Jim Shorthouse was the sort of fellow
who always made a mess of things. Everything
with which his hands or mind came into contact issued
from such contact in an unqualified and irremediable
state of mess. His college days were a mess:
he was twice rusticated. His schooldays were a
mess: he went to half a dozen, each passing him
on to the next with a worse character and in a more
developed state of mess. His early boyhood was
the sort of mess that copy-books and dictionaries spell
with a big “M,” and his babyhood ugh!
was the embodiment of howling, yowling, screaming
mess.
At the age of forty, however, there
came a change in his troubled life, when he met a
girl with half a million in her own right, who consented
to marry him, and who very soon succeeded in reducing
his most messy existence into a state of comparative
order and system.
Certain incidents, important and otherwise,
of Jim’s life would never have come to be told
here but for the fact that in getting into his “messes”
and out of them again he succeeded in drawing himself
into the atmosphere of peculiar circumstances and
strange happenings. He attracted to his path
the curious adventures of life as unfailingly as meat
attracts flies, and jam wasps. It is to the meat
and jam of his life, so to speak, that he owes his
experiences; his after-life was all pudding, which
attracts nothing but greedy children. With marriage
the interest of his life ceased for all but one person,
and his path became regular as the sun’s instead
of erratic as a comet’s.
The first experience in order of time
that he related to me shows that somewhere latent
behind his disarranged nervous system there lay psychic
perceptions of an uncommon order. About the age
of twenty-two I think after his second
rustication his father’s purse and
patience had equally given out, and Jim found himself
stranded high and dry in a large American city.
High and dry! And the only clothes that had no
holes in them safely in the keeping of his uncle’s
wardrobe.
Careful reflection on a bench in one
of the city parks led him to the conclusion that the
only thing to do was to persuade the city editor of
one of the daily journals that he possessed an observant
mind and a ready pen, and that he could “do
good work for your paper, sir, as a reporter.”
This, then, he did, standing at a most unnatural angle
between the editor and the window to conceal the whereabouts
of the holes.
“Guess we’ll have to give
you a week’s trial,” said the editor, who,
ever on the lookout for good chance material, took
on shoals of men in that way and retained on the average
one man per shoal. Anyhow it gave Jim Shorthouse
the wherewithal to sew up the holes and relieve his
uncle’s wardrobe of its burden.
Then he went to find living quarters;
and in this proceeding his unique characteristics
already referred to what theosophists would
call his Karma began unmistakably to assert
themselves, for it was in the house he eventually
selected that this sad tale took place.
There are no “diggings”
in American cities. The alternatives for small
incomes are grim enough rooms in a boarding-house
where meals are served, or in a room-house where no
meals are served not even breakfast.
Rich people live in palaces, of course, but Jim had
nothing to do with “sich-like.”
His horizon was bounded by boarding-houses and room-houses;
and, owing to the necessary irregularity of his meals
and hours, he took the latter.
It was a large, gaunt-looking place
in a side street, with dirty windows and a creaking
iron gate, but the rooms were large, and the one he
selected and paid for in advance was on the top floor.
The landlady looked gaunt and dusty as the house,
and quite as old. Her eyes were green and faded,
and her features large.
“Waal,” she twanged, with
her electrifying Western drawl, “that’s
the room, if you like it, and that’s the price
I said. Now, if you want it, why, just say so;
and if you don’t, why, it don’t hurt me
any.”
Jim wanted to shake her, but he feared
the clouds of long-accumulated dust in her clothes,
and as the price and size of the room suited him,
he decided to take it.
“Anyone else on this floor?” he asked.
She looked at him queerly out of her faded eyes before
she answered.
“None of my guests ever put
such questions to me before,” she said; “but
I guess you’re different. Why, there’s
no one at all but an old gent that’s stayed
here every bit of five years. He’s over
thar,” pointing to the end of the passage.
“Ah! I see,” said Shorthouse feebly.
“So I’m alone up here?”
“Reckon you are, pretty near,”
she twanged out, ending the conversation abruptly
by turning her back on her new “guest,”
and going slowly and deliberately downstairs.
The newspaper work kept Shorthouse
out most of the night. Three times a week he
got home at 1 a.m., and three times at 3 a.m.
The room proved comfortable enough, and he paid for
a second week. His unusual hours had so far prevented
his meeting any inmates of the house, and not a sound
had been heard from the “old gent” who
shared the floor with him. It seemed a very quiet
house.
One night, about the middle of the
second week, he came home tired after a long day’s
work. The lamp that usually stood all night in
the hall had burned itself out, and he had to stumble
upstairs in the dark. He made considerable noise
in doing so, but nobody seemed to be disturbed.
The whole house was utterly quiet, and probably everybody
was asleep. There were no lights under any of
the doors. All was in darkness. It was after
two o’clock.
After reading some English letters
that had come during the day, and dipping for a few
minutes into a book, he became drowsy and got ready
for bed. Just as he was about to get in between
the sheets, he stopped for a moment and listened.
There rose in the night, as he did so, the sound of
steps somewhere in the house below. Listening
attentively, he heard that it was somebody coming
upstairs a heavy tread, and the owner taking
no pains to step quietly. On it came up the stairs,
tramp, tramp, tramp evidently the tread
of a big man, and one in something of a hurry.
At once thoughts connected somehow
with fire and police flashed through Jim’s brain,
but there were no sounds of voices with the steps,
and he reflected in the same moment that it could
only be the old gentleman keeping late hours and tumbling
upstairs in the darkness. He was in the act of
turning out the gas and stepping into bed, when the
house resumed its former stillness by the footsteps
suddenly coming to a dead stop immediately outside
his own room.
With his hand on the gas, Shorthouse
paused a moment before turning it out to see if the
steps would go on again, when he was startled by a
loud knocking on his door. Instantly, in obedience
to a curious and unexplained instinct, he turned out
the light, leaving himself and the room in total darkness.
He had scarcely taken a step across
the room to open the door, when a voice from the other
side of the wall, so close it almost sounded in his
ear, exclaimed in German, “Is that you, father?
Come in.”
The speaker was a man in the next
room, and the knocking, after all, had not been on
his own door, but on that of the adjoining chamber,
which he had supposed to be vacant.
Almost before the man in the passage
had time to answer in German, “Let me in at
once,” Jim heard someone cross the floor and
unlock the door. Then it was slammed to with
a bang, and there was audible the sound of footsteps
about the room, and of chairs being drawn up to a table
and knocking against furniture on the way. The
men seemed wholly regardless of their neighbour’s
comfort, for they made noise enough to waken the dead.
“Serves me right for taking
a room in such a cheap hole,” reflected Jim
in the darkness. “I wonder whom she’s
let the room to!”
The two rooms, the landlady had told
him, were originally one. She had put up a thin
partition just a row of boards to
increase her income. The doors were adjacent,
and only separated by the massive upright beam between
them. When one was opened or shut the other rattled.
With utter indifference to the comfort
of the other sleepers in the house, the two Germans
had meanwhile commenced to talk both at once and at
the top of their voices. They talked emphatically,
even angrily. The words “Father”
and “Otto” were freely used. Shorthouse
understood German, but as he stood listening for the
first minute or two, an eavesdropper in spite of himself,
it was difficult to make head or tail of the talk,
for neither would give way to the other, and the jumble
of guttural sounds and unfinished sentences was wholly
unintelligible. Then, very suddenly, both voices
dropped together; and, after a moment’s pause,
the deep tones of one of them, who seemed to be the
“father,” said, with the utmost distinctness
“You mean, Otto, that you refuse to get it?”
There was a sound of someone shuffling
in the chair before the answer came. “I
mean that I don’t know how to get it. It
is so much, father. It is too much.
A part of it ”
“A part of it!” cried
the other, with an angry oath, “a part of it,
when ruin and disgrace are already in the house, is
worse than useless. If you can get half you can
get all, you wretched fool. Half-measures only
damn all concerned.”
“You told me last time ”
began the other firmly, but was not allowed to finish.
A succession of horrible oaths drowned his sentence,
and the father went on, in a voice vibrating with
anger
“You know she will give you
anything. You have only been married a few months.
If you ask and give a plausible reason you can get
all we want and more. You can ask it temporarily.
All will be paid back. It will re-establish the
firm, and she will never know what was done with it.
With that amount, Otto, you know I can recoup all these
terrible losses, and in less than a year all will
be repaid. But without it. . . . You must
get it, Otto. Hear me, you must. Am I to
be arrested for the misuse of trust moneys? Is
our honoured name to be cursed and spat on?”
The old man choked and stammered in his anger and
desperation.
Shorthouse stood shivering in the
darkness and listening in spite of himself. The
conversation had carried him along with it, and he
had been for some reason afraid to let his neighbourhood
be known. But at this point he realised that
he had listened too long and that he must inform the
two men that they could be overheard to every single
syllable. So he coughed loudly, and at the same
time rattled the handle of his door. It seemed
to have no effect, for the voices continued just as
loudly as before, the son protesting and the father
growing more and more angry. He coughed again
persistently, and also contrived purposely in the
darkness to tumble against the partition, feeling the
thin boards yield easily under his weight, and making
a considerable noise in so doing. But the voices
went on unconcernedly, and louder than ever. Could
it be possible they had not heard?
By this time Jim was more concerned
about his own sleep than the morality of overhearing
the private scandals of his neighbours, and he went
out into the passage and knocked smartly at their door.
Instantly, as if by magic, the sounds ceased.
Everything dropped into utter silence. There
was no light under the door and not a whisper could
be heard within. He knocked again, but received
no answer.
“Gentlemen,” he began
at length, with his lips close to the keyhole and
in German, “please do not talk so loud.
I can overhear all you say in the next room.
Besides, it is very late, and I wish to sleep.”
He paused and listened, but no answer
was forthcoming. He turned the handle and found
the door was locked. Not a sound broke the stillness
of the night except the faint swish of the wind over
the skylight and the creaking of a board here and
there in the house below. The cold air of a very
early morning crept down the passage, and made him
shiver. The silence of the house began to impress
him disagreeably. He looked behind him and about
him, hoping, and yet fearing, that something would
break the stillness. The voices still seemed
to ring on in his ears; but that sudden silence, when
he knocked at the door, affected him far more unpleasantly
than the voices, and put strange thoughts in his brain thoughts
he did not like or approve.
Moving stealthily from the door, he
peered over the banisters into the space below.
It was like a deep vault that might conceal in its
shadows anything that was not good. It was not
difficult to fancy he saw an indistinct moving to-and-fro
below him. Was that a figure sitting on the stairs
peering up obliquely at him out of hideous eyes?
Was that a sound of whispering and shuffling down
there in the dark halls and forsaken landings?
Was it something more than the inarticulate murmur
of the night?
The wind made an effort overhead,
singing over the skylight, and the door behind him
rattled and made him start. He turned to go back
to his room, and the draught closed the door slowly
in his face as if there were someone pressing against
it from the other side. When he pushed it open
and went in, a hundred shadowy forms seemed to dart
swiftly and silently back to their corners and hiding-places.
But in the adjoining room the sounds had entirely
ceased, and Shorthouse soon crept into bed, and left
the house with its inmates, waking or sleeping, to
take care of themselves, while he entered the region
of dreams and silence.
Next day, strong in the common sense
that the sunlight brings, he determined to lodge a
complaint against the noisy occupants of the next
room and make the landlady request them to modify their
voices at such late hours of the night and morning.
But it so happened that she was not to be seen that
day, and when he returned from the office at midnight
it was, of course, too late.
Looking under the door as he came
up to bed he noticed that there was no light, and
concluded that the Germans were not in. So much
the better. He went to sleep about one o’clock,
fully decided that if they came up later and woke
him with their horrible noises he would not rest till
he had roused the landlady and made her reprove them
with that authoritative twang, in which every word
was like the lash of a metallic whip.
However, there proved to be no need
for such drastic measures, for Shorthouse slumbered
peacefully all night, and his dreams chiefly
of the fields of grain and flocks of sheep on the
far-away farms of his father’s estate were
permitted to run their fanciful course unbroken.
Two nights later, however, when he
came home tired out, after a difficult day, and wet
and blown about by one of the wickedest storms he
had ever seen, his dreams always of the
fields and sheep were not destined to be
so undisturbed.
He had already dozed off in that delicious
glow that follows the removal of wet clothes and the
immediate snuggling under warm blankets, when his
consciousness, hovering on the borderland between sleep
and waking, was vaguely troubled by a sound that rose
indistinctly from the depths of the house, and, between
the gusts of wind and rain, reached his ears with
an accompanying sense of uneasiness and discomfort.
It rose on the night air with some pretence of regularity,
dying away again in the roar of the wind to reassert
itself distantly in the deep, brief hushes of the
storm.
For a few minutes Jim’s dreams
were coloured only tinged, as it were,
by this impression of fear approaching from somewhere
insensibly upon him. His consciousness, at first,
refused to be drawn back from that enchanted region
where it had wandered, and he did not immediately
awaken. But the nature of his dreams changed unpleasantly.
He saw the sheep suddenly run huddled together, as
though frightened by the neighbourhood of an enemy,
while the fields of waving corn became agitated as
though some monster were moving uncouthly among the
crowded stalks. The sky grew dark, and in his
dream an awful sound came somewhere from the clouds.
It was in reality the sound downstairs growing more
distinct.
Shorthouse shifted uneasily across
the bed with something like a groan of distress.
The next minute he awoke, and found himself sitting
straight up in bed listening. Was it
a nightmare? Had he been dreaming evil dreams,
that his flesh crawled and the hair stirred on his
head?
The room was dark and silent, but
outside the wind howled dismally and drove the rain
with repeated assaults against the rattling windows.
How nice it would be the thought flashed
through his mind if all winds, like the
west wind, went down with the sun! They made such
fiendish noises at night, like the crying of angry
voices. In the daytime they had such a different
sound. If only
Hark! It was no dream after all,
for the sound was momentarily growing louder, and
its cause was coming up the stairs. He
found himself speculating feebly what this cause might
be, but the sound was still too indistinct to enable
him to arrive at any definite conclusion.
The voice of a church clock striking
two made itself heard above the wind. It was
just about the hour when the Germans had commenced
their performance three nights before. Shorthouse
made up his mind that if they began it again he would
not put up with it for very long. Yet he was
already horribly conscious of the difficulty he would
have of getting out of bed. The clothes were
so warm and comforting against his back. The
sound, still steadily coming nearer, had by this time
become differentiated from the confused clamour of
the elements, and had resolved itself into the footsteps
of one or more persons.
“The Germans, hang ’em!”
thought Jim. “But what on earth is the matter
with me? I never felt so queer in all my life.”
He was trembling all over, and felt
as cold as though he were in a freezing atmosphere.
His nerves were steady enough, and he felt no diminution
of physical courage, but he was conscious of a curious
sense of malaise and trepidation, such as even the
most vigorous men have been known to experience when
in the first grip of some horrible and deadly disease.
As the footsteps approached this feeling of weakness
increased. He felt a strange lassitude creeping
over him, a sort of exhaustion, accompanied by a growing
numbness in the extremities, and a sensation of dreaminess
in the head, as if perhaps the consciousness were leaving
its accustomed seat in the brain and preparing to
act on another plane. Yet, strange to say, as
the vitality was slowly withdrawn from his body, his
senses seemed to grow more acute.
Meanwhile the steps were already on
the landing at the top of the stairs, and Shorthouse,
still sitting upright in bed, heard a heavy body brush
past his door and along the wall outside, almost immediately
afterwards the loud knocking of someone’s knuckles
on the door of the adjoining room.
Instantly, though so far not a sound
had proceeded from within, he heard, through the thin
partition, a chair pushed back and a man quickly cross
the floor and open the door.
“Ah! it’s you,”
he heard in the son’s voice. Had the fellow,
then, been sitting silently in there all this time,
waiting for his father’s arrival? To Shorthouse
it came not as a pleasant reflection by any means.
There was no answer to this dubious
greeting, but the door was closed quickly, and then
there was a sound as if a bag or parcel had been thrown
on a wooden table and had slid some distance across
it before stopping.
“What’s that?” asked the son, with
anxiety in his tone.
“You may know before I go,”
returned the other gruffly. Indeed his voice
was more than gruff: it betrayed ill-suppressed
passion.
Shorthouse was conscious of a strong
desire to stop the conversation before it proceeded
any further, but somehow or other his will was not
equal to the task, and he could not get out of bed.
The conversation went on, every tone and inflexion
distinctly audible above the noise of the storm.
In a low voice the father continued.
Jim missed some of the words at the beginning of the
sentence. It ended with: " . . . but now
they’ve all left, and I’ve managed to
get up to you. You know what I’ve come for.”
There was distinct menace in his tone.
“Yes,” returned the other; “I have
been waiting.”
“And the money?” asked the father impatiently.
No answer.
“You’ve had three days
to get it in, and I’ve contrived to stave off
the worst so far but to-morrow is the end.”
No answer.
“Speak, Otto! What have
you got for me? Speak, my son; for God’s
sake, tell me.”
There was a moment’s silence,
during which the old man’s vibrating accents
seemed to echo through the rooms. Then came in
a low voice the answer
“I have nothing.”
“Otto!” cried the other with passion,
“nothing!”
“I can get nothing,” came almost in a
whisper.
“You lie!” cried the other,
in a half-stifled voice. “I swear you lie.
Give me the money.”
A chair was heard scraping along the
floor. Evidently the men had been sitting over
the table, and one of them had risen. Shorthouse
heard the bag or parcel drawn across the table, and
then a step as if one of the men was crossing to the
door.
“Father, what’s in that?
I must know,” said Otto, with the first signs
of determination in his voice. There must have
been an effort on the son’s part to gain possession
of the parcel in question, and on the father’s
to retain it, for between them it fell to the ground.
A curious rattle followed its contact with the floor.
Instantly there were sounds of a scuffle. The
men were struggling for the possession of the box.
The elder man with oaths, and blasphemous imprecations,
the other with short gasps that betokened the strength
of his efforts. It was of short duration, and
the younger man had evidently won, for a minute later
was heard his angry exclamation.
“I knew it. Her jewels!
You scoundrel, you shall never have them. It is
a crime.”
The elder man uttered a short, guttural
laugh, which froze Jim’s blood and made his
skin creep. No word was spoken, and for the space
of ten seconds there was a living silence. Then
the air trembled with the sound of a thud, followed
immediately by a groan and the crash of a heavy body
falling over on to the table. A second later there
was a lurching from the table on to the floor and
against the partition that separated the rooms.
The bed quivered an instant at the shock, but the unholy
spell was lifted from his soul and Jim Shorthouse
sprang out of bed and across the floor in a single
bound. He knew that ghastly murder had been done the
murder by a father of his son.
With shaking fingers but a determined
heart he lit the gas, and the first thing in which
his eyes corroborated the evidence of his ears was
the horrifying detail that the lower portion of the
partition bulged unnaturally into his own room.
The glaring paper with which it was covered had cracked
under the tension and the boards beneath it bent inwards
towards him. What hideous load was behind them,
he shuddered to think.
All this he saw in less than a second.
Since the final lurch against the wall not a sound
had proceeded from the room, not even a groan or a
foot-step. All was still but the howl of the wind,
which to his ears had in it a note of triumphant horror.
Shorthouse was in the act of leaving
the room to rouse the house and send for the police in
fact his hand was already on the door-knob when
something in the room arrested his attention.
Out of the corner of his eyes he thought he caught
sight of something moving. He was sure of it,
and turning his eyes in the direction, he found he
was not mistaken.
Something was creeping slowly towards
him along the floor. It was something dark and
serpentine in shape, and it came from the place where
the partition bulged. He stooped down to examine
it with feelings of intense horror and repugnance,
and he discovered that it was moving toward him from
the other side of the wall. His eyes were
fascinated, and for the moment he was unable to move.
Silently, slowly, from side to side like a thick worm,
it crawled forward into the room beneath his frightened
eyes, until at length he could stand it no longer and
stretched out his arm to touch it. But at the
instant of contact he withdrew his hand with a suppressed
scream. It was sluggish and it was
warm! and he saw that his fingers were stained with
living crimson.
A second more, and Shorthouse was
out in the passage with his hand on the door of the
next room. It was locked. He plunged forward
with all his weight against it, and, the lock giving
way, he fell headlong into a room that was pitch dark
and very cold. In a moment he was on his feet
again and trying to penetrate the blackness. Not
a sound, not a movement. Not even the sense of
a presence. It was empty, miserably empty!
Across the room he could trace the
outline of a window with rain streaming down the outside,
and the blurred lights of the city beyond. But
the room was empty, appallingly empty; and so still.
He stood there, cold as ice, staring, shivering listening.
Suddenly there was a step behind him and a light flashed
into the room, and when he turned quickly with his
arm up as if to ward off a terrific blow he found himself
face to face with the landlady. Instantly the
reaction began to set in.
It was nearly three o’clock
in the morning, and he was standing there with bare
feet and striped pyjamas in a small room, which in
the merciful light he perceived to be absolutely empty,
carpetless, and without a stick of furniture, or even
a window-blind. There he stood staring at the
disagreeable landlady. And there she stood too,
staring and silent, in a black wrapper, her head almost
bald, her face white as chalk, shading a sputtering
candle with one bony hand and peering over it at him
with her blinking green eyes. She looked positively
hideous.
“Waal?” she drawled at
length, “I heard yer right enough. Guess
you couldn’t sleep! Or just prowlin’
round a bit is that it?”
The empty room, the absence of all
traces of the recent tragedy, the silence, the hour,
his striped pyjamas and bare feet everything
together combined to deprive him momentarily of speech.
He stared at her blankly without a word.
“Waal?” clanked the awful voice.
“My dear woman,” he burst
out finally, “there’s been something awful ”
So far his desperation took him, but no farther.
He positively stuck at the substantive.
“Oh! there hasn’t been
nothin’,” she said slowly still peering
at him. “I reckon you’ve only seen
and heard what the others did. I never can keep
folks on this floor long. Most of ’em catch
on sooner or later that is, the ones that’s
kind of quick and sensitive. Only you being an
Englishman I thought you wouldn’t mind.
Nothin’ really happens; it’s only thinkin’
like.”
Shorthouse was beside himself.
He felt ready to pick her up and drop her over the
banisters, candle and all.
“Look there,” he said,
pointing at her within an inch of her blinking eyes
with the fingers that had touched the oozing blood;
“look there, my good woman. Is that only
thinking?”
She stared a minute, as if not knowing what he meant.
“I guess so,” she said at length.
He followed her eyes, and to his amazement
saw that his fingers were as white as usual, and quite
free from the awful stain that had been there ten
minutes before. There was no sign of blood.
No amount of staring could bring it back. Had
he gone out of his mind? Had his eyes and ears
played such tricks with him? Had his senses become
false and perverted? He dashed past the landlady,
out into the passage, and gained his own room in a
couple of strides. Whew! . . . the partition no
longer bulged. The paper was not torn. There
was no creeping, crawling thing on the faded old carpet.
“It’s all over now,”
drawled the metallic voice behind him. “I’m
going to bed again.”
He turned and saw the landlady slowly
going downstairs again, still shading the candle with
her hand and peering up at him from time to time as
she moved. A black, ugly, unwholesome object,
he thought, as she disappeared into the darkness below,
and the last flicker of her candle threw a queer-shaped
shadow along the wall and over the ceiling.
Without hesitating a moment, Shorthouse
threw himself into his clothes and went out of the
house. He preferred the storm to the horrors of
that top floor, and he walked the streets till daylight.
In the evening he told the landlady he would leave
next day, in spite of her assurances that nothing
more would happen.
“It never comes back,”
she said “that is, not after he’s
killed.”
Shorthouse gasped.
“You gave me a lot for my money,” he growled.
“Waal, it aren’t my show,”
she drawled. “I’m no spirit medium.
You take chances. Some’ll sleep right along
and never hear nothin’. Others, like yourself,
are different and get the whole thing.”
“Who’s the old gentleman? does
he hear it?” asked Jim.
“There’s no old gentleman
at all,” she answered coolly. “I just
told you that to make you feel easy like in case you
did hear anythin’. You were all alone on
the floor.”
“Say now,” she went on,
after a pause in which Shorthouse could think of nothing
to say but unpublishable things, “say now, do
tell, did you feel sort of cold when the show was
on, sort of tired and weak, I mean, as if you might
be going to die?”
“How can I say?” he answered
savagely; “what I felt God only knows.”
“Waal, but He won’t tell,”
she drawled out. “Only I was wonderin’
how you really did feel, because the man who had that
room last was found one morning in bed ”
“In bed?”
“He was dead. He was the
one before you. Oh! You don’t need
to get rattled so. You’re all right.
And it all really happened, they do say. This
house used to be a private residence some twenty-five
years ago, and a German family of the name of Steinhardt
lived here. They had a big business in Wall Street,
and stood ’way up in things.”
“Ah!” said her listener.
“Oh yes, they did, right at
the top, till one fine day it all bust and the old
man skipped with the boodle ”
“Skipped with the boodle?”
“That’s so,” she
said; “got clear away with all the money, and
the son was found dead in his house, committed soocide
it was thought. Though there was some as said
he couldn’t have stabbed himself and fallen in
that position. They said he was murdered.
The father died in prison. They tried to fasten
the murder on him, but there was no motive, or no
evidence, or no somethin’. I forget now.”
“Very pretty,” said Shorthouse.
“I’ll show you somethin’
mighty queer any-ways,” she drawled, “if
you’ll come upstairs a minute. I’ve
heard the steps and voices lots of times; they don’t
pheaze me any. I’d just as lief hear so
many dogs barkin’. You’ll find the
whole story in the newspapers if you look it up not
what goes on here, but the story of the Germans.
My house would be ruined if they told all, and I’d
sue for damages.”
They reached the bedroom, and the
woman went in and pulled up the edge of the carpet
where Shorthouse had seen the blood soaking in the
previous night.
“Look thar, if you feel like
it,” said the old hag. Stooping down, he
saw a dark, dull stain in the boards that corresponded
exactly to the shape and position of the blood as
he had seen it.
That night he slept in a hotel, and
the following day sought new quarters. In the
newspapers on file in his office after a long search
he found twenty years back the detailed story, substantially
as the woman had said, of Steinhardt & Co.’s
failure, the absconding and subsequent arrest of the
senior partner, and the suicide, or murder, of his
son Otto. The landlady’s room-house had
formerly been their private residence.