may arrive in time.
+As it will then be too late, and the instruments are already
+prepared for the little operation which her grace is eagerly
+anticipating, it would, perhaps, be as well, after all, that you
+should give me into charge. You would have saved your five hundred
+pounds, and you would, at any rate, have something in exchange for
+her grace's mutilated limb. Ah, here is the constable! Officer!"
+
+The stranger spoke with such a pleasant little air of easy
+geniality that it was impossible to tell if he were in jest or in
+earnest. This fact impressed the duke much more than if he had
+gone in for a liberal indulgence of the--under the circumstances--
+orthodox melodramatic scowling. And, indeed, in the face of his
+own common sense, it impressed Mr. Ivor Dacre too.
+
+This well-bred, well-groomed youth was just the being to realize--
+aux bouts des ongles--a modern type of the devil, the type which
+depicts him as a perfect gentleman, who keeps smiling all the time.
+
+The constable whom this audacious rogue had signaled approached the
+little group. He addressed the stranger:
+
+"Do you want me, sir?"
+
+"No, I do not want you. I think it is the Duke of Datchet."
+
+The constable, who knew the duke very well by sight, saluted him as
+he turned to receive instructions.
+
+The duke looked white, even savage. There was not a pleasant look
+in his eyes and about his lips. He appeared to be endeavoring to
+put a great restraint upon himself. There was a momentary silence.
+Mr. Dacre made a movement as if to interpose. The duke caught him
+by the arm.
+
+He spoke: "No, constable, I do not want you. This person is
+mistaken."
+
+The constable looked as if he could not quite make out how such a
+mistake could have arisen, hesitated, then, with another salute, he
+moved away.
+
+The stranger was still holding his watch in his hand.
+
+"Only eight minutes," he said.
+
+The duke seemed to experience some difficulty in giving utterance
+to what he had to say.
+
+"If I give you this five hundred pounds, you--you--"
+
+As the duke paused, as if at a loss for language which was strong
+enough to convey his meaning, the stranger laughed.
+
+"Let us take the adjectives for granted. Besides, it is only boys
+who call each other names--men do things. If you give me the five
+hundred sovereigns, which you have in that bag, at once--in five
+minutes it will be too late--I will promise--I will not swear; if
+you do not credit my simple promise, you will not believe my solemn
+affirmation--I will promise that, possibly within an hour,
+certainly within an hour and a half, the Duchess of Datchet shall
+return to you absolutely uninjured--except, of course, as you are
+already aware, with regard to a few of the hairs of her head. I
+will promise this on the understanding that you do not yourself
+attempt to see where I go, and that you will allow no one else to
+do so." This with a glance at Ivor Dacre. "I shall know at once
+if I am followed. If you entertain such intentions, you had
+better, on all accounts, remain in possession of your five hundred
+pounds."
+
+The duke eyed him very grimly.
+
+"I entertain no such intentions--until the duchess returns."
+
+Again the stranger indulged in that musical laugh of his.
+
+"Ah, until the duchess returns! Of course, then the bargain's at
+an end. When you are once more in the enjoyment of her grace's
+society, you will be at liberty to set all the dogs in Europe at my
+heels. I assure you I fully expect that you will do so--why not?"
+The duke raised the canvas bag. "My dear duke, ten thousand
+thanks! You shall see her grace at Datchet House, 'pon my honor,
+probably within the hour."
+
+"Well," commented Ivor Dacre, when the stranger had vanished, with
+the bag, into Piccadilly, and as the duke and himself moved toward
+Burlington Gardens, "if a gentleman is to be robbed, it is as well
+that he should have another gentleman rob him."
+
+
+III
+
+
+Mr. Dacre eyed his companion covertly as they progressed. His
+Grace of Datchet appeared to have some fresh cause for uneasiness.
+All at once he gave it utterance, in a tone of voice which was
+extremely somber:
+
+"Ivor, do you think that scoundrel will dare to play me false?"
+
+"I think," murmured Mr. Dacre, "that he has dared to play you
+pretty false already."
+
+"I don't mean that. But I mean how am I to know, now that he has
+his money, that he will still not keep Mabel in his clutches?"
+
+There came an echo from Mr. Dacre.
+
+"Just so--how are you to know?"
+
+"I believe that something of this sort has been done in the
+States."
+
+"I thought that there they were content to kidnap them after they
+were dead. I was not aware that they had, as yet, got quite so far
+as the living."
+
+"I believe that I have heard of something just like this."
+
+"Possibly; they are giants over there."
+
+"And in that case the scoundrels, when their demands were met,
+refused to keep to the letter of their bargain and asked for more."
+
+The duke stood still. He clinched his fists, and swore:
+
+"Ivor, if that ---- villain doesn't keep his word, and Mabel isn't
+home within the hour, by ---- I shall go mad!"
+
+"My dear Datchet"--Mr. Dacre loved strong language as little as he
+loved a scene--"let us trust to time and, a little, to your white-
+hatted and gardenia-buttonholed friend's word of honor. You should
+have thought of possible eventualities before you showed your
+confidence--really. Suppose, instead of going mad, we first of all
+go home?"
+
+A hansom stood waiting for a fare at the end of the Arcade. Mr.
+Dacre had handed the duke into it before his grace had quite
+realized that the vehicle was there.
+
+"Tell the fellow to drive faster." That was what the duke said
+when the cab had started.
+
+"My dear Datchet, the man's already driving his geerage off its
+legs. If a bobby catches sight of him he'll take his number."
+
+A moment later, a murmur from the duke:
+
+"I don't know if you're aware that the prince is coming to dinner?"
+
+"I am perfectly aware of it."
+
+"You take it uncommonly cool. How easy it is to bear our brother's
+burdens! Ivor, if Mabel doesn't turn up I shall feel like murder."
+
+"I sympathize with you, Datchet, with all my heart, though, I may
+observe, parenthetically, that I very far from realize the
+situation even yet. Take my advice. If the duchess does not show
+quite as soon as we both of us desire, don't make a scene; just let
+me see what I can do."
+
+Judging from the expression of his countenance, the duke was
+conscious of no overwhelming desire to witness an exhibition of Mr.
+Dacre's prowess.
+
+When the cab reached Datchet House his grace dashed up the steps
+three at a time. The door flew open.
+
+"Has the duchess returned?"
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+A voice floated downward from above. Some one came running down
+the stairs. It was her Grace of Datchet.
+
+"Mabel!"
+
+She actually rushed into the duke's extended arms. And he kissed
+her, and she kissed him--before the servants.
+
+"So you're not quite dead?" she cried.
+
+"I am almost," he said.
+
+She drew herself a little away from him.
+
+"Hereward, were you seriously hurt?"
+
+"Do you suppose that I could have been otherwise than seriously
+hurt?"
+
+"My darling! Was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duke stared.
+
+"A Pickford's van? I don't understand. But come in here. Come
+along, Ivor. Mabel, you don't see Ivor."
+
+"How do you do, Mr. Dacre?"
+
+Then the trio withdrew into a little anteroom; it was really time.
+Even then the pair conducted themselves as if Mr. Dacre had been
+nothing and no one. The duke took the lady's two hands in his. He
+eyed her fondly.
+
+"So you are uninjured, with the exception of that lock of hair.
+Where did the villain take it from?"
+
+The lady looked a little puzzled.
+
+"What lock of hair?"
+
+From an envelope which he took from his pocket the duke produced a
+shining tress. It was the lock of hair which had arrived in the
+first communication. "I will have it framed."
+
+"You will have what framed?" The duchess glanced at what the duke
+was so tenderly caressing, almost, as it seemed, a little
+dubiously. "Whatever is it you have there?"
+
+"It is the lock of hair which that scoundrel sent me." Something
+in the lady's face caused him to ask a question:
+
+"Didn't he tell you he had sent it to me?"
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+"Did the brute tell you that he meant to cut off your little
+finger?"
+
+A very curious look came into the lady's face. She glanced at the
+duke as if she, all at once, was half afraid of him. She cast at
+Mr. Dacre what really seemed to be a look of inquiry. Her voice
+was tremulously anxious.
+
+"Hereward, did--did the accident affect you mentally?"
+
+"How could it not have affected me mentally? Do you think that my
+mental organization is of steel?"
+
+"But you look so well."
+
+"Of course I look well, now that I have you back again. Tell me,
+darling, did that hound actually threaten you with cutting off your
+arm? If he did, I shall feel half inclined to kill him yet."
+
+The duchess seemed positively to shrink from her better half's near
+neighborhood.
+
+"Hereward, was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duke seemed puzzled. Well he might be.
+
+"Was what a Pickford's van?"
+
+The lady turned to Mr. Dacre. In her voice there was a ring of
+anguish.
+
+"Mr. Dacre, tell me, was it a Pickford's van?" Ivor could only
+imitate his relative's repetition of her inquiry.
+
+"I don't quite catch you--was what a Pickford's van?"
+
+The duchess clasped her hands in front of her.
+
+"What is it you are keeping from me? What is it you are trying to
+hide? I implore you to tell me the worst, whatever it may be! Do
+not keep me any longer in suspense; you do not know what I already
+have endured. Mr. Dacre, is my husband mad?"
+
+One need scarcely observe that the lady's amazing appeal to Mr.
+Dacre as to her husband's sanity was received with something like
+surprise. As the duke continued to stare at her, a dreadful fear
+began to loom in his brain.
+
+"My darling, your brain is unhinged!"
+
+He advanced to take her two hands again in his; but, to his
+unmistakable distress, she shrank away from him.
+
+"Hereward--don't touch me. How is it that I missed you? Why did
+you not wait until I came?"
+
+"Wait until you came?"
+
+The duke's bewilderment increased.
+
+"Surely, if your injuries turned out, after all, to be slight, that
+was all the more reason why you should have waited, after sending
+for me like that."
+
+"I sent for you--I?" The duke's tone was grave. "My darling,
+perhaps you had better come upstairs."
+
+"Not until we have had an explanation. You must have known that I
+should come. Why did you not wait for me after you had sent me
+that?"
+
+The duchess held out something to the duke. He took it. It was a
+card--his own visiting card. Something was written on the back of
+it. He read aloud what was written.
+
+"'Mabel, come to me at once with the bearer. They tell me that
+they cannot take me home.' It looks like my own writing."
+
+"Looks like it! It IS your writing."
+
+"It looks like it--and written with a shaky pen."
+
+"My dear child, one's hand would shake at such a moment as that."
+
+"Mabel, where did you get this?"
+
+"It was brought to me in Cane and Wilson's."
+
+"Who brought it?"
+
+"Who brought it? Why, the man you sent."
+
+"The man I sent!" A light burst upon the duke's brain. He fell
+back a pace. "It's the decoy!"
+
+Her grace echoed the words:
+
+"The decoy?"
+
+"The scoundrel! To set a trap with such a bait! My poor innocent
+darling, did you think it came from me? Tell me, Mabel, where did
+he cut off your hair?"
+
+"Cut off my hair?"
+
+Her grace put her hand to her head as if to make sure that her hair
+was there.
+
+"Where did he take you to?"
+
+"He took me to Draper's Buildings."
+
+"Draper's Buildings?"
+
+"I have never been in the City before, but he told me it was
+Draper's Buildings. Isn't that near the Stock Exchange?"
+
+"Near the Stock Exchange?"
+
+It seemed rather a curious place to which to take a kidnaped
+victim. The man's audacity!
+
+"He told me that you were coming out of the Stock Exchange when a
+van knocked you over. He said that he thought it was a Pickford's
+van--was it a Pickford's van?"
+
+"No, it was not a Pickford's van. Mabel, were you in Draper's
+Buildings when you wrote that letter?"
+
+"Wrote what letter?"
+
+"Have you forgotten it already? I do not believe that there is a
+word in it which will not be branded on my brain until I die."
+
+"Hereward! What do you mean?"
+
+"Surely you cannot have written me such a letter as that, and then
+have forgotten it already?"
+
+He handed her the letter which had arrived in the second
+communication. She glanced at it, askance. Then she took it with
+a little gasp.
+
+"Hereward, if you don't mind, I think I'll take a chair." She took
+a chair. "Whatever--whatever's this?" As she read the letter the
+varying expressions which passed across her face were, in
+themselves, a study in psychology. "Is it possible that you can
+imagine that, under any conceivable circumstances, I could have
+written such a letter as this?"
+
+"Mabel!"
+
+She rose to her feet with emphasis.
+
+"Hereward, don't say that you thought this came from me!"
+
+"Not from you?" He remembered Knowles's diplomatic reception of
+the epistle on its first appearance. "I suppose that you will say
+next that this is not a lock of your hair?"
+
+"My dear child, what bee have you got in your bonnet? This a lock
+of my hair! Why, it's not in the least bit like my hair!"
+
+Which was certainly inaccurate. As far as color was concerned it
+was an almost perfect match. The duke turned to Mr. Dacre.
+
+"Ivor, I've had to go through a good deal this afternoon. If I
+have to go through much more, something will crack!" He touched
+his forehead. "I think it's my turn to take a chair." Not the one
+which the duchess had vacated, but one which faced it. He
+stretched out his legs in front of him; he thrust his hands into
+his trousers pockets; he said, in a tone which was not gloomy but
+absolutely grewsome:
+
+"Might I ask, Mabel, if you have been kidnaped?"
+
+"Kidnaped?"
+
+"The word I used was 'kidnaped.' But I will spell it if you like.
+Or I will get a dictionary, that you may see its meaning."
+
+The duchess looked as if she was beginning to be not quite sure if
+she was awake or sleeping. She turned to Ivor.
+
+"Mr. Dacre, has the accident affected Hereward's brain?"
+
+The duke took the words out of his cousin's mouth.
+
+"On that point, my dear, let me ease your mind. I don't know if
+you are under the impression that I should be the same shape after
+a Pickford's van had run over me as I was before; but, in any case,
+I have not been run over by a Pickford's van. So far as I am
+concerned there has been no accident. Dismiss that delusion from
+your mind."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"You appear surprised. One might even think that you were sorry.
+But may I now ask what you did when you arrived at Draper's
+Buildings?"
+
+"Did! I looked for you!"
+
+"Indeed! And when you had looked in vain, what was the next item
+in your programme?"
+
+The lady shrank still farther from him.
+
+"Hereward, have you been having a jest at my expense? Can you have
+been so cruel?" Tears stood in her eyes.
+
+Rising, the duke laid his hand upon her arm.
+
+"Mabel, tell me--what did you do when you had looked for me in
+vain?"
+
+"I looked for you upstairs and downstairs and everywhere. It was
+quite a large place, it took me ever such a time. I thought that I
+should go distracted. Nobody seemed to know anything about you, or
+even that there had been an accident at all--it was all offices. I
+couldn't make it out in the least, and the people didn't seem to be
+able to make me out either. So when I couldn't find you anywhere I
+came straight home again."
+
+The duke was silent for a moment. Then with funereal gravity he
+turned to Mr. Dacre. He put to him this question:
+
+"Ivor, what are you laughing at?"
+
+Mr. Dacre drew his hand across his mouth with rather a suspicious
+gesture.
+
+"My dear fellow, only a smile!"
+
+The duchess looked from one to the other.
+
+"What have you two been doing? What is the joke?"
+
+With an air of preternatural solemnity the duke took two letters
+from the breast pocket of his coat.
+
+"Mabel, you have already seen your letter. You have already seen
+the lock of your hair. Just look at this--and that."
+
+He gave her the two very singular communications which had arrived
+in such a mysterious manner, and so quickly one after the other.
+She read them with wide-open eyes.
+
+"Hereward! Wherever did these come from?"
+
+The duke was standing with his legs apart, and his hands in his
+trousers pockets. "I would give--I would give another five hundred
+pounds to know. Shall I tell you, madam, what I have been doing?
+I have been presenting five hundred golden sovereigns to a perfect
+stranger, with a top hat, and a gardenia in his buttonhole."
+
+"Whatever for?"
+
+"If you have perused those documents which you have in your hand,
+you will have some faint idea. Ivor, when it's your funeral, I'LL
+smile. Mabel, Duchess of Datchet, it is beginning to dawn upon the
+vacuum which represents my brain that I've been the victim of one
+of the prettiest things in practical jokes that ever yet was
+planned. When that fellow brought you that card at Cane and
+Wilson's--which, I need scarcely tell you, never came from me--some
+one walked out of the front entrance who was so exactly like you
+that both Barnes and Moysey took her for you. Moysey showed her
+into the carriage, and Barnes drove her home. But when the
+carriage reached home it was empty. Your double had got out upon
+the road."
+
+The duchess uttered a sound which was half gasp, half sigh.
+
+"Hereward!"
+
+"Barnes and Moysey, with beautiful and childlike innocence, when
+they found that they had brought the thing home empty, came
+straightway and told me that YOU had jumped out of the brougham
+while it had been driving full pelt through the streets. While I
+was digesting that piece of information there came the first
+epistle, with the lock of your hair. Before I had time to digest
+that there came the second epistle, with yours inside."
+
+"It seems incredible!"
+
+"It sounds incredible; but unfathomable is the folly of man,
+especially of a man who loves his wife." The duke crossed to Mr.
+Dacre. "I don't want, Ivor, to suggest anything in the way of
+bribery and corruption, but if you could keep this matter to
+yourself, and not mention it to your friends, our white-hatted and
+gardenia-buttonholed acquaintance is welcome to his five hundred
+pounds, and--Mabel, what on earth are you laughing at?"
+
+The duchess appeared, all at once, to be seized with
+inextinguishable laughter.
+
+"Hereward," she cried, "just think how that man must be laughing at
+you!"
+
+And the Duke of Datchet thought of it.
+
+
+
+The Minor Canon
+
+
+It was Monday, and in the afternoon, as I was walking along the
+High Street of Marchbury, I was met by a distinguished-looking
+person whom I had observed at the services in the cathedral on the
+previous day. Now it chanced on that Sunday that I was singing the
+service. Properly speaking, it was not my turn; but, as my brother
+minor canons were either away from Marchbury or ill in bed, I was
+the only one left to perform the necessary duty. The
+distinguished-looking person was a tall, big man with a round fat
+face and small features. His eyes, his hair and mustache (his face
+was bare but for a small mustache) were quite black, and he had a
+very pleasant and genial expression. He wore a tall hat, set
+rather jauntily on his head, and he was dressed in black with a
+long frock coat buttoned across the chest and fitting him close to
+the body. As he came, with a half saunter, half swagger, along the
+street, I knew him again at once by his appearance; and, as he came
+nearer, I saw from his manner that he was intending to stop and
+speak to me, for he slightly raised his hat and in a soft,
+melodious voice with a colonial "twang" which was far from being
+disagreeable, and which, indeed, to my ear gave a certain
+additional interest to his remarks, he saluted me with "Good day,
+sir!"
+
+"Good day," I answered, with just a little reserve in my tone.
+
+"I hope, sir," he began, "you will excuse my stopping you in the
+street, but I wish to tell you how very much I enjoyed the music at
+your cathedral yesterday. I am an Australian, sir, and we have no
+such music in my country."
+
+"I suppose not," I said.
+
+"No, sir," he went on, "nothing nearly so fine. I am very fond of
+music, and as my business brought me in this direction, I thought I
+would stop at your city and take the opportunity of paying a visit
+to your grand cathedral. And I am delighted I came; so pleased,
+indeed, that I should like to leave some memorial of my visit
+behind me. I should like, sir, to do something for your choir."
+
+"I am sure it is very kind of you," I replied.
+
+"Yes, I should certainly be glad if you could suggest to me
+something I might do in this way. As regards money, I may say that
+I have plenty of it. I am the owner of a most valuable property.
+My business relations extend throughout the world, and if I am as
+fortunate in the projects of the future as I have been in the past,
+I shall probably one day achieve the proud position of being the
+richest man in the world."
+
+I did not like to undertake myself the responsibility of advising
+or suggesting, so I simply said:
+
+"I cannot venture to say, offhand, what would be the most
+acceptable way of showing your great kindness and generosity, but I
+should certainly recommend you to put yourself in communication
+with the dean."
+
+"Thank you, sir," said my Australian friend, "I will do so. And
+now, sir," he continued, "let me say how much I admire your voice.
+It is, without exception, the very finest and clearest voice I have
+ever heard."
+
+"Really," I answered, quite overcome with such unqualified praise,
+"really it is very good of you to say so."
+
+"Ah, but I feel it, my dear sir. I have been round the world, from
+Sydney to Frisco, across the continent of America" (he called it
+Amerrker) "to New York City, then on to England, and to-morrow I
+shall leave your city to continue my travels. But in all my
+experience I have never heard so grand a voice as your own."
+
+This and a great deal more he said in the same strain, which
+modesty forbids me to reproduce.
+
+Now I am not without some knowledge of the world outside the close
+of Marchbury Cathedral, and I could not listen to such a
+"flattering tale" without having my suspicions aroused. Who and
+what is this man? thought I. I looked at him narrowly. At first
+the thought flashed across me that he might be a "swell mobsman."
+But no, his face was too good for that; besides, no man with that
+huge frame, that personality so marked and so easily recognizable,
+could be a swindler; he could not escape detection a single hour.
+I dismissed the ungenerous thought. Perhaps he is rich, as he
+says. We do hear of munificent donations by benevolent
+millionaires now and then. What if this Australian, attracted by
+the glories of the old cathedral, should now appear as a deus ex
+machina to reendow the choir, or to found a musical professoriate
+in connection with the choir, appointing me the first occupant of
+the professorial chair?
+
+These thoughts flashed across my mind in the momentary pause of his
+fluent tongue.
+
+"As for yourself, sir," he began again, "I have something to
+propose which I trust may not prove unwelcome. But the public
+street is hardly a suitable place to discuss my proposal. May I
+call upon you this evening at your house in the close? I know
+which it is, for I happened to see you go into it yesterday after
+the morning service."
+
+"I shall be very pleased to see you," I replied. "We are going out
+to dinner this evening, but I shall be at home and disengaged till
+about seven."
+
+"Thank you very much. Then I shall do myself the pleasure of
+calling upon you about six o'clock. Till then, farewell!" A
+graceful wave of the hand, and my unknown friend had disappeared
+round the corner of the street.
+
+Now at last, I thought, something is going to happen in my
+uneventful life--something to break the monotony of existence. Of
+course, he must have inquired my name--he could get that from any
+of the cathedral vergers--and, as he said, he had observed
+whereabouts in the close I lived. What is he coming to see me for?
+I wondered. I spent the rest of the afternoon in making the
+wildest surmises. I was castle-building in Spain at a furious
+rate. At one time I imagined that this faithful son of the church--
+as he appeared to me--was going to build and endow a grand
+cathedral in Australia on condition that I should be appointed dean
+at a yearly stipend of, say, ten thousand pounds. Or perhaps, I
+said to myself, he will beg me to accept a sum of money--I never
+thought of it as less than a thousand pounds--as a slight
+recognition of and tribute to my remarkable vocal ability.
+
+I took a long, lonely walk into the country to correct these
+ridiculous fancies and to steady my mind, and when I reached home
+and had refreshed myself with a quiet cup of afternoon tea, I felt
+I was morally and physically prepared for my interview with the
+opulent stranger.
+
+Punctually as the cathedral clock struck six there was a ring at
+the visitor's bell. In a moment or two my unknown friend was shown
+into the drawing-room, which he entered with the easy air of a man
+of the world. I noticed he was carrying a small black bag.
+
+"How do you do again, Mr. Dale?" he said as though we were old
+acquaintances; "you see I have come sharp to my time."
+
+"Yes," I answered, "and I am pleased to see you; do sit down." He
+sank into my best armchair, and placed his bag on the floor beside
+him.
+
+"Since we met in the afternoon," he said, "I have written a letter
+to your dean, expressing the great pleasure I felt in listening to
+your choir, and at the same time I inclosed a five-pound note,
+which I begged him to divide among the choir boys and men, from
+Alexander Poulter, Esq., of Poulter's Pills. You have of course
+heard of the world-renowned Poulter's Pills. I am Poulter!"
+
+Poulter of Poulter's Pills! My heart sank within me! A five-pound
+note! My airy castles were tottering!
+
+"I also sent him a couple of hundred of my pamphlets, which I said
+I trusted he would be so kind as to distribute in the close."
+
+I was aghast!
+
+"And now, with regard to the special object of my call, Mr. Dale.
+If you will allow me to say so, you are not making the most of that
+grand voice of yours; you are hidden under an ecclesiastical bushel
+here--lost to the world. You are wasting your vocal strength and
+sweetness on the desert air, so to speak. Why, if I may hazard a
+guess, I don't suppose you make five hundred a year here, at the
+outside?
+
+I could say nothing.
+
+"Well, now, I can put you into the way of making at least three or
+four times as much as that. Listen! I am Alexander Poulter, of
+Poulter's Pills. I have a proposal to make to you. The scheme is
+bound to succeed, but I want your help. Accept my proposal and
+your fortune's made. Did you ever hear Moody and Sankey?" he asked
+abruptly.
+
+The man is an idiot, thought I; he is now fairly carried away with
+his particular mania. Will it last long? Shall I ring?
+
+"Novelty, my dear sir," he went on, "is the rule of the day; and
+there must be novelty in advertising, as in everything else, to
+catch the public interest. So I intend to go on a tour, lecturing
+on the merits of Poulter's Pills in all the principal halls of all
+the principal towns all over the world. But I have been delayed in
+carrying out my idea till I could associate myself with a gentleman
+such as yourself. Will you join me? I should be the Moody of the
+tour; you would be its Sankey. I would speak my patter, and you
+would intersperse my orations with melodious ballads bearing upon
+the virtues of Poulter's Pills. The ballads are all ready!"
+
+So saying, he opened that bag and drew forth from its recesses
+nothing more alarming than a thick roll of manuscript music.
+
+"The verses are my own," he said, with a little touch of pride;
+"and as for the music, I thought it better to make use of popular
+melodies, so as to enable an audience to join in the chorus. See,
+here is one of the ballads: 'Darling, I am better now.' It
+describes the woes of a fond lover, or rather his physical
+ailments, until he went through a course of Poulter. Here's
+another: 'I'm ninety-five! I'm ninety-five!' You catch the drift
+of that, of course--a healthy old age, secured by taking Poulter's
+Pills. Ah! what's this? 'Little sister's last request.' I fancy
+the idea of that is to beg the family never to be without Poulter's
+Pills. Here again: 'Then you'll remember me!' I'm afraid that
+title is not original; never mind, the song is. And here is--but
+there are many more, and I won't detain you with them now." He
+saw, perhaps, I was getting impatient. Thank Heaven, however, he
+was no escaped lunatic. I was safe!
+
+"Mr. Poulter," said I, "I took you this afternoon for a
+disinterested and philanthropic millionaire; you take me for--for--
+something different from what I am. We have both made mistakes.
+In a word, it is impossible for me to accept your offer!"
+
+"Is that final?" asked Poulter.
+
+"Certainly," said I.
+
+Poulter gathered his manuscripts together and replaced them in the
+bag, and got up to leave the room.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Dale," he said mournfully, as I opened the door
+of the room. "Good evening"--he kept on talking till he was fairly
+out of the house--"mark my words, you'll be sorry--very sorry--one
+day that you did not fall in with my scheme. Offers like mine
+don't come every day, and you will one day regret having refused
+it."
+
+With these words he left the house.
+
+I had little appetite for my dinner that evening.
+
+
+
+The Pipe
+
+
+"RANDOLPH CRESCENT, N. W.
+
+MY DEAR PUGH--I hope you will like the pipe which I send with this.
+It is rather a curious example of a certain school of Indian
+carving. And is a present from
+
+"Yours truly, JOSEPH TRESS."
+
+
+It was really very handsome of Tress--very handsome! The more
+especially as I was aware that to give presents was not exactly in
+Tress's line. The truth is that when I saw what manner of pipe it
+was I was amazed. It was contained in a sandalwood box, which was
+itself illustrated with some remarkable specimens of carving. I
+use the word "remarkable" advisedly, because, although the
+workmanship was undoubtedly, in its way, artistic, the result could
+not be described as beautiful. The carver had thought proper to
+ornament the box with some of the ugliest figures I remember to
+have seen. They appeared to me to be devils. Or perhaps they were
+intended to represent deities appertaining to some mythological
+system with which, thank goodness, I am unacquainted. The pipe
+itself was worthy of the case in which it was contained. It was of
+meerschaum, with an amber mouthpiece. It was rather too large for
+ordinary smoking. But then, of course, one doesn't smoke a pipe
+like that. There are pipes in my collection which I should as soon
+think of smoking as I should of eating. Ask a china maniac to let
+you have afternoon tea out of his Old Chelsea, and you will learn
+some home truths as to the durability of human friendships. The
+glory of the pipe, as Tress had suggested, lay in its carving. Not
+that I claim that it was beautiful, any more than I make such a
+claim for the carving on the box, but, as Tress said in his note,
+it was curious.
+
+The stem and the bowl were quite plain, but on the edge of the bowl
+was perched some kind of lizard. I told myself it was an octopus
+when I first saw it, but I have since had reason to believe that it
+was some almost unique member of the lizard tribe. The creature
+was represented as climbing over the edge of the bowl down toward
+the stem, and its legs, or feelers, or tentacula, or whatever the
+things are called, were, if I may use a vulgarism, sprawling about
+"all over the place." For instance, two or three of them were
+twined about the bowl, two or three of them were twisted round the
+stem, and one, a particularly horrible one, was uplifted in the
+air, so that if you put the pipe in your mouth the thing was
+pointing straight at your nose.
+
+Not the least agreeable feature about the creature was that it was
+hideously lifelike. It appeared to have been carved in amber, but
+some coloring matter must have been introduced, for inside the
+amber the creature was of a peculiarly ghastly green. The more I
+examined the pipe the more amazed I was at Tress's generosity. He
+and I are rival collectors. I am not going to say, in so many
+words, that his collection of pipes contains nothing but rubbish,
+because, as a matter of fact, he has two or three rather decent
+specimens. But to compare his collection to mine would be absurd.
+Tress is conscious of this, and he resents it. He resents it to
+such an extent that he has been known, at least on one occasion, to
+declare that one single pipe of his--I believe he alluded to the
+Brummagem relic preposterously attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh--
+was worth the whole of my collection put together. Although I have
+forgotten this, as I hope I always shall forgive remarks made when
+envious passions get the better of our nobler nature, even of a
+Joseph Tress, it is not to be supposed that I have forgotten it.
+He was, therefore, not at all the sort of person from whom I
+expected to receive a present. And such a present! I do not
+believe that he himself had a finer pipe in his collection. And to
+have given it to me! I had misjudged the man. I wondered where he
+had got it from. I had seen his pipes; I knew them off by heart--
+and some nice trumpery he has among them, too! but I had never seen
+THAT pipe before. The more I looked at it, the more my amazement
+grew. The beast perched upon the edge of the bowl was so lifelike.
+Its two bead-like eyes seemed to gleam at me with positively human
+intelligence. The pipe fascinated me to such an extent that I
+actually resolved to--smoke it!
+
+I filled it with Perique. Ordinarily I use Birdseye, but on those
+very rare occasions on which I use a specimen I smoke Perique. I
+lit up with quite a small sensation of excitement. As I did so I
+kept my eyes perforce fixed upon the beast. The beast pointed its
+upraised tentacle directly at me. As I inhaled the pungent tobacco
+that tentacle impressed me with a feeling of actual uncanniness.
+It was broad daylight, and I was smoking in front of the window,
+yet to such an extent was I affected that it seemed to me that the
+tentacle was not only vibrating, which, owing to the peculiarity of
+its position, was quite within the range of probability, but
+actually moving, elongating--stretching forward, that is, farther
+toward me, and toward the tip of my nose. So impressed was I by
+this idea that I took the pipe out of my mouth and minutely
+examined the beast. Really, the delusion was excusable. So
+cunningly had the artist wrought that he succeeded in producing a
+creature which, such was its uncanniness, I could only hope had no
+original in nature.
+
+Replacing the pipe between my lips I took several whiffs. Never
+had smoking had such an effect on me before. Either the pipe, or
+the creature on it, exercised some singular fascination. I seemed,
+without an instant's warning, to be passing into some land of
+dreams. I saw the beast, which was perched upon the bowl, writhe
+and twist. I saw it lift itself bodily from the meerschaum.
+
+
+II
+
+
+"Feeling better now?"
+
+I looked up. Joseph Tress was speaking.
+
+"What's the matter? Have I been ill?"
+
+"You appear to have been in some kind of swoon." Tress's tone was
+peculiar, even a little dry.
+
+"Swoon! I never was guilty of such a thing in my life."
+
+"Nor was I, until I smoked that pipe."
+
+I sat up. The act of sitting up made me conscious of the fact that
+I had been lying down. Conscious, too, that I was feeling more
+than a little dazed. It seemed as though I was waking out of some
+strange, lethargic sleep--a kind of feeling which I have read of
+and heard about, but never before experienced.
+
+"Where am I?"
+
+"You're on the couch in your own room. You WERE on the floor; but
+I thought it would be better to pick you up and place you on the
+couch--though no one performed the same kind office to me when I
+was on the floor."
+
+Again Tress's tone was distinctly dry.
+
+"How came YOU here?"
+
+"Ah, that's the question." He rubbed his chin--a habit of his
+which has annoyed me more than once before. "Do you think you're
+sufficiently recovered to enable you to understand a little simple
+explanation?" I stared at him, amazed. He went on stroking his
+chin. "The truth is that when I sent you the pipe I made a slight
+omission."
+
+"An omission?"
+
+"I omitted to advise you not to smoke it."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"Because--well, I've reason to believe the thing is drugged."
+
+"Drugged!"
+
+"Or poisoned."
+
+"Poisoned!" I was wide awake enough then. I jumped off the couch
+with a celerity which proved it.
+
+"It is this way. I became its owner in rather a singular manner."
+He paused, as if for me to make a remark; but I was silent. "It is
+not often that I smoke a specimen, but, for some reason, I did
+smoke this. I commenced to smoke it, that is. How long I
+continued to smoke it is more than I can say. It had on me the
+same peculiar effect which it appears to have had on you. When I
+recovered consciousness I was lying on the floor."
+
+"On the floor?"
+
+"On the floor. In about as uncomfortable a position as you can
+easily conceive. I was lying face downward, with my legs bent
+under me. I was never so surprised in my life as I was when I
+found myself WHERE I was. At first I supposed that I had had a
+stroke. But by degrees it dawned upon me that I didn't FEEL as
+though I had had a stroke." Tress, by the way, has been an army
+surgeon. "I was conscious of distinct nausea. Looking about, I
+saw the pipe. With me it had fallen on to the floor. I took it
+for granted, considering the delicacy of the carving, that the fall
+had broken it. But when I picked it up I found it quite uninjured.
+While I was examining it a thought flashed to my brain. Might it
+not be answerable for what had happened to me? Suppose, for
+instance, it was drugged? I had heard of such things. Besides, in
+my case were present all the symptoms of drug poisoning, though
+what drug had been used I couldn't in the least conceive. I
+resolved that I would give the pipe another trial."
+
+"On yourself? or on another party, meaning me?"
+
+"On myself, my dear Pugh--on myself! At that point of my
+investigations I had not begun to think of you. I lit up and had
+another smoke."
+
+"With what result?"
+
+"Well, that depends on the standpoint from which you regard the
+thing. From one point of view the result was wholly satisfactory--
+I proved that the thing was drugged, and more."
+
+"Did you have another fall?"
+
+"I did. And something else besides."
+
+"On that account, I presume, you resolved to pass the treasure on
+to me?"
+
+"Partly on that account, and partly on another."
+
+"On my word, I appreciate your generosity. You might have labeled
+the thing as poison."
+
+"Exactly. But then you must remember how often you have told me
+that you NEVER smoke your specimens."
+
+"That was no reason why you shouldn't have given me a hint that the
+thing was more dangerous than dynamite."
+
+"That did occur to me afterwards. Therefore I called to supply the
+slight omission."
+
+"SLIGHT omission, you call it! I wonder what you would have called
+it if you had found me dead."
+
+"If I had known that you INTENDED smoking it I should not have been
+at all surprised if I had."
+
+"Really, Tress, I appreciate your kindness more and more! And
+where is this example of your splendid benevolence? Have you
+pocketed it, regretting your lapse into the unaccustomed paths of
+generosity? Or is it smashed to atoms?"
+
+"Neither the one nor the other. You will find the pipe upon the
+table. I neither desire its restoration nor is it in any way
+injured. It is merely an expression of personal opinion when I say
+that I don't believe that it COULD be injured. Of course, having
+discovered its deleterious properties, you will not want to smoke
+it again. You will therefore be able to enjoy the consciousness of
+being the possessor of what I honestly believe to be the most
+remarkable pipe in existence. Good day, Pugh."
+
+He was gone before I could say a word. I immediately concluded,
+from the precipitancy of his flight, that the pipe WAS injured.
+But when I subjected it to close examination I could discover no
+signs of damage. While I was still eying it with jealous scrutiny
+the door reopened, and Tress came in again.
+
+"By the way, Pugh, there is one thing I might mention, especially
+as I know it won't make any difference to you."
+
+"That depends on what it is. If you have changed your mind, and
+want the pipe back again, I tell you frankly that it won't. In my
+opinion, a thing once given is given for good."
+
+"Quite so; I don't want it back again. You may make your mind easy
+on that point. I merely wanted to tell you WHY I gave it you."
+
+"You have told me that already."
+
+"Only partly, my dear Pugh--only partly. You don't suppose I
+should have given you such a pipe as that merely because it
+happened to be drugged? Scarcely! I gave it you because I
+discovered from indisputable evidence, and to my cost, that it was
+haunted."
+
+"Haunted?"
+
+"Yes, haunted. Good day."
+
+He was gone again. I ran out of the room, and shouted after him
+down the stairs. He was already at the bottom of the flight.
+
+"Tress! Come back! What do you mean by talking such nonsense?"
+
+"Of course it's only nonsense. We know that that sort of thing
+always is nonsense. But if you should have reason to suppose that
+there is something in it besides nonsense, you may think it worth
+your while to make inquiries of me, But I won't have that pipe back
+again in my possession on any terms--mind that!"
+
+The bang of the front door told me that he had gone out into the
+street. I let him go. I laughed to myself as I reentered the
+room. Haunted! That was not a bad idea of his. I saw the whole
+position at a glance. The truth of the matter was that he did
+regret his generosity, and he was ready to go any lengths if he
+could only succeed in cajoling me into restoring his gift. He was
+aware that I have views upon certain matters which are not wholly
+in accordance with those which are popularly supposed to be the
+views of the day, and particularly that on the question of what are
+commonly called supernatural visitations I have a standpoint of my
+own. Therefore, it was not a bad move on his part to try to make
+me believe that about the pipe on which he knew I had set my heart
+there was something which could not be accounted for by ordinary
+laws. Yet, as his own sense would have told him it would do, if he
+had only allowed himself to reflect for a moment, the move failed.
+Because I am not yet so far gone as to suppose that a pipe, a thing
+of meerschaum and of amber, in the sense in which I understand the
+word, COULD be haunted--a pipe, a mere pipe.
+
+"Hollo! I thought the creature's legs were twined right round the
+bowl!"
+
+I was holding the pipe in my hand, regarding it with the
+affectionate eyes with which a connoisseur does regard a curio,
+when I was induced to make this exclamation. I was certainly under
+the impression that, when I first took the pipe out of the box,
+two, if not three of the feelers had been twined about the bowl--
+twined TIGHTLY, so that you could not see daylight between them and
+it. Now they were almost entirely detached, only the tips touching
+the meerschaum, and those particular feelers were gathered up as
+though the creature were in the act of taking a spring. Of course
+I was under a misapprehension: the feelers COULDN'T have been
+twined; a moment before I should have been ready to bet a thousand
+to one that they were. Still, one does make mistakes, and very
+egregious mistakes, at times. At the same time, I confess that
+when I saw that dreadful-looking animal poised on the extreme edge
+of the bowl, for all the world as though it were just going to
+spring at me, I was a little startled. I remembered that when I
+was smoking the pipe I did think I saw the uplifted tentacle
+moving, as though it were reaching out to me. And I had a clear
+recollection that just as I had been sinking into that strange
+state of unconsciousness, I had been under the impression that the
+creature was writhing and twisting, as though it had suddenly
+become instinct with life. Under the circumstances, these
+reflections were not pleasant. I wished Tress had not talked that
+nonsense about the thing being haunted. It was surely sufficient
+to know that it was drugged and poisonous, without anything else.
+
+I replaced it in the sandalwood box. I locked the box in a
+cabinet. Quite apart from the question as to whether that pipe was
+or was not haunted, I know it haunted me. It was with me in a
+figurative--which was worse than actual--sense all the day. Still
+worse, it was with me all the night. It was with me in my dreams.
+Such dreams! Possibly I had not yet wholly recovered from the
+effects of that insidious drug, but, whether or no, it was very
+wrong of Tress to set my thoughts into such a channel. He knows
+that I am of a highly imaginative temperament, and that it is
+easier to get morbid thoughts into my mind than to get them out
+again. Before that night was through I wished very heartily that I
+had never seen the pipe! I woke from one nightmare to fall into
+another. One dreadful dream was with me all the time--of a
+hideous, green reptile which advanced toward me out of some awful
+darkness, slowly, inch by inch, until it clutched me round the
+neck, and, gluing its lips to mine, sucked the life's blood out of
+my veins as it embraced me with a slimy kiss. Such dreams are not
+restful. I woke anything but refreshed when the morning came. And
+when I got up and dressed I felt that, on the whole, it would
+perhaps have been better if I never had gone to bed. My nerves
+were unstrung, and I had that generally tremulous feeling which is,
+I believe, an inseparable companion of the more advanced stages of
+dipsomania. I ate no breakfast. I am no breakfast eater as a
+rule, but that morning I ate absolutely nothing.
+
+"If this sort of thing is to continue, I will let Tress have his
+pipe again. He may have the laugh of me, but anything is better
+than this."
+
+It was with almost funereal forebodings that I went to the cabinet
+in which I had placed the sandalwood box. But when I opened it my
+feelings of gloom partially vanished. Of what phantasies had I
+been guilty! It must have been an entire delusion on my part to
+have supposed that those tentacula had ever been twined about the
+bowl. The creature was in exactly the same position in which I had
+left it the day before--as, of course, I knew it would be--poised,
+as if about to spring. I was telling myself how foolish I had been
+to allow myself to dwell for a moment on Tress's words, when Martin
+Brasher was shown in.
+
+Brasher is an old friend of mine. We have a common ground--ghosts.
+Only we approach them from different points of view. He takes the
+scientific--psychological--inquiry side. He is always anxious to
+hear of a ghost, so that he may have an opportunity of "showing it
+up."
+
+"I've something in your line here," I observed, as he came in.
+
+"In my line? How so? I'M not pipe mad."
+
+"No; but you're ghost mad. And this is a haunted pipe."
+
+"A haunted pipe! I think you're rather more mad about ghosts, my
+dear Pugh, than I am."
+
+Then I told him all about it. He was deeply interested, especially
+when I told him that the pipe was drugged. But when I repeated
+Tress's words about its being haunted, and mentioned my own
+delusion about the creature moving, he took a more serious view of
+the case than I had expected he would do.
+
+"I propose that we act on Tress's suggestion, and go and make
+inquiries of him."
+
+"But you don't really think that there is anything in it?"
+
+"On these subjects I never allow myself to think at all. There are
+Tress's words, and there is your story. It is agreed on all hands
+that the pipe has peculiar properties. It seems to me that there
+is a sufficient case here to merit inquiry."
+
+He persuaded me. I went with him. The pipe, in the sandalwood
+box, went too. Tress received us with a grin--a grin which was
+accentuated when I placed the sandalwood box on the table.
+
+"You understand," he said, "that a gift is a gift. On no terms
+will I consent to receive that pipe back in my possession."
+
+I was rather nettled by his tone.
+
+"You need be under no alarm. I have no intention of suggesting
+anything of the kind."
+
+"Our business here," began Brasher--I must own that his manner is a
+little ponderous--"is of a scientific, I may say also, and at the
+same time, of a judicial nature. Our object is the Pursuit of
+Truth and the Advancement of Inquiry."
+
+"Have you been trying another smoke?" inquired Tress, nodding his
+head toward me.
+
+Before I had time to answer, Brasher went droning on:
+
+"Our friend here tells me that you say this pipe is haunted."
+
+"I say it is haunted because it IS haunted."
+
+I looked at Tress. I half suspected that he was poking fun at us.
+But he appeared to be serious enough.
+
+"In these matters," remarked Brasher, as though he were giving
+utterance to a new and important truth, "there is a scientific and
+nonscientific method of inquiry. The scientific method is to begin
+at the beginning. May I ask how this pipe came into your
+possession?"
+
+Tress paused before he answered.
+
+"You may ask." He paused again. "Oh, you certainly may ask. But
+it doesn't follow that I shall tell you."
+
+"Surely your object, like ours, can be but the Spreading About of
+the Truth?"
+
+"I don't see it at all. It is possible to imagine a case in which
+the spreading about of the truth might make me look a little
+awkward."
+
+"Indeed!" Brasher pursed up his lips. "Your words would almost
+lead one to suppose that there was something about your method of
+acquiring the pipe which you have good and weighty reasons for
+concealing."
+
+"I don't know why I should conceal the thing from you. I don't
+suppose either of you is any better than I am. I don't mind
+telling you how I got the pipe. I stole it."
+
+"Stole it!"
+
+Brasher seemed both amazed and shocked. But I, who had previous
+experience of Tress's methods of adding to his collection, was not
+at all surprised. Some of the pipes which he calls his, if only
+the whole truth about them were publicly known, would send him to
+jail.
+
+"That's nothing!" he continued. "All collectors steal! The eighth
+commandment was not intended to apply to them. Why, Pugh there has
+'conveyed' three fourths of the pipes which he flatters himself are
+his."
+
+I was so dumfoundered by the charge that it took my breath away. I
+sat in astounded silence. Tress went raving on:
+
+"I was so shy of this particular pipe when I had obtained it, that
+I put it away for quite three months. When I took it out to have a
+look at it something about the thing so tickled me that I resolved
+to smoke it. Owing to peculiar circumstances attending the manner
+in which the thing came into my possession, and on which I need not
+dwell--you don't like to dwell on those sort of things, do you,
+Pugh?--I knew really nothing about the pipe. As was the case with
+Pugh, one peculiarity I learned from actual experience. It was
+also from actual experience that I learned that the thing was--
+well, I said haunted, but you may use any other word you like."
+
+"Tell us, as briefly as possible, what it was you really did
+discover."
+
+"Take the pipe out of the box!" Brasher took the pipe out of the
+box and held it in his hand. "You see that creature on it. Well,
+when I first had it it was underneath the pipe."
+
+"How do you mean that it was underneath the pipe?"
+
+"It was bunched together underneath the stem, just at the end of
+the mouthpiece, in the same way in which a fly might be suspended
+from the ceiling. When I began to smoke the pipe I saw the
+creature move."
+
+"But I thought that unconsciousness immediately followed."
+
+"It did follow, but not before I saw that the thing was moving. It
+was because I thought that I had been, in a way, a victim of
+delirium that I tried the second smoke. Suspecting that the thing
+was drugged I swallowed what I believed would prove a powerful
+antidote. It enabled me to resist the influence of the narcotic
+much longer than before, and while I still retained my senses I saw
+the creature crawl along under the stem and over the bowl. It was
+that sight, I believe, as much as anything else, which sent me
+silly. When I came to I then and there decided to present the pipe
+to Pugh. There is one more thing I would remark. When the pipe
+left me the creature's legs were twined about the bowl. Now they
+are withdrawn. Possibly you, Pugh, are able to cap my story with a
+little one which is all your own."
+
+"I certainly did imagine that I saw the creature move. But I
+supposed that while I was under the influence of the drug
+imagination had played me a trick."
+
+"Not a bit of it! Depend upon it, the beast is bewitched. Even to
+my eye it looks as though it were, and to a trained eye like yours,
+Pugh! You've been looking for the devil a long time, and you've
+got him at last."
+
+"I--I wish you wouldn't make those remarks, Tress. They jar on
+me."
+
+"I confess," interpolated Brasher--I noticed that he had put the
+pipe down on the table as though he were tired of holding it--
+"that, to MY thinking, such remarks are not appropriate. At the
+same time what you have told us is, I am bound to allow, a little
+curious. But of course what I require is ocular demonstration. I
+haven't seen the movement myself."
+
+"No, but you very soon will do if you care to have a pull at the
+pipe on your own account. Do, Brasher, to oblige me! There's a
+dear!"
+
+"It appears, then, that the movement is only observable when the
+pipe is smoked. We have at least arrived at step No. 1."
+
+"Here's a match, Brasher! Light up, and we shall have arrived at
+step No. 2."
+
+Tress lit a match and held it out to Brasher. Brasher retreated
+from its neighborhood.
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Tress, I am no smoker, as you are aware. And I
+have no desire to acquire the art of smoking by means of a poisoned
+pipe."
+
+Tress laughed. He blew out the match and threw it into the grate.
+
+"Then I tell you what I'll do--I'll have up Bob."
+
+"Bob--why Bob?"
+
+"Bob"--whose real name was Robert Haines, though I should think he
+must have forgotten the fact, so seldom was he addressed by it--was
+Tress's servant. He had been an old soldier, and had accompanied
+his master when he left the service. He was as depraved a
+character as Tress himself. I am not sure even that he was not
+worse than his master. I shall never forget how he once behaved
+toward myself. He actually had the assurance to accuse me of
+attempting to steal the Wardour Street relic which Tress fondly
+deludes himself was once the property of Sir Walter Raleigh. The
+truth is that I had slipped it with my handkerchief into my pocket
+in a fit of absence of mind. A man who could accuse ME of such a
+thing would be guilty of anything. I was therefore quite at one
+with Brasher when he asked what Bob could possibly be wanted for.
+Tress explained.
+
+"I'll get him to smoke the pipe," he said.
+
+Brasher and I exchanged glances, but we refrained from speech.
+
+"It won't do him any harm," said Tress.
+
+"What--not a poisoned pipe?" asked Brasher.
+
+"It's not poisoned--it's only drugged."
+
+"ONLY drugged!"
+
+"Nothing hurts Bob. He is like an ostrich. He has digestive
+organs which are peculiarly his own. It will only serve him as it
+served me--and Pugh--it will knock him over. It is all done in the
+Pursuit of Truth and for the Advancement of Inquiry."
+
+I could see that Brasher did not altogether like the tone in which
+Tress repeated his words. As for me, it was not to be supposed
+that I should put myself out in a matter which in no way concerned
+me. If Tress chose to poison the man, it was his affair, not mine.
+He went to the door and shouted:
+
+"Bob! Come here, you scoundrel!"
+
+That is the way in which he speaks to him. No really decent
+servant would stand it. I shouldn't care to address Nalder, my
+servant, in such a way. He would give me notice on the spot. Bob
+came in. He is a great hulking fellow who is always on the grin.
+Tress had a decanter of brandy in his hand. He filled a tumbler
+with the neat spirit.
+
+"Bob, what would you say to a glassful of brandy--the real thing--
+my boy?"
+
+"Thank you, sir."
+
+"And what would you say to a pull at a pipe when the brandy is
+drunk!"
+
+"A pipe?" The fellow is sharp enough when he likes. I saw him
+look at the pipe upon the table, and then at us, and then a gleam
+of intelligence came into his eyes. "I'd do it for a dollar, sir."
+
+"A dollar, you thief?"
+
+"I meant ten shillings, sir."
+
+"Ten shillings, you brazen vagabond?"
+
+"I should have said a pound."
+
+"A pound! Was ever the like of that! Do I understand you to ask a
+pound for taking a pull at your master's pipe?"
+
+"I'm thinking that I'll have to make it two."
+
+"The deuce you are! Here, Pugh, lend me a pound."
+
+"I'm afraid I've left my purse behind."
+
+"Then lend me ten shillings--Ananias!"
+
+"I doubt if I have more than five."
+
+"Then give me the five. And, Brasher, lend me the other fifteen."
+
+Brasher lent him the fifteen. I doubt if we shall either of us
+ever see our money again. He handed the pound to Bob.
+
+"Here's the brandy--drink it up!" Bob drank it without a word,
+draining the glass of every drop. "And here's the pipe."
+
+"Is it poisoned, sir?"
+
+"Poisoned, you villain! What do you mean?"
+
+"It isn't the first time I've seen your tricks, sir--is it now?
+And you're not the one to give a pound for nothing at all. If it
+kills me you'll send my body to my mother--she'd like to know that
+I was dead."
+
+"Send your body to your grandmother! You idiot, sit down and
+smoke!"
+
+Bob sat down. Tress had filled the pipe, and handed it, with a
+lighted match, to Bob. The fellow declined the match. He handled
+the pipe very gingerly, turning it over and over, eying it with all
+his eyes.
+
+"Thank you, sir--I'll light up myself if it's the same to you. I
+carry matches of my own. It's a beautiful pipe, entirely. I never
+see the like of it for ugliness. And what's the slimy-looking
+varmint that looks as though it would like to have my life? Is it
+living, or is it dead?"
+
+"Come, we don't want to sit here all day, my man!"
+
+"Well, sir, the look of this here pipe has quite upset my stomach.
+I'd like another drop of liquor, if it's the same to you."
+
+"Another drop! Why, you've had a tumblerful already! Here's
+another tumblerful to put on top of that. You won't want the pipe
+to kill you--you'll be killed before you get to it."
+
+"And isn't it better to die a natural death?"
+
+Bob emptied the second tumbler of brandy as though it were water.
+I believe he would empty a hogshead without turning a hair! Then
+he gave another look at the pipe. Then, taking a match from his
+waistcoat pocket, he drew a long breath, as though he were
+resigning himself to fate. Striking the match on the seat of his
+trousers, while, shaded by his hand, the flame was gathering
+strength, he looked at each of us in turn. When he looked at Tress
+I distinctly saw him wink his eye. What my feelings would have
+been if a servant of mine had winked his eye at me I am unable to
+imagine! The match was applied to the tobacco, a puff of smoke
+came through his lips--the pipe was alight!
+
+During this process of lighting the pipe we had sat--I do not wish
+to use exaggerated language, but we had sat and watched that
+alcoholic scamp's proceedings as though we were witnessing an
+action which would leave its mark upon the age. When we saw the
+pipe was lighted we gave a simultaneous start. Brasher put his
+hands under his coat tails and gave a kind of hop. I raised myself
+a good six inches from my chair, and Tress rubbed his palms
+together with a chuckle. Bob alone was calm.
+
+"Now," cried Tress, "you'll see the devil moving."
+
+Bob took the pipe from between his lips.
+
+"See what?" he said.
+
+"Bob, you rascal, put that pipe back into your mouth, and smoke it
+for your life!"
+
+Bob was eying the pipe askance.
+
+"I dare say, but what I want to know is whether this here varmint's
+dead or whether he isn't. I don't want to have him flying at my
+nose--and he looks vicious enough for anything."
+
+"Give me back that pound, you thief, and get out of my house, and
+bundle."
+
+"I ain't going to give you back no pound."
+
+"Then smoke that pipe!"
+
+"I am smoking it, ain't I?"
+
+With the utmost deliberation Bob returned the pipe to his mouth.
+He emitted another whiff or two of smoke.
+
+"Now--now!" cried Tress, all excitement, and wagging his hand in
+the air.
+
+We gathered round. As we did so Bob again withdrew the pipe.
+
+"What is the meaning of all this here? I ain't going to have you
+playing none of your larks on me. I know there's something up, but
+I ain't going to throw my life away for twenty shillings--not quite
+I ain't."
+
+Tress, whose temper is not at any time one of the best, was seized
+with quite a spasm of rage.
+
+"As I live, my lad, if you try to cheat me by taking that pipe from
+between your lips until I tell you, you leave this room that
+instant, never again to be a servant of mine."
+
+I presume the fellow knew from long experience when his master
+meant what he said, and when he didn't. Without an attempt at
+remonstrance he replaced the pipe. He continued stolidly to puff
+away. Tress caught me by the arm.
+
+"What did I tell you? There--there! That tentacle is moving."
+
+The uplifted tentacle WAS moving. It was doing what I had seen it
+do, as I supposed, in my distorted imagination--it was reaching
+forward. Undoubtedly Bob saw what it was doing; but, whether in
+obedience to his master's commands, or whether because the drug was
+already beginning to take effect, he made no movement to withdraw
+the pipe. He watched the slowly advancing tentacle, coming closer
+and closer toward his nose, with an expression of such intense
+horror on his countenance that it became quite shocking. Farther
+and farther the creature reached forward, until on a sudden, with a
+sort of jerk, the movement assumed a downward direction, and the
+tentacle was slowly lowered until the tip rested on the stem of the
+pipe. For a moment the creature remained motionless. I was
+quieting my nerves with the reflection that this thing was but some
+trick of the carver's art, and that what we had seen we had seen in
+a sort of nightmare, when the whole hideous reptile was seized with
+what seemed to be a fit of convulsive shuddering. It seemed to be
+in agony. It trembled so violently that I expected to see it
+loosen its hold of the stem and fall to the ground. I was
+sufficiently master of myself to steal a glance at Bob. We had had
+an inkling of what might happen. He was wholly unprepared. As he
+saw that dreadful, human-looking creature, coming to life, as it
+seemed, within an inch or two of his nose, his eyes dilated to
+twice their usual size. I hoped, for his sake, that
+unconsciousness would supervene, through the action of the drug,
+before through sheer fright his senses left him. Perhaps
+mechanically he puffed steadily on.
+
+The creature's shuddering became more violent. It appeared to
+swell before our eyes. Then, just as suddenly as it began, the
+shuddering ceased. There was another instant of quiescence. Then
+the creature began to crawl along the stem of the pipe! It moved
+with marvelous caution, the merest fraction of an inch at a time.
+But still it moved! Our eyes were riveted on it with a fascination
+which was absolutely nauseous. I am unpleasantly affected even as
+I think of it now. My dreams of the night before had been nothing
+to this.
+
+Slowly, slowly, it went, nearer and nearer to the smoker's nose.
+Its mode of progression was in the highest degree unsightly. It
+glided, never, so far as I could see, removing its tentacles from
+the stem of the pipe. It slipped its hindmost feelers onward until
+they came up to those which were in advance. Then, in their turn,
+it advanced those which were in front. It seemed, too, to move
+with the utmost labor, shuddering as though it were in pain.
+
+We were all, for our parts, speechless. I was momentarily hoping
+that the drug would take effect on Bob. Either his constitution
+enabled him to offer a strong resistance to narcotics, or else the
+large quantity of neat spirit which he had drunk acted--as Tress
+had malevolently intended that it should--as an antidote. It
+seemed to me that he would NEVER succumb. On went the creature--
+on, and on, in its infinitesimal progression. I was spellbound. I
+would have given the world to scream, to have been able to utter a
+sound. I could do nothing else but watch.
+
+The creature had reached the end of the stem. It had gained the
+amber mouthpiece. It was within an inch of the smoker's nose.
+Still on it went. It seemed to move with greater freedom on the
+amber. It increased its rate of progress. It was actually
+touching the foremost feature on the smoker's countenance. I
+expected to see it grip the wretched Bob, when it began to
+oscillate from side to side. Its oscillations increased in
+violence. It fell to the floor. That same instant the narcotic
+prevailed. Bob slipped sideways from the chair, the pipe still
+held tightly between his rigid jaws.
+
+We were silent. There lay Bob. Close beside him lay the creature.
+A few more inches to the left, and he would have fallen on and
+squashed it flat. It had fallen on its back. Its feelers were
+extended upward. They were writhing and twisting and turning in
+the air.
+
+Tress was the first to speak.
+
+"I think a little brandy won't be amiss." Emptying the remainder
+of the brandy into a glass, he swallowed it at a draught. "Now for
+a closer examination of our friend." Taking a pair of tongs from
+the grate he nipped the creature between them. He deposited it
+upon the table. "I rather fancy that this is a case for
+dissection."
+
+He took a penknife from his waistcoat pocket. Opening the large
+blade, he thrust its point into the object on the table. Little or
+no resistance seemed to be offered to the passage of the blade, but
+as it was inserted the tentacula simultaneously began to writhe and
+twist. Tress withdrew the knife.
+
+"I thought so!" He held the blade out for our inspection. The
+point was covered with some viscid-looking matter. "That's blood!
+The thing's alive!"
+
+"Alive!"
+
+"Alive! That's the secret of the whole performance!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"But me no buts, my Pugh! The mystery's exploded! One more ghost
+is lost to the world! The person from whom I OBTAINED that pipe
+was an Indian juggler--up to many tricks of the trade. He, or some
+one for him, got hold of this sweet thing in reptiles--and a
+sweeter thing would, I imagine, be hard to find--and covered it
+with some preparation of, possibly, gum arabic. He allowed this to
+harden. Then he stuck the thing--still living, for those sort of
+gentry are hard to kill--to the pipe. The consequence was that
+when anyone lit up, the warmth was communicated to the adhesive
+agent--again some preparation of gum, no doubt--it moistened it,
+and the creature, with infinite difficulty, was able to move. But
+I am open to lay odds with any gentleman of sporting tastes that
+THIS time the creature's traveling days ARE done. It has given me
+rather a larger taste of the horrors than is good for my
+digestion."
+
+With the aid of the tongs he removed the creature from the table.
+He placed it on the hearth. Before Brasher or I had a notion of
+what it was he intended to do he covered it with a heavy marble
+paper weight. Then he stood upon the weight, and between the
+marble and the hearth he ground the creature flat.
+
+While the execution was still proceeding, Bob sat up upon the
+floor.
+
+"Hollo!" he asked, "what's happened?"
+
+"We've emptied the bottle, Bob," said Tress. "But there's another
+where that came from. Perhaps you could drink another tumblerful,
+my boy?"
+
+Bob drank it!
+
+
+FOOTNOTE
+
+"Those gentry are hard to kill." Here is fact, not fantasy.
+Lizard yarns no less sensational than this Mystery Story can be
+found between the covers of solemn, zoological textbooks.
+
+Reptiles, indeed, are far from finicky in the matters of air,
+space, and especially warmth. Frogs and other such sluggish-
+blooded creatures have lived after being frozen fast in ice. Their
+blood is little warmer than air or water, enjoying no extra casing
+of fur or feathers.
+
+Air and food seem held in light esteem by lizards. Their blood
+need not be highly oxygenated; it nourishes just as well when
+impure. In temperate climes lizards lie torpid and buried all
+winter; some species of the tropic deserts sleep peacefully all
+summer. Their anatomy includes no means for the continuous
+introduction and expulsion of air; reptilian lungs are little more
+than closed sacs, without cell structure.
+
+If any further zoological fact were needed to verify the denouement
+of "The Pipe," it might be the general statement that lizards are
+abnormal brutes anyhow. Consider the chameleons of unsettled hue.
+And what is one to think of an animal which, when captured by the
+tail, is able to make its escape by willfully shuffling off that
+appendage?--EDITOR.
+
+
+
+The Puzzle
+
+I
+
+
+Pugh came into my room holding something wrapped in a piece of
+brown paper.
+
+"Tress, I have brought you something on which you may exercise your
+ingenuity." He began, with exasperating deliberation, to untie the
+string which bound his parcel; he is one of those persons who would
+not cut a knot to save their lives. The process occupied him the
+better part of a quarter of an hour. Then he held out the contents
+of the paper.
+
+"What do you think of that?" he asked. I thought nothing of it,
+and I told him so. "I was prepared for that confession. I have
+noticed, Tress, that you generally do think nothing of an article
+which really deserves the attention of a truly thoughtful mind.
+Possibly, as you think so little of it, you will be able to solve
+the puzzle."
+
+I took what he held out to me. It was an oblong box, perhaps seven
+inches long by three inches broad.
+
+"Where's the puzzle?" I asked.
+
+"If you will examine the lid of the box, you will see." I turned
+it over and over; it was difficult to see which was the lid. Then
+I perceived that on one side were printed these words:
+
+
+ "PUZZLE: TO OPEN THE BOX"
+
+
+The words were so faintly printed that it was not surprising that I
+had not noticed them at first. Pugh explained.
+
+"I observed that box on a tray outside a second-hand furniture
+shop. It struck my eye. I took it up. I examined it. I inquired
+of the proprietor of the shop in what the puzzle lay. He replied
+that that was more than he could tell me. He himself had made
+several attempts to open the box, and all of them had failed. I
+purchased it. I took it home. I have tried, and I have failed. I
+am aware, Tress, of how you pride yourself upon your ingenuity. I
+cannot doubt that, if you try, you will not fail."
+
+While Pugh was prosing, I was examining the box. It was at least
+well made. It weighed certainly under two ounces. I struck it
+with my knuckles; it sounded hollow. There was no hinge; nothing
+of any kind to show that it ever had been opened, or, for the
+matter of that, that it ever could be opened. The more I examined
+the thing, the more it whetted my curiosity. That it could be
+opened, and in some ingenious manner, I made no doubt--but how?
+
+The box was not a new one. At a rough guess I should say that it
+had been a box for a good half century; there were certain signs of
+age about it which could not escape a practiced eye. Had it
+remained unopened all that time? When opened, what would be found
+inside? It SOUNDED hollow; probably nothing at all--who could
+tell?
+
+It was formed of small pieces of inlaid wood. Several woods had
+been used; some of them were strange to me. They were of different
+colors; it was pretty obvious that they must all of them have been
+hard woods. The pieces were of various shapes--hexagonal,
+octagonal, triangular, square, oblong, and even circular. The
+process of inlaying them had been beautifully done. So nicely had
+the parts been joined that the lines of meeting were difficult to
+discover with the naked eye; they had been joined solid, so to
+speak. It was an excellent example of marquetry. I had been over-
+hasty in my deprecation; I owed as much to Pugh.
+
+"This box of yours is better worth looking at than I first
+supposed. Is it to be sold?"
+
+"No, it is not to be sold. Nor"--he "fixed" me with his
+spectacles--"is it to be given away. I have brought it to you for
+the simple purpose of ascertaining if you have ingenuity enough to
+open it."
+
+"I will engage to open it in two seconds--with a hammer."
+
+"I dare say. I will open it with a hammer. The thing is to open
+it without."
+
+"Let me see." I began, with the aid of a microscope, to examine
+the box more closely. "I will give you one piece of information,
+Pugh. Unless I am mistaken, the secret lies in one of these little
+pieces of inlaid wood. You push it, or you press it, or something,
+and the whole affair flies open."
+
+"Such was my own first conviction. I am not so sure of it now. I
+have pressed every separate piece of wood; I have tried to move
+each piece in every direction. No result has followed. My theory
+was a hidden spring."
+
+"But there must be a hidden spring of some sort, unless you are to
+open it by a mere exercise of force. I suppose the box is empty."
+
+"I thought it was at first, but now I am not so sure of that
+either. It all depends on the position in which you hold it. Hold
+it in this position--like this--close to your ear. Have you a
+small hammer?" I took a small hammer. "Tap it softly, with the
+hammer. Don't you notice a sort of reverberation within?"
+
+Pugh was right, there certainly was something within; something
+which seemed to echo back my tapping, almost as if it were a living
+thing. I mentioned this, to Pugh.
+
+"But you don't think that there is something alive inside the box?
+There can't be. The box must be airtight, probably as much air-
+tight as an exhausted receiver."
+
+"How do we know that? How can we tell that no minute interstices
+have been left for the express purpose of ventilation?" I
+continued tapping with the hammer. I noticed one peculiarity, that
+it was only when I held the box in a particular position, and
+tapped at a certain spot, there came the answering taps from
+within. "I tell you what it is, Pugh, what I hear is the
+reverberation of some machinery."
+
+"Do you think so?"
+
+"I'm sure of it."
+
+"Give the box to me." Pugh put the box to his ear. He tapped.
+"It sounds to me like the echoing tick, tick of some great beetle;
+like the sort of noise which a deathwatch makes, you know."
+
+Trust Pugh to find a remarkable explanation for a simple fact; if
+the explanation leans toward the supernatural, so much the more
+satisfactory to Pugh. I knew better.
+
+"The sound which you hear is merely the throbbing or the trembling
+of the mechanism with which it is intended that the box should be
+opened. The mechanism is placed just where you are tapping it with
+the hammer. Every tap causes it to jar."
+
+"It sounds to me like the ticking of a deathwatch. However, on
+such subjects, Tress, I know what you are."
+
+"My dear Pugh, give it an extra hard tap, and you will see."
+
+He gave it an extra hard tap. The moment he had done so, he
+started.
+
+"I've done it now."
+
+"What have you done?"
+
+"Broken something, I fancy." He listened intently, with his ear to
+the box. "No--it seems all right. And yet I could have sworn I
+had damaged something; I heard it smash."
+
+"Give me the box." He gave it me. In my turn, I listened. I
+shook the box. Pugh must have been mistaken. Nothing rattled;
+there was not a sound; the box was as empty as before. I gave a
+smart tap with the hammer, as Pugh had done. Then there certainly
+was a curious sound. To my ear, it sounded like the smashing of
+glass. "I wonder if there is anything fragile inside your precious
+puzzle, Pugh, and, if so, if we are shivering it by degrees?"
+
+
+II
+
+
+"What IS that noise?"
+
+I lay in bed in that curious condition which is between sleep and
+waking. When, at last, I KNEW that I was awake, I asked myself
+what it was that had woke me. Suddenly I became conscious that
+something was making itself audible in the silence of the night.
+For some seconds I lay and listened. Then I sat up in bed.
+
+"What IS that noise?"
+
+It was like the tick, tick of some large and unusually clear-toned
+clock. It might have been a clock, had it not been that the sound
+was varied, every half dozen ticks or so, by a sort of stifled
+screech, such as might have been uttered by some small creature in
+an extremity of anguish. I got out of bed; it was ridiculous to
+think of sleep during the continuation of that uncanny shrieking.
+I struck a light. The sound seemed to come from the neighborhood
+of my dressing-table. I went to the dressing-table, the lighted
+match in my hand, and, as I did so, my eyes fell on Pugh's
+mysterious box. That same instant there issued, from the bowels of
+the box, a more uncomfortable screech than any I had previously
+heard. It took me so completely by surprise that I let the match
+fall from my hand to the floor. The room was in darkness. I
+stood, I will not say trembling, listening--considering their
+volume--to the EERIEST shrieks I ever heard. All at once they
+ceased. Then came the tick, tick, tick again. I struck another
+match and lit the gas.
+
+Pugh had left his puzzle box behind him. We had done all we could,
+together, to solve the puzzle. He had left it behind to see what I
+could do with it alone. So much had it engrossed my attention that
+I had even brought it into my bedroom, in order that I might,
+before retiring to rest, make a final attempt at the solution of
+the mystery. NOW what possessed the thing?
+
+As I stood, and looked, and listened, one thing began to be clear
+to me, that some sort of machinery had been set in motion inside
+the box. How it had been set in motion was another matter. But
+the box had been subjected to so much handling, to such pressing
+and such hammering, that it was not strange if, after all, Pugh or
+I had unconsciously hit upon the spring which set the whole thing
+going. Possibly the mechanism had got so rusty that it had refused
+to act at once. It had hung fire, and only after some hours had
+something or other set the imprisoned motive power free.
+
+But what about the screeching? Could there be some living creature
+concealed within the box? Was I listening to the cries of some
+small animal in agony? Momentary reflection suggested that the
+explanation of the one thing was the explanation of the other.
+Rust!--there was the mystery. The same rust which had prevented
+the mechanism from acting at once was causing the screeching now.
+The uncanny sounds were caused by nothing more nor less than the
+want of a drop or two of oil. Such an explanation would not have
+satisfied Pugh, it satisfied me.
+
+Picking up the box, I placed it to my ear.
+
+"I wonder how long this little performance is going to continue.
+And what is going to happen when it is good enough to cease? I
+hope"--an uncomfortable thought occurred to me--"I hope Pugh hasn't
+picked up some pleasant little novelty in the way of an infernal
+machine. It would be a first-rate joke if he and I had been
+endeavoring to solve the puzzle of how to set it going."
+
+I don't mind owning that as this reflection crossed my mind I
+replaced Pugh's puzzle on the dressing-table. The idea did not
+commend itself to me at all. The box evidently contained some
+curious mechanism. It might be more curious than comfortable.
+Possibly some agreeable little device in clockwork. The tick,
+tick, tick suggested clockwork which had been planned to go a
+certain time, and then--then, for all I knew, ignite an explosive,
+and--blow up. It would be a charming solution to the puzzle if it
+were to explode while I stood there, in my nightshirt, looking on.
+It is true that the box weighed very little. Probably, as I have
+said, the whole affair would not have turned the scale at a couple
+of ounces. But then its very lightness might have been part of the
+ingenious inventor's little game. There are explosives with which
+one can work a very satisfactory amount of damage with considerably
+less than a couple of ounces.
+
+While I was hesitating--I own it!--whether I had not better immerse
+Pugh's puzzle in a can of water, or throw it out of the window, or
+call down Bob with a request to at once remove it to his apartment,
+both the tick, tick, tick, and the screeching ceased, and all
+within the box was still. If it WAS going to explode, it was now
+or never. Instinctively I moved in the direction of the door.
+
+I waited with a certain sense of anxiety. I waited in vain.
+Nothing happened, not even a renewal of the sound.
+
+"I wish Pugh had kept his precious puzzle at home. This sort of
+thing tries one's nerves."
+
+When I thought that I perceived that nothing seemed likely to
+happen, I returned to the neighborhood of the table. I looked at
+the box askance. I took it up gingerly. Something might go off at
+any moment for all I knew. It would be too much of a joke if
+Pugh's precious puzzle exploded in my hand. I shook it doubtfully;
+nothing rattled. I held it to my ear. There was not a sound.
+What had taken place? Had the clockwork run down, and was the
+machine arranged with such a diabolical ingenuity that a certain
+interval was required, after the clockwork had run down, before an
+explosion could occur? Or had rust caused the mechanism to again
+hang fire?
+
+"After making all that commotion the thing might at least come
+open." I banged the box viciously against the corner of the table.
+I felt that I would almost rather that an explosion should take
+place than that nothing should occur. One does not care to be
+disturbed from one's sound slumber in the small hours of the
+morning for a trifle.
+
+"I've half a mind to get a hammer, and try, as they say in the
+cookery books, another way."
+
+Unfortunately I had promised Pugh to abstain from using force. I
+might have shivered the box open with my hammer, and then explained
+that it had fallen, or got trod upon, or sat upon, or something,
+and so got shattered, only I was afraid that Pugh would not believe
+me. The man is himself such an untruthful man that he is in a
+chronic state of suspicion about the truthfulness of others.
+
+"Well, if you're not going to blow up, or open, or something, I'll
+say good night."
+
+I gave the box a final rap with my knuckles and a final shake,
+replaced it on the table, put out the gas, and returned to bed.
+
+I was just sinking again into slumber, when that box began again.
+It was true that Pugh had purchased the puzzle, but it was evident
+that the whole enjoyment of the purchase was destined to be mine.
+It was useless to think of sleep while that performance was going
+on. I sat up in bed once more.
+
+"It strikes me that the puzzle consists in finding out how it is
+possible to go to sleep with Pugh's purchase in your bedroom. This
+is far better than the old-fashioned prescription of cats on the
+tiles."
+
+It struck me the noise was distinctly louder than before; this
+applied both to the tick, tick, tick, and the screeching.
+
+"Possibly," I told myself, as I relighted the gas, "the explosion
+is to come off this time."
+
+I turned to look at the box. There could be no doubt about it; the
+noise was louder. And, if I could trust my eyes, the box was
+moving--giving a series of little jumps. This might have been an
+optical delusion, but it seemed to me that at each tick the box
+gave a little bound. During the screeches--which sounded more like
+the cries of an animal in an agony of pain even than before--if it
+did not tilt itself first on one end, and then on another, I shall
+never be willing to trust the evidence of my own eyes again. And
+surely the box had increased in size; I could have sworn not only
+that it had increased, but that it was increasing, even as I stood
+there looking on. It had grown, and still was growing, both
+broader, and longer, and deeper. Pugh, of course, would have
+attributed it to supernatural agency; there never was a man with
+such a nose for a ghost. I could picture him occupying my
+position, shivering in his nightshirt, as he beheld that miracle
+taking place before his eyes. The solution which at once suggested
+itself to me--and which would NEVER have suggested itself to Pugh!--
+was that the box was fashioned, as it were, in layers, and that
+the ingenious mechanism it contained was forcing the sides at once
+both upward and outward. I took it in my hand. I could feel
+something striking against the bottom of the box, like the tap,
+tap, tapping of a tiny hammer.
+
+"This is a pretty puzzle of Pugh's. He would say that that is the
+tapping of a deathwatch. For my part I have not much faith in
+deathwatches, et hoc genus omne, but it certainly is a curious
+tapping; I wonder what is going to happen next?"
+
+Apparently nothing, except a continuation of those mysterious
+sounds. That the box had increased in size I had, and have, no
+doubt whatever. I should say that it had increased a good inch in
+every direction, at least half an inch while I had been looking on.
+But while I stood looking its growth was suddenly and perceptibly
+stayed; it ceased to move. Only the noise continued.
+
+"I wonder how long it will be before anything worth happening does
+happen! I suppose something is going to happen; there can't be all
+this to-do for nothing. If it is anything in the infernal machine
+line, and there is going to be an explosion, I might as well be
+here to see it. I think I'll have a pipe."
+
+I put on my dressing-gown. I lit my pipe. I sat and stared at the
+box. I dare say I sat there for quite twenty minutes when, as
+before, without any sort of warning, the sound was stilled. Its
+sudden cessation rather startled me.
+
+"Has the mechanism again hung fire? Or, this time, is the
+explosion coming off?" It did not come off; nothing came off.
+"Isn't the box even going to open?"
+
+It did not open. There was simply silence all at once, and that
+was all. I sat there in expectation for some moments longer. But
+I sat for nothing. I rose. I took the box in my hand. I shook
+it.
+
+"This puzzle IS a puzzle." I held the box first to one ear, then
+to the other. I gave it several sharp raps with my knuckles.
+There was not an answering sound, not even the sort of
+reverberation which Pugh and I had noticed at first. It seemed
+hollower than ever. It was as though the soul of the box was dead.
+"I suppose if I put you down, and extinguish the gas and return to
+bed, in about half an hour or so, just as I am dropping off to
+sleep, the performance will be recommenced. Perhaps the third time
+will be lucky."
+
+But I was mistaken--there was no third time. When I returned to
+bed that time I returned to sleep, and I was allowed to sleep;
+there was no continuation of the performance, at least so far as I
+know. For no sooner was I once more between the sheets than I was
+seized with an irresistible drowsiness, a drowsiness which so
+mastered me that I--I imagine it must have been instantly--sank
+into slumber which lasted till long after day had dawned. Whether
+or not any more mysterious sounds issued from the bowels of Pugh's
+puzzle is more than I can tell. If they did, they did not succeed
+in rousing me.
+
+And yet, when at last I did awake, I had a sort of consciousness
+that my waking had been caused by something strange. What it was I
+could not surmise. My own impression was that I had been awakened
+by the touch of a person's hand. But that impression must have
+been a mistaken one, because, as I could easily see by looking
+round the room, there was no one in the room to touch me.
+
+It was broad daylight. I looked at my watch; it was nearly eleven
+o'clock. I am a pretty late sleeper as a rule, but I do not
+usually sleep as late as that. That scoundrel Bob would let me
+sleep all day without thinking it necessary to call me. I was just
+about to spring out of bed with the intention of ringing the bell
+so that I might give Bob a piece of my mind for allowing me to
+sleep so late, when my glance fell on the dressing-table on which,
+the night before, I had placed Pugh's puzzle. It had gone!
+
+Its absence so took me by surprise that I ran to the table. It HAD
+gone. But it had not gone far; it had gone to pieces! There were
+the pieces lying where the box had been. The puzzle had solved
+itself. The box was open, open with a vengeance, one might say.
+Like that unfortunate Humpty Dumpty, who, so the chroniclers tell
+us, sat on a wall, surely "all the king's horses and all the king's
+men" never could put Pugh's puzzle together again!
+
+The marquetry had resolved itself into its component parts. How
+those parts had ever been joined was a mystery. They had been laid
+upon no foundation, as is the case with ordinary inlaid work. The
+several pieces of wood were not only of different shapes and sizes,
+but they were as thin as the thinnest veneer; yet the box had been
+formed by simply joining them together. The man who made that box
+must have been possessed of ingenuity worthy of a better cause.
+
+I perceived how the puzzle had been worked. The box had contained
+an arrangement of springs, which, on being released, had expanded
+themselves in different directions until their mere expansion had
+rent the box to pieces. There were the springs, lying amid the
+ruin they had caused.
+
+There was something else amid that ruin besides those springs;
+there was a small piece of writing paper. I took it up. On the
+reverse side of it was written in a minute, crabbed hand: "A
+Present For You." What was a present for me? I looked, and, not
+for the first time since I had caught sight of Pugh's precious
+puzzle, could scarcely believe my eyes.
+
+There, poised between two upright wires, the bent ends of which
+held it aloft in the air, was either a piece of glass or--a
+crystal. The scrap of writing paper had exactly covered it. I
+understood what it was, when Pugh and I had tapped with the hammer,
+had caused the answering taps to proceed from within. Our taps
+caused the wires to oscillate, and in these oscillations the
+crystal, which they held suspended, had touched the side of the
+box.
+
+I looked again at the piece of paper. "A Present For You." Was
+THIS the present--this crystal? I regarded it intently.
+
+"It CAN'T be a diamond."
+
+The idea was ridiculous, absurd. No man in his senses would place
+a diamond inside a twopenny-halfpenny puzzle box. The thing was as
+big as a walnut! And yet--I am a pretty good judge of precious
+stones--if it was not an uncut diamond it was the best imitation I
+had seen. I took it up. I examined it closely. The more closely
+I examined it, the more my wonder grew.
+
+"It IS a diamond!"
+
+And yet the idea was too preposterous for credence. Who would
+present a diamond as big as a walnut with a trumpery puzzle?
+Besides, all the diamonds which the world contains of that size are
+almost as well known as the Koh-i-noor.
+
+"If it is a diamond, it is worth--it is worth--Heaven only knows
+what it isn't worth if it's a diamond."
+
+I regarded it through a strong pocket lens. As I did so I could
+not restrain an exclamation.
+
+"The world to a China orange, it IS a diamond!"
+
+The words had scarcely escaped my lips than there came a tapping at
+the door.
+
+"Come in!" I cried, supposing it was Bob. It was not Bob, it was
+Pugh. Instinctively I put the lens and the crystal behind my back.
+At sight of me in my nightshirt Pugh began to shake his head.
+
+"What hours, Tress, what hours! Why, my dear Tress, I've
+breakfasted, read the papers and my letters, came all the way from
+my house here, and you're not up!"
+
+"Don't I look as though I were up?"
+
+"Ah, Tress! Tress!" He approached the dressing-table. His eye
+fell upon the ruins. "What's this?"
+
+"That's the solution to the puzzle."
+
+"Have you--have you solved it fairly, Tress?"
+
+"It has solved itself. Our handling, and tapping, and hammering
+must have freed the springs which the box contained, and during the
+night, while I slept, they have caused it to come open."
+
+"While you slept? Dear me! How strange! And--what are these?"
+
+He had discovered the two upright wires on which the crystal had
+been poised.
+
+"I suppose they're part of the puzzle."
+
+"And was there anything in the box? What's this?" he picked up the
+scrap of paper; I had left it on the table. He read what was
+written on it: "'A Present For You.' What's it mean? Tress, was
+this in the box?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"What's it mean about a present? Was there anything in the box
+besides?"
+
+"Pugh, if you will leave the room I shall be able to dress; I am
+not in the habit of receiving quite such early calls, or I should
+have been prepared to receive you. If you will wait in the next
+room, I will be with you as soon as I'm dressed. There is a little
+subject in connection with the box which I wish to discuss with
+you."
+
+"A subject in connection with the box? What is the subject?"
+
+"I will tell you, Pugh, when I have performed my toilet."
+
+"Why can't you tell me now?"
+
+"Do you propose, then, that I should stand here shivering in my
+shirt while you are prosing at your ease? Thank you; I am obliged,
+but I decline. May I ask you once more, Pugh, to wait for me in
+the adjoining apartment?"
+
+He moved toward the door. When he had taken a couple of steps, he
+halted.
+
+"I--I hope, Tress, that you're--you're going to play no tricks on
+me?"
+
+"Tricks on you! Is it likely that I am going to play tricks upon
+my oldest friend?"
+
+When he had gone--he vanished, it seemed to me, with a somewhat
+doubtful visage--I took the crystal to the window. I drew the
+blind. I let the sunshine fall on it. I examined it again,
+closely and minutely, with the aid of my pocket lens. It WAS a
+diamond; there could not be a doubt of it. If, with my knowledge
+of stones, I was deceived, then I was deceived as never man had
+been deceived before. My heart beat faster as I recognized the
+fact that I was holding in my hand what was, in all probability, a
+fortune for a man of moderate desires. Of course, Pugh knew
+nothing of what I had discovered, and there was no reason why he
+should know. Not the least! The only difficulty was that if I
+kept my own counsel, and sold the stone and utilized the proceeds
+of the sale, I should have to invent a story which would account
+for my sudden accession to fortune. Pugh knows almost as much of
+my affairs as I do myself. That is the worst of these old friends!
+
+When I joined Pugh I found him dancing up and down the floor like a
+bear upon hot plates. He scarcely allowed me to put my nose inside
+the door before attacking me.
+
+"Tress, give me what was in the box."
+
+"My dear Pugh, how do you know that there was something in the box
+to give you?"
+
+"I know there was!"
+
+"Indeed! If you know that there was something in the box, perhaps
+you will tell me what that something was."
+
+He eyed me doubtfully. Then, advancing, he laid upon my arm a hand
+which positively trembled.
+
+"Tress, you--you wouldn't play tricks on an old friend."
+
+"You are right, Pugh, I wouldn't, though I believe there have been
+occasions on which you have had doubts upon the subject. By the
+way, Pugh, I believe that I am the oldest friend you have."
+
+"I--I don't know about that. There's--there's Brasher."
+
+"Brasher! Who's Brasher? You wouldn't compare my friendship to
+the friendship of such a man as Brasher? Think of the tastes we
+have in common, you and I. We're both collectors."
+
+"Ye-es, we're both collectors."
+
+"I make my interests yours, and you make your interests mine.
+Isn't that so, Pugh?"
+
+"Tress, what--what was in the box?"
+
+"I will be frank with you, Pugh. If there had been something in
+the box, would you have been willing to go halves with me in my
+discovery?"
+
+"Go halves! In your discovery, Tress! Give me what is mine!"
+
+"With pleasure, Pugh, if you will tell me what is yours."
+
+"If--if you don't give me what was in the box I'll--I'll send for
+the police."
+
+"Do! Then I shall be able to hand to them what was in the box in
+order that it may be restored to its proper owner."
+
+"Its proper owner! I'm its proper owner!"
+
+"Excuse me, but I don't understand how that can be; at least, until
+the police have made inquiries. I should say that the proper owner
+was the person from whom you purchased the box, or, more probably,
+the person from whom he purchased it, and by whom, doubtless, it
+was sold in ignorance, or by mistake. Thus, Pugh, if you will only
+send for the police, we shall earn the gratitude of a person of
+whom we never heard in our lives--I for discovering the contents of
+the box, and you for returning them."
+
+As I said this, Pugh's face was a study. He gasped for breath. He
+actually took out his handkerchief to wipe his brow.
+
+"Tress, I--I don't think you need to use a tone like that to me.
+It isn't friendly. What--what was in the box?"
+
+"Let us understand each other, Pugh. If you don't hand over what
+was in the box to the police, I go halves."
+
+Pugh began to dance about the floor.
+
+"What a fool I was to trust you with the box! I knew I couldn't
+trust you." I said nothing. I turned and rang the bell. "What's
+that for?"
+
+"That, my dear Pugh, is for breakfast, and, if you desire it, for
+the police. You know, although you have breakfasted, I haven't.
+Perhaps while I am breaking my fast, you would like to summon the
+representatives of law and order." Bob came in. I ordered
+breakfast. Then I turned to Pugh. "Is there anything you would
+like?"
+
+"No, I--I've breakfasted."
+
+"It wasn't of breakfast I was thinking. It was of--something else.
+Bob is at your service, if, for instance, you wish to send him on
+an errand."
+
+"No, I want nothing. Bob can go." Bob went. Directly he was
+gone, Pugh turned to me. "You shall have half. What was in the
+box?"
+
+"I shall have half?"
+
+"You shall!"
+
+"I don't think it is necessary that the terms of our little
+understanding should be expressly embodied in black and white. I
+fancy that, under the circumstance, I can trust you, Pugh. I
+believe that I am capable of seeing that, in this matter, you don't
+do me. That was in the box."
+
+I held out the crystal between my finger and thumb.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"That is what I desire to learn."
+
+"Let me look at it."
+
+"You are welcome to look at it where it is. Look at it as long as
+you like, and as closely."
+
+Pugh leaned over my hand. His eyes began to gleam. He is himself
+not a bad judge of precious stones, is Pugh.
+
+"It's--it's--Tress!--is it a diamond?"
+
+"That question I have already asked myself."
+
+"Let me look at it! It will be safe with me! It's mine!"
+
+I immediately put the thing behind my back.
+
+"Pardon me, it belongs neither to you nor to me. It belongs, in
+all probability, to the person who sold that puzzle to the man from
+whom you bought it--perhaps some weeping widow, Pugh, or hopeless
+orphan--think of it. Let us have no further misunderstanding upon
+that point, my dear old friend. Still, because you are my dear old
+friend, I am willing to trust you with this discovery of mine, on
+condition that you don't attempt to remove it from my sight, and
+that you return it to me the moment I require you."
+
+"You're--you're very hard on me." I made a movement toward my
+waistcoat pocket. "I'll return it to you!"
+
+I handed him the crystal, and with it I handed him my pocket lens.
+
+"With the aid of that glass I imagine that you will be able to
+subject it to a more acute examination, Pugh."
+
+He began to examine it through the lens. Directly he did so, he
+gave an exclamation. In a few moments he looked up at me. His
+eyes were glistening behind his spectacles. I could see he
+trembled.
+
+"Tress, it's--it's a diamond, a Brazil diamond. It's worth a
+fortune!"
+
+"I'm glad you think so."
+
+"Glad I think so! Don't you think that it's a diamond?"
+
+"It appears to be a diamond. Under ordinary conditions I should
+say, without hesitation, that it was a diamond. But when I
+consider the circumstances of its discovery, I am driven to doubts.
+How much did you give for that puzzle, Pugh?"
+
+"Ninepence; the fellow wanted a shilling, but I gave him ninepence.
+He seemed content."
+
+"Ninepence! Does it seem reasonable that we should find a diamond,
+which, if it is a diamond, is the finest stone I ever saw and
+handled, in a ninepenny puzzle? It is not as though it had got
+into the thing by accident, it had evidently been placed there to
+be found, and, apparently, by anyone who chanced to solve the
+puzzle; witness the writing on the scrap of paper."
+
+Pugh re-examined the crystal.
+
+"It is a diamond! I'll stake my life that it's a diamond!"
+
+"Still, though it be a diamond, I smell a rat!"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I strongly suspect that the person who placed that diamond inside
+that puzzle intended to have a joke at the expense of the person
+who discovered it. What was to be the nature of the joke is more
+than I can say at present, but I should like to have a bet with you
+that the man who compounded that puzzle was an ingenious practical
+joker. I may be wrong, Pugh; we shall see. But, until I have
+proved the contrary, I don't believe that the maddest man that ever
+lived would throw away a diamond worth, apparently, shall we say a
+thousand pounds?"
+
+"A thousand pounds! This diamond is worth a good deal more than a
+thousand pounds."
+
+"Well, that only makes my case the stronger; I don't believe that
+the maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond worth
+more than a thousand pounds with such utter wantonness as seems to
+have characterized the action of the original owner of the stone
+which I found in your ninepenny puzzle, Pugh."
+
+"There have been some eccentric characters in the world, some very
+eccentric characters. However, as you say, we shall see. I fancy
+that I know somebody who would be quite willing to have such a
+diamond as this, and who, moreover, would be willing to pay a fair
+price for its possession; I will take it to him and see what he
+says."
+
+"Pugh, hand me back that diamond."
+
+"My dear Tress, I was only going--"
+
+Bob came in with the breakfast tray.
+
+"Pugh, you will either hand me that at once, or Bob shall summon
+the representatives of law and order."
+
+He handed me the diamond. I sat down to breakfast with a hearty
+appetite. Pugh stood and scowled at me.
+
+"Joseph Tress, it is my solemn conviction, and I have no hesitation
+in saying so in plain English, that you're a thief."
+
+"My dear Pugh, it seems to me that we show every promise of
+becoming a couple of thieves."
+
+"Don't bracket me with you!"
+
+"Not at all, you are worse than I. It is you who decline to return
+the contents of the box to its proper owner. Put it to yourself,
+you have SOME common sense, my dear old friend I--do you suppose
+that a diamond worth more than a thousand pounds is to be HONESTLY
+bought for ninepence?"
+
+He resumed his old trick of dancing about the room.
+
+"I was a fool ever to let you have the box! I ought to have known
+better than to have trusted you; goodness knows you have given me
+sufficient cause to mistrust you! Over and over again! Your
+character is only too notorious! You have plundered friend and foe
+alike--friend and foe alike! As for the rubbish which you call
+your collection, nine tenths of it, I know as a positive fact, you
+have stolen out and out."
+
+"Who stole my Sir Walter Raleigh pipe? Wasn't it a man named
+Pugh?"
+
+"Look here, Joseph Tress!"
+
+"I'm looking."
+
+"Oh, it's no good talking to you, not the least! You're--you're
+dead to all the promptings of conscience! May I inquire, Mr.
+Tress, what it is you propose to do?"
+
+"I PROPOSE to do nothing, except summon the representatives of law
+and order. Failing that, my dear Pugh, I had some faint, vague,
+very vague idea of taking the contents of your ninepenny puzzle to
+a certain firm in Hatton Garden, who are dealers in precious
+stones, and to learn from them if they are disposed to give
+anything for it, and if so, what."
+
+"I shall come with you."
+
+"With pleasure, on condition that you pay the cab."
+
+"I pay the cab! I will pay half."
+
+"Not at all. You will either pay the whole fare, or else I will
+have one cab and you shall have another. It is a three-shilling
+cab fare from here to Hatton Garden. If you propose to share my
+cab, you will be so good as to hand over that three shillings
+before we start."
+
+He gasped, but he handed over the three shillings. There are few
+things I enjoy so much as getting money out of Pugh!
+
+On the road to Hatton Garden we wrangled nearly all the way. I own
+that I feel a certain satisfaction in irritating Pugh, he is such
+an irritable man. He wanted to know what I thought we should get
+for the diamond.
+
+"You can't expect to get much for the contents of a ninepenny
+puzzle, not even the price of a cab fare, Pugh."
+
+He eyed me, but for some minutes he was silent. Then he began
+again.
+
+"Tress, I don't think we ought to let it go for less than--than
+five thousand pounds."
+
+"Seriously, Pugh, I doubt whether, when the whole affair is ended,
+we shall get five thousand pence for it, or, for the matter of
+that, five thousand farthings."
+
+"But why not? Why not? It's a magnificent stone--magnificent!
+I'll stake my life on it."
+
+I tapped my breast with the tips of my fingers.
+
+"There's a warning voice within my breast that ought to be in
+yours, Pugh! Something tells me, perhaps it is the unusually
+strong vein of common sense which I possess, that the contents of
+your ninepenny puzzle will be found to be a magnificent do--an
+ingenious practical joke, my friend."
+
+"I don't believe it."
+
+But I think he did; at any rate, I had unsettled the foundations of
+his faith.
+
+We entered the Hatton Garden office side by side; in his anxiety
+not to let me get before him, Pugh actually clung to my arm. The
+office was divided into two parts by a counter which ran from wall
+to wall. I advanced to a man who stood on the other side of this
+counter.
+
+"I want to sell you a diamond."
+
+"WE want to sell you a diamond," interpolated Pugh.
+
+I turned to Pugh. I "fixed" him with my glance.
+
+"I want to sell you a diamond. Here it is. What will you give me
+for it?"
+
+Taking the crystal from my waistcoat pocket I handed it to the man
+on the other side of the counter. Directly he got it between his
+fingers, and saw that it was that he had got, I noticed a sudden
+gleam come into his eyes.
+
+"This is--this is rather a fine stone."
+
+Pugh nudged my arm.
+
+"I told you so." I paid no attention to Pugh. "What will you give
+me for it?"
+
+"Do you mean, what will I give you for it cash down upon the nail?"
+
+"Just so--what will you give me for it cash down upon the nail?"
+
+The man turned the crystal over and over in his fingers. "Well,
+that's rather a large order. We don't often get a chance of buying
+such a stone as this across the counter. What do you say to--well--
+to ten thousand pounds?"
+
+Ten thousand pounds! It was beyond my wildest imaginings. Pugh
+gasped. He lurched against the counter.
+
+"Ten thousand pounds!" he echoed.
+
+The man on the other side glanced at him, I thought, a little
+curiously.
+
+"If you can give me references, or satisfy me in any way as to your
+bona fides, I am prepared to give you for this diamond an open
+check for ten thousand pounds, or if you prefer it, the cash
+instead."
+
+I stared; I was not accustomed to see business transacted on quite
+such lines as those.
+
+"We'll take it," murmured Pugh; I believe he was too much overcome
+by his feelings to do more than murmur. I interposed.
+
+"My dear sir, you will excuse my saying that you arrive very
+rapidly at your conclusions. In the first place, how can you make
+sure that it is a diamond?"
+
+The man behind the counter smiled.
+
+"I should be very ill-fitted for the position which I hold if I
+could not tell a diamond directly I get a sight of it, especially
+such a stone as this."
+
+"But have you no tests you can apply?"
+
+"We have tests which we apply in cases in which doubt exists, but
+in this case there is no doubt whatever. I am as sure that this is
+a diamond as I am sure that it is air I breathe. However, here is
+a test."
+
+There was a wheel close by the speaker. It was worked by a
+treadle. It was more like a superior sort of traveling-tinker's
+grindstone than anything else. The man behind the counter put his
+foot upon the treadle. The wheel began to revolve. He brought the
+crystal into contact with the swiftly revolving wheel. There was a
+s--s--sh! And, in an instant, his hand was empty; the crystal had
+vanished into air.
+
+"Good heavens!" he gasped. I never saw such a look of amazement on
+a human countenance before. "It's splintered!"
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT
+
+
+It WAS a diamond, although it HAD splintered. In that fact lay the
+point of the joke. The man behind the counter had not been wrong;
+examination of such dust as could be collected proved that fact
+beyond a doubt. It was declared by experts that the diamond, at
+some period of its history, had been subjected to intense and
+continuing heat. The result had been to make it as brittle as
+glass.
+
+There could be no doubt that its original owner had been an expert
+too. He knew where he got it from, and he probably knew what it
+had endured. He was aware that, from a mercantile point of view,
+it was worthless; it could never have been cut. So, having a turn
+for humor of a peculiar kind, he had devoted days, and weeks, and
+possibly months, to the construction of that puzzle. He had placed
+the diamond inside, and he had enjoyed, in anticipation and in
+imagination, the Alnaschar visions of the lucky finder.
+
+Pugh blamed me for the catastrophe. He said, and still says, that
+if I had not, in a measure, and quite gratuitously, insisted on a
+test, the man behind the counter would have been satisfied with the
+evidence of his organs of vision, and we should have been richer by
+ten thousand pounds. But I satisfy my conscience with the
+reflection that what I did at any rate was honest, though, at the
+same time, I am perfectly well aware that such a reflection gives
+Pugh no sort of satisfaction.
+
+
+
+The Great Valdez Sapphire
+
+
+I know more about it than anyone else in the world, its present
+owner not excepted. I can give its whole history, from the
+Cingalese who found it, the Spanish adventurer who stole it, the
+cardinal who bought it, the Pope who graciously accepted it, the
+favored son of the Church who received it, the gay and giddy
+duchess who pawned it, down to the eminent prelate who now holds it
+in trust as a family heirloom.
+
+It will occupy a chapter to itself in my forthcoming work on
+"Historic Stones," where full details of its weight, size, color,
+and value may be found. At present I am going to relate an
+incident in its history which, for obvious reasons, will not be
+published--which, in fact, I trust the reader will consider related
+in strict confidence.
+
+I had never seen the stone itself when I began to write about it,
+and it was not till one evening last spring, while staying with my
+nephew, Sir Thomas Acton, that I came within measurable distance of
+it. A dinner party was impending, and, at my instigation, the
+Bishop of Northchurch and Miss Panton, his daughter and heiress,
+were among the invited guests.
+
+The dinner was a particularly good one, I remember that distinctly.
+In fact, I felt myself partly responsible for it, having engaged
+the new cook--a talented young Italian, pupil of the admirable old
+chef at my club. We had gone over the menu carefully together,
+with a result refreshing in its novelty, but not so daring as to
+disturb the minds of the innocent country guests who were bidden
+thereto.
+
+The first spoonful of soup was reassuring, and I looked to the end
+of the table to exchange a congratulatory glance with Leta. What
+was amiss? No response. Her pretty face was flushed, her smile
+constrained, she was talking with quite unnecessary empressement to
+her neighbor, Sir Harry Landor, though Leta is one of those few
+women who understand the importance of letting a man settle down
+tranquilly and with an undisturbed mind to the business of dining,
+allowing no topic of serious interest to come on before the
+releves, and reserving mere conversational brilliancy for the
+entremets.
+
+Guests all right? No disappointments? I had gone through the list
+with her, selecting just the right people to be asked to meet the
+Landors, our new neighbors. Not a mere cumbrous county gathering,
+nor yet a showy imported party from town, but a skillful blending
+of both. Had anything happened already? I had been late for
+dinner and missed the arrivals in the drawing-room. It was Leta's
+fault. She has got into a way of coming into my room and putting
+the last touches to my toilet. I let her, for I am doubtful of
+myself nowadays after many years' dependence on the best of valets.
+Her taste is generally beyond dispute, but to-day she had indulged
+in a feminine vagary that provoked me and made me late for dinner.
+
+"Are you going to wear your sapphire, Uncle Paul!" she cried in a
+tone of dismay. "Oh, why not the ruby?"
+
+"You WOULD have your way about the table decorations," I gently
+reminded her. "with that service of Crown Derby repousse and
+orchids, the ruby would look absolutely barbaric. Now if you would
+have had the Limoges set, white candles, and a yellow silk center--"
+
+"Oh, but--I'm SO disappointed--I wanted the bishop to see your
+ruby--or one of your engraved gems--"
+
+"My dear, it is on the bishop's account I put this on. You know
+his daughter is heiress of the great Valdez sapphire--"
+
+"Of course she is, and when he has the charge of a stone three
+times as big as yours, what's the use of wearing it? The ruby,
+dear Uncle Paul, PLEASE!"
+
+She was desperately in earnest I could see, and considering the
+obligations which I am supposed to be under to her and Tom, it was
+but a little matter to yield, but it involved a good deal of extra
+trouble. Studs, sleeve-links, watch-guard, all carefully selected
+to go with the sapphire, had to be changed, the emerald which I
+chose as a compromise requiring more florid accompaniments of a
+deeper tone of gold; and the dinner hour struck as I replaced my
+jewel case, the one relic left me of a once handsome fortune, in my
+fireproof safe.
+
+The emerald looked very well that evening, however. I kept my eyes
+upon it for comfort when Miss Panton proved trying.
+
+She was a lean, yellow, dictatorial young person with no
+conversation. I spoke of her father's celebrated sapphires. "MY
+sapphires," she amended sourly; "though I am legally debarred from
+making any profitable use of them." She furthermore informed me
+that she viewed them as useless gauds, which ought to be disposed
+of for the benefit of the heathen. I gave the subject up, and
+while she discoursed of the work of the Blue Ribbon Army among the
+Bosjesmans I tried to understand a certain dislocation in the
+arrangement of the table. Surely we were more or less in number
+than we should be? Opposite side all right. Who was extra on
+ours? I leaned forward. Lady Landor on one side of Tom, on the
+other who? I caught glimpses of plumes pink and green nodding over
+a dinner plate, and beneath them a pink nose in a green visage with
+a nutcracker chin altogether unknown to me. A sharp gray eye shot
+a sideway glance down the table and caught me peeping, and I
+retreated, having only marked in addition two clawlike hands, with
+pointed ruffles and a mass of brilliant rings, making good play
+with a knife and fork. Who was she? At intervals a high acid
+voice could be heard addressing Tom, and a laugh that made me
+shudder; it had the quality of the scream of a bird of prey or the
+yell of a jackal. I had heard that sort of laugh before, and it
+always made me feel like a defenseless rabbit.
+
+Every time it sounded I saw Leta's fan flutter more furiously and
+her manner grow more nervously animated. Poor dear girl! I never
+in all my recollection wished a dinner at an end so earnestly so as
+to assure her of my support and sympathy, though without the
+faintest conception why either should be required.
+
+The ices at last. A menu card folded in two was laid beside me. I
+read it unobserved. "Keep the B. from joining us in the drawing-
+room." The B.? The bishop, of course. With pleasure. But why?
+And how? THAT'S the question, never mind "why." Could I lure him
+into the library--the billiard room--the conservatory? I doubted
+it, and I doubted still more what I should do with him when I got
+him there.
+
+The bishop is a grand and stately ecclesiastic of the mediaeval
+type, broad-chested, deep-voiced, martial of bearing. I could
+picture him charging mace in hand at the head of his vassals, or
+delivering over a dissenter of the period to the rack and
+thumbscrew, but not pottering among rare editions, tall copies and
+Grolier bindings, nor condescending to a quiet cigar among the tree
+ferns and orchids. Leta must and should be obeyed, I swore,
+nevertheless, even if I were driven to lock the door in the
+fearless old fashion of a bygone day, and declare I'd shoot any man
+who left while a drop remained in the bottles.
+
+The ladies were rising. The lady at the head of the line smirked
+and nodded her pink plumes coquettishly at Tom, while her hawk's
+eyes roved keen and predatory over us all. She stopped suddenly,
+creating a block and confusion.
+
+"Ah, the dear bishop! YOU there, and I never saw you! You must
+come and have a nice long chat presently. By-by--!" She shook her
+fan at him over my shoulder and tripped off. Leta, passing me
+last, gave me a look of profound despair.
+
+"Lady Carwitchet!" somebody exclaimed. "I couldn't believe my
+eyes."
+
+"Thought she was dead or in penal servitude. Never should have
+expected to see her HERE," said some one else behind me
+confidentially.
+
+"What Carwitchet? Not the mother of the Carwitchet who--"
+
+"Just so. The Carwitchet who---" Tom assented with a shrug. "We
+needn't go farther, as she's my guest. Just my luck. I met them
+at Buxton, thought them uncommonly good company--in fact,
+Carwitchet laid me under a great obligation about a horse I was
+nearly let in for buying--and gave them a general invitation here,
+as one does, you know. Never expected her to turn up with her
+luggage this afternoon just before dinner, to stay a week, or a
+fortnight if Carwitchet can join her." A groan of sympathy ran
+round the table. "It can't be helped. I've told you this just to
+show that I shouldn't have asked you here to meet this sort of
+people of my own free will; but, as it is, please say no more about
+them." The subject was not dropped by any means, and I took care
+that it should not be. At our end of the table one story after
+another went buzzing round--sotto voce, out of deference to Tom--
+but perfectly audible.
+
+"Carwitchet? Ah, yes. Mixed up in that Rawlings divorce case,
+wasn't he? A bad lot. Turned out of the Dragoon Guards for
+cheating at cards, or picking pockets, or something--remember the
+row at the Cerulean Club? Scandalous exposure--and that forged
+letter business--oh, that was the mother--prosecution hushed up
+somehow. Ought to be serving her fourteen years--and that business
+of poor Farrars, the banker--got hold of some of his secrets and
+blackmailed him till he blew his brains out--"
+
+It was so exciting that I clean forgot the bishop, till a low gasp
+at my elbow startled me. He was lying back in his chair, his
+mighty shaven jowl a ghastly white, his fierce imperious eyebrows
+drooping limp over his fishlike eyes, his splendid figure shrunk
+and contracted. He was trying with a shaken hand to pour out wine.
+The decanter clattered against the glass and the wine spilled on
+the cloth.
+
+"I'm afraid you find the room too warm. Shall we go into the
+library?"
+
+He rose hastily and followed me like a lamb.
+
+He recovered himself once we got into the hall, and affably
+rejected all my proffers of brandy and soda--medical advice--
+everything else my limited experience could suggest. He only
+demanded his carriage "directly" and that Miss Panton should be
+summoned forthwith.
+
+I made the best use I could of the time left me.
+
+"I'm uncommonly sorry you do not feel equal to staying a little
+longer, my lord. I counted on showing you my few trifles of
+precious stones, the salvage from the wreck of my possessions.
+Nothing in comparison with your own collection."
+
+The bishop clasped his hand over his heart. His breath came short
+and quick.
+
+"A return of that dizziness," he explained with a faint smile.
+"You are thinking of the Valdez sapphire, are you not? Some day,"
+he went on with forced composure, "I may have the pleasure of
+showing it to you. It is at my banker's just now."
+
+Miss Panton's steps were heard in the ball. "You are well known as
+a connoisseur, Mr. Acton," he went on hurriedly. "Is your
+collection valuable? If so, keep it safe; don't trust a ring off
+your hand, or the key of your jewel case out of your pocket till
+the house is clear again." The words rushed from his lips in an
+impetuous whisper, he gave me a meaning glance, and departed with
+his daughter. I went back to the drawing-room, my head swimming
+with bewilderment.
+
+"What! The dear bishop gone!" screamed Lady Carwitchet from the
+central ottoman where she sat, surrounded by most of the gentlemen,
+all apparently well entertained by her conversation. "And I wanted
+to talk over old times with him so badly. His poor wife was my
+greatest friend. Mira Montanaro, daughter of the great banker, you
+know. It's not possible that that miserable little prig is my poor
+Mira's girl. The heiress of all the Montanaros in a black lace
+gown worth twopence! When I think of her mother's beauty and her
+toilets! Does she ever wear the sapphires? Has anyone ever seen
+her in them? Eleven large stones in a lovely antique setting, and
+the great Valdez sapphire--worth thousands and thousands--for the
+pendant." No one replied. "I wanted to get a rise out of the
+bishop to-night. It used to make him so mad when I wore this."
+
+She fumbled among the laces at her throat, and clawed out a pendant
+that hung to a velvet band around her neck. I fairly gasped when
+she removed her hand. A sapphire of irregular shape flashed out
+its blue lightning on us. Such a stone! A true, rich, cornflower
+blue even by that wretched artificial light, with soft velvety
+depths of color and dazzling clearness of tint in its lights and
+shades--a stone to remember! I stretched out my hand
+involuntarily, but Lady Carwitchet drew back with a coquettish
+squeal. "No! no! You mustn't look any closer. Tell me what you
+think of it now. Isn't it pretty?"
+
+"Superb!" was all I could ejaculate, staring at the azure splendor
+of that miraculous jewel in a sort of trance.
+
+She gave a shrill cackling laugh of mockery.
+
+"The great Mr. Acton taken in by a bit of Palais Royal gimcrackery!
+What an advertisement for Bogaerts et Cie! They are perfect
+artists in frauds. Don't you remember their stand at the first
+Paris Exhibition? They had imitations there of every celebrated
+stone; but I never expected anything made by man could delude Mr.
+Acton, never!" And she went off into another mocking cackle, and
+all the idiots round her haw-hawed knowingly, as if they had seen
+the joke all along. I was too bewildered to reply, which was on
+the whole lucky. "I suppose I mustn't tell why I came to give
+quite a big sum in francs for this?" she went on, tapping her
+closed lips with her closed fan, and cocking her eye at us all like
+a parrot wanting to be coaxed to talk. "It's a queer story."
+
+I didn't want to hear her anecdote, especially as I saw she wanted
+to tell it. What I DID want was to see that pendant again. She
+had thrust it back among her laces, only the loop which held it to
+the velvet being visible. It was set with three small sapphires,
+and even from a distance I clearly made them out to be imitations,
+and poor ones. I felt a queer thrill of self-mistrust. Was the
+large stone no better? Could I, even for an instant, have been
+dazzled by a sham, and a sham of that quality? The events of the
+evening had flurried and confused me. I wished to think them over
+in quiet. I would go to bed.
+
+My rooms at the Manor are the best in the house. Leta will have it
+so. I must explain their position for a reason to be understood
+later. My bedroom is in the southeast angle of the house; it opens
+on one side into a sitting-room in the east corridor, the rest of
+which is taken up by the suite of rooms occupied by Tom and Leta;
+and on the other side into my bathroom, the first room in the south
+corridor, where the principal guest chambers are, to one of which
+it was originally the dressing-room. Passing this room I noticed a
+couple of housemaids preparing it for the night, and discovered
+with a shiver that Lady Carwitchet was to be my next-door neighbor.
+It gave me a turn.
+
+The bishop's strange warning must have unnerved me. I was
+perfectly safe from her ladyship. The disused door into her room
+was locked, and the key safe on the housekeeper's bunch. It was
+also undiscoverable on her side, the recess in which it stood being
+completely filled by a large wardrobe. On my side hung a thick
+sound-proof portiere. Nevertheless, I resolved not to use that
+room while she inhabited the next one. I removed my possessions,
+fastened the door of communication with my bedroom, and dragged a
+heavy ottoman across it.
+
+Then I stowed away my emerald in my strong-box. It is built into
+the wall of my sitting-room, and masked by the lower part of an old
+carved oak bureau. I put away even the rings I wore habitually,
+keeping out only an inferior cat's-eye for workaday wear. I had
+just made all safe when Leta tapped at the door and came in to wish
+me good night. She looked flushed and harassed and ready to cry.
+"Uncle Paul," she began, "I want you to go up to town at once, and
+stay away till I send for you."
+
+"My dear--!" I was too amazed to expostulate.
+
+"We've got a--a pestilence among us," she declared, her foot
+tapping the ground angrily, "and the least we can do is to go into
+quarantine. Oh, I'm so sorry and so ashamed! The poor bishop!
+I'll take good care that no one else shall meet that woman here.
+You did your best for me, Uncle Paul, and managed admirably, but it
+was all no use. I hoped against hope that what between the dusk of
+the drawing-room before dinner, and being put at opposite ends of
+the table, we might get through without a meeting--"
+
+"But, my dear, explain. Why shouldn't the bishop and Lady
+Carwitchet meet? Why is it worse for him than anyone else?"
+
+"Why? I thought everybody had heard of that dreadful wife of his
+who nearly broke his heart. If he married her for her money it
+served him right, but Lady Landor says she was very handsome and
+really in love with him at first. Then Lady Carwitchet got hold of
+her and led her into all sorts of mischief. She left her husband--
+he was only a rector with a country living in those days--and went
+to live in town, got into a horrid fast set, and made herself
+notorious. You MUST have heard of her."
+
+"I heard of her sapphires, my dear. But I was in Brazil at the
+time."
+
+"I wish you had been at home. You might have found her out. She
+was furious because her husband refused to let her wear the great
+Valdez sapphire. It had been in the Montanaro family for some
+generations, and her father settled it first on her and then on her
+little girl--the bishop being trustee. He felt obliged to take
+away the little girl, and send her off to be brought up by some old
+aunts in the country, and he locked up the sapphire. Lady
+Carwitchet tells as a splendid joke how they got the copy made in
+Paris, and it did just as well for the people to stare at. No
+wonder the bishop hates the very name of the stone."
+
+"How long will she stay here?" I asked dismally.
+
+"Till Lord Carwitchet can come and escort her to Paris to visit
+some American friends. Goodness knows when that will be! Do go up
+to town, Uncle Paul!"
+
+I refused indignantly. The very least I could do was to stand by
+my poor young relatives in their troubles and help them through. I
+did so. I wore that inferior cat's eye for six weeks!
+
+It is a time I cannot think of even now without a shudder. The
+more I saw of that terrible old woman the more I detested her, and
+we saw a very great deal of her. Leta kept her word, and neither
+accepted nor gave invitations all that time. We were cut off from
+all society but that of old General Fairford, who would go anywhere
+and meet anyone to get a rubber after dinner; the doctor, a
+sporting widower; and the Duberlys, a giddy, rather rackety young
+couple who had taken the Dower House for a year. Lady Carwitchet
+seemed perfectly content. She reveled in the soft living and good
+fare of the Manor House, the drives in Leta's big barouche, and
+Domenico's dinners, as one to whom short commons were not unknown.
+She had a hungry way of grabbing and grasping at everything she
+could--the shillings she won at whist, the best fruit at dessert,
+the postage stamps in the library inkstand--that was infinitely
+suggestive. Sometimes I could have pitied her, she was so greedy,
+so spiteful, so friendless. She always made me think of some
+wicked old pirate putting into a peaceful port to provision and
+repair his battered old hulk, obliged to live on friendly terms
+with the natives, but his piratical old nostrils asniff for plunder
+and his piratical old soul longing to be off marauding once more.
+When would that be? Not till the arrival in Paris of her
+distinguished American friends, of whom we heard a great deal.
+"Charming people, the Bokums of Chicago, the American branch of the
+English Beauchamps, you know!" They seemed to be taking an
+unconscionable time to get there. She would have insisted on being
+driven over to Northchurch to call at the palace, but that the
+bishop was understood to be holding confirmations at the other end
+of the diocese.
+
+I was alone in the house one afternoon sitting by my window, toying
+with the key of my safe, and wondering whether I dare treat myself
+to a peep at my treasures, when a suspicious movement in the park
+below caught my attention. A black figure certainly dodged from
+behind one tree to the next, and then into the shadow of the park
+paling instead of keeping to the footpath. It looked queer. I
+caught up my field glass and marked him at one point where he was
+bound to come into the open for a few steps. He crossed the strip
+of turf with giant strides and got into cover again, but not quick
+enough to prevent me recognizing him. It was--great heavens!--the
+bishop! In a soft hat pulled over his forehead, with a long cloak
+and a big stick, he looked like a poacher.
+
+Guided by some mysterious instinct I hurried to meet him. I opened
+the conservatory door, and in he rushed like a hunted rabbit.
+Without explanation I led him up the wide staircase to my room,
+where he dropped into a chair and wiped his face.
+
+"You are astonished, Mr. Acton," he panted. "I will explain
+directly. Thanks." He tossed off the glass of brandy I had poured
+out without waiting for the qualifying soda, and looked better.
+
+"I am in serious trouble. You can help me. I've had a shock to-
+day--a grievous shock." He stopped and tried to pull himself
+together. "I must trust you implicitly, Mr. Acton, I have no
+choice. Tell me what you think of this." He drew a case from his
+breast pocket and opened it. "I promised you should see the Valdez
+sapphire. Look there!"
+
+The Valdez sapphire! A great big shining lump of blue crystal--
+flawless and of perfect color--that was all. I took it up,
+breathed on it, drew out my magnifier, looked at it in one light
+and another. What was wrong with it? I could not say. Nine
+experts out of ten would undoubtedly have pronounced the stone
+genuine. I, by virtue of some mysterious instinct that has
+hitherto always guided me aright, was the unlucky tenth. I looked
+at the bishop. His eyes met mine. There was no need of spoken
+word between us.
+
+"Has Lady Carwitchet shown you her sapphire?" was his most
+unexpected question. "She has? Now, Mr. Acton, on your honor as a
+connoisseur and a gentleman, which of the two is the Valdez?"
+
+"Not this one." I could say naught else.
+
+"You were my last hope." He broke off, and dropped his face on his
+folded arms with a groan that shook the table on which he rested,
+while I stood dismayed at myself for having let so hasty a judgment
+escape me. He lifted a ghastly countenance to me. "She vowed she
+would see me ruined and disgraced. I made her my enemy by crossing
+some of her schemes once, and she never forgives. She will keep
+her word. I shall appear before the world as a fraudulent trustee.
+I can neither produce the valuable confided to my charge nor make
+the loss good. I have only an incredible story to tell," be
+dropped his head and groaned again. "Who will believe me?"
+
+"I will, for one."
+
+"Ah, you? Yes, you know her. She took my wife from me, Mr. Acton.
+Heaven only knows what the hold was that she had over poor Mira.
+She encouraged her to set me at defiance and eventually to leave
+me. She was answerable for all the scandalous folly and
+extravagance of poor Mira's life in Paris--spare me the telling of
+the story. She left her at last to die alone and uncared for. I
+reached my wife to find her dying of a fever from which Lady
+Carwitchet and her crew had fled. She was raving in delirium, and
+died without recognizing me. Some trouble she had been in which I
+must never know oppressed her. At the very last she roused from a
+long stupor and spoke to the nurse. 'Tell him to get the sapphire
+back--she stole it. She has robbed my child.' Those were her last
+words. The nurse understood no English, and treated them as
+wandering; but I heard them, and knew she was sane when she spoke."
+
+"What did you do?"
+
+"What could I? I saw Lady Carwitchet, who laughed at me, and
+defied me to make her confess or disgorge. I took the pendant to
+more than one eminent jeweler on pretense of having the setting
+seen to, and all have examined and admired without giving a hint of
+there being anything wrong. I allowed a celebrated mineralogist to
+see it; he gave no sign--"
+
+"Perhaps they are right and we are wrong."
+
+"No, no. Listen. I heard of an old Dutchman celebrated for his
+imitations. I went to him, and he told me at once that he had been
+allowed by Montanaro to copy the Valdez--setting and all--for the
+Paris Exhibition. I showed him this, and he claimed it for his own
+work at once, and pointed out his private mark upon it. You must
+take your magnifier to find it; a Greek Beta. He also told me that
+he had sold it to Lady Carwitchet more than a year ago.
+
+"It is a terrible position."
+
+"It is. My co-trustee died lately. I have never dared to have
+another appointed. I am bound to hand over the sapphire to my
+daughter on her marriage, if her husband consents to take the name
+of Montanaro."
+
+The bishop's face was ghastly pale, and the moisture started on his
+brow. I racked my brain for some word of comfort.
+
+"Miss Panton may never marry."
+
+"But she will!" he shouted. "That is the blow that has been dealt
+me to-day. My chaplain--actually, my chaplain--tells me that he is
+going out as a temperance missionary to equatorial Africa, and has
+the assurance to add that he believes my daughter is not indisposed
+to accompany him!" His consummating wrath acted as a momentary
+stimulant. He sat upright, his eyes flashing and his brow
+thunderous. I felt for that chaplain. Then he collapsed
+miserably. "The sapphires will have to be produced, identified,
+revalued. How shall I come out of it? Think of the disgrace, the
+ripping up of old scandals! Even if I were to compound with Lady
+Carwitchet, the sum she hinted at was too monstrous. She wants
+more than my money. Help me, Mr. Acton! For the sake of your own
+family interests, help me!"
+
+"I beg your pardon--family interests? I don't understand."
+
+"If my daughter is childless, her next of kin is poor Marmaduke
+Panton, who is dying at Cannes, not married, or likely to marry;
+and failing him, your nephew, Sir Thomas Acton, succeeds."
+
+My nephew Tom! Leta, or Leta's baby, might come to be the possible
+inheritor of the great Valdez sapphire! The blood rushed to my
+head as I looked at the great shining swindle before me. "What
+diabolic jugglery was at work when the exchange was made?" I
+demanded fiercely.
+
+"It must have been on the last occasion of her wearing the
+sapphires in London. I ought never to have let her out of my
+sight"
+
+"You must put a stop to Miss Panton's marriage in the first place,"
+I pronounced as autocratically as he could have done himself.
+
+"Not to be thought of," he admitted helplessly. "Mira has my force
+of character. She knows her rights, and she will have her jewels.
+I want you to take charge of the--thing for me. If it's in the
+house she'll make me produce it. She'll inquire at the banker's.
+If YOU have it we can gain time, if but for a day or two." He
+broke off. Carriage wheels were crashing on the gravel outside.
+We looked at one another in consternation. Flight was imperative.
+I hurried him downstairs and out of the conservatory just as the
+door bell rang. I think we both lost our heads in the confusion.
+He shoved the case into my hands, and I pocketed it, without a
+thought of the awful responsibility I was incurring, and saw him
+disappear into the shelter of the friendly night.
+
+When I think of what my feelings were that evening--of my murderous
+hatred of that smirking, jesting Jezebel who sat opposite me at
+dinner, my wrathful indignation at the thought of the poor little
+expected heir defrauded ere his birth; of the crushing contempt I
+felt for myself and the bishop as a pair of witless idiots unable
+to see our way out of the dilemma; all this boiling and surging
+through my soul, I can only wonder--Domenico having given himself a
+holiday, and the kitchen maid doing her worst and wickedest--that
+gout or jaundice did not put an end to this story at once.
+
+"Uncle Paul!" Leta was looking her sweetest when she tripped into
+my room next morning. "I've news for you. She," pointing a
+delicate forefinger in the direction of the corridor, "is going!
+Her Bokums have reached Paris at last, and sent for her to join
+them at the Grand Hotel."
+
+I was thunderstruck. The longed-for deliverance had but come to
+remove hopelessly and forever out of my reach Lady Carwitchet and
+the great Valdez sapphire.
+
+"Why, aren't you overjoyed? I am. We are going to celebrate the
+event by a dinner party. Tom's hospitable soul is vexed by the
+lack of entertainment we had provided her. We must ask the
+Brownleys some day or other, and they will be delighted to meet
+anything in the way of a ladyship, or such smart folks as the
+Duberly-Parkers. Then we may as well have the Blomfields, and air
+that awful modern Sevres dessert service she gave us when we were
+married." I had no objection to make, and she went on, rubbing her
+soft cheek against my shoulder like the purring little cat she was:
+"Now I want you to do something to please me--and Mrs. Blomfield.
+She has set her heart on seeing your rubies, and though I know you
+hate her about as much as you do that Sevres china--"
+
+"What! Wear my rubies with that! I won't. I'll tell you what I
+will do, though. I've got some carbuncles as big as prize
+gooseberries, a whole set. Then you have only to put those
+Bohemian glass vases and candelabra on the table, and let your
+gardener do his worst with his great forced, scentless, vulgar
+blooms, and we shall all be in keeping." Leta pouted. An idea
+struck me. "Or I'll do as you wish, on one condition. You get
+Lady Carwitchet to wear her big sapphire, and don't tell her I wish
+it."
+
+I lived through the next few days as one in some evil dream. The
+sapphires, like twin specters, haunted me day and night. Was ever
+man so tantalized? To hold the shadow and see the substance
+dangled temptingly within reach. The bishop made no sign of
+ridding me of my unwelcome charge, and the thought of what might
+happen in a case of burglary--fire--earthquake--made me start and
+tremble at all sorts of inopportune moments.
+
+I kept faith with Leta, and reluctantly produced my beautiful
+rubies on the night of her dinner party. Emerging from my room I
+came full upon Lady Carwitchet in the corridor. She was dressed
+for dinner, and at her throat I caught the blue gleam of the great
+sapphire. Leta had kept faith with me. I don't know what I
+stammered in reply to her ladyship's remarks; my whole soul was
+absorbed in the contemplation of the intoxicating loveliness of the
+gem. THAT a Palais Royal deception! Incredible! My fingers
+twitched, my breath came short and fierce with the lust of
+possession. She must have seen the covetous glare in my eyes. A
+look of gratified spiteful complacency overspread her features, as
+she swept on ahead and descended the stairs before me. I followed
+her to the drawing-room door. She stopped suddenly, and murmuring
+something unintelligible hurried back again.
+
+Everybody was assembled there that I expected to see, with an
+addition. Not a welcome one by the look on Tom's face. He stood
+on the hearthrug conversing with a great hulking, high-shouldered
+fellow, sallow-faced, with a heavy mustache and drooping eyelids,
+from the corners of which flashed out a sudden suspicious look as I
+approached, which lighted up into a greedy one as it rested on my
+rubies, and seemed unaccountably familiar to me, till Lady
+Carwitchet tripping past me exclaimed:
+
+"He has come at last! My naughty, naughty boy! Mr. Acton, this is
+my son, Lord Carwitchet!"
+
+I broke off short in the midst of my polite acknowledgments to
+stare blankly at her. The sapphire was gone! A great gilt cross,
+with a Scotch pebble like an acid drop, was her sole decoration.
+
+"I had to put my pendant away," she explained confidentially; "the
+clasp had got broken somehow." I didn't believe a word.
+
+Lord Carwitchet contributed little to the general entertainment at
+dinner, but fell into confidential talk with Mrs. Duberly-Parker.
+I caught a few unintelligible remarks across the table. They
+referred, I subsequently discovered, to the lady's little book on
+Northchurch races, and I recollected that the Spring Meeting was
+on, and to-morrow "Cup Day." After dinner there was great talk
+about getting up a party to go on General Fairford's drag. Lady
+Carwitchet was in ecstasies and tried to coax me into joining.
+Leta declined positively. Tom accepted sulkily.
+
+The look in Lord Carwitchet's eye returned to my mind as I locked
+up my rubies that night. It made him look so like his mother! I
+went round my fastenings with unusual care. Safe and closets and
+desk and doors, I tried them all. Coming at last to the bathroom,
+it opened at once. It was the housemaid's doing. She had
+evidently taken advantage of my having abandoned the room to give
+it "a thorough spring cleaning," and I anathematized her. The
+furniture was all piled together and veiled with sheets, the carpet
+and felt curtain were gone, there were new brooms about. As I
+peered around, a voice close at my ear made me jump--Lady
+Carwitchet's!
+
+"I tell you I have nothing, not a penny! I shall have to borrow my
+train fare before I can leave this. They'll be glad enough to lend
+it."
+
+Not only had the portiere been removed, but the door behind it had
+been unlocked and left open for convenience of dusting behind the
+wardrobe. I might as well have been in the bedroom.
+
+"Don't tell me," I recognized Carwitchet's growl. "You've not been
+here all this time for nothing. You've been collecting for a
+Kilburn cot or getting subscriptions for the distressed Irish
+landlords. I know you. Now I'm not going to see myself ruined for
+the want of a paltry hundred or so. I tell you the colt is a dead
+certainty. If I could have got a thousand or two on him last week,
+we might have ended our dog days millionaires. Hand over what you
+can. You've money's worth, if not money. Where's that sapphire
+you stole?"
+
+"I didn't. I can show you the receipted bill. All I possess is
+honestly come by. What could you do with it, even if I gave it
+you? You couldn't sell it as the Valdez, and you can't get it cut
+up as you might if it were real."
+
+"If it's only bogus, why are you always in such a flutter about it?
+I'll do something with it, never fear. Hand over."
+
+"I can't. I haven't got it. I had to raise something on it before
+I left town."
+
+"Will you swear it's not in that wardrobe? I dare say you will. I
+mean to see. Give me those keys."
+
+I heard a struggle and a jingle, then the wardrobe door must have
+been flung open, for a streak of light struck through a crack in
+the wood of the back. Creeping close and peeping through, I could
+see an awful sight. Lady Carwitchet in a flannel wrapper, minus
+hair, teeth, complexion, pointing a skinny forefinger that quivered
+with rage at her son, who was out of the range of my vision.
+
+"Stop that, and throw those keys down here directly, or I'll rouse
+the house. Sir Thomas is a magistrate, and will lock you up as
+soon as look at you." She clutched at the bell rope as she spoke.
+"I'll swear I'm in danger of my life from you and give you in
+charge. Yes, and when you're in prison I'll keep you there till
+you die. I've often thought I'd do it. How about the hotel
+robberies last summer at Cowes, eh? Mightn't the police be
+grateful for a hint or two? And how about--"
+
+The keys fell with a crash on the bed, accompanied by some bad
+language in an apologetic tone, and the door slammed to. I crept
+trembling to bed.
+
+This new and horrible complication of the situation filled me with
+dismay. Lord Carwitchet's wolfish glance at my rubies took a new
+meaning. They were safe enough, I believed--but the sapphire! If
+he disbelieved his mother, how long would she be able to keep it
+from his clutches? That she had some plot of her own of which the
+bishop would eventually be the victim I did not doubt, or why had
+she not made her bargain with him long ago? But supposing she took
+fright, lost her head, allowed her son to wrest the jewel from her,
+or gave consent to its being mutilated, divided! I lay in a cold
+perspiration till morning.
+
+My terrors haunted me all day. They were with me at breakfast time
+when Lady Carwitchet, tripping in smiling, made a last attempt to
+induce me to accompany her and keep her "bad, bad boy" from getting
+among "those horrid betting men."
+
+They haunted me through the long peaceful day with Leta and the
+tete-a-tete dinner, but they swarmed around and beset me sorest
+when, sitting alone over my sitting-room fire, I listened for the
+return of the drag party. I read my newspaper and brewed myself
+some hot strong drink, but there comes a time of night when no fire
+can warm and no drink can cheer. The bishop's despairing face kept
+me company, and his troubles and the wrongs of the future heir took
+possession of me. Then the uncanny noises that make all old houses
+ghostly during the small hours began to make themselves heard.
+Muffled footsteps trod the corridor, stopping to listen at every
+door, door latches gently clicked, boards creaked unreasonably,
+sounds of stealthy movements came from the locked-up bathroom. The
+welcome crash of wheels at last, and the sound of the front-door
+bell. I could hear Lady Carwitchet making her shrill adieux to her
+friends and her steps in the corridor. She was softly humming a
+little song as she approached. I heard her unlock her bedroom door
+before she entered--an odd thing to do. Tom came sleepily
+stumbling to his room later. I put my head out. "Where is Lord
+Carwitchet?"
+
+"Haven't you seen him? He left us hours ago. Not come home, eh?
+Well, he's welcome to stay away. I don't want to see more of him."
+Tom's brow was dark and his voice surly. "I gave him to understand
+as much." Whatever had happened, Tom was evidently too disgusted
+to explain just then.
+
+I went back to my fire unaccountably relieved, and brewed myself
+another and a stronger brew. It warmed me this time, but excited
+me foolishly. There must be some way out of the difficulty. I
+felt now as if I could almost see it if I gave my mind to it. Why--
+suppose--there might be no difficulty after all! The bishop was a
+nervous old gentleman. He might have been mistaken all through,
+Bogaerts might have been mistaken, I might--no. I could not have
+been mistaken--or I thought not. I fidgeted and fumed and argued
+with myself till I found I should have no peace of mind without a
+look at the stone in my possession, and I actually went to the safe
+and took the case out.
+
+The sapphire certainly looked different by lamplight. I sat and
+stared, and all but over-persuaded my better judgment into giving
+it a verdict. Bogaerts's mark--I suddenly remembered it. I took
+my magnifier and held the pendant to the light. There, scratched
+upon the stone, was the Greek Beta! There came a tap on my door,
+and before I could answer, the handle turned softly and Lord
+Carwitchet stood before me. I whipped the case into my dressing-
+gown pocket and stared at him. He was not pleasant to look at,
+especially at that time of night. He had a disheveled, desperate
+air, his voice was hoarse, his red-rimmed eyes wild.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he began civilly enough. "I saw your light
+burning, and thought, as we go by the early train to-morrow, you
+might allow me to consult you now on a little business of my
+mother's." His eyes roved about the room. Was he trying to find
+the whereabouts of my safe? "You know a lot about precious stones,
+don't you?"
+
+"So my friends are kind enough to say. Won't you sit down? I have
+unluckily little chance of indulging the taste on my own account,"
+was my cautious reply.
+
+"But you've written a book about them, and know them when you see
+them, don't you? Now my mother has given me something, and would
+like you to give a guess at its value. Perhaps you can put me in
+the way of disposing of it?"
+
+"I certainly can do so if it is worth anything. Is that it?" I
+was in a fever of excitement, for I guessed what was clutched in
+his palm. He held out to me the Valdez sapphire.
+
+How it shone and sparkled like a great blue star! I made myself a
+deprecating smile as I took it from him, but how dare I call it
+false to its face? As well accuse the sun in heaven of being a
+cheap imitation. I faltered and prevaricated feebly. Where was my
+moral courage, and where was the good, honest, thumping lie that
+should have aided me? "I have the best authority for recognizing
+this as a very good copy of a famous stone in the possession of the
+Bishop of Northchurch." His scowl grew so black that I saw he
+believed me, and I went on more cheerily: "This was manufactured by
+Johannes Bogaerts--I can give you his address, and you can make
+inquiries yourself--by special permission of the then owner, the
+late Leone Montanaro."
+
+"Hand it back!" he interrupted (his other remarks were outrageous,
+but satisfactory to hear); but I waved him off. I couldn't give it
+up. It fascinated me. I toyed with it, I caressed it. I made it
+display its different tones of color. I must see the two stones
+together. I must see it outshine its paltry rival. It was a
+whimsical frenzy that seized me--I can call it by no other name.
+
+"Would you like to see the original? Curiously enough, I have it
+here. The bishop has left it in my charge."
+
+The wolfish light flamed up in Carwitchet's eyes as I drew forth
+the case. He laid the Valdez down on a sheet of paper, and I
+placed the other, still in its case, beside it. In that moment
+they looked identical, except for the little loop of sham stones,
+replaced by a plain gold band in the bishop's jewel. Carwitchet
+leaned across the table eagerly, the table gave a lurch, the lamp
+tottered, crashed over, and we were left in semidarkness.
+
+"Don't stir!" Carwitchet shouted. "The paraffin is all over the
+place!" He seized my sofa blanket, and flung it over the table
+while I stood helpless. "There, that's safe now. Have you candles
+on the chimney-piece? I've got matches."
+
+He looked very white and excited as he lit up. "Might have been an
+awkward job with all that burning paraffin running about," he said
+quite pleasantly. "I hope no real harm is done." I was lifting
+the rug with shaking hands. The two stones lay as I had placed
+them. No! I nearly dropped it back again. It was the stone in
+the case that had the loop with the three sham sapphires!
+
+Carwitchet picked the other up hastily. "So you say this is
+rubbish?" he asked, his eyes sparkling wickedly, and an attempt at
+mortification in his tone.
+
+"Utter rubbish!" I pronounced, with truth and decision, snapping up
+the case and pocketing it. "Lady Carwitchet must have known it."
+
+"Ah, well, it's disappointing, isn't it? Good-by, we shall not
+meet again."
+
+I shook hands with him most cordially. "Good-by, Lord Carwitchet.
+SO glad to have met you and your mother. It has been a source of
+the GREATEST pleasure, I assure you."
+
+I have never seen the Carwitchets since. The bishop drove over
+next day in rather better spirits. Miss Panton had refused the
+chaplain.
+
+"It doesn't matter, my lord," I said to him heartily. "We've all
+been under some strange misconception. The stone in your
+possession is the veritable one. I could swear to that anywhere.
+The sapphire Lady Carwitchet wears is only an excellent imitation,
+and--I have seen it with my own eyes--is the one bearing Bogaerts's
+mark, the Greek Beta."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Stories by Modern English Authors
+
diff --git a/old/sbmea10.zip b/old/sbmea10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..32cfd1f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/sbmea10.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/sbmea10h.htm b/old/sbmea10h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9e127a6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/sbmea10h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,23583 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>Stories by Modern English Authors</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
+"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+</head>
+
+
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+Project Gutenberg's The Lock and Key Library, by Edited by Julian Hawthorne
+#4 in our series by Edited by Julian Hawthorne
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Lock and Key Library
+ Classic Mystery and Detective Stories
+
+Author: Edited by Julian Hawthorne
+
+Release Date: January, 2000 [EBook #2038]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This htm conversion was first posted on March 21, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-Latin-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+
+
+This htm conversion was produced by Walter Debeuf from the
+etext prepared by Donald Lainson
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p>THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY</p>
+
+<p>CLASSIC MYSTERY AND DETECTIVE STORIES</p>
+
+<p>EDITED BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ MODERN ENGLISH</p>
+
+<p>Table of Contents</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ RUDYARD KIPLING (1865-)</p>
+
+<p>My Own True Ghost Story</p>
+
+<p>The Sending of Dana Da</p>
+
+<p>In the House of Suddhoo</p>
+
+<p>His Wedded Wife</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ A. CONAN DOYLE (1859-)</p>
+
+<p>A Case of Identity</p>
+
+<p>A Scandal in Bohemia</p>
+
+<p>The Red-Headed League</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ EGERTON CASTLE (1858-)</p>
+
+<p>The Baron's Quarry</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ STANLEY J. WEYMAN (1855-)</p>
+
+<p>The Fowl in the Pot</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON (1850-94)</p>
+
+<p>The Pavilion on the Links</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ WILKIE COLLINS (1824-89)</p>
+
+<p>The Dream Woman</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ ANONYMOUS</p>
+
+<p>The Lost Duchess</p>
+
+<p>The Minor Canon</p>
+
+<p>The Pipe</p>
+
+<p>The Puzzle</p>
+
+<p>The Great Valdez Sapphire</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h1>Modern English Mystery Stories</h1>
+
+<h3><br>
+ Rudyard Kipling</h3>
+
+<h3> </h3>
+
+<h2>My Own True Ghost Story</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ As I came through the Desert thus it was--<br>
+ As I came through the Desert.<br>
+ The City of Dreadful Night.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Somewhere in the Other World, where there are books and
+pictures<br>
+ and plays and shop windows to look at, and thousands of men
+who<br>
+ spend their lives in building up all four, lives a gentleman
+who<br>
+ writes real stories about the real insides of people; and his
+name<br>
+ is Mr. Walter Besant. But he will insist upon treating his
+ghosts--<br>
+ he has published half a workshopful of them--with levity. He<br>
+ makes his ghost-seers talk familiarly, and, in some cases,
+flirt<br>
+ outrageously, with the phantoms. You may treat anything, from
+a<br>
+ Viceroy to a Vernacular Paper, with levity; but you must
+behave<br>
+ reverently toward a ghost, and particularly an Indian one.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ There are, in this land, ghosts who take the form of fat,
+cold,<br>
+ pobby corpses, and hide in trees near the roadside till a
+traveler<br>
+ passes. Then they drop upon his neck and remain. There are
+also<br>
+ terrible ghosts of women who have died in child-bed. These
+wander<br>
+ along the pathways at dusk, or hide in the crops near a
+village,<br>
+ and call seductively. But to answer their call is death in
+this<br>
+ world and the next. Their feet are turned backward that all
+sober<br>
+ men may recognize them. There are ghosts of little children
+who<br>
+ have been thrown into wells. These haunt well curbs and the<br>
+ fringes of jungles, and wail under the stars, or catch women by
+the<br>
+ wrist and beg to be taken up and carried. These and the
+corpse<br>
+ ghosts, however, are only vernacular articles and do not
+attack<br>
+ Sahibs. No native ghost has yet been authentically reported
+to<br>
+ have frightened an Englishman; but many English ghosts have
+scared<br>
+ the life out of both white and black.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly every other Station owns a ghost. There are said to be
+two<br>
+ at Simla, not counting the woman who blows the bellows at
+Syree<br>
+ dak-bungalow on the Old Road; Mussoorie has a house haunted of
+a<br>
+ very lively Thing; a White Lady is supposed to do
+night-watchman<br>
+ round a house in Lahore; Dalhousie says that one of her
+houses<br>
+ "repeats" on autumn evenings all the incidents of a horrible
+horse-<br>
+ and-precipice accident; Murree has a merry ghost, and, now that
+she<br>
+ has been swept by cholera, will have room for a sorrowful
+one;<br>
+ there are Officers' Quarters in Mian Mir whose doors open
+without<br>
+ reason, and whose furniture is guaranteed to creak, not with
+the<br>
+ heat of June but with the weight of Invisibles who come to
+lounge<br>
+ in the chairs; Peshawur possesses houses that none will
+willingly<br>
+ rent; and there is something--not fever--wrong with a big
+bungalow<br>
+ in Allahabad. The older Provinces simply bristle with
+haunted<br>
+ houses, and march phantom armies along their main
+thoroughfares.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the dak-bungalows on the Grand Trunk Road have handy
+little<br>
+ cemeteries in their compound--witnesses to the "changes and
+chances<br>
+ of this mortal life" in the days when men drove from Calcutta
+to<br>
+ the Northwest. These bungalows are objectionable places to put
+up<br>
+ in. They are generally very old, always dirty, while the
+khansamah<br>
+ is as ancient as the bungalow. He either chatters senilely,
+or<br>
+ falls into the long trances of age. In both moods he is
+useless.<br>
+ If you get angry with him, he refers to some Sahib dead and
+buried<br>
+ these thirty years, and says that when he was in that
+Sahib's<br>
+ service not a khansamah in the Province could touch him. Then
+he<br>
+ jabbers and mows and trembles and fidgets among the dishes, and
+you<br>
+ repent of your irritation.</p>
+
+<p>In these dak-bungalows, ghosts are most likely to be found,
+and<br>
+ when found, they should be made a note of. Not long ago it was
+my<br>
+ business to live in dak-bungalows. I never inhabited the
+same<br>
+ house for three nights running, and grew to be learned in
+the<br>
+ breed. I lived in Government-built ones with red brick walls
+and<br>
+ rail ceilings, an inventory of the furniture posted in every
+room,<br>
+ and an excited snake at the threshold to give welcome. I lived
+in<br>
+ "converted" ones--old houses officiating as
+dak-bungalows--where<br>
+ nothing was in its proper place and there wasn't even a fowl
+for<br>
+ dinner. I lived in second-hand palaces where the wind blew
+through<br>
+ open-work marble tracery just as uncomfortably as through a
+broken<br>
+ pane. I lived in dak-bungalows where the last entry in the<br>
+ visitors' book was fifteen months old, and where they slashed
+off<br>
+ the curry-kid's head with a sword. It was my good luck to meet
+all<br>
+ sorts of men, from sober traveling missionaries and
+deserters<br>
+ flying from British Regiments, to drunken loafers who threw
+whisky<br>
+ bottles at all who passed; and my still greater good fortune
+just<br>
+ to escape a maternity case. Seeing that a fair proportion of
+the<br>
+ tragedy of our lives out here acted itself in dak-bungalows,
+I<br>
+ wondered that I had met no ghosts. A ghost that would
+voluntarily<br>
+ hang about a dak-bungalow would be mad of course; but so many
+men<br>
+ have died mad in dak-bungalows that there must be a fair
+percentage<br>
+ of lunatic ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>In due time I found my ghost, or ghosts rather, for there were
+two<br>
+ of them. Up till that hour I had sympathized with Mr.
+Besant's<br>
+ method of handling them, as shown in "The Strange Case of
+Mr.<br>
+ Lucraft and Other Stories." I am now in the Opposition.</p>
+
+<p>We will call the bungalow Katmal dak-bungalow. But THAT was
+the<br>
+ smallest part of the horror. A man with a sensitive hide has
+no<br>
+ right to sleep in dak-bungalows. He should marry. Katmal
+dak-<br>
+ bungalow was old and rotten and unrepaired. The floor was of
+worn<br>
+ brick, the walls were filthy, and the windows were nearly
+black<br>
+ with grime. It stood on a bypath largely used by native
+Sub-Deputy<br>
+ Assistants of all kinds, from Finance to Forests; but real
+Sahibs<br>
+ were rare. The khansamah, who was nearly bent double with old
+age,<br>
+ said so.</p>
+
+<p>When I arrived, there was a fitful, undecided rain on the face
+of<br>
+ the land, accompanied by a restless wind, and every gust made
+a<br>
+ noise like the rattling of dry bones in the stiff toddy
+palms<br>
+ outside. The khansamah completely lost his head on my arrival.
+He<br>
+ had served a Sahib once. Did I know that Sahib? He gave me
+the<br>
+ name of a well-known man who has been buried for more than a<br>
+ quarter of a century, and showed me an ancient daguerreotype
+of<br>
+ that man in his prehistoric youth. I had seen a steel engraving
+of<br>
+ him at the head of a double volume of Memoirs a month before,
+and I<br>
+ felt ancient beyond telling.</p>
+
+<p>The day shut in and the khansamah went to get me food. He did
+not<br>
+ go through the pretense of calling it "khana"--man's victuals.
+He<br>
+ said "ratub," and that means, among other things,
+"grub"--dog's<br>
+ rations. There was no insult in his choice of the term. He
+had<br>
+ forgotten the other word, I suppose.</p>
+
+<p>While he was cutting up the dead bodies of animals, I
+settled<br>
+ myself down, after exploring the dak-bungalow. There were
+three<br>
+ rooms, beside my own, which was a corner kennel, each giving
+into<br>
+ the other through dingy white doors fastened with long iron
+bars.<br>
+ The bungalow was a very solid one, but the partition walls of
+the<br>
+ rooms were almost jerry-built in their flimsiness. Every step
+or<br>
+ bang of a trunk echoed from my room down the other three, and
+every<br>
+ footfall came back tremulously from the far walls. For this
+reason<br>
+ I shut the door. There were no lamps--only candles in long
+glass<br>
+ shades. An oil wick was set in the bathroom.</p>
+
+<p>For bleak, unadulterated misery that dak-bungalow was the
+worst of<br>
+ the many that I had ever set foot in. There was no fireplace,
+and<br>
+ the windows would not open; so a brazier of charcoal would
+have<br>
+ been useless. The rain and the wind splashed and gurgled and<br>
+ moaned round the house, and the toddy palms rattled and
+roared.<br>
+ Half a dozen jackals went through the compound singing, and a
+hyena<br>
+ stood afar off and mocked them. A hyena would convince a
+Sadducee<br>
+ of the Resurrection of the Dead--the worst sort of Dead. Then
+came<br>
+ the ratub--a curious meal, half native and half English in<br>
+ composition--with the old khansamah babbling behind my chair
+about<br>
+ dead and gone English people, and the wind-blown candles
+playing<br>
+ shadow-bo-peep with the bed and the mosquito-curtains. It was
+just<br>
+ the sort of dinner and evening to make a man think of every
+single<br>
+ one of his past sins, and of all the others that he intended
+to<br>
+ commit if he lived.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep, for several hundred reasons, was not easy. The lamp in
+the<br>
+ bath-room threw the most absurd shadows into the room, and the
+wind<br>
+ was beginning to talk nonsense.</p>
+
+<p>Just when the reasons were drowsy with blood-sucking I heard
+the<br>
+ regular--"Let--us--take--and--heave--him--over" grunt of
+doolie-<br>
+ bearers in the compound. First one doolie came in, then a
+second,<br>
+ and then a third. I heard the doolies dumped on the ground,
+and<br>
+ the shutter in front of my door shook. "That's some one trying
+to<br>
+ come in," I said. But no one spoke, and I persuaded myself that
+it<br>
+ was the gusty wind. The shutter of the room next to mine was<br>
+ attacked, flung back, and the inner door opened. "That's some
+Sub-<br>
+ Deputy Assistant," I said, "and he has brought his friends
+with<br>
+ him. Now they'll talk and spit and smoke for an hour."</p>
+
+<p>But there were no voices and no footsteps. No one was putting
+his<br>
+ luggage into the next room. The door shut, and I thanked<br>
+ Providence that I was to be left in peace. But I was curious
+to<br>
+ know where the doolies had gone. I got out of bed and looked
+into<br>
+ the darkness. There was never a sign of a doolie. Just as I
+was<br>
+ getting into bed again, I heard, in the next room, the sound
+that<br>
+ no man in his senses can possibly mistake--the whir of a
+billiard<br>
+ ball down the length of the slates when the striker is
+stringing<br>
+ for break. No other sound is like it. A minute afterwards
+there<br>
+ was another whir, and I got into bed. I was not
+frightened--indeed<br>
+ I was not. I was very curious to know what had become of the<br>
+ doolies. I jumped into bed for that reason.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Next minute I heard the double click of a cannon and my hair
+sat<br>
+ up. It is a mistake to say that hair stands up. The skin of
+the<br>
+ head tightens and you can feel a faint, prickly, bristling all
+over<br>
+ the scalp. That is the hair sitting up.</p>
+
+<p>There was a whir and a click, and both sounds could only have
+been<br>
+ made by one thing--a billiard ball. I argued the matter out
+at<br>
+ great length with myself; and the more I argued the less
+probable<br>
+ it seemed that one bed, one table, and two chairs--all the<br>
+ furniture of the room next to mine--could so exactly duplicate
+the<br>
+ sounds of a game of billiards. After another cannon, a
+three-<br>
+ cushion one to judge by the whir, I argued no more. I had found
+my<br>
+ ghost and would have given worlds to have escaped from that
+dak-<br>
+ bungalow. I listened, and with each listen the game grew
+clearer.<br>
+ There was whir on whir and click on click. Sometimes there was
+a<br>
+ double click and a whir and another click. Beyond any sort
+of<br>
+ doubt, people were playing billiards in the next room. And
+the<br>
+ next room was not big enough to hold a billiard table!</p>
+
+<p>Between the pauses of the wind I heard the game go
+forward--stroke<br>
+ after stroke. I tried to believe that I could not hear voices;
+but<br>
+ that attempt was a failure.</p>
+
+<p>Do you know what fear is? Not ordinary fear of insult, injury
+or<br>
+ death, but abject, quivering dread of something that you
+cannot<br>
+ see--fear that dries the inside of the mouth and half of the<br>
+ throat--fear that makes you sweat on the palms of the hands,
+and<br>
+ gulp in order to keep the uvula at work? This is a fine
+Fear--a<br>
+ great cowardice, and must be felt to be appreciated. The
+very<br>
+ improbability of billiards in a dak-bungalow proved the reality
+of<br>
+ the thing. No man--drunk or sober--could imagine a game at<br>
+ billiards, or invent the spitting crack of a "screw-cannon."</p>
+
+<p>A severe course of dak-bungalows has this disadvantage--it
+breeds<br>
+ infinite credulity. If a man said to a confirmed
+dak-bungalow-<br>
+ haunter:--"There is a corpse in the next room, and there's a
+mad<br>
+ girl in the next but one, and the woman and man on that camel
+have<br>
+ just eloped from a place sixty miles away," the hearer would
+not<br>
+ disbelieve because he would know that nothing is too wild,<br>
+ grotesque, or horrible to happen in a dak-bungalow.</p>
+
+<p>This credulity, unfortunately, extends to ghosts. A
+rational<br>
+ person fresh from his own house would have turned on his side
+and<br>
+ slept. I did not. So surely as I was given up as a bad carcass
+by<br>
+ the scores of things in the bed because the bulk of my blood was
+in<br>
+ my heart, so surely did I hear every stroke of a long game
+at<br>
+ billiards played in the echoing room behind the iron-barred
+door.<br>
+ My dominant fear was that the players might want a marker. It
+was<br>
+ an absurd fear; because creatures who could play in the dark
+would<br>
+ be above such superfluities. I only know that that was my
+terror;<br>
+ and it was real.</p>
+
+<p>After a long, long while the game stopped, and the door
+banged. I<br>
+ slept because I was dead tired. Otherwise I should have
+preferred<br>
+ to have kept awake. Not for everything in Asia would I have<br>
+ dropped the door-bar and peered into the dark of the next
+room.</p>
+
+<p>When the morning came, I considered that I had done well
+and<br>
+ wisely, and inquired for the means of departure.</p>
+
+<p>"By the way, khansamah," I said, "what were those three
+doolies<br>
+ doing in my compound in the night?"</p>
+
+<p>"There were no doolies," said the khansamah.</p>
+
+<p>I went into the next room and the daylight streamed through
+the<br>
+ open door. I was immensely brave. I would, at that hour,
+have<br>
+ played Black Pool with the owner of the big Black Pool down
+below.</p>
+
+<p>"Has this place always been a dak-bungalow?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the khansamah. "Ten or twenty years ago, I have<br>
+ forgotten how long, it was a billiard room."</p>
+
+<p>"A how much?"</p>
+
+<p>"A billiard room for the Sahibs who built the Railway. I
+was<br>
+ khansamah then in the big house where all the Railway-Sahibs
+lived,<br>
+ and I used to come across with brandy-shrab. These three
+rooms<br>
+ were all one, and they held a big table on which the Sahibs
+played<br>
+ every evening. But the Sahibs are all dead now, and the
+Railway<br>
+ runs, you say, nearly to Kabul."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember anything about the Sahibs?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is long ago, but I remember that one Sahib, a fat man
+and<br>
+ always angry, was playing here one night, and he said to
+me:--<br>
+ 'Mangal Khan, brandy-pani do,' and I filled the glass, and he
+bent<br>
+ over the table to strike, and his head fell lower and lower till
+it<br>
+ hit the table, and his spectacles came off, and when we--the
+Sahibs<br>
+ and I myself--ran to lift him he was dead. I helped to carry
+him<br>
+ out. Aha, he was a strong Sahib! But he is dead and I, old
+Mangal<br>
+ Khan, am still living, by your favor."</p>
+
+<p>That was more than enough! I had my ghost--a firsthand,<br>
+ authenticated article. I would write to the Society for
+Psychical<br>
+ Research--I would paralyze the Empire with the news! But I
+would,<br>
+ first of all, put eighty miles of assessed crop land between
+myself<br>
+ and that dak-bungalow before nightfall. The Society might
+send<br>
+ their regular agent to investigate later on.</p>
+
+<p>I went into my own room and prepared to pack after noting down
+the<br>
+ facts of the case. As I smoked I heard the game begin
+again,--with<br>
+ a miss in balk this time, for the whir was a short one.</p>
+
+<p>The door was open and I could see into the room.
+Click--c1ick!<br>
+ That was a cannon. I entered the room without fear, for there
+was<br>
+ sunlight within and a fresh breeze without. The unseen game
+was<br>
+ going on at a tremendous rate. And well it might, when a
+restless<br>
+ little rat was running to and fro inside the dingy
+ceiling-cloth,<br>
+ and a piece of loose window-sash was making fifty breaks off
+the<br>
+ window-bolt as it shook in the breeze!</p>
+
+<p>Impossible to mistake the sound of billiard balls! Impossible
+to<br>
+ mistake the whir of a ball over the slate! But I was to be<br>
+ excused. Even when I shut my enlightened eyes the sound was<br>
+ marvelously like that of a fast game.</p>
+
+<p>Entered angrily the faithful partner of my sorrows, Kadir
+Baksh.</p>
+
+<p>"This bungalow is very bad and low-caste! No wonder the
+Presence<br>
+ was disturbed and is speckled. Three sets of doolie-bearers
+came<br>
+ to the bungalow late last night when I was sleeping outside,
+and<br>
+ said that it was their custom to rest in the rooms set apart
+for<br>
+ the English people! What honor has the khansamah? They tried
+to<br>
+ enter, but I told them to go. No wonder, if these Oorias have
+been<br>
+ here, that the Presence is sorely spotted. It is shame, and
+the<br>
+ work of a dirty man!"</p>
+
+<p>Kadir Baksh did not say that he had taken from each gang two
+annas<br>
+ for rent in advance, and then, beyond my earshot, had beaten
+them<br>
+ with the big green umbrella whose use I could never before
+divine.<br>
+ But Kadir Baksh has no notions of morality.</p>
+
+<p>There was an interview with the khansamah, but as he promptly
+lost<br>
+ his head, wrath gave place to pity, and pity led to a long<br>
+ conversation, in the course of which he put the fat
+Engineer-<br>
+ Sahib's tragic death in three separate stations--two of them
+fifty<br>
+ miles away. The third shift was to Calcutta, and there the
+Sahib<br>
+ died while driving a dogcart.</p>
+
+<p>If I had encouraged him the khansamah would have wandered
+all<br>
+ through Bengal with his corpse.</p>
+
+<p>I did not go away as soon as I intended. I stayed for the
+night,<br>
+ while the wind and the rat and the sash and the window-bolt
+played<br>
+ a ding-dong "hundred and fifty up." Then the wind ran out and
+the<br>
+ billiards stopped, and I felt that I had ruined my one
+genuine,<br>
+ hall-marked ghost story.</p>
+
+<p>Had I only stopped at the proper time, I could have made
+ANYTHING<br>
+ out of it.</p>
+
+<p>That was the bitterest thought of all!</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>THE SENDING OF DANA DA</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ When the Devil rides on your chest, remember the chamar.<br>
+ --Native Proverb.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Once upon a time some people in India made a new heaven and a
+new<br>
+ earth out of broken teacups, a missing brooch or two, and a
+hair<br>
+ brush. These were hidden under bushes, or stuffed into holes
+in<br>
+ the hillside, and an entire civil service of subordinate gods
+used<br>
+ to find or mend them again; and everyone said: "There are
+more<br>
+ things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our
+philosophy."<br>
+ Several other things happened also, but the religion never
+seemed<br>
+ to get much beyond its first manifestations; though it added
+an<br>
+ air-line postal dak, and orchestral effects in order to keep<br>
+ abreast of the times, and stall off competition.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ This religion was too elastic for ordinary use. It stretched<br>
+ itself and embraced pieces of everything that medicine men of
+all<br>
+ ages have manufactured. It approved and stole from
+Freemasonry;<br>
+ looted the Latter-day Rosicrucians of half their pet words;
+took<br>
+ any fragments of Egyptian philosophy that it found in the<br>
+ Encyclopaedia Britannica; annexed as many of the Vedas as had
+been<br>
+ translated into French or English, and talked of all the
+rest;<br>
+ built in the German versions of what is left of the Zend
+Avesta;<br>
+ encouraged white, gray, and black magic, including
+Spiritualism,<br>
+ palmistry, fortune-telling by cards, hot chestnuts,
+double-kerneled<br>
+ nuts and tallow droppings; would have adopted Voodoo and Oboe
+had<br>
+ it known anything about them, and showed itself, in every way,
+one<br>
+ of the most accommodating arrangements that had ever been
+invented<br>
+ since the birth of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>When it was in thorough working order, with all the machinery
+down<br>
+ to the subscriptions complete, Dana Da came from nowhere,
+with<br>
+ nothing in his hands, and wrote a chapter in its history which
+has<br>
+ hitherto been unpublished. He said that his first name was
+Dana,<br>
+ and his second was Da. Now, setting aside Dana of the New
+York<br>
+ Sun, Dana is a Bhil name, and Da fits no native of India unless
+you<br>
+ accept the Bengali De as the original spelling. Da is Lap or<br>
+ Finnish; and Dana Da was neither Finn, Chin, Bhil, Bengali,
+Lap,<br>
+ Nair, Gond, Romaney, Magh, Bokhariot, Kurd, Armenian,
+Levantine,<br>
+ Jew, Persian, Punjabi, Madrasi, Parsee, nor anything else known
+to<br>
+ ethnologists. He was simply Dana Da, and declined to give
+further<br>
+ information. For the sake of brevity, and as roughly
+indicating<br>
+ his origin, he was called "The Native." He might have been
+the<br>
+ original Old Man of the Mountains, who is said to be the
+only<br>
+ authorized head of the Teacup Creed. Some, people said that
+he<br>
+ was; but Dana Da used to smile and deny any connection with
+the<br>
+ cult; explaining that he was an "independent experimenter."</p>
+
+<p>As I have said, he came from nowhere, with his hands behind
+his<br>
+ back, and studied the creed for three weeks; sitting at the feet
+of<br>
+ those best competent to explain its mysteries. Then he
+laughed<br>
+ aloud and went away, but the laugh might have been either of<br>
+ devotion or derision.</p>
+
+<p>When he returned he was without money, but his pride was
+unabated.<br>
+ He declared that he knew more about the things in heaven and
+earth<br>
+ than those who taught him, and for this contumacy was
+abandoned<br>
+ altogether.</p>
+
+<p>His next appearance in public life was at a big cantonment in
+Upper<br>
+ India, and he was then telling fortunes with the help of
+three<br>
+ leaden dice, a very dirty old cloth, and a little tin box of
+opium<br>
+ pills. He told better fortunes when he was allowed half a
+bottle<br>
+ of whisky; but the things which he invented on the opium were
+quite<br>
+ worth the money. He was in reduced circumstances. Among
+other<br>
+ people's he told the fortune of an Englishman who had once
+been<br>
+ interested in the Simla creed, but who, later on, had married
+and<br>
+ forgotten all his old knowledge in the study of babies and<br>
+ Exchange. The Englishman allowed Dana Da to tell a fortune
+for<br>
+ charity's sake, and gave him five rupees, a dinner, and some
+old<br>
+ clothes. When he had eaten, Dana Da professed gratitude, and
+asked<br>
+ if there were anything he could do for his host--in the
+esoteric<br>
+ line.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there anyone that you love?" said Dana Da. The
+Englishman<br>
+ loved his wife, but had no desire to drag her name into the<br>
+ conversation. He therefore shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there anyone that you hate?" said Dana Da. The Englishman
+said<br>
+ that there were several men whom he hated deeply.</p>
+
+<p>"Very good," said Dana Da, upon whom the whisky and the opium
+were<br>
+ beginning to tell. "Only give me their names, and I will
+dispatch<br>
+ a Sending to them and kill them."</p>
+
+<p>Now a Sending is a horrible arrangement, first invented, they
+say,<br>
+ in Iceland. It is a thing sent by a wizard, and may take any
+form,<br>
+ but most generally wanders about the land in the shape of a
+little<br>
+ purple cloud till it finds the sendee, and him it kills by
+changing<br>
+ into the form of a horse, or a cat, or a man without a face. It
+is<br>
+ not strictly a native patent, though chamars can, if
+irritated,<br>
+ dispatch a Sending which sits on the breast of their enemy by
+night<br>
+ and nearly kills him. Very few natives care to irritate
+chamars<br>
+ for this reason.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me dispatch a Sending," said Dana Da; "I am nearly dead
+now<br>
+ with want, and drink, and opium; but I should like to kill a
+man<br>
+ before I die. I can send a Sending anywhere you choose, and in
+any<br>
+ form except in the shape of a man."</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman had no friends that he wished to kill, but
+partly to<br>
+ soothe Dana Da, whose eyes were rolling, and partly to see
+what<br>
+ would be done, he asked whether a modified Sending could not
+be<br>
+ arranged for--such a Sending as should make a man's life a
+burden<br>
+ to him, and yet do him no harm. If this were possible, he
+notified<br>
+ his willingness to give Dana Da ten rupees for the job.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not what I was once," said Dana Da, "and I must take
+the<br>
+ money because I am poor. To what Englishman shall I send
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Send a Sending to Lone Sahib," said the Englishman, naming a
+man<br>
+ who had been most bitter in rebuking him for his apostasy from
+the<br>
+ Teacup Creed. Dana Da laughed and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I could have chosen no better man myself," said he. "I will
+see<br>
+ that he finds the Sending about his path and about his bed."</p>
+
+<p>He lay down on the hearthrug, turned up the whites of his
+eyes,<br>
+ shivered all over, and began to snort. This was magic, or
+opium,<br>
+ or the Sending, or all three. When he opened his eyes he
+vowed<br>
+ that the Sending had started upon the warpath, and was at
+that<br>
+ moment flying up to the town where Lone Sahib lives.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me my ten rupees," said Dana Da, wearily, "and write a
+letter<br>
+ to Lone Sahib, telling him, and all who believe with him, that
+you<br>
+ and a friend are using a power greater than theirs. They will
+see<br>
+ that you are speaking the truth."</p>
+
+<p>He departed unsteadily, with the promise of some more rupees
+if<br>
+ anything came of the Sending.</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman sent a letter to Lone Sahib, couched in what
+he<br>
+ remembered of the terminology of the creed. He wrote: "I also,
+in<br>
+ the days of what you held to be my backsliding, have
+obtained<br>
+ enlightenment, and with enlightenment has come power." Then
+he<br>
+ grew so deeply mysterious that the recipient of the letter
+could<br>
+ make neither head nor tail of it, and was proportionately<br>
+ impressed; for he fancied that his friend had become a
+"fifth<br>
+ rounder." When a man is a "fifth rounder" he can do more
+than<br>
+ Slade and Houdin combined.</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib read the letter in five different fashions, and
+was<br>
+ beginning a sixth interpretation, when his bearer dashed in
+with<br>
+ the news that there was a cat on the bed. Now, if there was
+one<br>
+ thing that Lone Sahib hated more than another it was a cat.
+He<br>
+ rated the bearer for not turning it out of the house. The
+bearer<br>
+ said that he was afraid. All the doors of the bedroom had
+been<br>
+ shut throughout the morning, and no real cat could possibly
+have<br>
+ entered the room. He would prefer not to meddle with the
+creature.</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib entered the room gingerly, and there, on the pillow
+of<br>
+ his bed, sprawled and whimpered a wee white kitten, not a
+jumpsome,<br>
+ frisky little beast, but a sluglike crawler with its eyes
+barely<br>
+ opened and its paws lacking strength or direction--a kitten
+that<br>
+ ought to have been in a basket with its mamma. Lone Sahib
+caught<br>
+ it by the scruff of its neck, handed it over to the sweeper to
+be<br>
+ drowned, and fined the bearer four annas.</p>
+
+<p>That evening, as he was reading in his room, he fancied that
+he saw<br>
+ something moving about on the hearthrug, outside the circle
+of<br>
+ light from his reading lamp. When the thing began to myowl,
+he<br>
+ realized that it was a kitten--a wee white kitten, nearly blind
+and<br>
+ very miserable. He was seriously angry, and spoke bitterly to
+his<br>
+ bearer, who said that there was no kitten in the room when
+he<br>
+ brought in the lamp, and real kittens of tender age generally
+had<br>
+ mother cats in attendance.</p>
+
+<p>"If the Presence will go out into the veranda and listen,"
+said the<br>
+ bearer, "he will hear no cats. How, therefore, can the kitten
+on<br>
+ the bed and the kitten on the hearthrug be real kittens?"</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib went out to listen, and the bearer followed him,
+but<br>
+ there was no sound of Rachel mewing for her children. He
+returned<br>
+ to his room, having hurled the kitten down the hillside, and
+wrote<br>
+ out the incidents of the day for the benefit of his
+coreligionists.<br>
+ Those people were so absolutely free from superstition that
+they<br>
+ ascribed anything a little out of the common to agencies. As
+it<br>
+ was their business to know all about the agencies, they were
+on<br>
+ terms of almost indecent familiarity with manifestations of
+every<br>
+ kind. Their letters dropped from the
+ceiling--un-stamped--and<br>
+ spirits used to squatter up and down their staircases all
+night.<br>
+ But they had never come into contact with kittens. Lone
+Sahib<br>
+ wrote out the facts, noting the hour and the minute, as
+every<br>
+ psychical observer is bound to do, and appending the
+Englishman's<br>
+ letter because it was the most mysterious document and might
+have<br>
+ had a bearing upon anything in this world or the next. An
+outsider<br>
+ would have translated all the tangle thus: "Look out! You
+laughed<br>
+ at me once, and now I am going to make you sit up."</p>
+
+<p>Lone Sahib's coreligionists found that meaning in it; but
+their<br>
+ translation was refined and full of four-syllable words. They
+held<br>
+ a sederunt, and were filled with tremulous joy, for, in spite
+of<br>
+ their familiarity with all the other worlds and cycles, they had
+a<br>
+ very human awe of things sent from ghostland. They met in
+Lone<br>
+ Sahib's room in shrouded and sepulchral gloom, and their
+conclave<br>
+ was broken up by a clinking among the photo frames on the<br>
+ mantelpiece. A wee white kitten, nearly blind, was looping
+and<br>
+ writhing itself between the clock and the candlesticks. That<br>
+ stopped all investigations or doubtings. Here was the<br>
+ manifestation in the flesh. It was, so far as could be seen,<br>
+ devoid of purpose, but it was a manifestation of undoubted<br>
+ authenticity.</p>
+
+<p>They drafted a round robin to the Englishman, the backslider
+of old<br>
+ days, adjuring him in the interests of the creed to explain
+whether<br>
+ there was any connection between the embodiment of some
+Egyptian<br>
+ god or other (I have forgotten the name) and his
+communication.<br>
+ They called the kitten Ra, or Toth, or Shem, or Noah, or
+something;<br>
+ and when Lone Sahib confessed that the first one had, at his
+most<br>
+ misguided instance, been drowned by the sweeper, they said<br>
+ consolingly that in his next life he would be a "bounder," and
+not<br>
+ even a "rounder" of the lowest grade. These words may not be
+quite<br>
+ correct, but they express the sense of the house accurately.</p>
+
+<p>When the Englishman received the round robin--it came by
+post--he<br>
+ was startled and bewildered. He sent into the bazaar for Dana
+Da,<br>
+ who read the letter and laughed. "That is my Sending," said
+he.<br>
+ "I told you I would work well. Now give me another ten
+rupees."</p>
+
+<p>"But what in the world is this gibberish about Egyptian
+gods?"<br>
+ asked the Englishman.</p>
+
+<p>"Cats," said Dana Da, with a hiccough, for he had discovered
+the<br>
+ Englishman's whisky bottle. "Cats and cats and cats! Never
+was<br>
+ such a Sending. A hundred of cats. Now give me ten more
+rupees<br>
+ and write as I dictate."</p>
+
+<p>Dana Da's letter was a curiosity. It bore the Englishman's<br>
+ signature, and hinted at cats--at a Sending of cats. The
+mere<br>
+ words on paper were creepy and uncanny to behold.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you done, though?" said the Englishman; "I am as
+much in<br>
+ the dark as ever. Do you mean to say that you can actually
+send<br>
+ this absurd Sending you talk about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Judge for yourself," said Dana Da. "What does that letter
+mean?<br>
+ In a little time they will all be at my feet and yours, and I,
+oh,<br>
+ glory! will be drugged or drunk all day long."</p>
+
+<p>Dana Da knew his people.</p>
+
+<p>When a man who hates cats wakes up in the morning and finds
+a<br>
+ little squirming kitten on his breast, or puts his hand into
+his<br>
+ ulster pocket and finds a little half-dead kitten where his
+gloves<br>
+ should be, or opens his trunk and finds a vile kitten among
+his<br>
+ dress shirts, or goes for a long ride with his mackintosh
+strapped<br>
+ on his saddle-bow and shakes a little sprawling kitten from
+its<br>
+ folds when he opens it, or goes out to dinner and finds a
+little<br>
+ blind kitten under his chair, or stays at home and finds a
+writhing<br>
+ kitten under the quilt, or wriggling among his boots, or
+hanging,<br>
+ head downward, in his tobacco jar, or being mangled by his
+terrier<br>
+ in the veranda--when such a man finds one kitten, neither more
+nor<br>
+ less, once a day in a place where no kitten rightly could or
+should<br>
+ be, he is naturally upset. When he dare not murder his daily
+trove<br>
+ because he believes it to be a manifestation, an emissary,
+an<br>
+ embodiment, and half a dozen other things all out of the
+regular<br>
+ course of nature, he is more than upset. He is actually<br>
+ distressed. Some of Lone Sahib's coreligionists thought that
+he<br>
+ was a highly favored individual; but many said that if he
+had<br>
+ treated the first kitten with proper respect--as suited a
+Toth-Ra<br>
+ Tum-Sennacherib Embodiment--all his trouble would have been<br>
+ averted. They compared him to the Ancient Mariner, but none
+the<br>
+ less they were proud of him and proud of the Englishman who
+had<br>
+ sent the manifestation. They did not call it a Sending
+because<br>
+ Icelandic magic was not in their programme.</p>
+
+<p>After sixteen kittens--that is to say, after one fortnight,
+for<br>
+ there were three kittens on the first day to impress the fact
+of<br>
+ the Sending, the whole camp was uplifted by a letter--it
+came<br>
+ flying through a window--from the Old Man of the
+Mountains--the<br>
+ head of all the creed--explaining the manifestation in the
+most<br>
+ beautiful language and soaking up all the credit of it for
+himself.<br>
+ The Englishman, said the letter, was not there at all. He was
+a<br>
+ backslider without power or asceticism, who couldn't even raise
+a<br>
+ table by force of volition, much less project an army of
+kittens<br>
+ through space. The entire arrangement, said the letter, was<br>
+ strictly orthodox, worked and sanctioned by the highest
+authorities<br>
+ within the pale of the creed. There was great joy at this,
+for<br>
+ some of the weaker brethren seeing that an outsider who had
+been<br>
+ working on independent lines could create kittens, whereas
+their<br>
+ own rulers had never gone beyond crockery--and broken at
+that--were<br>
+ showing a desire to break line on their own trail. In fact,
+there<br>
+ was the promise of a schism. A second round robin was drafted
+to<br>
+ the Englishman, beginning: "Oh, Scoffer," and ending with a<br>
+ selection of curses from the rites of Mizraim and Memphis and
+the<br>
+ Commination of Jugana; who was a "fifth rounder," upon whose
+name<br>
+ an upstart "third rounder" once traded. A papal excommunication
+is<br>
+ a billet-doux compared to the Commination of Jugana. The<br>
+ Englishman had been proved under the hand and seal of the Old
+Man<br>
+ of the Mountains to have appropriated virtue and pretended to
+have<br>
+ power which, in reality, belonged only to the supreme head.<br>
+ Naturally the round robin did not spare him.</p>
+
+<p>He handed the letter to Dana Da to translate into decent
+English.<br>
+ The effect on Dana Da was curious. At first he was furiously<br>
+ angry, and then he laughed for five minutes.</p>
+
+<p>"I had thought," he said, "that they would have come to me.
+In<br>
+ another week I would have shown that I sent the Sending, and
+they<br>
+ would have discrowned the Old Man of the Mountains who has
+sent<br>
+ this Sending of mine. Do you do nothing. The time has come for
+me<br>
+ to act. Write as I dictate, and I will put them to shame.
+But<br>
+ give me ten more rupees."</p>
+
+<p>At Dana Da's dictation the Englishman wrote nothing less than
+a<br>
+ formal challenge to the Old Man of the Mountains. It wound
+up:<br>
+ "And if this manifestation be from your hand, then let it go<br>
+ forward; but if it be from my hand, I will that the Sending
+shall<br>
+ cease in two days' time. On that day there shall be twelve
+kittens<br>
+ and thenceforward none at all. The people shall judge between
+us."<br>
+ This was signed by Dana Da, who added pentacles and pentagrams,
+and<br>
+ a crux ansata, and half a dozen swastikas, and a Triple Tau to
+his<br>
+ name, just to show that he was all he laid claim to be.</p>
+
+<p>The challenge was read out to the gentlemen and ladies, and
+they<br>
+ remembered then that Dana Da had laughed at them some years
+ago.<br>
+ It was officially announced that the Old Man of the Mountains
+would<br>
+ treat the matter with contempt; Dana Da being an independent<br>
+ investigator without a single "round" at the back of him. But
+this<br>
+ did not soothe his people. They wanted to see a fight. They
+were<br>
+ very human for all their spirituality. Lone Sahib, who was
+really<br>
+ being worn out with kittens, submitted meekly to his fate. He
+felt<br>
+ that he was being "kittened to prove the power of Dana Da," as
+the<br>
+ poet says.</p>
+
+<p>When the stated day dawned, the shower of kittens began. Some
+were<br>
+ white and some were tabby, and all were about the same
+loathsome<br>
+ age. Three were on his hearth-rug, three in his bathroom, and
+the<br>
+ other six turned up at intervals among the visitors who came to
+see<br>
+ the prophecy break down. Never was a more satisfactory
+Sending.<br>
+ On the next day there were no kittens, and the next day and all
+the<br>
+ other days were kittenless and quiet. The people murmured
+and<br>
+ looked to the Old Man of the Mountains for an explanation. A<br>
+ letter, written on a palm leaf, dropped from the ceiling,
+but<br>
+ everyone except Lone Sahib felt that letters were not what
+the<br>
+ occasion demanded. There should have been cats, there should
+have<br>
+ been cats--full-grown ones. The letter proved conclusively
+that<br>
+ there had been a hitch in the psychic current which, colliding
+with<br>
+ a dual identity, had interfered with the percipient activity
+all<br>
+ along the main line. The kittens were still going on, but owing
+to<br>
+ some failure in the developing fluid, they were not
+materialized.<br>
+ The air was thick with letters for a few days afterwards.
+Unseen<br>
+ hands played Gluck and Beethoven on finger-bowls and clock
+shades;<br>
+ but all men felt that psychic life was a mockery without<br>
+ materialized kittens. Even Lone Sahib shouted with the majority
+on<br>
+ this head. Dana Da's letters were very insulting, and if he
+had<br>
+ then offered to lead a new departure, there is no knowing
+what<br>
+ might not have happened.</p>
+
+<p>But Dana Da was dying of whisky and opium in the Englishman's
+go-<br>
+ down, and had small heart for new creeds.</p>
+
+<p>"They have been put to shame," said he. "Never was such a
+Sending.<br>
+ It has killed me."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," said the Englishman, "you are going to die, Dana
+Da,<br>
+ and that sort of stuff must be left behind. I'll admit that
+you<br>
+ have made some queer things come about. Tell me honestly, now,
+how<br>
+ was it done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me ten more rupees," said Dana Da, faintly, "and if I
+die<br>
+ before I spend them, bury them with me." The silver was
+counted<br>
+ out while Dana Da was fighting with death. His hand closed
+upon<br>
+ the money and he smiled a grim smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Bend low," he whispered. The Englishman bent.</p>
+
+<p>"Bunnia--mission school--expelled--box-wallah
+(peddler)--Ceylon<br>
+ pearl merchant--all mine English education--outcasted, and made
+up<br>
+ name Dana Da--England with American thought-reading man
+and--and--<br>
+ you gave me ten rupees several times--I gave the Sahib's
+bearer<br>
+ two-eight a month for cats--little, little cats. I wrote, and
+he<br>
+ put them about--very clever man. Very few kittens now in the<br>
+ bazaar. Ask Lone Sahib's sweeper's wife."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Dana Da gasped and passed away into a land where,
+if all<br>
+ be true, there are no materializations and the making of new
+creeds<br>
+ is discouraged.</p>
+
+<p>But consider the gorgeous simplicity of it all!</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>IN THE HOUSE OF SUDDHOO</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ A stone's throw out on either hand<br>
+ From that well-ordered road we tread,<br>
+ And all the world is wild and strange;<br>
+ Churel and ghoul and Djinn and sprite<br>
+ Shall bear us company to-night,<br>
+ For we have reached the Oldest Land<br>
+ Wherein the Powers of Darkness range.</p>
+
+<p>From the Dusk to the Dawn.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The house of Suddhoo, near the Taksali Gate, is two-storied,
+with<br>
+ four carved windows of old brown wood, and a flat roof. You
+may<br>
+ recognize it by five red hand-prints arranged like the Five
+of<br>
+ Diamonds on the whitewash between the upper windows. Bhagwan
+Dass,<br>
+ the bunnia, and a man who says he gets his living by
+seal-cutting,<br>
+ live in the lower story with a troop of wives, servants,
+friends,<br>
+ and retainers. The two upper rooms used to be occupied by
+Janoo<br>
+ and Azizun and a little black-and-tan terrier that was stolen
+from<br>
+ an Englishman's house and given to Janoo by a soldier.
+To-day,<br>
+ only Janoo lives in the upper rooms. Suddhoo sleeps on the
+roof<br>
+ generally, except when he sleeps in the street. He used to go
+to<br>
+ Peshawar in the cold weather to visit his son, who sells<br>
+ curiosities near the Edwardes' Gate, and then he slept under a
+real<br>
+ mud roof. Suddhoo is a great friend of mine, because his cousin
+had<br>
+ a son who secured, thanks to my recommendation, the post of
+head-<br>
+ messenger to a big firm in the Station. Suddhoo says that God
+will<br>
+ make me a Lieutenant-Governor one of these days. I daresay
+his<br>
+ prophecy will come true. He is very, very old, with white hair
+and<br>
+ no teeth worth showing, and he has outlived his
+wits--outlived<br>
+ nearly everything except his fondness for his son at
+Peshawar.<br>
+ Janoo and Azizun are Kashmiris, Ladies of the City, and theirs
+was<br>
+ an ancient and more or less honorable profession; but Azizun
+has<br>
+ since married a medical student from the North-West and has
+settled<br>
+ down to a most respectable life somewhere near Bareilly.
+Bhagwan<br>
+ Dass is an extortionate and an adulterator. He is very rich.
+The<br>
+ man who is supposed to get his living by seal-cutting pretends
+to<br>
+ be very poor. This lets you know as much as is necessary of
+the<br>
+ four principal tenants in the house of Suddhoo. Then there is
+Me,<br>
+ of course; but I am only the chorus that comes in at the end
+to<br>
+ explain things. So I do not count.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Suddhoo was not clever. The man who pretended to cut seals was
+the<br>
+ cleverest of them all--Bhagwan Dass only knew how to
+lie--except<br>
+ Janoo. She was also beautiful, but that was her own affair.</p>
+
+<p>Suddhoo's son at Peshawar was attacked by pleurisy, and old
+Suddhoo<br>
+ was troubled. The seal-cutter man heard of Suddhoo's anxiety
+and<br>
+ made capital out of it. He was abreast of the times. He got
+a<br>
+ friend in Peshawar to telegraph daily accounts of the son's
+health.<br>
+ And here the story begins.</p>
+
+<p>Suddhoo's cousin's son told me, one evening, that Suddhoo
+wanted to<br>
+ see me; that he was too old and feeble to come personally, and
+that<br>
+ I should be conferring an everlasting honor on the House of
+Suddhoo<br>
+ if I went to him. I went; but I think, seeing how well-off
+Suddhoo<br>
+ was then, that he might have sent something better than an
+ekka,<br>
+ which jolted fearfully, to haul out a future Lieutenant-Governor
+to<br>
+ the City on a muggy April evening. The ekka did not run
+quickly.<br>
+ It was full dark when we pulled up opposite the door of
+Ranjit<br>
+ Singh's Tomb near the main gate of the Fort. Here was Suddhoo
+and<br>
+ he said that, by reason of my condescension, it was
+absolutely<br>
+ certain that I should become a Lieutenant-Governor while my
+hair<br>
+ was yet black. Then we talked about the weather and the state
+of<br>
+ my health, and the wheat crops, for fifteen minutes, in the
+Huzuri<br>
+ Bagh, under the stars.</p>
+
+<p>Suddhoo came to the point at last. He said that Janoo had told
+him<br>
+ that there was an order of the Sirkar against magic, because it
+was<br>
+ feared that magic might one day kill the Empress of India. I<br>
+ didn't know anything about the state of the law; but I fancied
+that<br>
+ something interesting was going to happen. I said that so far
+from<br>
+ magic being discouraged by the Government it was highly
+commended.<br>
+ The greatest officials of the State practiced it themselves.
+(If<br>
+ the Financial Statement isn't magic, I don't know what is.)
+Then,<br>
+ to encourage him further, I said that, if there was any
+jadoo<br>
+ afoot, I had not the least objection to giving it my
+countenance<br>
+ and sanction, and to seeing that it was clean jadoo--white
+magic,<br>
+ as distinguished from the unclean jadoo which kills folk. It
+took<br>
+ a long time before Suddhoo admitted that this was just what he
+had<br>
+ asked me to come for. Then he told me, in jerks and quavers,
+that<br>
+ the man who said he cut seals was a sorcerer of the cleanest
+kind;<br>
+ that every day he gave Suddhoo news of the sick son in
+Peshawar<br>
+ more quickly than the lightning could fly, and that this news
+was<br>
+ always corroborated by the letters. Further, that he had
+told<br>
+ Suddhoo how a great danger was threatening his son, which could
+be<br>
+ removed by clean jadoo; and, of course, heavy payment. I began
+to<br>
+ see how the land lay, and told Suddhoo that I also understood
+a<br>
+ little jadoo in the Western line, and would go to his house to
+see<br>
+ that everything was done decently and in order. We set off<br>
+ together; and on the way Suddhoo told me he had paid the
+seal-<br>
+ cutter between one hundred and two hundred rupees already; and
+the<br>
+ jadoo of that night would cost two hundred more. Which was
+cheap,<br>
+ he said, considering the greatness of his son's danger; but I
+do<br>
+ not think he meant it.</p>
+
+<p>The lights were all cloaked in the front of the house when
+we<br>
+ arrived. I could hear awful noises from behind the
+seal-cutter's<br>
+ shop-front, as if some one were groaning his soul out.
+Suddhoo<br>
+ shook all over, and while we groped our way upstairs told me
+that<br>
+ the jadoo had begun. Janoo and Azizun met us at the
+stair-head,<br>
+ and told us that the jadoo-work was coming off in their
+rooms,<br>
+ because there was more space there. Janoo is a lady of a<br>
+ freethinking turn of mind. She whispered that the jadoo was
+an<br>
+ invention to get money out of Suddhoo, and that the
+seal-cutter<br>
+ would go to a hot place when he died. Suddhoo was nearly
+crying<br>
+ with fear and old age. He kept walking up and down the room in
+the<br>
+ half light, repeating his son's name over and over again,
+and<br>
+ asking Azizun if the seal-cutter ought not to make a reduction
+in<br>
+ the case of his own landlord. Janoo pulled me over to the shadow
+in<br>
+ the recess of the carved bow- windows. The boards were up, and
+the<br>
+ rooms were only lit by one tiny lamp. There was no chance of
+my<br>
+ being seen if I stayed still.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, the groans below ceased, and we heard steps on
+the<br>
+ staircase. That was the seal-cutter. He stopped outside the
+door<br>
+ as the terrier barked and Azizun fumbled at the chain, and he
+told<br>
+ Suddhoo to blow out the lamp. This left the place in jet
+darkness,<br>
+ except for the red glow from the two huqas that belonged to
+Janoo<br>
+ and Azizun. The seal-cutter came in, and I heard Suddhoo
+throw<br>
+ himself down on the floor and groan. Azizun caught her breath,
+and<br>
+ Janoo backed to one of the beds with a shudder. There was a
+clink<br>
+ of something metallic, and then shot up a pale blue-green
+flame<br>
+ near the ground. The light was just enough to show Azizun,
+pressed<br>
+ against one corner of the room with the terrier between her
+knees;<br>
+ Janoo, with her hands clasped, leaning forward as she sat on
+the<br>
+ bed; Suddhoo, face down, quivering, and the seal-cutter.</p>
+
+<p>I hope I may never see another man like that seal-cutter. He
+was<br>
+ stripped to the waist, with a wreath of white jasmine as thick
+as<br>
+ my wrist round his forehead, a salmon-colored loin-cloth round
+his<br>
+ middle, and a steel bangle on each ankle. This was not awe-<br>
+ inspiring. It was the face of the man that turned me cold. It
+was<br>
+ blue-gray in the first place. In the second, the eyes were
+rolled<br>
+ back till you could only see the whites of them; and, in the
+third,<br>
+ the face was the face of a demon--a ghoul--anything you
+please<br>
+ except of the sleek, oily old ruffian who sat in the day-time
+over<br>
+ his turning-lathe downstairs. He was lying on his stomach,
+with<br>
+ his arms turned and crossed behind him, as if he had been
+thrown<br>
+ down pinioned. His head and neck were the only parts of him
+off<br>
+ the floor. They were nearly at right angles to the body, like
+the<br>
+ head of a cobra at spring. It was ghastly. In the centre of
+the<br>
+ room, on the bare earth floor, stood a big, deep, brass basin,
+with<br>
+ a pale blue-green light floating in the centre like a
+night-light.<br>
+ Round that basin the man on the floor wriggled himself three
+times.<br>
+ How he did it I do not know. I could see the muscles ripple
+along<br>
+ his spine and fall smooth again; but I could not see any
+other<br>
+ motion. The head seemed the only thing alive about him, except
+that<br>
+ slow curl and uncurl of the laboring back-muscles. Janoo from
+the<br>
+ bed was breathing seventy to the minute; Azizun held her
+hands<br>
+ before her eyes; and old Suddhoo, fingering at the dirt that
+had<br>
+ got into his white beard, was crying to himself. The horror of
+it<br>
+ was that the creeping, crawly thing made no sound--only
+crawled!<br>
+ And, remember, this lasted for ten minutes, while the
+terrier<br>
+ whined, and Azizun shuddered, and Janoo gasped, and Suddhoo
+cried.</p>
+
+<p>I felt the hair lift at the back of my head, and my heart
+thump<br>
+ like a thermantidote paddle. Luckily, the seal-cutter
+betrayed<br>
+ himself by his most impressive trick and made me calm again.
+After<br>
+ he had finished that unspeakable triple crawl, he stretched
+his<br>
+ head away from the floor as high as he could, and sent out a jet
+of<br>
+ fire from his nostrils. Now, I knew how fire-spouting is
+done--I<br>
+ can do it myself--so I felt at ease. The business was a fraud.
+If<br>
+ he had only kept to that crawl without trying to raise the
+effect,<br>
+ goodness knows what I might not have thought. Both the girls<br>
+ shrieked at the jet of fire and the head dropped, chin down, on
+the<br>
+ floor with a thud; the whole body lying then like a corpse with
+its<br>
+ arms trussed. There was a pause of five full minutes after
+this,<br>
+ and the blue- green flame died down. Janoo stooped to settle
+one<br>
+ of her anklets, while Azizun turned her face to the wall and
+took<br>
+ the terrier in her arms. Suddhoo put out an arm mechanically
+to<br>
+ Janoo's huqa, and she slid it across the floor with her
+foot.<br>
+ Directly above the body and on the wall, were a couple of
+flaming<br>
+ portraits, in stamped paper frames, of the Queen and the Prince
+of<br>
+ Wales. They looked down on the performance, and, to my
+thinking,<br>
+ seemed to heighten the grotesqueness of it all.</p>
+
+<p>Just when the silence was getting unendurable, the body turned
+over<br>
+ and rolled away from the basin to the side of the room, where
+it<br>
+ lay stomach up. There was a faint "plop" from the
+basin--exactly<br>
+ like the noise a fish makes when it takes a fly--and the
+green<br>
+ light in the centre revived.</p>
+
+<p>I looked at the basin, and saw, bobbing in the water, the
+dried,<br>
+ shrivelled, black head of a native baby--open eyes, open mouth
+and<br>
+ shaved scalp. It was worse, being so very sudden, than the<br>
+ crawling exhibition. We had no time to say anything before
+it<br>
+ began to speak.</p>
+
+<p>Read Poe's account of the voice that came from the mesmerized
+dying<br>
+ man, and you will realize less than one-half of the horror of
+that<br>
+ head's voice.</p>
+
+<p>There was an interval of a second or two between each word,
+and a<br>
+ sort of "ring, ring, ring," in the note of the voice, like
+the<br>
+ timbre of a bell. It pealed slowly, as if talking to itself,
+for<br>
+ several minutes before I got rid of my cold sweat. Then the<br>
+ blessed solution struck me. I looked at the body lying near
+the<br>
+ doorway, and saw, just where the hollow of the throat joins on
+the<br>
+ shoulders, a muscle that had nothing to do with any man's
+regular<br>
+ breathing, twitching away steadily. The whole thing was a
+careful<br>
+ reproduction of the Egyptian teraphin that one read about
+sometimes<br>
+ and the voice was as clever and as appalling a piece of<br>
+ ventriloquism as one could wish to hear. All this time the
+head<br>
+ was "lip-lip-lapping" against the side of the basin, and
+speaking.<br>
+ It told Suddhoo, on his face again whining, of his son's
+illness<br>
+ and of the state of the illness up to the evening of that
+very<br>
+ night. I always shall respect the seal-cutter for keeping so<br>
+ faithfully to the time of the Peshawar telegrams. It went on
+to<br>
+ say that skilled doctors were night and day watching over the
+man's<br>
+ life; and that he would eventually recover if the fee to the
+potent<br>
+ sorcerer, whose servant was the head in the basin, were
+doubled.</p>
+
+<p>Here the mistake from the artistic point of view came in. To
+ask<br>
+ for twice your stipulated fee in a voice that Lazarus might
+have<br>
+ used when he rose from the dead, is absurd. Janoo, who is really
+a<br>
+ woman of masculine intellect, saw this as quickly as I did.
+I<br>
+ heard her say "Asli nahin! Fareib!" scornfully under her
+breath;<br>
+ and just as she said so, the light in the basin died out, the
+head<br>
+ stopped talking, and we heard the room door creak on its
+hinges.<br>
+ Then Janoo struck a match, lit the lamp, and we saw that
+head,<br>
+ basin, and seal- cutter were gone. Suddhoo was wringing his
+hands<br>
+ and explaining to any one who cared to listen, that, if his
+chances<br>
+ of eternal salvation depended on it, he could not raise another
+two<br>
+ hundred rupees. Azizun was nearly in hysterics in the
+corner;<br>
+ while Janoo sat down composedly on one of the beds to discuss
+the<br>
+ probabilities of the whole thing being a bunao, or
+"make-up."</p>
+
+<p>I explained as much as I knew of the seal-cutter's way of
+jadoo;<br>
+ but her argument was much more simple:--"The magic that is
+always<br>
+ demanding gifts is no true magic," said she. "My mother told
+me<br>
+ that the only potent love-spells are those which are told you
+for<br>
+ love. This seal-cutter man is a liar and a devil. I dare not<br>
+ tell, do anything, or get anything done, because I am in debt
+to<br>
+ Bhagwan Dass the bunnia for two gold rings and a heavy anklet.
+I<br>
+ must get my food from his shop. The seal-cutter is the friend
+of<br>
+ Bhagwan Dass, and he would poison my food. A fool's jadoo has
+been<br>
+ going on for ten days, and has cost Suddhoo many rupees each
+night.<br>
+ The seal-cutter used black hens and lemons and mantras before.
+He<br>
+ never showed us anything like this till to-night. Azizun is
+a<br>
+ fool, and will be a pur dahnashin soon. Suddhoo has lost his<br>
+ strength and his wits. See now! I had hoped to get from
+Suddhoo<br>
+ many rupees while he lived, and many more after his death;
+and<br>
+ behold, he is spending everything on that offspring of a devil
+and<br>
+ a she-ass, the seal- cutter!"</p>
+
+<p>Here I said:--"But what induced Suddhoo to drag me into
+the<br>
+ business? Of course I can speak to the seal-cutter, and he
+shall<br>
+ refund. The whole thing is child's talk--shame--and
+senseless."</p>
+
+<p>"Suddhoo IS an old child," said Janoo. "He has lived on the
+roofs<br>
+ these seventy years and is as senseless as a milch-goat. He<br>
+ brought you here to assure himself that he was not breaking any
+law<br>
+ of the Sirkar, whose salt he ate many years ago. He worships
+the<br>
+ dust off the feet of the seal-cutter, and that cow-devourer
+has<br>
+ forbidden him to go and see his son. What does Suddhoo know
+of<br>
+ your laws or the lightning-post? I have to watch his money
+going<br>
+ day by day to that lying beast below."</p>
+
+<p>Janoo stamped her foot on the floor and nearly cried with
+vexation;<br>
+ while Suddhoo was whimpering under a blanket in the corner,
+and<br>
+ Azizun was trying to guide the pipe-stem to his foolish old
+mouth.</p>
+
+<p>. . . . . . . . .</p>
+
+<p>Now the case stands thus. Unthinkingly, I have laid myself
+open to<br>
+ the charge of aiding and abetting the seal-cutter in
+obtaining<br>
+ money under false pretences, which is forbidden by Section 420
+of<br>
+ the Indian Penal Code. I am helpless in the matter for these<br>
+ reasons, I cannot inform the Police. What witnesses would
+support<br>
+ my statements? Janoo refuses flatly, Azizun is a veiled
+woman<br>
+ somewhere near Bareilly--lost in this big India of ours. I
+cannot<br>
+ again take the law into my own hands, and speak to the
+seal-cutter;<br>
+ for certain am I that, not only would Suddhoo disbelieve me,
+but<br>
+ this step would end in the poisoning of Janoo, who is bound
+hand<br>
+ and foot by her debt to the bunnia. Suddhoo is an old dotard;
+and<br>
+ whenever we meet mumbles my idiotic joke that the Sirkar
+rather<br>
+ patronizes the Black Art than otherwise. His son is well now;
+but<br>
+ Suddhoo is completely under the influence of the seal-cutter,
+by<br>
+ whose advice he regulates the affairs of his life. Janoo
+watches<br>
+ daily the money that she hoped to wheedle out of Suddhoo taken
+by<br>
+ the seal-cutter, and becomes daily more furious and sullen.</p>
+
+<p>She will never tell, because she dare not; but, unless
+something<br>
+ happens to prevent her, I am afraid that the seal-cutter will
+die<br>
+ of cholera--the white arsenic kind--about the middle of May.
+And<br>
+ thus I shall have to be privy to a murder in the House of
+Suddhoo.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ HIS WEDDED WIFE.</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ Cry "Murder!" in the market-place, and each<br>
+ Will turn upon his neighbor anxious eyes<br>
+ That ask:--"Art thou the man?" We hunted Cain,<br>
+ Some centuries ago, across the world,<br>
+ That bred the fear our own misdeeds maintain<br>
+ To-day.</p>
+
+<p>Vibart's Moralities.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Shakespeare says something about worms, or it may be giants
+or<br>
+ beetles, turning if you tread on them too severely. The
+safest<br>
+ plan is never to tread on a worm--not even on the last new<br>
+ subaltern from Home, with his buttons hardly out of their
+tissue<br>
+ paper, and the red of sappy English beef in his cheeks. This
+is<br>
+ the story of the worm that turned. For the sake of brevity,
+we<br>
+ will call Henry Augustus Ramsay Faizanne, "The Worm," although
+he<br>
+ really was an exceedingly pretty boy, without a hair on his
+face,<br>
+ and with a waist like a girl's when he came out to the
+Second<br>
+ "Shikarris" and was made unhappy in several ways. The
+"Shikarris"<br>
+ are a high-caste regiment, and you must be able to do things
+well--<br>
+ play a banjo or ride more than a little, or sing, or act--to get
+on<br>
+ with them.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The Worm did nothing except fall off his pony, and knock chips
+out<br>
+ of gate-posts with his trap. Even that became monotonous after
+a<br>
+ time. He objected to whist, cut the cloth at billiards, sang
+out<br>
+ of tune, kept very much to himself, and wrote to his Mamma
+and<br>
+ sisters at Home. Four of these five things were vices which
+the<br>
+ "Shikarris" objected to and set themselves to eradicate. Every
+one<br>
+ knows how subalterns are, by brother subalterns, softened and
+not<br>
+ permitted to be ferocious. It is good and wholesome, and does
+no<br>
+ one any harm, unless tempers are lost; and then there is
+trouble.<br>
+ There was a man once--but that is another story.</p>
+
+<p>The "Shikarris" shikarred The Worm very much, and he bore<br>
+ everything without winking. He was so good and so anxious to<br>
+ learn, and flushed so pink, that his education was cut short,
+and<br>
+ he was left to his own devices by every one except the
+Senior<br>
+ Subaltern, who continued to make life a burden to The Worm.
+The<br>
+ Senior Subaltern meant no harm; but his chaff was coarse, and
+he<br>
+ didn't quite understand where to stop. He had been waiting
+too<br>
+ long for his company; and that always sours a man. Also he was
+in<br>
+ love, which made him worse.</p>
+
+<p>One day, after he had borrowed The Worm's trap for a lady who
+never<br>
+ existed, had used it himself all the afternoon, had sent a note
+to<br>
+ The Worm purporting to come from the lady, and was telling the
+Mess<br>
+ all about it, The Worm rose in his place and said, in his
+quiet,<br>
+ ladylike voice: "That was a very pretty sell; but I'll lay you
+a<br>
+ month's pay to a month's pay when you get your step, that I work
+a<br>
+ sell on you that you'll remember for the rest of your days, and
+the<br>
+ Regiment after you when you're dead or broke." The Worm
+wasn't<br>
+ angry in the least, and the rest of the Mess shouted. Then
+the<br>
+ Senior Subaltern looked at The Worm from the boots upwards,
+and<br>
+ down again, and said, "Done, Baby." The Worm took the rest of
+the<br>
+ Mess to witness that the bet had been taken, and retired into
+a<br>
+ book with a sweet smile.</p>
+
+<p>Two months passed, and the Senior Subaltern still educated
+The<br>
+ Worm, who began to move about a little more as the hot weather
+came<br>
+ on. I have said that the Senior Subaltern was in love. The<br>
+ curious thing is that a girl was in love with the Senior
+Subaltern.<br>
+ Though the Colonel said awful things, and the Majors snorted,
+and<br>
+ married Captains looked unutterable wisdom, and the juniors<br>
+ scoffed, those two were engaged.</p>
+
+<p>The Senior Subaltern was so pleased with getting his Company
+and<br>
+ his acceptance at the same time that he forgot to bother The
+Worm.<br>
+ The girl was a pretty girl, and had money of her own. She does
+not<br>
+ come into this story at all.</p>
+
+<p>One night, at the beginning of the hot weather, all the
+Mess,<br>
+ except The Worm, who had gone to his own room to write Home<br>
+ letters, were sitting on the platform outside the Mess House.
+The<br>
+ Band had finished playing, but no one wanted to go in. And
+the<br>
+ Captains' wives were there also. The folly of a man in love
+is<br>
+ unlimited. The Senior Subaltern had been holding forth on
+the<br>
+ merits of the girl he was engaged to, and the ladies were
+purring<br>
+ approval, while the men yawned, when there was a rustle of
+skirts<br>
+ in the dark, and a tired, faint voice lifted itself:</p>
+
+<p>"Where's my husband?"</p>
+
+<p>I do not wish in the least to reflect on the morality of
+the<br>
+ "Shikarris;" but it is on record that four men jumped up as if
+they<br>
+ had been shot. Three of them were married men. Perhaps they
+were<br>
+ afraid that their wives had come from Home unbeknownst. The
+fourth<br>
+ said that he had acted on the impulse of the moment. He
+explained<br>
+ this afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>Then the voice cried:--"Oh, Lionel!" Lionel was the Senior<br>
+ Subaltern's name. A woman came into the little circle of light
+by<br>
+ the candles on the peg-tables, stretching out her hands to the
+dark<br>
+ where the Senior Subaltern was, and sobbing. We rose to our
+feet,<br>
+ feeling that things were going to happen and ready to believe
+the<br>
+ worst. In this bad, small world of ours, one knows so little
+of<br>
+ the life of the next man--which, after all, is entirely his
+own<br>
+ concern-- that one is not surprised when a crash comes.
+Anything<br>
+ might turn up any day for any one. Perhaps the Senior
+Subaltern<br>
+ had been trapped in his youth. Men are crippled that way<br>
+ occasionally. We didn't know; we wanted to hear; and the
+Captains'<br>
+ wives were as anxious as we. If he HAD been trapped, he was to
+be<br>
+ excused; for the woman from nowhere, in the dusty shoes, and
+gray<br>
+ travelling dress, was very lovely, with black hair and great
+eyes<br>
+ full of tears. She was tall, with a fine figure, and her voice
+had<br>
+ a running sob in it pitiful to hear. As soon as the Senior<br>
+ Subaltern stood up, she threw her arms round his neck, and
+called<br>
+ him "my darling," and said she could not bear waiting alone
+in<br>
+ England, and his letters were so short and cold, and she was his
+to<br>
+ the end of the world, and would he forgive her. This did not
+sound<br>
+ quite like a lady's way of speaking. It was too
+demonstrative.</p>
+
+<p>Things seemed black indeed, and the Captains' wives peered
+under<br>
+ their eyebrows at the Senior Subaltern, and the Colonel's face
+set<br>
+ like the Day of Judgment framed in gray bristles, and no one
+spoke<br>
+ for a while.</p>
+
+<p>Next the Colonel said, very shortly:--"Well, Sir?" and the
+woman<br>
+ sobbed afresh. The Senior Subaltern was half choked with the
+arms<br>
+ round his neck, but he gasped out:--"It's a d----d lie! I
+never<br>
+ had a wife in my life!" "Don't swear," said the Colonel.
+"Come<br>
+ into the Mess. We must sift this clear somehow," and he sighed
+to<br>
+ himself, for he believed in his "Shikarris," did the
+Colonel.</p>
+
+<p>We trooped into the ante-room, under the full lights, and
+there we<br>
+ saw how beautiful the woman was. She stood up in the middle of
+us<br>
+ all, sometimes choking with crying, then hard and proud, and
+then<br>
+ holding out her arms to the Senior Subaltern. It was like
+the<br>
+ fourth act of a tragedy. She told us how the Senior Subaltern
+had<br>
+ married her when he was Home on leave eighteen months before;
+and<br>
+ she seemed to know all that we knew, and more too, of his
+people<br>
+ and his past life. He was white and ashy gray, trying now
+and<br>
+ again to break into the torrent of her words; and we, noting
+how<br>
+ lovely she was and what a criminal he looked, esteemed him a
+beast<br>
+ of the worst kind. We felt sorry for him, though.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget the indictment of the Senior Subaltern by
+his<br>
+ wife. Nor will he. It was so sudden, rushing out of the
+dark,<br>
+ unannounced, into our dull lives. The Captains' wives stood
+back;<br>
+ but their eyes were alight, and you could see that they had
+already<br>
+ convicted and sentenced the Senior Subaltern. The Colonel
+seemed<br>
+ five years older. One Major was shading his eyes with his hand
+and<br>
+ watching the woman from underneath it. Another was chewing
+his<br>
+ moustache and smiling quietly as if he were witnessing a
+play.<br>
+ Full in the open space in the centre, by the whist-tables,
+the<br>
+ Senior Subaltern's terrier was hunting for fleas. I remember
+all<br>
+ this as clearly as though a photograph were in my hand. I
+remember<br>
+ the look of horror on the Senior Subaltern's face. It was
+rather<br>
+ like seeing a man hanged; but much more interesting. Finally,
+the<br>
+ woman wound up by saying that the Senior Subaltern carried a
+double<br>
+ F. M. in tattoo on his left shoulder. We all knew that, and to
+our<br>
+ innocent minds it seemed to clinch the matter. But one of
+the<br>
+ Bachelor Majors said very politely:--"I presume that your
+marriage<br>
+ certificate would be more to the purpose?"</p>
+
+<p>That roused the woman. She stood up and sneered at the
+Senior<br>
+ Subaltern for a cur, and abused the Major and the Colonel and
+all<br>
+ the rest. Then she wept, and then she pulled a paper from
+her<br>
+ breast, saying imperially:--"Take that! And let my
+husband--my<br>
+ lawfully wedded husband--read it aloud--if he dare!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a hush, and the men looked into each other's eyes as
+the<br>
+ Senior Subaltern came forward in a dazed and dizzy way, and
+took<br>
+ the paper. We were wondering as we stared, whether there was<br>
+ anything against any one of us that might turn up later on.
+The<br>
+ Senior Subaltern's throat was dry; but, as he ran his eye over
+the<br>
+ paper, he broke out into a hoarse cackle of relief, and said to
+the<br>
+ woman:--"You young blackguard!"</p>
+
+<p>But the woman had fled through a door, and on the paper
+was<br>
+ written:--"This is to certify that I, The Worm, have paid in
+full<br>
+ my debts to the Senior Subaltern, and, further, that the
+Senior<br>
+ Subaltern is my debtor, by agreement on the 23d of February, as
+by<br>
+ the Mess attested, to the extent of one month's Captain's pay,
+in<br>
+ the lawful currency of the India Empire."</p>
+
+<p>Then a deputation set off for The Worm's quarters and found
+him,<br>
+ betwixt and between, unlacing his stays, with the hat, wig,
+serge<br>
+ dress, etc., on the bed. He came over as he was, and the<br>
+ "Shikarris" shouted till the Gunners' Mess sent over to know
+if<br>
+ they might have a share of the fun. I think we were all,
+except<br>
+ the Colonel and the Senior Subaltern, a little disappointed
+that<br>
+ the scandal had come to nothing. But that is human nature.
+There<br>
+ could be no two words about The Worm's acting. It leaned as
+near<br>
+ to a nasty tragedy as anything this side of a joke can. When
+most<br>
+ of the Subalterns sat upon him with sofa-cushions to find out
+why<br>
+ he had not said that acting was his strong point, he answered
+very<br>
+ quietly:--"I don't think you ever asked me. I used to act at
+Home<br>
+ with my sisters." But no acting with girls could account for
+The<br>
+ Worm's display that night. Personally, I think it was in bad<br>
+ taste. Besides being dangerous. There is no sort of use in
+playing<br>
+ with fire, even for fun.</p>
+
+<p>The "Shikarris" made him President of the Regimental Dramatic
+Club;<br>
+ and, when the Senior Subaltern paid up his debt, which he did
+at<br>
+ once, The Worm sank the money in scenery and dresses. He was
+a<br>
+ good Worm; and the "Shikarris" are proud of him. The only
+drawback<br>
+ is that he has been christened "Mrs. Senior Subaltern;" and
+as<br>
+ there are now two Mrs. Senior Subalterns in the Station, this
+is<br>
+ sometimes confusing to strangers.</p>
+
+<p>Later on, I will tell you of a case something like, this, but
+with<br>
+ all the jest left out and nothing in it but real trouble.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3>A. Conan Doyle</h3>
+
+<h2>A Case of Identity</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ "My dear fellow," said Sherlock Holmes, as we sat on either side
+of<br>
+ the fire in his lodgings at Baker Street, "life is
+infinitely<br>
+ stranger than anything which the mind of man can invent. We
+would<br>
+ not dare to conceive the things which are really mere
+commonplaces<br>
+ of existence. If we could fly out of that window hand in
+hand,<br>
+ hover over this great city, gently remove the roofs, and peep in
+at<br>
+ the queer things which are going on, the strange coincidences,
+the<br>
+ plannings, the cross-purposes, the wonderful chains of
+events,<br>
+ working through generations, and leading to the most outre
+results,<br>
+ it would make all fiction, with its conventionalities and
+foreseen<br>
+ conclusions, most stale and unprofitable."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "And yet I am not convinced of it," I answered. "The cases
+which<br>
+ come to light in the papers are, as a rule, bald enough, and
+vulgar<br>
+ enough. We have in our police reports realism pushed to its<br>
+ extreme limits, and yet the result is, it must be confessed,<br>
+ neither fascinating nor artistic."</p>
+
+<p>"A certain selection and discretion must be used in producing
+a<br>
+ realistic effect," remarked Holmes. "This is wanting in the
+police<br>
+ report, where more stress is laid perhaps upon the platitudes
+of<br>
+ the magistrate than upon the details, which to an observer
+contain<br>
+ the vital essence of the whole matter. Depend upon it, there
+is<br>
+ nothing so unnatural as the commonplace."</p>
+
+<p>I smiled and shook my head. "I can quite understand your
+thinking<br>
+ so," I said. "Of course, in your position of unofficial
+adviser<br>
+ and helper to everybody who is absolutely puzzled, throughout
+three<br>
+ continents, you are brought in contact with all that is strange
+and<br>
+ bizarre. But here,"--I picked up the morning paper from the<br>
+ ground--"let us put it to a practical test. Here is the
+first<br>
+ heading upon which I come. 'A husband's cruelty to his
+wife.'<br>
+ There is half a column of print, but I know without reading it
+that<br>
+ it is all perfectly familiar to me. There is, of course, the
+other<br>
+ woman, the drink, the push, the blow, the bruise, the
+unsympathetic<br>
+ sister or landlady. The crudest of writers could invent
+nothing<br>
+ more crude."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed your example is an unfortunate one for your argument,"
+said<br>
+ Holmes, taking the paper, and glancing his eye down it. "This
+is<br>
+ the Dundas separation case, and, as it happens, I was engaged
+in<br>
+ clearing up some small points in connection with it. The
+husband<br>
+ was a teetotaler, there was no other woman, and the conduct<br>
+ complained of was that he had drifted into the habit of winding
+up<br>
+ every meal by taking out his false teeth and hurling them at
+his<br>
+ wife, which you will allow is not an action likely to occur to
+the<br>
+ imagination of the average story teller. Take a pinch of
+snuff,<br>
+ doctor, and acknowledge that I have scored over you in your<br>
+ example."</p>
+
+<p>He held out his snuffbox of old gold, with a great amethyst in
+the<br>
+ center of the lid. Its splendor was in such contrast to his
+homely<br>
+ ways and simple life that I could not help commenting upon
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said he, "I forgot that I had not seen you for some
+weeks.<br>
+ It is a little souvenir from the King of Bohemia, in return for
+my<br>
+ assistance in the case of the Irene Adler papers."</p>
+
+<p>"And the ring?" I asked, glancing at a remarkable brilliant
+which<br>
+ sparkled upon his finger.</p>
+
+<p>"It was from the reigning family of Holland, though the matter
+in<br>
+ which I served them was of such delicacy that I cannot confide
+it<br>
+ even to you, who have been good enough to chronicle one or two
+of<br>
+ my little problems."</p>
+
+<p>"And have you any on hand just now?" I asked with
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>"Some ten or twelve, but none which present any features
+of<br>
+ interest. They are important, you understand, without being<br>
+ interesting. Indeed I have found that it is usually in
+unimportant<br>
+ matters that there is a field for the observation, and for
+the<br>
+ quick analysis of cause and effect which gives the charm to
+an<br>
+ investigation. The larger crimes are apt to be the simpler,
+for<br>
+ the bigger the crime, the more obvious, as a rule, is the
+motive.<br>
+ In these cases, save for one rather intricate matter which has
+been<br>
+ referred to me from Marseilles, there is nothing which presents
+any<br>
+ features of interest. It is possible, however, that I may
+have<br>
+ something better before very many minutes are over, for this is
+one<br>
+ of my clients, or I am much mistaken."</p>
+
+<p>He had risen from his chair, and was standing between the
+parted<br>
+ blinds, gazing down into the dull, neutral-tinted London
+street.<br>
+ Looking over his shoulder, I saw that on the pavement
+opposite<br>
+ there stood a large woman with a heavy fur boa round her neck,
+and<br>
+ a large curling red feather in a broad-brimmed hat which was
+tilted<br>
+ in a coquettish Duchess-of-Devonshire fashion over her ear.</p>
+
+<p>From under this great panoply she peeped up in a nervous,<br>
+ hesitating fashion at our windows, while her body oscillated<br>
+ backward and forward, and her fingers fidgeted with her
+glove<br>
+ buttons. Suddenly, with a plunge, as of the swimmer who leaves
+the<br>
+ bank, she hurried across the road, and we heard the sharp clang
+of<br>
+ the bell.</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen those symptoms before," said Holmes, throwing
+his<br>
+ cigarette into the fire. "Oscillation upon the pavement
+always<br>
+ means an affaire de coeur. She would like advice, but is not
+sure<br>
+ that the matter is not too delicate for communication. And
+yet<br>
+ even here we may discriminate. When a woman has been
+seriously<br>
+ wronged by a man, she no longer oscillates, and the usual
+symptom<br>
+ is a broken bell wire. Here we may take it that there is a
+love<br>
+ matter, but that the maiden is not so much angry as perplexed
+or<br>
+ grieved. But here she comes in person to resolve our
+doubts."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, there was a tap at the door, and the boy in
+buttons<br>
+ entered to announce Miss Mary Sutherland, while the lady
+herself<br>
+ loomed behind his small black figure like a full-sailed
+merchantman<br>
+ behind a tiny pilot boat. Sherlock Holmes welcomed her with
+the<br>
+ easy courtesy for which he was remarkable, and having closed
+the<br>
+ door, and bowed her into an armchair, he looked her over in
+the<br>
+ minute and yet abstracted fashion which was peculiar to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not find," he said, "that with your short sight it is
+a<br>
+ little trying to do so much typewriting?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did at first," she answered, "but now I know where the
+letters<br>
+ are without looking." Then, suddenly realizing the full purport
+of<br>
+ his words, she gave a violent start, and looked up with fear
+and<br>
+ astonishment upon her broad, good-humored face. "You've
+heard<br>
+ about me, Mr. Holmes," she cried, "else how could you know
+all<br>
+ that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," said Holmes, laughing, "it is my business to
+know<br>
+ things. Perhaps I have trained myself to see what others
+overlook.<br>
+ If not, why should you come to consult me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I came to you, sir, because I heard of you from Mrs.
+Etherege,<br>
+ whose husband you found so easily when the police and everyone
+had<br>
+ given him up for dead. Oh, Mr. Holmes, I wish you would do as
+much<br>
+ for me. I'm not rich, but still I have a hundred a year in my
+own<br>
+ right, besides the little that I make by the machine, and I
+would<br>
+ give it all to know what has become of Mr. Hosmer Angel."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you come away to consult me in such a hurry?"
+asked<br>
+ Sherlock Holmes, with his finger tips together, and his eyes to
+the<br>
+ ceiling.</p>
+
+<p>Again a startled look came over the somewhat vacuous face of
+Miss<br>
+ Mary Sutherland. "Yes, I did bang out of the house," she
+said,<br>
+ "for it made me angry to see the easy way in which Mr.
+Windibank--<br>
+ that is, my father--took it all. He would not go to the
+police,<br>
+ and he would not go to you, and so at last, as he would do
+nothing,<br>
+ and kept on saying that there was no harm done, it made me mad,
+and<br>
+ I just on with my things and came right away to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Your father?" said Holmes. "Your stepfather, surely, since
+the<br>
+ name is different."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my stepfather. I call him father, though it sounds
+funny,<br>
+ too, for he is only five years and two months older than
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"And your mother is alive?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes; mother is alive and well. I wasn't best pleased,
+Mr.<br>
+ Holmes, when she married again so soon after father's death, and
+a<br>
+ man who was nearly fifteen years younger than herself. Father
+was<br>
+ a plumber in the Tottenham Court Road, and he left a tidy
+business<br>
+ behind him, which mother carried on with Mr. Hardy, the
+foreman;<br>
+ but when Mr. Windibank came he made her sell the business, for
+he<br>
+ was very superior, being a traveler in wines. They got four<br>
+ thousand seven hundred for the good-will and interest, which
+wasn't<br>
+ near as much as father could have got if he had been alive."</p>
+
+<p>I had expected to see Sherlock Holmes impatient under this
+rambling<br>
+ and inconsequential narrative, but, on the contrary, he had<br>
+ listened with the greatest concentration of attention.</p>
+
+<p>"Your own little income," he asked, "does it come out of
+the<br>
+ business?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, sir. It is quite separate, and was left me by my
+Uncle<br>
+ Ned in Auckland. It is in New Zealand stock, paying four and
+half<br>
+ per cent. Two thousand five hundred pounds was the amount, but
+I<br>
+ can only touch the interest."</p>
+
+<p>"You interest me extremely," said Holmes. "And since you draw
+so<br>
+ large a sum as a hundred a year, with what you earn into the<br>
+ bargain, you no doubt travel a little, and indulge yourself
+in<br>
+ every way. I believe that a single lady can get on very
+nicely<br>
+ upon an income of about sixty pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"I could do with much less than that, Mr. Holmes, but you<br>
+ understand that as long as I live at home I don't wish to be
+a<br>
+ burden to them, and so they have the use of the money just while
+I<br>
+ am staying with them. Of course that is only just for the
+time.<br>
+ Mr. Windibank draws my interest every quarter, and pays it over
+to<br>
+ mother, and I find that I can do pretty well with what I earn
+at<br>
+ typewriting. It brings me twopence a sheet, and I can often
+do<br>
+ from fifteen to twenty sheets in a day."</p>
+
+<p>"You have made your position very clear to me," said Holmes.
+"This<br>
+ is my friend, Doctor Watson, before whom you can speak as freely
+as<br>
+ before myself. Kindly tell us now all about your connection
+with<br>
+ Mr. Hosmer Angel."</p>
+
+<p>A flush stole over Miss Sutherland's face, and she picked
+nervously<br>
+ at the fringe of her jacket. "I met him first at the
+gasfitters'<br>
+ ball," she said. "They used to send father tickets when he
+was<br>
+ alive, and then afterwards they remembered us, and sent them
+to<br>
+ mother. Mr. Windibank did not wish us to go. He never did wish
+us<br>
+ to go anywhere. He would get quite mad if I wanted so much as
+to<br>
+ join a Sunday School treat. But this time I was set on going,
+and<br>
+ I would go, for what right had he to prevent? He said the
+folk<br>
+ were not fit for us to know, when all father's friends were to
+be<br>
+ there. And he said that I had nothing fit to wear, when I had
+my<br>
+ purple plush that I had never so much as taken out of the
+drawer.<br>
+ At last, when nothing else would do, he went off to France upon
+the<br>
+ business of the firm; but we went, mother and I, with Mr.
+Hardy,<br>
+ who used to be our foreman, and it was there I met Mr.
+Hosmer<br>
+ Angel."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "I suppose," said Holmes, "that when Mr. Windibank came back
+from<br>
+ France, he was very annoyed at your having gone to the
+ball?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, he was very good about it. He laughed, I remember,
+and<br>
+ shrugged his shoulders, and said there was no use denying
+anything<br>
+ to a woman, for she would have her way."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Then at the gasfitters' ball you met, as I understand,
+a<br>
+ gentleman called Mr. Hosmer Angel?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. I met him that night, and he called next day to ask
+if<br>
+ we had got home all safe, and after that we met him--that is
+to<br>
+ say, Mr. Holmes, I met him twice for walks, but after that
+father<br>
+ came back again, and Mr. Hosmer Angel could not come to the
+house<br>
+ any more."</p>
+
+<p>"No?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you know, father didn't like anything of the sort.
+He<br>
+ wouldn't have any visitors if he could help it, and he used to
+say<br>
+ that a woman should be happy in her own family circle. But
+then,<br>
+ as I used to say to mother, a woman wants her own circle to
+begin<br>
+ with, and I had not got mine yet."</p>
+
+<p>"But how about Mr. Hosmer Angel? Did he make no attempt to
+see<br>
+ you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, father was going off to France again in a week, and
+Hosmer<br>
+ wrote and said that it would be safer and better not to see
+each<br>
+ other until he had gone. We could write in the meantime, and
+he<br>
+ used to write every day. I took the letters in the morning,
+so<br>
+ there was no need for father to know."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you engaged to the gentleman at this time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, Mr. Holmes. We were engaged after the first walk
+that we<br>
+ took. Hosmer--Mr. Angel--was a cashier in an office in
+Leadenhall<br>
+ Street--and--"</p>
+
+<p>"What office?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the worst of it, Mr. Holmes; I don't know."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did he live, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"He slept on the premises."</p>
+
+<p>"And you don't know his address?"</p>
+
+<p>"No--except that it was Leadenhall Street."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you address your letters, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"To the Leadenhall Street Post Office, to be left till called
+for.<br>
+ He said that if they were sent to the office he would be chaffed
+by<br>
+ all the other clerks about having letters from a lady, so I
+offered<br>
+ to typewrite them, like he did his, but he wouldn't have that,
+for<br>
+ he said that when I wrote them they seemed to come from me,
+but<br>
+ when they were typewritten he always felt that the machine had
+come<br>
+ between us. That will just show you how fond he was of me,
+Mr.<br>
+ Holmes, and the little things that he would think of."</p>
+
+<p>"It was most suggestive," said Holmes. "It has long been an
+axiom<br>
+ of mine that the little things are infinitely the most
+important.<br>
+ Can you remember any other little things about Mr. Hosmer
+Angel?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was a very shy man, Mr. Holmes. He would rather walk with
+me<br>
+ in the evening than in the daylight, for he said that he hated
+to<br>
+ be conspicuous. Very retiring and gentlemanly he was. Even
+his<br>
+ voice was gentle. He'd had the quinsy and swollen glands when
+he<br>
+ was young, he told me, and it had left him with a weak throat
+and a<br>
+ hesitating, whispering fashion of speech. He was always well<br>
+ dressed, very neat and plain, but his eyes were weak, just as
+mine<br>
+ are, and he wore tinted glasses against the glare."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and what happened when Mr. Windibank, your
+stepfather,<br>
+ returned to France?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Hosmer Angel came to the house again, and proposed that
+we<br>
+ should marry before father came back. He was in dreadful
+earnest,<br>
+ and made me swear, with my hands on the Testament, that
+whatever<br>
+ happened I would always be true to him. Mother said he was
+quite<br>
+ right to make me swear, and that it was a sign of his
+passion.<br>
+ Mother was all in his favor from the first, and was even fonder
+of<br>
+ him than I was. Then, when they talked of marrying within
+the<br>
+ week, I began to ask about father; but they both said never to
+mind<br>
+ about father, but just to tell him afterwards and mother said
+she<br>
+ would make it all right with him. I didn't quite like that,
+Mr.<br>
+ Holmes. It seemed funny that I should ask his leave, as he
+was<br>
+ only a few years older than me; but I didn't want to do anything
+on<br>
+ the sly, so I wrote to father at Bordeaux, where the company
+has<br>
+ its French offices, but the letter came back to me on the
+very<br>
+ morning of the wedding."</p>
+
+<p>"It missed him, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, for he had started to England just before it
+arrived."</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! that was unfortunate. Your wedding was arranged, then,
+for<br>
+ the Friday. Was it to be in church?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, but very quietly. It was to be at St. Saviour's,
+near<br>
+ King's Cross, and we were to have breakfast afterwards at the
+St.<br>
+ Pancras Hotel. Hosmer came for us in a hansom, but as there
+were<br>
+ two of us, he put us both into it, and stepped himself into a
+four-<br>
+ wheeler, which happened to be the only other cab in the street.
+We<br>
+ got to the church first, and when the four-wheeler drove up
+we<br>
+ waited for him to step out, but he never did, and when the
+cabman<br>
+ got down from the box and looked, there was no one there!
+The<br>
+ cabman said that he could not imagine what had become of him,
+for<br>
+ he had seen him get in with his own eyes. That was last
+Friday,<br>
+ Mr. Holmes, and I have never seen or heard anything since then
+to<br>
+ throw any light upon what became of him."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me that you have been very shamefully treated,"
+said<br>
+ Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, sir! He was too good and kind to leave me so. Why,
+all<br>
+ the morning he was saying to me that, whatever happened, I was
+to<br>
+ be true; and that even if something quite unforeseen occurred
+to<br>
+ separate us, I was always to remember that I was pledged to
+him,<br>
+ and that he would claim his pledge sooner or later. It
+seemed<br>
+ strange talk for a wedding morning, but what has happened
+since<br>
+ gives a meaning to it."</p>
+
+<p>"Most certainly it does. Your own opinion is, then, that
+some<br>
+ unforeseen catastrophe has occurred to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. I believe that he foresaw some danger, or else he
+would<br>
+ not have talked so. And then I think that what he foresaw<br>
+ happened."</p>
+
+<p>"But you have no notion as to what it could have been?"</p>
+
+<p>"None."</p>
+
+<p>"One more question. How did your mother take the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"She was angry, and said that I was never to speak of the
+matter<br>
+ again."</p>
+
+<p>"And your father? Did you tell him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and he seemed to think, with me, that something had
+happened,<br>
+ and that I should hear of Hosmer again. As he said, what
+interest<br>
+ could anyone have in bringing me to the door of the church,
+and<br>
+ then leaving me? Now, if he had borrowed my money, or if he
+had<br>
+ married me and got my money settled on him, there might be
+some<br>
+ reason; but Hosmer was very independent about money, and
+never<br>
+ would look at a shilling of mine. And yet what could have<br>
+ happened? And why could he not write? Oh! it drives me half
+mad<br>
+ to think of, and I can't sleep a wink at night." She pulled
+a<br>
+ little handkerchief out of her muff, and began to sob heavily
+into<br>
+ it.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall glance into the case for you," said Holmes, rising,
+"and I<br>
+ have no doubt that we shall reach some definite result. Let
+the<br>
+ weight of the matter rest upon me now, and do not let your
+mind<br>
+ dwell upon it further. Above all, try to let Mr. Hosmer
+Angel<br>
+ vanish from your memory, as he has done from your life."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't think I'll see him again?"</p>
+
+<p>"I fear not."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what has happened to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will leave that question in my hands. I should like
+an<br>
+ accurate description of him, and any letters of his which you
+can<br>
+ spare."</p>
+
+<p>"I advertised for him in last Saturday's Chronicle," said
+she.<br>
+ "Here is the slip, and here are four letters from him."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. And your address?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. 31 Lyon Place, Camberwell."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Angel's address you never had, I understand. Where is
+your<br>
+ father's place of business?"</p>
+
+<p>"He travels for Westhouse &amp; Marbank, the great claret
+importers of<br>
+ Fenchurch Street."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. You have made your statement very clearly. You
+will<br>
+ leave the papers here, and remember the advice which I have
+given<br>
+ you. Let the whole incident be a sealed book, and do not allow
+it<br>
+ to affect your life."</p>
+
+<p>"You are very kind, Mr. Holmes, but I cannot do that. I shall
+be<br>
+ true to Hosmer. He shall find me ready when he comes back."</p>
+
+<p>For all the preposterous hat and the vacuous face, there
+was<br>
+ something noble in the simple faith of our visitor which
+compelled<br>
+ our respect. She laid her little bundle of papers upon the
+table,<br>
+ and went her way, with a promise to come again whenever she
+might<br>
+ be summoned.</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes sat silent for a few minutes with his finger
+tips<br>
+ still pressed together, his legs stretched out in front of him,
+and<br>
+ his gaze directed upward to the ceiling. Then he took down
+from<br>
+ the rack the old and oily clay pipe, which was to him as a<br>
+ counselor, and, having lighted it, he leaned back in his
+chair,<br>
+ with thick blue cloud wreaths spinning up from him, and a look
+of<br>
+ infinite languor in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite an interesting study, that maiden," he observed. "I
+found<br>
+ her more interesting than her little problem, which, by the way,
+is<br>
+ rather a trite one. You will find parallel cases, if you
+consult<br>
+ my index, in Andover in '77, and there was something of the sort
+at<br>
+ The Hague last year. Old as is the idea, however, there were
+one<br>
+ or two details which were new to me. But the maiden herself
+was<br>
+ most instructive."</p>
+
+<p>"You appeared to read a good deal upon her which was quite<br>
+ invisible to me," I remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not invisible, but unnoticed, Watson. You did not know where
+to<br>
+ look, and so you missed all that was important. I can never
+bring<br>
+ you to realize the importance of sleeves, the suggestiveness
+of<br>
+ thumb nails, or the great issues that may hang from a boot
+lace.<br>
+ Now, what did you gather from that woman's appearance?
+Describe<br>
+ it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she had a slate-colored, broad-brimmed straw hat, with
+a<br>
+ feather of a brickish red. Her jacket was black, with black
+beads<br>
+ sewed upon it and a fringe of little black jet ornaments.
+Her<br>
+ dress was brown, rather darker than coffee color, with a
+little<br>
+ purple plush at the neck and sleeves. Her gloves were grayish,
+and<br>
+ were worn through at the right forefinger. Her boots I
+didn't<br>
+ observe. She had small round, hanging gold earrings, and a
+general<br>
+ air of being fairly well-to-do, in a vulgar, comfortable,
+easygoing<br>
+ way."</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes clapped his hands softly together and
+chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"'Pon my word, Watson, you are coming along wonderfully. You
+have<br>
+ really done very well indeed. It is true that you have
+missed<br>
+ everything of importance, but you have hit upon the method, and
+you<br>
+ have a quick eye for color. Never trust to general impressions,
+my<br>
+ boy, but concentrate yourself upon details. My first glance
+is<br>
+ always at a woman's sleeve. In a man it is perhaps better first
+to<br>
+ take the knee of the trouser. As you observe, this woman had
+plush<br>
+ upon her sleeve, which is a most useful material for showing<br>
+ traces. The double line a little above the wrist, where the<br>
+ typewritist presses against the table, was beautifully
+defined.<br>
+ The sewing machine, of the hand type, leaves a similar mark,
+but<br>
+ only on the left arm, and on the side of it farthest from
+the<br>
+ thumb, instead of being right across the broadest part, as
+this<br>
+ was. I then glanced at her face, and observing the dint of a<br>
+ pince-nez at either side of her nose, I ventured a remark
+upon<br>
+ short sight and typewriting, which seemed to surprise her."</p>
+
+<p>"It surprised me."</p>
+
+<p>"But, surely, it was very obvious. I was then much surprised
+and<br>
+ interested on glancing down to observe that, though the boots
+which<br>
+ she was wearing were not unlike each other, they were really
+odd<br>
+ ones, the one having a slightly decorated toe cap and the other
+a<br>
+ plain one. One was buttoned only in the two lower buttons out
+of<br>
+ five, and the other at the first, third, and fifth. Now, when
+you<br>
+ see that a young lady, otherwise neatly dressed, has come away
+from<br>
+ home with odd boots, half-buttoned, it is no great deduction to
+say<br>
+ that she came away in a hurry."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "And what else?" I asked, keenly interested, as I always was, by
+my<br>
+ friend's incisive reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>"I noted, in passing, that she had written a note before
+leaving<br>
+ home, but after being fully dressed. You observed that her
+right<br>
+ glove was torn at the forefinger, but you did not, apparently,
+see<br>
+ that both glove and finger were stained with violet ink. She
+had<br>
+ written in a hurry, and dipped her pen too deep. It must have
+been<br>
+ this morning, or the mark would not remain clear upon the
+finger.<br>
+ All this is amusing, though rather elementary, but I must go
+back<br>
+ to business, Watson. Would you mind reading me the
+advertised<br>
+ description of Mr. Hosmer Angel?"</p>
+
+<p>I held the little printed slip to the light. "Missing," it
+said,<br>
+ "on the morning of the fourteenth, a gentleman named Hosmer
+Angel.<br>
+ About five feet seven inches in height; strongly built,
+sallow<br>
+ complexion, black hair, a little bald in the center, bushy
+black<br>
+ side-whiskers and mustache; tinted glasses; slight infirmity
+of<br>
+ speech. Was dressed, when last seen, in black frock-coat
+faced<br>
+ with silk, black waistcoat, gold Albert chain, and gray
+Harris<br>
+ tweed trousers, with brown gaiters over elastic-sided boots.
+Known<br>
+ to have been employed in an office in Leadenhall Street.
+Anybody<br>
+ bringing," etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>"That will do," said Holmes. "As to the letters," he
+continued,<br>
+ glancing over them, "they are very commonplace. Absolutely no
+clew<br>
+ in them to Mr. Angel, save that he quotes Balzac once. There
+is<br>
+ one remarkable point, however, which will no doubt strike
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"They are typewritten," I remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not only that, but the signature is typewritten. Look at the
+neat<br>
+ little 'Hosmer Angel' at the bottom. There is a date, you see,
+but<br>
+ no superscription except Leadenhall Street, which is rather
+vague.<br>
+ The point about the signature is very suggestive--in fact, we
+may<br>
+ call it conclusive."</p>
+
+<p>"Of what?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, is it possible you do not see how strongly
+it<br>
+ bears upon the case?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot say that I do, unless it were that he wished to be
+able<br>
+ to deny his signature if an action for breach of promise
+were<br>
+ instituted."</p>
+
+<p>"No, that was not the point. However, I shall write two
+letters<br>
+ which should settle the matter. One is to a firm in the City,
+the<br>
+ other is to the young lady's stepfather, Mr. Windibank, asking
+him<br>
+ whether he could meet us here at six o'clock to-morrow evening.
+It<br>
+ is just as well that we should do business with the male
+relatives.<br>
+ And now, doctor, we can do nothing until the answers to
+those<br>
+ letters come, so we may put our little problem upon the shelf
+for<br>
+ the interim."</p>
+
+<p>I had had so many reasons to believe in my friend's subtle
+powers<br>
+ of reasoning, and extraordinary energy in action, that I felt
+that<br>
+ he must have some solid grounds for the assured and easy
+demeanor<br>
+ with which he treated the singular mystery which he had been
+called<br>
+ upon to fathom. Once only had I known him to fail, in the case
+of<br>
+ the King of Bohemia and the Irene Adler photograph, but when
+I<br>
+ looked back to the weird business of the "Sign of the Four,"
+and<br>
+ the extraordinary circumstances connected with the "Study in<br>
+ Scarlet," I felt that it would be a strange tangle indeed which
+he<br>
+ could not unravel.</p>
+
+<p>I left him then, still puffing at his black clay pipe, with
+the<br>
+ conviction that when I came again on the next evening I would
+find<br>
+ that he held in his hands all the clews which would lead up to
+the<br>
+ identity of the disappearing bridegroom of Miss Mary
+Sutherland.</p>
+
+<p>A professional case of great gravity was engaging my own
+attention<br>
+ at the time, and the whole of next day I was busy at the bedside
+of<br>
+ the sufferer. It was not until close upon six o'clock that I
+found<br>
+ myself free, and was able to spring into a hansom and drive
+to<br>
+ Baker Street, half afraid that I might be too late to assist at
+the<br>
+ denouement of the little mystery. I found Sherlock Holmes
+alone,<br>
+ however, half asleep, with his long, thin form curled up in
+the<br>
+ recesses of his armchair. A formidable array of bottles and
+test-<br>
+ tubes, with the pungent, cleanly smell of hydrochloric acid,
+told<br>
+ me that he had spent his day in the chemical work which was so
+dear<br>
+ to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, have you solved it?" I asked as I entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It was the bisulphate of baryta."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; the mystery!" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that! I thought of the salt that I have been working
+upon.<br>
+ There was never any mystery in the matter, though, as I said<br>
+ yesterday, some of the details are of interest. The only
+drawback<br>
+ is that there is no law, I fear, that can touch the
+scoundrel."</p>
+
+<p>"Who was he, then, and what was his object in deserting
+Miss<br>
+ Sutherland?"</p>
+
+<p>The question was hardly out of my mouth, and Holmes had not
+yet<br>
+ opened his lips to reply, when we heard a heavy footfall in
+the<br>
+ passage, and a tap at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the girl's stepfather, Mr. James Windibank," said
+Holmes.<br>
+ "He has written to me to say that he would be here at six.
+Come<br>
+ in!"</p>
+
+<p>The man who entered was a sturdy, middle-sized fellow, some
+thirty<br>
+ years of age, clean shaven, and sallow-skinned, with a
+bland,<br>
+ insinuating manner, and a pair of wonderfully sharp and
+penetrating<br>
+ gray eyes. He shot a questioning glance at each of us, placed
+his<br>
+ shiny top hat upon the sideboard, and, with a slight bow,
+sidled<br>
+ down into the nearest chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Good evening, Mr. James Windibank," said Holmes. "I think
+this<br>
+ typewritten letter is from you, in which you made an
+appointment<br>
+ with me for six o'clock?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. I am afraid that I am a little late, but I am not
+quite<br>
+ my own master, you know. I am sorry that Miss Sutherland has<br>
+ troubled you about this little matter, for I think it is far
+better<br>
+ not to wash linen of the sort in public. It was quite against
+my<br>
+ wishes that she came, but she is a very excitable, impulsive
+girl,<br>
+ as you may have noticed, and she is not easily controlled when
+she<br>
+ has made up her mind on a point. Of course, I did not mind you
+so<br>
+ much, as you are not connected with the official police, but it
+is<br>
+ not pleasant to have a family misfortune like this noised
+abroad.<br>
+ Besides, it is a useless expense, for how could you possibly
+find<br>
+ this Hosmer Angel?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," said Holmes, quietly, "I have every reason
+to<br>
+ believe that I will succeed in discovering Mr. Hosmer
+Angel."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Windibank gave a violent start, and dropped his gloves. "I
+am<br>
+ delighted to hear it," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a curious thing," remarked Holmes, "that a typewriter
+has<br>
+ really quite as much individuality as a man's handwriting.
+Unless<br>
+ they are quite new no two of them write exactly alike. Some<br>
+ letters get more worn than others, and some wear only on one
+side.<br>
+ Now, you remark in this note of yours, Mr. Windibank, that in
+every<br>
+ case there is some little slurring over the e, and a slight
+defect<br>
+ in the tail of the r. There are fourteen other
+characteristics,<br>
+ but those are the more obvious."</p>
+
+<p>"We do all our correspondence with this machine at the office,
+and<br>
+ no doubt it is a little worn," our visitor answered,
+glancing<br>
+ keenly at Holmes with his bright little eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"And now I will show you what is really a very interesting
+study,<br>
+ Mr. Windibank," Holmes continued. "I think of writing
+another<br>
+ little monograph some of these days on the typewriter and
+its<br>
+ relation to crime. It is a subject to which I have devoted
+some<br>
+ little attention. I have here four letters which purport to
+come<br>
+ from the missing man. They are all typewritten. In each case,
+not<br>
+ only are the e's slurred and the r's tailless, but you will<br>
+ observe, if you care to use my magnifying lens, that the
+fourteen<br>
+ other characteristics to which I have alluded are there as
+well."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Windibank sprung out of his chair, and picked up his hat.
+"I<br>
+ cannot waste time over this sort of fantastic talk, Mr. Holmes,"
+he<br>
+ said. "If you can catch the man, catch him, and let me know
+when<br>
+ you have done it."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said Holmes, stepping over and turning the key in
+the<br>
+ door. "I let you know, then, that I have caught him!"</p>
+
+<p>"What! where?" shouted Mr. Windibank, turning white to his
+lips,<br>
+ and glancing about him like a rat in a trap.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it won't do--really it won't," said Holmes, suavely.
+"There<br>
+ is no possible getting out of it, Mr. Windibank. It is quite
+too<br>
+ transparent, and it was a very bad compliment when you said that
+it<br>
+ was impossible for me to solve so simple a question. That's
+right!<br>
+ Sit down, and let us talk it over."</p>
+
+<p>Our visitor collapsed into a chair, with a ghastly face, and
+a<br>
+ glitter of moisture on his brow. "It--it's not actionable,"
+he<br>
+ stammered.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very much afraid that it is not; but between
+ourselves,<br>
+ Windibank, it was as cruel, and selfish, and heartless a trick
+in a<br>
+ petty way as ever came before me. Now, let me just run over
+the<br>
+ course of events, and you will contradict me if I go wrong."</p>
+
+<p>The man sat huddled up in his chair, with his head sunk upon
+his<br>
+ breast, like one who is utterly crushed. Holmes stuck his feet
+up<br>
+ on the corner of the mantelpiece, and, leaning back with his
+hands<br>
+ in his pockets, began talking, rather to himself, as it
+seemed,<br>
+ than to us.</p>
+
+<p>"The man married a woman very much older than himself for
+her<br>
+ money," said he, "and he enjoyed the use of the money of the<br>
+ daughter as long as she lived with them. It was a
+considerable<br>
+ sum, for people in their position, and the loss of it would
+have<br>
+ made a serious difference. It was worth an effort to preserve
+it.<br>
+ The daughter was of a good, amiable disposition, but
+affectionate<br>
+ and warmhearted in her ways, so that it was evident that with
+her<br>
+ fair personal advantages, and her little income, she would not
+be<br>
+ allowed to remain single long. Now her marriage would mean,
+of<br>
+ course, the loss of a hundred a year, so what does her
+stepfather<br>
+ do to prevent it? He takes the obvious course of keeping her
+at<br>
+ home, and forbidding her to seek the company of people of her
+own<br>
+ age. But soon he found that that would not answer forever.
+She<br>
+ became restive, insisted upon her rights, and finally announced
+her<br>
+ positive intention of going to a certain ball. What does her<br>
+ clever stepfather do then? He conceives an idea more creditable
+to<br>
+ his head than to his heart. With the connivance and assistance
+of<br>
+ his wife, he disguised himself, covered those keen eyes with
+tinted<br>
+ glasses, masked the face with a mustache and a pair of bushy<br>
+ whiskers, sunk that clear voice into an insinuating whisper,
+and<br>
+ doubly secure on account of the girl's short sight, he appears
+as<br>
+ Mr. Hosmer Angel, and keeps off other lovers by making love<br>
+ himself."</p>
+
+<p>"It was only a joke at first," groaned our visitor. "We
+never<br>
+ thought that she would have been so carried away."</p>
+
+<p>"Very likely not. However that may be, the young lady was
+very<br>
+ decidedly carried away, and having quite made up her mind that
+her<br>
+ stepfather was in France, the suspicion of treachery never for
+an<br>
+ instant entered her mind. She was flattered by the
+gentleman's<br>
+ attentions, and the effect was increased by the loudly
+expressed<br>
+ admiration of her mother. Then Mr. Angel began to call, for it
+was<br>
+ obvious that the matter should be pushed as far as if would go,
+if<br>
+ a real effect were to be produced. There were meetings, and
+an<br>
+ engagement, which would finally secure the girl's affections
+from<br>
+ turning toward anyone else. But the deception could not be kept
+up<br>
+ forever. These pretended journeys to France were rather
+cumbrous.<br>
+ The thing to do was clearly to bring the business to an end in
+such<br>
+ a dramatic manner that it would leave a permanent impression
+upon<br>
+ the young lady's mind, and prevent her from looking upon any
+other<br>
+ suitor for some time to come. Hence those vows of fidelity
+exacted<br>
+ upon a Testament, and hence also the allusions to a possibility
+of<br>
+ something happening on the very morning of the wedding.
+James<br>
+ Windibank wished Miss Sutherland to be so bound to Hosmer
+Angel,<br>
+ and so uncertain as to his fate, that for ten years to come, at
+any<br>
+ rate, she would not listen to another man. As far as the
+church<br>
+ door he brought her, and then, as he could go no farther, he<br>
+ conveniently vanished away by the old trick of stepping in at
+one<br>
+ door of a four-wheeler and out at the other. I think that that
+was<br>
+ the chain of events, Mr. Windibank!"</p>
+
+<br>
+Our visitor had recovered something of his assurance while
+Holmes<br>
+had been talking, and he rose from his chair now with a cold
+sneer<br>
+upon his pale face.
+
+<p>"It may be so, or it may not, Mr. Holmes," said he; "but if
+you are<br>
+ so very sharp you ought to be sharp enough to know that it is
+you<br>
+ who are breaking the law now, and not me. I have done
+nothing<br>
+ actionable from the first, but as long as you keep that door
+locked<br>
+ you lay yourself open to an action for assault and illegal<br>
+ constraint."</p>
+
+<p>"The law cannot, as you say, touch you," said Holmes,
+unlocking and<br>
+ throwing open the door, "yet there never was a man who
+deserved<br>
+ punishment more. If the young lady has a brother or a friend,
+he<br>
+ ought to lay a whip across your shoulders. By Jove!" he
+continued,<br>
+ flushing up at the sight of the bitter sneer upon the man's
+face,<br>
+ "it is not part of my duties to my client, but here's a
+hunting<br>
+ crop handy, and I think I shall just treat myself to--" He
+took<br>
+ two swift steps to the whip, but before he could grasp it there
+was<br>
+ a wild clatter of steps upon the stairs, the heavy hall door<br>
+ banged, and from the window we could see Mr. James Windibank<br>
+ running at the top of his speed down the road.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a cold-blooded scoundrel!" said Holmes, laughing as
+he<br>
+ threw himself down into his chair once more. "That fellow
+will<br>
+ rise from crime to crime until he does something very bad and
+ends<br>
+ on a gallows. The case has, in some respects, been not
+entirely<br>
+ devoid of interest."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot now entirely see all the steps of your reasoning,"
+I<br>
+ remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, of course it was obvious from the first that this Mr.
+Hosmer<br>
+ Angel must have some strong object for his curious conduct, and
+it<br>
+ was equally clear that the only man who really profited by
+the<br>
+ incident, as far as we could see, was the stepfather. Then
+the<br>
+ fact that the two men were never together, but that the one
+always<br>
+ appeared when the other was away, was suggestive. So were
+the<br>
+ tinted spectacles and the curious voice, which both hinted at
+a<br>
+ disguise, as did the bushy whiskers. My suspicions were all<br>
+ confirmed by his peculiar action in typewriting his
+signature,<br>
+ which, of course, inferred that his handwriting was so familiar
+to<br>
+ her that she would recognize even the smallest sample of it.
+You<br>
+ see all these isolated facts, together with many minor ones,
+all<br>
+ pointed in the same direction."</p>
+
+<p>"And how did you verify them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Having once spotted my man, it was easy to get corroboration.
+I<br>
+ knew the firm for which this man worked. Having taken the
+printed<br>
+ description, I eliminated everything from it which could be
+the<br>
+ result of a disguise,--the whiskers, the glasses, the
+voice,--and I<br>
+ sent it to the firm with a request that they would inform me<br>
+ whether it answered to the description of any of their
+travelers.<br>
+ I had already noticed the peculiarities of the typewriter, and
+I<br>
+ wrote to the man himself at his business address, asking him if
+he<br>
+ would come here. As I expected, his reply was typewritten,
+and<br>
+ revealed the same trivial but characteristic defects. The
+same<br>
+ post brought me a letter from Westhouse &amp; Marbank, of
+Fenchurch<br>
+ Street, to say that the description tallied in every respect
+with<br>
+ that of their employee, James Windibank. Voila tout!"</p>
+
+<p>"And Miss Sutherland?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I tell her she will not believe me. You may remember the
+old<br>
+ Persian saying, 'There is danger for him who taketh the tiger
+cub,<br>
+ and danger also for whoso snatcheth a delusion from a
+woman.'<br>
+ There is as much sense in Hafiz as in Horace, and as much
+knowledge<br>
+ of the world."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>A Scandal in Bohemia</h2>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ To Sherlock Holmes she is always THE woman. I have seldom
+heard<br>
+ him mention her under any other name. In his eyes she eclipses
+and<br>
+ predominates the whole of her sex. It was not that he felt
+any<br>
+ emotion akin to love for Irene Adler. All emotions, and that
+one<br>
+ particularly, were abhorrent to his cold, precise but
+admirably<br>
+ balanced mind. He was, I take it, the most perfect reasoning
+and<br>
+ observing machine that the world has seen; but as a lover, he
+would<br>
+ have placed himself in a false position. He never spoke of
+the<br>
+ softer passions, save with a gibe and a sneer. They were
+admirable<br>
+ things for the observer--excellent for drawing the veil from
+men's<br>
+ motives and actions. But for the trained reasoner to admit
+such<br>
+ intrusions into his own delicate and finely adjusted
+temperament<br>
+ was to introduce a distracting factor which might throw a
+doubt<br>
+ upon all his mental results. Grit in a sensitive instrument, or
+a<br>
+ crack in one of his own high-power lenses, would not be more<br>
+ disturbing that a strong emotion in a nature such as his. And
+yet<br>
+ there was but one woman to him, and that woman was the late
+Irene<br>
+ Adler, of dubious and questionable memory.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ I had seen little of Holmes lately. My marriage had drifted
+us<br>
+ away from each other. My own complete happiness, and the
+home-<br>
+ centered interests which rise up around the man who first
+finds<br>
+ himself master of his own establishment, were sufficient to
+absorb<br>
+ all my attention; while Holmes, who loathed every form of
+society<br>
+ with his whole Bohemian soul, remained in our lodgings in
+Baker<br>
+ Street, buried among his old books, and alternating from week
+to<br>
+ week between cocaine and ambition, the drowsiness of the drug
+and<br>
+ the fierce energy of his own keen nature. He was still, as
+ever,<br>
+ deeply attracted by the study of crime, and occupied his
+immense<br>
+ faculties and extraordinary powers of observation in following
+out<br>
+ those clews, and clearing up those mysteries, which had been<br>
+ abandoned as hopeless by the official police. From time to time
+I<br>
+ heard some vague account of his doings; of his summons to Odessa
+in<br>
+ the case of the Trepoff murder, of his clearing up of the
+singular<br>
+ tragedy of the Atkinson brothers at Trincomalee, and finally of
+the<br>
+ mission which he had accomplished so delicately and
+successfully<br>
+ for the reigning family of Holland. Beyond these signs of
+his<br>
+ activity, however, which I merely shared with all the readers
+of<br>
+ the daily press, I knew little of my former friend and
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>One night--it was on the 20th of March, 1888--I was returning
+from<br>
+ a journey to a patient (for I had now returned to civil
+practice),<br>
+ when my way led me through Baker Street. As I passed the
+well-<br>
+ remembered door, which must always be associated in my mind with
+my<br>
+ wooing, and with the dark incidents of the Study in Scarlet, I
+was<br>
+ seized with a keen desire to see Holmes again, and to know how
+he<br>
+ was employing his extraordinary powers. His rooms were
+brilliantly<br>
+ lighted, and even as I looked up, I saw his tall, spare figure
+pass<br>
+ twice in a dark silhouette against the blind. He was pacing
+the<br>
+ room swiftly, eagerly, with his head sunk upon his chest, and
+his<br>
+ hands clasped behind him. To me, who knew his every mood and<br>
+ habit, his attitude and manner told their own story. He was
+at<br>
+ work again. He had risen out of his drug-created dreams, and
+was<br>
+ hot upon the scent of some new problem. I rang the bell, and
+was<br>
+ shown up to the chamber which had formerly been in part my
+own.</p>
+
+<p>His manner was not effusive. It seldom was; but he was glad,
+I<br>
+ think, to see me. With hardly a word spoken, but with a
+kindly<br>
+ eye, he waved me to an armchair, threw across his case of
+cigars,<br>
+ and indicated a spirit case and a gasogene in the corner. Then
+he<br>
+ stood before the fire, and looked me over in his singular<br>
+ introspective fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"Wedlock suits you," he remarked. "I think, Watson, that you
+have<br>
+ put on seven and a half pounds since I saw you."</p>
+
+<p>"Seven," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, I should have thought a little more. Just a trifle
+more,<br>
+ I fancy, Watson. And in practice again, I observe. You did
+not<br>
+ tell me that you intended to go into harness."</p>
+
+<p>"Then how do you know?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see it, I deduce it. How do I know that you have been
+getting<br>
+ yourself very wet lately, and that you have a most clumsy
+and<br>
+ careless servant girl?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Holmes," said I, "this is too much. You would
+certainly<br>
+ have been burned had you lived a few centuries ago. It is
+true<br>
+ that I had a country walk on Thursday and came home in a
+dreadful<br>
+ mess; but as I have changed my clothes, I can't imagine how
+you<br>
+ deduce it. As to Mary Jane, she is incorrigible, and my wife
+has<br>
+ given her notice; but there again I fail to see how you work
+it<br>
+ out."</p>
+
+<p>He chuckled to himself and rubbed his long nervous hands
+together.</p>
+
+<p>"It is simplicity itself," said he, "my eyes tell me that on
+the<br>
+ inside of your left shoe, just where the firelight strikes it,
+the<br>
+ leather is scored by six almost parallel cuts. Obviously they
+have<br>
+ been caused by some one who has very carelessly scraped round
+the<br>
+ edges of the sole in order to remove crusted mud from it.
+Hence,<br>
+ you see, my double deduction that you had been out in vile
+weather,<br>
+ and that you had a particularly malignant boot-slicking specimen
+of<br>
+ the London slavey. As to your practice, if a gentleman walks
+into<br>
+ my rooms, smelling of iodoform, with a black mark of nitrate
+of<br>
+ silver upon his right forefinger, and a bulge on the side of
+his<br>
+ top hat to show where he has secreted his stethoscope, I must
+be<br>
+ dull indeed if I do not pronounce him to be an active member of
+the<br>
+ medical profession."</p>
+
+<p>I could not help laughing at the ease with which he explained
+his<br>
+ process of deduction. "When I hear you give your reasons," I<br>
+ remarked, "the thing always appears to me so ridiculously
+simple<br>
+ that I could easily do it myself, though at each successive<br>
+ instance of your reasoning I am baffled, until you explain
+your<br>
+ process. And yet, I believe that my eyes are as good as
+yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so," he answered, lighting a cigarette, and throwing
+himself<br>
+ down into an armchair. "You see, but you do not observe. The<br>
+ distinction is clear. For example, you have frequently seen
+the<br>
+ steps which lead up from the hall to this room."</p>
+
+<p>"Frequently."</p>
+
+<p>"How often?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, some hundreds of times."</p>
+
+<p>"Then how many are there?"</p>
+
+<p>"How many? I don't know."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so! You have not observed. And yet you have seen. That
+is<br>
+ just my point. Now, I know there are seventeen steps, because
+I<br>
+ have both seen and observed. By the way, since you are
+interested<br>
+ in these little problems, and since you are good enough to<br>
+ chronicle one or two of my trifling experiences, you may be<br>
+ interested in this." He threw over a sheet of thick
+pink-tinted<br>
+ note paper which had been lying open upon the table. "It came
+by<br>
+ the last post," said he. "Read it aloud."</p>
+
+<p>The note was undated, and without either signature or
+address.</p>
+
+<p>"There will call upon you to-night, at a quarter to eight
+o'clock,"<br>
+ it said, "a gentleman who desires to consult you upon a matter
+of<br>
+ the very deepest moment. Your recent services to one of the
+royal<br>
+ houses of Europe have shown that you are one who may safely
+be<br>
+ trusted with matters which are of an importance which can hardly
+be<br>
+ exaggerated. This account of you we have from all quarters<br>
+ received. Be in your chamber, then, at that hour, and do not
+take<br>
+ it amiss if your visitor wears a mask."</p>
+
+<p>"This is indeed a mystery," I remarked. "What do you imagine
+that<br>
+ it means?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no data yet. It is a capital mistake to theorize
+before<br>
+ one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit<br>
+ theories, instead of theories to suit facts. But the note
+itself--<br>
+ what do you deduce from it?"</p>
+
+<p>I carefully examined the writing, and the paper upon which it
+was<br>
+ written.</p>
+
+<p>"The man who wrote it was presumably well to do," I
+remarked,<br>
+ endeavoring to imitate my companion's processes. "Such paper
+could<br>
+ not be bought under half a crown a packet. It is peculiarly
+strong<br>
+ and stiff."</p>
+
+<p>"Peculiar--that is the very word," said Holmes. "It is not
+an<br>
+ English paper at all. Hold it up to the light."</p>
+
+<p>I did so, and saw a large E with a small g, a P and a large G
+with<br>
+ a small t woven into the texture of the paper.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you make of that?" asked Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"The name of the maker, no doubt; or his monogram,
+rather."</p>
+
+<p>"Not all. The G with the small t stands for 'Gesellschaft,'
+which<br>
+ is the German for 'Company.' It is a customary contraction
+like<br>
+ our 'Co.' P, of course, stands for 'Papier.' Now for the Eg.
+Let<br>
+ us glance at our 'Continental Gazetteer." He took down a
+heavy<br>
+ brown volume from his shelves. "Eglow, Eglonitz--here we
+are,<br>
+ Egria. It is in a German-speaking country--in Bohemia, not
+far<br>
+ from Carlsbad. 'Remarkable as being the scene of the death
+of<br>
+ Wallenstein, and for its numerous glass factories and paper
+mills.'<br>
+ Ha! ha! my boy, what do you make of that?" His eyes sparkled,
+and<br>
+ he sent up a great blue triumphant cloud from his cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"The paper was made in Bohemia," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely. And the man who wrote the note is a German. Do
+you<br>
+ note the peculiar construction of the sentence--'This account
+of<br>
+ you we have from all quarters received'? A Frenchman or
+Russian<br>
+ could not have written that. It is the German who is so<br>
+ uncourteous to his verbs. It only remains, therefore, to
+discover<br>
+ what is wanted by this German who writes upon Bohemian paper,
+and<br>
+ prefers wearing a mask to showing his face. And here he comes,
+if<br>
+ I am not mistaken, to resolve all our doubts."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke there was the sharp sound of horses' hoofs and
+grating<br>
+ wheels against the curb, followed by a sharp pull at the
+bell.<br>
+ Holmes whistled.</p>
+
+<p>"A pair, by the sound," said he. "Yes," he continued, glancing
+out<br>
+ of the window. "A nice little brougham and a pair of beauties.
+A<br>
+ hundred and fifty guineas apiece. There's money in this
+case,<br>
+ Watson, if there is nothing else."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I had better go, Holmes."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit, doctor. Stay where you are. I am lost without
+my<br>
+ Boswell. And this promises to be interesting. It would be a
+pity<br>
+ to miss it."</p>
+
+<p>"But your client--"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind him. I may want your help, and so may he. Here
+he<br>
+ comes. Sit down in that armchair, doctor, and give us your
+best<br>
+ attention."</p>
+
+<p>A slow and heavy step, which had been heard upon the stairs
+and in<br>
+ the passage, paused immediately outside the door. Then there was
+a<br>
+ loud and authoritative tap.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in!" said Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>A man entered who could hardly have been less than six feet
+six<br>
+ inches in height, with the chest and limbs of a Hercules.
+His<br>
+ dress was rich with a richness which would, in England, be
+looked<br>
+ upon as akin to bad taste. Heavy bands of astrakhan were
+slashed<br>
+ across the sleeves and front of his double-breasted coat, while
+the<br>
+ deep blue cloak which was thrown over his shoulders was lined
+with<br>
+ flame-colored silk, and secured at the neck with a brooch
+which<br>
+ consisted of a single flaming beryl. Boots which extended
+halfway<br>
+ up his calves, and which were trimmed at the tops with rich
+brown<br>
+ fur, completed the impression of barbaric opulence which was<br>
+ suggested by his whole appearance. He carried a broad-brimmed
+hat<br>
+ in his hand, while he wore across the upper part of his
+face,<br>
+ extending down past the cheek-bones, a black visard mask, which
+he<br>
+ had apparently adjusted that very moment, for his hand was
+still<br>
+ raised to it as he entered. From the lower part of the face
+he<br>
+ appeared to be a man of strong character, with a thick,
+hanging<br>
+ lip, and a long, straight chin, suggestive of resolution pushed
+to<br>
+ the length of obstinacy.</p>
+
+<p>"You had my note?" he asked, with a deep, harsh voice and
+a<br>
+ strongly marked German accent. "I told you that I would call."
+He<br>
+ looked from one to the other of us, as if uncertain which to<br>
+ address.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Pray take a seat," said Holmes. "This is my friend and
+colleague,<br>
+ Doctor Watson, who is occasionally good enough to help me in
+my<br>
+ cases. Whom have I the honor to address?"</p>
+
+<p>"You may address me as the Count von Kramm, a Bohemian
+nobleman. I<br>
+ understand that this gentleman, your friend, is a man of honor
+and<br>
+ discretion, whom I may trust with a matter of the most
+extreme<br>
+ importance. If not, I should much prefer to communicate with
+you<br>
+ alone."</p>
+
+<p>I rose to go, but Holmes caught me by the wrist and pushed me
+back<br>
+ into my chair. "It is both, or none," said he. "You may say<br>
+ before this gentleman anything which you may say to me."</p>
+
+<p>The count shrugged his broad shoulders. "Then I must begin,"
+said<br>
+ he, "by binding you both to absolute secrecy for two years; at
+the<br>
+ end of that time the matter will be of no importance. At
+present<br>
+ it is not too much to say that it is of such weight that it
+may<br>
+ have an influence upon European history."</p>
+
+<p>"I promise," said Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"And I."</p>
+
+<p>"You will excuse this mask," continued our strange visitor.
+"The<br>
+ august person who employs me wishes his agent to be unknown to
+you,<br>
+ and I may confess at once that the title by which I have
+just<br>
+ called myself is not exactly my own."</p>
+
+<p>"I was aware of it," said Holmes, dryly.</p>
+
+<p>"The circumstances are of great delicacy, and every precaution
+has<br>
+ to be taken to quench what might grow to be an immense scandal,
+and<br>
+ seriously compromise one of the reigning families of Europe.
+To<br>
+ speak plainly, the matter implicates the great House of
+Ormstein,<br>
+ hereditary kings of Bohemia."</p>
+
+<p>"I was also aware of that," murmured Holmes, settling himself
+down<br>
+ in his armchair, and closing his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Our visitor glanced with some apparent surprise at the
+languid,<br>
+ lounging figure of the man who had been, no doubt, depicted to
+him<br>
+ as the most incisive reasoner and most energetic agent in
+Europe.<br>
+ Holmes slowly reopened his eyes and looked impatiently at
+his<br>
+ gigantic client.</p>
+
+<p>"If your majesty would condescend to state your case," he
+remarked,<br>
+ "I should be better able to advise you."</p>
+
+<p>The man sprung from his chair, and paced up and down the room
+in<br>
+ uncontrollable agitation. Then, with a gesture of desperation,
+he<br>
+ tore the mask from his face and hurled it upon the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," he cried, "I am the king. Why should I
+attempt to<br>
+ conceal it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, indeed?" murmured Holmes. "Your majesty had not
+spoken<br>
+ before I was aware that I was addressing Wilhelm Gottsreich<br>
+ Sigismond von Ormstein, Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein, and<br>
+ hereditary King of Bohemia."</p>
+
+<p>"But you can understand," said our strange visitor, sitting
+down<br>
+ once more and passing his hand over his high, white forehead,
+"you<br>
+ can understand that I am not accustomed to doing such business
+in<br>
+ my own person. Yet the matter was so delicate that I could
+not<br>
+ confide it to an agent without putting myself in his power. I
+have<br>
+ come incognito from Prague for the purpose of consulting
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, pray consult," said Holmes, shutting his eyes once
+more.</p>
+
+<p>"The facts are briefly these: Some five years ago, during a
+lengthy<br>
+ visit to Warsaw, I made the acquaintance of the well-known<br>
+ adventuress Irene Adler. The name is no doubt familiar to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Kindly look her up in my index, doctor," murmured Holmes,
+without<br>
+ opening his eyes. For many years he had adopted a system for<br>
+ docketing all paragraphs concerning men and things, so that it
+was<br>
+ difficult to name a subject or a person on which he could not
+at<br>
+ once furnish information. In this case I found her biography<br>
+ sandwiched in between that of a Hebrew rabbi and that of a
+staff<br>
+ commander who had written a monograph upon the deep-sea
+fishes.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see!" said Holmes. "Hum! Born in New Jersey in the
+year<br>
+ 1858. Contralto--hum! La Scala--hum! Prima donna Imperial
+Opera<br>
+ of Warsaw--yes! Retired from operatic stage--ha! Living in<br>
+ London--quite so! Your majesty, as I understand, became
+entangled<br>
+ with this young person, wrote her some compromising letters, and
+is<br>
+ now desirous of getting those letters back."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely so. But how--"</p>
+
+<p>"Was there a secret marriage?"</p>
+
+<p>"None."</p>
+
+<p>"No legal papers or certificates?"</p>
+
+<p>"None."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I fail to follow your majesty. If this young person
+should<br>
+ produce her letters for blackmailing or other purposes, how is
+she<br>
+ to prove their authenticity?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is the writing."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh-pooh! Forgery."</p>
+
+<p>"My private note paper."</p>
+
+<p>"Stolen."</p>
+
+<p>"My own seal."</p>
+
+<p>"Imitated."</p>
+
+<p>"My photograph."</p>
+
+<p>"Bought."</p>
+
+<p>"We were both in the photograph."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear! That is very bad. Your majesty has indeed committed
+an<br>
+ indiscretion."</p>
+
+<p>"I was mad--insane."</p>
+
+<p>"You have compromised yourself seriously."</p>
+
+<p>"I was only crown prince then. I was young. I am but thirty
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"It must be recovered."</p>
+
+<p>"We have tried and failed."</p>
+
+<p>"Your majesty must pay. It must be bought."</p>
+
+<p>"She will not sell."</p>
+
+<p>"Stolen, then."</p>
+
+<p>"Five attempts have been made. Twice burglars in my pay
+ransacked<br>
+ her house. Once we diverted her luggage when she traveled.
+Twice<br>
+ she has been waylaid. There has been no result."</p>
+
+<p>"No sign of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely none."</p>
+
+<p>Holmes laughed. "It is quite a pretty little problem," said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"But a very serious one to me," returned the king,
+reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Very, indeed. And what does she propose to do with the<br>
+ photograph?"</p>
+
+<p>"To ruin me."</p>
+
+<p>"But how?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am about to be married."</p>
+
+<p>"So I have heard."</p>
+
+<p>"To Clotilde Lothman von Saxe-Meiningen, second daughter of
+the<br>
+ King of Scandinavia. You may know the strict principles of
+her<br>
+ family. She is herself the very soul of delicacy. A shadow of
+a<br>
+ doubt as to my conduct would bring the matter to an end."</p>
+
+<p>"And Irene Adler?"</p>
+
+<p>"Threatens to send them the photograph. And she will do it.
+I<br>
+ know that she will do it. You do not know her, but she has a
+soul<br>
+ of steel. She has the face of the most beautiful of women and
+the<br>
+ mind of the most resolute of men. Rather than I should marry<br>
+ another woman, there are no lengths to which she would not
+go--<br>
+ none."</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure she has not sent it yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure."</p>
+
+<p>"And why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because she has said that she would send it on the day when
+the<br>
+ betrothal was publicly proclaimed. That will be next
+Monday."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, then we have three days yet," said Holmes, with a yawn.
+"That<br>
+ is very fortunate, as I have one or two matters of importance
+to<br>
+ look into just at present. Your majesty will, of course, stay
+in<br>
+ London for the present?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. You will find me at the Langham, under the name of
+the<br>
+ Count von Kramm."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I shall drop you a line to let you know how we
+progress."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray do so; I shall be all anxiety."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, as to money?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have carte blanche."</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely?"</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you that I would give one of the provinces of my
+kingdom to<br>
+ have that photograph."</p>
+
+<p>"And for present expenses?"</p>
+
+<p>The king took a heavy chamois-leather bag from under his
+cloak, and<br>
+ laid it on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"There are three hundred pounds in gold, and seven hundred
+in<br>
+ notes," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Holmes scribbled a receipt upon a sheet of his notebook, and
+handed<br>
+ it to him.</p>
+
+<p>"And mademoiselle's address?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Briony Lodge, Serpentine Avenue, St. John's Wood."</p>
+
+<p>Holmes took a note of it. "One other question," said he,<br>
+ thoughtfully. "Was the photograph a cabinet?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, good-night, your majesty, and I trust that we shall
+soon<br>
+ have some good news for you. And good-night, Watson," he added,
+as<br>
+ the wheels of the royal brougham rolled down the street. "If
+you<br>
+ will be good enough to call to-morrow afternoon, at three
+o'clock,<br>
+ I should like to chat this little matter over with you."</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ II</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ At three o'clock precisely I was at Baker Street, but Holmes
+had<br>
+ not yet returned. The landlady informed me that he had left
+the<br>
+ house shortly after eight o'clock in the morning. I sat down<br>
+ beside the fire, however, with the intention of awaiting
+him,<br>
+ however long he might be. I was already deeply interested in
+his<br>
+ inquiry, for, though it was surrounded by none of the grim
+and<br>
+ strange features which were associated with the two crimes which
+I<br>
+ have already recorded, still, the nature of the case and the<br>
+ exalted station of his client gave it a character of its
+own.<br>
+ Indeed, apart from the nature of the investigation which my
+friend<br>
+ had on hand, there was something in his masterly grasp of a<br>
+ situation, and his keen, incisive reasoning, which made it a<br>
+ pleasure to me to study his system of work, and to follow
+the<br>
+ quick, subtle methods by which he disentangled the most<br>
+ inextricable mysteries. So accustomed was I to his
+invariable<br>
+ success that the very possibility of his failing had ceased
+to<br>
+ enter into my head.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was close upon four before the door opened, and a
+drunken-<br>
+ looking groom, ill-kempt and side-whiskered, with an inflamed
+face<br>
+ and disreputable clothes, walked into the room. Accustomed as
+I<br>
+ was to my friend's amazing powers in the use of disguises, I had
+to<br>
+ look three times before I was certain that it was indeed he.
+With<br>
+ a nod he vanished into the bedroom, whence he emerged in
+five<br>
+ minutes tweed-suited and respectable, as of old. Putting his
+hands<br>
+ into his pockets, he stretched out his legs in front of the
+fire,<br>
+ and laughed heartily for some minutes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, really!" he cried, and then he choked, and laughed
+again<br>
+ until he was obliged to lie back, limp and helpless, in the
+chair.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's quite too funny. I am sure you could never guess how
+I<br>
+ employed my morning, or what I ended by doing."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't imagine. I suppose that you have been watching
+the<br>
+ habits, and, perhaps, the house, of Miss Irene Adler."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so, but the sequel was rather unusual. I will tell
+you,<br>
+ however. I left the house a little after eight o'clock this<br>
+ morning in the character of a groom out of work. There is a<br>
+ wonderful sympathy and freemasonry among horsey men. Be one
+of<br>
+ them, and you will know all that there is to know. I soon
+found<br>
+ Briony Lodge. It is a bijou villa, with a garden at the back,
+but<br>
+ built out in the front right up to the road, two stories.
+Chubb<br>
+ lock to the door. Large sitting room on the right side, well<br>
+ furnished, with long windows almost to the floor, and those<br>
+ preposterous English window fasteners which a child could
+open.<br>
+ Behind there was nothing remarkable, save that the passage
+window<br>
+ could be reached from the top of the coach-house. I walked
+round<br>
+ it and examined it closely from every point of view, but
+without<br>
+ noting anything else of interest.</p>
+
+<p>"I then lounged down the street, and found, as I expected,
+that<br>
+ there was a mews in a lane which runs down by one wall of
+the<br>
+ garden. I lent the hostlers a hand in rubbing down their
+horses,<br>
+ and I received in exchange two-pence, a glass of half and half,
+two<br>
+ fills of shag tobacco, and as much information as I could
+desire<br>
+ about Miss Adler, to say nothing of half a dozen other people
+in<br>
+ the neighborhood, in whom I was not in the least interested,
+but<br>
+ whose biographies I was compelled to listen to."</p>
+
+<p>"And what of Irene Adler?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, she has turned all the men's heads down in that part. She
+is<br>
+ the daintiest thing under a bonnet on this planet. So say
+the<br>
+ Serpentine Mews, to a man. She lives quietly, sings at
+concerts,<br>
+ drives out at five every day, and returns at seven sharp for<br>
+ dinner. Seldom goes out at other times, except when she
+sings.<br>
+ Has only one male visitor, but a good deal of him. He is
+dark,<br>
+ handsome, and dashing; never calls less than once a day, and
+often<br>
+ twice. He is a Mr. Godfrey Norton of the Inner Temple. See
+the<br>
+ advantages of a cabman as a confidant. They had driven him home
+a<br>
+ dozen times from Serpentine Mews, and knew all about him. When
+I<br>
+ had listened to all that they had to tell, I began to walk up
+and<br>
+ down near Briony Lodge once more, and to think over my plan
+of<br>
+ campaign.</p>
+
+<p>"This Godfrey Norton was evidently an important factor in
+the<br>
+ matter. He was a lawyer. That sounded ominous. What was the<br>
+ relation between them, and what the object of his repeated
+visits?<br>
+ Was she his client, his friend, or his mistress? If the
+former,<br>
+ she had probably transferred the photograph to his keeping. If
+the<br>
+ latter, it was less likely. On the issue of this question
+depended<br>
+ whether I should continue my work at Briony Lodge, or turn
+my<br>
+ attention to the gentleman's chambers in the Temple. It was
+a<br>
+ delicate point, and it widened the field of my inquiry. I
+fear<br>
+ that I bore you with these details, but I have to let you see
+my<br>
+ little difficulties, if you are to understand the
+situation."</p>
+
+<p>"I am following you closely," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"I was still balancing the matter in my mind, when a hansom
+cab<br>
+ drove up to Briony Lodge, and a gentleman sprung out. He was
+a<br>
+ remarkably handsome man, dark, aquiline, and
+mustached--evidently<br>
+ the man of whom I had heard. He appeared to be in a great
+hurry,<br>
+ shouted to the cabman to wait, and brushed past the maid who
+opened<br>
+ the door, with the air of a man who was thoroughly at home.</p>
+
+<p>"He was in the house about half an hour, and I could catch
+glimpses<br>
+ of him in the windows of the sitting room, pacing up and
+down,<br>
+ talking excitedly and waving his arms. Of her I could see
+nothing.<br>
+ Presently he emerged, looking even more flurried than before.
+As<br>
+ he stepped up to the cab, he pulled a gold watch from his
+pocket<br>
+ and looked at it earnestly. 'Drive like the devil!' he
+shouted,<br>
+ 'first to Gross &amp; Hankey's in Regent Street, and then to the
+Church<br>
+ of St. Monica in the Edgeware Road. Half a guinea if you do it
+in<br>
+ twenty minutes!'</p>
+
+<p>"Away they went, and I was just wondering whether I should not
+do<br>
+ well to follow them, when up the lane came a neat little
+landau,<br>
+ the coachman with his coat only half buttoned, and his tie
+under<br>
+ his ear, while all the tags of his harness were sticking out of
+the<br>
+ buckles. It hadn't pulled up before she shot out of the hall
+door<br>
+ and into it. I only caught a glimpse of her at the moment, but
+she<br>
+ was a lovely woman, with a face that a man might die for.</p>
+
+<p>"'The Church of St. Monica, John,' she cried; 'and half a
+sovereign<br>
+ if you reach it in twenty minutes.'</p>
+
+<p>"This was quite too good to lose, Watson. I was just
+balancing<br>
+ whether I should run for it, or whether I should perch behind
+her<br>
+ landau, when a cab came through the street. The driver
+looked<br>
+ twice at such a shabby fare; but I jumped in before he could<br>
+ object. 'The Church of St. Monica,' said I, 'and half a
+sovereign<br>
+ if you reach it in twenty minutes.' It was twenty-five minutes
+to<br>
+ twelve, and of course it was clear enough what was in the
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>"My cabby drove fast. I don't think I ever drove faster, but
+the<br>
+ others were there before us. The cab and landau with their<br>
+ steaming horses were in front of the door when I arrived. I
+paid<br>
+ the man, and hurried into the church. There was not a soul
+there<br>
+ save the two whom I had followed, and a surpliced clergyman,
+who<br>
+ seemed to be expostulating with them. They were all three
+standing<br>
+ in a knot in front of the altar. I lounged up the side aisle
+like<br>
+ any other idler who has dropped into a church. Suddenly, to
+my<br>
+ surprise, the three at the altar faced round to me, and
+Godfrey<br>
+ Norton came running as hard as he could toward me.</p>
+
+<p>"'Thank God!' he cried. 'You'll do. Come! Come!'</p>
+
+<p>"'What then?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come, man, come; only three minutes, or it won't be
+legal.'</p>
+
+<p>"I was half dragged up to the altar, and, before I knew where
+I<br>
+ was, I found myself mumbling responses which were whispered in
+my<br>
+ ear, and vouching for things of which I knew nothing, and
+generally<br>
+ assisting in the secure tying up of Irene Adler, spinster,
+to<br>
+ Godfrey Norton, bachelor. It was all done in an instant, and
+there<br>
+ was the gentleman thanking me on the one side and the lady on
+the<br>
+ other, while the clergyman beamed on me in front. It was the
+most<br>
+ preposterous position in which I ever found myself in my life,
+and<br>
+ it was the thought of it that started me laughing just now.
+It<br>
+ seems that there had been some informality about their
+license;<br>
+ that the clergyman absolutely refused to marry them without
+a<br>
+ witness of some sort, and that my lucky appearance saved the<br>
+ bridegroom from having to sally out into the streets in search
+of a<br>
+ best man. The bride gave me a sovereign, and I mean to wear it
+on<br>
+ my watch chain in memory of the occasion."</p>
+
+<p>"This is a very unexpected turn of affairs," said I; "and
+what<br>
+ then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I found my plans very seriously menaced. It looked as
+if<br>
+ the pair might take an immediate departure, and so necessitate
+very<br>
+ prompt and energetic measures on my part. At the church
+door,<br>
+ however, they separated, he driving back to the Temple, and she
+to<br>
+ her own house. 'I shall drive out in the park at five as
+usual,'<br>
+ she said, as she left him. I heard no more. They drove away
+in<br>
+ different directions, and I went off to make my own
+arrangements."</p>
+
+<p>"Which are?"</p>
+
+<p>"Some cold beef and a glass of beer," he answered, ringing
+the<br>
+ bell. "I have been too busy to think of food, and I am likely
+to<br>
+ be busier still this evening. By the way, doctor, I shall
+want<br>
+ your cooperation."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be delighted."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mind breaking the law?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor running a chance of arrest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in a good cause."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the cause is excellent!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then I am your man."</p>
+
+<p>"I was sure that I might rely on you."</p>
+
+<p>"But what is it you wish?"</p>
+
+<p>"When Mrs. Turner has brought in the tray I will make it clear
+to<br>
+ you. Now," he said, as he turned hungrily on the simple fare
+that<br>
+ our landlady had provided, "I must discuss it while I eat, for
+I<br>
+ have not much time. It is nearly five now. In two hours we
+must<br>
+ be on the scene of action. Miss Irene, or Madame, rather,
+returns<br>
+ from her drive at seven. We must be at Briony Lodge to meet
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"And what then?"</p>
+
+<p>"You must leave that to me. I have already arranged what is
+to<br>
+ occur. There is only one point on which I must insist. You
+must<br>
+ not interfere, come what may. You understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am to be neutral?"</p>
+
+<p>"To do nothing whatever. There will probably be some small<br>
+ unpleasantness. Do not join in it. It will end in my being<br>
+ conveyed into the house. Four or five minutes afterwards the<br>
+ sitting-room window will open. You are to station yourself
+close<br>
+ to that open window."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You are to watch me, for I will be visible to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And when I raise my hand--so--you will throw into the room
+what I<br>
+ give you to throw, and will, at the same time, raise the cry
+of<br>
+ fire. You quite follow me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Entirely."</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing very formidable," he said, taking a long,
+cigar-<br>
+ shaped roll from his pocket. "It is an ordinary plumber's
+smoke-<br>
+ rocket, fitted with a cap at either end, to make it
+self-lighting.<br>
+ Your task is confined to that. When you raise your cry of fire,
+it<br>
+ will be taken up by quite a number of people. You may then walk
+to<br>
+ the end of the street, and I will rejoin you in ten minutes.
+I<br>
+ hope that I have made myself clear?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am to remain neutral, to get near the window, to watch you,
+and,<br>
+ at the signal, to throw in this object, then to raise the cry
+of<br>
+ fire and to wait you at the corner of the street."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you may entirely rely on me."</p>
+
+<p>"That is excellent. I think, perhaps, it is almost time that
+I<br>
+ prepared for the new role I have to play."</p>
+
+<p>He disappeared into his bedroom, and returned in a few minutes
+in<br>
+ the character of an amiable and simple-minded Nonconformist<br>
+ clergyman. His broad, black hat, his baggy trousers, his
+white<br>
+ tie, his sympathetic smile, and general look of peering and<br>
+ benevolent curiosity were such as Mr. John Hare alone could
+have<br>
+ equaled. It was not merely that Holmes changed his costume.
+His<br>
+ expression, his manner, his very soul seemed to vary with
+every<br>
+ fresh part that he assumed. The stage lost a fine actor, even
+as<br>
+ science lost an acute reasoner, when he became a specialist
+in<br>
+ crime.</p>
+
+<p>It was a quarter past six when we left Baker Street, and it
+still<br>
+ wanted ten minutes to the hour when we found ourselves in<br>
+ Serpentine Avenue. It was already dusk, and the lamps were
+just<br>
+ being lighted as we paced up and down in front of Briony
+Lodge,<br>
+ waiting for the coming of its occupant. The house was just such
+as<br>
+ I had pictured it from Sherlock Holmes's succinct description,
+but<br>
+ the locality appeared to be less private than I expected. On
+the<br>
+ contrary, for a small street in a quiet neighborhood, it was<br>
+ remarkably animated. There was a group of shabbily dressed
+men<br>
+ smoking and laughing in a corner, a scissors grinder with
+his<br>
+ wheel, two guardsmen who were flirting with a nurse girl,
+and<br>
+ several well-dressed young men who were lounging up and down
+with<br>
+ cigars in their mouths.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," remarked Holmes, as we paced to and fro in front of
+the<br>
+ house, "this marriage rather simplifies matters. The
+photograph<br>
+ becomes a double-edged weapon now. The chances are that she
+would<br>
+ be as averse to its being seen by Mr. Godfrey Norton as our
+client<br>
+ is to its coming to the eyes of his princess. Now the question
+is--<br>
+ where are we to find the photograph?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where, indeed?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is most unlikely that she carries it about with her. It
+is<br>
+ cabinet size. Too large for easy concealment about a woman's<br>
+ dress. She knows that the king is capable of having her
+waylaid<br>
+ and searched. Two attempts of the sort have already been made.
+We<br>
+ may take it, then, that she does not carry it about with
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"Where, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her banker or her lawyer. There is that double possibility.
+But<br>
+ I am inclined to think neither. Women are naturally secretive,
+and<br>
+ they like to do their own secreting. Why should she hand it
+over<br>
+ to anyone else? She could trust her own guardianship, but
+she<br>
+ could not tell what indirect or political influence might be<br>
+ brought to bear upon a business man. Besides, remember that
+she<br>
+ had resolved to use it within a few days. It must be where she
+can<br>
+ lay her hands upon it. It must be in her own house."</p>
+
+<p>"But it has twice been burglarized."</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw! They did not know how to look."</p>
+
+<p>"But how will you look?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will not look."</p>
+
+<p>"What then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will get her to show me."</p>
+
+<p>"But she will refuse."</p>
+
+<p>"She will not be able to. But I hear the rumble of wheels. It
+is<br>
+ her carriage. Now carry out my orders to the letter."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the gleam of the sidelights of a carriage came
+round<br>
+ the curve of the avenue. It was a smart little landau which<br>
+ rattled up to the door of Briony Lodge. As it pulled up one of
+the<br>
+ loafing men at the corner dashed forward to open the door in
+the<br>
+ hope of earning a copper, but was elbowed away by another
+loafer<br>
+ who had rushed up with the same intention. A fierce quarrel
+broke<br>
+ out which was increased by the two guardsmen, who took sides
+with<br>
+ one of the loungers, and by the scissors grinder, who was
+equally<br>
+ hot upon the other side. A blow was struck, and in an instant
+the<br>
+ lady, who had stepped from her carriage, was the center of a
+little<br>
+ knot of struggling men who struck savagely at each other with
+their<br>
+ fists and sticks. Holmes dashed into the crowd to protect
+the<br>
+ lady; but, just as he reached her, he gave a cry and dropped to
+the<br>
+ ground, with the blood running freely down his face. At his
+fall<br>
+ the guardsmen took to their heels in one direction and the
+loungers<br>
+ in the other, while a number of better-dressed people who
+had<br>
+ watched the scuffle without taking part in it crowded in to
+help<br>
+ the lady and to attend to the injured man. Irene Adler, as I
+will<br>
+ still call her, had hurried up the steps; but she stood at the
+top,<br>
+ with her superb figure outlined against the lights of the
+ball,<br>
+ looking back into the street.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Is the poor gentleman much hurt?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"He is dead," cried several voices.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, there's life in him," shouted another. "But he'll be
+gone<br>
+ before you can get him to the hospital."</p>
+
+<p>"He's a brave fellow," said a woman. "They would have had
+the<br>
+ lady's purse and watch if it hadn't been for him. They were
+a<br>
+ gang, and a rough one, too. Ah! he's breathing now."</p>
+
+<p>"He can't lie in the street. May we bring him in, marm?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely. Bring him into the sitting room. There is a
+comfortable<br>
+ sofa. This way, please." Slowly and solemnly he was borne
+into<br>
+ Briony Lodge, and laid out in the principal room, while I
+still<br>
+ observed the proceedings from my post by the window. The lamps
+had<br>
+ been lighted, but the blinds had not been drawn, so that I
+could<br>
+ see Holmes as he lay upon the couch. I do not know whether he
+was<br>
+ seized with compunction at that moment for the part he was
+playing,<br>
+ but I know that I never felt more heartily ashamed of myself in
+my<br>
+ life than when I saw the beautiful creature against whom I
+was<br>
+ conspiring, or the grace and kindliness with which she waited
+upon<br>
+ the injured man. And yet it would be the blackest treachery
+to<br>
+ Holmes to draw back now from the part which he had intrusted to
+me.<br>
+ I hardened my heart, and took the smoke-rocket from under my<br>
+ ulster. After all, I thought, we are not injuring her. We are
+but<br>
+ preventing her from injuring another.</p>
+
+<p>Holmes had sat upon the couch, and I saw him motion like a man
+who<br>
+ is in need of air. A maid rushed across and threw open the
+window.<br>
+ At the same instant I saw him raise his hand, and at the signal
+I<br>
+ tossed my rocket into the room with a cry of "Fire!" The word
+was<br>
+ no sooner out of my mouth than the whole crowd of spectators,
+well<br>
+ dressed and ill--gentlemen, hostlers, and servant maids--joined
+in<br>
+ a general shriek of "Fire!" Thick clouds of smoke curled
+through<br>
+ the room, and out at the open window. I caught a glimpse of<br>
+ rushing figures, and a moment later the voice of Holmes from
+within<br>
+ assuring them that it was a false alarm. Slipping through
+the<br>
+ shouting crowd, I made my way to the corner of the street, and
+in<br>
+ ten minutes was rejoiced to find my friend's arm in mine, and
+to<br>
+ get away from the scene of uproar. He walked swiftly and in<br>
+ silence for some few minutes, until we had turned down one of
+the<br>
+ quiet streets which led toward the Edgeware Road.</p>
+
+<p>"You did it very nicely, doctor," he remarked. "Nothing could
+have<br>
+ been better. It is all right."</p>
+
+<p>"You have the photograph?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know where it is."</p>
+
+<p>"And how did you find out?"</p>
+
+<p>"She showed me, as I told you that she would."</p>
+
+<p>"I am still in the dark."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish to make a mystery," said he, laughing. "The
+matter<br>
+ was perfectly simple. You, of course, saw that everyone in
+the<br>
+ street was an accomplice. They were all engaged for the
+evening."</p>
+
+<p>"I guessed as much."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, when the row broke out, I had a little moist red paint
+in<br>
+ the palm of my hand. I rushed forward, fell down, clapped my
+hand<br>
+ to my face, and became a piteous spectacle. It is an old
+trick."</p>
+
+<p>"That also I could fathom."</p>
+
+<p>"Then they carried me in. She was bound to have me in. What
+else<br>
+ could she do? And into her sitting room, which was the very
+room<br>
+ which I suspected. It lay between that and her bedroom, and I
+was<br>
+ determined to see which. They laid me on a couch, I motioned
+for<br>
+ air, they were compelled to open the window, and you had
+your<br>
+ chance."</p>
+
+<p>"How did that help you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was all-important. When a woman thinks that her house is
+on<br>
+ fire, her instinct is at once to rush to the thing which she
+values<br>
+ most. It is a perfectly overpowering impulse, and I have more
+than<br>
+ once taken advantage of it. In the case of the Darlington<br>
+ Substitution Scandal it was of use to me, and also in the
+Arnsworth<br>
+ Castle business. A married woman grabs at her baby--an
+unmarried<br>
+ one reaches for her jewel box. Now it was clear to me that
+our<br>
+ lady of to-day had nothing in the house more precious to her
+than<br>
+ what we are in quest of. She would rush to secure it. The
+alarm<br>
+ of fire was admirably done. The smoke and shouting were enough
+to<br>
+ shake nerves of steel. She responded beautifully. The
+photograph<br>
+ is in a recess behind a sliding panel just above the right
+bell-<br>
+ pull. She was there in an instant, and I caught a glimpse of it
+as<br>
+ she drew it out. When I cried out that it was a false alarm,
+she<br>
+ replaced it, glanced at the rocket, rushed from the room, and
+I<br>
+ have not seen her since. I rose, and, making my excuses,
+escaped<br>
+ from the house. I hesitated whether to attempt to secure the<br>
+ photograph at once; but the coachman had come in, and as he
+was<br>
+ watching me narrowly, it seemed safer to wait. A little
+over-<br>
+ precipitance may ruin all."</p>
+
+<p>"And now?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Our quest is practically finished. I shall call with the king
+to-<br>
+ morrow, and with you, if you care to come with us. We will
+be<br>
+ shown into the sitting room to wait for the lady, but it is<br>
+ probable that when she comes she may find neither us nor the<br>
+ photograph. It might be a satisfaction to his majesty to regain
+it<br>
+ with his own hands."</p>
+
+<p>"And when will you call?"</p>
+
+<p>"At eight in the morning. She will not be up, so that we
+shall<br>
+ have a clear field. Besides, we must be prompt, for this
+marriage<br>
+ may mean a complete change in her life and habits. I must wire
+to<br>
+ the king without delay."</p>
+
+<p>We had reached Baker Street, and had stopped at the door. He
+was<br>
+ searching his pockets for the key, when some one passing
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, Mister Sherlock Holmes."</p>
+
+<p>There were several people on the pavement at the time, but
+the<br>
+ greeting appeared to come from a slim youth in an ulster who
+had<br>
+ hurried by.</p>
+
+<p>"I've heard that voice before," said Holmes, staring down the
+dimly<br>
+ lighted street. "Now, I wonder who the deuce that could have<br>
+ been?"</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ III</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ I slept at Baker Street that night, and we were engaged upon
+our<br>
+ toast and coffee in the morning, when the King of Bohemia
+rushed<br>
+ into the room.</p>
+
+<p>"You have really got it?" he cried, grasping Sherlock Holmes
+by<br>
+ either shoulder, and looking eagerly into his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet."</p>
+
+<p>"But you have hopes?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have hopes."</p>
+
+<p>"Then come. I am all impatience to be gone."</p>
+
+<p>"We must have a cab."</p>
+
+<p>"No, my brougham is waiting."</p>
+
+<p>"Then that will simplify matters." We descended, and started
+off<br>
+ once more for Briony Lodge.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Irene Adler is married," remarked Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"Married! When?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"But to whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"To an English lawyer named Norton."</p>
+
+<p>"But she could not love him."</p>
+
+<p>"I am in hopes that she does."</p>
+
+<p>"And why in hopes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because it would spare your majesty all fear of future
+annoyance.<br>
+ If the lady loves her husband, she does not love your majesty.
+If<br>
+ she does not love your majesty, there is no reason why she
+should<br>
+ interfere with your majesty's plan."</p>
+
+<p>"It is true. And yet-- Well, I wish she had been of my own<br>
+ station. What a queen she would have made!" He relapsed into
+a<br>
+ moody silence, which was not broken until we drew up in
+Serpentine<br>
+ Avenue.</p>
+
+<p>The door of Briony Lodge was open, and an elderly woman stood
+upon<br>
+ the steps. She watched us with a sardonic eye as we stepped
+from<br>
+ the brougham.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Sherlock Holmes, I believe?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Mr. Holmes," answered my companion, looking at her with
+a<br>
+ questioning and rather startled gaze.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! My mistress told me that you were likely to call.
+She<br>
+ left this morning, with her husband, by the 5:15 train from
+Charing<br>
+ Cross, for the Continent."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" Sherlock Holmes staggered back, white with chagrin
+and<br>
+ surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean that she has left England?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never to return."</p>
+
+<p>"And the papers?" asked the king hoarsely. "All is lost!"</p>
+
+<p>"We shall see." He pushed past the servant, and rushed into
+the<br>
+ drawing-room, followed by the king and myself. The furniture
+was<br>
+ scattered about in every direction, with dismantled shelves,
+and<br>
+ open drawers, as if the lady had hurriedly ransacked them
+before<br>
+ her flight. Holmes rushed at the bell-pull, tore back a
+small<br>
+ sliding shutter, and plunging in his hand, pulled out a
+photograph<br>
+ and a letter. The photograph was of Irene Adler herself in
+evening<br>
+ dress; the letter was superscribed to "Sherlock Holmes, Esq. To
+be<br>
+ left till called for." My friend tore it open, and we all
+three<br>
+ read it together. It was dated at midnight of the preceding
+night,<br>
+ and ran in this way:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "MY DEAR MR. SHERLOCK HOLMES,--You really did it very well.
+You<br>
+ took me in completely. Until after the alarm of the fire, I
+had<br>
+ not a suspicion. But then, when I found how I had betrayed
+myself,<br>
+ I began to think. I had been warned against you months ago. I
+had<br>
+ been told that if the king employed an agent, it would certainly
+be<br>
+ you. And your address had been given me. Yet, with all this,
+you<br>
+ made me reveal what you wanted to know. Even after I became<br>
+ suspicious, I found it hard to think evil of such a dear, kind
+old<br>
+ clergyman. But, you know, I have been trained as an actress<br>
+ myself. Male costume is nothing new to me. I often take
+advantage<br>
+ of the freedom which it gives. I sent John, the coachman, to
+watch<br>
+ you, ran upstairs, got into my walking clothes, as I call them,
+and<br>
+ came down just as you departed.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I followed you to the door, and so made sure that I
+was<br>
+ really an object of interest to the celebrated Mr. Sherlock
+Holmes.<br>
+ Then I, rather imprudently, wished you good night, and started
+for<br>
+ the Temple to see my husband.</p>
+
+<p>"We both thought the best resource was flight when pursued by
+so<br>
+ formidable an antagonist; so you will find the nest empty when
+you<br>
+ call to-morrow. As to the photograph, your client may rest
+in<br>
+ peace. I love and am loved by a better man than he. The king
+may<br>
+ do what he will without hindrance from one whom he has
+cruelly<br>
+ wronged. I keep it only to safeguard myself, and preserve a
+weapon<br>
+ which will always secure me from any steps which he might take
+in<br>
+ the future. I leave a photograph which he might care to
+possess;<br>
+ and I remain, dear Mr. Sherlock Holmes, very truly yours,</p>
+
+<p>"IRENE NORTON, nee ADLER."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "What a woman--oh, what a woman!" cried the King of Bohemia,
+when<br>
+ we had all three read this epistle. "Did I not tell you how
+quick<br>
+ and resolute she was? Would she not have made an admirable
+queen?<br>
+ Is it not a pity that she was not on my level?"</p>
+
+<p>"From what I have seen of the lady, she seems indeed to be on
+a<br>
+ very different level to your majesty," said Holmes coldly. "I
+am<br>
+ sorry that I have not been able to bring your majesty's business
+to<br>
+ a more successful conclusion."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, my dear sir," cried the king, "nothing could
+be<br>
+ more successful. I know that her word is inviolate. The<br>
+ photograph is now as safe as if it were in the fire."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear your majesty say so."</p>
+
+<p>"I am immensely indebted to you. Pray tell me in what way I
+can<br>
+ reward you. This ring--" He slipped an emerald snake ring
+from<br>
+ his finger, and held it out upon the palm of his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Your majesty has something which I should value even more
+highly,"<br>
+ said Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"You have but to name it."</p>
+
+<p>"This photograph!"</p>
+
+<p>The king stared at him in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"Irene's photograph!" he cried. "Certainly, if you wish
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank your majesty. Then there is no more to be done in
+the<br>
+ matter. I have the honor to wish you a very good morning."
+He<br>
+ bowed, and turning away without observing the hand which the
+king<br>
+ had stretched out to him, he set off in my company for his<br>
+ chambers.</p>
+
+<p>And that was how a great scandal threatened to affect the
+kingdom<br>
+ of Bohemia, and how the best plans of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
+were<br>
+ beaten by a woman's wit. He used to make merry over the
+cleverness<br>
+ of women, but I have not heard him do it of late. And when
+he<br>
+ speaks of Irene Adler, or when he refers to her photograph, it
+is<br>
+ always under the honorable title of THE woman.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>The Red-Headed League</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ I had called upon my friend, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, one day in
+the<br>
+ autumn of last year, and found him in deep conversation with a
+very<br>
+ stout, florid-faced elderly gentleman, with fiery red hair.
+With<br>
+ an apology for my intrusion, I was about to withdraw, when
+Holmes<br>
+ pulled me abruptly into the room and closed the door behind
+me.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "You could not possibly have come at a better time, my dear<br>
+ Watson," he said, cordially.</p>
+
+<p>"I was afraid that you were engaged."</p>
+
+<p>"So I am. Very much so."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I can wait in the next room."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all. This gentleman, Mr. Wilson, has been my partner
+and<br>
+ helper in many of my most successful cases, and I have no
+doubt<br>
+ that he will be of the utmost use to me in yours also."</p>
+
+<p>The stout gentleman half rose from his chair and gave a bob
+of<br>
+ greeting, with a quick little questioning glance from his
+small,<br>
+ fat-encircled eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Try the settee," said Holmes, relapsing into his armchair,
+and<br>
+ putting his finger tips together, as was his custom when in<br>
+ judicial moods. "I know, my dear Watson, that you share my love
+of<br>
+ all that is bizarre and outside the conventions and humdrum
+routine<br>
+ of everyday life. You have shown your relish for it by the<br>
+ enthusiasm which has prompted you to chronicle, and, if you
+will<br>
+ excuse my saying so, somewhat to embellish so many of my own
+little<br>
+ adventures."</p>
+
+<p>"Your cases have indeed been of the greatest interest to me,"
+I<br>
+ observed.</p>
+
+<p>"You will remember that I remarked the other day, just before
+we<br>
+ went into the very simple problem presented by Miss Mary<br>
+ Sutherland, that for strange effects and extraordinary
+combinations<br>
+ we must go to life itself, which is always far more daring than
+any<br>
+ effort of the imagination."</p>
+
+<p>"A proposition which I took the liberty of doubting."</p>
+
+<p>"You did, doctor, but none the less you must come round to my
+view,<br>
+ for otherwise I shall keep on piling fact upon fact on you,
+until<br>
+ your reason breaks down under them and acknowledge me to be
+right.<br>
+ Now, Mr. Jabez Wilson here has been good enough to call upon
+me<br>
+ this morning, and to begin a narrative which promises to be one
+of<br>
+ the most singular which I have listened to for some time. You
+have<br>
+ heard me remark that the strangest and most unique things are
+very<br>
+ often connected not with the larger but with the smaller
+crimes,<br>
+ and occasionally, indeed, where there is room for doubt whether
+any<br>
+ positive crime has been committed. As far as I have heard, it
+is<br>
+ impossible for me to say whether the present case is an instance
+of<br>
+ crime or not, but the course of events is certainly among the
+most<br>
+ singular that I have ever listened to. Perhaps, Mr. Wilson,
+you<br>
+ would have the great kindness to recommence your narrative. I
+ask<br>
+ you, not merely because my friend, Dr. Watson, has not heard
+the<br>
+ opening part, but also because the peculiar nature of the
+story<br>
+ makes me anxious to have every possible detail from your lips.
+As<br>
+ a rule, when I have heard some slight indication of the course
+of<br>
+ events I am able to guide myself by the thousands of other
+similar<br>
+ cases which occur to my memory. In the present instance I am<br>
+ forced to admit that the facts are, to the best of my
+belief,<br>
+ unique."</p>
+
+<p>The portly client puffed out his chest with an appearance of
+some<br>
+ little pride, and pulled a dirty and wrinkled newspaper from
+the<br>
+ inside pocket of his greatcoat. As he glanced down the<br>
+ advertisement column, with his head thrust forward, and the
+paper<br>
+ flattened out upon his knee, I took a good look at the man,
+and<br>
+ endeavored, after the fashion of my companion, to read the<br>
+ indications which might be presented by his dress or
+appearance.</p>
+
+<p>I did not gain very much, however, by my inspection. Our
+visitor<br>
+ bore every mark of being an average commonplace British
+tradesman,<br>
+ obese, pompous, and slow. He wore rather baggy gray
+shepherd's<br>
+ check trousers, a not over-clean black frock coat, unbuttoned
+in<br>
+ the front, and a drab waistcoat with a heavy brassy Albert
+chain,<br>
+ and a square pierced bit of metal dangling down as an ornament.
+A<br>
+ frayed top hat and a faded brown overcoat with a wrinkled
+velvet<br>
+ collar lay upon a chair beside him. Altogether, look as I
+would,<br>
+ there was nothing remarkable about the man save his blazing
+red<br>
+ head and the expression of extreme chagrin and discontent upon
+his<br>
+ features.</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes's quick eye took in my occupation, and he
+shook his<br>
+ head with a smile as he noticed my questioning glances.
+"Beyond<br>
+ the obvious facts that he has at some time done manual labor,
+that<br>
+ he takes snuff, that he is a Freemason, that he has been in
+China,<br>
+ and that he has done a considerable amount of writing lately, I
+can<br>
+ deduce nothing else."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Jabez Wilson started up in his chair, with his forefinger
+upon<br>
+ the paper, but his eyes upon my companion.</p>
+
+<p>How, in the name of good fortune, did you know all that,
+Mr.<br>
+ Holmes?" he asked. "How did you know, for example, that I
+did<br>
+ manual labor? It's as true as gospel, for I began as a
+ship's<br>
+ carpenter."</p>
+
+<p>"Your hands, my dear sir. Your right hand is quite a size
+larger<br>
+ than your left. You have worked with it and the muscles are
+more<br>
+ developed."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I won't insult your intelligence by telling you how I read
+that,<br>
+ especially as, rather against the strict rules of your order,
+you<br>
+ use an arc and compass breastpin."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, of course, I forgot that. But the writing?"</p>
+
+<p>"What else can be indicated by that right cuff so very shiny
+for<br>
+ five inches, and the left one with the smooth patch near the
+elbow<br>
+ where you rest it upon the desk."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, but China?"</p>
+
+<p>"The fish which you have tattooed immediately above your
+wrist<br>
+ could only have been done in China. I have made a small study
+of<br>
+ tattoo marks, and have even contributed to the literature of
+the<br>
+ subject. That trick of staining the fishes' scales of a
+delicate<br>
+ pink is quite peculiar to China. When, in addition, I see a<br>
+ Chinese coin hanging from your watch chain, the matter becomes
+even<br>
+ more simple."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Jabez Wilson laughed heavily. "Well, I never!" said he.
+"I<br>
+ thought at first that you had done something clever, but I see
+that<br>
+ there was nothing in it after all."</p>
+
+<p>"I begin to think, Watson," said Holmes, "that I make a
+mistake in<br>
+ explaining. 'Omne ignotom pro magnifico,' you know, and my
+poor<br>
+ little reputation, such as it is, will suffer shipwreck if I am
+so<br>
+ candid. Can you not find the advertisement, Mr. Wilson?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I have got it now," he answered, with his thick, red
+finger<br>
+ planted halfway down the column. "Here it is. This is what
+began<br>
+ it all. You just read it for yourself, sir."</p>
+
+<p>I took the paper from him and read as follows:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "TO THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE: On account of the bequest of the
+late<br>
+ Ezekiah Hopkins, of Lebanon, Pa., U. S. A., there is now
+another<br>
+ vacancy open which entitles a member of the League to a salary
+of<br>
+ four pounds a week for purely nominal services. All red-headed
+men<br>
+ who are sound in body and mind and above the age of
+twenty-one<br>
+ years are eligible. Apply in person on Monday, at eleven
+o'clock,<br>
+ to Duncan Ross, at the offices of the League, 7 Pope's Court,
+Fleet<br>
+ Street."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "What on earth does this mean?" I ejaculated, after I had
+twice<br>
+ read over the extraordinary announcement.</p>
+
+<p>Holmes chuckled and wriggled in his chair, as was his habit
+when in<br>
+ high spirits. "It is a little off the beaten track, isn't
+it?"<br>
+ said he. "And now, Mr. Wilson, off you go at scratch, and tell
+us<br>
+ all about yourself, your household, and the effect which
+this<br>
+ advertisement had upon your fortunes. You will first make a
+note,<br>
+ doctor, of the paper and the date."</p>
+
+<p>"It is The Morning Chronicle of April 27, 1890. Just two
+months<br>
+ ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good. Now, Mr. Wilson."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it is just as I have been telling you, Mr. Sherlock
+Holmes,"<br>
+ said Jabez Wilson, mopping his forehead, "I have a small<br>
+ pawnbroker's business at Saxe-Coburg Square, near the City.
+It's<br>
+ not a very large affair, and of late years it has not done
+more<br>
+ than just give me a living. I used to be able to keep two<br>
+ assistants, but now I only keep one; and I would have a job to
+pay<br>
+ him but that he is willing to come for half wages, so as to
+learn<br>
+ the business."</p>
+
+<p>"What is the name of this obliging youth?" asked Sherlock
+Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"His name is Vincent Spaulding, and he's not such a youth
+either.<br>
+ It's hard to say his age. I should not wish a smarter
+assistant,<br>
+ Mr. Holmes; and I know very well that he could better himself,
+and<br>
+ earn twice what I am able to give him. But, after all, if he
+is<br>
+ satisfied, why should I put ideas in his head?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, indeed? You seem most fortunate in having an employee
+who<br>
+ comes under the full market price. It is not a common
+experience<br>
+ among employers in this age. I don't know that your assistant
+is<br>
+ not as remarkable as your advertisement."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he has his faults, too," said Mr. Wilson. "Never was such
+a<br>
+ fellow for photography. Snapping away with a camera when he
+ought<br>
+ to be improving his mind, and then diving down into the cellar
+like<br>
+ a rabbit into its hole to develop his pictures. That is his
+main<br>
+ fault; but, on the whole, he's a good worker. There's no vice
+in<br>
+ him."</p>
+
+<p>"He is still with you, I presume?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. He and a girl of fourteen, who does a bit of
+simple<br>
+ cooking, and keeps the place clean--that's all I have in the
+house,<br>
+ for I am a widower, and never had any family. We live very<br>
+ quietly, sir, the three of us; and we keep a roof over our
+heads,<br>
+ and pay our debts, if we do nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>"The first thing that put us out was that advertisement.<br>
+ Spaulding, he came down into the office just this day eight
+weeks,<br>
+ with this very paper in his hand, and he says:</p>
+
+<p>"'I wish to the Lord, Mr. Wilson, that I was a redheaded
+man.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why that?' I asks.</p>
+
+<p>"'Why,' says he, 'here's another vacancy on the League of the
+Red-<br>
+ headed Men. It's worth quite a little fortune to any man who
+gets<br>
+ it, and I understand that there are more vacancies than there
+are<br>
+ men, so that the trustees are at their wits' end what to do
+with<br>
+ the money. If my hair would only change color here's a nice
+little<br>
+ crib all ready for me to step into.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, what is it, then?' I asked. You see, Mr. Holmes, I am
+a<br>
+ very stay-at-home man, and, as my business came to me instead of
+my<br>
+ having to go to it, I was often weeks on end without putting
+my<br>
+ foot over the door mat. In that way I didn't know much of what
+was<br>
+ going on outside, and I was always glad of a bit of news.</p>
+
+<p>"'Have you never heard of the League of the Red-headed Men?'
+he<br>
+ asked, with his eyes open.</p>
+
+<p>"'Never.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, I wonder at that, for you are eligible yourself for one
+of<br>
+ the vacancies.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And what are they worth?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, merely a couple of hundred a year, but the work is
+slight,<br>
+ and it need not interfere very much with one's other
+occupations.'</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can easily think that that made me prick up my
+ears, for<br>
+ the business has not been over good for some years, and an
+extra<br>
+ couple of hundred would have been very handy.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tell me all about it,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well,' said he, showing me the advertisement, 'you can see
+for<br>
+ yourself that the League has a vacancy, and there is the
+address<br>
+ where you should apply for particulars. As far as I can make
+out,<br>
+ the League was founded by an American millionaire, Ezekiah
+Hopkins,<br>
+ who was very peculiar in his ways. He was himself red-headed,
+and<br>
+ he had a great sympathy for all red-headed men; so, when he
+died,<br>
+ it was found that he had left his enormous fortune in the hands
+of<br>
+ trustees, with instructions to apply the interest to the
+providing<br>
+ of easy berths to men whose hair is of that color. From all I
+hear<br>
+ it is splendid pay, and very little to do.'</p>
+
+<p>"'But,' said I, 'there would be millions of red-headed men
+who<br>
+ would apply.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not so many as you might think,' he answered. 'You see it
+is<br>
+ really confined to Londoners, and to grown men. This American
+had<br>
+ started from London when he was young, and he wanted to do the
+old<br>
+ town a good turn. Then, again, I have heard it is of no use
+your<br>
+ applying if your hair is light red, or dark red, or anything
+but<br>
+ real, bright, blazing, fiery red. Now, if you cared to apply,
+Mr.<br>
+ Wilson, you would just walk in; but perhaps it would hardly
+be<br>
+ worth your while to put yourself out of the way for the sake of
+a<br>
+ few hundred pounds.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now it is a fact, gentlemen, as you may see for yourselves,
+that<br>
+ my hair is of a very full and rich tint, so that it seemed to
+me<br>
+ that, if there was to be any competition in the matter, I stood
+as<br>
+ good a chance as any man that I had ever met. Vincent
+Spaulding<br>
+ seemed to know so much about it that I thought he might
+prove<br>
+ useful, so I just ordered him to put up the shutters for the
+day,<br>
+ and to come right away with me. He was very willing to have
+a<br>
+ holiday, so we shut the business up, and started off for the<br>
+ address that was given us in the advertisement.</p>
+
+<p>"I never hope to see such a sight as that again, Mr. Holmes.
+From<br>
+ north, south, east, and west every man who had a shade of red
+in<br>
+ his hair had tramped into the City to answer the
+advertisement.<br>
+ Fleet Street was choked with red-headed folk, and Pope's
+Court<br>
+ looked like a coster's orange barrow. I should not have
+thought<br>
+ there were so many in the whole country as were brought together
+by<br>
+ that single advertisement. Every shade of color they
+were--straw,<br>
+ lemon, orange, brick, Irish setter, liver, clay; but, as
+Spaulding<br>
+ said, there were not many who had the real vivid
+flame-colored<br>
+ tint. When I saw how many were waiting, I would have given it
+up<br>
+ in despair; but Spaulding would not hear of it. How he did it
+I<br>
+ could not imagine, but he pushed and pulled and butted until he
+got<br>
+ me through the crowd, and right up to the steps which led to
+the<br>
+ office. There was a double stream upon the stair, some going up
+in<br>
+ hope, and some coming back dejected; but we wedged in as well as
+we<br>
+ could, and soon found ourselves in the office."</p>
+
+<p>"Your experience has been a most entertaining one,"
+remarked<br>
+ Holmes, as his client paused and refreshed his memory with a
+huge<br>
+ pinch of snuff. "Pray continue your very interesting
+statement."</p>
+
+<p>"There was nothing in the office but a couple of wooden chairs
+and<br>
+ a deal table, behind which sat a small man, with a head that
+was<br>
+ even redder than mine. He said a few words to each candidate as
+he<br>
+ came up, and then he always managed to find some fault in
+them<br>
+ which would disqualify them. Getting a vacancy did not seem to
+be<br>
+ such a very easy matter after all. However, when our turn
+came,<br>
+ the little man was much more favorable to me than to any of
+the<br>
+ others, and he closed the door as we entered, so that he might
+have<br>
+ a private word with us.</p>
+
+<p>"'This is Mr. Jabez Wilson,' said my assistant, 'and he is
+willing<br>
+ to fill a vacancy in the League.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And he is admirably suited for it,' the other answered. 'He
+has<br>
+ every requirement. I cannot recall when I have seen anything
+so<br>
+ fine.' He took a step backward, cocked his head on one side,
+and<br>
+ gazed at my hair until I felt quite bashful. Then suddenly
+he<br>
+ plunged forward, wrung my hand, and congratulated me warmly on
+my<br>
+ success.</p>
+
+<p>"'It would be injustice to hesitate,' said he. 'You will,
+however,<br>
+ I am sure, excuse me for taking an obvious precaution.' With
+that<br>
+ he seized my hair in both his hands, and tugged until I yelled
+with<br>
+ the pain. 'There is water in your eyes,' said he, as he
+released<br>
+ me. 'I perceive that all is as it should be. But we have to
+be<br>
+ careful, for we have twice been deceived by wigs and once by
+paint.<br>
+ I could tell you tales of cobbler's wax which would disgust
+you<br>
+ with human nature.' He stepped over to the window and
+shouted<br>
+ through it at the top of his voice that the vacancy was filled.
+A<br>
+ groan of disappointment came up from below, and the folk all<br>
+ trooped away in different directions, until there was not a
+red<br>
+ head to be seen except my own and that of the manager.</p>
+
+<p>"'My name,' said he, 'is Mr. Duncan Ross, and I am myself one
+of<br>
+ the pensioners upon the fund left by our noble benefactor. Are
+you<br>
+ a married man, Mr. Wilson? Have you a family?'</p>
+
+<p>"I answered that I had not.</p>
+
+<p>"His face fell immediately.</p>
+
+<p>"'Dear me!' he said, gravely, 'that is very serious indeed! I
+am<br>
+ sorry to hear you say that. The fund was, of course, for the<br>
+ propagation and spread of the red heads as well as for their<br>
+ maintenance. It is exceedingly unfortunate that you should be
+a<br>
+ bachelor.'</p>
+
+<p>"My face lengthened at this, Mr. Holmes, for I thought that I
+was<br>
+ not to have the vacancy after all; but, after thinking it over
+for<br>
+ a few minutes, he said that it would be all right.</p>
+
+<p>"'In the case of another,' said he, 'the objection might be
+fatal,<br>
+ but we must stretch a point in favor of a man with such a head
+of<br>
+ hair as yours. When shall you be able to enter upon your new<br>
+ duties?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, it is a little awkward, for I have a business
+already,'<br>
+ said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, never mind about that, Mr. Wilson!' said Vincent
+Spaulding.<br>
+ 'I shall be able to look after that for you.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What would be the hours?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ten to two.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now a pawnbroker's business is mostly done of an evening,
+Mr.<br>
+ Holmes, especially Thursday and Friday evenings, which is
+just<br>
+ before pay day; so it would suit me very well to earn a little
+in<br>
+ the mornings. Besides, I knew that my assistant was a good
+man,<br>
+ and that he would see to anything that turned up.</p>
+
+<p>"'That would suit me very well,' said I. 'And the pay?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Is four pounds a week.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And the work?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Is purely nominal.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What do you call purely nominal?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, you have to be in the office, or at least in the
+building,<br>
+ the whole time. If you leave, you forfeit your whole
+position<br>
+ forever. The will is very clear upon that point. You don't
+comply<br>
+ with the conditions if you budge from the office during that
+time.'</p>
+
+<p>"'It's only four hours a day, and I should not think of
+leaving,'<br>
+ said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'No excuse will avail,' said Mr. Duncan Ross, 'neither
+sickness,<br>
+ nor business, nor anything else. There you must stay, or you
+lose<br>
+ your billet.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And the work?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Is to copy out the "Encyclopaedia Britannica." There is
+the<br>
+ first volume of it in that press. You must find your own
+ink,<br>
+ pens, and blotting paper, but we provide this table and
+chair.<br>
+ Will you be ready to-morrow?'</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "'Certainly,' I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"'Then, good-by, Mr. Jabez Wilson, and let me congratulate you
+once<br>
+ more on the important position which you have been fortunate
+enough<br>
+ to gain.' He bowed me out of the room, and I went home with
+my<br>
+ assistant hardly knowing what to say or do, I was so pleased at
+my<br>
+ own good fortune.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I thought over the matter all day, and by evening I was
+in<br>
+ low spirits again; for I had quite persuaded myself that the
+whole<br>
+ affair must be some great hoax or fraud, though what its
+object<br>
+ might be I could not imagine. It seemed altogether past
+belief<br>
+ that anyone could make such a will, or that they would pay such
+a<br>
+ sum for doing anything so simple as copying out the
+'Encyclopaedia<br>
+ Britannica.' Vincent Spaulding did what he could to cheer me
+up,<br>
+ but by bed time I had reasoned myself out of the whole
+thing.<br>
+ However, in the morning I determined to have a look at it
+anyhow,<br>
+ so I bought a penny bottle of ink, and with a quill pen and
+seven<br>
+ sheets of foolscap paper I started off for Pope's Court.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, to my surprise and delight everything was as right
+as<br>
+ possible. The table was set out ready for me, and Mr. Duncan
+Ross<br>
+ was there to see that I got fairly to work. He started me off
+upon<br>
+ the letter A, and then he left me; but he would drop in from
+time<br>
+ to time to see that all was right with me. At two o'clock he
+bade<br>
+ me good-day, complimented me upon the amount that I had
+written,<br>
+ and locked the door of the office after me.</p>
+
+<p>"This went on day after day, Mr. Holmes, and on Saturday
+the<br>
+ manager came in and planked down four golden sovereigns for
+my<br>
+ week's work. It was the same next week, and the same the
+week<br>
+ after. Every morning I was there at ten, and every afternoon
+I<br>
+ left at two. By degrees Mr. Duncan Ross took to coming in
+only<br>
+ once of a morning, and then, after a time, he did not come in
+at<br>
+ all. Still, of course. I never dared to leave the room for
+an<br>
+ instant, for I was not sure when he might come, and the billet
+was<br>
+ such a good one, and suited me so well, that I would not risk
+the<br>
+ loss of it.</p>
+
+<p>"Eight weeks passed away like this, and I had written about
+Abbots,<br>
+ and Archery, and Armor, and Architecture, and Attica, and
+hoped<br>
+ with diligence that I might get on to the Bs before very long.
+It<br>
+ cost me something in foolscap, and I had pretty nearly filled
+a<br>
+ shelf with my writings. And then suddenly the whole business
+came<br>
+ to an end."</p>
+
+<p>"To an end?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. And no later than this morning. I went to my work
+as<br>
+ usual at ten o'clock, but the door was shut and locked, with
+a<br>
+ little square of cardboard hammered onto the middle of the
+panel<br>
+ with a tack. Here it is, and you can read for yourself."</p>
+
+<p>He held up a piece of white cardboard, about the size of a
+sheet of<br>
+ note paper. It read in this fashion:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE IS DISSOLVED.</p>
+
+<p>Oct. 9, 1890."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Sherlock Holmes and I surveyed this curt announcement and
+the<br>
+ rueful face behind it, until the comical side of the affair
+so<br>
+ completely overtopped every consideration that we both burst
+out<br>
+ into a roar of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot see that there is anything very funny," cried our
+client,<br>
+ flushing up to the roots of his flaming head. "If you can do<br>
+ nothing better than laugh at me, I can go elsewhere."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," cried Holmes, shoving him back into the chair from
+which<br>
+ he had half risen. "I really wouldn't miss your case for the<br>
+ world. It is most refreshingly unusual. But there is, if you
+will<br>
+ excuse my saying so, something just a little funny about it.
+Pray<br>
+ what steps did you take when you found the card upon the
+door?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was staggered, sir. I did not know what to do. Then I
+called<br>
+ at the offices round, but none of them seemed to know
+anything<br>
+ about it. Finally, I went to the landlord, who is an
+accountant<br>
+ living on the ground floor, and I asked him if he could tell
+me<br>
+ what had become of the Red-headed League. He said that he
+had<br>
+ never heard of any such body. Then I asked him who Mr. Duncan
+Ross<br>
+ was. He answered that the name was new to him.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well,' said I, 'the gentleman at No. 4.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What, the red-headed man?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh,' said he, 'his name was William Morris. He was a
+solicitor,<br>
+ and was using my room as a temporary convenience until his
+new<br>
+ premises were ready. He moved out yesterday.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Where could I find him?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, at his new offices. He did tell me the address. Yes,
+17<br>
+ King Edward Street, near St. Paul's.'</p>
+
+<p>"I started off, Mr. Holmes, but when I got to that address it
+was a<br>
+ manufactory of artificial knee-caps, and no one in it had
+ever<br>
+ heard of either Mr. William Morris or Mr. Duncan Ross."</p>
+
+<p>"And what did you do then?" asked Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"I went home to Saxe-Coburg Square, and I took the advice of
+my<br>
+ assistant. But he could not help me in any way. He could only
+say<br>
+ that if I waited I should hear by post. But that was not
+quite<br>
+ good enough, Mr. Holmes. I did not wish to lose such a place<br>
+ without a struggle, so, as I had heard that you were good enough
+to<br>
+ give advice to poor folk who were in need of it, I came right
+away<br>
+ to you."</p>
+
+<p>"And you did very wisely," said Holmes. "Your case is an<br>
+ exceedingly remarkable one, and I shall be happy to look into
+it.<br>
+ From what you have told me I think that it is possible that
+graver<br>
+ issues hang from it than might at first sight appear."</p>
+
+<p>"Grave enough!" said Mr. Jabez Wilson. "Why, I have lost
+four<br>
+ pound a week."</p>
+
+<p>"As far as you are personally concerned," remarked Holmes, "I
+do<br>
+ not see that you have any grievance against this
+extraordinary<br>
+ league. On the contrary, you are, as I understand, richer by
+some<br>
+ thirty pounds, to say nothing of the minute knowledge which
+you<br>
+ have gained on every subject which comes under the letter A.
+You<br>
+ have lost nothing by them."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir. But I want to find out about them, and who they are,
+and<br>
+ what their object was in playing this prank--if it was a
+prank--<br>
+ upon me. It was a pretty expensive joke for them, for it cost
+them<br>
+ two-and-thirty pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall endeavor to clear up these points for you. And,
+first,<br>
+ one or two questions, Mr. Wilson. This assistant of yours
+who<br>
+ first called your attention to the advertisement--how long had
+he<br>
+ been with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"About a month then."</p>
+
+<p>"How did he come?"</p>
+
+<p>"In answer to an advertisement."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he the only applicant?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I had a dozen."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you pick him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because he was handy and would come cheap."</p>
+
+<p>"At half wages, in fact."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding?"</p>
+
+<p>"Small, stout-built, very quick in his ways, no hair on his
+face,<br>
+ though he's not short of thirty. Has a white splash of acid
+upon<br>
+ his forehead."</p>
+
+<p>Holmes sat up in his chair in considerable excitement. I
+thought<br>
+ as much," said he. "Have you ever observed that his ears are<br>
+ pierced for earrings?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. He told me that a gypsy had done it for him when he
+was<br>
+ a lad."</p>
+
+<p>"Hum!" said Holmes, sinking back in deep thought. "He is
+still<br>
+ with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, sir; I have only just left him."</p>
+
+<p>"And has your business been attended to in your absence?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing to complain of, sir. There's never very much to do of
+a<br>
+ morning."</p>
+
+<p>"That will do, Mr. Wilson. I shall be happy to give you an
+opinion<br>
+ upon the subject in the course of a day or two. To-day is<br>
+ Saturday, and I hope that by Monday we may come to a
+conclusion."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Watson," said Holmes, when our visitor had left us,
+"what do<br>
+ you make of it all?"</p>
+
+<p>"I make nothing of it," I answered frankly. "It is a most<br>
+ mysterious business."</p>
+
+<p>"As a rule," said Holmes, "the more bizarre a thing is the
+less<br>
+ mysterious it proves to be. It is your commonplace,
+featureless<br>
+ crimes which are really puzzling, just as a commonplace face is
+the<br>
+ most difficult to identify. But I must be prompt over this<br>
+ matter."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do, then?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"To smoke," he answered. "It is quite a three-pipe problem,
+and I<br>
+ beg that you won't speak to me for fifty minutes." He curled<br>
+ himself up in his chair, with his thin knees drawn up to his<br>
+ hawklike nose, and there he sat with his eyes closed and his
+black<br>
+ clay pipe thrusting out like the bill of some strange bird. I
+had<br>
+ come to the conclusion that he had dropped asleep, and indeed
+was<br>
+ nodding myself, when he suddenly sprang out of his chair with
+the<br>
+ gesture of a man who has made up his mind, and put his pipe
+down<br>
+ upon the mantelpiece.</p>
+
+<p>"Sarasate plays at St. James's Hall this afternoon," he
+remarked.<br>
+ "What do you think, Watson? Could your patients spare you for
+a<br>
+ few hours?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have nothing to do to-day. My practice is never very<br>
+ absorbing."</p>
+
+<p>"Then put on your hat and come. I am going through the City
+first,<br>
+ and we can have some lunch on the way. I observe that there is
+a<br>
+ good deal of German music on the programme, which is rather more
+to<br>
+ my taste than Italian or French. It is introspective, and I
+want<br>
+ to introspect. Come along!"</p>
+
+<p>We traveled by the Underground as far as Aldersgate; and a
+short<br>
+ walk took us to Saxe-Coburg Square, the scene of the singular
+story<br>
+ which we had listened to in the morning. It was a poky,
+little,<br>
+ shabby-genteel place, where four lines of dingy, two-storied
+brick<br>
+ houses looked out into a small railed-in inclosure, where a lawn
+of<br>
+ weedy grass, and a few clumps of faded laurel bushes made a
+hard<br>
+ fight against a smoke-laden and uncongenial atmosphere. Three
+gilt<br>
+ balls and a brown board with JABEZ WILSON in white letters, upon
+a<br>
+ corner house, announced the place where our red-headed
+client<br>
+ carried on his business. Sherlock Holmes stopped in front of
+it<br>
+ with his head on one side, and looked it all over, with his
+eyes<br>
+ shining brightly between puckered lids. Then he walked slowly
+up<br>
+ the street, and then down again to the corner, still looking
+keenly<br>
+ at the houses. Finally he returned to the pawnbroker's and,
+having<br>
+ thumped vigorously upon the pavement with his stick two or
+three<br>
+ times, he went up to the door and knocked. It was instantly
+opened<br>
+ by a bright-looking, clean-shaven young fellow, who asked him
+to<br>
+ step in.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Holmes, "I only wished to ask you how you
+would<br>
+ go from here to the Strand."</p>
+
+<p>"Third right, fourth left," answered the assistant,
+promptly,<br>
+ closing the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Smart fellow, that," observed Holmes as we walked away. "He
+is,<br>
+ in my judgment, the fourth smartest man in London, and for
+daring I<br>
+ am not sure that he has not a claim to be third. I have
+known<br>
+ something of him before."</p>
+
+<p>"Evidently," said I, "Mr. Wilson's assistant counts for a good
+deal<br>
+ in this mystery of the Red-headed League. I am sure that you<br>
+ inquired your way merely in order that you might see him."</p>
+
+<p>"Not him."</p>
+
+<p>"What then?"</p>
+
+<p>"The knees of his trousers."</p>
+
+<p>"And what did you see?"</p>
+
+<p>"What I expected to see."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you beat the pavement?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear doctor, this is a time for observation, not for talk.
+We<br>
+ are spies in an enemy's country. We know something of
+Saxe-Coburg<br>
+ Square. Let us now explore the parts which lie behind it."</p>
+
+<p>The road in which we found ourselves as we turned round the
+corner<br>
+ from the retired Saxe-Coburg Square presented as great a
+contrast<br>
+ to it as the front of a picture does to the back. It was one
+of<br>
+ the main arteries which convey the traffic of the City to the
+north<br>
+ and west. The roadway was blocked with the immense stream of<br>
+ commerce flowing in a double tide inward and outward, while
+the<br>
+ footpaths were black with the hurrying swarm of pedestrians.
+It<br>
+ was difficult to realize, as we looked at the line of fine
+shops<br>
+ and stately business premises, that they really abutted on
+the<br>
+ other side upon the faded and stagnant square which we had
+just<br>
+ quitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see," said Holmes, standing at the corner, and
+glancing<br>
+ along the line, "I should like just to remember the order of
+the<br>
+ houses here. It is a hobby of mine to have an exact knowledge
+of<br>
+ London. There is Mortimer's, the tobacconist; the little
+newspaper<br>
+ shop, the Coburg branch of the City and Suburban Bank, the<br>
+ Vegetarian Restaurant, and McFarlane's carriage-building
+depot.<br>
+ That carries us right on to the other block. And now,
+doctor,<br>
+ we've done our work, so it's time we had some play. A sandwich
+and<br>
+ a cup of coffee, and then off to violin-land, where all is<br>
+ sweetness, and delicacy, and harmony, and there are no
+red-headed<br>
+ clients to vex us with their conundrums."</p>
+
+<p>My friend was an enthusiastic musician, being himself not only
+a<br>
+ very capable performer, but a composer of no ordinary merit.
+All<br>
+ the afternoon he sat in the stalls wrapped in the most
+perfect<br>
+ happiness, gently waving his long thin fingers in time to
+the<br>
+ music, while his gently smiling face and his languid, dreamy
+eyes<br>
+ were as unlike those of Holmes the sleuth-hound, Holmes the<br>
+ relentless, keen-witted, ready-handed criminal agent, as it
+was<br>
+ possible to conceive. In his singular character the dual
+nature<br>
+ alternately asserted itself, and his extreme exactness and<br>
+ astuteness represented, as I have often thought, the
+reaction<br>
+ against the poetic and contemplative mood which occasionally<br>
+ predominated in him. The swing of his nature took him from
+extreme<br>
+ languor to devouring energy; and, as I knew well, he was never
+so<br>
+ truly formidable as when, for days on end, he had been lounging
+in<br>
+ his armchair amid his improvisations and his black-letter
+editions.<br>
+ Then it was that the lust of the chase would suddenly come
+upon<br>
+ him, and that his brilliant reasoning power would rise to the
+level<br>
+ of intuition, until those who were unacquainted with his
+methods<br>
+ would look askance at him as on a man whose knowledge was not
+that<br>
+ of other mortals. When I saw him that afternoon so enwrapped
+in<br>
+ the music at St. James's Hall, I felt that an evil time might
+be<br>
+ coming upon those whom he had set himself to hunt down.</p>
+
+<p>"You want to go home, no doubt, doctor," he remarked, as
+we<br>
+ emerged.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it would be as well."</p>
+
+<p>"And I have some business to do which will take some hours.
+This<br>
+ business at Saxe-Coburg Square is serious."</p>
+
+<p>"Why serious?"</p>
+
+<p>"A considerable crime is in contemplation. I have every reason
+to<br>
+ believe that we shall be in time to stop it. But to-day
+being<br>
+ Saturday rather complicates matters. I shall want your help
+to-<br>
+ night."</p>
+
+<p>"At what time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ten will be early enough."</p>
+
+<p>I shall be at Baker Street at ten."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. And, I say, doctor! there may be some little
+danger,<br>
+ so kindly put your army revolver in your pocket." He waved
+his<br>
+ hand, turned on his heel, and disappeared in an instant among
+the<br>
+ crowd.</p>
+
+<p>I trust that I am not more dense than my neighbors, but I
+was<br>
+ always oppressed with a sense of my own stupidity in my
+dealings<br>
+ with Sherlock Holmes. Here I had heard what he had heard, I
+had<br>
+ seen what he had seen, and yet from his words it was evident
+that<br>
+ he saw clearly not only what had happened, but what was about
+to<br>
+ happen, while to me the whole business was still confused
+and<br>
+ grotesque. As I drove home to my house in Kensington I
+thought<br>
+ over it all, from the extraordinary story of the red-headed
+copier<br>
+ of the "Encyclopaedia" down to the visit to Saxe-Coburg Square,
+and<br>
+ the ominous words with which he had parted from me. What was
+this<br>
+ nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed? Where were
+we<br>
+ going, and what were we to do? I had the hint from Holmes
+that<br>
+ this smooth-faced pawnbroker's assistant was a formidable
+man--a<br>
+ man who might play a deep game. I tried to puzzle it out, but
+gave<br>
+ it up in despair, and set the matter aside until night should
+bring<br>
+ an explanation.</p>
+
+<p>It was a quarter-past nine when I started from home and made
+my way<br>
+ across the Park, and so through Oxford Street to Baker Street.
+Two<br>
+ hansoms were standing at the door, and, as I entered the
+passage, I<br>
+ heard the sound of voices from above. On entering his room,
+I<br>
+ found Holmes in animated conversation with two men, one of whom
+I<br>
+ recognized as Peter Jones, the official police agent; while
+the<br>
+ other was a long, thin, sad-faced man, with a very shiny hat
+and<br>
+ oppressively respectable frock coat.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! our party is complete," said Holmes, buttoning up his
+pea-<br>
+ jacket, and taking his heavy hunting crop from the rack.
+"Watson,<br>
+ I think you know Mr. Jones, of Scotland Yard? Let me introduce
+you<br>
+ to Mr. Merryweather, who is to be our companion in
+to-night's<br>
+ adventure."</p>
+
+<p>"We're hunting in couples again, doctor, you see," said Jones,
+in<br>
+ his consequential way. "Our friend here is a wonderful man
+for<br>
+ starting a chase. All he wants is an old dog to help him do
+the<br>
+ running down."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope a wild goose may not prove to be the end of our
+chase,"<br>
+ observed Mr. Merryweather gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>"You may place considerable confidence in Mr. Holmes, sir,"
+said<br>
+ the police agent loftily. "He has his own little methods,
+which<br>
+ are, if he won't mind my saying so, just a little too
+theoretical<br>
+ and fantastic, but he has the makings of a detective in him. It
+is<br>
+ not too much to say that once or twice, as in that business of
+the<br>
+ Sholto murder and the Agra treasure, he has been more nearly<br>
+ correct than the official force."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if you say so, Mr. Jones, it is all right!" said the
+stranger,<br>
+ with deference. "Still, I confess that I miss my rubber. It
+is<br>
+ the first Saturday night for seven-and-twenty years that I have
+not<br>
+ had my rubber."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you will find," said Sherlock Holmes, "that you will
+play<br>
+ for a higher stake to-night than you have ever done yet, and
+that<br>
+ the play will be more exciting. For you, Mr. Merryweather,
+the<br>
+ stake will be some thirty thousand pounds; and for you, Jones,
+it<br>
+ will be the man upon whom you wish to lay your hands."</p>
+
+<p>"John Clay, the murderer, thief, smasher, and forger. He's a
+young<br>
+ man, Mr. Merryweather, but he is at the head of his profession,
+and<br>
+ I would rather have my bracelets on him than on any criminal
+in<br>
+ London. He's a remarkable man, is young John Clay. His<br>
+ grandfather was a Royal Duke, and he himself has been to Eton
+and<br>
+ Oxford. His brain is as cunning as his fingers, and though we
+meet<br>
+ signs of him at every turn, we never know where to find the
+man<br>
+ himself. He'll crack a crib in Scotland one week, and be
+raising<br>
+ money to build an orphanage in Cornwall the next. I've been on
+his<br>
+ track for years, and have never set eyes on him yet."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope that I may have the pleasure of introducing you
+to-night.<br>
+ I've had one or two little turns also with Mr. John Clay, and
+I<br>
+ agree with you that he is at the head of his profession. It
+is<br>
+ past ten, however, and quite time that we started. If you two
+will<br>
+ take the first hansom, Watson and I will follow in the
+second."</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes was not very communicative during the long
+drive,<br>
+ and lay back in the cab humming the tunes which he had heard in
+the<br>
+ afternoon. We rattled through an endless labyrinth of gaslit<br>
+ streets until we emerged into Farringdon Street.</p>
+
+<p>"We are close there now," my friend remarked. "This fellow<br>
+ Merryweather is a bank director and personally interested in
+the<br>
+ matter. I thought it as well to have Jones with us also. He
+is<br>
+ not a bad fellow, though an absolute imbecile in his
+profession.<br>
+ He has one positive virtue. He is as brave as a bulldog, and
+as<br>
+ tenacious as a lobster if he gets his claws upon anyone. Here
+we<br>
+ are, and they are waiting for us."</p>
+
+<p>We had reached the same crowded thoroughfare in which we had
+found<br>
+ ourselves in the morning. Our cabs were dismissed, and
+following<br>
+ the guidance of Mr. Merryweather, we passed down a narrow
+passage,<br>
+ and through a side door which he opened for us. Within there was
+a<br>
+ small corridor, which ended in a very massive iron gate. This
+also<br>
+ was opened, and led down a flight of winding stone steps,
+which<br>
+ terminated at another formidable gate. Mr. Merryweather stopped
+to<br>
+ light a lantern, and then conducted us down a dark,
+earth-smelling<br>
+ passage, and so, after opening a third door, into a huge vault
+or<br>
+ cellar, which was piled all round with crates and massive
+boxes.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not very vulnerable from above," Holmes remarked, as
+he<br>
+ held up the lantern and gazed about him.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor from below," said Mr. Merryweather, striking his stick
+upon<br>
+ the flags which lined the floor. "Why, dear me, it sounds
+quite<br>
+ hollow!" he remarked, looking up in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"I must really ask you to be a little more quiet," said
+Holmes<br>
+ severely. "You have already imperiled the whole success of
+our<br>
+ expedition. Might I beg that you would have the goodness to
+sit<br>
+ down upon one of those boxes, and not to interfere?"</p>
+
+<p>The solemn Mr. Merryweather perched himself upon a crate, with
+a<br>
+ very injured expression upon his face, while Holmes fell upon
+his<br>
+ knees upon the floor, and, with the lantern and a magnifying
+lens,<br>
+ began to examine minutely the cracks between the stones. A
+few<br>
+ seconds sufficed to satisfy him, for he sprang to his feet
+again,<br>
+ and put his glass in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"We have at least an hour before us," he remarked, "for they
+can<br>
+ hardly take any steps until the good pawnbroker is safely in
+bed.<br>
+ Then they will not lose a minute, for the sooner they do their
+work<br>
+ the longer time they will have for their escape. We are at<br>
+ present, doctor--as no doubt you have divined--in the cellar of
+the<br>
+ City branch of one of the principal London banks. Mr.
+Merryweather<br>
+ is the chairman of directors, and he will explain to you that
+there<br>
+ are reasons why the more daring criminals of London should take
+a<br>
+ considerable interest in this cellar at present."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "It is our French gold," whispered the director. "We have
+had<br>
+ several warnings that an attempt might be made upon it."</p>
+
+<p>"Your French gold?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. We had occasion some months ago to strengthen our
+resources,<br>
+ and borrowed, for that purpose, thirty thousand napoleons from
+the<br>
+ Bank of France. It has become known that we have never had<br>
+ occasion to unpack the money, and that it is still lying in
+our<br>
+ cellar. The crate upon which I sit contains two thousand
+napoleons<br>
+ packed between layers of lead foil. Our reserve of bullion is
+much<br>
+ larger at present than is usually kept in a single branch
+office,<br>
+ and the directors have had misgivings upon the subject."</p>
+
+<p>"Which were very well justified," observed Holmes. "And now it
+is<br>
+ time that we arranged our little plans. I expect that within
+an<br>
+ hour matters will come to a head. In the meantime, Mr.<br>
+ Merryweather, we must put the screen over that dark
+lantern."</p>
+
+<p>"And sit in the dark?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid so. I had brought a pack of cards in my pocket,
+and I<br>
+ thought that, as we were a partie carree, you might have
+your<br>
+ rubber after all. But I see that the enemy's preparations
+have<br>
+ gone so far that we cannot risk the presence of a light.
+And,<br>
+ first of all, we must choose our positions. These are daring
+men,<br>
+ and, though we shall take them at a disadvantage, they may do
+us<br>
+ some harm, unless we are careful. I shall stand behind this
+crate,<br>
+ and do you conceal yourself behind those. Then, when I flash
+a<br>
+ light upon them, close in swiftly. If they fire, Watson, have
+no<br>
+ compunction about shooting them down."</p>
+
+<p>I placed my revolver, cocked, upon the top of the wooden
+case<br>
+ behind which I crouched. Holmes shot the slide across the front
+of<br>
+ his lantern, and left us in pitch darkness--such an absolute<br>
+ darkness as I have never before experienced. The smell of
+hot<br>
+ metal remained to assure us that the light was still there,
+ready<br>
+ to flash out at a moment's notice. To me, with my nerves worked
+up<br>
+ to a pitch of expectancy, there was something depressing and<br>
+ subduing in the sudden gloom, and in the cold, dank air of
+the<br>
+ vault.</p>
+
+<p>"They have but one retreat," whispered Holmes. "That is
+back<br>
+ through the house into Saxe-Coburg Square. I hope that you
+have<br>
+ done what I asked you, Jones?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have an inspector and two officers waiting at the front
+door."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we have stopped all the holes. And now we must be silent
+and<br>
+ wait."</p>
+
+<p>What a time it seemed! From comparing notes afterwards, it was
+but<br>
+ an hour and a quarter, yet it appeared to me that the night
+must<br>
+ have almost gone, and the dawn be breaking above us. My limbs
+were<br>
+ weary and stiff, for I feared to change my position, yet my
+nerves<br>
+ were worked up to the highest pitch of tension, and my hearing
+was<br>
+ so acute that I could not only hear the gentle breathing of
+my<br>
+ companions, but I could distinguish the deeper, heavier inbreath
+of<br>
+ the bulky Jones from the thin, sighing note of the bank
+director.<br>
+ From my position I could look over the case in the direction of
+the<br>
+ floor. Suddenly my eyes caught the glint of a light.</p>
+
+<p>At first it was but a lurid spark upon the stone pavement.
+Then it<br>
+ lengthened out until it became a yellow line, and then, without
+any<br>
+ warning or sound, a gash seemed to open and a hand appeared,
+a<br>
+ white, almost womanly hand, which felt about in the center of
+the<br>
+ little area of light. For a minute or more the hand, with
+its<br>
+ writhing fingers, protruded out of the floor. Then it was<br>
+ withdrawn as suddenly as it appeared, and all was dark again
+save<br>
+ the single lurid spark, which marked a chink between the
+stones.</p>
+
+<p>Its disappearance, however, was but momentary. With a
+rending,<br>
+ tearing sound, one of the broad white stones turned over upon
+its<br>
+ side, and left a square, gaping hole, through which streamed
+the<br>
+ light of a lantern. Over the edge there peeped a clean-cut,
+boyish<br>
+ face, which looked keenly about it, and then, with a hand on
+either<br>
+ side of the aperture, drew itself shoulder-high and
+waist-high,<br>
+ until one knee rested upon the edge. In another instant he
+stood<br>
+ at the side of the hole, and was hauling after him a
+companion,<br>
+ lithe and small like himself, with a pale face and a shock of
+very<br>
+ red hair.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all clear," he whispered. "Have you the chisel and the
+bags?<br>
+ Great Scott! Jump, Archie, jump, and I'll swing for it!"</p>
+
+<p>Sherlock Holmes had sprung out and seized the intruder by
+the<br>
+ collar. The other dived down the hole, and I heard the sound
+of<br>
+ rending cloth as Jones clutched at his skirts. The light
+flashed<br>
+ upon the barrel of a revolver, but Holmes's hunting crop came
+down<br>
+ on the man's wrist, and the pistol clinked upon the stone
+floor.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no use, John Clay," said Holmes blandly, "you have no
+chance<br>
+ at all."</p>
+
+<p>"So I see," the other answered, with the utmost coolness. "I
+fancy<br>
+ that my pal is all right, though I see you have got his
+coat-<br>
+ tails."</p>
+
+<p>"There are three men waiting for him at the door," said
+Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed. You seem to have done the thing very completely.
+I<br>
+ must compliment you."</p>
+
+<p>"And I you," Holmes answered. "Your red-headed idea was very
+new<br>
+ and effective."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll see your pal again presently," said Jones. "He's
+quicker<br>
+ at climbing down holes than I am. Just hold out while I fix
+the<br>
+ derbies."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg that you will not touch me with your filthy hands,"
+remarked<br>
+ our prisoner, as the handcuffs clattered upon his wrists. "You
+may<br>
+ not be aware that I have royal blood in my veins. Have the<br>
+ goodness also, when you address me, always to say 'sir' and<br>
+ 'please.'"</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said Jones, with a stare and a snigger. "Well,
+would<br>
+ you please, sir, march upstairs where we can get a cab to
+carry<br>
+ your highness to the police station?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is better," said John Clay serenely. He made a sweeping
+bow<br>
+ to the three of us, and walked quietly off in the custody of
+the<br>
+ detective.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Mr. Holmes," said Mr. Merryweather, as we followed
+them<br>
+ from the cellar, "I do not know how the bank can thank you or
+repay<br>
+ you. There is no doubt that you have detected and defeated in
+the<br>
+ most complete manner one of the most determined attempts at
+bank<br>
+ robbery that have ever come within my experience."</p>
+
+<p>"I have had one or two little scores of my own to settle with
+Mr.<br>
+ John Clay," said Holmes. "I have been at some small expense
+over<br>
+ this matter, which I shall expect the bank to refund, but
+beyond<br>
+ that I am amply repaid by having had an experience which is in
+many<br>
+ ways unique, and by hearing the very remarkable narrative of
+the<br>
+ Red-headed League."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "You see, Watson," he explained, in the early hours of the
+morning,<br>
+ as we sat over a glass of whisky and soda in Baker Street, "it
+was<br>
+ perfectly obvious from the first that the only possible object
+of<br>
+ this rather fantastic business of the advertisement of the
+League,<br>
+ and the copying of the 'Encyclopaedia,' must be to get this
+not<br>
+ over-bright pawnbroker out of the way for a number of hours
+every<br>
+ day. It was a curious way of managing it, but really it would
+be<br>
+ difficult to suggest a better. The method was no doubt
+suggested<br>
+ to Clay's ingenious mind by the color of his accomplice's
+hair.<br>
+ The four pounds a week was a lure which must draw him, and what
+was<br>
+ it to them, who were playing for thousands? They put in the<br>
+ advertisement, one rogue has the temporary office, the other
+rogue<br>
+ incites the man to apply for it, and together they manage to
+secure<br>
+ his absence every morning in the week. From the time that I
+heard<br>
+ of the assistant having come for half wages, it was obvious to
+me<br>
+ that he had some strong motive for securing the situation."</p>
+
+<p>"But how could you guess what the motive was?"</p>
+
+<p>"Had there been women in the house, I should have suspected a
+mere<br>
+ vulgar intrigue. That, however, was out of the question. The<br>
+ man's business was a small one, and there was nothing in his
+house<br>
+ which could account for such elaborate preparations, and such
+an<br>
+ expenditure as they were at. It must then be something out of
+the<br>
+ house. What could it be? I thought of the assistant's
+fondness<br>
+ for photography, and his trick of vanishing into the cellar.
+The<br>
+ cellar! There was the end of this tangled clew. Then I made<br>
+ inquiries as to this mysterious assistant, and found that I had
+to<br>
+ deal with one of the coolest and most daring criminals in
+London.<br>
+ He was doing something in the cellar--something which took
+many<br>
+ hours a day for months on end. What could it be, once more?
+I<br>
+ could think of nothing save that he was running a tunnel to
+some<br>
+ other building.</p>
+
+<p>"So far I had got when we went to visit the scene of action.
+I<br>
+ surprised you by beating upon the pavement with my stick. I
+was<br>
+ ascertaining whether the cellar stretched out in front or
+behind.<br>
+ It was not in front. Then I rang the bell, and, as I hoped,
+the<br>
+ assistant answered it. We have had some skirmishes, but we
+had<br>
+ never set eyes upon each other before. I hardly looked at
+his<br>
+ face. His knees were what I wished to see. You must yourself
+have<br>
+ remarked how worn, wrinkled, and stained they were. They spoke
+of<br>
+ those hours of burrowing. The only remaining point was what
+they<br>
+ were burrowing for. I walked round the corner, saw that the
+City<br>
+ and Suburban Bank abutted on our friend's premises, and felt
+that I<br>
+ had solved my problem. When you drove home after the concert
+I<br>
+ called upon Scotland Yard, and upon the chairman of the bank<br>
+ directors, with the result that you have seen."</p>
+
+<p>"And how could you tell that they would make their attempt
+to-<br>
+ night?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, when they closed their League offices that was a sign
+that<br>
+ they cared no longer about Mr. Jabez Wilson's presence; in
+other<br>
+ words, that they had completed their tunnel. But it was
+essential<br>
+ that they should use it soon, as it might be discovered, or
+the<br>
+ bullion might be removed. Saturday would suit them better than
+any<br>
+ other day, as it would give them two days for their escape.
+For<br>
+ all these reasons I expected them to come to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"You reasoned it out beautifully," I exclaimed, in
+unfeigned<br>
+ admiration. "It is so long a chain, and yet every link rings<br>
+ true."</p>
+
+<p>"It saved me from ennui," he answered, yawning. "Alas! I
+already<br>
+ feel it closing in upon me. My life is spent in one long effort
+to<br>
+ escape from the commonplaces of existence. These little
+problems<br>
+ help me to do so."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are a benefactor of the race," said I. He shrugged
+his<br>
+ shoulders. "Well, perhaps, after all, it is of some little
+use,"<br>
+ he remarked. "'L'homme c'est rien--l'oeuvre c'est tout,' as<br>
+ Gustave Flaubert wrote to Georges Sands."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ Egerton Castle</h3>
+
+<h2>The Baron's Quarry</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Oh, no, I assure you, you are not boring Mr. Marshfield,"
+said<br>
+ this personage himself in his gentle voice--that curious voice
+that<br>
+ could flow on for hours, promulgating profound and startling<br>
+ theories on every department of human knowledge or
+conducting<br>
+ paradoxical arguments without a single inflection or pause
+of<br>
+ hesitation. "I am, on the contrary, much interested in your<br>
+ hunting talk. To paraphrase a well-worn quotation somewhat
+widely,<br>
+ nihil humanum a me alienum est. Even hunting stories may
+have<br>
+ their point of biological interest; the philologist
+sometimes<br>
+ pricks his ear to the jargon of the chase; moreover, I am
+not<br>
+ incapable of appreciating the subject matter itself. This seems
+to<br>
+ excite some derision. I admit I am not much of a sportsman to
+look<br>
+ at, nor, indeed, by instinct, yet I have had some
+out-of-the-way<br>
+ experiences in that line--generally when intent on other
+pursuits.<br>
+ I doubt, for instance, if even you, Major Travers,
+notwithstanding<br>
+ your well-known exploits against man and beast,
+notwithstanding<br>
+ that doubtful smile of yours, could match the strangeness of
+a<br>
+ certain hunting adventure in which I played an important
+part."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The speaker's small, deep-set, black eyes, that never warmed
+to<br>
+ anything more human than a purely speculative scientific
+interest<br>
+ in his surroundings, here wandered round the skeptical yet<br>
+ expectant circle with bland amusement. He stretched out his<br>
+ bloodless fingers for another of his host's superfine cigars
+and<br>
+ proceeded, with only such interruptions as were occasioned by
+the<br>
+ lighting and careful smoking of the latter.</p>
+
+<p>"I was returning home after my prolonged stay in
+Petersburg,<br>
+ intending to linger on my way and test with mine own ears
+certain<br>
+ among the many dialects of Eastern Europe--anent which there is
+a<br>
+ symmetrical little cluster of philological knotty points it is
+my<br>
+ modest intention one day to unravel. However, that is neither
+here<br>
+ nor there. On the road to Hungary I bethought myself
+opportunely<br>
+ of proving the once pressingly offered hospitality of the
+Baron<br>
+ Kossowski.</p>
+
+<p>"You may have met the man, Major Travers; he was a
+tremendous<br>
+ sportsman, if you like. I first came across him at McNeil's
+place<br>
+ in remote Ireland. Now, being in Bukowina, within measurable<br>
+ distance of his Carpathian abode, and curious to see a Polish
+lord<br>
+ at home, I remembered his invitation. It was already of long<br>
+ standing, but it had been warm, born in fact of a sudden fit
+of<br>
+ enthusiasm for me"--here a half-mocking smile quivered an
+instant<br>
+ under the speaker's black mustache--"which, as it was<br>
+ characteristic, I may as well tell you about.</p>
+
+<p>"It was on the day of, or, rather, to be accurate, on the day
+after<br>
+ my arrival, toward the small hours of the morning, in the
+smoking<br>
+ room at Rathdrum. Our host was peacefully snoring over his
+empty<br>
+ pipe and his seventh glass of whisky, also empty. The rest of
+the<br>
+ men had slunk off to bed. The baron, who all unknown to
+himself<br>
+ had been a subject of most interesting observation to me the
+whole<br>
+ evening, being now practically alone with me, condescended to
+turn<br>
+ an eye, as wide awake as a fox's, albeit slightly bloodshot,
+upon<br>
+ the contemptible white-faced person who had preferred spending
+the<br>
+ raw hours over his papers, within the radius of a glorious
+fire's<br>
+ warmth, to creeping slyly over treacherous quagmires in the
+pursuit<br>
+ of timid bog creatures (snipe shooting had been the order of
+the<br>
+ day)--the baron, I say, became aware of my existence and
+entered<br>
+ into conversation with me.</p>
+
+<p>"He would no doubt have been much surprised could he have
+known<br>
+ that he was already mapped out, craniologically and<br>
+ physiognomically, catalogued with care and neatly laid by in
+his<br>
+ proper ethnological box, in my private type museum; that, as I
+sat<br>
+ and examined him from my different coigns of vantage in library,
+in<br>
+ dining and smoking room that evening, not a look of his, not
+a<br>
+ gesture went forth but had significance for me.</p>
+
+<p>"You, I had thought, with your broad shoulders and deep chest;
+your<br>
+ massive head that should have gone with a tall stature, not
+with<br>
+ those short sturdy limbs; with your thick red hair, that
+should<br>
+ have been black for that matter, as should your wide-set
+yellow<br>
+ eyes--you would be a real puzzle to one who did not recognize
+in<br>
+ you equal mixtures of the fair, stalwart and muscular Slav with
+the<br>
+ bilious-sanguine, thick-set, wiry Turanian. Your pedigree would
+no<br>
+ doubt bear me out: there is as much of the Magyar as of the Pole
+in<br>
+ your anatomy. Athlete, and yet a tangle of nerves; a
+ferocious<br>
+ brute at bottom, I dare say, for your broad forehead inclines
+to<br>
+ flatness; under your bristling beard your jaw must protrude,
+and<br>
+ the base of your skull is ominously thick. And, with all
+that,<br>
+ capable of ideal transports: when that girl played and sang
+to-<br>
+ night I saw the swelling of your eyelid veins, and how that
+small,<br>
+ tenacious, claw-like hand of yours twitched! You would be a
+fine<br>
+ leader of men--but God help the wretches in your power!</p>
+
+<p>"So had I mused upon him. Yet I confess that when we came
+in<br>
+ closer contact with each other, even I was not proof against
+the<br>
+ singular courtesy of his manner and his unaccountable
+personal<br>
+ charm.</p>
+
+<p>"Our conversation soon grew interesting; to me as a matter
+of<br>
+ course, and evidently to him also. A few general words led
+to<br>
+ interchange of remarks upon the country we were both visitors
+in<br>
+ and so to national characteristics--Pole and Irishman have not
+a<br>
+ few in common, both in their nature and history. An
+observation<br>
+ which he made, not without a certain flash in his light eyes and
+a<br>
+ transient uncovering of the teeth, on the Irish type of
+female<br>
+ beauty suddenly suggested to me a stanza of an ancient
+Polish<br>
+ ballad, very full of milk-and-blood imagery, of alternating<br>
+ ferocity and voluptuousness. This I quoted to the astounded<br>
+ foreigner in the vernacular, and this it was that metamorphosed
+his<br>
+ mere perfection of civility into sudden warmth, and, in
+fact,<br>
+ procured me the invitation in question.</p>
+
+<p>"When I left Rathdrum the baron's last words to me were that
+if I<br>
+ ever thought of visiting his country otherwise than in books,
+he<br>
+ held me bound to make Yany, his Galician seat, my headquarters
+of<br>
+ study.</p>
+
+<p>"From Czernowicz, therefore, where I stopped some time, I
+wrote,<br>
+ received in due time a few lines of prettily worded reply,
+and<br>
+ ultimately entered my sled in the nearest town to, yet at a
+most<br>
+ forbidding distance from, Yany, and started on my journey
+thither.</p>
+
+<p>"The undertaking meant many long hours of undulation and
+skidding<br>
+ over the November snow, to the somniferous bell jangle of my
+dirty<br>
+ little horses, the only impression of interest being a weird
+gypsy<br>
+ concert I came in for at a miserable drinking-booth half buried
+in<br>
+ the snow where we halted for the refreshment of man and
+beast.<br>
+ Here, I remember, I discovered a very definite connection
+between<br>
+ the characteristic run of the tsimbol, the peculiar bite of
+the<br>
+ Zigeuner's bow on his fiddle-string, and some distinctive points
+of<br>
+ Turanian tongues. In other countries, in Spain, for instance,
+your<br>
+ gypsy speaks differently on his instrument. But, oddly
+enough,<br>
+ when I later attempted to put this observation on paper I
+could<br>
+ find no word to express it."</p>
+
+<p>A few of our company evinced signs of sleepiness, but most of
+us<br>
+ who knew Marshfield, and that he could, unless he had
+something<br>
+ novel to say, be as silent and retiring as he now evinced signs
+of<br>
+ being copious, awaited further developments with patience. He
+has<br>
+ his own deliberate way of speaking, which he evidently
+enjoys<br>
+ greatly, though it be occasionally trying to his listeners.</p>
+
+<p>"On the afternoon of my second day's drive, the snow, which
+till<br>
+ then had fallen fine and continuous, ceased, and my Jehu,
+suddenly<br>
+ interrupting himself in the midst of some exciting wolf story
+quite<br>
+ in keeping with the time of year and the wild surroundings,
+pointed<br>
+ to a distant spot against the gray sky to the northwest,
+between<br>
+ two wood-covered folds of ground--the first eastern spurs of
+the<br>
+ great Carpathian chain.</p>
+
+<p>"'There stands Yany,' said he. I looked at my far-off goal
+with<br>
+ interest. As we drew nearer, the sinking sun, just dipping
+behind<br>
+ the hills, tinged the now distinct frontage with a cold
+copper-like<br>
+ gleam, but it was only for a minute; the next the building
+became<br>
+ nothing more to the eye than a black irregular silhouette
+against<br>
+ the crimson sky.</p>
+
+<p>"Before we entered the long, steep avenue of poplars, the
+early<br>
+ winter darkness was upon us, rendered all the more depressing
+by<br>
+ gray mists which gave a ghostly aspect to such objects as the
+sheen<br>
+ of the snow rendered visible. Once or twice there were
+feeble<br>
+ flashes of light looming in iridescent halos as we passed
+little<br>
+ clusters of hovels, but for which I should have been induced
+to<br>
+ fancy that the great Hof stood alone in the wilderness, such
+was<br>
+ the deathly stillness around. But even as the tall, square<br>
+ building rose before us above the vapor, yellow lighted in
+various<br>
+ stories, and mighty in height and breadth, there broke upon my
+ear<br>
+ a deep-mouthed, menacing bay, which gave at once almost
+alarming<br>
+ reality to the eerie surroundings. 'His lordship's boar and
+wolf<br>
+ hounds,' quoth my charioteer calmly, unmindful of the
+regular<br>
+ pandemonium of howls and barks which ensued as he skillfully
+turned<br>
+ his horses through the gateway and flogged the tired beasts into
+a<br>
+ sort of shambling canter that we might land with glory before
+the<br>
+ house door: a weakness common, I believe, to drivers of all<br>
+ nations.</p>
+
+<p>"I alighted in the court of honor, and while awaiting an
+answer to<br>
+ my tug at the bell, stood, broken with fatigue, depressed,
+chilled<br>
+ and aching, questioning the wisdom of my proceedings and the
+amount<br>
+ of comfort, physical and moral, that was likely to await me in
+a<br>
+ tete-a-tete visit with a well-mannered savage in his own
+home.</p>
+
+<p>"The unkempt tribe of stable retainers who began to gather
+round me<br>
+ and my rough vehicle in the gloom, with their evil-smelling<br>
+ sheepskins and their resigned, battered visages, were not<br>
+ calculated to reassure me. Yet when the door opened, there stood
+a<br>
+ smart chasseur and a solemn major-domo who might but just
+have<br>
+ stepped out of Mayfair; and there was displayed a spreading
+vista<br>
+ of warm, deep-colored halls, with here a statue and there a
+stuffed<br>
+ bear, and under foot pile carpets strewn with rarest skins.</p>
+
+<p>"Marveling, yet comforted withal, I followed the solemn
+butler, who<br>
+ received me with the deference due to an expected guest and<br>
+ expressed the master's regret for his enforced absence till
+dinner<br>
+ time. I traversed vast rooms, each more sumptuous than the
+last,<br>
+ feeling the strangeness of the contrast between the outer<br>
+ desolation and this sybaritic excess of luxury growing ever
+more<br>
+ strongly upon me; caught a glimpse of a picture gallery,
+where<br>
+ peculiar yet admirably executed latter-day French pictures
+hung<br>
+ side by side with ferocious boar hunts of Snyder and such kin;
+and,<br>
+ at length, was ushered into a most cheerful room, modern to
+excess<br>
+ in its comfortable promise, where, in addition to the tall
+stove<br>
+ necessary for warmth, there burned on an open hearth a
+vastly<br>
+ pleasant fire of resinous logs, and where, on a low table,
+awaited<br>
+ me a dainty service of fragrant Russian tea.</p>
+
+<p>"My impression of utter novelty seemed somehow enhanced by
+this<br>
+ unexpected refinement in the heart of the solitudes and in such
+a<br>
+ rugged shell, and yet, when I came to reflect, it was only<br>
+ characteristic of my cosmopolitan host. But another surprise
+was<br>
+ in store for me.</p>
+
+<p>"When I had recovered bodily warmth and mental equilibrium in
+my<br>
+ downy armchair, before the roaring logs, and during the
+delicious<br>
+ absorption of my second glass of tea, I turned my attention to
+the<br>
+ French valet, evidently the baron's own man, who was deftly<br>
+ unpacking my portmanteau, and who, unless my practiced eye
+deceived<br>
+ me, asked for nothing better than to entertain me with
+agreeable<br>
+ conversation the while.</p>
+
+<p>"'Your master is out, then?' quoth I, knowing that the most
+trivial<br>
+ remark would suffice to start him.</p>
+
+<p>"True, Monseigneur was out; he was desolated in despair (this
+with<br>
+ the national amiable and imaginative instinct); 'but it was<br>
+ doubtless important business. M. le Baron had the visit of
+his<br>
+ factor during the midday meal; had left the table hurriedly,
+and<br>
+ had not been seen since. Madame la Baronne had been a little<br>
+ suffering, but she would receive monsieur!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Madame!' exclaimed I, astounded, 'is your master then
+married?--<br>
+ since when?'--visions of a fair Tartar, fit mate for my
+baron,<br>
+ immediately springing somewhat alluringly before my mental
+vision.<br>
+ But the answer dispelled the picturesque fancy.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, yes,' said the man, with a somewhat peculiar
+expression.<br>
+ Yes, Monseigneur is married. Did Monsieur not know? And yet
+it<br>
+ was from England that Monseigneur brought back his wife.'</p>
+
+<p>"'An Englishwoman!'</p>
+
+<p>"My first thought was one of pity; an Englishwoman alone in
+this<br>
+ wilderness--two days' drive from even a railway station--and at
+the<br>
+ mercy of Kossowski! But the next minute I reversed my
+judgment.<br>
+ Probably she adored her rufous lord, took his veneer of
+courtesy--a<br>
+ veneer of the most exquisite polish, I grant you, but
+perilously<br>
+ thin--for the very perfection of chivalry. Or perchance it was
+his<br>
+ inner savageness itself that charmed her; the most refined
+women<br>
+ often amaze one by the fascination which the preponderance of
+the<br>
+ brute in the opposite sex seems to have for them.</p>
+
+<p>"I was anxious to hear more.</p>
+
+<p>"'Is it not dull for the lady here at this time of the
+year?'</p>
+
+<p>"The valet raised his shoulders with a gesture of despair that
+was<br>
+ almost passionate.</p>
+
+<p>"Dull! Ah, monsieur could not conceive to himself the dullness
+of<br>
+ it. That poor Madame la Baronne! not even a little child to
+keep<br>
+ her company on the long, long days when there was nothing but
+snow<br>
+ in the heaven and on the earth and the howling of the wind and
+the<br>
+ dogs to cheer her. At the beginning, indeed, it had been<br>
+ different; when the master first brought home his bride the
+house<br>
+ was gay enough. It was all redecorated and refurnished to
+receive<br>
+ her (monsieur should have seen it before, a mere
+rendezvous-de-<br>
+ chasse--for the matter of that so were all the country houses
+in<br>
+ these parts). Ah, that was the good time! There were visits
+month<br>
+ after month; parties, sleighing, dancing, trips to St.
+Petersburg<br>
+ and Vienna. But this year it seemed they were to have nothing
+but<br>
+ boars and wolves. How madame could stand it--well, it was not
+for<br>
+ him to speak--and heaving a deep sigh he delicately inserted
+my<br>
+ white tie round my collar, and with a flourish twisted it into
+an<br>
+ irreproachable bow beneath my chin. I did not think it right
+to<br>
+ cross-examine the willing talker any further, especially as,<br>
+ despite his last asseveration, there were evidently volumes
+he<br>
+ still wished to pour forth; but I confess that, as I made my
+way<br>
+ slowly out of my room along the noiseless length of passage, I
+was<br>
+ conscious of an unwonted, not to say vulgar, curiosity
+concerning<br>
+ the woman who had captivated such a man as the Baron
+Kossowski.</p>
+
+<p>"In a fit of speculative abstraction I must have taken the
+wrong<br>
+ turning, for I presently found myself in a long, narrow passage.
+I<br>
+ did not remember. I was retracing my steps when there came
+the<br>
+ sound of rapid footfalls upon stone flags; a little door flew
+open<br>
+ in the wall close to me, and a small, thick-set man, huddled in
+the<br>
+ rough sheepskin of the Galician peasant, with a mangy fur cap
+on<br>
+ his head, nearly ran headlong into my arms. I was about<br>
+ condescendingly to interpellate him in my best Polish, when
+I<br>
+ caught the gleam of an angry yellow eye and noted the bristle of
+a<br>
+ red beard--Kossowski!</p>
+
+<p>"Amazed, I fell back a step in silence. With a growl like
+an<br>
+ uncouth animal disturbed, he drew his filthy cap over his brow
+with<br>
+ a savage gesture and pursued his way down the corridor at a sort
+of<br>
+ wild-boar trot.</p>
+
+<p>"This first meeting between host and guest was so odd, so<br>
+ incongruous, that it afforded me plenty of food for a fresh line
+of<br>
+ conjecture as I traced my way back to the picture gallery, and
+from<br>
+ thence successfully to the drawing-room, which, as the door
+was<br>
+ ajar, I could not this time mistake.</p>
+
+<p>"It was large and lofty and dimly lit by shaded lamps; through
+the<br>
+ rosy gloom I could at first only just make out a slender figure
+by<br>
+ the hearth; but as I advanced, this was resolved into a
+singularly<br>
+ graceful woman in clinging, fur-trimmed velvet gown, who, with
+one<br>
+ hand resting on the high mantelpiece, the other banging
+listlessly<br>
+ by her side, stood gazing down at the crumbling wood fire as if
+in<br>
+ a dream.</p>
+
+<p>"My friends are kind enough to say that I have a catlike
+tread; I<br>
+ know not how that may be; at any rate the carpet I was walking
+upon<br>
+ was thick enough to smother a heavier footfall: not until I
+was<br>
+ quite close to her did my hostess become aware of my
+presence.<br>
+ Then she started violently and looked over her shoulder at me
+with<br>
+ dilating eyes. Evidently a nervous creature, I saw the pulse
+in<br>
+ her throat, strained by her attitude, flutter like a
+terrified<br>
+ bird.</p>
+
+<p>"The next instant she had stretched out her hand with sweet
+English<br>
+ words of welcome, and the face, which I had been comparing in
+my<br>
+ mind to that of Guido's Cenci, became transformed by the arch
+and<br>
+ exquisite smile of a Greuse. For more than two years I had had
+no<br>
+ intercourse with any of my nationality. I could conceive the
+sound<br>
+ of his native tongue under such circumstances moving a man in
+a<br>
+ curious unexpected fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"I babbled some commonplace reply, after which there was
+silence<br>
+ while we stood opposite each other, she looking at me
+expectantly.<br>
+ At length, with a sigh checked by a smile and an overtone of<br>
+ sadness in a voice that yet tried to be sprightly:</p>
+
+<p>"'Am I then so changed, Mr. Marshfield?' she asked. And all
+at<br>
+ once I knew her: the girl whose nightingale throat had redeemed
+the<br>
+ desolation of the evenings at Rathdrum, whose sunny beauty
+had<br>
+ seemed (even to my celebrated cold-blooded aestheticism) worthy
+to<br>
+ haunt a man's dreams. Yes, there was the subtle curve of the<br>
+ waist, the warm line of throat, the dainty foot, the slender
+tip-<br>
+ tilted fingers--witty fingers, as I had classified them--which
+I<br>
+ now shook like a true Briton, instead of availing myself of
+the<br>
+ privilege the country gave me, and kissing her slender
+wrist.</p>
+
+<p>"But she was changed; and I told her so with
+unconventional<br>
+ frankness, studying her closely as I spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"'I am afraid,' I said gravely, 'that this place does not
+agree<br>
+ with you.'</p>
+
+<p>"She shrank from my scrutiny with a nervous movement and
+flushed to<br>
+ the roots of her red-brown hair. Then she answered coldly that
+I<br>
+ was wrong, that she was in excellent health, but that she could
+not<br>
+ expect any more than other people to preserve perennial youth
+(I<br>
+ rapidly calculated she might be two-and-twenty), though,
+indeed,<br>
+ with a little forced laugh, it was scarcely flattering to hear
+one<br>
+ had altered out of all recognition. Then, without allowing me
+time<br>
+ to reply, she plunged into a general topic of conversation
+which,<br>
+ as I should have been obtuse indeed not to take the hint, I did
+my<br>
+ best to keep up.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "But while she talked of Vienna and Warsaw, of her distant<br>
+ neighbors, and last year's visitors, it was evident that her
+mind<br>
+ was elsewhere; her eye wandered, she lost the thread of her<br>
+ discourse, answered me at random, and smiled her piteous
+smile<br>
+ incongruously.</p>
+
+<p>"However lonely she might be in her solitary splendor, the
+company<br>
+ of a countryman was evidently no such welcome diversion.</p>
+
+<p>"After a little while she seemed to feel herself that she
+was<br>
+ lacking in cordiality, and, bringing her absent gaze to bear
+upon<br>
+ me with a puzzled strained look: 'I fear you will find it
+very<br>
+ dull,' she said, 'my husband is so wrapped up this winter in
+his<br>
+ country life and his sport. You are the first visitor we have
+had.<br>
+ There is nothing but guns and horses here, and you do not care
+for<br>
+ these things.'</p>
+
+<p>"The door creaked behind us; and the baron entered, in
+faultless<br>
+ evening dress. Before she turned toward him I was sharp enough
+to<br>
+ catch again the upleaping of a quick dread in her eyes, not even
+so<br>
+ much dread perhaps, I thought afterwards, as horror--the horror
+we<br>
+ notice in some animals at the nearing of a beast of prey. It
+was<br>
+ gone in a second, and she was smiling. But it was a
+revelation.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps he beat her in Russian fashion, and she, as an<br>
+ Englishwoman, was narrow-minded enough to resent this; or
+perhaps,<br>
+ merely, I had the misfortune to arrive during a matrimonial<br>
+ misunderstanding.</p>
+
+<p>"The baron would not give me leisure to reflect; he was so
+very<br>
+ effusive in his greeting--not a hint of our previous
+meeting--<br>
+ unlike my hostess, all in all to me; eager to listen, to
+reply;<br>
+ almost affectionate, full of references to old times and
+genial<br>
+ allusions. No doubt when he chose he could be the most charming
+of<br>
+ men; there were moments when, looking at him in his quiet smile
+and<br>
+ restrained gesture, the almost exaggerated politeness of his
+manner<br>
+ to his wife, whose fingers he had kissed with pretty,
+old-fashioned<br>
+ gallantry upon his entrance, I asked myself, Could that
+encounter<br>
+ in the passage have been a dream? Could that savage in the<br>
+ sheepskin be my courteous entertainer?</p>
+
+<p>"'Just as I came in, did I hear my wife say there was nothing
+for<br>
+ you to do in this place?' he said presently to me. Then,
+turning<br>
+ to her:</p>
+
+<p>"'You do not seem to know Mr. Marshfield. Wherever he can
+open<br>
+ his eyes there is for him something to see which might not
+interest<br>
+ other men. He will find things in my library which I have no<br>
+ notion of. He will discover objects for scientific observation
+in<br>
+ all the members of my household, not only in the
+good-looking<br>
+ maids--though he could, I have no doubt, tell their points as
+I<br>
+ could those of a horse. We have maidens here of several
+distinct<br>
+ races, Marshfield. We have also witches, and Jew leeches, and
+holy<br>
+ daft people. In any case, Yany, with all its dependencies,<br>
+ material, male and female, are at your disposal, for what you
+can<br>
+ make out of them.</p>
+
+<p>"'It is good,' he went on gayly, 'that you should happen to
+have<br>
+ this happy disposition, for I fear that, no later than
+to-morrow, I<br>
+ may have to absent myself from home. I have heard that there
+are<br>
+ news of wolves--they threaten to be a greater pest than usual
+this<br>
+ winter, but I am going to drive them on quite a new plan, and
+it<br>
+ will go hard with me if I don't come even with them. Well for
+you,<br>
+ by the way, Marshfield, that you did not pass within their
+scent<br>
+ today.' Then, musingly: 'I should not give much for the life of
+a<br>
+ traveler who happened to wander in these parts just now.' Here
+he<br>
+ interrupted himself hastily and went over to his wife, who had
+sunk<br>
+ back on her chair, livid, seemingly on the point of
+swooning.</p>
+
+<p>"His gaze was devouring; so might a man look at the woman
+he<br>
+ adored, in his anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"'What! faint, Violet, alarmed!' His voice was subdued, yet
+there<br>
+ was an unmistakable thrill of emotion in it.</p>
+
+<p>"'Pshaw!' thought I to myself, 'the man is a model
+husband.'</p>
+
+<p>"She clinched her hands, and by sheer force of will seemed to
+pull<br>
+ herself together. These nervous women have often an
+unexpected<br>
+ fund of strength.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come, that is well,' said the baron with a flickering smile;
+'Mr.<br>
+ Marshfield will think you but badly acclimatized to Poland if
+a<br>
+ little wolf scare can upset you. My dear wife is so
+soft-hearted,'<br>
+ he went on to me, 'that she is capable of making herself quite
+ill<br>
+ over the sad fate that might have, but has not, overcome you.
+Or,<br>
+ perhaps,' he added, in a still gentler voice, 'her fear is that
+I<br>
+ may expose myself to danger for the public weal.'</p>
+
+<p>"She turned her head away, but I saw her set her teeth as if
+to<br>
+ choke a sob. The baron chuckled in his throat and seemed to<br>
+ luxuriate in the pleasant thought.</p>
+
+<p>"At this moment folding doors were thrown open, and supper
+was<br>
+ announced. I offered my arm, she rose and took it in
+silence.<br>
+ This silence she maintained during the first part of the
+meal,<br>
+ despite her husband's brilliant conversation and almost
+uproarious<br>
+ spirits. But by and by a bright color mounted to her cheeks
+and<br>
+ luster to her eyes. I suppose you will think me horribly<br>
+ unpoetical if I add that she drank several glasses of champagne
+one<br>
+ after the other, a fact which perhaps may account for the
+change.</p>
+
+<p>"At any rate she spoke and laughed and looked lovely, and I
+did not<br>
+ wonder that the baron could hardly keep his eyes off her.
+But<br>
+ whether it was her wifely anxiety or not--it was evident her
+mind<br>
+ was not at ease through it all, and I fancied that her
+brightness<br>
+ was feverish, her merriment slightly hysterical.</p>
+
+<p>"After supper--an exquisite one it was--we adjourned together,
+in<br>
+ foreign fashion, to the drawing-room; the baron threw himself
+into<br>
+ a chair and, somewhat with the air of a pasha, demanded music.
+He<br>
+ was flushed; the veins of his forehead were swollen and stood
+out<br>
+ like cords; the wine drunk at table was potent: even through
+my<br>
+ phlegmatic frame it ran hotly.</p>
+
+<p>"She hesitated a moment or two, then docilely sat down to
+the<br>
+ piano. That she could sing I have already made clear: how
+she<br>
+ could sing, with what pathos, passion, as well as perfect art,
+I<br>
+ had never realized before.</p>
+
+<p>"When the song was ended she remained for a while, with eyes
+lost<br>
+ in distance, very still, save for her quick breathing. It
+was<br>
+ clear she was moved by the music; indeed she must have thrown
+her<br>
+ whole soul into it.</p>
+
+<p>"At first we, the audience, paid her the rare compliment
+of<br>
+ silence. Then the baron broke forth into loud applause.
+'Brava,<br>
+ brava! that was really said con amore. A delicious love
+song,<br>
+ delicious--but French! You must sing one of our Slav melodies
+for<br>
+ Marshfield before you allow us to go and smoke.'</p>
+
+<p>"She started from her reverie with a flush, and after a
+pause<br>
+ struck slowly a few simple chords, then began one of those<br>
+ strangely sweet, yet intensely pathetic Russian airs, which
+give<br>
+ one a curious revelation of the profound, endless melancholy<br>
+ lurking in the national mind.</p>
+
+<p>"'What do you think of it?' asked the baron of me when it
+ceased.</p>
+
+<p>"'What I have always thought of such music--it is that of
+a<br>
+ hopeless people; poetical, crushed, and resigned.'</p>
+
+<p>"He gave a loud laugh. 'Hear the analyst, the
+psychologue--why,<br>
+ man, it is a love song! Is it possible that we, uncivilized,
+are<br>
+ truer realists than our hypercultured Western neighbors? Have
+we<br>
+ gone to the root of the matter, in our simple way?'</p>
+
+<p>"The baroness got up abruptly. She looked white and spent;
+there<br>
+ were bister circles round her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"'I am tired,' she said, with dry lips. 'You will excuse me,
+Mr.<br>
+ Marshfield, I must really go to bed.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Go to bed, go to bed,' cried her husband gayly. Then,
+quoting in<br>
+ Russian from the song she had just sung: 'Sleep, my little
+soft<br>
+ white dove: my little innocent tender lamb!' She hurried from
+the<br>
+ room. The baron laughed again, and, taking me familiarly by
+the<br>
+ arm, led me to his own set of apartments for the promised
+smoke.<br>
+ He ensconced me in an armchair, placed cigars of every
+description<br>
+ and a Turkish pipe ready to my hand, and a little table on
+which<br>
+ stood cut-glass flasks and beakers in tempting array.</p>
+
+<p>"After I had selected my cigar with some precautions, I
+glanced at<br>
+ him over a careless remark, and was startled to see a sudden<br>
+ alteration in his whole look and attitude.</p>
+
+<p>"'You will forgive me, Marshfield,' he said, as he caught my
+eye,<br>
+ speaking with spasmodic politeness. 'It is more than probable
+that<br>
+ I shall have to set out upon this chase I spoke of to-night, and
+I<br>
+ must now go and change my clothes, that I may be ready to start
+at<br>
+ any moment. This is the hour when it is most likely these
+hell<br>
+ beasts are to be got at. You have all you want, I hope,'<br>
+ interrupting an outbreak of ferocity by an effort after his
+former<br>
+ courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>"It was curious to watch the man of the world struggling with
+the<br>
+ primitive man.</p>
+
+<p>"'But, baron,' said I, 'I do not at all see the fun of
+sticking at<br>
+ home like this. You know my passion for witnessing everything
+new,<br>
+ strange, and outlandish. You will surely not refuse me such
+an<br>
+ opportunity for observation as a midnight wolf raid. I will do
+my<br>
+ best not to be in the way if you will take me with you.'</p>
+
+<p>"At first it seemed as if he had some difficulty in realizing
+the<br>
+ drift of my words, he was so engrossed by some inner thought.
+But<br>
+ as I repeated them, he gave vent to a loud cachinnation.</p>
+
+<p>"'By heaven! I like your spirit,' he exclaimed, clapping
+me<br>
+ strongly on the shoulder. 'Of course you shall come. You
+shall,'<br>
+ he repeated, 'and I promise you a sight, a hunt such as you
+never<br>
+ heard or dreamed of--you will be able to tell them in England
+the<br>
+ sort of thing we can do here in that line--such wolves are
+rare<br>
+ quarry,' he added, looking slyly at me, 'and I have a new plan
+for<br>
+ getting at them.'</p>
+
+<p>"There was a long pause, and then there rose in the stillness
+the<br>
+ unearthly howling of the baron's hounds, a cheerful sound
+which<br>
+ only their owner's somewhat loud converse of the evening had
+kept<br>
+ from becoming excessively obtrusive.</p>
+
+<p>"'Hark at them--the beauties!' cried he, showing his short,
+strong<br>
+ teeth, pointed like a dog's in a wide grin of anticipative
+delight.<br>
+ 'They have been kept on pretty short commons, poor things!
+They<br>
+ are hungry. By the way, Marshfield, you can sit tight to a
+horse,<br>
+ I trust? If you were to roll off, you know, these splendid<br>
+ fellows--they would chop you up in a second. They would chop
+you<br>
+ up,' he repeated unctuously, 'snap, crunch, gobble, and there
+would<br>
+ be an end of you!'</p>
+
+<p>"'If I could not ride a decent horse without being thrown,'
+I<br>
+ retorted, a little stung by his manner, 'after my recent
+three<br>
+ months' torture with the Guard Cossacks, I should indeed be
+a<br>
+ hopeless subject. Do not think of frightening me from the
+exploit,<br>
+ but say frankly if my company would be displeasing.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Tut!' he said, waving his hand impatiently, 'it is your
+affair.<br>
+ I have warned you. Go and get ready if you want to come.
+Time<br>
+ presses.'</p>
+
+<p>"I was determined to be of the fray; my blood was up. I
+have<br>
+ hinted that the baron's Tokay had stirred it.</p>
+
+<p>"I went to my room and hurriedly donned clothes more suitable
+for<br>
+ rough night work. My last care was to slip into my pockets a
+brace<br>
+ of double-barreled pistols which formed part of my traveling
+kit.<br>
+ When I returned I found the baron already booted and spurred;
+this<br>
+ without metaphor. He was stretched full length on the divan,
+and<br>
+ did not speak as I came in, or even look at me. Chewing an
+unlit<br>
+ cigar, with eyes fixed on the ceiling, he was evidently
+following<br>
+ some absorbing train of ideas.</p>
+
+<p>"The silence was profound; time went by; it grew oppressive;
+at<br>
+ length, wearied out, I fell, over my chibouque, into a doze
+filled<br>
+ with puzzling visions, out of which I was awakened with a
+start.<br>
+ My companion had sprung up, very lightly, to his feet. In
+his<br>
+ throat was an odd, half-suppressed cry, grewsome to hear. He
+stood<br>
+ on tiptoe, with eyes fixed, as though looking through the wall,
+and<br>
+ I distinctly saw his ears point in the intensity of his
+listening.</p>
+
+<p>"After a moment, with hasty, noiseless energy, and without
+the<br>
+ slightest ceremony, he blew the lamps out, drew back the
+heavy<br>
+ curtains and threw the tall window wide open. A rush of icy
+air,<br>
+ and the bright rays of the moon--gibbous, I remember, in her
+third<br>
+ quarter--filled the room. Outside the mist had condensed, and
+the<br>
+ view was unrestricted over the white plains at the foot of
+the<br>
+ hill.</p>
+
+<p>"The baron stood motionless in the open window, callous to the
+cold<br>
+ in which, after a minute, I could hardly keep my teeth from<br>
+ chattering, his head bent forward, still listening. I
+listened<br>
+ too, with 'all my ears,' but could not catch a sound; indeed
+the<br>
+ silence over the great expanse of snow might have been
+called<br>
+ awful; even the dogs were mute.</p>
+
+<p>"Presently, far, far away, came a faint tinkle of bells; so
+faint,<br>
+ at first, that I thought it was but fancy, then distincter. It
+was<br>
+ even more eerie than the silence, I thought, though I knew it
+could<br>
+ come but from some passing sleigh. All at once that ceased,
+and<br>
+ again my duller senses could perceive nothing, though I saw by
+my<br>
+ host's craning neck that he was more on the alert than ever.
+But<br>
+ at last I too heard once more, this time not bells, but as it
+were<br>
+ the tread of horses muffled by the snow, intermittent and dull,
+yet<br>
+ drawing nearer. And then in the inner silence of the great
+house<br>
+ it seemed to me I caught the noise of closing doors; but here
+the<br>
+ hounds, as if suddenly becoming alive to some disturbance,
+raised<br>
+ the same fearsome concert of yells and barks with which they
+had<br>
+ greeted my arrival, and listening became useless.</p>
+
+<p>"I had risen to my feet. My host, turning from the window,
+seized<br>
+ my shoulder with a fierce grip, and bade me 'hold my noise'; for
+a<br>
+ second or two I stood motionless under his iron talons, then
+he<br>
+ released me with an exultant whisper: "Now for our chase!" and
+made<br>
+ for the door with a spring. Hastily gulping down a mouthful
+of<br>
+ arrack from one of the bottles on the table, I followed him,
+and,<br>
+ guided by the sound of his footsteps before me, groped my
+way<br>
+ through passages as black as Erebus.</p>
+
+<p>"After a time, which seemed a long one, a small door was flung
+open<br>
+ in front, and I saw Kossowski glide into the moonlit courtyard
+and<br>
+ cross the square. When I too came out he was disappearing into
+the<br>
+ gaping darkness of the open stable door, and there I overtook
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"A man who seemed to have been sleeping in a corner jumped up
+at<br>
+ our entrance, and led out a horse ready saddled. In obedience to
+a<br>
+ gruff order from his master, as the latter mounted, he then
+brought<br>
+ forward another which he had evidently thought to ride himself
+and<br>
+ held the stirrup for me.</p>
+
+<p>"We came delicately forth, and the Cossack hurriedly barred
+the<br>
+ great door behind us. I caught a glimpse of his worn, scarred
+face<br>
+ by the moonlight, as he peeped after us for a second before<br>
+ shutting himself in; it was stricken with terror.</p>
+
+<p>"The baron trotted briskly toward the kennels, from whence
+there<br>
+ was now issuing a truly infernal clangor, and, as my steed
+followed<br>
+ suit of his own accord, I could see how he proceeded dexterously
+to<br>
+ unbolt the gates without dismounting, while the beasts
+within<br>
+ dashed themselves against them and tore the ground in their fury
+of<br>
+ impatience.</p>
+
+<p>"He smiled, as he swung back the barriers at last, and his<br>
+ 'beauties' came forth. Seven or eight monstrous brutes, hounds
+of<br>
+ a kind unknown to me: fulvous and sleek of coat, tall on
+their<br>
+ legs, square-headed, long-tailed, deep-chested; with terrible
+jaws<br>
+ slobbering in eagerness. They leaped around and up at us, much
+to<br>
+ our horses' distaste. Kossowski, still smiling, lashed at
+them<br>
+ unsparingly with his hunting whip, and they responded, not
+with<br>
+ yells of pain, but with snarls of fury.</p>
+
+<p>"Managing his restless steed and his cruel whip with
+consummate<br>
+ ease, my host drove the unruly crew before him out of the<br>
+ precincts, then halted and bent down from his saddle to
+examine<br>
+ some slight prints in the snow which led, not the way I had
+come,<br>
+ but toward what seemed another avenue. In a second or two
+the<br>
+ hounds were gathered round this spot, their great snake-like
+tails<br>
+ quivering, nose to earth, yelping with excitement. I had some
+ado<br>
+ to manage my horse, and my eyesight was far from being as keen
+as<br>
+ the baron's, but I had then no doubt he had come already upon
+wolf<br>
+ tracks, and I shuddered mentally, thinking of the sleigh
+bells.</p>
+
+<p>"Suddenly Kossowski raised himself from his strained
+position;<br>
+ under his low fur cap his face, with its fixed smile, looked<br>
+ scarcely human in the white light: and then we broke into a
+hand<br>
+ canter just as the hounds dashed, in a compact body, along
+the<br>
+ trail.</p>
+
+<p>"But we had not gone more than a few hundred yards before
+they<br>
+ began to falter, then straggled, stopped and ran back and
+about<br>
+ with dismal cries. It was clear to me they had lost the scent.
+My<br>
+ companion reined in his horse, and mine, luckily a
+well-trained<br>
+ brute, halted of himself.</p>
+
+<p>"We had reached a bend in a broad avenue of firs and larches,
+and<br>
+ just where we stood, and where the hounds ever returned and
+met<br>
+ nose to nose in frantic conclave, the snow was trampled and
+soiled,<br>
+ and a little farther on planed in a great sweep, as if by a
+turning<br>
+ sleigh. Beyond was a double-furrowed track of skaits and
+regular<br>
+ hoof prints leading far away.</p>
+
+<p>"Before I had time to reflect upon the bearing of this
+unexpected<br>
+ interruption, Kossowski, as if suddenly possessed by a devil,
+fell<br>
+ upon the hounds with his whip, flogging them upon the new
+track,<br>
+ uttering the while the most savage cries I have ever heard
+issue<br>
+ from human throat. The disappointed beasts were nothing loath
+to<br>
+ seize upon another trail; after a second of hesitation they
+had<br>
+ understood, and were off upon it at a tearing pace, we after
+them<br>
+ at the best speed of our horses.</p>
+
+<p>"Some unformed idea that we were going to escort, or
+rescue,<br>
+ benighted travelers flickered dimly in my mind as I galloped<br>
+ through the night air; but when I managed to approach my
+companion<br>
+ and called out to him for explanation, he only turned half
+round<br>
+ and grinned at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Before us lay now the white plain, scintillating under the
+high<br>
+ moon's rays. That light is deceptive; I could be sure of
+nothing<br>
+ upon the wide expanse but of the dark, leaping figures of
+the<br>
+ hounds already spread out in a straggling line, some right
+ahead,<br>
+ others just in front of us. In a short time also the icy
+wind,<br>
+ cutting my face mercilessly as we increased our pace, well
+nigh<br>
+ blinded me with tears of cold.</p>
+
+<p>"I can hardly realize how long this pursuit after an unseen
+prey<br>
+ lasted; I can only remember that I was getting rather faint
+with<br>
+ fatigue, and ignominiously held on to my pommel, when all of
+a<br>
+ sudden the black outline of a sleigh merged into sight in front
+of<br>
+ us.</p>
+
+<p>"I rubbed my smarting eyes with my benumbed hand; we were
+gaining<br>
+ upon it second by second; two of those hell hounds of the
+baron's<br>
+ were already within a few leaps of it.</p>
+
+<p>"Soon I was able to make out two figures, one standing up
+and<br>
+ urging the horses on with whip and voice, the other clinging to
+the<br>
+ back seat and looking toward us in an attitude of terror. A
+great<br>
+ fear crept into my half-frozen brain--were we not bringing
+deadly<br>
+ danger instead of help to these travelers? Great God! did
+the<br>
+ baron mean to use them as a bait for his new method of wolf<br>
+ hunting?</p>
+
+<p>"I would have turned upon Kossowski with a cry of
+expostulation or<br>
+ warning, but he, urging on his hounds as he galloped on
+their<br>
+ flank, howling and gesticulating like a veritable Hun, passed me
+by<br>
+ like a flash--and all at once I knew."</p>
+
+<p>Marshfield paused for a moment and sent his pale smile round
+upon<br>
+ his listeners, who now showed no signs of sleepiness; he
+knocked<br>
+ the ash from his cigar, twisted the latter round in his mouth,
+and<br>
+ added dryly:</p>
+
+<p>"And I confess it seemed to me a little strong even for a
+baron in<br>
+ the Carpathians. The travelers were our quarry. But the
+reason<br>
+ why the Lord of Yany had turned man-hunter I was yet to
+learn.<br>
+ Just then I had to direct my energies to frustrating his plans.
+I<br>
+ used my spurs mercilessly. While I drew up even with him I saw
+the<br>
+ two figures in the sleigh change places; he who had hitherto
+driven<br>
+ now faced back, while his companion took the reins; there was
+the<br>
+ pale blue sheen of a revolver barrel under the moonlight,
+followed<br>
+ by a yellow flash, and the nearest hound rolled over in the
+snow.</p>
+
+<p>"With an oath the baron twisted round in his saddle to call up
+and<br>
+ urge on the remainder. My horse had taken fright at the report
+and<br>
+ dashed irresistibly forward, bringing me at once almost level
+with<br>
+ the fugitives, and the next instant the revolver was turned<br>
+ menacingly toward me. There was no time to explain; my pistol
+was<br>
+ already drawn, and as another of the brutes bounded up,
+almost<br>
+ under my horse's feet, I loosed it upon him. I must have let
+off<br>
+ both barrels at once, for the weapon flew out of my hand, but
+the<br>
+ hound's back was broken. I presume the traveler understood; at
+any<br>
+ rate, he did not fire at me.</p>
+
+<p>"In moments of intense excitement like these, strangely
+enough, the<br>
+ mind is extraordinarily open to impressions. I shall never
+forget<br>
+ that man's countenance in the sledge, as he stood upright
+and<br>
+ defied us in his mortal danger; it was young, very handsome,
+the<br>
+ features not distorted, but set into a sort of desperate,
+stony<br>
+ calm, and I knew it, beyond all doubt, for that of an
+Englishman.<br>
+ And then I saw his companion--it was the baron's wife. And I<br>
+ understood why the bells had been removed.</p>
+
+<p>"It takes a long time to say this; it only required an instant
+to<br>
+ see it. The loud explosion of my pistol had hardly ceased to
+ring<br>
+ before the baron, with a fearful imprecation, was upon me.
+First<br>
+ he lashed at me with his whip as we tore along side by side,
+and<br>
+ then I saw him wind the reins round his off arm and bend over,
+and<br>
+ I felt his angry fingers close tightly on my right foot. The
+next<br>
+ instant I should have been lifted out of my saddle, but there
+came<br>
+ another shot from the sledge. The baron's horse plunged and<br>
+ stumbled, and the baron, hanging on to my foot with a fierce
+grip,<br>
+ was wrenched from his seat. His horse, however, was up again<br>
+ immediately, and I was released, and then I caught a
+confused<br>
+ glimpse of the frightened and wounded animal galloping wildly
+away<br>
+ to the right, leaving a black track of blood behind him in
+the<br>
+ snow, his master, entangled in the reins, running with
+incredible<br>
+ swiftness by his side and endeavoring to vault back into the<br>
+ saddle.</p>
+
+<p>"And now came to pass a terrible thing which, in his savage
+plans,<br>
+ my host had doubtless never anticipated.</p>
+
+<p>"One of the hounds that had during this short check recovered
+lost<br>
+ ground, coming across this hot trail of blood, turned away from
+his<br>
+ course, and with a joyous yell darted after the running man.
+In<br>
+ another instant the remainder of the pack was upon the new
+scent.</p>
+
+<p>"As soon as I could stop my horse, I tried to turn him in
+the<br>
+ direction the new chase had taken, but just then, through the
+night<br>
+ air, over the receding sound of the horse's scamper and the
+sobbing<br>
+ of the pack in full cry, there came a long scream, and after
+that a<br>
+ sickening silence. And I knew that somewhere yonder, under
+the<br>
+ beautiful moonlight, the Baron Kossowski was being devoured by
+his<br>
+ starving dogs.</p>
+
+<p>"I looked round, with the sweat on my face, vaguely, for some
+human<br>
+ being to share the horror of the moment, and I saw, gliding
+away,<br>
+ far away in the white distance, the black silhouette of the<br>
+ sledge."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" said we, in divers tones of impatience, curiosity,
+or<br>
+ horror, according to our divers temperaments, as the speaker<br>
+ uncrossed his legs and gazed at us in mild triumph, with all
+the<br>
+ air of having said his say, and satisfactorily proved his
+point.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," repeated he, "what more do you want to know? It
+will<br>
+ interest you but slightly, I am sure, to hear how I found my
+way<br>
+ back to the Hof; or how I told as much as I deemed prudent of
+the<br>
+ evening's grewsome work to the baron's servants, who, by the
+way,<br>
+ to my amazement, displayed the profoundest and most
+unmistakable<br>
+ sorrow at the tidings, and sallied forth (at their head the
+Cossack<br>
+ who had seen us depart) to seek for his remains. Excuse the<br>
+ unpleasantness of the remark: I fear the dogs must have left
+very<br>
+ little of him, he had dieted them so carefully. However, since
+it<br>
+ was to have been a case of 'chop, crunch, and gobble,' as the
+baron<br>
+ had it, I preferred that that particular fate should have
+overtaken<br>
+ him rather than me--or, for that matter, either of those two<br>
+ country people of ours in the sledge.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor am I going to inflict upon you," continued Marshfield,
+after<br>
+ draining his glass, "a full account of my impressions when I
+found<br>
+ myself once more in that immense, deserted, and stricken house,
+so<br>
+ luxuriously prepared for the mistress who had fled from it; how
+I<br>
+ philosophized over all this, according to my wont; the
+conjectures<br>
+ I made as to the first acts of the drama; the untold sufferings
+my<br>
+ countrywoman must have endured from the moment her husband
+first<br>
+ grew jealous till she determined on this desperate step; as to
+how<br>
+ and when she had met her lover, how they communicated, and how
+the<br>
+ baron had discovered the intended flitting in time to concoct
+his<br>
+ characteristic revenge.</p>
+
+<p>"One thing you may be sure of, I had no mind to remain at Yany
+an<br>
+ hour longer than necessary. I even contrived to get well clear
+of<br>
+ the neighborhood before the lady's absence was discovered.
+Luckily<br>
+ for me--or I might have been taxed with connivance, though
+indeed<br>
+ the simple household did not seem to know what suspicion was,
+and<br>
+ accepted my account with childlike credence--very typical, and
+very<br>
+ convenient to me at the same time."</p>
+
+<p>"But how do you know," said one of us, "that the man was her
+lover?<br>
+ He might have been her brother or some other relative."</p>
+
+<p>"That," said Marshfield, with his little flat laugh, "I happen
+to<br>
+ have ascertained--and, curiously enough, only a few weeks ago.
+It<br>
+ was at the play, between the acts, from my comfortable seat
+(the<br>
+ first row in the pit). I was looking leisurely round the
+house<br>
+ when I caught sight of a woman, in a box close by, whose head
+was<br>
+ turned from me, and who presented the somewhat unusual spectacle
+of<br>
+ a young neck and shoulders of the most exquisite
+contour--and<br>
+ perfectly gray hair; and not dull gray, but rather of a
+pleasing<br>
+ tint like frosted silver. This aroused my curiosity. I brought
+my<br>
+ glasses to a focus on her and waited patiently till she
+turned<br>
+ round. Then I recognized the Baroness Kassowski, and I no
+longer<br>
+ wondered at the young hair being white.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Yet she looked placid and happy; strangely so, it seemed to
+me,<br>
+ under the sudden reviving in my memory of such scenes as I have
+now<br>
+ described. But presently I understood further: beside her,
+in<br>
+ close attendance, was the man of the sledge, a handsome fellow
+with<br>
+ much of a military air about him.</p>
+
+<p>"During the course of the evening, as I watched, I saw a
+friend of<br>
+ mine come into the box, and at the end I slipped out into
+the<br>
+ passage to catch him as he came out.</p>
+
+<p>"'Who is the woman with the white hair?' I asked. Then, in
+the<br>
+ fragmentary style approved of by ultra-fashionable young
+men--this<br>
+ earnest-languid mode of speech presents curious similarities in
+all<br>
+ languages--he told me: 'Most charming couple in
+London--awfully<br>
+ pretty, wasn't she?--he had been in the Guards--attache at
+Vienna<br>
+ once--they adored each other. White hair, devilish queer,
+wasn't<br>
+ it? Suited her, somehow. And then she had been married to a<br>
+ Russian, or something, somewhere in the wilds, and their
+names<br>
+ were--' But do you know," said Marshfield, interrupting
+himself,<br>
+ "I think I had better let you find that out for yourselves, if
+you<br>
+ care."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3>Stanley J. Weyman</h3>
+
+<h2>The Fowl in the Pot</h2>
+
+<h4>An Episode Adapted from the Memoirs of Maximilian de Bethune,
+Duke<br>
+ of Sully</h4>
+
+<p><br>
+ What I am going to relate may seem to some merely to be curious
+and<br>
+ on a party with the diverting story of M. Boisrose, which I
+have<br>
+ set down in an earlier part of my memoirs. But among the
+calumnies<br>
+ of those who have never ceased to attack me since the death of
+the<br>
+ late king, the statement that I kept from his majesty things
+which<br>
+ should have reached his ears has always had a prominent
+place,<br>
+ though a thousand times refuted by my friends, and those who
+from<br>
+ an intimate acquaintance with events could judge how faithfully
+I<br>
+ labored to deserve the confidence with which my master honored
+me.<br>
+ Therefore, I take it in hand to show by an example, trifling
+in<br>
+ itself, the full knowledge of affairs which the king had, and
+to<br>
+ prove that in many matters, which were never permitted to
+become<br>
+ known to the idlers of the court, he took a personal share,
+worthy<br>
+ as much of Haroun as of Alexander.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was my custom, before I entered upon those negotiations with
+the<br>
+ Prince of Conde which terminated in the recovery of the estate
+of<br>
+ Villebon, where I now principally reside, to spend a part of
+the<br>
+ autumn and winter at Rosny. On these occasions I was in the
+habit<br>
+ of leaving Paris with a considerable train of Swiss, pages,
+valets,<br>
+ and grooms, together with the maids of honor and waiting women
+of<br>
+ the duchess. We halted to take dinner at Poissy, and
+generally<br>
+ contrived to reach Rosny toward nightfall, so as to sup by
+the<br>
+ light of flambeaux in a manner enjoyable enough, though devoid
+of<br>
+ that state which I have ever maintained, and enjoined upon
+my<br>
+ children, as at once the privilege and burden of rank.</p>
+
+<p>At the time of which I am speaking I had for my favorite
+charger<br>
+ the sorrel horse which the Duke of Mercoeur presented to me with
+a<br>
+ view to my good offices at the time of the king's entry into
+Paris;<br>
+ and which I honestly transferred to his majesty in accordance
+with<br>
+ a principle laid down in another place. The king insisted on<br>
+ returning it to me, and for several years I rode it on these
+annual<br>
+ visits to Rosny. What was more remarkable was that on each
+of<br>
+ these occasions it cast a shoe about the middle of the
+afternoon,<br>
+ and always when we were within a short league of the village
+of<br>
+ Aubergenville. Though I never had with me less than half a
+score<br>
+ of led horses, I had such an affection for the sorrel that I<br>
+ preferred to wait until it was shod, rather than accommodate
+myself<br>
+ to a nag of less easy paces; and would allow my household to<br>
+ precede me, staying behind myself with at most a guard or two,
+my<br>
+ valet, and a page.</p>
+
+<p>The forge at Aubergenville was kept by a smith of some skill,
+a<br>
+ cheerful fellow, whom I always remembered to reward, considering
+my<br>
+ own position rather than his services, with a gold livre. His
+joy<br>
+ at receiving what was to him the income of a year was great,
+and<br>
+ never failed to reimburse me; in addition to which I took
+some<br>
+ pleasure in unbending, and learning from this simple peasant
+and<br>
+ loyal man, what the taxpayers were saying of me and my
+reforms--a<br>
+ duty I always felt I owed to the king my master.</p>
+
+<p>As a man of breeding it would ill become me to set down the
+homely<br>
+ truths I thus learned. The conversations of the vulgar are
+little<br>
+ suited to a nobleman's memoirs; but in this I distinguish
+between<br>
+ the Duke of Sully and the king's minister, and it is in the
+latter<br>
+ capacity that I relate what passed on these diverting
+occasions.<br>
+ "Ho, Simon," I would say, encouraging the poor man as he
+came<br>
+ bowing and trembling before me, "how goes it, my friend?"</p>
+
+<p>"Badly," he would answer, "very badly until your lordship came
+this<br>
+ way."</p>
+
+<p>"And how is that, little man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it is the roads," he always replied, shaking his bald
+head as<br>
+ he began to set about his business. "The roads since your
+lordship<br>
+ became surveyor-general are so good that not one horse in a
+hundred<br>
+ casts a shoe; and then there are so few highwaymen now that not
+one<br>
+ robber's plates do I replace in a twelvemonth. There is where
+it<br>
+ is."</p>
+
+<p>At this I was highly delighted.</p>
+
+<p>"Still, since I began to pass this way times have not been so
+bad<br>
+ with you, Simon," I would answer.</p>
+
+<p>Thereto he had one invariable reply.</p>
+
+<p>"No; thanks to Ste. Genevieve and your lordship, whom we call
+in<br>
+ this village the poor man's friend, I have a fowl in the
+pot."</p>
+
+<p>This phrase so pleased me that I repeated it to the king.
+It<br>
+ tickled his fancy also, and for some years it was a very
+common<br>
+ remark of that good and great ruler, that he hoped to live to
+see<br>
+ every peasant with a fowl in his pot.</p>
+
+<p>"But why," I remember I once asked this honest fellow--it was
+on<br>
+ the last occasion of the sorrel falling lame there--"do you
+thank<br>
+ Ste. Genevieve?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is my patron saint," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you are a Parisian?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your lordship is always right."</p>
+
+<p>"But does her saintship do you any good?" I asked
+curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, by your lordship's leave. My wife prays to her and
+she<br>
+ loosens the nails in the sorrel's shoes."</p>
+
+<p>"In fact she pays off an old grudge," I answered, "for there
+was a<br>
+ time when Paris liked me little; but hark ye, master smith, I
+am<br>
+ not sure that this is not an act of treason to conspire with
+Madame<br>
+ Genevieve against the comfort of the king's minister. What
+think<br>
+ you, you rascal; can you pass the justice elm without a
+shiver?"</p>
+
+<p>This threw the simple fellow into a great fear, which the
+sight of<br>
+ the livre of gold speedily converted into joy as stupendous.<br>
+ Leaving him still staring at his fortune I rode away; but when
+we<br>
+ had gone some little distance, the aspect of his face, when
+I<br>
+ charged him with treason, or my own unassisted
+discrimination<br>
+ suggested a clew to the phenomenon.</p>
+
+<p>"La Trape," I said to my valet--the same who was with me at
+Cahors--<br>
+ "what is the name of the innkeeper at Poissy, at whose house
+we<br>
+ are accustomed to dine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Andrew, may it please your lordship."</p>
+
+<p>"Andrew! I thought so!" I exclaimed, smiting my thigh. "Simon
+and<br>
+ Andrew his brother! Answer, knave, and, if you have permitted
+me<br>
+ to be robbed these many times, tremble for your ears. Is he
+not<br>
+ brother to the smith at Aubergenville who has just shod my
+horse?"</p>
+
+<p>La Trape professed to be ignorant on this point, but a groom
+who<br>
+ had stayed behind with me, having sought my permission to
+speak,<br>
+ said it was so, adding that Master Andrew had risen in the
+world<br>
+ through large dealings in hay, which he was wont to take daily
+into<br>
+ Paris and sell, and that he did not now acknowledge or see
+anything<br>
+ of his brother the smith, though it was believed that he
+retained a<br>
+ sneaking liking for him.</p>
+
+<p>On receiving this confirmation of my suspicions, my vanity as
+well<br>
+ as my sense of justice led me to act with the promptitude which
+I<br>
+ have exhibited in greater emergencies. I rated La Trape for
+his<br>
+ carelessness of my interests in permitting this deception to
+be<br>
+ practiced on me; and the main body of my attendants being now
+in<br>
+ sight, I ordered him to take two Swiss and arrest both
+brothers<br>
+ without delay. It wanted yet three hours of sunset, and I
+judged<br>
+ that, by hard riding, they might reach Rosny with their
+prisoners<br>
+ before bedtime.</p>
+
+<p>I spent some time while still on the road in considering
+what<br>
+ punishment I should inflict on the culprits; and finally laid
+aside<br>
+ the purpose I had at first conceived of putting them to
+death--an<br>
+ infliction they had richly deserved--in favor of a plan which
+I<br>
+ thought might offer me some amusement. For the execution of this
+I<br>
+ depended upon Maignan, my equerry, who was a man of lively<br>
+ imagination, being the same who had of his own motion arranged
+and<br>
+ carried out the triumphal procession, in which I was borne to
+Rosny<br>
+ after the battle of Ivry. Before I sat down to supper I gave
+him<br>
+ his directions; and as I had expected, news was brought to me
+while<br>
+ I was at table that the prisoners had arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon I informed the duchess and the company generally,
+for, as<br>
+ was usual, a number of my country neighbors had come to
+compliment<br>
+ me on my return, that there was some sport of a rare kind on
+foot;<br>
+ and we adjourned, Maignan, followed by four pages bearing
+lights,<br>
+ leading the way to that end of the terrace which abuts on
+the<br>
+ linden avenue. Here, a score of grooms holding torches aloft
+had<br>
+ been arranged in a circle so that the impromptu theater thus<br>
+ formed, which Maignan had ordered with much taste, was as light
+as<br>
+ in the day. On a sloping bank at one end seats had been placed
+for<br>
+ those who had supped at my table, while the rest of the
+company<br>
+ found such places of vantage as they could; their number,
+indeed,<br>
+ amounting, with my household, to two hundred persons. In the<br>
+ center of the open space a small forge fire had been kindled,
+the<br>
+ red glow of which added much to the strangeness of the scene;
+and<br>
+ on the anvil beside it were ranged a number of horses' and
+donkeys'<br>
+ shoes, with a full complement of the tools used by smiths.
+All<br>
+ being ready I gave the word to bring in the prisoners, and
+escorted<br>
+ by La Trape and six of my guards, they were marched into the
+arena.<br>
+ In their pale and terrified faces, and the shaking limbs
+which<br>
+ could scarce support them to their appointed stations, I read
+both<br>
+ the consciousness of guilt and the apprehension of immediate
+death;<br>
+ it was plain that they expected nothing less. I was very
+willing<br>
+ to play with their fears, and for some time looked at them
+in<br>
+ silence, while all wondered with lively curiosity what would
+ensue.<br>
+ I then addressed them gravely, telling the innkeeper that I
+knew<br>
+ well he had loosened each year a shoe of my horse, in order
+that<br>
+ his brother might profit by the job of replacing it; and went on
+to<br>
+ reprove the smith for the ingratitude which had led him to
+return<br>
+ my bounty by the conception of so knavish a trick.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this they confessed their guilt, and flinging themselves
+upon<br>
+ their knees with many tears and prayers begged for mercy.
+This,<br>
+ after a decent interval, I permitted myself to grant. "Your
+lives,<br>
+ which are forfeited, shall be spared," I pronounced. "But
+punished<br>
+ you must be. I therefore ordain that Simon, the smith, at
+once<br>
+ fit, nail, and properly secure a pair of iron shoes to
+Andrew's<br>
+ heels, and that then Andrew, who by that time will have picked
+up<br>
+ something of the smith's art, do the same to Simon. So will
+you<br>
+ both learn to avoid such shoeing tricks for the future."</p>
+
+<p>It may well be imagined that a judgment so whimsical, and so
+justly<br>
+ adapted to the offense, charmed all save the culprits; and in
+a<br>
+ hundred ways the pleasure of those present was evinced, to such
+a<br>
+ degree, indeed, that Maignan had some difficulty in
+restoring<br>
+ silence and gravity to the assemblage. This done, however,
+Master<br>
+ Andrew was taken in hand and his wooden shoes removed. The
+tools<br>
+ of his trade were placed before the smith, who cast glances
+so<br>
+ piteous, first at his brother's feet and then at the shoes on
+the<br>
+ anvil, as again gave rise to a prodigious amount of merriment,
+my<br>
+ pages in particular well-nigh forgetting my presence, and
+rolling<br>
+ about in a manner unpardonable at another time. However, I
+rebuked<br>
+ them sharply, and was about to order the sentence to be
+carried<br>
+ into effect, when the remembrance of the many pleasant
+simplicities<br>
+ which the smith had uttered to me, acting upon a natural<br>
+ disposition to mercy, which the most calumnious of my enemies
+have<br>
+ never questioned, induced me to give the prisoners a chance
+of<br>
+ escape. "Listen," I said, "Simon and Andrew. Your sentence
+has<br>
+ been pronounced, and will certainly be executed unless you
+can<br>
+ avail yourself of the condition I now offer. You shall have
+three<br>
+ minutes; if in that time either of you can make a good joke,
+he<br>
+ shall go free. If not, let a man attend to the bellows, La
+Trape!"</p>
+
+<p>This added a fresh satisfaction to my neighbors, who were
+well<br>
+ assured now that I had not promised them a novel
+entertainment<br>
+ without good grounds; for the grimaces of the two knaves
+thus<br>
+ bidden to jest if they would save their skins, were so
+diverting<br>
+ they would have made a nun laugh. They looked at me with
+their<br>
+ eyes as wide as plates, and for the whole of the time of
+grace<br>
+ never a word could they utter save howls for mercy. "Simon,"
+I<br>
+ said gravely, when the time was up, "have you a joke? No.
+Andrew,<br>
+ my friend, have you a joke? No. Then--"</p>
+
+<p>I was going on to order the sentence to be carried out, when
+the<br>
+ innkeeper flung himself again upon his knees, and cried out
+loudly--<br>
+ as much to my astonishment as to the regret of the bystanders,
+who<br>
+ were bent on seeing so strange a shoeing feat--"One word, my
+lord;<br>
+ I can give you no joke, but I can do a service, an eminent
+service<br>
+ to the king. I can disclose a conspiracy!"</p>
+
+<p>I was somewhat taken aback by this sudden and public
+announcement.<br>
+ But I had been too long in the king's employment not to have<br>
+ remarked how strangely things are brought to light. On hearing
+the<br>
+ man's words therefore--which were followed by a stricken
+silence--I<br>
+ looked sharply at the faces of such of those present as it
+was<br>
+ possible to suspect, but failed to observe any sign of confusion
+or<br>
+ dismay, or anything more particular than so abrupt a statement
+was<br>
+ calculated to produce. Doubting much whether the man was not<br>
+ playing with me, I addressed him sternly, warning him to
+beware,<br>
+ lest in his anxiety to save his heels by falsely accusing
+others,<br>
+ he should lose his head. For that if his conspiracy should
+prove<br>
+ to be an invention of his own, I should certainly consider it
+my<br>
+ duty to hang him forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>He heard me out, but nevertheless persisted in his story,
+adding<br>
+ desperately, "It is a plot, my lord, to assassinate you and
+the<br>
+ king on the same day."</p>
+
+<p>This statement struck me a blow; for I had good reason to know
+that<br>
+ at that time the king had alienated many by his infatuation
+for<br>
+ Madame de Verneuil; while I had always to reckon firstly with
+all<br>
+ who hated him, and secondly with all whom my pursuit of his<br>
+ interests injured, either in reality or appearance. I
+therefore<br>
+ immediately directed that the prisoners should be led in
+close<br>
+ custody to the chamber adjoining my private closet, and taking
+the<br>
+ precaution to call my guards about me, since I knew not what<br>
+ attempt despair might not breed, I withdrew myself, making
+such<br>
+ apologies to the company as the nature of the case
+permitted.</p>
+
+<p>I ordered Simon the smith to be first brought to me, and in
+the<br>
+ presence of Maignan only, I severely examined him as to his<br>
+ knowledge of any conspiracy. He denied, however, that he had
+ever<br>
+ heard of the matters referred to by his brother, and persisted
+so<br>
+ firmly in the denial that I was inclined to believe him. In
+the<br>
+ end he was taken out and Andrew was brought in. The
+innkeeper's<br>
+ demeanor was such as I have often observed in intriguers
+brought<br>
+ suddenly to book. He averred the existence of the conspiracy,
+and<br>
+ that its objects were those which he had stated. He also
+offered<br>
+ to give up his associates, but conditioned that he should do
+this<br>
+ in his own way; undertaking to conduct me and one other
+person--but<br>
+ no more, lest the alarm should be given--to a place in Paris on
+the<br>
+ following night, where we could hear the plotters state their
+plans<br>
+ and designs. In this way only, he urged, could proof positive
+be<br>
+ obtained.</p>
+
+<p>I was much startled by this proposal, and inclined to think it
+a<br>
+ trap; but further consideration dispelled my fears. The
+innkeeper<br>
+ had held no parley with anyone save his guards and myself since
+his<br>
+ arrest, and could neither have warned his accomplices, nor<br>
+ acquainted them with any design the execution of which
+should<br>
+ depend on his confession to me. I therefore accepted his
+terms--<br>
+ with a private reservation that I should have help at
+hand--and<br>
+ before daybreak next morning left Rosny, which I had only seen
+by<br>
+ torchlight, with my prisoner and a select body of Swiss. We<br>
+ entered Paris in the afternoon in three parties, with as
+little<br>
+ parade as possible, and went straight to the Arsenal, whence,
+as<br>
+ soon as evening fell, I hurried with only two armed attendants
+to<br>
+ the Louvre.</p>
+
+<p>A return so sudden and unexpected was as great a surprise to
+the<br>
+ court as to the king, and I was not slow to mark with an
+inward<br>
+ smile the discomposure which appeared very clearly, on the faces
+of<br>
+ several, as the crowd in the chamber fell back for me to
+approach<br>
+ my master. I was careful, however, to remember that this
+might<br>
+ arise from other causes than guilt. The king received me with
+his<br>
+ wonted affection; and divining at once that I must have
+something<br>
+ important to communicate, withdrew with me to the farther end
+of<br>
+ the chamber, where we were out of earshot of the court. I
+there<br>
+ related the story to his majesty, keeping back nothing.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head, saying merely: "The fish to escape the
+frying<br>
+ pan, grand master, will jump into the fire. And human nature,
+save<br>
+ in the case of you and me, who can trust one another, is
+very<br>
+ fishy."</p>
+
+<p>I was touched by this gracious compliment, but not convinced.
+"You<br>
+ have not seen the man, sire," I said, "and I have had that<br>
+ advantage."</p>
+
+<p>"And believe him?"</p>
+
+<p>"In part," I answered with caution. "So far at least as to
+be<br>
+ assured that he thinks to save his skin, which he will only do
+if<br>
+ he be telling the truth. May I beg you, sire," I added
+hastily,<br>
+ seeing the direction of his glance, "not to look so fixedly at
+the<br>
+ Duke of Epernon? He grows uneasy."</p>
+
+<p>"Conscience makes--you know the rest."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, sire, with submission," I replied, "I will answer for
+him; if<br>
+ he be not driven by fear to do something reckless."</p>
+
+<p>"Good! I take your warranty, Duke of Sully," the king said,
+with<br>
+ the easy grace which came so natural to him. "But now in
+this<br>
+ matter what would you have me do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Double your guards, sire, for to-night--that is all. I
+will<br>
+ answer for the Bastile and the Arsenal; and holding these we
+hold<br>
+ Paris."</p>
+
+<p>But thereupon I found that the king had come to a decision,
+which I<br>
+ felt it to be my duty to combat with all my influence. He
+had<br>
+ conceived the idea of being the one to accompany me to the<br>
+ rendezvous. "I am tired of the dice," he complained, "and sick
+of<br>
+ tennis, at which I know everybody's strength. Madame de
+Verneuil<br>
+ is at Fontainebleau, the queen is unwell. Ah, Sully, I would
+the<br>
+ old days were back when we had Nerac for our Paris, and knew
+the<br>
+ saddle better than the armchair!"</p>
+
+<p>"A king must think of his people," I reminded him.</p>
+
+<p>"The fowl in the pot? To be sure. So I will--to-morrow,"
+he<br>
+ replied. And in the end he would be obeyed. I took my leave
+of<br>
+ him as if for the night, and retired, leaving him at play with
+the<br>
+ Duke of Epernon. But an hour later, toward eight o'clock,
+his<br>
+ majesty, who had made an excuse to withdraw to his closet, met
+me<br>
+ outside the eastern gate of the Louvre.</p>
+
+<p>He was masked, and attended only by Coquet, his master of
+the<br>
+ household. I too wore a mask and was esquired by Maignan,
+under<br>
+ whose orders were four Swiss--whom I had chosen because they
+were<br>
+ unable to speak French--guarding the prisoner Andrew. I bade<br>
+ Maignan follow the innkeeper's directions, and we proceeded in
+two<br>
+ parties through the streets on the left bank of the river, past
+the<br>
+ Chatelet and Bastile, until we reached an obscure street near
+the<br>
+ water, so narrow that the decrepit wooden houses shut out
+well-nigh<br>
+ all view of the sky. Here the prisoner halted and called upon
+me<br>
+ to fulfill the terms of my agreement. I bade Maignan therefore
+to<br>
+ keep with the Swiss at a distance of fifty paces, but to come
+up<br>
+ should I whistle or otherwise give the alarm; and myself with
+the<br>
+ king and Andrew proceeded onward in the deep shadow of the
+houses.<br>
+ I kept my hand on my pistol, which I had previously shown to
+the<br>
+ prisoner, intimating that on the first sign of treachery I
+should<br>
+ blow out his brains. However, despite precaution, I felt<br>
+ uncomfortable to the last degree. I blamed myself severely
+for<br>
+ allowing the king to expose himself and the country to this<br>
+ unnecessary danger; while the meanness of the locality, the
+fetid<br>
+ air, the darkness of the night, which was wet and tempestuous,
+and<br>
+ the uncertainty of the event lowered my spirits, and made
+every<br>
+ splash in the kennel and stumble on the reeking, slippery<br>
+ pavements--matters over which the king grew merry--seem no
+light<br>
+ troubles to me.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at a house, which, if we might judge in the
+darkness,<br>
+ seemed to be of rather greater pretensions than its fellows,
+our<br>
+ guide stopped, and whispered to us to mount some steps to a
+raised<br>
+ wooden gallery, which intervened between the lane and the
+doorway.<br>
+ On this, besides the door, a couple of unglazed windows looked
+out.<br>
+ The shutter of one was ajar, and showed us a large, bare
+room,<br>
+ lighted by a couple of rushlights. Directing us to place
+ourselves<br>
+ close to this shutter, the innkeeper knocked at the door in
+a<br>
+ peculiar fashion, and almost immediately entered, going at
+once<br>
+ into the lighted room. Peering cautiously through the window
+we<br>
+ were surprised to find that the only person within, save the<br>
+ newcomer, was a young woman, who, crouching over a smoldering
+fire,<br>
+ was crooning a lullaby while she attended to a large black
+pot.</p>
+
+<p>"Good evening, mistress!" said the innkeeper, advancing to the
+fire<br>
+ with a fair show of nonchalance.</p>
+
+<p>"Good evening, Master Andrew," the girl replied, looking up
+and<br>
+ nodding, but showing no sign of surprise at his appearance.<br>
+ "Martin is away, but he may return at any moment."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he still of the same mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite."</p>
+
+<p>"And what of Sully? Is he to die then?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"They have decided he must," the girl answered gloomily. It
+may be<br>
+ believed that I listened with all my ears, while the king by
+a<br>
+ nudge in my side seemed to rally me on the destiny so coolly<br>
+ arranged for me. "Martin says it is no good killing the
+other<br>
+ unless he goes too--they have been so long together. But it
+vexes<br>
+ me sadly, Master Andrew," she added with a sudden break in
+her<br>
+ voice. "Sadly it vexes me. I could not sleep last night for<br>
+ thinking of it, and the risk Martin runs. And I shall sleep
+less<br>
+ when it is done."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh-pooh!" said that rascally innkeeper. "Think less about
+it.<br>
+ Things will grow worse and worse if they are let live. The
+King<br>
+ has done harm enough already. And he grows old besides."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true!" said the girl. "And no doubt the sooner he is
+put<br>
+ out of the way the better. He is changed sadly. I do not say
+a<br>
+ word for him. Let him die. It is killing Sully that troubles
+me--<br>
+ that and the risk Martin runs."</p>
+
+<p>At this I took the liberty of gently touching the king. He<br>
+ answered by an amused grimace; then by a motion of his hand
+he<br>
+ enjoined silence. We stooped still farther forward so as better
+to<br>
+ command the room. The girl was rocking herself to and fro in<br>
+ evident distress of mind. "If we killed the King," she
+continued,<br>
+ "Martin declares we should be no better off, as long as
+Sully<br>
+ lives. Both or neither, he says. But I do not know. I cannot<br>
+ bear to think of it. It was a sad day when we brought
+Epernon<br>
+ here, Master Andrew; and one I fear we shall rue as long as
+we<br>
+ live."</p>
+
+<p>It was now the king's turn to be moved. He grasped my wrist
+so<br>
+ forcibly that I restrained a cry with difficulty. "Epernon!"
+he<br>
+ whispered harshly in my ear. "They are Epernon's tools! Where
+is<br>
+ your guaranty now, Rosny?"</p>
+
+<p>I confess that I trembled. I knew well that the king,
+particular<br>
+ in small courtesies, never forgot to call his servants by
+their<br>
+ correct titles, save in two cases; when he indicated by the
+seeming<br>
+ error, as once in Marshal Biron's affair, his intention to
+promote<br>
+ or degrade them; or when he was moved to the depths of his
+nature<br>
+ and fell into an old habit. I did not dare to reply, but
+listened<br>
+ greedily for more information.</p>
+
+<p>"When is it to be done?" asked the innkeeper, sinking his
+voice and<br>
+ glancing round, as if he would call especial attention to
+this.</p>
+
+<p>"That depends upon Master la Riviere," the girl answered.
+"To-<br>
+ morrow night, I understand, if Master la Riviere can have the
+stuff<br>
+ ready."</p>
+
+<p>I met the king's eyes. They shone fiercely in the faint
+light,<br>
+ which issuing from the window fell on him. Of all things he
+hated<br>
+ treachery most, and La Riviere was his first body physician, and
+at<br>
+ this very time, as I well knew, was treating him for a
+slight<br>
+ derangement which the king had brought upon himself by his<br>
+ imprudence. This doctor had formerly been in the employment of
+the<br>
+ Bouillon family, who had surrendered his services to the
+king.<br>
+ Neither I nor his majesty had trusted the Duke of Bouillon for
+the<br>
+ last year past, so that we were not surprised by this hint that
+he<br>
+ was privy to the design.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Despite our anxiety not to miss a word, an approaching step
+warned<br>
+ us at this moment to draw back. More than once before we had
+done<br>
+ so to escape the notice of a wayfarer passing up and down.
+But<br>
+ this time I had a difficulty in inducing the king to adopt
+the<br>
+ precaution. Yet it was well that I succeeded, for the person
+who<br>
+ came stumbling along toward us did not pass, but, mounting
+the<br>
+ steps, walked by within touch of us and entered the house.</p>
+
+<p>"The plot thickens," muttered the king. "Who is this?"</p>
+
+<p>At the moment he asked I was racking my brain to remember. I
+have<br>
+ a good eye and a fair recollection for faces, and this was one
+I<br>
+ had seen several times. The features were so familiar that I<br>
+ suspected the man of being a courtier in disguise, and I ran
+over<br>
+ the names of several persons whom I knew to be Bouillon's
+secret<br>
+ agents. But he was none of these, and obeying the king's
+gesture,<br>
+ I bent myself again to the task of listening.</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked up on the man's entrance, but did not rise.
+"You<br>
+ are late, Martin," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"A little," the newcomer answered. "How do you do, Master
+Andrew?<br>
+ What cheer? What, still vexing, mistress?" he added
+contemptuously<br>
+ to the girl. "You have too soft a heart for this business!"</p>
+
+<p>She sighed, but made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>"You have made up your mind to it, I hear?" said the
+innkeeper.</p>
+
+<p>"That is it. Needs must when the devil drives!" replied the
+man<br>
+ jauntily. He had a downcast, reckless, luckless air, yet in
+his<br>
+ face I thought I still saw traces of a better spirit.</p>
+
+<p>"The devil in this case was Epernon," quoth Andrew.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, curse him! I would I had cut his dainty throat before
+he<br>
+ crossed my threshold," cried the desperado. "But there, it is
+too<br>
+ late to say that now. What has to be done, has to be done."</p>
+
+<p>"How are you going about it? Poison, the mistress says."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but if I had my way," the man growled fiercely, "I would
+out<br>
+ one of these nights and cut the dogs' throats in the
+kennel!"</p>
+
+<p>"You could never escape, Martin!" the girl cried, rising
+in<br>
+ excitement. "It would be hopeless. It would merely be
+throwing<br>
+ away your own life."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it is not to be done that way, so there is an end of
+it,"<br>
+ quoth the man wearily. "Give me my supper. The devil take
+the<br>
+ king and Sully too! He will soon have them."</p>
+
+<p>On this Master Andrew rose, and I took his movement toward the
+door<br>
+ for a signal for us to retire. He came out at once, shutting
+the<br>
+ door behind him as he bade the pair within a loud good night.
+He<br>
+ found us standing in the street waiting for him and forthwith
+fell<br>
+ on his knees in the mud and looked up at me, the
+perspiration<br>
+ standing thick on his white face. "My lord," he cried hoarsely,
+"I<br>
+ have earned my pardon!"</p>
+
+<p>"If you go on," I said encouragingly, "as you have begun, have
+no<br>
+ fear." Without more ado I whistled up the Swiss and bade
+Maignan<br>
+ go with them and arrest the man and woman with as little<br>
+ disturbance as possible. While this was being done we waited<br>
+ without, keeping a sharp eye upon the informer, whose terror,
+I<br>
+ noted with suspicion, seemed to be in no degree diminished. He
+did<br>
+ not, however, try to escape, and Maignan presently came to tell
+us<br>
+ that he had executed the arrest without difficulty or
+resistance.</p>
+
+<p>The importance of arriving at the truth before Epernon and
+the<br>
+ greater conspirators should take the alarm was so vividly
+present<br>
+ to the minds of the king and myself, that we did not hesitate
+to<br>
+ examine the prisoners in their house, rather than hazard the
+delay<br>
+ and observation which their removal to a more fit place must<br>
+ occasion. Accordingly, taking the precaution to post Coquet in
+the<br>
+ street outside, and to plant a burly Swiss in the doorway, the
+king<br>
+ and I entered. I removed my mask as I did so, being aware of
+the<br>
+ necessity of gaining the prisoners' confidence, but I begged
+the<br>
+ king to retain his. As I had expected, the man immediately<br>
+ recognized me and fell on his knees, a nearer view confirming
+the<br>
+ notion I had previously entertained that his features were
+familiar<br>
+ to me, though I could not remember his name. I thought this a
+good<br>
+ starting-point for my examination, and bidding Maignan withdraw,
+I<br>
+ assumed an air of mildness and asked the fellow his name.</p>
+
+<p>"Martin, only, please your lordship," he answered; adding,
+"once I<br>
+ sold you two dogs, sir, for the chase, and to your lady a
+lapdog<br>
+ called Ninette no larger than her hand."</p>
+
+<p>I remembered the knave, then, as a fashionable dog dealer, who
+had<br>
+ been much about the court in the reign of Henry the Third
+and<br>
+ later; and I saw at once how convenient a tool he might be
+made,<br>
+ since he could be seen in converse with people of all ranks
+without<br>
+ arousing suspicion. The man's face as he spoke expressed so
+much<br>
+ fear and surprise that I determined to try what I had often
+found<br>
+ successful in the case of greater criminals, to squeeze him for
+a<br>
+ confession while still excited by his arrest, and before he
+should<br>
+ have had time to consider what his chances of support at the
+hands<br>
+ of his confederates might be. I charged him therefore solemnly
+to<br>
+ tell the whole truth as he hoped for the king's mercy. He
+heard<br>
+ me, gazing at me piteously; but his only answer, to my
+surprise,<br>
+ was that he had nothing to confess.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come," I replied sternly, "this will avail you nothing;
+if<br>
+ you do not speak quickly, rogue, and to the point, we shall
+find<br>
+ means to compel you. Who counseled you to attempt his
+majesty's<br>
+ life?"</p>
+
+<p>On this he stared so stupidly at me, and exclaimed with so
+real an<br>
+ appearance of horror: "How? I attempt the king's life? God<br>
+ forbid!" that I doubted that we had before us a more
+dangerous<br>
+ rascal than I had thought, and I hastened to bring him to
+the<br>
+ point.</p>
+
+<p>"What, then," I cried, frowning, "of the stuff Master la
+Riviere is<br>
+ to give you to take the king's life to-morrow night? Oh, we
+know<br>
+ something, I assure you; bethink you quickly, and find your
+tongue<br>
+ if you would have an easy death."</p>
+
+<p>I expected to see his self-control break down at this proof of
+our<br>
+ knowledge of his design, but he only stared at me with the
+same<br>
+ look of bewilderment. I was about to bid them bring in the<br>
+ informer that I might see the two front to front, when the
+female<br>
+ prisoner, who had hitherto stood beside her companion in
+such<br>
+ distress and terror as might be expected in a woman of that
+class,<br>
+ suddenly stopped her tears and lamentations. It occurred to
+me<br>
+ that she might make a better witness. I turned to her, but when
+I<br>
+ would have questioned her she broke into a wild scream of<br>
+ hysterical laughter.</p>
+
+<p>From that I remember that I learned nothing, though it
+greatly<br>
+ annoyed me. But there was one present who did--the king. He
+laid<br>
+ his hand on my shoulder, gripping it with a force that I read as
+a<br>
+ command to be silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Where," he said to the man, "do you keep the King and Sully
+and<br>
+ Epernon, my friend?"</p>
+
+<p>"The King and Sully--with the lordship's leave," said the
+man<br>
+ quickly, with a frightened glance at me--"are in the kennels at
+the<br>
+ back of the house, but it is not safe to go near them. The King
+is<br>
+ raving mad, and--and the other dog is sickening. Epernon we had
+to<br>
+ kill a month back. He brought the disease here, and I have
+had<br>
+ such losses through him as have nearly ruined me, please
+your<br>
+ lordship."</p>
+
+<p>"Get up--get up, man!" cried the king, and tearing off his
+mask he<br>
+ stamped up and down the room, so torn by paroxysms of laughter
+that<br>
+ he choked himself when again and again he attempted to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>I too now saw the mistake, but I could not at first see it in
+the<br>
+ same light. Commanding myself as well as I could, I ordered one
+of<br>
+ the Swiss to fetch in the innkeeper, but to admit no one
+else.</p>
+
+<p>The knave fell on his knees as soon as he saw me, his
+cheeks<br>
+ shaking like a jelly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy, mercy!" was all he could say.</p>
+
+<p>"You have dared to play with me?" I whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"You bade me joke," he sobbed, "you bade me."</p>
+
+<p>I was about to say that it would be his last joke in this
+world--<br>
+ for my anger was fully aroused--when the king intervened.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay," he said, laying his hand softly on my shoulder. "It
+has<br>
+ been the most glorious jest. I would not have missed it for
+a<br>
+ kingdom. I command you, Sully, to forgive him."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon his majesty strictly charged the three that they
+should<br>
+ not on peril of their lives mention the circumstances to
+anyone.<br>
+ Nor to the best of my belief did they do so, being so
+shrewdly<br>
+ scared when they recognized the king that I verily think they
+never<br>
+ afterwards so much as spoke of the affair to one another. My<br>
+ master further gave me on his own part his most gracious
+promise<br>
+ that he would not disclose the matter even to Madame de Verneuil
+or<br>
+ the queen, and upon these representations he induced me freely
+to<br>
+ forgive the innkeeper. So ended this conspiracy, on the
+diverting<br>
+ details of which I may seem to have dwelt longer than I should;
+but<br>
+ alas! in twenty-one years of power I investigated many, and
+this<br>
+ one only can I regard with satisfaction. The rest were so
+many<br>
+ warnings and predictions of the fate which, despite all my care
+and<br>
+ fidelity, was in store for the great and good master I
+served.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3>Robert Louis Stevenson</h3>
+
+<h2>The Pavilion on the Links</h2>
+
+<h3><br>
+ I</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ I was a great solitary when I was young. I made it my pride
+to<br>
+ keep aloof and suffice for my own entertainment; and I may say
+that<br>
+ I had neither friends nor acquaintances until I met that friend
+who<br>
+ became my wife and the mother of my children. With one man
+only<br>
+ was I on private terms; this was R. Northmour, Esquire, of
+Graden<br>
+ Easter, in Scotland. We had met at college; and though there
+was<br>
+ not much liking between us, nor even much intimacy, we were
+so<br>
+ nearly of a humor that we could associate with ease to both.<br>
+ Misanthropes, we believed ourselves to be; but I have thought
+since<br>
+ that we were only sulky fellows. It was scarcely a
+companionship,<br>
+ but a coexistence in unsociability. Northmour's exceptional<br>
+ violence of temper made it no easy affair for him to keep the
+peace<br>
+ with anyone but me; and as he respected my silent ways, and let
+me<br>
+ come and go as I pleased, I could tolerate his presence
+without<br>
+ concern. I think we called each other friends.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ When Northmour took his degree and I decided to leave the<br>
+ university without one, he invited me on a long visit to
+Graden<br>
+ Easter; and it was thus that I first became acquainted with
+the<br>
+ scene of my adventures. The mansion house of Graden stood in
+a<br>
+ bleak stretch of country some three miles from the shore of
+the<br>
+ German Ocean. It was as large as a barrack; and as it had
+been<br>
+ built of a soft stone, liable to consume in the eager air of
+the<br>
+ seaside, it was damp and draughty within and half ruinous
+without.<br>
+ It was impossible for two young men to lodge with comfort in
+such a<br>
+ dwelling. But there stood in the northern part of the estate, in
+a<br>
+ wilderness of links and blowing sand hills, and between a<br>
+ plantation and the sea, a small pavilion or belvedere, of
+modern<br>
+ design, which was exactly suited to our wants; and in this<br>
+ hermitage, speaking little, reading much, and rarely
+associating<br>
+ except at meals, Northmour and I spent four tempestuous
+winter<br>
+ months. I might have stayed longer; but one March night
+there<br>
+ sprung up between us a dispute, which rendered my departure<br>
+ necessary. Northmour spoke hotly, I remember, and I suppose I
+must<br>
+ have made some tart rejoinder. He leaped from his chair and<br>
+ grappled me; I had to fight, without exaggeration, for my life;
+and<br>
+ it was only with a great effort that I mastered him, for he
+was<br>
+ near as strong in body as myself, and seemed filled with the
+devil.<br>
+ The next morning, we met on our usual terms; but I judged it
+more<br>
+ delicate to withdraw; nor did he attempt to dissuade me.</p>
+
+<p>It was nine years before I revisited the neighborhood. I
+traveled<br>
+ at that time with a tilt-cart, a tent, and a cooking stove,<br>
+ tramping all day beside the wagon, and at night, whenever it
+was<br>
+ possible, gypsying in a cove of the hills, or by the side of
+a<br>
+ wood. I believe I visited in this manner most of the wild
+and<br>
+ desolate regions both in England and Scotland; and, as I had<br>
+ neither friends nor relations, I was troubled with no<br>
+ correspondence, and had nothing in the nature of
+headquarters,<br>
+ unless it was the office of my solicitors, from whom I drew
+my<br>
+ income twice a year. It was a life in which I delighted; and
+I<br>
+ fully thought to have grown old upon the march, and at last died
+in<br>
+ a ditch.</p>
+
+<p>It was my whole business to find desolate corners, where I
+could<br>
+ camp without the fear of interruption; and hence, being in
+another<br>
+ part of the same shire, I bethought me suddenly of the Pavilion
+on<br>
+ the Links. No thoroughfare passed within three miles of it.
+The<br>
+ nearest town, and that was but a fisher village, was at a
+distance<br>
+ of six or seven. For ten miles of length, and from a depth
+varying<br>
+ from three miles to half a mile, this belt of barren country
+lay<br>
+ along the sea. The beach, which was the natural approach, was
+full<br>
+ of quicksands. Indeed I may say there is hardly a better place
+of<br>
+ concealment in the United Kingdom. I determined to pass a week
+in<br>
+ the Sea-Wood of Graden Easter, and making a long stage, reached
+it<br>
+ about sundown on a wild September day.</p>
+
+<p>The country, I have said, was mixed sand hill and links,
+LINKS<br>
+ being a Scottish name for sand which has ceased drifting and
+become<br>
+ more or less solidly covered with turf. The pavilion stood on
+an<br>
+ even space: a little behind it, the wood began in a hedge of
+elders<br>
+ huddled together by the wind; in front, a few tumbled sand
+hills<br>
+ stood between it and the sea. An outcropping of rock had formed
+a<br>
+ bastion for the sand, so that there was here a promontory in
+the<br>
+ coast line between two shallow bays; and just beyond the tides,
+the<br>
+ rock again cropped out and formed an islet of small dimensions
+but<br>
+ strikingly designed. The quicksands were of great extent at
+low<br>
+ water, and had an infamous reputation in the country. Close
+in<br>
+ shore, between the islet and the promontory, it was said they
+would<br>
+ swallow a man in four minutes and a half; but there may have
+been<br>
+ little ground for this precision. The district was alive
+with<br>
+ rabbits, and haunted by gulls which made a continual piping
+about<br>
+ the pavilion. On summer days the outlook was bright and even<br>
+ gladsome; but at sundown in September, with a high wind, and
+a<br>
+ heavy surf rolling in close along the links, the place told
+of<br>
+ nothing but dead mariners and sea disaster. A ship beating
+to<br>
+ windward on the horizon, and a huge truncheon of wreck half
+buried<br>
+ in the sands at my feet, completed the innuendo of the
+scene.</p>
+
+<p>The pavilion--it had been built by the last proprietor,
+Northmour's<br>
+ uncle, a silly and prodigal virtuoso--presented little signs
+of<br>
+ age. It was two stories in height, Italian in design,
+surrounded<br>
+ by a patch of garden in which nothing had prospered but a
+few<br>
+ coarse flowers; and looked, with its shuttered windows, not like
+a<br>
+ house that had been deserted, but like one that had never
+been<br>
+ tenanted by man. Northmour was plainly from home; whether,
+as<br>
+ usual, sulking in the cabin of his yacht, or in one of his
+fitful<br>
+ and extravagant appearances in the world of society, I had,
+of<br>
+ course, no means of guessing. The place had an air of
+solitude<br>
+ that daunted even a solitary like myself; the wind cried in
+the<br>
+ chimneys with a strange and wailing note; and it was with a
+sense<br>
+ of escape, as if I were going indoors, that I turned away
+and,<br>
+ driving my cart before me, entered the skirts of the wood.</p>
+
+<p>The Sea-Wood of Graden had been planted to shelter the
+cultivated<br>
+ fields behind, and check the encroachments of the blowing sand.
+As<br>
+ you advanced into it from coastward, elders were succeeded by
+other<br>
+ hardy shrubs; but the timber was all stunted and bushy; it led
+a<br>
+ life of conflict; the trees were accustomed to swing there
+all<br>
+ night long in fierce winter tempests; and even in early spring,
+the<br>
+ leaves were already flying, and autumn was beginning, in
+this<br>
+ exposed plantation. Inland the ground rose into a little
+hill,<br>
+ which, along with the islet, served as a sailing mark for
+seamen.<br>
+ When the hill was open of the islet to the north, vessels must
+bear<br>
+ well to the eastward to clear Graden Ness and the Graden
+Bullers.<br>
+ In the lower ground, a streamlet ran among the trees, and,
+being<br>
+ dammed with dead leaves and clay of its own carrying, spread
+out<br>
+ every here and there, and lay in stagnant pools. One or two
+ruined<br>
+ cottages were dotted about the wood; and, according to
+Northmour,<br>
+ these were ecclesiastical foundations, and in their time had<br>
+ sheltered pious hermits.</p>
+
+<p>I found a den, or small hollow, where there was a spring of
+pure<br>
+ water; and there, clearing away the brambles, I pitched the
+tent,<br>
+ and made a fire to cook my supper. My horse I picketed farther
+in<br>
+ the wood where there was a patch of sward. The banks of the
+den<br>
+ not only concealed the light of my fire, but sheltered me from
+the<br>
+ wind, which was cold as well as high.</p>
+
+<p>The life I was leading made me both hardy and frugal. I
+never<br>
+ drank but water, and rarely eat anything more costly than
+oatmeal;<br>
+ and I required so little sleep, that, although I rose with the
+peep<br>
+ of day, I would often lie long awake in the dark or starry
+watches<br>
+ of the night. Thus in Graden Sea-Wood, although I fell
+thankfully<br>
+ asleep by eight in the evening I was awake again before eleven
+with<br>
+ a full possession of my faculties, and no sense of drowsiness
+or<br>
+ fatigue. I rose and sat by the fire, watching the trees and
+clouds<br>
+ tumultuously tossing and fleeing overhead, and hearkening to
+the<br>
+ wind and the rollers along the shore; till at length, growing
+weary<br>
+ of inaction, I quitted the den, and strolled toward the borders
+of<br>
+ the wood. A young moon, buried in mist, gave a faint
+illumination<br>
+ to my steps; and the light grew brighter as I walked forth into
+the<br>
+ links. At the same moment, the wind, smelling salt of the
+open<br>
+ ocean and carrying particles of sand, struck me with its
+full<br>
+ force, so that I had to bow my head.</p>
+
+<p>When I raised it again to look about me, I was aware of a
+light in<br>
+ the pavilion. It was not stationary; but passed from one window
+to<br>
+ another, as though some one were reviewing the different
+apartments<br>
+ with a lamp or candle. I watched it for some seconds in
+great<br>
+ surprise. When I had arrived in the afternoon the house had
+been<br>
+ plainly deserted; now it was as plainly occupied. It was my
+first<br>
+ idea that a gang of thieves might have broken in and be now<br>
+ ransacking Northmour's cupboards, which were many and not
+ill<br>
+ supplied. But what should bring thieves at Graden Easter?
+And,<br>
+ again, all the shutters had been thrown open, and it would
+have<br>
+ been more in the character of such gentry to close them. I<br>
+ dismissed the notion, and fell back upon another. Northmour<br>
+ himself must have arrived, and was now airing and inspecting
+the<br>
+ pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that there was no real affection between this man
+and<br>
+ me; but, had I loved him like a brother, I was then so much more
+in<br>
+ love with solitude that I should none the less have shunned
+his<br>
+ company. As it was, I turned and ran for it; and it was with<br>
+ genuine satisfaction that I found myself safely back beside
+the<br>
+ fire. I had escaped an acquaintance; I should have one more
+night<br>
+ in comfort. In the morning, I might either slip away before<br>
+ Northmour was abroad, or pay him as short a visit as I
+chose.</p>
+
+<p>But when morning came, I thought the situation so diverting
+that I<br>
+ forgot my shyness. Northmour was at my mercy; I arranged a
+good<br>
+ practical jest, though I knew well that my neighbor was not the
+man<br>
+ to jest with in security; and, chuckling beforehand over its<br>
+ success, took my place among the elders at the edge of the
+wood,<br>
+ whence I could command the door of the pavilion. The shutters
+were<br>
+ all once more closed, which I remember thinking odd; and the
+house,<br>
+ with its white walls and green venetians, looked spruce and<br>
+ habitable in the morning light. Hour after hour passed, and
+still<br>
+ no sign of Northmour. I knew him for a sluggard in the
+morning;<br>
+ but, as it drew on toward noon, I lost my patience. To say
+the<br>
+ truth, I had promised myself to break my fast in the pavilion,
+and<br>
+ hunger began to prick me sharply. It was a pity to let the<br>
+ opportunity go by without some cause for mirth; but the
+grosser<br>
+ appetite prevailed, and I relinquished my jest with regret,
+and<br>
+ sallied from the wood.</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of the house affected me, as I drew near;
+with<br>
+ disquietude. It seemed unchanged since last evening; and I
+had<br>
+ expected it, I scarce knew why, to wear some external signs
+of<br>
+ habitation. But no: the windows were all closely shuttered,
+the<br>
+ chimneys breathed no smoke, and the front door itself was
+closely<br>
+ padlocked. Northmour, therefore, had entered by the back; this
+was<br>
+ the natural, and indeed, the necessary conclusion; and you
+may<br>
+ judge of my surprise when, on turning the house, I found the
+back<br>
+ door similarly secured.</p>
+
+<p>My mind at once reverted to the original theory of thieves;
+and I<br>
+ blamed myself sharply for my last night's inaction. I examined
+all<br>
+ the windows on the lower story, but none of them had been
+tampered<br>
+ with; I tried the padlocks, but they were both secure. It
+thus<br>
+ became a problem how the thieves, if thieves they were, had
+managed<br>
+ to enter the house. They must have got, I reasoned, upon the
+roof<br>
+ of the outhouse where Northmour used to keep his
+photographic<br>
+ battery; and from thence, either by the window of the study or
+that<br>
+ of my old bedroom, completed their burglarious entry.</p>
+
+<p>I followed what I supposed was their example; and, getting on
+the<br>
+ roof, tried the shutters of each room. Both were secure; but I
+was<br>
+ not to be beaten; and, with a little force, one of them flew
+open,<br>
+ grazing, as it did so, the back of my hand. I remember, I put
+the<br>
+ wound to my mouth, and stood for perhaps half a minute licking
+it<br>
+ like a dog, and mechanically gazing behind me over the waste
+links<br>
+ and the sea; and, in that space of time, my eye made note of
+a<br>
+ large schooner yacht some miles to the north-east. Then I threw
+up<br>
+ the window and climbed in.</p>
+
+<p>I went over the house, and nothing can express my
+mystification.<br>
+ There was no sign of disorder, but, on the contrary, the rooms
+were<br>
+ unusually clean and pleasant. I found fires laid, ready for<br>
+ lighting; three bedrooms prepared with a luxury quite foreign
+to<br>
+ Northmour's habits, and with water in the ewers and the beds
+turned<br>
+ down; a table set for three in the dining-room; and an ample
+supply<br>
+ of cold meats, game, and vegetables on the pantry shelves.
+There<br>
+ were guests expected, that was plain; but why guests, when<br>
+ Northmour hated society? And, above all, why was the house
+thus<br>
+ stealthily prepared at dead of night? and why were the
+shutters<br>
+ closed and the doors padlocked?</p>
+
+<p>I effaced all traces of my visit, and came forth from the
+window<br>
+ feeling sobered and concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The schooner yacht was still in the same place; and it flashed
+for<br>
+ a moment through my mind that this might be the Red Earl
+bringing<br>
+ the owner of the pavilion and his guests. But the vessel's
+head<br>
+ was set the other way.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ II</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ I returned to the den to cook myself a meal, of which I stood
+in<br>
+ great need, as well as to care for my horse, whom I had
+somewhat<br>
+ neglected in the morning. From time to time I went down to
+the<br>
+ edge of the wood; but there was no change in the pavilion, and
+not<br>
+ a human creature was seen all day upon the links. The schooner
+in<br>
+ the offing was the one touch of life within my range of
+vision.<br>
+ She, apparently with no set object, stood off and on or lay
+to,<br>
+ hour after hour; but as the evening deepened, she drew
+steadily<br>
+ nearer. I became more convinced that she carried Northmour and
+his<br>
+ friends, and that they would probably come ashore after dark;
+not<br>
+ only because that was of a piece with the secrecy of the<br>
+ preparations, but because the tide would not have flowed<br>
+ sufficiently before eleven to cover Graden Floe and the other
+sea<br>
+ quags that fortified the shore against invaders.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ All day the wind had been going down, and the sea along with
+it;<br>
+ but there was a return towards sunset of the heavy weather of
+the<br>
+ day before. The night set in pitch dark. The wind came off
+the<br>
+ sea in squalls, like the firing of a battery of cannon; now
+and<br>
+ then there was a flaw of rain, and the surf rolled heavier with
+the<br>
+ rising tide. I was down at my observatory among the elders, when
+a<br>
+ light was run up to the masthead of the schooner, and showed
+she<br>
+ was closer in than when I had last seen her by the dying
+daylight.<br>
+ I concluded that this must be a signal to Northmour's associates
+on<br>
+ shore; and, stepping forth into the links, looked around me
+for<br>
+ something in response.</p>
+
+<p>A small footpath ran along the margin of the wood, and formed
+the<br>
+ most direct communication between the pavilion and the
+mansion-<br>
+ house; and, as I cast my eyes to that side, I saw a spark of
+light,<br>
+ not a quarter of a mile away, and rapidly approaching. From
+its<br>
+ uneven course it appeared to be the light of a lantern carried
+by a<br>
+ person who followed the windings of the path, and was often<br>
+ staggered and taken aback by the more violent squalls. I
+concealed<br>
+ myself once more among the elders, and waited eagerly for
+the<br>
+ newcomer's advance. It proved to be a woman; and, as she
+passed<br>
+ within half a rod of my ambush, I was able to recognise the<br>
+ features. The deaf and silent old dame, who had nursed
+Northmour<br>
+ in his childhood, was his associate in this underhand
+affair.</p>
+
+<p>I followed her at a little distance, taking advantage of
+the<br>
+ innumerable heights and hollows, concealed by the darkness,
+and<br>
+ favored not only by the nurse's deafness, but by the uproar of
+the<br>
+ wind and surf. She entered the pavilion, and, going at once to
+the<br>
+ upper story, opened and set a light in one of the windows
+that<br>
+ looked toward the sea. Immediately afterwards the light at
+the<br>
+ schooner's masthead was run down and extinguished. Its purpose
+had<br>
+ been attained, and those on board were sure that they were<br>
+ expected. The old woman resumed her preparations; although
+the<br>
+ other shutters remained closed, I could see a glimmer going to
+and<br>
+ fro about the house; and a gush of sparks from one chimney
+after<br>
+ another soon told me that the fires were being kindled.</p>
+
+<p>Northmour and his guests, I was now persuaded, would come
+ashore as<br>
+ soon as there was water on the floe. It was a wild night for
+boat<br>
+ service; and I felt some alarm mingle with my curiosity as I<br>
+ reflected on the danger of the landing. My old acquaintance,
+it<br>
+ was true, was the most eccentric of men; but the present<br>
+ eccentricity was both disquieting and lugubrious to consider.
+A<br>
+ variety of feelings thus led me toward the beach, where I lay
+flat<br>
+ on my face in a hollow within six feet of the track that led to
+the<br>
+ pavilion. Thence, I should have the satisfaction of
+recognizing<br>
+ the arrivals, and, if they should prove to be acquaintances,<br>
+ greeting them as soon as they landed.</p>
+
+<p>Some time before eleven, while the tide was still dangerously
+low,<br>
+ a boat's lantern appeared close in shore; and, my attention
+being<br>
+ thus awakened, I could perceive another still far to
+seaward,<br>
+ violently tossed, and sometimes hidden by the billows. The<br>
+ weather, which was getting dirtier as the night went on, and
+the<br>
+ perilous situation of the yacht upon a lee shore, had
+probably<br>
+ driven them to attempt a landing at the earliest possible
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>A little afterwards, four yachtsmen carrying a very heavy
+chest,<br>
+ and guided by a fifth with a lantern, passed close in front of
+me<br>
+ as I lay, and were admitted to the pavilion by the nurse.
+They<br>
+ returned to the beach, and passed me a third time with
+another<br>
+ chest, larger but apparently not so heavy as the first. A
+third<br>
+ time they made the transit; and on this occasion one of the<br>
+ yachtsmen carried a leather portmanteau, and the others a
+lady's<br>
+ trunk and carriage bag. My curiosity was sharply excited. If
+a<br>
+ woman were among the guests of Northmour, it would show a change
+in<br>
+ his habits, and an apostasy from his pet theories of life,
+well<br>
+ calculated to fill me with surprise. When he and I dwelt
+there<br>
+ together, the pavilion had been a temple of misogyny. And now,
+one<br>
+ of the detested sex was to be installed under its roof. I<br>
+ remembered one or two particulars, a few notes of daintiness
+and<br>
+ almost of coquetry which had struck me the day before as I
+surveyed<br>
+ the preparations in the house; their purpose was now clear, and
+I<br>
+ thought myself dull not to have perceived it from the first.</p>
+
+<p>While I was thus reflecting, a second lantern drew near me
+from the<br>
+ beach. It was carried by a yachtsman whom I had not yet seen,
+and<br>
+ who was conducting two other persons to the pavilion. These
+two<br>
+ persons were unquestionably the guests for whom the house was
+made<br>
+ ready; and, straining eye and ear, I set myself to watch them
+as<br>
+ they passed. One was an unusually tall man, in a traveling
+hat<br>
+ slouched over his eyes, and a highland cape closely buttoned
+and<br>
+ turned up so as to conceal his face. You could make out no more
+of<br>
+ him than that he was, as I have said, unusually tall, and
+walked<br>
+ feebly with a heavy stoop. By his side, and either clinging to
+him<br>
+ or giving him support--I could not make out which--was a
+young,<br>
+ tall, and slender figure of a woman. She was extremely pale;
+but<br>
+ in the light of the lantern her face was so marred by strong
+and<br>
+ changing shadows, that she might equally well have been as ugly
+as<br>
+ sin or as beautiful as I afterwards found her to be.</p>
+
+<p>When they were just abreast of me, the girl made some remark
+which<br>
+ was drowned by the noise of the wind.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" said her companion; and there was something in the
+tone<br>
+ with which the word was uttered that thrilled and rather shook
+my<br>
+ spirits. It seemed to breathe from a bosom laboring under
+the<br>
+ deadliest terror; I have never heard another syllable so<br>
+ expressive; and I still hear it again when I am feverish at
+night,<br>
+ and my mind runs upon old times. The man turned toward the girl
+as<br>
+ he spoke; I had a glimpse of much red beard and a nose which
+seemed<br>
+ to have been broken in youth; and his light eyes seemed shining
+in<br>
+ his face with some strong and unpleasant emotion.</p>
+
+<p>But these two passed on and were admitted in their turn to
+the<br>
+ pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>One by one, or in groups, the seamen returned to the beach.
+The<br>
+ wind brought me the sound of a rough voice crying, "Shove
+off!"<br>
+ Then, after a pause, another lantern drew near. It was
+Northmour<br>
+ alone.</p>
+
+<p>My wife and I, a man and a woman, have often agreed to wonder
+how a<br>
+ person could be, at the same time, so handsome and so repulsive
+as<br>
+ Northmour. He had the appearance of a finished gentleman; his
+face<br>
+ bore every mark of intelligence and courage; but you had only
+to<br>
+ look at him, even in his most amiable moment, to see that he
+had<br>
+ the temper of a slaver captain. I never knew a character that
+was<br>
+ both explosive and revengeful to the same degree; he combined
+the<br>
+ vivacity of the south with the sustained and deadly hatreds of
+the<br>
+ north; and both traits were plainly written on his face, which
+was<br>
+ a sort of danger signal. In person, he was tall, strong, and<br>
+ active; his hair and complexion very dark; his features
+handsomely<br>
+ designed, but spoiled by a menacing expression.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment he was somewhat paler than by nature; he wore
+a<br>
+ heavy frown; and his lips worked, and he looked sharply round
+him<br>
+ as he walked, like a man besieged with apprehensions. And yet
+I<br>
+ thought he had a look of triumph underlying all, as though he
+had<br>
+ already done much, and was near the end of an achievement.</p>
+
+<p>Partly from a scruple of delicacy--which I dare say came too
+late--<br>
+ partly from the pleasure of startling an acquaintance, I desired
+to<br>
+ make my presence known to him without delay.</p>
+
+<p>I got suddenly to my feet, and stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>I have never had so shocking a surprise in all my days. He
+leaped<br>
+ on me without a word; something shone in his hand; and he
+struck<br>
+ for my heart with a dagger. At the same moment I knocked him
+head<br>
+ over heels. Whether it was my quickness, or his own uncertainty,
+I<br>
+ know not; but the blade only grazed my shoulder, while the hilt
+and<br>
+ his fist struck me violently on the mouth.</p>
+
+<p>I fled, but not far. I had often and often observed the<br>
+ capabilities of the sand hills for protracted ambush or
+stealthy<br>
+ advances and retreats; and, not ten yards from the scene of
+the<br>
+ scuffle, plumped down again upon the grass. The lantern had
+fallen<br>
+ and gone out. But what was my astonishment to see Northmour
+slip<br>
+ at a bound into the pavilion, and hear him bar the door behind
+him<br>
+ with a clang of iron!</p>
+
+<p>He had not pursued me. He had run away. Northmour, whom I
+knew<br>
+ for the most implacable and daring of men, had run away! I
+could<br>
+ scarce believe my reason; and yet in this strange business,
+where<br>
+ all was incredible, there was nothing to make a work about in
+an<br>
+ incredibility more or less. For why was the pavilion
+secretly<br>
+ prepared? Why had Northmour landed with his guests at dead
+of<br>
+ night, in half a gale of wind, and with the floe scarce
+covered?<br>
+ Why had he sought to kill me? Had he not recognized my voice?
+I<br>
+ wondered. And, above all, how had he come to have a dagger
+ready<br>
+ in his hand? A dagger, or even a sharp knife, seemed out of<br>
+ keeping with the age in which we lived; and a gentleman
+landing<br>
+ from his yacht on the shore of his own estate, even although it
+was<br>
+ at night and with some mysterious circumstances, does not
+usually,<br>
+ as a matter of fact, walk thus prepared for deadly onslaught.
+The<br>
+ more I reflected, the further I felt at sea. I recapitulated
+the<br>
+ elements of mystery, counting them on my fingers: the
+pavilion<br>
+ secretly prepared for guests; the guests landed at the risk
+of<br>
+ their lives and to the imminent peril of the yacht; the guests,
+or<br>
+ at least one of them, in undisguised and seemingly causeless<br>
+ terror; Northmour with a naked weapon; Northmour stabbing his
+most<br>
+ intimate acquaintance at a word; last, and not least
+strange,<br>
+ Northmour fleeing from the man whom he had sought to murder,
+and<br>
+ barricading himself, like a hunted creature, behind the door of
+the<br>
+ pavilion. Here were at least six separate causes for extreme<br>
+ surprise; each part and parcel with the others, and forming
+all<br>
+ together one consistent story. I felt almost ashamed to believe
+my<br>
+ own senses.</p>
+
+<p>As I thus stood, transfixed with wonder, I began to grow
+painfully<br>
+ conscious of the injuries I had received in the scuffle;
+skulked<br>
+ round among the sand hills; and, by a devious path, regained
+the<br>
+ shelter of the wood. On the way, the old nurse passed again
+within<br>
+ several yards of me, still carrying her lantern, on the
+return<br>
+ journey to the mansion house of Graden. This made a seventh<br>
+ suspicious feature in the case. Northmour and his guests, it<br>
+ appeared, were to cook and do the cleaning for themselves,
+while<br>
+ the old woman continued to inhabit the big empty barrack among
+the<br>
+ policies. There must surely be great cause for secrecy, when
+so<br>
+ many inconveniences were confronted to preserve it.</p>
+
+<p>So thinking, I made my way to the den. For greater security,
+I<br>
+ trod out the embers of the fire, and lighted my lantern to
+examine<br>
+ the wound upon my shoulder. It was a trifling hurt, although
+it<br>
+ bled somewhat freely, and I dressed it as well as I could (for
+its<br>
+ position made it difficult to reach) with some rag and cold
+water<br>
+ from the spring. While I was thus busied, I mentally declared
+war<br>
+ against Northmour and his mystery. I am not an angry man by<br>
+ nature, and I believe there was more curiosity than resentment
+in<br>
+ my heart. But war I certainly declared; and, by way of<br>
+ preparation, I got out my revolver, and, having drawn the
+charges,<br>
+ cleaned and reloaded it with scrupulous care. Next I became<br>
+ preoccupied about my horse. It might break loose, or fall to<br>
+ neighing, and so betray my camp in the Sea-Wood. I determined
+to<br>
+ rid myself of its neighborhood; and long before dawn I was
+leading<br>
+ it over the links in the direction of the fisher village.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ III</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ For two days I skulked round the pavilion, profiting by the
+uneven<br>
+ surface of the links. I became an adept in the necessary
+tactics.<br>
+ These low hillocks and shallow dells, running one into
+another,<br>
+ became a kind of cloak of darkness for my inthralling, but
+perhaps<br>
+ dishonorable, pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, in spite of this advantage, I could learn but little
+of<br>
+ Northmour or his guests.</p>
+
+<p>Fresh provisions were brought under cover of darkness by the
+old<br>
+ woman from the mansion house. Northmour, and the young lady,<br>
+ sometimes together, but more often singly, would walk for an
+hour<br>
+ or two at a time on the beach beside the quicksand. I could
+not<br>
+ but conclude that this promenade was chosen with an eye to
+secrecy;<br>
+ for the spot was open only to seaward. But it suited me not
+less<br>
+ excellently; the highest and most accidented of the sand
+hills<br>
+ immediately adjoined; and from these, lying flat in a hollow,
+I<br>
+ could overlook Northmour or the young lady as they walked.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The tall man seemed to have disappeared. Not only did he
+never<br>
+ cross the threshold, but he never so much as showed face at
+a<br>
+ window; or, at least, not so far as I could see; for I dared
+not<br>
+ creep forward beyond a certain distance in the day, since the
+upper<br>
+ floors commanded the bottoms of the links; and at night, when
+I<br>
+ could venture further, the lower windows were barricaded as if
+to<br>
+ stand a siege. Sometimes I thought the tall man must be
+confined<br>
+ to bed, for I remembered the feebleness of his gait; and
+sometimes<br>
+ I thought he must have gone clear away, and that Northmour and
+the<br>
+ young lady remained alone together in the pavilion. The idea,
+even<br>
+ then, displeased me.</p>
+
+<p>Whether or not this pair were man and wife, I had seen
+abundant<br>
+ reason to doubt the friendliness of their relation. Although
+I<br>
+ could hear nothing of what they said, and rarely so much as
+glean a<br>
+ decided expression on the face of either, there was a
+distance,<br>
+ almost a stiffness, in their bearing which showed them to be
+either<br>
+ unfamiliar or at enmity. The girl walked faster when she was
+with<br>
+ Northmour than when she was alone; and I conceived that any<br>
+ inclination between a man and a woman would rather delay
+than<br>
+ accelerate the step. Moreover, she kept a good yard free of
+him,<br>
+ and trailed her umbrella, as if it were a barrier, on the
+side<br>
+ between them. Northmour kept sidling closer; and, as the
+girl<br>
+ retired from his advance, their course lay at a sort of
+diagonal<br>
+ across the beach, and would have landed them in the surf had
+it<br>
+ been long enough continued. But, when this was imminent, the
+girl<br>
+ would unostentatiously change sides and put Northmour between
+her<br>
+ and the sea. I watched these maneuvers, for my part, with
+high<br>
+ enjoyment and approval, and chuckled to myself at every
+move.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the third day, she walked alone for some
+time,<br>
+ and I perceived, to my great concern, that she was more than
+once<br>
+ in tears. You will see that my heart was already interested
+more<br>
+ than I supposed. She had a firm yet airy motion of the body,
+and<br>
+ carried her head with unimaginable grace; every step was a thing
+to<br>
+ look at, and she seemed in my eyes to breathe sweetness and<br>
+ distinction.</p>
+
+<p>The day was so agreeable, being calm and sunshiny, with a
+tranquil<br>
+ sea, and yet with a healthful piquancy and vigor in the air,
+that,<br>
+ contrary to custom, she was tempted forth a second time to
+walk.<br>
+ On this occasion she was accompanied by Northmour, and they
+had<br>
+ been but a short while on the beach, when I saw him take
+forcible<br>
+ possession of her hand. She struggled, and uttered a cry that
+was<br>
+ almost a scream. I sprung to my feet, unmindful of my
+strange<br>
+ position; but, ere I had taken a step, I saw Northmour
+bareheaded<br>
+ and bowing very low, as if to apologize; and dropped again at
+once<br>
+ into my ambush. A few words were interchanged; and then,
+with<br>
+ another bow, he left the beach to return to the pavilion. He<br>
+ passed not far from me, and I could see him, flushed and
+lowering,<br>
+ and cutting savagely with his cane among the grass. It was
+not<br>
+ without satisfaction that I recognized my own handiwork in a
+great<br>
+ cut under his right eye, and a considerable discoloration round
+the<br>
+ socket.</p>
+
+<p>For some time the girl remained where he had left her, looking
+out<br>
+ past the islet and over the bright sea. Then with a start, as
+one<br>
+ who throws off preoccupation and puts energy again upon its
+mettle,<br>
+ she broke into a rapid and decisive walk. She also was much<br>
+ incensed by what had passed. She had forgotten where she was.
+And<br>
+ I beheld her walk straight into the borders of the quicksand
+where<br>
+ it is most abrupt and dangerous. Two or three steps farther
+and<br>
+ her life would have been in serious jeopardy, when I slid down
+the<br>
+ face of the sand hill, which is there precipitous, and,
+running<br>
+ halfway forward, called to her to stop.</p>
+
+<p>She did so, and turned round. There was not a tremor of fear
+in<br>
+ her behavior, and she marched directly up to me like a queen.
+I<br>
+ was barefoot, and clad like a common sailor, save for an
+Egyptian<br>
+ scarf round my waist; and she probably took me at first for
+some<br>
+ one from the fisher village, straying after bait. As for her,
+when<br>
+ I thus saw her face to face, her eyes set steadily and
+imperiously<br>
+ upon mine, I was filled with admiration and astonishment,
+and<br>
+ thought her even more beautiful than I had looked to find her.
+Nor<br>
+ could I think enough of one who, acting with so much boldness,
+yet<br>
+ preserved a maidenly air that was both quaint and engaging; for
+my<br>
+ wife kept an old-fashioned precision of manner through all
+her<br>
+ admirable life--an excellent thing in woman, since it sets
+another<br>
+ value on her sweet familiarities.</p>
+
+<p>"What does this mean?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"You were walking," I told her, "directly into Graden
+Floe."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not belong to these parts," she said again. "You
+speak<br>
+ like an educated man."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe I have a right to that name," said I, "although in
+this<br>
+ disguise."</p>
+
+<p>But her woman's eye had already detected the sash.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" she said; "your sash betrays you."</p>
+
+<p>"You have said the word BETRAY," I resumed. "May I ask you not
+to<br>
+ betray me? I was obliged to disclose myself in your interest;
+but<br>
+ if Northmour learned my presence it might be worse than<br>
+ disagreeable for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know," she asked, "to whom you are speaking?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not to Mr. Northmour's wife?" I asked, by way of answer.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. All this while she was studying my face
+with<br>
+ an embarrassing intentness. Then she broke out--</p>
+
+<p>"You have an honest face. Be honest like your face, sir, and
+tell<br>
+ me what you want and what you are afraid of. Do you think I
+could<br>
+ hurt you? I believe you have far more power to injure me! And
+yet<br>
+ you do not look unkind. What do you mean--you, a
+gentleman--by<br>
+ skulking like a spy about this desolate place? Tell me," she
+said,<br>
+ "who is it you hate?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hate no one," I answered; "and I fear no one face to face.
+My<br>
+ name is Cassilis--Frank Cassilis. I lead the life of a
+vagabond<br>
+ for my own good pleasure. I am one of Northmour's oldest
+friends;<br>
+ and three nights ago, when I addressed him on these links,
+he<br>
+ stabbed me in the shoulder with a knife."</p>
+
+<p>"It was you!" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Why he did so," I continued, disregarding the interruption,
+"is<br>
+ more than I can guess, and more than I care to know. I have
+not<br>
+ many friends, nor am I very susceptible to friendship; but no
+man<br>
+ shall drive me from a place by terror. I had camped in the
+Graden<br>
+ Sea-Wood ere he came; I camp in it still. If you think I mean
+harm<br>
+ to you or yours, madame, the remedy is in your hand. Tell him
+that<br>
+ my camp is in the Hemlock Den, and tonight he can stab me in
+safety<br>
+ while I sleep."</p>
+
+<p>With this I doffed my cap to her, and scrambled up once more
+among<br>
+ the sand hills. I do not know why, but I felt a prodigious
+sense<br>
+ of injustice, and felt like a hero and a martyr; while as a
+matter<br>
+ of fact, I had not a word to say in my defense, nor so much as
+one<br>
+ plausible reason to offer for my conduct. I had stayed at
+Graden<br>
+ out of a curiosity natural enough, but undignified; and
+though<br>
+ there was another motive growing in along with the first, it
+was<br>
+ not one which, at that period, I could have properly explained
+to<br>
+ the lady of my heart.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly, that night, I thought of no one else; and, though
+her<br>
+ whole conduct and position seemed suspicious, I could not find
+it<br>
+ in my heart to entertain a doubt of her integrity. I could
+have<br>
+ staked my life that she was clear of blame, and, though all
+was<br>
+ dark at the present, that the explanation of the mystery would
+show<br>
+ her part in these events to be both right and needful. It
+was<br>
+ true, let me cudgel my imagination as I pleased, that I
+could<br>
+ invent no theory of her relations to Northmour; but I felt none
+the<br>
+ less sure of my conclusion because it was founded on instinct
+in<br>
+ place of reason, and, as I may say, went to sleep that night
+with<br>
+ the thought of her under my pillow.</p>
+
+<p>Next day she came out about the same hour alone, and, as soon
+as<br>
+ the sand hills concealed her from the pavilion, drew nearer to
+the<br>
+ edge, and called me by name in guarded tones. I was astonished
+to<br>
+ observe that she was deadly pale, and seemingly under the
+influence<br>
+ of strong emotion.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Cassilis!" she cried; "Mr. Cassilis!"</p>
+
+<p>I appeared at once, and leaped down upon the beach. A
+remarkable<br>
+ air of relief overspread her countenance as soon as she saw
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" she cried, with a hoarse sound, like one whose bosom had
+been<br>
+ lightened of a weight. And then, "Thank God you are still
+safe!"<br>
+ she added; "I knew, if you were, you would be here." (Was not
+this<br>
+ strange? So swiftly and wisely does Nature prepare our hearts
+for<br>
+ these great lifelong intimacies, that both my wife and I had
+been<br>
+ given a presentiment on this the second day of our acquaintance.
+I<br>
+ had even then hoped that she would seek me; she had felt sure
+that<br>
+ she would find me.) "Do not," she went on swiftly, "do not stay
+in<br>
+ this place. Promise me that you will sleep no longer in that
+wood.<br>
+ You do not know how I suffer; all last night I could not sleep
+for<br>
+ thinking of your peril."</p>
+
+<p>"Peril!" I repeated. "Peril from whom? From Northmour?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," she said. "Did you think I would tell him after what
+you<br>
+ said?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not from Northmour?" I repeated. "Then how? From whom? I
+see<br>
+ none to be afraid of."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not ask me," was her reply, "for I am not free to
+tell<br>
+ you. Only believe me, and go hence--believe me, and go away<br>
+ quickly, quickly, for your life!"</p>
+
+<p>An appeal to his alarm is never a good plan to rid oneself of
+a<br>
+ spirited young man. My obstinacy was but increased by what
+she<br>
+ said, and I made it a point of honor to remain. And her
+solicitude<br>
+ for my safety still more confirmed me in the resolve.</p>
+
+<p>"You must not think me inquisitive, madame," I replied; "but,
+if<br>
+ Graden is so dangerous a place, you yourself perhaps remain here
+at<br>
+ some risk."</p>
+
+<p>She only looked at me reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You and your father--" I resumed; but she interrupted me
+almost<br>
+ with a gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"My father! How do you know that?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw you together when you landed," was my answer; and I do
+not<br>
+ know why, but it seemed satisfactory to both of us, as indeed
+it<br>
+ was truth. "But," I continued, "you need have no fear from me.
+I<br>
+ see you have some reason to be secret, and, you may believe
+me,<br>
+ your secret is as safe with me as if I were in Graden Floe. I
+have<br>
+ scarce spoken to anyone for years; my horse is my only
+companion,<br>
+ and even he, poor beast, is not beside me. You see, then, you
+may<br>
+ count on me for silence. So tell me the truth, my dear young
+lady,<br>
+ are you not in danger?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Northmour says you are an honorable man," she returned,
+"and I<br>
+ believe it when I see you. I will tell you so much; you are
+right;<br>
+ we are in dreadful, dreadful danger, and you share it by
+remaining<br>
+ where you are."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said I; "you have heard of me from Northmour? And he
+gives<br>
+ me a good character?"</p>
+
+<p>"I asked him about you last night," was her reply. "I
+pretended,"<br>
+ she hesitated, "I pretended to have met you long ago, and spoken
+to<br>
+ you of him. It was not true; but I could not help myself
+without<br>
+ betraying you, and you had put me in a difficulty. He praised
+you<br>
+ highly."</p>
+
+<p>"And--you may permit me one question--does this danger come
+from<br>
+ Northmour?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"From Mr. Northmour?" she cried. "Oh, no, he stays with us
+to<br>
+ share it."</p>
+
+<p>"While you propose that I should run away?" I said. "You do
+not<br>
+ rate me very high."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you stay?" she asked. "You are no friend of
+ours."</p>
+
+<p>I know not what came over me, for I had not been conscious of
+a<br>
+ similar weakness since I was a child, but I was so mortified
+by<br>
+ this retort that my eyes pricked and filled with tears, as I<br>
+ continued to gaze upon her face.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," she said, in a changed voice; "I did not mean the
+words<br>
+ unkindly."</p>
+
+<p>"It was I who offended," I said; and I held out my hand with a
+look<br>
+ of appeal that somehow touched her, for she gave me hers at
+once,<br>
+ and even eagerly. I held it for awhile in mine, and gazed into
+her<br>
+ eyes. It was she who first tore her hand away, and, forgetting
+all<br>
+ about her request and the promise she had sought to extort, ran
+at<br>
+ the top of her speed, and without turning, till she was out
+of<br>
+ sight. And then I knew that I loved her, and thought in my
+glad<br>
+ heart that she--she herself--was not indifferent to my suit.
+Many<br>
+ a time she has denied it in after days, but it was with a
+smiling<br>
+ and not a serious denial. For my part, I am sure our hands
+would<br>
+ not have lain so closely in each other if she had not begun to
+melt<br>
+ to me already. And, when all is said, it is no great
+contention,<br>
+ since, by her own avowal, she began to love me on the
+morrow.</p>
+
+<p>And yet on the morrow very little took place. She came and
+called<br>
+ me down as on the day before, upbraided me for lingering at
+Graden,<br>
+ and, when she found I was still obdurate, began to ask me
+more<br>
+ particularly as to my arrival. I told her by what series of<br>
+ accidents I had come to witness their disembarkation, and how I
+had<br>
+ determined to remain, partly from the interest which had
+been<br>
+ awakened in me by Northmour's guests, and partly because of his
+own<br>
+ murderous attack. As to the former, I fear I was disingenuous,
+and<br>
+ led her to regard herself as having been an attraction to me
+from<br>
+ the first moment that I saw her on the links. It relieves my
+heart<br>
+ to make this confession even now, when my wife is with God,
+and<br>
+ already knows all things, and the honesty of my purpose even
+in<br>
+ this; for while she lived, although it often pricked my
+conscience,<br>
+ I had never the hardihood to undeceive her. Even a little
+secret,<br>
+ in such a married life as ours, is like the rose leaf which
+kept<br>
+ the princess from her sleep.</p>
+
+<p>From this the talk branched into other subjects, and I told
+her<br>
+ much about my lonely and wandering existence; she, for her
+part,<br>
+ giving ear, and saying little. Although we spoke very
+naturally,<br>
+ and latterly on topics that might seem indifferent, we were
+both<br>
+ sweetly agitated. Too soon it was time for her to go; and we<br>
+ separated, as if by mutual consent, without shaking hands, for
+both<br>
+ knew that, between us, it was no idle ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>The next, and that was the fourth day of our acquaintance, we
+met<br>
+ in the same spot, but early in the morning, with much
+familiarity<br>
+ and yet much timidity on either side. While she had once
+more<br>
+ spoken about my danger--and that, I understood, was her excuse
+for<br>
+ coming--I, who had prepared a great deal of talk during the
+night,<br>
+ began to tell her how highly I valued her kind interest, and how
+no<br>
+ one had ever cared to hear about my life, nor had I ever cared
+to<br>
+ relate it, before yesterday. Suddenly she interrupted me,
+saying<br>
+ with vehemence--</p>
+
+<p>"And yet, if you knew who I was, you would not so much as
+speak to<br>
+ me!"</p>
+
+<p>I told her such a thought was madness, and, little as we had
+met, I<br>
+ counted her already a dear friend; but my protestations seemed
+only<br>
+ to make her more desperate.</p>
+
+<p>"My father is in hiding!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," I said, forgetting for the first time to add
+"young<br>
+ lady," "what do I care? If I were in hiding twenty times
+over,<br>
+ would it make one thought of change in you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but the cause!" she cried, "the cause! It is"--she
+faltered<br>
+ for a second--"it is disgraceful to us!"</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ IV</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ This was my wife's story, as I drew it from her among tears
+and<br>
+ sobs. Her name was Clara Huddlestone: it sounded very beautiful
+in<br>
+ my ears; but not so beautiful as that other name of Clara
+Cassilis,<br>
+ which she wore during the longer and, I thank God, the
+happier<br>
+ portion of her life. Her father, Bernard Huddlestone, had been
+a<br>
+ private banker in a very large way of business. Many years
+before,<br>
+ his affairs becoming disordered, he had been led to try
+dangerous,<br>
+ and at last criminal, expedients to retrieve himself from
+ruin.<br>
+ All was in vain; he became more and more cruelly involved,
+and<br>
+ found his honor lost at the same moment with his fortune.
+About<br>
+ this period, Northmour had been courting his daughter with
+great<br>
+ assiduity, though with small encouragement; and to him, knowing
+him<br>
+ thus disposed in his favor, Bernard Huddlestone turned for help
+in<br>
+ his extremity. It was not merely ruin and dishonor, nor merely
+a<br>
+ legal condemnation, that the unhappy man had brought upon his
+head.<br>
+ It seems he could have gone to prison with a light heart. What
+he<br>
+ feared, what kept him awake at night or recalled him from
+slumber<br>
+ into frenzy, was some secret, sudden, and unlawful attempt upon
+his<br>
+ life. Hence, he desired to bury his existence and escape to one
+of<br>
+ the islands in the South Pacific, and it was in Northmour's
+yacht,<br>
+ the "Red Earl," that he designed to go. The yacht picked them
+up<br>
+ clandestinely upon the coast of Wales, and had once more
+deposited<br>
+ them at Graden, till she could be refitted and provisioned for
+the<br>
+ longer voyage. Nor could Clara doubt that her hand had been<br>
+ stipulated as the price of passage. For, although Northmour
+was<br>
+ neither unkind, nor even discourteous, he had shown himself
+in<br>
+ several instances somewhat overbold in speech and manner.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ I listened, I need not say, with fixed attention, and put
+many<br>
+ questions as to the more mysterious part. It was in vain. She
+had<br>
+ no clear idea of what the blow was, nor of how it was expected
+to<br>
+ fall. Her father's alarm was unfeigned and physically
+prostrating,<br>
+ and he had thought more than once of making an unconditional<br>
+ surrender to the police. But the scheme was finally abandoned,
+for<br>
+ he was convinced that not even the strength of our English
+prisons<br>
+ could shelter him from his pursuers. He had had many affairs
+in<br>
+ Italy, and with Italians resident in London, in the latter years
+of<br>
+ his business; and these last, as Clara fancied, were somehow<br>
+ connected with the doom that threatened him. He had shown
+great<br>
+ terror at the presence of an Italian seaman on board the
+"Red<br>
+ Earl," and had bitterly and repeatedly accused Northmour in<br>
+ consequence. The latter had protested that Beppo (that was
+the<br>
+ seaman's name) was a capital fellow, and could be trusted to
+the<br>
+ death; but Mr. Huddlestone had continued ever since to declare
+that<br>
+ all was lost, that it was only a question of days, and that
+Beppo<br>
+ would be the ruin of him yet.</p>
+
+<p>I regarded the whole story as the hallucination of a mind
+shaken by<br>
+ calamity. He had suffered heavy loss by his Italian
+transactions;<br>
+ and hence the sight of an Italian was hateful to him, and
+the<br>
+ principal part in his nightmare would naturally enough be played
+by<br>
+ one of that nation.</p>
+
+<p>"What your father wants," I said, "is a good doctor and
+some<br>
+ calming medicine."</p>
+
+<p>"But Mr. Northmour?" objected Clara. "He is untroubled by
+losses,<br>
+ and yet he shares in this terror."</p>
+
+<p>I could not help laughing at what I considered her
+simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," said I, "you have told me yourself what reward he
+has to<br>
+ look for. All is fair in love, you must remember; and if
+Northmour<br>
+ foments your father's terrors, it is not at all because he
+is<br>
+ afraid of any Italian man, but simply because he is infatuated
+with<br>
+ a charming English woman."</p>
+
+<p>She reminded me of his attack upon myself on the night of
+the<br>
+ disembarkation, and this I was unable to explain. In short,
+and<br>
+ from one thing to another, it was agreed between us that I
+should<br>
+ set out at once for the fisher village, Graden Wester, as it
+was<br>
+ called, look up all the newspapers I could find, and see for
+myself<br>
+ if there seemed any basis of fact for these continued alarms.
+The<br>
+ next morning, at the same hour and place, I was to make my
+report<br>
+ to Clara. She said no more on that occasion about my
+departure;<br>
+ nor, indeed, did she make it a secret that she clung to the
+thought<br>
+ of my proximity as something helpful and pleasant; and, for
+my<br>
+ part, I could not have left her, if she had gone upon her knees
+to<br>
+ ask it.</p>
+
+<p>I reached Graden Wester before ten in the forenoon; for in
+those<br>
+ days I was an excellent pedestrian, and the distance, as I think
+I<br>
+ have said, was little over seven miles; fine walking all the
+way<br>
+ upon the springy turf. The village is one of the bleakest on
+that<br>
+ coast, which is saying much: there is a church in the hollow;
+a<br>
+ miserable haven in the rocks, where many boats have been lost
+as<br>
+ they returned from fishing; two or three score of stone
+houses<br>
+ arranged along the beach and in two streets, one leading from
+the<br>
+ harbor, and another striking out from it at right angles; and,
+at<br>
+ the corner of these two, a very dark and cheerless tavern, by
+way<br>
+ of principal hotel.</p>
+
+<p>I had dressed myself somewhat more suitably to my station in
+life,<br>
+ and at once called upon the minister in his little manse beside
+the<br>
+ graveyard. He knew me, although it was more than nine years
+since<br>
+ we had met; and when I told him that I had been long upon a
+walking<br>
+ tour, and was behind with the news, readily lent me an armful
+of<br>
+ newspapers, dating from a month back to the day before. With
+these<br>
+ I sought the tavern, and, ordering some breakfast, sat down
+to<br>
+ study the "Huddlestone Failure."</p>
+
+<p>It had been, it appeared, a very flagrant case. Thousands
+of<br>
+ persons were reduced to poverty; and one in particular had
+blown<br>
+ out his brains as soon as payment was suspended. It was strange
+to<br>
+ myself that, while I read these details, I continued rather
+to<br>
+ sympathize with Mr. Huddlestone than with his victims; so
+complete<br>
+ already was the empire of my love for my wife. A price was<br>
+ naturally set upon the banker's head; and, as the case was<br>
+ inexcusable and the public indignation thoroughly aroused,
+the<br>
+ unusual figure of 750 pounds was offered for his capture. He
+was<br>
+ reported to have large sums of money in his possession. One
+day,<br>
+ he had been heard of in Spain; the next, there was sure<br>
+ intelligence that he was still lurking between Manchester
+and<br>
+ Liverpool, or along the border of Wales; and the day after,
+a<br>
+ telegram would announce his arrival in Cuba or Yucatan. But in
+all<br>
+ this there was no word of an Italian, nor any sign of
+mystery.</p>
+
+<p>In the very last paper, however, there was one item not so
+clear.<br>
+ The accountants who were charged to verify the failure had,
+it<br>
+ seemed, come upon the traces of a very large number of
+thousands,<br>
+ which figured for some time in the transactions of the house
+of<br>
+ Huddlestone; but which came from nowhere, and disappeared in
+the<br>
+ same mysterious fashion. It was only once referred to by name,
+and<br>
+ then under the initials "X. X."; but it had plainly been
+floated<br>
+ for the first time into the business at a period of great<br>
+ depression some six years ago. The name of a distinguished
+royal<br>
+ personage had been mentioned by rumor in connection with this
+sum.<br>
+ "The cowardly desperado"--such, I remember, was the
+editorial<br>
+ expression--was supposed to have escaped with a large part of
+this<br>
+ mysterious fund still in his possession.</p>
+
+<p>I was still brooding over the fact, and trying to torture it
+into<br>
+ some connection with Mr. Huddlestone's danger, when a man
+entered<br>
+ the tavern and asked for some bread and cheese with a
+decided<br>
+ foreign accent.</p>
+
+<p>"Siete Italiano?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Si, Signor," was his reply.</p>
+
+<p>I said it was unusually far north to find one of his
+compatriots;<br>
+ at which he shrugged his shoulders, and replied that a man would
+go<br>
+ anywhere to find work. What work he could hope to find at
+Graden<br>
+ Wester, I was totally unable to conceive; and the incident
+struck<br>
+ so unpleasantly upon my mind, that I asked the landlord, while
+he<br>
+ was counting me some change, whether he had ever before seen
+an<br>
+ Italian in the village. He said he had once seen some
+Norwegians,<br>
+ who had been shipwrecked on the other side of Graden Ness
+and<br>
+ rescued by the lifeboat from Cauldhaven.</p>
+
+<p>"No!" said I; "but an Italian, like the man who has just had
+bread<br>
+ and cheese."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" cried he, "yon black-avised fellow wi' the teeth? Was
+he<br>
+ an I-talian? Weel, yon's the first that ever I saw, an' I dare
+say<br>
+ he's like to be the last."</p>
+
+<p>Even as he was speaking, I raised my eyes, and, casting a
+glance<br>
+ into the street, beheld three men in earnest conversation
+together,<br>
+ and not thirty yards away. One of them was my recent companion
+in<br>
+ the tavern parlor; the other two, by their handsome sallow
+features<br>
+ and soft hats, should evidently belong to the same race. A
+crowd<br>
+ of village children stood around them, gesticulating and
+talking<br>
+ gibberish in imitation. The trio looked singularly foreign to
+the<br>
+ bleak dirty street in which they were standing and the dark
+gray<br>
+ heaven that overspread them; and I confess my incredulity
+received<br>
+ at that moment a shock from which it never recovered. I
+might<br>
+ reason with myself as I pleased, but I could not argue down
+the<br>
+ effect of what I had seen, and I began to share in the
+Italian<br>
+ terror.</p>
+
+<p>It was already drawing toward the close of the day before I
+had<br>
+ returned the newspapers to the manse, and got well forward on
+to<br>
+ the links on my way home. I shall never forget that walk. It
+grew<br>
+ very cold and boisterous; the wind sung in the short grass about
+my<br>
+ feet; thin rain showers came running on the gusts; and an
+immense<br>
+ mountain range of clouds began to arise out of the bosom of
+the<br>
+ sea. It would be hard to imagine a more dismal evening; and<br>
+ whether it was from these external influences, or because my
+nerves<br>
+ were already affected by what I had heard and seen, my
+thoughts<br>
+ were as gloomy as the weather.</p>
+
+<p>The upper windows of the pavilion commanded a considerable
+spread<br>
+ of links in the direction of Graden Wester. To avoid
+observation,<br>
+ it was necessary to hug the beach until I had gained cover from
+the<br>
+ higher sand hills on the little headland, when I might
+strike<br>
+ across, through the hollows, for the margin of the wood. The
+sun<br>
+ was about setting; the tide was low, and all the quicksands<br>
+ uncovered; and I was moving along, lost in unpleasant thought,
+when<br>
+ I was suddenly thunderstruck to perceive the prints of human
+feet.<br>
+ They ran parallel to my own course, but low down upon the
+beach,<br>
+ instead of along the border of the turf; and, when I examined
+them,<br>
+ I saw at once, by the size and coarseness of the impression,
+that<br>
+ it was a stranger to me and to those of the pavilion who had<br>
+ recently passed that way. Not only so; but from the
+recklessness<br>
+ of the course which he had followed, steering near to the
+most<br>
+ formidable portions of the sand, he was evidently a stranger to
+the<br>
+ country and to the ill-repute of Graden beach.</p>
+
+<p>Step by step I followed the prints; until, a quarter of a
+mile<br>
+ farther, I beheld them die away into the southeastern boundary
+of<br>
+ Graden Floe. There, whoever he was, the miserable man had<br>
+ perished. One or two gulls, who had, perhaps, seen him
+disappear,<br>
+ wheeled over his sepulcher with their usual melancholy piping.
+The<br>
+ sun had broken through the clouds by a last effort, and colored
+the<br>
+ wide level of quicksands with a dusky purple. I stood for
+some<br>
+ time gazing at the spot, chilled and disheartened by my own<br>
+ reflections, and with a strong and commanding consciousness
+of<br>
+ death. I remember wondering how long the tragedy had taken,
+and<br>
+ whether his screams had been audible at the pavilion. And
+then,<br>
+ making a strong resolution, I was about to tear myself away,
+when a<br>
+ gust fiercer than usual fell upon this quarter of the beach, and
+I<br>
+ saw, now whirling high in air, now skimming lightly across
+the<br>
+ surface of the sands, a soft, black, felt hat, somewhat conical
+in<br>
+ shape, such as I had remarked already on the heads of the
+Italians.</p>
+
+<p>I believe, but I am not sure, that I uttered a cry. The wind
+was<br>
+ driving the hat shoreward, and I ran round the border of the
+floe<br>
+ to be ready against its arrival. The gust fell, dropping the
+hat<br>
+ for awhile upon the quicksand, and then, once more
+freshening,<br>
+ landed it a few yards from where I stood. I seized it with
+the<br>
+ interest you may imagine. It had seen some service; indeed, it
+was<br>
+ rustier than either of those I had seen that day upon the
+street.<br>
+ The lining was red, stamped with the name of the maker, which
+I<br>
+ have forgotten, and that of the place of manufacture,
+Venedig.<br>
+ This (it is not yet forgotten) was the name given by the
+Austrians<br>
+ to the beautiful city of Venice, then, and for long after, a
+part<br>
+ of their dominions.</p>
+
+<p>The shock was complete. I saw imaginary Italians upon every
+side;<br>
+ and for the first, and, I may say, for the last time in my<br>
+ experience, became overpowered by what is called a panic terror.
+I<br>
+ knew nothing, that is, to be afraid of, and yet I admit that I
+was<br>
+ heartily afraid; and it was with sensible reluctance that I<br>
+ returned to my exposed and solitary camp in the Sea-Wood.</p>
+
+<p>There I eat some cold porridge which had been left over from
+the<br>
+ night before, for I was disinclined to make a fire; and,
+feeling<br>
+ strengthened and reassured, dismissed all these fanciful
+terrors<br>
+ from my mind, and lay down to sleep with composure.</p>
+
+<p>How long I may have slept it is impossible for me to guess;
+but I<br>
+ was awakened at last by a sudden, blinding flash of light into
+my<br>
+ face. It woke me like a blow. In an instant I was upon my
+knees.<br>
+ But the light had gone as suddenly as it came. The darkness
+was<br>
+ intense. And, as it was blowing great guns from the sea, and<br>
+ pouring with rain, the noises of the storm effectually
+concealed<br>
+ all others.</p>
+
+<p>It was, I dare say, half a minute before I regained my
+self-<br>
+ possession. But for two circumstances, I should have thought I
+had<br>
+ been awakened by some new and vivid form of nightmare. First,
+the<br>
+ flap of my tent, which I had shut carefully when I retired, was
+now<br>
+ unfastened; and, second, I could still perceive, with a
+sharpness<br>
+ that excluded any theory of hallucination, the smell of hot
+metal<br>
+ and of burning oil. The conclusion was obvious. I had been<br>
+ awakened by some one flashing a bull's-eye lantern in my face.
+It<br>
+ had been but a flash, and away. He had seen my face, and
+then<br>
+ gone. I asked myself the object of so strange a proceeding,
+and<br>
+ the answer came pat. The man, whoever he was, had thought to<br>
+ recognize me, and he had not. There was another question<br>
+ unresolved; and to this, I may say, I feared to give an answer;
+if<br>
+ he had recognized me, what would he have done?</p>
+
+<p>My fears were immediately diverted from myself, for I saw that
+I<br>
+ had been visited in a mistake; and I became persuaded that
+some<br>
+ dreadful danger threatened the pavilion. It required some nerve
+to<br>
+ issue forth into the black and intricate thicket which
+surrounded<br>
+ and overhung the den; but I groped my way to the links,
+drenched<br>
+ with rain, beaten upon and deafened by the gusts, and fearing
+at<br>
+ every step to lay my hand upon some lurking adversary. The<br>
+ darkness was so complete that I might have been surrounded by
+an<br>
+ army and yet none the wiser, and the uproar of the gale so
+loud<br>
+ that my hearing was as useless as my sight.</p>
+
+<p>For the rest of that night, which seemed interminably long,
+I<br>
+ patrolled the vicinity of the pavilion, without seeing a
+living<br>
+ creature or hearing any noise but the concert of the wind, the
+sea,<br>
+ and the rain. A light in the upper story filtered through a
+cranny<br>
+ of the shutter, and kept me company till the approach of
+dawn.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ V</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ With the first peep of day, I retired from the open to my old
+lair<br>
+ among the sand hills, there to await the coming of my wife.
+The<br>
+ morning was gray, wild, and melancholy; the wind moderated
+before<br>
+ sunrise, and then went about, and blew in puffs from the shore;
+the<br>
+ sea began to go down, but the rain still fell without mercy.
+Over<br>
+ all the wilderness of links there was not a creature to be
+seen.<br>
+ Yet I felt sure the neighborhood was alive with skulking foes.
+The<br>
+ light that had been so suddenly and surprisingly flashed upon
+my<br>
+ face as I lay sleeping, and the hat that had been blown ashore
+by<br>
+ the wind from over Graden Floe, were two speaking signals of
+the<br>
+ peril that environed Clara and the party in the pavilion.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was, perhaps, half-past seven, or nearer eight, before I saw
+the<br>
+ door open, and that dear figure come toward me in the rain. I
+was<br>
+ waiting for her on the beach before she had crossed the sand
+hills.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had such trouble to come!" she cried. "They did not
+wish<br>
+ me to go walking in the rain."</p>
+
+<p>"Clara," I said, "you are not frightened!"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said she, with a simplicity that filled my heart
+with<br>
+ confidence. For my wife was the bravest as well as the best
+of<br>
+ women; in my experience, I have not found the two go always<br>
+ together, but with her they did; and she combined the extreme
+of<br>
+ fortitude with the most endearing and beautiful virtues.</p>
+
+<p>I told her what had happened; and, though her cheek grew
+visibly<br>
+ paler, she retained perfect control over her senses.</p>
+
+<p>"You see now that I am safe," said I, in conclusion. "They do
+not<br>
+ mean to harm me; for, had they chosen, I was a dead man last<br>
+ night."</p>
+
+<p>She laid her hand upon my arm.</p>
+
+<p>"And I had no presentiment!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>Her accent thrilled me with delight. I put my arm about her,
+and<br>
+ strained her to my side; and, before either of us was aware,
+her<br>
+ hands were on my shoulders and my lips upon her mouth. Yet up
+to<br>
+ that moment no word of love had passed between us. To this day
+I<br>
+ remember the touch of her cheek, which was wet and cold with
+the<br>
+ rain; and many a time since, when she has been washing her face,
+I<br>
+ have kissed it again for the sake of that morning on the
+beach.<br>
+ Now that she is taken from me, and I finish my pilgrimage alone,
+I<br>
+ recall our old loving kindnesses and the deep honesty and
+affection<br>
+ which united us, and my present loss seems but a trifle in<br>
+ comparison.</p>
+
+<p>We may have thus stood for some seconds--for time passes
+quickly<br>
+ with lovers--before we were startled by a peal of laughter close
+at<br>
+ hand. It was not natural mirth, but seemed to be affected in
+order<br>
+ to conceal an angrier feeling. We both turned, though I still
+kept<br>
+ my left arm about Clara's waist; nor did she seek to
+withdraw<br>
+ herself; and there, a few paces off upon the beach, stood<br>
+ Northmour, his head lowered, his hands behind his back, his<br>
+ nostrils white with passion.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Cassilis!" he said, as I disclosed my face.</p>
+
+<p>"That same," said I; for I was not at all put about.</p>
+
+<p>"And so, Miss Huddlestone," he continued slowly but savagely,
+"this<br>
+ is how you keep your faith to your father and to me? This is
+the<br>
+ value you set upon your father's life? And you are so
+infatuated<br>
+ with this young gentleman that you must brave ruin, and
+decency,<br>
+ and common human caution--"</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Huddlestone--" I was beginning to interrupt him, when
+he, in<br>
+ his turn, cut in brutally--</p>
+
+<p>"You hold your tongue," said he; "I am speaking to that
+girl."</p>
+
+<p>"That girl, as you call her, is my wife," said I; and my wife
+only<br>
+ leaned a little nearer, so that I knew she had affirmed my
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"Your what?" he cried. "You lie!"</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour," I said, "we all know you have a bad temper, and I
+am<br>
+ the last man to be irritated by words. For all that, I
+propose<br>
+ that you speak lower, for I am convinced that we are not
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>He looked round him, and it was plain my remark had in some
+degree<br>
+ sobered his passion. "What do you mean?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>I only said one word: "Italians."</p>
+
+<p>He swore a round oath, and looked at us, from one to the
+other.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Cassilis knows all that I know," said my wife.</p>
+
+<p>"What I want to know," he broke out, "is where the devil
+Mr.<br>
+ Cassilis comes from, and what the devil Mr. Cassilis is doing
+here.<br>
+ You say you are married; that I do not believe. If you were,<br>
+ Graden Floe would soon divorce you; four minutes and a half,<br>
+ Cassilis. I keep my private cemetery for my friends."</p>
+
+<p>"It took somewhat longer," said I, "for that Italian."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me for a moment half daunted, and then,
+almost<br>
+ civilly, asked me to tell my story. "You have too much the<br>
+ advantage of me, Cassilis," he added. I complied of course; and
+he<br>
+ listened, with several ejaculations, while I told him how I
+had<br>
+ come to Graden: that it was I whom he had tried to murder on
+the<br>
+ night of landing; and what I had subsequently seen and heard of
+the<br>
+ Italians.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, when I had done, "it is here at last; there
+is no<br>
+ mistake about that. And what, may I ask, do you propose to
+do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I propose to stay with you and lend a hand," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a brave man," he returned, with a peculiar
+intonation.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not afraid," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And so," he continued, "I am to understand that you two
+are<br>
+ married? And you stand up to it before my face, Miss
+Huddlestone?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are not yet married," said Clara; "but we shall be as soon
+as<br>
+ we can."</p>
+
+<p>"Bravo!" cried Northmour. "And the bargain? D--n it, you're
+not a<br>
+ fool, young woman; I may call a spade a spade with you. How
+about<br>
+ the bargain? You know as well as I do what your father's
+life<br>
+ depends upon. I have only to put my hands under my coat tails
+and<br>
+ walk away, and his throat would be cut before the evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Northmour," returned Clara, with great spirit; "but
+that<br>
+ is what you will never do. You made a bargain that was unworthy
+of<br>
+ a gentleman; but you are a gentleman for all that, and you
+will<br>
+ never desert a man whom you have begun to help."</p>
+
+<p>"Aha!" said he. "You think I will give my yacht for nothing?
+You<br>
+ think I will risk my life and liberty for love of the old<br>
+ gentleman; and then, I suppose, he best man at the wedding, to
+wind<br>
+ up? Well," he added, with an odd smile, "perhaps you are not<br>
+ altogether wrong. But ask Cassilis here. HE knows me. Am I a
+man<br>
+ to trust? Am I safe and scrupulous? Am I kind?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know you talk a great deal, and sometimes, I think,
+very<br>
+ foolishly," replied Clara, "but I know you are a gentleman, and
+I<br>
+ am not the least afraid."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her with a peculiar approval and admiration;
+then,<br>
+ turning to me, "Do you think I would give her up without a<br>
+ struggle, Frank?" said he. "I tell you plainly, you look out.
+The<br>
+ next time we come to blows--"</p>
+
+<p>"Will make the third," I interrupted, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, true; so it will," he said. "I had forgotten. Well,
+the<br>
+ third time's lucky."</p>
+
+<p>"The third time, you mean, you will have the crew of the 'Red
+Earl'<br>
+ to help," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you hear him?" he asked, turning to my wife.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear two men speaking like cowards," said she. "I
+should<br>
+ despise myself either to think or speak like that. And neither
+of<br>
+ you believe one word that you are saying, which makes it the
+more<br>
+ wicked and silly."</p>
+
+<p>"She's a trump!" cried Northmour. "But she's not yet Mrs.<br>
+ Cassilis. I say no more. The present is not for me."</p>
+
+<p>Then my wife surprised me.</p>
+
+<p>"I leave you here," she said suddenly. "My father has been
+too<br>
+ long alone. But remember this: you are to be friends, for you
+are<br>
+ both good friends to me."</p>
+
+<p>She has since told me her reason for this step. As long as
+she<br>
+ remained, she declares that we two would have continued to
+quarrel;<br>
+ and I suppose that she was right, for when she was gone we fell
+at<br>
+ once into a sort of confidentiality.</p>
+
+<p>Northmour stared after her as she went away over the sand
+hill.</p>
+
+<p>"She is the only woman in the world!" he exclaimed with an
+oath.<br>
+ "Look at her action."</p>
+
+<p>I, for my part, leaped at this opportunity for a little
+further<br>
+ light.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Northmour," said I; "we are all in a tight place,
+are we<br>
+ not?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe you, my boy," he answered, looking me in the eyes,
+and<br>
+ with great emphasis. "We have all hell upon us, that's the
+truth.<br>
+ You may believe me or not, but I'm afraid of my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me one thing," said I. "What are they after, these
+Italians?<br>
+ What do they want with Mr. Huddlestone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know?" he cried. "The black old scamp had
+carbonari<br>
+ funds on a deposit--two hundred and eighty thousand; and of
+course<br>
+ he gambled it away on stocks. There was to have been a
+revolution<br>
+ in the Tridentino, or Parma; but the revolution is off, and
+the<br>
+ whole wasp's nest is after Huddlestone. We shall all be lucky
+if<br>
+ we can save our skins."</p>
+
+<p>"The carbonari!" I exclaimed; "God help him indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>"Amen!" said Northmour. "And now, look here: I have said that
+we<br>
+ are in a fix; and, frankly, I shall be glad of your help. If
+I<br>
+ can't save Huddlestone, I want at least to save the girl. Come
+and<br>
+ stay in the pavilion; and, there's my hand on it, I shall act
+as<br>
+ your friend until the old man is either clear or dead. But,"
+he<br>
+ added, "once that is settled, you become my rival once again,
+and I<br>
+ warn you--mind yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"Done!" said I; and we shook hands.</p>
+
+<p>"And now let us go directly to the fort," said Northmour; and
+he<br>
+ began to lead the way through the rain.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ VI</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ We were admitted to the pavilion by Clara, and I was surprised
+by<br>
+ the completeness and security of the defenses. A barricade
+of<br>
+ great strength, and yet easy to displace, supported the door<br>
+ against any violence from without; and the shutters of the
+dining-<br>
+ room, into which I was led directly, and which was feebly<br>
+ illuminated by a lamp, were even more elaborately fortified.
+The<br>
+ panels were strengthened by bars and crossbars; and these, in
+their<br>
+ turn, were kept in position by a system of braces and struts,
+some<br>
+ abutting on the floor, some on the roof, and others, in
+fine,<br>
+ against the opposite wall of the apartment. It was at once a
+solid<br>
+ and well-designed piece of carpentry; and I did not seek to
+conceal<br>
+ my admiration.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "I am the engineer," said Northmour. "You remember the planks
+in<br>
+ the garden? Behold them?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know you had so many talents," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you armed?" he continued, pointing to an array of guns
+and<br>
+ pistols, all in admirable order, which stood in line against
+the<br>
+ wall or were displayed upon the sideboard.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," I returned; "I have gone armed since our last<br>
+ encounter. But, to tell you the truth, I have had nothing to
+eat<br>
+ since early yesterday evening."</p>
+
+<p>Northmour produced some cold meat, to which I eagerly set
+myself,<br>
+ and a bottle of good Burgundy, by which, wet as I was, I did
+not<br>
+ scruple to profit. I have always been an extreme temperance man
+on<br>
+ principle; but it is useless to push principle to excess, and
+on<br>
+ this occasion I believe that I finished three quarters of
+the<br>
+ bottle. As I eat, I still continued to admire the preparations
+for<br>
+ defense.</p>
+
+<p>"We could stand a siege," I said at length.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye--es," drawled Northmour; "a very little one, perhaps. It
+is<br>
+ not so much the strength of the pavilion I misdoubt; it is
+the<br>
+ double danger that kills me. If we get to shooting, wild as
+the<br>
+ country is, some one is sure to hear it, and then--why then
+it's<br>
+ the same thing, only different, as they say: caged by law,
+or<br>
+ killed by carbonari. There's the choice. It is a devilish
+bad<br>
+ thing to have the law against you in this world, and so I tell
+the<br>
+ old gentleman upstairs. He is quite of my way of thinking."</p>
+
+<p>"Speaking of that," said I, "what kind of person is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he!" cried the other; "he's a rancid fellow, as far as
+he<br>
+ goes. I should like to have his neck wrung to-morrow by all
+the<br>
+ devils in Italy. I am not in this affair for him. You take me?
+I<br>
+ made a bargain for missy's hand, and I mean to have it too."</p>
+
+<p>"That, by the way," said I. "I understand. But how will
+Mr.<br>
+ Huddlestone take my intrusion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Leave that to Clara," returned Northmour.</p>
+
+<p>I could have struck him in the face for his coarse
+familiarity; but<br>
+ I respected the truce, as, I am bound to say, did Northmour, and
+so<br>
+ long as the danger continued not a cloud arose in our relation.
+I<br>
+ bear him this testimony with the most unfeigned satisfaction;
+nor<br>
+ am I without pride when I look back upon my own behavior.
+For<br>
+ surely no two men were ever left in a position so invidious
+and<br>
+ irritating.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as I had done eating, we proceeded to inspect the
+lower<br>
+ floor. Window by window we tried the different supports, now
+and<br>
+ then making an inconsiderable change; and the strokes of the
+hammer<br>
+ sounded with startling loudness through the house. I proposed,
+I<br>
+ remember, to make loopholes; but he told me they were already
+made<br>
+ in the windows of the upper story. It was an anxious
+business,<br>
+ this inspection, and left me down-hearted. There were two
+doors<br>
+ and five windows to protect, and, counting Clara, only four of
+us<br>
+ to defend them against an unknown number of foes. I
+communicated<br>
+ my doubts to Northmour, who assured me, with unmoved
+composure,<br>
+ that he entirely shared them.</p>
+
+<p>"Before morning," said he, "we shall all be butchered and
+buried in<br>
+ Graden Floe. For me, that is written."</p>
+
+<p>I could not help shuddering at the mention of the quicksand,
+but<br>
+ reminded Northmour that our enemies had spared me in the
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not flatter yourself," said he. "Then you were not in the
+same<br>
+ boat with the old gentleman; now you are. It's the floe for all
+of<br>
+ us, mark my words."</p>
+
+<p>I trembled for Clara; and just then her dear voice was
+heard<br>
+ calling us to come upstairs. Northmour showed me the way,
+and,<br>
+ when he had reached the landing, knocked at the door of what
+used<br>
+ to be called My Uncle's Bedroom, as the founder of the pavilion
+had<br>
+ designed it especially for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, Northmour; come in, dear Mr. Cassilis," said a voice
+from<br>
+ within.</p>
+
+<p>Pushing open the door, Northmour admitted me before him into
+the<br>
+ apartment. As I came in I could see the daughter slipping out
+by<br>
+ the side door into the study, which had been prepared as her<br>
+ bedroom. In the bed, which was drawn back against the wall,<br>
+ instead of standing, as I had last seen it, boldly across
+the<br>
+ window, sat Bernard Huddlestone, the defaulting banker. Little
+as<br>
+ I had seen of him by the shifting light of the lantern on
+the<br>
+ links, I had no difficulty in recognizing him for the same. He
+had<br>
+ a long and sallow countenance, surrounded by a long red beard
+and<br>
+ side-whiskers. His broken nose and high cheek-hones gave him<br>
+ somewhat the air of a Kalmuck, and his light eyes shone with
+the<br>
+ excitement of a high fever. He wore a skull-cap of black silk;
+a<br>
+ huge Bible lay open before him on the bed, with a pair of
+gold<br>
+ spectacles in the place, and a pile of other books lay on the
+stand<br>
+ by his side. The green curtains lent a cadaverous shade to
+his<br>
+ cheek; and, as he sat propped on pillows, his great stature
+was<br>
+ painfully hunched, and his head protruded till it overhung
+his<br>
+ knees. I believe if he had not died otherwise, he must have
+fallen<br>
+ a victim to consumption in the course of but a very few
+weeks.</p>
+
+<p>He held out to me a hand, long, thin, and disagreeably
+hairy.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, come in, Mr. Cassilis," said he. "Another
+protector--<br>
+ ahem!--another protector. Always welcome as a friend of my<br>
+ daughter's, Mr. Cassilis. How they have rallied about me, my<br>
+ daughter's friends! May God in heaven bless and reward them
+for<br>
+ it!"</p>
+
+<p>I gave him my hand, of course, because I could not help it;
+but the<br>
+ sympathy I had been prepared to feel for Clara's father was<br>
+ immediately soured by his appearance, and the wheedling,
+unreal<br>
+ tones in which he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Cassilis is a good man," said Northmour; "worth ten."</p>
+
+<p>"So I hear," cried Mr. Huddlestone eagerly; "so my girl tells
+me.<br>
+ Ah, Mr. Cassilis, my sin has found me out, you see! I am very
+low,<br>
+ very low; but I hope equally penitent. We must all come to
+the<br>
+ throne of grace at last, Mr. Cassilis. For my part, I come
+late<br>
+ indeed; but with unfeigned humility, I trust."</p>
+
+<p>"Fiddle-de-dee!" said Northmour roughly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, dear Northmour!" cried the banker. "You must not
+say<br>
+ that; you must not try to shake me. You forget, my dear, good
+boy,<br>
+ you forget I may be called this very night before my Maker."</p>
+
+<p>His excitement was pitiful to behold; and I felt myself
+grow<br>
+ indignant with Northmour, whose infidel opinions I well knew,
+and<br>
+ heartily despised, as he continued to taunt the poor sinner out
+of<br>
+ his humor of repentance.</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh, my dear Huddlestone!" said he. "You do yourself
+injustice.<br>
+ You are a man of the world inside and out, and were up to all
+kinds<br>
+ of mischief before I was born. Your conscience is tanned
+like<br>
+ South American leather--only you forgot to tan your liver,
+and<br>
+ that, if you will believe me, is the seat of the annoyance."</p>
+
+<p>"Rogue, rogue! bad boy!" said Mr. Huddlestone, shaking his
+finger.<br>
+ "I am no precisian, if you come to that; I always hated a<br>
+ precisian; but I never lost hold of something better through
+it<br>
+ all. I have been a bad boy, Mr. Cassilis; I do not seek to
+deny<br>
+ that; but it was after my wife's death, and you know, with a<br>
+ widower, it's a different thing: sinful--I won't say no; but
+there<br>
+ is a gradation, we shall hope. And talking of that-- Hark!"
+he<br>
+ broke out suddenly, his hand raised, his fingers spread, his
+face<br>
+ racked with interest and terror. "Only the rain, bless God!"
+he<br>
+ added, after a pause, and with indescribable relief.</p>
+
+<p>For some seconds he lay back among the pillows like a man near
+to<br>
+ fainting; then he gathered himself together, and, in
+somewhat<br>
+ tremulous tones, began once more to thank me for the share I
+was<br>
+ prepared to take in his defense.</p>
+
+<p>"One question, sir," said I, when he had paused. "Is it true
+that<br>
+ you have money with you?"</p>
+
+<p>He seemed annoyed by the question, but admitted with
+reluctance<br>
+ that he had a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I continued, "it is their money they are after, is it
+not?<br>
+ Why not give it up to them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" replied he, shaking his head, "I have tried that
+already, Mr.<br>
+ Cassilis; and alas! that it should be so, but it is blood
+they<br>
+ want."</p>
+
+<p>"Huddlestone, that's a little less than fair," said
+Northmour.<br>
+ "You should mention that what you offered them was upward of
+two<br>
+ hundred thousand short. The deficit is worth a reference; it
+is<br>
+ for what they call a cool sum, Frank. Then, you see, the
+fellows<br>
+ reason in their clear Italian way; and it seems to them, as
+indeed<br>
+ it seems to me, that they may just as well have both while
+they're<br>
+ about it--money and blood together, by George, and no more
+trouble<br>
+ for the extra pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it in the pavilion?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It is; and I wish it were in the bottom of the sea instead,"
+said<br>
+ Northmour; and then suddenly--"What are you making faces at
+me<br>
+ for?" he cried to Mr. Huddlestone, on whom I had
+unconsciously<br>
+ turned my back. "Do you think Cassilis would sell you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone protested that nothing had been further from
+his<br>
+ mind.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a good thing," retorted Northmour in his ugliest
+manner.<br>
+ "You might end by wearying us. What were you going to say?"
+he<br>
+ added, turning to me.</p>
+
+<p>"I was going to propose an occupation for the afternoon," said
+I.<br>
+ "Let us carry that money out, piece by piece, and lay it
+down<br>
+ before the pavilion door. If the carbonari come, why, it's
+theirs<br>
+ at any rate."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," cried Mr. Huddlestone; "it does not, it cannot,
+belong to<br>
+ them! It should be distributed pro rata among all my
+creditors."</p>
+
+<p>"Come now, Huddlestone," said Northmour, "none of that."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, but my daughter," moaned the wretched man. "Your
+daughter<br>
+ will do well enough. Here are two suitors, Cassilis and I,
+neither<br>
+ of us beggars, between whom she has to choose. And as for<br>
+ yourself, to make an end of arguments, you have no right to
+a<br>
+ farthing, and, unless I'm much mistaken, you are going to
+die."</p>
+
+<p>It was certainly very cruelly said; but Mr. Huddlestone was a
+man<br>
+ who attracted little sympathy; and, although I saw him wince
+and<br>
+ shudder, I mentally indorsed the rebuke; nay, I added a<br>
+ contribution of my own.</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour and I," I said, "are willing enough to help you to
+save<br>
+ your life, but not to escape with stolen property."</p>
+
+<p>He struggled for awhile with himself, as though he were on
+the<br>
+ point of giving way to anger, but prudence had the best of
+the<br>
+ controversy.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear boys," he said, "do with me or my money what you
+will. I<br>
+ leave all in your hands. Let me compose myself."</p>
+
+<p>And so we left him, gladly enough I am sure.</p>
+
+<p>The last that I saw, he had once more taken up his great
+Bible, and<br>
+ with tremulous hands was adjusting his spectacles to read.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ VII</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The recollection of that afternoon will always be graven on
+my<br>
+ mind. Northmour and I were persuaded that an attack was
+imminent;<br>
+ and if it had been in our power to alter in any way the order
+of<br>
+ events, that power would have been used to precipitate rather
+than<br>
+ delay the critical moment. The worst was to be anticipated; yet
+we<br>
+ could conceive no extremity so miserable as the suspense we
+were<br>
+ now suffering. I have never been an eager, though always a
+great,<br>
+ reader; but I never knew books so insipid as those which I took
+up<br>
+ and cast aside that afternoon in the pavilion. Even talk
+became<br>
+ impossible, as the hours went on. One or other was always<br>
+ listening for some sound, or peering from an upstairs window
+over<br>
+ the links. And yet not a sign indicated the presence of our
+foes.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ We debated over and over again my proposal with regard to
+the<br>
+ money; and had we been in complete possession of our faculties,
+I<br>
+ am sure we should have condemned it as unwise; but we were<br>
+ flustered with alarm, grasped at a straw, and determined,
+although<br>
+ it was as much as advertising Mr. Huddlestone's presence in
+the<br>
+ pavilion, to carry my proposal into effect.</p>
+
+<p>The sum was part in specie, part in bank paper, and part
+in<br>
+ circular notes payable to the name of James Gregory. We took
+it<br>
+ out, counted it, inclosed it once more in a dispatch box
+belonging<br>
+ to Northmour, and prepared a letter in Italian which he tied to
+the<br>
+ handle. It was signed by both of us under oath, and declared
+that<br>
+ this was all the money which had escaped the failure of the
+house<br>
+ of Huddlestone. This was, perhaps, the maddest action ever<br>
+ perpetrated by two persons professing to be sane. Had the
+dispatch<br>
+ box fallen into other hands than those for which it was
+intended,<br>
+ we stood criminally convicted on our own written testimony; but,
+as<br>
+ I have said, we were neither of us in a condition to judge
+soberly,<br>
+ and had a thirst for action that drove us to do something, right
+or<br>
+ wrong, rather than endure the agony of waiting. Moreover, as
+we<br>
+ were both convinced that the hollows of the links were alive
+with<br>
+ hidden spies upon our movements, we hoped that our appearance
+with<br>
+ the box might lead to a parley, and, perhaps, a compromise.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly three when we issued from the pavilion. The rain
+had<br>
+ taken off; the sun shone quite cheerfully. I had never seen
+the<br>
+ gulls fly so close about the house or approach so fearlessly
+to<br>
+ human beings. On the very doorstep one flapped heavily past
+our<br>
+ heads, and uttered its wild cry in my very ear.</p>
+
+<p>"There is an omen for you," said Northmour, who like all<br>
+ freethinkers was much under the influence of superstition.
+"They<br>
+ think we are already dead."</p>
+
+<p>I made some light rejoinder, but it was with half my heart;
+for the<br>
+ circumstance had impressed me.</p>
+
+<p>A yard or two before the gate, on a patch of smooth turf, we
+set<br>
+ down the dispatch box; and Northmour waved a white
+handkerchief<br>
+ over his head. Nothing replied. We raised our voices, and
+cried<br>
+ aloud in Italian that we were there as ambassadors to arrange
+the<br>
+ quarrel, but the stillness remained unbroken save by the
+seagulls<br>
+ and the surf. I had a weight at my heart when we desisted; and
+I<br>
+ saw that even Northmour was unusually pale. He looked over
+his<br>
+ shoulder nervously, as though he feared that some one had
+crept<br>
+ between him and the pavilion door.</p>
+
+<p>"By God," he said in a whisper, "this is too much for me!"</p>
+
+<p>I replied in the same key: "Suppose there should be none,
+after<br>
+ all!"</p>
+
+<p>"Look there," he returned, nodding with his head, as though he
+had<br>
+ been afraid to point.</p>
+
+<p>I glanced in the direction indicated; and there, from the
+northern<br>
+ quarter of the Sea-Wood, beheld a thin column of smoke
+rising<br>
+ steadily against the now cloudless sky.</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour," I said (we still continued to talk in whispers),
+"it<br>
+ is not possible to endure this suspense. I prefer death
+fifty<br>
+ times over. Stay you here to watch the pavilion; I will go
+forward<br>
+ and make sure, if I have to walk right into their camp."</p>
+
+<p>He looked once again all round him with puckered eyes, and
+then<br>
+ nodded assentingly to my proposal.</p>
+
+<p>My heart heat like a sledge hammer as I set out walking
+rapidly in<br>
+ the direction of the smoke; and, though up to that moment I
+had<br>
+ felt chill and shivering, I was suddenly conscious of a glow
+of<br>
+ heat all over my body. The ground in this direction was very<br>
+ uneven; a hundred men might have lain hidden in as many
+square<br>
+ yards about my path. But I who had not practiced the business
+in<br>
+ vain, chose such routes as cut at the very root of
+concealment,<br>
+ and, by keeping along the most convenient ridges, commanded
+several<br>
+ hollows at a time. It was not long before I was rewarded for
+my<br>
+ caution. Coming suddenly on to a mound somewhat more elevated
+than<br>
+ the surrounding hummocks, I saw, not thirty yards away, a man
+bent<br>
+ almost double, and running as fast as his attitude permitted,
+along<br>
+ the bottom of a gully. I had dislodged one of the spies from
+his<br>
+ ambush. As soon as I sighted him, I called loudly both in
+English<br>
+ and Italian; and he, seeing concealment was no longer
+possible,<br>
+ straightened himself out, leaped from the gully, and made off
+as<br>
+ straight as an arrow for the borders of the wood. It was none
+of<br>
+ my business to pursue; I had learned what I wanted--that we
+were<br>
+ beleaguered and watched in the pavilion; and I returned at
+once,<br>
+ and walked as nearly as possible in my old footsteps, to
+where<br>
+ Northmour awaited me beside the dispatch box. He was even
+paler<br>
+ than when I had left him, and his voice shook a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you see what he was like?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"He kept his back turned," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us get into the house, Frank. I don't think I'm a coward,
+but<br>
+ I can stand no more of this," he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>All was still and sunshiny about the pavilion, as we turned
+to<br>
+ reenter it; even the gulls had flown in a wider circuit, and
+were<br>
+ seen flickering along the beach and sand hills; and this
+loneliness<br>
+ terrified me more than a regiment under arms. It was not until
+the<br>
+ door was barricaded that I could draw a full inspiration and<br>
+ relieve the weight that lay upon my bosom. Northmour and I<br>
+ exchanged a steady glance; and I suppose each made his own<br>
+ reflections on the white and startled aspect of the other.</p>
+
+<p>"You were right," I said. "All is over. Shake hands, old man,
+for<br>
+ the last time."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied he, "I will shake hands; for, as sure as I am
+here,<br>
+ I bear no malice. But, remember, if, by some impossible
+accident,<br>
+ we should give the slip to these blackguards, I'll take the
+upper<br>
+ hand of you by fair or foul."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said I, "you weary me!"</p>
+
+<p>He seemed hurt, and walked away in silence to the foot of
+the<br>
+ stairs, where he paused.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not understand," said he. "I am not a swindler, and
+I<br>
+ guard myself; that is all. I may weary you or not, Mr. Cassilis,
+I<br>
+ do not care a rush; I speak for my own satisfaction, and not
+for<br>
+ your amusement. You had better go upstairs and court the girl;
+for<br>
+ my part, I stay here."</p>
+
+<p>"And I stay with you," I returned. "Do you think I would steal
+a<br>
+ march, even with your permission?"</p>
+
+<p>"Frank," he said, smiling, "it's a pity you are an ass, for
+you<br>
+ have the makings of a man. I think I must be fey to-day; you<br>
+ cannot irritate me even when you try. Do you know," he
+continued<br>
+ softly, "I think we are the two most miserable men in England,
+you<br>
+ and I? we have got on to thirty without wife or child, or so
+much<br>
+ as a shop to look after--poor, pitiful, lost devils, both! And
+now<br>
+ we clash about a girl! As if there were not several millions
+in<br>
+ the United Kingdom! Ah, Frank, Frank, the one who loses his
+throw,<br>
+ be it you or me, he has my pity! It were better for him--how
+does<br>
+ the Bible say?--that a millstone were hanged about his neck and
+he<br>
+ were cast into the depth of the sea. Let us take a drink,"
+he<br>
+ concluded suddenly, but without any levity of tone.</p>
+
+<p>I was touched by his words, and consented. He sat down on
+the<br>
+ table in the dining-room, and held up the glass of sherry to
+his<br>
+ eye.</p>
+
+<p>"If you beat me, Frank," he said, "I shall take to drink.
+What<br>
+ will you do, if it goes the other way?"</p>
+
+<p>"God knows," I returned.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, "here is a toast in the meantime: 'Italia<br>
+ irredenta!'"</p>
+
+<p>The remainder of the day was passed in the same dreadful
+tedium and<br>
+ suspense. I laid the table for dinner, while Northmour and
+Clara<br>
+ prepared the meal together in the kitchen. I could hear their
+talk<br>
+ as I went to and fro, and was surprised to find it ran all the
+time<br>
+ upon myself. Northmour again bracketed us together, and
+rallied<br>
+ Clara on a choice of husbands; but he continued to speak of me
+with<br>
+ some feeling, and uttered nothing to my prejudice unless he<br>
+ included himself in the condemnation. This awakened a sense
+of<br>
+ gratitude in my heart, which combined with the immediateness of
+our<br>
+ peril to fill my eyes with tears. After all, I thought--and<br>
+ perhaps the thought was laughably vain--we were here three
+very<br>
+ noble human beings to perish in defense of a thieving
+banker.</p>
+
+<p>Before we sat down to table, I looked forth from an
+upstairs<br>
+ window. The day was beginning to decline; the links were
+utterly<br>
+ deserted; the dispatch box still lay untouched where we had left
+it<br>
+ hours before.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone, in a long yellow dressing gown, took one end
+of<br>
+ the table, Clara the other; while Northmour and I faced each
+other<br>
+ from the sides. The lamp was brightly trimmed; the wine was
+good;<br>
+ the viands, although mostly cold, excellent of their sort.
+We<br>
+ seemed to have agreed tacitly; all reference to the
+impending<br>
+ catastrophe was carefully avoided; and, considering our
+tragic<br>
+ circumstances, we made a merrier party than could have been<br>
+ expected. From time to time, it is true, Northmour or I would
+rise<br>
+ from table and make a round of the defenses; and, on each of
+these<br>
+ occasions, Mr. Huddlestone was recalled to a sense of his
+tragic<br>
+ predicament, glanced up with ghastly eyes, and bore for an
+instant<br>
+ on his countenance the stamp of terror. But he hastened to
+empty<br>
+ his glass, wiped his forehead with his handkerchief, and
+joined<br>
+ again in the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>I was astonished at the wit and information he displayed.
+Mr.<br>
+ Huddlestone's was certainly no ordinary character; he had read
+and<br>
+ observed for himself; his gifts were sound; and, though I
+could<br>
+ never have learned to love the man, I began to understand
+his<br>
+ success in business, and the great respect in which he had
+been<br>
+ held before his failure. He had, above all, the talent of
+society;<br>
+ and though I never heard him speak but on this one and most<br>
+ unfavorable occasion, I set him down among the most
+brilliant<br>
+ conversationalists I ever met.</p>
+
+<p>He was relating with great gusto, and seemingly no feeling
+of<br>
+ shame, the maneuvers of a scoundrelly commission merchant whom
+he<br>
+ had known and studied in his youth, and we were all listening
+with<br>
+ an odd mixture of mirth and embarrassment, when our little
+party<br>
+ was brought abruptly to an end in the most startling manner.</p>
+
+<p>A noise like that of a wet finger on the window pane
+interrupted<br>
+ Mr. Huddlestone's tale; and in an instant we were all four as
+white<br>
+ as paper, and sat tongue-tied and motionless round the
+table.</p>
+
+<p>"A snail," I said at last; for I had heard that these animals
+make<br>
+ a noise somewhat similar in character.</p>
+
+<p>"Snail be d--d!" said Northmour. "Hush!"</p>
+
+<p>The same sound was repeated twice at regular intervals; and
+then a<br>
+ formidable voice shouted through the shutters the Italian
+word,<br>
+ "Traditore!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone threw his head in the air; his eyelids
+quivered;<br>
+ next moment he fell insensible below the table. Northmour and
+I<br>
+ had each run to the armory and seized a gun. Clara was on her
+feet<br>
+ with her hand at her throat.</p>
+
+<p>So we stood waiting, for we thought the hour of attack was<br>
+ certainly come; but second passed after second, and all but
+the<br>
+ surf remained silent in the neighborhood of the pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>"Quick," said Northmour; "upstairs with him before they
+come."</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ VIII</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Somehow or other, by hook and crook, and between the three of
+us,<br>
+ we got Bernard Huddlestone bundled upstairs and laid upon the
+bed<br>
+ in My Uncle's Room. During the whole process, which was
+rough<br>
+ enough, he gave no sign of consciousness, and he remained, as
+we<br>
+ had thrown him, without changing the position of a finger.
+His<br>
+ daughter opened his shirt and began to wet his head and
+bosom;<br>
+ while Northmour and I ran to the window. The weather
+continued<br>
+ clear; the moon, which was now about full, had risen and shed
+a<br>
+ very clear light upon the links; yet, strain our eyes as we
+might,<br>
+ we could distinguish nothing moving. A few dark spots, more
+or<br>
+ less, on the uneven expanse were not to be identified; they
+might<br>
+ be crouching men, they might be shadows; it was impossible to
+be<br>
+ sure.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Thank God," said Northmour, "Aggie is not coming to-night."</p>
+
+<p>Aggie was the name of the old nurse; he had not thought of
+her<br>
+ until now; but that he should think of her at all was a trait
+that<br>
+ surprised me in the man.</p>
+
+<p>We were again reduced to waiting. Northmour went to the
+fireplace<br>
+ and spread his hands before the red embers, as if he were cold.
+I<br>
+ followed him mechanically with my eyes, and in so doing turned
+my<br>
+ back upon the window. At that moment a very faint report was<br>
+ audible from without, and a ball shivered a pane of glass,
+and<br>
+ buried itself in the shutter two inches from my head. I
+heard<br>
+ Clara scream; and though I whipped instantly out of range and
+into<br>
+ a corner, she was there, so to speak, before me, beseeching to
+know<br>
+ if I were hurt. I felt that I could stand to be shot at every
+day<br>
+ and all day long, with such remarks of solicitude for a reward;
+and<br>
+ I continued to reassure her, with the tenderest caresses and
+in<br>
+ complete forgetfulness of our situation, till the voice of<br>
+ Northmour recalled me to myself.</p>
+
+<p>"An air gun," he said. "They wish to make no noise."</p>
+
+<p>I put Clara aside, and looked at him. He was standing with
+his<br>
+ back to the fire and his hands clasped behind him; and I knew
+by<br>
+ the black look on his face, that passion was boiling within. I
+had<br>
+ seen just such a look before he attacked me, that March night,
+in<br>
+ the adjoining chamber; and, though I could make every allowance
+for<br>
+ his anger, I confess I trembled for the consequences. He
+gazed<br>
+ straight before him; but he could see us with the tail of his
+eye,<br>
+ and his temper kept rising like a gale of wind. With regular<br>
+ battle awaiting us outside, this prospect of an internecine
+strife<br>
+ within the walls began to daunt me.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, as I was thus closely watching his expression
+and<br>
+ prepared against the worst, I saw a change, a flash, a look
+of<br>
+ relief, upon his face. He took up the lamp which stood beside
+him<br>
+ on the table, and turned to us with an air of some
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one point that we must know," said he. "Are they
+going<br>
+ to butcher the lot of us, or only Huddlestone? Did they take
+you<br>
+ for him, or fire at you for your own beaux yeux?"</p>
+
+<p>"They took me for him, for certain," I replied. "I am near
+as<br>
+ tall, and my head is fair."</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to make sure," returned Northmour; and he stepped
+up to<br>
+ the window, holding the lamp above his head, and stood
+there,<br>
+ quietly affronting death, for half a minute.</p>
+
+<p>Clara sought to rush forward and pull him from the place of
+danger;<br>
+ but I had the pardonable selfishness to hold her back by
+force.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Northmour, turning coolly from the window, "it's
+only<br>
+ Huddlestone they want."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mr. Northmour!" cried Clara; but found no more to add;
+the<br>
+ temerity she had just witnessed seeming beyond the reach of
+words.</p>
+
+<p>He, on his part, looked at me, cocking his head, with a fire
+of<br>
+ triumph in his eyes; and I understood at once that he had
+thus<br>
+ hazarded his life, merely to attract Clara's notice, and depose
+me<br>
+ from my position as the hero of the hour. He snapped his
+fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"The fire is only beginning," said he. "When they warm up to
+their<br>
+ work, they won't be so particular."</p>
+
+<p>A voice was now heard hailing us from the entrance. From
+the<br>
+ window we could see the figure of a man in the moonlight; he
+stood<br>
+ motionless, his face uplifted to ours, and a rag of something
+white<br>
+ on his extended arm; and as we looked right down upon him,
+though<br>
+ he was a good many yards distant on the links, we could see
+the<br>
+ moonlight glitter on his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He opened his lips again, and spoke for some minutes on end,
+in a<br>
+ key so loud that he might have been heard in every corner of
+the<br>
+ pavilion, and as far away as the borders of the wood. It was
+the<br>
+ same voice that had already shouted, "Traditore!" through
+the<br>
+ shutters of the dining-room; this time it made a complete and
+clear<br>
+ statement. If the traitor "Oddlestone" were given up, all
+others<br>
+ should be spared; if not, no one should escape to tell the
+tale.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Huddlestone, what do you say to that?" asked
+Northmour,<br>
+ turning to the bed.</p>
+
+<p>Up to that moment the banker had given no sign of life, and I,
+at<br>
+ least, had supposed him to be still lying in a faint; but he<br>
+ replied at once, and in such tones as I have never heard
+elsewhere,<br>
+ save from a delirious patient, adjured and besought us not
+to<br>
+ desert him. It was the most hideous and abject performance that
+my<br>
+ imagination can conceive.</p>
+
+<p>"Enough," cried Northmour; and then he threw open the
+window,<br>
+ leaned out into the night, and in a tone of exultation, and with
+a<br>
+ total forgetfulness of what was due to the presence of a
+lady,<br>
+ poured out upon the ambassador a string of the most
+abominable<br>
+ raillery both in English and Italian, and bade him be gone where
+he<br>
+ had come from. I believe that nothing so delighted Northmour
+at<br>
+ that moment as the thought that we must all infallibly
+perish<br>
+ before the night was out.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, the Italian put his flag of truce into his pocket,
+and<br>
+ disappeared, at a leisurely pace, among the sand hills.</p>
+
+<p>"They make honorable war," said Northmour. "They are all
+gentlemen<br>
+ and soldiers. For the credit of the thing, I wish we could
+change<br>
+ sides--you and I, Frank, and you, too, missy, my darling--and
+leave<br>
+ that being on the bed to some one else. Tut! Don't look
+shocked!<br>
+ We are all going post to what they call eternity, and may as
+well<br>
+ be above board while there's time. As far as I am concerned, if
+I<br>
+ could first strangle Huddlestone and then get Clara in my arms,
+I<br>
+ could die with some pride and satisfaction. And as it is, by
+God,<br>
+ I'll have a kiss!"</p>
+
+<p>Before I could do anything to interfere, he had rudely
+embraced and<br>
+ repeatedly kissed the resisting girl. Next moment I had pulled
+him<br>
+ away with fury, and flung him heavily against the wall. He
+laughed<br>
+ loud and long, and I feared his wits had given way under the<br>
+ strain; for even in the best of days he had been a sparing and
+a<br>
+ quiet laugher.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Frank," said he, when his mirth was somewhat appeased,
+"it's<br>
+ your turn. Here's my hand. Good-bye, farewell!" Then, seeing
+me<br>
+ stand rigid and indignant, and holding Clara to my side--"Man!"
+he<br>
+ broke out, "are you angry? Did you think we were going to die
+with<br>
+ all the airs and graces of society? I took a kiss; I'm glad I
+did<br>
+ it; and now you can take another if you like, and square
+accounts."</p>
+
+<p>I turned from him with a feeling of contempt which I did not
+seek<br>
+ to dissemble.</p>
+
+<p>"As you please," said he. "You've been a prig in life; a
+prig<br>
+ you'll die."</p>
+
+<p>And with that he sat down in a chair, a rifle over his knee,
+and<br>
+ amused himself with snapping the lock; but I could see that
+his<br>
+ ebullition of light spirits (the only one I ever knew him to<br>
+ display) had already come to an end, and was succeeded by a
+sullen,<br>
+ scowling humor.</p>
+
+<p>All this time our assailants might have been entering the
+house,<br>
+ and we been none the wiser; we had in truth almost forgotten
+the<br>
+ danger that so imminently overhung our days. But just then
+Mr.<br>
+ Huddlestone uttered a cry, and leaped from the bed.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him what was wrong.</p>
+
+<p>"Fire!" he cried. "They have set the house on fire!"</p>
+
+<p>Northmour was on his feet in an instant, and he and I ran
+through<br>
+ the door of communication with the study. The room was
+illuminated<br>
+ by a red and angry light. Almost at the moment of our entrance,
+a<br>
+ tower of flame arose in front of the window, and, with a
+tingling<br>
+ report, a pane fell inward on the carpet. They had set fire to
+the<br>
+ lean-to outhouse, where Northmour used to nurse his
+negatives.</p>
+
+<p>"Hot work," said Northmour. "Let us try in your old room."</p>
+
+<p>We ran thither in a breath, threw up the casement, and
+looked<br>
+ forth. Along the whole back wall of the pavilion piles of fuel
+had<br>
+ been arranged and kindled; and it is probable they had been<br>
+ drenched with mineral oil, for, in spite of the morning's
+rain,<br>
+ they all burned bravely. The fire had taken a firm hold already
+on<br>
+ the outhouse, which blazed higher and higher every moment; the
+back<br>
+ door was in the center of a red-hot bonfire; the eaves we
+could<br>
+ see, as we looked upward, were already smoldering, for the
+roof<br>
+ overhung, and was supported by considerable beams of wood. At
+the<br>
+ same time, hot, pungent, and choking volumes of smoke began to
+fill<br>
+ the house. There was not a human being to be seen to right
+or<br>
+ left.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well!" said Northmour, "here's the end, thank God!"</p>
+
+<p>And we returned to My Uncle's Room. Mr. Huddlestone was
+putting on<br>
+ his boots, still violently trembling, but with an air of<br>
+ determination such as I had not hitherto observed. Clara
+stood<br>
+ close by him, with her cloak in both hands ready to throw about
+her<br>
+ shoulders, and a strange look in her eyes, as if she were
+half<br>
+ hopeful, half doubtful of her father.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, boys and girls," said Northmour, "how about a sally?
+The<br>
+ oven is heating; it is not good to stay here and be baked; and,
+for<br>
+ my part, I want to come to my hands with them, and be done."</p>
+
+<p>"There's nothing else left," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>And both Clara and Mr. Huddlestone, though with a very
+different<br>
+ intonation, added, "Nothing."</p>
+
+<p>As we went downstairs the heat was excessive, and the roaring
+of<br>
+ the fire filled our ears; and we had scarce reached the
+passage<br>
+ before the stairs window fell in, a branch of flame shot<br>
+ brandishing through the aperture, and the interior of the
+pavilion<br>
+ became lighted up with that dreadful and fluctuating glare. At
+the<br>
+ same moment we heard the fall of something heavy and inelastic
+in<br>
+ the upper story. The whole pavilion, it was plain, had gone
+alight<br>
+ like a box of matches, and now not only flamed sky high to land
+and<br>
+ sea, but threatened with every moment to crumble and fall in
+about<br>
+ our ears.</p>
+
+<p>Northmour and I cocked our revolvers. Mr. Huddlestone, who
+had<br>
+ already refused a firearm, put us behind him with a manner
+of<br>
+ command.</p>
+
+<p>"Let Clara open the door," said he. "So, if they fire a
+volley,<br>
+ she will be protected. And in the meantime stand behind me. I
+am<br>
+ the scapegoat; my sins have found me out."</p>
+
+<p>I heard him, as I stood breathless by his shoulder, with my
+pistol<br>
+ ready, pattering off prayers in a tremulous, rapid whisper; and,
+I<br>
+ confess, horrid as the thought may seem, I despised him for<br>
+ thinking of supplications in a moment so critical and
+thrilling.<br>
+ In the meantime, Clara, who was dead white but still possessed
+her<br>
+ faculties, had displaced the barricade from the front door.<br>
+ Another moment, and she had pulled it open. Firelight and<br>
+ moonlight illuminated the links with confused and changeful
+luster,<br>
+ and far away against the sky we could see a long trail of
+glowing<br>
+ smoke.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Huddlestone, filled for the moment with a strength greater
+than<br>
+ his own, struck Northmour and myself a back-hander in the
+chest;<br>
+ and while we were thus for the moment incapacitated from
+action,<br>
+ lifting his arms above his head like one about to dive, he
+ran<br>
+ straight forward out of the pavilion.</p>
+
+<p>"Here am I!" he cried--"Huddlestone! Kill me, and spare
+the<br>
+ others!"</p>
+
+<p>His sudden appearance daunted, I suppose, our hidden enemies;
+for<br>
+ Northmour and I had time to recover, to seize Clara between us,
+one<br>
+ by each arm, and to rush forth to his assistance, ere
+anything<br>
+ further had taken place. But scarce had we passed the
+threshold<br>
+ when there came near a dozen reports and flashes from every<br>
+ direction among the hollows of the links. Mr. Huddlestone<br>
+ staggered, uttered a weird and freezing cry, threw up his arms
+over<br>
+ his head, and fell backward on the turf.</p>
+
+<p>"Traditore! Traditore!" cried the invisible avengers.</p>
+
+<p>And just then a part of the roof of the pavilion fell in, so
+rapid<br>
+ was the progress of the fire. A loud, vague, and horrible
+noise<br>
+ accompanied the collapse, and a vast volume of flame went
+soaring<br>
+ up to heaven. It must have been visible at that moment from
+twenty<br>
+ miles out at sea, from the shore at Graden Wester, and far
+inland<br>
+ from the peak of Graystiel, the most eastern summit of the
+Caulder<br>
+ Hills. Bernard Huddlestone, although God knows what were his<br>
+ obsequies, had a fine pyre at the moment of his death.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ IX</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ I should have the greatest difficulty to tell you what
+followed<br>
+ next after this tragic circumstance. It is all to me, as I
+look<br>
+ back upon it, mixed, strenuous, and ineffectual, like the
+struggles<br>
+ of a sleeper in a nightmare. Clara, I remember, uttered a
+broken<br>
+ sigh and would have fallen forward to earth, had not Northmour
+and<br>
+ I supported her insensible body. I do not think we were
+attacked:<br>
+ I do not remember even to have seen an assailant; and I believe
+we<br>
+ deserted Mr. Huddlestone without a glance. I only remember
+running<br>
+ like a man in a panic, now carrying Clara altogether in my
+own<br>
+ arms, now sharing her weight with Northmour, now scuffling<br>
+ confusedly for the possession of that dear burden. Why we
+should<br>
+ have made for my camp in the Hemlock Den, or how we reached it,
+are<br>
+ points lost forever to my recollection. The first moment at
+which<br>
+ I became definitely sure, Clara had been suffered to fall
+against<br>
+ the outside of my little tent, Northmour and I were tumbling<br>
+ together on the ground, and he, with contained ferocity, was<br>
+ striking for my head with the butt of his revolver. He had
+already<br>
+ twice wounded me on the scalp; and it is to the consequent loss
+of<br>
+ blood that I am tempted to attribute the sudden clearness of
+my<br>
+ mind.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ I caught him by the wrist.</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour," I remember saying, "you can kill me afterwards.
+Let<br>
+ us first attend to Clara."</p>
+
+<p>He was at that moment uppermost. Scarcely had the words passed
+my<br>
+ lips, when he had leaped to his feet and ran toward the tent;
+and<br>
+ the next moment, he was straining Clara to his heart and
+covering<br>
+ her unconscious hands and face with his caresses.</p>
+
+<p>"Shame!" I cried. "Shame to you, Northmour!"</p>
+
+<p>And, giddy though I still was, I struck him repeatedly upon
+the<br>
+ head and shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>He relinquished his grasp, and faced me in the broken
+moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"I had you under, and I let you go," said he; "and now you
+strike<br>
+ me! Coward!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are the coward," I retorted. "Did she wish your kisses
+while<br>
+ she was still sensible of what you wanted? Not she! And now
+she<br>
+ may be dying; and you waste this precious time, and abuse
+her<br>
+ helplessness. Stand aside, and let me help her."</p>
+
+<p>He confronted me for a moment, white and menacing; then
+suddenly he<br>
+ stepped aside.</p>
+
+<p>"Help her then," said he.</p>
+
+<p>I threw myself on my knees beside her, and loosened, as well
+as I<br>
+ was able, her dress and corset; but while I was thus engaged,
+a<br>
+ grasp descended on my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep your hands off her," said Northmour, fiercely. "Do you
+think<br>
+ I have no blood in my veins?"</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour," I cried, "if you will neither help her yourself,
+nor<br>
+ let me do so, do you know that I shall have to kill you?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is better!" he cried. "Let her die also, where's the
+harm?<br>
+ Step aside from that girl! and stand up to fight."</p>
+
+<p>"You will observe," said I, half rising, "that I have not
+kissed<br>
+ her yet."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare you to," he cried.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know what possessed me; it was one of the things I am
+most<br>
+ ashamed of in my life, though, as my wife used to say, I knew
+that<br>
+ my kisses would be always welcome were she dead or living; down
+I<br>
+ fell again upon my knees, parted the hair from her forehead,
+and,<br>
+ with the dearest respect, laid my lips for a moment on that
+cold<br>
+ brow. It was such a caress as a father might have given; it
+was<br>
+ such a one as was not unbecoming from a man soon to die to a
+woman<br>
+ already dead.</p>
+
+<p>"And now," said I, "I am at your service, Mr. Northmour."</p>
+
+<p>But I saw, to my surprise, that he had turned his back upon
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you hear?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said he, "I do. If you wish to fight, I am ready. If
+not,<br>
+ go on and save Clara. All is one to me."</p>
+
+<p>I did not wait to be twice bidden; but, stooping again over
+Clara,<br>
+ continued my efforts to revive her. She still lay white and<br>
+ lifeless; I began to fear that her sweet spirit had indeed
+fled<br>
+ beyond recall, and horror and a sense of utter desolation
+seized<br>
+ upon my heart. I called her by name with the most endearing<br>
+ inflections; I chafed and beat her hands; now I laid her head
+low,<br>
+ now supported it against my knee; but all seemed to be in vain,
+and<br>
+ the lids still lay heavy on her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour," I said, "there is my hat. For God's sake bring
+some<br>
+ water from the spring."</p>
+
+<p>Almost in a moment he was by my side with the water.</p>
+
+<p>"I have brought it in my own," he said. "You do not grudge me
+the<br>
+ privilege?"</p>
+
+<p>"Northmour," I was beginning to say, as I laved her head
+and<br>
+ breast; but he interrupted me savagely.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you hush up!" he said. "The best thing you can do is to
+say<br>
+ nothing."</p>
+
+<p>I had certainly no desire to talk, my mind being swallowed up
+in<br>
+ concern for my dear love and her condition; so I continued
+in<br>
+ silence to do my best toward her recovery, and, when the hat
+was<br>
+ empty, returned it to him, with one word--"More." He had,
+perhaps,<br>
+ gone several times upon this errand, when Clara reopened her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said he, "since she is better, you can spare me, can
+you<br>
+ not? I wish you a good night, Mr. Cassilis."</p>
+
+<p>And with that he was gone among the thicket. I made a fire,
+for I<br>
+ had now no fear of the Italians, who had even spared all the
+little<br>
+ possessions left in my encampment; and, broken as she was by
+the<br>
+ excitement and the hideous catastrophe of the evening, I
+managed,<br>
+ in one way or another--by persuasion, encouragement, warmth,
+and<br>
+ such simple remedies as I could lay my hand on--to bring her
+back<br>
+ to some composure of mind and strength of body.</p>
+
+<p>Day had already come, when a sharp "Hist!" sounded from
+the<br>
+ thicket. I started from the ground; but the voice of Northmour
+was<br>
+ heard adding, in the most tranquil tones: "Come here, Cassilis,
+and<br>
+ alone; I want to show you something."</p>
+
+<p>I consulted Clara with my eyes, and, receiving her tacit<br>
+ permission, left her alone, and clambered out of the den. At
+some<br>
+ distance off I saw Northmour leaning against an elder; and, as
+soon<br>
+ as he perceived me, he began walking seaward. I had almost<br>
+ overtaken him as he reached the outskirts of the wood.</p>
+
+<p>"Look," said he, pausing.</p>
+
+<p>A couple of steps more brought me out of the foliage. The
+light of<br>
+ the morning lay cold and clear over that well-known scene.
+The<br>
+ pavilion was but a blackened wreck; the roof had fallen in, one
+of<br>
+ the gables had fallen out; and, far and near, the face of the
+links<br>
+ was cicatrized with little patches of burned furze. Thick
+smoke<br>
+ still went straight upward in the windless air of the morning,
+and<br>
+ a great pile of ardent cinders filled the bare walls of the
+house,<br>
+ like coals in an open grate. Close by the islet a schooner
+yacht<br>
+ lay to, and a well-manned boat was pulling vigorously for
+the<br>
+ shore.</p>
+
+<p>"The 'Red Earl'!" I cried. "The 'Red Earl' twelve hours too
+late!"</p>
+
+<p>"Feel in your pocket, Frank. Are you armed?" asked
+Northmour.</p>
+
+<p>I obeyed him, and I think I must have become deadly pale.
+My<br>
+ revolver had been taken from me.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, I have you in my power," he continued. "I disarmed
+you<br>
+ last night while you were nursing Clara; but this
+morning--here--<br>
+ take your pistol. No thanks!" he cried, holding up his hand.
+"I<br>
+ do not like them; that is the only way you can annoy me
+now."</p>
+
+<p>He began to walk forward across the links to meet the boat,
+and I<br>
+ followed a step or two behind. In front of the pavilion I
+paused<br>
+ to see where Mr. Huddlestone had fallen; but there was no sign
+of<br>
+ him, nor so much as a trace of blood.</p>
+
+<p>"Graden Floe," said Northmour.</p>
+
+<p>He continued to advance till we had come to the head of the
+beach.</p>
+
+<p>"No farther, please," said he. "Would you like to take her
+to<br>
+ Graden House?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," replied I; "I shall try to get her to the
+minister at<br>
+ Graden Wester."</p>
+
+<p>The prow of the boat here grated on the beach, and a sailor
+jumped<br>
+ ashore with a line in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute, lads!" cried Northmour; and then lower and to
+my<br>
+ private ear, "You had better say nothing of all this to her,"
+he<br>
+ added.</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary!" I broke out, "she shall know everything
+that I<br>
+ can tell."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not understand," he returned, with an air of great
+dignity.<br>
+ "It will be nothing to her; she expects it of me. Good-by!"
+he<br>
+ added, with a nod.</p>
+
+<p>I offered him my hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me," said he. "It's small, I know; but I can't push
+things<br>
+ quite so far as that. I don't wish any sentimental business,
+to<br>
+ sit by your hearth a white-haired wanderer, and all that.
+Quite<br>
+ the contrary: I hope to God I shall never again clap eyes on
+either<br>
+ one of you."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, God bless you, Northmour!" I said heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," he returned.</p>
+
+<p>He walked down the beach; and the man who was ashore gave him
+an<br>
+ arm on board, and then shoved off and leaped into the bows
+himself.<br>
+ Northmour took the tiller; the boat rose to the waves, and the
+oars<br>
+ between the tholepins sounded crisp and measured in the
+morning<br>
+ air.</p>
+
+<p>They were not yet half way to the "Red Earl," and I was
+still<br>
+ watching their progress, when the sun rose out of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>One word more, and my story is done. Years after, Northmour
+was<br>
+ killed fighting under the colors of Garibaldi for the liberation
+of<br>
+ the Tyrol.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3>Wilkie Collins</h3>
+
+<h2><br>
+ The Dream Woman</h2>
+
+<h3>A Mystery in Four Narratives</h3>
+
+<h4><br>
+ THE FIRST NARRATIVE</h4>
+
+<h4>INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT OF THE FACTS BY PERCY FAIRBANK</h4>
+
+<h3><br>
+ I</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Hullo, there! Hostler! Hullo-o-o!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear! why don't you look for the bell?"</p>
+
+<p>"I HAVE looked--there is no bell."</p>
+
+<p>"And nobody in the yard. How very extraordinary! Call
+again,<br>
+ dear."</p>
+
+<p>"Hostler! Hullo, there! Hostler-r-r!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ My second call echoes through empty space, and rouses
+nobody--<br>
+ produces, in short, no visible result. I am at the end of my<br>
+ resources--I don't know what to say or what to do next. Here
+I<br>
+ stand in the solitary inn yard of a strange town, with two
+horses<br>
+ to hold, and a lady to take care of. By way of adding to my<br>
+ responsibilities, it so happens that one of the horses is
+dead<br>
+ lame, and that the lady is my wife.</p>
+
+<p>Who am I?--you will ask.</p>
+
+<p>There is plenty of time to answer the question. Nothing
+happens;<br>
+ and nobody appears to receive us. Let me introduce myself and
+my<br>
+ wife.</p>
+
+<p>I am Percy Fairbank--English gentleman--age (let us say)
+forty--no<br>
+ profession--moderate politics--middle height--fair
+complexion--easy<br>
+ character--plenty of money.</p>
+
+<p>My wife is a French lady. She was Mademoiselle Clotilde
+Delorge--<br>
+ when I was first presented to her at her father's house in
+France.<br>
+ I fell in love with her--I really don't know why. It might
+have<br>
+ been because I was perfectly idle, and had nothing else to do
+at<br>
+ the time. Or it might have been because all my friends said
+she<br>
+ was the very last woman whom I ought to think of marrying. On
+the<br>
+ surface, I must own, there is nothing in common between Mrs.<br>
+ Fairbank and me. She is tall; she is dark; she is nervous,<br>
+ excitable, romantic; in all her opinions she proceeds to
+extremes.<br>
+ What could such a woman see in me? what could I see in her? I
+know<br>
+ no more than you do. In some mysterious manner we exactly
+suit<br>
+ each other. We have been man and wife for ten years, and our
+only<br>
+ regret is, that we have no children. I don't know what YOU
+may<br>
+ think; I call that--upon the whole--a happy marriage.</p>
+
+<p>So much for ourselves. The next question is--what has brought
+us<br>
+ into the inn yard? and why am I obliged to turn groom, and hold
+the<br>
+ horses?</p>
+
+<p>We live for the most part in France--at the country house in
+which<br>
+ my wife and I first met. Occasionally, by way of variety, we
+pay<br>
+ visits to my friends in England. We are paying one of those
+visits<br>
+ now. Our host is an old college friend of mine, possessed of
+a<br>
+ fine estate in Somersetshire; and we have arrived at his
+house--<br>
+ called Farleigh Hall--toward the close of the hunting
+season.</p>
+
+<p>On the day of which I am now writing--destined to be a
+memorable<br>
+ day in our calendar--the hounds meet at Farleigh Hall. Mrs.<br>
+ Fairbank and I are mounted on two of the best horses in my
+friend's<br>
+ stables. We are quite unworthy of that distinction; for we
+know<br>
+ nothing and care nothing about hunting. On the other hand,
+we<br>
+ delight in riding, and we enjoy the breezy Spring morning and
+the<br>
+ fair and fertile English landscape surrounding us on every
+side.<br>
+ While the hunt prospers, we follow the hunt. But when a
+check<br>
+ occurs--when time passes and patience is sorely tried; when
+the<br>
+ bewildered dogs run hither and thither, and strong language
+falls<br>
+ from the lips of exasperated sportsmen--we fail to take any
+further<br>
+ interest in the proceedings. We turn our horses' heads in
+the<br>
+ direction of a grassy lane, delightfully shaded by trees. We
+trot<br>
+ merrily along the lane, and find ourselves on an open common.
+We<br>
+ gallop across the common, and follow the windings of a second
+lane.<br>
+ We cross a brook, we pass through a village, we emerge into<br>
+ pastoral solitude among the hills. The horses toss their
+heads,<br>
+ and neigh to each other, and enjoy it as much as we do. The
+hunt<br>
+ is forgotten. We are as happy as a couple of children; we
+are<br>
+ actually singing a French song--when in one moment our
+merriment<br>
+ comes to an end. My wife's horse sets one of his forefeet on
+a<br>
+ loose stone, and stumbles. His rider's ready hand saves him
+from<br>
+ falling. But, at the first attempt he makes to go on, the
+sad<br>
+ truth shows itself--a tendon is strained; the horse is lame.</p>
+
+<p>What is to be done? We are strangers in a lonely part of
+the<br>
+ country. Look where we may, we see no signs of a human
+habitation.<br>
+ There is nothing for it but to take the bridle road up the
+hill,<br>
+ and try what we can discover on the other side. I transfer
+the<br>
+ saddles, and mount my wife on my own horse. He is not used
+to<br>
+ carry a lady; he misses the familiar pressure of a man's legs
+on<br>
+ either side of him; he fidgets, and starts, and kicks up the
+dust.<br>
+ I follow on foot, at a respectful distance from his heels,
+leading<br>
+ the lame horse. Is there a more miserable object on the face
+of<br>
+ creation than a lame horse? I have seen lame men and lame dogs
+who<br>
+ were cheerful creatures; but I never yet saw a lame horse
+who<br>
+ didn't look heartbroken over his own misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>For half an hour my wife capers and curvets sideways along
+the<br>
+ bridle road. I trudge on behind her; and the heartbroken
+horse<br>
+ halts behind me. Hard by the top of the hill, our melancholy<br>
+ procession passes a Somersetshire peasant at work in a field.
+I<br>
+ summon the man to approach us; and the man looks at me
+stolidly,<br>
+ from the middle of the field, without stirring a step. I ask
+at<br>
+ the top of my voice how far it is to Farleigh Hall. The<br>
+ Somersetshire peasant answers at the top of HIS voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Vourteen mile. Gi' oi a drap o' zyder."</p>
+
+<p>I translate (for my wife's benefit) from the Somersetshire
+language<br>
+ into the English language. We are fourteen miles from
+Farleigh<br>
+ Hall; and our friend in the field desires to be rewarded,
+for<br>
+ giving us that information, with a drop of cider. There is
+the<br>
+ peasant, painted by himself! Quite a bit of character, my
+dear!<br>
+ Quite a bit of character!</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fairbank doesn't view the study of agricultural human
+nature<br>
+ with my relish. Her fidgety horse will not allow her a
+moment's<br>
+ repose; she is beginning to lose her temper.</p>
+
+<p>"We can't go fourteen miles in this way," she says. "Where is
+the<br>
+ nearest inn? Ask that brute in the field!"</p>
+
+<p>I take a shilling from my pocket and hold it up in the sun.
+The<br>
+ shilling exercises magnetic virtues. The shilling draws the<br>
+ peasant slowly toward me from the middle of the field. I
+inform<br>
+ him that we want to put up the horses and to hire a carriage
+to<br>
+ take us back to Farleigh Hall. Where can we do that? The
+peasant<br>
+ answers (with his eye on the shilling):</p>
+
+<p>"At Oonderbridge, to be zure." (At Underbridge, to be
+sure.)</p>
+
+<p>"Is it far to Underbridge?"</p>
+
+<p>The peasant repeats, "Var to Oonderbridge?"--and laughs at
+the<br>
+ question. "Hoo-hoo-hoo!" (Underbridge is evidently close
+by--if<br>
+ we could only find it.) "Will you show us the way, my man?"
+"Will<br>
+ you gi' oi a drap of zyder?" I courteously bend my head, and
+point<br>
+ to the shilling. The agricultural intelligence exerts itself.
+The<br>
+ peasant joins our melancholy procession. My wife is a fine
+woman,<br>
+ but he never once looks at my wife--and, more extraordinary
+still,<br>
+ he never even looks at the horses. His eyes are with his
+mind--and<br>
+ his mind is on the shilling.</p>
+
+<p>We reach the top of the hill--and, behold on the other
+side,<br>
+ nestling in a valley, the shrine of our pilgrimage, the town
+of<br>
+ Underbridge! Here our guide claims his shilling, and leaves us
+to<br>
+ find out the inn for ourselves. I am constitutionally a
+polite<br>
+ man. I say "Good morning" at parting. The guide looks at me
+with<br>
+ the shilling between his teeth to make sure that it is a good
+one.<br>
+ "Marnin!" he says savagely--and turns his back on us, as if we
+had<br>
+ offended him. A curious product, this, of the growth of<br>
+ civilization. If I didn't see a church spire at Underbridge,
+I<br>
+ might suppose that we had lost ourselves on a savage island.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ II</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Arriving at the town, we had no difficulty in finding the inn.
+The<br>
+ town is composed of one desolate street; and midway in that
+street<br>
+ stands the inn--an ancient stone building sadly out of repair.
+The<br>
+ painting on the sign-board is obliterated. The shutters over
+the<br>
+ long range of front windows are all closed. A cock and his
+hens<br>
+ are the only living creatures at the door. Plainly, this is one
+of<br>
+ the old inns of the stage-coach period, ruined by the railway.
+We<br>
+ pass through the open arched doorway, and find no one to
+welcome<br>
+ us. We advance into the stable yard behind; I assist my wife
+to<br>
+ dismount--and there we are in the position already disclosed
+to<br>
+ view at the opening of this narrative. No bell to ring. No
+human<br>
+ creature to answer when I call. I stand helpless, with the
+bridles<br>
+ of the horses in my hand. Mrs. Fairbank saunters gracefully
+down<br>
+ the length of the yard and does--what all women do, when they
+find<br>
+ themselves in a strange place. She opens every door as she
+passes<br>
+ it, and peeps in. On my side, I have just recovered my breath,
+I<br>
+ am on the point of shouting for the hostler for the third and
+last<br>
+ time, when I hear Mrs. Fairbank suddenly call to me:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Percy! come here!"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice is eager and agitated. She has opened a last door at
+the<br>
+ end of the yard, and has started back from some sight which
+has<br>
+ suddenly met her view. I hitch the horses' bridles on a rusty
+nail<br>
+ in the wall near me, and join my wife. She has turned pale,
+and<br>
+ catches me nervously by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens!" she cries; "look at that!"</p>
+
+<p>I look--and what do I see? I see a dingy little stable,
+containing<br>
+ two stalls. In one stall a horse is munching his corn. In
+the<br>
+ other a man is lying asleep on the litter.</p>
+
+<p>A worn, withered, woebegone man in a hostler's dress. His
+hollow<br>
+ wrinkled cheeks, his scanty grizzled hair, his dry yellow
+skin,<br>
+ tell their own tale of past sorrow or suffering. There is an<br>
+ ominous frown on his eyebrows--there is a painful nervous<br>
+ contraction on the side of his mouth. I hear him breathing<br>
+ convulsively when I first look in; he shudders and sighs in
+his<br>
+ sleep. It is not a pleasant sight to see, and I turn round<br>
+ instinctively to the bright sunlight in the yard. My wife turns
+me<br>
+ back again in the direction of the stable door.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait!" she says. "Wait! he may do it again."</p>
+
+<p>"Do what again?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was talking in his sleep, Percy, when I first looked in.
+He<br>
+ was dreaming some dreadful dream. Hush! he's beginning
+again."</p>
+
+<p>I look and listen. The man stirs on his miserable bed. The
+man<br>
+ speaks in a quick, fierce whisper through his clinched
+teeth.<br>
+ "Wake up! Wake up, there! Murder!"</p>
+
+<p>There is an interval of silence. He moves one lean arm
+slowly<br>
+ until it rests over his throat; he shudders, and turns on
+his<br>
+ straw; he raises his arm from his throat, and feebly stretches
+it<br>
+ out; his hand clutches at the straw on the side toward which he
+has<br>
+ turned; he seems to fancy that he is grasping at the edge of<br>
+ something. I see his lips begin to move again; I step softly
+into<br>
+ the stable; my wife follows me, with her hand fast clasped in
+mine.<br>
+ We both bend over him. He is talking once more in his
+sleep--<br>
+ strange talk, mad talk, this time.</p>
+
+<p>"Light gray eyes" (we hear him say), "and a droop in the
+left<br>
+ eyelid--flaxen hair, with a gold-yellow streak in it--all
+right,<br>
+ mother! fair, white arms with a down on them--little, lady's
+hand,<br>
+ with a reddish look round the fingernails--the knife--the
+cursed<br>
+ knife--first on one side, then on the other--aha, you
+she-devil!<br>
+ where is the knife?"</p>
+
+<p>He stops and grows restless on a sudden. We see him writhing
+on<br>
+ the straw. He throws up both his hands and gasps hysterically
+for<br>
+ breath. His eyes open suddenly. For a moment they look at<br>
+ nothing, with a vacant glitter in them--then they close again
+in<br>
+ deeper sleep. Is he dreaming still? Yes; but the dream seems
+to<br>
+ have taken a new course. When he speaks next, the tone is
+altered;<br>
+ the words are few--sadly and imploringly repeated over and
+over<br>
+ again. "Say you love me! I am so fond of YOU. Say you love
+me!<br>
+ say you love me!" He sinks into deeper and deeper sleep,
+faintly<br>
+ repeating those words. They die away on his lips. He speaks
+no<br>
+ more.</p>
+
+<p>By this time Mrs. Fairbank has got over her terror; she is
+devoured<br>
+ by curiosity now. The miserable creature on the straw has
+appealed<br>
+ to the imaginative side of her character. Her illimitable
+appetite<br>
+ for romance hungers and thirsts for more. She shakes me<br>
+ impatiently by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you hear? There is a woman at the bottom of it, Percy!
+There<br>
+ is love and murder in it, Percy! Where are the people of the
+inn?<br>
+ Go into the yard, and call to them again."</p>
+
+<p>My wife belongs, on her mother's side, to the South of France.
+The<br>
+ South of France breeds fine women with hot tempers. I say no
+more.<br>
+ Married men will understand my position. Single men may need to
+be<br>
+ told that there are occasions when we must not only love and
+honor-<br>
+ -we must also obey--our wives.</p>
+
+<p>I turn to the door to obey MY wife, and find myself confronted
+by a<br>
+ stranger who has stolen on us unawares. The stranger is a
+tiny,<br>
+ sleepy, rosy old man, with a vacant pudding-face, and a
+shining<br>
+ bald head. He wears drab breeches and gaiters, and a
+respectable<br>
+ square-tailed ancient black coat. I feel instinctively that
+here<br>
+ is the landlord of the inn.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, sir," says the rosy old man. "I'm a little hard
+of<br>
+ hearing. Was it you that was a-calling just now in the
+yard?"</p>
+
+<p>Before I can answer, my wife interposes. She insists (in a
+shrill<br>
+ voice, adapted to our host's hardness of hearing) on knowing
+who<br>
+ that unfortunate person is sleeping on the straw. "Where does
+he<br>
+ come from? Why does he say such dreadful things in his sleep?
+Is<br>
+ he married or single? Did he ever fall in love with a
+murderess?<br>
+ What sort of a looking woman was she? Did she really stab him
+or<br>
+ not? In short, dear Mr. Landlord, tell us the whole story!"</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. Landlord waits drowsily until Mrs. Fairbank has
+quite<br>
+ done--then delivers himself of his reply as follows:</p>
+
+<p>"His name's Francis Raven. He's an Independent Methodist. He
+was<br>
+ forty-five year old last birthday. And he's my hostler.
+That's<br>
+ his story."</p>
+
+<p>My wife's hot southern temper finds its way to her foot,
+and<br>
+ expresses itself by a stamp on the stable yard.</p>
+
+<p>The landlord turns himself sleepily round, and looks at the
+horses.<br>
+ "A fine pair of horses, them two in the yard. Do you want to
+put<br>
+ 'em in my stables?" I reply in the affirmative by a nod. The<br>
+ landlord, bent on making himself agreeable to my wife,
+addresses<br>
+ her once more. "I'm a-going to wake Francis Raven. He's an<br>
+ Independent Methodist. He was forty-five year old last
+birthday.<br>
+ And he's my hostler. That's his story."</p>
+
+<p>Having issued this second edition of his interesting
+narrative, the<br>
+ landlord enters the stable. We follow him to see how he will
+wake<br>
+ Francis Raven, and what will happen upon that. The stable
+broom<br>
+ stands in a corner; the landlord takes it--advances toward
+the<br>
+ sleeping hostler--and coolly stirs the man up with a broom as if
+he<br>
+ was a wild beast in a cage. Francis Raven starts to his feet
+with<br>
+ a cry of terror--looks at us wildly, with a horrid glare of<br>
+ suspicion in his eyes--recovers himself the next moment--and<br>
+ suddenly changes into a decent, quiet, respectable
+serving-man.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, ma'am. I beg your pardon, sir."</p>
+
+<p>The tone and manner in which he makes his apologies are both
+above<br>
+ his apparent station in life. I begin to catch the infection
+of<br>
+ Mrs. Fairbank's interest in this man. We both follow him out
+into<br>
+ the yard to see what he will do with the horses. The manner
+in<br>
+ which he lifts the injured leg of the lame horse tells me at
+once<br>
+ that he understands his business. Quickly and quietly, he
+leads<br>
+ the animal into an empty stable; quickly and quietly, he gets
+a<br>
+ bucket of hot water, and puts the lame horse's leg into it.
+"The<br>
+ warm water will reduce the swelling, sir. I will bandage the
+leg<br>
+ afterwards." All that he does is done intelligently; all that
+he<br>
+ says, he says to the purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing wild, nothing strange about him now. Is this the same
+man<br>
+ whom we heard talking in his sleep?--the same man who woke
+with<br>
+ that cry of terror and that horrid suspicion in his eyes? I<br>
+ determine to try him with one or two questions.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ III</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Not much to do here," I say to the hostler.</p>
+
+<p>"Very little to do, sir," the hostler replies.</p>
+
+<p>"Anybody staying in the house?"</p>
+
+<p>"The house is quite empty, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you were all dead. I could make nobody hear
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"The landlord is very deaf, sir, and the waiter is out on
+an<br>
+ errand."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and YOU were fast asleep in the stable. Do you often
+take a<br>
+ nap in the daytime?"</p>
+
+<p>The worn face of the hostler faintly flushes. His eyes look
+away<br>
+ from my eyes for the first time. Mrs. Fairbank furtively
+pinches<br>
+ my arm. Are we on the eve of a discovery at last? I repeat
+my<br>
+ question. The man has no civil alternative but to give me an<br>
+ answer. The answer is given in these words:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "I was tired out, sir. You wouldn't have found me asleep in
+the<br>
+ daytime but for that."</p>
+
+<p>"Tired out, eh? You had been hard at work, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"What was it, then?"</p>
+
+<p>He hesitates again, and answers unwillingly, "I was up all
+night."</p>
+
+<p>"Up all night? Anything going on in the town?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing going on, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Anybody ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody ill, sir."</p>
+
+<p>That reply is the last. Try as I may, I can extract nothing
+more<br>
+ from him. He turns away and busies himself in attending to
+the<br>
+ horse's leg. I leave the stable to speak to the landlord about
+the<br>
+ carriage which is to take us back to Farleigh Hall. Mrs.
+Fairbank<br>
+ remains with the hostler, and favors me with a look at
+parting.<br>
+ The look says plainly, "I mean to find out why he was up all
+night.<br>
+ Leave him to Me."</p>
+
+<p>The ordering of the carriage is easily accomplished. The
+inn<br>
+ possesses one horse and one chaise. The landlord has a story
+to<br>
+ tell of the horse, and a story to tell of the chaise. They<br>
+ resemble the story of Francis Raven--with this exception, that
+the<br>
+ horse and chaise belong to no religious persuasion. "The
+horse<br>
+ will be nine year old next birthday. I've had the shay for
+four-<br>
+ and-twenty year. Mr. Max, of Underbridge, he bred the horse;
+and<br>
+ Mr. Pooley, of Yeovil, he built the shay. It's my horse and
+my<br>
+ shay. And that's THEIR story!" Having relieved his mind of
+these<br>
+ details, the landlord proceeds to put the harness on the horse.
+By<br>
+ way of assisting him, I drag the chaise into the yard. Just as
+our<br>
+ preparations are completed, Mrs. Fairbank appears. A moment or
+two<br>
+ later the hostler follows her out. He has bandaged the
+horse's<br>
+ leg, and is now ready to drive us to Farleigh Hall. I
+observe<br>
+ signs of agitation in his face and manner, which suggest that
+my<br>
+ wife has found her way into his confidence. I put the question
+to<br>
+ her privately in a corner of the yard. "Well? Have you found
+out<br>
+ why Francis Raven was up all night?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fairbank has an eye to dramatic effect. Instead of
+answering<br>
+ plainly, Yes or No, she suspends the interest and excites
+the<br>
+ audience by putting a question on her side.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the day of the month, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"The day of the month is the first of March."</p>
+
+<p>"The first of March, Percy, is Francis Raven's birthday."</p>
+
+<p>I try to look as if I was interested--and don't succeed.</p>
+
+<p>"Francis was born," Mrs. Fairbank proceeds gravely, "at two
+o'clock<br>
+ in the morning."</p>
+
+<p>I begin to wonder whether my wife's intellect is going the way
+of<br>
+ the landlord's intellect. "Is that all?" I ask.</p>
+
+<p>"It is NOT all," Mrs. Fairbank answers. "Francis Raven sits up
+on<br>
+ the morning of his birthday because he is afraid to go to
+bed."</p>
+
+<p>"And why is he afraid to go to bed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because he is in peril of his life."</p>
+
+<p>"On his birthday?"</p>
+
+<p>"On his birthday. At two o'clock in the morning. As regularly
+as<br>
+ the birthday comes round."</p>
+
+<p>There she stops. Has she discovered no more than that? No
+more<br>
+ thus far. I begin to feel really interested by this time. I
+ask<br>
+ eagerly what it means? Mrs. Fairbank points mysteriously to
+the<br>
+ chaise--with Francis Raven (hitherto our hostler, now our
+coachman)<br>
+ waiting for us to get in. The chaise has a seat for two in
+front,<br>
+ and a seat for one behind. My wife casts a warning look at me,
+and<br>
+ places herself on the seat in front.</p>
+
+<p>The necessary consequence of this arrangement is that Mrs.
+Fairhank<br>
+ sits by the side of the driver during a journey of two hours
+and<br>
+ more. Need I state the result? It would be an insult to your<br>
+ intelligence to state the result. Let me offer you my place in
+the<br>
+ chaise. And let Francis Raven tell his terrible story in his
+own<br>
+ words.</p>
+
+<h4><br>
+ THE SECOND NARRATIVE</h4>
+
+<h4>THE HOSTLER'S STORY.--TOLD BY HIMSELF</h4>
+
+<h3><br>
+ IV</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ It is now ten years ago since I got my first warning of the
+great<br>
+ trouble of my life in the Vision of a Dream.</p>
+
+<p>I shall be better able to tell you about it if you will
+please<br>
+ suppose yourselves to be drinking tea along with us in our
+little<br>
+ cottage in Cambridgeshire, ten years since.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The time was the close of day, and there were three of us at
+the<br>
+ table, namely, my mother, myself, and my mother's sister,
+Mrs.<br>
+ Chance. These two were Scotchwomen by birth, and both were
+widows.<br>
+ There was no other resemblance between them that I can call
+to<br>
+ mind. My mother had lived all her life in England, and had no
+more<br>
+ of the Scotch brogue on her tongue than I have. My aunt Chance
+had<br>
+ never been out of Scotland until she came to keep house with
+my<br>
+ mother after her husband's death. And when SHE opened her lips
+you<br>
+ heard broad Scotch, I can tell you, if you ever heard it
+yet!</p>
+
+<p>As it fell out, there was a matter of some consequence in
+debate<br>
+ among us that evening. It was this: whether I should do well
+or<br>
+ not to take a long journey on foot the next morning.</p>
+
+<p>Now the next morning happened to be the day before my
+birthday; and<br>
+ the purpose of the journey was to offer myself for a situation
+as<br>
+ groom at a great house in the neighboring county to ours.
+The<br>
+ place was reported as likely to fall vacant in about three
+weeks'<br>
+ time. I was as well fitted to fill it as any other man. In
+the<br>
+ prosperous days of our family, my father had been manager of
+a<br>
+ training stable, and he had kept me employed among the horses
+from<br>
+ my boyhood upward. Please to excuse my troubling you with
+these<br>
+ small matters. They all fit into my story farther on, as you
+will<br>
+ soon find out. My poor mother was dead against my leaving home
+on<br>
+ the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>"You can never walk all the way there and all the way back
+again by<br>
+ to-morrow night," she says. "The end of it will be that you
+will<br>
+ sleep away from home on your birthday. You have never done
+that<br>
+ yet, Francis, since your father's death, I don't like your doing
+it<br>
+ now. Wait a day longer, my son--only one day."</p>
+
+<p>For my own part, I was weary of being idle, and I couldn't
+abide<br>
+ the notion of delay. Even one day might make all the
+difference.<br>
+ Some other man might take time by the forelock, and get the
+place.</p>
+
+<p>"Consider how long I have been out of work," I says, "and
+don't ask<br>
+ me to put off the journey. I won't fail you, mother. I'll
+get<br>
+ back by to-morrow night, if I have to pay my last sixpence for
+a<br>
+ lift in a cart."</p>
+
+<p>My mother shook her head. "I don't like it, Francis--I don't
+like<br>
+ it!" There was no moving her from that view. We argued and<br>
+ argued, until we were both at a deadlock. It ended in our
+agreeing<br>
+ to refer the difference between us to my mother's sister,
+Mrs.<br>
+ Chance.</p>
+
+<p>While we were trying hard to convince each other, my aunt
+Chance<br>
+ sat as dumb as a fish, stirring her tea and thinking her own<br>
+ thoughts. When we made our appeal to her, she seemed as it were
+to<br>
+ wake up. "Ye baith refer it to my puir judgment?" she says, in
+her<br>
+ broad Scotch. We both answered Yes. Upon that my aunt Chance<br>
+ first cleared the tea-table, and then pulled out from the pocket
+of<br>
+ her gown a pack of cards.</p>
+
+<p>Don't run away, if you please, with the notion that this was
+done<br>
+ lightly, with a view to amuse my mother and me. My aunt
+Chance<br>
+ seriously believed that she could look into the future by
+telling<br>
+ fortunes on the cards. She did nothing herself without first<br>
+ consulting the cards. She could give no more serious proof of
+her<br>
+ interest in my welfare than the proof which she was offering
+now.<br>
+ I don't say it profanely; I only mention the fact--the cards
+had,<br>
+ in some incomprehensible way, got themselves jumbled up
+together<br>
+ with her religious convictions. You meet with people nowadays
+who<br>
+ believe in spirits working by way of tables and chairs. On
+the<br>
+ same principle (if there IS any principle in it) my aunt
+Chance<br>
+ believed in Providence working by way of the cards.</p>
+
+<p>"Whether YOU are right, Francie, or your mither--whether ye
+will do<br>
+ weel or ill, the morrow, to go or stay--the cairds will tell
+it.<br>
+ We are a' in the hands of Proavidence. The cairds will tell
+it."</p>
+
+<p>Hearing this, my mother turned her head aside, with something
+of a<br>
+ sour look in her face. Her sister's notions about the cards
+were<br>
+ little better than flat blasphemy to her mind. But she kept
+her<br>
+ opinion to herself. My aunt Chance, to own the truth, had<br>
+ inherited, through her late husband, a pension of thirty pounds
+a<br>
+ year. This was an important contribution to our housekeeping,
+and<br>
+ we poor relations were bound to treat her with a certain
+respect.<br>
+ As for myself, if my poor father never did anything else for
+me<br>
+ before he fell into difficulties, he gave me a good education,
+and<br>
+ raised me (thank God) above superstitions of all sorts. However,
+a<br>
+ very little amused me in those days; and I waited to have my<br>
+ fortune told, as patiently as if I believed in it too!</p>
+
+<p>My aunt began her hocus pocus by throwing out all the cards in
+the<br>
+ pack under seven. She shuffled the rest with her left hand
+for<br>
+ luck; and then she gave them to me to cut. "Wi' yer left
+hand,<br>
+ Francie. Mind that! Pet your trust in Proavidence--but dinna<br>
+ forget that your luck's in yer left hand!" A long and
+roundabout<br>
+ shifting of the cards followed, reducing them in number until
+there<br>
+ were just fifteen of them left, laid out neatly before my aunt
+in a<br>
+ half circle. The card which happened to lie outermost, at
+the<br>
+ right-hand end of the circle, was, according to rule in such
+cases,<br>
+ the card chosen to represent Me. By way of being appropriate to
+my<br>
+ situation as a poor groom out of employment, the card was--the
+King<br>
+ of Diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>"I tak' up the King o' Diamants," says my aunt. "I count
+seven<br>
+ cairds fra' richt to left; and I humbly ask a blessing on
+what<br>
+ follows." My aunt shut her eyes as if she was saying grace
+before<br>
+ meat, and held up to me the seventh card. I called the
+seventh<br>
+ card--the Queen of Spades. My aunt opened her eyes again in
+a<br>
+ hurry, and cast a sly look my way. "The Queen o' Spades means
+a<br>
+ dairk woman. Ye'll be thinking in secret, Francie, of a
+dairk<br>
+ woman?"</p>
+
+<p>When a man has been out of work for more than three months,
+his<br>
+ mind isn't troubled much with thinking of women--light or dark.
+I<br>
+ was thinking of the groom's place at the great house, and I
+tried<br>
+ to say so. My aunt Chance wouldn't listen. She treated my<br>
+ interpretation with contempt. "Hoot-toot! there's the caird
+in<br>
+ your hand! If ye're no thinking of her the day, ye'll be
+thinking<br>
+ of her the morrow. Where's the harm of thinking of a dairk
+woman!<br>
+ I was ance a dairk woman myself, before my hair was gray. Haud
+yer<br>
+ peace, Francie, and watch the cairds."</p>
+
+<p>I watched the cards as I was told. There were seven left on
+the<br>
+ table. My aunt removed two from one end of the row and two
+from<br>
+ the other, and desired me to call the two outermost of the
+three<br>
+ cards now left on the table. I called the Ace of Clubs and the
+Ten<br>
+ of Diamonds. My aunt Chance lifted her eyes to the ceiling with
+a<br>
+ look of devout gratitude which sorely tried my mother's
+patience.<br>
+ The Ace of Clubs and the Ten of Diamonds, taken together,<br>
+ signified--first, good news (evidently the news of the
+groom's<br>
+ place); secondly, a journey that lay before me (pointing plainly
+to<br>
+ my journey to-morrow!); thirdly and lastly, a sum of money<br>
+ (probably the groom's wages!) waiting to find its way into
+my<br>
+ pockets. Having told my fortune in these encouraging terms,
+my<br>
+ aunt declined to carry the experiment any further. "Eh, lad!
+it's<br>
+ a clean tempting o' Proavidence to ask mair o' the cairds than
+the<br>
+ cairds have tauld us noo. Gae yer ways to-morrow to the
+great<br>
+ hoose. A dairk woman will meet ye at the gate; and she'll have
+a<br>
+ hand in getting ye the groom's place, wi' a' the gratifications
+and<br>
+ pairquisites appertaining to the same. And, mebbe, when yer<br>
+ poaket's full o' money, ye'll no' be forgetting yer aunt
+Chance,<br>
+ maintaining her ain unblemished widowhood--wi' Proavidence<br>
+ assisting--on thratty punds a year!"</p>
+
+<p>I promised to remember my aunt Chance (who had the defect, by
+the<br>
+ way, of being a terribly greedy person after money) on the
+next<br>
+ happy occasion when my poor empty pockets were to be filled
+at<br>
+ last. This done, I looked at my mother. She had agreed to
+take<br>
+ her sister for umpire between us, and her sister had given it in
+my<br>
+ favor. She raised no more objections. Silently, she got on
+her<br>
+ feet, and kissed me, and sighed bitterly--and so left the room.
+My<br>
+ aunt Chance shook her head. "I doubt, Francie, yer puir mither
+has<br>
+ but a heathen notion of the vairtue of the cairds!"</p>
+
+<p>By daylight the next morning I set forth on my journey. I
+looked<br>
+ back at the cottage as I opened the garden gate. At one window
+was<br>
+ my mother, with her handkerchief to her eyes. At the other
+stood<br>
+ my aunt Chance, holding up the Queen of Spades by way of<br>
+ encouraging me at starting. I waved my hands to both of them
+in<br>
+ token of farewell, and stepped out briskly into the road. It
+was<br>
+ then the last day of February. Be pleased to remember, in<br>
+ connection with this, that the first of March was the day, and
+two<br>
+ o'clock in the morning the hour of my birth.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ V</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Now you know how I came to leave home. The next thing to tell
+is,<br>
+ what happened on the journey.</p>
+
+<p>I reached the great house in reasonably good time considering
+the<br>
+ distance. At the very first trial of it, the prophecy of the
+cards<br>
+ turned out to be wrong. The person who met me at the lodge
+gate<br>
+ was not a dark woman--in fact, not a woman at all--but a boy.
+He<br>
+ directed me on the way to the servants' offices; and there
+again<br>
+ the cards were all wrong. I encountered, not one woman, but
+three-<br>
+ -and not one of the three was dark. I have stated that I am
+not<br>
+ superstitious, and I have told the truth. But I must own that
+I<br>
+ did feel a certain fluttering at the heart when I made my bow
+to<br>
+ the steward, and told him what business had brought me to
+the<br>
+ house. His answer completed the discomfiture of aunt
+Chance's<br>
+ fortune-telling. My ill-luck still pursued me. That very
+morning<br>
+ another man had applied for the groom's place, and had got
+it.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ I swallowed my disappointment as well as I could, and thanked
+the<br>
+ steward, and went to the inn in the village to get the rest
+and<br>
+ food which I sorely needed by this time.</p>
+
+<p>Before starting on my homeward walk I made some inquiries at
+the<br>
+ inn, and ascertained that I might save a few miles, on my
+return,<br>
+ by following a new road. Furnished with full instructions,
+several<br>
+ times repeated, as to the various turnings I was to take, I
+set<br>
+ forth, and walked on till the evening with only one stoppage
+for<br>
+ bread and cheese. Just as it was getting toward dark, the
+rain<br>
+ came on and the wind began to rise; and I found myself, to
+make<br>
+ matters worse, in a part of the country with which I was
+entirely<br>
+ unacquainted, though I guessed myself to be some fifteen miles
+from<br>
+ home. The first house I found to inquire at, was a lonely
+roadside<br>
+ inn, standing on the outskirts of a thick wood. Solitary as
+the<br>
+ place looked, it was welcome to a lost man who was also
+hungry,<br>
+ thirsty, footsore, and wet. The landlord was civil and<br>
+ respectable-looking; and the price he asked for a bed was<br>
+ reasonable enough. I was grieved to disappoint my mother.
+But<br>
+ there was no conveyance to be had, and I could go no farther
+afoot<br>
+ that night. My weariness fairly forced me to stop at the
+inn.</p>
+
+<p>I may say for myself that I am a temperate man. My supper
+simply<br>
+ consisted of some rashers of bacon, a slice of home-made bread,
+and<br>
+ a pint of ale. I did not go to bed immediately after this
+moderate<br>
+ meal, but sat up with the landlord, talking about my bad
+prospects<br>
+ and my long run of ill-luck, and diverging from these topics to
+the<br>
+ subjects of horse-flesh and racing. Nothing was said, either
+by<br>
+ myself, my host, or the few laborers who strayed into the
+tap-room,<br>
+ which could, in the slightest degree, excite my mind, or set
+my<br>
+ fancy--which is only a small fancy at the best of
+times--playing<br>
+ tricks with my common sense.</p>
+
+<p>At a little after eleven the house was closed. I went round
+with<br>
+ the landlord, and held the candle while the doors and lower
+windows<br>
+ were being secured. I noticed with surprise the strength of
+the<br>
+ bolts, bars, and iron-sheathed shutters.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, we are rather lonely here," said the landlord. "We
+never<br>
+ have had any attempts to break in yet, but it's always as well
+to<br>
+ be on the safe side. When nobody is sleeping here, I am the
+only<br>
+ man in the house. My wife and daughter are timid, and the
+servant<br>
+ girl takes after her missuses. Another glass of ale, before
+you<br>
+ turn in?--No!--Well, how such a sober man as you comes to be out
+of<br>
+ a place is more than I can understand for one.--Here's where
+you're<br>
+ to sleep. You're the only lodger to-night, and I think you'll
+say<br>
+ my missus has done her best to make you comfortable. You're
+quite<br>
+ sure you won't have another glass of ale?--Very well. Good
+night."</p>
+
+<p>It was half-past eleven by the clock in the passage as we
+went<br>
+ upstairs to the bedroom. The window looked out on the wood at
+the<br>
+ back of the house.</p>
+
+<p>I locked my door, set my candle on the chest of drawers,
+and<br>
+ wearily got me ready for bed. The bleak wind was still
+blowing,<br>
+ and the solemn, surging moan of it in the wood was very dreary
+to<br>
+ hear through the night silence. Feeling strangely wakeful, I<br>
+ resolved to keep the candle alight until I began to grow
+sleepy.<br>
+ The truth is, I was not quite myself. I was depressed in mind
+by<br>
+ my disappointment of the morning; and I was worn out in body by
+my<br>
+ long walk. Between the two, I own I couldn't face the prospect
+of<br>
+ lying awake in the darkness, listening to the dismal moan of
+the<br>
+ wind in the wood.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep stole on me before I was aware of it; my eyes closed,
+and I<br>
+ fell off to rest, without having so much as thought of<br>
+ extinguishing the candle.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing that I remember was a faint shivering that
+ran<br>
+ through me from head to foot, and a dreadful sinking pain at
+my<br>
+ heart, such as I had never felt before. The shivering only<br>
+ disturbed my slumbers--the pain woke me instantly. In one moment
+I<br>
+ passed from a state of sleep to a state of wakefulness--my
+eyes<br>
+ wide open--my mind clear on a sudden as if by a miracle. The<br>
+ candle had burned down nearly to the last morsel of tallow, but
+the<br>
+ unsnuffed wick had just fallen off, and the light was, for
+the<br>
+ moment, fair and full.</p>
+
+<p>Between the foot of the bed and the closet door, I saw a
+person in<br>
+ my room. The person was a woman, standing looking at me, with
+a<br>
+ knife in her hand. It does no credit to my courage to confess
+it--<br>
+ but the truth IS the truth. I was struck speechless with
+terror.<br>
+ There I lay with my eyes on the woman; there the woman stood
+(with<br>
+ the knife in her hand) with HER eyes on ME.</p>
+
+<p>She said not a word as we stared each other in the face; but
+she<br>
+ moved after a little--moved slowly toward the left-hand side of
+the<br>
+ bed.</p>
+
+<p>The light fell full on her face. A fair, fine woman, with<br>
+ yellowish flaxen hair, and light gray eyes, with a droop in
+the<br>
+ left eyelid. I noticed these things and fixed them in my
+mind,<br>
+ before she was quite round at the side of the bed. Without
+saying<br>
+ a word; without any change in the stony stillness of her
+face;<br>
+ without any noise following her footfall, she came closer
+and<br>
+ closer; stopped at the bed-head; and lifted the knife to stab
+me.<br>
+ I laid my arm over my throat to save it; but, as I saw the
+blow<br>
+ coming, I threw my hand across the bed to the right side,
+and<br>
+ jerked my body over that way, just as the knife came down,
+like<br>
+ lightning, within a hair's breadth of my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>My eyes fixed on her arm and her hand--she gave me time to
+look at<br>
+ them as she slowly drew the knife out of the bed. A white,
+well-<br>
+ shaped arm, with a pretty down lying lightly over the fair skin.
+A<br>
+ delicate lady's hand, with a pink flush round the finger
+nails.</p>
+
+<p>She drew the knife out, and passed back again slowly to the
+foot of<br>
+ the bed; she stopped there for a moment looking at me; then
+she<br>
+ came on without saying a word; without any change in the
+stony<br>
+ stillness of her face; without any noise following her
+footfall--<br>
+ came on to the side of the bed where I now lay.</p>
+
+<p>Getting near me, she lifted the knife again, and I drew myself
+away<br>
+ to the left side. She struck, as before right into the
+mattress,<br>
+ with a swift downward action of her arm; and she missed me,
+as<br>
+ before; by a hair's breadth. This time my eyes wandered from
+HER<br>
+ to the knife. It was like the large clasp knives which
+laboring<br>
+ men use to cut their bread and bacon with. Her delicate
+little<br>
+ fingers did not hide more than two thirds of the handle; I
+noticed<br>
+ that it was made of buckhorn, clean and shining as the blade
+was,<br>
+ and looking like new.</p>
+
+<p>For the second time she drew the knife out of the bed, and
+suddenly<br>
+ hid it away in the wide sleeve of her gown. That done, she
+stopped<br>
+ by the bedside watching me. For an instant I saw her standing
+in<br>
+ that position--then the wick of the spent candle fell over into
+the<br>
+ socket. The flame dwindled to a little blue point, and the
+room<br>
+ grew dark.</p>
+
+<p>A moment, or less, if possible, passed so--and then the wick
+flared<br>
+ up, smokily, for the last time. My eyes were still looking for
+her<br>
+ over the right-hand side of the bed when the last flash of
+light<br>
+ came. Look as I might, I could see nothing. The woman with
+the<br>
+ knife was gone.</p>
+
+<p>I began to get back to myself again. I could feel my heart<br>
+ beating; I could hear the woeful moaning of the wind in the
+wood; I<br>
+ could leap up in bed, and give the alarm before she escaped
+from<br>
+ the house. "Murder! Wake up there! Murder!"</p>
+
+<p>Nobody answered to the alarm. I rose and groped my way through
+the<br>
+ darkness to the door of the room. By that way she must have
+got<br>
+ in. By that way she must have gone out.</p>
+
+<p>The door of the room was fast locked, exactly as I had left it
+on<br>
+ going to bed! I looked at the window. Fast locked too!</p>
+
+<p>Hearing a voice outside, I opened the door. There was the<br>
+ landlord, coming toward me along the passage, with his
+burning<br>
+ candle in one hand, and his gun in the other.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" he says, looking at me in no very friendly
+way.</p>
+
+<p>I could only answer in a whisper, "A woman, with a knife in
+her<br>
+ hand. In my room. A fair, yellow-haired woman. She jabbed at
+me<br>
+ with the knife, twice over."</p>
+
+<p>He lifted his candle, and looked at me steadily from head to
+foot.<br>
+ "She seems to have missed you--twice over."</p>
+
+<p>"I dodged the knife as it came down. It struck the bed each
+time.<br>
+ Go in, and see."</p>
+
+<p>The landlord took his candle into the bedroom immediately. In
+less<br>
+ than a minute he came out again into the passage in a
+violent<br>
+ passion.</p>
+
+<p>"The devil fly away with you and your woman with the knife!
+There<br>
+ isn't a mark in the bedclothes anywhere. What do you mean by<br>
+ coming into a man's place and frightening his family out of
+their<br>
+ wits by a dream?"</p>
+
+<p>A dream? The woman who had tried to stab me, not a living
+human<br>
+ being like myself? I began to shake and shiver. The horrors
+got<br>
+ hold of me at the bare thought of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll leave the house," I said. "Better be out on the road in
+the<br>
+ rain and dark, than back in that room, after what I've seen in
+it.<br>
+ Lend me the light to get my clothes by, and tell me what I'm
+to<br>
+ pay."</p>
+
+<p>The landlord led the way back with his light into the
+bedroom.<br>
+ "Pay?" says he. "You'll find your score on the slate when you
+go<br>
+ downstairs. I wouldn't have taken you in for all the money
+you've<br>
+ got about you, if I had known your dreaming, screeching ways<br>
+ beforehand. Look at the bed--where's the cut of a knife in
+it?<br>
+ Look at the window--is the lock bursted? Look at the door (which
+I<br>
+ heard you fasten yourself)--is it broke in? A murdering woman
+with<br>
+ a knife in my house! You ought to be ashamed of yourself!"</p>
+
+<p>My eyes followed his hand as it pointed first to the bed--then
+to<br>
+ the window--then to the door. There was no gainsaying it. The
+bed<br>
+ sheet was as sound as on the day it was made. The window was
+fast.<br>
+ The door hung on its hinges as steady as ever. I huddled my<br>
+ clothes on without speaking. We went downstairs together. I<br>
+ looked at the clock in the bar-room. The time was twenty
+minutes<br>
+ past two in the morning. I paid my bill, and the landlord let
+me<br>
+ out. The rain had ceased; but the night was dark, and the wind
+was<br>
+ bleaker than ever. Little did the darkness, or the cold, or
+the<br>
+ doubt about the way home matter to ME. My mind was away from
+all<br>
+ these things. My mind was fixed on the vision in the
+bedroom.<br>
+ What had I seen trying to murder me? The creature of a dream?
+Or<br>
+ that other creature from the world beyond the grave, whom men
+call<br>
+ ghost? I could make nothing of it as I walked along in the
+night;<br>
+ I had made nothing by it by midday--when I stood at last,
+after<br>
+ many times missing my road, on the doorstep of home.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ VI</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ My mother came out alone to welcome me back. There were no
+secrets<br>
+ between us two. I told her all that had happened, just as I
+have<br>
+ told it to you. She kept silence till I had done. And then
+she<br>
+ put a question to me.</p>
+
+<p>"What time was it, Francis, when you saw the Woman in your
+Dream?"</p>
+
+<p>I had looked at the clock when I left the inn, and I had
+noticed<br>
+ that the hands pointed to twenty minutes past two. Allowing
+for<br>
+ the time consumed in speaking to the landlord, and in getting on
+my<br>
+ clothes, I answered that I must have first seen the Woman at
+two<br>
+ o'clock in the morning. In other words, I had not only seen her
+on<br>
+ my birthday, but at the hour of my birth.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ My mother still kept silence. Lost in her own thoughts, she
+took<br>
+ me by the hand, and led me into the parlor. Her writing-desk
+was<br>
+ on the table by the fireplace. She opened it, and signed to me
+to<br>
+ take a chair by her side.</p>
+
+<p>"My son! your memory is a bad one, and mine is fast failing
+me.<br>
+ Tell me again what the Woman looked like. I want her to be as
+well<br>
+ known to both of us, years hence, as she is now."</p>
+
+<p>I obeyed; wondering what strange fancy might be working in
+her<br>
+ mind. I spoke; and she wrote the words as they fell from my
+lips:</p>
+
+<p>"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen
+hair,<br>
+ with a golden-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down
+upon<br>
+ them. Little, lady's hands, with a rosy-red look about the
+finger<br>
+ nails."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you notice how she was dressed, Francis?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, mother."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you notice the knife?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. A large clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, as good
+as<br>
+ new."</p>
+
+<p>My mother added the description of the knife. Also the
+year,<br>
+ month, day of the week, and hour of the day when the
+Dream-Woman<br>
+ appeared to me at the inn. That done, she locked up the paper
+in<br>
+ her desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a word, Francis, to your aunt. Not a word to any living
+soul.<br>
+ Keep your Dream a secret between you and me."</p>
+
+<p>The weeks passed, and the months passed. My mother never
+returned<br>
+ to the subject again. As for me, time, which wears out all
+things,<br>
+ wore out my remembrance of the Dream. Little by little, the
+image<br>
+ of the Woman grew dimmer and dimmer. Little by little, she
+faded<br>
+ out of my mind.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ VII</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The story of the warning is now told. Judge for yourself if it
+was<br>
+ a true warning or a false, when you hear what happened to me on
+my<br>
+ next birthday.</p>
+
+<p>In the Summer time of the year, the Wheel of Fortune turned
+the<br>
+ right way for me at last. I was smoking my pipe one day, near
+an<br>
+ old stone quarry at the entrance to our village, when a
+carriage<br>
+ accident happened, which gave a new turn, as it were, to my lot
+in<br>
+ life. It was an accident of the commonest kind--not worth<br>
+ mentioning at any length. A lady driving herself; a runaway
+horse;<br>
+ a cowardly man-servant in attendance, frightened out of his
+wits;<br>
+ and the stone quarry too near to be agreeable--that is what I
+saw,<br>
+ all in a few moments, between two whiffs of my pipe. I stopped
+the<br>
+ horse at the edge of the quarry, and got myself a little hurt
+by<br>
+ the shaft of the chaise. But that didn't matter. The lady<br>
+ declared I had saved her life; and her husband, coming with her
+to<br>
+ our cottage the next day, took me into his service then and
+there.<br>
+ The lady happened to be of a dark complexion; and it may amuse
+you<br>
+ to hear that my aunt Chance instantly pitched on that
+circumstance<br>
+ as a means of saving the credit of the cards. Here was the
+promise<br>
+ of the Queen of Spades performed to the very letter, by means of
+"a<br>
+ dark woman," just as my aunt had told me. "In the time to
+come,<br>
+ Francis, beware o' pettin' yer ain blinded intairpretation on
+the<br>
+ cairds. Ye're ower ready, I trow, to murmur under dispensation
+of<br>
+ Proavidence that ye canna fathom--like the Eesraelites of
+auld.<br>
+ I'll say nae mair to ye. Mebbe when the mony's powering into
+yer<br>
+ poakets, ye'll no forget yer aunt Chance, left like a sparrow
+on<br>
+ the housetop, wi a sma' annuitee o' thratty punds a year."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ I remained in my situation (at the West-end of London) until
+the<br>
+ Spring of the New Year. About that time, my master's health<br>
+ failed. The doctors ordered him away to foreign parts, and
+the<br>
+ establishment was broken up. But the turn in my luck still
+held<br>
+ good. When I left my place, I left it--thanks to the generosity
+of<br>
+ my kind master--with a yearly allowance granted to me, in<br>
+ remembrance of the day when I had saved my mistress's life.
+For<br>
+ the future, I could go back to service or not, as I pleased;
+my<br>
+ little income was enough to support my mother and myself.</p>
+
+<p>My master and mistress left England toward the end of
+February.<br>
+ Certain matters of business to do for them detained me in
+London<br>
+ until the last day of the month. I was only able to leave for
+our<br>
+ village by the evening train, to keep my birthday with my mother
+as<br>
+ usual. It was bedtime when I got to the cottage; and I was
+sorry<br>
+ to find that she was far from well. To make matters worse, she
+had<br>
+ finished her bottle of medicine on the previous day, and had<br>
+ omitted to get it replenished, as the doctor had strictly
+directed.<br>
+ He dispensed his own medicines, and I offered to go and knock
+him<br>
+ up. She refused to let me do this; and, after giving me my
+supper,<br>
+ sent me away to my bed.</p>
+
+<p>I fell asleep for a little, and woke again. My mother's
+bed-<br>
+ chamber was next to mine. I heard my aunt Chance's heavy
+footsteps<br>
+ going to and fro in the room, and, suspecting something
+wrong,<br>
+ knocked at the door. My mother's pains had returned upon
+her;<br>
+ there was a serious necessity for relieving her sufferings
+as<br>
+ speedily as possible, I put on my clothes, and ran off, with
+the<br>
+ medicine bottle in my hand, to the other end of the village,
+where<br>
+ the doctor lived. The church clock chimed the quarter to two on
+my<br>
+ birthday just as I reached his house. One ring of the night
+bell<br>
+ brought him to his bedroom window to speak to me. He told me
+to<br>
+ wait, and he would let me in at the surgery door. I noticed,
+while<br>
+ I was waiting, that the night was wonderfully fair and warm for
+the<br>
+ time of year. The old stone quarry where the carriage accident
+had<br>
+ happened was within view. The moon in the clear heavens lit it
+up<br>
+ almost as bright as day.</p>
+
+<p>In a minute or two the doctor let me into the surgery. I
+closed<br>
+ the door, noticing that he had left his room very lightly clad.
+He<br>
+ kindly pardoned my mother's neglect of his directions, and set
+to<br>
+ work at once at compounding the medicine. We were both intent
+on<br>
+ the bottle; he filling it, and I holding the light--when we
+heard<br>
+ the surgery door suddenly opened from the street.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ VIII</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Who could possibly be up and about in our quiet village at
+the<br>
+ second hour of the morning?</p>
+
+<p>The person who opened the door appeared within range of the
+light<br>
+ of the candle. To complete our amazement, the person proved to
+be<br>
+ a woman! She walked up to the counter, and standing side by
+side<br>
+ with me, lifted her veil. At the moment when she showed her
+face,<br>
+ I heard the church clock strike two. She was a stranger to me,
+and<br>
+ a stranger to the doctor. She was also, beyond all comparison,
+the<br>
+ most beautiful woman I have ever seen in my life.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw the light under the door," she said. "I want some<br>
+ medicine."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ She spoke quite composedly, as if there was nothing at all<br>
+ extraordinary in her being out in the village at two in the<br>
+ morning, and following me into the surgery to ask for
+medicine!<br>
+ The doctor stared at her as if he suspected his own eyes of<br>
+ deceiving him. "Who are you?" be asked. "How do you come to
+be<br>
+ wandering about at this time in the morning?"</p>
+
+<p>She paid no heed to his questions. She only told him coolly
+what<br>
+ she wanted. "I have got a bad toothache. I want a bottle of<br>
+ laudanum."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor recovered himself when she asked for the laudanum.
+He<br>
+ was on his own ground, you know, when it came to a matter of<br>
+ laudanum; and he spoke to her smartly enough this time.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you have got the toothache, have you? Let me look at
+the<br>
+ tooth."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her bead, and laid a two-shilling piece on the
+counter.<br>
+ "I won't trouble you to look at the tooth," she said. "There
+is<br>
+ the money. Let me have the laudanum, if you please."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor put the two-shilling piece back again in her hand.
+"I<br>
+ don't sell laudanum to strangers," he answered. "If you are in
+any<br>
+ distress of body or mind, that is another matter. I shall be
+glad<br>
+ to help you."</p>
+
+<p>She put the money back in her pocket. "YOU can't help me,"
+she<br>
+ said, as quietly as ever. "Good morning."</p>
+
+<p>With that, she opened the surgery door to go out again into
+the<br>
+ street. So far, I had not spoken a word on my side. I had
+stood<br>
+ with the candle in my hand (not knowing I was holding it)--with
+my<br>
+ eyes fixed on her, with my mind fixed on her like a man
+bewitched.<br>
+ Her looks betrayed, even more plainly than her words, her<br>
+ resolution, in one way or another, to destroy herself. When
+she<br>
+ opened the door, in my alarm at what might happen I found the
+use<br>
+ of my tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop!" I cried out. "Wait for me. I want to speak to you
+before<br>
+ you go away." She lifted her eyes with a look of careless
+surprise<br>
+ and a mocking smile on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"What can YOU have to say to me?" She stopped, and laughed
+to<br>
+ herself. "Why not?" she said. "I have got nothing to do, and<br>
+ nowhere to go." She turned back a step, and nodded to me.
+"You're<br>
+ a strange man--I think I'll humor you--I'll wait outside."
+The<br>
+ door of the surgery closed on her. She was gone.</p>
+
+<p>I am ashamed to own what happened next. The only excuse for me
+is<br>
+ that I was really and truly a man bewitched. I turned me round
+to<br>
+ follow her out, without once thinking of my mother. The
+doctor<br>
+ stopped me.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't forget the medicine," he said. "And if you will take
+my<br>
+ advice, don't trouble yourself about that woman. Rouse up
+the<br>
+ constable. It's his business to look after her--not yours."</p>
+
+<p>I held out my hand for the medicine in silence: I was afraid
+I<br>
+ should fail in respect if I trusted myself to answer him. He
+must<br>
+ have seen, as I saw, that she wanted the laudanum to poison<br>
+ herself. He had, to my mind, taken a very heartless view of
+the<br>
+ matter. I just thanked him when he gave me the medicine--and
+went<br>
+ out.</p>
+
+<p>She was waiting for me as she had promised; walking slowly to
+and<br>
+ fro--a tall, graceful, solitary figure in the bright
+moonbeams.<br>
+ They shed over her fair complexion, her bright golden hair,
+her<br>
+ large gray eyes, just the light that suited them best. She
+looked<br>
+ hardly mortal when she first turned to speak to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" she said. "And what do you want?"</p>
+
+<p>In spite of my pride, or my shyness, or my better
+sense--whichever<br>
+ it might be--all my heart went out to her in a moment. I
+caught<br>
+ hold of her by the hands, and owned what was in my thoughts,
+as<br>
+ freely as if I had known her for half a lifetime.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean to destroy yourself," I said. "And I mean to prevent
+you<br>
+ from doing it. If I follow you about all night, I'll prevent
+you<br>
+ from doing it."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed. "You saw yourself that he wouldn't sell me
+the<br>
+ laudanum. Do you really care whether I live or die?" She
+squeezed<br>
+ my hands gently as she put the question: her eyes searched
+mine<br>
+ with a languid, lingering look in them that ran through me
+like<br>
+ fire. My voice died away on my lips; I couldn't answer her.</p>
+
+<p>She understood, without my answering. "You have given me a
+fancy<br>
+ for living, by speaking kindly to me," she said. "Kindness has
+a<br>
+ wonderful effect on women, and dogs, and other domestic
+animals.<br>
+ It is only men who are superior to kindness. Make your mind
+easy--<br>
+ I promise to take as much care of myself as if I was the
+happiest<br>
+ woman living! Don't let me keep you here, out of your bed.
+Which<br>
+ way are you going?"</p>
+
+<p>Miserable wretch that I was, I had forgotten my mother--with
+the<br>
+ medicine in my hand! "I am going home," I said. "Where are
+you<br>
+ staying? At the inn?"</p>
+
+<p>She laughed her bitter laugh, and pointed to the stone
+quarry.<br>
+ "There is MY inn for to-night," she said. "When I got tired
+of<br>
+ walking about, I rested there."</p>
+
+<p>We walked on together, on my way home. I took the liberty
+of<br>
+ asking her if she had any friends.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I had one friend left," she said, "or you would
+never<br>
+ have met me in this place. It turns out I was wrong. My
+friend's<br>
+ door was closed in my face some hours since; my friend's
+servants<br>
+ threatened me with the police. I had nowhere else to go,
+after<br>
+ trying my luck in your neighborhood; and nothing left but my
+two-<br>
+ shilling piece and these rags on my back. What respectable<br>
+ innkeeper would take ME into his house? I walked about,
+wondering<br>
+ how I could find my way out of the world without disfiguring<br>
+ myself, and without suffering much pain. You have no river
+in<br>
+ these parts. I didn't see my way out of the world, till I
+heard<br>
+ you ringing at the doctor's house. I got a glimpse at the
+bottles<br>
+ in the surgery, when he let you in, and I thought of the
+laudanum<br>
+ directly. What were you doing there? Who is that medicine
+for?<br>
+ Your wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not married!"</p>
+
+<p>She laughed again. "Not married! If I was a little better
+dressed<br>
+ there might be a chance for ME. Where do you live? Here?"</p>
+
+<p>We had arrived, by this time, at my mother's door. She held
+out<br>
+ her hand to say good-by. Houseless and homeless as she was,
+she<br>
+ never asked me to give her a shelter for the night. It was
+MY<br>
+ proposal that she should rest, under my roof, unknown to my
+mother<br>
+ and my aunt. Our kitchen was built out at the back of the
+cottage:<br>
+ she might remain there unseen and unheard until the household
+was<br>
+ astir in the morning. I led her into the kitchen, and set a
+chair<br>
+ for her by the dying embers of the fire. I dare say I was to<br>
+ blame--shamefully to blame, if you like. I only wonder what
+YOU<br>
+ would have done in my place. On your word of honor as a man,
+would<br>
+ YOU have let that beautiful creature wander back to the shelter
+of<br>
+ the stone quarry like a stray dog? God help the woman who is<br>
+ foolish enough to trust and love you, if you would have done
+that!</p>
+
+<p>I left her by the fire, and went to my mother's room.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ IX</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ If you have ever felt the heartache, you will know what I
+suffered<br>
+ in secret when my mother took my hand, and said, "I am
+sorry,<br>
+ Francis, that your night's rest has been disturbed through ME."
+I<br>
+ gave her the medicine; and I waited by her till the pains
+abated.<br>
+ My aunt Chance went back to her bed; and my mother and I were
+left<br>
+ alone. I noticed that her writing-desk, moved from its
+customary<br>
+ place, was on the bed by her side. She saw me looking at it.<br>
+ "This is your birthday, Francis," she said. "Have you anything
+to<br>
+ tell me?" I had so completely forgotten my Dream, that I had
+no<br>
+ notion of what was passing in her mind when she said those
+words.<br>
+ For a moment there was a guilty fear in me that she
+suspected<br>
+ something. I turned away my face, and said, "No, mother; I
+have<br>
+ nothing to tell." She signed to me to stoop down over the
+pillow<br>
+ and kiss her. "God bless you, my love!" she said; and many
+happy<br>
+ returns of the day." She patted my hand, and closed her
+weary<br>
+ eyes, and, little by little, fell off peaceably into sleep.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ I stole downstairs again. I think the good influence of my
+mother<br>
+ must have followed me down. At any rate, this is true: I
+stopped<br>
+ with my hand on the closed kitchen door, and said to myself:<br>
+ "Suppose I leave the house, and leave the village, without
+seeing<br>
+ her or speaking to her more?"</p>
+
+<p>Should I really have fled from temptation in this way, if I
+had<br>
+ been left to myself to decide? Who can tell? As things were,
+I<br>
+ was not left to decide. While my doubt was in my mind, she
+heard<br>
+ me, and opened the kitchen door. My eyes and her eyes met.
+That<br>
+ ended it.</p>
+
+<p>We were together, unsuspected and undisturbed, for the next
+two<br>
+ hours. Time enough for her to reveal the secret of her
+wasted<br>
+ life. Time enough for her to take possession of me as her own,
+to<br>
+ do with me as she liked. It is needless to dwell here on the<br>
+ misfortunes which had brought her low; they are misfortunes
+too<br>
+ common to interest anybody.</p>
+
+<p>Her name was Alicia Warlock. She had been born and bred a
+lady.<br>
+ She had lost her station, her character, and her friends.
+Virtue<br>
+ shuddered at the sight of her; and Vice had got her for the rest
+of<br>
+ her days. Shocking and common, as I told you. It made no<br>
+ difference to ME. I have said it already--I say it again--I was
+a<br>
+ man bewitched. Is there anything so very wonderful in that?
+Just<br>
+ remember who I was. Among the honest women in my own station
+in<br>
+ life, where could I have found the like of HER? Could THEY walk
+as<br>
+ she walked? and look as she looked? When THEY gave me a kiss,
+did<br>
+ their lips linger over it as hers did? Had THEY her skin,
+her<br>
+ laugh, her foot, her hand, her touch? SHE never had a speck
+of<br>
+ dirt on her: I tell you her flesh was a perfume. When she
+embraced<br>
+ me, her arms folded round me like the wings of angels; and
+her<br>
+ smile covered me softly with its light like the sun in heaven.
+I<br>
+ leave you to laugh at me, or to cry over me, just as your
+temper<br>
+ may incline. I am not trying to excuse myself--I am trying
+to<br>
+ explain. You are gentle-folks; what dazzled and maddened ME,
+is<br>
+ everyday experience to YOU. Fallen or not, angel or devil, it
+came<br>
+ to this--she was a lady; and I was a groom.</p>
+
+<p>Before the house was astir, I got her away (by the workmen's
+train)<br>
+ to a large manufacturing town in our parts.</p>
+
+<p>Here--with my savings in money to help her--she could get
+her<br>
+ outfit of decent clothes and her lodging among strangers who
+asked<br>
+ no questions so long as they were paid. Here--now on one
+pretense<br>
+ and now on another--I could visit her, and we could both
+plan<br>
+ together what our future lives were to be. I need not tell
+you<br>
+ that I stood pledged to make her my wife. A man in my
+station<br>
+ always marries a woman of her sort.</p>
+
+<p>Do you wonder if I was happy at this time? I should have
+been<br>
+ perfectly happy but for one little drawback. It was this: I
+was<br>
+ never quite at my ease in the presence of my promised wife.</p>
+
+<p>I don't mean that I was shy with her, or suspicious of her,
+or<br>
+ ashamed of her. The uneasiness I am speaking of was caused by
+a<br>
+ faint doubt in my mind whether I had not seen her somewhere,
+before<br>
+ the morning when we met at the doctor's house. Over and over<br>
+ again, I found myself wondering whether her face did not remind
+me<br>
+ of some other face--what other I never could tell. This
+strange<br>
+ feeling, this one question that could never be answered, vexed
+me<br>
+ to a degree that you would hardly credit. It came between us
+at<br>
+ the strangest times--oftenest, however, at night, when the
+candles<br>
+ were lit. You have known what it is to try and remember a<br>
+ forgotten name--and to fail, search as you may, to find it in
+your<br>
+ mind. That was my case. I failed to find my lost face, just
+as<br>
+ you failed to find your lost name.</p>
+
+<p>In three weeks we had talked matters over, and had arranged
+how I<br>
+ was to make a clean breast of it at home. By Alicia's advice,
+I<br>
+ was to describe her as having been one of my fellow servants
+during<br>
+ the time I was employed under my kind master and mistress in<br>
+ London. There was no fear now of my mother taking any harm
+from<br>
+ the shock of a great surprise. Her health had improved during
+the<br>
+ three weeks' interval. On the first evening when she was able
+to<br>
+ take her old place at tea time, I summoned my courage, and told
+her<br>
+ I was going to be married. The poor soul flung her arms round
+my<br>
+ neck, and burst out crying for joy. "Oh, Francis!" she says, "I
+am<br>
+ so glad you will have somebody to comfort you and care for you
+when<br>
+ I am gone!" As for my aunt Chance, you can anticipate what
+SHE<br>
+ did, without being told. Ah, me! If there had really been
+any<br>
+ prophetic virtue in the cards, what a terrible warning they
+might<br>
+ have given us that night! It was arranged that I was to bring
+my<br>
+ promised wife to dinner at the cottage on the next day.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ X</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ I own I was proud of Alicia when I led her into our little
+parlor<br>
+ at the appointed time. She had never, to my mind, looked so<br>
+ beautiful as she looked that day. I never noticed any other<br>
+ woman's dress--I noticed hers as carefully as if I had been a
+woman<br>
+ myself! She wore a black silk gown, with plain collar and
+cuffs,<br>
+ and a modest lavender-colored bonnet, with one white rose in
+it<br>
+ placed at the side. My mother, dressed in her Sunday best,
+rose<br>
+ up, all in a flutter, to welcome her daughter-in-law that was
+to<br>
+ be. She walked forward a few steps, half smiling, half in
+tears--<br>
+ she looked Alicia full in the face--and suddenly stood still.
+Her<br>
+ cheeks turned white in an instant; her eyes stared in horror;
+her<br>
+ hands dropped helplessly at her sides. She staggered back,
+and<br>
+ fell into the arms of my aunt, standing behind her. It was
+no<br>
+ swoon--she kept her senses. Her eyes turned slowly from Alicia
+to<br>
+ me. "Francis," she said, "does that woman's face remind you
+of<br>
+ nothing?"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Before I could answer, she pointed to her writing-desk on the
+table<br>
+ at the fireside. "Bring it!" she cried, "bring it!"</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment I felt Alicia's hand on my shoulder, and
+saw<br>
+ Alicia's face red with anger--and no wonder!</p>
+
+<p>"What does this mean?" she asked. "Does your mother want to
+insult<br>
+ me?"</p>
+
+<p>I said a few words to quiet her; what they were I don't
+remember--I<br>
+ was so confused and astonished at the time. Before I had done,
+I<br>
+ heard my mother behind me.</p>
+
+<p>My aunt had fetched her desk. She had opened it; she had taken
+a<br>
+ paper from it. Step by step, helping herself along by the
+wall,<br>
+ she came nearer and nearer, with the paper in her hand. She
+looked<br>
+ at the paper--she looked in Alicia's face--she lifted the
+long,<br>
+ loose sleeve of her gown, and examined her hand and arm. I
+saw<br>
+ fear suddenly take the place of anger in Alicia's eyes. She
+shook<br>
+ herself free of my mother's grasp. "Mad!" she said to
+herself,<br>
+ "and Francis never told me!" With those words she ran out of
+the<br>
+ room.</p>
+
+<p>I was hastening out after her, when my mother signed to me to
+stop.<br>
+ She read the words written on the paper. While they fell
+slowly,<br>
+ one by one, from her lips, she pointed toward the open door.</p>
+
+<p>"Light gray eyes, with a droop in the left eyelid. Flaxen
+hair,<br>
+ with a gold-yellow streak in it. White arms, with a down
+upon<br>
+ them. Little, lady's hand, with a rosy-red look about the
+finger<br>
+ nails. The Dream Woman, Francis! The Dream Woman!"</p>
+
+<p>Something darkened the parlor window as those words were
+spoken. I<br>
+ looked sidelong at the shadow. Alicia Warlock had come back!
+She<br>
+ was peering in at us over the low window blind. There was
+the<br>
+ fatal face which had first looked at me in the bedroom of
+the<br>
+ lonely inn. There, resting on the window blind, was the
+lovely<br>
+ little hand which had held the murderous knife. I HAD seen
+her<br>
+ before we met in the village. The Dream Woman! The Dream
+Woman!</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ XI</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ I expect nobody to approve of what I have next to tell of
+myself.<br>
+ In three weeks from the day when my mother had identified her
+with<br>
+ the Woman of the Dream, I took Alicia Warlock to church, and
+made<br>
+ her my wife. I was a man bewitched. Again and again I say
+it--I<br>
+ was a man bewitched!</p>
+
+<p>During the interval before my marriage, our little household
+at the<br>
+ cottage was broken up. My mother and my aunt quarreled. My<br>
+ mother, believing in the Dream, entreated me to break off my<br>
+ engagement. My aunt, believing in the cards, urged me to
+marry.</p>
+
+<p>This difference of opinion produced a dispute between them, in
+the<br>
+ course of which my aunt Chance--quite unconscious of having
+any<br>
+ superstitious feelings of her own--actually set out the cards
+which<br>
+ prophesied happiness to me in my married life, and asked my
+mother<br>
+ how anybody but "a blinded heathen could be fule enough,
+after<br>
+ seeing those cairds, to believe in a dream!" This was,
+naturally,<br>
+ too much for my mother's patience; hard words followed on
+either<br>
+ side; Mrs. Chance returned in dudgeon to her friends in
+Scotland.<br>
+ She left me a written statement of my future prospects, as
+revealed<br>
+ by the cards, and with it an address at which a post-office
+order<br>
+ would reach her. "The day was not that far off," she
+remarked,<br>
+ "when Francie might remember what he owed to his aunt
+Chance,<br>
+ maintaining her ain unbleemished widowhood on thratty punds
+a<br>
+ year."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Having refused to give her sanction to my marriage, my mother
+also<br>
+ refused to be present at the wedding, or to visit Alicia<br>
+ afterwards. There was no anger at the bottom of this conduct
+on<br>
+ her part. Believing as she did in this Dream, she was simply
+in<br>
+ mortal fear of my wife. I understood this, and I made
+allowances<br>
+ for her. Not a cross word passed between us. My one happy<br>
+ remembrance now--though I did disobey her in the matter of
+my<br>
+ marriage--is this: I loved and respected my good mother to
+the<br>
+ last.</p>
+
+<p>As for my wife, she expressed no regret at the estrangement
+between<br>
+ her mother-in-law and herself. By common consent, we never
+spoke<br>
+ on that subject. We settled in the manufacturing town which I
+have<br>
+ already mentioned, and we kept a lodging-house. My kind master,
+at<br>
+ my request, granted me a lump sum in place of my annuity. This
+put<br>
+ us into a good house, decently furnished. For a while things
+went<br>
+ well enough. I may describe myself at this time of my life as
+a<br>
+ happy man.</p>
+
+<p>My misfortunes began with a return of the complaint with which
+my<br>
+ mother had already suffered. The doctor confessed, when I
+asked<br>
+ him the question, that there was danger to be dreaded this
+time.<br>
+ Naturally, after hearing this, I was a good deal away at the<br>
+ cottage. Naturally also, I left the business of looking after
+the<br>
+ house, in my absence, to my wife. Little by little, I found
+her<br>
+ beginning to alter toward me. While my back was turned, she
+formed<br>
+ acquaintances with people of the doubtful and dissipated sort.
+One<br>
+ day, I observed something in her manner which forced the
+suspicion<br>
+ on me that she had been drinking. Before the week was out,
+my<br>
+ suspicion was a certainty. From keeping company with
+drunkards,<br>
+ she had grown to be a drunkard herself.</p>
+
+<p>I did all a man could do to reclaim her. Quite useless! She
+had<br>
+ never really returned the love I felt for her: I had no
+influence;<br>
+ I could do nothing. My mother, hearing of this last worse
+trouble,<br>
+ resolved to try what her influence could do. Ill as she was,
+I<br>
+ found her one day dressed to go out.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not long for this world, Francis," she said. "I shall
+not<br>
+ feel easy on my deathbed, unless I have done my best to the last
+to<br>
+ make you happy. I mean to put my own fears and my own feelings
+out<br>
+ of the question, and go with you to your wife, and try what I
+can<br>
+ do to reclaim her. Take me home with you, Francis. Let me do
+all<br>
+ I can to help my son, before it is too late."</p>
+
+<p>How could I disobey her? We took the railway to the town: it
+was<br>
+ only half an hour's ride. By one o'clock in the afternoon we<br>
+ reached my house. It was our dinner hour, and Alicia was in
+the<br>
+ kitchen. I was able to take my mother quietly into the parlor
+and<br>
+ then to prepare my wife for the visit. She had drunk but little
+at<br>
+ that early hour; and, luckily, the devil in her was tamed for
+the<br>
+ time.</p>
+
+<p>She followed me into the parlor, and the meeting passed off
+better<br>
+ than I had ventured to forecast; with this one drawback, that
+my<br>
+ mother--though she tried hard to control herself--shrank
+from<br>
+ looking my wife in the face when she spoke to her. It was a
+relief<br>
+ to me when Alicia began to prepare the table for dinner.</p>
+
+<p>She laid the cloth, brought in the bread tray, and cut some
+slices<br>
+ for us from the loaf. Then she returned to the kitchen. At
+that<br>
+ moment, while I was still anxiously watching my mother, I
+was<br>
+ startled by seeing the same ghastly change pass over her face
+which<br>
+ had altered it in the morning when Alicia and she first met.<br>
+ Before I could say a word, she started up with a look of
+horror.</p>
+
+<p>"Take me back!--home, home again, Francis! Come with me, and
+never<br>
+ go back more!"</p>
+
+<p>I was afraid to ask for an explanation; I could only sign her
+to be<br>
+ silent, and help her quickly to the door. As we passed the
+bread<br>
+ tray on the table, she stopped and pointed to it.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you see what your wife cut your bread with?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No, mother; I was not noticing. What was it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look!"</p>
+
+<p>I did look. A new clasp knife, with a buckhorn handle, lay
+with<br>
+ the loaf in the bread tray. I stretched out my hand to
+possess<br>
+ myself of it. At the same moment, there was a noise in the<br>
+ kitchen, and my mother caught me by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"The knife of the Dream! Francis, I'm faint with fear--take
+me<br>
+ away before she comes back!"</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't speak to comfort or even to answer her. Superior as
+I<br>
+ was to superstition, the discovery of the knife staggered me.
+In<br>
+ silence, I helped my mother out of the house; and took her
+home.</p>
+
+<p>I held out my hand to say good-by. She tried to stop me.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't go back, Francis! don't go back!"</p>
+
+<p>"I must get the knife, mother. I must go back by the next
+train."<br>
+ I held to that resolution. By the next train I went back.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ XII</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ My wife had, of course, discovered our secret departure from
+the<br>
+ house. She had been drinking. She was in a fury of passion.
+The<br>
+ dinner in the kitchen was flung under the grate; the cloth was
+off<br>
+ the parlor table. Where was the knife?</p>
+
+<p>I was foolish enough to ask for it. She refused to give it to
+me.<br>
+ In the course of the dispute between us which followed, I<br>
+ discovered that there was a horrible story attached to the
+knife.<br>
+ It had been used in a murder--years since--and had been so<br>
+ skillfully hidden that the authorities had been unable to
+produce<br>
+ it at the trial. By help of some of her disreputable friends,
+my<br>
+ wife had been able to purchase this relic of a bygone crime.
+Her<br>
+ perverted nature set some horrid unacknowledged value on the
+knife.<br>
+ Seeing there was no hope of getting it by fair means, I
+determined<br>
+ to search for it, later in the day, in secret. The search
+was<br>
+ unsuccessful. Night came on, and I left the house to walk
+about<br>
+ the streets. You will understand what a broken man I was by
+this<br>
+ time, when I tell you I was afraid to sleep in the same room
+with<br>
+ her!</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Three weeks passed. Still she refused to give up the knife;
+and<br>
+ still that fear of sleeping in the same room with her possessed
+me.<br>
+ I walked about at night, or dozed in the parlor, or sat watching
+by<br>
+ my mother's bedside. Before the end of the first week in the
+new<br>
+ month, the worst misfortune of all befell me--my mother died.
+It<br>
+ wanted then but a short time to my birthday. She had longed
+to<br>
+ live till that day. I was present at her death. Her last words
+in<br>
+ this world were addressed to me. "Don't go back, my son--don't
+go<br>
+ back!"</p>
+
+<p>I was obliged to go back, if it was only to watch my wife. In
+the<br>
+ last days of my mother's illness she had spitefully added a
+sting<br>
+ to my grief by declaring she would assert her right to attend
+the<br>
+ funeral. In spite of all that I could do or say, she held to
+her<br>
+ word. On the day appointed for the burial she forced
+herself,<br>
+ inflamed and shameless with drink, into my presence, and swore
+she<br>
+ would walk in the funeral procession to my mother's grave.</p>
+
+<p>This last insult--after all I had gone through already--was
+more<br>
+ than I could endure. It maddened me. Try to make allowances for
+a<br>
+ man beside himself. I struck her.</p>
+
+<p>The instant the blow was dealt, I repented it. She crouched
+down,<br>
+ silent, in a corner of the room, and eyed me steadily. It was
+a<br>
+ look that cooled my hot blood in an instant. There was no time
+now<br>
+ to think of making atonement. I could only risk the worst,
+and<br>
+ make sure of her till the funeral was over. I locked her into
+her<br>
+ bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>When I came back, after laying my mother in the grave, I found
+her<br>
+ sitting by the bedside, very much altered in look and bearing,
+with<br>
+ a bundle on her lap. She faced me quietly; she spoke with a<br>
+ curious stillness in her voice--strangely and unnaturally
+composed<br>
+ in look and manner.</p>
+
+<p>"No man has ever struck me yet," she said. "My husband shall
+have<br>
+ no second opportunity. Set the door open, and let me go."</p>
+
+<p>She passed me, and left the room. I saw her walk away up
+the<br>
+ street. Was she gone for good?</p>
+
+<p>All that night I watched and waited. No footstep came near
+the<br>
+ house. The next night, overcome with fatigue, I lay down on
+the<br>
+ bed in my clothes, with the door locked, the key on the table,
+and<br>
+ the candle burning. My slumber was not disturbed. The third<br>
+ night, the fourth, the fifth, the sixth, passed, and nothing<br>
+ happened. I lay down on the seventh night, still suspicious
+of<br>
+ something happening; still in my clothes; still with the
+door<br>
+ locked, the key on the table, and the candle burning.</p>
+
+<p>My rest was disturbed. I awoke twice, without any sensation
+of<br>
+ uneasiness. The third time, that horrid shivering of the night
+at<br>
+ the lonely inn, that awful sinking pain at the heart, came
+back<br>
+ again, and roused me in an instant. My eyes turned to the
+left-<br>
+ hand side of the bed. And there stood, looking at me--</p>
+
+<p>The Dream Woman again? No! My wife. The living woman, with
+the<br>
+ face of the Dream--in the attitude of the Dream--the fair arm
+up;<br>
+ the knife clasped in the delicate white hand.</p>
+
+<p>I sprang upon her on the instant; but not quickly enough to
+stop<br>
+ her from hiding the knife. Without a word from me, without a
+cry<br>
+ from her, I pinioned her in a chair. With one hand I felt up
+her<br>
+ sleeve; and there, where the Dream Woman had hidden the knife,
+my<br>
+ wife had hidden it--the knife with the buckhorn handle, that
+looked<br>
+ like new.</p>
+
+<p>What I felt when I made that discovery I could not realize at
+the<br>
+ time, and I can't describe now. I took one steady look at her
+with<br>
+ the knife in my hand. "You meant to kill me?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she answered; "I meant to kill you." She crossed her
+arms<br>
+ over her bosom, and stared me coolly in the face. "I shall do
+it<br>
+ yet," she said. "With that knife."</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what possessed me--I swear to you I am no coward;
+and<br>
+ yet I acted like a coward. The horrors got hold of me. I
+couldn't<br>
+ look at her--I couldn't speak to her. I left her (with the
+knife<br>
+ in my hand), and went out into the night.</p>
+
+<p>There was a bleak wind abroad, and the smell of rain was in
+the<br>
+ air. The church clocks chimed the quarter as I walked beyond
+the<br>
+ last house in the town. I asked the first policeman I met
+what<br>
+ hour that was, of which the quarter past had just struck.</p>
+
+<p>The man looked at his watch, and answered, "Two o'clock." Two
+in<br>
+ the morning. What day of the month was this day that had
+just<br>
+ begun? I reckoned it up from the date of my mother's funeral.
+The<br>
+ horrid parallel between the dream and the reality was
+complete--it<br>
+ was my birthday!</p>
+
+<p>Had I escaped the mortal peril which the dream foretold? or
+had I<br>
+ only received a second warning? As that doubt crossed my mind
+I<br>
+ stopped on my way out of the town. The air had revived me--I
+felt<br>
+ in some degree like my own self again. After a little thinking,
+I<br>
+ began to see plainly the mistake I had made in leaving my wife
+free<br>
+ to go where she liked and to do as she pleased.</p>
+
+<p>I turned instantly, and made my way back to the house. It
+was<br>
+ still dark. I had left the candle burning in the bedchamber.
+When<br>
+ I looked up to the window of the room now, there was no light
+in<br>
+ it. I advanced to the house door. On going away, I remembered
+to<br>
+ have closed it; on trying it now, I found it open.</p>
+
+<p>I waited outside, never losing sight of the house till
+daylight.<br>
+ Then I ventured indoors--listened, and heard nothing--looked
+into<br>
+ the kitchen, scullery, parlor, and found nothing--went up at
+last<br>
+ into the bedroom. It was empty.</p>
+
+<p>A picklock lay on the floor, which told me how she had
+gained<br>
+ entrance in the night. And that was the one trace I could find
+of<br>
+ the Dream Woman.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ XIII</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ I waited in the house till the town was astir for the day, and
+then<br>
+ I went to consult a lawyer. In the confused state of my mind
+at<br>
+ the time, I had one clear notion of what I meant to do: I
+was<br>
+ determined to sell my house and leave the neighborhood. There
+were<br>
+ obstacles in the way which I had not counted on. I was told I
+had<br>
+ creditors to satisfy before I could leave--I, who had given my
+wife<br>
+ the money to pay my bills regularly every week! Inquiry
+showed<br>
+ that she had embezzled every farthing of the money I had
+intrusted<br>
+ to her. I had no choice but to pay over again.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Placed in this awkward position, my first duty was to set
+things<br>
+ right, with the help of my lawyer. During my forced sojourn in
+the<br>
+ town I did two foolish things. And, as a consequence that<br>
+ followed, I heard once more, and heard for the last time, of
+my<br>
+ wife.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, having got possession of the knife, I was
+rash<br>
+ enough to keep it in my pocket. In the second place, having<br>
+ something of importance to say to my lawyer, at a late hour of
+the<br>
+ evening, I went to his house after dark--alone and on foot. I
+got<br>
+ there safely enough. Returning, I was seized on from behind by
+two<br>
+ men, dragged down a passage and robbed--not only of the
+little<br>
+ money I had about me, but also of the knife. It was the
+lawyer's<br>
+ opinion (as it was mine) that the thieves were among the<br>
+ disreputable acquaintances formed by my wife, and that they,
+had<br>
+ attacked me at her instigation. To confirm this view I received
+a<br>
+ letter the next day, without date or address, written in
+Alicia's<br>
+ hand. The first line informed me that the knife was back again
+in<br>
+ her possession. The second line reminded me of the day when
+I<br>
+ struck her. The third line warned me that she would wash out
+the<br>
+ stain of that blow in my blood, and repeated the words, "I shall
+do<br>
+ it with the knife!"</p>
+
+<p>These things happened a year ago. The law laid hands on the
+men<br>
+ who had robbed me; but from that time to this, the law has
+failed<br>
+ completely to find a trace of my wife.</p>
+
+<p>My story is told. When I had paid the creditors and paid the
+legal<br>
+ expenses, I had barely five pounds left out of the sale of
+my<br>
+ house; and I had the world to begin over again. Some months
+since--<br>
+ drifting here and there--I found my way to Underbridge. The<br>
+ landlord of the inn had known something of my father's family
+in<br>
+ times past. He gave me (all he had to give) my food, and
+shelter<br>
+ in the yard. Except on market days, there is nothing to do.
+In<br>
+ the coming winter the inn is to be shut up, and I shall have
+to<br>
+ shift for myself. My old master would help me if I applied to
+him--<br>
+ but I don't like to apply: he has done more for me already than
+I<br>
+ deserve. Besides, in another year who knows but my troubles
+may<br>
+ all be at an end? Next winter will bring me nigh to my next<br>
+ birthday, and my next birthday may be the day of my death.
+Yes!<br>
+ it's true I sat up all last night; and I heard two in the
+morning<br>
+ strike: and nothing happened. Still, allowing for that, the
+time<br>
+ to come is a time I don't trust. My wife has got the
+knife--my<br>
+ wife is looking for me. I am above superstition, mind! I
+don't<br>
+ say I believe in dreams; I only say, Alicia Warlock is looking
+for<br>
+ me. It is possible I may be wrong. It is possible I may be
+right.<br>
+ Who can tell?</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>THE THIRD NARRATIVE</h2>
+
+<h3>THE STORY CONTINUED BY PERCY FAIRBANK</h3>
+
+<h3><br>
+ XIV</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ We took leave of Francis Raven at the door of Farleigh Hall,
+with<br>
+ the understanding that he might expect to hear from us
+again.</p>
+
+<p>The same night Mrs. Fairbank and I had a discussion in the<br>
+ sanctuary of our own room. The topic was "The Hostler's
+Story";<br>
+ and the question in dispute between us turned on the measure
+of<br>
+ charitable duty that we owed to the hostler himself.</p>
+
+<p>The view I took of the man's narrative was of the purely
+matter-of-<br>
+ fact kind. Francis Raven had, in my opinion, brooded over
+the<br>
+ misty connection between his strange dream and his vile wife,
+until<br>
+ his mind was in a state of partial delusion on that subject. I
+was<br>
+ quite willing to help him with a trifle of money, and to
+recommend<br>
+ him to the kindness of my lawyer, if he was really in any
+danger<br>
+ and wanted advice. There my idea of my duty toward this
+afflicted<br>
+ person began and ended.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Confronted with this sensible view of the matter, Mrs.
+Fairbank's<br>
+ romantic temperament rushed, as usual, into extremes. "I should
+no<br>
+ more think of losing sight of Francis Raven when his next
+birthday<br>
+ comes round," says my wife, "than I should think of laying down
+a<br>
+ good story with the last chapters unread. I am positively<br>
+ determined, Percy, to take him back with us when we return
+to<br>
+ France, in the capacity of groom. What does one man more or
+less<br>
+ among the horses matter to people as rich as we are?" In
+this<br>
+ strain the partner of my joys and sorrows ran on, perfectly<br>
+ impenetrable to everything that I could say on the side of
+common<br>
+ sense. Need I tell my married brethren how it ended? Of course
+I<br>
+ allowed my wife to irritate me, and spoke to her sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Of course my wife turned her face away indignantly on the
+conjugal<br>
+ pillow, and burst into tears. Of course upon that, "Mr." made
+his<br>
+ excuses, and "Mrs." had her own way.</p>
+
+<p>Before the week was out we rode over to Underbridge, and
+duly<br>
+ offered to Francis Raven a place in our service as
+supernumerary<br>
+ groom.</p>
+
+<p>At first the poor fellow seemed hardly able to realize his
+own<br>
+ extraordinary good fortune. Recovering himself, he expressed
+his<br>
+ gratitude modestly and becomingly. Mrs. Fairbank's ready<br>
+ sympathies overflowed, as usual, at her lips. She talked to
+him<br>
+ about our home in France, as if the worn, gray-headed hostler
+had<br>
+ been a child. "Such a dear old house, Francis; and such
+pretty<br>
+ gardens! Stables! Stables ten times as big as your stables
+here--<br>
+ quite a choice of rooms for you. You must learn the name of
+our<br>
+ house--Maison Rouge. Our nearest town is Metz. We are within
+a<br>
+ walk of the beautiful River Moselle. And when we want a change
+we<br>
+ have only to take the railway to the frontier, and find
+ourselves<br>
+ in Germany."</p>
+
+<p>Listening, so far, with a very bewildered face, Francis
+started and<br>
+ changed color when my wife reached the end of her last
+sentence.<br>
+ "Germany?" he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Does Germany remind you of anything?"</p>
+
+<p>The hostler's eyes looked down sadly on the ground.
+"Germany<br>
+ reminds me of my wife," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! How?"</p>
+
+<p>"She once told me she had lived in Germany--long before I knew
+her-<br>
+ -in the time when she was a young girl."</p>
+
+<p>"Was she living with relations or friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"She was living as governess in a foreign family."</p>
+
+<p>"In what part of Germany?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't remember, ma'am. I doubt if she told me."</p>
+
+<p>"Did she tell you the name of the family?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, ma'am. It was a foreign name, and it has slipped my
+memory<br>
+ long since. The head of the family was a wine grower in a
+large<br>
+ way of business--I remember that."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you hear what sort of wine he grew? There are wine
+growers in<br>
+ our neighborhood. Was it Moselle wine?"</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't say, ma'am, I doubt if I ever heard."</p>
+
+<p>There the conversation dropped. We engaged to communicate
+with<br>
+ Francis Raven before we left England, and took our leave. I
+had<br>
+ made arrangements to pay our round of visits to English
+friends,<br>
+ and to return to Maison Rouge in the summer. On the eve of<br>
+ departure, certain difficulties in connection with the
+management<br>
+ of some landed property of mine in Ireland obliged us to alter
+our<br>
+ plans. Instead of getting back to our house in France in the<br>
+ Summer, we only returned a week or two before Christmas.
+Francis<br>
+ Raven accompanied us, and was duly established, in the
+nominal<br>
+ capacity of stable keeper, among the servants at Maison
+Rouge.</p>
+
+<p>Before long, some of the objections to taking him into our<br>
+ employment, which I had foreseen and had vainly mentioned to
+my<br>
+ wife, forced themselves on our attention in no very agreeable
+form.<br>
+ Francis Raven failed (as I had feared he would) to get on
+smoothly<br>
+ with his fellow-servants. They were all French; and not one
+of<br>
+ them understood English. Francis, on his side, was equally<br>
+ ignorant of French. His reserved manners, his melancholy<br>
+ temperament, his solitary ways--all told against him. Our
+servants<br>
+ called him "the English Bear." He grew widely known in the<br>
+ neighborhood under his nickname. Quarrels took place, ending
+once<br>
+ or twice in blows. It became plain, even to Mrs. Fairbank
+herself,<br>
+ that some wise change must be made. While we were still<br>
+ considering what the change was to be, the unfortunate hostler
+was<br>
+ thrown on our hands for some time to come by an accident in
+the<br>
+ stables. Still pursued by his proverbial ill-luck, the poor<br>
+ wretch's leg was broken by a kick from a horse.</p>
+
+<p>He was attended to by our own surgeon, in his comfortable
+bedroom<br>
+ at the stables. As the date of his birthday drew near, he
+was<br>
+ still confined to his bed.</p>
+
+<p>Physically speaking, he was doing very well. Morally speaking,
+the<br>
+ surgeon was not satisfied. Francis Raven was suffering under
+some<br>
+ mysterious mental disturbance, which interfered seriously with
+his<br>
+ rest at night. Hearing this, I thought it my duty to tell
+the<br>
+ medical attendant what was preying on the patient's mind. As
+a<br>
+ practical man, he shared my opinion that the hostler was in a
+state<br>
+ of delusion on the subject of his Wife and his Dream.
+"Curable<br>
+ delusion, in my opinion," the surgeon added, "if the
+experiment<br>
+ could be fairly tried."</p>
+
+<p>"How can it be tried?" I asked. Instead of replying, the
+surgeon<br>
+ put a question to me, on his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you happen to know," he said, "that this year is Leap
+Year?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Fairbank reminded me of it yesterday," I answered.<br>
+ "Otherwise I might NOT have known it."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think Francis Raven knows that this year is Leap
+Year?"</p>
+
+<p>(I began to see dimly what my friend was driving at.)</p>
+
+<p>"It depends," I answered, "on whether he has got an
+English<br>
+ almanac. Suppose he has NOT got the almanac--what then?"</p>
+
+<p>"In that case," pursued the surgeon, "Francis Raven is
+innocent of<br>
+ all suspicion that there is a twenty-ninth day in February
+this<br>
+ year. As a necessary consequence--what will he do? He will<br>
+ anticipate the appearance of the Woman with the Knife, at two
+in<br>
+ the morning of the twenty-ninth of February, instead of the
+first<br>
+ of March. Let him suffer all his superstitious terrors on
+the<br>
+ wrong day. Leave him, on the day that is really his birthday,
+to<br>
+ pass a perfectly quiet night, and to be as sound asleep as
+other<br>
+ people at two in the morning. And then, when he wakes
+comfortably<br>
+ in time for his breakfast, shame him out of his delusion by
+telling<br>
+ him the truth."</p>
+
+<p>I agreed to try the experiment. Leaving the surgeon to
+caution<br>
+ Mrs. Fairbank on the subject of Leap Year, I went to the stables
+to<br>
+ see Mr. Raven.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ XV</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The poor fellow was full of forebodings of the fate in store
+for<br>
+ him on the ominous first of March. He eagerly entreated me
+to<br>
+ order one of the men servants to sit up with him on the
+birthday<br>
+ morning. In granting his request, I asked him to tell me on
+which<br>
+ day of the week his birthday fell. He reckoned the days on
+his<br>
+ fingers; and proved his innocence of all suspicion that it was
+Leap<br>
+ Year, by fixing on the twenty-ninth of February, in the full<br>
+ persuasion that it was the first of March. Pledged to try
+the<br>
+ surgeon's experiment, I left his error uncorrected, of course.
+In<br>
+ so doing, I took my first step blindfold toward the last act in
+the<br>
+ drama of the Hostler's Dream.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The next day brought with it a little domestic difficulty,
+which<br>
+ indirectly and strangely associated itself with the coming
+end.</p>
+
+<p>My wife received a letter, inviting us to assist in
+celebrating the<br>
+ "Silver Wedding" of two worthy German neighbors of ours--Mr.
+and<br>
+ Mrs. Beldheimer. Mr. Beldheimer was a large wine grower on
+the<br>
+ banks of the Moselle. His house was situated on the frontier
+line<br>
+ of France and Germany; and the distance from our house was<br>
+ sufficiently considerable to make it necessary for us to
+sleep<br>
+ under our host's roof. Under these circumstances, if we
+accepted<br>
+ the invitation, a comparison of dates showed that we should be
+away<br>
+ from home on the morning of the first of March. Mrs.
+Fairbank--<br>
+ holding to her absurd resolution to see with her own eyes
+what<br>
+ might, or might not, happen to Francis Raven on his
+birthday--<br>
+ flatly declined to leave Maison Rouge. "It's easy to send an<br>
+ excuse," she said, in her off-hand manner.</p>
+
+<p>I failed, for my part, to see any easy way out of the
+difficulty.<br>
+ The celebration of a "Silver Wedding" in Germany is the
+celebration<br>
+ of twenty-five years of happy married life; and the host's
+claim<br>
+ upon the consideration of his friends on such an occasion is<br>
+ something in the nature of a royal "command." After
+considerable<br>
+ discussion, finding my wife's obstinacy invincible, and
+feeling<br>
+ that the absence of both of us from the festival would
+certainly<br>
+ offend our friends, I left Mrs. Fairbank to make her excuses
+for<br>
+ herself, and directed her to accept the invitation so far as I
+was<br>
+ concerned. In so doing, I took my second step, blindfold,
+toward<br>
+ the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.</p>
+
+<p>A week elapsed; the last days of February were at hand.
+Another<br>
+ domestic difficulty happened; and, again, this event also proved
+to<br>
+ be strangely associated with the coming end.</p>
+
+<p>My head groom at the stables was one Joseph Rigobert. He was
+an<br>
+ ill-conditioned fellow, inordinately vain of his personal<br>
+ appearance, and by no means scrupulous in his conduct with
+women.<br>
+ His one virtue consisted of his fondness for horses, and in
+the<br>
+ care he took of the animals under his charge. In a word, he
+was<br>
+ too good a groom to be easily replaced, or he would have quitted
+my<br>
+ service long since. On the occasion of which I am now writing,
+he<br>
+ was reported to me by my steward as growing idle and disorderly
+in<br>
+ his habits. The principal offense alleged against him was, that
+he<br>
+ had been seen that day in the city of Metz, in the company of
+a<br>
+ woman (supposed to be an Englishwoman), whom he was entertaining
+at<br>
+ a tavern, when he ought to have been on his way back to
+Maison<br>
+ Rouge. The man's defense was that "the lady" (as he called
+her)<br>
+ was an English stranger, unacquainted with the ways of the
+place,<br>
+ and that he had only shown her where she could obtain some<br>
+ refreshments at her own request. I administered the
+necessary<br>
+ reprimand, without troubling myself to inquire further into
+the<br>
+ matter. In failing to do this, I took my third step,
+blindfold,<br>
+ toward the last act in the drama of the Hostler's Dream.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the twenty-eighth, I informed the servants
+at the<br>
+ stables that one of them must watch through the night by the<br>
+ Englishman's bedside. Joseph Rigobert immediately volunteered
+for<br>
+ the duty--as a means, no doubt, of winning his way back to
+my<br>
+ favor. I accepted his proposal.</p>
+
+<p>That day the surgeon dined with us. Toward midnight he and I
+left<br>
+ the smoking room, and repaired to Francis Raven's bedside.<br>
+ Rigobert was at his post, with no very agreeable expression on
+his<br>
+ face. The Frenchman and the Englishman had evidently not got
+on<br>
+ well together so far. Francis Raven lay helpless on his bed,<br>
+ waiting silently for two in the morning and the Dream Woman.</p>
+
+<p>"I have come, Francis, to bid you good night," I said,
+cheerfully.<br>
+ "To-morrow morning I shall look in at breakfast time, before
+I<br>
+ leave home on a journey."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you for all your kindness, sir. You will not see me
+alive<br>
+ to-morrow morning. She will find me this time. Mark my
+words--she<br>
+ will find me this time."</p>
+
+<p>"My good fellow! she couldn't find you in England. How in
+the<br>
+ world is she to find you in France?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's borne in on my mind, sir, that she will find me here. At
+two<br>
+ in the morning on my birthday I shall see her again, and see
+her<br>
+ for the last time."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean that she will kill you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean that, sir, she will kill me--with the knife."</p>
+
+<p>"And with Rigobert in the room to protect you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am a doomed man. Fifty Rigoberts couldn't protect me."</p>
+
+<p>"And you wanted somebody to sit up with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mere weakness, sir. I don't like to be left alone on my<br>
+ deathbed."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at the surgeon. If he had encouraged me, I should<br>
+ certainly, out of sheer compassion, have confessed to Francis
+Raven<br>
+ the trick that we were playing him. The surgeon held to his<br>
+ experiment; the surgeon's face plainly said--"No."</p>
+
+<p>The next day (the twenty-ninth of February) was the day of
+the<br>
+ "Silver Wedding." The first thing in the morning, I went to<br>
+ Francis Raven's room. Rigobert met me at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"How has he passed the night?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Saying his prayers, and looking for ghosts," Rigobert
+answered.<br>
+ "A lunatic asylum is the only proper place for him."</p>
+
+<p>I approached the bedside. "Well, Francis, here you are, safe
+and<br>
+ sound, in spite of what you said to me last night."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes rested on mine with a vacant, wondering look.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand it," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you see anything of your wife when the clock struck
+two?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Did anything happen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing happened, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't THIS satisfy you that you were wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>His eyes still kept their vacant, wondering look. He only
+repeated<br>
+ the words he had spoken already: "I don't understand it."</p>
+
+<p>I made a last attempt to cheer him. "Come, come, Francis! keep
+a<br>
+ good heart. You will be out of bed in a fortnight."</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head on the pillow. "There's something wrong,"
+he<br>
+ said. "I don't expect you to believe me, sir. I only say
+there's<br>
+ something wrong--and time will show it."</p>
+
+<p>I left the room. Half an hour later I started for Mr.
+Beldheimer's<br>
+ house; leaving the arrangements for the morning of the first
+of<br>
+ March in the hands of the doctor and my wife.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ XVI</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The one thing which principally struck me when I joined the
+guests<br>
+ at the "Silver Wedding" is also the one thing which it is
+necessary<br>
+ to mention here. On this joyful occasion a noticeable lady
+present<br>
+ was out of spirits. That lady was no other than the heroine of
+the<br>
+ festival, the mistress of the house!</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the evening I spoke to Mr. Beldheimer's
+eldest son<br>
+ on the subject of his mother. As an old friend of the family,
+I<br>
+ had a claim on his confidence which the young man willingly<br>
+ recognized.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "We have had a very disagreeable matter to deal with," he
+said;<br>
+ "and my mother has not recovered the painful impression left on
+her<br>
+ mind. Many years since, when my sisters were children, we had
+an<br>
+ English governess in the house. She left us, as we then<br>
+ understood, to be married. We heard no more of her until a week
+or<br>
+ ten days since, when my mother received a letter, in which our
+ex-<br>
+ governess described herself as being in a condition of great<br>
+ poverty and distress. After much hesitation she had
+ventured--at<br>
+ the suggestion of a lady who had been kind to her--to write to
+her<br>
+ former employers, and to appeal to their remembrance of old
+times.<br>
+ You know my mother she is not only the most kind-headed, but
+the<br>
+ most innocent of women--it is impossible to persuade her of
+the<br>
+ wickedness that there is in the world. She replied by return
+of<br>
+ post, inviting the governess to come here and see her, and<br>
+ inclosing the money for her traveling expenses. When my
+father<br>
+ came home, and heard what had been done, he wrote at once to
+his<br>
+ agent in London to make inquiries, inclosing the address on
+the<br>
+ governess' letter. Before he could receive the agent's reply
+the<br>
+ governess arrived. She produced the worst possible impression
+on<br>
+ his mind. The agent's letter, arriving a few days later,
+confirmed<br>
+ his suspicions. Since we had lost sight of her, the woman had
+led<br>
+ a most disreputable life. My father spoke to her privately:
+he<br>
+ offered--on condition of her leaving the house--a sum of money
+to<br>
+ take her back to England. If she refused, the alternative would
+be<br>
+ an appeal to the authorities and a public scandal. She
+accepted<br>
+ the money, and left the house. On her way back to England
+she<br>
+ appears to have stopped at Metz. You will understand what sort
+of<br>
+ woman she is when I tell you that she was seen the other day in
+a<br>
+ tavern with your handsome groom, Joseph Rigobert."</p>
+
+<p>While my informant was relating these circumstances, my memory
+was<br>
+ at work. I recalled what Francis Raven had vaguely told us of
+his<br>
+ wife's experience in former days as governess in a German
+family.<br>
+ A suspicion of the truth suddenly flashed across my mind.
+"What<br>
+ was the woman's name?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beldheimer's son answered: "Alicia Warlock."</p>
+
+<p>I had but one idea when I heard that reply--to get back to my
+house<br>
+ without a moment's needless delay. It was then ten o'clock
+at<br>
+ night--the last train to Metz had left long since. I arranged
+with<br>
+ my young friend--after duly informing him of the
+circumstances--<br>
+ that I should go by the first train in the morning, instead
+of<br>
+ staying to breakfast with the other guests who slept in the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>At intervals during the night I wondered uneasily how things
+were<br>
+ going on at Maison Rouge. Again and again the same question<br>
+ occurred to me, on my journey home in the early morning--the<br>
+ morning of the first of March. As the event proved, but one
+person<br>
+ in my house knew what really happened at the stables on
+Francis<br>
+ Raven's birthday. Let Joseph Rigobert take my place as
+narrator,<br>
+ and tell the story of the end to You--as he told it, in times
+past,<br>
+ to his lawyer and to Me.</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ FOURTH (AND LAST) NARRATIVE</h2>
+
+<h3>STATEMENT OF JOSEPH RIGOBERT: ADDRESSED TO THE ADVOCATE
+WHO<br>
+ DEFENDED HIM AT HIS TRIAL</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ RESPECTED SIR,--On the twenty-seventh of February I was sent,
+on<br>
+ business connected with the stables at Maison Rouge, to the city
+of<br>
+ Metz. On the public promenade I met a magnificent woman.<br>
+ Complexion, blond. Nationality, English. We mutually admired
+each<br>
+ other; we fell into conversation. (She spoke French
+perfectly--<br>
+ with the English accent.) I offered refreshment; my proposal
+was<br>
+ accepted. We had a long and interesting interview--we
+discovered<br>
+ that we were made for each other. So far, Who is to blame?</p>
+
+<p>Is it my fault that I am a handsome man--universally agreeable
+as<br>
+ such to the fair sex? Is it a criminal offense to be accessible
+to<br>
+ the amiable weakness of love? I ask again, Who is to blame?<br>
+ Clearly, nature. Not the beautiful lady--not my humble self.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ To resume. The most hard-hearted person living will
+understand<br>
+ that two beings made for each other could not possibly part
+without<br>
+ an appointment to meet again.</p>
+
+<p>I made arrangements for the accommodation of the lady in
+the<br>
+ village near Maison Rouge. She consented to honor me with
+her<br>
+ company at supper, in my apartment at the stables, on the night
+of<br>
+ the twenty-ninth. The time fixed on was the time when the
+other<br>
+ servants were accustomed to retire--eleven o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>Among the grooms attached to the stables was an Englishman,
+laid up<br>
+ with a broken leg. His name was Francis. His manners were<br>
+ repulsive; he was ignorant of the French language. In the
+kitchen<br>
+ he went by the nickname of the "English Bear." Strange to say,
+he<br>
+ was a great favorite with my master and my mistress. They
+even<br>
+ humored certain superstitious terrors to which this
+repulsive<br>
+ person was subject--terrors into the nature of which I, as
+an<br>
+ advanced freethinker, never thought it worth my while to
+inquire.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the twenty-eighth the Englishman, being a
+prey to<br>
+ the terrors which I have mentioned, requested that one of
+his<br>
+ fellow-servants might sit up with him for that night only.
+The<br>
+ wish that he expressed was backed by Mr. Fairbank's
+authority.<br>
+ Having already incurred my master's displeasure--in what way,
+a<br>
+ proper sense of my own dignity forbids me to relate--I
+volunteered<br>
+ to watch by the bedside of the English Bear. My object was
+to<br>
+ satisfy Mr. Fairbank that I bore no malice, on my side, after
+what<br>
+ had occurred between us. The wretched Englishman passed a night
+of<br>
+ delirium. Not understanding his barbarous language, I could
+only<br>
+ gather from his gesture that he was in deadly fear of some
+fancied<br>
+ apparition at his bedside. From time to time, when this
+madman<br>
+ disturbed my slumbers, I quieted him by swearing at him. This
+is<br>
+ the shortest and best way of dealing with persons in his
+condition.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the twenty-ninth, Mr. Fairbank left us on
+a<br>
+ journey. Later in the day, to my unspeakable disgust, I found
+that<br>
+ I had not done with the Englishman yet. In Mr. Fairbank's
+absence,<br>
+ Mrs. Fairbank took an incomprehensible interest in the question
+of<br>
+ my delirious fellow-servant's repose at night. Again, one or
+the<br>
+ other of us was to watch at his bedside, and report it, if
+anything<br>
+ happened. Expecting my fair friend to supper, it was necessary
+to<br>
+ make sure that the other servants at the stables would be safe
+in<br>
+ their beds that night. Accordingly, I volunteered once more to
+be<br>
+ the man who kept watch. Mrs. Fairbank complimented me on my<br>
+ humanity. I possess great command over my feelings. I
+accepted<br>
+ the compliment without a blush.</p>
+
+<p>Twice, after nightfall, my mistress and the doctor (the
+last<br>
+ staying in the house in Mr. Fairbank's absence) came to make<br>
+ inquiries. Once BEFORE the arrival of my fair friend--and
+once<br>
+ AFTER. On the second occasion (my apartment being next door to
+the<br>
+ Englishman's) I was obliged to hide my charming guest in the<br>
+ harness room. She consented, with angelic resignation, to
+immolate<br>
+ her dignity to the servile necessities of my position. A
+more<br>
+ amiable woman (so far) I never met with!</p>
+
+<p>After the second visit I was left free. It was then close
+on<br>
+ midnight. Up to that time there was nothing in the behavior of
+the<br>
+ mad Englishman to reward Mrs. Fairbank and the doctor for<br>
+ presenting themselves at his bedside. He lay half awake,
+half<br>
+ asleep, with an odd wondering kind of look in his face. My<br>
+ mistress at parting warned me to be particularly watchful of
+him<br>
+ toward two in the morning. The doctor (in case anything
+happened)<br>
+ left me a large hand bell to ring, which could easily be heard
+at<br>
+ the house.</p>
+
+<p>Restored to the society of my fair friend, I spread the
+supper<br>
+ table. A pate, a sausage, and a few bottles of generous
+Moselle<br>
+ wine, composed our simple meal. When persons adore each other,
+the<br>
+ intoxicating illusion of Love transforms the simplest meal into
+a<br>
+ banquet. With immeasurable capacities for enjoyment, we sat
+down<br>
+ to table. At the very moment when I placed my fascinating<br>
+ companion in a chair, the infamous Englishman in the next room
+took<br>
+ that occasion, of all others, to become restless and noisy
+once<br>
+ more. He struck with his stick on the floor; he cried out, in
+a<br>
+ delirious access of terror, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"</p>
+
+<p>The sound of that lamentable voice, suddenly assailing our
+ears,<br>
+ terrified my fair friend. She lost all her charming color in
+an<br>
+ instant. "Good heavens!" she exclaimed. "Who is that in the
+next<br>
+ room?"</p>
+
+<p>"A mad Englishman."</p>
+
+<p>"An Englishman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Compose yourself, my angel. I will quiet him." The
+lamentable<br>
+ voice called out on me again, "Rigobert! Rigobert!"</p>
+
+<p>My fair friend caught me by the arm. "Who is he?" she
+cried.<br>
+ "What is his name?"</p>
+
+<p>Something in her face struck me as she put that question. A
+spasm<br>
+ of jealousy shook me to the soul. "You know him?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"His name!" she vehemently repeated; "his name!"</p>
+
+<p>"Francis," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Francis--WHAT?"</p>
+
+<p>I shrugged my shoulders. I could neither remember nor
+pronounce<br>
+ the barbarous English surname. I could only tell her it began
+with<br>
+ an "R."</p>
+
+<p>She dropped back into the chair. Was she going to faint? No:
+she<br>
+ recovered, and more than recovered, her lost color. Her eyes<br>
+ flashed superbly. What did it mean? Profoundly as I
+understand<br>
+ women in general, I was puzzled by THIS woman!</p>
+
+<p>"You know him?" I repeated.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed at me. "What nonsense! How should I know him? Go
+and<br>
+ quiet the wretch."</p>
+
+<p>My looking-glass was near. One glance at it satisfied me that
+no<br>
+ woman in her senses could prefer the Englishman to Me. I
+recovered<br>
+ my self-respect. I hastened to the Englishman's bedside.</p>
+
+<p>The moment I appeared he pointed eagerly toward my room.
+He<br>
+ overwhelmed me with a torrent of words in his own language. I
+made<br>
+ out, from his gestures and his looks, that he had, in some<br>
+ incomprehensible manner, discovered the presence of my guest;
+and,<br>
+ stranger still, that he was scared by the idea of a person in
+my<br>
+ room. I endeavored to compose him on the system which I have<br>
+ already mentioned--that is to say, I swore at him in MY
+language.<br>
+ The result not proving satisfactory, I own I shook my fist in
+his<br>
+ face, and left the bedchamber.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to my fair friend, I found her walking backward
+and<br>
+ forward in a state of excitement wonderful to behold. She had
+not<br>
+ waited for me to fill her glass--she had begun the generous
+Moselle<br>
+ in my absence. I prevailed on her with difficulty to place
+herself<br>
+ at the table. Nothing would induce her to eat. "My appetite
+is<br>
+ gone," she said. "Give me wine."</p>
+
+<p>The generous Moselle deserves its name--delicate on the
+palate,<br>
+ with prodigious "body." The strength of this fine wine produced
+no<br>
+ stupefying effect on my remarkable guest. It appeared to<br>
+ strengthen and exhilarate her--nothing more. She always spoke
+in<br>
+ the same low tone, and always, turn the conversation as I
+might,<br>
+ brought it back with the same dexterity to the subject of
+the<br>
+ Englishman in the next room. In any other woman this
+persistency<br>
+ would have offended me. My lovely guest was irresistible; I<br>
+ answered her questions with the docility of a child. She
+possessed<br>
+ all the amusing eccentricity of her nation. When I told her of
+the<br>
+ accident which confined the Englishman to his bed, she sprang
+to<br>
+ her feet. An extraordinary smile irradiated her countenance.
+She<br>
+ said, "Show me the horse who broke the Englishman's leg! I
+must<br>
+ see that horse!" I took her to the stables. She kissed the
+horse-<br>
+ -on my word of honor, she kissed the horse! That struck me.
+I<br>
+ said. "You DO know the man; and he has wronged you in some
+way."<br>
+ No! she would not admit it, even then. "I kiss all beautiful<br>
+ animals," she said. "Haven't I kissed YOU?" With that
+charming<br>
+ explanation of her conduct, she ran back up the stairs. I
+only<br>
+ remained behind to lock the stable door again. When I
+rejoined<br>
+ her, I made a startling discovery. I caught her coming out of
+the<br>
+ Englishman's room.</p>
+
+<p>"I was just going downstairs again to call you," she said.
+"The<br>
+ man in there is getting noisy once more."</p>
+
+<p>The mad Englishman's voice assailed our ears once again.<br>
+ "Rigobert! Rigobert!"</p>
+
+<p>He was a frightful object to look at when I saw him this time.
+His<br>
+ eyes were staring wildly; the perspiration was pouring over
+his<br>
+ face. In a panic of terror he clasped his hands; he pointed up
+to<br>
+ heaven. By every sign and gesture that a man can make, he<br>
+ entreated me not to leave him again. I really could not help<br>
+ smiling. The idea of my staying with HIM, and leaving my
+fair<br>
+ friend by herself in the next room!</p>
+
+<p>I turned to the door. When the mad wretch saw me leaving him
+he<br>
+ burst out into a screech of despair--so shrill that I feared
+it<br>
+ might awaken the sleeping servants.</p>
+
+<p>My presence of mind in emergencies is proverbial among those
+who<br>
+ know me. I tore open the cupboard in which he kept his
+linen--<br>
+ seized a handful of his handkerchief's--gagged him with one
+of<br>
+ them, and secured his hands with the others. There was now
+no<br>
+ danger of his alarming the servants. After tying the last knot,
+I<br>
+ looked up.</p>
+
+<p>The door between the Englishman's room and mine was open. My
+fair<br>
+ friend was standing on the threshold--watching HIM as he lay<br>
+ helpless on the bed; watching ME as I tied the last knot.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing there?" I asked. "Why did you open the
+door?"</p>
+
+<p>She stepped up to me, and whispered her answer in my ear, with
+her<br>
+ eyes all the time upon the man on the bed:</p>
+
+<p>"I heard him scream."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you had killed him."</p>
+
+<p>I drew back from her in horror. The suspicion of me which
+her<br>
+ words implied was sufficiently detestable in itself. But her<br>
+ manner when she uttered the words was more revolting still. It
+so<br>
+ powerfully affected me that I started back from that
+beautiful<br>
+ creature as I might have recoiled from a reptile crawling over
+my<br>
+ flesh.</p>
+
+<p>Before I had recovered myself sufficiently to reply, my nerves
+were<br>
+ assailed by another shock. I suddenly heard my mistress's
+voice<br>
+ calling to me from the stable yard.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time to think--there was only time to act. The
+one<br>
+ thing needed was to keep Mrs. Fairbank from ascending the
+stairs,<br>
+ and discovering--not my lady guest only--but the Englishman
+also,<br>
+ gagged and bound on his bed. I instantly hurried to the yard.
+As<br>
+ I ran down the stairs I heard the stable clock strike the
+quarter<br>
+ to two in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>My mistress was eager and agitated. The doctor (in attendance
+on<br>
+ her) was smiling to himself, like a man amused at his own
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Francis awake or asleep?" Mrs. Fairbank inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"He has been a little restless, madam. But he is now quiet
+again.<br>
+ If he is not disturbed" (I added those words to prevent her
+from<br>
+ ascending the stairs), "he will soon fall off into a quiet
+sleep."</p>
+
+<p>"Has nothing happened since I was here last?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, madam."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor lifted his eyebrows with a comical look of
+distress.<br>
+ "Alas, alas, Mrs. Fairbank!" he said. "Nothing has happened!
+The<br>
+ days of romance are over!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not two o'clock yet," my mistress answered, a
+little<br>
+ irritably.</p>
+
+<p>The smell of the stables was strong on the morning air. She
+put<br>
+ her handkerchief to her nose and led the way out of the yard by
+the<br>
+ north entrance--the entrance communicating with the gardens and
+the<br>
+ house. I was ordered to follow her, along with the doctor.
+Once<br>
+ out of the smell of the stables she began to question me
+again.<br>
+ She was unwilling to believe that nothing had occurred in
+her<br>
+ absence. I invented the best answers I could think of on the
+spur<br>
+ of the moment; and the doctor stood by laughing. So the
+minutes<br>
+ passed till the clock struck two. Upon that, Mrs. Fairbank<br>
+ announced her intention of personally visiting the Englishman
+in<br>
+ his room. To my great relief, the doctor interfered to stop
+her<br>
+ from doing this.</p>
+
+<p>"You have heard that Francis is just falling asleep," he said.
+"If<br>
+ you enter his room you may disturb him. It is essential to
+the<br>
+ success of my experiment that he should have a good night's
+rest,<br>
+ and that he should own it himself, before I tell him the truth.
+I<br>
+ must request, madam, that you will not disturb the man.
+Rigobert<br>
+ will ring the alarm bell if anything happens."</p>
+
+<p>My mistress was unwilling to yield. For the next five minutes,
+at<br>
+ least, there was a warm discussion between the two. In the
+end<br>
+ Mrs. Fairbank was obliged to give way--for the time. "In half
+an<br>
+ hour," she said, "Francis will either be sound asleep, or
+awake<br>
+ again. In half an hour I shall come back." She took the
+doctor's<br>
+ arm. They returned together to the house.</p>
+
+<p>Left by myself, with half an hour before me, I resolved to
+take the<br>
+ Englishwoman back to the village--then, returning to the
+stables,<br>
+ to remove the gag and the bindings from Francis, and to let
+him<br>
+ screech to his heart's content. What would his alarming the
+whole<br>
+ establishment matter to ME after I had got rid of the
+compromising<br>
+ presence of my guest?</p>
+
+<p>Returning to the yard I heard a sound like the creaking of an
+open<br>
+ door on its hinges. The gate of the north entrance I had
+just<br>
+ closed with my own hand. I went round to the west entrance, at
+the<br>
+ back of the stables. It opened on a field crossed by two
+footpaths<br>
+ in Mr. Fairbank's grounds. The nearest footpath led to the<br>
+ village. The other led to the highroad and the river.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at the west entrance I found the door open--swinging
+to<br>
+ and fro slowly in the fresh morning breeze. I had myself
+locked<br>
+ and bolted that door after admitting my fair friend at
+eleven<br>
+ o'clock. A vague dread of something wrong stole its way into
+my<br>
+ mind. I hurried back to the stables.</p>
+
+<p>I looked into my own room. It was empty. I went to the
+harness<br>
+ room. Not a sign of the woman was there. I returned to my
+room,<br>
+ and approached the door of the Englishman's bedchamber. Was
+it<br>
+ possible that she had remained there during my absence? An<br>
+ unaccountable reluctance to open the door made me hesitate, with
+my<br>
+ hand on the lock. I listened. There was not a sound inside.
+I<br>
+ called softly. There was no answer. I drew back a step,
+still<br>
+ hesitating. I noticed something dark moving slowly in the
+crevice<br>
+ between the bottom of the door and the boarded floor. Snatching
+up<br>
+ the candle from the table, I held it low, and looked. The
+dark,<br>
+ slowly moving object was a stream of blood!</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ That horrid sight roused me. I opened the door. The
+Englishman<br>
+ lay on his bed--alone in the room. He was stabbed in two
+places--<br>
+ in the throat and in the heart. The weapon was left in the
+second<br>
+ wound. It was a knife of English manufacture, with a handle
+of<br>
+ buckhorn as good as new.</p>
+
+<p>I instantly gave the alarm. Witnesses can speak to what
+followed.<br>
+ It is monstrous to suppose that I am guilty of the murder. I
+admit<br>
+ that I am capable of committing follies: but I shrink from the
+bare<br>
+ idea of a crime. Besides, I had no motive for killing the
+man.<br>
+ The woman murdered him in my absence. The woman escaped by
+the<br>
+ west entrance while I was talking to my mistress. I have no
+more<br>
+ to say. I swear to you what I have here written is a true<br>
+ statement of all that happened on the morning of the first
+of<br>
+ March.</p>
+
+<p>Accept, sir, the assurance of my sentiments of profound
+gratitude<br>
+ and respect.</p>
+
+<p>JOSEPH RIGOBERT.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ LAST LINES--ADDED BY PERCY FAIRBANK</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ Tried for the murder of Francis Raven, Joseph Rigobert was
+found<br>
+ Not Guilty; the papers of the assassinated man presented
+ample<br>
+ evidence of the deadly animosity felt toward him by his
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>The investigations pursued on the morning when the crime
+was<br>
+ committed showed that the murderess, after leaving the stable,
+had<br>
+ taken the footpath which led to the river. The river was
+dragged--<br>
+ without result. It remains doubtful to this day whether she
+died<br>
+ by drowning or not. The one thing certain is--that Alicia
+Warlock<br>
+ was never seen again.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ So--beginning in mystery, ending in mystery--the Dream Woman
+passes<br>
+ from your view. Ghost; demon; or living human creature--say
+for<br>
+ yourselves which she is. Or, knowing what unfathomed wonders
+are<br>
+ around you, what unfathomed wonders are IN you, let the wise
+words<br>
+ of the greatest of all poets be explanation enough:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><br>
+ "We are such stuff<br>
+ As dreams are made of, and our little life<br>
+ Is rounded with a sleep."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Anonymous</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>The Lost Duchess</h2>
+
+<h3><br>
+ I</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Has the duchess returned?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, your grace."</p>
+
+<p>Knowles came farther into the room. He had a letter on a
+salver.<br>
+ When the duke had taken it, Knowles still lingered. The duke<br>
+ glanced at him.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Is an answer required?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, your grace." Still Knowles lingered. "Something a
+little<br>
+ singular has happened. The carriage has returned without the<br>
+ duchess, and the men say that they thought her grace was in
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hardly understand myself, your grace. Perhaps you would
+like to<br>
+ see Barnes."</p>
+
+<p>Barnes was the coachman.</p>
+
+<p>"Send him up." When Knowles had gone, and he was alone, his
+grace<br>
+ showed signs of being slightly annoyed. He looked at his
+watch.<br>
+ "I told her she'd better be in by four. She says that she's
+not<br>
+ feeling well, and yet one would think that she was not aware of
+the<br>
+ fatigue entailed in having the prince come to dinner, and a mob
+of<br>
+ people to follow. I particularly wished her to lie down for
+a<br>
+ couple of hours."</p>
+
+<p>Knowles ushered in not only Barnes, the coachman, but Moysey,
+the<br>
+ footman, too. Both these persons seemed to be ill at ease.
+The<br>
+ duke glanced at them sharply. In his voice there was a
+suggestion<br>
+ of impatience.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>Barnes explained as best he could.</p>
+
+<p>"If you please, your grace, we waited for the duchess outside
+Cane<br>
+ and Wilson's, the drapers. The duchess came out, got into
+the<br>
+ carriage, and Moysey shut the door, and her grace said, 'Home!'
+and<br>
+ yet when we got home she wasn't there."</p>
+
+<p>"She wasn't where?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her grace wasn't in the carriage, your grace."</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her grace did get into the carriage; you shut the door,
+didn't<br>
+ you?"</p>
+
+<p>Barnes turned to Moysey. Moysey brought his hand up to his
+brow in<br>
+ a sort of military salute--he had been a soldier in the regiment
+in<br>
+ which, once upon a time, the duke had been a subaltern.</p>
+
+<p>"She did. The duchess came out of the shop. She seemed rather
+in<br>
+ a hurry, I thought. She got into the carriage, and she said,<br>
+ 'Home, Moysey!' I shut the door, and Barnes drove straight
+home.<br>
+ We never stopped anywhere, and we never noticed nothing happen
+on<br>
+ the way; and yet when we got home the carriage was empty."</p>
+
+<p>The duke started.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to tell me that the duchess got out of the
+carriage<br>
+ while you were driving full pelt through the streets without
+saying<br>
+ anything to you, and without you noticing it?"</p>
+
+<p>"The carriage was empty when we got home, your grace."</p>
+
+<p>"Was either of the doors open?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, your grace."</p>
+
+<p>"You fellows have been up to some infernal mischief. You have
+made<br>
+ a mess of it. You never picked up the duchess, and you're
+trying<br>
+ to palm this tale off on me to save yourselves."</p>
+
+<p>Barnes was moved to adjuration:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take my Bible oath, your grace, that the duchess got
+into the<br>
+ carriage outside Cane and Wilson's."</p>
+
+<p>Moysey seconded his colleague.</p>
+
+<p>"I will swear to that, your grace. She got into that carriage,
+and<br>
+ I shut the door, and she said, 'Home, Moysey!'"</p>
+
+<p>The duke looked as if he did not know what to make of the
+story and<br>
+ its tellers.</p>
+
+<p>"What carriage did you have?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her grace's brougham, your grace."</p>
+
+<p>Knowles interposed:</p>
+
+<p>"The brougham was ordered because I understood that the
+duchess was<br>
+ not feeling very well, and there's rather a high wind, your
+grace."</p>
+
+<p>The duke snapped at him:</p>
+
+<p>"What has that to do with it? Are you suggesting that the
+duchess<br>
+ was more likely to jump out of a brougham while it was
+dashing<br>
+ through the streets than out of any other kind of vehicle?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke's glance fell on the letter which Knowles had brought
+him<br>
+ when he first had entered. He had placed it on his writing
+table.<br>
+ Now he took it up. It was, addressed:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "To His Grace the Duke of Datchet.</p>
+
+<p>Private!</p>
+
+<p>VERY PRESSING! ! !"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The name was written in a fine, clear, almost feminine hand.
+The<br>
+ words in the left-hand corner of the envelope were written in
+a<br>
+ different hand. They were large and bold; almost as though
+they<br>
+ had been painted with the end of the penholder instead of
+being<br>
+ written with the pen. The envelope itself was of an unusual
+size,<br>
+ and bulged out as though it contained something else besides
+a<br>
+ letter.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The duke tore the envelope open. As he did so something fell
+out<br>
+ of it on to the writing table. It looked as though it was a
+lock<br>
+ of a woman's hair. As he glanced at it the duke seemed to be
+a<br>
+ trifle startled. The duke read the letter:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Your grace will be so good as to bring five hundred pounds in
+gold<br>
+ to the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade within an hour
+of<br>
+ the receipt of this. The Duchess of Datchet has been kidnaped.
+An<br>
+ imitation duchess got into the carriage, which was waiting
+outside<br>
+ Cane and Wilson's, and she alighted on the road. Unless your
+grace<br>
+ does as you are requested, the Duchess of Datchet's
+left-hand<br>
+ little finger will be at once cut off, and sent home in time
+to<br>
+ receive the prince to dinner. Other portions of her grace
+will<br>
+ follow. A lock of her grace's hair is inclosed with this as
+an<br>
+ earnest of our good intentions.</p>
+
+<p>"BEFORE 5:30 P.M. your grace is requested to be at the
+Piccadilly<br>
+ end of the Burlington Arcade with five hundred pounds in gold.
+You<br>
+ will there be accosted by an individual in a white top hat,
+and<br>
+ with a gardenia in his buttonhole. You will be entirely at
+liberty<br>
+ to give him into custody, or to have him followed by the police,
+in<br>
+ which case the duchess's left arm, cut off at the shoulder, will
+be<br>
+ sent home for dinner--not to mention other extremely
+possible<br>
+ contingencies. But you are ADVISED to give the individual in<br>
+ question the five hundred pounds in gold, because in that case
+the<br>
+ duchess herself will he home in time to receive the prince
+to<br>
+ dinner, and with one of the best stories with which to
+entertain<br>
+ your distinguished guests they ever heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember! NOT LATER THAN 5:30, unless you wish to receive
+her<br>
+ grace's little finger."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The duke stared at this amazing epistle when he had read it
+as<br>
+ though he found it difficult to believe the evidence of his
+eyes.<br>
+ He was not a demonstrative person, as a rule, but this
+little<br>
+ communication astonished even him. He read it again. Then
+his<br>
+ hands dropped to his sides, and he swore.</p>
+
+<p>He took up the lock of hair which had fallen out of the
+envelope.<br>
+ Was it possible that it could be his wife's, the duchess? Was
+it<br>
+ possible that a Duchess of Datchet could be kidnaped, in
+broad<br>
+ daylight, in the heart of London, and be sent home, as it were,
+in<br>
+ pieces? Had sacrilegious hands already been playing pranks
+with<br>
+ that great lady's hair? Certainly, THAT hair was so like HER
+hair<br>
+ that the mere resemblance made his grace's blood run cold.
+He<br>
+ turned on Messrs. Barnes and Moysey as though he would have
+liked<br>
+ to rend them.</p>
+
+<p>"You scoundrels!"</p>
+
+<p>He moved forward as though the intention had entered his
+ducal<br>
+ heart to knock his servants down. But, if that were so, he did
+not<br>
+ act quite up to his intention. Instead, he stretched out his
+arm,<br>
+ pointing at them as if he were an accusing spirit:</p>
+
+<p>"Will you swear that it was the duchess who got into the
+carriage<br>
+ outside Cane and Wilson's?"</p>
+
+<p>Barnes began to stammer:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll swear, your grace, that I--I thought--"</p>
+
+<p>The duke stormed an interruption:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't ask what you thought. I ask you, will you swear it
+was?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke's anger was more than Barnes could face. He was
+silent.<br>
+ Moysey showed a larger courage.</p>
+
+<p>"I could have sworn that it was at the time, your grace. But
+now<br>
+ it seems to me that it's a rummy go."</p>
+
+<p>"A rummy go!" The peculiarity of the phrase did not seem to
+strike<br>
+ the duke just then--at least, he echoed it as if it didn't.
+"You<br>
+ call it a rummy go! Do you know that I am told in this letter
+that<br>
+ the woman who entered the carriage was not the duchess? What
+you<br>
+ were thinking about, or what case you will be able to make out
+for<br>
+ yourselves, you know better than I; but I can tell you
+this--that<br>
+ in an hour you will leave my service, and you may esteem
+yourselves<br>
+ fortunate if, to-night, you are not both of you sleeping in
+jail."</p>
+
+<p>One might almost have suspected that the words were spoken
+in<br>
+ irony. But before they could answer, another servant entered,
+who<br>
+ also brought a letter for the duke. When his grace's glance
+fell<br>
+ on it he uttered an exclamation. The writing on the envelope
+was<br>
+ the same writing that had been on the envelope which had
+contained<br>
+ the very singular communication--like it in all respects, down
+to<br>
+ the broomstick-end thickness of the "Private!" and "Very<br>
+ pressing!!!" in the corner.</p>
+
+<p>"Who brought this?" stormed the duke.</p>
+
+<p>The servant appeared to be a little startled by the violence
+of his<br>
+ grace's manner.</p>
+
+<p>"A lady--or, at least, your grace, she seemed to be a
+lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is she?"</p>
+
+<p>"She came in a hansom, your grace. She gave me that letter,
+and<br>
+ said, 'Give that to the Duke of Datchet at once--without a
+moment's<br>
+ delay!' Then she got into the hansom again, and drove away."</p>
+
+<p>"Why didn't you stop her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your grace!"</p>
+
+<p>The man seemed surprised, as though the idea of stopping
+chance<br>
+ visitors to the ducal mansion vi et armis had not, until
+that<br>
+ moment, entered into his philosophy. The duke continued to
+regard<br>
+ the man as if he could say a good deal, if he chose. Then he<br>
+ pointed to the door. His lips said nothing, but his gesture
+much.<br>
+ The servant vanished.</p>
+
+<p>"Another hoax!" the duke said grimly, as he tore the envelope
+open.</p>
+
+<p>This time the envelope contained a sheet of paper, and in the
+sheet<br>
+ of paper another envelope. The duke unfolded the sheet of
+paper.<br>
+ On it some words were written. These:</p>
+
+<p>"The duchess appears so particularly anxious to drop you a
+line,<br>
+ that one really hasn't the heart to refuse her.</p>
+
+<p>"Her grace's communication--written amidst blinding
+tears!--you<br>
+ will find inclosed with this."</p>
+
+<p>"Knowles," said the duke, in a voice which actually
+trembled,<br>
+ "Knowles, hoax or no hoax, I will be even with the gentleman
+who<br>
+ wrote that."</p>
+
+<p>Handing the sheet of paper to Mr. Knowles, his grace turned
+his<br>
+ attention to the envelope which had been inclosed. It was a
+small,<br>
+ square envelope, of the finest quality, and it reeked with
+perfume.<br>
+ The duke's countenance assumed an added frown--he had no
+fondness<br>
+ for envelopes which were scented. In the center of the
+envelope<br>
+ were the words, "To the Duke of Datchet," written in the big,
+bold,<br>
+ sprawling hand which he knew so well.</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel's writing," he said, half to himself, as, with
+shaking<br>
+ fingers, he tore the envelope open.</p>
+
+<p>The sheet of paper which he took out was almost as stiff
+as<br>
+ cardboard. It, too, emitted what his grace deemed the
+nauseous<br>
+ odors of the perfumer's shop. On it was written this letter:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "MY DEAR HEREWARD--For Heaven's sake do what these people
+require!<br>
+ I don't know what has happened or where I am, but I am
+nearly<br>
+ distracted! They have already cut off some of my hair, and
+they<br>
+ tell me that, if you don't let them have five hundred pounds
+in<br>
+ gold by half-past five, they will cut off my little finger too.
+I<br>
+ would sooner die than lose my little finger--and--I don't know
+what<br>
+ else besides.</p>
+
+<p>"By the token which I send you, and which has never, until
+now,<br>
+ been off my breast, I conjure you to help me.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward--HELP ME!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ When he read that letter the duke turned white--very white,
+as<br>
+ white as the paper on which it was written. He passed the
+epistle<br>
+ on to Knowles.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that also is a hoax?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Knowles was silent. He still yielded to his
+constitutional<br>
+ disrelish to commit himself. At last he asked:</p>
+
+<p>"What is it that your grace proposes to do?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke spoke with a bitterness which almost suggested a
+personal<br>
+ animosity toward the inoffensive Mr. Knowles.</p>
+
+<p>"I propose, with your permission, to release the duchess from
+the<br>
+ custody of my estimable correspondent. I propose--always with
+your<br>
+ permission--to comply with his modest request, and to take him
+his<br>
+ five hundred pounds in gold." He paused, then continued in a
+tone<br>
+ which, coming from him, meant volumes: "Afterwards, I propose
+to<br>
+ cry quits with the concocter of this pretty little hoax, even if
+it<br>
+ costs me every penny I possess. He shall pay more for that
+five<br>
+ hundred pounds than he supposes."</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ II</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The Duke of Datchet, coming out of the bank, lingered for a
+moment<br>
+ on the steps. In one hand he carried a canvas bag which
+seemed<br>
+ well weighted. On his countenance there was an expression which
+to<br>
+ a casual observer might have suggested that his grace was
+not<br>
+ completely at his ease. That casual observer happened to
+come<br>
+ strolling by. It took the form of Ivor Dacre.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Mr. Dacre looked the Duke of Datchet up and down in that
+languid<br>
+ way he has. He perceived the canvas bag. Then he remarked,<br>
+ possibly intending to be facetious:</p>
+
+<p>"Been robbing the bank? Shall I call a cart?"</p>
+
+<p>Nobody minds what Ivor Dacre says. Besides, he is the duke's
+own<br>
+ cousin. Perhaps a little removed; still, there it is. So the
+duke<br>
+ smiled a sickly smile, as if Mr. Dacre's delicate wit had given
+him<br>
+ a passing touch of indigestion.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre noticed that the duke looked sallow, so he gave
+his<br>
+ pretty sense of humor another airing.</p>
+
+<p>"Kitchen boiler burst? When I saw the duchess just now I
+wondered<br>
+ if it had."</p>
+
+<p>His grace distinctly started. He almost dropped the canvas
+bag.</p>
+
+<p>"You saw the duchess just now, Ivor! When?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke was evidently moved. Mr. Dacre was stirred to
+languid<br>
+ curiosity. "I can't say I clocked it. Perhaps half an hour
+ago;<br>
+ perhaps a little more."</p>
+
+<p>"Half an hour ago! Are you sure? Where did you see her?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre wondered. The Duchess of Datchet could scarcely
+have<br>
+ been eloping in broad daylight. Moreover, she had not yet
+been<br>
+ married a year. Everyone knew that she and the duke were still
+as<br>
+ fond of each other as if they were not man and wife. So,
+although<br>
+ the duke, for some cause or other, was evidently in an odd state
+of<br>
+ agitation, Mr. Dacre saw no reason why he should not make a
+clean<br>
+ breast of all he knew.</p>
+
+<p>"She was going like blazes in a hansom cab."</p>
+
+<p>"In a hansom cab? Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"Down Waterloo Place."</p>
+
+<p>"Was she alone?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre reflected. He glanced at the duke out of the corners
+of<br>
+ his eyes. His languid utterance became a positive drawl.</p>
+
+<p>"I rather fancy that she wasn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Who was with her?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, if you were to offer me the bank I couldn't
+tell<br>
+ you."</p>
+
+<p>"Was it a man?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre's drawl became still more pronounced.</p>
+
+<p>"I rather fancy that it was."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre expected something. The duke was so excited. But he
+by<br>
+ no means expected what actually came.</p>
+
+<p>"Ivor, she's been kidnaped!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre did what he had never been known to do before within
+the<br>
+ memory of man--he dropped his eyeglass.</p>
+
+<p>"Datchet!"</p>
+
+<p>"She has! Some scoundrel has decoyed her away, and trapped
+her.<br>
+ He's already sent me a lock of her hair, and he tells me that if
+I<br>
+ don't let him have five hundred pounds in gold by half-past
+five<br>
+ he'll let me have her little finger."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre did not know what to make of his grace at all. He
+was a<br>
+ sober man--it COULDN'T be that! Mr. Dacre felt really
+concerned.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll call a cab, old man, and you'd better let me see you
+home."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre half raised his stick to hail a passing hansom. The
+duke<br>
+ caught him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"You ass! What do you mean? I am telling you the simple
+truth.<br>
+ My wife's been kidnaped."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre's countenance was a thing to be seen--and
+remembered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I hadn't heard that there was much of that sort of thing
+about<br>
+ just now. They talk of poodles being kidnaped, but as for<br>
+ duchesses-- You'd really better let me call that cab."</p>
+
+<p>"Ivor, do you want me to kick you? Don't you see that to me
+it's a<br>
+ question of life and death? I've been in there to get the
+money."<br>
+ His grace motioned toward the bank. "I'm going to take it to
+the<br>
+ scoundrel who has my darling at his mercy. Let me but have
+her<br>
+ hand in mine again, and he shall continue to pay for every<br>
+ sovereign with tears of blood until he dies."</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Datchet, I don't know if you're having a joke with
+me,<br>
+ or if you're not well--"</p>
+
+<p>The duke stepped impatiently into the roadway.</p>
+
+<p>"Ivor, you're a fool! Can't you tell jest from earnest,
+health<br>
+ from disease? I'm off! Are you coming with me? It would be
+as<br>
+ well that I should have a witness."</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you off to?"</p>
+
+<p>"To the other end of the Arcade."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is the gentleman you expect to have the pleasure of
+meeting<br>
+ there?"</p>
+
+<p>"How should I know?" The duke took a letter from his
+pocket--it<br>
+ was the letter which had just arrived. "The fellow is to wear
+a<br>
+ white top hat, and a gardenia in his buttonhole."</p>
+
+<p>"What is it you have there?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's the letter which brought the news--look for yourself and
+see;<br>
+ but, for God's sake, make haste!" His grace glanced at his
+watch.<br>
+ "It's already twenty after five."</p>
+
+<p>"And do you mean to say that on the strength of a letter such
+as<br>
+ this you are going to hand over five hundred pounds to--"</p>
+
+<p>The duke cut Mr. Dacre short.</p>
+
+<p>"What are five hundred pounds to me? Besides, you don't know
+all.<br>
+ There is another letter. And I have heard from Mabel. But I
+will<br>
+ tell you all about it later. If you are coming, come!"</p>
+
+<p>Folding up the letter, Mr. Dacre returned it to the duke.</p>
+
+<p>"As you say, what are five hundred pounds to you? It's as
+well<br>
+ they are not as much to you as they are to me, or I'm
+afraid--"</p>
+
+<p>"Hang it, Ivor, do prose afterwards!"</p>
+
+<p>The duke hurried across the road. Mr. Dacre hastened after
+him.<br>
+ As they entered the Arcade they passed a constable. Mr.
+Dacre<br>
+ touched his companion's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you think we'd better ask our friend in blue to walk
+behind<br>
+ us? His neighborhood might be handy."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense!" The duke stopped short. "Ivor, this is my affair,
+not<br>
+ yours. If you are not content to play the part of silent
+witness,<br>
+ be so good as to leave me."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Datchet, I'm entirely at your service. I can be
+every<br>
+ whit as insane as you, I do assure you."</p>
+
+<p>Side by side they moved rapidly down the Burlington Arcade.
+The<br>
+ duke was obviously in a state of the extremest nervous
+tension.<br>
+ Mr. Dacre was equally obviously in a state of the most
+supreme<br>
+ enjoyment. People stared as they rushed past. The duke saw<br>
+ nothing. Mr. Dacre saw everything, and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>When they reached the Piccadilly end of the Arcade the duke
+pulled<br>
+ up. He looked about him. Mr. Dacre also looked about him.</p>
+
+<p>"I see nothing of your white-hatted and
+gardenia-buttonholed<br>
+ friend," said Ivor.</p>
+
+<p>The duke referred to his watch.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not yet half-past five. I'm up to time."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre held his stick in front of him and leaned on it.
+He<br>
+ indulged himself with a beatific smile.</p>
+
+<p>"It strikes me, my dear Datchet, that you've been the victim
+of one<br>
+ of the finest things in hoaxes--"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope I haven't kept you waiting."</p>
+
+<p>The voice which interrupted Mr. Dacre came from the rear.
+While<br>
+ they were looking in front of them some one approached them
+from<br>
+ behind, apparently coming out of the shop which was at their
+backs.</p>
+
+<p>The speaker looked a gentleman. He sounded like one, too.<br>
+ Costume, appearance, manner, were beyond reproach--even beyond
+the<br>
+ criticism of two such keen critics as were these. The
+glorious<br>
+ attire of a London dandy was surmounted with a beautiful white
+top<br>
+ hat. In his buttonhole was a magnificent gardenia.</p>
+
+<p>In age the stranger was scarcely more than a boy, and a
+sunny-<br>
+ faced, handsome boy at that. His cheeks were hairless, his
+eyes<br>
+ were blue. His smile was not only innocent, it was bland.
+Never<br>
+ was there a more conspicuous illustration of that repose
+which<br>
+ stamps the caste of Vere de Vere.</p>
+
+<p>The duke looked at him and glowered. Mr. Dacre looked at him
+and<br>
+ smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you?" asked the duke.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah--that is the question!" The newcomer's refined and
+musical<br>
+ voice breathed the very soul of affability. "I am an
+individual<br>
+ who is so unfortunate as to be in want of five hundred
+pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you the scoundrel who sent me that infamous letter?"</p>
+
+<p>The charming stranger never turned a hair.</p>
+
+<p>"I am the scoundrel mentioned in that infamous letter who
+wants to<br>
+ accost you at the Piccadilly end of the Burlington Arcade
+before<br>
+ half-past five--as witness my white hat and my gardenia."</p>
+
+<p>"Where's my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>The stranger gently swung his stick in front of him with his
+two<br>
+ hands. He regarded the duke as a merry-hearted son might
+regard<br>
+ his father. The thing was beautiful!</p>
+
+<p>"Her grace will be home almost as soon as you are--when you
+have<br>
+ given me the money which I perceive you have all ready for me
+in<br>
+ that scarcely elegant-looking canvas bag." He shrugged his<br>
+ shoulders quite gracefully. "Unfortunately, in these matters
+one<br>
+ has no choice--one is forced to ask for gold."</p>
+
+<p>"And suppose, instead of giving you what is in this canvas
+bag, I<br>
+ take you by the throat and choke the life right out of you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Or suppose," amended Mr. Dacre, "that you do better, and
+commend<br>
+ this gentleman to the tender mercies of the first policeman
+we<br>
+ encounter."</p>
+
+<p>The stranger turned to Mr. Dacre. He condescended to
+become<br>
+ conscious of his presence.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this gentleman your grace's friend? Ah--Mr. Dacre, I
+perceive!<br>
+ I have the honor of knowing Mr. Dacre, though, possibly, I
+am<br>
+ unknown to him."</p>
+
+<p>"You were--until this moment."</p>
+
+<p>With an airy little laugh the stranger returned to the duke.
+He<br>
+ brushed an invisible speck of dust off the sleeve of his
+coat.</p>
+
+<p>"As has been intimated in that infamous letter, his grace is
+at<br>
+ perfect liberty to give me into custody--why not? Only"--he
+said<br>
+ it with his boyish smile--"if a particular communication is
+not<br>
+ received from me in certain quarters within a certain time
+the<br>
+ Duchess of Datchet's beautiful white arm will be hacked off at
+the<br>
+ shoulder."</p>
+
+<p>"You hound!"</p>
+
+<p>The duke would have taken the stranger by the throat, and have
+done<br>
+ his best to choke the life right out of him then and there, if
+Mr.<br>
+ Dacre had not intervened.</p>
+
+<p>"Steady, old man!" Mr. Dacre turned to the stranger. "You
+appear<br>
+ to be a pretty sort of a scoundrel."</p>
+
+<p>The stranger gave his shoulders that almost imperceptible
+shrug.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my dear Dacre, I am in want of money! I believe that
+you<br>
+ sometimes are in want of money, too."</p>
+
+<p>Everybody knows that nobody knows where Ivor Dacre gets his
+money<br>
+ from, so the allusion must have tickled him immensely.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a cool hand," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Some men are born that way."</p>
+
+<p>"So I should imagine. Men like you must be born, not
+made."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely--as you say!" The stranger turned, with his
+graceful<br>
+ smile, to the duke: "But are we not wasting precious time? I
+can<br>
+ assure your grace that, in this particular matter, moments are
+of<br>
+ value."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre interposed before the duke could answer.</p>
+
+<p>"If you take my strongly urged advice, Datchet, you will
+summon<br>
+ this constable who is now coming down the Arcade, and hand
+this<br>
+ gentleman over to his keeping. I do not think that you need
+fear<br>
+ that the duchess will lose her arm, or even her little
+finger.<br>
+ Scoundrels of this one's kidney are most amenable to reason
+when<br>
+ they have handcuffs on their wrists."</p>
+
+<p>The duke plainly hesitated. He would--and he would not.
+The<br>
+ stranger, as he eyed him, seemed much amused.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear duke, by all means act on Mr. Dacre's valuable
+suggestion.<br>
+ As I said before, why not? It would at least be interesting to
+see<br>
+ if the duchess does or does not lose her arm--almost as
+interesting<br>
+ to you as to Mr. Dacre. Those blackmailing, kidnaping
+scoundrels<br>
+ do use such empty menaces. Besides, you would have the pleasure
+of<br>
+ seeing me locked up. My imprisonment for life would recompense
+you<br>
+ even for the loss of her grace's arm. And five hundred pounds
+is<br>
+ such a sum to have to pay--merely for a wife! Why not,
+therefore,<br>
+ act on Mr. Dacre's suggestion? Here comes the constable."
+The<br>
+ constable referred to was advancing toward them--he was not a
+dozen<br>
+ yards away. "Let me beckon to him--I will with pleasure." He
+took<br>
+ out his watch--a gold chronograph repeater. "There are
+scarcely<br>
+ ten minutes left during which it will be possible for me to
+send<br>
+ the communication which I spoke of, so that it may arrive in
+time.<br>
+ As it will then be too late, and the instruments are already<br>
+ prepared for the little operation which her grace is eagerly<br>
+ anticipating, it would, perhaps, be as well, after all, that
+you<br>
+ should give me into charge. You would have saved your five
+hundred<br>
+ pounds, and you would, at any rate, have something in exchange
+for<br>
+ her grace's mutilated limb. Ah, here is the constable!
+Officer!"</p>
+
+<p>The stranger spoke with such a pleasant little air of easy<br>
+ geniality that it was impossible to tell if he were in jest or
+in<br>
+ earnest. This fact impressed the duke much more than if he
+had<br>
+ gone in for a liberal indulgence of the--under the
+circumstances--<br>
+ orthodox melodramatic scowling. And, indeed, in the face of
+his<br>
+ own common sense, it impressed Mr. Ivor Dacre too.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ This well-bred, well-groomed youth was just the being to
+realize--<br>
+ aux bouts des ongles--a modern type of the devil, the type
+which<br>
+ depicts him as a perfect gentleman, who keeps smiling all the
+time.</p>
+
+<p>The constable whom this audacious rogue had signaled
+approached the<br>
+ little group. He addressed the stranger:</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want me, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I do not want you. I think it is the Duke of
+Datchet."</p>
+
+<p>The constable, who knew the duke very well by sight, saluted
+him as<br>
+ he turned to receive instructions.</p>
+
+<p>The duke looked white, even savage. There was not a pleasant
+look<br>
+ in his eyes and about his lips. He appeared to be endeavoring
+to<br>
+ put a great restraint upon himself. There was a momentary
+silence.<br>
+ Mr. Dacre made a movement as if to interpose. The duke caught
+him<br>
+ by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>He spoke: "No, constable, I do not want you. This person
+is<br>
+ mistaken."</p>
+
+<p>The constable looked as if he could not quite make out how
+such a<br>
+ mistake could have arisen, hesitated, then, with another salute,
+he<br>
+ moved away.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger was still holding his watch in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Only eight minutes," he said.</p>
+
+<p>The duke seemed to experience some difficulty in giving
+utterance<br>
+ to what he had to say.</p>
+
+<p>"If I give you this five hundred pounds, you--you--"</p>
+
+<p>As the duke paused, as if at a loss for language which was
+strong<br>
+ enough to convey his meaning, the stranger laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us take the adjectives for granted. Besides, it is only
+boys<br>
+ who call each other names--men do things. If you give me the
+five<br>
+ hundred sovereigns, which you have in that bag, at once--in
+five<br>
+ minutes it will be too late--I will promise--I will not swear;
+if<br>
+ you do not credit my simple promise, you will not believe my
+solemn<br>
+ affirmation--I will promise that, possibly within an hour,<br>
+ certainly within an hour and a half, the Duchess of Datchet
+shall<br>
+ return to you absolutely uninjured--except, of course, as you
+are<br>
+ already aware, with regard to a few of the hairs of her head.
+I<br>
+ will promise this on the understanding that you do not
+yourself<br>
+ attempt to see where I go, and that you will allow no one else
+to<br>
+ do so." This with a glance at Ivor Dacre. "I shall know at
+once<br>
+ if I am followed. If you entertain such intentions, you had<br>
+ better, on all accounts, remain in possession of your five
+hundred<br>
+ pounds."</p>
+
+<p>The duke eyed him very grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"I entertain no such intentions--until the duchess
+returns."</p>
+
+<p>Again the stranger indulged in that musical laugh of his.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, until the duchess returns! Of course, then the bargain's
+at<br>
+ an end. When you are once more in the enjoyment of her
+grace's<br>
+ society, you will be at liberty to set all the dogs in Europe at
+my<br>
+ heels. I assure you I fully expect that you will do so--why
+not?"<br>
+ The duke raised the canvas bag. "My dear duke, ten thousand<br>
+ thanks! You shall see her grace at Datchet House, 'pon my
+honor,<br>
+ probably within the hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," commented Ivor Dacre, when the stranger had vanished,
+with<br>
+ the bag, into Piccadilly, and as the duke and himself moved
+toward<br>
+ Burlington Gardens, "if a gentleman is to be robbed, it is as
+well<br>
+ that he should have another gentleman rob him."</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ III</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Mr. Dacre eyed his companion covertly as they progressed.
+His<br>
+ Grace of Datchet appeared to have some fresh cause for
+uneasiness.<br>
+ All at once he gave it utterance, in a tone of voice which
+was<br>
+ extremely somber:</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Ivor, do you think that scoundrel will dare to play me
+false?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think," murmured Mr. Dacre, "that he has dared to play
+you<br>
+ pretty false already."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean that. But I mean how am I to know, now that he
+has<br>
+ his money, that he will still not keep Mabel in his
+clutches?"</p>
+
+<p>There came an echo from Mr. Dacre.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so--how are you to know?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that something of this sort has been done in
+the<br>
+ States."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought that there they were content to kidnap them after
+they<br>
+ were dead. I was not aware that they had, as yet, got quite so
+far<br>
+ as the living."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that I have heard of something just like this."</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly; they are giants over there."</p>
+
+<p>"And in that case the scoundrels, when their demands were
+met,<br>
+ refused to keep to the letter of their bargain and asked for
+more."</p>
+
+<p>The duke stood still. He clinched his fists, and swore:</p>
+
+<p>"Ivor, if that ---- villain doesn't keep his word, and Mabel
+isn't<br>
+ home within the hour, by ---- I shall go mad!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Datchet"--Mr. Dacre loved strong language as little
+as he<br>
+ loved a scene--"let us trust to time and, a little, to your
+white-<br>
+ hatted and gardenia-buttonholed friend's word of honor. You
+should<br>
+ have thought of possible eventualities before you showed
+your<br>
+ confidence--really. Suppose, instead of going mad, we first of
+all<br>
+ go home?"</p>
+
+<p>A hansom stood waiting for a fare at the end of the Arcade.
+Mr.<br>
+ Dacre had handed the duke into it before his grace had quite<br>
+ realized that the vehicle was there.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell the fellow to drive faster." That was what the duke
+said<br>
+ when the cab had started.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Datchet, the man's already driving his geerage off
+its<br>
+ legs. If a bobby catches sight of him he'll take his
+number."</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, a murmur from the duke:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know if you're aware that the prince is coming to
+dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am perfectly aware of it."</p>
+
+<p>"You take it uncommonly cool. How easy it is to bear our
+brother's<br>
+ burdens! Ivor, if Mabel doesn't turn up I shall feel like
+murder."</p>
+
+<p>"I sympathize with you, Datchet, with all my heart, though, I
+may<br>
+ observe, parenthetically, that I very far from realize the<br>
+ situation even yet. Take my advice. If the duchess does not
+show<br>
+ quite as soon as we both of us desire, don't make a scene; just
+let<br>
+ me see what I can do."</p>
+
+<p>Judging from the expression of his countenance, the duke
+was<br>
+ conscious of no overwhelming desire to witness an exhibition of
+Mr.<br>
+ Dacre's prowess.</p>
+
+<p>When the cab reached Datchet House his grace dashed up the
+steps<br>
+ three at a time. The door flew open.</p>
+
+<p>"Has the duchess returned?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward!"</p>
+
+<p>A voice floated downward from above. Some one came running
+down<br>
+ the stairs. It was her Grace of Datchet.</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel!"</p>
+
+<p>She actually rushed into the duke's extended arms. And he
+kissed<br>
+ her, and she kissed him--before the servants.</p>
+
+<p>"So you're not quite dead?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I am almost," he said.</p>
+
+<p>She drew herself a little away from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward, were you seriously hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose that I could have been otherwise than
+seriously<br>
+ hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>"My darling! Was it a Pickford's van?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke stared.</p>
+
+<p>"A Pickford's van? I don't understand. But come in here.
+Come<br>
+ along, Ivor. Mabel, you don't see Ivor."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do, Mr. Dacre?"</p>
+
+<p>Then the trio withdrew into a little anteroom; it was really
+time.<br>
+ Even then the pair conducted themselves as if Mr. Dacre had
+been<br>
+ nothing and no one. The duke took the lady's two hands in his.
+He<br>
+ eyed her fondly.</p>
+
+<p>"So you are uninjured, with the exception of that lock of
+hair.<br>
+ Where did the villain take it from?"</p>
+
+<p>The lady looked a little puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>"What lock of hair?"</p>
+
+<p>From an envelope which he took from his pocket the duke
+produced a<br>
+ shining tress. It was the lock of hair which had arrived in
+the<br>
+ first communication. "I will have it framed."</p>
+
+<p>"You will have what framed?" The duchess glanced at what the
+duke<br>
+ was so tenderly caressing, almost, as it seemed, a little<br>
+ dubiously. "Whatever is it you have there?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is the lock of hair which that scoundrel sent me."
+Something<br>
+ in the lady's face caused him to ask a question:</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't he tell you he had sent it to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward!"</p>
+
+<p>"Did the brute tell you that he meant to cut off your
+little<br>
+ finger?"</p>
+
+<p>A very curious look came into the lady's face. She glanced at
+the<br>
+ duke as if she, all at once, was half afraid of him. She cast
+at<br>
+ Mr. Dacre what really seemed to be a look of inquiry. Her
+voice<br>
+ was tremulously anxious.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward, did--did the accident affect you mentally?"</p>
+
+<p>"How could it not have affected me mentally? Do you think that
+my<br>
+ mental organization is of steel?"</p>
+
+<p>"But you look so well."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I look well, now that I have you back again. Tell
+me,<br>
+ darling, did that hound actually threaten you with cutting off
+your<br>
+ arm? If he did, I shall feel half inclined to kill him yet."</p>
+
+<p>The duchess seemed positively to shrink from her better half's
+near<br>
+ neighborhood.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward, was it a Pickford's van?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke seemed puzzled. Well he might be.</p>
+
+<p>"Was what a Pickford's van?"</p>
+
+<p>The lady turned to Mr. Dacre. In her voice there was a ring
+of<br>
+ anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Dacre, tell me, was it a Pickford's van?" Ivor could
+only<br>
+ imitate his relative's repetition of her inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite catch you--was what a Pickford's van?"</p>
+
+<p>The duchess clasped her hands in front of her.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it you are keeping from me? What is it you are trying
+to<br>
+ hide? I implore you to tell me the worst, whatever it may be!
+Do<br>
+ not keep me any longer in suspense; you do not know what I
+already<br>
+ have endured. Mr. Dacre, is my husband mad?"</p>
+
+<p>One need scarcely observe that the lady's amazing appeal to
+Mr.<br>
+ Dacre as to her husband's sanity was received with something
+like<br>
+ surprise. As the duke continued to stare at her, a dreadful
+fear<br>
+ began to loom in his brain.</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, your brain is unhinged!"</p>
+
+<p>He advanced to take her two hands again in his; but, to
+his<br>
+ unmistakable distress, she shrank away from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward--don't touch me. How is it that I missed you? Why
+did<br>
+ you not wait until I came?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait until you came?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke's bewilderment increased.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, if your injuries turned out, after all, to be slight,
+that<br>
+ was all the more reason why you should have waited, after
+sending<br>
+ for me like that."</p>
+
+<p>"I sent for you--I?" The duke's tone was grave. "My
+darling,<br>
+ perhaps you had better come upstairs."</p>
+
+<p>"Not until we have had an explanation. You must have known
+that I<br>
+ should come. Why did you not wait for me after you had sent
+me<br>
+ that?"</p>
+
+<p>The duchess held out something to the duke. He took it. It was
+a<br>
+ card--his own visiting card. Something was written on the back
+of<br>
+ it. He read aloud what was written.</p>
+
+<p>"'Mabel, come to me at once with the bearer. They tell me
+that<br>
+ they cannot take me home.' It looks like my own writing."</p>
+
+<p>"Looks like it! It IS your writing."</p>
+
+<p>"It looks like it--and written with a shaky pen."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, one's hand would shake at such a moment as
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel, where did you get this?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was brought to me in Cane and Wilson's."</p>
+
+<p>"Who brought it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Who brought it? Why, the man you sent."</p>
+
+<p>"The man I sent!" A light burst upon the duke's brain. He
+fell<br>
+ back a pace. "It's the decoy!"</p>
+
+<p>Her grace echoed the words:</p>
+
+<p>"The decoy?"</p>
+
+<p>"The scoundrel! To set a trap with such a bait! My poor
+innocent<br>
+ darling, did you think it came from me? Tell me, Mabel, where
+did<br>
+ he cut off your hair?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cut off my hair?"</p>
+
+<p>Her grace put her hand to her head as if to make sure that her
+hair<br>
+ was there.</p>
+
+<p>"Where did he take you to?"</p>
+
+<p>"He took me to Draper's Buildings."</p>
+
+<p>"Draper's Buildings?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have never been in the City before, but he told me it
+was<br>
+ Draper's Buildings. Isn't that near the Stock Exchange?"</p>
+
+<p>"Near the Stock Exchange?"</p>
+
+<p>It seemed rather a curious place to which to take a
+kidnaped<br>
+ victim. The man's audacity!</p>
+
+<p>"He told me that you were coming out of the Stock Exchange
+when a<br>
+ van knocked you over. He said that he thought it was a
+Pickford's<br>
+ van--was it a Pickford's van?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, it was not a Pickford's van. Mabel, were you in
+Draper's<br>
+ Buildings when you wrote that letter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wrote what letter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you forgotten it already? I do not believe that there is
+a<br>
+ word in it which will not be branded on my brain until I
+die."</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward! What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely you cannot have written me such a letter as that, and
+then<br>
+ have forgotten it already?"</p>
+
+<p>He handed her the letter which had arrived in the second<br>
+ communication. She glanced at it, askance. Then she took it
+with<br>
+ a little gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward, if you don't mind, I think I'll take a chair." She
+took<br>
+ a chair. "Whatever--whatever's this?" As she read the letter
+the<br>
+ varying expressions which passed across her face were, in<br>
+ themselves, a study in psychology. "Is it possible that you
+can<br>
+ imagine that, under any conceivable circumstances, I could
+have<br>
+ written such a letter as this?"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Mabel!"</p>
+
+<p>She rose to her feet with emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward, don't say that you thought this came from me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not from you?" He remembered Knowles's diplomatic reception
+of<br>
+ the epistle on its first appearance. "I suppose that you will
+say<br>
+ next that this is not a lock of your hair?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, what bee have you got in your bonnet? This a
+lock<br>
+ of my hair! Why, it's not in the least bit like my hair!"</p>
+
+<p>Which was certainly inaccurate. As far as color was concerned
+it<br>
+ was an almost perfect match. The duke turned to Mr. Dacre.</p>
+
+<p>"Ivor, I've had to go through a good deal this afternoon. If
+I<br>
+ have to go through much more, something will crack!" He
+touched<br>
+ his forehead. "I think it's my turn to take a chair." Not the
+one<br>
+ which the duchess had vacated, but one which faced it. He<br>
+ stretched out his legs in front of him; he thrust his hands
+into<br>
+ his trousers pockets; he said, in a tone which was not gloomy
+but<br>
+ absolutely grewsome:</p>
+
+<p>"Might I ask, Mabel, if you have been kidnaped?"</p>
+
+<p>"Kidnaped?"</p>
+
+<p>"The word I used was 'kidnaped.' But I will spell it if you
+like.<br>
+ Or I will get a dictionary, that you may see its meaning."</p>
+
+<p>The duchess looked as if she was beginning to be not quite
+sure if<br>
+ she was awake or sleeping. She turned to Ivor.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Dacre, has the accident affected Hereward's brain?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke took the words out of his cousin's mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"On that point, my dear, let me ease your mind. I don't know
+if<br>
+ you are under the impression that I should be the same shape
+after<br>
+ a Pickford's van had run over me as I was before; but, in any
+case,<br>
+ I have not been run over by a Pickford's van. So far as I am<br>
+ concerned there has been no accident. Dismiss that delusion
+from<br>
+ your mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!"</p>
+
+<p>"You appear surprised. One might even think that you were
+sorry.<br>
+ But may I now ask what you did when you arrived at Draper's<br>
+ Buildings?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did! I looked for you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! And when you had looked in vain, what was the next
+item<br>
+ in your programme?"</p>
+
+<p>The lady shrank still farther from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward, have you been having a jest at my expense? Can you
+have<br>
+ been so cruel?" Tears stood in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Rising, the duke laid his hand upon her arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel, tell me--what did you do when you had looked for me
+in<br>
+ vain?"</p>
+
+<p>"I looked for you upstairs and downstairs and everywhere. It
+was<br>
+ quite a large place, it took me ever such a time. I thought that
+I<br>
+ should go distracted. Nobody seemed to know anything about you,
+or<br>
+ even that there had been an accident at all--it was all offices.
+I<br>
+ couldn't make it out in the least, and the people didn't seem to
+be<br>
+ able to make me out either. So when I couldn't find you anywhere
+I<br>
+ came straight home again."</p>
+
+<p>The duke was silent for a moment. Then with funereal gravity
+he<br>
+ turned to Mr. Dacre. He put to him this question:</p>
+
+<p>"Ivor, what are you laughing at?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dacre drew his hand across his mouth with rather a
+suspicious<br>
+ gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, only a smile!"</p>
+
+<p>The duchess looked from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you two been doing? What is the joke?"</p>
+
+<p>With an air of preternatural solemnity the duke took two
+letters<br>
+ from the breast pocket of his coat.</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel, you have already seen your letter. You have already
+seen<br>
+ the lock of your hair. Just look at this--and that."</p>
+
+<p>He gave her the two very singular communications which had
+arrived<br>
+ in such a mysterious manner, and so quickly one after the
+other.<br>
+ She read them with wide-open eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward! Wherever did these come from?"</p>
+
+<p>The duke was standing with his legs apart, and his hands in
+his<br>
+ trousers pockets. "I would give--I would give another five
+hundred<br>
+ pounds to know. Shall I tell you, madam, what I have been
+doing?<br>
+ I have been presenting five hundred golden sovereigns to a
+perfect<br>
+ stranger, with a top hat, and a gardenia in his buttonhole."</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever for?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you have perused those documents which you have in your
+hand,<br>
+ you will have some faint idea. Ivor, when it's your funeral,
+I'LL<br>
+ smile. Mabel, Duchess of Datchet, it is beginning to dawn upon
+the<br>
+ vacuum which represents my brain that I've been the victim of
+one<br>
+ of the prettiest things in practical jokes that ever yet was<br>
+ planned. When that fellow brought you that card at Cane and<br>
+ Wilson's--which, I need scarcely tell you, never came from
+me--some<br>
+ one walked out of the front entrance who was so exactly like
+you<br>
+ that both Barnes and Moysey took her for you. Moysey showed
+her<br>
+ into the carriage, and Barnes drove her home. But when the<br>
+ carriage reached home it was empty. Your double had got out
+upon<br>
+ the road."</p>
+
+<p>The duchess uttered a sound which was half gasp, half
+sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward!"</p>
+
+<p>"Barnes and Moysey, with beautiful and childlike innocence,
+when<br>
+ they found that they had brought the thing home empty, came<br>
+ straightway and told me that YOU had jumped out of the
+brougham<br>
+ while it had been driving full pelt through the streets. While
+I<br>
+ was digesting that piece of information there came the first<br>
+ epistle, with the lock of your hair. Before I had time to
+digest<br>
+ that there came the second epistle, with yours inside."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems incredible!"</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds incredible; but unfathomable is the folly of
+man,<br>
+ especially of a man who loves his wife." The duke crossed to
+Mr.<br>
+ Dacre. "I don't want, Ivor, to suggest anything in the way
+of<br>
+ bribery and corruption, but if you could keep this matter to<br>
+ yourself, and not mention it to your friends, our white-hatted
+and<br>
+ gardenia-buttonholed acquaintance is welcome to his five
+hundred<br>
+ pounds, and--Mabel, what on earth are you laughing at?"</p>
+
+<p>The duchess appeared, all at once, to be seized with<br>
+ inextinguishable laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Hereward," she cried, "just think how that man must be
+laughing at<br>
+ you!"</p>
+
+<p>And the Duke of Datchet thought of it.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>The Minor Canon</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was Monday, and in the afternoon, as I was walking along
+the<br>
+ High Street of Marchbury, I was met by a
+distinguished-looking<br>
+ person whom I had observed at the services in the cathedral on
+the<br>
+ previous day. Now it chanced on that Sunday that I was singing
+the<br>
+ service. Properly speaking, it was not my turn; but, as my
+brother<br>
+ minor canons were either away from Marchbury or ill in bed, I
+was<br>
+ the only one left to perform the necessary duty. The<br>
+ distinguished-looking person was a tall, big man with a round
+fat<br>
+ face and small features. His eyes, his hair and mustache (his
+face<br>
+ was bare but for a small mustache) were quite black, and he had
+a<br>
+ very pleasant and genial expression. He wore a tall hat, set<br>
+ rather jauntily on his head, and he was dressed in black with
+a<br>
+ long frock coat buttoned across the chest and fitting him close
+to<br>
+ the body. As he came, with a half saunter, half swagger, along
+the<br>
+ street, I knew him again at once by his appearance; and, as he
+came<br>
+ nearer, I saw from his manner that he was intending to stop
+and<br>
+ speak to me, for he slightly raised his hat and in a soft,<br>
+ melodious voice with a colonial "twang" which was far from
+being<br>
+ disagreeable, and which, indeed, to my ear gave a certain<br>
+ additional interest to his remarks, he saluted me with "Good
+day,<br>
+ sir!"</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Good day," I answered, with just a little reserve in my
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope, sir," he began, "you will excuse my stopping you in
+the<br>
+ street, but I wish to tell you how very much I enjoyed the music
+at<br>
+ your cathedral yesterday. I am an Australian, sir, and we have
+no<br>
+ such music in my country."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose not," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," he went on, "nothing nearly so fine. I am very fond
+of<br>
+ music, and as my business brought me in this direction, I
+thought I<br>
+ would stop at your city and take the opportunity of paying a
+visit<br>
+ to your grand cathedral. And I am delighted I came; so
+pleased,<br>
+ indeed, that I should like to leave some memorial of my
+visit<br>
+ behind me. I should like, sir, to do something for your
+choir."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure it is very kind of you," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I should certainly be glad if you could suggest to
+me<br>
+ something I might do in this way. As regards money, I may say
+that<br>
+ I have plenty of it. I am the owner of a most valuable
+property.<br>
+ My business relations extend throughout the world, and if I am
+as<br>
+ fortunate in the projects of the future as I have been in the
+past,<br>
+ I shall probably one day achieve the proud position of being
+the<br>
+ richest man in the world."</p>
+
+<p>I did not like to undertake myself the responsibility of
+advising<br>
+ or suggesting, so I simply said:</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot venture to say, offhand, what would be the most<br>
+ acceptable way of showing your great kindness and generosity,
+but I<br>
+ should certainly recommend you to put yourself in
+communication<br>
+ with the dean."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," said my Australian friend, "I will do so.
+And<br>
+ now, sir," he continued, "let me say how much I admire your
+voice.<br>
+ It is, without exception, the very finest and clearest voice I
+have<br>
+ ever heard."</p>
+
+<p>"Really," I answered, quite overcome with such unqualified
+praise,<br>
+ "really it is very good of you to say so."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but I feel it, my dear sir. I have been round the world,
+from<br>
+ Sydney to Frisco, across the continent of America" (he called
+it<br>
+ Amerrker) "to New York City, then on to England, and to-morrow
+I<br>
+ shall leave your city to continue my travels. But in all my<br>
+ experience I have never heard so grand a voice as your own."</p>
+
+<p>This and a great deal more he said in the same strain,
+which<br>
+ modesty forbids me to reproduce.</p>
+
+<p>Now I am not without some knowledge of the world outside the
+close<br>
+ of Marchbury Cathedral, and I could not listen to such a<br>
+ "flattering tale" without having my suspicions aroused. Who
+and<br>
+ what is this man? thought I. I looked at him narrowly. At
+first<br>
+ the thought flashed across me that he might be a "swell
+mobsman."<br>
+ But no, his face was too good for that; besides, no man with
+that<br>
+ huge frame, that personality so marked and so easily
+recognizable,<br>
+ could be a swindler; he could not escape detection a single
+hour.<br>
+ I dismissed the ungenerous thought. Perhaps he is rich, as
+he<br>
+ says. We do hear of munificent donations by benevolent<br>
+ millionaires now and then. What if this Australian, attracted
+by<br>
+ the glories of the old cathedral, should now appear as a deus
+ex<br>
+ machina to reendow the choir, or to found a musical
+professoriate<br>
+ in connection with the choir, appointing me the first occupant
+of<br>
+ the professorial chair?</p>
+
+<p>These thoughts flashed across my mind in the momentary pause
+of his<br>
+ fluent tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"As for yourself, sir," he began again, "I have something
+to<br>
+ propose which I trust may not prove unwelcome. But the
+public<br>
+ street is hardly a suitable place to discuss my proposal. May
+I<br>
+ call upon you this evening at your house in the close? I
+know<br>
+ which it is, for I happened to see you go into it yesterday
+after<br>
+ the morning service."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be very pleased to see you," I replied. "We are going
+out<br>
+ to dinner this evening, but I shall be at home and disengaged
+till<br>
+ about seven."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you very much. Then I shall do myself the pleasure
+of<br>
+ calling upon you about six o'clock. Till then, farewell!" A<br>
+ graceful wave of the hand, and my unknown friend had
+disappeared<br>
+ round the corner of the street.</p>
+
+<p>Now at last, I thought, something is going to happen in my<br>
+ uneventful life--something to break the monotony of existence.
+Of<br>
+ course, he must have inquired my name--he could get that from
+any<br>
+ of the cathedral vergers--and, as he said, he had observed<br>
+ whereabouts in the close I lived. What is he coming to see me
+for?<br>
+ I wondered. I spent the rest of the afternoon in making the<br>
+ wildest surmises. I was castle-building in Spain at a
+furious<br>
+ rate. At one time I imagined that this faithful son of the
+church--<br>
+ as he appeared to me--was going to build and endow a grand<br>
+ cathedral in Australia on condition that I should be appointed
+dean<br>
+ at a yearly stipend of, say, ten thousand pounds. Or perhaps,
+I<br>
+ said to myself, he will beg me to accept a sum of money--I
+never<br>
+ thought of it as less than a thousand pounds--as a slight<br>
+ recognition of and tribute to my remarkable vocal ability.</p>
+
+<p>I took a long, lonely walk into the country to correct
+these<br>
+ ridiculous fancies and to steady my mind, and when I reached
+home<br>
+ and had refreshed myself with a quiet cup of afternoon tea, I
+felt<br>
+ I was morally and physically prepared for my interview with
+the<br>
+ opulent stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Punctually as the cathedral clock struck six there was a ring
+at<br>
+ the visitor's bell. In a moment or two my unknown friend was
+shown<br>
+ into the drawing-room, which he entered with the easy air of a
+man<br>
+ of the world. I noticed he was carrying a small black bag.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do again, Mr. Dale?" he said as though we were
+old<br>
+ acquaintances; "you see I have come sharp to my time."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I answered, "and I am pleased to see you; do sit down."
+He<br>
+ sank into my best armchair, and placed his bag on the floor
+beside<br>
+ him.</p>
+
+<p>"Since we met in the afternoon," he said, "I have written a
+letter<br>
+ to your dean, expressing the great pleasure I felt in listening
+to<br>
+ your choir, and at the same time I inclosed a five-pound
+note,<br>
+ which I begged him to divide among the choir boys and men,
+from<br>
+ Alexander Poulter, Esq., of Poulter's Pills. You have of
+course<br>
+ heard of the world-renowned Poulter's Pills. I am Poulter!"</p>
+
+<p>Poulter of Poulter's Pills! My heart sank within me! A
+five-pound<br>
+ note! My airy castles were tottering!</p>
+
+<p>"I also sent him a couple of hundred of my pamphlets, which I
+said<br>
+ I trusted he would be so kind as to distribute in the
+close."</p>
+
+<p>I was aghast!</p>
+
+<p>"And now, with regard to the special object of my call, Mr.
+Dale.<br>
+ If you will allow me to say so, you are not making the most of
+that<br>
+ grand voice of yours; you are hidden under an ecclesiastical
+bushel<br>
+ here--lost to the world. You are wasting your vocal strength
+and<br>
+ sweetness on the desert air, so to speak. Why, if I may hazard
+a<br>
+ guess, I don't suppose you make five hundred a year here, at
+the<br>
+ outside?</p>
+
+<p>I could say nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, now, I can put you into the way of making at least
+three or<br>
+ four times as much as that. Listen! I am Alexander Poulter,
+of<br>
+ Poulter's Pills. I have a proposal to make to you. The scheme
+is<br>
+ bound to succeed, but I want your help. Accept my proposal
+and<br>
+ your fortune's made. Did you ever hear Moody and Sankey?" he
+asked<br>
+ abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>The man is an idiot, thought I; he is now fairly carried away
+with<br>
+ his particular mania. Will it last long? Shall I ring?</p>
+
+<p>"Novelty, my dear sir," he went on, "is the rule of the day;
+and<br>
+ there must be novelty in advertising, as in everything else,
+to<br>
+ catch the public interest. So I intend to go on a tour,
+lecturing<br>
+ on the merits of Poulter's Pills in all the principal halls of
+all<br>
+ the principal towns all over the world. But I have been delayed
+in<br>
+ carrying out my idea till I could associate myself with a
+gentleman<br>
+ such as yourself. Will you join me? I should be the Moody of
+the<br>
+ tour; you would be its Sankey. I would speak my patter, and
+you<br>
+ would intersperse my orations with melodious ballads bearing
+upon<br>
+ the virtues of Poulter's Pills. The ballads are all ready!"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he opened that bag and drew forth from its
+recesses<br>
+ nothing more alarming than a thick roll of manuscript music.</p>
+
+<p>"The verses are my own," he said, with a little touch of
+pride;<br>
+ "and as for the music, I thought it better to make use of
+popular<br>
+ melodies, so as to enable an audience to join in the chorus.
+See,<br>
+ here is one of the ballads: 'Darling, I am better now.' It<br>
+ describes the woes of a fond lover, or rather his physical<br>
+ ailments, until he went through a course of Poulter. Here's<br>
+ another: 'I'm ninety-five! I'm ninety-five!' You catch the
+drift<br>
+ of that, of course--a healthy old age, secured by taking
+Poulter's<br>
+ Pills. Ah! what's this? 'Little sister's last request.' I
+fancy<br>
+ the idea of that is to beg the family never to be without
+Poulter's<br>
+ Pills. Here again: 'Then you'll remember me!' I'm afraid
+that<br>
+ title is not original; never mind, the song is. And here
+is--but<br>
+ there are many more, and I won't detain you with them now."
+He<br>
+ saw, perhaps, I was getting impatient. Thank Heaven, however,
+he<br>
+ was no escaped lunatic. I was safe!</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Poulter," said I, "I took you this afternoon for a<br>
+ disinterested and philanthropic millionaire; you take me
+for--for--<br>
+ something different from what I am. We have both made
+mistakes.<br>
+ In a word, it is impossible for me to accept your offer!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is that final?" asked Poulter.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said I.</p>
+
+<p>Poulter gathered his manuscripts together and replaced them in
+the<br>
+ bag, and got up to leave the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Good evening, Mr. Dale," he said mournfully, as I opened the
+door<br>
+ of the room. "Good evening"--he kept on talking till he was
+fairly<br>
+ out of the house--"mark my words, you'll be sorry--very
+sorry--one<br>
+ day that you did not fall in with my scheme. Offers like
+mine<br>
+ don't come every day, and you will one day regret having
+refused<br>
+ it."</p>
+
+<p>With these words he left the house.</p>
+
+<p>I had little appetite for my dinner that evening.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>The Pipe</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ "RANDOLPH CRESCENT, N. W.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAR PUGH--I hope you will like the pipe which I send with
+this.<br>
+ It is rather a curious example of a certain school of Indian<br>
+ carving. And is a present from</p>
+
+<p>"Yours truly, JOSEPH TRESS."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was really very handsome of Tress--very handsome! The
+more<br>
+ especially as I was aware that to give presents was not exactly
+in<br>
+ Tress's line. The truth is that when I saw what manner of pipe
+it<br>
+ was I was amazed. It was contained in a sandalwood box, which
+was<br>
+ itself illustrated with some remarkable specimens of carving.
+I<br>
+ use the word "remarkable" advisedly, because, although the<br>
+ workmanship was undoubtedly, in its way, artistic, the result
+could<br>
+ not be described as beautiful. The carver had thought proper
+to<br>
+ ornament the box with some of the ugliest figures I remember
+to<br>
+ have seen. They appeared to me to be devils. Or perhaps they
+were<br>
+ intended to represent deities appertaining to some
+mythological<br>
+ system with which, thank goodness, I am unacquainted. The
+pipe<br>
+ itself was worthy of the case in which it was contained. It was
+of<br>
+ meerschaum, with an amber mouthpiece. It was rather too large
+for<br>
+ ordinary smoking. But then, of course, one doesn't smoke a
+pipe<br>
+ like that. There are pipes in my collection which I should as
+soon<br>
+ think of smoking as I should of eating. Ask a china maniac to
+let<br>
+ you have afternoon tea out of his Old Chelsea, and you will
+learn<br>
+ some home truths as to the durability of human friendships.
+The<br>
+ glory of the pipe, as Tress had suggested, lay in its carving.
+Not<br>
+ that I claim that it was beautiful, any more than I make such
+a<br>
+ claim for the carving on the box, but, as Tress said in his
+note,<br>
+ it was curious.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The stem and the bowl were quite plain, but on the edge of the
+bowl<br>
+ was perched some kind of lizard. I told myself it was an
+octopus<br>
+ when I first saw it, but I have since had reason to believe that
+it<br>
+ was some almost unique member of the lizard tribe. The
+creature<br>
+ was represented as climbing over the edge of the bowl down
+toward<br>
+ the stem, and its legs, or feelers, or tentacula, or whatever
+the<br>
+ things are called, were, if I may use a vulgarism, sprawling
+about<br>
+ "all over the place." For instance, two or three of them
+were<br>
+ twined about the bowl, two or three of them were twisted round
+the<br>
+ stem, and one, a particularly horrible one, was uplifted in
+the<br>
+ air, so that if you put the pipe in your mouth the thing was<br>
+ pointing straight at your nose.</p>
+
+<p>Not the least agreeable feature about the creature was that it
+was<br>
+ hideously lifelike. It appeared to have been carved in amber,
+but<br>
+ some coloring matter must have been introduced, for inside
+the<br>
+ amber the creature was of a peculiarly ghastly green. The more
+I<br>
+ examined the pipe the more amazed I was at Tress's generosity.
+He<br>
+ and I are rival collectors. I am not going to say, in so
+many<br>
+ words, that his collection of pipes contains nothing but
+rubbish,<br>
+ because, as a matter of fact, he has two or three rather
+decent<br>
+ specimens. But to compare his collection to mine would be
+absurd.<br>
+ Tress is conscious of this, and he resents it. He resents it
+to<br>
+ such an extent that he has been known, at least on one occasion,
+to<br>
+ declare that one single pipe of his--I believe he alluded to
+the<br>
+ Brummagem relic preposterously attributed to Sir Walter
+Raleigh--<br>
+ was worth the whole of my collection put together. Although I
+have<br>
+ forgotten this, as I hope I always shall forgive remarks made
+when<br>
+ envious passions get the better of our nobler nature, even of
+a<br>
+ Joseph Tress, it is not to be supposed that I have forgotten
+it.<br>
+ He was, therefore, not at all the sort of person from whom I<br>
+ expected to receive a present. And such a present! I do not<br>
+ believe that he himself had a finer pipe in his collection. And
+to<br>
+ have given it to me! I had misjudged the man. I wondered where
+he<br>
+ had got it from. I had seen his pipes; I knew them off by
+heart--<br>
+ and some nice trumpery he has among them, too! but I had never
+seen<br>
+ THAT pipe before. The more I looked at it, the more my
+amazement<br>
+ grew. The beast perched upon the edge of the bowl was so
+lifelike.<br>
+ Its two bead-like eyes seemed to gleam at me with positively
+human<br>
+ intelligence. The pipe fascinated me to such an extent that
+I<br>
+ actually resolved to--smoke it!</p>
+
+<p>I filled it with Perique. Ordinarily I use Birdseye, but on
+those<br>
+ very rare occasions on which I use a specimen I smoke Perique.
+I<br>
+ lit up with quite a small sensation of excitement. As I did so
+I<br>
+ kept my eyes perforce fixed upon the beast. The beast pointed
+its<br>
+ upraised tentacle directly at me. As I inhaled the pungent
+tobacco<br>
+ that tentacle impressed me with a feeling of actual
+uncanniness.<br>
+ It was broad daylight, and I was smoking in front of the
+window,<br>
+ yet to such an extent was I affected that it seemed to me that
+the<br>
+ tentacle was not only vibrating, which, owing to the peculiarity
+of<br>
+ its position, was quite within the range of probability, but<br>
+ actually moving, elongating--stretching forward, that is,
+farther<br>
+ toward me, and toward the tip of my nose. So impressed was I
+by<br>
+ this idea that I took the pipe out of my mouth and minutely<br>
+ examined the beast. Really, the delusion was excusable. So<br>
+ cunningly had the artist wrought that he succeeded in producing
+a<br>
+ creature which, such was its uncanniness, I could only hope had
+no<br>
+ original in nature.</p>
+
+<p>Replacing the pipe between my lips I took several whiffs.
+Never<br>
+ had smoking had such an effect on me before. Either the pipe,
+or<br>
+ the creature on it, exercised some singular fascination. I
+seemed,<br>
+ without an instant's warning, to be passing into some land
+of<br>
+ dreams. I saw the beast, which was perched upon the bowl,
+writhe<br>
+ and twist. I saw it lift itself bodily from the meerschaum.</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ II</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Feeling better now?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked up. Joseph Tress was speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter? Have I been ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"You appear to have been in some kind of swoon." Tress's tone
+was<br>
+ peculiar, even a little dry.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Swoon! I never was guilty of such a thing in my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor was I, until I smoked that pipe."</p>
+
+<p>I sat up. The act of sitting up made me conscious of the fact
+that<br>
+ I had been lying down. Conscious, too, that I was feeling
+more<br>
+ than a little dazed. It seemed as though I was waking out of
+some<br>
+ strange, lethargic sleep--a kind of feeling which I have read
+of<br>
+ and heard about, but never before experienced.</p>
+
+<p>"Where am I?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're on the couch in your own room. You WERE on the floor;
+but<br>
+ I thought it would be better to pick you up and place you on
+the<br>
+ couch--though no one performed the same kind office to me when
+I<br>
+ was on the floor."</p>
+
+<p>Again Tress's tone was distinctly dry.</p>
+
+<p>"How came YOU here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that's the question." He rubbed his chin--a habit of
+his<br>
+ which has annoyed me more than once before. "Do you think
+you're<br>
+ sufficiently recovered to enable you to understand a little
+simple<br>
+ explanation?" I stared at him, amazed. He went on stroking
+his<br>
+ chin. "The truth is that when I sent you the pipe I made a
+slight<br>
+ omission."</p>
+
+<p>"An omission?"</p>
+
+<p>"I omitted to advise you not to smoke it."</p>
+
+<p>"And why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because--well, I've reason to believe the thing is
+drugged."</p>
+
+<p>"Drugged!"</p>
+
+<p>"Or poisoned."</p>
+
+<p>"Poisoned!" I was wide awake enough then. I jumped off the
+couch<br>
+ with a celerity which proved it.</p>
+
+<p>"It is this way. I became its owner in rather a singular
+manner."<br>
+ He paused, as if for me to make a remark; but I was silent. "It
+is<br>
+ not often that I smoke a specimen, but, for some reason, I
+did<br>
+ smoke this. I commenced to smoke it, that is. How long I<br>
+ continued to smoke it is more than I can say. It had on me
+the<br>
+ same peculiar effect which it appears to have had on you. When
+I<br>
+ recovered consciousness I was lying on the floor."</p>
+
+<p>"On the floor?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the floor. In about as uncomfortable a position as you
+can<br>
+ easily conceive. I was lying face downward, with my legs
+bent<br>
+ under me. I was never so surprised in my life as I was when
+I<br>
+ found myself WHERE I was. At first I supposed that I had had
+a<br>
+ stroke. But by degrees it dawned upon me that I didn't FEEL
+as<br>
+ though I had had a stroke." Tress, by the way, has been an
+army<br>
+ surgeon. "I was conscious of distinct nausea. Looking about,
+I<br>
+ saw the pipe. With me it had fallen on to the floor. I took
+it<br>
+ for granted, considering the delicacy of the carving, that the
+fall<br>
+ had broken it. But when I picked it up I found it quite
+uninjured.<br>
+ While I was examining it a thought flashed to my brain. Might
+it<br>
+ not be answerable for what had happened to me? Suppose, for<br>
+ instance, it was drugged? I had heard of such things. Besides,
+in<br>
+ my case were present all the symptoms of drug poisoning,
+though<br>
+ what drug had been used I couldn't in the least conceive. I<br>
+ resolved that I would give the pipe another trial."</p>
+
+<p>"On yourself? or on another party, meaning me?"</p>
+
+<p>"On myself, my dear Pugh--on myself! At that point of my<br>
+ investigations I had not begun to think of you. I lit up and
+had<br>
+ another smoke."</p>
+
+<p>"With what result?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that depends on the standpoint from which you regard
+the<br>
+ thing. From one point of view the result was wholly
+satisfactory--<br>
+ I proved that the thing was drugged, and more."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you have another fall?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did. And something else besides."</p>
+
+<p>"On that account, I presume, you resolved to pass the treasure
+on<br>
+ to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Partly on that account, and partly on another."</p>
+
+<p>"On my word, I appreciate your generosity. You might have
+labeled<br>
+ the thing as poison."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. But then you must remember how often you have told
+me<br>
+ that you NEVER smoke your specimens."</p>
+
+<p>"That was no reason why you shouldn't have given me a hint
+that the<br>
+ thing was more dangerous than dynamite."</p>
+
+<p>"That did occur to me afterwards. Therefore I called to supply
+the<br>
+ slight omission."</p>
+
+<p>"SLIGHT omission, you call it! I wonder what you would have
+called<br>
+ it if you had found me dead."</p>
+
+<p>"If I had known that you INTENDED smoking it I should not have
+been<br>
+ at all surprised if I had."</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Tress, I appreciate your kindness more and more!
+And<br>
+ where is this example of your splendid benevolence? Have you<br>
+ pocketed it, regretting your lapse into the unaccustomed paths
+of<br>
+ generosity? Or is it smashed to atoms?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither the one nor the other. You will find the pipe upon
+the<br>
+ table. I neither desire its restoration nor is it in any way<br>
+ injured. It is merely an expression of personal opinion when I
+say<br>
+ that I don't believe that it COULD be injured. Of course,
+having<br>
+ discovered its deleterious properties, you will not want to
+smoke<br>
+ it again. You will therefore be able to enjoy the consciousness
+of<br>
+ being the possessor of what I honestly believe to be the
+most<br>
+ remarkable pipe in existence. Good day, Pugh."</p>
+
+<p>He was gone before I could say a word. I immediately
+concluded,<br>
+ from the precipitancy of his flight, that the pipe WAS
+injured.<br>
+ But when I subjected it to close examination I could discover
+no<br>
+ signs of damage. While I was still eying it with jealous
+scrutiny<br>
+ the door reopened, and Tress came in again.</p>
+
+<p>"By the way, Pugh, there is one thing I might mention,
+especially<br>
+ as I know it won't make any difference to you."</p>
+
+<p>"That depends on what it is. If you have changed your mind,
+and<br>
+ want the pipe back again, I tell you frankly that it won't. In
+my<br>
+ opinion, a thing once given is given for good."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so; I don't want it back again. You may make your mind
+easy<br>
+ on that point. I merely wanted to tell you WHY I gave it
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"You have told me that already."</p>
+
+<p>"Only partly, my dear Pugh--only partly. You don't suppose
+I<br>
+ should have given you such a pipe as that merely because it<br>
+ happened to be drugged? Scarcely! I gave it you because I<br>
+ discovered from indisputable evidence, and to my cost, that it
+was<br>
+ haunted."</p>
+
+<p>"Haunted?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, haunted. Good day."</p>
+
+<p>He was gone again. I ran out of the room, and shouted after
+him<br>
+ down the stairs. He was already at the bottom of the flight.</p>
+
+<p>"Tress! Come back! What do you mean by talking such
+nonsense?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it's only nonsense. We know that that sort of
+thing<br>
+ always is nonsense. But if you should have reason to suppose
+that<br>
+ there is something in it besides nonsense, you may think it
+worth<br>
+ your while to make inquiries of me, But I won't have that pipe
+back<br>
+ again in my possession on any terms--mind that!"</p>
+
+<p>The bang of the front door told me that he had gone out into
+the<br>
+ street. I let him go. I laughed to myself as I reentered the<br>
+ room. Haunted! That was not a bad idea of his. I saw the
+whole<br>
+ position at a glance. The truth of the matter was that he
+did<br>
+ regret his generosity, and he was ready to go any lengths if
+he<br>
+ could only succeed in cajoling me into restoring his gift. He
+was<br>
+ aware that I have views upon certain matters which are not
+wholly<br>
+ in accordance with those which are popularly supposed to be
+the<br>
+ views of the day, and particularly that on the question of what
+are<br>
+ commonly called supernatural visitations I have a standpoint of
+my<br>
+ own. Therefore, it was not a bad move on his part to try to
+make<br>
+ me believe that about the pipe on which he knew I had set my
+heart<br>
+ there was something which could not be accounted for by
+ordinary<br>
+ laws. Yet, as his own sense would have told him it would do, if
+he<br>
+ had only allowed himself to reflect for a moment, the move
+failed.<br>
+ Because I am not yet so far gone as to suppose that a pipe, a
+thing<br>
+ of meerschaum and of amber, in the sense in which I understand
+the<br>
+ word, COULD be haunted--a pipe, a mere pipe.</p>
+
+<p>"Hollo! I thought the creature's legs were twined right round
+the<br>
+ bowl!"</p>
+
+<p>I was holding the pipe in my hand, regarding it with the<br>
+ affectionate eyes with which a connoisseur does regard a
+curio,<br>
+ when I was induced to make this exclamation. I was certainly
+under<br>
+ the impression that, when I first took the pipe out of the
+box,<br>
+ two, if not three of the feelers had been twined about the
+bowl--<br>
+ twined TIGHTLY, so that you could not see daylight between them
+and<br>
+ it. Now they were almost entirely detached, only the tips
+touching<br>
+ the meerschaum, and those particular feelers were gathered up
+as<br>
+ though the creature were in the act of taking a spring. Of
+course<br>
+ I was under a misapprehension: the feelers COULDN'T have
+been<br>
+ twined; a moment before I should have been ready to bet a
+thousand<br>
+ to one that they were. Still, one does make mistakes, and
+very<br>
+ egregious mistakes, at times. At the same time, I confess
+that<br>
+ when I saw that dreadful-looking animal poised on the extreme
+edge<br>
+ of the bowl, for all the world as though it were just going
+to<br>
+ spring at me, I was a little startled. I remembered that when
+I<br>
+ was smoking the pipe I did think I saw the uplifted tentacle<br>
+ moving, as though it were reaching out to me. And I had a
+clear<br>
+ recollection that just as I had been sinking into that
+strange<br>
+ state of unconsciousness, I had been under the impression that
+the<br>
+ creature was writhing and twisting, as though it had
+suddenly<br>
+ become instinct with life. Under the circumstances, these<br>
+ reflections were not pleasant. I wished Tress had not talked
+that<br>
+ nonsense about the thing being haunted. It was surely
+sufficient<br>
+ to know that it was drugged and poisonous, without anything
+else.</p>
+
+<p>I replaced it in the sandalwood box. I locked the box in a<br>
+ cabinet. Quite apart from the question as to whether that pipe
+was<br>
+ or was not haunted, I know it haunted me. It was with me in
+a<br>
+ figurative--which was worse than actual--sense all the day.
+Still<br>
+ worse, it was with me all the night. It was with me in my
+dreams.<br>
+ Such dreams! Possibly I had not yet wholly recovered from
+the<br>
+ effects of that insidious drug, but, whether or no, it was
+very<br>
+ wrong of Tress to set my thoughts into such a channel. He
+knows<br>
+ that I am of a highly imaginative temperament, and that it
+is<br>
+ easier to get morbid thoughts into my mind than to get them
+out<br>
+ again. Before that night was through I wished very heartily that
+I<br>
+ had never seen the pipe! I woke from one nightmare to fall
+into<br>
+ another. One dreadful dream was with me all the time--of a<br>
+ hideous, green reptile which advanced toward me out of some
+awful<br>
+ darkness, slowly, inch by inch, until it clutched me round
+the<br>
+ neck, and, gluing its lips to mine, sucked the life's blood out
+of<br>
+ my veins as it embraced me with a slimy kiss. Such dreams are
+not<br>
+ restful. I woke anything but refreshed when the morning came.
+And<br>
+ when I got up and dressed I felt that, on the whole, it
+would<br>
+ perhaps have been better if I never had gone to bed. My
+nerves<br>
+ were unstrung, and I had that generally tremulous feeling which
+is,<br>
+ I believe, an inseparable companion of the more advanced stages
+of<br>
+ dipsomania. I ate no breakfast. I am no breakfast eater as a<br>
+ rule, but that morning I ate absolutely nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"If this sort of thing is to continue, I will let Tress have
+his<br>
+ pipe again. He may have the laugh of me, but anything is
+better<br>
+ than this."</p>
+
+<p>It was with almost funereal forebodings that I went to the
+cabinet<br>
+ in which I had placed the sandalwood box. But when I opened it
+my<br>
+ feelings of gloom partially vanished. Of what phantasies had
+I<br>
+ been guilty! It must have been an entire delusion on my part
+to<br>
+ have supposed that those tentacula had ever been twined about
+the<br>
+ bowl. The creature was in exactly the same position in which I
+had<br>
+ left it the day before--as, of course, I knew it would
+be--poised,<br>
+ as if about to spring. I was telling myself how foolish I had
+been<br>
+ to allow myself to dwell for a moment on Tress's words, when
+Martin<br>
+ Brasher was shown in.</p>
+
+<p>Brasher is an old friend of mine. We have a common
+ground--ghosts.<br>
+ Only we approach them from different points of view. He takes
+the<br>
+ scientific--psychological--inquiry side. He is always anxious
+to<br>
+ hear of a ghost, so that he may have an opportunity of "showing
+it<br>
+ up."</p>
+
+<p>"I've something in your line here," I observed, as he came
+in.</p>
+
+<p>"In my line? How so? I'M not pipe mad."</p>
+
+<p>"No; but you're ghost mad. And this is a haunted pipe."</p>
+
+<p>"A haunted pipe! I think you're rather more mad about ghosts,
+my<br>
+ dear Pugh, than I am."</p>
+
+<p>Then I told him all about it. He was deeply interested,
+especially<br>
+ when I told him that the pipe was drugged. But when I
+repeated<br>
+ Tress's words about its being haunted, and mentioned my own<br>
+ delusion about the creature moving, he took a more serious view
+of<br>
+ the case than I had expected he would do.</p>
+
+<p>"I propose that we act on Tress's suggestion, and go and
+make<br>
+ inquiries of him."</p>
+
+<p>"But you don't really think that there is anything in it?"</p>
+
+<p>"On these subjects I never allow myself to think at all. There
+are<br>
+ Tress's words, and there is your story. It is agreed on all
+hands<br>
+ that the pipe has peculiar properties. It seems to me that
+there<br>
+ is a sufficient case here to merit inquiry."</p>
+
+<p>He persuaded me. I went with him. The pipe, in the
+sandalwood<br>
+ box, went too. Tress received us with a grin--a grin which
+was<br>
+ accentuated when I placed the sandalwood box on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"You understand," he said, "that a gift is a gift. On no
+terms<br>
+ will I consent to receive that pipe back in my possession."</p>
+
+<p>I was rather nettled by his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"You need be under no alarm. I have no intention of
+suggesting<br>
+ anything of the kind."</p>
+
+<p>"Our business here," began Brasher--I must own that his manner
+is a<br>
+ little ponderous--"is of a scientific, I may say also, and at
+the<br>
+ same time, of a judicial nature. Our object is the Pursuit
+of<br>
+ Truth and the Advancement of Inquiry."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been trying another smoke?" inquired Tress, nodding
+his<br>
+ head toward me.</p>
+
+<p>Before I had time to answer, Brasher went droning on:</p>
+
+<p>"Our friend here tells me that you say this pipe is
+haunted."</p>
+
+<p>"I say it is haunted because it IS haunted."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at Tress. I half suspected that he was poking fun at
+us.<br>
+ But he appeared to be serious enough.</p>
+
+<p>"In these matters," remarked Brasher, as though he were
+giving<br>
+ utterance to a new and important truth, "there is a scientific
+and<br>
+ nonscientific method of inquiry. The scientific method is to
+begin<br>
+ at the beginning. May I ask how this pipe came into your<br>
+ possession?"</p>
+
+<p>Tress paused before he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"You may ask." He paused again. "Oh, you certainly may ask.
+But<br>
+ it doesn't follow that I shall tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Surely your object, like ours, can be but the Spreading About
+of<br>
+ the Truth?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see it at all. It is possible to imagine a case in
+which<br>
+ the spreading about of the truth might make me look a little<br>
+ awkward."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" Brasher pursed up his lips. "Your words would
+almost<br>
+ lead one to suppose that there was something about your method
+of<br>
+ acquiring the pipe which you have good and weighty reasons
+for<br>
+ concealing."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "I don't know why I should conceal the thing from you. I
+don't<br>
+ suppose either of you is any better than I am. I don't mind<br>
+ telling you how I got the pipe. I stole it."</p>
+
+<p>"Stole it!"</p>
+
+<p>Brasher seemed both amazed and shocked. But I, who had
+previous<br>
+ experience of Tress's methods of adding to his collection, was
+not<br>
+ at all surprised. Some of the pipes which he calls his, if
+only<br>
+ the whole truth about them were publicly known, would send him
+to<br>
+ jail.</p>
+
+<p>"That's nothing!" he continued. "All collectors steal! The
+eighth<br>
+ commandment was not intended to apply to them. Why, Pugh there
+has<br>
+ 'conveyed' three fourths of the pipes which he flatters himself
+are<br>
+ his."</p>
+
+<p>I was so dumfoundered by the charge that it took my breath
+away. I<br>
+ sat in astounded silence. Tress went raving on:</p>
+
+<p>"I was so shy of this particular pipe when I had obtained it,
+that<br>
+ I put it away for quite three months. When I took it out to have
+a<br>
+ look at it something about the thing so tickled me that I
+resolved<br>
+ to smoke it. Owing to peculiar circumstances attending the
+manner<br>
+ in which the thing came into my possession, and on which I need
+not<br>
+ dwell--you don't like to dwell on those sort of things, do
+you,<br>
+ Pugh?--I knew really nothing about the pipe. As was the case
+with<br>
+ Pugh, one peculiarity I learned from actual experience. It
+was<br>
+ also from actual experience that I learned that the thing
+was--<br>
+ well, I said haunted, but you may use any other word you
+like."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell us, as briefly as possible, what it was you really
+did<br>
+ discover."</p>
+
+<p>"Take the pipe out of the box!" Brasher took the pipe out of
+the<br>
+ box and held it in his hand. "You see that creature on it.
+Well,<br>
+ when I first had it it was underneath the pipe."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you mean that it was underneath the pipe?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was bunched together underneath the stem, just at the end
+of<br>
+ the mouthpiece, in the same way in which a fly might be
+suspended<br>
+ from the ceiling. When I began to smoke the pipe I saw the<br>
+ creature move."</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought that unconsciousness immediately followed."</p>
+
+<p>"It did follow, but not before I saw that the thing was
+moving. It<br>
+ was because I thought that I had been, in a way, a victim of<br>
+ delirium that I tried the second smoke. Suspecting that the
+thing<br>
+ was drugged I swallowed what I believed would prove a
+powerful<br>
+ antidote. It enabled me to resist the influence of the
+narcotic<br>
+ much longer than before, and while I still retained my senses I
+saw<br>
+ the creature crawl along under the stem and over the bowl. It
+was<br>
+ that sight, I believe, as much as anything else, which sent
+me<br>
+ silly. When I came to I then and there decided to present the
+pipe<br>
+ to Pugh. There is one more thing I would remark. When the
+pipe<br>
+ left me the creature's legs were twined about the bowl. Now
+they<br>
+ are withdrawn. Possibly you, Pugh, are able to cap my story with
+a<br>
+ little one which is all your own."</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly did imagine that I saw the creature move. But
+I<br>
+ supposed that while I was under the influence of the drug<br>
+ imagination had played me a trick."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it! Depend upon it, the beast is bewitched. Even
+to<br>
+ my eye it looks as though it were, and to a trained eye like
+yours,<br>
+ Pugh! You've been looking for the devil a long time, and
+you've<br>
+ got him at last."</p>
+
+<p>"I--I wish you wouldn't make those remarks, Tress. They jar
+on<br>
+ me."</p>
+
+<p>"I confess," interpolated Brasher--I noticed that he had put
+the<br>
+ pipe down on the table as though he were tired of holding
+it--<br>
+ "that, to MY thinking, such remarks are not appropriate. At
+the<br>
+ same time what you have told us is, I am bound to allow, a
+little<br>
+ curious. But of course what I require is ocular demonstration.
+I<br>
+ haven't seen the movement myself."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but you very soon will do if you care to have a pull at
+the<br>
+ pipe on your own account. Do, Brasher, to oblige me! There's
+a<br>
+ dear!"</p>
+
+<p>"It appears, then, that the movement is only observable when
+the<br>
+ pipe is smoked. We have at least arrived at step No. 1."</p>
+
+<p>"Here's a match, Brasher! Light up, and we shall have arrived
+at<br>
+ step No. 2."</p>
+
+<p>Tress lit a match and held it out to Brasher. Brasher
+retreated<br>
+ from its neighborhood.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Mr. Tress, I am no smoker, as you are aware. And
+I<br>
+ have no desire to acquire the art of smoking by means of a
+poisoned<br>
+ pipe."</p>
+
+<p>Tress laughed. He blew out the match and threw it into the
+grate.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I tell you what I'll do--I'll have up Bob."</p>
+
+<p>"Bob--why Bob?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bob"--whose real name was Robert Haines, though I should
+think he<br>
+ must have forgotten the fact, so seldom was he addressed by
+it--was<br>
+ Tress's servant. He had been an old soldier, and had
+accompanied<br>
+ his master when he left the service. He was as depraved a<br>
+ character as Tress himself. I am not sure even that he was
+not<br>
+ worse than his master. I shall never forget how he once
+behaved<br>
+ toward myself. He actually had the assurance to accuse me of<br>
+ attempting to steal the Wardour Street relic which Tress
+fondly<br>
+ deludes himself was once the property of Sir Walter Raleigh.
+The<br>
+ truth is that I had slipped it with my handkerchief into my
+pocket<br>
+ in a fit of absence of mind. A man who could accuse ME of such
+a<br>
+ thing would be guilty of anything. I was therefore quite at
+one<br>
+ with Brasher when he asked what Bob could possibly be wanted
+for.<br>
+ Tress explained.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll get him to smoke the pipe," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Brasher and I exchanged glances, but we refrained from
+speech.</p>
+
+<p>"It won't do him any harm," said Tress.</p>
+
+<p>"What--not a poisoned pipe?" asked Brasher.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not poisoned--it's only drugged."</p>
+
+<p>"ONLY drugged!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing hurts Bob. He is like an ostrich. He has
+digestive<br>
+ organs which are peculiarly his own. It will only serve him as
+it<br>
+ served me--and Pugh--it will knock him over. It is all done in
+the<br>
+ Pursuit of Truth and for the Advancement of Inquiry."</p>
+
+<p>I could see that Brasher did not altogether like the tone in
+which<br>
+ Tress repeated his words. As for me, it was not to be
+supposed<br>
+ that I should put myself out in a matter which in no way
+concerned<br>
+ me. If Tress chose to poison the man, it was his affair, not
+mine.<br>
+ He went to the door and shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"Bob! Come here, you scoundrel!"</p>
+
+<p>That is the way in which he speaks to him. No really
+decent<br>
+ servant would stand it. I shouldn't care to address Nalder,
+my<br>
+ servant, in such a way. He would give me notice on the spot.
+Bob<br>
+ came in. He is a great hulking fellow who is always on the
+grin.<br>
+ Tress had a decanter of brandy in his hand. He filled a
+tumbler<br>
+ with the neat spirit.</p>
+
+<p>"Bob, what would you say to a glassful of brandy--the real
+thing--<br>
+ my boy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"And what would you say to a pull at a pipe when the brandy
+is<br>
+ drunk!"</p>
+
+<p>"A pipe?" The fellow is sharp enough when he likes. I saw
+him<br>
+ look at the pipe upon the table, and then at us, and then a
+gleam<br>
+ of intelligence came into his eyes. "I'd do it for a dollar,
+sir."</p>
+
+<p>"A dollar, you thief?"</p>
+
+<p>"I meant ten shillings, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Ten shillings, you brazen vagabond?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should have said a pound."</p>
+
+<p>"A pound! Was ever the like of that! Do I understand you to
+ask a<br>
+ pound for taking a pull at your master's pipe?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm thinking that I'll have to make it two."</p>
+
+<p>"The deuce you are! Here, Pugh, lend me a pound."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I've left my purse behind."</p>
+
+<p>"Then lend me ten shillings--Ananias!"</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt if I have more than five."</p>
+
+<p>"Then give me the five. And, Brasher, lend me the other
+fifteen."</p>
+
+<p>Brasher lent him the fifteen. I doubt if we shall either of
+us<br>
+ ever see our money again. He handed the pound to Bob.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's the brandy--drink it up!" Bob drank it without a
+word,<br>
+ draining the glass of every drop. "And here's the pipe."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it poisoned, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Poisoned, you villain! What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't the first time I've seen your tricks, sir--is it
+now?<br>
+ And you're not the one to give a pound for nothing at all. If
+it<br>
+ kills me you'll send my body to my mother--she'd like to know
+that<br>
+ I was dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Send your body to your grandmother! You idiot, sit down
+and<br>
+ smoke!"</p>
+
+<p>Bob sat down. Tress had filled the pipe, and handed it, with
+a<br>
+ lighted match, to Bob. The fellow declined the match. He
+handled<br>
+ the pipe very gingerly, turning it over and over, eying it with
+all<br>
+ his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir--I'll light up myself if it's the same to you.
+I<br>
+ carry matches of my own. It's a beautiful pipe, entirely. I
+never<br>
+ see the like of it for ugliness. And what's the
+slimy-looking<br>
+ varmint that looks as though it would like to have my life? Is
+it<br>
+ living, or is it dead?"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, we don't want to sit here all day, my man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, the look of this here pipe has quite upset my
+stomach.<br>
+ I'd like another drop of liquor, if it's the same to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Another drop! Why, you've had a tumblerful already!
+Here's<br>
+ another tumblerful to put on top of that. You won't want the
+pipe<br>
+ to kill you--you'll be killed before you get to it."</p>
+
+<p>"And isn't it better to die a natural death?"</p>
+
+<p>Bob emptied the second tumbler of brandy as though it were
+water.<br>
+ I believe he would empty a hogshead without turning a hair!
+Then<br>
+ he gave another look at the pipe. Then, taking a match from
+his<br>
+ waistcoat pocket, he drew a long breath, as though he were<br>
+ resigning himself to fate. Striking the match on the seat of
+his<br>
+ trousers, while, shaded by his hand, the flame was gathering<br>
+ strength, he looked at each of us in turn. When he looked at
+Tress<br>
+ I distinctly saw him wink his eye. What my feelings would
+have<br>
+ been if a servant of mine had winked his eye at me I am unable
+to<br>
+ imagine! The match was applied to the tobacco, a puff of
+smoke<br>
+ came through his lips--the pipe was alight!</p>
+
+<p>During this process of lighting the pipe we had sat--I do not
+wish<br>
+ to use exaggerated language, but we had sat and watched that<br>
+ alcoholic scamp's proceedings as though we were witnessing
+an<br>
+ action which would leave its mark upon the age. When we saw
+the<br>
+ pipe was lighted we gave a simultaneous start. Brasher put
+his<br>
+ hands under his coat tails and gave a kind of hop. I raised
+myself<br>
+ a good six inches from my chair, and Tress rubbed his palms<br>
+ together with a chuckle. Bob alone was calm.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," cried Tress, "you'll see the devil moving."</p>
+
+<p>Bob took the pipe from between his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"See what?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Bob, you rascal, put that pipe back into your mouth, and
+smoke it<br>
+ for your life!"</p>
+
+<p>Bob was eying the pipe askance.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say, but what I want to know is whether this here
+varmint's<br>
+ dead or whether he isn't. I don't want to have him flying at
+my<br>
+ nose--and he looks vicious enough for anything."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me back that pound, you thief, and get out of my house,
+and<br>
+ bundle."</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't going to give you back no pound."</p>
+
+<p>"Then smoke that pipe!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am smoking it, ain't I?"</p>
+
+<p>With the utmost deliberation Bob returned the pipe to his
+mouth.<br>
+ He emitted another whiff or two of smoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Now--now!" cried Tress, all excitement, and wagging his hand
+in<br>
+ the air.</p>
+
+<p>We gathered round. As we did so Bob again withdrew the
+pipe.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the meaning of all this here? I ain't going to have
+you<br>
+ playing none of your larks on me. I know there's something up,
+but<br>
+ I ain't going to throw my life away for twenty shillings--not
+quite<br>
+ I ain't."</p>
+
+<p>Tress, whose temper is not at any time one of the best, was
+seized<br>
+ with quite a spasm of rage.</p>
+
+<p>"As I live, my lad, if you try to cheat me by taking that pipe
+from<br>
+ between your lips until I tell you, you leave this room that<br>
+ instant, never again to be a servant of mine."</p>
+
+<p>I presume the fellow knew from long experience when his
+master<br>
+ meant what he said, and when he didn't. Without an attempt
+at<br>
+ remonstrance he replaced the pipe. He continued stolidly to
+puff<br>
+ away. Tress caught me by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"What did I tell you? There--there! That tentacle is
+moving."</p>
+
+<p>The uplifted tentacle WAS moving. It was doing what I had seen
+it<br>
+ do, as I supposed, in my distorted imagination--it was
+reaching<br>
+ forward. Undoubtedly Bob saw what it was doing; but, whether
+in<br>
+ obedience to his master's commands, or whether because the drug
+was<br>
+ already beginning to take effect, he made no movement to
+withdraw<br>
+ the pipe. He watched the slowly advancing tentacle, coming
+closer<br>
+ and closer toward his nose, with an expression of such
+intense<br>
+ horror on his countenance that it became quite shocking.
+Farther<br>
+ and farther the creature reached forward, until on a sudden,
+with a<br>
+ sort of jerk, the movement assumed a downward direction, and
+the<br>
+ tentacle was slowly lowered until the tip rested on the stem of
+the<br>
+ pipe. For a moment the creature remained motionless. I was<br>
+ quieting my nerves with the reflection that this thing was but
+some<br>
+ trick of the carver's art, and that what we had seen we had seen
+in<br>
+ a sort of nightmare, when the whole hideous reptile was seized
+with<br>
+ what seemed to be a fit of convulsive shuddering. It seemed to
+be<br>
+ in agony. It trembled so violently that I expected to see it<br>
+ loosen its hold of the stem and fall to the ground. I was<br>
+ sufficiently master of myself to steal a glance at Bob. We had
+had<br>
+ an inkling of what might happen. He was wholly unprepared. As
+he<br>
+ saw that dreadful, human-looking creature, coming to life, as
+it<br>
+ seemed, within an inch or two of his nose, his eyes dilated
+to<br>
+ twice their usual size. I hoped, for his sake, that<br>
+ unconsciousness would supervene, through the action of the
+drug,<br>
+ before through sheer fright his senses left him. Perhaps<br>
+ mechanically he puffed steadily on.</p>
+
+<p>The creature's shuddering became more violent. It appeared
+to<br>
+ swell before our eyes. Then, just as suddenly as it began,
+the<br>
+ shuddering ceased. There was another instant of quiescence.
+Then<br>
+ the creature began to crawl along the stem of the pipe! It
+moved<br>
+ with marvelous caution, the merest fraction of an inch at a
+time.<br>
+ But still it moved! Our eyes were riveted on it with a
+fascination<br>
+ which was absolutely nauseous. I am unpleasantly affected even
+as<br>
+ I think of it now. My dreams of the night before had been
+nothing<br>
+ to this.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Slowly, slowly, it went, nearer and nearer to the smoker's
+nose.<br>
+ Its mode of progression was in the highest degree unsightly.
+It<br>
+ glided, never, so far as I could see, removing its tentacles
+from<br>
+ the stem of the pipe. It slipped its hindmost feelers onward
+until<br>
+ they came up to those which were in advance. Then, in their
+turn,<br>
+ it advanced those which were in front. It seemed, too, to
+move<br>
+ with the utmost labor, shuddering as though it were in pain.</p>
+
+<p>We were all, for our parts, speechless. I was momentarily
+hoping<br>
+ that the drug would take effect on Bob. Either his
+constitution<br>
+ enabled him to offer a strong resistance to narcotics, or else
+the<br>
+ large quantity of neat spirit which he had drunk acted--as
+Tress<br>
+ had malevolently intended that it should--as an antidote. It<br>
+ seemed to me that he would NEVER succumb. On went the
+creature--<br>
+ on, and on, in its infinitesimal progression. I was spellbound.
+I<br>
+ would have given the world to scream, to have been able to utter
+a<br>
+ sound. I could do nothing else but watch.</p>
+
+<p>The creature had reached the end of the stem. It had gained
+the<br>
+ amber mouthpiece. It was within an inch of the smoker's
+nose.<br>
+ Still on it went. It seemed to move with greater freedom on
+the<br>
+ amber. It increased its rate of progress. It was actually<br>
+ touching the foremost feature on the smoker's countenance. I<br>
+ expected to see it grip the wretched Bob, when it began to<br>
+ oscillate from side to side. Its oscillations increased in<br>
+ violence. It fell to the floor. That same instant the
+narcotic<br>
+ prevailed. Bob slipped sideways from the chair, the pipe
+still<br>
+ held tightly between his rigid jaws.</p>
+
+<p>We were silent. There lay Bob. Close beside him lay the
+creature.<br>
+ A few more inches to the left, and he would have fallen on
+and<br>
+ squashed it flat. It had fallen on its back. Its feelers
+were<br>
+ extended upward. They were writhing and twisting and turning
+in<br>
+ the air.</p>
+
+<p>Tress was the first to speak.</p>
+
+<p>"I think a little brandy won't be amiss." Emptying the
+remainder<br>
+ of the brandy into a glass, he swallowed it at a draught. "Now
+for<br>
+ a closer examination of our friend." Taking a pair of tongs
+from<br>
+ the grate he nipped the creature between them. He deposited
+it<br>
+ upon the table. "I rather fancy that this is a case for<br>
+ dissection."</p>
+
+<p>He took a penknife from his waistcoat pocket. Opening the
+large<br>
+ blade, he thrust its point into the object on the table. Little
+or<br>
+ no resistance seemed to be offered to the passage of the blade,
+but<br>
+ as it was inserted the tentacula simultaneously began to writhe
+and<br>
+ twist. Tress withdrew the knife.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so!" He held the blade out for our inspection.
+The<br>
+ point was covered with some viscid-looking matter. "That's
+blood!<br>
+ The thing's alive!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alive!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alive! That's the secret of the whole performance!"</p>
+
+<p>"But--"</p>
+
+<p>"But me no buts, my Pugh! The mystery's exploded! One more
+ghost<br>
+ is lost to the world! The person from whom I OBTAINED that
+pipe<br>
+ was an Indian juggler--up to many tricks of the trade. He, or
+some<br>
+ one for him, got hold of this sweet thing in reptiles--and a<br>
+ sweeter thing would, I imagine, be hard to find--and covered
+it<br>
+ with some preparation of, possibly, gum arabic. He allowed this
+to<br>
+ harden. Then he stuck the thing--still living, for those sort
+of<br>
+ gentry are hard to kill--to the pipe. The consequence was
+that<br>
+ when anyone lit up, the warmth was communicated to the
+adhesive<br>
+ agent--again some preparation of gum, no doubt--it moistened
+it,<br>
+ and the creature, with infinite difficulty, was able to move.
+But<br>
+ I am open to lay odds with any gentleman of sporting tastes
+that<br>
+ THIS time the creature's traveling days ARE done. It has given
+me<br>
+ rather a larger taste of the horrors than is good for my<br>
+ digestion."</p>
+
+<p>With the aid of the tongs he removed the creature from the
+table.<br>
+ He placed it on the hearth. Before Brasher or I had a notion
+of<br>
+ what it was he intended to do he covered it with a heavy
+marble<br>
+ paper weight. Then he stood upon the weight, and between the<br>
+ marble and the hearth he ground the creature flat.</p>
+
+<p>While the execution was still proceeding, Bob sat up upon
+the<br>
+ floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Hollo!" he asked, "what's happened?"</p>
+
+<p>"We've emptied the bottle, Bob," said Tress. "But there's
+another<br>
+ where that came from. Perhaps you could drink another
+tumblerful,<br>
+ my boy?"</p>
+
+<p>Bob drank it!</p>
+
+<h4><br>
+ FOOTNOTE</h4>
+
+<p>"Those gentry are hard to kill." Here is fact, not
+fantasy.<br>
+ Lizard yarns no less sensational than this Mystery Story can
+be<br>
+ found between the covers of solemn, zoological textbooks.</p>
+
+<p>Reptiles, indeed, are far from finicky in the matters of
+air,<br>
+ space, and especially warmth. Frogs and other such sluggish-<br>
+ blooded creatures have lived after being frozen fast in ice.
+Their<br>
+ blood is little warmer than air or water, enjoying no extra
+casing<br>
+ of fur or feathers.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Air and food seem held in light esteem by lizards. Their
+blood<br>
+ need not be highly oxygenated; it nourishes just as well
+when<br>
+ impure. In temperate climes lizards lie torpid and buried
+all<br>
+ winter; some species of the tropic deserts sleep peacefully
+all<br>
+ summer. Their anatomy includes no means for the continuous<br>
+ introduction and expulsion of air; reptilian lungs are little
+more<br>
+ than closed sacs, without cell structure.</p>
+
+<p>If any further zoological fact were needed to verify the
+denouement<br>
+ of "The Pipe," it might be the general statement that lizards
+are<br>
+ abnormal brutes anyhow. Consider the chameleons of unsettled
+hue.<br>
+ And what is one to think of an animal which, when captured by
+the<br>
+ tail, is able to make its escape by willfully shuffling off
+that<br>
+ appendage?--EDITOR.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>The Puzzle</h2>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Pugh came into my room holding something wrapped in a piece
+of<br>
+ brown paper.</p>
+
+<p>"Tress, I have brought you something on which you may exercise
+your<br>
+ ingenuity." He began, with exasperating deliberation, to untie
+the<br>
+ string which bound his parcel; he is one of those persons who
+would<br>
+ not cut a knot to save their lives. The process occupied him
+the<br>
+ better part of a quarter of an hour. Then he held out the
+contents<br>
+ of the paper.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "What do you think of that?" he asked. I thought nothing of
+it,<br>
+ and I told him so. "I was prepared for that confession. I
+have<br>
+ noticed, Tress, that you generally do think nothing of an
+article<br>
+ which really deserves the attention of a truly thoughtful
+mind.<br>
+ Possibly, as you think so little of it, you will be able to
+solve<br>
+ the puzzle."</p>
+
+<p>I took what he held out to me. It was an oblong box, perhaps
+seven<br>
+ inches long by three inches broad.</p>
+
+<p>"Where's the puzzle?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will examine the lid of the box, you will see." I
+turned<br>
+ it over and over; it was difficult to see which was the lid.
+Then<br>
+ I perceived that on one side were printed these words:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><br>
+ "PUZZLE: TO OPEN THE BOX"</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><br>
+ The words were so faintly printed that it was not surprising
+that I<br>
+ had not noticed them at first. Pugh explained.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "I observed that box on a tray outside a second-hand
+furniture<br>
+ shop. It struck my eye. I took it up. I examined it. I
+inquired<br>
+ of the proprietor of the shop in what the puzzle lay. He
+replied<br>
+ that that was more than he could tell me. He himself had
+made<br>
+ several attempts to open the box, and all of them had failed.
+I<br>
+ purchased it. I took it home. I have tried, and I have failed.
+I<br>
+ am aware, Tress, of how you pride yourself upon your ingenuity.
+I<br>
+ cannot doubt that, if you try, you will not fail."</p>
+
+<p>While Pugh was prosing, I was examining the box. It was at
+least<br>
+ well made. It weighed certainly under two ounces. I struck
+it<br>
+ with my knuckles; it sounded hollow. There was no hinge;
+nothing<br>
+ of any kind to show that it ever had been opened, or, for
+the<br>
+ matter of that, that it ever could be opened. The more I
+examined<br>
+ the thing, the more it whetted my curiosity. That it could
+be<br>
+ opened, and in some ingenious manner, I made no doubt--but
+how?</p>
+
+<p>The box was not a new one. At a rough guess I should say that
+it<br>
+ had been a box for a good half century; there were certain signs
+of<br>
+ age about it which could not escape a practiced eye. Had it<br>
+ remained unopened all that time? When opened, what would be
+found<br>
+ inside? It SOUNDED hollow; probably nothing at all--who
+could<br>
+ tell?</p>
+
+<p>It was formed of small pieces of inlaid wood. Several woods
+had<br>
+ been used; some of them were strange to me. They were of
+different<br>
+ colors; it was pretty obvious that they must all of them have
+been<br>
+ hard woods. The pieces were of various shapes--hexagonal,<br>
+ octagonal, triangular, square, oblong, and even circular.
+The<br>
+ process of inlaying them had been beautifully done. So nicely
+had<br>
+ the parts been joined that the lines of meeting were difficult
+to<br>
+ discover with the naked eye; they had been joined solid, so
+to<br>
+ speak. It was an excellent example of marquetry. I had been
+over-<br>
+ hasty in my deprecation; I owed as much to Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>"This box of yours is better worth looking at than I first<br>
+ supposed. Is it to be sold?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, it is not to be sold. Nor"--he "fixed" me with his<br>
+ spectacles--"is it to be given away. I have brought it to you
+for<br>
+ the simple purpose of ascertaining if you have ingenuity enough
+to<br>
+ open it."</p>
+
+<p>"I will engage to open it in two seconds--with a hammer."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say. I will open it with a hammer. The thing is to
+open<br>
+ it without."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see." I began, with the aid of a microscope, to
+examine<br>
+ the box more closely. "I will give you one piece of
+information,<br>
+ Pugh. Unless I am mistaken, the secret lies in one of these
+little<br>
+ pieces of inlaid wood. You push it, or you press it, or
+something,<br>
+ and the whole affair flies open."</p>
+
+<p>"Such was my own first conviction. I am not so sure of it now.
+I<br>
+ have pressed every separate piece of wood; I have tried to
+move<br>
+ each piece in every direction. No result has followed. My
+theory<br>
+ was a hidden spring."</p>
+
+<p>"But there must be a hidden spring of some sort, unless you
+are to<br>
+ open it by a mere exercise of force. I suppose the box is
+empty."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought it was at first, but now I am not so sure of
+that<br>
+ either. It all depends on the position in which you hold it.
+Hold<br>
+ it in this position--like this--close to your ear. Have you
+a<br>
+ small hammer?" I took a small hammer. "Tap it softly, with
+the<br>
+ hammer. Don't you notice a sort of reverberation within?"</p>
+
+<p>Pugh was right, there certainly was something within;
+something<br>
+ which seemed to echo back my tapping, almost as if it were a
+living<br>
+ thing. I mentioned this, to Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>"But you don't think that there is something alive inside the
+box?<br>
+ There can't be. The box must be airtight, probably as much
+air-<br>
+ tight as an exhausted receiver."</p>
+
+<p>"How do we know that? How can we tell that no minute
+interstices<br>
+ have been left for the express purpose of ventilation?" I<br>
+ continued tapping with the hammer. I noticed one peculiarity,
+that<br>
+ it was only when I held the box in a particular position,
+and<br>
+ tapped at a certain spot, there came the answering taps from<br>
+ within. "I tell you what it is, Pugh, what I hear is the<br>
+ reverberation of some machinery."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think so?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Give the box to me." Pugh put the box to his ear. He
+tapped.<br>
+ "It sounds to me like the echoing tick, tick of some great
+beetle;<br>
+ like the sort of noise which a deathwatch makes, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Trust Pugh to find a remarkable explanation for a simple fact;
+if<br>
+ the explanation leans toward the supernatural, so much the
+more<br>
+ satisfactory to Pugh. I knew better.</p>
+
+<p>"The sound which you hear is merely the throbbing or the
+trembling<br>
+ of the mechanism with which it is intended that the box should
+be<br>
+ opened. The mechanism is placed just where you are tapping it
+with<br>
+ the hammer. Every tap causes it to jar."</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds to me like the ticking of a deathwatch. However,
+on<br>
+ such subjects, Tress, I know what you are."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Pugh, give it an extra hard tap, and you will
+see."</p>
+
+<p>He gave it an extra hard tap. The moment he had done so,
+he<br>
+ started.</p>
+
+<p>"I've done it now."</p>
+
+<p>"What have you done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Broken something, I fancy." He listened intently, with his
+ear to<br>
+ the box. "No--it seems all right. And yet I could have sworn
+I<br>
+ had damaged something; I heard it smash."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me the box." He gave it me. In my turn, I listened.
+I<br>
+ shook the box. Pugh must have been mistaken. Nothing
+rattled;<br>
+ there was not a sound; the box was as empty as before. I gave
+a<br>
+ smart tap with the hammer, as Pugh had done. Then there
+certainly<br>
+ was a curious sound. To my ear, it sounded like the smashing
+of<br>
+ glass. "I wonder if there is anything fragile inside your
+precious<br>
+ puzzle, Pugh, and, if so, if we are shivering it by
+degrees?"</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ II</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ "What IS that noise?"</p>
+
+<p>I lay in bed in that curious condition which is between sleep
+and<br>
+ waking. When, at last, I KNEW that I was awake, I asked
+myself<br>
+ what it was that had woke me. Suddenly I became conscious
+that<br>
+ something was making itself audible in the silence of the
+night.<br>
+ For some seconds I lay and listened. Then I sat up in bed.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "What IS that noise?"</p>
+
+<p>It was like the tick, tick of some large and unusually
+clear-toned<br>
+ clock. It might have been a clock, had it not been that the
+sound<br>
+ was varied, every half dozen ticks or so, by a sort of
+stifled<br>
+ screech, such as might have been uttered by some small creature
+in<br>
+ an extremity of anguish. I got out of bed; it was ridiculous
+to<br>
+ think of sleep during the continuation of that uncanny
+shrieking.<br>
+ I struck a light. The sound seemed to come from the
+neighborhood<br>
+ of my dressing-table. I went to the dressing-table, the
+lighted<br>
+ match in my hand, and, as I did so, my eyes fell on Pugh's<br>
+ mysterious box. That same instant there issued, from the bowels
+of<br>
+ the box, a more uncomfortable screech than any I had
+previously<br>
+ heard. It took me so completely by surprise that I let the
+match<br>
+ fall from my hand to the floor. The room was in darkness. I<br>
+ stood, I will not say trembling, listening--considering
+their<br>
+ volume--to the EERIEST shrieks I ever heard. All at once
+they<br>
+ ceased. Then came the tick, tick, tick again. I struck
+another<br>
+ match and lit the gas.</p>
+
+<p>Pugh had left his puzzle box behind him. We had done all we
+could,<br>
+ together, to solve the puzzle. He had left it behind to see what
+I<br>
+ could do with it alone. So much had it engrossed my attention
+that<br>
+ I had even brought it into my bedroom, in order that I
+might,<br>
+ before retiring to rest, make a final attempt at the solution
+of<br>
+ the mystery. NOW what possessed the thing?</p>
+
+<p>As I stood, and looked, and listened, one thing began to be
+clear<br>
+ to me, that some sort of machinery had been set in motion
+inside<br>
+ the box. How it had been set in motion was another matter.
+But<br>
+ the box had been subjected to so much handling, to such
+pressing<br>
+ and such hammering, that it was not strange if, after all, Pugh
+or<br>
+ I had unconsciously hit upon the spring which set the whole
+thing<br>
+ going. Possibly the mechanism had got so rusty that it had
+refused<br>
+ to act at once. It had hung fire, and only after some hours
+had<br>
+ something or other set the imprisoned motive power free.</p>
+
+<p>But what about the screeching? Could there be some living
+creature<br>
+ concealed within the box? Was I listening to the cries of
+some<br>
+ small animal in agony? Momentary reflection suggested that
+the<br>
+ explanation of the one thing was the explanation of the
+other.<br>
+ Rust!--there was the mystery. The same rust which had
+prevented<br>
+ the mechanism from acting at once was causing the screeching
+now.<br>
+ The uncanny sounds were caused by nothing more nor less than
+the<br>
+ want of a drop or two of oil. Such an explanation would not
+have<br>
+ satisfied Pugh, it satisfied me.</p>
+
+<p>Picking up the box, I placed it to my ear.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder how long this little performance is going to
+continue.<br>
+ And what is going to happen when it is good enough to cease?
+I<br>
+ hope"--an uncomfortable thought occurred to me--"I hope Pugh
+hasn't<br>
+ picked up some pleasant little novelty in the way of an
+infernal<br>
+ machine. It would be a first-rate joke if he and I had been<br>
+ endeavoring to solve the puzzle of how to set it going."</p>
+
+<p>I don't mind owning that as this reflection crossed my mind
+I<br>
+ replaced Pugh's puzzle on the dressing-table. The idea did
+not<br>
+ commend itself to me at all. The box evidently contained
+some<br>
+ curious mechanism. It might be more curious than
+comfortable.<br>
+ Possibly some agreeable little device in clockwork. The
+tick,<br>
+ tick, tick suggested clockwork which had been planned to go
+a<br>
+ certain time, and then--then, for all I knew, ignite an
+explosive,<br>
+ and--blow up. It would be a charming solution to the puzzle if
+it<br>
+ were to explode while I stood there, in my nightshirt, looking
+on.<br>
+ It is true that the box weighed very little. Probably, as I
+have<br>
+ said, the whole affair would not have turned the scale at a
+couple<br>
+ of ounces. But then its very lightness might have been part of
+the<br>
+ ingenious inventor's little game. There are explosives with
+which<br>
+ one can work a very satisfactory amount of damage with
+considerably<br>
+ less than a couple of ounces.</p>
+
+<p>While I was hesitating--I own it!--whether I had not better
+immerse<br>
+ Pugh's puzzle in a can of water, or throw it out of the window,
+or<br>
+ call down Bob with a request to at once remove it to his
+apartment,<br>
+ both the tick, tick, tick, and the screeching ceased, and
+all<br>
+ within the box was still. If it WAS going to explode, it was
+now<br>
+ or never. Instinctively I moved in the direction of the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>I waited with a certain sense of anxiety. I waited in
+vain.<br>
+ Nothing happened, not even a renewal of the sound.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish Pugh had kept his precious puzzle at home. This sort
+of<br>
+ thing tries one's nerves."</p>
+
+<p>When I thought that I perceived that nothing seemed likely
+to<br>
+ happen, I returned to the neighborhood of the table. I looked
+at<br>
+ the box askance. I took it up gingerly. Something might go off
+at<br>
+ any moment for all I knew. It would be too much of a joke if<br>
+ Pugh's precious puzzle exploded in my hand. I shook it
+doubtfully;<br>
+ nothing rattled. I held it to my ear. There was not a sound.<br>
+ What had taken place? Had the clockwork run down, and was
+the<br>
+ machine arranged with such a diabolical ingenuity that a
+certain<br>
+ interval was required, after the clockwork had run down, before
+an<br>
+ explosion could occur? Or had rust caused the mechanism to
+again<br>
+ hang fire?</p>
+
+<p>"After making all that commotion the thing might at least
+come<br>
+ open." I banged the box viciously against the corner of the
+table.<br>
+ I felt that I would almost rather that an explosion should
+take<br>
+ place than that nothing should occur. One does not care to
+be<br>
+ disturbed from one's sound slumber in the small hours of the<br>
+ morning for a trifle.</p>
+
+<p>"I've half a mind to get a hammer, and try, as they say in
+the<br>
+ cookery books, another way."</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately I had promised Pugh to abstain from using force.
+I<br>
+ might have shivered the box open with my hammer, and then
+explained<br>
+ that it had fallen, or got trod upon, or sat upon, or
+something,<br>
+ and so got shattered, only I was afraid that Pugh would not
+believe<br>
+ me. The man is himself such an untruthful man that he is in
+a<br>
+ chronic state of suspicion about the truthfulness of others.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if you're not going to blow up, or open, or something,
+I'll<br>
+ say good night."</p>
+
+<p>I gave the box a final rap with my knuckles and a final
+shake,<br>
+ replaced it on the table, put out the gas, and returned to
+bed.</p>
+
+<p>I was just sinking again into slumber, when that box began
+again.<br>
+ It was true that Pugh had purchased the puzzle, but it was
+evident<br>
+ that the whole enjoyment of the purchase was destined to be
+mine.<br>
+ It was useless to think of sleep while that performance was
+going<br>
+ on. I sat up in bed once more.</p>
+
+<p>"It strikes me that the puzzle consists in finding out how it
+is<br>
+ possible to go to sleep with Pugh's purchase in your bedroom.
+This<br>
+ is far better than the old-fashioned prescription of cats on
+the<br>
+ tiles."</p>
+
+<p>It struck me the noise was distinctly louder than before;
+this<br>
+ applied both to the tick, tick, tick, and the screeching.</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly," I told myself, as I relighted the gas, "the
+explosion<br>
+ is to come off this time."</p>
+
+<p>I turned to look at the box. There could be no doubt about it;
+the<br>
+ noise was louder. And, if I could trust my eyes, the box was<br>
+ moving--giving a series of little jumps. This might have been
+an<br>
+ optical delusion, but it seemed to me that at each tick the
+box<br>
+ gave a little bound. During the screeches--which sounded more
+like<br>
+ the cries of an animal in an agony of pain even than before--if
+it<br>
+ did not tilt itself first on one end, and then on another, I
+shall<br>
+ never be willing to trust the evidence of my own eyes again.
+And<br>
+ surely the box had increased in size; I could have sworn not
+only<br>
+ that it had increased, but that it was increasing, even as I
+stood<br>
+ there looking on. It had grown, and still was growing, both<br>
+ broader, and longer, and deeper. Pugh, of course, would have<br>
+ attributed it to supernatural agency; there never was a man
+with<br>
+ such a nose for a ghost. I could picture him occupying my<br>
+ position, shivering in his nightshirt, as he beheld that
+miracle<br>
+ taking place before his eyes. The solution which at once
+suggested<br>
+ itself to me--and which would NEVER have suggested itself to
+Pugh!--<br>
+ was that the box was fashioned, as it were, in layers, and
+that<br>
+ the ingenious mechanism it contained was forcing the sides at
+once<br>
+ both upward and outward. I took it in my hand. I could feel<br>
+ something striking against the bottom of the box, like the
+tap,<br>
+ tap, tapping of a tiny hammer.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a pretty puzzle of Pugh's. He would say that that is
+the<br>
+ tapping of a deathwatch. For my part I have not much faith
+in<br>
+ deathwatches, et hoc genus omne, but it certainly is a
+curious<br>
+ tapping; I wonder what is going to happen next?"</p>
+
+<p>Apparently nothing, except a continuation of those
+mysterious<br>
+ sounds. That the box had increased in size I had, and have,
+no<br>
+ doubt whatever. I should say that it had increased a good inch
+in<br>
+ every direction, at least half an inch while I had been looking
+on.<br>
+ But while I stood looking its growth was suddenly and
+perceptibly<br>
+ stayed; it ceased to move. Only the noise continued.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder how long it will be before anything worth happening
+does<br>
+ happen! I suppose something is going to happen; there can't be
+all<br>
+ this to-do for nothing. If it is anything in the infernal
+machine<br>
+ line, and there is going to be an explosion, I might as well
+be<br>
+ here to see it. I think I'll have a pipe."</p>
+
+<p>I put on my dressing-gown. I lit my pipe. I sat and stared at
+the<br>
+ box. I dare say I sat there for quite twenty minutes when,
+as<br>
+ before, without any sort of warning, the sound was stilled.
+Its<br>
+ sudden cessation rather startled me.</p>
+
+<p>"Has the mechanism again hung fire? Or, this time, is the<br>
+ explosion coming off?" It did not come off; nothing came
+off.<br>
+ "Isn't the box even going to open?"</p>
+
+<p>It did not open. There was simply silence all at once, and
+that<br>
+ was all. I sat there in expectation for some moments longer.
+But<br>
+ I sat for nothing. I rose. I took the box in my hand. I
+shook<br>
+ it.</p>
+
+<p>"This puzzle IS a puzzle." I held the box first to one ear,
+then<br>
+ to the other. I gave it several sharp raps with my knuckles.<br>
+ There was not an answering sound, not even the sort of<br>
+ reverberation which Pugh and I had noticed at first. It
+seemed<br>
+ hollower than ever. It was as though the soul of the box was
+dead.<br>
+ "I suppose if I put you down, and extinguish the gas and return
+to<br>
+ bed, in about half an hour or so, just as I am dropping off
+to<br>
+ sleep, the performance will be recommenced. Perhaps the third
+time<br>
+ will be lucky."</p>
+
+<p>But I was mistaken--there was no third time. When I returned
+to<br>
+ bed that time I returned to sleep, and I was allowed to
+sleep;<br>
+ there was no continuation of the performance, at least so far as
+I<br>
+ know. For no sooner was I once more between the sheets than I
+was<br>
+ seized with an irresistible drowsiness, a drowsiness which
+so<br>
+ mastered me that I--I imagine it must have been
+instantly--sank<br>
+ into slumber which lasted till long after day had dawned.
+Whether<br>
+ or not any more mysterious sounds issued from the bowels of
+Pugh's<br>
+ puzzle is more than I can tell. If they did, they did not
+succeed<br>
+ in rousing me.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, when at last I did awake, I had a sort of
+consciousness<br>
+ that my waking had been caused by something strange. What it was
+I<br>
+ could not surmise. My own impression was that I had been
+awakened<br>
+ by the touch of a person's hand. But that impression must
+have<br>
+ been a mistaken one, because, as I could easily see by
+looking<br>
+ round the room, there was no one in the room to touch me.</p>
+
+<p>It was broad daylight. I looked at my watch; it was nearly
+eleven<br>
+ o'clock. I am a pretty late sleeper as a rule, but I do not<br>
+ usually sleep as late as that. That scoundrel Bob would let
+me<br>
+ sleep all day without thinking it necessary to call me. I was
+just<br>
+ about to spring out of bed with the intention of ringing the
+bell<br>
+ so that I might give Bob a piece of my mind for allowing me
+to<br>
+ sleep so late, when my glance fell on the dressing-table on
+which,<br>
+ the night before, I had placed Pugh's puzzle. It had gone!</p>
+
+<p>Its absence so took me by surprise that I ran to the table. It
+HAD<br>
+ gone. But it had not gone far; it had gone to pieces! There
+were<br>
+ the pieces lying where the box had been. The puzzle had
+solved<br>
+ itself. The box was open, open with a vengeance, one might
+say.<br>
+ Like that unfortunate Humpty Dumpty, who, so the chroniclers
+tell<br>
+ us, sat on a wall, surely "all the king's horses and all the
+king's<br>
+ men" never could put Pugh's puzzle together again!</p>
+
+<p>The marquetry had resolved itself into its component parts.
+How<br>
+ those parts had ever been joined was a mystery. They had been
+laid<br>
+ upon no foundation, as is the case with ordinary inlaid work.
+The<br>
+ several pieces of wood were not only of different shapes and
+sizes,<br>
+ but they were as thin as the thinnest veneer; yet the box had
+been<br>
+ formed by simply joining them together. The man who made that
+box<br>
+ must have been possessed of ingenuity worthy of a better
+cause.</p>
+
+<p>I perceived how the puzzle had been worked. The box had
+contained<br>
+ an arrangement of springs, which, on being released, had
+expanded<br>
+ themselves in different directions until their mere expansion
+had<br>
+ rent the box to pieces. There were the springs, lying amid
+the<br>
+ ruin they had caused.</p>
+
+<p>There was something else amid that ruin besides those
+springs;<br>
+ there was a small piece of writing paper. I took it up. On
+the<br>
+ reverse side of it was written in a minute, crabbed hand: "A<br>
+ Present For You." What was a present for me? I looked, and,
+not<br>
+ for the first time since I had caught sight of Pugh's
+precious<br>
+ puzzle, could scarcely believe my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>There, poised between two upright wires, the bent ends of
+which<br>
+ held it aloft in the air, was either a piece of glass or--a<br>
+ crystal. The scrap of writing paper had exactly covered it.
+I<br>
+ understood what it was, when Pugh and I had tapped with the
+hammer,<br>
+ had caused the answering taps to proceed from within. Our
+taps<br>
+ caused the wires to oscillate, and in these oscillations the<br>
+ crystal, which they held suspended, had touched the side of
+the<br>
+ box.</p>
+
+<p>I looked again at the piece of paper. "A Present For You."
+Was<br>
+ THIS the present--this crystal? I regarded it intently.</p>
+
+<p>"It CAN'T be a diamond."</p>
+
+<p>The idea was ridiculous, absurd. No man in his senses would
+place<br>
+ a diamond inside a twopenny-halfpenny puzzle box. The thing was
+as<br>
+ big as a walnut! And yet--I am a pretty good judge of
+precious<br>
+ stones--if it was not an uncut diamond it was the best imitation
+I<br>
+ had seen. I took it up. I examined it closely. The more
+closely<br>
+ I examined it, the more my wonder grew.</p>
+
+<p>"It IS a diamond!"</p>
+
+<p>And yet the idea was too preposterous for credence. Who
+would<br>
+ present a diamond as big as a walnut with a trumpery puzzle?<br>
+ Besides, all the diamonds which the world contains of that size
+are<br>
+ almost as well known as the Koh-i-noor.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is a diamond, it is worth--it is worth--Heaven only
+knows<br>
+ what it isn't worth if it's a diamond."</p>
+
+<p>I regarded it through a strong pocket lens. As I did so I
+could<br>
+ not restrain an exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>"The world to a China orange, it IS a diamond!"</p>
+
+<p>The words had scarcely escaped my lips than there came a
+tapping at<br>
+ the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in!" I cried, supposing it was Bob. It was not Bob, it
+was<br>
+ Pugh. Instinctively I put the lens and the crystal behind my
+back.<br>
+ At sight of me in my nightshirt Pugh began to shake his
+head.</p>
+
+<p>"What hours, Tress, what hours! Why, my dear Tress, I've<br>
+ breakfasted, read the papers and my letters, came all the way
+from<br>
+ my house here, and you're not up!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't I look as though I were up?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Tress! Tress!" He approached the dressing-table. His
+eye<br>
+ fell upon the ruins. "What's this?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the solution to the puzzle."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you--have you solved it fairly, Tress?"</p>
+
+<p>"It has solved itself. Our handling, and tapping, and
+hammering<br>
+ must have freed the springs which the box contained, and during
+the<br>
+ night, while I slept, they have caused it to come open."</p>
+
+<p>"While you slept? Dear me! How strange! And--what are
+these?"</p>
+
+<p>He had discovered the two upright wires on which the crystal
+had<br>
+ been poised.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose they're part of the puzzle."</p>
+
+<p>"And was there anything in the box? What's this?" he picked up
+the<br>
+ scrap of paper; I had left it on the table. He read what was<br>
+ written on it: "'A Present For You.' What's it mean? Tress,
+was<br>
+ this in the box?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was."</p>
+
+<p>"What's it mean about a present? Was there anything in the
+box<br>
+ besides?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pugh, if you will leave the room I shall be able to dress; I
+am<br>
+ not in the habit of receiving quite such early calls, or I
+should<br>
+ have been prepared to receive you. If you will wait in the
+next<br>
+ room, I will be with you as soon as I'm dressed. There is a
+little<br>
+ subject in connection with the box which I wish to discuss
+with<br>
+ you."</p>
+
+<p>"A subject in connection with the box? What is the
+subject?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you, Pugh, when I have performed my toilet."</p>
+
+<p>"Why can't you tell me now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you propose, then, that I should stand here shivering in
+my<br>
+ shirt while you are prosing at your ease? Thank you; I am
+obliged,<br>
+ but I decline. May I ask you once more, Pugh, to wait for me
+in<br>
+ the adjoining apartment?"</p>
+
+<p>He moved toward the door. When he had taken a couple of steps,
+he<br>
+ halted.</p>
+
+<p>"I--I hope, Tress, that you're--you're going to play no tricks
+on<br>
+ me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tricks on you! Is it likely that I am going to play tricks
+upon<br>
+ my oldest friend?"</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone--he vanished, it seemed to me, with a
+somewhat<br>
+ doubtful visage--I took the crystal to the window. I drew
+the<br>
+ blind. I let the sunshine fall on it. I examined it again,<br>
+ closely and minutely, with the aid of my pocket lens. It WAS
+a<br>
+ diamond; there could not be a doubt of it. If, with my
+knowledge<br>
+ of stones, I was deceived, then I was deceived as never man
+had<br>
+ been deceived before. My heart beat faster as I recognized
+the<br>
+ fact that I was holding in my hand what was, in all probability,
+a<br>
+ fortune for a man of moderate desires. Of course, Pugh knew<br>
+ nothing of what I had discovered, and there was no reason why
+he<br>
+ should know. Not the least! The only difficulty was that if
+I<br>
+ kept my own counsel, and sold the stone and utilized the
+proceeds<br>
+ of the sale, I should have to invent a story which would
+account<br>
+ for my sudden accession to fortune. Pugh knows almost as much
+of<br>
+ my affairs as I do myself. That is the worst of these old
+friends!</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ When I joined Pugh I found him dancing up and down the floor
+like a<br>
+ bear upon hot plates. He scarcely allowed me to put my nose
+inside<br>
+ the door before attacking me.</p>
+
+<p>"Tress, give me what was in the box."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Pugh, how do you know that there was something in the
+box<br>
+ to give you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know there was!"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! If you know that there was something in the box,
+perhaps<br>
+ you will tell me what that something was."</p>
+
+<p>He eyed me doubtfully. Then, advancing, he laid upon my arm a
+hand<br>
+ which positively trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"Tress, you--you wouldn't play tricks on an old friend."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Pugh, I wouldn't, though I believe there have
+been<br>
+ occasions on which you have had doubts upon the subject. By
+the<br>
+ way, Pugh, I believe that I am the oldest friend you have."</p>
+
+<p>"I--I don't know about that. There's--there's Brasher."</p>
+
+<p>"Brasher! Who's Brasher? You wouldn't compare my friendship
+to<br>
+ the friendship of such a man as Brasher? Think of the tastes
+we<br>
+ have in common, you and I. We're both collectors."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye-es, we're both collectors."</p>
+
+<p>"I make my interests yours, and you make your interests
+mine.<br>
+ Isn't that so, Pugh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tress, what--what was in the box?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will be frank with you, Pugh. If there had been something
+in<br>
+ the box, would you have been willing to go halves with me in
+my<br>
+ discovery?"</p>
+
+<p>"Go halves! In your discovery, Tress! Give me what is
+mine!"</p>
+
+<p>"With pleasure, Pugh, if you will tell me what is yours."</p>
+
+<p>"If--if you don't give me what was in the box I'll--I'll send
+for<br>
+ the police."</p>
+
+<p>"Do! Then I shall be able to hand to them what was in the box
+in<br>
+ order that it may be restored to its proper owner."</p>
+
+<p>"Its proper owner! I'm its proper owner!"</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, but I don't understand how that can be; at least,
+until<br>
+ the police have made inquiries. I should say that the proper
+owner<br>
+ was the person from whom you purchased the box, or, more
+probably,<br>
+ the person from whom he purchased it, and by whom, doubtless,
+it<br>
+ was sold in ignorance, or by mistake. Thus, Pugh, if you will
+only<br>
+ send for the police, we shall earn the gratitude of a person
+of<br>
+ whom we never heard in our lives--I for discovering the contents
+of<br>
+ the box, and you for returning them."</p>
+
+<p>As I said this, Pugh's face was a study. He gasped for breath.
+He<br>
+ actually took out his handkerchief to wipe his brow.</p>
+
+<p>"Tress, I--I don't think you need to use a tone like that to
+me.<br>
+ It isn't friendly. What--what was in the box?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let us understand each other, Pugh. If you don't hand over
+what<br>
+ was in the box to the police, I go halves."</p>
+
+<p>Pugh began to dance about the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"What a fool I was to trust you with the box! I knew I
+couldn't<br>
+ trust you." I said nothing. I turned and rang the bell.
+"What's<br>
+ that for?"</p>
+
+<p>"That, my dear Pugh, is for breakfast, and, if you desire it,
+for<br>
+ the police. You know, although you have breakfasted, I
+haven't.<br>
+ Perhaps while I am breaking my fast, you would like to summon
+the<br>
+ representatives of law and order." Bob came in. I ordered<br>
+ breakfast. Then I turned to Pugh. "Is there anything you
+would<br>
+ like?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I--I've breakfasted."</p>
+
+<p>"It wasn't of breakfast I was thinking. It was of--something
+else.<br>
+ Bob is at your service, if, for instance, you wish to send him
+on<br>
+ an errand."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I want nothing. Bob can go." Bob went. Directly he
+was<br>
+ gone, Pugh turned to me. "You shall have half. What was in
+the<br>
+ box?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have half?"</p>
+
+<p>"You shall!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think it is necessary that the terms of our
+little<br>
+ understanding should be expressly embodied in black and white.
+I<br>
+ fancy that, under the circumstance, I can trust you, Pugh. I<br>
+ believe that I am capable of seeing that, in this matter, you
+don't<br>
+ do me. That was in the box."</p>
+
+<p>I held out the crystal between my finger and thumb.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is what I desire to learn."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me look at it."</p>
+
+<p>"You are welcome to look at it where it is. Look at it as long
+as<br>
+ you like, and as closely."</p>
+
+<p>Pugh leaned over my hand. His eyes began to gleam. He is
+himself<br>
+ not a bad judge of precious stones, is Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>"It's--it's--Tress!--is it a diamond?"</p>
+
+<p>"That question I have already asked myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me look at it! It will be safe with me! It's mine!"</p>
+
+<p>I immediately put the thing behind my back.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me, it belongs neither to you nor to me. It belongs,
+in<br>
+ all probability, to the person who sold that puzzle to the man
+from<br>
+ whom you bought it--perhaps some weeping widow, Pugh, or
+hopeless<br>
+ orphan--think of it. Let us have no further misunderstanding
+upon<br>
+ that point, my dear old friend. Still, because you are my dear
+old<br>
+ friend, I am willing to trust you with this discovery of mine,
+on<br>
+ condition that you don't attempt to remove it from my sight,
+and<br>
+ that you return it to me the moment I require you."</p>
+
+<p>"You're--you're very hard on me." I made a movement toward
+my<br>
+ waistcoat pocket. "I'll return it to you!"</p>
+
+<p>I handed him the crystal, and with it I handed him my pocket
+lens.</p>
+
+<p>"With the aid of that glass I imagine that you will be able
+to<br>
+ subject it to a more acute examination, Pugh."</p>
+
+<p>He began to examine it through the lens. Directly he did so,
+he<br>
+ gave an exclamation. In a few moments he looked up at me.
+His<br>
+ eyes were glistening behind his spectacles. I could see he<br>
+ trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"Tress, it's--it's a diamond, a Brazil diamond. It's worth
+a<br>
+ fortune!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad you think so."</p>
+
+<p>"Glad I think so! Don't you think that it's a diamond?"</p>
+
+<p>"It appears to be a diamond. Under ordinary conditions I
+should<br>
+ say, without hesitation, that it was a diamond. But when I<br>
+ consider the circumstances of its discovery, I am driven to
+doubts.<br>
+ How much did you give for that puzzle, Pugh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ninepence; the fellow wanted a shilling, but I gave him
+ninepence.<br>
+ He seemed content."</p>
+
+<p>"Ninepence! Does it seem reasonable that we should find a
+diamond,<br>
+ which, if it is a diamond, is the finest stone I ever saw
+and<br>
+ handled, in a ninepenny puzzle? It is not as though it had
+got<br>
+ into the thing by accident, it had evidently been placed there
+to<br>
+ be found, and, apparently, by anyone who chanced to solve
+the<br>
+ puzzle; witness the writing on the scrap of paper."</p>
+
+<p>Pugh re-examined the crystal.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a diamond! I'll stake my life that it's a diamond!"</p>
+
+<p>"Still, though it be a diamond, I smell a rat!"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I strongly suspect that the person who placed that diamond
+inside<br>
+ that puzzle intended to have a joke at the expense of the
+person<br>
+ who discovered it. What was to be the nature of the joke is
+more<br>
+ than I can say at present, but I should like to have a bet with
+you<br>
+ that the man who compounded that puzzle was an ingenious
+practical<br>
+ joker. I may be wrong, Pugh; we shall see. But, until I have<br>
+ proved the contrary, I don't believe that the maddest man that
+ever<br>
+ lived would throw away a diamond worth, apparently, shall we say
+a<br>
+ thousand pounds?"</p>
+
+<p>"A thousand pounds! This diamond is worth a good deal more
+than a<br>
+ thousand pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that only makes my case the stronger; I don't believe
+that<br>
+ the maddest man that ever lived would throw away a diamond
+worth<br>
+ more than a thousand pounds with such utter wantonness as seems
+to<br>
+ have characterized the action of the original owner of the
+stone<br>
+ which I found in your ninepenny puzzle, Pugh."</p>
+
+<p>"There have been some eccentric characters in the world, some
+very<br>
+ eccentric characters. However, as you say, we shall see. I
+fancy<br>
+ that I know somebody who would be quite willing to have such
+a<br>
+ diamond as this, and who, moreover, would be willing to pay a
+fair<br>
+ price for its possession; I will take it to him and see what
+he<br>
+ says."</p>
+
+<p>"Pugh, hand me back that diamond."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Tress, I was only going--"</p>
+
+<p>Bob came in with the breakfast tray.</p>
+
+<p>"Pugh, you will either hand me that at once, or Bob shall
+summon<br>
+ the representatives of law and order."</p>
+
+<p>He handed me the diamond. I sat down to breakfast with a
+hearty<br>
+ appetite. Pugh stood and scowled at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Joseph Tress, it is my solemn conviction, and I have no
+hesitation<br>
+ in saying so in plain English, that you're a thief."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Pugh, it seems to me that we show every promise
+of<br>
+ becoming a couple of thieves."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't bracket me with you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all, you are worse than I. It is you who decline to
+return<br>
+ the contents of the box to its proper owner. Put it to
+yourself,<br>
+ you have SOME common sense, my dear old friend I--do you
+suppose<br>
+ that a diamond worth more than a thousand pounds is to be
+HONESTLY<br>
+ bought for ninepence?"</p>
+
+<p>He resumed his old trick of dancing about the room.</p>
+
+<p>"I was a fool ever to let you have the box! I ought to have
+known<br>
+ better than to have trusted you; goodness knows you have given
+me<br>
+ sufficient cause to mistrust you! Over and over again! Your<br>
+ character is only too notorious! You have plundered friend and
+foe<br>
+ alike--friend and foe alike! As for the rubbish which you
+call<br>
+ your collection, nine tenths of it, I know as a positive fact,
+you<br>
+ have stolen out and out."</p>
+
+<p>"Who stole my Sir Walter Raleigh pipe? Wasn't it a man
+named<br>
+ Pugh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Joseph Tress!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm looking."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it's no good talking to you, not the least!
+You're--you're<br>
+ dead to all the promptings of conscience! May I inquire, Mr.<br>
+ Tress, what it is you propose to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I PROPOSE to do nothing, except summon the representatives of
+law<br>
+ and order. Failing that, my dear Pugh, I had some faint,
+vague,<br>
+ very vague idea of taking the contents of your ninepenny puzzle
+to<br>
+ a certain firm in Hatton Garden, who are dealers in precious<br>
+ stones, and to learn from them if they are disposed to give<br>
+ anything for it, and if so, what."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall come with you."</p>
+
+<p>"With pleasure, on condition that you pay the cab."</p>
+
+<p>"I pay the cab! I will pay half."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all. You will either pay the whole fare, or else I
+will<br>
+ have one cab and you shall have another. It is a
+three-shilling<br>
+ cab fare from here to Hatton Garden. If you propose to share
+my<br>
+ cab, you will be so good as to hand over that three
+shillings<br>
+ before we start."</p>
+
+<p>He gasped, but he handed over the three shillings. There are
+few<br>
+ things I enjoy so much as getting money out of Pugh!</p>
+
+<p>On the road to Hatton Garden we wrangled nearly all the way. I
+own<br>
+ that I feel a certain satisfaction in irritating Pugh, he is
+such<br>
+ an irritable man. He wanted to know what I thought we should
+get<br>
+ for the diamond.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't expect to get much for the contents of a
+ninepenny<br>
+ puzzle, not even the price of a cab fare, Pugh."</p>
+
+<p>He eyed me, but for some minutes he was silent. Then he
+began<br>
+ again.</p>
+
+<p>"Tress, I don't think we ought to let it go for less
+than--than<br>
+ five thousand pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"Seriously, Pugh, I doubt whether, when the whole affair is
+ended,<br>
+ we shall get five thousand pence for it, or, for the matter
+of<br>
+ that, five thousand farthings."</p>
+
+<p>"But why not? Why not? It's a magnificent
+stone--magnificent!<br>
+ I'll stake my life on it."</p>
+
+<p>I tapped my breast with the tips of my fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a warning voice within my breast that ought to be
+in<br>
+ yours, Pugh! Something tells me, perhaps it is the unusually<br>
+ strong vein of common sense which I possess, that the contents
+of<br>
+ your ninepenny puzzle will be found to be a magnificent
+do--an<br>
+ ingenious practical joke, my friend."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe it."</p>
+
+<p>But I think he did; at any rate, I had unsettled the
+foundations of<br>
+ his faith.</p>
+
+<p>We entered the Hatton Garden office side by side; in his
+anxiety<br>
+ not to let me get before him, Pugh actually clung to my arm.
+The<br>
+ office was divided into two parts by a counter which ran from
+wall<br>
+ to wall. I advanced to a man who stood on the other side of
+this<br>
+ counter.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "I want to sell you a diamond."</p>
+
+<p>"WE want to sell you a diamond," interpolated Pugh.</p>
+
+<p>I turned to Pugh. I "fixed" him with my glance.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to sell you a diamond. Here it is. What will you give
+me<br>
+ for it?"</p>
+
+<p>Taking the crystal from my waistcoat pocket I handed it to the
+man<br>
+ on the other side of the counter. Directly he got it between
+his<br>
+ fingers, and saw that it was that he had got, I noticed a
+sudden<br>
+ gleam come into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"This is--this is rather a fine stone."</p>
+
+<p>Pugh nudged my arm.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you so." I paid no attention to Pugh. "What will you
+give<br>
+ me for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean, what will I give you for it cash down upon the
+nail?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so--what will you give me for it cash down upon the
+nail?"</p>
+
+<p>The man turned the crystal over and over in his fingers.
+"Well,<br>
+ that's rather a large order. We don't often get a chance of
+buying<br>
+ such a stone as this across the counter. What do you say
+to--well--<br>
+ to ten thousand pounds?"</p>
+
+<p>Ten thousand pounds! It was beyond my wildest imaginings.
+Pugh<br>
+ gasped. He lurched against the counter.</p>
+
+<p>"Ten thousand pounds!" he echoed.</p>
+
+<p>The man on the other side glanced at him, I thought, a
+little<br>
+ curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"If you can give me references, or satisfy me in any way as to
+your<br>
+ bona fides, I am prepared to give you for this diamond an
+open<br>
+ check for ten thousand pounds, or if you prefer it, the cash<br>
+ instead."</p>
+
+<p>I stared; I was not accustomed to see business transacted on
+quite<br>
+ such lines as those.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll take it," murmured Pugh; I believe he was too much
+overcome<br>
+ by his feelings to do more than murmur. I interposed.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear sir, you will excuse my saying that you arrive
+very<br>
+ rapidly at your conclusions. In the first place, how can you
+make<br>
+ sure that it is a diamond?"</p>
+
+<p>The man behind the counter smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I should be very ill-fitted for the position which I hold if
+I<br>
+ could not tell a diamond directly I get a sight of it,
+especially<br>
+ such a stone as this."</p>
+
+<p>"But have you no tests you can apply?"</p>
+
+<p>"We have tests which we apply in cases in which doubt exists,
+but<br>
+ in this case there is no doubt whatever. I am as sure that this
+is<br>
+ a diamond as I am sure that it is air I breathe. However, here
+is<br>
+ a test."</p>
+
+<p>There was a wheel close by the speaker. It was worked by a<br>
+ treadle. It was more like a superior sort of
+traveling-tinker's<br>
+ grindstone than anything else. The man behind the counter put
+his<br>
+ foot upon the treadle. The wheel began to revolve. He brought
+the<br>
+ crystal into contact with the swiftly revolving wheel. There was
+a<br>
+ s--s--sh! And, in an instant, his hand was empty; the crystal
+had<br>
+ vanished into air.</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens!" he gasped. I never saw such a look of
+amazement on<br>
+ a human countenance before. "It's splintered!"</p>
+
+<h3><br>
+ POSTSCRIPT</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ It WAS a diamond, although it HAD splintered. In that fact lay
+the<br>
+ point of the joke. The man behind the counter had not been
+wrong;<br>
+ examination of such dust as could be collected proved that
+fact<br>
+ beyond a doubt. It was declared by experts that the diamond,
+at<br>
+ some period of its history, had been subjected to intense
+and<br>
+ continuing heat. The result had been to make it as brittle
+as<br>
+ glass.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ There could be no doubt that its original owner had been an
+expert<br>
+ too. He knew where he got it from, and he probably knew what
+it<br>
+ had endured. He was aware that, from a mercantile point of
+view,<br>
+ it was worthless; it could never have been cut. So, having a
+turn<br>
+ for humor of a peculiar kind, he had devoted days, and weeks,
+and<br>
+ possibly months, to the construction of that puzzle. He had
+placed<br>
+ the diamond inside, and he had enjoyed, in anticipation and
+in<br>
+ imagination, the Alnaschar visions of the lucky finder.</p>
+
+<p>Pugh blamed me for the catastrophe. He said, and still says,
+that<br>
+ if I had not, in a measure, and quite gratuitously, insisted on
+a<br>
+ test, the man behind the counter would have been satisfied with
+the<br>
+ evidence of his organs of vision, and we should have been richer
+by<br>
+ ten thousand pounds. But I satisfy my conscience with the<br>
+ reflection that what I did at any rate was honest, though, at
+the<br>
+ same time, I am perfectly well aware that such a reflection
+gives<br>
+ Pugh no sort of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>The Great Valdez Sapphire</h2>
+
+<p><br>
+ I know more about it than anyone else in the world, its
+present<br>
+ owner not excepted. I can give its whole history, from the<br>
+ Cingalese who found it, the Spanish adventurer who stole it,
+the<br>
+ cardinal who bought it, the Pope who graciously accepted it,
+the<br>
+ favored son of the Church who received it, the gay and giddy<br>
+ duchess who pawned it, down to the eminent prelate who now holds
+it<br>
+ in trust as a family heirloom.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ It will occupy a chapter to itself in my forthcoming work on<br>
+ "Historic Stones," where full details of its weight, size,
+color,<br>
+ and value may be found. At present I am going to relate an<br>
+ incident in its history which, for obvious reasons, will not
+be<br>
+ published--which, in fact, I trust the reader will consider
+related<br>
+ in strict confidence.</p>
+
+<p>I had never seen the stone itself when I began to write about
+it,<br>
+ and it was not till one evening last spring, while staying with
+my<br>
+ nephew, Sir Thomas Acton, that I came within measurable distance
+of<br>
+ it. A dinner party was impending, and, at my instigation,
+the<br>
+ Bishop of Northchurch and Miss Panton, his daughter and
+heiress,<br>
+ were among the invited guests.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner was a particularly good one, I remember that
+distinctly.<br>
+ In fact, I felt myself partly responsible for it, having
+engaged<br>
+ the new cook--a talented young Italian, pupil of the admirable
+old<br>
+ chef at my club. We had gone over the menu carefully
+together,<br>
+ with a result refreshing in its novelty, but not so daring as
+to<br>
+ disturb the minds of the innocent country guests who were
+bidden<br>
+ thereto.</p>
+
+<p>The first spoonful of soup was reassuring, and I looked to the
+end<br>
+ of the table to exchange a congratulatory glance with Leta.
+What<br>
+ was amiss? No response. Her pretty face was flushed, her
+smile<br>
+ constrained, she was talking with quite unnecessary empressement
+to<br>
+ her neighbor, Sir Harry Landor, though Leta is one of those
+few<br>
+ women who understand the importance of letting a man settle
+down<br>
+ tranquilly and with an undisturbed mind to the business of
+dining,<br>
+ allowing no topic of serious interest to come on before the<br>
+ releves, and reserving mere conversational brilliancy for
+the<br>
+ entremets.</p>
+
+<p>Guests all right? No disappointments? I had gone through the
+list<br>
+ with her, selecting just the right people to be asked to meet
+the<br>
+ Landors, our new neighbors. Not a mere cumbrous county
+gathering,<br>
+ nor yet a showy imported party from town, but a skillful
+blending<br>
+ of both. Had anything happened already? I had been late for<br>
+ dinner and missed the arrivals in the drawing-room. It was
+Leta's<br>
+ fault. She has got into a way of coming into my room and
+putting<br>
+ the last touches to my toilet. I let her, for I am doubtful
+of<br>
+ myself nowadays after many years' dependence on the best of
+valets.<br>
+ Her taste is generally beyond dispute, but to-day she had
+indulged<br>
+ in a feminine vagary that provoked me and made me late for
+dinner.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going to wear your sapphire, Uncle Paul!" she cried
+in a<br>
+ tone of dismay. "Oh, why not the ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>"You WOULD have your way about the table decorations," I
+gently<br>
+ reminded her. "with that service of Crown Derby repousse and<br>
+ orchids, the ruby would look absolutely barbaric. Now if you
+would<br>
+ have had the Limoges set, white candles, and a yellow silk
+center--"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but--I'm SO disappointed--I wanted the bishop to see
+your<br>
+ ruby--or one of your engraved gems--"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, it is on the bishop's account I put this on. You
+know<br>
+ his daughter is heiress of the great Valdez sapphire--"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course she is, and when he has the charge of a stone
+three<br>
+ times as big as yours, what's the use of wearing it? The
+ruby,<br>
+ dear Uncle Paul, PLEASE!"</p>
+
+<p>She was desperately in earnest I could see, and considering
+the<br>
+ obligations which I am supposed to be under to her and Tom, it
+was<br>
+ but a little matter to yield, but it involved a good deal of
+extra<br>
+ trouble. Studs, sleeve-links, watch-guard, all carefully
+selected<br>
+ to go with the sapphire, had to be changed, the emerald which
+I<br>
+ chose as a compromise requiring more florid accompaniments of
+a<br>
+ deeper tone of gold; and the dinner hour struck as I replaced
+my<br>
+ jewel case, the one relic left me of a once handsome fortune, in
+my<br>
+ fireproof safe.</p>
+
+<p>The emerald looked very well that evening, however. I kept my
+eyes<br>
+ upon it for comfort when Miss Panton proved trying.</p>
+
+<p>She was a lean, yellow, dictatorial young person with no<br>
+ conversation. I spoke of her father's celebrated sapphires.
+"MY<br>
+ sapphires," she amended sourly; "though I am legally debarred
+from<br>
+ making any profitable use of them." She furthermore informed
+me<br>
+ that she viewed them as useless gauds, which ought to be
+disposed<br>
+ of for the benefit of the heathen. I gave the subject up,
+and<br>
+ while she discoursed of the work of the Blue Ribbon Army among
+the<br>
+ Bosjesmans I tried to understand a certain dislocation in
+the<br>
+ arrangement of the table. Surely we were more or less in
+number<br>
+ than we should be? Opposite side all right. Who was extra on<br>
+ ours? I leaned forward. Lady Landor on one side of Tom, on
+the<br>
+ other who? I caught glimpses of plumes pink and green nodding
+over<br>
+ a dinner plate, and beneath them a pink nose in a green visage
+with<br>
+ a nutcracker chin altogether unknown to me. A sharp gray eye
+shot<br>
+ a sideway glance down the table and caught me peeping, and I<br>
+ retreated, having only marked in addition two clawlike hands,
+with<br>
+ pointed ruffles and a mass of brilliant rings, making good
+play<br>
+ with a knife and fork. Who was she? At intervals a high acid<br>
+ voice could be heard addressing Tom, and a laugh that made
+me<br>
+ shudder; it had the quality of the scream of a bird of prey or
+the<br>
+ yell of a jackal. I had heard that sort of laugh before, and
+it<br>
+ always made me feel like a defenseless rabbit.</p>
+
+<p>Every time it sounded I saw Leta's fan flutter more furiously
+and<br>
+ her manner grow more nervously animated. Poor dear girl! I
+never<br>
+ in all my recollection wished a dinner at an end so earnestly so
+as<br>
+ to assure her of my support and sympathy, though without the<br>
+ faintest conception why either should be required.</p>
+
+<p>The ices at last. A menu card folded in two was laid beside
+me. I<br>
+ read it unobserved. "Keep the B. from joining us in the
+drawing-<br>
+ room." The B.? The bishop, of course. With pleasure. But
+why?<br>
+ And how? THAT'S the question, never mind "why." Could I lure
+him<br>
+ into the library--the billiard room--the conservatory? I
+doubted<br>
+ it, and I doubted still more what I should do with him when I
+got<br>
+ him there.</p>
+
+<p>The bishop is a grand and stately ecclesiastic of the
+mediaeval<br>
+ type, broad-chested, deep-voiced, martial of bearing. I
+could<br>
+ picture him charging mace in hand at the head of his vassals,
+or<br>
+ delivering over a dissenter of the period to the rack and<br>
+ thumbscrew, but not pottering among rare editions, tall copies
+and<br>
+ Grolier bindings, nor condescending to a quiet cigar among the
+tree<br>
+ ferns and orchids. Leta must and should be obeyed, I swore,<br>
+ nevertheless, even if I were driven to lock the door in the<br>
+ fearless old fashion of a bygone day, and declare I'd shoot any
+man<br>
+ who left while a drop remained in the bottles.</p>
+
+<p>The ladies were rising. The lady at the head of the line
+smirked<br>
+ and nodded her pink plumes coquettishly at Tom, while her
+hawk's<br>
+ eyes roved keen and predatory over us all. She stopped
+suddenly,<br>
+ creating a block and confusion.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, the dear bishop! YOU there, and I never saw you! You
+must<br>
+ come and have a nice long chat presently. By-by--!" She shook
+her<br>
+ fan at him over my shoulder and tripped off. Leta, passing
+me<br>
+ last, gave me a look of profound despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Carwitchet!" somebody exclaimed. "I couldn't believe
+my<br>
+ eyes."</p>
+
+<p>"Thought she was dead or in penal servitude. Never should
+have<br>
+ expected to see her HERE," said some one else behind me<br>
+ confidentially.</p>
+
+<p>"What Carwitchet? Not the mother of the Carwitchet who--"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. The Carwitchet who---" Tom assented with a shrug.
+"We<br>
+ needn't go farther, as she's my guest. Just my luck. I met
+them<br>
+ at Buxton, thought them uncommonly good company--in fact,<br>
+ Carwitchet laid me under a great obligation about a horse I
+was<br>
+ nearly let in for buying--and gave them a general invitation
+here,<br>
+ as one does, you know. Never expected her to turn up with
+her<br>
+ luggage this afternoon just before dinner, to stay a week, or
+a<br>
+ fortnight if Carwitchet can join her." A groan of sympathy
+ran<br>
+ round the table. "It can't be helped. I've told you this just
+to<br>
+ show that I shouldn't have asked you here to meet this sort
+of<br>
+ people of my own free will; but, as it is, please say no more
+about<br>
+ them." The subject was not dropped by any means, and I took
+care<br>
+ that it should not be. At our end of the table one story
+after<br>
+ another went buzzing round--sotto voce, out of deference to
+Tom--<br>
+ but perfectly audible.</p>
+
+<p>"Carwitchet? Ah, yes. Mixed up in that Rawlings divorce
+case,<br>
+ wasn't he? A bad lot. Turned out of the Dragoon Guards for<br>
+ cheating at cards, or picking pockets, or something--remember
+the<br>
+ row at the Cerulean Club? Scandalous exposure--and that
+forged<br>
+ letter business--oh, that was the mother--prosecution hushed
+up<br>
+ somehow. Ought to be serving her fourteen years--and that
+business<br>
+ of poor Farrars, the banker--got hold of some of his secrets
+and<br>
+ blackmailed him till he blew his brains out--"</p>
+
+<p>It was so exciting that I clean forgot the bishop, till a low
+gasp<br>
+ at my elbow startled me. He was lying back in his chair, his<br>
+ mighty shaven jowl a ghastly white, his fierce imperious
+eyebrows<br>
+ drooping limp over his fishlike eyes, his splendid figure
+shrunk<br>
+ and contracted. He was trying with a shaken hand to pour out
+wine.<br>
+ The decanter clattered against the glass and the wine spilled
+on<br>
+ the cloth.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid you find the room too warm. Shall we go into
+the<br>
+ library?"</p>
+
+<p>He rose hastily and followed me like a lamb.</p>
+
+<p>He recovered himself once we got into the hall, and
+affably<br>
+ rejected all my proffers of brandy and soda--medical
+advice--<br>
+ everything else my limited experience could suggest. He only<br>
+ demanded his carriage "directly" and that Miss Panton should
+be<br>
+ summoned forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>I made the best use I could of the time left me.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm uncommonly sorry you do not feel equal to staying a
+little<br>
+ longer, my lord. I counted on showing you my few trifles of<br>
+ precious stones, the salvage from the wreck of my
+possessions.<br>
+ Nothing in comparison with your own collection."</p>
+
+<p>The bishop clasped his hand over his heart. His breath came
+short<br>
+ and quick.</p>
+
+<p>"A return of that dizziness," he explained with a faint
+smile.<br>
+ "You are thinking of the Valdez sapphire, are you not? Some
+day,"<br>
+ he went on with forced composure, "I may have the pleasure
+of<br>
+ showing it to you. It is at my banker's just now."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Panton's steps were heard in the ball. "You are well
+known as<br>
+ a connoisseur, Mr. Acton," he went on hurriedly. "Is your<br>
+ collection valuable? If so, keep it safe; don't trust a ring
+off<br>
+ your hand, or the key of your jewel case out of your pocket
+till<br>
+ the house is clear again." The words rushed from his lips in
+an<br>
+ impetuous whisper, he gave me a meaning glance, and departed
+with<br>
+ his daughter. I went back to the drawing-room, my head
+swimming<br>
+ with bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>"What! The dear bishop gone!" screamed Lady Carwitchet from
+the<br>
+ central ottoman where she sat, surrounded by most of the
+gentlemen,<br>
+ all apparently well entertained by her conversation. "And I
+wanted<br>
+ to talk over old times with him so badly. His poor wife was
+my<br>
+ greatest friend. Mira Montanaro, daughter of the great banker,
+you<br>
+ know. It's not possible that that miserable little prig is my
+poor<br>
+ Mira's girl. The heiress of all the Montanaros in a black
+lace<br>
+ gown worth twopence! When I think of her mother's beauty and
+her<br>
+ toilets! Does she ever wear the sapphires? Has anyone ever
+seen<br>
+ her in them? Eleven large stones in a lovely antique setting,
+and<br>
+ the great Valdez sapphire--worth thousands and thousands--for
+the<br>
+ pendant." No one replied. "I wanted to get a rise out of the<br>
+ bishop to-night. It used to make him so mad when I wore
+this."</p>
+
+<p>She fumbled among the laces at her throat, and clawed out a
+pendant<br>
+ that hung to a velvet band around her neck. I fairly gasped
+when<br>
+ she removed her hand. A sapphire of irregular shape flashed
+out<br>
+ its blue lightning on us. Such a stone! A true, rich,
+cornflower<br>
+ blue even by that wretched artificial light, with soft
+velvety<br>
+ depths of color and dazzling clearness of tint in its lights
+and<br>
+ shades--a stone to remember! I stretched out my hand<br>
+ involuntarily, but Lady Carwitchet drew back with a
+coquettish<br>
+ squeal. "No! no! You mustn't look any closer. Tell me what
+you<br>
+ think of it now. Isn't it pretty?"</p>
+
+<p>"Superb!" was all I could ejaculate, staring at the azure
+splendor<br>
+ of that miraculous jewel in a sort of trance.</p>
+
+<p>She gave a shrill cackling laugh of mockery.</p>
+
+<p>"The great Mr. Acton taken in by a bit of Palais Royal
+gimcrackery!<br>
+ What an advertisement for Bogaerts et Cie! They are perfect<br>
+ artists in frauds. Don't you remember their stand at the
+first<br>
+ Paris Exhibition? They had imitations there of every
+celebrated<br>
+ stone; but I never expected anything made by man could delude
+Mr.<br>
+ Acton, never!" And she went off into another mocking cackle,
+and<br>
+ all the idiots round her haw-hawed knowingly, as if they had
+seen<br>
+ the joke all along. I was too bewildered to reply, which was
+on<br>
+ the whole lucky. "I suppose I mustn't tell why I came to
+give<br>
+ quite a big sum in francs for this?" she went on, tapping
+her<br>
+ closed lips with her closed fan, and cocking her eye at us all
+like<br>
+ a parrot wanting to be coaxed to talk. "It's a queer story."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't want to hear her anecdote, especially as I saw she
+wanted<br>
+ to tell it. What I DID want was to see that pendant again.
+She<br>
+ had thrust it back among her laces, only the loop which held it
+to<br>
+ the velvet being visible. It was set with three small
+sapphires,<br>
+ and even from a distance I clearly made them out to be
+imitations,<br>
+ and poor ones. I felt a queer thrill of self-mistrust. Was
+the<br>
+ large stone no better? Could I, even for an instant, have
+been<br>
+ dazzled by a sham, and a sham of that quality? The events of
+the<br>
+ evening had flurried and confused me. I wished to think them
+over<br>
+ in quiet. I would go to bed.</p>
+
+<p>My rooms at the Manor are the best in the house. Leta will
+have it<br>
+ so. I must explain their position for a reason to be
+understood<br>
+ later. My bedroom is in the southeast angle of the house; it
+opens<br>
+ on one side into a sitting-room in the east corridor, the rest
+of<br>
+ which is taken up by the suite of rooms occupied by Tom and
+Leta;<br>
+ and on the other side into my bathroom, the first room in the
+south<br>
+ corridor, where the principal guest chambers are, to one of
+which<br>
+ it was originally the dressing-room. Passing this room I noticed
+a<br>
+ couple of housemaids preparing it for the night, and
+discovered<br>
+ with a shiver that Lady Carwitchet was to be my next-door
+neighbor.<br>
+ It gave me a turn.</p>
+
+<p>The bishop's strange warning must have unnerved me. I was<br>
+ perfectly safe from her ladyship. The disused door into her
+room<br>
+ was locked, and the key safe on the housekeeper's bunch. It
+was<br>
+ also undiscoverable on her side, the recess in which it stood
+being<br>
+ completely filled by a large wardrobe. On my side hung a
+thick<br>
+ sound-proof portiere. Nevertheless, I resolved not to use
+that<br>
+ room while she inhabited the next one. I removed my
+possessions,<br>
+ fastened the door of communication with my bedroom, and dragged
+a<br>
+ heavy ottoman across it.</p>
+
+<p>Then I stowed away my emerald in my strong-box. It is built
+into<br>
+ the wall of my sitting-room, and masked by the lower part of an
+old<br>
+ carved oak bureau. I put away even the rings I wore
+habitually,<br>
+ keeping out only an inferior cat's-eye for workaday wear. I
+had<br>
+ just made all safe when Leta tapped at the door and came in to
+wish<br>
+ me good night. She looked flushed and harassed and ready to
+cry.<br>
+ "Uncle Paul," she began, "I want you to go up to town at once,
+and<br>
+ stay away till I send for you."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear--!" I was too amazed to expostulate.</p>
+
+<p>"We've got a--a pestilence among us," she declared, her
+foot<br>
+ tapping the ground angrily, "and the least we can do is to go
+into<br>
+ quarantine. Oh, I'm so sorry and so ashamed! The poor
+bishop!<br>
+ I'll take good care that no one else shall meet that woman
+here.<br>
+ You did your best for me, Uncle Paul, and managed admirably, but
+it<br>
+ was all no use. I hoped against hope that what between the dusk
+of<br>
+ the drawing-room before dinner, and being put at opposite ends
+of<br>
+ the table, we might get through without a meeting--"</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear, explain. Why shouldn't the bishop and Lady<br>
+ Carwitchet meet? Why is it worse for him than anyone else?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why? I thought everybody had heard of that dreadful wife of
+his<br>
+ who nearly broke his heart. If he married her for her money
+it<br>
+ served him right, but Lady Landor says she was very handsome
+and<br>
+ really in love with him at first. Then Lady Carwitchet got hold
+of<br>
+ her and led her into all sorts of mischief. She left her
+husband--<br>
+ he was only a rector with a country living in those days--and
+went<br>
+ to live in town, got into a horrid fast set, and made
+herself<br>
+ notorious. You MUST have heard of her."</p>
+
+<p>"I heard of her sapphires, my dear. But I was in Brazil at
+the<br>
+ time."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you had been at home. You might have found her out.
+She<br>
+ was furious because her husband refused to let her wear the
+great<br>
+ Valdez sapphire. It had been in the Montanaro family for
+some<br>
+ generations, and her father settled it first on her and then on
+her<br>
+ little girl--the bishop being trustee. He felt obliged to
+take<br>
+ away the little girl, and send her off to be brought up by some
+old<br>
+ aunts in the country, and he locked up the sapphire. Lady<br>
+ Carwitchet tells as a splendid joke how they got the copy made
+in<br>
+ Paris, and it did just as well for the people to stare at.
+No<br>
+ wonder the bishop hates the very name of the stone."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "How long will she stay here?" I asked dismally.</p>
+
+<p>"Till Lord Carwitchet can come and escort her to Paris to
+visit<br>
+ some American friends. Goodness knows when that will be! Do go
+up<br>
+ to town, Uncle Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>I refused indignantly. The very least I could do was to stand
+by<br>
+ my poor young relatives in their troubles and help them through.
+I<br>
+ did so. I wore that inferior cat's eye for six weeks!</p>
+
+<p>It is a time I cannot think of even now without a shudder.
+The<br>
+ more I saw of that terrible old woman the more I detested her,
+and<br>
+ we saw a very great deal of her. Leta kept her word, and
+neither<br>
+ accepted nor gave invitations all that time. We were cut off
+from<br>
+ all society but that of old General Fairford, who would go
+anywhere<br>
+ and meet anyone to get a rubber after dinner; the doctor, a<br>
+ sporting widower; and the Duberlys, a giddy, rather rackety
+young<br>
+ couple who had taken the Dower House for a year. Lady
+Carwitchet<br>
+ seemed perfectly content. She reveled in the soft living and
+good<br>
+ fare of the Manor House, the drives in Leta's big barouche,
+and<br>
+ Domenico's dinners, as one to whom short commons were not
+unknown.<br>
+ She had a hungry way of grabbing and grasping at everything
+she<br>
+ could--the shillings she won at whist, the best fruit at
+dessert,<br>
+ the postage stamps in the library inkstand--that was
+infinitely<br>
+ suggestive. Sometimes I could have pitied her, she was so
+greedy,<br>
+ so spiteful, so friendless. She always made me think of some<br>
+ wicked old pirate putting into a peaceful port to provision
+and<br>
+ repair his battered old hulk, obliged to live on friendly
+terms<br>
+ with the natives, but his piratical old nostrils asniff for
+plunder<br>
+ and his piratical old soul longing to be off marauding once
+more.<br>
+ When would that be? Not till the arrival in Paris of her<br>
+ distinguished American friends, of whom we heard a great
+deal.<br>
+ "Charming people, the Bokums of Chicago, the American branch of
+the<br>
+ English Beauchamps, you know!" They seemed to be taking an<br>
+ unconscionable time to get there. She would have insisted on
+being<br>
+ driven over to Northchurch to call at the palace, but that
+the<br>
+ bishop was understood to be holding confirmations at the other
+end<br>
+ of the diocese.</p>
+
+<p>I was alone in the house one afternoon sitting by my window,
+toying<br>
+ with the key of my safe, and wondering whether I dare treat
+myself<br>
+ to a peep at my treasures, when a suspicious movement in the
+park<br>
+ below caught my attention. A black figure certainly dodged
+from<br>
+ behind one tree to the next, and then into the shadow of the
+park<br>
+ paling instead of keeping to the footpath. It looked queer.
+I<br>
+ caught up my field glass and marked him at one point where he
+was<br>
+ bound to come into the open for a few steps. He crossed the
+strip<br>
+ of turf with giant strides and got into cover again, but not
+quick<br>
+ enough to prevent me recognizing him. It was--great
+heavens!--the<br>
+ bishop! In a soft hat pulled over his forehead, with a long
+cloak<br>
+ and a big stick, he looked like a poacher.</p>
+
+<p>Guided by some mysterious instinct I hurried to meet him. I
+opened<br>
+ the conservatory door, and in he rushed like a hunted
+rabbit.<br>
+ Without explanation I led him up the wide staircase to my
+room,<br>
+ where he dropped into a chair and wiped his face.</p>
+
+<p>"You are astonished, Mr. Acton," he panted. "I will
+explain<br>
+ directly. Thanks." He tossed off the glass of brandy I had
+poured<br>
+ out without waiting for the qualifying soda, and looked
+better.</p>
+
+<p>"I am in serious trouble. You can help me. I've had a shock
+to-<br>
+ day--a grievous shock." He stopped and tried to pull himself<br>
+ together. "I must trust you implicitly, Mr. Acton, I have no<br>
+ choice. Tell me what you think of this." He drew a case from
+his<br>
+ breast pocket and opened it. "I promised you should see the
+Valdez<br>
+ sapphire. Look there!"</p>
+
+<p>The Valdez sapphire! A great big shining lump of blue
+crystal--<br>
+ flawless and of perfect color--that was all. I took it up,<br>
+ breathed on it, drew out my magnifier, looked at it in one
+light<br>
+ and another. What was wrong with it? I could not say. Nine<br>
+ experts out of ten would undoubtedly have pronounced the
+stone<br>
+ genuine. I, by virtue of some mysterious instinct that has<br>
+ hitherto always guided me aright, was the unlucky tenth. I
+looked<br>
+ at the bishop. His eyes met mine. There was no need of
+spoken<br>
+ word between us.</p>
+
+<p>"Has Lady Carwitchet shown you her sapphire?" was his most<br>
+ unexpected question. "She has? Now, Mr. Acton, on your honor as
+a<br>
+ connoisseur and a gentleman, which of the two is the
+Valdez?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not this one." I could say naught else.</p>
+
+<p>"You were my last hope." He broke off, and dropped his face on
+his<br>
+ folded arms with a groan that shook the table on which he
+rested,<br>
+ while I stood dismayed at myself for having let so hasty a
+judgment<br>
+ escape me. He lifted a ghastly countenance to me. "She vowed
+she<br>
+ would see me ruined and disgraced. I made her my enemy by
+crossing<br>
+ some of her schemes once, and she never forgives. She will
+keep<br>
+ her word. I shall appear before the world as a fraudulent
+trustee.<br>
+ I can neither produce the valuable confided to my charge nor
+make<br>
+ the loss good. I have only an incredible story to tell," be<br>
+ dropped his head and groaned again. "Who will believe me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will, for one."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, you? Yes, you know her. She took my wife from me, Mr.
+Acton.<br>
+ Heaven only knows what the hold was that she had over poor
+Mira.<br>
+ She encouraged her to set me at defiance and eventually to
+leave<br>
+ me. She was answerable for all the scandalous folly and<br>
+ extravagance of poor Mira's life in Paris--spare me the telling
+of<br>
+ the story. She left her at last to die alone and uncared for.
+I<br>
+ reached my wife to find her dying of a fever from which Lady<br>
+ Carwitchet and her crew had fled. She was raving in delirium,
+and<br>
+ died without recognizing me. Some trouble she had been in which
+I<br>
+ must never know oppressed her. At the very last she roused from
+a<br>
+ long stupor and spoke to the nurse. 'Tell him to get the
+sapphire<br>
+ back--she stole it. She has robbed my child.' Those were her
+last<br>
+ words. The nurse understood no English, and treated them as<br>
+ wandering; but I heard them, and knew she was sane when she
+spoke."</p>
+
+<p>"What did you do?"</p>
+
+<p>"What could I? I saw Lady Carwitchet, who laughed at me,
+and<br>
+ defied me to make her confess or disgorge. I took the pendant
+to<br>
+ more than one eminent jeweler on pretense of having the
+setting<br>
+ seen to, and all have examined and admired without giving a hint
+of<br>
+ there being anything wrong. I allowed a celebrated mineralogist
+to<br>
+ see it; he gave no sign--"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps they are right and we are wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no. Listen. I heard of an old Dutchman celebrated for
+his<br>
+ imitations. I went to him, and he told me at once that he had
+been<br>
+ allowed by Montanaro to copy the Valdez--setting and all--for
+the<br>
+ Paris Exhibition. I showed him this, and he claimed it for his
+own<br>
+ work at once, and pointed out his private mark upon it. You
+must<br>
+ take your magnifier to find it; a Greek Beta. He also told me
+that<br>
+ he had sold it to Lady Carwitchet more than a year ago.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a terrible position."</p>
+
+<p>"It is. My co-trustee died lately. I have never dared to
+have<br>
+ another appointed. I am bound to hand over the sapphire to
+my<br>
+ daughter on her marriage, if her husband consents to take the
+name<br>
+ of Montanaro."</p>
+
+<p>The bishop's face was ghastly pale, and the moisture started
+on his<br>
+ brow. I racked my brain for some word of comfort.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Panton may never marry."</p>
+
+<p>"But she will!" he shouted. "That is the blow that has been
+dealt<br>
+ me to-day. My chaplain--actually, my chaplain--tells me that he
+is<br>
+ going out as a temperance missionary to equatorial Africa, and
+has<br>
+ the assurance to add that he believes my daughter is not
+indisposed<br>
+ to accompany him!" His consummating wrath acted as a
+momentary<br>
+ stimulant. He sat upright, his eyes flashing and his brow<br>
+ thunderous. I felt for that chaplain. Then he collapsed<br>
+ miserably. "The sapphires will have to be produced,
+identified,<br>
+ revalued. How shall I come out of it? Think of the disgrace,
+the<br>
+ ripping up of old scandals! Even if I were to compound with
+Lady<br>
+ Carwitchet, the sum she hinted at was too monstrous. She
+wants<br>
+ more than my money. Help me, Mr. Acton! For the sake of your
+own<br>
+ family interests, help me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon--family interests? I don't understand."</p>
+
+<p>"If my daughter is childless, her next of kin is poor
+Marmaduke<br>
+ Panton, who is dying at Cannes, not married, or likely to
+marry;<br>
+ and failing him, your nephew, Sir Thomas Acton, succeeds."</p>
+
+<p>My nephew Tom! Leta, or Leta's baby, might come to be the
+possible<br>
+ inheritor of the great Valdez sapphire! The blood rushed to
+my<br>
+ head as I looked at the great shining swindle before me.
+"What<br>
+ diabolic jugglery was at work when the exchange was made?" I<br>
+ demanded fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"It must have been on the last occasion of her wearing the<br>
+ sapphires in London. I ought never to have let her out of my<br>
+ sight"</p>
+
+<p>"You must put a stop to Miss Panton's marriage in the first
+place,"<br>
+ I pronounced as autocratically as he could have done
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Not to be thought of," he admitted helplessly. "Mira has my
+force<br>
+ of character. She knows her rights, and she will have her
+jewels.<br>
+ I want you to take charge of the--thing for me. If it's in
+the<br>
+ house she'll make me produce it. She'll inquire at the
+banker's.<br>
+ If YOU have it we can gain time, if but for a day or two."
+He<br>
+ broke off. Carriage wheels were crashing on the gravel
+outside.<br>
+ We looked at one another in consternation. Flight was
+imperative.<br>
+ I hurried him downstairs and out of the conservatory just as
+the<br>
+ door bell rang. I think we both lost our heads in the
+confusion.<br>
+ He shoved the case into my hands, and I pocketed it, without
+a<br>
+ thought of the awful responsibility I was incurring, and saw
+him<br>
+ disappear into the shelter of the friendly night.</p>
+
+<p>When I think of what my feelings were that evening--of my
+murderous<br>
+ hatred of that smirking, jesting Jezebel who sat opposite me
+at<br>
+ dinner, my wrathful indignation at the thought of the poor
+little<br>
+ expected heir defrauded ere his birth; of the crushing contempt
+I<br>
+ felt for myself and the bishop as a pair of witless idiots
+unable<br>
+ to see our way out of the dilemma; all this boiling and
+surging<br>
+ through my soul, I can only wonder--Domenico having given
+himself a<br>
+ holiday, and the kitchen maid doing her worst and
+wickedest--that<br>
+ gout or jaundice did not put an end to this story at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Paul!" Leta was looking her sweetest when she tripped
+into<br>
+ my room next morning. "I've news for you. She," pointing a<br>
+ delicate forefinger in the direction of the corridor, "is
+going!<br>
+ Her Bokums have reached Paris at last, and sent for her to
+join<br>
+ them at the Grand Hotel."</p>
+
+<p>I was thunderstruck. The longed-for deliverance had but come
+to<br>
+ remove hopelessly and forever out of my reach Lady Carwitchet
+and<br>
+ the great Valdez sapphire.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, aren't you overjoyed? I am. We are going to celebrate
+the<br>
+ event by a dinner party. Tom's hospitable soul is vexed by
+the<br>
+ lack of entertainment we had provided her. We must ask the<br>
+ Brownleys some day or other, and they will be delighted to
+meet<br>
+ anything in the way of a ladyship, or such smart folks as
+the<br>
+ Duberly-Parkers. Then we may as well have the Blomfields, and
+air<br>
+ that awful modern Sevres dessert service she gave us when we
+were<br>
+ married." I had no objection to make, and she went on, rubbing
+her<br>
+ soft cheek against my shoulder like the purring little cat she
+was:<br>
+ "Now I want you to do something to please me--and Mrs.
+Blomfield.<br>
+ She has set her heart on seeing your rubies, and though I know
+you<br>
+ hate her about as much as you do that Sevres china--"</p>
+
+<p>"What! Wear my rubies with that! I won't. I'll tell you what
+I<br>
+ will do, though. I've got some carbuncles as big as prize<br>
+ gooseberries, a whole set. Then you have only to put those<br>
+ Bohemian glass vases and candelabra on the table, and let
+your<br>
+ gardener do his worst with his great forced, scentless,
+vulgar<br>
+ blooms, and we shall all be in keeping." Leta pouted. An
+idea<br>
+ struck me. "Or I'll do as you wish, on one condition. You
+get<br>
+ Lady Carwitchet to wear her big sapphire, and don't tell her I
+wish<br>
+ it."</p>
+
+<p>I lived through the next few days as one in some evil dream.
+The<br>
+ sapphires, like twin specters, haunted me day and night. Was
+ever<br>
+ man so tantalized? To hold the shadow and see the substance<br>
+ dangled temptingly within reach. The bishop made no sign of<br>
+ ridding me of my unwelcome charge, and the thought of what
+might<br>
+ happen in a case of burglary--fire--earthquake--made me start
+and<br>
+ tremble at all sorts of inopportune moments.</p>
+
+<p>I kept faith with Leta, and reluctantly produced my
+beautiful<br>
+ rubies on the night of her dinner party. Emerging from my room
+I<br>
+ came full upon Lady Carwitchet in the corridor. She was
+dressed<br>
+ for dinner, and at her throat I caught the blue gleam of the
+great<br>
+ sapphire. Leta had kept faith with me. I don't know what I<br>
+ stammered in reply to her ladyship's remarks; my whole soul
+was<br>
+ absorbed in the contemplation of the intoxicating loveliness of
+the<br>
+ gem. THAT a Palais Royal deception! Incredible! My fingers<br>
+ twitched, my breath came short and fierce with the lust of<br>
+ possession. She must have seen the covetous glare in my eyes.
+A<br>
+ look of gratified spiteful complacency overspread her features,
+as<br>
+ she swept on ahead and descended the stairs before me. I
+followed<br>
+ her to the drawing-room door. She stopped suddenly, and
+murmuring<br>
+ something unintelligible hurried back again.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody was assembled there that I expected to see, with
+an<br>
+ addition. Not a welcome one by the look on Tom's face. He
+stood<br>
+ on the hearthrug conversing with a great hulking,
+high-shouldered<br>
+ fellow, sallow-faced, with a heavy mustache and drooping
+eyelids,<br>
+ from the corners of which flashed out a sudden suspicious look
+as I<br>
+ approached, which lighted up into a greedy one as it rested on
+my<br>
+ rubies, and seemed unaccountably familiar to me, till Lady<br>
+ Carwitchet tripping past me exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"He has come at last! My naughty, naughty boy! Mr. Acton, this
+is<br>
+ my son, Lord Carwitchet!"</p>
+
+<p>I broke off short in the midst of my polite acknowledgments
+to<br>
+ stare blankly at her. The sapphire was gone! A great gilt
+cross,<br>
+ with a Scotch pebble like an acid drop, was her sole
+decoration.</p>
+
+<p>"I had to put my pendant away," she explained confidentially;
+"the<br>
+ clasp had got broken somehow." I didn't believe a word.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Carwitchet contributed little to the general
+entertainment at<br>
+ dinner, but fell into confidential talk with Mrs.
+Duberly-Parker.<br>
+ I caught a few unintelligible remarks across the table. They<br>
+ referred, I subsequently discovered, to the lady's little book
+on<br>
+ Northchurch races, and I recollected that the Spring Meeting
+was<br>
+ on, and to-morrow "Cup Day." After dinner there was great
+talk<br>
+ about getting up a party to go on General Fairford's drag.
+Lady<br>
+ Carwitchet was in ecstasies and tried to coax me into
+joining.<br>
+ Leta declined positively. Tom accepted sulkily.</p>
+
+<p>The look in Lord Carwitchet's eye returned to my mind as I
+locked<br>
+ up my rubies that night. It made him look so like his mother!
+I<br>
+ went round my fastenings with unusual care. Safe and closets
+and<br>
+ desk and doors, I tried them all. Coming at last to the
+bathroom,<br>
+ it opened at once. It was the housemaid's doing. She had<br>
+ evidently taken advantage of my having abandoned the room to
+give<br>
+ it "a thorough spring cleaning," and I anathematized her.
+The<br>
+ furniture was all piled together and veiled with sheets, the
+carpet<br>
+ and felt curtain were gone, there were new brooms about. As
+I<br>
+ peered around, a voice close at my ear made me jump--Lady<br>
+ Carwitchet's!</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "I tell you I have nothing, not a penny! I shall have to borrow
+my<br>
+ train fare before I can leave this. They'll be glad enough to
+lend<br>
+ it."</p>
+
+<p>Not only had the portiere been removed, but the door behind it
+had<br>
+ been unlocked and left open for convenience of dusting behind
+the<br>
+ wardrobe. I might as well have been in the bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tell me," I recognized Carwitchet's growl. "You've not
+been<br>
+ here all this time for nothing. You've been collecting for a<br>
+ Kilburn cot or getting subscriptions for the distressed
+Irish<br>
+ landlords. I know you. Now I'm not going to see myself ruined
+for<br>
+ the want of a paltry hundred or so. I tell you the colt is a
+dead<br>
+ certainty. If I could have got a thousand or two on him last
+week,<br>
+ we might have ended our dog days millionaires. Hand over what
+you<br>
+ can. You've money's worth, if not money. Where's that
+sapphire<br>
+ you stole?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't. I can show you the receipted bill. All I possess
+is<br>
+ honestly come by. What could you do with it, even if I gave
+it<br>
+ you? You couldn't sell it as the Valdez, and you can't get it
+cut<br>
+ up as you might if it were real."</p>
+
+<p>"If it's only bogus, why are you always in such a flutter
+about it?<br>
+ I'll do something with it, never fear. Hand over."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't. I haven't got it. I had to raise something on it
+before<br>
+ I left town."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you swear it's not in that wardrobe? I dare say you
+will. I<br>
+ mean to see. Give me those keys."</p>
+
+<p>I heard a struggle and a jingle, then the wardrobe door must
+have<br>
+ been flung open, for a streak of light struck through a crack
+in<br>
+ the wood of the back. Creeping close and peeping through, I
+could<br>
+ see an awful sight. Lady Carwitchet in a flannel wrapper,
+minus<br>
+ hair, teeth, complexion, pointing a skinny forefinger that
+quivered<br>
+ with rage at her son, who was out of the range of my vision.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop that, and throw those keys down here directly, or I'll
+rouse<br>
+ the house. Sir Thomas is a magistrate, and will lock you up
+as<br>
+ soon as look at you." She clutched at the bell rope as she
+spoke.<br>
+ "I'll swear I'm in danger of my life from you and give you
+in<br>
+ charge. Yes, and when you're in prison I'll keep you there
+till<br>
+ you die. I've often thought I'd do it. How about the hotel<br>
+ robberies last summer at Cowes, eh? Mightn't the police be<br>
+ grateful for a hint or two? And how about--"</p>
+
+<p>The keys fell with a crash on the bed, accompanied by some
+bad<br>
+ language in an apologetic tone, and the door slammed to. I
+crept<br>
+ trembling to bed.</p>
+
+<p>This new and horrible complication of the situation filled me
+with<br>
+ dismay. Lord Carwitchet's wolfish glance at my rubies took a
+new<br>
+ meaning. They were safe enough, I believed--but the sapphire!
+If<br>
+ he disbelieved his mother, how long would she be able to keep
+it<br>
+ from his clutches? That she had some plot of her own of which
+the<br>
+ bishop would eventually be the victim I did not doubt, or why
+had<br>
+ she not made her bargain with him long ago? But supposing she
+took<br>
+ fright, lost her head, allowed her son to wrest the jewel from
+her,<br>
+ or gave consent to its being mutilated, divided! I lay in a
+cold<br>
+ perspiration till morning.</p>
+
+<p>My terrors haunted me all day. They were with me at breakfast
+time<br>
+ when Lady Carwitchet, tripping in smiling, made a last attempt
+to<br>
+ induce me to accompany her and keep her "bad, bad boy" from
+getting<br>
+ among "those horrid betting men."</p>
+
+<p>They haunted me through the long peaceful day with Leta and
+the<br>
+ tete-a-tete dinner, but they swarmed around and beset me
+sorest<br>
+ when, sitting alone over my sitting-room fire, I listened for
+the<br>
+ return of the drag party. I read my newspaper and brewed
+myself<br>
+ some hot strong drink, but there comes a time of night when no
+fire<br>
+ can warm and no drink can cheer. The bishop's despairing face
+kept<br>
+ me company, and his troubles and the wrongs of the future heir
+took<br>
+ possession of me. Then the uncanny noises that make all old
+houses<br>
+ ghostly during the small hours began to make themselves
+heard.<br>
+ Muffled footsteps trod the corridor, stopping to listen at
+every<br>
+ door, door latches gently clicked, boards creaked
+unreasonably,<br>
+ sounds of stealthy movements came from the locked-up bathroom.
+The<br>
+ welcome crash of wheels at last, and the sound of the
+front-door<br>
+ bell. I could hear Lady Carwitchet making her shrill adieux to
+her<br>
+ friends and her steps in the corridor. She was softly humming
+a<br>
+ little song as she approached. I heard her unlock her bedroom
+door<br>
+ before she entered--an odd thing to do. Tom came sleepily<br>
+ stumbling to his room later. I put my head out. "Where is
+Lord<br>
+ Carwitchet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Haven't you seen him? He left us hours ago. Not come home,
+eh?<br>
+ Well, he's welcome to stay away. I don't want to see more of
+him."<br>
+ Tom's brow was dark and his voice surly. "I gave him to
+understand<br>
+ as much." Whatever had happened, Tom was evidently too
+disgusted<br>
+ to explain just then.</p>
+
+<p>I went back to my fire unaccountably relieved, and brewed
+myself<br>
+ another and a stronger brew. It warmed me this time, but
+excited<br>
+ me foolishly. There must be some way out of the difficulty.
+I<br>
+ felt now as if I could almost see it if I gave my mind to it.
+Why--<br>
+ suppose--there might be no difficulty after all! The bishop was
+a<br>
+ nervous old gentleman. He might have been mistaken all
+through,<br>
+ Bogaerts might have been mistaken, I might--no. I could not
+have<br>
+ been mistaken--or I thought not. I fidgeted and fumed and
+argued<br>
+ with myself till I found I should have no peace of mind without
+a<br>
+ look at the stone in my possession, and I actually went to the
+safe<br>
+ and took the case out.</p>
+
+<p>The sapphire certainly looked different by lamplight. I sat
+and<br>
+ stared, and all but over-persuaded my better judgment into
+giving<br>
+ it a verdict. Bogaerts's mark--I suddenly remembered it. I
+took<br>
+ my magnifier and held the pendant to the light. There,
+scratched<br>
+ upon the stone, was the Greek Beta! There came a tap on my
+door,<br>
+ and before I could answer, the handle turned softly and Lord<br>
+ Carwitchet stood before me. I whipped the case into my
+dressing-<br>
+ gown pocket and stared at him. He was not pleasant to look
+at,<br>
+ especially at that time of night. He had a disheveled,
+desperate<br>
+ air, his voice was hoarse, his red-rimmed eyes wild.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," he began civilly enough. "I saw your
+light<br>
+ burning, and thought, as we go by the early train to-morrow,
+you<br>
+ might allow me to consult you now on a little business of my<br>
+ mother's." His eyes roved about the room. Was he trying to
+find<br>
+ the whereabouts of my safe? "You know a lot about precious
+stones,<br>
+ don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"So my friends are kind enough to say. Won't you sit down? I
+have<br>
+ unluckily little chance of indulging the taste on my own
+account,"<br>
+ was my cautious reply.</p>
+
+<p>"But you've written a book about them, and know them when you
+see<br>
+ them, don't you? Now my mother has given me something, and
+would<br>
+ like you to give a guess at its value. Perhaps you can put me
+in<br>
+ the way of disposing of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly can do so if it is worth anything. Is that it?"
+I<br>
+ was in a fever of excitement, for I guessed what was clutched
+in<br>
+ his palm. He held out to me the Valdez sapphire.</p>
+
+<p>How it shone and sparkled like a great blue star! I made
+myself a<br>
+ deprecating smile as I took it from him, but how dare I call
+it<br>
+ false to its face? As well accuse the sun in heaven of being
+a<br>
+ cheap imitation. I faltered and prevaricated feebly. Where was
+my<br>
+ moral courage, and where was the good, honest, thumping lie
+that<br>
+ should have aided me? "I have the best authority for
+recognizing<br>
+ this as a very good copy of a famous stone in the possession of
+the<br>
+ Bishop of Northchurch." His scowl grew so black that I saw
+he<br>
+ believed me, and I went on more cheerily: "This was manufactured
+by<br>
+ Johannes Bogaerts--I can give you his address, and you can
+make<br>
+ inquiries yourself--by special permission of the then owner,
+the<br>
+ late Leone Montanaro."</p>
+
+<p>"Hand it back!" he interrupted (his other remarks were
+outrageous,<br>
+ but satisfactory to hear); but I waved him off. I couldn't give
+it<br>
+ up. It fascinated me. I toyed with it, I caressed it. I made
+it<br>
+ display its different tones of color. I must see the two
+stones<br>
+ together. I must see it outshine its paltry rival. It was a<br>
+ whimsical frenzy that seized me--I can call it by no other
+name.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to see the original? Curiously enough, I have
+it<br>
+ here. The bishop has left it in my charge."</p>
+
+<p>The wolfish light flamed up in Carwitchet's eyes as I drew
+forth<br>
+ the case. He laid the Valdez down on a sheet of paper, and I<br>
+ placed the other, still in its case, beside it. In that
+moment<br>
+ they looked identical, except for the little loop of sham
+stones,<br>
+ replaced by a plain gold band in the bishop's jewel.
+Carwitchet<br>
+ leaned across the table eagerly, the table gave a lurch, the
+lamp<br>
+ tottered, crashed over, and we were left in semidarkness.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't stir!" Carwitchet shouted. "The paraffin is all over
+the<br>
+ place!" He seized my sofa blanket, and flung it over the
+table<br>
+ while I stood helpless. "There, that's safe now. Have you
+candles<br>
+ on the chimney-piece? I've got matches."</p>
+
+<p>He looked very white and excited as he lit up. "Might have
+been an<br>
+ awkward job with all that burning paraffin running about," he
+said<br>
+ quite pleasantly. "I hope no real harm is done." I was
+lifting<br>
+ the rug with shaking hands. The two stones lay as I had
+placed<br>
+ them. No! I nearly dropped it back again. It was the stone
+in<br>
+ the case that had the loop with the three sham sapphires!</p>
+
+<p>Carwitchet picked the other up hastily. "So you say this
+is<br>
+ rubbish?" he asked, his eyes sparkling wickedly, and an attempt
+at<br>
+ mortification in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Utter rubbish!" I pronounced, with truth and decision,
+snapping up<br>
+ the case and pocketing it. "Lady Carwitchet must have known
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well, it's disappointing, isn't it? Good-by, we shall
+not<br>
+ meet again."</p>
+
+<p>I shook hands with him most cordially. "Good-by, Lord
+Carwitchet.<br>
+ SO glad to have met you and your mother. It has been a source
+of<br>
+ the GREATEST pleasure, I assure you."</p>
+
+<p>I have never seen the Carwitchets since. The bishop drove
+over<br>
+ next day in rather better spirits. Miss Panton had refused
+the<br>
+ chaplain.</p>
+
+<p>"It doesn't matter, my lord," I said to him heartily. "We've
+all<br>
+ been under some strange misconception. The stone in your<br>
+ possession is the veritable one. I could swear to that
+anywhere.<br>
+ The sapphire Lady Carwitchet wears is only an excellent
+imitation,<br>
+ and--I have seen it with my own eyes--is the one bearing
+Bogaerts's<br>
+ mark, the Greek Beta."</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lock and Key Library
+Edited by Julian Hawthorne
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOCK AND KEY LIBRARY ***
+
+This file should be named sbmea10h.htm or sbmea10h.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, sbmea11h.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, sbmea10ha.txt
+
+This htm conversion was produced by Walter Debeuf from the etext
+prepared by Donald Lainson
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart hart@pobox.com
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
+
diff --git a/old/sbmea10h.zip b/old/sbmea10h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1cd4359
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/sbmea10h.zip
Binary files differ