How John passed the evening, in what
windy confusion of mind, in what squalls of anger
and lulls of sick collapse, in what pacing of streets
and plunging into public-houses, it would profit little
to relate. His misery, if it were not progressive,
yet tended in no way to diminish; for in proportion
as grief and indignation abated, fear began to take
their place. At first, his father’s menacing
words lay by in some safe drawer of memory, biding
their hour. At first, John was all thwarted affection
and blighted hope; next bludgeoned vanity raised its
head again, with twenty mortal gashes; and the father
was disowned even as he had disowned the son.
What was this regular course of life, that John should
have admired it? what were these clock-work virtues,
from which love was absent? Kindness was the
test, kindness the aim and soul; and judged by such
a standard, the discarded prodigal now rapidly
drowning his sorrows and his reason in successive
drams was a creature of a lovelier morality
than his self-righteous father. Yes, he was the
better man; he felt it, glowed with the consciousness,
and entering a public-house at the corner of Howard
Place (whither he had somehow wandered) he pledged
his own virtues in a glass perhaps the fourth
since his dismissal. Of that he knew nothing,
keeping no account of what he did or where he went;
and in the general crashing hurry of his nerves, unconscious
of the approach of intoxication. Indeed, it is
a question whether he were really growing intoxicated,
or whether at first the spirits did not even sober
him. For it was even as he drained this last
glass that his father’s ambiguous and menacing
words popping from their hiding-place in
memory startled him like a hand laid upon
his shoulder. “Crimes, hunted, the gallows.”
They were ugly words; in the ears of an innocent man,
perhaps all the uglier; for if some judicial error
were in act against him, who should set a limit to
its grossness or to how far it might be pushed?
Not John, indeed; he was no believer in the powers
of innocence, his cursed experience pointing in quite
other ways; and his fears, once wakened, grew with
every hour and hunted him about the city streets.
It was perhaps nearly nine at night;
he had eaten nothing since lunch, he had drunk a good
deal, and he was exhausted by emotion, when the thought
of Houston came into his head. He turned, not
merely to the man as a friend, but to his house as
a place of refuge. The danger that threatened
him was still so vague, that he knew neither what to
fear nor where he might expect it; but this much at
least seemed undeniable, that a private house was
safer than a public inn. Moved by these counsels,
he turned at once to the Caledonian Station, passed
(not without alarm) into the bright lights of the
approach, redeemed his portmanteau from the cloak-room,
and was soon whirling in a cab along the Glasgow road.
The change of movement and position, the sight of the
lamps twinkling to the rear, and the smell of damp
and mould and rotten straw which clung about the vehicle,
wrought in him strange alternations of lucidity and
mortal giddiness.
“I have been drinking,”
he discovered; “I must go straight to bed, and
sleep.” And he thanked Heaven for the drowsiness
that came upon his mind in waves.
From one of these spells he was awakened
by the stoppage of the cab; and, getting down, found
himself in quite a country road, the last lamp of
the suburb shining some way below, and the high walls
of a garden rising before him in the dark. The
Lodge (as the place was named) stood, indeed, very
solitary. To the south it adjoined another house,
but standing in so large a garden as to be well out
of cry; on all other sides, open fields stretched
upward to the woods of Corstorphine Hill, or backward
to the dells of Ravelston, or downward towards the
valley of the Leith. The effect of seclusion
was aided by the great height of the garden walls,
which were, indeed, conventual, and, as John had tested
in former days, defied the climbing schoolboy.
The lamp of the cab threw a gleam upon the door and
the not brilliant handle of the bell.
“Shall I ring for ye?”
said the cabman, who had descended from his perch,
and was slapping his chest, for the night was bitter.
“I wish you would,” said
John, putting his hand to his brow in one of his accesses
of giddiness.
The man pulled at the handle, and
the clanking of the bell replied from further in the
garden; twice and thrice he did it, with sufficient
intervals; in the great, frosty silence of the night
the sounds fell sharp and small.
“Does he expect ye?” asked
the driver, with that manner of familiar interest
that well became his port-wine face; and when John
had told him no, “Well, then,” said the
cabman, “if ye’ll tak’ my advice
of it, we’ll just gang back. And that’s
disinterested, mind ye, for my stables are in the
Glesgie road.”
“The servants must hear,” said John.
“Hout!” said the driver.
“He keeps no servants here, man. They’re
a’ in the town house; I drive him often; it’s
just a kind of a hermitage this.”
“Give me the bell,” said
John; and he plucked at it like a man desperate.
The clamour had not yet subsided before
they heard steps upon the gravel, and a voice of singular
nervous irritability cried to them through the door,
“Who are you, and what do you want?”
“Alan,” said John, “it’s
me it’s Fatty John, you
know. I’m just come home, and I’ve
come to stay with you.”
There was no reply for a moment, and
then the door was opened.
“Get the portmanteau down,” said John
to the driver.
“Do nothing of the kind,”
said Alan; and then to John, “Come in here a
moment. I want to speak to you.”
John entered the garden, and the door
was closed behind him. A candle stood on the
gravel walk, winking a little in the draughts; it threw
inconstant sparkles on the clumped holly, struck the
light and darkness to and fro like a veil on Alan’s
features, and sent his shadow hovering behind him.
All beyond was inscrutable; and John’s dizzy
brain rocked with the shadow. Yet even so, it
struck him that Alan was pale, and his voice, when
he spoke, unnatural.
“What brings you here to-night?”
he began. “I don’t want, God knows,
to seem unfriendly; but I cannot take you in, Nicholson;
I cannot do it.”
“Alan,” said John, “you’ve
just got to! You don’t know the mess I’m
in; the governor’s turned me out, and I daren’t
show face in an inn, because they’re down on
me for murder or something!”
“For what?” cried Alan, starting.
“Murder, I believe,” says John.
“Murder!” repeated Alan,
and passed his hand over his eyes. “What
was that you were saying?” he asked again.
“That they were down on me,”
said John. “I’m accused of murder,
by what I can make out; and I’ve really had
a dreadful day of it, Alan, and I can’t sleep
on the roadside on a night like this at
least, not with a portmanteau,” he pleaded.
“Hush!” said Alan, with
his head on one side; and then, “Did you hear
nothing?” he asked.
“No,” said John, thrilling,
he knew not why, with communicated terror. “No,
I heard nothing; why?” And then, as there was
no answer, he reverted to his pleading: “But
I say, Alan, you’ve just got to take me in.
I’ll go right away to bed if you have anything
to do. I seem to have been drinking; I was that
knocked over. I wouldn’t turn you away,
Alan, if you were down on your luck.”
“No?” returned Alan.
“Neither will I you, then. Come and let’s
get your portmanteau.”
The cabman was paid, and drove off
down the long, lamp-lit hill, and the two friends
stood on the side-walk beside the portmanteau till
the last rumble of the wheels had died in silence.
It seemed to John as though Alan attached importance
to this departure of the cab; and John, who was in
no state to criticise, shared profoundly in the feeling.
When the stillness was once more perfect,
Alan shouldered the portmanteau, carried it in, and
shut and locked the garden door; and then, once more,
abstraction seemed to fall upon him, and he stood with
his hand on the key, until the cold began to nibble
at John’s fingers.
“Why are we standing here?” asked John.
“Eh?” said Alan blankly.
“Why, man, you don’t seem yourself,”
said the other.
“No, I’m not myself,”
said Alan; and he sat down on the portmanteau and
put his face in his hands.
John stood beside him swaying a little,
and looking about him at the swaying shadows, the
flitting sparkles, and the steady stars overhead,
until the windless cold began to touch him through
his clothes on the bare skin. Even in his bemused
intelligence, wonder began to awake.
“I say, let’s come on to the house,”
he said at last.
“Yes, let’s come on to the house,”
repeated Alan.
And he rose at once, re-shouldered
the portmanteau, and, taking the candle in his other
hand, moved forward to the Lodge. This was a long,
low building, smothered in creepers; and now, except
for some chinks of light between the dining-room shutters,
it was plunged in darkness and silence.
In the hall Alan lit another candle,
gave it to John, and opened the door of a bedroom.
“Here,” said he; “go
to bed. Don’t mind me, John. You’ll
be sorry for me when you know.”
“Wait a bit,” returned
John; “I’ve got so cold with all that standing
about. Let’s go into the dining-room a minute.
Just one glass to warm me, Alan.”
On the table in the hall stood a glass,
and a bottle with a whisky label on a tray. It
was plain the bottle had been just opened, for the
cork and corkscrew lay beside it.
“Take that,” said Alan,
passing John the whisky, and then with a certain roughness
pushed his friend into the bedroom, and closed the
door behind him.
John stood amazed; then he shook the
bottle, and, to his further wonder, found it partly
empty. Three or four glasses were gone. Alan
must have uncorked a bottle of whisky and drunk three
or four glasses one after the other, without sitting
down, for there was no chair, and that in his own
cold lobby on this freezing night! It fully explained
his eccentricities, John reflected sagely, as he mixed
himself a grog. Poor Alan! He was drunk;
and what a dreadful thing was drink, and what a slave
to it poor Alan was, to drink in this unsociable, uncomfortable
fashion! The man who would drink alone, except
for health’s sake as John was now
doing was a man utterly lost. He took
the grog out, and felt hazier but warmer. It
was hard work opening the portmanteau and finding
his night things; and before he was undressed, the
cold had struck home to him once more. “Well,”
said he; “just a drop more. There’s
no sense in getting ill with all this other trouble.”
And presently dreamless slumber buried him.
When John awoke it was day. The
low winter sun was already high in the heavens, but
his watch had stopped, and it was impossible to tell
the hour exactly. Ten, he guessed it, and made
haste to dress, dismal reflections crowding on his
mind. But it was less from terror than from regret
that he now suffered; and with his regret there were
mingled cutting pangs of penitence. There had
fallen upon him a blow, cruel, indeed, but yet only
the punishment of old misdoing; and he had rebelled
and plunged into fresh sin. The rod had been used
to chasten, and he had bit the chastening fingers.
His father was right: John had justified him;
John was no guest for decent people’s houses,
and no fit associate for decent people’s children.
And had a broader hint been needed, there was the
case of his old friend. John was no drunkard,
though he could at times exceed; and the picture of
Houston drinking neat spirits at his hall-table struck
him with something like disgust. He hung back
from meeting his old friend. He could have wished
he had not come to him; and yet, even now, where else
was he to turn?
These musings occupied him while he
dressed, and accompanied him into the lobby of the
house. The door stood open on the garden; doubtless
Alan had stepped forth; and John did as he supposed
his friend had done. The ground was hard as iron,
the frost still rigorous; as he brushed among the
hollies, icicles jingled and glittered in their fall;
and wherever he went, a volley of eager sparrows followed
him. Here were Christmas weather and Christmas
morning duly met, to the delight of children.
This was the day of reunited families, the day to which
he had so long looked forward, thinking to awake in
his own bed in Randolph Crescent, reconciled with
all men and repeating the footprints of his youth;
and here he was alone, pacing the alleys of a wintry
garden and filled with penitential thoughts.
And that reminded him: why was
he alone? and where was Alan? The thought of
the festal morning and the due salutations reawakened
his desire for his friend, and he began to call for
him by name. As the sound of his voice died away,
he was aware of the greatness of the silence that
environed him. But for the twittering of the sparrows
and the crunching of his own feet upon the frozen
snow, the whole windless world of air seemed to hang
over him entranced, and the stillness weighed upon
his mind with a horror of solitude.
Still calling at intervals, but now
with a moderated voice, he made the hasty circuit
of the garden, and finding neither man nor trace of
man in all its evergreen coverts, turned at last to
the house. About the house the silence seemed
to deepen strangely. The door, indeed, stood open
as before; but the windows were still shuttered, the
chimneys breathed no stain into the bright air, there
sounded abroad none of that low stir (perhaps audible
rather to the ear of the spirit than to the ear of
the flesh) by which a house announces and betrays
its human lodgers. And yet Alan must be there Alan
locked in drunken slumbers, forgetful of the return
of day, of the holy season, and of the friend whom
he had so coldly received and was now so churlishly
neglecting. John’s disgust redoubled at
the thought; but hunger was beginning to grow stronger
than repulsion, and as a step to breakfast, if to
nothing else, he must find and arouse the sleeper.
He made the circuit of the bedroom
quarters. All, until he came to Alan’s
chamber, were locked from without, and bore the marks
of a long disuse. But Alan’s was a room
in commission, filled with clothes, knick-knacks,
letters, books, and the conveniences of a solitary
man. The fire had been lit; but it had long ago
burnt out, and the ashes were stone cold. The
bed had been made, but it had not been slept in.
Worse and worse, then: Alan must
have fallen where he sat, and now sprawled brutishly,
no doubt, upon the dining-room floor.
The dining-room was a very long apartment,
and was reached through a passage; so that John, upon
his entrance, brought but little light with him, and
must move towards the windows with spread arms, groping
and knocking on the furniture. Suddenly he tripped
and fell his length over a prostrate body. It
was what he had looked for, yet it shocked him; and
he marvelled that so rough an impact should not have
kicked a groan out of the drunkard. Men had killed
themselves ere now in such excesses, a dreary and
degraded end that made John shudder. What if Alan
were dead? There would be a Christmas Day!
By this, John had his hand upon the
shutters, and flinging them back, beheld once again
the blessed face of the day. Even by that light
the room had a discomfortable air. The chairs
were scattered, and one had been overthrown; the table-cloth,
laid as if for dinner, was twitched upon one side,
and some of the dishes had fallen to the floor.
Behind the table lay the drunkard, still unaroused,
only one foot visible to John.
But now that light was in the room,
the worst seemed over; it was a disgusting business,
but not more than disgusting; and it was with no great
apprehension that John proceeded to make the circuit
of the table: his last comparatively tranquil
moment for that day. No sooner had he turned
the corner, no sooner had his eyes alighted on the
body, than he gave a smothered, breathless cry, and
fled out of the room and out of the house.
It was not Alan who lay there, but
a man well up in years, of stern countenance and iron-grey
locks; and it was no drunkard, for the body lay in
a black pool of blood and the open eyes stared upon
the ceiling.
To and fro walked John before the
door. The extreme sharpness of the air acted
on his nerves like an astringent, and braced them swiftly.
Presently, he not relaxing in his disordered walk,
the images began to come clearer and stay longer in
his fancy; and next the power of thought came back
to him, and the horror and danger of his situation
rooted him to the ground.
He grasped his forehead, and staring
on one spot of gravel, pieced together what he knew
and what he suspected. Alan had murdered some
one: possibly “that man” against
whom the butler chained the door in Regent Terrace;
possibly another; some one at least: a human soul,
whom it was death to slay and whose blood lay spilt
upon the floor. This was the reason of the whisky-drinking
in the passage, of his unwillingness to welcome John,
of his strange behaviour and bewildered words; this
was why he had started at and harped upon the name
of murder; this was why he had stood and hearkened,
or sat and covered his eyes, in the black night.
And now he was gone, now he had basely fled; and to
all his perplexities and dangers John stood heir.
“Let me think, let me think,”
he said aloud, impatiently, even pleadingly, as if
to some merciless interrupter. In the turmoil
of his wits, a thousand hints and hopes and threats
and terrors dinning continuously in his ears, he was
like one plunged in the hubbub of a crowd. How
was he to remember he, who had not a thought
to spare that he was himself the author,
as well as the theatre, of so much confusion?
But in hours of trial the junto of man’s nature
is dissolved, and anarchy succeeds.
It was plain he must stay no longer
where he was, for here was a new Judicial Error in
the very making. It was not so plain where he
must go, for the old Judicial Error, vague as a cloud,
appeared to fill the habitable world; whatever it
might be, it watched for him, full-grown, in Edinburgh;
it must have had its birth in San Francisco; it stood
guard, no doubt, like a dragon, at the bank where he
should cash his credit; and though there were doubtless
many other places, who should say in which of them
it was not ambushed? No, he could not tell where
he was to go; he must not lose time on these insolubilities.
Let him go back to the beginning. It was plain
he must stay no longer where he was. It was plain,
too, that he must not flee as he was, for he could
not carry his portmanteau, and to flee and leave it
was to plunge deeper in the mire. He must go,
leave the house unguarded, find a cab, and return return
after an absence? Had he courage for that?
And just then he spied a stain about
a hand’s breadth on his trousers-leg, and reached
his finger down to touch it. The finger was stained
red: it was blood; he stared upon it with disgust,
and awe, and terror, and in the sharpness of the new
sensation fell instantly to act.
He cleansed his finger in the snow,
returned into the house, drew near with hushed footsteps
to the dining-room door, and shut and locked it.
Then he breathed a little freer, for here at least
was an oaken barrier between himself and what he feared.
Next, he hastened to his room, tore off the spotted
trousers, which seemed in his eyes a link to bind him
to the gallows, flung them in a corner, donned another
pair, breathlessly crammed his night-things into his
portmanteau, locked it, swung it with an effort from
the ground, and with a rush of relief came forth again
under the open heavens.
The portmanteau, being of Occidental
build, was no feather-weight; it had distressed the
powerful Alan; and as for John, he was crushed under
its bulk, and the sweat broke upon him thickly.
Twice he must set it down to rest before he reached
the gate; and when he had come so far, he must do
as Alan did, and take his seat upon one corner.
Here, then, he sat a while and panted; but now his
thoughts were sensibly lightened; now, with the trunk
standing just inside the door, some part of his dissociation
from the house of crime had been effected, and the
cabman need not pass the garden wall. It was
wonderful how that relieved him; for the house, in
his eyes, was a place to strike the most cursory beholder
with suspicion, as though the very windows had cried
murder.
But there was to be no remission of
the strokes of fate. As he thus sat, taking breath
in the shadow of the wall, and hopped about by sparrows,
it chanced that his eye roved to the fastening of the
door; and what he saw plucked him to his feet.
The thing locked with a spring; once the door was
closed, the bolt shot of itself; and without a key
there was no means of entering from the road.
He saw himself compelled to one of
two distasteful and perilous alternatives: either
to shut the door altogether and set his portmanteau
out upon the wayside, a wonder to all beholders; or
to leave the door ajar, so that any thievish tramp
or holiday schoolboy might stray in and stumble on
the grisly secret. To the last, as the least desperate,
his mind inclined; but he must first insure himself
that he was unobserved. He peered out, and down
the long road: it lay dead empty. He went
to the corner of the by-road that comes by way of
Dean; there also not a passenger was stirring.
Plainly it was, now or never, the high tide of his
affairs; and he drew the door as close as he durst,
slipped a pebble in the chink, and made off downhill
to find a cab.
Half-way down a gate opened, and a
troop of Christmas children sallied forth in the most
cheerful humour, followed more soberly by a smiling
mother.
“And this is Christmas Day!”
thought John; and could have laughed aloud in tragic
bitterness of heart.