CHAPTER I - ROOM 3, HOTEL CARTER
I rose at my usual hour. I dressed
myself with my usual care. I was, to a superficial
observer at least, in all respects my usual self when
Hannah came to my door to ask what she could do for
me. As there was nothing I wanted but to get
out of this house, which had become unbearable to
me, I replied with the utmost cheerfulness that my
wants were all supplied and that I would soon be down,
at which she answered that in that case she must bestir
herself or the breakfast would not be ready, and hurried
away.
There was no one in the dining-room
when I entered, and judging from appearances that
several minutes must elapse before breakfast would
be ready, I took occasion to stroll through the grounds
and glance up at the window of William’s room.
The knot of crape was gone.
I would have gone farther, but just
then I heard a great rushing and scampering, and,
looking up, saw an enormous dog approaching at full
gallop from the stables. Saracen was loose.
I did not scream or give way to other
feminine expressions of fear, but I did return as
quickly as possible to the house, where I now saw I
must remain till William chose to take me into town.
This I was determined should take
place as soon after breakfast as practicable.
The knowledge which I now possessed warranted, nay,
demanded, instant consultation with the police, and
as this could best be effected by following out the
orders I had received from Mr. Gryce, I did not consider
any other plan than that of meeting the man on duty
in Room N at the hotel.
Loreen, Lucetta, and William were
awaiting me in the hall, and made no apology for the
flurry into which I had been thrown by my rapid escape
from Saracen. Indeed I doubt if they noticed it,
for with all the attempt they made to seem gay and
at ease, the anxieties and fatigue of the foregoing
nights were telling upon them, and from Miss Knollys
down, they looked physically exhausted. But they
also looked mentally relieved. In the clear depths
of Lucetta’s eye there was now no wavering,
and the head which was always turning in anxious anticipation
over her shoulder rested firm, though not as erect
as her sister’s, who had less cause perhaps
for regret and sorrow.
William was joyful to a degree, but
it was a forced joviality which only became real when
he heard a sudden, quick bark under the window and
the sound of scraping paws against the mastic coating
of the wall outside. Then he broke out into a
loud laugh of unrestrained pleasure, crying out thoughtlessly:
“There’s Saracen. How quick he knows ”
A warning look from Lucetta stopped him.
“I mean,” he stammered,
“it’s a dull dog that cannot find his master.
Miss Butterworth, you will have to overcome your fear
of dogs if you stay with us long. Saracen is
unbound this morning, and” he used
a great oath “he’s going to
remain so.”
By which I came to understand that
it was not out of consideration for me he had been
tied up in the court till now, but for reasons connected
with their own safety and the preservation of the secret
which they so evidently believed had been buried with
the body, which I did not like to remember lay at
that very minute too nearly under our feet for my own
individual comfort.
However, this has nothing to do with
the reply I made to William.
“I hope he does not run with
the buggy,” I objected. “I want to
take a ride very much this morning and could get small
pleasure out of it if that dog must be our companion.”
“I cannot go out this morning,”
William began, but changed his sentence, possibly
at the touch of his sister’s foot under the table,
into: “But if you say I must, why, I must.
You women folks are so plagued unreasonable.”
Had he been ten years younger I would
have boxed his ears; had he been that much older I
would have taken cue and packed my trunk before he
could have finished the cup of coffee he was drinking.
But he was just too old to reprimand in the way just
mentioned, and not old enough to appreciate any display
of personal dignity or self-respect on the part of
the person he had offended. Besides, he was a
knave; so I just let his impertinence pass with the
remark:
“I have purchases to make in
the village”: and so that matter ended,
manifestly to the two girls’ relief, who naturally
did not like to see me insulted, even if they did
not possess sufficient power over their brother to
prevent it.
One other small episode and then I
will take you with me to the village. As we were
leaving the table, where I ate less than common, notwithstanding
all my efforts to seem perfectly unconcerned, Lucetta,
who had waited for her brother to go out, took me gently
by the arm, and, eying me closely, said:
“Did you have any dreams last
night, Miss Butterworth? You know I promised
you some.”
The question disconcerted me, and
for a moment I felt like taking the two girls into
my confidence and bidding them fly from the shame and
doom so soon to fall upon their brother; but the real
principle underlying all such momentary impulses on
my part deterred me, and in as light a tone as I could
command and not be an absolute hypocrite, I replied
that I was sorry to disappoint her, but I had had no
dreams, which seemed to please her more than it should,
for if I had had no dreams I certainly had suffered
from the most frightful realities.
I will not describe our ride into
town. Saracen did go with us, and indignation
not only rendered me speechless, but gave to my thoughts
a turn which made that half-hour of very little value
to me. Mother Jane’s burly figure crouching
in her doorway might otherwise have given me opportunity
for remark, and so might the dubious looks of people
we met on the highroad looks to which I
am so wholly unaccustomed that I had difficulty in
recognizing myself as the butt of so much doubt and
possibly dislike. I attributed this, however,
all to the ill repute under which William so deservedly
labored, and did not allow myself to more than notice
it. Indeed, I could only be sorry for people who
did not know in what consideration I was held at home,
and who, either through ignorance or prejudice, allowed
themselves privileges they would be the first to regret
did they know the heart and mind of Amelia Butterworth.
Once in the village, I took the direction of affairs.
“Set me down at the hotel,”
I commanded, “and then go about such business
as you may have here in town. I am not going to
allow myself to be tracked all over by that dog.”
“I have no business,” was the surly reply.
“Then make some,” was
my sharp retort. “I want to see the locksmith that
locksmith who wouldn’t come to do an honest piece
of work for me in your house; and I want to buy dimities
and wools and sewing silks at the dry-goods store
over there. Indeed I have a thousand things to
do, and expect to spend half the morning before the
counters. Why, man, I haven’t done any
shopping for a week.”
He gaped at me perfectly aghast (as
I meant he should), and, having but little experience
of city ladies, took me at my word and prepared to
beat an honorable retreat. As a result, I found
myself ten minutes later standing on the top step
of the hotel porch, watching William driving away
with Saracen perched on the seat beside him. Then
I realized that the village held no companions for
him, and did not know whether I felt glad or sorry.
To the clerk who came to meet me,
I said quietly, “Room N, if you please,”
at which he gave a nod of intelligence and led me as
unostentatiously as possible into a small hall, at
the end of which I saw a door with the aforesaid number
on it.
“If you will take a seat inside,”
said he, “I will send you whatever you may desire
for your comfort.”
“I think you know what that
is,” I rejoined, at which he nodded again and
left me, closing the door carefully behind him as he
went.
The few minutes which elapsed before
my quiet was disturbed were spent by me in thinking.
There were many little questions to settle in my own
mind, for which a spell of uninterrupted contemplation
was necessary. One of these was whether, in the
event of finding the police amenable, I should reveal
or hide from these children of my old friend, the fact
that it was through my instrumentality that their nefarious
secret had been discovered. I wished nay,
I hoped that the affair might be so concluded,
but the possibility of doing so seemed so problematical,
especially since Mr. Gryce was not on hand to direct
matters, that I spent very little time on the subject,
deep and important as it was to all concerned.
What most occupied me was the necessity
of telling my story in such a way as to exonerate
the girls as much as possible. They were mistaken
in their devotion and most unhappy in the exercise
of it, but they were not innately wicked and should
not be made to appear so. Perhaps the one thing
for which I should yet have the best cause to congratulate
myself, would be the opportunity I had gained of giving
to their connection with this affair its true and
proper coloring.
I was still dwelling on this thought
when there came a knock at my door which advised me
that the visitor I expected had arrived. To open
and admit him was the work of a moment, but it took
more than a moment for me to overcome my surprise
at seeing in my visitor no lesser person than Mr.
Gryce himself, who in our parting interview had assured
me he was too old and too feeble for further detective
work and must therefore delegate it to me.
“Ah!” I ejaculated slowly.
“It is you, is it? Well, I am not surprised.”
(I shouldn’t have been.) “When you say
you are old, you mean old enough to pull the wool
over other people’s eyes, and when you say you
are lame, you mean that you only halt long enough
to let others get far enough ahead for them not to
see how fast you hobble up behind them. But do
not think I am not happy to see you. I am, Mr.
Gryce, for I have discovered the secret of Lost Man’s
Lane, and find it somewhat too heavy a one for my
own handling.”
To my surprise he showed this was more than he expected.
“You have?” he asked,
with just that shade of incredulity which it is so
tantalizing to encounter. “Then I suppose
congratulations are in order. But are you sure,
Miss Butterworth, that you really have obtained a clue
to the many strange and fearful disappearances which
have given to this lane its name?”
“Quite sure,” I returned,
nettled. “Why do you doubt it? Because
I have kept so quiet and not sounded one note of alarm
from my whistle?”
“No,” said he. “Knowing
your self-restraint so well, I cannot say that that
is my reason.”
“What is it, then?” I urged.
“Well,” said he, “my
real reason for doubting if you have been quite as
successful as you think, is that we ourselves have
come upon a clue about which there can be no question.
Can you say the same of yours?”
You will expect my answer to have
been a decided “Yes,” uttered with all
the positiveness of which you know me capable.
But for some reason, perhaps because of the strange
influence this man’s personality exercises upon
all yes, all who do not absolutely
steel themselves against him, I faltered just long
enough for him to cry:
“I thought not. The clue
is outside the Knollys house, not in it, Miss Butterworth,
for which, of course, you are not to be blamed or your
services scorned. I have no doubt they have been
invaluable in unearthing a secret, if not the
secret.”
“Thank you,” was my quiet
retort. I thought his presumption beyond all
bounds, and would at that moment have felt justified
in snapping my fingers at the clue he boasted of,
had it not been for one thing. What that thing
is I am not ready yet to state.
“You and I have come to issue
over such matters before,” said he, “and
therefore need not take too much account of the feelings
it is likely to engender. I will merely state
that my clue points to Mother Jane, and ask if you
have found in the visit she paid at the house last
night anything which would go to strengthen the suspicion
against her.”
“Perhaps,” said I, in
a state of disdain that was more or less unpardonable,
considering that my own suspicions previous to my
discovery of the real tragedy enacted under my eyes
at the Knollys mansion had played more or less about
this old crone.
“Only perhaps?” He smiled,
with a playful forbearance for which I should have
been truly grateful to him.
“She was there for no good purpose,”
said I, “and yet if you had not characterized
her as the person most responsible for the crimes we
are here to investigate, I should have said from all
that I then saw of her conduct that she acted as a
supernumerary rather than principal, and that it is
to me you should look for the correct clue to the criminal,
notwithstanding your confidence in your own theories
and my momentary hesitation to assert that there was
no possible defect in mine.”
“Miss Butterworth,” I
thought he looked a trifle shaken, “what
did Mother Jane do in that closely shuttered house
last night?”
Mother Jane? Well! Did he
think I was going to introduce my tragic story by
telling what Mother Jane did? I must have looked
irritated, and indeed I think I had cause.
“Mother Jane ate her supper,”
I snapped out angrily. “Miss Knollys gave
it to her. Then she helped a little with a piece
of work they had on hand. It will not interest
you to know what. It has nothing to do with your
clue, I warrant.”
He did not get angry. He has
an admirable temper, has Mr. Gryce, but he did stop
a minute to consider.
“Miss Butterworth,” he
said at last, “most detectives would have held
their peace and let you go on with what you have to
tell without a hint that it was either unwelcome or
unnecessary, but I have consideration for persons’
feelings and for persons’ secrets so long as
they do not come in collision with the law, and my
opinion is, or was when I entered this room, that
such discoveries as you have made at your old friend’s
house” (Why need he emphasize friend did
he think I forgot for a moment that Althea was my
friend?) “were connected rather with some family
difficulty than with the dreadful affair we are considering.
That is why I hastened to tell you that we had found
a clue to the disappearances in Mother Jane’s
cottage. I wished to save the Misses Knollys.”
If he had thought to mollify me by
this assertion, he did not succeed. He saw it
and made haste to say:
“Not that I doubt your consideration
for them, only the justness of your conclusions.”
“You have doubted those before
and with more reason,” I replied, “yet
they were not altogether false.”
“That I am willing to acknowledge,
so willing that if you still think after I have told
my story that yours is apropos, then I will
listen to it only too eagerly. My object is to
find the real criminal in this matter. I say
at the present moment it is Mother Jane.”
“God grant you are right,”
I said, influenced in spite of myself by the calm
assurance of his manner. “If she was at
the house night before last between eleven and twelve,
then perhaps she is all you think her. But I
see no reason to believe it not yet, Mr.
Gryce. Supposing you give me one. It would
be better than all this controversy. One small
reason, Mr. Gryce, as good as” I
did not say what, but the fillip it gave to his intention
stood me in good stead, for he launched immediately
into the matter with no further play upon my curiosity,
which was now, as you can believe, thoroughly aroused,
though I could not believe that anything he had to
bring up against Mother Jane could for a moment stand
against the death and the burial I had witnessed in
Miss Knollys’ house during the two previous
nights.
CHAPTER II - THE ENIGMA OF NUMBERS
“When in our first conversation
on this topic I told you that Mother Jane was not
to be considered in this matter, I meant she was not
to be considered by you. She was a subject to
be handled by the police, and we have handled her.
Yesterday afternoon I made a search of her cabin.”
Here Mr. Gryce paused and eyed me quizzically.
He sometimes does eye me, which same I cannot regard
as a compliment, considering how fond he is of concentrating
all his wisdom upon small and insignificant objects.
“I wonder,” said he, “what
you would have done in such a search as that.
It was no common one, I assure you. There are
not many hiding-places between Mother Jane’s
four walls.”
I felt myself begin to tremble, with
eagerness, of course.
“I wish I had been given the
opportunity,” said I “that is,
if anything was to be found there.”
He seemed to be in a sympathetic mood
toward me, or perhaps and this is the likelier
supposition he had a minute of leisure and
thought he could afford to give himself a little quiet
amusement. However that was, he answered me by
saying:
“The opportunity is not lost.
You have been in her cabin and have noted, I have
no doubt, its extreme simplicity. Yet it contains,
or rather did contain up till last night, distinct
evidences of more than one of the crimes which have
been perpetrated in this lane.”
“Good! And you want me
to guess where you found them? Well, it’s
not fair.”
“Ah, and why not?”
“Because you probably did not
find them on your first attempt. You had time
to look about. I am asked to guess at once and
without second trial what I warrant it took you several
trials to determine.”
He could not help but laugh.
“And why do you think it took me several trials?”
“Because there is more than
one thing in that room made up of parts.”
“Parts?” He attempted
to look puzzled, but I would not have it.
“You know what I mean,”
I declared; “seventy parts, twenty-eight, or
whatever the numbers are she so constantly mutters.”
His admiration was unqualified and sincere.
“Miss Butterworth,” said
he, “you are a woman after my own heart.
How came you to think that her mutterings had anything
to do with a hiding-place?”
“Because it did not have anything
to do with the amount of money I gave her. When
I handed her twenty-five cents, she cried, ’Seventy,
twenty-eight, and now ten!’ Ten what? Not
ten cents or ten dollars, but ten ”
“Why do you stop?”
“I do not want to risk my reputation
on a guess. There is a quilt on the bed made
up of innumerable pieces. There is a floor of
neatly laid brick ”
“And there is a Bible on the
stand whose leaves number many over seventy.”
“Ah, it was in the Bible you found ”
His smile put mine quite to shame.
“I must acknowledge,”
he cried, “that I looked in the Bible, but I
found nothing there beyond what we all seek when we
open its sacred covers. Shall I tell my story?”
He was evidently bursting with pride.
You would think that after a half-century of just
such successes, a man would take his honors more quietly.
But pshaw! Human nature is just the same in the
old as in the young. He was no more tired of
compliment or of awakening the astonishment of those
he confided in, than when he aroused the admiration
of the force by his triumphant handling of the Leavenworth
Case. Of course in presence of such weakness I
could do nothing less than give him a sympathetic
ear. I may be old myself some day. Besides,
his story was likely to prove more or less interesting.
“Tell your story?” I repeated.
“Don’t you see that I am” I
was going to say “on pins and needles till I
hear it,” but the expression is too vulgar for
a woman of my breeding; so I altered the words, happily
before they were spoken, into “that I am in a
state of the liveliest curiosity concerning the whole
matter? Tell your story, of course.”
“Well, Miss Butterworth, if
I do, it is because I know you will appreciate it.
You, like myself, placed weight upon the numbers she
is forever running over, and you, like myself, have
conceived the possibility of these numbers having
reference to something in the one room she inhabits.
At first glance the extreme bareness of the spot seemed
to promise nothing to my curiosity. I looked at
the floor and detected no signs of any disturbance
having taken place in its symmetrically laid bricks
for years. Yet I counted up to seventy one way
and twenty-eight the other, and marking the brick thus
selected, began to pry it out. It came with difficulty
and showed me nothing underneath but green mold and
innumerable frightened insects. Then I counted
the bricks the other way, but nothing came of it.
The floor does not appear to have been disturbed for
years. Turning my attention away from the floor,
I began upon the quilt. This was a worse job than
the other, and it took me an hour to rip apart the
block I settled upon as the suspicious one, but my
labor was entirely wasted. There was no hidden
treasure in the quilt. Then I searched the walls,
using the measurements seventy by twenty-eight, but
no result followed these endeavors, and well,
what do you think I did then?”
“You will tell me,” I
said, “if I give you one more minute to do it
in.”
“Very well,” said he.
“I see you do not know, madam. Having searched
below and around me, I next turned my attention overhead.
Do you remember the strings and strings of dried vegetables
that decorate the beams above?”
“I do,” I replied, not
stinting any of the astonishment I really felt.
“Well, I began to count them
next, and when I reached the seventieth onion from
the open doorway, I crushed it between my fingers and these
fell out, madam worthless trinkets, as you
will immediately see, but ”
“Well, well,” I urged.
“They have been identified as
belonging to the peddler who was one of the victims
in whose fate we are interested.”
“Ah, ah!” I ejaculated,
somewhat amazed, I own. “And number twenty-eight?”
“That was a carrot, and it held
a really valuable ring a ruby surrounded
by diamonds. If you remember, I once spoke to
you of this ring. It was the property of young
Mr. Chittenden and worn by him while he was in this
village. He disappeared on his way to the railway
station, having taken, as many can vouch, the short
detour by Lost Man’s Lane, which would lead
him directly by Mother Jane’s cottage.”
“You thrill me,” said
I, keeping down with admirable self-possession my
own thoughts in regard to this matter. “And
what of No. ten, beyond which she said she could not
count?”
“In ten was your twenty-five-cent
piece, and in various other vegetables, small coins,
whose value taken collectively would not amount to
a dollar. The only numbers which seemed to make
any impression on her mind were those connected with
these crimes. Very good evidence, Miss Butterworth,
that Mother Jane holds the clue to this matter, even
if she is not responsible for the death of the individuals
represented by this property.”
“Certainly,” I acquiesced,
“and if you examined her after her return from
the Knollys mansion last night you would probably have
found upon her some similar evidence of her complicity
in the last crime of this terrible series. It
would needs have been small, as Silly Rufus neither
indulged in the brass trinkets sold by the old peddler
nor the real jewelry of a well-to-do man like Mr.
Chittenden.”
“Silly Rufus?”
“He was the last to disappear from these parts,
was he not?”
“Yes, madam.”
“And as such, should have left
some clue to his fate in the hands of this old crone,
if her motive in removing him was, as you seem to think,
entirely that of gain.”
“I did not say it was entirely
so. Silly Rufus would be the last person any
one, even such a non compos mentis as Mother
Jane, would destroy for hope of gain.”
“But what other motive could
she have? And, Mr. Gryce, where could she bestow
the bodies of so many unfortunate victims, even if
by her great strength she could succeed in killing
them?”
“There you have me,” said
he. “We have not been able as yet to unearth
any bodies. Have you?”
“No,” said I, with some
little show of triumph showing through my disdain,
“but I can show you where to unearth one.”
He should have been startled, profoundly
startled. Why wasn’t he? I asked this
of myself over and over in the one instant he weighed
his words before answering.
“You have made some definite
discoveries, then,” he declared. “You
have come across a grave or a mound which you have
taken for a grave.”
I shook my head.
“No mound,” said I. Why
should I not play for an instant or more with his
curiosity? He had with mine.
“Ah, then, why do you talk of
unearthing? No one has told you where you can
lay hand on Silly Rufus’ body, I take it.”
“No,” said I. “The
Knollys house is not inclined to give up its secrets.”
He started, glancing almost remorsefully
first at the tip, then at the head of the cane he
was balancing in his hand.
“It’s too bad,”
he muttered, “but you’ve been led astray,
Miss Butterworth, excusably, I acknowledge,
quite excusably, but yet in a way to give you quite
wrong conclusions. The secret of the Knollys
house But wait a moment. Then you were
not locked up in your room last night?”
“Scarcely,” I returned,
wavering between the doubts he had awakened by his
first sentence and the surprise which his last could
not fail to give me.
“I might have known they would
not be likely to catch you in a trap,” he remarked.
“So you were up and in the halls?”
“I was up,” I acknowledged,
“and in the halls. May I ask where you
were?”
He paid no heed to the last sentence.
“This complicates matters,” said he, “and
yet perhaps it is as well. I understand you now,
and in a few minutes you will understand me.
You thought it was Silly Rufus who was buried last
night. That was rather an awful thought, Miss
Butterworth. I wonder, with that in your mind,
you look as well as you do this morning, madam.
Truly you are a wonderful woman a very wonderful
woman.”
“A truce to compliments,”
I begged. “If you know as much as your words
imply of what went on in that ill-omened house last
night, you ought to show some degree of emotion yourself,
for if it was not Silly Rufus who was laid away under
the Flower Parlor, who, then, was it? No one for
whom tears could openly be shed or of whose death public
acknowledgment could be made, or we would not be sitting
here talking away at cross purposes the morning after
his burial.”
“Tears are not shed or public
acknowledgment made for the subject of a half-crazy
man’s love for scientific investigation.
It was no human being whom you saw buried, madam,
but a victim of Mr. Knollys’ passion for vivisection.”
“You are playing with me,”
was my indignant answer; “outrageously and inexcusably
playing with me. Only a human being would be laid
away in such secrecy and with such manifestations
of feeling as I was witness to. You must think
me in my dotage, or else ”
“We will take the rest of the
sentence for granted,” he dryly interpolated.
“You know that I can have no wish to insult your
intelligence, Miss Butterworth, and that if I advance
a theory on my own account I must have ample reasons
for it. Now can you say the same for yours?
Can you adduce irrefutable proof that the body we buried
last night was that of a man? If you can, there
is no more to be said, or, rather, there is everything
to be said, for this would give to the transaction
a very dreadful and tragic significance which at present
I am not disposed to ascribe to it.”
Taken aback by his persistence, but
determined not to acknowledge defeat until forced
to it, I stolidly replied: “You have made
an assertion, and it is for you to adduce proof.
It will be time enough for me to talk when your own
theory is proved untenable.”
He was not angry: fellow-feeling
for my disappointment made him unusually gentle.
His voice was therefore very kind when he said:
“Madam, if you know it to have
been a man, say so. I do not wish to waste my
time.”
“I do not know it.”
“Very well, then, I will tell
you why I think my supposition true. Mr. Knollys,
as you probably have already discovered, is a man with
a secret passion for vivisection.”
“Yes, I have discovered that.”
“It is known to his family,
and it is known to a very few others, but it is not
known to the world at large, not even to his fellow-villagers.’
“I can believe it,” said I.
“His sisters, who are gentle
girls, regard the matter as the gentle-hearted usually
do. They have tried in every way to influence
him to abandon it, but unsuccessfully so far, for
he is not only entirely unamenable to persuasion,
but has a nature of such brutality he could not live
without some such excitement to help away his life
in this dreary house. All they can do, then,
is to conceal these cruelties from the eyes of the
people who already execrate him for his many roughnesses
and the undoubted shadow under which he lives.
Time was when I thought this shadow had a substance
worth our investigation, but a further knowledge of
his real fault and a completer knowledge of his sisters’
virtues turned my inquiries in a new direction, where
I have found, as I have told you, actual reason for
arresting Mother Jane. Have you anything to say
against these conclusions? Cannot you see that
all your suspicions can be explained by the brother’s
cruel impulses and the sisters’ horror of having
those impulses known?”
I thought a moment; then I cried out
boldly: “No, I cannot, Mr. Gryce.
The anxiety, the fear, which I have seen depicted on
these sisters’ faces for days might be explained
perhaps by this theory; but the knot of crape on the
window-shutter, the open Bible in the room of death William’s
room, Mr. Gryce, proclaim that it was a
human being, and nothing less, for whom Lucetta’s
sobs went up.”
“I do not follow you,”
he said, moved for the first time from his composure.
“What do you mean by a knot of crape, and when
was it you obtained entrance into William’s
room?”
“Ah,” I exclaimed in dry
retort; “you are beginning to see that I have
something as interesting to report as yourself.
Did you think me a superficial egotist, without facts
to back my assertions?”
“I should not have done you that injustice.”
“I have penetrated, I think,
deeper than even yourself, into William’s character.
I think him capable But do satisfy my curiosity
on one point first, Mr. Gryce. How came you to
know as much as you do about last night’s proceedings?
You could not have been in the house. Did Mother
Jane talk after she got back?”
The tip of his cane was up, and he
frowned at it. Then the handle took its place,
and he gave it a good-natured smile.
“Miss Butterworth,” said
he, “I have not succeeded in making Mother Jane
at any time go beyond her numerical monologue.
But you have been more successful.” And
with a sudden marvellous change of expression, pose,
and manner he threw over his head my shawl, which had
fallen to the floor in my astonishment, and, rocking
himself to and fro before me, muttered grimly:
“Seventy! Twenty-eight!
Ten! No more! I can count no more! Go.”
“Mr. Gryce, it was you ”
“Whom you interviewed in Mother
Jane’s cottage with Mr. Knollys,” he finished.
“And it was I who helped to bury what
you now declare, to my real terror and astonishment,
to have been a human being. Miss Butterworth,
what about the knot of crape? Tell me.”
CHAPTER III - TRIFLES, BUT NOT TRIFLING
I was so astounded I hardly took in this final question.
He had been the sixth party
in the funeral cortege I had seen pause in the Flower
Parlor. Well, what might I not expect from this
man next!
But I am methodical even under the
greatest excitement and at the most critical instants,
as those who have read That Affair Next Door
have had ample opportunity to know. Once having
taken in the startling fact he mentioned, I found
it impossible to proceed to establish my standpoint
till I knew a little more about his.
“Wait,” I said; “tell
me first if I have ever seen the real Mother Jane;
or were you the person I saw stooping in the road,
and of whom I bought the pennyroyal?”
“No,” he replied; “that
was the old woman herself. My appearance in the
cottage dates from yesterday noon. I felt the
need of being secretly near you, and I also wished
for an opportunity to examine this humble interior
unsuspected and unobserved. So I prevailed upon
the old woman to exchange places with me; she taking
up her abode in the woods for the night and I her
old stool on the hearthstone. She was the more
willing to do this from the promise I gave her to
watch out for Lizzie. That I would don her own
Sunday suit and personate her in her own home she
evidently did not suspect. Had not wit enough,
I suppose. At the present moment she is back
in her old place.”
I nodded my thanks for this explanation,
but was not deterred from pressing the point I was
anxious to have elucidated.
“If,” I went on to urge,
“you took advantage of your disguise to act as
assistant in the burial which took place last night,
you are in a much better situation than myself to
decide the question we are at present considering.
Was it because of any secret knowledge thus gained
you declare so positively that it was not a human
being you helped lower in its grave?”
“Partially. Having some
skill in these disguises, especially where my own
infirmities can have full play, as in the case of this
strong but half-bent woman, I had no reason to think
my own identity was suspected, much less discovered.
Therefore I could trust to what I saw and heard as
being just what Mother Jane herself would be allowed
to see or hear under the same circumstances.
If, therefore, these young people and this old crone
had been, as you seem to think they are, in league
for murder, Lucetta would hardly have greeted me as
she did when she came down to meet me in the kitchen.”
“And how was that? What did she say?”
“She said: ’Ah, Mother
Jane, we have a piece of work for you. You are
strong, are you not?’”
“Humph!”
“And then she commiserated me
a bit and gave me food which, upon my word, I found
hard to eat, though I had saved my appetite for the
occasion. Before she left me she bade me sit in
the inglenook till she wanted me, adding in Hannah’s
ear as she passed her: ’There is no use
trying to explain anything to her. Show her when
the time comes what there is to do and trust to her
short memory to forget it before she leaves the house.
She could not understand my brother’s propensity
or our shame in pandering to it. So attempt nothing,
Hannah. Only keep the money in her view.’”
“So, and that gave you no idea?”
“It gave me the idea I have
imparted to you, or, rather, added to the idea which
had been instilled in me by others.”
“And this idea was not affected
by what you saw afterwards?”
“Not in the least rather
strengthened. Of the few words I overheard, one
was uttered in reference to yourself by Miss Knollys.
She said: ’I have locked Miss Butterworth
again into her room. If she accuses me of having
done so, I shall tell her our whole story. Better
she should know the family’s disgrace than imagine
us guilty of crimes of which we are utterly incapable.’”
“So! so!” I cried, “you heard that?”
“Yes, madam, I heard that, and
I do not think she knew she was dropping that word
into the ear of a detective, but on this point you
are, of course, at liberty to differ with me.”
“I am not yet ready to avail
myself of the privilege,” I retorted. “What
else did these girls let fall in your hearing?”
“Not much. It was Hannah
who led me into the upper hall, and Hannah who by
signs and signals rather than words showed me what
was expected of me. However, when, after the
box was lowered into the cellar, Hannah was drawing
me away, Lucetta stepped up and whispered in her ear:
’Don’t give her the biggest coin.
Give her the little one, or she may mistake our reasons
for secrecy. I wouldn’t like even a fool
to do that even for the moment it would remain lodged
in Mother Jane’s mind.’”
“Well, well,” I again
cried, certainly puzzled, for these stray expressions
of the sisters were in a measure contradictory not
only of the suspicions I entertained, but of the facts
which had seemingly come to my attention.
Mr. Gryce, who was probably watching
my face more closely than he did the cane with whose
movements he was apparently engrossed, stopped to
give a caressing rub to the knob of that same cane
before remarking:
“One such peep behind the scenes
is worth any amount of surmise expended on the wrong
side of the curtain. I let you share my knowledge
because it is your due. Now if you feel willing
to explain what you mean by a knot of crape on the
shutter, I am at your service, madam.”
I felt that it would be cruel to delay
my story longer, and so I began it. It was evidently
more interesting than he expected, and as I dilated
upon the special features which had led me to believe
that it was a thinking, suffering mortal like ourselves
who had been shut up in William’s room and afterwards
buried in the cellar under the Flower Parlor, I saw
his face lengthen and doubt take the place of the quiet
assurance with which he had received my various intimations
up to this time. The cane was laid aside, and
from the action of his right forefinger on the palm
of his left hand I judged that I was making no small
impression on his mind. When I had finished, he
sat for a minute silent; then he said:
“Thanks, Miss Butterworth; you
have more than fulfilled my hopes. What we buried
was undoubtedly human, and the question now is, Who
was it, and of what death did he die?” Then,
after a meaning pause: “You think
it was Silly Rufus.”
I will astonish you with my reply.
“No,” said I, “I do not. That
is where you make a mistake, Mr. Gryce.”
CHAPTER IV - A POINT GAINED
He was surprised, for all his attempts to conceal
it.
“No?” said he. “Who,
then? You are becoming interesting, Miss Butterworth.”
This I thought I could afford to ignore.
“Yesterday,” I proceeded,
“I would have declared it to be Silly Rufus,
in the face of God and man, but after what I saw in
William’s room during the hurried survey I gave
it, I am inclined to doubt if the explanation we have
to give to this affair is so simple as that would
make it. Mr. Gryce, in one corner of that room,
from which the victim had so lately been carried,
was a pair of shoes that could never have been worn
by any boy-tramp I have ever seen or known of.”
“They were Loreen’s, or possibly Lucetta’s.”
“No, Loreen and Lucetta both
have trim feet, but these were the shoes of a child
of ten, very dainty at that, and of a cut and make
worn by women, or rather, I should say, by girls.
Now, what do you make of that?”
He did not seem to know what to make
of it. Tap, tap went his finger on his seasoned
palm, and as I watched the slowness with which it fell,
I said to myself, “I have proposed a problem
this time that will tax even Mr. Gryce’s powers
of deduction.”
And I had. It was minutes before
he ventured an opinion, and then it was with a shade
of doubt in his tone that I acknowledge to have felt
some pride in producing.
“They were Lucetta’s shoes.
The emotions under which you labored very
pardonable emotions, madam, considering the circumstances
and the hour ”
“Excuse me,” said I.
“We do not want to waste a moment. I was
excited, suitably and duly excited, or I would have
been a stone. But I never lose my head under
excitement, nor do I part with my sense of proportion.
The shoes were not Lucetta’s. She never
wore any approaching them in smallness since her tenth
year.”
“Has Simsbury a daughter?
Has there not been a child about the house some time
to assist the cook in errands and so on?”
“No, or I should have seen her.
Besides, how would the shoes of such a person come
into William’s room?”
“Easily. Secrecy was required.
You were not to be disturbed; so shoes were taken
off that quiet might result.”
“Was Lucetta shoeless or William
or even Mother Jane? You have not told me that
you were requested to walk in stocking feet up the
hall. No, Mr. Gryce, the shoes were the shoes
of a girl. I know it because it was matched by
a dress I saw hanging up in a sort of wardrobe.”
“Ah! You looked into the wardrobe?”
“I did and felt justified in
doing so. It was after I had spied the shoes.”
“Very good. And you saw a dress?”
“A little dress; a dress with
a short skirt. It was of silk too; another anomaly and
the color, I think, was blue, but I cannot swear to
that point. I was in great haste and took the
briefest glance. But my brief glances can be
trusted, Mr. Gryce. That, I think, you are beginning
to know.”
“Certainly,” said he,
“and as proof of it we will now act upon these
two premises that the victim in whose burial
I was an innocent partaker was a human being and that
this human being was a girl-child who came into the
house well dressed. Now where does that lead us?
Into a maze, I fear.”
“We are accustomed to mazes,” I observed.
“Yes,” he answered somewhat
gloomily, “but they are not exactly desirable
in this case. I want to find the Knollys family
innocent.”
“And I. But William’s
character, I fear, will make that impossible.”
“But this girl? Who is
she, and where did she come from? No girl has
been reported to us as missing from this neighborhood.”
“I supposed not.”
“A visitor But no
visitor could enter this house without it being known
far and wide. Why, I heard of your arrival here
before I left the train on which I followed you.
Had we allowed ourselves to be influenced by what
the people about here say, we would have turned the
Knollys house inside out a week ago. But I don’t
believe in putting too much confidence in the prejudice
of country people. The idea they suggested, and
which you suggest without putting it too clearly into
words, is much too horrible to be acted upon without
the best of reasons. Perhaps we have found those
reasons, yet I still feel like asking, Where did this
girl come from and how could she have become a prisoner
in the Knollys house without the knowledge of Madam,
have you met Mr. Trohm?”
The question was so sudden I had not
time to collect myself. But perhaps it was not
necessary that I should, for the simple affirmation
I used seemed to satisfy Mr. Gryce, who went on to
say:
“It is he who first summoned
us here, and it is he who has the greatest interest
in locating the source of these disappearances, yet
he has seen no child come here.”
“Mr. Trohm is not a spy,”
said I, but the remark, happily, fell unheeded.
“No one has,” he pursued.
“We must give another turn to our suppositions.”
Suddenly a silence fell upon us both.
His finger ceased to lay down the law, and my gaze,
which had been searching his face inquiringly, became
fixed. At the same moment and in much the same
tone of voice we both spoke, he saying, “Humph!”
and I, “Ah!” as a prelude to the simultaneous
exclamation:
“The phantom coach!”
We were so pleased with this discovery
that we allowed a moment to pass in silent contemplation
of each other’s satisfaction. Then he quietly
added:
“Which on the evening preceding
your arrival came from the mountains and passed into
Lost Man’s Lane, from which no one ever saw it
emerge.”
“It was no phantom,” I put in.
“It was their own old coach bringing to the
house a fresh victim.”
This sounded so startling we both
sat still for a moment, lost in the horror of it,
then I spoke:
“People living in remote and
isolated quarters like this are naturally superstitious.
The Knollys family know this, and, remembering the
old legend, forbore to contradict the conclusions
of their neighbors. Loreen’s emotion when
the topic was broached to her is explained by this
theory.”
“It is not a pleasant one, but
we cannot be wrong in contemplating it.”
“Not at all. This apparition,
as they call it, was seen by two persons; therefore
it was no apparition but a real coach. It came
from the mountains, that is, from the Mountain Station,
and it glided ah!”
“Well?”
“Mr. Gryce, it was its noiselessness
that gave it its spectral appearance. Now I remember
a petty circumstance which I dare you to match, in
corroboration of our suspicions.”
“You do?”
I could not repress a slight toss of my head.
“Yes, I do,” I repeated.
He smiled and made the slightest of deprecatory gestures.
“You have had advantages ”
he began.
“And disadvantages,” I
finished, determined that he should award me my full
meed of praise. “You are probably not afraid
of dogs. I am. You could visit the stables.”
“And did; but I found nothing there.”
“I thought not!” I could
not help the exclamation. It is so seldom one
can really triumph over this man. “Not having
the cue, you would not be apt to see what gives this
whole thing away. I would never have thought
of it again if we had not had this talk. Is Mr.
Simsbury a neat man?”
“A neat man? Madam, what do you mean?”
“Something important, Mr. Gryce.
If Mr. Simsbury is a neat man, he will have thrown
away the old rags which, I dare promise you, cumbered
his stable floor the morning after the phantom coach
was seen to enter the lane. If he is not, you
may still find them there. One of them, I know,
you will not find. He pulled it off of his wheel
with his whip the afternoon he drove me down from
the station. I can see the sly look he gave me
as he did it. It made no impression on me then,
but now ”
“Madam, you have supplied the
one link necessary to the establishment of this theory.
Allow me to felicitate you upon it. But whatever
our satisfaction may be from a professional standpoint,
we cannot but feel the unhappy nature of the responsibility
incurred by these discoveries. If this seemingly
respectable family stooped to such subterfuge, going
to the length of winding rags around the wheels of
their lumbering old coach to make it noiseless, and
even tying up their horse’s feet for this same
purpose, they must have had a motive dark enough to
warrant your worst suspicions. And William was
not the only one involved. Simsbury, at least,
had a hand in it, nor does it look as if the girls
were as innocent as we would like to consider them.”
“I cannot stop to consider the
girls,” I declared. “I can no longer
consider the girls.”
“Nor I,” he gloomily assented.
“Our duty requires us to sift this matter, and
it shall be sifted. We must first find if any
child alighted from the cars at the Mountain Station
on that especial night, or, what is more probable,
from the little station at C., five miles farther back
in the mountains.”
“And ” I urged,
seeing that he had still something to say.
“We must make sure who lies
buried under the floor of the room you call the Flower
Parlor. You may expect me at the Knollys house
some time to-day. I shall come quietly, but in
my own proper person. You are not to know me,
and, unless you desire it, need not appear in the matter.”
“I do not desire it.”
“Then good-morning, Miss Butterworth.
My respect for your abilities has risen even higher
than before. We part in a similar frame of mind
for once.”
And this he expected me to regard as a compliment.
CHAPTER V - THE TEXT WITNESSETH
I have a grim will when I choose to
exert it. After Mr. Gryce left the hotel, I took
a cup of tea with the landlady and then made a round
of the stores. I bought dimity, sewing silk,
and what not, as I said I would, but this did not
occupy me long (to the regret probably of the country
merchants, who expected to make a fool of me and found
it a by no means easy task), and was quite ready for
William when he finally drove up.
The ride home was a more or less silent
one. I had conceived such a horror of the man
beside me, that talking for talk’s sake was
impossible, while he was in a mood which it would be
charity to call non-communicative. It may be
that my own reticence was at the bottom of this, but
I rather think not. The remark he made in passing
Deacon Spear’s house showed that something more
than spite was working in his slow but vindictive
brain.
“There’s a man of your
own sort,” he cried. “You won’t
find him doing anything out of the way; oh, no.
Pity your visit wasn’t paid there. You’d
have got a better impression of the lane.”
To this I made no reply.
At Mr. Trohm’s he spoke again:
“I suppose that you and Trohm
had the devil of a say about Lucetta and the rest
of us. I don’t know why, but the whole neighborhood
seems to feel they’ve a right to use our name
as they choose. But it isn’t going to be
so, long. We have played poor and pinched and
starved all I’m going to. I’m going
to have a new horse, and Lucetta shall have a dress,
and that mighty quick too. I’m tired of
all this shabbiness, and mean to have a change.”
I wanted to say, “No change
yet; change under the present circumstances would
be the worst thing possible for you all,” but
I felt that this would be treason to Mr. Gryce, and
refrained, saying simply, as he looked sideways at
me for a word:
“Lucetta needs a new dress.
That no one can deny. But you had better let
me get it for her, or perhaps that is what you mean.”
The grunt which was my only answer
might be interpreted in any way. I took it, however,
for assent.
As soon as I was relieved of his presence
and found myself again with the girls, I altered my
whole manner and cried out in querulous tones:
“Mrs. Carter and I have had
a difference.” (This was true. We did have
a difference over our cup of tea. I did not think
it necessary to say this difference was a forced one.
Some things we are perfectly justified in keeping
to ourselves.) “She remembers a certain verse
in the New Testament one way and I in another.
We had not time to settle it by a consultation with
the sacred word, but I cannot rest till it is settled,
so will you bring your Bible to me, my dear, that I
may look that verse up?”
We were in the upper hall, where I
had taken a seat on the old-fashioned sofa there.
Lucetta, who was standing before me, started immediately
to do my bidding, without stopping to think, poor
child, that it was very strange I did not go to my
own room and consult my own Bible as any good Presbyterian
would be expected to do. As she was turning toward
the large front room I stopped her with the quiet
injunction:
“Get me one with good print,
Lucetta. My eyes won’t bear much straining.”
At which she turned and to my great
relief hurried down the corridor toward William’s
room, from which she presently returned, bringing the
very volume I was anxious to consult.
Meanwhile I had laid aside my hat.
I felt flurried and unhappy, and showed it. Lucetta’s
pitiful face had a strange sweetness in it this morning,
and I felt sure as I took the sacred book from her
hand that her thoughts were all with the lover she
had sent from her side and not at all with me or with
what at the moment occupied me. Yet my thoughts
at this moment involved, without doubt, the very deepest
interests of her life, if not that very lover she
was brooding over in her darkened and resigned mind.
As I realized this I heaved an involuntary sigh, which
seemed to startle her, for she turned and gave me a
quick look as she was slipping away to join her sister,
who was busy at the other end of the hall.
The Bible I held was an old one, of
medium size and most excellent print. I had no
difficulty in finding the text and settling the question
which had been my ostensible reason for wanting the
book, but it took me longer to discover the indentation
which I had made in one of its pages; but when I did,
you may imagine my awe and the turmoil into which my
mind was cast, when I found that it marked those great
verses in Corinthians which are so universally read
at funerals:
“Behold I shew you a mystery.
We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed.”
“In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye ”
CHAPTER VI - AN INTRUSION
I was so moved by this discovery that
I was not myself for several moments.
The reading of these words over the
body which had been laid away under the Flower Parlor
was in keeping with the knot of crape on the window-shutter
and argued something more than remorse on the part
of some one of the Knollys family. Who was this
one, and why, with such feelings in the breast of
any of the three, had the deceit and crime to which
I had been witness succeeded to such a point as to
demand the attention of the police? An impossible
problem of which I dared seek no solution, even in
the faces of these seemingly innocent girls.
I was, of course, in no position to
determine what plan Mr. Gryce intended to pursue.
I only knew what course I myself meant to follow,
which was to remain quiet and sustain the part I had
already played in this house as visitor and friend.
It was therefore as such both in heart and manner
that I hastened from my room late in the afternoon
to inquire the meaning of the cry I had just heard
issue from Lucetta’s lips. It had come
from the front of the house, and, as I hastened thither,
I met the two Misses Knollys, looking more openly
anxious and distraught than at any former time of
anxiety and trouble.
As they looked up and saw my face,
Loreen paused and laid her hand on Lucetta’s
arm. But Lucetta was not to be restrained.
“He has dared to enter our gates,
bringing a police officer with him,” was her
hoarse and almost unintelligible cry. “We
know that the man with him is a police officer because
he was here once before, and though he was kind enough
then, he cannot have come the second time except to ”
Here the pressure of Loreen’s
hand was so strong as to make the feeble Lucetta quiver.
She stopped, and Miss Knollys took up her words:
“Except to make us talk on subjects
much better buried in oblivion. Miss Butterworth,
will you go down with us? Your presence may act
as a restraint. Mr. Trohm seems to have some
respect for you.”
“Mr. Trohm?”
“Yes. It is his coming
which has so agitated Lucetta. He and a man named
Gryce are just coming up the walk. There goes
the knocker. Lucetta, you must control yourself
or leave me to face these unwelcome visitors alone.”
Lucetta, with a sudden fierce effort,
subdued her trembling.
“If he must be met,” said
she, “my anger and disdain may give some weight
to your quiet acceptance of the family’s disgrace.
I shall not accept his denunciations quietly, Loreen.
You must expect me to show some of the feelings that
I have held in check all these years.” And
without waiting for reply, without waiting even to
see what effect these strange words might have upon
me, she dashed down the stairs and pulled open the
front door.
We had followed rapidly, too rapidly
for speech ourselves, and were therefore in the hall
when the door swung back, revealing the two persons
I had been led to expect. Mr. Trohm spoke first,
evidently in answer to the defiance to be seen in
Lucetta’s face.
“Miss Knollys, a thousand pardons.
I know I am transgressing, but, I assure you, the
occasion warrants it. I am certain you will acknowledge
this when you hear what my errand is.”
“Your errand? What can your errand be but
to ”
Why did she pause? Mr. Gryce
had not looked at her. Yet that it was under
his influence she ceased to commit herself I am as
convinced as we can be of anything in a world which
is half deceit.
“Let us hear your errand,”
put in Loreen, with that gentle emphasis which is
no sign of weakness.
“I will let this gentleman speak
for me,” returned Mr. Trohm. “You
have seen him before a New York detective
of whose business in this town you cannot be ignorant.”
Lucetta turned a cold eye upon Mr.
Gryce and quietly remarked:
“When he visited this lane a
few days ago, he professed to be seeking a clue to
the many disappearances which have unfortunately taken
place within its precincts.”
Mr. Trohm’s nod was one of acquiescence.
But Lucetta was still looking at the detective.
“Is that your business now?”
she asked, appealing directly to Mr. Gryce.
His fatherly accents when he answered
her were a great relief after the alternate iciness
and fire with which she had addressed his companion
and himself.
“I hardly know how to reply
without arousing your just anger. If your brother
is in ”
“My brother would face you with
less patience than we. Tell us your errand, Mr.
Gryce, and do not think of calling in my brother till
we have failed to answer your questions or satisfy
your demands.”
“Very well,” said he.
“The quickest explanation is the kindest in these
cases. I merely wish, as a police officer whose
business it is to locate the disappearances which
have made this lane notorious, and who believes the
surest way to do this is to find out once and for all
where they did not and could not have taken place,
to make an official search of these premises as I
already have those of Mother Jane and of Deacon Spear.”
“And my errand here,”
interposed Mr. Trohm, “is to make everything
easier by the assurance that my house will be the
next to undergo a complete investigation. As
all the houses in the lane will be visited alike, none
of us need complain or feel our good name attacked.”
This was certainly thoughtful of him,
but knowing how much they had to fear, I could not
expect Loreen or Lucetta to show any great sense either
of his kindness or Mr. Gryce’s consideration.
They were in no position to have a search made of
their premises, and, serene as was Loreen’s
nature and powerful as was Lucetta’s will, the
apprehension under which they labored was evident
to us all, though neither of them attempted either
subterfuge or evasion.
“If the police wish to search
this house, it is open to them,” said Loreen.
“But not to Mr. Trohm,”
quoth Lucetta, quickly. “Our poverty should
be our protection from the curiosity of neighbors.”
“Mr. Trohm has no wish to intrude,”
was Mr. Gryce’s conciliatory remark; but Mr.
Trohm said nothing. He probably understood why
Lucetta wished to curtail his stay in this house better
than Mr. Gryce did.
CHAPTER VII - IN THE CELLAR
I had meanwhile stood silent.
There was no reason for me to obtrude myself, and
I was happy not to do so. This does not mean,
however, that my presence was not noticed. Mr.
Trohm honored me with more than one glance during
these trying moments, in which I read the anxiety he
felt lest my peace of mind should be too much disturbed,
and when, in response to the undoubted dismissal he
had received from Lucetta, he prepared to take his
leave, it was upon me he bestowed his final look and
most deferential bow. It was a tribute to my position
and character which all seemed to feel, and I was
not at all surprised when Lucetta, after carefully
watching his departure, turned to me with childlike
impetuosity, saying:
“This must be very unpleasant
for you, Miss Butterworth, yet must we ask you to
stand our friend. God knows we need one.”
“I shall never forget I occupied
that position toward your mother,” was my straightforward
reply, and I did not forget it, not for a moment.
“I shall begin with the cellar,” Mr. Gryce
announced.
Both girls quivered. Then Loreen lifted her proud
head and said quietly:
“The whole house is at your
disposal. Only I pray you to be as expeditious
as possible. My sister is not well, and the sooner
our humiliation is over, the better it will be for
her.”
And, indeed, Lucetta was in a state
that aroused even Mr. Gryce’s anxiety.
But when she saw us all hovering over her she roused
herself with an extraordinary effort, and, waving
us aside, led the way to the kitchen, from which,
as I gathered, the only direct access could be had
to the cellar. Mr. Gryce immediately followed,
and behind him came Loreen and myself, both too much
agitated to speak. At the Flower Parlor Mr. Gryce
paused as if he had forgotten something, but Lucetta
urged him feverishly on, and before long we were all
standing in the kitchen. Here a surprise awaited
us. Two men were sitting there who appeared to
be strangers to Hannah, from the lowering looks she
cast them as she pretended to be busy over her stove.
This was so out of keeping with her usual good humor
as to attract the attention even of her young mistress.
“What is the matter, Hannah?”
asked Lucetta. “And who are these men?”
“They are my men,” said
Mr. Gryce. “The job I have undertaken cannot
be carried on alone.”
The quick look the two sisters interchanged
did not escape me, or the quiet air of resignation
which was settling slowly over Loreen.
“Must they go into the cellar too?” she
asked.
Mr. Gryce smiled his most fatherly smile as he said:
“My dear young ladies, these
men are interested in but one thing; they are searching
for a clue to the disappearances that have occurred
in this lane. As they will not find this in your
cellar, nothing else that they may see there will
remain in their minds for a moment.”
Lucetta said no more. Even her
indomitable spirit was giving way before the inevitable
discovery that threatened them.
“Do not let William know,”
were the low words with which she passed Hannah; but
from the short glimpse I caught of William’s
burly figure standing in the stable door, under the
guardianship of two detectives, I felt this injunction
to be quite superfluous. William evidently did
know.
I was not going to descend the cellar
stairs, but the girls made me.
“We want you with us,”
Loreen declared in no ordinary tones, while Lucetta
paused and would not go on till I followed. This
surprised me. I no longer seemed to have any
clue to their motives; but I was glad to be one of
the party.
Hannah, under Loreen’s orders,
had furnished one of the men with a lighted lantern,
and upon our descent into the dark labyrinth below,
it became his duty to lead the way, which he did with
due circumspection. What all this underground
space into which we were thus introduced had ever
been used for, it would be difficult to tell.
At present it was mostly empty. After passing
a small collection of stores, a wine-cellar, the very
door of which was unhinged and lay across the cellar
bottom, we struck into a hollow void, in which there
was nothing worth an instant’s investigation
save the earth under our feet.
This the two foremost detectives examined
very carefully, detaining us often longer, I thought,
than Mr. Gryce desired or Lucetta had patience for.
But nothing was said in protest nor did the older detective
give an order or manifest any special interest in
the investigation till he saw the men in front stoop
and throw out of the way a coil of rope, when he immediately
hurried forward and called upon the party to stop.
The girls, who were on either side
of me, crossed glances at this command, and Lucetta,
who had been tottering for the last few minutes, fell
upon her knees and hid her face in the hollow of her
two hands. Loreen came around and stood by her,
and I do not know which of them presented the most
striking picture of despair, the shrinking Lucetta
or Loreen with her quivering form uplifted to meet
the shafts of fate without a droop of her eyelids
or a murmur from her lips. The light of the one
lantern which, intentionally or unintentionally, was
concentrated on this pathetic group, made it stand
out from the midst of the surrounding darkness in
a way to draw the gaze of Mr. Gryce upon them.
He looked, and his own brow became overcast. Evidently
we were not far from the cause of their fears.
Ordering the candle lifted, he surveyed
the ceiling above, at which Loreen’s lips opened
slightly in secret dread and amazement. Then he
commanded the men to move on slowly, while he himself
looked overhead rather than underneath, which seemed
to astonish his associates, who evidently had heard
nothing of the hole which had been cut in the floor
of the Flower Parlor.
Suddenly I heard a slight gasp from
Lucetta, who had not moved forward with the rest of
us. Then her rushing figure flew by us and took
up its stand by Mr. Gryce, who had himself paused
and was pointing with an imperious forefinger to the
ground under his feet.
“You will dig here,” said
he, not heeding her, though I am sure he was as well
acquainted with her proximity as we.
“Dig?” repeated Loreen,
in what we all saw was a final effort to stave off
disgrace and misery.
“My duty demands it,”
said he. “Some one else has been digging
here within a very few days, Miss Knollys. That
is as evident as is the fact that a communication
has been made with this place through an opening into
the room above. See!” And taking the lantern
from the man at his side, he held it up toward the
ceiling.
There was no hole there now, but there
were ample evidences of there having been one, and
that within a very short time. Loreen made no
further attempt to stay him.
“The house is at your disposal,”
she reiterated, but I do not think she knew what she
said. The man with the bundle in his arms was
already unrolling it on the cellar bottom. A
spade came to light, together with some other tools.
Lifting the spade, he thrust it smartly into the ground
toward which Mr. Gryce’s inexorable finger still
pointed. At the sight and the sound it made,
a thrill passed through Lucetta which made her another
creature. Dashing forward, she flung herself down
upon the spot with lifted head and outstretched arms.
“Stop your desecrating hand!”
she cried. “This is a grave the
grave, sirs, of our mother!”
CHAPTER VIII - INVESTIGATION
The shock of these words if
false, most horrible; if true, still more horrible threw
us all aback and made even Mr. Gryce’s features
assume an aspect quite uncommon to them.
“Your mother’s grave?”
said he, looking from her to Loreen with very evident
doubt. “I thought your mother died seven
or more years ago, and this grave has been dug within
three days.”
“I know,” she whispered.
“To the world my mother has been dead many,
many years, but not to us. We closed her eyes
night before last, and it was to preserve this secret,
which involves others affecting our family honor,
that we resorted to expedients which have perhaps attracted
the notice of the police and drawn this humiliation
down upon us. I can conceive no other reason
for this visit, ushered in as it was by Mr. Trohm.”
“Miss Lucetta” Mr.
Gryce spoke quickly; if he had not I certainly could
not have restrained some expression of the emotions
awakened in my own breast by this astounding revelation “Miss
Lucetta, it is not necessary to bring Mr. Trohm’s
name into this matter or that of any other person
than myself. I saw the coffin lowered here, which
you say contained the body of your mother. Thinking
this a strange place of burial and not knowing it
was your mother to whom you were paying these last
dutiful rites, I took advantage of my position as
detective to satisfy myself that nothing wrong lay
behind so mysterious a death and burial. Can you
blame me, Miss? Would I have been a man to trust
if I had let such an event as this go by unchallenged?”
She did not answer. She had heard
but one sentence of all this long speech.
“You saw my mother’s coffin
lowered? Where were you that you should see that?
In some of these dark passages, let in by I know not
what traitor to our peace of mind.” And
her eyes, which seemed to have grown almost supernaturally
large and bright under her emotions, turned slowly
in their sockets till they rested with something like
doubtful accusation upon mine. But not to remain
there, for Mr. Gryce recalled them almost instantly
by this short, sharp negative.
“No, I was nearer than that.
I lent my strength to this burial. If you had
thought to look under Mother Jane’s hood, you
would have seen what would have forced these explanations
then and there.”
“And you ”
“I was Mother Jane for the nonce.
Not from choice, Miss, but from necessity. I
was impersonating the old woman when your brother came
to the cottage. I could not give away my plans
by refusing the task your brother offered me.”
“It is well.” Lucetta
had risen and was now standing by the side of Loreen.
“Such a secret as ours defies concealment.
Even Providence takes part against us. What you
want to know we must tell, but I assure you it has
nothing to do with the business you profess to be chiefly
interested in nothing at all.”
“Then perhaps you and your sister
will retire,” said he. “Distracted
as you are by family griefs, I would not wish to add
one iota to your distress. This lady, whom you
seem to regard with more or less favor as friend or
relative, will stay to see that no dishonor is paid
to your mother’s remains. But your mother’s
face we must see, Miss Lucetta, if only to lighten
the explanations you will doubtless feel called upon
to make.”
It was Loreen who answered this.
“If it must be,” said
she, “remember your own mother and deal reverently
with ours.” Which entreaty and the way it
was uttered, gave me my first distinct conviction
that these girls were speaking the truth, and that
the diminutive body we had come to unearth was that
of Althea Knollys, whose fairy-like form I had so
long supposed commingled with foreign soil.
The thought was almost too much for
my self-possession, and I advanced upon Loreen with
a dozen burning questions on my lips when the voice
of Mr. Gryce stopped me.
“Explanations later,”
said he. “For the present we want you here.”
It was no easy task for me to linger
there with all my doubts unsolved, waiting for the
decisive moment when Mr. Gryce should say: “Come!
Look! Is it she?” But the will that had
already sustained me through so many trying experiences
did not fail me now, and, grievous as was the ordeal,
I passed steadily through it, being able to say, though
not without some emotion, I own: “It is
Althea Knollys! Changed almost beyond conception,
but still these girls’ mother!” which was
a happier end to this adventure than that we had first
feared, mysterious as the event was, not only to myself,
but, as I could see, to the acute detective as well.
The girls had withdrawn long before
this, just as Mr. Gryce had desired, and I now expected
to be allowed to join them, but Mr. Gryce detained
me till the grave was refilled and made decent again,
when he turned and to my intense astonishment for
I had thought the matter was all over and the exoneration
of this household complete said softly and
with telling emphasis in my ear:
“Our work is not done yet.
They who make graves so readily in cellars must have
been more or less accustomed to the work. We have
still some digging to do.”
CHAPTER IX - STRATEGY
I was overwhelmed.
“What,” said I, “you still doubt?”
“I always doubt,” he gravely
replied. “This cellar bottom offers a wide
field for speculation. Too wide, perhaps, but,
then, I have a plan.”
Here he leaned over and whispered
a few concise sentences into my ear in a tone so low
I should feel that I was betraying his confidence in
repeating them. But their import will soon become
apparent from what presently occurred.
“Light Miss Butterworth to the
stairway,” Mr. Gryce now commanded one of the
men, and thus accompanied I found my way back to the
kitchen, where Hannah was bemoaning uncomforted the
shame which had come upon the house.
I did not stop to soothe her.
That was not my cue, nor would it have answered my
purpose. On the contrary, I broke into angry ejaculations
as I passed her:
“What a shame! Those wretches
cannot be got away from the cellar. What do you
suppose they expect to find there? I left them
poking hither and thither in a way that will be very
irritating to Miss Knollys when she finds it out.
I wonder William stands it.”
What she said in reply I do not know.
I was half way down the hall before my own words were
finished.
My next move was to go to my room
and take from my trunk a tiny hammer and some very
small, sharp-pointed tacks. Curious articles,
you will think, for a woman to carry on her travels,
but I am a woman of experience, and have known only
too often what it was to want these petty conveniences
and not be able to get them. They were to serve
me an odd turn now. Taking a half-dozen tacks
in one hand and concealing the hammer in my bag, I
started boldly for William’s room. I knew
that the girls were not there, for I had heard them
talking together in the sitting-room as I came up.
Besides, if they were, I had a ready answer for any
demand they might make.
Searching out his boots, I turned
them over, and into the sole of each I drove one of
my small tacks. Then I put them back in the same
place and position in which I found them. Task
number one was accomplished.
When I issued from the room, I went
as quickly as I could below. I was now ready
for a talk with the girls, whom I found as I had anticipated,
talking and weeping together in the sitting-room.
They rose as I came in, awaiting my
first words in evident anxiety. They had not
heard me go up-stairs. I immediately allowed my
anxiety and profound interest in this matter to have
full play.
“My poor girls! What is
the meaning of this? Your mother just dead, and
the matter kept from me, her friend! It is astounding incomprehensible!
I do not know what to make of it or of you.”
“It has a strange look,”
Loreen gravely admitted; “but we had reasons
for this deception, Miss Butterworth. Our mother,
charming and sweet as you remember her, has not always
done right, or, what you will better understand, she
committed a criminal act against a person in this town,
the penalty of which is state’s prison.”
With difficulty the words came out.
With difficulty she kept down the flush of shame which
threatened to overwhelm her and did overwhelm her
more sensitive sister. But her self-control was
great, and she went bravely on, while I, in faint
imitation of her courage, restrained my own surprise
and intolerable sense of shock and bitter sorrow under
a guise of simple sympathy.
“It was forgery,” she
explained. “This has never before passed
our lips. Though a cherished wife and a beloved
mother, she longed for many things my father could
not give her, and in an evil hour she imitated the
name of a rich man here and took the check thus signed
to New York. The fraud was not detected, and
she received the money, but ultimately the rich man
whose money she had spent, discovered the use she had
made of his name, and, if she had not escaped, would
have had her arrested. But she left the country,
and the only revenge he took, was to swear that if
she ever set foot again in X., he would call the police
down upon her. Yes, if she were dying, and they
had to drag her from the brink of the grave.
And he would have done it; and knowing this, we have
lived under the shadow of this fear for eleven years.
My father died under it, and my mother ah,
she spent all the remaining years of her life under
foreign skies, but when she felt the hand of death
upon her, her affection for her own flesh and blood
triumphed over her discretion, and she came, secretly,
I own, but still with that horror menacing her, to
these doors, and begging our forgiveness, lay down
under the roof where we were born, and died with the
halo of our love about her.”
“Ah,” said I, thinking
of all that had happened since I had come into this
house and finding nothing but confirmation of what
she was saying, “I begin to understand.”
But Lucetta shook her head.
“No,” said she, “you
cannot understand yet. We who had worn mourning
for her because my father wished to make this very
return impossible, knew nothing of what was in store
for us till a letter came saying she would be at the
C. station on the very night we received it. To
acknowledge our deception, to seek and bring her home
openly to this house, could not be thought of for
a moment. How, then, could we satisfy her dying
wishes without compromising her memory and ourselves?
Perhaps you have guessed, Miss Butterworth. You
have had time since we revealed the unhappy secret
of this household.”
“Yes,” said I. “I have guessed.”
Lucetta, with her hand laid on mine, looked wistfully
into my face.
“Don’t blame us!”
she cried. “Our mother’s good name
is everything to us, and we knew no other way to preserve
it than by making use of the one superstition of this
place. Alas! our efforts were in vain. The
phantom coach brought our mother safely to us, but
the circumstances which led to our doors being opened
to outsiders, rendered it impossible for us to carry
out our plans unsuspected. Her grave has been
discovered and desecrated, and we ”
She stopped, choked. Loreen took
advantage of her silence to pursue the explanations
she seemed to think necessary.
“It was Simsbury who undertook
to bring our dying mother from C. station to our door.
He has a crafty spirit under his meek ways, and dressed
himself in a way to lend color to the superstition
he hoped to awaken. William, who did not dare
to accompany him for fear of arousing gossip, was
at the gate when the coach drove in. It was he
who lifted our mother out, and it was while she still
clung to him with her face pressed close to his breast
that we saw her first. Ah! what a pitiable sight
it was! She was so wan, so feeble, and yet so
radiantly happy.
“She looked up at Lucetta, and
her face grew wonderful in its unearthly beauty.
She was not the mother we remembered, but a mother
whose life had culminated in the one desire to see
and clasp her children again. When she could
tear her eyes away from Lucetta, she looked at me,
and then the tears came, and we all wept together,
even William; and thus weeping and murmuring words
of welcome and cheer, we carried her up-stairs and
laid her in the great front chamber. Alas! we
did not foresee what would happen the very next morning I
mean the arrival of your telegram, to be followed
so soon by yourself.”
“Poor girls! Poor girls!”
It was all I could say. I was completely overwhelmed.
“The first night after your
arrival we moved her into William’s room as
being more remote and thus a safer refuge for her.
The next night she died. The dream which you
had of being locked in your room was no dream.
Lucetta did that in foolish precaution against your
trying to search us out in the night. It would
have been better if we had taken you into our confidence.”
“Yes,” I assented, “that
would have been better.” But I did not say
how much better. That would have been giving
away my secret.
Lucetta had now recovered sufficiently
to go on with the story.
“William, who is naturally colder
than we and less sensitive in regard to our mother’s
good name, has shown some little impatience at the
restraint imposed upon him by her presence, and this
was an extra burden, Miss Butterworth, but that and
all the others we have been forced to bear”
(the generous girl did not speak of her own special
grief and loss) “have all been rendered useless
by the unhappy chance which has brought into our midst
this agent of the police. Ah, if I only knew
whether this was the providence of God rebuking us
for years of deception, or just the malice of man
seeking to rob us of our one best treasure, a mother’s
untarnished name!”
“Mr. Gryce acts from no malice ”
I began, but I saw they were not listening.
“Have they finished down below?” asked
Lucetta.
“Does the man you call Gryce seem satisfied?”
asked Loreen.
I drew myself up physically and mentally.
My second task was about to begin.
“I do not understand those men,”
said I. “They seem to want to look farther
than the sacred spot where we left them. If they
are going through a form, they are doing it very thoroughly.”
“That is their duty,”
observed Loreen, but Lucetta took it less calmly.
“It is an unhappy day for us!”
cried she. “Shame after shame, disgrace
upon disgrace! I wish we had all died in our childhood.
Loreen, I must see William. He will be doing
some foolish thing, swearing or ”
“My dear, let me go to William,”
I urgently put in. “He may not like me
overmuch, but I will at least prove a restraint to
him. You are too feeble. See, you ought
to be lying on the couch instead of trying to drag
yourself out to the stables.”
And indeed at that moment Lucetta’s
strength gave suddenly out, and she sank into Loreen’s
arms insensible.
When she was restored, I hurried away
to the stables, still in pursuit of the task which
I had not yet completed. I found William sitting
doggedly on a stool in the open doorway, grunting out
short sentences to the two men who lounged in his
vicinity on either side. He was angry, but not
as angry as I had seen him many times before.
The men were townsfolk and listened eagerly to his
broken sentences. One or two of these reached
my ears.
“Let ’em go it. It
won’t be now or to-day they’ll settle this
business. It’s the devil’s work,
and devils are sly. My house won’t give
up that secret, or any other house they’ll be
likely to visit. The place I would ransack But
Loreen would say I was babbling. Goodness knows
a fellow’s got to talk about something when
his fellow-townsfolk come to see him.”
And here his laugh broke in, harsh, cruel, and insulting.
I felt it did him no good, and made haste to show
myself.
Immediately his whole appearance changed.
He was so astonished to see me there that for a moment
he was absolutely silent; then he broke out again
into another loud guffaw, but this time in a different
tone.
“Why, it’s Miss Butterworth,”
he laughed. “Here, Saracen! Come, pay
your respects to the lady who likes you so well.”
And Saracen came, but I did not forsake
my ground. I had espied in one corner just what
I had hoped to see there, and Saracen’s presence
afforded me the opportunity of indulging in one or
two rather curious antics.
“I am not afraid of the dog,”
I declared, with marked loftiness, shrinking toward
the pail of water I had already marked with my eye.
“Not at all afraid,” I continued, catching
up the pail and putting it before me as the dog made
a wild rush in my direction. “These gentlemen
will not see me hurt.” And though they all
laughed they would have been fools if they
had not and the dog jumped the pail and
I jumped not a pail, but a broom-handle
that was lying amid all the rest of the disorder on
the floor they did not see that I had succeeded
in doing what I wished, which was to place that pail
so near to William’s feet that But
wait a moment; everything in its own time. I escaped
the dog, and next moment had my eye on him. He
did not move after that, which rather put a stop to
the laughter, which observing, I drew very near to
William, and with a sly gesture to the two men, which
for some reason they seemed to understand, whispered
in the rude fellow’s ear:
“They’ve found your mother’s
grave under the Flower Parlor. Your sisters told
me to tell you. But that is not all. They’re
trampling hither and yon through all the secret places
in the cellar, turning up the earth with their spades.
I know they won’t find anything, but we thought
you ought to know ”
Here I made a feint of being startled,
and ceased. My second task was done. The
third only remained. Fortunately at that moment
Mr. Gryce and his followers showed themselves in the
garden. They had just come from the cellar and
played their part in the same spirit I had mine.
Though they were too far off for their words to be
heard, the air of secrecy they maintained and the
dubious looks they cast towards the stable, could
not but evince even to William’s dull understanding
that their investigations had resulted in a doubt
which left them far from satisfied; but, once this
impression made, they did not linger long together.
The man with the lantern moved off, and Mr. Gryce turned
towards us, changing his whole appearance as he advanced,
till no one could look more cheerful and good-humored.
“Well, that is over,”
he sighed, with a forced air of infinite relief.
“Mere form, Mr. Knollys mere form.
We have to go through these pretended investigations
at times, and good people like yourself have to submit;
but I assure you it is not pleasant, and under the
present circumstances I am sure you understand
me, Mr. Knollys the task has occasioned
me a feeling almost of remorse; but that is inseparable
from a detective’s life. He is obliged
every day of his life to ride over the tenderest emotions.
Forgive me! And now, boys, scatter till I call
you together again. I hope our next search will
be without such sorrowful accompaniments.”
It succeeded. William stared
at him and stared at the men slowly filing off down
the yard, but was not for a moment deceived by these
overflowing expressions. On the contrary, he looked
more concerned than he had while seated between the
two men manifestly set to guard him.
“The deuce!” he cried,
with a shrug of his shoulders that expressed anything
but satisfaction. “Lucetta always said ”
But even he knew enough not to finish that sentence,
low as he had mumbled it. Watching him and watching
Mr. Gryce, who at that moment turned to follow his
men, I thought the time had come for action.
Making another spring as if in fresh terror of Saracen,
who, by the way, was eying me with the meekness of
a lamb, I tipped over that pail with such suddenness
and with such dexterity that its whole contents poured
in one flood over William’s feet. My third
task was accomplished.
The oath he uttered and the excuses
which I volubly poured forth could not have reached
Mr. Gryce’s ears, for he did not return.
And yet from the way his shoulders shook as he disappeared
around the corner of the house, I judge that he was
not entirely ignorant of the subterfuge by which I
hoped to force this blundering booby of ours to change
the boots he wore for one of the pairs into which
I had driven those little tacks.
CHAPTER X - RELIEF
The plan succeeded. Mr. Gryce’s
plans usually do. William went immediately to
his room, and in a little while came down and hastened
into the cellar.
“I want to see what mischief they have done,”
said he.
When he came back, his face was beaming.
“All right,” he shouted
to his sisters, who had come into the hall to meet
him. “Your secret’s out, but mine ”
“There, there!” interposed
Loreen, “you had better go up-stairs and prepare
for supper. We must eat, William, or rather, Miss
Butterworth must eat, whatever our sorrows or disappointments.”
He took the rebuke with a grunt and
relieved us of his company. Little did he think
as he went whistling up the stairs that he had just
shown Mr. Gryce where to search for whatever might
be lying under the broad sweep of that cellar-bottom.
That night it was after
supper, which I did not eat for all my natural stoicism Hannah
came rushing in where we all sat silent, for the girls
showed no disposition to enlarge their confidences
in regard to their mother, and no other topic seemed
possible, and, closing the door behind her, said quickly
and with evident chagrin:
“Those men are here again.
They say they forgot something. What do you think
it means, Miss Loreen? They have spades and lanterns
and ”
“They are the police, Hannah.
If they forgot something, they have the right to return.
Don’t work yourself up about that. The secret
they have already found out was our worst. There
is nothing to fear after that.” And she
dismissed Hannah, merely bidding her let us know when
the house was quite clear.
Was she right? Was there nothing
worse for them to fear? I longed to leave these
trembling sisters, longed to join the party below and
follow in the track of the tiny impressions made by
the tacks I had driven into William’s soles.
If there was anything hidden under the cellar-bottom,
natural anxiety would carry him to the spot he had
most to fear; so they would only have to dig at the
places where these impressions took a sharp turn.
But was there anything hidden there?
From the sisters’ words and actions I judged
there was nothing serious, but would they know?
William was quite capable of deceiving them.
Had he done so? It was a question.
It was solved for us by Mr. Gryce’s
reappearance in the room an hour or so later.
From the moment the light fell upon his kindly features
I knew that I might breathe again freely. It
was not the face he showed in the house of a criminal,
nor did his bow contain any of the false deference
with which he sometimes tries to hide his secret doubt
or contempt.
“I have come to trouble you
for the last time, ladies. We have made a double
search through this house and through the stables,
and feel perfectly justified in saying that our duty
henceforth will lead us elsewhere. The secrets
we have surprised are your own, and if possible shall
remain so. Your brother’s propensity for
vivisection and the return and death of your mother
bear so little on the real question which interests
this community that we may be able to prevent their
spread as gossip through the town. That this may
be done conscientiously, however, I ought to know
something more of the latter circumstance. If
Miss Butterworth will then be good enough to grant
me a few minutes’ conference with these ladies,
I may be able to satisfy myself to such an extent
as to let this matter rest where it is.”
I rose with right good will.
A mountain weight had been lifted from me, proof positive
that I had really come to love these girls.
What they told him, whether it was
less or more than they told me, I cannot say, and
for the moment did not know. That it had not shaken
his faith in them was evident, for when he came out
to where I was waiting in the hall his aspect was
even more encouraging than it had been before.
“No guile in those girls,”
he whispered as he passed me. “The clue
given by what seemed mysterious in this house has
come to naught. To-morrow we take up another.
The trinkets found in Mother Jane’s cottage are
something real. You may sleep soundly to-night,
Miss Butterworth. Your part has been well played,
but I know you are glad that it has failed.”
And I knew that I was glad, too, which
is the best proof that there is something in me besides
the detective instinct.
The front door had scarcely closed
behind him when William came storming in. He
had been gossiping over the fence with Mr. Trohm, and
had been beguiled into taking a glass of wine in his
house. This was evident without his speaking
of it.
“Those sneaks!” cried
he. “I hear they’ve been back again,
digging and stirring up our cellar-bottom like mad.
That’s because you’re so dreadful shy,
you girls. You’re afraid of this, you’re
afraid of that. You don’t want folks to
know that mother once Well, well, there
it is now! If you had not tried to keep this
wretched secret, it would have been an old matter
by this time, and my affairs would have been left
untouched. But now every fool will cry out at
me in this staid, puritanical old town, and all because
a few bones have been found of animals which have
died in the cause of science. I say it’s
all your fault! Not that I have anything to be
ashamed of, because I haven’t, but because this
other thing, this d d wicked series of disappearances,
taking place, for aught we know, a dozen rods from
our gates (though I think but no matter
what I think you all like, or say you like,
old Deacon Spear), has made every one so touchy in
this pharisaical town that to kill a fly has become
a crime even if it is to save oneself from poison.
I’m going to see if I cannot make folks blink
askance at some other man than me. I’m
going to find out who or what causes these disappearances.”
This was a declaration to make us
all stare and look a little bit foolish. William
playing the detective! Well, what might I not
live to see next! But the next moment an overpowering
thought struck me. Might this Deacon Spear by
any chance be the rich man whose animosity Althea
Knollys had awakened?