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diff --git a/22806.txt b/22806.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..deb8afc --- /dev/null +++ b/22806.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2126 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bronze Hand, by +Anna Katharine Green (Mrs. Charles Rohlfs) + +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 Bronze Hand + 1897 + +Author: Anna Katharine Green (Mrs. Charles Rohlfs) + +Release Date: September 29, 2007 [EBook #22806] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRONZE HAND *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +THE BRONZE HAND + +By Anna Katharine Green (Mrs. Charles Rohlfs) + +Copyright, 1897, by Anna Katharine Green + + + + +I. THE FASCINATING UNKNOWN. + +HER room was on the ground floor of the house we mutually inhabited, +and mine directly above it, so that my opportunities for seeing her were +limited to short glimpses of her auburn head as she leaned out of the +window to close her shutters at night or open them in the morning. Yet +our chance encounter in the hall or on the walk in front, had made so +deep an impression upon my sensibilities that I was never without the +vision of her pale face set off by the aureole of reddish brown hair, +which, since my first meeting with her, had become for me the symbol of +everything beautiful, incomprehensible and strange. + +For my fellow-lodger was a mystery. + +I am a busy man now, but just at the time of which I speak, I had +leisure in abundance. + +I was sharing with many others the unrest of the perilous days +subsequent to the raid of John Brown at Harper's Ferry. Abraham Lincoln +had been elected President. Baltimore, where the incidents I am relating +transpired, had become the headquarters of men who secretly leagued +themselves in antagonism to the North. Men and women who felt that their +Northern brethren had grievously wronged them planned to undermine the +stability of the government. The schemes at this time were gigantic +in their conception and far-reaching in their scope and endless +ramifications. + +Naturally under these conditions, a consciousness of ever-present danger +haunted every thinking mind. The candor of the outspoken was regarded +with doubt, and the reticence of the more cautious, with distrust. It +was a trying time for sensitive, impressionable natures with nothing to +do. Perhaps all this may account for the persistency with which I sat +in my open window. I was thus sitting one night--a memorable one to +me--when I heard a sharp exclamation from below, in a voice I had long +listened for. + +Any utterance from those lips would have attracted my attention; but, +filled as this was with marked, if not extraordinary, emotion, I +could not fail to be roused to a corresponding degree of curiosity and +interest. + +Thrusting out my head, I cast a rapid glance downward. A shutter +swinging in the wind, and the escaping figure of a man hurrying round +the corner of the street, were all that rewarded my scrutiny; though, +from the stream of light issuing from the casement beneath, I perceived +that her window, like my own, was wide open. + +As I continued to watch this light, I saw her thrust out her head with +an eagerness indicative of great excitement. Peering to right and left, +she murmured some suppressed words mixed with gasps of such strong +feeling that I involuntarily called out: + +"Excuse me, madam, have you been frightened in any way by the man I saw +running away from here a moment ago?" + +She gave a great start and glanced up. I see her face yet--beautiful, +wonderful; so beautiful and so wonderful I have never been able to +forget it. Meeting my eye, she faltered out: + +"Did you see a man running away from here? Oh, sir, if I might have a +word with you!" + +I came near leaping directly to the pavement in my ardor and anxiety to +oblige her, but, remembering before it was too late that she was neither +a Juliet nor I a Romeo, I merely answered that I would be with her in a +moment and betook myself below by the less direct but safer means of the +staircase. + +It was a short one and I was but a moment in descending, but that moment +was long enough for my heart to acquire a most uncomfortable throb, +and it was with anything but an air of quiet self-possession that I +approached the threshold I had never before dared to cross even in +fancy. + +The door was open and I caught one glimpse of her figure before she was +aware of my presence. She was contemplating her right hand with a look +of terror, which, added to her striking personality, made her seem at +the instant a creature of alarming characteristics fully as capable of +awakening awe as devotion. + +I may have given some token of the agitation her appearance awakened, +for she turned towards me with sudden vehemence. + +"Oh!" she cried, with a welcoming gesture; "you are the gentleman from +up-stairs who saw a man running away from here a moment ago. Would you +know that man if you saw him again?" + +"I am afraid not," I replied. "He was only a flying figure in my eyes." + +"Oh!" she moaned, bringing her hands together in dismay. But, +immediately straightening herself, she met my regard with one as +direct as my own. "I need a friend," she said, "and I am surrounded by +strangers." + +I made a move towards her; I did not feel myself a stranger. But how was +I to make her realize the fact? + +"If there is anything I can do," I suggested. + +Her steady regard became searching. + +"I have noticed you before to-night," she declared, with a directness +devoid of every vestige of coquetry. "You seem to have qualities that +may be trusted. But the man capable of helping me needs the strongest +motives that influence humanity: courage, devotion, discretion, and a +total forgetfulness of self. Such qualifications cannot be looked for in +a stranger." + +As if with these words she dismissed me from her thoughts, she turned +her back upon me. Then, as if recollecting the courtesy due even to +strangers, she cast me an apologetic glance over her shoulder and +hurriedly added: + +"I am bewildered by my loss. Leave me to the torment of my thoughts. You +can do nothing for me." + +Had there been the least evidence of falsity in her tone or the +slightest striving after effect in her look or bearing, I would have +taken her at her word and left her then and there. But the candor of +the woman and the reality of her emotion were not to be questioned, and +moved by an impulse as irresistible as it was foolhardy, I cried with +the impetuosity of my twenty-one years: + +"I am ready to risk my life for you. Why, I do not know and do not care +to ask. I only know you could have found no other man so willing to do +your bidding." + +A smile, in which surprise was tempered by a feeling almost tender, +crossed her lips and immediately vanished. She shook her head as if in +deprecation of the passion my words evinced, and was about to dismiss +me, when she suddenly changed her mind and seized upon the aid I had +offered, with a fervor that roused my sense of chivalry and +deepened what might have been but a passing fancy into an active and +all-engrossing passion. + +"I can read faces," said she, "and I have read yours. You will do for me +what I cannot do for myself, but----Have you a mother living?" + +I answered no; that I was very nearly without relatives or ties. + +"I am glad," she said, half to herself. Then with a last searching look, +"Have you not even a sweetheart?" + +I must have reddened painfully, for she drew back with a hesitating +and troubled air; but the vigorous protest I hastened to make seemed to +reassure her, for the next word she uttered was one of confidence. + +"I have lost a ring." She spoke in a low but hurried tone. "It was +snatched from my finger as I reached out my hand to close my shutters. +Some one must have been lying in wait; some one who knows my habits +and the hour at which I close my window for the night. The loss I have +sustained is greater than you can conceive. It means more, much more, +than appears. To the man who will bring me back that ring direct from +the hand that stole it, I would devote the gratitude of a lifetime. +Are you willing to make the endeavor? It is a task I cannot give to the +police." + +This request, so different from any I had expected, checked my +enthusiasm in proportion as it awoke a senseless jealousy. + +"Yet it seems directly in their line," I suggested, seeing nothing +but humiliation before me if I attempted the recovery of a simple +love-token. + +"I know that it must seem so to you," she admitted, reading my thoughts +and answering them with skilful indirectness. "But what policeman would +undertake a difficult and minute search for an article whose intrinsic +value would not reach five dollars?" + +"Then it is only a memento," I stammered, with very evident feeling. + +"Only a memento," she repeated; "but not of love. Worthless as it is in +itself, it would buy everything I possess, and almost my soul to-night. +I can explain no further. Will you attempt its recovery?" + +Restored to myself by her frank admission that it was no lover's +keepsake I was urged to recapture and return, I allowed the powerful +individuality of this woman to have its full effect upon me. Taking in +with one glance her beauty, the impassioned fervor of her nature, and +the subtle charm of a spirit she now allowed to work its full spell upon +me, I threw every practical consideration to the winds, and impetuously +replied: + +"I will endeavor to regain this ring for you. Tell me where to go, and +whom to attack, and if human wit and strength can compass it, you shall +have the jewel back before morning. + +"Oh!" she protested, "I see that you anticipate a task of small +difficulty. You cannot recover this particular ring so easily as that. +In the first place, I do not in the least know who took it; I only know +its destination. Alas! if it is allowed to reach that destination, I am +bereft of hope." + +"No love token," I murmured, "and yet your whole peace depends on its +recovery." + +"More than my peace," she answered; and with a quick movement she closed +the door which I had left open behind me. As its sharp bang rang +through the room, I realized into what a pitfall I had stumbled. Only a +political intrigue of the most desperate character could account for the +words I had heard and the actions to which I had been a witness. But I +was in no mood to recoil even from such dangers as these, and so my look +showed her as she leaned toward me with the words: + +"Listen! I am burdened with a secret. I am in this house, in this city, +for a purpose. The secret is not my own and I cannot part with it; +neither is my purpose communicable. You therefore will be obliged to +deal with the greatest dangers blindfold. One encouragement only I can +give you. You will work for good ends. You are pitted against wrong, not +right, and if you succumb, it will be in a cause you yourself would call +noble. Do I make myself understood, Mr.--Mr. ------" + +"Abbott," I put in, with a bow. + +She took the bow for an affirmative, as indeed I meant she should. "You +do not recoil," she murmured, "not even when I say that you must take +no third party into your confidence, no matter to what extremity you are +brought." + +"I would not be the man I think I am, if I recoiled," I said, smiling. + +She waved her hand with almost a stern air. + +"Swear!" she commanded; "swear that, from the moment you leave this +door till you return to it, you will breathe no word concerning me, your +errand, or even the oath I am now exacting from you." + +"Ah!" thought I to myself, "this is serious." But I took the oath under +the spell of the most forceful personality I had ever met, and did not +regret it--_then_. + +"Now let us waste no more time," said she. + +"In the large building on ------ Street there is an office with the name +of Dr. Merriam on the door. See! I have written it on this card, so that +there may be no mistake about it. That office is open to patients from +ten in the morning until twelve at noon. During these hours any one can +enter there; but to awaken no distrust, he should have some ailment. +Have you not some slight disorder concerning which you might consult a +physician?" + +"I doubt it," said I; "but I might manufacture one." + +"That would not do with Dr. Merriam. He is a skilful man; he would see +through any imposture." + +"I have a sick friend," I ruminated. "And by the way, his case is +obscure and curious. I could interest any doctor in it in five minutes." + +"That is good; consult him in regard to your friend; meantime--while you +are waiting for the interview, I mean--take notice of a large box you +will find placed on a side-table. Do not seem to fix your attention on +it, but never let it be really out of your sight from the moment the +door is unlocked at ten till you are forced by the doctor's importunity +to leave the room at twelve. If you are alone there for one minute +(and you will be allowed to remain there alone if you show no haste to +consult the doctor) unlock that box--here is the key--and look carefully +inside. No one will interfere and no one will criticize you; there is +more than one person who has access to that box." + +"But--" I put in. + +"You will discover there," she whispered, "a hand of bronze lying on +an enamelled cushion. On the fingers of this hand there should be, and +doubtless are, rings of forged steel of peculiar workmanship. _If there +is one on the middle finger_, my cause is lost, and I can only await the +end." Her cheek paled. "_But if there is not_, you may be sure that an +attempt will be made by some one to-morrow--I do not know whom--to put +one there before the office closes at noon. The ring will be mine--the +one stolen from my hand just now--and it will be your business to +prevent the box being opened for this purpose, by any means short of +public interference involving arrest and investigation; for this, too, +would be fatal. The delay of a day may be of incalculable service to me. +It would give me time to think, if not to act. Does the undertaking seem +a hopeless one? Am I asking too much of your inexperience?" + +"It does not seem a hopeful one," I admitted; "but I am willing to +undertake the adventure. What are its dangers? And why, if I see the +ring on the finger you speak of, cannot I take it off and bring it back +to you?" + +"Because," said she, answering the last question first, "the ring +becomes a part of the mechanism the moment it is thrust over the last +joint. You could not draw it off. As for the dangers I allude to, they +are of a hidden character, and part of the secret I mentioned. If, +however, you exercise your wit, your courage, and a proper amount of +strategy, you may escape. Interference must be _proved_ against you. +That rule, at least, has been held inviolate." + +Aghast at the mysterious perils she thus indicated in the path toward +which she was urging me, I for one instant felt an impulse to retreat. +But adventure of any kind has its allurements for an unoccupied youth +of twenty-one, and when seasoned, as this was, by a romantic, if +unreasonable, passion, proved altogether too irresistible for me to give +it up. Laughing outright in my endeavor to throw off the surplus of my +excitement, I drew myself up and uttered some fiery phrase of courage, +which I doubt if she even heard. Then I said some word about the doctor, +which she at once caught up. + +"The doctor," said she, "may know, and may not know, the mysteries of +that box. I would advise you to treat him solely as a doctor. He who +uses the key you now hold in your hand cannot be too wary; by which I +mean too careful or too silent. Oh, that I dared to go there myself! But +my agitation would betray me. Besides, my person is known, or this ring +would never have been taken from me. + +"I will be your deputy," I assured her. "Have you any further +instructions?" + +"No," said she; "instructions are useless in an affair of this kind. +Your actions must be determined by the exigencies of the moment. +Meantime, my every thought will be yours. Good-night, sir; pray God, it +may not be good-by." + +"One moment," I said, as I arose to go. "Have you any objection to +telling me your name?" + +"I am Miss Calhoun," she said, with a graceful bow. + +This was the beginning of my formidable adventure with the bronze hand. + + + + +II. THE QUAKER-LIKE GIRL, THE PALE GIRL, AND THE MAN WITH A BRISTLING MUSTACHE. + +THE building mentioned by my new-found friend was well known to me. It +was one of the kind in which every other office is unoccupied the year +round. Such tenants as gave it the little air of usefulness it possessed +were of the bad-pay kind. They gave little concern to their own affairs +and less to those of their neighbors. The public avoided the building, +and the tenants did nothing to encourage a change. In a populous city, +on the corner made by frequented streets, it stood as much alone and +neglected as if it were a ruin. Old or young eyes may have looked +through its begrimed windows into the busy thoroughfare beneath, but +none in the street ever honored the old place with a glance or thought. +No one even wasted contempt upon its smoky walls, and few disturbed the +accumulated dust upon the stairs or in the dimly-lighted hallways. + +Had a place been sought for wherein the utmost secrecy might be +observed, surely this was that place. As I neared the door upon which I +read the doctor's name, I found myself treading on tip-toe, so impressed +had I become by a sense of caution, if not of dread. + +I had made every effort to be on hand at precisely ten o'clock, and felt +so sure that I had been the first to arrive that I reached out to the +door-knob with every expectation of entering, unseen by any one, and +possibly unheard. To my dismay, the first twist I gave it resulted in a +rusty shriek that set my teeth on edge, and echoed down the gloomy hall. +With my flesh creeping, I opened the door and passed into the doctor's +outer room. + +It was far from being empty. Seated in chairs ranged along two sides of +the room, I saw a dozen or more persons, male and female. All wore the +preoccupied air that patients are apt to assume while awaiting their +turn to be called by the doctor. One amongst the number made an effort +at indifference by drawing out and pushing back a nail in the flooring +with the sole of her pretty shoe. It may have been intended for +coquetry, and at another time might have bewitched me; now it seemed +strangely out of place. The man who was to all appearance counting the +flies in the web of an industrious spider was more in keeping with the +place, my feelings, and the atmosphere of despondency that the room gave +out. + +As I had no doubt that the ring I was seeking was in the possession of +some one of these persons, I gave each as minute an examination as was +possible under the circumstances. Only two amongst them appeared open to +suspicion. Of these, one was a young man whose naturally fine features +would have prepossessed him in my favor had it not been for the peculiar +alertness of his bright blue eye, which flashed incessantly in every +direction till each and all of us seemed to partake of his restlessness +and anxiety. Why was he not depressed? The other was the girl, or, +rather, the young lady to whose pretty foot I have referred. If she was +at all conspicuous, it was owing to the contrast between her beautiful +face and the Quaker-like simplicity of her dress. She was restless also; +her foot had ceased its action, but her hand moved constantly. Now +it clutched its fellow in her lap, and now it ran in an oft-repeated +action, seemingly beyond her control, up and down and round and round a +plain but expensive leather bag she wore at her side. "She carries the +ring," thought I, sitting down in the chair next her. + +Meantime, I had not been oblivious of _the box_. It stood upon a plain +oak table directly opposite the door by which I had come in. It +was about a foot square, and was the only object in the room at all +ornamental. Indeed, there was but little else for the eye to rest on, +consequently most of us looked that way, though I noticed that but few +seemed to take any real interest in that or anything else within sight. +This was encouraging, and I was on the point of transferring my entire +attention to the two persons I have named, when one of them, the +nearest, rose hurriedly and went out. + +This was an unexpected move on her part, and I did not know what to make +of it. Had I annoyed her by my scrutiny, or had she divined my errand? +In my doubt, I consulted the face of the man I secretly thought to be +her accomplice. It was non-committal, and, in my doubt as to the meaning +of all this, I allowed myself to become interested in a pale young woman +who had been sitting on the other side of the lady who had just left. +She was evidently a patient who stood in great need of assistance. Her +head hung feebly forward, and her whole figure looked ready to drop. Yet +when a minute later the door of the inner office opened, and the doctor +appeared on the sill in an expectant attitude, she made no attempt to +rise, but pushed forward another woman who seemed less indisposed than +herself. I had to compel myself to think of all I saw as being real and +within my experience. + +Surprised by this action on the part of one so ill, I watched the pale +girl for an instant, and almost forgot my mission in the compassion +aroused by her sickly appearance. But soon that mission and my motive +for being in this place were somewhat vividly recalled to me by an +unexpected action on this very young woman's part. With the sudden +movement of an acutely suffering person, she bounded from her seat and +crossed the floor to where the box stood, gasping for breath, and almost +falling against the table when she reached it. + +A grunt from the good-looking young man followed; but neither he nor +the middle-aged female with a pitiful skin disease, who had been sitting +near her, offered to go to her assistance, though the latter looked as +if she would like to. I was the only one to rise. The truth is, I +could see no one touch _the box_ without having something more than my +curiosity awakened. Approaching her respectfully, and with as complete a +dissimulation of my real feelings as possible, I ventured to say: + +"You are very ill, miss. Shall I summon the doctor?" + +She was clutching the side of the table for support, and her head, +drooping helplessly over the box, was swaying from side to side as she +rocked to and fro in her pain. + +"Thank you!" she gasped, without turning, "I will wait. I would rather +wait." + +At that moment the doctor's door opened again. + +"There he is now," said I. + +"I will wait," she insisted. "Let the others take their turn." + +Satisfied now that something besides pain caused her interest in the +box, I drew back, asking myself whether she had been in possession of +the ring from the beginning, or whether it had been passed to her by her +restless neighbor. Meanwhile, another patient had disappeared into the +adjoining room. + +A few minutes passed. The man with the restless eye began to fidget. +Could it be that she was simply guarding the box, and that he was the +one who wished to open it? As the doubt struck me, I surveyed her +more attentively. She was certainly doing something besides supporting +herself with that sly right hand of hers. Yes, that was a click I heard. +She was fitting a key into the lock. Startled, but determined not +to betray myself, I assumed an air of great patience, and, taking a +memorandum book from my pocket, began to write in it. Meantime, the +doctor had disposed of his second patient and had beckoned to a third. +To my astonishment, my friend with the nervous manner responded, thus +acquitting himself in my eyes from any interest in the box. + +The interview he had with the doctor lasted some time; meantime, the +young woman in the window remained more or less motionless. When the +fourth person left the room, she turned and cast a quick glance at +myself and the other person present. + +I knew what it meant. She was anxious to be left alone in order to lift +that mysterious lid. She was no more ill than I was. + +There was even a dash of color in her cheeks, and the trembling she +indulged in was caused by great excitement and suspense, and not by +pain. + +Compassion at once gave way to anger, and I inwardly resolved not to +spare her if we came into conflict over the box. + +My companion was an old and non-observant man, who had come in after the +rest of us. When the doctor again appeared, I motioned to this old man +to follow him, which he very gladly did, leaving me alone with the pale +girl. At once I got up, showing my fatigue and slightly yawning. + +"This is very tedious," I muttered aloud, and stepped idly towards the +door leading into the hall. + +The girl at the box could not restrain her impatience. She cast me +another short glance. I affected not to see it; took out my watch, +consulted it, put it back quickly and slipped out into the hall. As I +closed the door behind me, I heard a slight creak. Instantly I was back +again, and with so sudden a movement that I surprised her, with her face +bent over the open box. + +"Oh, my poor young lady," I exclaimed, springing towards her with every +appearance of great concern. "You do not look able to stand. Lean on me +if you feel faint, and I will help you to a seat." + +She turned upon me in a fury, but, meeting my eye, assumed an air of +composure, which did not impose upon me in the least, or prevent me from +pressing close to her side and taking one look into the box, which she +had evidently not had sufficient self-possession to close. + +The sight which met my eye was not unexpected, yet was no less +interesting on that account. A hand--_the_ hand--curiously made of +bronze, and of exquisite proportions, lay on its enamelled cushion, with +rings on all of its fingers save one. That one I was delighted to see +was the middle one, proof positive that the mischief contemplated by +Miss Calhoun had not yet been accomplished. + +Restored to complete self-possession by this discovery, I examined the +box and its contents with an air of polite curiosity. I surprised myself +by my self-possession and _bonhomie_. + +"What an odd thing to find in a physician's office!" I exclaimed. +"Beautiful, is it not? An unusual work of art; but there is nothing in +it to alarm you. You shouldn't allow yourself to be frightened at such +a thing as that." And with a quick action, she was wholly powerless to +prevent, I shut down the lid, which closed with a snap. + +Startled and greatly discomposed, she drew back, hastily thrusting her +hand behind her. + +"You are very officious," she began, but, seeing nothing but good nature +in the smile with which I regarded her, she faltered irresolutely, and +finally took refuge again in her former trick of invalidism. Breaking +out into low moanings, she fell back upon the nearest chair, from which +she immediately started again with the quick cry, "Oh, how I suffer! I +am not well enough to be out alone." And turning with a celerity that +belied her words, she fled into the hall, shutting the door violently +behind her. + +Astonished at the completeness of my victory, I spent the first moments +of triumph in trying to lift the lid of the box. But it was securely +locked. I was just debating whether I could now venture to return to my +seat, when the hall door reopened and a gentleman entered. + +He was short, sturdy and had a bristling black mustache. I needed to +look at him but once to be certain he was interested both in the box and +me, and, while I gave no evidence of my discovery, I prepared myself +for an adventure of a much more serious nature than that which had just +occupied me. + +Modeling my behavior upon that of the young girl whose place I had +usurped, I placed my elbow on the box and looked out of the window. As +I did so I heard a shuffling in the adjoining room, and knew that in +another moment the doctor would again appear at the door to announce +that he was ready for another patient. How could I evade the summons? +The man behind me was a determined one. He was there for the purpose +of opening the box, and would not be likely to leave the room while I +remained in it. How, then, could I comply with the requirements of the +situation and yet prevent this new-comer from lifting the lid in my +absence? I knew of but one way--a way which had suggested itself to +me during the long watches of the previous night, and which I had come +prepared to carry out. + +Taking advantage of my proximity to the box, I inserted in the keyhole a +small morsel of wax which for some minutes past I had been warming in +my hand. This done, I laid my hat down on the lid, noting with great +exactness as I did so just where its rim lay in reference to the various +squares and scrolls with which the top was ornamented. By this means I +felt that I might know if the hat were moved in my absence. The doctor +having showed himself by this time, I followed him into his office with +a calmness born of the most complete confidence in the strategy I had +employed. + +Dr. Merriam, whom I have purposely refrained from describing until now, +was a tall, well-made man, with a bald head and a pleasant eye, but +careless in his attire and bearing. As I met that eye and responded to +his good-natured greeting, I inwardly decided that his interest in the +box was much less than his guardianship of it would seem to betoken. +And when I addressed him and entered upon the subject of my friend's +complaint, I soon saw by the depth of his professional interest that +whatever connection he might have with the box, neither that nor any +other topic whatever could for a moment vie with his delight in a new +and strange case like that of my poor friend. I consequently entered +into the medical details demanded of me with a free mind and succeeded +in getting some very valuable advice, for which I was of course truly +grateful. + +As soon as this was accomplished I took my leave, but not by the usual +door of egress. Saying that I had left my hat in the ante-room, I bowed +my acknowledgments to the doctor and returned the way I came. But not +without meeting with a surprise. There was still but one person in the +room with the box, but that person was not the man with the bristling +mustache and determined eye whom I had expected to find there. It was +the pretty, Quaker-like girl who had formerly aroused my suspicions; and +though she sat far from the box, a moment's glance at her flushed face +and trembling hands assured me she had but that moment left it. + +Going at once to the box, I saw that my hat had been moved. But more +significant still was the hairpin lying on the floor at my feet, with +a morsel of wax sticking to one of its points. This was conclusive. The +man had discovered why his key would not work, and had called to his aid +the young lady, who had evidently been waiting in the hall outside. + +She had tried to pick out the wax--a task in which I had happily +interrupted her. + +Proud of the success of my device, and satisfied that the danger was +over for that day (it being well on to twelve o'clock), I said a few +words more to the doctor, who had followed me into the room, and then +prepared to take my departure. But the young lady was more agile than I. +Saying something about a very pressing engagement which would not allow +her to consult the doctor that day, she hurried ahead of me and ran +quickly down the long hall. The doctor looked astonished, but dismissed +the matter with a shrug; while, with the greatest desire to follow her, +I stood hesitating on the threshold, when my eye fell on a small object +lying under the chair on which she had been sitting. It was the little +leathern bag I had seen hanging at her side. + +Catching it up, I explained that I would run after the young lady and +restore it; and glad of an excuse which would enable me to follow her +through the streets without risking the suspicion of impropriety, I +hastened down the stairs and happily succeeded in reaching the pavement +before her skirts whisked round the corner. I was therefore but a few +paces behind her, which distance I took good care to preserve. + + + + +III. MADAME. + +My motive in following this young girl was not so much to restore +her property, as to see where her engagement was taking her. I felt +confident that none of the three persons who had shown interest in the +box was the prime mover in an affair so important; and it was necessary +above all things to find out who the prime mover was. So I followed the +girl. + +She led me into a doubtful quarter of the town. As the crowd between us +diminished and we reached a point where we were the only pedestrians on +the block we were then traversing, I grew anxious lest she should turn +and see me before arriving at her destination. But she evidently was +without suspicion, for she passed without any hesitation up a certain +stoop in the middle of this long block and entered an open door on which +a brass plate was to be seen, inscribed with this one word in large +black letters: + +"MADAME." + +This was odd; and as I had no inclination to encounter any "madame" +without some hint as to her character and business, I looked about me +for some one able and willing to give me the necessary information. +An upholsterer's shop in an opposite basement seemed to offer me the +opportunity I wanted. Crossing the street, I saluted the honest-looking +man I met in the doorway, and pointing out madame's house, asked what +was done over there. + +He answered with a smile. + +"Go and see," he said; "the door's open. Oh, they don't charge +anything," he made haste to protest, misunderstanding, no doubt, my air +of hesitation. "I was in there once myself. They all sit round and she +talks; that is, if she feels like it. It is all nonsense, you know, sir; +no good in it." + +"But is there any harm?" I asked. "Is the place reputable and safe?" + +"Oh, safe enough; I never heard of anything going wrong there. Why, +ladies go there; real ladies; veiled, of course. I have seen two +carriages at a time standing in front of that door. Fools, to be sure, +sir; but honest enough, I suppose." + +I needed no further encouragement. Recrossing the street, I entered +the house which stood so invitingly open, and found myself almost +immediately in a large hall, from which I was ushered by a silent +negress into a long room with so dim and mysterious an interior that +I felt like a man suddenly transported from the bustle of the out-door +world into the mystic recesses of some Eastern temple. + +The causes of this effect were simple, A dim light suggesting worship; +the faint scent of slowly burning incense; women and men sitting on low +benches about the walls. In the center, on a kind of raised dais, backed +by a drapery of black velvet, a woman was seated, in the semblance of +a Hindoo god, so nearly did her heavy, compactly crouched figure, wound +about with Eastern stuffs and glistening with gold, recall the images we +are accustomed to associate with the worship of Vishnu. Her face, too, +so far as it was visible in the subdued light, had the unresponsiveness +of carven wood, and if not exactly hideous of feature, had in it a +strange and haunting quality calculated to impress a sensitive mind +with a sense of implacable fate. Cruel, hard, passionless, and yet +threatening to a degree, must this countenance have seemed to those who +willingly subjected themselves to its baneful influence. + +I was determined not to be one of these, and yet I had not regarded her +for two minutes before I found myself forgetting the real purpose of my +visit, and taking a seat with the rest, in anticipation of something for +which as yet I had no name, even in my own mind. + +How long I sat there motionless I do not know. A spell was on me--a +spell from which I suddenly roused with a start. Why or through what +means I do not know. Nobody else had moved. Fearing a relapse into +this trance-like state, I made a persistent effort to be freed from its +dangers. Happily the full signification of my errand there burst upon +me. Finding myself really awake, I ventured to peer about, expecting to +see the more willing devotees affected as I had been. I encountered a +flash from the eyes of the young lady whose bag I held in my hand. She +was under no spell. She had not only seen but recognized me. + +I held the bag towards her. She gave a furtive glance in the direction +of Madame--a glance not free from fear--then clutched the bag. Before +releasing my hold upon it I ventured upon a word of explanation. I got +no further, for at this moment a voice was heard. + +By the effect it had upon the expectant ones, I knew it could have +emanated only from the idol-like being who had filled the place with her +awesome personality. + +At first the voice sounded like a distant call, musically sweet and low; +the kind of note that we can imagine the Indian snake-charmers to +use when the cobra raises its winged head in obedience to the pipe's +resistless charm. Every ear was strained to hear; mine with the rest. So +much preparation, so much faith must result in something. What was it to +be? The incoherent sounds became more and more distinct, and, finally, +took on the articulate form of words. The quiet was deathly. Every one +was prepared to interpret her utterances into personal significance. +The dread and trouble of the times filling all minds, men wished to be +forehanded with the decrees of Providence. Into this brooding silence +the low, vibrating tones of this mysterious voice entered, and this is +what we heard: + +"_Doom! doom! For him--the one--the betrayer--the passing bell is +tolling. Hear it, ye weak ones and grow strong. Hear it, ye mighty and +tremble. Not alone for him will it ring. For ye! for ye! if the decree +of the linked rings goes forth---_" + +Here there was a perceptible quiver of the drapery back of the dais. +Others may not have noted it; I did. When, therefore, a very white hand +came slowly from between its folds and placed its fingers upon the right +temple of Madame, I was not much startled. What did startle me was +the fact let out before that admonishing hand touched her, that this +being--I can hardly call her woman--seemingly so far removed from the +political agitations of the day, was, in very deed, either consciously +or unconsciously--I could not decide which--intimately connected +with the conspiracy I was at that very moment striving to defeat. +How intimately? Was she the prime mover I was seeking, or simply an +instrument under the control of another, and yet stronger, personality +imaged in the owner of that white hand? + +There was no means of determining at that moment. Meanwhile, the fingers +had left the temple of Madame. The hand was slowly withdrawn. Sleep +apparently fell again upon the dreamer, but only long enough for her to +bring forth the words: + +"I have said." + +The silence that followed, gave me time to think. It was necessary. +She had bidden the mighty tremble and had pronounced death to one--the +betrayer. Was this senseless drivel, prophetic sight, or threatened +murder? I inclined to consider it the last, and this was why: For some +weeks now, murder, or, at least, sudden death, had been rampant in +the country. My flesh crept as I remembered the many mysterious deaths +reported within the month from St. Louis, Boston, New Orleans, New York +and even here in Baltimore. Like a flash it came across me that every +name was identified, more or less closely, with the political affairs of +the time. Coupling my knowledge with what I conjectured, was it strange +I saw a confirmation of the worst fears expressed by Miss Calhoun in the +half-completed sentences of this seeming clairvoyant? + +So occupied had I been with my own thoughts that I feared I might have +done something to call an undesirable attention to myself. Glancing +furtively to one side, I heard, in the opposite direction, these words: + +"She has never failed. What she has said will come to pass. Some one of +note will die." + +These gloomy words were the first to break the ominous silence. +Turning to face the speaker, I encountered the cold eye of a man with a +retreating chin, a receding forehead, and a mouth large and cruel enough +to stamp him as one of those perverted natures who, to the unscrupulous, +are usefully insane. + +Here, then, was a being who not only knew the meaning of the fateful +words we had heard, but, to my mind, could be relied upon to make them a +verity. + +It was a relief to me to turn my gaze from his repellant features to the +fixed countenance of Madame. She had not stirred; but either the room +had grown lighter or my eyes had become more accustomed to the darkness, +for I certainly saw a change in her look. Her eyelids were now raised, +and her eyes were bent directly upon me. This was uncomfortable, +especially as there was malevolence in her glance, or so I thought, +and, far from being pleased with my position, I began to wish that I +had never allowed myself to enter the place. Under the influence of this +feeling I let my eyes drop from the woman's countenance to her hands, +which were folded, as I have said, in a fixed position across her +breast. The result was an increase of my mental disturbance. They were +brown, shining hands, laden with rings, and, in the added light, under +which I saw them, bore a strange resemblance to the bronze hand I had +just left in Dr. Merriam's office. + +I had never considered myself a weak man, but, from that instant, I +began to have a crawling fear of this woman--a fear that was in nowise +lessened by the very evident agitation visible in the girl, who had been +for me the connecting link between that object of mystery and this. + +Unendurable quiet was upon us all again. It was aggravated by awe--an +awe to which I was determined not to succumb, notwithstanding the secret +uneasiness under which I was laboring. So I let my eyes continue to +roam, till they fell upon the one thing moving in the room. This was a +man's foot, which I now saw projecting from behind the drapery through +which I had seen the white hand glide. It was swinging up and down in an +impatient way, so out of keeping with the emotions perceptible on this +side of the drapery that I felt forced to ask myself what sort of person +this could be who thus kept watch and ward with such very commonplace +impatience over a creature who was able to hold every other person in +her presence under a spell. The drapery did not give up its secrets, and +again I yielded to the fascinations of Madame's face. + +There was a change in it; the eyes no longer looked my way, but into +space, which seemed to hold for them some terrible and heart-rending +vision. The lips, which had been closed, were now parted, and from them +issued a breath which soon formed itself into words. + +"'Vengeance is mine! I will repay,' saith the Lord." What passionate +utterance was this? The voice that had been musical now rang with +jangling discord. The swinging of the foot behind the drapery ceased. +Madame spoke on: + +"Through pain, sorrow, blood and death shall victory come. Life for +life, pang for pang, scorn for scorn!" + +The swinging foot disappeared, and the small white hand passed quickly +through the curtain and rested again upon the forehead of Madame. But +without a calming effect this time. On the contrary, it seemed to urge +and incite her, for she broke into a new strain, speaking rapidly, +wildly, as if she lived in what she saw, or, what was doubtless truer, +had lived in it and was but recalling her own past in one of those +terrible hours of memory that recur on the border-land of dreams. + +"I see a child, a girl. She is young; she is beautiful. Men love her, +many men, but she loves only one. He is of the North; she is of the +South. He is icy like his clime; she is fiery like her skies. The fire +cannot warm the ice. It is the ice puts out the fire! Woe! woe!" + +The left hand came from the drapery; found its way to the left temple +of the woman. But it, too, was ineffectual. Hurriedly, madly, the words +went on, tripping each other up in their haste and passion. The voice +now became hoarse with rage. + +"The girl is now a woman. A child is given her. The man demands the +child. She will not give it up. He curses it; he curses her, but she is +firm and holds it to her breast till her arms are blackened by the blows +he deals her. Then he curses her _country_, the land that gave her a +_heart_; and, hearing this, she rises up and curses him and his with an +oath the Lord will hear and answer from His judgment throne. _For the +child was slain between them_ and its pitiful, small body blocks the +passage of Mercy between his and hers forever. Woe! woe!" + +As suddenly as the vehement change had come upon her, she had become +calm again. The eyes retained their stony stare, but a cold and cruel +smile formed about her lips, as if, with the utterance of that last +word, she saw a futurity of blood and carnage satisfying her ferocious +soul. + +It was revolting, horrible; but no one else seemed to feel it as I did. +To most it was a short glimpse into a suffering soul. To me it was the +revelation of causes which had led, and would lead yet, to miseries for +which she had no pity, and which I felt myself too weak to avert. + +That it was not intended that the devotees of Madame should have heard +these ravings was evident; for at this juncture the owner of the two +white hands that had failed to control the spirit of Madame came out +from behind the drapery of the dais. He proved to be none other than +the man with the bristling mustache whose plans I had disarranged at the +doctor's office by plugging the keyhole of the box with wax. + +This was enough. "Chicanery!" was my inmost thought as I noted his cool +and calculating eye. "But very dangerous chicanery," I added. Was the +ring upon whose immediate capture I now saw that a life, if not lives, +depended, in his possession, or in that of Madame, or in that of the +Quaker-like girl sitting a few seats from me? How impossible to tell, +and yet how imperative to know! As I was debating how this could be +brought about, I watched the man. + +Self-control was a habit with him, but I saw the nervous clutch of his +delicate hand. This did not indicate complete mastery of himself at +that moment. He spoke with care, but as if he were in haste to deliver +himself of the few necessary words of dismissal, without betraying his +lack of composure. + +"Madame will awake presently; she will be heard no more to-day. Those +who wish to kiss her robes may pass in front of her; but she is still +too far away from earth to hear your voices or to answer any questions. +You will therefore preserve silence." + +So! so! more chicanery. Or was it strategy, pure and simple? Was there +at the bottom of his words the wish to see me nearer or was he just +playing with the credulity of such believers as the man next me, for +instance? I did not stop to determine. My anxiety to see Madame, without +the illusion of even the short distance between us, induced me to join +the file of the faithful who were slowly approaching the seated woman. +I would not kiss her robes, but I would look into her eyes and make sure +that she was as far away from us all as she was said to be. + +But as I drew nearer to her I forgot all about her eyes in the interest +awakened by her hands. And when it came my turn to pause before her, +it was upon the middle finger of her right hand my eyes were fixed. For +there I saw THE RING; the veritable ring of my fair neighbor, if the +description given by her was correct. + +To see it there was to have it; or so I vowed in my surprise and +self-confidence. Putting on an air of great dignity, I bowed to the +woman and passed on, resolving upon the course I would pursue, which +must necessarily be daring in order to succeed. At the door I paused +till all who followed me had passed out; then I turned back, and once +again faced Madame. + +She was alone. Her watchful guardian had left her side, and to all +appearances the room. The opportunity surpassed my expectations, and +with a step full of nerve I pushed forward and took my stand again +directly in front of her. She gave no token of seeing me; but I did not +hesitate on that account. Exerting all my will power, I first subjected +her to a long and masterful look, and then I spoke, directly and to the +point, like one who felt himself her superior, + +"Madame," said I, "the man you wish for is here. Give me the ring, and +trust no more to weak or false emissaries." + +The start with which she came to life, or to the evidence of life, +was surprising. Lifting her great lids, she returned my gaze with one +equally searching and powerful, and seeing with what disdain I sustained +it, allowed an almost imperceptible tremor to pass across her face, +which up to now had not displayed the shadow even of an emotion. + +"You!" she murmured, in a dove-like tone of voice; "who are you that I +should trust you more than the others?" + +"I am he you expect," said I, venturing more as I felt her impassibility +giving way before me. "Have you had no premonition of my coming? Did you +not know that he who controls would be in your presence to-day?" + +She trembled, and her fingers almost unclasped from her arms. + +"I have had dreams," she murmured, "but I have been bidden to beware of +dreams. If you are the person you claim to be, you will have some token +which will absolve me from the charge of credulity. What is your token?" + +Though doubtful, I dared not hesitate. "This," I said, taking from my +pocket the key which had been given me by my fair neighbor. + +She moved, she touched it with a finger; then she eyed me again. + +"Others have keys," said she, "but they fail in the opening. How are you +better than they?" + +"You know," I declared--"you know that I can do what others have failed +in. Give me the ring." + +The force, the assurance with which I uttered this command moved her in +spite of herself. She trembled, gave me one final, searching look, and +slowly began to pull the ring from off her finger. It was in her hand, +and half way to mine, when a third voice came to break the spell. + +"Madame, Madame," it said; "be careful. This is the man who clogged the +lock, and hindered my endeavors in your behalf in the doctor's office." + +Her hand which was so near mine drew back; but I was too quick and too +determined for her. I snatched the ring before she could replace it on +her own hand, and, holding it firmly, faced the intruder with an air of +very well-assumed disdain. + +"Attempt no argument with me. It was because I saw your weakness +and vulgar self-confidence that I interfered in a matter only to be +undertaken by one upon whom all can rely. Now that I have the ring, +the end is near. Madame, be wiser in the choice of your confidants, +_To-morrow this ring will be in its proper place_." + +Bowing as I had done before, I advanced to the door. They had made no +effort to regain the ring, and I felt that my rashness had stood me in +good stead. But as, with a secret elation I was just capable of keeping +within bounds, I put my foot across the threshold, I heard behind me a +laugh so triumphant and mocking that I felt struck with consternation; +and, glancing down into my hand, I saw that I held, not the peculiar +steel circlet destined for the piece of mechanism in the doctor's +office, but an ordinary ring of gold. + +She had offered me the wrong ring, _and I had taken it_, thus proving +the falsity of my pretensions. + +There was nothing left for me but to acknowledge defeat by an +ignominious departure. + + + + +IV. CHECKMATE. + +I HASTENED at once home, and knocked at Miss Calhoun's door. While +waiting for a response, the mockery of my return without the token I had +undertaken to restore to her, impressed itself upon me in full force. It +seemed to me that in that instant my face must have taken on a haggard +look. I could not summon up the necessary will to make it otherwise. +Any effort in that direction would have made my failure at cheerfulness +pitiable. + +The door opened. There she stood. Whatever expectancy of success she may +have had fled at once. Our eyes met and her countenance changed. My face +must have told the whole story, for she exclaimed: + +"You have failed!" + +I was obliged to acknowledge it in a whisper, but hastened to assure her +that the ring had not yet been placed upon the bronze hand, and was not +likely to be till the lock had been cleaned, out. This interested her, +and called out a hurried but complete recital of my adventure. She hung +upon it breathlessly, and when I reached the point where Madame and her +prophetic voice entered the tale, she showed so much excitement that any +doubts I may have cherished as to the importance of the communication +Madame had made us vanished in a cold horror I with difficulty hid from +my companion. But the end agitated her more than the beginning, and when +she heard that I had taken upon myself a direct connection with this +mysterious matter, she grew so pale that I felt forced to inquire if the +folly I had committed was likely to result badly, at which she shuddered +and replied: + +"You have brought death upon yourself. I see nothing but destruction +before us both. This woman--this horrible woman--has seen your face, +and, if she is what you describe, she will never forget it. The man, who +is her guardian or agent, no doubt, must have tracked you, and finding +you here with me, from whose hand he himself may have torn the ring +last night, will record it as treason against a cause which punishes all +treason with death. + +"Pshaw!" I ejaculated, with a jocular effort at indifference, which I +acknowledge I did not feel. "You seem to forget the law. We live in the +city of Baltimore. Charlatans such as I have just left behind me do not +make away with good citizens with impunity. We have only to seek the +protection of the police." + +She met my looks with a slowly increasing intentness, which stilled this +protest on my lips. + +"I am under no oath," she ruminated. "I can tell this man what I will. +Mr. Abbott, there has been formed in this city an organization against +which the police are powerless. I am an involuntary member of it, and I +know its power. It has constrained me and it has constrained others, and +no one who has opposed it once has lived to do so twice. Yet it has +no recognized head (though there is a chief to whom we may address +ourselves), and it has no oaths of secrecy. All is left to the +discretion of its members, and _to their fears_. The object of this +society is the breaking of the power of the North, and the means by +which it works is _death_. I joined it under a stress of feeling I +called patriotism, and I believed myself right till the sword was +directed against my own breast. Then I quailed; then I began to ask +by what right we poor mortals constitute ourselves into instruments of +destruction to our kind, and having once stopped to question, I saw +the whole matter in such a different light that I knowingly put a +stumbling-block in the path of so-called avenging justice, and thus +courted the doom that at any moment may fall upon my head." And she +actually looked up, as if expecting to see it fall then and there. +"This Madame," she went on in breathless haste, "is doubtless one of the +members. How so grotesque and yet redoubtable an individuality should +have become identified with a cause demanding the coolest judgment as +well as the most acute political acumen, I cannot stop to conjecture. +But that she is a member of our organization, and an important one, too, +her prophecies, which have so strangely become facts, are sufficient +proof, even had you not seen my ring on her finger. Perhaps, incredible +as it may appear, she is the _chief_. If so--But I do not make myself +intelligible," she continued, meeting my eyes. "I will be more explicit. +One peculiar feature of this organization is the complete ignorance +which we all have concerning our fellow-members. We can reveal nothing, +for we know nothing. I know that I am allied to a cause which has for +its end the destruction of all who oppose the supremacy of the South, +but I cannot give you the name of another person attached to this +organization, though I feel the pressure of their combined power upon +every act of my life. _You_ may be a member without my knowing it--a +secret and fearful thought, which forms one of the greatest safeguards +to the institution, though it has failed in this instance, owing"--here +her voice fell--"to my devotion to the man I love. What?"--(I had not +spoken; my heart was dying within me, but I had given no evidence of +a wish to interrupt her; she, however, feared a check, and rushed +vehemently on.) "I shall have to tell you more. When, through pamphlets +and unsigned letters--dangerous communications, which have long since +become ashes--I was drawn into this society (and only those of the most +radical and impressionable natures are approached) a ring and a key were +sent me with this injunction: 'When the man or woman whose name will +be forwarded to you in an otherwise empty envelope, shall have, in your +honest judgment, proved himself or herself sufficiently dangerous to +the cause we love, to merit removal, you are to place this ring on the +middle finger of the bronze hand locked up in the box openly displayed +in the office of a Dr. Merriam on ------ Street. With the pressure of +the whole five rings on the fingers of this piece of mechanism, the +guardian of our rights will be notified by a bell, that a victim awaits +justice, and the end to be accomplished will be begun. As there are five +fingers, and each one of these must feel the pressure of its own ring +before connection can be made between this hand and the bell mentioned, +no injustice can be done and no really innocent person destroyed. For, +when five totally disconnected persons devoted to the cause agree that +a certain individual is worthy of death, mistake is impossible. You +are now one of the five. Use the key and the ring according to +your conscience.' This was well, if I had been allowed to follow my +conscience; but when, six weeks ago, they sent me the name of a man of +lofty character and unquestioned loyalty, I recoiled, scarcely believing +my eyes. Yet, fearing that my own judgment was warped, or that some +hidden hypocrisy was latent in a man thus given over to our attention, +I made it my business to learn this man's inner life. I found it so +beautiful----" She choked, turned away for a moment, controlled herself, +and went on rapidly and with increased earnestness: "I learned to love +this man, and as I learned to love him I grew more and more satisfied of +the dangerous character of the organization I was pledged to. But I had +one comfort. He could not be doomed without my ring, and that was safe +on my finger. Safe! You know how safe it was. The monster whom you have +just seen, and who may have been the person to subject this noble man to +suspicion, must have discovered my love and the safeguard it offered to +this man. The ring, as you know, was stolen, and as you have failed to +recover it, and I to get any reply from the chief to whom I forwarded my +protest, to-morrow will without doubt see it placed upon the finger of +the bronze hand. The result you know. Fantastic as this may strike you, +it is the dreadful truth." + +Love, had I ever felt this holy passion for her, had no longer a place +in my breast; but awe, terror and commiseration for her, for him, and +also perhaps for myself, were still active passions within me, and at +this decided statement of the case, I laughed in the excitement of the +moment, and the relief I felt at knowing just what there was to dread in +the adventure. + +"Absurd!" I cried. "With Madame's address in my mind and the Baltimore +police at my command, this man is as safe from assault as you or I are. +Give me five minutes' talk with Chief----" + +Her hand on my arm stopped me; the look in her eye made me dumb. + +"What could you do without _me?_" she said; "and my evidence you cannot +have. For what would give it weight can never pass my lips. The lives +that have fallen with my connivance stand between me and confession. I +do not wish to subject myself to the law." + +This placed her in another light before me, and I started back. + +"You have----" I stammered. + +"Placed that ring three times on the hand in Dr. Merriam's office." + +"And each time?" + +"A man somewhere in this nation has died suddenly. I do not know by what +means or by whose hand, but he died." + +This beautiful creature guilty of---- I tried not to show my horror. + +"It is, then, a question of choice between you and him?" said I. "Either +you or he must perish. Both cannot be saved." + +She recoiled, turning very pale, and for several minutes stood surveying +me with a fixed gaze as if overcome by an idea which threw so immense +a responsibility upon her. As she stood thus, I seemed not only to look +into her nature, but her life. I saw the fanaticism that that had +once held every good impulse in check, the mistaken devotion, the +unreasoning hatred, and, underneath all, a spirit of truth and +rectitude which brightened and brightened as I watched her, till it +dominated every evil passion and made her next words come easily, and +with a natural burst of conviction which showed the innate generosity of +her soul. + +"You have shown me my duty, sir. There can be no question as to where +the choice should fall, I am not worth one hair of his noble head. Save +him, sir; I will help you by every means in my power." + +Seizing the opportunity she thus gave me, I asked her the name of the +man who was threatened. + +In a low voice she told me. + +I was astonished; dumfounded. + +"Shameful!" I cried. "What motive, what reason can they have for +denouncing _him?_" + +"He is under suspicion--that is enough." + +"Great heaven!" I exclaimed. "Have we reached such a pass as that?" + +"Don't," she uttered, hoarsely; "don't reason; don't talk; act." + +"I will," I cried, and rushed from the room. + +She fell back in a chair, almost fainting. I saw her lying quiet, inert +and helpless as I rushed by her door on my way to the street, but I did +not stop to aid her. I knew she would not suffer it. + +The police are practical, and my tale was an odd one. I found it hard, +therefore, to impress them with its importance, especially as in trying +to save Miss Calhoun I was necessarily more or less incoherent. I +did succeed, however, in awakening interest at last, and, a man being +assigned me, I led the way to Madame's door. But here a surprise awaited +me. The doorplate, which had so attracted my attention, was gone, and +in a few minutes we found that she had departed also, leaving no trace +behind her. + +This looked ominous, and with little delay we hastened to the office of +Dr. Merriam. Knocking at the usual door brought no response, but when +we tried the further one, by which his patients usually passed out, we +found ourselves confronted by the gentleman we sought. + +His face was calm and smiling, and though he made haste to tell us that +we had come out of hours, he politely asked us in and inquired what he +could do for us. + +Not understanding how he could have forgotten me so soon, I looked at +him inquiringly, at which his face lighted up, and he apologetically +said: + +"I remember you now. You were here this morning consulting me about a +friend who is afflicted with a peculiar complaint. Have you anything +further to state or ask in regard to it. I have just five minutes to +spare." + +"Hear this gentleman first," said I, pointing to the officer who +accompanied me. + +The doctor calmly bowed, and waited with the greatest self-possession +for him to state his case. + +The officer did so abruptly. + +"There is a box in your ante-room which I feel it my duty to examine. I +am Detective Hopkins, of the city police." + +The doctor, with a gentleness which seemed native rather than assumed, +quietly replied: + +"I am very sorry, but you are an hour too late." And, throwing open the +door of communication between the two rooms, he pointed to the table. + +_The box was gone_! + + + + + +V. DOCTOR MERRIAM. + +This second disappointment was more than I could endure. Turning upon +the doctor with undisguised passion, I hotly asked: + +"Who has taken it? Describe the person at once. Tell what you know about +the box, I did not finish the threat; but my looks must have been very +fierce, for he edged off a bit, and cast a curious glance at the officer +before he answered: + +"You have, then, no ailing friend? Well, well; I expended some very good +advice upon you. But you paid me, and so we are even." + +"The box!" I urged; "the box! Don't waste words, for a man's life is at +stake." + +His surprise was marvelously assumed or very real. + +"You are talking somewhat wildly, are you not?" he ventured, with a +bland air. "A man's life? I cannot believe that." + +"But you don't answer me," I urged. + +He smiled; he evidently thought me out of my mind. + +"That's true; but there is so little I can tell you. I do not know what +was in the box about which you express so much concern, and I do not +know the names of its owners. It was brought here some six months ago +and placed in the spot where you saw it this morning, upon conditions +that were satisfactory to me, and not at all troublesome to my patients, +whose convenience I was bound to consult. It has remained there till +to-day, when----" + +Here the officer interrupted him. + +"What were these conditions? The matter calls for frankness." + +"The conditions," repeated the doctor, in no wise abashed, "were these: +That it should occupy the large table in the window as long as they +saw fit. That, though placed in my room, it should be regarded as the +property of the society which owned it, and, consequently, free to the +inspection of its members but to no one else. That I should know these +members by their ability to open the box, and that so long as these +persons confined their visits to my usual hours for patients, they were +to be subject to no one's curiosity, nor allowed to suffer from any +one's interference. In return for these slight concessions, I was to +receive five dollars for every day I allowed it to stay here, payment to +be made by mail." + +"Good business! And you cannot tell the names of the persons with whom +you entered into this contract?" + +"No; the one who came to me first and saw to the placing of the box +and all that, was a short, sturdy fellow, with a common face but very +brilliant eye; he it was who made the conditions; but the man who came +to get it, and who paid me twenty dollars for opening my office door +at an unusual hour, was a more gentlemanly man, with a thick, brown +mustache and resolute look. He was accompanied----" + +"Why do you stop?" + +The doctor smiled. + +"I was wondering," said he, "if I should say he was accompanied, or that +he accompanied, a woman, of such enormous size that the doorway hardly +received her. I thought she was a patient at first, for, large as she +is, she was brought into my room in a chair, which it took four men to +carry. But she only came about the box." + +"Madame!" I muttered; and being made still more eager by this discovery +of her direct participation in its carrying off, I asked if she touched +the box or whether it was taken away unopened. + +The doctor's answer put an end to every remaining hope I may have +cherished. + +"She not only touched but opened it. I saw the lid rise and heard a +whirr. What is the matter, sir?" + +"Nothing," I made haste to say--"that is, nothing I can communicate +just now. This woman must be followed," I signified to the officer, and +was about to rush from the room when my eye fell on the table where the +box stood. + +"See!" said I, pointing to a fine wire protruding from a small hole +in the center of its upper surface; "this box had connection with some +point outside of this room." + +The doctor's face flushed, and for the first time he looked a trifle +foolish. + +"So I perceive _now,_" said he, "The workman who put up this box +evidently took liberties in my absence. For _that_ I was not paid." + +"This wire leads where?" asked the officer. + +"Rip up the floor and see. I know no other way to find out." + +"But that would take time, and we have not a minute to lose," said I, +and was disappearing for the second time when I again stopped. "Doctor," +said I, "when you consented to harbor this box under such peculiar +conditions and allowed yourself to receive such good pay for a service +involving so little inconvenience to yourself, you must have had some +idea of the uses to which so mysterious an article would be put. What +did you suppose them to be?" + +"To tell you the truth, I thought it was some new-fangled lottery +scheme, and I have still to learn that I was mistaken." + +I gave him a look, but did not stop to undeceive him. + + + + +VI. THE BOX AGAIN. + +But one resource was left: to warn Mr. S------ of his peril. This was +not so easy a task as might appear. To make my story believed, I should +be obliged to compromise Miss Calhoun, and Mr. S------'s well-known +chivalry, as far as women are concerned, would make the communication +difficult on my part, if not absolutely impossible. I, however, +determined to attempt it, though I could not but wish I were an older +man, with public repute to back me. + +Though there was but little in Mr. S------'s public life which I did not +know, I had little or no knowledge of his domestic relations beyond the +fact that he was a widower with one child. I did not even know where he +lived. But inquiry at police headquarters soon settled that, and in half +an hour after leaving the doctor's office I was at his home. + +It was a large, old-fashioned dwelling, of comfortable aspect; too +comfortable, I thought, for the shadow of doom, which, in my eyes, +overlay its cheerful front, wide-open doors and windows. How should I +tell my story here! What credence could I expect for a tale so gruesome, +within walls warmed by so much sunshine and joy. None, possibly; but my +story must be told for all that. + +Ringing the bell hurriedly, I asked for Mr. S------. He was out of town. +This was my first check. When would he be home? The answer gave me some +hope, though it seemed to increase my difficulties. He would be in the +city by eight, as he had invited a large number of guests to his house +for the evening. Beyond this, I could learn nothing. + +Returning immediately to Miss Calhoun, I told her what had occurred, +and tried to impress upon her the necessity I felt of seeing Mr. S------ +that night. She surveyed me like a woman in a dream. Twice did I have +to repeat my words before she seemed to take them in; then she turned +hurriedly, and going to a little desk standing in one corner of the +room, drew out a missive, which she brought me. It was an invitation to +this very reception which she had received a week before. + +"I will get you one," she whispered. "But don't speak to him, don't tell +him without giving me some warning. I will not be far from you. I think +I will have strength for this final hour." + +"God grant that your sacrifice may bear fruit," I said, and left her. + +To enter, on such an errand as mine, a brilliantly illuminated house +odoriferous with flowers and palpitating with life and music, would +be hard for any man. It was hard for me. But in the excitement of the +occasion, aggravated as it was by a presage of danger not only to myself +but to the woman I had come so near loving, I experienced a calmness, +such as is felt in the presence of all mortal conflicts. I made sure +that this was reflected in my face before leaving the dressing-room, and +satisfied that I would not draw the attention of others by too much or +too little color, I descended to the drawing-room and into the presence +of my admired host. + +I had expected to confront a handsome man, but not of the exact type +that he presented. There was a melancholy in his expression I had not +foreseen, mingled with an attraction from which I could not escape after +my first hurried glimpse of his features across the wide room. No other +man in the room had it to so great a degree, nor was there any other +who made so determined an effort to throw off care and be simply the +agreeable companion. Could it be that any other warning had forestalled +mine, or was this his habitual manner and expression? Finding no +answer to this question, I limited myself to the duty of the hour, and +advancing as rapidly as possible through the ever-increasing throng, +waited for the chance to speak to him for one minute alone. Meantime, I +satisfied myself that the two detectives sent from police headquarters +were on hand. I recognized them among a group of people at the door. + +Whether intentionally or not, Mr. S ------ had taken up his stand before +the conservatory, and as in my endeavors to reach him I approached +within sight of this place, I perceived the face of Miss Calhoun shining +from amid its greenery, and at once remembered the promise I had +made her. She was looking for me, and, meeting my eyes, made me an +imperceptible gesture, to which I felt bound to respond. + +Slipping from the group with which I was advancing, I stole around to +a side door towards which she had pointed, and in another moment found +myself at her side. She was clothed in velvet, which gave to her cheek +and brow the colorlessness of marble. + +"He is not as ignorant of his position as we thought," said she. "I have +been watching him for an hour. He is in anticipation of something. This +will make our task easier." + +"You have said nothing," I suggested. + +"No, no; how could I?" + +"Perhaps the detectives I saw there have told him." + +"Perhaps; but they cannot know the whole." + +"No, or our words would be unnecessary." + +"Mr. Abbott," said she, with feverish volubility, "do not try to +tell him yet; wait for a few minutes till I have gained a little +self-possession, a little command over myself; but no--that may be +to risk his life--do not wait a moment--go now, go now, only----" She +started, stumbled and fell back into a low seat under a spreading palm. +"He is coming here. Do not leave me, Mr. Abbott; step back there behind +those plants. I cannot trust myself to face him all alone." + +I did as she bade me. Mr. S----, with a smile on his face--the first I +had seen there--came in and walked with a quick step and a resolved +air up to Miss Calhoun, who endeavored to rise to meet him. But she was +unable, which involuntary sign of confusion seemed to please him. + +"Irene," said he, in a tone that made me start and wish I had not been +so amenable to her wishes, "I thought I saw you glide in here, and my +guests being now all arrived, I have ventured to steal away for a moment, +just to satisfy the craving which has been torturing me for the last +hour. Irene, you are pale; you tremble like an aspen. Have I frightened +you by my words--too abrupt, perhaps, considering the reserve that has +always been between us until now. Didn't you know that I loved you? that +for the last month--ever since I have known you, indeed--I have had but +the one wish, to make you my wife?" + +"Good God!" I saw the words on her lips rather than heard them. She +seemed to be illumined and overwhelmed at once. "Mr. S------," said +she, trying to be brave, trying to address him with some sort of +self-possession, + +"I did not expect--I had no right to expect this honor from you. I +am not worthy--I have no right to hear such words from your lips. +Besides----" She could go no further; perhaps he did not let her. + +"Not worthy--you!" There was infinite sadness in his tone. "What do you +think I am, then? It is because you are so worthy, so much better than +I am or can ever be, that I want you for my wife. I long for the +companionship of a pure mind, a pure hand----" + +"Mr. S------" (she had risen, and the resolve in her face made her +beauty shine out transcendently), "I have not the pure mind, the pure +hand you ascribe to me. I have meddled with matters few women could +even conceive of. I am a member--a repentant member, to be sure--of an +organization which slights the decrees of God and places the aims of a +few selfish souls above the rights of man, and----" + +He had stooped and was kissing her hand. + +"You need not go on," he whispered; "I quite understand. But you will be +my wife?" + +Aghast, white as the driven snow, she watched him with dilating eyes +that slowly filled with a great horror. + +"Understand!--_you understand!_ Oh, what does that mean? _Why_ should +you understand?" + +"Because"--his voice sunk to a whisper, but I heard it, as I would have +recognized his thought had he not spoken at that moment--"because I +am the chief of the organization you mention. Irene, now you have _my_ +secret." + +I do not think she uttered a sound, but I heard the dying cry of her +soul in her very silence. He may have heard it, too, for his look showed +sudden and unfathomable pity. + +"This is a blow to you," he said. "I do not wonder; there _is_ something +hateful in the fact; latterly I have begun to realize it. That is why +I have allowed myself to love. I wanted some relief from my thoughts. +Alas! I did not know that a full knowledge of your noble soul would only +emphasize them. But this is no talk for a ballroom. Cheer up, darling, +and----" + +"Wait!" She had found strength to lay her hand on his arm. "Did you know +that a man was condemned to-day?" + +His face took on a shade of gloom. + +"Yes," he bowed, casting an anxious look towards the room from which +came the mingled sounds of dance and merriment. "The bell which +announces the fact rang during my absence. I did not know there was a +name before the society." + +She crouched, covering her face with her hands. I think she was afraid +her emotion would escape her in a cry. But in an instant they had +dropped again, and she was panting in his ear: + +"You are the chief and are not acquainted with these matters of life +and death? Traitors are these men and women to you--traitors! jealous of +your influence and your power!" + +He looked amazed; he measured the distance between himself and the +door and turned to ask her what she meant, but she did not give him the +opportunity. + +"Do you know," she asked, "the name of the person for whom the bell rang +to-day?" + +He shook his head. "I am expecting a messenger with it any moment," said +he, looking towards the rear of the conservatory. "Is it any one who is +here to-night?" + +The gasp she gave might have been heard in the other room. Language and +motion seemed both to fail her, and I thought I should have to go to +her rescue. But before I could move, I heard the click of a latch at +the rear of the conservatory, and saw, peering through the flowers and +plants, the wicked face of the man with the receding forehead whom I had +seen at madame's, and in his arms he held THE BOX. + +It was a shock which sent me further into concealment. Mr. S----, on the +contrary, looked relieved. Exclaiming, "Ah, he has come!" he went to +the door leading into the drawing-room, locked it, took out the key and +returned to meet the stealthy, advancing figure. + +The latter presented a picture of malignant joy, horrible to +contemplate. The lips of his large mouth were compressed and bloodless. +He came on with the quiet certainty and deadly ease of a slimy thing +sure of its prey. + +As I noted him I felt that not only Mr. S----'s life but my own was not +worth a moment's purchase. But I uttered no cry and scarcely breathed. +Miss Calhoun, on the contrary, gave vent to a long, shivering sigh. The +man bowed as he heard it, but with looks directed solely to Mr. S----. + +"I was told," said he, "to deliver this box to you wherever and with +whomsoever I should find you. In it you will find _the name._" + +Mr. S---- gazed in haughty astonishment, first at the box and then at +the man. + +"This is irregular," said he. "Why was I not made acquainted with the +fact that a name was up for consideration, and why have you removed the +box from its place and broken the connection which was made with so much +difficulty?" + +As he said this he looked up through the glass of the conservatory to a +high building I could see towering at the end of the garden. It was the +building in which I had first seen that box, and I now understood how +this connection had been made. + +Mr. S----'s movement had been involuntary. + +Dropping his eyes, he finished by saying, with an almost imperceptible +bow, "You may speak before this lady; she is the holder of a key." + +"The connection was broken because suspicion was aroused; to your other +question you will find an answer in the box. Shall I open it for you?" + +Mr. S------, with a stern frown, shook his head, and produced a key +from his pocket. "Do you understand all this?" he suddenly asked Miss +Calhoun. + +For reply, she pointed to the box. + +"Open!" her beseeching looks seemed to say. + +Mr. S---- turned the key and threw up the lid. "Look under the hand," +suggested the man. + +Mr. S---- leaned over the box, which had been laid on a small table, +discovered a paper somewhere in its depth, and drew it out. It was no +whiter than his face when he did so. + +"How many have subscribed to this?" he asked. + +"You will observe that there are five rings on the hand," responded the +man. + +Miss Calhoun started, opened her lips, but paused as she saw Mr. S---- +unfold the paper. + +"The name of the latest traitor," murmured the man, with a look of +ferocity the like of which I had never seen on any human face before. + +It was not observed by either of the actors in the tragedy before +me. Mr. S---- was gazing with a wild incredulity at the note he had +unfolded; she was gazing at him. From the room beyond rose and swelled +the sweet strains of the waltz. + +Suddenly a low, crackling sound was heard. + +It came from the paper which Mr. S---- had crumpled in his hand. + +"So the society has decreed my death," he said, meeting the man's +steel-cold eye for the first time. "Now I know how the men whose doom +preceded mine have felt in a presence that leaves no hope to mortal man. +But _you_ shall not be _my_ executioner. I will meet my fate at less +noxious hands than yours." And, leaning forward, he whispered a +few seemingly significant words into the messenger's ear. The man, +grievously disappointed, hung his head, and with a sidelong look, the +venom of which made us all shudder, he hesitated to go. + +"To-night?" he said. + +"To-night," Mr. S---- repeated, and pointed towards the door by which +he had entered. Then, as the man still hesitated, he took him by the arm +and resolutely led him through the conservatory, crying in his ear, "Go. +I am still the chief." + +The man bowed, and slipped slowly out into the night. + +A burst of music, laughter, voices, joy, rose in the drawing-room. Mr. +S---- and Irene Calhoun stood looking at each other. + +"You must go home," were the first words he uttered. Then, in a +half-reproachful, half-pitiful tone, as if on the verge of tears, he +added: "Was I so bad a chief that even you thought me a hindrance to the +advancement of the society and the cause to which we are pledged?" + +It was the one thing he could say capable of rousing her. + +"Oh!" she cried, "it is all a mistake, all a cheat. Did you not get the +letter I sent to my chief this morning, written in the usual style and +directed in the usual way?" + +"No," he answered. + +"Then there is worse treason than yours among the five. I wrote to +say that my ring had been stolen; that I did not subscribe to the +condemnation of the man under suspicion, and that, if it was made, it +would be through fraud. That was before I knew that the suspected one +and the man I addressed were one and the same. Now----" + +"Well, now?" + +"You have but to accuse the woman called Madame. The man you have just +sent away would forgive you his disappointment if you gave him the +supreme satisfaction of carrying doom to the still more formidable +being who prophesies death to those for whom she has already prepared a +violent end." + +"Irene!" + +But her passion had found vent and she was not to be stilled. Telling +him the whole story of the last twenty-four hours, she waited for the +look of comfort she evidently expected. But it did not come. His first +words showed why. + +"Madame is inexorable," said he; "but Madame is but one of five. There +are three others--true men, sound men, thinking men. If they deem +me unworthy--and I have shown signs of faltering of late--Madame's +animosity or your loving weakness must not stand in the way of their +decree. It shall never be said I sanctioned the doom of other men and +shrank from my own. I would be unworthy of your love if I did, and your +love is everything to me now." She had not expected this; she had not at +all reckoned upon the stern quality in this man, forgetting that without +it he could never have held his pitiless position. + +"But it is not regular; it is not according to precedent. Five rings are +required, and only four were fairly placed. As an honest man, you ought +to hesitate at injustice, and injustice you will show if you allow them +to triumph through their own deceit." + +But even this failed to move him. + +"I see five rings," said he, "and I see another thing. Never will I be +permitted to live even if I am coward enough to take advantage of the +loophole of escape you offer me. A man who is once seen to tremble loses +the confidence of such men as call me _chief_. I would die suddenly, +horribly and perhaps when less prepared for it than now. And you, +my darling, my imperial one! you would not escape. Besides, you have +forgotten the young man who, with such unselfishness, has lent himself +to your schemes in my favor. What could save him if I disappointed the +malignancy of Madame. No; I have destroyed others, and must submit to +the penalty incurred by murder. Kiss me, Irene, and go. I command it as +your chief." + +With a low moan she gave up the struggle. Lifting her forehead to his +embrace, she bestowed upon him a look of indescribable despair, then +tottered to the door leading into the garden. As it closed upon her +departing figure, he uttered a deep sigh, in which he seemed to give up +life and the world. Then he raised his head, and in an instant was in +the midst of a throng of beautiful women and dashing men, with a smile +on his lips and a jest on his tongue. + +I made my escape unnoticed. The next morning I was in Philadelphia. +There I read the following lines in the leading daily: + +"Baltimore, Md.--An unexpected tragedy occurred here last evening. +Mr. S----, the well-known financier and politician, died at his +supper-table, while drinking the health of a hundred assembled guests. +He is considered to be a great loss to the Southern cause. The city is +filled with mourning." + +And further down, in an obscure corner, this short line: + +"Baltimore, Md.--A beautiful young woman, known by the name of Irene +Calhoun, was found dead in her bed this morning, from the effects of +poison administered by herself. No cause is ascribed for the act." + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bronze Hand, by +Anna Katharine Green (Mrs. Charles Rohlfs) + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRONZE HAND *** + +***** This file should be named 22806.txt or 22806.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/2/8/0/22806/ + +Produced by David Widger + +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. 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