WRITTEN IN COLLABORATION WITH LLOYD OSBOURNE
CHAPTER I
IN WHICH MORRIS SUSPECTS
How very little does the amateur,
dwelling at home at ease, comprehend the labours and
perils of the author, and, when he smilingly skims
the surface of a work of fiction, how little does
he consider the hours of toil, consultation of authorities,
researches in the Bodleian, correspondence with learned
and illegible Germans in one word, the vast
scaffolding that was first built up and then knocked
down, to while away an hour for him in a railway train!
Thus I might begin this tale with a biography of Tonti birthplace,
parentage, genius probably inherited from his mother,
remarkable instance of precocity, etc. and
a complete treatise on the system to which he bequeathed
his name. The material is all beside me in a
pigeon-hole, but I scorn to appear vainglorious.
Tonti is dead, and I never saw anyone who even pretended
to regret him; and, as for the tontine system, a word
will suffice for all the purposes of this unvarnished
narrative.
A number of sprightly youths (the
more the merrier) put up a certain sum of money, which
is then funded in a pool under trustees; coming on
for a century later, the proceeds are fluttered for
a moment in the face of the last survivor, who is
probably deaf, so that he cannot even hear of his
success and who is certainly dying, so that
he might just as well have lost. The peculiar
poetry and even humour of the scheme is now apparent,
since it is one by which nobody concerned can possibly
profit; but its fine, sportsmanlike character endeared
it to our grand-parents.
When Joseph Finsbury and his brother
Masterman were little lads in white-frilled trousers,
their father a well-to-do merchant in Cheapside caused
them to join a small but rich tontine of seven-and-thirty
lives. A thousand pounds was the entrance fee;
and Joseph Finsbury can remember to this day the visit
to the lawyer’s, where the members of the tontine all
children like himself were assembled together,
and sat in turn in the big office chair, and signed
their names with the assistance of a kind old gentleman
in spectacles and Wellington boots. He remembers
playing with the children afterwards on the lawn at
the back of the lawyer’s house, and a battle-royal
that he had with a brother tontiner who had kicked
his shins. The sound of war called forth the
lawyer from where he was dispensing cake and wine
to the assembled parents in the office, and the combatants
were separated, and Joseph’s spirit (for he
was the smaller of the two) commended by the gentleman
in the Wellington boots, who vowed he had been just
such another at the same age. Joseph wondered
to himself if he had worn at that time little Wellingtons
and a little bald head, and when, in bed at night,
he grew tired of telling himself stories of sea-fights,
he used to dress himself up as the old gentleman, and
entertain other little boys and girls with cake and
wine.
In the year 1840 the thirty-seven
were all alive; in 1850 their number had decreased
by six; in 1856 and 1857 business was more lively,
for the Crimea and the Mutiny carried off no less
than nine. There remained in 1870 but five of
the original members, and at the date of my story,
including the two Finsburys, but three.
By this time Masterman was in his
seventy-third year; he had long complained of the
effects of age, had long since retired from business,
and now lived in absolute seclusion under the roof
of his son Michael, the well-known solicitor.
Joseph, on the other hand, was still up and about,
and still presented but a semi-venerable figure on
the streets in which he loved to wander. This
was the more to be deplored because Masterman had
led (even to the least particular) a model British
life. Industry, regularity, respectability, and
a preference for the four per cents. are understood
to be the very foundations of a green old age.
All these Masterman had eminently displayed, and here
he was, ab agendo, at seventy-three; while
Joseph, barely two years younger, and in the most
excellent preservation, had disgraced himself through
life by idleness and eccentricity. Embarked in
the leather trade, he had early wearied of business,
for which he was supposed to have small parts.
A taste for general information, not promptly checked,
had soon begun to sap his manhood. There is no
passion more debilitating to the mind, unless, perhaps,
it be that itch of public speaking which it not infrequently
accompanies or begets. The two were conjoined
in the case of Joseph; the acute stage of this double
malady, that in which the patient delivers gratuitous
lectures, soon declared itself with severity, and
not many years had passed over his head before he would
have travelled thirty miles to address an infant school.
He was no student; his reading was confined to elementary
text-books and the daily papers; he did not even fly
as high as cyclopædias; life, he would say, was his
volume. His lectures were not meant, he would
declare, for college professors; they were addressed
direct to “the great heart of the people,”
and the heart of the people must certainly be sounder
than its head, for his lucubrations were received
with favour. That entitled, “How to Live
Cheerfully on Forty Pounds a Year,” created a
sensation among the unemployed. “Education:
Its Aims, Objects, Purposes, and Desirability,”
gained him the respect of the shallow-minded.
As for his celebrated essay on “Life Insurance
Regarded in its Relation to the Masses,” read
before the Working Men’s Mutual Improvement Society,
Isle of Dogs, it was received with a “literal
ovation” by an unintelligent audience of both
sexes, and so marked was the effect that he was next
year elected honorary president of the institution,
an office of less than no emolument since
the holder was expected to come down with a donation but
one which highly satisfied his self-esteem.
While Joseph was thus building himself
up a reputation among the more cultivated portion
of the ignorant, his domestic life was suddenly overwhelmed
by orphans. The death of his younger brother Jacob
saddled him with the charge of two boys, Morris and
John; and in the course of the same year his family
was still further swelled by the addition of a little
girl, the daughter of John Henry Hazeltine, Esq., a
gentleman of small property and fewer friends.
He had met Joseph only once, at a lecture-hall in
Holloway; but from that formative experience he returned
home to make a new will, and consign his daughter and
her fortune to the lecturer. Joseph had a kindly
disposition; and yet it was not without reluctance
that he accepted this new responsibility, advertised
for a nurse, and purchased a second-hand perambulator.
Morris and John he made more readily welcome; not
so much because of the tie of consanguinity as because
the leather business (in which he hastened to invest
their fortune of thirty thousand pounds) had recently
exhibited inexplicable symptoms of decline. A
young but capable Scot was chosen as manager to the
enterprise, and the cares of business never again afflicted
Joseph Finsbury. Leaving his charges in the hands
of the capable Scot (who was married), he began his
extensive travels on the Continent and in Asia Minor.
With a polyglot Testament in one hand
and a phrase-book in the other, he groped his way
among the speakers of eleven European languages.
The first of these guides is hardly applicable to
the purposes of the philosophic traveller, and even
the second is designed more expressly for the tourist
than for the expert in life. But he pressed interpreters
into his service whenever he could get their
services for nothing and by one means and
another filled many note-books with the results of
his researches.
In these wanderings he spent several
years, and only returned to England when the increasing
age of his charges needed his attention. The two
lads had been placed in a good but economical school,
where they had received a sound commercial education;
which was somewhat awkward, as the leather business
was by no means in a state to court inquiry. In
fact, when Joseph went over his accounts preparatory
to surrendering his trust, he was dismayed to discover
that his brother’s fortune had not increased
by his stewardship; even by making over to his two
wards every penny he had in the world, there would
still be a deficit of seven thousand eight hundred
pounds. When these facts were communicated to
the two brothers in the presence of a lawyer, Morris
Finsbury threatened his uncle with all the terrors
of the law, and was only prevented from taking extreme
steps by the advice of the professional man.
“You cannot get blood from a stone,” observed
the lawyer.
And Morris saw the point and came
to terms with his uncle. On the one side, Joseph
gave up all that he possessed, and assigned to his
nephew his contingent interest in the tontine, already
quite a hopeful speculation. On the other, Morris
agreed to harbour his uncle and Miss Hazeltine (who
had come to grief with the rest), and to pay to each
of them one pound a month as pocket-money. The
allowance was amply sufficient for the old man; it
scarce appears how Miss Hazeltine contrived to dress
upon it; but she did, and, what is more, she never
complained. She was, indeed, sincerely attached
to her incompetent guardian. He had never been
unkind; his age spoke for him loudly; there was something
appealing in his whole-souled quest of knowledge and
innocent delight in the smallest mark of admiration;
and, though the lawyer had warned her she was being
sacrificed, Julia had refused to add to the perplexities
of Uncle Joseph.
In a large, dreary house in John Street,
Bloomsbury, these four dwelt together; a family in
appearance, in reality a financial association.
Julia and Uncle Joseph were, of course, slaves; John,
a gentleman with a taste for the banjo, the music-hall,
the Gaiety bar, and the sporting papers, must have
been anywhere a secondary figure; and the cares and
delights of empire devolved entirely upon Morris.
That these are inextricably intermixed is one of the
commonplaces with which the bland essayist consoles
the incompetent and the obscure, but in the case of
Morris the bitter must have largely outweighed the
sweet. He grudged no trouble to himself, he spared
none to others; he called the servants in the morning,
he served out the stores with his own hand, he took
soundings of the sherry, he numbered the remainder
biscuits; painful scenes took place over the weekly
bills, and the cook was frequently impeached, and
the tradespeople came and hectored with him in the
back parlour upon a question of three farthings.
The superficial might have deemed him a miser; in
his own eyes he was simply a man who had been defrauded;
the world owed him seven thousand eight hundred pounds,
and he intended that the world should pay.
But it was in his dealings with Joseph
that Morris’s character particularly shone.
His uncle was a rather gambling stock in which he
had invested heavily; and he spared no pains in nursing
the security. The old man was seen monthly by
a physician, whether he was well or ill. His
diet, his raiment, his occasional outings, now to Brighton,
now to Bournemouth, were doled out to him like pap
to infants. In bad weather he must keep the house.
In good weather, by half-past nine, he must be ready
in the hall; Morris would see that he had gloves and
that his shoes were sound; and the pair would start
for the leather business arm in arm. The way
there was probably dreary enough, for there was no
pretence of friendly feeling; Morris had never ceased
to upbraid his guardian with his defalcation and to
lament the burthen of Miss Hazeltine; and Joseph,
though he was a mild enough soul, regarded his nephew
with something very near akin to hatred. But the
way there was nothing to the journey back; for the
mere sight of the place of business, as well as every
detail of its transactions, was enough to poison life
for any Finsbury.
Joseph’s name was still over
the door; it was he who still signed the cheques;
but this was only policy on the part of Morris, and
designed to discourage other members of the tontine.
In reality the business was entirely his; and he found
it an inheritance of sorrows. He tried to sell
it, and the offers he received were quite derisory.
He tried to extend it, and it was only the liabilities
he succeeded in extending; to restrict it, and it
was only the profits he managed to restrict. Nobody
had ever made money out of that concern except the
capable Scot, who retired (after his discharge) to
the neighbourhood of Banff and built a castle with
his profits. The memory of this fallacious Caledonian
Morris would revile daily, as he sat in the private
office opening his mail, with old Joseph at another
table, sullenly awaiting orders, or savagely affixing
signatures to he knew not what. And when the man
of the heather pushed cynicism so far as to send him
the announcement of his second marriage (to Davida,
eldest daughter of the Rev. Alexander McCraw), it
was really supposed that Morris would have had a fit.
Business hours, in the Finsbury leather
trade, had been cut to the quick; even Morris’s
strong sense of duty to himself was not strong enough
to dally within those walls and under the shadow of
that bankruptcy; and presently the manager and the
clerks would draw a long breath, and compose themselves
for another day of procrastination. Raw Haste,
on the authority of my Lord Tennyson, is half-sister
to Delay; but the Business Habits are certainly her
uncles. Meanwhile, the leather merchant would
lead his living investment back to John Street like
a puppy dog; and, having there immured him in the hall,
would depart for the day on the quest of seal rings,
the only passion of his life. Joseph had more
than the vanity of man, he had that of lecturers.
He owned he was in fault, although more sinned against
(by the capable Scot) than sinning; but had he steeped
his hands in gore, he would still not deserve to be
thus dragged at the chariot-wheels of a young man,
to sit a captive in the halls of his own leather business,
to be entertained with mortifying comments on his
whole career to have his costume examined,
his collar pulled up, the presence of his mittens
verified, and to be taken out and brought home in custody,
like an infant with a nurse. At the thought of
it his soul would swell with venom, and he would make
haste to hang up his hat and coat and the detested
mittens, and slink upstairs to Julia and his note-books.
The drawing-room at least was sacred from Morris;
it belonged to the old man and the young girl; it
was there that she made her dresses; it was there
that he inked his spectacles over the registration
of disconnected facts and the calculation of insignificant
statistics.
Here he would sometimes lament his
connection with the tontine. “If it were
not for that,” he cried one afternoon, “he
would not care to keep me. I might be a free
man, Julia. And I could so easily support myself
by giving lectures.”
“To be sure you could,”
said she; “and I think it one of the meanest
things he ever did to deprive you of that amusement.
There were those nice people at the Isle of Cats (wasn’t
it?) who wrote and asked you so very kindly to give
them an address. I did think he might have let
you go to the Isle of Cats.”
“He is a man of no intelligence,”
cried Joseph. “He lives here literally
surrounded by the absorbing spectacle of life, and
for all the good it does him, he might just as well
be in his coffin. Think of his opportunities!
The heart of any other young man would burn within
him at the chance. The amount of information
that I have it in my power to convey, if he would
only listen, is a thing that beggars language, Julia.”
“Whatever you do, my dear, you
mustn’t excite yourself,” said Julia;
“for you know, if you look at all ill, the doctor
will be sent for.”
“That is very true,” returned
the old man humbly, “I will compose myself with
a little study.” He thumbed his gallery
of note-books. “I wonder,” he said,
“I wonder (since I see your hands are occupied)
whether it might not interest you ”
“Why, of course it would,”
cried Julia. “Read me one of your nice
stories, there’s a dear!”
He had the volume down and his spectacles
upon his nose instanter, as though to forestall some
possible rétractation. “What I
propose to read to you,” said he, skimming through
the pages, “is the notes of a highly important
conversation with a Dutch courier of the name of David
Abbas, which is the Latin for abbot. Its results
are well worth the money it cost me, for, as Abbas
at first appeared somewhat impatient, I was induced
to (what is, I believe, singularly called) stand him
drink. It runs only to about five-and-twenty
pages. Yes, here it is.” He cleared
his throat, and began to read.
Mr. Finsbury (according to his own
report) contributed about four hundred and ninety-nine
five-hundredths of the interview, and elicited from
Abbas literally nothing. It was dull for Julia,
who did not require to listen; for the Dutch courier,
who had to answer, it must have been a perfect nightmare.
It would seem as if he had consoled himself by frequent
appliances to the bottle; it would even seem that (toward
the end) he had ceased to depend on Joseph’s
frugal generosity and called for the flagon on his
own account. The effect, at least, of some mellowing
influence was visible in the record: Abbas became
suddenly a willing witness; he began to volunteer
disclosures; and Julia had just looked up from her
seam with something like a smile, when Morris burst
into the house, eagerly calling for his uncle, and
the next instant plunged into the room, waving in
the air the evening paper.
It was indeed with great news that
he came charged. The demise was announced of
Lieutenant-General Sir Glasgow Biggar, K.C.S.I., K.C.M.G.,
etc., and the prize of the tontine now lay between
the Finsbury brothers. Here was Morris’s
opportunity at last. The brothers had never,
it is true, been cordial. When word came that
Joseph was in Asia Minor, Masterman had expressed
himself with irritation. “I call it simply
indecent,” he had said. “Mark my words we
shall hear of him next at the North Pole.”
And these bitter expressions had been reported to the
traveller on his return. What was worse, Masterman
had refused to attend the lecture on “Education:
Its Aims, Objects, Purposes, and Desirability,”
although invited to the platform. Since then the
brothers had not met. On the other hand, they
never had openly quarrelled; Joseph (by Morris’s
orders) was prepared to waive the advantage of his
juniority; Masterman had enjoyed all through life the
reputation of a man neither greedy nor unfair.
Here, then, were all the elements of compromise assembled;
and Morris, suddenly beholding his seven thousand
eight hundred pounds restored to him, and himself dismissed
from the vicissitudes of the leather trade, hastened
the next morning to the office of his cousin Michael.
Michael was something of a public
character. Launched upon the law at a very early
age, and quite without protectors, he had become a
trafficker in shady affairs. He was known to
be the man for a lost cause; it was known he could
extract testimony from a stone, and interest from a
gold mine; and his office was besieged in consequence
by all that numerous class of persons who have still
some reputation to lose, and find themselves upon
the point of losing it; by those who have made undesirable
acquaintances, who have mislaid a compromising correspondence,
or who are blackmailed by their own butlers. In
private life Michael was a man of pleasure; but it
was thought his dire experience at the office had
gone far to sober him, and it was known that (in the
matter of investments) he preferred the solid to the
brilliant. What was yet more to the purpose, he
had been all his life a consistent scoffer at the
Finsbury tontine.
It was therefore with little fear
for the result that Morris presented himself before
his cousin, and proceeded feverishly to set forth his
scheme. For near upon a quarter of an hour the
lawyer suffered him to dwell upon its manifest advantages
uninterrupted. Then Michael rose from his seat,
and, ringing for his clerk, uttered a single clause:
“It won’t do, Morris.”
It was in vain that the leather merchant
pleaded and reasoned, and returned day after day to
plead and reason. It was in vain that he offered
a bonus of one thousand, of two thousand, of three
thousand pounds; in vain that he offered, in Joseph’s
name, to be content with only one-third of the pool.
Still there came the same answer: “It won’t
do.”
“I can’t see the bottom
of this,” he said at last. “You answer
none of my arguments; you haven’t a word to
say. For my part, I believe it’s malice.”
The lawyer smiled at him benignly.
“You may believe one thing,” said he.
“Whatever else I do, I am not going to gratify
any of your curiosity. You see I am a trifle
more communicative to-day, because this is our last
interview upon the subject.”
“Our last interview!” cried Morris.
“The stirrup-cup, dear boy,”
returned Michael. “I can’t have my
business hours encroached upon. And, by the by,
have you no business of your own? Are there no
convulsions in the leather trade?”
“I believe it to be malice,”
repeated Morris doggedly. “You always hated
and despised me from a boy.”
“No, no not hated,”
returned Michael soothingly. “I rather like
you than otherwise; there’s such a permanent
surprise about you, you look so dark and attractive
from a distance. Do you know that to the naked
eye you look romantic? like what they call
a man with a history? And indeed, from all that
I can hear, the history of the leather trade is full
of incident.”
“Yes,” said Morris, disregarding
these remarks, “it’s no use coming here.
I shall see your father.”
“O no, you won’t,”
said Michael. “Nobody shall see my father.”
“I should like to know why,” cried his
cousin.
“I never make any secret of that,” replied
the lawyer. “He is too ill.”
“If he is as ill as you say,”
cried the other, “the more reason for accepting
my proposal. I will see him.”
“Will you?” said Michael, and he rose
and rang for his clerk.
It was now time, according to Sir
Faraday Bond, the medical baronet whose name is so
familiar at the foot of bulletins, that Joseph (the
poor Golden Goose) should be removed into the purer
air of Bournemouth; and for that uncharted wilderness
of villas the family now shook off the dust of Bloomsbury;
Julia delighted, because at Bournemouth she sometimes
made acquaintances; John in despair, for he was a man
of city tastes; Joseph indifferent where he was, so
long as there was pen and ink and daily papers, and
he could avoid martyrdom at the office; Morris himself,
perhaps, not displeased to pretermit these visits to
the city, and have a quiet time for thought.
He was prepared for any sacrifice; all he desired
was to get his money again and clear his feet of leather;
and it would be strange, since he was so modest in
his desires, and the pool amounted to upward of a
hundred and sixteen thousand pounds it
would be strange indeed if he could find no way of
influencing Michael. “If I could only guess
his reason,” he repeated to himself; and by day,
as he walked in Branksome Woods, and by night, as he
turned upon his bed, and at meal-times, when he forgot
to eat, and in the bathing machine, when he forgot
to dress himself, that problem was constantly before
him: Why had Michael refused?
At last, one night, he burst into his brother’s
room and woke him.
“What’s all this?” asked John.
“Julia leaves this place to-morrow,”
replied Morris. “She must go up to town
and get the house ready, and find servants. We
shall all follow in three days.”
“Oh, brayvo!” cried John. “But
why?”
“I’ve found it out, John,” returned
his brother gently.
“It? What?” inquired John.
“Why Michael won’t compromise,”
said Morris. “It’s because he can’t.
It’s because Masterman’s dead, and he’s
keeping it dark.”
“Golly!” cried the impressionable
John. “But what’s the use? Why
does he do it, anyway?”
“To defraud us of the tontine,” said his
brother.
“He couldn’t; you have to have a doctor’s
certificate,” objected John.
“Did you never hear of venal
doctors?” inquired Morris. “They’re
as common as blackberries: you can pick ’em
up for three-pound-ten a head.”
“I wouldn’t do it under fifty if I were
a sawbones,” ejaculated John.
“And then Michael,” continued
Morris, “is in the very thick of it. All
his clients have come to grief; his whole business
is rotten eggs. If any man could arrange it,
he could; and depend upon it, he has his plan all
straight; and depend upon it, it’s a good one,
for he’s clever, and be damned to him!
But I’m clever too; and I’m desperate.
I lost seven thousand eight hundred pounds when I
was an orphan at school.”
“O, don’t be tedious,”
interrupted John. “You’ve lost far
more already trying to get it back.”
CHAPTER II
IN WHICH MORRIS TAKES ACTION
Some days later, accordingly, the
three males of this depressing family might have been
observed (by a reader of G. P. R. James) taking their
departure from the East Station of Bournemouth.
The weather was raw and changeable, and Joseph was
arrayed in consequence according to the principles
of Sir Faraday Bond, a man no less strict (as is well
known) on costume than on diet. There are few
polite invalids who have not lived, or tried to live,
by that punctilious physician’s orders.
“Avoid tea, madam,” the reader has doubtless
heard him say, “avoid tea, fried liver, antimonial
wine, and bakers’ bread. Retire nightly
at 10.45; and clothe yourself (if you please) throughout
in hygienic flannel. Externally, the fur of the
marten is indicated. Do not forget to procure
a pair of health boots at Messrs. Dall and Crumbie’s.”
And he has probably called you back, even after you
have paid your fee, to add with stentorian emphasis:
“I had forgotten one caution: avoid kippered
sturgeon as you would the very devil!” The unfortunate
Joseph was cut to the pattern of Sir Faraday in every
button; he was shod with the health boot; his suit
was of genuine ventilating cloth; his shirt of hygienic
flannel, a somewhat dingy fabric; and he was draped
to the knees in the inevitable greatcoat of marten’s
fur. The very railway porters at Bournemouth
(which was a favourite station of the doctor’s)
marked the old gentleman for a creature of Sir Faraday.
There was but one evidence of personal taste, a vizarded
forage-cap; from this form of headpiece, since he
had fled from a dying jackal on the plains of Ephesus,
and weathered a bora in the Adriatic, nothing could
divorce our traveller.
The three Finsburys mounted into their
compartment, and fell immediately to quarrelling,
a step unseemly in itself and (in this case) highly
unfortunate for Morris. Had he lingered a moment
longer by the window, this tale need never have been
written. For he might then have observed (as
the porters did not fail to do) the arrival of a second
passenger in the uniform of Sir Faraday Bond.
But he had other matters on hand, which he judged
(God knows how erroneously) to be more important.
“I never heard of such a thing,”
he cried, resuming a discussion which had scarcely
ceased all morning. “The bill is not yours;
it is mine.”
“It is payable to me,”
returned the old gentleman, with an air of bitter
obstinacy. “I will do what I please with
my own property.”
The bill was one for eight hundred
pounds, which had been given him at breakfast to endorse,
and which he had simply pocketed.
“Hear him, Johnny!” cried
Morris. “His property! the very clothes
upon his back belong to me.”
“Let him alone,” said John. “I
am sick of both of you.”
“That is no way to speak of
your uncle, sir,” cried Joseph. “I
will not endure this disrespect. You are a pair
of exceedingly forward, impudent, and ignorant young
men, and I have quite made up my mind to put an end
to the whole business.”
“O skittles!” said the graceful John.
But Morris was not so easy in his
mind. This unusual act of insubordination had
already troubled him; and these mutinous words now
sounded ominously in his ears. He looked at the
old gentleman uneasily. Upon one occasion, many
years before, when Joseph was delivering a lecture,
the audience had revolted in a body; finding their
entertainer somewhat dry, they had taken the question
of amusement into their own hands; and the lecturer
(along with the board schoolmaster, the Baptist clergyman,
and a working-man’s candidate, who made up his
bodyguard) was ultimately driven from the scene.
Morris had not been present on that fatal day; if
he had, he would have recognised a certain fighting
glitter in his uncle’s eye, and a certain chewing
movement of his lips, as old acquaintances. But
even to the inexpert these symptoms breathed of something
dangerous.
“Well, well,” said Morris.
“I have no wish to bother you further till we
get to London.”
Joseph did not so much as look at
him in answer; with tremulous hands he produced a
copy of the British Mechanic, and ostentatiously
buried himself in its perusal.
“I wonder what can make him
so cantankerous?” reflected the nephew.
“I don’t like the look of it at all.”
And he dubiously scratched his nose.
The train travelled forth into the
world, bearing along with it the customary freight
of obliterated voyagers, and along with these old
Joseph, affecting immersion in his paper, and John
slumbering over the columns of the Pink Un,
and Morris revolving in his mind a dozen grudges,
and suspicions, and alarms. It passed Christ Church
by the sea, Herne with its pinewoods, Ringwood on
its mazy river. A little behind time, but not
much for the South-Western, it drew up at the platform
of a station, in the midst of the New Forest, the
real name of which (in case the railway company “might
have the law of me”) I shall veil under the
alias of Browndean.
Many passengers put their heads to
the window, and among the rest an old gentleman on
whom I willingly dwell, for I am nearly done with him
now, and (in the whole course of the present narrative)
I am not in the least likely to meet another character
so decent. His name is immaterial, not so his
habits. He had passed his life wandering in a
tweed suit on the continent of Europe; and years of
Galignani’s Messenger having at length
undermined his eyesight, he suddenly remembered the
rivers of Assyria and came to London to consult an
oculist. From the oculist to the dentist, and
from both to the physician, the step appears inevitable;
presently he was in the hands of Sir Faraday, robed
in ventilating cloth and sent to Bournemouth; and
to that domineering baronet (who was his only friend
upon his native soil) he was now returning to report.
The case of these tweed-suited wanderers is unique.
We have all seen them entering the table d’hôte
(at Spezzia, or Grätz, or Venice) with a genteel
melancholy and a faint appearance of having been to
India and not succeeded. In the offices of many
hundred hotels they are known by name; and yet, if
the whole of this wandering cohort were to disappear
tomorrow, their absence would be wholly unremarked.
How much more, if only one say this one
in the ventilating cloth should vanish!
He had paid his bills at Bournemouth; his worldly
effects were all in the van in two portmanteaux, and
these after the proper interval would be sold as unclaimed
baggage to a Jew; Sir Faraday’s butler would
be a half-crown poorer at the year’s end, and
the hotel-keepers of Europe about the same date would
be mourning a small but quite observable decline in
profits. And that would be literally all.
Perhaps the old gentleman thought something of the
sort, for he looked melancholy enough as he pulled
his bare, grey head back into the carriage, and the
train smoked under the bridge, and forth, with ever
quickening speed, across the mingled heaths and woods
of the New Forest.
Not many hundred yards beyond Browndean,
however, a sudden jarring of brakes set everybody’s
teeth on edge, and there was a brutal stoppage.
Morris Finsbury was aware of a confused uproar of voices,
and sprang to the window. Women were screaming,
men were tumbling from the windows on the track, the
guard was crying to them to stay where they were; at
the same time the train began to gather way and move
very slowly backward toward Browndean; and the next
moment, all these various sounds were blotted out
in the apocalyptic whistle and the thundering onslaught
of the down express.
The actual collision Morris did not
hear. Perhaps he fainted. He had a wild
dream of having seen the carriage double up and fall
to pieces like a pantomime trick; and sure enough,
when he came to himself, he was lying on the bare
earth and under the open sky. His head ached savagely;
he carried his hand to his brow, and was not surprised
to see it red with blood. The air was filled
with an intolerable, throbbing roar, which he expected
to find die away with the return of consciousness;
and instead of that it seemed but to swell the louder
and to pierce the more cruelly through his ears.
It was a raging, bellowing thunder, like a boiler-riveting
factory.
And now curiosity began to stir, and
he sat up and looked about him. The track at
this point ran in a sharp curve about a wooded hillock;
all of the near side was heaped with the wreckage
of the Bournemouth train; that of the express was
mostly hidden by the trees; and just at the turn,
under clouds of vomiting steam and piled about with
cairns of living coal, lay what remained of the two
engines, one upon the other. On the heathy margin
of the line were many people running to and fro, and
crying aloud as they ran, and many others lying motionless
like sleeping tramps.
Morris suddenly drew an inference.
“There has been an accident!” thought
he, and was elated at his perspicacity. Almost
at the same time his eye lighted on John, who lay
close by as white as paper. “Poor old John!
poor old cove!” he thought, the schoolboy expression
popping forth from some forgotten treasury, and he
took his brother’s hand in his with childish
tenderness. It was perhaps the touch that recalled
him; at least John opened his eyes, sat suddenly up,
and after several ineffectual movements of his lips,
“What’s the row?” said he, in a
phantom voice.
The din of that devil’s smithy
still thundered in their ears. “Let us
get away from that,” Morris cried, and pointed
to the vomit of steam that still spouted from the
broken engines. And the pair helped each other
up, and stood and quaked and wavered and stared about
them at the scene of death.
Just then they were approached by
a party of men who had already organised themselves
for the purposes of rescue.
“Are you hurt?” cried
one of these, a young fellow with the sweat streaming
down his pallid face, and who, by the way he was treated,
was evidently the doctor.
Morris shook his head, and the young
man, nodding grimly, handed him a bottle of some spirit.
“Take a drink of that,”
he said; “your friend looks as if he needed it
badly. We want every man we can get,” he
added; “there’s terrible work before us,
and nobody should shirk. If you can do no more,
you can carry a stretcher.”
The doctor was hardly gone before
Morris, under the spur of the dram, awoke to the full
possession of his wits.
“My God!” he cried. “Uncle
Joseph!”
“Yes,” said John, “where
can he be? He can’t be far off. I hope
the old party isn’t damaged.”
“Come and help me to look,”
said Morris, with a snap of savage determination strangely
foreign to his ordinary bearing; and then, for one
moment, he broke forth. “If he’s dead!”
he cried, and shook his fist at heaven.
To and fro the brothers hurried, staring
in the faces of the wounded, or turning the dead upon
their backs. They must have thus examined forty
people, and still there was no word of Uncle Joseph.
But now the course of their search brought them near
the centre of the collision, where the boilers were
still blowing off steam with a deafening clamour.
It was a part of the field not yet gleaned by the
rescuing party. The ground, especially on the
margin of the wood, was full of inequalities here
a pit, there a hillock surmounted with a bush of furze.
It was a place where many bodies might lie concealed,
and they beat it like pointers after game. Suddenly
Morris, who was leading, paused and reached forth
his index with a tragic gesture. John followed
the direction of his brother’s hand.
In the bottom of a sandy hole lay
something that had once been human. The face
had suffered severely, and it was unrecognisable; but
that was not required. The snowy hair, the coat
of marten, the ventilating cloth, the hygienic flannel everything
down to the health boots from Messrs. Dall and Crumbie’s,
identified the body as that of Uncle Joseph. Only
the forage-cap must have been lost in the convulsion,
for the dead man was bare-headed.
“The poor old beggar!”
said John, with a touch of natural feeling; “I
would give ten pounds if we hadn’t chivied him
in the train!”
But there was no sentiment in the
face of Morris as he gazed upon the dead. Gnawing
his nails, with introverted eyes, his brow marked with
the stamp of tragic indignation and tragic intellectual
effort, he stood there silent. Here was a last
injustice; he had been robbed while he was an orphan
at school, he had been lashed to a decadent leather
business, he had been saddled with Miss Hazeltine,
his cousin had been defrauding him of the tontine,
and he had borne all this, we might almost say, with
dignity, and now they had gone and killed his uncle!
“Here!” he said suddenly,
“take his heels, we must get him into the woods.
I’m not going to have anybody find this.”
“O, fudge!” said John, “Where’s
the use?”
“Do what I tell you,”
spirted Morris, as he took the corpse by the shoulders.
“Am I to carry him myself?”
They were close upon the borders of
the wood; in ten or twelve paces they were under cover;
and a little farther back, in a sandy clearing of
the trees, they laid their burthen down, and stood
and looked at it with loathing.
“What do you mean to do?” whispered John.
“Bury him, to be sure!”
responded Morris, and he opened his pocket-knife and
began feverishly to dig.
“You’ll never make a hand
of it with that,” objected the other.
“If you won’t help me,
you cowardly shirk,” screamed Morris, “you
can go to the devil!”
“It’s the childishest
folly,” said John; “but no man shall call
me a coward,” and he began to help his brother
grudgingly.
The soil was sandy and light, but
matted with the roots of the surrounding firs.
Gorse tore their hands; and as they baled the sand
from the grave, it was often discoloured with their
blood. An hour passed of unremitting energy upon
the part of Morris, of lukewarm help on that of John;
and still the trench was barely nine inches in depth.
Into this the body was rudely flung: sand was
piled upon it, and then more sand must be dug, and
gorse had to be cut to pile on that; and still from
one end of the sordid mound a pair of feet projected
and caught the light upon their patent-leather toes.
But by this time the nerves of both were shaken; even
Morris had enough of his grisly task; and they skulked
off like animals into the thickest of the neighbouring
covert.
“It’s the best that we
can do,” said Morris, sitting down.
“And now,” said John,
“perhaps you’ll have the politeness to
tell me what it’s all about.”
“Upon my word,” cried
Morris, “if you do not understand for yourself,
I almost despair of telling you.”
“O, of course it’s some
rot about the tontine,” returned the other.
“But it’s the merest nonsense. We’ve
lost it, and there’s an end.”
“I tell you,” said Morris,
“Uncle Masterman is dead. I know it, there’s
a voice that tells me so.”
“Well, and so is Uncle Joseph,” said John.
“He’s not dead, unless I choose,”
returned Morris.
“And come to that,” cried
John, “if you’re right, and Uncle Masterman’s
been dead ever so long, all we have to do is to tell
the truth and expose Michael.”
“You seem to think Michael is
a fool,” sneered Morris. “Can’t
you understand he’s been preparing this fraud
for years? He has the whole thing ready:
the nurse, the doctor, the undertaker, all bought,
the certificate all ready but the date! Let him
get wind of this business, and you mark my words,
Uncle Masterman will die in two days and be buried
in a week. But see here, Johnny; what Michael
can do, I can do. If he plays a game of bluff,
so can I. If his father is to live for ever, by God,
so shall my uncle!”
“It’s illegal, ain’t it?”
said John.
“A man must have some moral courage,”
replied Morris with dignity.
“And then suppose you’re
wrong? Suppose Uncle Masterman’s alive and
kicking?”
“Well, even then,” responded
the plotter, “we are no worse off than we were
before; in fact, we’re better. Uncle Masterman
must die some day; as long as Uncle Joseph was alive,
he might have died any day; but we’re out of
all that trouble now: there’s no sort of
limit to the game that I propose it can
be kept up till Kingdom Come.”
“If I could only see how you
meant to set about it!” sighed John. “But
you know, Morris, you always were such a bungler.”
“I’d like to know what
I ever bungled,” cried Morris; “I have
the best collection of signet rings in London.”
“Well, you know, there’s
the leather business,” suggested the other.
“That’s considered rather a hash.”
It was a mark of singular self-control
in Morris that he suffered this to pass unchallenged,
and even unresented.
“About the business in hand,”
said he, “once we can get him up to Bloomsbury,
there’s no sort of trouble. We bury him
in the cellar, which seems made for it; and then all
I have to do is to start out and find a venal doctor.”
“Why can’t we leave him where he is?”
asked John.
“Because we know nothing about
the country,” retorted Morris. “This
wood may be a regular lovers’ walk. Turn
your mind to the real difficulty. How are we
to get him up to Bloomsbury?”
Various schemes were mooted and rejected.
The railway station at Browndean was, of course, out
of the question, for it would now be a centre of curiosity
and gossip, and (of all things) they would be least
able to despatch a dead body without remark. John
feebly proposed getting an ale-cask and sending it
as beer, but the objections to this course were so
overwhelming that Morris scorned to answer. The
purchase of a packing-case seemed equally hopeless,
for why should two gentlemen without baggage of any
kind require a packing-case? They would be more
likely to require clean linen.
“We are working on wrong lines,”
cried Morris at last. “The thing must be
gone about more carefully. Suppose now,”
he added excitedly, speaking by fits and starts, as
if he were thinking aloud, “suppose we rent a
cottage by the month. A householder can buy a
packing-case without remark. Then suppose we
clear the people out to-day, get the packing-case
to-night, and to-morrow I hire a carriage or
a cart that we could drive ourselves and
take the box, or whatever we get, to Ringwood or Lyndhurst
or somewhere; we could label it ‘specimens,’
don’t you see? Johnny, I believe I’ve
hit the nail at last.”
“Well, it sounds more feasible,” admitted
John.
“Of course we must take assumed
names,” continued Morris. “It would
never do to keep our own. What do you say to ‘Masterman’
itself? It sounds quiet and dignified.”
“I will not take the
name of Masterman,” returned his brother; “you
may, if you like. I shall call myself Vance the
Great Vance; positively the last six nights.
There’s some go in a name like that.”
“Vance!” cried Morris.
“Do you think we are playing a pantomime for
our amusement? There was never anybody named
Vance who wasn’t a music-hall singer.”
“That’s the beauty of
it,” returned John; “it gives you some
standing at once. You may call yourself Fortescue
till all’s blue, and nobody cares; but to be
Vance gives a man a natural nobility.”
“But there’s lots of other
theatrical names,” cried Morris. “Leybourne,
Irving, Brough, Toole ”
“Devil a one will I take!”
returned his brother. “I am going to have
my little lark out of this as well as you.”
“Very well,” said Morris,
who perceived that John was determined to carry his
point, “I shall be Robert Vance.”
“And I shall be George Vance,”
cried John, “the only original George Vance!
Rally round the only original!”
Repairing as well as they were able
the disorder of their clothes, Finsbury brothers returned
to Browndean by a circuitous route in quest of luncheon
and a suitable cottage. It is not always easy
to drop at a moment’s notice on a furnished
residence in a retired locality; but fortune presently
introduced our adventurers to a deaf carpenter, a man
rich in cottages of the required description, and unaffectedly
eager to supply their wants. The second place
they visited, standing, as it did, about a mile and
a half from any neighbours, caused them to exchange
a glance of hope. On a nearer view, the place
was not without depressing features. It stood
in a marshy-looking hollow of a heath; tall trees
obscured its windows; the thatch visibly rotted on
the rafters; and the walls were stained with splashes
of unwholesome green. The rooms were small, the
ceilings low, the furniture merely nominal; a strange
chill and a haunting smell of damp pervaded the kitchen;
and the bedroom boasted only of one bed.
Morris, with a view to cheapening
the place, remarked on this defect.
“Well,” returned the man,
“if you can’t sleep two abed, you’d
better take a villa residence.”
“And then,” pursued Morris,
“there’s no water. How do you get
your water?”
“We fill that from the
spring,” replied the carpenter, pointing to a
big barrel that stood beside the door. “The
spring ain’t so very far off, after all,
and it’s easy brought in buckets. There’s
a bucket there.”
Morris nudged his brother as they
examined the water-butt. It was new, and very
solidly constructed for its office. If anything
had been wanting to decide them, this eminently practical
barrel would have turned the scale. A bargain
was promptly struck, the month’s rent was paid
upon the nail, and about an hour later Finsbury brothers
might have been observed returning to the blighted
cottage, having along with them the key, which was
the symbol of their tenancy, a spirit-lamp, with which
they fondly told themselves they would be able to cook,
a pork pie of suitable dimensions, and a quart of
the worst whisky in Hampshire. Nor was this all
they had effected; already (under the plea that they
were landscape-painters) they had hired for dawn on
the morrow a light but solid two-wheeled cart; so
that when they entered in their new character, they
were able to tell themselves that the back of the
business was already broken.
John proceeded to get tea; while Morris,
foraging about the house, was presently delighted
by discovering the lid of the water-butt upon the
kitchen shelf. Here, then, was the packing-case
complete; in the absence of straw, the blankets (which
he himself, at least, had not the smallest intention
of using for their present purpose) would exactly take
the place of packing; and Morris, as the difficulties
began to vanish from his path, rose almost to the
brink of exultation. There was, however, one
difficulty not yet faced, one upon which his whole
scheme depended. Would John consent to remain
alone in the cottage? He had not yet dared to
put the question.
It was with high good-humour that
the pair sat down to the deal table, and proceeded
to fall-to on the pork pie. Morris retailed the
discovery of the lid, and the Great Vance was pleased
to applaud by beating on the table with his fork in
true music-hall style.
“That’s the dodge,”
he cried. “I always said a water-butt was
what you wanted for this business.”
“Of course,” said Morris,
thinking this a favourable opportunity to prepare
his brother, “of course you must stay on in this
place till I give the word; I’ll give out that
uncle is resting in the New Forest. It would
not do for both of us to appear in London; we could
never conceal the absence of the old man.”
John’s jaw dropped.
“O, come!” he cried. “You can
stay in this hole yourself. I won’t.”
The colour came into Morris’s
cheeks. He saw that he must win his brother at
any cost.
“You must please remember, Johnny,”
he said, “the amount of the tontine. If
I succeed, we shall have each fifty thousand to place
to our bank account; ay, and nearer sixty.”
“But if you fail,” returned
John, “what then? What’ll be the colour
of our bank account in that case?”
“I will pay all expenses,”
said Morris, with an inward struggle; “you shall
lose nothing.”
“Well,” said John, with
a laugh, “if the ex-s are yours, and half-profits
mine, I don’t mind remaining here for a couple
of days.”
“A couple of days!” cried
Morris, who was beginning to get angry and controlled
himself with difficulty; “why, you would do more
to win five pounds on a horse-race!”
“Perhaps I would,” returned
the Great Vance; “it’s the artistic temperament.”
“This is monstrous!” burst
out Morris. “I take all risks; I pay all
expenses; I divide profits; and you won’t take
the slightest pains to help me. It’s not
decent; it’s not honest; it’s not even
kind.”
“But suppose,” objected
John, who was considerably impressed by his brother’s
vehemence, “suppose that Uncle Masterman is alive
after all, and lives ten years longer; must I rot
here all that time?”
“Of course not,” responded
Morris, in a more conciliatory tone; “I only
ask a month at the outside; and if Uncle Masterman
is not dead by that time you can go abroad.”
“Go abroad?” repeated
John eagerly. “Why shouldn’t I go
at once? Tell ’em that Joseph and I are
seeing life in Paris.”
“Nonsense,” said Morris.
“Well, but look here,”
said John; “it’s this house, it’s
such a pig-sty, it’s so dreary and damp.
You said yourself that it was damp.”
“Only to the carpenter,”
Morris distinguished, “and that was to reduce
the rent. But really, you know, now we’re
in it, I’ve seen worse.”
“And what am I to do?”
complained the victim. “How can I entertain
a friend?”
“My dear Johnny, if you don’t
think the tontine worth a little trouble, say so,
and I’ll give the business up.”
“You’re dead certain of
the figures, I suppose?” asked John. “Well” with
a deep sigh “send me the Pink Un
and all the comic papers regularly. I’ll
face the music.”
As afternoon drew on, the cottage
breathed more thrillingly of its native marsh; a creeping
chill inhabited its chambers; the fire smoked, and
a shower of rain, coming up from the channel on a slant
of wind, tingled on the window-panes. At intervals,
when the gloom deepened toward despair, Morris would
produce the whisky-bottle, and at first John welcomed
the diversion not for long. It has
been said this spirit was the worst in Hampshire;
only those acquainted with the county can appreciate
the force of that superlative; and at length even the
Great Vance (who was no connoisseur) waved the decoction
from his lips. The approach of dusk, feebly combated
with a single tallow candle, added a touch of tragedy;
and John suddenly stopped whistling through his fingers an
art to the practice of which he had been reduced and
bitterly lamented his concessions.
“I can’t stay here a month,”
he cried. “No one could. The thing’s
nonsense, Morris. The parties that lived in the
Bastille would rise against a place like this.”
With an admirable affectation of indifference,
Morris proposed a game of pitch-and-toss. To
what will not the diplomatist condescend! It was
John’s favourite game; indeed his only game he
had found all the rest too intellectual and
he played it with equal skill and good fortune.
To Morris himself, on the other hand, the whole business
was detestable; he was a bad pitcher, he had no luck
in tossing, and he was one who suffered torments when
he lost. But John was in a dangerous humour, and
his brother was prepared for any sacrifice.
By seven o’clock, Morris, with
incredible agony, had lost a couple of half-crowns.
Even with the tontine before his eyes, this was as
much as he could bear; and, remarking that he would
take his revenge some other time, he proposed a bit
of supper and a grog.
Before they had made an end of this
refreshment it was time to be at work. A bucket
of water for present necessities was withdrawn from
the water-butt, which was then emptied and rolled
before the kitchen fire to dry; and the two brothers
set forth on their adventure under a starless heaven.
CHAPTER III
THE LECTURER AT LARGE
Whether mankind is really partial
to happiness is an open question. Not a month
passes by but some cherished son runs off into the
merchant service, or some valued husband decamps to
Texas with a lady help; clergymen have fled from their
parishioners; and even judges have been known to retire.
To an open mind, it will appear (upon the whole) less
strange that Joseph Finsbury should have been led to
entertain ideas of escape. His lot (I think we
may say) was not a happy one. My friend, Mr.
Morris, with whom I travel up twice or thrice a week
from Snaresbrook Park, is certainly a gentleman whom
I esteem; but he was scarce a model nephew. As
for John, he is of course an excellent fellow; but
if he was the only link that bound one to a home,
I think the most of us would vote for foreign travel.
In the case of Joseph, John (if he were a link at
all) was not the only one; endearing bonds had long
enchained the old gentleman to Bloomsbury; and by
these expressions I do not in the least refer to Julia
Hazeltine (of whom, however, he was fond enough), but
to that collection of manuscript note-books in which
his life lay buried. That he should ever have
made up his mind to separate himself from these collections,
and go forth upon the world with no other resources
than his memory supplied, is a circumstance highly
pathetic in itself, and but little creditable to the
wisdom of his nephews.
The design, or at least the temptation,
was already some months old; and when a bill for eight
hundred pounds, payable to himself, was suddenly placed
in Joseph’s hand, it brought matters to an issue.
He retained that bill, which, to one of his frugality,
meant wealth; and he promised himself to disappear
among the crowds at Waterloo, or (if that should prove
impossible) to slink out of the house in the course
of the evening and melt like a dream into the millions
of London. By a peculiar interposition of Providence
and railway mismanagement he had not so long to wait.
He was one of the first to come to
himself and scramble to his feet after the Browndean
catastrophe, and he had no sooner remarked his prostrate
nephews than he understood his opportunity and fled.
A man of upwards of seventy, who has just met with
a railway accident, and who is cumbered besides with
the full uniform of Sir Faraday Bond, is not very
likely to flee far, but the wood was close at hand
and offered the fugitive at least a temporary covert.
Hither, then, the old gentleman skipped with extraordinary
expedition, and, being somewhat winded and a good
deal shaken, here he lay down in a convenient grove
and was presently overwhelmed by slumber. The
way of fate is often highly entertaining to the looker-on,
and it is certainly a pleasant circumstance, that
while Morris and John were delving in the sand to
conceal the body of a total stranger, their uncle lay
in dreamless sleep a few hundred yards deeper in the
wood.
He was awakened by the jolly note
of a bugle from the neighbouring high road, where
a char-Ã -banc was bowling by with some belated
tourists. The sound cheered his old heart, it
directed his steps into the bargain, and soon he was
on the highway, looking east and west from under his
vizor, and doubtfully revolving what he ought to do.
A deliberate sound of wheels arose in the distance,
and then a cart was seen approaching, well filled
with parcels, driven by a good-natured looking man
on a double bench, and displaying on a board the legend,
“I. Chandler, carrier.” In the
infamously prosaic mind of Mr. Finsbury, certain streaks
of poetry survived and were still efficient; they had
carried him to Asia Minor as a giddy youth of forty,
and now, in the first hours of his recovered freedom,
they suggested to him the idea of continuing his flight
in Mr. Chandler’s cart. It would be cheap;
properly broached, it might even cost nothing, and,
after years of mittens and hygienic flannel, his heart
leaped out to meet the notion of exposure.
Mr. Chandler was perhaps a little
puzzled to find so old a gentleman, so strangely clothed,
and begging for a lift on so retired a roadside.
But he was a good-natured man, glad to do a service,
and so he took the stranger up; and he had his own
idea of civility, and so he asked no questions.
Silence, in fact, was quite good enough for Mr. Chandler;
but the cart had scarcely begun to move forward ere
he found himself involved in a one-sided conversation.
“I can see,” began Mr.
Finsbury, “by the mixture of parcels and boxes
that are contained in your cart, each marked with its
individual label, and by the good Flemish mare you
drive, that you occupy the post of carrier in that
great English system of transport which, with all its
defects, is the pride of our country.”
“Yes, sir,” returned Mr.
Chandler vaguely, for he hardly knew what to reply;
“them parcels posts has done us carriers a world
of harm.”
“I am not a prejudiced man,”
continued Joseph Finsbury. “As a young man
I travelled much. Nothing was too small or too
obscure for me to acquire. At sea I studied seamanship,
learned the complicated knots employed by mariners,
and acquired the technical terms. At Naples, I
would learn the art of making macaroni; at Nice, the
principles of making candied fruit. I never went
to the opera without first buying the book of the
piece, and making myself acquainted with the principal
airs by picking them out on the piano with one finger.”
“You must have seen a deal,
sir,” remarked the carrier, touching up his
horse; “I wish I could have had your advantages.”
“Do you know how often the word
whip occurs in the Old Testament?” continued
the old gentleman. “One hundred and (if
I remember exactly) forty-seven times.”
“Do it indeed, sir?” said
Mr. Chandler. “I never should have thought
it.”
“The Bible contains three million
five hundred and one thousand two hundred and forty-nine
letters. Of verses I believe there are upward
of eighteen thousand. There have been many editions
of the Bible; Wiclif was the first to introduce it
into England about the year 1300. The ‘Paragraph
Bible,’ as it is called, is a well-known edition,
and is so called because it is divided into paragraphs.
The ‘Breeches Bible’ is another well-known
instance, and gets its name either because it was
printed by one Breeches, or because the place of publication
bore that name.”
The carrier remarked drily that he
thought that was only natural, and turned his attention
to the more congenial task of passing a cart of hay;
it was a matter of some difficulty, for the road was
narrow, and there was a ditch on either hand.
“I perceive,” began Mr.
Finsbury, when they had successfully passed the cart,
“that you hold your reins with one hand; you
should employ two.”
“Well, I like that!” cried
the carrier contemptuously. “Why?”
“You do not understand,”
continued Mr. Finsbury. “What I tell you
is a scientific fact, and reposes on the theory of
the lever, a branch of mechanics. There are some
very interesting little shilling books upon the field
of study, which I should think a man in your station
would take a pleasure to read. But I am afraid
you have not cultivated the art of observation; at
least we have now driven together for some time, and
I cannot remember that you have contributed a single
fact. This is a very false principle, my good
man. For instance, I do not know if you observed
that (as you passed the hay-cart man) you took your
left?”
“Of course I did,” cried
the carrier, who was now getting belligerent; “he’d
have the law on me if I hadn’t.”
“In France, now,” resumed
the old man, “and also, I believe, in the United
States of America, you would have taken the right.”
“I would not,” cried Mr.
Chandler indignantly. “I would have taken
the left.”
“I observe again,” continued
Mr. Finsbury, scorning to reply, “that you mend
the dilapidated parts of your harness with string.
I have always protested against this carelessness
and slovenliness of the English poor. In an essay
that I once read before an appreciative audience ”
“It ain’t string,”
said the carrier sullenly, “it’s pack-thread.”
“I have always protested,”
resumed the old man, “that in their private
and domestic life, as well as in their labouring career,
the lower classes of this country are improvident,
thriftless, and extravagant. A stitch in time ”
“Who the devil are the
lower classes?” cried the carrier. “You
are the lower classes yourself! If I thought
you were a blooming aristocrat, I shouldn’t
have given you a lift.”
The words were uttered with undisguised
ill-feeling; it was plain the pair were not congenial,
and further conversation, even to one of Mr. Finsbury’s
pathetic loquacity, was out of the question. With
an angry gesture, he pulled down the brim of the forage-cap
over his eyes, and, producing a note-book and a blue
pencil from one of his innermost pockets, soon became
absorbed in calculations.
On his part the carrier fell to whistling
with fresh zest; and if (now and again) he glanced
at the companion of his drive, it was with mingled
feelings of triumph and alarm triumph because
he had succeeded in arresting that prodigy of speech,
and alarm lest (by any accident) it should begin again.
Even the shower, which presently overtook and passed
them, was endured by both in silence; and it was still
in silence that they drove at length into Southampton.
Dusk had fallen; the shop windows
glimmered forth into the streets of the old seaport;
in private houses lights were kindled for the evening
meal; and Mr. Finsbury began to think complacently
of his night’s lodging. He put his papers
by, cleared his throat, and looked doubtfully at Mr.
Chandler.
“Will you be civil enough,”
said he, “to recommend me to an inn?”
Mr. Chandler pondered for a moment.
“Well,” he said at last, “I wonder
how about the ‘Tregonwell Arms.’”
“The ‘Tregonwell Arms’
will do very well,” returned the old man, “if
it’s clean and cheap, and the people civil.”
“I wasn’t thinking so
much of you,” returned Mr. Chandler thoughtfully.
“I was thinking of my friend Watts as keeps the
’ouse; he’s a friend of mine, you see,
and he helped me through my trouble last year.
And I was thinking, would it be fair-like on Watts
to saddle him with an old party like you, who might
be the death of him with general information.
Would it be fair to the ’ouse?” inquired
Mr. Chandler, with an air of candid appeal.
“Mark me,” cried the old
gentleman with spirit. “It was kind in you
to bring me here for nothing, but it gives you no
right to address me in such terms. Here’s
a shilling for your trouble; and, if you do not choose
to set me down at the ‘Tregonwell Arms,’
I can find it for myself.”
Chandler was surprised and a little
startled; muttering something apologetic, he returned
the shilling, drove in silence through several intricate
lanes and small streets, drew up at length before the
bright windows of an inn, and called loudly for Mr.
Watts.
“Is that you, Jem?” cried
a hearty voice from the stableyard. “Come
in and warm yourself.”
“I only stopped here,”
Mr. Chandler explained, “to let down an old gent
that wants food and lodging. Mind, I warn you
agin him; he’s worse nor a temperance lecturer.”
Mr. Finsbury dismounted with difficulty,
for he was cramped with his long drive, and the shaking
he had received in the accident. The friendly
Mr. Watts, in spite of the carter’s scarcely
agreeable introduction, treated the old gentleman
with the utmost courtesy, and led him into the back
parlour, where there was a big fire burning in the
grate. Presently a table was spread in the same
room, and he was invited to seat himself before a
stewed fowl somewhat the worse for having
seen service before and a big pewter mug
of ale from the tap.
He rose from supper a giant refreshed;
and, changing his seat to one nearer the fire, began
to examine the other guests with an eye to the delights
of oratory. There were near a dozen present, all
men, and (as Joseph exulted to perceive) all working
men. Often already had he seen cause to bless
that appetite for disconnected fact and rotatory argument
which is so marked a character of the mechanic.
But even an audience of working men has to be courted,
and there was no man more deeply versed in the necessary
arts than Joseph Finsbury. He placed his glasses
on his nose, drew from his pocket a bundle of papers,
and spread them before him on a table. He crumpled
them, he smoothed them out; now he skimmed them over,
apparently well pleased with their contents; now, with
tapping pencil and contracted brows, he seemed maturely
to consider some particular statement. A stealthy
glance about the room assured him of the success of
his manoeuvres; all eyes were turned on the performer,
mouths were open, pipes hung suspended; the birds were
charmed. At the same moment the entrance of Mr.
Watts afforded him an opportunity.
“I observe,” said he,
addressing the landlord, but taking at the same time
the whole room into his confidence with an encouraging
look, “I observe that some of these gentlemen
are looking with curiosity in my direction; and certainly
it is unusual to see anyone immersed in literary and
scientific labours in the public apartment of an inn.
I have here some calculations I made this morning
upon the cost of living in this and other countries a
subject, I need scarcely say, highly interesting to
the working classes. I have calculated a scale
of living for incomes of eighty, one hundred and sixty,
two hundred, and two hundred and forty pounds a year.
I must confess that the income of eighty pounds has
somewhat baffled me, and the others are not so exact
as I could wish; for the price of washing varies largely
in foreign countries, and the different cokes, coals,
and firewoods fluctuate surprisingly. I will
read my researches, and I hope you won’t scruple
to point out to me any little errors that I may have
committed either from oversight or ignorance.
I will begin, gentlemen, with the income of eighty
pounds a year.”
Whereupon the old gentleman, with
less compassion than he would have had for brute beasts,
delivered himself of all his tedious calculations.
As he occasionally gave nine versions of a single
income, placing the imaginary person in London, Paris,
Bagdad, Spitzbergen, Bassorah, Heligoland, the Scilly
Islands, Brighton, Cincinnati, and Nijni-Novgorod,
with an appropriate outfit for each locality, it is
no wonder that his hearers look back on that evening
as the most tiresome they ever spent.
Long before Mr. Finsbury had reached
Nijni-Novgorod with the income of one hundred and
sixty pounds, the company had dwindled and faded away
to a few old topers and the bored but affable Watts.
There was a constant stream of customers from the
outer world, but so soon as they were served they
drank their liquor quickly and departed with the utmost
celerity for the next public-house.
By the time the young man with two
hundred a year was vegetating in the Scilly Islands,
Mr. Watts was left alone with the economist; and that
imaginary person had scarce commenced life at Brighton
before the last of his pursuers desisted from the
chase.
Mr. Finsbury slept soundly after the
manifold fatigues of the day. He rose late, and,
after a good breakfast, ordered the bill. Then
it was that he made a discovery which has been made
by many others, both before and since: that it
is one thing to order your bill, and another to discharge
it. The items were moderate and (what does not
always follow) the total small; but, after the most
sedulous review of all his pockets, one and nine pence
halfpenny appeared to be the total of the old gentleman’s
available assets. He asked to see Mr. Watts.
“Here is a bill on London for
eight hundred pounds,” said Mr. Finsbury, as
that worthy appeared. “I am afraid, unless
you choose to discount it yourself, it may detain
me a day or two till I can get it cashed.”
Mr. Watts looked at the bill, turned
it over, and dogs-eared it with his fingers.
“It will keep you a day or two?” he said,
repeating the old man’s words. “You
have no other money with you?”
“Some trifling change,”
responded Joseph. “Nothing to speak of.”
“Then you can send it me; I
should be pleased to trust you.”
“To tell the truth,” answered
the old gentleman, “I am more than half inclined
to stay; I am in need of funds.”
“If a loan of ten shillings
would help you, it is at your service,” responded
Watts, with eagerness.
“No, I think I would rather
stay,” said the old man, “and get my bill
discounted.”
“You shall not stay in my house,”
cried Mr. Watts. “This is the last time
you shall have a bed at the ‘Tregonwell Arms.’”
“I insist upon remaining,”
replied Mr. Finsbury, with spirit; “I remain
by Act of Parliament; turn me out if you dare.”
“Then pay your bill,” said Mr. Watts.
“Take that,” cried the old man, tossing
him the negotiable bill.
“It is not legal tender,”
replied Mr. Watts. “You must leave my house
at once.”
“You cannot appreciate the contempt
I feel for you, Mr. Watts,” said the old gentleman,
resigning himself to circumstances. “But
you shall feel it in one way: I refuse to pay
my bill.”
“I don’t care for your
bill,” responded Mr. Watts. “What
I want is your absence.”
“That you shall have!”
said the old gentleman, and, taking up his forage-cap
as he spoke, he crammed it on his head. “Perhaps
you are too insolent,” he added, “to inform
me of the time of the next London train?”
“It leaves in three-quarters
of an hour,” returned the innkeeper with alacrity.
“You can easily catch it.”
Joseph’s position was one of
considerable weakness. On the one hand, it would
have been well to avoid the direct line of railway,
since it was there he might expect his nephews to
lie in wait for his recapture; on the other, it was
highly desirable, it was even strictly needful, to
get the bill discounted ere it should be stopped.
To London, therefore, he decided to proceed on the
first train; and there remained but one point to be
considered, how to pay his fare.
Joseph’s nails were never clean;
he ate almost entirely with his knife. I doubt
if you could say he had the manners of a gentleman;
but he had better than that, a touch of genuine dignity.
Was it from his stay in Asia Minor? Was it from
a strain in the Finsbury blood sometimes alluded to
by customers? At least, when he presented himself
before the station-master, his salaam was truly Oriental,
palm-trees appeared to crowd about the little office,
and the simoom or the bulbul but I leave
this image to persons better acquainted with the East.
His appearance, besides, was highly in his favour;
the uniform of Sir Faraday, however inconvenient and
conspicuous, was, at least, a costume in which no
swindler could have hoped to prosper; and the exhibition
of a valuable watch and a bill for eight hundred pounds
completed what deportment had begun. A quarter
of an hour later, when the train came up, Mr. Finsbury
was introduced to the guard and installed in a first-class
compartment, the station-master smilingly assuming
all responsibility.
As the old gentleman sat waiting the
moment of departure, he was the witness of an incident
strangely connected with the fortunes of his house.
A packing-case of cyclopean bulk was borne along the
platform by some dozen of tottering porters, and ultimately,
to the delight of a considerable crowd, hoisted on
board the van. It is often the cheering task
of the historian to direct attention to the designs
and (if it may be reverently said) the artifices of
Providence. In the luggage van, as Joseph was
borne out of the station of Southampton East upon his
way to London, the egg of his romance lay (so to speak)
unhatched. The huge packing-case was directed
to lie at Waterloo till called for, and addressed
to one “William Dent Pitman”; and the very
next article, a goodly barrel jammed into the corner
of the van, bore the superscription, “M.
Finsbury, 16 John Street, Bloomsbury. Carriage
paid.”
In this juxtaposition, the train of
powder was prepared; and there was now wanting only
an idle hand to fire it off.
CHAPTER IV
THE MAGISTRATE IN THE LUGGAGE VAN
The city of Winchester is famed for
a cathedral, a bishop but he was unfortunately
killed some years ago while riding a public
school, a considerable assortment of the military,
and the deliberate passage of the trains of the London
and South-Western line. These and many similar
associations would have doubtless crowded on the mind
of Joseph Finsbury; but his spirit had at that time
flitted from the railway compartment to a heaven of
populous lecture-halls and endless oratory. His
body, in the meanwhile, lay doubled on the cushions,
the forage-cap rakishly tilted back after the fashion
of those that lie in wait for nursery-maids, the poor
old face quiescent, one arm clutching to his heart
Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper.
To him, thus unconscious, enter and
exeunt again a pair of voyagers. These two had
saved the train and no more. A tandem urged to
its last speed, an act of something closely bordering
on brigandage at the ticket office, and a spasm of
running, had brought them on the platform just as
the engine uttered its departing snort. There
was but one carriage easily within their reach; and
they had sprung into it, and the leader and elder
already had his feet upon the floor, when he observed
Mr. Finsbury.
“Good God!” he cried. “Uncle
Joseph! This’ll never do.”
And he backed out, almost upsetting
his companion, and once more closed the door upon
the sleeping patriarch.
The next moment the pair had jumped into the baggage
van.
“What’s the row about
your Uncle Joseph?” inquired the younger traveller,
mopping his brow. “Does he object to smoking?”
“I don’t know that there’s
anything the row with him,” returned the other.
“He’s by no means the first comer, my Uncle
Joseph, I can tell you! Very respectable old
gentleman; interested in leather; been to Asia Minor;
no family, no assets and a tongue, my dear
Wickham, sharper than a serpent’s tooth.”
“Cantankerous old party, eh?” suggested
Wickham.
“Not in the least,” cried
the other; “only a man with a solid talent for
being a bore; rather cheery I dare say, on a desert
island, but on a railway journey insupportable.
You should hear him on Tonti, the ass that started
tontines. He’s incredible on Tonti.”
“By Jove!” cried Wickham,
“then you’re one of these Finsbury tontine
fellows. I hadn’t a guess of that.”
“Ah!” said the other,
“do you know that old boy in the carriage is
worth a hundred thousand pounds to me? There
he was asleep, and nobody there but you! But
I spared him, because I’m a Conservative in politics.”
Mr. Wickham, pleased to be in a luggage
van, was flitting to and fro like a gentlemanly butterfly.
“By Jingo!” he cried,
“here’s something for you! ’M.
Finsbury, 16 John Street, Bloomsbury, London.’
M. stands for Michael, you sly dog; you keep two establishments,
do you?”
“O, that’s Morris,”
responded Michael from the other end of the van, where
he had found a comfortable seat upon some sacks.
“He’s a little cousin of mine. I
like him myself, because he’s afraid of me.
He’s one of the ornaments of Bloomsbury, and
has a collection of some kind birds’
eggs or something that’s supposed to be curious.
I bet it’s nothing to my clients!”
“What a lark it would be to
play billy with the labels!” chuckled Mr. Wickham.
“By George, here’s a tack-hammer!
We might send all these things skipping about the
premises like what’s-his-name!”
At this moment, the guard, surprised
by the sound of voices, opened the door of his little
cabin.
“You had best step in here,
gentlemen,” said he, when he had heard their
story.
“Won’t you come, Wickham?” asked
Michael.
“Catch me I want to travel in a van,”
replied the youth.
And so the door of communication was
closed; and for the rest of the run Mr. Wickham was
left alone over his diversions on the one side, and
on the other Michael and the guard were closeted together
in familiar talk.
“I can get you a compartment
here, sir,” observed the official, as the train
began to slacken speed before Bishopstoke station.
“You had best get out at my door, and I can
bring your friend.”
Mr. Wickham, whom we left (as the
reader has shrewdly suspected) beginning to “play
billy” with the labels in the van, was a young
gentleman of much wealth, a pleasing but sandy exterior,
and a highly vacant mind. Not many months before,
he had contrived to get himself blackmailed by the
family of a Wallachian Hospodar, resident for political
reasons in the gay city of Paris. A common friend
(to whom he had confided his distress) recommended
him to Michael; and the lawyer was no sooner in possession
of the facts than he instantly assumed the offensive,
fell on the flank of the Wallachian forces, and, in
the inside of three days, had the satisfaction to
behold them routed and fleeing for the Danube.
It is no business of ours to follow them on this retreat,
over which the police were so obliging as to preside
paternally. Thus relieved from what he loved to
refer to as the Bulgarian Atrocity, Mr. Wickham returned
to London with the most unbounded and embarrassing
gratitude and admiration for his saviour. These
sentiments were not repaid either in kind or degree;
indeed, Michael was a trifle ashamed of his new client’s
friendship; it had taken many invitations to get him
to Winchester and Wickham Manor; but he had gone at
last, and was now returning. It has been remarked
by some judicious thinker (possibly J.F. Smith)
that Providence despises to employ no instrument,
however humble; and it is now plain to the dullest
that both Mr. Wickham and the Wallachian Hospodar were
liquid lead and wedges in the hand of Destiny.
Smitten with the desire to shine in
Michael’s eyes and show himself a person of
original humour and resources, the young gentleman
(who was a magistrate, more by token, in his native
county) was no sooner alone in the van than he fell
upon the labels with all the zeal of a reformer; and,
when he rejoined the lawyer at Bishopstoke, his face
was flushed with his exertions, and his cigar, which
he had suffered to go out was almost bitten in two.
“By George, but this has been
a lark!” he cried. “I’ve sent
the wrong thing to everybody in England. These
cousins of yours have a packing-case as big as a house.
I’ve muddled the whole business up to that extent,
Finsbury, that if it were to get out it’s my
belief we should get lynched.”
It was useless to be serious with
Mr. Wickham. “Take care,” said Michael.
“I am getting tired of your perpetual scrapes;
my reputation is beginning to suffer.”
“Your reputation will be all
gone before you finish with me,” replied his
companion with a grin. “Clap it in the bill,
my boy. ’For total loss of reputation,
six and eightpence.’ But,” continued
Mr. Wickham with more seriousness, “could I
be bowled out of the Commission for this little jest?
I know it’s small, but I like to be a J.P.
Speaking as a professional man, do you think there’s
any risk?”
“What does it matter?”
responded Michael, “they’ll chuck you out
sooner or later. Somehow you don’t give
the effect of being a good magistrate.”
“I only wish I was a solicitor,”
retorted his companion, “instead of a poor devil
of a country gentleman. Suppose we start one of
those tontine affairs ourselves; I to pay five hundred
a year, and you to guarantee me against every misfortune
except illness or marriage.”
“It strikes me,” remarked
the lawyer with a meditative laugh, as he lighted
a cigar, “it strikes me that you must be a cursed
nuisance in this world of ours.”
“Do you really think so, Finsbury?”
responded the magistrate, leaning back in his cushions,
delighted with the compliment. “Yes, I suppose
I am a nuisance. But, mind you, I have a stake
in the country: don’t forget that, dear
boy.”
CHAPTER V
MR. GIDEON FORSYTH AND THE GIGANTIC BOX
It has been mentioned that at Bournemouth
Julia sometimes made acquaintances; it is true she
had but a glimpse of them before the doors of John
Street closed again upon its captives, but the glimpse
was sometimes exhilarating, and the consequent regret
was tempered with hope. Among those whom she
had thus met a year before was a young barrister of
the name of Gideon Forsyth.
About three o’clock of the eventful
day when the magistrate tampered with the labels,
a somewhat moody and distempered ramble had carried
Mr. Forsyth to the corner of John Street; and about
the same moment Miss Hazeltine was called to the door
of N by a thundering double knock.
Mr. Gideon Forsyth was a happy enough
young man; he would have been happier if he had had
more money and less uncle. One hundred and twenty
pounds a year was all his store; but his uncle, Mr.
Edward Hugh Bloomfield, supplemented this with a handsome
allowance and a great deal of advice, couched in language
that would probably have been judged intemperate on
board a pirate ship. Mr. Bloomfield was indeed
a figure quite peculiar to the days of Mr. Gladstone;
what we may call (for the lack of an accepted expression)
a Squirradical. Having acquired years without
experience, he carried into the Radical side of politics
those noisy, after-dinner-table passions, which we
are more accustomed to connect with Toryism in its
severe and senile aspects. To the opinions of
Mr. Bradlaugh, in fact, he added the temper and the
sympathies of that extinct animal, the Squire; he
admired pugilism, he carried a formidable oaken staff,
he was a reverent churchman, and it was hard to know
which would have more volcanically stirred his choler a
person who should have defended the established church,
or one who should have neglected to attend its celebrations.
He had besides some levelling catchwords, justly dreaded
in the family circle; and when he could not go so
far as to declare a step un-English, he might still
(and with hardly less effect) denounce it as unpractical.
It was under the ban of this lesser excommunication
that Gideon had fallen. His views on the study
of law had been pronounced unpractical; and it had
been intimated to him, in a vociferous interview punctuated
with the oaken staff, that he must either take a new
start and get a brief or two, or prepare to live on
his own money.
No wonder if Gideon was moody.
He had not the slightest wish to modify his present
habits; but he would not stand on that, since the recall
of Mr. Bloomfield’s allowance would revolutionise
them still more radically. He had not the least
desire to acquaint himself with law; he had looked
into it already, and it seemed not to repay attention;
but upon this also he was ready to give way.
In fact, he would go as far as he could to meet the
views of his uncle, the Squirradical. But there
was one part of the programme that appeared independent
of his will. How to get a brief? there was the
question. And there was another and a worse.
Suppose he got one, should he prove the better man?
Suddenly he found his way barred by
a crowd. A garishly illuminated van was backed
against the kerb; from its open stern, half resting
on the street, half supported by some glistening athletes,
the end of the largest packing-case in the county
of Middlesex might have been seen protruding; while,
on the steps of the house, the burly person of the
driver and the slim figure of a young girl stood as
upon a stage, disputing.
“It is not for us,” the
girl was saying. “I beg you to take it away;
it couldn’t get into the house, even if you
managed to get it out of the van.”
“I shall leave it on the pavement,
then, and M. Finsbury can arrange with the Vestry
as he likes,” said the vanman.
“But I am not M. Finsbury,” expostulated
the girl.
“It doesn’t matter who you are,”
said the vanman.
“You must allow me to help you,
Miss Hazeltine,” said Gideon, putting out his
hand.
Julia gave a little cry of pleasure.
“O, Mr. Forsyth,” she cried, “I am
so glad to see you; we must get this horrid thing,
which can only have come here by mistake, into the
house. The man says we’ll have to take
off the door, or knock two of our windows into one,
or be fined by the Vestry or Custom House or something
for leaving our parcels on the pavement.”
The men by this time had successfully
removed the box from the van, had plumped it down
on the pavement, and now stood leaning against it,
or gazing at the door of N, in visible physical
distress and mental embarrassment. The windows
of the whole street had filled, as if by magic, with
interested and entertained spectators.
With as thoughtful and scientific
an expression as he could assume, Gideon measured
the doorway with his cane, while Julia entered his
observations in a drawing-book. He then measured
the box, and, upon comparing his data, found that
there was just enough space for it to enter.
Next throwing off his coat and waistcoat, he assisted
the men to take the door from its hinges. And
lastly, all bystanders being pressed into the service,
the packing-case mounted the steps upon some fifteen
pairs of wavering legs scraped, loudly grinding,
through the doorway and was deposited at
length, with a formidable convulsion, in the far end
of the lobby, which it almost blocked. The artisans
of this victory smiled upon each other as the dust
subsided. It was true they had smashed a bust
of Apollo and ploughed the wall into deep ruts; but,
at least, they were no longer one of the public spectacles
of London.
“Well, sir,” said the vanman, “I
never see such a job.”
Gideon eloquently expressed his concurrence
in this sentiment by pressing a couple of sovereigns
in the man’s hand.
“Make it three, sir, and I’ll
stand Sam to everybody here!” cried the latter,
and this having been done, the whole body of volunteer
porters swarmed into the van, which drove off in the
direction of the nearest reliable public-house.
Gideon closed the door on their departure, and turned
to Julia; their eyes met; the most uncontrollable mirth
seized upon them both, and they made the house ring
with their laughter. Then curiosity awoke in
Julia’s mind, and she went and examined the box,
and more especially the label.
“This is the strangest thing
that ever happened,” she said, with another
burst of laughter. “It is certainly Morris’s
handwriting, and I had a letter from him only this
morning, telling me to expect a barrel. Is there
a barrel coming too, do you think, Mr. Forsyth?”
“‘Statuary with Care,
Fragile,’” read Gideon aloud from the painted
warning on the box. “Then you were told
nothing about this?”
“No,” responded Julia.
“O, Mr. Forsyth, don’t you think we might
take a peep at it?”
“Yes, indeed,” cited Gideon. “Just
let me have a hammer.”
“Come down, and I’ll show
you where it is,” cried Julia. “The
shelf is too high for me to reach”; and, opening
the door of the kitchen stair, she bade Gideon follow
her. They found both the hammer and a chisel;
but Gideon was surprised to see no sign of a servant.
He also discovered that Miss Hazeltine had a very
pretty little foot and ankle; and the discovery embarrassed
him so much that he was glad to fall at once upon
the packing-case.
He worked hard and earnestly, and
dealt his blows with the precision of a blacksmith;
Julia the while standing silently by his side, and
regarding rather the workman than the work. He
was a handsome fellow; she told herself she had never
seen such beautiful arms. And suddenly, as though
he had overheard these thoughts, Gideon turned and
smiled to her. She, too, smiled and coloured;
and the double change became her so prettily that
Gideon forgot to turn away his eyes, and, swinging
the hammer with a will, discharged a smashing blow
on his own knuckles. With admirable presence
of mind he crushed down an oath and substituted the
harmless comment, “Butter fingers!” But
the pain was sharp, his nerve was shaken, and after
an abortive trial he found he must desist from further
operations.
In a moment Julia was off to the pantry;
in a moment she was back again with a basin of water
and a sponge, and had begun to bathe his wounded hand.
“I am dreadfully sorry!”
said Gideon apologetically. “If I had had
any manners I should have opened the box first and
smashed my hand afterward. It feels much better,”
he added. “I assure you it does.”
“And now I think you are well
enough to direct operations,” said she.
“Tell me what to do, and I’ll be your workman.”
“A very pretty workman,”
said Gideon, rather forgetting himself. She turned
and looked at him, with a suspicion of a frown; and
the indiscreet young man was glad to direct her attention
to the packing-case. The bulk of the work had
been accomplished; and presently Julia had burst through
the last barrier and disclosed a zone of straw.
In a moment they were kneeling side by side, engaged
like hay-makers; the next they were rewarded with
a glimpse of something white and polished; and the
next again laid bare an unmistakable marble leg.
“He is surely a very athletic person,”
said Julia.
“I never saw anything like it,”
responded Gideon. “His muscles stand out
like penny rolls.”
Another leg was soon disclosed, and
then what seemed to be a third. This resolved
itself, however, into a knotted club resting upon a
pedestal.
“It is a Hercules,” cried
Gideon; “I might have guessed that from his
calf. I’m supposed to be rather partial
to statuary, but when it comes to Hercules, the police
should interfere. I should say,” he added,
glancing with disaffection at the swollen leg, “that
this was about the biggest and the worst in Europe.
What in heaven’s name can have induced him to
come here?”
“I suppose nobody else would
have a gift of him,” said Julia. “And
for that matter, I think we could have done without
the monster very well.”
“O, don’t say that,”
returned Gideon. “This has been one of the
most amusing experiences of my life.”
“I don’t think you’ll
forget it very soon,” said Julia. “Your
hand will remind you.”
“Well, I suppose I must be going,”
said Gideon reluctantly.
“No,” pleaded Julia.
“Why should you? Stay and have tea with
me.”
“If I thought you really wished
me to stay,” said Gideon, looking at his hat,
“of course I should only be too delighted.”
“What a silly person you must
take me for!” returned the girl. “Why,
of course I do; and, besides, I want some cakes for
tea, and I’ve nobody to send. Here is the
latch-key.”
Gideon put on his hat with alacrity,
and casting one look at Miss Hazeltine, and another
at the legs of Hercules, threw open the door and departed
on his errand.
He returned with a large bag of the
choicest and most tempting of cakes and tartlets,
and found Julia in the act of spreading a small tea-table
in the lobby.
“The rooms are all in such a
state,” she cried, “that I thought we
should be more cosy and comfortable in our own lobby,
and under our own vine and statuary.”
“Ever so much better,” cried Gideon delightedly.
“O what adorable cream tarts!”
said Julia, opening the bag, “and the dearest
little cherry tartlets, with all the cherries spilled
out into the cream!”
“Yes,” said Gideon, concealing
his dismay, “I knew they would mix beautifully;
the woman behind the counter told me so.”
“Now,” said Julia, as
they began their little festival, “I am going
to show you Morris’s letter; read it aloud,
please; perhaps there’s something I have missed.”
Gideon took the letter, and spreading
it out on his knee, read as follows:
“DEAR JULIA, I write
you from Browndean, where we are stopping over for
a few days. Uncle was much shaken in that dreadful
accident, of which, I dare say, you have seen the
account. To-morrow I leave him here with John,
and come up alone; but before that, you will have
received a barrel containing specimens for a
friend. Do not open it on any account,
but leave it in the lobby till I come.
“Yours in haste,
“M. FINSBURY.
“P.S. Be
sure and leave the barrel in the lobby.”
“No,” said Gideon, “there
seems to be nothing about the monument,” and
he nodded, as he spoke, at the marble legs. “Miss
Hazeltine,” he continued, “would you mind
me asking a few questions?”
“Certainly not,” replied
Julia; “and if you can make me understand why
Morris has sent a statue of Hercules instead of a barrel
containing specimens for a friend, I shall be grateful
till my dying day. And what are specimens for
a friend?”
“I haven’t a guess,”
said Gideon. “Specimens are usually bits
of stone, but rather smaller than our friend the monument.
Still, that is not the point. Are you quite alone
in this big house?”
“Yes, I am at present,”
returned Julia. “I came up before them to
prepare the house, and get another servant. But
I couldn’t get one I liked.”
“Then you are utterly alone,”
said Gideon in amazement. “Are you not
afraid?”
“No,” responded Julia
stoutly. “I don’t see why I should
be more afraid than you would be; I am weaker, of
course, but when I found I must sleep alone in the
house I bought a revolver wonderfully cheap, and made
the man show me how to use it.”
“And how do you use it?”
demanded Gideon, much amused at her courage.
“Why,” said she, with
a smile, “you pull the little trigger thing on
top, and then pointing it very low, for it springs
up as you fire, you pull the underneath little trigger
thing, and it goes off as well as if a man had done
it.”
“And how often have you used it?” asked
Gideon.
“O, I have not used it yet,”
said the determined young lady; “but I know
how, and that makes me wonderfully courageous, especially
when I barricade my door with a chest of drawers.”
“I’m awfully glad they
are coming back soon,” said Gideon. “This
business strikes me as excessively unsafe; if it goes
on much longer, I could provide you with a maiden
aunt of mine, or my landlady if you preferred.”
“Lend me an aunt!” cried
Julia. “O, what generosity! I begin
to think it must have been you that sent the Hercules.”
“Believe me,” cried the
young man, “I admire you too much to send you
such an infamous work of art.”
Julia was beginning to reply, when
they were both startled by a knocking at the door.
“O, Mr. Forsyth!”
“Don’t be afraid, my dear
girl,” said Gideon, laying his hand tenderly
on her arm.
“I know it’s the police,”
she whispered. “They are coming to complain
about the statue.”
The knock was repeated. It was
louder than before, and more impatient.
“It’s Morris,” cried
Julia, in a startled voice, and she ran to the door
and opened it.
It was indeed Morris that stood before
them; not the Morris of ordinary days, but a wild-looking
fellow, pale and haggard, with bloodshot eyes, and
a two-days’ beard upon his chin.
“The barrel!” he cried.
“Where’s the barrel that came this morning?”
And he stared about the lobby, his eyes, as they fell
upon the legs of Hercules, literally goggling in his
head. “What is that?” he screamed.
“What is that waxwork? Speak, you fool!
What is that? And where’s the barrel the
water-butt?”
“No barrel came, Morris,”
responded Julia coldly. “This is the only
thing that has arrived.”
“This!” shrieked the miserable
man. “I never heard of it!”
“It came addressed in your hand,”
replied Julia; “we had nearly to pull the house
down to get it in, that is all that I can tell you.”
Morris gazed at her in utter bewilderment.
He passed his hand over his forehead; he leaned against
the wall like a man about to faint. Then his
tongue was loosed, and he overwhelmed the girl with
torrents of abuse. Such fire, such directness,
such a choice of ungentlemanly language, none had
ever before suspected Morris to possess; and the girl
trembled and shrank before his fury.
“You shall not speak to Miss
Hazeltine in that way,” said Gideon sternly.
“It is what I will not suffer.”
“I shall speak to the girl as
I like,” returned Morris, with a fresh outburst
of anger. “I’ll speak to the hussy
as she deserves.”
“Not a word more, sir, not one
word,” cried Gideon. “Miss Hazeltine,”
he continued, addressing the young girl, “you
cannot stay a moment longer in the same house with
this unmanly fellow. Here is my arm; let me take
you where you will be secure from insult.”
“Mr. Forsyth,” returned
Julia, “you are right; I cannot stay here longer,
and I am sure I trust myself to an honourable gentleman.”
Pale and resolute, Gideon offered
her his arm, and the pair descended the steps, followed
by Morris clamouring for the latch-key.
Julia had scarcely handed the key
to Morris before an empty hansom drove smartly into
John Street. It was hailed by both men, and as
the cabman drew up his restive horse, Morris made
a dash into the vehicle.
“Sixpence above fare,”
he cried recklessly. “Waterloo Station for
your life. Sixpence for yourself!”
“Make it a shilling, guv’ner,”
said the man, with a grin; “the other parties
were first.”
“A shilling then,” cried
Morris, with the inward reflection that he would reconsider
it at Waterloo. The man whipped up his horse,
and the hansom vanished from John Street.
CHAPTER VI
THE TRIBULATIONS OF MORRIS: PART THE FIRST
As the hansom span through the streets
of London, Morris sought to rally the forces of his
mind. The water-butt with the dead body had miscarried,
and it was essential to recover it. So much was
clear; and if, by some blest good fortune, it was
still at the station, all might be well. If it
had been sent out, however, if it were already in the
hands of some wrong person, matters looked more ominous.
People who receive unexplained packages are usually
keen to have them open; the example of Miss Hazeltine
(whom he cursed again) was there to remind him of
the circumstance; and if anyone had opened the water-butt “O
Lord!” cried Morris at the thought, and carried
his hand to his damp forehead. The private conception
of any breach of law is apt to be inspiriting, for
the scheme (while yet inchoate) wears dashing and attractive
colours. Not so in the least that part of the
criminal’s later reflections which deal with
the police. That useful corps (as Morris now
began to think) had scarce been kept sufficiently in
view when he embarked upon his enterprise. “I
must play devilish close,” he reflected, and
he was aware of an exquisite thrill of fear in the
region of the spine.
“Main line or loop?” inquired
the cabman, through the scuttle.
“Main line,” replied Morris,
and mentally decided that the man should have his
shilling after all. “It would be madness
to attract attention,” thought he. “But
what this thing will cost me, first and last, begins
to be a nightmare!”
He passed through the booking-office
and wandered disconsolately on the platform.
It was a breathing-space in the day’s traffic.
There were few people there, and these for the most
part quiescent on the benches. Morris seemed
to attract no remark, which was a good thing; but,
on the other hand, he was making no progress in his
quest. Something must be done, something must
be risked. Every passing instant only added to
his dangers. Summoning all his courage, he stopped
a porter, and asked him if he remembered receiving
a barrel by the morning train. He was anxious
to get information, for the barrel belonged to a friend.
“It is a matter of some moment,” he added,
“for it contains specimens.”
“I was not here this morning,
sir,” responded the porter, somewhat reluctantly,
“but I’ll ask Bill. Do you recollect,
Bill, to have got a barrel from Bournemouth this morning
containing specimens?”
“I don’t know about specimens,”
replied Bill; “but the party as received the
barrel I mean raised a sight of trouble.”
“What’s that?” cried
Morris, in the agitation of the moment pressing a
penny into the man’s hand.
“You see, sir, the barrel arrived
at one-thirty. No one claimed it till about three,
when a small, sickly-looking gentleman (probably a
curate) came up, and sez he, ‘Have you got anything
for Pitman?’ or ’Will’m Bent Pitman,’
if I recollect right.’ ‘I don’t
exactly know,’ sez I, ’but I rather fancy
that there barrel bears that name.’ The
little man went up to the barrel, and seemed regularly
all took aback when he saw the address, and then he
pitched into us for not having brought what he wanted.
‘I don’t care a damn what you want,’
sez I to him, ’but if you are Will’m Bent
Pitman, there’s your barrel.’”
“Well, and did he take it?” cried the
breathless Morris.
“Well, sir,” returned
Bill, “it appears it was a packing-case he was
after. The packing-case came; that’s sure
enough, because it was about the biggest packing-case
ever I clapped eyes on. And this Pitman he seemed
a good deal cut up, and he had the superintendent out,
and they got hold of the vanman him as
took the packing-case. Well, sir,” continued
Bill, with a smile, “I never see a man in such
a state. Everybody about that van was mortal,
bar the horses. Some gen’leman (as well
as I could make out) had given the vanman a sov.; and
so that was where the trouble come in, you see.”
“But what did he say?” gasped Morris.
“I don’t know as he said
much, sir,” said Bill. “But he offered
to fight this Pitman for a pot of beer. He had
lost his book, too, and the receipts, and his men
were all as mortal as himself. O, they were all
like” and Bill paused for a simile “like
lords! The superintendent sacked them on the
spot.”
“O, come, but that’s not
so bad,” said Morris, with a bursting sigh.
“He couldn’t tell where he took the packing-case,
then?”
“Not he,” said Bill, “nor yet nothink
else.”
“And what what did Pitman do?”
asked Morris.
“O, he went off with the barrel
in a four-wheeler, very trembling like,” replied
Bill. “I don’t believe he’s
a gentleman as has good health.”
“Well, so the barrel’s gone,” said
Morris, half to himself.
“You may depend on that, sir,”
returned the porter. “But you had better
see the superintendent.”
“Not in the least; it’s
of no account,” said Morris. “It only
contained specimens.” And he walked hastily
away.
Ensconced once more in a hansom, he
proceeded to reconsider his position. Suppose
(he thought), suppose he should accept defeat and
declare his uncle’s death at once? He should
lose the tontine, and with that the last hope of his
seven thousand eight hundred pounds. But on the
other hand, since the shilling to the hansom cabman,
he had begun to see that crime was expensive in its
course, and, since the loss of the water-butt, that
it was uncertain in its consequences. Quietly
at first, and then with growing heat, he reviewed
the advantages of backing out. It involved a
loss; but (come to think of it) no such great loss
after all; only that of the tontine, which had been
always a toss-up, which at bottom he had never really
expected. He reminded himself of that eagerly;
he congratulated himself upon his constant moderation.
He had never really expected the tontine; he had never
even very definitely hoped to recover his seven thousand
eight hundred pounds; he had been hurried into the
whole thing by Michael’s obvious dishonesty.
Yes, it would probably be better to draw back from
this high-flying venture, settle back on the leather
business
“Great God!” cried Morris,
bounding in the hansom like a Jack-in-a-box.
“I have not only not gained the tontine I
have lost the leather business!”
Such was the monstrous fact.
He had no power to sign; he could not draw a cheque
for thirty shillings. Until he could produce legal
evidence of his uncle’s death, he was a penniless
outcast and as soon as he produced it he
had lost the tontine! There was no hesitation
on the part of Morris; to drop the tontine like a
hot chestnut, to concentrate all his forces on the
leather business and the rest of his small but legitimate
inheritance, was the decision of a single instant.
And the next, the full extent of his calamity was
suddenly disclosed to him. Declare his uncle’s
death? He couldn’t! Since the body
was lost Joseph had (in a legal sense) become immortal.
There was no created vehicle big enough
to contain Morris and his woes. He paid the hansom
off and walked on he knew not whither.
“I seem to have gone into this
business with too much precipitation,” he reflected,
with a deadly sigh. “I fear it seems too
ramified for a person of my powers of mind.”
And then a remark of his uncle’s
flashed into his memory: If you want to think
clearly, put it all down on paper. “Well,
the old boy knew a thing or two,” said Morris.
“I will try; but I don’t believe the paper
was ever made that will clear my mind.”
He entered a place of public entertainment,
ordered bread and cheese, and writing materials, and
sat down before them heavily. He tried the pen.
It was an excellent pen, but what was he to write?
“I have it,” cried Morris. “Robinson
Crusoe and the double columns!” He prepared his
paper after that classic model, and began as follows:
Bad.
Good.
1. I have lost my uncle’s
body. 1. But then Pitman has found it.
“Stop a bit,” said Morris.
“I am letting the spirit of antithesis run away
with me. Let’s start again.”
Bad.
Good.
1. I have lost my uncle’s
body. 1. But then I no longer require
to bury
it.
2. I have lost the tontine.
2. But I may still save that if
Pitman disposes
of the
body, and
if I can find a
physician
who will stick at
nothing.
3. I have lost the leather
3. But not if Pitman gives the
business and the rest of body up
to the police.
my uncle’s succession.
“O, but in that case I go to
gaol; I had forgot that,” thought Morris.
“Indeed, I don’t know that I had better
dwell on that hypothesis at all; it’s all very
well to talk of facing the worst; but in a case of
this kind a man’s first duty is to his own nerve.
Is there any answer to N? Is there any possible
good side to such a beastly bungle? There must
be, of course, or where would be the use of this double-entry
business? And by George, I have it!”
he exclaimed; “it’s exactly the same as
the last!” And he hastily re-wrote the passage:
Bad.
Good.
3. I have lost the leather
3. But not if I can find a physician
business and the rest of who will
stick at nothing.
my uncle’s succession.
“This venal doctor seems quite
a desideratum,” he reflected. “I want
him first to give me a certificate that my uncle is
dead, so that I may get the leather business; and
then that he’s alive but here we are
again at the incompatible interests!” And he
returned to his tabulation:
Bad.
Good.
4. I have almost no money.
4. But there is plenty in the bank.
6. I have left the bill for
6. But if Pitman is only a dishonest
eighthundred pounds in man, the
presence of this bill
Uncle Joseph’s pocket. may
lead him to keep the whole
thing dark
and throw the body
into the
New Cut.
7. Yes, but if Pitman is
7. Yes, but if I am right about
dishonest and finds the Uncle Masterman,
I can blackmail
bill, he will know who Michael.
Joseph is, and he may
blackmail me.
8. But I can’t blackmail
Michael 8. Worse luck!
(which is, besides, a very
dangerous thing to do)
until I find out.
9. The leather business will soon
9. But the leather business is a
want money
for current sinking ship.
expenses,
and I have none
to give.
10. Yes, but it’s all the ship I
10. A fact.
have.
11. John will soon want money, 11.
and I have
none to give.
12. And the venal doctor will 12.
want money
down.
13. And if Pitman is dishonest 13.
and don’t
send me to gaol,
he will
want a fortune.
“O, this seems to be a very
one-sided business,” exclaimed Morris.
“There’s not so much in this method as
I was led to think.” He crumpled the paper
up and threw it down; and then, the next moment, picked
it up again and ran it over. “It seems
it’s on the financial point that my position
is weakest,” he reflected. “Is there
positively no way of raising the wind? In a vast
city like this, and surrounded by all the resources
of civilisation, it seems not to be conceived!
Let us have no more precipitation. Is there nothing
I can sell? My collection of signet ”
But at the thought of scattering these loved treasures
the blood leaped into Morris’s cheek. “I
would rather die!” he exclaimed, and, cramming
his hat upon his head, strode forth into the streets.
“I must raise funds,”
he thought. “My uncle being dead, the money
in the bank is mine, or would be mine but for the
cursed injustice that has pursued me ever since I
was an orphan in a commercial academy. I know
what any other man would do; any other man in Christendom
would forge; although I don’t know why I call
it forging, either, when Joseph’s dead, and
the funds are my own. When I think of that, when
I think that my uncle is really as dead as mutton,
and that I can’t prove it, my gorge rises at
the injustice of the whole affair. I used to feel
bitterly about that seven thousand eight hundred pounds;
it seems a trifle now! Dear me, why, the day
before yesterday I was comparatively happy.”
And Morris stood on the sidewalk and
heaved another sobbing sigh.
“Then there’s another
thing,” he resumed; “can I? Am I able?
Why didn’t I practise different handwritings
while I was young? How a fellow regrets those
lost opportunities when he grows up! But there’s
one comfort: it’s not morally wrong; I
can try it on with a clear conscience, and even if
I was found out, I wouldn’t greatly care morally,
I mean. And then, if I succeed, and if Pitman
is staunch there’s nothing to do
but find a venal doctor; and that ought to be simple
enough in a place like London. By all accounts
the town’s alive with them. It wouldn’t
do, of course, to advertise for a corrupt physician;
that would be impolitic. No, I suppose a fellow
has simply to spot along the streets for a red lamp
and herbs in the window, and then you go in and and and
put it to him plainly; though it seems a delicate
step.”
He was near home now, after many devious
wanderings, and turned up John Street. As he
thrust his latch-key in the lock, another mortifying
reflection struck him to the heart.
“Not even this house is mine
till I can prove him dead,” he snarled, and
slammed the door behind him so that the windows in
the attic rattled.
Night had long fallen; long ago the
lamps and the shop-fronts had begun to glitter down
the endless streets; the lobby was pitch-dark; and,
as the devil would have it, Morris barked his shins
and sprawled all his length over the pedestal of Hercules.
The pain was sharp; his temper was already thoroughly
undermined; by a last misfortune his hand closed on
the hammer as he fell; and, in a spasm of childish
irritation, he turned and struck at the offending
statue. There was a splintering crash.
“O Lord, what have I done next?”
wailed Morris; and he groped his way to find a candle.
“Yes,” he reflected, as he stood with the
light in his hand and looked upon the mutilated leg,
from which about a pound of muscle was detached.
“Yes, I have destroyed a genuine antique; I may
be in for thousands!” And then there sprung
up in his bosom a sort of angry hope. “Let
me see,” he thought. “Julia’s
got rid of; there’s nothing to connect me with
that beast Forsyth; the men were all drunk, and (what’s
better) they’ve been all discharged. O,
come, I think this is another case of moral courage!
I’ll deny all knowledge of the thing.”
A moment more, and he stood again
before the Hercules, his lips sternly compressed,
the coal-axe and the meat-cleaver under his arm.
The next, he had fallen upon the packing-case.
This had been already seriously undermined by the
operations of Gideon; a few well-directed blows, and
it already quaked and gaped; yet a few more, and it
fell about Morris in a shower of boards followed by
an avalanche of straw.
And now the leather-merchant could
behold the nature of his task: and at the first
sight his spirit quailed. It was, indeed, no more
ambitious a task for De Lesseps, with all his men
and horses, to attack the hills of Panama, than for
a single, slim young gentleman, with no previous experience
of labour in a quarry, to measure himself against that
bloated monster on his pedestal. And yet the pair
were well encountered: on the one side, bulk on
the other, genuine heroic fire.
“Down you shall come, you great
big ugly brute!” cried Morris aloud, with something
of that passion which swept the Parisian mob against
the walls of the Bastille. “Down you shall
come, this night. I’ll have none of you
in my lobby.”
The face, from its indecent expression,
had particularly animated the zeal of our iconoclast;
and it was against the face that he began his operations.
The great height of the demigod for he stood
a fathom and half in his stocking-feet offered
a preliminary obstacle to this attack. But here,
in the first skirmish of the battle, intellect already
began to triumph over matter. By means of a pair
of library steps, the injured householder gained a
posture of advantage; and, with great swipes of the
coal-axe, proceeded to decapitate the brute.
Two hours later, what had been the
erect image of a gigantic coal-porter turned miraculously
white, was now no more than a medley of disjected
members; the quadragenarian torso prone against the
pedestal; the lascivious countenance leering down
the kitchen stair; the legs, the arms, the hands,
and even the fingers, scattered broadcast on the lobby
floor. Half an hour more, and all the débris
had been laboriously carted to the kitchen; and Morris,
with a gentle sentiment of triumph, looked round upon
the scene of his achievements. Yes, he could deny
all knowledge of it now: the lobby, beyond the
fact that it was partly ruinous, betrayed no trace
of the passage of Hercules. But it was a weary
Morris that crept up to bed; his arms and shoulders
ached, the palms of his hands burned from the rough
kisses of the coal-axe, and there was one smarting
finger that stole continually to his mouth. Sleep
long delayed to visit the dilapidated hero, and with
the first peep of day it had again deserted him.
The morning, as though to accord with
his disastrous fortunes, dawned inclemently.
An easterly gale was shouting in the streets; flaws
of rain angrily assailed the windows; and as Morris
dressed, the draught from the fireplace vividly played
about his legs.
“I think,” he could not
help observing bitterly, “that with all I have
to bear, they might have given me decent weather.”
There was no bread in the house, for
Miss Hazeltine (like all women left to themselves)
had subsisted entirely upon cake. But some of
this was found, and (along with what the poets call
a glass of fair, cold water) made up a semblance of
a morning meal, and then down he sat undauntedly to
his delicate task.
Nothing can be more interesting than
the study of signatures, written (as they are) before
meals and after, during indigestion and intoxication;
written when the signer is trembling for the life of
his child or has come from winning the Derby, in his
lawyer’s office, or under the bright eyes of
his sweetheart. To the vulgar, these seem never
the same; but to the expert, the bank clerk, or the
lithographer, they are constant quantities, and as
recognisable as the North Star to the night-watch
on deck.
To all this Morris was alive.
In the theory of that graceful art in which he was
now embarking, our spirited leather-merchant was beyond
all reproach. But, happily for the investor,
forgery is an affair of practice. And as Morris
sat surrounded by examples of his uncle’s signature
and of his own incompetence, insidious depression stole
upon his spirits. From time to time the wind
wuthered in the chimney at his back; from time to
time there swept over Bloomsbury a squall so dark
that he must rise and light the gas; about him was
the chill and the mean disorder of a house out of
commission the floor bare, the sofa heaped
with books and accounts enveloped in a dirty table-cloth,
the pens rusted, the paper glazed with a thick film
of dust; and yet these were but adminicles of misery,
and the true root of his depression lay round him
on the table in the shape of misbegotten forgeries.
“It’s one of the strangest
things I ever heard of,” he complained.
“It almost seems as if it was a talent that
I didn’t possess.” He went once more
minutely through his proofs. “A clerk would
simply gibe at them,” said he. “Well,
there’s nothing else but tracing possible.”
He waited till a squall had passed
and there came a blink of scowling daylight.
Then he went to the window, and in the face of all
John Street traced his uncle’s signature.
It was a poor thing at the best. “But it
must do,” said he, as he stood gazing woefully
on his handiwork. “He’s dead, anyway.”
And he filled up the cheque for a couple of hundred
and sallied forth for the Anglo-Patagonian Bank.
There, at the desk at which he was
accustomed to transact business, and with as much
indifference as he could assume, Morris presented the
forged cheque to the big, red-bearded Scots teller.
The teller seemed to view it with surprise; and as
he turned it this way and that, and even scrutinised
the signature with a magnifying-glass, his surprise
appeared to warm into disfavour. Begging to be
excused for a moment, he passed away into the rearmost
quarters of the bank; whence, after an appreciable
interval, he returned again in earnest talk with a
superior, an oldish and a baldish, but a very gentlemanly
man.
“Mr. Morris Finsbury, I believe,”
said the gentlemanly man, fixing Morris with a pair
of double eye-glasses.
“That is my name,” said
Morris, quavering. “Is there anything wrong?”
“Well, the fact is, Mr. Finsbury,
you see we are rather surprised at receiving this,”
said the other, flicking at the cheque. “There
are no effects.”
“No effects?” cried Morris.
“Why, I know myself there must be eight-and-twenty
hundred pounds, if there’s a penny.”
“Two seven six four, I think,”
replied the gentlemanly man; “but it was drawn
yesterday.”
“Drawn!” cried Morris.
“By your uncle himself, sir,”
continued the other. “Not only that, but
we discounted a bill for him for let me
see how much was it for, Mr. Bell?”
“Eight hundred, Mr. Judkin,” replied the
teller.
“Dent Pitman!” cried Morris, staggering
back.
“I beg your pardon,” said Mr. Judkin.
“It’s it’s only an expletive,”
said Morris.
“I hope there’s nothing wrong, Mr. Finsbury,”
said Mr. Bell.
“All I can tell you,”
said Morris, with a harsh laugh, “is that the
whole thing’s impossible. My uncle is at
Bournemouth, unable to move.”
“Really!” cried Mr. Bell,
and he recovered the cheque from Mr. Judkin.
“But this cheque is dated in London, and to-day,”
he observed. “How d’ye account for
that, sir?”
“O, that was a mistake,”
said Morris, and a deep tide of colour dyed his face
and neck.
“No doubt, no doubt,”
said Mr. Judkin, but he looked at his customer inquiringly.
“And and ”
resumed Morris, “even if there were no effects this
is a very trifling sum to overdraw our
firm the name of Finsbury, is surely good
enough for such a wretched sum as this.”
“No doubt, Mr. Finsbury,”
returned Mr. Judkin; “and if you insist I will
take it into consideration; but I hardly think in
short, Mr. Finsbury, if there had been nothing else,
the signature seems hardly all that we could wish.”
“That’s of no consequence,”
replied Morris nervously. “I’ll get
my uncle to sign another. The fact is,”
he went on, with a bold stroke, “my uncle is
so far from well at present that he was unable to sign
this cheque without assistance, and I fear that my
holding the pen for him may have made the difference
in the signature.”
Mr. Judkin shot a keen glance into
Morris’s face; and then turned and looked at
Mr. Bell.
“Well,” he said, “it
seems as if we had been victimised by a swindler.
Pray tell Mr. Finsbury we shall put detectives on at
once. As for this cheque of yours, I regret that,
owing to the way it was signed, the bank can hardly
consider it what shall I say? business-like,”
and he returned the cheque across the counter.
Morris took it up mechanically; he
was thinking of something very different.
“In a case of this kind,”
he began, “I believe the loss falls on us; I
mean upon my uncle and myself.”
“It does not, sir,” replied
Mr. Bell; “the bank is responsible, and the
bank will either recover the money or refund it, you
may depend on that.”
Morris’s face fell; then it
was visited by another gleam of hope.
“I’ll tell you what,”
he said, “you leave this entirely in my hands.
I’ll sift the matter. I’ve an idea,
at any rate; and detectives,” he added appealingly,
“are so expensive.”
“The bank would not hear of
it,” returned Mr. Judkin. “The bank
stands to lose between three and four thousand pounds;
it will spend as much more if necessary. An undiscovered
forger is a permanent danger. We shall clear
it up to the bottom, Mr. Finsbury; set your mind at
rest on that.”
“Then I’ll stand the loss,”
said Morris boldly. “I order you to abandon
the search.” He was determined that no inquiry
should be made.
“I beg your pardon,” returned
Mr. Judkin, “but we have nothing to do with
you in this matter, which is one between your uncle
and ourselves. If he should take this opinion,
and will either come here himself or let me see him
in his sick-room ”
“Quite impossible,” cried Morris.
“Well, then, you see,”
said Mr. Judkin, “how my hands are tied.
The whole affair must go at once into the hands of
the police.”
Morris mechanically folded the cheque
and restored it to his pocket-book.
“Good-morning,” said he,
and scrambled somehow out of the bank.
“I don’t know what they
suspect,” he reflected; “I can’t
make them out, their whole behaviour is thoroughly
unbusiness-like. But it doesn’t matter;
all’s up with everything. The money has
been paid; the police are on the scent; in two hours
that idiot Pitman will be nabbed and the
whole story of the dead body in the evening papers.”
If he could have heard what passed
in the bank after his departure he would have been
less alarmed, perhaps more mortified.
“That was a curious affair, Mr. Bell,”
said Mr. Judkin.
“Yes, sir,” said Mr. Bell, “but
I think we have given him a fright.”
“O, we shall hear no more of
Mr. Morris Finsbury,” returned the other; “it
was a first attempt, and the house have dealt with
us so long that I was anxious to deal gently.
But I suppose, Mr. Bell, there can be no mistake about
yesterday? It was old Mr. Finsbury himself?”
“There could be no possible
doubt of that,” said Mr. Bell with a chuckle.
“He explained to me the principles of banking.”
“Well, well,” said Mr.
Judkin. “The next time he calls ask him
to step into my room. It is only proper he should
be warned.”
CHAPTER VII
IN WHICH WILLIAM DENT PITMAN TAKES LEGAL ADVICE
Norfolk Street, King’s Road jocularly
known among Mr. Pitman’s lodgers as “Norfolk
Island” is neither a long, a handsome,
nor a pleasing thoroughfare. Dirty, undersized
maids-of-all-work issue from it in pursuit of beer,
or linger on its sidewalk listening to the voice of
love. The cat’s-meat man passes twice a
day. An occasional organ-grinder wanders in and
wanders out again, disgusted. In holiday-time
the street is the arena of the young bloods of the
neighbourhood, and the house-holders have an opportunity
of studying the manly art of self-defence. And
yet Norfolk Street has one claim to be respectable,
for it contains not a single shop unless
you count the public-house at the corner, which is
really in the King’s Road.
The door of N bore a brass plate
inscribed with the legend “W.D. Pitman,
Artist.” It was not a particularly clean
brass plate, nor was N itself a particularly inviting
place of residence. And yet it had a character
of its own, such as may well quicken the pulse of the
reader’s curiosity. For here was the home
of an artist and a distinguished artist
too, highly distinguished by his ill-success which
had never been made the subject of an article in the
illustrated magazines. No wood-engraver had ever
reproduced “a corner in the back drawing-room”
or “the studio mantelpiece” of N; no
young lady author had ever commented on “the
unaffected simplicity” with which Mr. Pitman
received her in the midst of his “treasures.”
It is an omission I would gladly supply, but our business
is only with the backward parts and “abject
rear” of this æsthetic dwelling.
Here was a garden, boasting a dwarf
fountain (that never played) in the centre, a few
grimy-looking flowers in pots, two or three newly-planted
trees which the spring of Chelsea visited without noticeable
consequence, and two or three statues after the antique,
representing satyrs and nymphs in the worst possible
style of sculptured art. On one side the garden
was overshadowed by a pair of crazy studios, usually
hired out to the more obscure and youthful practitioners
of British art. Opposite these another lofty
out-building, somewhat more carefully finished, and
boasting of a communication with the house and a private
door on the back lane, enshrined the multifarious industry
of Mr. Pitman. All day, it is true, he was engaged
in the work of education at a seminary for young ladies;
but the evenings at least were his own, and these
he would prolong far into the night, now dashing off
“A landscape with waterfall” in oil, now
a volunteer bust ("in marble,” as he would gently
but proudly observe) of some public character, now
stooping his chisel to a mere “nymph”
("for a gas-bracket on a stair, sir “), or a
life-size “Infant Samuel” for a religious
nursery. Mr. Pitman had studied in Paris, and
he had studied in Rome, supplied with funds by a fond
parent who went subsequently bankrupt in consequence
of a fall in corsets; and though he was never thought
to have the smallest modicum of talent, it was at
one time supposed that he had learned his business.
Eighteen years of what is called “tuition”
had relieved him of the dangerous knowledge.
His artist lodgers would sometimes reason with him;
they would point out to him how impossible it was to
paint by gas-light, or to sculpture life-sized nymphs
without a model.
“I know that,” he would
reply. “No one in Norfolk Street knows it
better; and if I were rich I should certainly employ
the best models in London; but, being poor, I have
taught myself to do without them. An occasional
model would only disturb my ideal conception of the
figure, and be a positive impediment in my career.
As for painting by an artificial light,” he
would continue, “that is simply a knack I have
found it necessary to acquire, my days being engrossed
in the work of tuition.”
At the moment when we must present
him to our readers, Pitman was in his studio alone,
by the dying light of the October day. He sat
(sure enough with “unaffected simplicity”)
in a Windsor chair, his low-crowned black felt hat
by his side; a dark, weak, harmless, pathetic little
man, clad in the hue of mourning, his coat longer
than is usual with the laity, his neck enclosed in
a collar without a parting, his neckcloth pale in
hue and simply tied; the whole outward man, except
for a pointed beard, tentatively clerical. There
was a thinning on the top of Pitman’s head,
there were silver hairs at Pitman’s temple.
Poor gentleman, he was no longer young; and years,
and poverty, and humble ambition thwarted, make a
cheerless lot.
In front of him, in the corner by
the door, there stood a portly barrel; and let him
turn them where he might, it was always to the barrel
that his eyes and his thoughts returned.
“Should I open it? Should
I return it? Should I communicate with Mr. Semitopolis
at once?” he wondered. “No,”
he concluded finally, “nothing without Mr. Finsbury’s
advice.” And he arose and produced a shabby
leathern desk. It opened without the formality
of unlocking, and displayed the thick cream-coloured
note-paper on which Mr. Pitman was in the habit of
communicating with the proprietors of schools and the
parents of his pupils. He placed the desk on the
table by the window, and taking a saucer of Indian
ink from the chimney-piece, laboriously composed the
following letter:
“My dear Mr. Finsbury,”
it ran, “would it be presuming on your kindness
if I asked you to pay me a visit here this evening?
It is in no trifling matter that I invoke your valuable
assistance, for need I say more than it concerns the
welfare of Mr. Semitopolis’s statue of Hercules?
I write you in great agitation of mind; for I have
made all inquiries, and greatly fear that this work
of ancient art has been mislaid. I labour besides
under another perplexity, not unconnected with the
first. Pray excuse the inelegance of this scrawl,
and believe me yours in haste, William D. Pitman.”
Armed with this he set forth and rang
the bell of N King’s Road, the private
residence of Michael Finsbury. He had met the
lawyer at a time of great public excitement in Chelsea;
Michael, who had a sense of humour and a great deal
of careless kindness in his nature, followed the acquaintance
up, and, having come to laugh, remained to drop into
a contemptuous kind of friendship. By this time,
which was four years after the first meeting, Pitman
was the lawyer’s dog.
“No,” said the elderly
housekeeper, who opened the door in person, “Mr.
Michael’s not in yet. But ye’re looking
terribly poorly, Mr. Pitman. Take a glass of
sherry, sir, to cheer ye up.”
“No, I thank you, ma’am,”
replied the artist. “It is very good in
you, but I scarcely feel in sufficient spirits for
sherry. Just give Mr. Finsbury this note, and
ask him to look round to the door in the
lane, you will please tell him; I shall be in the
studio all evening.”
And he turned again into the street
and walked slowly homeward. A hair-dresser’s
window caught his attention, and he stared long and
earnestly at the proud, high-born, waxen lady in evening
dress, who circulated in the centre of the show.
The artist woke in him, in spite of his troubles.
“It is all very well to run
down the men who make these things,” he cried,
“but there’s a something there’s
a haughty, indefinable something about that figure.
It’s what I tried for in my ’Empress Eugénie,’”
he added, with a sigh.
And he went home reflecting on the
quality. “They don’t teach you that
direct appeal in Paris,” he thought. “It’s
British. Come, I am going to sleep, I must wake
up, I must aim higher aim higher,”
cried the little artist to himself. All through
his tea and afterward, as he was giving his eldest
boy a lesson on the fiddle, his mind dwelt no longer
on his troubles, but he was rapt into the better land;
and no sooner was he at liberty than he hastened with
positive exhilaration to his studio.
Not even the sight of the barrel could
entirely cast him down. He flung himself with
rising zest into his work a bust of Mr.
Gladstone from a photograph; turned (with extraordinary
success) the difficulty of the back of the head, for
which he had no documents beyond a hazy recollection
of a public meeting; delighted himself by his treatment
of the collar; and was only recalled to the cares
of life by Michael Finsbury’s rattle at the
door.
“Well, what’s wrong?”
said Michael, advancing to the grate, where, knowing
his friend’s delight in a bright fire, Mr. Pitman
had not spared the fuel. “I suppose you
have come to grief somehow.”
“There is no expression strong
enough,” said the artist. “Mr. Semitopolis’s
statue has not turned up, and I am afraid I shall be
answerable for the money; but I think nothing of that what
I fear, my dear Mr. Finsbury, what I fear alas
that I should have to say it! is exposure.
The Hercules was to be smuggled out of Italy; a thing
positively wrong, a thing of which a man of my principles
and in my responsible position should have taken (as
I now see too late) no part whatever.”
“This sounds like very serious
work,” said the lawyer. “It will require
a great deal of drink, Pitman.”
“I took the liberty of in
short, of being prepared for you,” replied the
artist, pointing to a kettle, a bottle of gin, a lemon,
and glasses.
Michael mixed himself a grog, and
offered the artist a cigar.
“No, thank you,” said
Pitman. “I used occasionally to be rather
partial to it, but the smell is so disagreeable about
the clothes.”
“All right,” said the
lawyer. “I am comfortable now. Unfold
your tale.”
At some length Pitman set forth his
sorrows. He had gone to-day to Waterloo, expecting
to receive the colossal Hercules, and he had received
instead a barrel not big enough to hold Discobolus;
yet the barrel was addressed in the hand (with which
he was perfectly acquainted) of his Roman correspondent.
What was stranger still, a case had arrived by the
same train, large enough and heavy enough to contain
the Hercules; and this case had been taken to an address
now undiscoverable. “The vanman (I regret
to say it) had been drinking, and his language was
such as I could never bring myself to repeat.
He was at once discharged by the superintendent of
the line, who behaved most properly throughout, and
is to make inquiries at Southampton. In the meanwhile,
what was I to do? I left my address and brought
the barrel home; but, remembering an old adage, I
determined not to open it except in the presence of
my lawyer.”
“Is that all?” asked Michael.
“I don’t see any cause to worry. The
Hercules has stuck upon the road. It will drop
in to-morrow or the day after; and as for the barrel,
depend upon it, it’s a testimonial from one
of your young ladies, and probably contains oysters.”
“O, don’t speak so loud!”
cried the little artist. “It would cost
me my place if I were heard to speak lightly of the
young ladies; and besides, why oysters from Italy?
and why should they come to me addressed in Signor
Ricardi’s hand?”
“Well, let’s have a look
at it,” said Michael. “Let’s
roll it forward to the light.”
The two men rolled the barrel from
the corner, and stood it on end before the fire.
“It’s heavy enough to
be oysters,” remarked Michael judiciously.
“Shall we open it at once?”
inquired the artist, who had grown decidedly cheerful
under the combined effects of company and gin; and
without waiting for a reply, he began to strip as
if for a prize-fight, tossed his clerical collar in
the waste-paper basket, hung his clerical coat upon
a nail, and with a chisel in one hand and a hammer
in the other, struck the first blow of the evening.
“That’s the style, William
Dent!” cried Michael. “There’s
fire for your money! It may be a romantic visit
from one of the young ladies a sort of
Cleopatra business. Have a care and don’t
stave in Cleopatra’s head.”
But the sight of Pitman’s alacrity
was infectious. The lawyer could sit still no
longer. Tossing his cigar into the fire, he snatched
the instrument from the unwilling hands of the artist,
and fell to himself. Soon the sweat stood in
beads upon his large, fair brow; his stylish trousers
were defaced with iron rust, and the state of his chisel
testified to misdirected energies.
A cask is not an easy thing to open,
even when you set about it in the right way; when
you set about it wrongly, the whole structure must
be resolved into its elements. Such was the course
pursued alike by the artist and the lawyer. Presently
the last hoop had been removed a couple
of smart blows tumbled the staves upon the ground and
what had once been a barrel was no more than a confused
heap of broken and distorted boards.
In the midst of these, a certain dismal
something, swathed in blankets, remained for an instant
upright, and then toppled to one side and heavily
collapsed before the fire. Even as the thing subsided,
an eye-glass tingled to the floor and rolled toward
the screaming Pitman.
“Hold your tongue!” said
Michael. He dashed to the house door and locked
it; then, with a pale face and bitten lip, he drew
near, pulled aside a corner of the swathing blanket,
and recoiled, shuddering.
There was a long silence in the studio.
“Now tell me,” said Michael,
in a low voice: “Had you any hand in it?”
and he pointed to the body.
The little artist could only utter
broken and disjointed sounds.
Michael poured some gin into a glass.
“Drink that,” he said. “Don’t
be afraid of me. I’m your friend through
thick and thin.”
Pitman put the liquor down untasted.
“I swear before God,”
he said, “this is another mystery to me.
In my worst fears I never dreamed of such a thing.
I would not lay a finger on a sucking infant.”
“That’s all square,”
said Michael, with a sigh of huge relief. “I
believe you, old boy.” And he shook the
artist warmly by the hand. “I thought for
a moment,” he added with rather a ghastly smile,
“I thought for a moment you might have made
away with Mr. Semitopolis.”
“It would make no difference
if I had,” groaned Pitman. “All is
at an end for me. There’s the writing on
the wall.”
“To begin with,” said
Michael, “let’s get him out of sight; for
to be quite plain with you, Pitman, I don’t
like your friend’s appearance.” And
with that the lawyer shuddered. “Where can
we put it?”
“You might put it in the closet
there if you could bear to touch it,”
answered the artist.
“Somebody has to do it, Pitman,”
returned the lawyer; “and it seems as if it
had to be me. You go over to the table, turn your
back, and mix me a grog; that’s a fair division
of labour.”
About ninety seconds later the closet-door
was heard to shut.
“There,” observed Michael,
“that’s more home-like. You can turn
now, my pallid Pitman. Is this the grog?”
he ran on. “Heaven forgive you, it’s
a lemonade.”
“But, O, Finsbury, what are
we to do with it?” wailed the artist, laying
a clutching hand upon the lawyer’s arm.
“Do with it?” repeated
Michael. “Bury it in one of your flower-beds,
and erect one of your own statues for a monument.
I tell you we should look devilish romantic shovelling
out the sod by the moon’s pale ray. Here,
put some gin in this.”
“I beg of you, Mr. Finsbury,
do not trifle with my misery,” cried Pitman.
“You see before you a man who has been all his
life I do not hesitate to say it eminently
respectable. Even in this solemn hour I can lay
my hand upon my heart without a blush. Except
on the really trifling point of the smuggling of the
Hercules (and even of that I now humbly repent), my
life has been entirely fit for publication. I
never feared the light,” cried the little man;
“and now now !”
“Cheer up, old boy,” said
Michael. “I assure you we should count this
little contretemps a trifle at the office; it’s
the sort of thing that may occur to any one; and if
you’re perfectly sure you had no hand in it ”
“What language am I to find ”
began Pitman.
“O, I’ll do that part
of it,” interrupted Michael, “you have
no experience. But the point is this: If or
rather since you know nothing of the crime,
since the the party in the closet is
neither your father, nor your brother, nor your creditor,
nor your mother-in-law, nor what they call an injured
husband ”
“O, my dear sir!” interjected Pitman,
horrified.
“Since, in short,” continued
the lawyer, “you had no possible interest in
the crime, we have a perfectly free field before us
and a safe game to play. Indeed the problem is
really entertaining; it is one I have long contemplated
in the light of an A. B. case; here it is at last
under my hand in specie; and I mean to pull you through.
Do you hear that? I mean to pull you through.
Let me see: it’s a long time since I have
had what I call a genuine holiday; I’ll send
an excuse to-morrow to the office. We had best
be lively,” he added significantly; “for
we must not spoil the market for the other man.”
“What do you mean?” inquired
Pitman. “What other man? The inspector
of police?”
“Damn the inspector of police!”
remarked his companion. “If you won’t
take the short cut and bury this in your back garden,
we must find some one who will bury it in his.
We must place the affair, in short, in the hands of
some one with fewer scruples and more resources.”
“A private detective, perhaps?” suggested
Pitman.
“There are times when you fill
me with pity,” observed the lawyer. “By
the way, Pitman,” he added in another key, “I
have always regretted that you have no piano in this
den of yours. Even if you don’t play yourself,
your friends might like to entertain themselves with
a little music while you were mudding.”
“I shall get one at once if
you like,” said Pitman nervously, anxious to
please. “I play the fiddle a little as it
is.”
“I know you do,” said
Michael; “but what’s the fiddle above
all as you play it? What you want is polyphonic
music. And I’ll tell you what it is since
it’s too late for you to buy a piano I’ll
give you mine.”
“Thank you,” said the
artist blankly. “You will give me yours?
I am sure it’s very good in you.”
“Yes, I’ll give you mine,”
continued Michael, “for the inspector of police
to play on while his men are digging up your back garden.”
Pitman stared at him in pained amazement.
“No, I’m not insane,”
Michael went on. “I’m playful, but
quite coherent. See here, Pitman: follow
me one half minute. I mean to profit by the refreshing
fact that we are really and truly innocent; nothing
but the presence of the you know what connects
us with the crime; once let us get rid of it, no matter
how, and there is no possible clue to trace us by.
Well, I give you my piano; we’ll bring it round
this very night. To-morrow we rip the fittings
out, deposit the our friend inside,
plump the whole on a cart, and carry it to the chambers
of a young gentleman whom I know by sight.”
“Whom do you know by sight?” repeated
Pitman.
“And what is more to the purpose,”
continued Michael, “whose chambers I know better
than he does himself. A friend of mine I
call him my friend for brevity; he is now, I understand,
in Demerara and (most likely) in gaol was
the previous occupant. I defended him, and I got
him off too all saved but honour; his assets
were nil, but he gave me what he had, poor gentleman,
and along with the rest the key of his chambers.
It’s there that I propose to leave the piano
and, shall we say, Cleopatra?”
“It seems very wild,”
said Pitman. “And what will become of the
poor young gentleman whom you know by sight?”
“It will do him good,”
said Michael cheerily. “Just what he wants
to steady him.”
“But, my dear sir, he might
be involved in a charge of a charge of
murder,” gulped the artist.
“Well, he’ll be just where
we are,” returned the lawyer. “He’s
innocent, you see. What hangs people, my dear
Pitman, is the unfortunate circumstance of guilt.”
“But indeed, indeed,”
pleaded Pitman, “the whole scheme appears to
me so wild. Would it not be safer, after all,
just to send for the police?”
“And make a scandal?”
inquired Michael. “’The Chelsea Mystery;
alleged innocence of Pitman’? How would
that do at the Seminary?”
“It would imply my discharge,”
admitted the drawing-master. “I cannot
deny that.”
“And besides,” said Michael,
“I am not going to embark in such a business
and have no fun for my money.”
“O my dear sir, is that a proper spirit?”
cried Pitman.
“O, I only said that to cheer
you up,” said the unabashed Michael. “Nothing
like a little judicious levity. But it’s
quite needless to discuss. If you mean to follow
my advice, come on, and let us get the piano at once.
If you don’t, just drop me the word, and I’ll
leave you to deal with the whole thing according to
your better judgment.”
“You know perfectly well that
I depend on you entirely,” returned Pitman.
“But O, what a night is before me with that horror
in my studio! How am I to think of it on my pillow?”
“Well, you know, my piano will
be there too,” said Michael. “That’ll
raise the average.”
An hour later a cart came up the lane,
and the lawyer’s piano a momentous
Broadwood grand was deposited in Mr. Pitman’s
studio.
CHAPTER VIII
IN WHICH MICHAEL FINSBURY ENJOYS A HOLIDAY
Punctually at eight o’clock
next morning the lawyer rattled (according to previous
appointment) on the studio door. He found the
artist sadly altered for the worse bleached,
bloodshot, and chalky a man upon wires,
the tail of his haggard eye still wandering to the
closet. Nor was the professor of drawing less
inclined to wonder at his friend. Michael was
usually attired in the height of fashion, with a certain
mercantile brilliancy best described perhaps as stylish;
nor could anything be said against him, as a rule,
but that he looked a trifle too like a wedding guest
to be quite a gentleman. To-day he had fallen
altogether from these heights. He wore a flannel
shirt of washed-out shepherd’s tartan, and a
suit of reddish tweeds, of the colour known to
tailors as “heather mixture”; his neckcloth
was black, and tied loosely in a sailor’s knot;
a rusty ulster partly concealed these advantages;
and his feet were shod with rough walking boots.
His hat was an old soft felt, which he removed with
a flourish as he entered.
“Here I am, William Dent!”
he cried, and drawing from his pocket two little wisps
of reddish hair, he held them to his cheeks like side-whiskers
and danced about the studio with the filmy graces of
a ballet-girl.
Pitman laughed sadly. “I
should never have known you,” said he.
“Nor were you intended to,”
returned Michael, replacing his false whiskers in
his pocket. “Now we must overhaul you and
your wardrobe, and disguise you up to the nines.”
“Disguise!” cried the
artist. “Must I indeed disguise myself?
Has it come to that?”
“My dear creature,” returned
his companion, “disguise is the spice of life.
What is life, passionately exclaimed a French philosopher,
without the pleasures of disguise? I don’t
say it’s always good taste, and I know it’s
unprofessional; but what’s the odds, downhearted
drawing-master? It has to be. We have to
leave a false impression on the minds of many persons,
and in particular on the mind of Mr. Gideon Forsyth the
young gentleman I know by sight if he should
have the bad taste to be at home.”
“If he be at home?” faltered
the artist. “That would be the end of all.”
“Won’t matter a d ,”
returned Michael airily. “Let me see your
clothes, and I’ll make a new man of you in a
jiffy.”
In the bedroom, to which he was at
once conducted, Michael examined Pitman’s poor
and scanty wardrobe with a humorous eye, picked out
a short jacket of black alpaca, and presently added
to that a pair of summer trousers which somehow took
his fancy as incongruous. Then, with the garments
in his hand, he scrutinised the artist closely.
“I don’t like that clerical
collar,” he remarked. “Have you nothing
else?”
The professor of drawing pondered
for a moment, and then brightened; “I have a
pair of low-necked shirts,” he said, “that
I used to wear in Paris as a student. They are
rather loud.”
“The very thing!” ejaculated
Michael. “You’ll look perfectly beastly.
Here are spats, too,” he continued, drawing forth
a pair of those offensive little gaiters. “Must
have spats! And now you jump into these, and
whistle a tune at the window for (say) three-quarters
of an hour. After that you can rejoin me on the
field of glory.”
So saying, Michael returned to the
studio. It was the morning of the easterly gale;
the wind blew shrilly among the statues in the garden,
and drove the rain upon the skylight in the studio
ceiling; and at about the same moment of the time
when Morris attacked the hundredth version of his
uncle’s signature in Bloomsbury, Michael, in
Chelsea, began to rip the wires out of the Broadwood
grand.
Three-quarters of an hour later Pitman
was admitted, to find the closet-door standing open,
the closet untenanted, and the piano discreetly shut.
“It’s a remarkably heavy
instrument,” observed Michael, and turned to
consider his friend’s disguise. “You
must shave off that beard of yours,” he said.
“My beard!” cried Pitman.
“I cannot shave my beard. I cannot tamper
with my appearance my principals would
object. They hold very strong views as to the
appearance of the professors young ladies
are considered so romantic. My beard was regarded
as quite a feature when I went about the place.
It was regarded,” said the artist, with rising
colour, “it was regarded as unbecoming.”
“You can let it grow again,”
returned Michael, “and then you’ll be so
precious ugly that they’ll raise your salary.”
“But I don’t want to be ugly,” cried
the artist.
“Don’t be an ass,”
said Michael, who hated beards and was delighted to
destroy one. “Off with it like a man!”
“Of course, if you insist,”
said Pitman; and then he sighed, fetched some hot
water from the kitchen, and setting a glass upon his
easel, first clipped his beard with scissors and then
shaved his chin. He could not conceal from himself,
as he regarded the result, that his last claims to
manhood had been sacrificed, but Michael seemed delighted.
“A new man, I declare!”
he cried. “When I give you the window-glass
spectacles I have in my pocket, you’ll be the
beau-idéal of a French commercial traveller.”
Pitman did not reply, but continued
to gaze disconsolately on his image in the glass.
“Do you know,” asked Michael,
“what the Governor of South Carolina said to
the Governor of North Carolina? ‘It’s
a long time between drinks,’ observed that powerful
thinker; and if you will put your hand into the top
left-hand pocket of my ulster, I have an impression
you will find a flask of brandy. Thank you, Pitman,”
he added, as he filled out a glass for each.
“Now you will give me news of this.”
The artist reached out his hand for
the water-jug, but Michael arrested the movement.
“Not if you went upon your knees!”
he cried. “This is the finest liqueur brandy
in Great Britain.”
Pitman put his lips to it, set it down again, and
sighed.
“Well, I must say you’re
the poorest companion for a holiday!” cried
Michael. “If that’s all you know of
brandy, you shall have no more of it; and while I
finish the flask, you may as well begin business.
Come to think of it,” he broke off, “I
have made an abominable error: you should have
ordered the cart before you were disguised. Why,
Pitman, what the devil’s the use of you? why
couldn’t you have reminded me of that?”
“I never even knew there was
a cart to be ordered,” said the artist.
“But I can take off the disguise again,”
he suggested eagerly.
“You would find it rather a
bother to put on your beard,” observed the lawyer.
“No, it’s a false step; the sort of thing
that hangs people,” he continued, with eminent
cheerfulness, as he sipped his brandy; “and it
can’t be retraced now. Off to the mews with
you, make all the arrangements; they’re to take
the piano from here, cart it to Victoria, and despatch
it thence by rail to Cannon Street, to lie till called
for in the name of Fortuné du Boisgobey.”
“Isn’t that rather an awkward name?”
pleaded Pitman.
“Awkward?” cried Michael
scornfully. “It would hang us both!
Brown is both safer and easier to pronounce.
Call it Brown.”
“I wish,” said Pitman,
“for my sake, I wish you wouldn’t talk
so much of hanging.”
“Talking about it’s nothing,
my boy!” returned Michael. “But take
your hat and be off, and mind and pay everything beforehand.”
Left to himself, the lawyer turned
his attention for some time exclusively to the liqueur
brandy, and his spirits, which had been pretty fair
all morning, now prodigiously rose. He proceeded
to adjust his whiskers finally before the glass.
“Devilish rich,” he remarked, as he contemplated
his reflection. “I look like a purser’s
mate.” And at that moment the window-glass
spectacles (which he had hitherto destined for Pitman)
flashed into his mind; he put them on, and fell in
love with the effect. “Just what I required,”
he said. “I wonder what I look like now?
A humorous novelist, I should think,” and he
began to practise divers characters of walk, naming
them to himself as he proceeded. “Walk
of a humorous novelist but that would require
an umbrella. Walk of a purser’s mate.
Walk of an Australian colonist revisiting the scenes
of childhood. Walk of Sepoy colonel, ditto, ditto.”
And in the midst of the Sepoy colonel (which was an
excellent assumption, although inconsistent with the
style of his make-up), his eye lighted on the piano.
This instrument was made to lock both at the top and
at the keyboard, but the key of the latter had been
mislaid. Michael opened it and ran his fingers
over the dumb keys. “Fine instrument full,
rich tone,” he observed, and he drew in a seat.
When Mr. Pitman returned to the studio,
he was appalled to observe his guide, philosopher,
and friend performing miracles of execution on the
silent grand.
“Heaven help me!” thought
the little man, “I fear he has been drinking!
Mr. Finsbury,” he said aloud; and Michael, without
rising, turned upon him a countenance somewhat flushed,
encircled with the bush of the red whiskers, and bestridden
by the spectacles. “Capriccio in B-flat
on the departure of a friend,” said he, continuing
his noiseless evolutions.
Indignation awoke in the mind of Pitman.
“Those spectacles were to be mine,” he
cried. “They are an essential part of my
disguise.”
“I am going to wear them myself,”
replied Michael; and he added, with some show of truth,
“There would be a devil of a lot of suspicion
aroused if we both wore spectacles.”
“O, well,” said the assenting
Pitman, “I rather counted on them; but of course,
if you insist. And at any rate, here is the cart
at the door.”
While the men were at work, Michael
concealed himself in the closet among the debris of
the barrel and the wires of the piano; and as soon
as the coast was clear the pair sallied forth by the
lane, jumped into a hansom in the King’s Road,
and were driven rapidly toward town. It was still
cold and raw and boisterous; the rain beat strongly
in their faces, but Michael refused to have the glass
let down; he had now suddenly donned the character
of cicerone, and pointed out and lucidly commented
on the sights of London, as they drove. “My
dear fellow,” he said, “you don’t
seem to know anything of your native city. Suppose
we visited the Tower? No? Well, perhaps
it’s a trifle out of our way. But, anyway Here,
cabby, drive round by Trafalgar Square!” And
on that historic battle-field he insisted on drawing
up, while he criticised the statues and gave the artist
many curious details (quite new to history) of the
lives of the celebrated men they represented.
It would be difficult to express what
Pitman suffered in the cab: cold, wet, terror
in the capital degree, a grounded distrust of the commander
under whom he served, a sense of imprudency in the
matter of the low-necked shirt, a bitter sense of
the decline and fall involved in the deprivation of
his beard, all these were among the ingredients of
the bowl. To reach the restaurant, for which
they were deviously steering, was the first relief.
To hear Michael bespeak a private room was a second
and a still greater. Nor, as they mounted the
stair under the guidance of an unintelligible alien,
did he fail to note with gratitude the fewness of
the persons present, or the still more cheering fact
that the greater part of these were exiles from the
land of France. It was thus a blessed thought
that none of them would be connected with the Seminary;
for even the French professor, though admittedly a
Papist, he could scarce imagine frequenting so rakish
an establishment.
The alien introduced them into a small
bare room with a single table, a sofa, and a dwarfish
fire; and Michael called promptly for more coals and
a couple of brandies and sodas.
“O, no,” said Pitman, “surely not no
more to drink.”
“I don’t know what you
would be at,” said Michael plaintively.
“It’s positively necessary to do something;
and one shouldn’t smoke before meals I
thought that was understood. You seem to have
no idea of hygiene.” And he compared his
watch with the clock upon the chimney-piece.
Pitman fell into bitter musing; here
he was, ridiculously shorn, absurdly disguised, in
the company of a drunken man in spectacles, and waiting
for a champagne luncheon in a restaurant painfully
foreign. What would his principals think, if
they could see him? What if they knew his tragic
and deceitful errand?
From these reflections he was aroused
by the entrance of the alien with the brandies and
sodas. Michael took one and bade the waiter pass
the other to his friend.
Pitman waved it from him with his
hand. “Don’t let me lose all self-respect,”
he said.
“Anything to oblige a friend,”
returned Michael. “But I’m not going
to drink alone. Here,” he added to the
waiter, “you take it.” And, then,
touching glasses, “The health of Mr. Gideon Forsyth,”
said he.
“Meestare Gidden Borsye,”
replied the waiter, and he tossed off the liquor in
four gulps.
“Have another?” said Michael,
with undisguised interest. “I never saw
a man drink faster. It restores one’s confidence
in the human race.”
But the waiter excused himself politely,
and, assisted by some one from without, began to bring
in lunch.
Michael made an excellent meal, which
he washed down with a bottle of Heidsieck’s
dry monopole. As for the artist, he
was far too uneasy to eat, and his companion flatly
refused to let him share in the champagne unless he
did.
“One of us must stay sober,”
remarked the lawyer, “and I won’t give
you champagne on the strength of a leg of grouse.
I have to be cautious,” he added confidentially.
“One drunken man, excellent business two
drunken men, all my eye.”
On the production of coffee and departure
of the waiter, Michael might have been observed to
make portentous efforts after gravity of mien.
He looked his friend in the face (one eye perhaps
a trifle off), and addressed him thickly but severely.
“Enough of this fooling,”
was his not inappropriate exordium. “To
business. Mark me closely. I am an Australian.
My name is John Dickson, though you mightn’t
think it from my unassuming appearance. You will
be relieved to hear that I am rich, sir, very rich.
You can’t go into this sort of thing too thoroughly,
Pitman; the whole secret is preparation, and I can
get up my biography from the beginning, and I could
tell it you now, only I have forgotten it.”
“Perhaps I’m stupid ”
began Pitman.
“That’s it!” cried
Michael. “Very stupid; but rich too richer
than I am. I thought you would enjoy it, Pitman,
so I’ve arranged that you were to be literally
wallowing in wealth. But then, on the other hand,
you’re only an American, and a maker of india-rubber
overshoes at that. And the worst of it is why
should I conceal it from you? the worst
of it is that you’re called Ezra Thomas.
Now,” said Michael, with a really appalling
seriousness of manner, “tell me who we are.”
The unfortunate little man was cross-examined
till he knew these facts by heart.
“There!” cried the lawyer.
“Our plans are laid. Thoroughly consistent that’s
the great thing.”
“But I don’t understand,” objected
Pitman.
“O, you’ll understand
right enough when it comes to the point,” said
Michael, rising.
“There doesn’t seem any story to it,”
said the artist.
“We can invent one as we go along,” returned
the lawyer.
“But I can’t invent,”
protested Pitman. “I never could invent
in all my life.”
“You’ll find you’ll
have to, my boy,” was Michael’s easy comment,
and he began calling for the waiter, with whom he
at once resumed a sparkling conversation.
It was a downcast little man that
followed him. “Of course he is very clever,
but can I trust him in such a state?” he asked
himself. And when they were once more in a hansom,
he took heart of grace.
“Don’t you think,”
he faltered, “it would be wiser, considering
all things, to put this business off?”
“Put off till to-morrow what
can be done to-day?” cried Michael, with indignation.
“Never heard of such a thing! Cheer up,
it’s all right, go in and win there’s
a lion-hearted Pitman!”
At Cannon Street they inquired for
Mr. Brown’s piano, which had duly arrived, drove
thence to a neighbouring mews, where they contracted
for a cart, and while that was being got ready, took
shelter in the harness-room beside the stove.
Here the lawyer presently toppled against the wall
and fell into a gentle slumber; so that Pitman found
himself launched on his own resources in the midst
of several staring loafers, such as love to spend
unprofitable days about a stable.
“Rough day, sir,” observed one. “Do
you go far?”
“Yes, it’s a rather
a rough day,” said the artist; and then, feeling
that he must change the conversation, “My friend
is an Australian; he is very impulsive,” he
added.
“An Australian?” said
another. “I’ve a brother myself in
Melbourne. Does your friend come from that way
at all?”
“No, not exactly,” replied
the artist, whose ideas of the geography of New Holland
were a little scattered. “He lives immensely
far inland, and is very rich.”
The loafers gazed with great respect
upon the slumbering colonist.
“Well,” remarked the second
speaker, “it’s a mighty big place, is
Australia. Do you come from thereaway too?”
“No, I do not,” said Pitman.
“I do not, and I don’t want to,”
he added irritably. And then, feeling some diversion
needful, he fell upon Michael and shook him up.
“Hullo,” said the lawyer, “what’s
wrong?”
“The cart is nearly ready,”
said Pitman sternly. “I will not allow you
to sleep.”
“All right no offence,
old man,” replied Michael, yawning. “A
little sleep never did anybody any harm; I feel comparatively
sober now. But what’s all the hurry?”
he added, looking round him glassily. “I
don’t see the cart, and I’ve forgotten
where we left the piano.”
What more the lawyer might have said,
in the confidence of the moment, is with Pitman a
matter of tremulous conjecture to this day; but by
the most blessed circumstance the cart was then announced,
and Michael must bend the forces of his mind to the
more difficult task of rising.
“Of course you’ll drive,”
he remarked to his companion, as he clambered on the
vehicle.
“I drive!” cried Pitman.
“I never did such a thing in my life. I
cannot drive.”
“Very well,” responded
Michael with entire composure, “neither can I
see. But just as you like. Anything to oblige
a friend.”
A glimpse of the ostler’s darkening
countenance decided Pitman. “All right,”
he said desperately, “you drive. I’ll
tell you where to go.”
On Michael in the character of charioteer
(since this is not intended to be a novel of adventure)
it would be superfluous to dwell at length. Pitman,
as he sat holding on and gasping counsels, sole witness
of this singular feat, knew not whether most to admire
the driver’s valour or his undeserved good fortune.
But the latter at least prevailed, the cart reached
Cannon Street without disaster; and Mr. Brown’s
piano was speedily and cleverly got on board.
“Well, sir,” said the
leading porter, smiling as he mentally reckoned up
a handful of loose silver, “that’s a mortal
heavy piano.”
“It’s the richness of
the tone,” returned Michael, as he drove away.
It was but a little distance in the
rain, which now fell thick and quiet, to the neighbourhood
of Mr. Gideon Forsyth’s chambers in the Temple.
There, in a deserted by-street, Michael drew up the
horses and gave them in charge to a blighted shoe-black;
and the pair descending from the cart, whereon they
had figured so incongruously, set forth on foot for
the decisive scene of their adventure. For the
first time Michael displayed a shadow of uneasiness.
“Are my whiskers right?”
he asked. “It would be the devil and all
if I was spotted.”
“They are perfectly in their
place,” returned Pitman, with scant attention.
“But is my disguise equally effective? There
is nothing more likely than that I should meet some
of my patrons.”
“O, nobody could tell you without
your beard,” said Michael. “All you
have to do is to remember to speak slow; you speak
through your nose already.”
“I only hope the young man won’t
be at home,” sighed Pitman.
“And I only hope he’ll
be alone,” returned the lawyer. “It
will save a precious sight of manoeuvring.”
And sure enough, when they had knocked
at the door, Gideon admitted them in person to a room,
warmed by a moderate fire, framed nearly to the roof
in works connected with the bench of British Themis,
and offering, except in one particular, eloquent testimony
to the legal zeal of the proprietor. The one
particular was the chimney-piece, which displayed a
varied assortment of pipes, tobacco, cigar-boxes, and
yellow-backed French novels.
“Mr. Forsyth, I believe?”
It was Michael who thus opened the engagement.
“We have come to trouble you with a piece of
business. I fear it’s scarcely professional ”
“I am afraid I ought to be instructed
through a solicitor,” replied Gideon.
“Well, well, you shall name
your own, and the whole affair can be put on a more
regular footing to-morrow,” replied Michael,
taking a chair and motioning Pitman to do the same.
“But you see we didn’t know any solicitors;
we did happen to know of you, and time presses.”
“May I inquire, gentlemen,”
asked Gideon, “to whom it was I am indebted
for a recommendation?”
“You may inquire,” returned
the lawyer, with a foolish laugh; “but I was
invited not to tell you till the thing was
done.”
“My uncle, no doubt,” was the barrister’s
conclusion.
“My name is John Dickson,”
continued Michael; “a pretty well-known name
in Ballarat; and my friend here is Mr. Ezra Thomas,
of the United States of America, a wealthy manufacturer
of india-rubber overshoes.”
“Stop one moment till I make
a note of that,” said Gideon; any one might
have supposed he was an old practitioner.
“Perhaps you wouldn’t
mind my smoking a cigar?” asked Michael.
He had pulled himself together for the entrance; now
again there began to settle on his mind clouds of
irresponsible humour and incipient slumber; and he
hoped (as so many have hoped in the like case) that
a cigar would clear him.
“Oh, certainly,” cried
Gideon blandly. “Try one of mine; I can
confidently recommend them.” And he handed
the box to his client.
“In case I don’t make
myself perfectly clear,” observed the Australian,
“it’s perhaps best to tell you candidly
that I’ve been lunching. It’s a thing
that may happen to any one.”
“O, certainly,” replied
the affable barrister. “But please be under
no sense of hurry. I can give you,” he
added, thoughtfully consulting his watch “yes,
I can give you the whole afternoon.”
“The business that brings me
here,” resumed the Australian with gusto, “is
devilish delicate, I can tell you. My friend Mr.
Thomas, being an American of Portuguese extraction,
unacquainted with our habits, and a wealthy manufacturer
of Broadwood pianos ”
“Broadwood pianos?” cried
Gideon, with some surprise. “Dear me, do
I understand Mr. Thomas to be a member of the firm?”
“O, pirated Broadwoods,”
returned Michael. “My friend’s the
American Broadwood.”
“But I understood you to say,”
objected Gideon, “I certainly have it so in
my notes that your friend was a manufacturer
of india-rubber overshoes.”
“I know it’s confusing
at first,” said the Australian, with a beaming
smile. “But he in short, he combines
the two professions. And many others besides many,
many, many others,” repeated Mr. Dickson, with
drunken solemnity. “Mr. Thomas’s cotton-mills
are one of the sights of Tallahassee; Mr. Thomas’s
tobacco-mills are the pride of Richmond, Va.; in short,
he’s one of my oldest friends, Mr. Forsyth, and
I lay his case before you with emotion.”
The barrister looked at Mr. Thomas
and was agreeably prepossessed by his open although
nervous countenance, and the simplicity and timidity
of his manner. “What a people are these
Americans!” he thought. “Look at
this nervous, weedy, simple little bird in a low-necked
shirt, and think of him wielding and directing interests
so extended and seemingly incongruous! But had
we not better,” he observed aloud, “had
we not perhaps better approach the facts?”
“Man of business, I perceive,
sir!” said the Australian. “Let’s
approach the facts. It’s a breach of promise
case.”
The unhappy artist was so unprepared
for this view of his position that he could scarce
suppress a cry.
“Dear me,” said Gideon,
“they are apt to be very troublesome. Tell
me everything about it,” he added kindly; “if
you require my assistance, conceal nothing.”
“You tell him,”
said Michael, feeling, apparently, that he had done
his share. “My friend will tell you all
about it,” he added to Gideon, with a yawn.
“Excuse my closing my eyes a moment; I’ve
been sitting up with a sick friend.”
Pitman gazed blankly about the room;
rage and despair seethed in his innocent spirit; thoughts
of flight, thoughts even of suicide, came and went
before him; and still the barrister patiently waited,
and still the artist groped in vain for any form of
words, however insignificant.
“It’s a breach of promise
case,” he said at last, in a low voice.
“I I am threatened with a breach
of promise case.” Here, in desperate quest
of inspiration, he made a clutch at his beard; his
fingers closed upon the unfamiliar smoothness of a
shaven chin; and with that, hope and courage (if such
expressions could ever have been appropriate in the
case of Pitman) conjointly fled. He shook Michael
roughly. “Wake up!” he cried, with
genuine irritation in his tones. “I cannot
do it, and you know I can’t.”
“You must excuse my friend,”
said Michael; “he’s no hand as a narrator
of stirring incident. The case is simple,”
he went on. “My friend is a man of very
strong passions, and accustomed to a simple, patriarchal
style of life. You see the thing from here:
unfortunate visit to Europe, followed by unfortunate
acquaintance with sham foreign count, who has a lovely
daughter. Mr. Thomas was quite carried away; he
proposed, he was accepted, and he wrote wrote
in a style which I am sure he must regret to-day.
If these letters are produced in court, sir, Mr. Thomas’s
character is gone.”
“Am I to understand ”
began Gideon.
“My dear sir,” said the
Australian emphatically, “it isn’t possible
to understand unless you saw them.”
“That is a painful circumstance,”
said Gideon; he glanced pityingly in the direction
of the culprit, and, observing on his countenance every
mark of confusion, pityingly withdrew his eyes.
“And that would be nothing,”
continued Mr. Dickson sternly, “but I wish I
wish from my heart, sir, I could say that Mr. Thomas’s
hands were clean. He has no excuse; for he was
engaged at the time and is still engaged to
the belle of Constantinople, Ga. My friend’s
conduct was unworthy of the brutes that perish.”
“Ga.?” repeated Gideon inquiringly.
“A contraction in current use,”
said Michael. “Ga. for Georgia, in the
same way as Co. for Company.”
“I was aware it was sometimes
so written,” returned the barrister, “but
not that it was so pronounced.”
“Fact, I assure you,”
said Michael. “You now see for yourself,
sir, that if this unhappy person is to be saved, some
devilish sharp practice will be needed. There’s
money, and no desire to spare it. Mr. Thomas could
write a cheque to-morrow for a hundred thousand.
And, Mr. Forsyth, there’s better than money.
The foreign count Count Tarnow, he calls
himself was formerly a tobacconist in Bayswater,
and passed under the humble but expressive name of
Schmidt; his daughter if she is his daughter there’s
another point make a note of that, Mr. Forsyth his
daughter at that time actually served in the shop and
she now proposes to marry a man of the eminence of
Mr. Thomas! Now do you see our game? We
know they contemplate a move; and we wish to forestall
’em. Down you go to Hampton Court, where
they live, and threaten, or bribe, or both, until
you get the letters; if you can’t, God help us,
we must go to court and Thomas must be exposed.
I’ll be done with him for one,” added
the unchivalrous friend.
“There seem some elements of
success,” said Gideon. “Was Schmidt
at all known to the police?”
“We hope so,” said Michael.
“We have every ground to think so. Mark
the neighbourhood Bayswater! Doesn’t
Bayswater occur to you as very suggestive?”
For perhaps the sixth time during
this remarkable interview, Gideon wondered if he were
not becoming light-headed. “I suppose it’s
just because he has been lunching,” he thought;
and then added aloud, “To what figure may I
go?”
“Perhaps five thousand would
be enough for to-day,” said Michael. “And
now, sir, do not let me detain you any longer; the
afternoon wears on; there are plenty of trains to
Hampton Court; and I needn’t try to describe
to you the impatience of my friend. Here is a
five-pound note for current expenses; and here is
the address.” And Michael began to write,
paused, tore up the paper, and put the pieces in his
pocket. “I will dictate,” he said,
“my writing is so uncertain.”
Gideon took down the address, “Count
Tarnow, Kurnaul Villa, Hampton Court.”
Then he wrote something else on a sheet of paper.
“You said you had not chosen a solicitor,”
he said. “For a case of this sort, here
is the best man in London.” And he handed
the paper to Michael.
“God bless me!” ejaculated
Michael, as he read his own address.
“O, I daresay you have seen
his name connected with some rather painful cases,”
said Gideon. “But he is himself a perfectly
honest man, and his capacity is recognised. And
now, gentlemen, it only remains for me to ask where
I shall communicate with you.”
“The Langham, of course,”
returned Michael. “Till to-night.”
“Till to-night,” replied
Gideon, smiling. “I suppose I may knock
you up at a late hour?”
“Any hour, any hour,” cried the vanishing
solicitor.
“Now there’s a young fellow
with a head upon his shoulders,” he said to
Pitman, as soon as they were in the street.
Pitman was indistinctly heard to murmur, “Perfect
fool.”
“Not a bit of him,” returned
Michael. “He knows who’s the best
solicitor in London, and it’s not every man
can say the same. But, I say, didn’t I
pitch it in hot?”
Pitman returned no answer.
“Hullo!” said the lawyer,
pausing, “what’s wrong with the long-suffering
Pitman?”
“You had no right to speak of
me as you did,” the artist broke out; “your
language was perfectly unjustifiable; you have wounded
me deeply.”
“I never said a word about you,”
replied Michael. “I spoke of Ezra Thomas;
and do please remember that there’s no such party.”
“It’s just as hard to bear,” said
the artist.
But by this time they had reached
the corner of the by-street; and there was the faithful
shoeblack, standing by the horses’ heads with
a splendid assumption of dignity; and there was the
piano, figuring forlorn upon the cart, while the rain
beat upon its unprotected sides and trickled down
its elegantly varnished legs.
The shoeblack was again put in requisition
to bring five or six strong fellows from the neighbouring
public-house; and the last battle of the campaign
opened. It is probable that Mr. Gideon Forsyth
had not yet taken his seat in the train for Hampton
Court, before Michael opened the door of the chambers,
and the grunting porters deposited the Broadwood grand
in the middle of the floor.
“And now,” said the lawyer,
after he had sent the men about their business, “one
more precaution. We must leave him the key of
the piano, and we must contrive that he shall find
it. Let me see.” And he built a square
tower of cigars upon the top of the instrument, and
dropped the key into the middle.
“Poor young man,” said
the artist, as they descended the stairs.
“He is in a devil of a position,”
assented Michael drily. “It’ll brace
him up.”
“And that reminds me,”
observed the excellent Pitman, “that I fear I
displayed a most ungrateful temper. I had no right,
I see, to resent expressions, wounding as they were,
which were in no sense directed.”
“That’s all right,”
cried Michael, getting on the cart. “Not
a word more, Pitman. Very proper feeling on your
part; no man of self-respect can stand by and hear
his alias insulted.”
The rain had now ceased, Michael was
fairly sober, the body had been disposed of, and the
friends were reconciled. The return to the mews
was therefore (in comparison with previous stages
of the day’s adventures) quite a holiday outing;
and when they had returned the cart and walked forth
again from the stable-yard, unchallenged, and even
unsuspected, Pitman drew a deep breath of joy.
“And now,” he said, “we can go home.”
“Pitman,” said the lawyer,
stopping short, “your recklessness fills me
with concern. What! we have been wet through the
greater part of the day, and you propose, in cold
blood, to go home! No, sir hot Scotch.”
And taking his friend’s arm
he led him sternly towards the nearest public-house.
Nor was Pitman (I regret to say) wholly unwilling.
Now that peace was restored and the body gone, a certain
innocent skittishness began to appear in the manners
of the artist; and when he touched his steaming glass
to Michael’s, he giggled aloud like a venturesome
school-girl at a picnic.
CHAPTER IX
GLORIOUS CONCLUSION OF MICHAEL FINSBURY’S HOLIDAY
I know Michael Finsbury personally;
my business I know the awkwardness of having
such a man for a lawyer still it’s
an old story now, and there is such a thing as gratitude,
and, in short, my legal business, although now (I
am thankful to say) of quite a placid character, remains
entirely in Michael’s hands. But the trouble
is I have no natural talent for addresses; I learn
one for every man that is friendship’s
offering; and the friend who subsequently changes
his residence is dead to me, memory refusing to pursue
him. Thus it comes about that, as I always write
to Michael at his office, I cannot swear to his number
in the King’s Road. Of course (like my
neighbours), I have been to dinner there. Of
late years, since his accession to wealth, neglect
of business, and election to the club, these little
festivals have become common. He picks up a few
fellows in the smoking-room all men of Attic
wit myself, for instance, if he has the
luck to find me disengaged; a string of hansoms may
be observed (by Her Majesty) bowling gaily through
St. James’s Park; and in a quarter of an hour
the party surrounds one of the best appointed boards
in London.
But at the time of which we write
the house in the King’s Road (let us still continue
to call it N was kept very quiet; when Michael
entertained guests it was at the halls of Nichol or
Verrey that he would convene them, and the door of
his private residence remained closed against his
friends. The upper story, which was sunny, was
set apart for his father; the drawing-room was never
opened; the dining-room was the scene of Michael’s
life. It is in this pleasant apartment, sheltered
from the curiosity of King’s Road by wire blinds,
and entirely surrounded by the lawyer’s unrivalled
library of poetry and criminal trials, that we find
him sitting down to his dinner after his holiday with
Pitman. A spare old lady, with very bright eyes
and a mouth humorously compressed, waited upon the
lawyer’s needs; in every line of her countenance
she betrayed the fact that she was an old retainer;
in every word that fell from her lips she flaunted
the glorious circumstance of a Scottish origin; and
the fear with which this powerful combination fills
the boldest was obviously no stranger to the bosom
of our friend. The hot Scotch having somewhat
warmed up the embers of the Heidsieck, it was touching
to observe the master’s eagerness to pull himself
together under the servant’s eye; and when he
remarked, “I think, Teena, I’ll take a
brandy and soda,” he spoke like a man doubtful
of his elocution, and not half certain of obedience.
“No such a thing, Mr. Michael,”
was the prompt return. “Clar’t and
water.”
“Well, well, Teena, I daresay
you know best,” said the master. “Very
fatiguing day at the office, though.”
“What?” said the retainer,
“ye never were near the office!”
“O yes, I was though; I was
repeatedly along Fleet Street,” returned Michael.
“Pretty pliskies ye’ve
been at this day!” cried the old lady, with
humorous alacrity; and then, “Take care don’t
break my crystal!” she cried, as the lawyer
came within an ace of knocking the glasses off the
table.
“And how is he keeping?” asked Michael.
“O, just the same, Mr. Michael,
just the way he’ll be till the end, worthy man!”
was the reply. “But ye’ll not be the
first that’s asked me that the day.”
“No?” said the lawyer. “Who
else?”
“Ay, that’s a joke, too,”
said Teena grimly. “A friend of yours:
Mr. Morris.”
“Morris! What was the little
beggar wanting here?” inquired Michael.
“Wantin’? To see
him,” replied the housekeeper, completing her
meaning by a movement of the thumb toward the upper
story. “That’s by his way of it;
but I’ve an idée of my own. He tried
to bribe me, Mr. Michael. Bribe me!”
she repeated, with inimitable scorn. “That’s
no’ kind of a young gentleman.”
“Did he so?” said Michael. “I
bet he didn’t offer much.”
“No more he did,” replied
Teena; nor could any subsequent questioning elicit
from her the sum with which the thrifty leather merchant
had attempted to corrupt her. “But I sent
him about his business,” she said gallantly.
“He’ll not come here again in a hurry.”
“He mustn’t see my father,
you know; mind that!” said Michael. “I’m
not going to have any public exhibition to a little
beast like him.”
“No fear of me lettin’
him,” replied the trusty one. “But
the joke is this, Mr. Michael see, ye’re
upsettin’ the sauce, that’s a clean table-cloth the
best of the joke is that he thinks your father’s
dead and you’re keepin’ it dark.”
Michael whistled. “Set
a thief to catch a thief,” said he.
“Exac’ly what I told him!” cried
the delighted dame.
“I’ll make him dance for that,”
said Michael.
“Couldn’t ye get the law of him some way?”
suggested Teena truculently.
“No, I don’t think I could,
and I’m quite sure I don’t want to,”
replied Michael. “But I say, Teena, I really
don’t believe this claret’s wholesome;
it’s not a sound, reliable wine. Give us
a brandy and soda, there’s a good soul.”
Teena’s face became like adamant. “Well,
then,” said the lawyer fretfully, “I won’t
eat any more dinner.”
“Ye can please yourself about
that, Mr. Michael,” said Teena, and began composedly
to take away.
“I do wish Teena wasn’t
a faithful servant!” sighed the lawyer, as he
issued into King’s Road.
The rain had ceased; the wind still
blew, but only with a pleasant freshness; the town,
in the clear darkness of the night, glittered with
street-lamps and shone with glancing rain-pools.
“Come, this is better,” thought the lawyer
to himself, and he walked on eastward, lending a pleased
ear to the wheels and the million footfalls of the
city.
Near the end of the King’s Road
he remembered his brandy and soda, and entered a flaunting
public-house. A good many persons were present,
a waterman from a cab-stand, half a dozen of the chronically
unemployed, a gentleman (in one corner) trying to
sell æsthetic photographs out of a leather case to
another and very youthful gentleman with a yellow
goatee, and a pair of lovers debating some fine shade
(in the other). But the centrepiece and great
attraction was a little old man, in a black, ready-made
surtout, which was obviously a recent purchase.
On the marble table in front of him, beside a sandwich
and a glass of beer, there lay a battered forage-cap.
His hand fluttered abroad with oratorical gestures;
his voice, naturally shrill, was plainly tuned to
the pitch of the lecture-room; and by arts, comparable
to those of the Ancient Mariner, he was now holding
spell-bound the barmaid, the waterman, and four of
the unemployed.
“I have examined all the theatres
in London,” he was saying; “and pacing
the principal entrances, I have ascertained them to
be ridiculously disproportionate to the requirements
of their audiences. The doors opened the wrong
way I forget at this moment which it is,
but have a note of it at home; they were frequently
locked during the performance, and when the auditorium
was literally thronged with English people. You
have probably not had my opportunities of comparing
distant lands; but I can assure you this has been
long ago recognised as a mark of aristocratic government.
Do you suppose, in a country really self-governed,
such abuses could exist? Your own intelligence,
however uncultivated, tells you they could not.
Take Austria, a country even possibly more enslaved
than England. I have myself conversed with one
of the survivors of the Ring Theatre, and though his
colloquial German was not very good, I succeeded in
gathering a pretty clear idea of his opinion of the
case. But, what will perhaps interest you still
more, here is a cutting on the subject from a Vienna
newspaper, which I will now read to you, translating
as I go. You can see for yourselves; it is printed
in the German character.” And he held the
cutting out for verification, much as a conjurer passes
a trick orange along the front bench.
“Hullo, old gentleman!
Is this you?” said Michael, laying his hand upon
the orator’s shoulder.
The figure turned with a convulsion
of alarm, and showed the countenance of Mr. Joseph
Finsbury.
“You, Michael!” he cried.
“There’s no one with you, is there?”
“No,” replied Michael,
ordering a brandy and soda, “there’s nobody
with me; whom do you expect?”
“I thought of Morris or John,”
said the old gentleman, evidently greatly relieved.
“What the devil would I be doing
with Morris or John?” cried the nephew.
“There is something in that,”
returned Joseph. “And I believe I can trust
you. I believe you will stand by me.”
“I hardly know what you mean,”
said the lawyer, “but if you are in need of
money I am flush.”
“It’s not that, my dear
boy,” said the uncle, shaking him by the hand.
“I’ll tell you all about it afterwards.”
“All right,” responded
the nephew. “I stand treat, Uncle Joseph;
what will you have?”
“In that case,” replied
the old gentleman, “I’ll take another sandwich.
I daresay I surprise you,” he went on, “with
my presence in a public-house; but the fact is, I
act on a sound but little-known principle of my own ”
“O, it’s better known
than you suppose,” said Michael sipping his brandy
and soda. “I always act on it myself when
I want a drink.”
The old gentleman, who was anxious
to propitiate Michael, laughed a cheerless laugh.
“You have such a flow of spirits,” said
he, “I am sure I often find it quite amusing.
But regarding this principle of which I was about
to speak. It is that of accommodating one’s-self
to the manners of any land (however humble) in which
our lot may be cast. Now, in France, for instance,
every one goes to a café for his meals; in America,
to what is called a ‘two-bit house’; in
England the people resort to such an institution as
the present for refreshment. With sandwiches,
tea, and an occasional glass of bitter beer, a man
can live luxuriously in London for fourteen pounds
twelve shillings per annum.”
“Yes, I know,” returned
Michael, “but that’s not including clothes,
washing, or boots. The whole thing, with cigars
and occasional sprees, costs me over seven hundred
a year.”
But this was Michael’s last
interruption. He listened in good-humoured silence
to the remainder of his uncle’s lecture, which
speedily branched to political reform, thence to the
theory of the weather-glass, with an illustrative
account of a bora in the Adriatic; thence again to
the best manner of teaching arithmetic to the deaf-and-dumb;
and with that, the sandwich being then no more, explicuit
valde féliciter. A moment later the pair
issued forth on the King’s Road.
“Michael,” said his uncle,
“the reason that I am here is because I cannot
endure those nephews of mine. I find them intolerable.”
“I daresay you do,” assented
Michael, “I never could stand them for a moment.”
“They wouldn’t let me
speak,” continued the old gentleman bitterly;
“I never was allowed to get a word in edgewise;
I was shut up at once with some impertinent remark.
They kept me on short allowance of pencils, when I
wished to make notes of the most absorbing interest;
the daily newspaper was guarded from me like a young
baby from a gorilla. Now, you know me, Michael.
I live for my calculations; I live for my manifold
and ever-changing views of life; pens and paper and
the productions of the popular press are to me as
important as food and drink; and my life was growing
quite intolerable when, in the confusion of that fortunate
railway accident at Browndean, I made my escape.
They must think me dead, and are trying to deceive
the world for the chance of the tontine.”
“By the way, how do you stand
for money?” asked Michael kindly.
“Pecuniarily speaking, I am
rich,” returned the old man with cheerfulness.
“I am living at present at the rate of one hundred
a year, with unlimited pens and paper; the British
Museum at which to get books; and all the newspapers
I choose to read. But it’s extraordinary
how little a man of intellectual interest requires
to bother with books in a progressive age. The
newspapers supply all the conclusions.”
“I’ll tell you what,”
said Michael, “come and stay with me.”
“Michael,” said the old
gentleman, “it’s very kind of you, but
you scarcely understand what a peculiar position I
occupy. There are some little financial complications;
as a guardian, my efforts were not altogether blessed;
and not to put too fine a point upon the matter, I
am absolutely in the power of that vile fellow, Morris.”
“You should be disguised,”
cried Michael eagerly; “I will lend you a pair
of window-glass spectacles and some red side-whiskers.”
“I had already canvassed that
idea,” replied the old gentleman, “but
feared to awaken remark in my unpretentious lodgings.
The aristocracy, I am well aware ”
“But see here,” interrupted
Michael, “how do you come to have any money
at all? Don’t make a stranger of me, Uncle
Joseph; I know all about the trust, and the hash you
made of it, and the assignment you were forced to
make to Morris.”
Joseph narrated his dealings with the bank.
“O, but I say, this won’t
do,” cried the lawyer. “You’ve
put your foot in it. You had no right to do what
you did.”
“The whole thing is mine, Michael,”
protested the old gentleman. “I founded
and nursed that business on principles entirely of
my own.”
“That’s all very fine,”
said the lawyer; “but you made an assignment,
you were forced to make it, too; even then your position
was extremely shaky; but now, my dear sir, it means
the dock.”
“It isn’t possible,”
cried Joseph; “the law cannot be so unjust as
that?”
“And the cream of the thing,”
interrupted Michael, with a sudden shout of laughter,
“the cream of the thing is this, that of course
you’ve downed the leather business! I must
say, Uncle Joseph, you have strange ideas of law,
but I like your taste in humour.”
“I see nothing to laugh at,”
observed Mr. Finsbury tartly.
“And talking of that, has Morris
any power to sign for the firm?” asked Michael.
“No one but myself,” replied Joseph.
“Poor devil of a Morris!
O, poor devil of a Morris!” cried the lawyer
in delight. “And his keeping up the farce
that you’re at home! O, Morris, the Lord
has delivered you into my hands! Let me see, Uncle
Joseph, what do you suppose the leather business worth?”
“It was worth a hundred
thousand,” said Joseph bitterly, “when
it was in my hands. But then there came a Scotsman it
is supposed he had a certain talent it
was entirely directed to book-keeping no
accountant in London could understand a word of any
of his books; and then there was Morris, who is perfectly
incompetent. And now it is worth very little.
Morris tried to sell it last year; and Pogram and Jarris
offered only four thousand.”
“I shall turn my attention to
leather,” said Michael with decision.
“You?” asked Joseph.
“I advise you not. There is nothing in the
whole field of commerce more surprising than the fluctuations
of the leather market. Its sensitiveness may
be described as morbid.”
“And now, Uncle Joseph, what
have you done with all that money?” asked the
lawyer.
“Paid it into a bank and drew
twenty pounds,” answered Mr. Finsbury promptly.
“Why?”
“Very well,” said Michael.
“To-morrow I shall send down a clerk with a
cheque for a hundred, and he’ll draw out the
original sum and return it to the Anglo-Patagonian,
with some sort of explanation which I will try to
invent for you. That will clear your feet, and
as Morris can’t touch a penny of it without
forgery, it will do no harm to my little scheme.”
“But what am I to do?”
asked Joseph; “I cannot live upon nothing.”
“Don’t you hear?”
returned Michael. “I send you a cheque for
a hundred; which leaves you eighty to go along upon;
and when that’s done, apply to me again.”
“I would rather not be beholden
to your bounty all the same,” said Joseph, biting
at his white moustache. “I would rather
live on my own money, since I have it.”
Michael grasped his arm. “Will
nothing make you believe,” he cried, “that
I am trying to save you from Dartmoor?”
His earnestness staggered the old
man. “I must turn my attention to law,”
he said; “it will be a new field; for though,
of course, I understand its general principles, I
have never really applied my mind to the details,
and this view of yours, for example, comes on me entirely
by surprise. But you may be right, and of course
at my time of life for I am no longer young any
really long term of imprisonment would be highly prejudicial.
But, my dear nephew, I have no claim on you; you have
no call to support me.”
“That’s all right,”
said Michael; “I’ll probably get it out
of the leather business.”
And having taken down the old gentleman’s
address, Michael left him at the corner of a street.
“What a wonderful old muddler!”
he reflected, “and what a singular thing is
life! I seem to be condemned to be the instrument
of Providence. Let me see; what have I done to-day?
Disposed of a dead body, saved Pitman, saved my Uncle
Joseph, brightened up Forsyth, and drunk a devil of
a lot of most indifferent liquor. Let’s
top off with a visit to my cousins, and be the instrument
of Providence in earnest. To-morrow I can turn
my attention to leather; to-night I’ll just
make it lively for ’em in a friendly spirit.”
About a quarter of an hour later,
as the clocks were striking eleven, the instrument
of Providence descended from a hansom, and, bidding
the driver wait, rapped at the door of N John
Street.
It was promptly opened by Morris.
“O, it’s you, Michael,”
he said, carefully blocking up the narrow opening:
“it’s very late.”
Michael without a word reached forth,
grasped Morris warmly by the hand, and gave it so
extreme a squeeze that the sullen householder fell
back. Profiting by this movement, the lawyer
obtained a footing in the lobby and marched into the
dining-room, with Morris at his heels.
“Where’s my Uncle Joseph?”
demanded Michael, sitting down in the most comfortable
chair.
“He’s not been very well
lately,” replied Morris; “he’s staying
at Browndean; John is nursing him; and I am alone,
as you see.”
Michael smiled to himself. “I
want to see him on particular business,” he
said.
“You can’t expect to see
my uncle when you won’t let me see your father,”
returned Morris.
“Fiddlestick,” said Michael.
“My father is my father; but Joseph is just
as much my uncle as he’s yours; and you have
no right to sequestrate his person.”
“I do no such thing,”
said Morris doggedly. “He is not well, he
is dangerously ill and nobody can see him.”
“I’ll tell you what, then,”
said Michael. “I’ll make a clean breast
of it. I have come down like the opossum, Morris;
I have come to compromise.”
Poor Morris turned as pale as death,
and then a flush of wrath against the injustice of
man’s destiny dyed his very temples. “What
do you mean?” he cried, “I don’t
believe a word of it!” And when Michael had
assured him of his seriousness, “Well, then,”
he cried, with another deep flush, “I won’t;
so you can put that in your pipe and smoke it.”
“Oho!” said Michael queerly.
“You say your uncle is dangerously ill, and
you won’t compromise? There’s something
very fishy about that.”
“What do you mean?” cried Morris hoarsely.
“I only say it’s fishy,”
returned Michael, “that is, pertaining to the
finny tribe.”
“Do you mean to insinuate anything?”
cried Morris stormily, trying the high hand.
“Insinuate?” repeated
Michael. “O, don’t let’s begin
to use awkward expressions! Let us drown our
differences in a bottle, like two affable kinsmen.
The Two Affable Kinsmen, sometimes attributed
to Shakespeare,” he added.
Morris’s mind was labouring
like a mill. “Does he suspect? or is this
chance and stuff? Should I soap, or should I bully?
Soap,” he concluded. “It gains time.
Well,” said he aloud, and with rather a painful
affectation of heartiness, “it’s long since
we have had an evening together, Michael; and though
my habits (as you know) are very temperate, I may
as well make an exception. Excuse me one moment
till I fetch a bottle of whisky from the cellar.”
“No whisky for me,” said
Michael; “a little of the old still champagne
or nothing.”
For a moment Morris stood irresolute,
for the wine was very valuable: the next he had
quitted the room without a word. His quick mind
had perceived his advantage; in thus dunning him for
the cream of the cellar, Michael was playing into
his hand. “One bottle?” he thought.
“By George, I’ll give him two! this is
no moment for economy; and once the beast is drunk,
it’s strange if I don’t wring his secret
out of him.”
With two bottles, accordingly, he
returned. Glasses were produced, and Morris filled
them with hospitable grace.
“I drink to you, cousin!”
he cried gaily. “Don’t spare the wine-cup
in my house.”
Michael drank his glass deliberately,
standing at the table; filled it again, and returned
to his chair, carrying the bottle along with him.
“The spoils of war!” he
said apologetically. “The weakest goes to
the wall. Science, Morris, science.”
Morris could think of no reply, and for an appreciable
interval silence reigned. But two glasses of the
still champagne produced a rapid change in Michael.
“There’s a want of vivacity
about you, Morris,” he observed. “You
may be deep; but I’ll be hanged if you’re
vivacious!”
“What makes you think me deep?”
asked Morris with an air of pleased simplicity.
“Because you won’t compromise,”
said the lawyer. “You’re deep dog,
Morris, very deep dog, not t’ compromise remarkable
deep dog. And a very good glass of wine; it’s
the only respectable feature in the Finsbury family,
this wine; rarer thing than a title much
rarer. Now a man with glass wine like this in
cellar, I wonder why won’t compromise?”
“Well, you wouldn’t
compromise before, you know,” said the smiling
Morris. “Turn about is fair play.”
“I wonder why I wouldn’
compromise? I wonder why you wouldn’?”
inquired Michael. “I wonder why we each
think the other wouldn’? ’S quite
a remarrable remarkable problem,”
he added, triumphing over oral obstacles, not without
obvious pride. “Wonder what we each think don’t
you?”
“What do you suppose to have
been my reason?” asked Morris adroitly.
Michael looked at him and winked.
“That’s cool,” said he. “Next
thing, you’ll ask me to help you out of the
muddle. I know I’m emissary of Providence,
but not that kind! You get out of it yourself,
like Ãsop and the other fellow. Must be dreadful
muddle for young orphan o’ forty; leather business
and all!”
“I am sure I don’t know what you mean,”
said Morris.
“Not sure I know myself,”
said Michael. “This is exc’lent vintage,
sir exc’lent vintage. Nothing
against the tipple. Only thing: here’s
a valuable uncle disappeared. Now, what I want
to know: where’s valuable uncle?”
“I have told you: he is
at Browndean,” answered Morris, furtively wiping
his brow, for these repeated hints began to tell upon
him cruelly.
“Very easy say Brown Browndee no’
so easy after all!” cried Michael. “Easy
say; anything’s easy say, when you can say it.
What I don’ like’s total disappearance
of an uncle. Not business-like.” And
he wagged his head.
“It is all perfectly simple,”
returned Morris, with laborious calm. “There
is no mystery. He stays at Browndean, where he
got a shake in the accident.”
“Ah!” said Michael, “got devil of
a shake!”
“Why do you say that?” cried Morris sharply.
“Best possible authority.
Told me so yourself,” said the lawyer. “But
if you tell me contrary now, of course I’m bound
to believe either the one story or the other.
Point is I’ve upset this bottle, still
champagne’s exc’lent thing carpet point
is, is valuable uncle dead an’ bury?”
Morris sprang from his seat. “What’s
that you say?” he gasped.
“I say it’s exc’lent
thing carpet,” replied Michael, rising.
“Exc’lent thing promote healthy action
of the skin. Well, it’s all one, anyway.
Give my love to Uncle Champagne.”
“You’re not going away?” said Morris.
“Awf’ly sorry, olé
man. Got to sit up sick friend,” said the
wavering Michael.
“You shall not go till you have
explained your hints,” returned Morris fiercely.
“What do you mean? What brought you here?”
“No offence, I trust,”
said the lawyer, turning round as he opened the door;
“only doing my duty as shemishery of Providence.”
Groping his way to the front-door,
he opened it with some difficulty, and descended the
steps to the hansom. The tired driver looked up
as he approached, and asked where he was to go next.
Michael observed that Morris had followed
him to the steps; a brilliant inspiration came to
him. “Anything t’ give pain,”
he reflected.... “Drive Shcotlan’
Yard,” he added aloud, holding to the wheel to
steady himself; “there’s something devilish
fishy, cabby, about those cousins. Mush’
be cleared up! Drive Shcotlan’ Yard.”
“You don’t mean that,
sir,” said the man, with the ready sympathy of
the lower orders for an intoxicated gentleman.
“I had better take you home, sir; you can go
to Scotland Yard to-morrow.”
“Is it as friend or as perfessional
man you advise me not to go Shcotlan’ Yard t’night?”
inquired Michael. “All righ’, never
min’ Shcotlan’ Yard, drive Gaiety bar.”
“The Gaiety bar is closed,” said the man.
“Then home,” said Michael, with the same
cheerfulness.
“Where to, sir?”
“I don’t remember, I’m
sure,” said Michael, entering the vehicle, “drive
Shcotlan’ Yard and ask.”
“But you’ll have a card,”
said the man, through the little aperture in the top,
“give me your card-case.”
“What imagi imagination
in a cabby!” cried the lawyer, producing his
card-case, and handing it to the driver.
The man read it by the light of the
lamp. “Mr. Michael Finsbury, 233 King’s
Road, Chelsea. Is that it, sir?”
“Right you are,” cried
Michael, “drive there if you can see way.”
CHAPTER X
GIDEON FORSYTH AND THE BROADWOOD GRAND
The reader has perhaps read that remarkable
work, “Who Put Back the Clock?” by E.
H. B., which appeared for several days upon the railway
bookstalls and then vanished entirely from the face
of the earth. Whether eating Time makes the chief
of his diet out of old editions; whether Providence
has passed a special enactment on behalf of authors;
or whether these last have taken the law into their
own hand, bound themselves into a dark conspiracy
with a password, which I would die rather than reveal,
and night after night sally forth under some vigorous
leader, such as Mr. James Payn or Mr. Walter Besant,
on their task of secret spoliation certain
it is, at least, that the old editions pass, giving
place to new. To the proof, it is believed there
are now only three copies extant of “Who Put
Back the Clock?” one in the British Museum,
successfully concealed by a wrong entry in the catalogue;
another in one of the cellars (the cellar where the
music accumulates) of the Advocates’ Library
at Edinburgh; and a third, bound in morocco, in the
possession of Gideon Forsyth. To account for the
very different fate attending this third exemplar,
the readiest theory is to suppose that Gideon admired
the tale. How to explain that admiration might
appear (to those who have perused the work) more difficult;
but the weakness of a parent is extreme, and Gideon
(and not his uncle, whose initials he had humorously
borrowed) was the author of “Who Put Back the
Clock?” He had never acknowledged it, or only
to some intimate friends while it was still in proof;
after its appearance and alarming failure, the modesty
of the novelist had become more pressing, and the
secret was now likely to be better kept than that of
the authorship of “Waverley.”
A copy of the work (for the date of
my tale is already yesterday) still figured in dusty
solitude in the bookstall at Waterloo; and Gideon,
as he passed with his ticket for Hampton Court, smiled
contemptuously at the creature of his thoughts.
What an idle ambition was the author’s!
How far beneath him was the practice of that childish
art! With his hand closing on his first brief,
he felt himself a man at last; and the muse who presides
over the police romance, a lady presumably of French
extraction, fled his neighbourhood, and returned to
join the dance round the springs of Helicon, among
her Grecian sisters.
Robust, practical reflection still
cheered the young barrister upon his journey.
Again and again he selected the little country-house
in its islet of great oaks, which he was to make his
future home. Like a prudent householder, he projected
improvements as he passed; to one he added a stable,
to another a tennis-court, a third he supplied with
a becoming rustic boat-house.
“How little a while ago,”
he could not but reflect, “I was a careless
young dog with no thought but to be comfortable!
I cared for nothing but boating and detective novels.
I would have passed an old-fashioned country-house
with large kitchen-garden, stabling, boat-house, and
spacious offices, without so much as a look, and certainly
would have made no inquiry as to the drains.
How a man ripens with the years!”
The intelligent reader will perceive
the ravages of Miss Hazeltine. Gideon had carried
Julia straight to Mr. Bloomfleld’s house; and
that gentleman, having been led to understand she
was the victim of oppression, had noisily espoused
her cause. He worked himself into a fine breathing
heat; in which, to a man of his temperament, action
became needful.
“I do not know which is the
worse,” he cried, “the fraudulent old
villain or the unmanly young cub. I will write
to the Pall Mall and expose them. Nonsense,
sir; they must be exposed! It’s a public
duty. Did you not tell me the fellow was a Tory?
O, the uncle is a Radical lecturer, is he? No
doubt the uncle has been grossly wronged. But
of course, as you say, that makes a change; it becomes
scarce so much a public duty.”
And he sought and instantly found
a fresh outlet for his alacrity. Miss Hazeltine
(he now perceived) must be kept out of the way; his
houseboat was lying ready he had returned
but a day or two before from his usual cruise; there
was no place like a houseboat for concealment; and
that very morning, in the teeth of the easterly gale,
Mr. and Mrs. Bloomfield and Miss Julia Hazeltine had
started forth on their untimely voyage. Gideon
pled in vain to be allowed to join the party.
“No, Gid,” said his uncle. “You
will be watched; you must keep away from us.”
Nor had the barrister ventured to contest this strange
illusion; for he feared if he rubbed off any of the
romance, that Mr. Bloomfield might weary of the whole
affair. And his discretion was rewarded; for the
Squirradical, laying a heavy hand upon his nephew’s
shoulder, had added these notable expressions:
“I see what you are after, Gid. But if you’re
going to get the girl, you have to work, sir.”
These pleasing sounds had cheered
the barrister all day, as he sat reading in chambers;
they continued to form the ground-base of his manly
musings as he was whirled to Hampton Court; even when
he landed at the station, and began to pull himself
together for his delicate interview, the voice of
Uncle Ned and the eyes of Julia were not forgotten.
But now it began to rain surprises:
in all Hampton Court there was no Kurnaul Villa, no
Count Tarnow, and no count. This was strange;
but, viewed in the light of the incoherency of his
instructions, not perhaps inexplicable; Mr. Dickson
had been lunching, and he might have made some fatal
oversight in the address. What was the thoroughly
prompt, manly, and business-like step? thought Gideon;
and he answered himself at once: “A telegram,
very laconic.” Speedily the wires were flashing
the following very important missive: “Dickson,
Langham Hotel. Villa and persons both unknown
here, suppose erroneous address; follow self next
train. Forsyth.” And at the Langham
Hotel, sure enough, with a brow expressive of despatch
and intellectual effort, Gideon descended not long
after from a smoking hansom.
I do not suppose that Gideon will
ever forget the Langham Hotel. No Count Tarnow
was one thing; no John Dickson and no Ezra Thomas,
quite another. How, why, and what next, danced
in his bewildered brain; from every centre of what
we playfully call the human intellect incongruous
messages were telegraphed; and before the hubbub of
dismay had quite subsided, the barrister found himself
driving furiously for his chambers. There was
at least a cave of refuge; it was at least a place
to think in; and he climbed the stair, put his key
in the lock and opened the door, with some approach
to hope.
It was all dark within, for the night
had some time fallen; but Gideon knew his room, he
knew where the matches stood on the end of the chimney-piece;
and he advanced boldly, and in so doing dashed himself
against a heavy body; where (slightly altering the
expressions of the song) no heavy body should have
been. There had been nothing there when Gideon
went out; he had locked the door behind him, he had
found it locked on his return, no one could have entered,
the furniture could not have changed its own position.
And yet undeniably there was a something there.
He thrust out his hands in the darkness. Yes,
there was something, something large, something smooth,
something cold.
“Heaven forgive me!” said
Gideon, “it feels like a piano.”
And the next moment he remembered
the vestas in his waistcoat-pocket and had struck
a light.
It was indeed a piano that met his
doubtful gaze; a vast and costly instrument, stained
with the rains of the afternoon and defaced with recent
scratches. The light of the vesta was reflected
from the varnished sides, like a star in quiet water;
and in the farther end of the room the shadow of that
strange visitor loomed bulkily and wavered on the
wall.
Gideon let the match burn to his fingers,
and the darkness closed once more on his bewilderment.
Then with trembling hands he lit the lamp and drew
near. Near or far, there was no doubt of the fact:
the thing was a piano. There, where by all the
laws of God and man it was impossible that it should
be there the thing impudently stood.
Gideon threw open the key-board and struck a chord.
Not a sound disturbed the quiet of the room.
“Is there anything wrong with me?” he thought,
with a pang; and drawing in a seat, obstinately persisted
in his attempts to ravish silence, now with sparkling
arpeggios, now with a sonata of Beethoven’s
which (in happier days) he knew to be one of the loudest
pieces of that powerful composer. Still not a
sound. He gave the Broadwood two great bangs
with his clenched first. All was still as the
grave.
The young barrister started to his feet.
“I am stark-staring mad,”
he cried aloud, “and no one knows it but myself.
God’s worst curse has fallen on me.”
His fingers encountered his watch-chain;
instantly he had plucked forth his watch and held
it to his ear. He could hear it ticking.
“I am not deaf,” he said
aloud. “I am only insane. My mind has
quitted me for ever.”
He looked uneasily about the room,
and gazed with lacklustre eyes at the chair in which
Mr. Dickson had installed himself. The end of
a cigar lay near on the fender.
“No,” he thought, “I
don’t believe that was a dream; but God knows
my mind is failing rapidly. I seem to be hungry,
for instance; it’s probably another hallucination.
Still I might try. I shall have one more good
meal; I shall go to the Café Royal, and may possibly
be removed from there direct to the asylum.”
He wondered with morbid interest,
as he descended the stairs, how he would first betray
his terrible condition would he attack a
waiter? or eat glass? and when he had mounted
into a cab, he bade the man drive to Nichol’s,
with a lurking fear that there was no such place.
The flaring, gassy entrance of the
café speedily set his mind at rest; he was cheered
besides to recognise his favourite waiter; his orders
appeared to be coherent; the dinner, when it came,
was quite a sensible meal, and he ate it with enjoyment.
“Upon my word,” he reflected, “I
am about tempted to indulge a hope. Have I been
hasty? Have I done what Robert Skill would have
done?” Robert Skill (I need scarcely mention)
was the name of the principal character in “Who
Put Back the Clock?” It had occurred to the
author as a brilliant and probable invention; to readers
of a critical turn, Robert appeared scarce upon a level
with his surname; but it is the difficulty of the
police romance, that the reader is always a man of
such vastly greater ingenuity than the writer.
In the eyes of his creator, however, Robert Skill
was a word to conjure with; the thought braced and
spurred him; what that brilliant creature would have
done Gideon would do also. This frame of mind
is not uncommon; the distressed general, the baited
divine, the hesitating author, decide severally to
do what Napoleon, what St. Paul, what Shakespeare would
have done; and there remains only the minor question,
What is that? In Gideon’s case one thing
was clear: Skill was a man of singular decision,
he would have taken some step (whatever it was) at
once; and the only step that Gideon could think of
was to return to his chambers.
This being achieved, all further inspiration
failed him, and he stood pitifully staring at the
instrument of his confusion. To touch the keys
again was more than he durst venture on; whether they
had maintained their former silence, or responded
with the tones of the last trump, it would have equally
dethroned his resolution. “It may be a practical
jest,” he reflected, “though it seems elaborate
and costly. And yet what else can it be?
It must be a practical jest.” And
just then his eye fell upon a feature which seemed
corroborative of that view: the pagoda of cigars
which Michael had erected ere he left the chambers.
“Why that?” reflected Gideon. “It
seems entirely irresponsible.” And drawing
near, he gingerly demolished it. “A key,”
he thought. “Why that? And why so
conspicuously placed?” He made the circuit of
the instrument, and perceived the keyhole at the back.
“Aha! this is what the key is for,” said
he. “They wanted me to look inside.
Stranger and stranger.” And with that he
turned the key and raised the lid.
In what antics of agony, in what fits
of flighty resolution, in what collapses of despair,
Gideon consumed the night, it would be ungenerous
to inquire too closely.
That trill of tiny song with which
the eaves-birds of London welcome the approach of
day found him limp and rumpled and bloodshot, and with
a mind still vacant of resource. He rose and
looked forth unrejoicingly on blinded windows, an
empty street, and the grey daylight dotted with the
yellow lamps. There are mornings when the city
seems to awake with a sick headache; this was one
of them; and still the twittering reveillé of the
sparrows stirred in Gideon’s spirit.
“Day here,” he thought,
“and I still helpless! This must come to
an end.” And he locked up the piano, put
the key in his pocket; and set forth in quest of coffee.
As he went, his mind trudged for the hundredth time
a certain mill-road of terrors, misgivings, and regrets.
To call in the police, to give up the body, to cover
London with handbills describing John Dickson and
Ezra Thomas, to fill the papers with paragraphs, Mysterious
Occurrence in the Temple Mr. Forsyth admitted
to bail, this was one course, an easy course, a
safe course; but not, the more he reflected on it,
not a pleasant one. For, was it not to publish
abroad a number of singular facts about himself?
A child ought to have seen through the story of these
adventurers, and he had gaped and swallowed it.
A barrister of the least self-respect should have
refused to listen to clients who came before him in
a manner so irregular, and he had listened. And
O, if he had only listened; but he had gone upon their
errand he, a barrister, uninstructed even
by the shadow of a solicitor upon an errand
fit only for a private detective; and alas! and
for the hundredth time the blood surged to his brow he
had taken their money! “No,” said
he, “the thing is as plain as St. Paul’s.
I shall be dishonoured! I have smashed my career
for a five-pound note.”
Between the possibility of being hanged
in all innocence, and the certainty of a public and
merited disgrace, no gentleman of spirit could long
hesitate. After three gulps of that hot, snuffy,
and muddy beverage, that passes on the streets of
London for a decoction of the coffee berry, Gideon’s
mind was made up. He would do without the police.
He must face the other side of the dilemma, and be
Robert Skill in earnest. What would Robert Skill
have done? How does a gentleman dispose of a
dead body, honestly come by? He remembered the
inimitable story of the hunchback; reviewed its course,
and dismissed it for a worthless guide. It was
impossible to prop a corpse on the corner of Tottenham
Court Road without arousing fatal curiosity in the
bosoms of the passers-by; as for lowering it down
a London chimney, the physical obstacles were insurmountable.
To get it on board a train and drop it out, or on
the top of an omnibus and drop it off, were equally
out of the question. To get it on a yacht and
drop it overboard, was more conceivable; but for a
man of moderate means it seemed extravagant. The
hire of the yacht was in itself a consideration; the
subsequent support of the whole crew (which seemed
a necessary consequence) was simply not to be thought
of. His uncle and the houseboat here occurred
in very luminous colours to his mind. A musical
composer (say, of the name of Jimson) might very well
suffer, like Hogarth’s musician before him, from
the disturbances of London. He might very well
be pressed for time to finish an opera say
the comic opera Orange Pekoe Orange
Pekoe, music by Jimson “this
young maëstro, one of the most promising of our recent
English school” vigorous entrance
of the drums, etc. the whole character
of Jimson and his music arose in bulk before the mind
of Gideon. What more likely than Jimson’s
arrival with a grand piano (say, at Padwick), and
his residence in a houseboat alone with the unfinished
score of Orange Pekoe? His subsequent disappearance,
leaving nothing behind but an empty piano case, it
might be more difficult to account for. And yet
even that was susceptible of explanation. For,
suppose Jimson had gone mad over a fugal passage,
and had thereupon destroyed the accomplice of his
infamy, and plunged into the welcome river? What
end, on the whole, more probable for a modern musician?
“By Jove, I’ll do it,” cried Gideon.
“Jimson is the boy!”
CHAPTER XI
THE MAÃSTRO JIMSON
Mr. Edward Hugh Bloomfield having
announced his intention to stay in the neighbourhood
of Maidenhead, what more probable than that the Maëstro
Jimson should turn his mind toward Padwick? Near
this pleasant river-side village he remembered to
have observed an ancient, weedy houseboat lying moored
beside a tuft of willows. It had stirred in him,
in his careless hours, as he pulled down the river
under a more familiar name, a certain sense of the
romantic; and when the nice contrivance of his story
was already complete in his mind, he had come near
pulling it all down again, like an ungrateful clock,
in order to introduce a chapter in which Richard Skill
(who was always being decoyed somewhere) should be
decoyed on board that lonely hulk by Lord Bellew and
the American desperado Gin Sling. It was fortunate
he had not done so, he reflected, since the hulk was
now required for very different purposes.
Jimson, a man of inconspicuous costume,
but insinuating manners, had little difficulty in
finding the hireling who had charge of the houseboat,
and still less in persuading him to resign his care.
The rent was almost nominal, the entry immediate,
the key was exchanged against a suitable advance in
money, and Jimson returned to town by the afternoon
train to see about despatching his piano.
“I will be down to-morrow,”
he had said reassuringly. “My opera is
waited for with such impatience, you know.”
And, sure enough, about the hour of
noon on the following day, Jimson might have been
observed ascending the river-side road that goes from
Padwick to Great Haverham, carrying in one hand a basket
of provisions, and under the other arm a leather case
containing (it is to be conjectured) the score of
Orange Pekoe. It was October weather; the
stone-grey sky was full of larks, the leaden mirror
of the Thames brightened with autumnal foliage, and
the fallen leaves of the chestnuts chirped under the
composer’s footing. There is no time of
the year in England more courageous; and Jimson, though
he was not without his troubles, whistled as he went.
A little above Padwick the river lies
very solitary. On the opposite shore the trees
of a private park enclose the view, the chimneys of
the mansion just pricking forth above their clusters;
on the near side the path is bordered by willows.
Close among these lay the houseboat, a thing so soiled
by the tears of the overhanging willows, so grown upon
with parasites, so decayed, so battered, so neglected,
such a haunt of rats, so advertised a storehouse of
rheumatic agonies, that the heart of an intending
occupant might well recoil. A plank, by way of
flying drawbridge, joined it to the shore. And
it was a dreary moment for Jimson when he pulled this
after him and found himself alone on this unwholesome
fortress. He could hear the rats scuttle and flop
in the abhorred interior; the key cried among the
wards like a thing in pain; the sitting-room was deep
in dust, and smelt strong of bilge-water. It
could not be called a cheerful spot, even for a composer
absorbed in beloved toil; how much less for a young
gentleman haunted by alarms and awaiting the arrival
of a corpse!
He sat down, cleared away a piece
of the table, and attacked the cold luncheon in his
basket. In case of any subsequent inquiry into
the fate of Jimson, it was desirable he should be
little seen: in other words, that he should spend
the day entirely in the house. To this end, and
further to corroborate his fable, he had brought in
the leather case not only writing materials, but a
ream of large-size music paper, such as he considered
suitable for an ambitious character like Jimson’s.
“And now to work,” said
he, when he had satisfied his appetite. “We
must leave traces of the wretched man’s activity.”
And he wrote in bold characters:
ORANGE PEKOE.
O.
J. B. JIMSON.
Vocal and p. f. score.
“I suppose they never do begin
like this,” reflected Gideon; “but then
it’s quite out of the question for me to tackle
a full score, and Jimson was so unconventional.
A dedication would be found convincing, I believe.
‘Dedicated to’ (let me see) ’to William
Ewart Gladstone, by his obedient servant the composer.’
And now some music: I had better avoid the overture;
it seems to present difficulties. Let’s
give an air for the tenor: key O,
something modern! seven sharps.”
And he made a business-like signature across the staves,
and then paused and browsed for a while on the handle
of his pen. Melody, with no better inspiration
than a sheet of paper, is not usually found to spring
unbidden in the mind of the amateur; nor is the key
of seven sharps a place of much repose to the untried.
He cast away that sheet. “It will help to
build up the character of Jimson,” Gideon remarked,
and again waited on the muse, in various keys and
on divers sheets of paper, but all with results so
inconsiderable that he stood aghast. “It’s
very odd,” thought he. “I seem to
have less fancy than I thought, or this is an off-day
with me; yet Jimson must leave something.”
And again he bent himself to the task.
Presently the penetrating chill of
the houseboat began to attack the very seat of life.
He desisted from his unremunerative trial, and, to
the audible annoyance of the rats, walked briskly up
and down the cabin. Still he was cold. “This
is all nonsense,” said he. “I don’t
care about the risk, but I will not catch a catarrh.
I must get out of this den.”
He stepped on deck, and passing to
the bow of his embarkation, looked for the first time
up the river. He started. Only a few hundred
yards above another houseboat lay moored among the
willows. It was very spick-and-span, an elegant
canoe hung at the stern, the windows were concealed
by snowy curtains, a flag floated from a staff.
The more Gideon looked at it, the more there mingled
with his disgust a sense of impotent surprise.
It was very like his uncle’s houseboat; it was
exceedingly like it was identical.
But for two circumstances, he could have sworn it
was the same. The first, that his uncle had gone
to Maidenhead, might be explained away by that flightiness
of purpose which is so common a trait among the more
than usually manly. The second, however, was
conclusive: it was not in the least like Mr. Bloomfield
to display a banner on his floating residence; and
if he ever did, it would certainly be dyed in hues
of emblematical propriety. Now the Squirradical,
like the vast majority of the more manly, had drawn
knowledge at the wells of Cambridge he was
wooden spoon in the year 1850; and the flag upon the
houseboat streamed on the afternoon air with the colours
of that seat of Toryism, that cradle of Puseyism, that
home of the inexact and the effete Oxford.
Still it was strangely like, thought Gideon.
And as he thus looked and thought,
the door opened, and a young lady stepped forth on
deck. The barrister dropped and fled into his
cabin it was Julia Hazeltine! Through
the window he watched her draw in the canoe, get on
board of it, cast off, and come dropping down stream
in his direction.
“Well, all is up now,” said he, and he
fell on a seat.
“Good-afternoon, miss,”
said a voice on the water. Gideon knew it for
the voice of his landlord.
“Good-afternoon,” replied
Julia, “but I don’t know who you are; do
I? O yes, I do though. You are the nice
man that gave us leave to sketch from the old houseboat.”
Gideon’s heart leaped with fear.
“That’s it,” returned
the man. “And what I wanted to say was as
you couldn’t do it any more. You see I’ve
let it.”
“Let it!” cried Julia.
“Let it for a month,”
said the man. “Seems strange, don’t
it? Can’t see what the party wants with
it!”
“It seems very romantic of him,
I think,” said Julia, “What sort of a
person is he?”
Julia in her canoe, the landlord in
his wherry, were close alongside, and holding on by
the gunwale of the houseboat; so that not a word was
lost on Gideon.
“He’s a music-man,”
said the landlord, “or at least that’s
what he told me, miss; come down here to write an
op’ra.”
“Really!” cried Julia,
“I never heard of anything so delightful!
Why, we shall be able to slip down at night and hear
him improvise! What is his name?”
“Jimson,” said the man.
“Jimson?” repeated Julia,
and interrogated her memory in vain. But indeed
our rising school of English music boasts so many professors
that we rarely hear of one till he is made a baronet.
“Are you sure you have it right?”
“Made him spell it to me,”
replied the landlord. “J-I-M-S-O-N Jimson;
and his op’ra’s called some
kind of tea.”
“Some kind of tea!”
cried the girl. “What a very singular name
for an opera! What can it be about?” And
Gideon heard her pretty laughter flow abroad.
“We must try to get acquainted with this Mr.
Jimson; I feel sure he must be nice.”
“Well, miss, I’m afraid
I must be going on. I’ve got to be at Haverham,
you see.”
“O, don’t let me keep
you, you kind man!” said Julia. “Good-afternoon.”
“Good-afternoon to you, miss.”
Gideon sat in the cabin a prey to
the most harrowing thoughts. Here he was anchored
to a rotting houseboat, soon to be anchored to it still
more emphatically by the presence of the corpse, and
here was the country buzzing about him, and young
ladies already proposing pleasure parties to surround
his house at night. Well, that meant the gallows;
and much he cared for that. What troubled him
now was Julia’s indescribable levity. That
girl would scrape acquaintance with anybody; she had
no reserve, none of the enamel of the lady. She
was familiar with a brute like his landlord; she took
an immediate interest (which she lacked even the delicacy
to conceal) in a creature like Jimson! He could
conceive her asking Jimson to have tea with her!
And it was for a girl like this that a man like Gideon
Down, manly heart!
He was interrupted by a sound that
sent him whipping behind the door in a trice.
Miss Hazeltine had stepped on board the houseboat.
Her sketch was promising; judging from the stillness,
she supposed Jimson not yet come; and she had decided
to seize occasion and complete the work of art.
Down she sat therefore in the bow, produced her block
and water-colours, and was soon singing over (what
used to be called) the ladylike accomplishment.
Now and then indeed her song was interrupted, as she
searched in her memory for some of the odious little
receipts by means of which the game is practised or
used to be practised in the brave days of old; they
say the world, and those ornaments of the world, young
ladies, are become more sophisticated now; but Julia
had probably studied under Pitman, and she stood firm
in the old ways.
Gideon, meanwhile, stood behind the
door, afraid to move, afraid to breathe, afraid to
think of what must follow, racked by confinement and
borne to the ground with tedium. This particular
phase, he felt with gratitude, could not last for
ever; whatever impended (even the gallows, he bitterly
and perhaps erroneously reflected) could not fail
to be a relief. To calculate cubes occurred to
him as an ingenious and even profitable refuge from
distressing thoughts, and he threw his manhood into
that dreary exercise.
Thus, then, were these two young persons
occupied Gideon attacking the perfect number
with resolution; Julia vigorously stippling incongruous
colours on her block, when Providence despatched into
these waters a steam-launch asthmatically panting
up the Thames. All along the banks the water
swelled and fell, and the reeds rustled. The houseboat
itself, that ancient stationary creature, became suddenly
imbued with life, and rolled briskly at her moorings,
like a sea-going ship when she begins to smell the
harbour bar. The wash had nearly died away, and
the quick panting of the launch sounded already faint
and far off, when Gideon was startled by a cry from
Julia. Peering through the window, he beheld her
staring disconsolately down stream at the fast-vanishing
canoe. The barrister (whatever were his faults)
displayed on this occasion a promptitude worthy of
his hero, Robert Skill; with one effort of his mind
he foresaw what was about to follow; with one movement
of his body he dropped to the floor and crawled under
the table.
Julia, on her part, was not yet alive
to her position. She saw she had lost the canoe,
and she looked forward with something less than avidity
to her next interview with Mr. Bloomfield; but she
had no idea that she was imprisoned, for she knew
of the plank bridge.
She made the circuit of the house,
and found the door open and the bridge withdrawn.
It was plain, then, that Jimson must have come; plain,
too, that he must be on board. He must be a very
shy man to have suffered this invasion of his residence,
and made no sign; and her courage rose higher at the
thought. He must come now, she must force him
from his privacy, for the plank was too heavy for her
single strength; so she tapped upon the open door.
Then she tapped again.
“Mr. Jimson,” she cried,
“Mr. Jimson! here, come! you must
come, you know, sooner or later, for I can’t
get off without you. O, don’t be so exceedingly
silly! O, please, come!”
Still there was no reply.
“If he is here he must
be mad,” she thought, with a little fear.
And the next moment she remembered he had probably
gone aboard like herself in a boat. In that case
she might as well see the houseboat, and she pushed
open the door and stepped in. Under the table,
where he lay smothered with dust, Gideon’s heart
stood still.
There were the remains of Jimson’s
lunch. “He likes rather nice things to
eat,” she thought. “O, I am sure he
is quite a delightful man. I wonder if he is
as good-looking as Mr. Forsyth. Mrs. Jimson I
don’t believe it sounds as nice as Mrs. Forsyth;
but then ‘Gideon’ is so really odious!
And here is some of his music too; this is delightful.
Orange Pekoe O, that’s what
he meant by some kind of tea.” And she
trilled with laughter. “Adagio molto espressivo,
sempre legato,” she read next. (For the
literary part of a composer’s business Gideon
was well equipped.) “How very strange to have
all these directions, and only three or four notes!
O, here’s another with some more. Andante
patetico.” And she began to glance over the
music. “O dear me,” she thought,
“he must be terribly modern! It all seems
discords to me. Let’s try the air.
It is very strange, it seems familiar.”
She began to sing it, and suddenly broke off with
laughter. “Why, it’s ’Tommy
make room for your Uncle!’” she cried
aloud, so that the soul of Gideon was filled with
bitterness. “Andante patetico, indeed!
The man must be a mere impostor.”
And just at this moment there came
a confused, scuffling sound from underneath the table;
a strange note, like that of a barn-door fowl, ushered
in a most explosive sneeze; the head of the sufferer
was at the same time brought smartly in contact with
the boards above; and the sneeze was followed by a
hollow groan.
Julia fled to the door, and there,
with the salutary instinct of the brave, turned and
faced the danger. There was no pursuit. The
sounds continued; below the table a crouching figure
was indistinctly to be seen jostled by the throes
of a sneezing-fit; and that was all.
“Surely,” thought Julia,
“this is most unusual behaviour. He cannot
be a man of the world!”
Meanwhile the dust of years had been
disturbed by the young barrister’s convulsions;
and the sneezing-fit was succeeded by a passionate
access of coughing.
Julia began to feel a certain interest.
“I am afraid you are really quite ill,”
she said, drawing a little nearer. “Please
don’t let me put you out, and do not stay under
that table, Mr. Jimson. Indeed it cannot be good
for you.”
Mr. Jimson only answered by a distressing
cough; and the next moment the girl was on her knees,
and their faces had almost knocked together under
the table.
“O, my gracious goodness!”
exclaimed Miss Hazeltine, and sprang to her feet.
“Mr. Forsyth gone mad!”
“I am not mad,” said the
gentleman ruefully, extricating himself from his position.
“Dearest Miss Hazeltine, I vow to you upon my
knees I am not mad!”
“You are not!” she cried, panting.
“I know,” he said, “that
to a superficial eye my conduct may appear unconventional.”
“If you are not mad, it was
no conduct at all,” cried the girl, with a flash
of colour, “and showed you did not care one penny
for my feelings!”
“This is the very devil and
all. I know I admit that,” cried
Gideon, with a great effort of manly candour.
“It was abominable conduct!” said Julia,
with energy.
“I know it must have shaken
your esteem,” said the barrister. “But,
dearest Miss Hazeltine, I beg of you to hear me out;
my behaviour, strange as it may seem, is not unsusceptible
of explanation; and I positively cannot and will not
consent to continue to try to exist without without
the esteem of one whom I admire the moment
is ill chosen, I am well aware of that; but I repeat
the expression one whom I admire.”
A touch of amusement appeared on Miss
Hazeltine’s face. “Very well,”
said she, “come out of this dreadfully cold place,
and let us sit down on deck.” The barrister
dolefully followed her. “Now,” said
she, making herself comfortable against the end of
the house, “go on. I will hear you out.”
And then, seeing him stand before her with so much
obvious disrelish to the task, she was suddenly overcome
with laughter. Julia’s laugh was a thing
to ravish lovers; she rolled her mirthful descant with
the freedom and the melody of a blackbird’s song
upon the river, and repeated by the echoes of the
farther bank. It seemed a thing in its own place
and a sound native to the open air. There was
only one creature who heard it without joy, and that
was her unfortunate admirer.
“Miss Hazeltine,” he said,
in a voice that tottered with annoyance, “I
speak as your sincere well-wisher, but this can only
be called levity.”
Julia made great eyes at him.
“I can’t withdraw the
word,” he said: “already the freedom
with which I heard you hobnobbing with a boatman gave
me exquisite pain. Then there was a want of reserve
about Jimson ”
“But Jimson appears to be yourself,” objected
Julia.
“I am far from denying that,”
cried the barrister, “but you did not know it
at the time. What could Jimson be to you?
Who was Jimson? Miss Hazeltine, it cut me to
the heart.”
“Really this seems to me to
be very silly,” returned Julia, with severe
decision. “You have behaved in the most
extraordinary manner; you pretend you are able to
explain your conduct, and instead of doing so you
begin to attack me.”
“I am well aware of that,”
replied Gideon. “I I will make
a clean breast of it. When you know all the circumstances
you will be able to excuse me.”
And sitting down beside her on the
deck, he poured forth his miserable history.
“O, Mr. Forsyth,” she
cried, when he had done, “I am so sorry!
I wish I hadn’t laughed at you only
you know you really were so exceedingly funny.
But I wish I hadn’t, and I wouldn’t either
if I had only known.” And she gave him
her hand.
Gideon kept it in his own. “You
do not think the worse of me for this?” he asked
tenderly.
“Because you have been so silly
and got into such dreadful trouble? you poor boy,
no!” cried Julia; and, in the warmth of the moment,
reached him her other hand; “you may count on
me,” she added.
“Really?” said Gideon.
“Really and really!” replied the girl.
“I do then, and I will,”
cried the young man. “I admit the moment
is not well chosen; but I have no friends to
speak of.”
“No more have I,” said
Julia. “But don’t you think it’s
perhaps time you gave me back my hands?”
“La ci darem la mano,”
said the barrister, “the merest moment more!
I have so few friends,” he added.
“I thought it was considered
such a bad account of a young man to have no friends,”
observed Julia.
“O, but I have crowds of friends!”
cried Gideon. “That’s not what I
mean. I feel the moment is ill chosen; but O,
Julia, if you could only see yourself!”
“Mr. Forsyth ”
“Don’t call me by that beastly name!”
cried the youth. “Call me Gideon!”
“O, never that!” from
Julia. “Besides, we have known each other
such a short time.”
“Not at all!” protested
Gideon. “We met at Bournemouth ever so long
ago. I never forgot you since. Say you never
forgot me. Say you never forgot me, and call
me Gideon!”
“Isn’t this rather a
want of reserve about Jimson?” inquired the girl.
“O, I know I am an ass,”
cried the barrister, “and I don’t care
a halfpenny! I know I’m an ass, and you
may laugh at me to your heart’s delight.”
And as Julia’s lips opened with a smile, he once
more dropped into music. “There’s
the Land of Cherry Isle!” he sang, courting her
with his eyes.
“It’s like an opera,” said Julia,
rather faintly.
“What should it be?” said
Gideon. “Am I not Jimson? It would
be strange if I did not serenade my love. O yes,
I mean the word, my Julia; and I mean to win you.
I am in dreadful trouble, and I have not a penny of
my own, and I have cut the silliest figure; and yet
I mean to win you, Julia. Look at me, if you
can, and tell me no!”
She looked at him; and whatever her
eyes may have told him, it is to be supposed he took
a pleasure in the message, for he read it a long while.
“And Uncle Ned will give us
some money to go on upon in the meanwhile,”
he said at last.
“Well, I call that cool!”
said a cheerful voice at his elbow.
Gideon and Julia sprang apart with
wonderful alacrity; the latter annoyed to observe
that although they had never moved since they sat
down, they were now quite close together; both presenting
faces of a very heightened colour to the eyes of Mr.
Edward Hugh Bloomfield. That gentleman, coming
up the river in his boat, had captured the truant
canoe, and divining what had happened, had thought
to steal a march upon Miss Hazeltine at her sketch.
He had unexpectedly brought down two birds with one
stone; and as he looked upon the pair of flushed and
breathless culprits, the pleasant human instinct of
the matchmaker softened his heart.
“Well, I call that cool,”
he repeated; “you seem to count very securely
upon Uncle Ned. But look here, Gid, I thought
I had told you to keep away?”
“To keep away from Maidenhead,”
replied Gid. “But how should I expect to
find you here?”
“There is something in that,”
Mr. Bloomfield admitted. “You see I thought
it better that even you should be ignorant of my address;
those rascals, the Finsburys, would have wormed it
out of you. And just to put them off the scent
I hoisted these abominable colours. But that is
not all, Gid; you promised me to work, and here I
find you playing the fool at Padwick.”
“Please, Mr. Bloomfield, you
must not be hard on Mr. Forsyth,” said Julia.
“Poor boy, he is in dreadful straits.”
“What’s this, Gid?”
inquired the uncle. “Have you been fighting?
or is it a bill?”
These, in the opinion of the Squirradical,
were the two misfortunes incident to gentlemen; and
indeed both were culled from his own career.
He had once put his name (as a matter of form) on a
friend’s paper; it had cost him a cool thousand;
and the friend had gone about with the fear of death
upon him ever since, and never turned a corner without
scouting in front of him for Mr. Bloomfield and the
oaken staff. As for fighting, the Squirradical
was always on the brink of it; and once, when (in
the character of president of a Radical club) he had
cleared out the hall of his opponents, things had
gone even further. Mr. Holtum, the Conservative
candidate, who lay so long on the bed of sickness,
was prepared to swear to Mr. Bloomfield. “I
will swear to it in any court it was the
hand of that brute that struck me down,” he was
reported to have said; and when he was thought to be
sinking, it was known that he had made an ante-mortem
statement in that sense. It was a cheerful day
for the Squirradical when Holtum was restored to his
brewery.
“It’s much worse than
that,” said Gideon; “a combination of
circumstances really providentially unjust a in
fact, a syndicate of murderers seem to have perceived
my latent ability to rid them of the traces of their
crime. It’s a legal study after all, you
see!” And with these words, Gideon, for the
second time that day, began to describe the adventures
of the Broadwood Grand.
“I must write to the Times,” cried
Mr. Bloomfield.
“Do you want to get me disbarred?” asked
Gideon.
“Disbarred! Come, it can’t
be as bad as that,” said his uncle. “It’s
a good, honest, Liberal Government that’s in,
and they would certainly move at my request.
Thank God, the days of Tory jobbery are at an end.”
“It wouldn’t do, Uncle Ned,” said
Gideon.
“But you’re not mad enough,”
cried Mr. Bloomfield, “to persist in trying
to dispose of it yourself?”
“There is no other path open to me,” said
Gideon.
“It’s not common-sense,
and I will not hear of it,” cried Mr. Bloomfield.
“I command you, positively, Gid, to desist from
this criminal interference.”
“Very well, then, I hand it
over to you,” said Gideon, “and you can
do what you like with the dead body.”
“God forbid!” ejaculated
the president of the Radical Club, “I’ll
have nothing to do with it.”
“Then you must allow me to do
the best I can,” returned his nephew. “Believe
me, I have a distinct talent for this sort of difficulty.”
“We might forward it to that
pest-house, the Conservative Club,” observed
Mr. Bloomfield. “It might damage them in
the eyes of their constituents; and it could be profitably
worked up in the local journal.”
“If you see any political capital
in the thing,” said Gideon, “you may have
it for me.”
“No, no, Gid no,
no, I thought you might. I will have no
hand in the thing. On reflection, it’s
highly undesirable that either I or Miss Hazeltine
should linger here. We might be observed,”
said the president, looking up and down the river;
“and in my public position the consequences
would be painful for the party. And, at any rate,
it’s dinner-time.”
“What?” cried Gideon,
plunging for his watch. “And so it is!
Great heaven, the piano should have been here hours
ago!”
Mr. Bloomfield was clambering back
into his boat; but at these words he paused.
“I saw it arrive myself at the
station; I hired a carrier man; he had a round to
make, but he was to be here by four at the latest,”
cried the barrister. “No doubt the piano
is open, and the body found.”
“You must fly at once,”
cried Mr. Bloomfield, “it’s the only manly
step.”
“But suppose it’s all
right?” wailed Gideon. “Suppose the
piano comes, and I am not here to receive it?
I shall have hanged myself by my cowardice. No,
Uncle Ned, inquiries must be made in Padwick; I dare
not go, of course; but you may you could
hang about the police office, don’t you see?”
“No, Gid no, my dear
nephew,” said Mr. Bloomfield, with the voice
of one on the rack. “I regard you with
the most sacred affection; and I thank God I am an
Englishman and all that. But not not
the police, Gid.”
“Then you desert me?” said Gideon.
“Say it plainly.”
“Far from it! far from it!”
protested Mr. Bloomfield. “I only propose
caution. Common-sense, Gid, should always be an
Englishman’s guide.”
“Will you let me speak?”
said Julia. “I think Gideon had better leave
this dreadful houseboat, and wait among the willows
over there. If the piano comes, then he could
step out and take it in; and if the police come, he
could slip into our houseboat, and there needn’t
be any more Jimson at all. He could go to bed,
and we could burn his clothes (couldn’t we?)
in the steam-launch; and then really it seems as if
it would be all right. Mr. Bloomfield is so respectable,
you know, and such a leading character, it would be
quite impossible even to fancy that he could be mixed
up with it.”
“This young lady has strong
common-sense,” said the Squirradical.
“O, I don’t think I’m
at all a fool,” said Julia, with conviction.
“But what if neither of them
come?” asked Gideon; “what shall I do
then?”
“Why then,” said she,
“you had better go down to the village after
dark; and I can go with you, and then I am sure you
could never be suspected; and even if you were, I
could tell them it was altogether a mistake.”
“I will not permit that I
will not suffer Miss Hazeltine to go,” cried
Mr. Bloomfield.
“Why?” asked Julia.
Mr. Bloomfield had not the least desire
to tell her why, for it was simply a craven fear of
being drawn himself into the imbroglio; but with the
usual tactics of a man who is ashamed of himself, he
took the high hand. “God forbid, my dear
Miss Hazeltine, that I should dictate to a lady on
the question of propriety ”
he began.
“O, is that all?” interrupted
Julia. “Then we must go all three.”
“Caught!” thought the Squirradical.
CHAPTER XII
POSITIVELY THE LAST APPEARANCE OF THE BROADWOOD GRAND
England is supposed to be unmusical;
but without dwelling on the patronage extended to
the organ-grinder, without seeking to found any argument
on the prevalence of the jew’s trump, there is
surely one instrument that may be said to be national
in the fullest acceptance of the word. The herdboy
in the broom, already musical in the days of Father
Chaucer, startles (and perhaps pains) the lark with
this exiguous pipe; and in the hands of the skilled
brick-layer,
“The thing becomes a trumpet, whence
he blows”
(as a general rule) either “The
British Grenadiers” or “Cherry Ripe.”
The latter air is indeed the shibboleth and diploma
piece of the penny whistler; I hazard a guess it was
originally composed for this instrument. It is
singular enough that a man should be able to gain a
livelihood, or even to tide over a period of unemployment,
by the display of his proficiency upon the penny whistle;
still more so, that the professional should almost
invariably confine himself to “Cherry Ripe.”
But indeed, singularities surround the subject, thick
like blackberries. Why, for instance, should
the pipe be called a penny whistle? I think no
one ever bought it for a penny. Why should the
alternative name be tin whistle? I am grossly
deceived if it be made of tin. Lastly, in what
deaf catacomb, in what earless desert, does the beginner
pass the excruciating interval of his apprenticeship?
We have all heard people learning the piano, the fiddle,
and the cornet; but the young of the penny whistler
(like that of the salmon) is occult from observation;
he is never heard until proficient; and providence
(perhaps alarmed by the works of Mr. Mallock) defends
human hearing from his first attempts upon the upper
octave.
A really noteworthy thing was taking
place in a green lane, not far from Padwick.
On the bench of a carrier’s cart there sat a
tow-headed, lanky, modest-looking youth; the reins
were on his lap; the whip lay behind him in the interior
of the cart; the horse proceeded without guidance or
encouragement; the carrier (or the carrier’s
man), rapt into a higher sphere than that of his daily
occupations, his looks dwelling on the skies, devoted
himself wholly to a brand-new D penny whistle, whence
he diffidently endeavoured to elicit that pleasing
melody “The Ploughboy.” To any observant
person who should have chanced to saunter in that lane,
the hour would have been thrilling. “Here
at last,” he would have said, “is the
beginner.”
The tow-headed youth (whose name was
Harker) had just encored himself for the nineteenth
time, when he was struck into the extreme of confusion
by the discovery that he was not alone.
“There you have it!” cried
a manly voice from the side of the road. “That’s
as good as I want to hear. Perhaps a leetle oilier
in the run,” the voice suggested, with meditative
gusto. “Give it us again.”
Harker glanced, from the depths of
his humiliation, at the speaker. He beheld a
powerful, sun-brown, clean-shaven fellow, about forty
years of age, striding beside the cart with a non-commissioned
military bearing, and (as he strode) spinning in the
air a cane. The fellow’s clothes were very
bad, but he looked clean and self-reliant.
“I’m only a beginner,”
gasped the blushing Harker, “I didn’t think
anybody could hear me.”
“Well, I like that!” returned
the other. “You’re a pretty old beginner.
Come, I’ll give you a lead myself. Give
us a seat here beside you.”
The next moment the military gentleman
was perched on the cart, pipe in hand. He gave
the instrument a knowing rattle on the shaft, mouthed
it, appeared to commune for a moment with the muse,
and dashed into “The girl I left behind me.”
He was a great, rather than a fine, performer; he
lacked the bird-like richness; he could scarce have
extracted all the honey out of “Cherry Ripe”;
he did not fear he even ostentatiously
displayed and seemed to revel in the shrillness
of the instrument; but in fire, speed, precision,
evenness, and fluency; in linked agility of jimmy a
technical expression, by your leave, answering to warblers
on the bagpipe; and perhaps, above all, in that inspiring
side-glance of the eye, with which he followed the
effect and (as by a human appeal) eked out the insufficiency
of his performance: in these, the fellow stood
without a rival. Harker listened: “The
girl I left behind me” filled him with despair;
“The Soldier’s Joy” carried him beyond
jealousy into generous enthusiasm.
“Turn about,” said the
military gentleman, offering the pipe.
“O, not after you!” cried
Harker; “you’re a professional.”
“No,” said his companion;
“an amatyure like yourself. That’s
one style of play, yours is the other, and I like
it best. But I began when I was a boy, you see,
before my taste was formed. When you’re
my age you’ll play that thing like a cornet-Ã -piston.
Give us that air again; how does it go?” and
he affected to endeavour to recall “The Ploughboy.”
A timid, insane hope sprang in the
breast of Harker. Was it possible? Was there
something in his playing? It had, indeed, seemed
to him at times as if he got a kind of a richness
out of it. Was he a genius? Meantime the
military gentleman stumbled over the air.
“No,” said the unhappy
Harker, “that’s not quite it. It goes
this way just to show you.”
And, taking the pipe between his lips, he sealed his
doom. When he had played the air, and then a second
time, and a third; when the military gentleman had
tried it once more, and once more failed; when it
became clear to Harker that he, the blushing débutant,
was actually giving a lesson to this full-grown flutist and
the flutist under his care was not very brilliantly
progressing how am I to tell what floods
of glory brightened the autumnal countryside; how,
unless the reader were an amateur himself, describe
the heights of idiotic vanity to which the carrier
climbed? One significant fact shall paint the
situation: thenceforth it was Harker who played,
and the military gentleman listened and approved.
As he listened, however, he did not
forget the habit of soldierly precaution, looking
both behind and before. He looked behind and
computed the value of the carrier’s load, divining
the contents of the brown-paper parcels and the portly
hamper, and briefly setting down the grand piano in
the brand-new piano-case as “difficult to get
rid of.” He looked before, and spied at
the corner of the green lane a little country public-house
embowered in roses. “I’ll have a shy
at it,” concluded the military gentleman, and
roundly proposed a glass.
“Well, I’m not a drinking man,”
said Harker.
“Look here, now,” cut
in the other, “I’ll tell you who I am:
I’m Colour-Sergeant Brand of the Blankth.
That’ll tell you if I’m a drinking man
or not.” It might and it might not, thus
a Greek chorus would have intervened, and gone on
to point out how very far it fell short of telling
why the sergeant was tramping a country lane in tatters;
or even to argue that he must have pretermitted some
while ago his labours for the general defence, and
(in the interval) possibly turned his attention to
oakum. But there was no Greek chorus present;
and the man of war went on to contend that drinking
was one thing and a friendly glass another.
In the Blue Lion, which was the name
of the country public-house, Colour-Sergeant Brand
introduced his new friend, Mr. Harker, to a number
of ingenious mixtures, calculated to prevent the approaches
of intoxication. These he explained to be “rekisite”
in the service, so that a self-respecting officer
should always appear upon parade in a condition honourable
to his corps. The most efficacious of these devices
was to lace a pint of mild ale with twopence-worth
of London gin. I am pleased to hand in this recipe
to the discerning reader, who may find it useful even
in civil station; for its effect upon Mr. Harker was
revolutionary. He must be helped on board his
own waggon, where he proceeded to display a spirit
entirely given over to mirth and music, alternately
hooting with laughter, to which the sergeant hastened
to bear chorus, and incoherently tootling on the pipe.
The man of war, meantime, unostentatiously possessed
himself of the reins. It was plain he had a taste
for the secluded beauties of an English landscape;
for the cart, although it wandered under his guidance
for some time, was never observed to issue on the
dusty highway, journeying between hedge and ditch,
and for the most part under overhanging boughs.
It was plain, besides, he had an eye to the true interests
of Mr. Harker; for though the cart drew up more than
once at the doors of public-houses, it was only the
sergeant who set foot to ground, and, being equipped
himself with a quart bottle, once more proceeded on
his rural drive.
To give any idea of the complexity
of the sergeant’s course, a map of that part
of Middlesex would be required, and my publisher is
averse from the expense. Suffice it, that a little
after the night had closed, the cart was brought to
a standstill in a woody road; where the sergeant lifted
from among the parcels, and tenderly deposited upon
the wayside, the inanimate form of Harker.
“If you come-to before daylight,”
thought the sergeant, “I shall be surprised
for one.”
From the various pockets of the slumbering
carrier he gently collected the sum of seventeen shillings
and eightpence sterling; and, getting once more into
the cart, drove thoughtfully away.
“If I was exactly sure of where
I was, it would be a good job,” he reflected.
“Anyway, here’s a corner.”
He turned it, and found himself upon
the river-side. A little above him the lights
of a houseboat shone cheerfully; and already close
at hand, so close that it was impossible to avoid
their notice, three persons, a lady and two gentlemen,
were deliberately drawing near. The sergeant put
his trust in the convenient darkness of the night,
and drove on to meet them. One of the gentlemen,
who was of a portly figure, walked in the midst of
the fairway, and presently held up a staff by way of
signal.
“My man, have you seen anything
of a carrier’s cart?” he cried.
Dark as it was, it seemed to the sergeant
as though the slimmer of the two gentlemen had made
a motion to prevent the other speaking, and (finding
himself too late) had skipped aside with some alacrity.
At another season, Sergeant Brand would have paid
more attention to the fact; but he was then immersed
in the perils of his own predicament.
“A carrier’s cart?”
said he, with a perceptible uncertainty of voice.
“No, sir.”
“Ah!” said the portly
gentleman, and stood aside to let the sergeant pass.
The lady appeared to bend forward and study the cart
with every mark of sharpened curiosity, the slimmer
gentleman still keeping in the rear.
“I wonder what the devil they
would be at,” thought Sergeant Brand; and, looking
fearfully back, he saw the trio standing together in
the midst of the way, like folk consulting. The
bravest of military heroes are not always equal to
themselves as to their reputation; and fear, on some
singular provocation, will find a lodgment in the most
unfamiliar bosom. The word “detective”
might have been heard to gurgle in the sergeant’s
throat; and vigorously applying the whip, he fled up
the river-side road to Great Haverham, at the gallop
of the carrier’s horse. The lights of the
houseboat flashed upon the flying waggon as it passed;
the beat of hoofs and the rattle of the vehicle gradually
coalesced and died away; and presently, to the trio
on the river-side, silence had redescended.
“It’s the most extraordinary
thing,” cried the slimmer of the two gentlemen,
“but that’s the cart!”
“And I know I saw a piano,” said the girl.
“O, it’s the cart, certainly;
and the extraordinary thing is, it’s not the
man,” added the first.
“It must be the man, Gid, it
must be,” said the portly one.
“Well, then, why is he running away?”
asked Gideon.
“His horse bolted, I suppose,” said the
Squirradical.
“Nonsense! I heard the
whip going like a flail,” said Gideon. “It
simply defies the human reason.”
“I’ll tell you,”
broke in the girl, “he came round that corner.
Suppose we went and what do you call it
in books? followed his trail? There
may be a house there, or somebody who saw him, or something.”
“Well, suppose we did, for the
fun of the thing,” said Gideon.
The fun of the thing (it would appear)
consisted in the extremely close juxtaposition of
himself and Miss Hazeltine. To Uncle Ned, who
was excluded from these simple pleasures, the excursion
appeared hopeless from the first; and when a fresh
perspective of darkness opened up, dimly contained
between park palings on the one side and a hedge and
ditch upon the other, the whole without the smallest
signal of human habitation, the Squirradical drew
up.
“This is a wild-goose chase,” said he.
With the cessation of the footfalls,
another sound smote upon their ears.
“O, what’s that?” cried Julia.
“I can’t think,” said Gideon.
The Squirradical had his stick presented
like a sword. “Gid,” he began, “Gid,
I ”
“O Mr. Forsyth!” cried
the girl. “O don’t go forward, you
don’t know what it might be it might
be something perfectly horrid.”
“It may be the devil itself,”
said Gideon, disengaging himself, “but I am
going to see it.”
“Don’t be rash, Gid,” cried his
uncle.
The barrister drew near to the sound,
which was certainly of a portentous character.
In quality it appeared to blend the strains of the
cow, the fog-horn, and the mosquito; and the startling
manner of its enunciation added incalculably to its
terrors. A dark object, not unlike the human
form divine, appeared on the brink of the ditch.
“It’s a man,” said
Gideon, “it’s only a man; he seems to be
asleep and snoring. Hullo,” he added,
a moment after, “there must be something wrong
with him, he won’t waken.”
Gideon produced his vestas, struck
one, and by its light recognised the tow head of Harker.
“This is the man,” said
he, “as drunk as Belial. I see the whole
story”; and to his two companions, who had now
ventured to rejoin him, he set forth a theory of the
divorce between the carrier and his cart, which was
not unlike the truth.
“Drunken brute!” said
Uncle Ned, “let’s get him to a pump and
give him what he deserves.”
“Not at all!” said Gideon.
“It is highly undesirable he should see us together;
and really, do you know, I am very much obliged to
him, for this is about the luckiest thing that could
have possibly occurred. It seems to me Uncle
Ned, I declare to heaven it seems to me I’m
clear of it!”
“Clear of what?” asked the Squirradical.
“The whole affair!” cried
Gideon. “That man has been ass enough to
steal the cart and the dead body; what he hopes to
do with it I neither know nor care. My hands
are free, Jimson ceases; down with Jimson. Shake
hands with me, Uncle Ned Julia, darling
girl, Julia, I ”
“Gideon, Gideon!” said his uncle.
“O, it’s all right, uncle,
when we’re going to be married so soon,”
said Gideon. “You know you said so yourself
in the houseboat.”
“Did I?” said Uncle Ned;
“I am certain I said no such thing.”
“Appeal to him, tell him he
did, get on his soft side,” cried Gideon.
“He’s a real brick if you get on his soft
side.”
“Dear Mr. Bloomfield,”
said Julia, “I know Gideon will be such a very
good boy, and he has promised me to do such a lot of
law, and I will see that he does too. And you
know it is so very steadying to young men, everybody
admits that; though, of course, I know I have no money,
Mr. Bloomfield,” she added.
“My dear young lady, as this
rapscallion told you to-day on the boat, Uncle Ned
has plenty,” said the Squirradical, “and
I can never forget that you have been shamefully defrauded.
So as there’s nobody looking, you had better
give your Uncle Ned a kiss. There, you rogue,”
resumed Mr. Bloomfield, when the ceremony had been
daintily performed, “this very pretty young
lady is yours, and a vast deal more than you deserve.
But now, let us get back to the houseboat, get up steam
on the launch, and away back to town.”
“That’s the thing!”
cried Gideon; “and to-morrow there will be no
houseboat, and no Jimson, and no carrier’s cart,
and no piano; and when Harker awakes on the ditch-side,
he may tell himself the whole affair has been a dream.”
“Aha!” said Uncle Ned,
“but there’s another man who will have
a different awakening. That fellow in the cart
will find he has been too clever by half.”
“Uncle Ned and Julia,”
said Gideon, “I am as happy as the King of Tartary,
my heart is like a threepenny-bit, my heels are like
feathers; I am out of all my troubles, Julia’s
hand is in mine. Is this a time for anything
but handsome sentiments? Why, there’s not
room in me for anything that’s not angelic!
And when I think of that poor unhappy devil in the
cart, I stand here in the night and cry with a single
heart God help him!”
“Amen,” said Uncle Ned.
CHAPTER XIII
THE TRIBULATIONS OF MORRIS: PART THE SECOND
In a really polite age of literature
I would have scorned to cast my eye again on the contortions
of Morris. But the study is in the spirit of
the day; it presents, besides, features of a high,
almost a repulsive, morality; and if it should prove
the means of preventing any respectable and inexperienced
gentleman from plunging light-heartedly into crime,
even political crime, this work will not have been
penned in vain.
He rose on the morrow of his night
with Michael, rose from the leaden slumber of distress,
to find his hand tremulous, his eyes closed with rheum,
his throat parched, and his digestion obviously paralysed.
“Lord knows it’s not from eating!”
Morris thought; and as he dressed he reconsidered
his position under several heads. Nothing will
so well depict the troubled seas in which he was now
voyaging as a review of these various anxieties.
I have thrown them (for the reader’s convenience)
into a certain order; but in the mind of one poor human
equal they whirled together like the dust of hurricanes.
With the same obliging preoccupation, I have put a
name to each of his distresses; and it will be observed
with pity that every individual item would have graced
and commended the cover of a railway novel.
Anxiety the First: Where is
the Body? or, The Mystery of Bent Pitman. It was
now manifestly plain that Bent Pitman (as was to be
looked for from his ominous appellation) belonged
to the darker order of the criminal class. An
honest man would not have cashed the bill; a humane
man would not have accepted in silence the tragic contents
of the water-butt; a man, who was not already up to
the hilts in gore, would have lacked the means of
secretly disposing them. This process of reasoning
left a horrid image of the monster, Pitman. Doubtless
he had long ago disposed of the body dropping
it through a trap-door in his back kitchen, Morris
supposed, with some hazy recollection of a picture
in a penny dreadful; and doubtless the man now lived
in wanton splendour on the proceeds of the bill.
So far, all was peace. But with the profligate
habits of a man like Bent Pitman (who was no doubt
a hunchback in the bargain), eight hundred pounds
could be easily melted in a week. When they were
gone, what would he be likely to do next? A hell-like
voice in Morris’s own bosom gave the answer:
“Blackmail me.”
Anxiety the Second: The Fraud
of the Tontine; or, Is my Uncle dead? This, on
which all Morris’s hopes depended, was yet a
question. He had tried to bully Teena; he had
tried to bribe her; and nothing came of it. He
had his moral conviction still; but you cannot blackmail
a sharp lawyer on a moral conviction. And besides,
since his interview with Michael, the idea wore a
less attractive countenance. Was Michael the
man to be blackmailed? and was Morris the man to do
it? Grave considerations. “It’s
not that I’m afraid of him,” Morris so
far condescended to reassure himself; “but I
must be very certain of my ground, and the deuce of
it is, I see no way. How unlike is life to novels!
I wouldn’t have even begun this business in a
novel, but what I’d have met a dark, slouching
fellow in the Oxford Road, who’d have become
my accomplice, and known all about how to do it, and
probably broken into Michael’s house at night
and found nothing but a waxwork image; and then blackmailed
or murdered me. But here, in real life, I might
walk the streets till I dropped dead, and none of the
criminal classes would look near me. Though,
to be sure, there is always Pitman,” he added
thoughtfully.
Anxiety the Third: The Cottage
at Browndean; or, The Underpaid Accomplice. For
he had an accomplice, and that accomplice was blooming
unseen in a damp cottage in Hampshire with empty pockets.
What could be done about that? He really ought
to have sent him something; if it was only a post-office
order for five bob, enough to prove that he was kept
in mind, enough to keep him in hope, beer, and tobacco.
“But what would you have?” thought Morris;
and ruefully poured into his hand a half-crown, a
florin, and eightpence in small change. For a
man in Morris’s position, at war with all society,
and conducting, with the hand of inexperience, a widely
ramified intrigue, the sum was already a derision.
John would have to be doing; no mistake of that.
“But then,” asked the hell-like voice,
“how long is John likely to stand it?”
Anxiety the Fourth: The Leather
Business; or, The Shutters at Last: a Tale of
the City. On this head Morris had no news.
He had not yet dared to visit the family concern;
yet he knew he must delay no longer, and if anything
had been wanted to sharpen this conviction, Michael’s
references of the night before rang ambiguously in
his ear. Well and good. To visit the city
might be indispensable; but what was he to do when
he was there? He had no right to sign in his own
name; and, with all the will in the world, he seemed
to lack the art of signing with his uncle’s.
Under these circumstances, Morris could do nothing
to procrastinate the crash; and, when it came, when
prying eyes began to be applied to every joint of
his behaviour, two questions could not fail to be
addressed, sooner or later, to a speechless and perspiring
insolvent. Where is Mr. Joseph Finsbury? and
how about your visit to the bank? Questions,
how easy to put! ye gods, how impossible
to answer! The man to whom they should be addressed
went certainly to gaol, and eh! what was
this? possibly to the gallows. Morris
was trying to shave when this idea struck him, and
he laid the razor down. Here (in Michael’s
words) was the total disappearance of a valuable uncle;
here was a time of inexplicable conduct on the part
of a nephew who had been in bad blood with the old
man any time these seven years; what a chance for a
judicial blunder! “But no,” thought
Morris, “they cannot, they dare not, make it
murder. Not that. But honestly, and speaking
as a man to a man, I don’t see any other crime
in the calendar (except arson) that I don’t
seem somehow to have committed. And yet I’m
a perfectly respectable man, and wished nothing but
my due. Law is a pretty business.”
With this conclusion firmly seated
in his mind, Morris Finsbury descended to the hall
of the house in John Street, still half-shaven.
There was a letter in the box; he knew the handwriting:
John at last!
“Well, I think I might have
been spared this,” he said bitterly, and tore
it open.
“Dear Morris,” it ran, “what
the dickens do you mean by it? I’m in an
awful hole down here; I have to go on tick, and
the parties on the spot don’t cotton to the
idea; they couldn’t, because it is so plain
I’m in a stait of Destitution. I’ve
got no bed-clothes, think of that, I must have
coins, the hole thing’s a Mockry, I wont stand
it, nobody would. I would have come away before,
only I have no money for the railway fare.
Don’t be a lunatic, Morris, you don’t seem
to understand my dredful situation. I have
to get the stamp on tick. A fact. Ever
your affte. Brother,
“J. FINSBURY.”
“Can’t even spell!”
Morris reflected, as he crammed the letter in his
pocket, and left the house. “What can I
do for him? I have to go to the expense of a
barber, I’m so shattered! How can I send
anybody coins? It’s hard lines, I daresay;
but does he think I’m living on hot muffins?
One comfort,” was his grim reflection, “he
can’t cut and run he’s got
to stay; he’s as helpless as the dead.”
And then he broke forth again: “Complains,
does he? and he’s never even heard of Bent Pitman!
If he had what I have on my mind, he might complain
with a good grace.”
But these were not honest arguments,
or not wholly honest; there was a struggle in the
mind of Morris; he could not disguise from himself
that his brother John was miserably situated at Browndean,
without news, without money, without bed-clothes,
without society or any entertainment; and by the time
he had been shaved and picked a hasty breakfast at
a coffee tavern, Morris had arrived at a compromise.
“Poor Johnny,” he said
to himself, “he’s in an awful box!
I can’t send him coins, but I’ll tell
you what I’ll do: I’ll send him the
Pink Un it’ll cheer John up;
and besides, it’ll do his credit good getting
anything by post.”
Accordingly, on his way to the leather
business, whither he proceeded (according to his thrifty
habit) on foot, Morris purchased and despatched a
single copy of that enlivening periodical, to which
(in a sudden pang of remorse) he added at random the
Athenæum, the Revivalist, and the Penny
Pictorial Weekly. So there was John set up
with literature, and Morris had laid balm upon his
conscience.
As if to reward him, he was received
in his place of business with good news. Orders
were pouring in; there was a run on some of the back
stock, and the figure had gone up. Even the manager
appeared elated. As for Morris, who had almost
forgotten the meaning of good news, he longed to sob
like a little child; he could have caught the manager
(a pallid man with startled eyebrows) to his bosom;
he could have found it in his generosity to give a
cheque (for a small sum) to every clerk in the counting-house.
As he sat and opened his letters a chorus of airy
vocalists sang in his brain, to most exquisite music,
“This whole concern may be profitable yet, profitable
yet, profitable yet.”
To him, in this sunny moment of relief,
enter a Mr. Rodgerson, a creditor, but not one who
was expected to be pressing, for his connection with
the firm was old and regular.
“O, Finsbury,” said he,
not without embarrassment, “it’s of course
only fair to let you know the fact is,
money is a trifle tight I have some paper
out for that matter, every one’s complaining and
in short ”
“It has never been our habit,
Rodgerson,” said Morris, turning pale.
“But give me time to turn round, and I’ll
see what I can do; I daresay we can let you have something
to account.”
“Well, that’s just where
it is,” replied Rodgerson. “I was
tempted; I’ve let the credit out of my hands.”
“Out of your hands?” repeated
Morris. “That’s playing rather fast
and loose with us, Mr. Rodgerson.”
“Well, I got cent. for cent.
for it,” said the other, “on the nail,
in a certified cheque.”
“Cent. for cent.!” cried
Morris. “Why, that’s something like
thirty per cent. bonus; a singular thing! Who’s
the party?”
“Don’t know the man,” was the reply.
“Name of Moss.”
“A Jew,” Morris reflected,
when his visitor was gone. And what could a Jew
want with a claim of he verified the amount
in the books a claim of three five eight,
nineteen, ten, against the house of Finsbury?
And why should he pay cent. for cent.? The figure
proved the loyalty of Rodgerson even Morris
admitted that. But it proved unfortunately something
else the eagerness of Moss. The claim
must have been wanted instantly, for that day, for
that morning even. Why? The mystery of Moss
promised to be a fit pendant to the mystery of Pitman.
“And just when all was looking
well too!” cried Morris, smiting his hand upon
the desk. And almost at the same moment Mr. Moss
was announced.
Mr. Moss was a radiant Hebrew, brutally
handsome, and offensively polite. He was acting,
it appeared, for a third party; he understood nothing
of the circumstances; his client desired to have his
position regularised; but he would accept an antedated
cheque antedated by two months, if Mr.
Finsbury chose.
“But I don’t understand
this,” said Morris. “What made you
pay cent. per cent. for it to-day?”
Mr. Moss had no idea; only his orders.
“The whole thing is thoroughly
irregular,” said Morris. “It is not
the custom of the trade to settle at this time of
the year. What are your instructions if I refuse?”
“I am to see Mr. Joseph Finsbury,
the head of the firm,” said Mr. Moss. “I
was directed to insist on that; it was implied you
had no status here the expressions are
not mine.”
“You cannot see Mr. Joseph; he is unwell,”
said Morris.
“In that case I was to place
the matter in the hands of a lawyer. Let me see,”
said Mr. Moss, opening a pocket-book with, perhaps,
suspicious care, at the right place “Yes of
Mr. Michael Finsbury. A relation, perhaps?
In that case, I presume, the matter will be pleasantly
arranged.”
To pass into the hands of Michael
was too much for Morris. He struck his colours.
A cheque at two months was nothing, after all.
In two months he would probably be dead, or in a gaol
at any rate. He bade the manager give Mr. Moss
a chair and the paper. “I’m going
over to get a cheque signed by Mr. Finsbury,”
said he, “who is lying ill at John Street.”
A cab there and a cab back; here were
inroads on his wretched capital! He counted the
cost; when he was done with Mr. Moss he would be left
with twelvepence-halfpenny in the world. What
was even worse, he had now been forced to bring his
uncle up to Bloomsbury. “No use for poor
Johnny in Hampshire now,” he reflected.
“And how the farce is to be kept up completely
passes me. At Browndean it was just possible;
in Bloomsbury it seems beyond human ingenuity though
I suppose it’s what Michael does. But then
he has accomplices that Scotsman and the
whole gang. Ah, if I had accomplices!”
Necessity is the mother of the arts.
Under a spur so immediate, Morris surprised himself
by the neatness and despatch of his new forgery, and
within three-fourths of an hour had handed it to Mr.
Moss.
“That is very satisfactory,”
observed that gentleman, rising. “I was
to tell you it will not be presented, but you had
better take care.”
The room swam round Morris. “What what’s
that!” he cried, grasping the table. He
was miserably conscious the next moment of his shrill
tongue and ashen face. “What do you mean it
will not be presented? Why am I to take care?
What is all this mummery?”
“I have no idea, Mr. Finsbury,”
replied the smiling Hebrew. “It was a message
I was to deliver. The expressions were put into
my mouth.”
“What is your client’s name?” asked
Morris.
“That is a secret for the moment,” answered
Mr. Moss.
Morris bent toward him. “It’s not
the bank?” he asked hoarsely.
“I have no authority to say
more, Mr. Finsbury,” returned Mr. Moss.
“I will wish you a good morning, if you please.”
“Wish me a good morning!”
thought Morris; and the next moment, seizing his hat,
he fled from his place of business like a madman.
Three streets away he stopped and groaned. “Lord!
I should have borrowed from the manager!” he
cried. “But it’s too late now; it
would look dicky to go back; I’m penniless simply
penniless like the unemployed.”
He went home and sat in the dismantled
dining-room with his head in his hands. Newton
never thought harder than this victim of circumstances,
and yet no clearness came. “It may be a
defect in my intelligence,” he cried, rising
to his feet, “but I cannot see that I am fairly
used. The bad luck I’ve had is a thing
to write to the Times about; it’s enough
to breed a revolution. And the plain English of
the whole thing is that I must have money at once.
I’m done with all morality now; I’m long
past that stage; money I must have, and the only chance
I see is Bent Pitman. Bent Pitman is a criminal,
and therefore his position’s weak. He must
have some of that eight hundred left; if he has I’ll
force him to go shares; and even if he hasn’t,
I’ll tell him the tontine affair, and with a
desperate man like Pitman at my back, it’ll be
strange if I don’t succeed.”
Well and good. But how to lay
hands upon Bent Pitman, except by advertisement, was
not so clear. And even so, in what terms to ask
a meeting? on what grounds? and where? Not at
John Street, for it would never do to let a man like
Bent Pitman know your real address; nor yet at Pitman’s
house, some dreadful place in Holloway, with a trap-door
in the back kitchen; a house which you might enter
in a light summer overcoat and varnished boots, to
come forth again piecemeal in a market-basket.
That was the drawback of a really efficient accomplice,
Morris felt, not without a shudder. “I never
dreamed I should come to actually covet such society,”
he thought. And then a brilliant idea struck
him. Waterloo Station, a public place, yet at
certain hours of the day a solitary; a place, besides,
the very name of which must knock upon the heart of
Pitman, and at once suggest a knowledge of the latest
of his guilty secrets. Morris took a piece of
paper and sketched his advertisement.
“WILLIAM BENT PITMAN, if this
should meet the eye of, he will hear of SOMETHING
TO HIS ADVANTAGE on the far end of the main line departure
platform, Waterloo Station, 2 to 4 P.M., Sunday next.”
Morris reperused this literary trifle
with approbation. “Terse,” he reflected.
“Something to his advantage is not strictly true;
but it’s taking and original, and a man is not
on oath in an advertisement. All that I require
now is the ready cash for my own meals and for the
advertisement, and no, I can’t lavish
money upon John, but I’ll give him some more
papers. How to raise the wind?”
He approached his cabinet of signets,
and the collector suddenly revolted in his blood.
“I will not!” he cried; “nothing
shall induce me to massacre my collection rather
theft!” And dashing upstairs to the drawing-room,
he helped himself to a few of his uncle’s curiosities:
a pair of Turkish babooshes, a Smyrna fan, a water-cooler,
a musket guaranteed to have been seized from an Ephesian
bandit, and a pocketful of curious but incomplete
sea-shells.
CHAPTER XIV
WILLIAM BENT PITMAN HEARS OF SOMETHING TO HIS ADVANTAGE
On the morning of Sunday, William
Dent Pitman rose at his usual hour, although with
something more than the usual reluctance. The
day before (it should be explained) an addition had
been made to his family in the person of a lodger.
Michael Finsbury had acted sponsor in the business,
and guaranteed the weekly bill; on the other hand,
no doubt with a spice of his prevailing jocularity,
he had drawn a depressing portrait of the lodger’s
character. Mr. Pitman had been led to understand
his guest was not good company; he had approached
the gentleman with fear, and had rejoiced to find
himself the entertainer of an angel. At tea he
had been vastly pleased; till hard on one in the morning
he had sat entranced by eloquence and progressively
fortified with information in the studio; and now,
as he reviewed over his toilet the harmless pleasures
of the evening, the future smiled upon him with revived
attractions. “Mr. Finsbury is indeed an
acquisition,” he remarked to himself; and as
he entered the little parlour, where the table was
already laid for breakfast, the cordiality of his
greeting would have befitted an acquaintanceship already
old.
“I am delighted to see you,
sir” these were his expressions “and
I trust you have slept well.”
“Accustomed as I have been for
so long to a life of almost perpetual change,”
replied the guest, “the disturbance so often
complained of by the more sedentary, as attending
their first night in (what is called) a new bed, is
a complaint from which I am entirely free.”
“I am delighted to hear it,”
said the drawing-master warmly. “But I see
I have interrupted you over the paper.”
“The Sunday paper is one of
the features of the age,” said Mr. Finsbury.
“In America, I am told, it supersedes all other
literature, the bone and sinew of the nation finding
their requirements catered for; hundreds of columns
will be occupied with interesting details of the world’s
doings, such as water-spouts, elopements, conflagrations,
and public entertainments; there is a corner for politics,
ladies’ work, chess, religion, and even literature;
and a few spicy editorials serve to direct the course
of public thought. It is difficult to estimate
the part played by such enormous and miscellaneous
repositories in the education of the people.
But this (though interesting in itself) partakes of
the nature of a digression; and what I was about to
ask you was this: Are you yourself a student
of the daily press?”
“There is not much in the papers
to interest an artist,” returned Pitman.
“In that case,” resumed
Joseph, “an advertisement which has appeared
the last two days in various journals, and reappears
this morning, may possibly have failed to catch your
eye. The name, with a trifling variation, bears
a strong resemblance to your own. Ah, here it
is. If you please, I will read it to you:
“’WILLIAM BENT PITMAN,
if this should meet the eye of, he will hear of SOMETHING
TO HIS ADVANTAGE at the far end of the main line departure
platform, Waterloo Station, 2 to 4 P.M. to-day.’”
“Is that in print?” cried
Pitman. “Let me see it! Bent?
It must be Dent! Something to my advantage?
Mr. Finsbury, excuse me offering a word of caution;
I am aware how strangely this must sound in your ears,
but there are domestic reasons why this little circumstance
might perhaps be better kept between ourselves.
Mrs. Pitman my dear sir, I assure you there
is nothing dishonourable in my secrecy; the reasons
are domestic, merely domestic; and I may set your
conscience at rest when I assure you all the circumstances
are known to our common friend, your excellent nephew,
Mr. Michael, who has not withdrawn from me his esteem.”
“A word is enough, Mr. Pitman,”
said Joseph, with one of his Oriental révérences.
Half an hour later, the drawing-master
found Michael in bed and reading a book, the picture
of good-humour and repose.
“Hillo, Pitman,” he said,
laying down his book, “what brings you here at
this inclement hour? Ought to be in church, my
boy!”
“I have little thought of church
to-day, Mr. Finsbury,” said the drawing-master.
“I am on the brink of something new, sir.”
And he presented the advertisement.
“Why, what is this?” cried
Michael, sitting suddenly up. He studied it for
half a minute with a frown. “Pitman, I don’t
care about this document a particle,” said he.
“It will have to be attended to, however,”
said Pitman.
“I thought you’d had enough
of Waterloo,” returned the lawyer. “Have
you started a morbid craving? You’ve never
been yourself anyway since you lost that beard.
I believe now it was where you kept your senses.”
“Mr. Finsbury,” said the
drawing-master, “I have tried to reason this
matter but, and, with your permission, I should like
to lay before you the results.”
“Fire away,” said Michael;
“but please, Pitman, remember it’s Sunday,
and let’s have no bad language.”
“There are three views open
to us,” began Pitman. “First this
may be connected with the barrel; second, it may be
connected with Mr. Semitopolis’s statue; and
third, it may be from my wife’s brother, who
went to Australia. In the first case, which is
of course possible, I confess the matter would be
best allowed to drop.”
“The court is with you there,
Brother Pitman,” said Michael.
“In the second,” continued
the other, “it is plainly my duty to leave no
stone unturned for the recovery of the lost antique.”
“My dear fellow, Semitopolis
has come down like a trump; he has pocketed the loss
and left you the profit. What more would you have?”
inquired the lawyer.
“I conceive, sir, under correction,
that Mr. Semitopolis’s generosity binds me to
even greater exertion,” said the drawing-master.
“The whole business was unfortunate; it was I
need not disguise it from you it was illegal
from the first: the more reason that I should
try to behave like a gentleman,” concluded Pitman,
flushing.
“I have nothing to say to that,”
returned the lawyer. “I have sometimes
thought I should like to try to behave like a gentleman
myself; only it’s such a one-sided business,
with the world and the legal profession as they are.”
“Then, in the third,”
resumed the drawing-master, “if it’s Uncle
Tim, of course, our fortune’s made.”
“It’s not Uncle Tim, though,” said
the lawyer.
“Have you observed that very
remarkable expression: Something to his advantage?”
inquired Pitman shrewdly.
“You innocent mutton,”
said Michael, “it’s the seediest commonplace
in the English language, and only proves the advertiser
is an ass. Let me demolish your house of cards
for you at once. Would Uncle Tim make that blunder
in your name? in itself, the blunder is
delicious, a huge improvement on the gross reality,
and I mean to adopt it in the future; but is it like
Uncle Tim?”
“No, it’s not like him,”
Pitman admitted. “But his mind may have
become unhinged at Ballarat.”
“If you come to that, Pitman,”
said Michael, “the advertiser may be
Queen Victoria, fired with the desire to make a duke
of you. I put it to yourself if that’s
probable; and yet it’s not against the laws of
nature. But we sit here to consider probabilities;
and with your genteel permission, I eliminate her
Majesty and Uncle Tim on the threshold. To proceed,
we have your second idea, that this has some connection
with the statue. Possible; but in that case who
is the advertiser? Not Ricardi, for he knows
your address; not the person who got the box, for
he doesn’t know your name. The vanman, I
hear you suggest, in a lucid interval. He might
have got your name, and got it incorrectly, at the
station; and he might have failed to get your address.
I grant the vanman. But a question: Do you
really wish to meet the vanman?”
“Why should I not?” asked Pitman.
“If he wants to meet you,”
replied Michael, “observe this: it is because
he has found his address-book, has been to the house
that got the statue, and mark my words! is
moving at the instigation of the murderer.”
“I should be very sorry to think
so,” said Pitman; “but I still consider
it my duty to Mr. Semitopolis....”
“Pitman,” interrupted
Michael, “this will not do. Don’t
seek to impose on your legal adviser; don’t
try to pass yourself off for the Duke of Wellington,
for that is not your line. Come, I wager a dinner
I can read your thoughts. You still believe it’s
Uncle Tim.”
“Mr. Finsbury,” said the
drawing-master, colouring, “you are not a man
in narrow circumstances, and you have no family.
Guendolen is growing up, a very promising girl she
was confirmed this year; and I think you will be able
to enter into my feelings as a parent when I tell you
she is quite ignorant of dancing. The boys are
at the board school, which is all very well in its
way; at least, I am the last man in the world to criticise
the institutions of my native land. But I had
fondly hoped that Harold might become a professional
musician; and little Otho shows a quite remarkable
vocation for the Church. I am not exactly an
ambitious man....”
“Well, well,” interrupted
Michael. “Be explicit; you think it’s
Uncle Tim?”
“It might be Uncle Tim,”
insisted Pitman, “and if it were, and I neglected
the occasion, how could I ever look my children in
the face? I do not refer to Mrs. Pitman....”
“No, you never do,” said Michael.
“... but in the case of her
own brother returning from Ballarat ...” continued
Pitman.
“... with his mind unhinged,” put in the
lawyer.
“... returning from Ballarat
with a large fortune, her impatience may be more easily
imagined than described,” concluded Pitman.
“All right,” said Michael,
“be it so. And what do you propose to do?”
“I am going to Waterloo,” said Pitman,
“in disguise.”
“All by your little self?”
inquired the lawyer. “Well, I hope you think
it safe. Mind and send me word from the police
cells.”
“O, Mr. Finsbury, I had ventured
to hope perhaps you might be induced to to
make one of us,” faltered Pitman.
“Disguise myself on Sunday?”
cried Michael. “How little you understand
my principles!”
“Mr. Finsbury, I have no means
of showing you my gratitude; but let me ask you one
question,” said Pitman. “If I were
a very rich client, would you not take the risk?”
“Diamond, Diamond, you know
not what you do!” cried Michael. “Why,
man, do you suppose I make a practice of cutting about
London with my clients in disguise? Do you suppose
money would induce me to touch this business with
a stick? I give you my word of honour, it would
not. But I own I have a real curiosity to see
how you conduct this interview that tempts
me; it tempts me, Pitman, more than gold it
should be exquisitely rich.” And suddenly
Michael laughed. “Well, Pitman,” said
he, “have all the truck ready in the studio.
I’ll go.”
About twenty minutes after two, on
this eventful day, the vast and gloomy shed of Waterloo
lay, like the temple of a dead religion, silent and
deserted. Here and there at one of the platforms,
a train lay becalmed; here and there a wandering footfall
echoed; the cab-horses outside stamped with startling
reverberations on the stones; or from the neighbouring
wilderness of railway an engine snorted forth a whistle.
The main-line departure platform slumbered like the
rest; the booking-hutches closed; the backs of Mr.
Haggard’s novels, with which upon a weekday
the bookstall shines emblazoned, discreetly hidden
behind dingy shutters; the rare officials, undisguisedly
somnambulant; and the customary loiterers, even to
the middle-aged woman with the ulster and the handbag,
fled to more congenial scenes. As in the inmost
dells of some small tropic island the throbbing of
the ocean lingers, so here a faint pervading hum and
trepidation told in every corner of surrounding London.
At the hour already named, persons
acquainted with John Dickson, of Ballarat, and Ezra
Thomas, of the United States of America, would have
been cheered to behold them enter through the booking-office.
“What names are we to take?”
inquired the latter, anxiously adjusting the window-glass
spectacles which he had been suffered on this occasion
to assume.
“There’s no choice for
you, my boy,” returned Michael. “Bent
Pitman or nothing. As for me, I think I look
as if I might be called Appleby; something agreeably
old-world about Appleby breathes of Devonshire
cider. Talking of which, suppose you wet your
whistle? the interview is likely to be trying.”
“I think I’ll wait till
afterwards,” returned Pitman; “on the whole,
I think I’ll wait till the thing’s over.
I don’t know if it strikes you as it does me;
but the place seems deserted and silent, Mr. Finsbury,
and filled with very singular echoes.”
“Kind of Jack-in-the-box feeling?”
inquired Michael, “as if all these empty trains
might be filled with policemen waiting for a signal?
and Sir Charles Warren perched among the girders with
a silver whistle to his lips? It’s guilt,
Pitman.”
In this uneasy frame of mind they
walked nearly the whole length of the departure platform,
and at the western extremity became aware of a slender
figure standing back against a pillar. The figure
was plainly sunk into a deep abstraction; he was not
aware of their approach, but gazed far abroad over
the sunlit station. Michael stopped.
“Holloa!” said he, “can
that be your advertiser? If so, I’m done
with it.” And then, on second thoughts:
“Not so, either,” he resumed more cheerfully.
“Here, turn your back a moment. So.
Give me the specs.”
“But you agreed I was to have them,” protested
Pitman.
“Ah, but that man knows me,” said Michael.
“Does he? what’s his name?” cried
Pitman.
“O, he took me into his confidence,”
returned the lawyer. “But I may say one
thing: if he’s your advertiser (and he may
be, for he seems to have been seized with criminal
lunacy) you can go ahead with a clear conscience,
for I hold him in the hollow of my hand.”
The change effected, and Pitman comforted
with this good news, the pair drew near to Morris.
“Are you looking for Mr. William
Bent Pitman?” inquired the drawing-master.
“I am he.”
Morris raised his head. He saw
before him, in the speaker, a person of almost indescribable
insignificance, in white spats and a shirt cut indecently
low. A little behind, a second and more burly
figure offered little to criticism, except ulster,
whiskers, spectacles, and deer-stalker hat. Since
he had decided to call up devils from the underworld
of London, Morris had pondered deeply on the probabilities
of their appearance. His first emotion, like
that of Charoba when she beheld the sea, was one of
disappointment; his second did more justice to the
case. Never before had he seen a couple dressed
like these; he had struck a new stratum.
“I must speak with you alone,” said he.
“You need not mind Mr. Appleby,” returned
Pitman. “He knows all.”
“All? Do you know what
I am here to speak of?” inquired Morris.
“The barrel.”
Pitman turned pale, but it was with
manly indignation. “You are the man!”
he cried. “You very wicked person.”
“Am I to speak before him?”
asked Morris, disregarding these severe expressions.
“He has been present throughout,”
said Pitman. “He opened the barrel; your
guilty secret is already known to him, as well as to
your Maker and myself.”
“Well, then,” said Morris,
“what have you done with the money?”
“I know nothing about any money,” said
Pitman.
“You needn’t try that
on,” said Morris. “I have tracked
you down; you came to the station sacrilegiously disguised
as a clergyman, procured my barrel, opened it, rifled
the body, and cashed the bill. I have been to
the bank, I tell you! I have followed you step
by step, and your denials are childish and absurd.”
“Come, come, Morris, keep your temper,”
said Mr. Appleby.
“Michael!” cried Morris, “Michael
here too!”
“Here too,” echoed the
lawyer; “here and everywhere, my good fellow;
every step you take is counted; trained detectives
follow you like your shadow; they report to me every
three-quarters of an hour; no expense is spared.”
Morris’s face took on a hue
of dirty grey. “Well, I don’t care;
I have the less reserve to keep,” he cried.
“That man cashed my bill; it’s a theft,
and I want the money back.”
“Do you think I would lie to you, Morris?”
asked Michael.
“I don’t know,” said his cousin.
“I want my money.”
“It was I alone who touched the body,”
began Michael.
“You? Michael!” cried
Morris, starting back. “Then why haven’t
you declared the death?”
“What the devil do you mean?” asked Michael.
“Am I mad? or are you?” cried Morris.
“I think it must be Pitman,” said Michael.
The three men stared at each other, wild-eyed.
“This is dreadful,” said
Morris, “dreadful. I do not understand one
word that is addressed to me.”
“I give you my word of honour, no more do I,”
said Michael.
“And in God’s name, why
whiskers?” cried Morris, pointing in a ghastly
manner at his cousin. “Does my brain reel?
How whiskers?”
“O, that’s a matter of detail,”
said Michael.
There was another silence, during
which Morris appeared to himself to be shot in a trapeze
as high as St. Paul’s, and as low as Baker Street
Station.
“Let us recapitulate,”
said Michael, “unless it’s really a dream,
in which case I wish Teena would call me for breakfast.
My friend Pitman, here, received a barrel which, it
now appears, was meant for you. The barrel contained
the body of a man. How or why you killed him....”
“I never laid a hand on him,”
protested Morris. “This is what I have
dreaded all along. But think, Michael! I’m
not that kind of man; with all my faults, I wouldn’t
touch a hair of anybody’s head, and it was all
dead loss to me. He got killed in that vile accident.”
Suddenly Michael was seized by mirth
so prolonged and excessive that his companions supposed
beyond a doubt his reason had deserted him. Again
and again he struggled to compose himself, and again
and again laughter overwhelmed him like a tide.
In all this maddening interview there had been no
more spectral feature than this of Michael’s
merriment; and Pitman and Morris, drawn together by
the common fear, exchanged glances of anxiety.
“Morris,” gasped the lawyer,
when he was at last able to articulate, “hold
on, I see it all now. I can make it clear in one
word. Here’s the key: I never guessed
it was Uncle Joseph till this moment.”
This remark produced an instant lightening
of the tension for Morris. For Pitman it quenched
the last ray of hope and daylight. Uncle Joseph,
whom he had left an hour ago in Norfolk Street, pasting
newspaper cuttings? it? the
dead body? then who was he, Pitman? and
was this Waterloo Station or Colney Hatch?
“To be sure!” cried Morris;
“it was badly smashed, I know. How stupid
not to think of that! Why, then, all’s clear;
and, my dear Michael, I’ll tell you what we’re
saved, both saved. You get the tontine I
don’t grudge it you the least and
I get the leather business, which is really beginning
to look up. Declare the death at once, don’t
mind me in the smallest, don’t consider me;
declare the death, and we’re all right.”
“Ah, but I can’t declare it,” said
Michael.
“Why not?” cried Morris.
“I can’t produce the corpus, Morris.
I’ve lost it,” said the lawyer.
“Stop a bit,” ejaculated
the leather merchant. “How is this?
It’s not possible. I lost it.”
“Well, I’ve lost it too,
my son,” said Michael, with extreme serenity.
“Not recognising it, you see, and suspecting
something irregular in its origin, I got rid of what
shall we say? got rid of the proceeds at
once.”
“You got rid of the body?
What made you do that?” wailed Morris. “But
you can get it again? You know where it is?”
“I wish I did, Morris, and you
may believe me there, for it would be a small sum
in my pocket; but the fact is, I don’t,”
said Michael.
“Good Lord,” said Morris,
addressing heaven and earth, “good Lord, I’ve
lost the leather business!”
Michael was once more shaken with laughter.
“Why do you laugh, you fool?”
cried his cousin, “you lose more than I. You’ve
bungled it worse than even I did. If you had a
spark of feeling, you would be shaking in your boots
with vexation. But I’ll tell you one thing I’ll
have that eight hundred pound I’ll
have that and go to Swan River that’s
mine, anyway, and your friend must have forged to cash
it. Give me the eight hundred, here, upon this
platform, or I go straight to Scotland Yard and turn
the whole disreputable story inside out.”
“Morris,” said Michael,
laying his hand upon his shoulder, “hear reason.
It wasn’t us, it was the other man. We never
even searched the body.”
“The other man?” repeated Morris.
“Yes, the other man. We
palmed Uncle Joseph off upon another man,” said
Michael.
“You what? You palmed him
off? That’s surely a singular expression,”
said Morris.
“Yes, palmed him off for a piano,”
said Michael with perfect simplicity. “Remarkably
full, rich tone,” he added.
Morris carried his hand to his brow
and looked at it; it was wet with sweat. “Fever,”
said he.
“No, it was a Broadwood grand,”
said Michael. “Pitman here will tell you
if it was genuine or not.”
“Eh? O! O yes, I believe
it was a genuine Broadwood; I have played upon it
several times myself,” said Pitman. “The
three-letter E was broken.”
“Don’t say anything more
about pianos,” said Morris, with a strong shudder;
“I’m not the man I used to be! This this
other man let’s come to him, if I
can only manage to follow. Who is he? Where
can I get hold of him?”
“Ah, that’s the rub,”
said Michael. “He’s been in possession
of the desired article, let me see since
Wednesday, about four o’clock, and is now, I
should imagine, on his way to the isles of Javan and
Gadire.”
“Michael,” said Morris
pleadingly, “I am in a very weak state, and I
beg your consideration for a kinsman. Say it slowly
again, and be sure you are correct. When did
he get it?”
Michael repeated his statement.
“Yes, that’s the worst thing yet,”
said Morris, drawing in his breath.
“What is?” asked the lawyer.
“Even the dates are sheer nonsense,”
said the leather merchant. “The bill was
cashed on Tuesday. There’s not a gleam of
reason in the whole transaction.”
A young gentleman, who had passed
the trio and suddenly started and turned back, at
this moment laid a heavy hand on Michael’s shoulder.
“Aha! so this is Mr. Dickson?” said he.
The trump of judgment could scarce
have rung with a more dreadful note in the ears of
Pitman and the lawyer. To Morris this erroneous
name seemed a legitimate enough continuation of the
nightmare in which he had so long been wandering.
And when Michael, with his brand-new bushy whiskers,
broke from the grasp of the stranger and turned to
run, and the weird little shaven creature in the low-necked
shirt followed his example with a bird-like screech,
and the stranger (finding the rest of his prey escape
him) pounced with a rude grasp on Morris himself, that
gentleman’s frame of mind might be very nearly
expressed in the colloquial phrase: “I
told you so!”
“I have one of the gang,” said Gideon
Forsyth.
“I do not understand,” said Morris dully.
“O, I will make you understand,” returned
Gideon grimly.
“You will be a good friend to
me if you can make me understand anything,”
cried Morris, with a sudden energy of conviction.
“I don’t know you personally,
do I?” continued Gideon, examining his unresisting
prisoner. “Never mind, I know your friends.
They are your friends, are they not?”
“I do not understand you,” said Morris.
“You had possibly something to do with a piano?”
suggested Gideon.
“A piano!” cried Morris,
convulsively clasping Gideon by the arm. “Then
you’re the other man! Where is it?
Where is the body? And did you cash the draft?”
“Where is the body? This
is very strange,” mused Gideon. “Do
you want the body?”
“Want it?” cried Morris.
“My whole fortune depends upon it! I lost
it. Where is it? Take me to it!”
“O, you want it, do you?
And the other man, Dickson does he want
it?” inquired Gideon.
“Who do you mean by Dickson?
O, Michael Finsbury! Why, of course he does!
He lost it too. If he had it, he’d have
won the tontine to-morrow.”
“Michael Finsbury! Not the solicitor?”
cried Gideon.
“Yes, the solicitor,” said Morris.
“But where is the body?”
“Then that is why he sent the
brief! What is Mr. Finsbury’s private address?”
asked Gideon.
“233 King’s Road.
What brief? Where are you going? Where is
the body?” cried Morris, clinging to Gideon’s
arm.
“I have lost it myself,”
returned Gideon, and ran out of the station.
CHAPTER XV
THE RETURN OF THE GREAT VANCE
Morris returned from Waterloo in a
frame of mind that baffles description. He was
a modest man; he had never conceived an overweening
notion of his own powers; he knew himself unfit to
write a book, turn a table napkin-ring, entertain
a Christmas party with legerdemain grapple
(in short) any of those conspicuous accomplishments
that are usually classed under the head of genius.
He knew he admitted his parts
to be pedestrian, but he had considered them (until
quite lately) fully equal to the demands of life.
And to-day he owned himself defeated: life had
the upper hand; if there had been any means of flight
or place to flee to, if the world had been so ordered
that a man could leave it like a place of entertainment,
Morris would have instantly resigned all further claim
on its rewards and pleasures, and, with inexpressible
contentment, ceased to be. As it was, one aim
shone before him: he could get home. Even
as the sick dog crawls under the sofa, Morris could
shut the door of John Street and be alone.
The dusk was falling when he drew
near this place of refuge; and the first thing that
met his eyes was the figure of a man upon the step,
alternately plucking at the bell-handle and pounding
on the panels. The man had no hat, his clothes
were hideous with filth, he had the air of a hop-picker.
Yet Morris knew him; it was John.
The first impulse of flight was succeeded,
in the elder brother’s bosom, by the empty quiescence
of despair. “What does it matter now?”
he thought, and drawing forth his latch-key ascended
the steps.
John turned about; his face was ghastly
with weariness and dirt and fury; and as he recognised
the head of his family, he drew in a long rasping
breath, and his eyes glittered.
“Open that door,” he said, standing back.
“I am going to,” said
Morris, and added mentally, “He looks like murder!”
The brothers passed into the hall,
the door closed behind them; and suddenly John seized
Morris by the shoulders and shook him as a terrier
shakes a rat. “You mangy little cad,”
he said, “I’d serve you right to smash
your skull!” And shook him again, so that his
teeth rattled and his head smote upon the wall.
“Don’t be violent, Johnny,”
said Morris. “It can’t do any good
now.”
“Shut your mouth,” said
John, “your time’s come to listen.”
He strode into the dining-room, fell
into the easy-chair, and taking off one of his burst
walking-shoes, nursed for a while his foot like one
in agony. “I’m lame for life,”
he said. “What is there for dinner?”
“Nothing, Johnny,” said Morris.
“Nothing? What do you mean
by that?” inquired the Great Vance. “Don’t
set up your chat to me!”
“I mean simply nothing,”
said his brother. “I have nothing to eat,
and nothing to buy it with. I’ve only had
a cup of tea and a sandwich all this day myself.”
“Only a sandwich?” sneered
Vance. “I suppose you’re going
to complain next. But you had better take care:
I’ve had all I mean to take; and I can tell
you what it is, I mean to dine and to dine well.
Take your signets and sell them.”
“I can’t to-day,” objected Morris;
“it’s Sunday.”
“I tell you I’m going to dine!”
cried the younger brother.
“But if it’s not possible, Johnny?”
pleaded the other.
“You nincompoop!” cried
Vance. “Ain’t we house-holders?
Don’t they know us at that hotel where Uncle
Parker used to come. Be off with you; and if
you ain’t back in half an hour, and if the dinner
ain’t good, first I’ll lick you till you
don’t want to breathe, and then I’ll go
straight to the police and blow the gaff. Do
you understand that, Morris Finsbury? Because
if you do, you had better jump.”
The idea smiled even upon the wretched
Morris, who was sick with famine. He sped upon
his errand, and returned to find John still nursing
his foot in the arm-chair.
“What would you like to drink,
Johnny?” he inquired soothingly.
“Fizz,” said John.
“Some of the poppy stuff from the end bin; a
bottle of the old port that Michael liked, to follow;
and see and don’t shake the port. And look
here, light the fire and the gas, and draw
down the blinds; it’s cold and it’s getting
dark. And then you can lay the cloth. And,
I say here, you! bring me down some clothes.”
The room looked comparatively habitable
by the time the dinner came; and the dinner itself
was good: strong gravy soup, fillets of sole,
mutton chops and tomato sauce, roast beef done rare
with roast potatoes, cabinet pudding, a piece of Chester
cheese, and some early celery: a meal uncompromisingly
British, but supporting.
“Thank God!” said John,
his nostrils sniffing wide, surprised by joy into
the unwonted formality of grace. “Now I’m
going to take this chair with my back to the fire there’s
been a strong frost these two last nights, and I can’t
get it out of my bones; the celery will be just the
ticket I’m going to sit here, and
you are going to stand there, Morris Finsbury, and
play butler.”
“But, Johnny, I’m so hungry myself,”
pleaded Morris.
“You can have what I leave,”
said Vance. “You’re just beginning
to pay your score, my daisy; I owe you one-pound-ten;
don’t you rouse the British lion!” There
was something indescribably menacing in the face and
voice of the Great Vance as he uttered these words,
at which the soul of Morris withered. “There!”
resumed the feaster, “give us a glass of the
fizz to start with. Gravy soup! And I thought
I didn’t like gravy soup! Do you know how
I got here?” he asked, with another explosion
of wrath.
“No, Johnny; how could I?” said the obsequious
Morris.
“I walked on my ten toes!”
cried John; “tramped the whole way from Browndean;
and begged! I would like to see you beg.
It’s not so easy as you might suppose.
I played it on being a shipwrecked mariner from Blyth;
I don’t know where Blyth is, do you? but I thought
it sounded natural. I begged from a little beast
of a schoolboy, and he forked out a bit of twine,
and asked me to make a clove hitch; I did, too, I know
I did, but he said it wasn’t, he said it was
a granny’s knot, and I was a what-d’ye-call-’em,
and he would give me in charge. Then I begged
from a naval officer he never bothered
me with knots, but he only gave me a tract; there’s
a nice account of the British navy! and
then from a widow woman that sold lollipops, and I
got a hunch of bread from her. Another party
I fell in with said you could generally always get
bread; and the thing to do was to break a plate-glass
window and get into gaol; seemed rather a brilliant
scheme. Pass the beef.”
“Why didn’t you stay at
Browndean?” Morris ventured to inquire.
“Skittles!” said John.
“On what? The Pink Un and a measly
religious paper? I had to leave Browndean; I
had to, I tell you. I got tick at a public, and
set up to be the Great Vance; so would you, if you
were leading such a beastly existence! And a
card stood me a lot of ale and stuff, and we got swipey,
talking about music-halls and the piles of tin I got
for singing; and then they got me on to sing ’Around
her splendid form I weaved the magic circle,’
and then he said I couldn’t be Vance, and I
stuck to it like grim death I was. It was rot
of me to sing, of course, but I thought I could brazen
it out with a set of yokels. It settled my hash
at the public,” said John, with a sigh.
“And then the last thing was the carpenter ”
“Our landlord?” inquired Morris.
“That’s the party,”
said John. “He came nosing about the place,
and then wanted to know where the water-butt was,
and the bed-clothes. I told him to go to the
devil; so would you too, when there was no possible
thing to say! And then he said I had pawned them,
and did I know it was felony? Then I made a pretty
neat stroke. I remembered he was deaf, and talked
a whole lot of rot, very politely, just so low he couldn’t
hear a word. ‘I don’t hear you,’
says he. ’I know you don’t, my buck,
and I don’t mean you to,’ says I, smiling
away like a haberdasher. ’I’m hard
of hearing,’ he roars. ‘I’d
be in a pretty hot corner if you weren’t,’
says I, making signs as if I was explaining everything.
It was tip-top as long as it lasted. ‘Well,’
he said, ’I’m deaf, worse luck, but I bet
the constable can hear you.’ And off he
started one way, and I the other. They got a
spirit-lamp and the Pink Un, and that old religious
paper, and another periodical you sent me. I think
you must have been drunk it had a name
like one of those spots that Uncle Joseph used to
hold forth at, and it was all full of the most awful
swipes about poetry and the use of the globes.
It was the kind of thing that nobody could read out
of a lunatic asylum. The Athæneum, that
was the name! Golly, what a paper!”
“Athenæum, you mean,” said Morris.
“I don’t care what you
call it,” said John, “so as I don’t
require to take it in! There, I feel better.
Now I’m going to sit by the fire in the easy-chair;
pass me the cheese, and the celery, and the bottle
of port no, a champagne glass, it holds
more. And now you can pitch in; there’s
some of the fish left and a chop, and some fizz.
Ah,” sighed the refreshed pedestrian, “Michael
was right about that port; there’s old and vatted
for you! Michael’s a man I like; he’s
clever and reads books, and the Athæneum,
and all that; but he’s not dreary to meet, he
don’t talk Athæneum like the other parties;
why, the most of them would throw a blight over a
skittle alley! Talking of Michael, I ain’t
bored myself to put the question, because of course
I knew it from the first. You’ve made a
hash of it, eh?”
“Michael made a hash of it,” said Morris,
flushing dark.
“What have we got to do with that?” inquired
John.
“He has lost the body, that’s
what we have to do with it,” cried Morris.
“He has lost the body, and the death can’t
be established.”
“Hold on,” said John. “I thought
you didn’t want to?”
“O, we’re far past that,”
said his brother. “It’s not the tontine
now, it’s the leather business, Johnny; it’s
the clothes upon our back.”
“Stow the slow music,”
said John, “and tell your story from beginning
to end.”
Morris did as he was bid.
“Well, now, what did I tell
you?” cried the Great Vance, when the other
had done. “But I know one thing: I’m
not going to be humbugged out of my property.”
“I should like to know what you mean to do,”
said Morris.
“I’ll tell you that,”
responded John with extreme decision. “I’m
going to put my interests in the hands of the smartest
lawyer in London; and whether you go to quod or not
is a matter of indifference to me.”
“Why, Johnny, we’re in
the same boat!” expostulated Morris.
“Are we?” cried his brother.
“I bet we’re not! Have I committed
forgery? have I lied about Uncle Joseph? have I put
idiotic advertisements in the comic papers? have I
smashed other people’s statues? I like your
cheek, Morris Finsbury. No, I’ve let you
run my affairs too long; now they shall go to Michael.
I like Michael, anyway; and it’s time I understood
my situation.”
At this moment the brethren were interrupted
by a ring at the bell, and Morris, going timorously
to the door, received from the hands of a commissionaire
a letter addressed in the hand of Michael. Its
contents ran as follows:
“MORRIS FINSBURY, if this
should meet the eye of, he will hear of
SOMETHING TO HIS ADVANTAGE at my
office, in Chancery Lane, at 10 A.M.
to-morrow.
“MICHAEL FINSBURY.”
So utter was Morris’s subjection
that he did not wait to be asked, but handed the note
to John as soon as he had glanced at it himself.
“That’s the way to write
a letter,” cried John. “Nobody but
Michael could have written that.”
And Morris did not even claim the credit of priority.
CHAPTER XVI
FINAL ADJUSTMENT OF THE LEATHER BUSINESS
Finsbury brothers were ushered, at
ten the next morning, into a large apartment in Michael’s
office; the Great Vance, somewhat restored from yesterday’s
exhaustion, but with one foot in a slipper; Morris,
not positively damaged, but a man ten years older
than he who had left Bournemouth eight days before,
his face ploughed full of anxious wrinkles, his dark
hair liberally grizzled at the temples.
Three persons were seated at a table
to receive them: Michael in the midst, Gideon
Forsyth on his right hand, on his left an ancient
gentleman with spectacles and silver hair.
“By Jingo, it’s Uncle Joe!” cried
John.
But Morris approached his uncle with
a pale countenance and glittering eyes.
“I’ll tell you what you did!” he
cried. “You absconded!”
“Good-morning, Morris Finsbury,”
returned Joseph, with no less asperity; “you
are looking seriously ill.”
“No use making trouble now,”
remarked Michael. “Look the facts in the
face. Your uncle, as you see, was not so much
as shaken in the accident; a man of your humane disposition
ought to be delighted.”
“Then, if that’s so,”
Morris broke forth, “how about the body?
You don’t mean to insinuate that thing I schemed
and sweated for, and colported with my own hands,
was the body of a total stranger?”
“O no, we can’t go as
far as that,” said Michael soothingly; “you
may have met him at the club.”
Morris fell into a chair. “I
would have found it out if it had come to the house,”
he complained. “And why didn’t it?
why did it go to Pitman? what right had Pitman to
open it?”
“If you come to that, Morris,
what have you done with the colossal Hercules?”
asked Michael.
“He went through it with the
meat-axe,” said John. “It’s
all in spillikins in the back garden.”
“Well, there’s one thing,”
snapped Morris; “there’s my uncle again,
my fraudulent trustee. He’s mine, anyway.
And the tontine too. I claim the tontine; I claim
it now. I believe Uncle Masterman’s dead.”
“I must put a stop to this nonsense,”
said Michael, “and that for ever. You say
too near the truth. In one sense your uncle is
dead, and has been so long; but not in the sense of
the tontine, which it is even on the cards he may
yet live to win. Uncle Joseph saw him this morning;
he will tell you he still lives, but his mind is in
abeyance.”
“He did not know me,”
said Joseph; to do him justice, not without emotion.
“So you’re out again there,
Morris,” said John. “My eye! what
a fool you’ve made of yourself!”
“And that was why you wouldn’t compromise,”
said Morris.
“As for the absurd position
in which you and Uncle Joseph have been making yourselves
an exhibition,” resumed Michael, “it is
more than time it came to an end. I have prepared
a proper discharge in full, which you shall sign as
a preliminary.”
“What!” cried Morris,
“and lose my seven thousand eight hundred pounds,
and the leather business, and the contingent interest,
and get nothing? Thank you.”
“It’s like you to feel gratitude, Morris,”
began Michael.
“O, I know it’s no good
appealing to you, you sneering devil!” cried
Morris. “But there’s a stranger present,
I can’t think why, and I appeal to him.
I was robbed of that money when I was an orphan, a
mere child, at a commercial academy. Since then,
I’ve never had a wish but to get back my own.
You may hear a lot of stuff about me; and there’s
no doubt at times I have been ill advised. But
it’s the pathos of my situation; that’s
what I want to show you.”
“Morris,” interrupted
Michael, “I do wish you would let me add one
point, for I think it will affect your judgment.
It’s pathetic too since that’s
your taste in literature.”
“Well, what is it?” said Morris.
“It’s only the name of
one of the persons who’s to witness your signature,
Morris,” replied Michael. “His name’s
Moss, my dear.”
There was a long silence. “I
might have been sure it was you!” cried Morris.
“You’ll sign, won’t you?”
said Michael.
“Do you know what you’re
doing?” cried Morris. “You’re
compounding a felony.”
“Very well, then, we won’t
compound it, Morris,” returned Michael.
“See how little I understood the sterling integrity
of your character! I thought you would prefer
it so.”
“Look here, Michael,”
said John, “this is all very fine and large;
but how about me? Morris is gone up, I see that;
but I’m not. And I was robbed, too, mind
you; and just as much an orphan, and at the blessed
same academy as himself.”
“Johnny,” said Michael,
“don’t you think you’d better leave
it to me?”
“I’m your man,”
said John. “You wouldn’t deceive a
poor orphan, I’ll take my oath. Morris,
you sign that document, or I’ll start in and
astonish your weak mind.”
With a sudden alacrity, Morris proffered
his willingness. Clerks were brought in, the
discharge was executed, and there was Joseph a free
man once more.
“And now,” said Michael,
“hear what I propose to do. Here, John and
Morris, is the leather business made over to the pair
of you in partnership. I have valued it at the
lowest possible figure, Pogram and Jarris’s.
And here is a cheque for the balance of your fortune.
Now, you see, Morris, you start fresh from the commercial
academy; and, as you said yourself the leather business
was looking up, I suppose you’ll probably marry
before long. Here’s your marriage present from
a Mr. Moss.”
Morris bounded on his cheque with
a crimsoned countenance.
“I don’t understand the
performance,” remarked John. “It seems
too good to be true.”
“It’s simply a readjustment,”
Michael explained. “I take up Uncle Joseph’s
liabilities; and if he gets the tontine, it’s
to be mine; if my father gets it, it’s mine
anyway, you see. So that I’m rather advantageously
placed.”
“Morris, my unconverted friend,
you’ve got left,” was John’s comment.
“And now, Mr. Forsyth,”
resumed Michael, turning to his silent guest, “here
are all the criminals before you, except Pitman.
I really didn’t like to interrupt his scholastic
career; but you can have him arrested at the seminary I
know his hours. Here we are then; we’re
not pretty to look at: what do you propose to
do with us?”
“Nothing in the world, Mr. Finsbury,”
returned Gideon. “I seem to understand
that this gentleman” indicating Morris “is
the fons et origo of the trouble; and, from
what I gather, he has already paid through the nose.
And really, to be quite frank, I do not see who is
to gain by any scandal; not me, at least. And
besides, I have to thank you for that brief.”
Michael blushed. “It was
the least I could do to let you have some business,”
he said. “But there’s one thing more.
I don’t want you to misjudge poor Pitman, who
is the most harmless being upon earth. I wish
you would dine with me to-night, and see the creature
on his native heath say at Verrey’s?”
“I have no engagement, Mr. Finsbury,”
replied Gideon. “I shall be delighted.
But subject to your judgment, can we do nothing for
the man in the cart? I have qualms of conscience.”
“Nothing but sympathise,” said Michael.