“A Lady to see you, sir.”
I looked up and was at once impressed
by the grace and beauty of the person thus introduced
to me.
“Is there anything I can do
to serve you?” I asked, rising.
She cast me a childlike look full
of trust and candour as she seated herself in the
chair I had pointed out.
“I believe so; I hope so,”
she earnestly assured me. “I I
am in great trouble. I have just lost my husband but
it is not that. It is the slip of paper I found
on my dresser, and which which ”
She was trembling violently and her
words were fast becoming incoherent. I calmed
her and asked her to relate her story just as it had
happened; and after a few minutes of silent struggle
she succeeded in collecting herself sufficiently to
respond with some degree of connection and self-possession.
“I have been married six months.
My name is Lucy Holmes. For the last few weeks
my husband and I have been living in an apartment house
on Fifty-ninth Street, and, as we had not a care in
the world, we were very happy till Mr. Holmes was
called away on business to Philadelphia. This
was two weeks ago. Five days later I received
an affectionate letter from him, in which he promised
to come back the next day; and the news so delighted
me that I accepted an invitation to the theatre from
some intimate friends of ours. The next morning
I naturally felt fatigued and rose late; but I was
very cheerful, for I expected my husband at noon.
And now comes the perplexing mystery. In the course
of dressing myself I stepped to my bureau, and seeing
a small newspaper slip attached to the cushion by
a pin, I drew it off and read it. It was a death
notice, and my hair rose and my limbs failed me as
I took in its fatal and incredible words.
“’Died this day at the
Colonnade, James Forsythe De Witt Holmes. New
York papers please copy.’
“James Forsythe De Witt Holmes
was my husband, and his last letter, which was at
that very moment lying beside the cushion, had been
dated from the Colonnade. Was I dreaming or under
the spell of some frightful hallucination which led
me to misread the name on the slip of paper before
me? I could not determine. My head, throat,
and chest seemed bound about with iron, so that I
could neither speak nor breathe with freedom, and,
suffering thus, I stood staring at this demoniacal
bit of paper which in an instant had brought the shadow
of death upon my happy life. Nor was I at all
relieved when a little later I flew with the notice
into a neighbour’s apartment, and praying her
to read it to me, found that my eyes had not deceived
me and that the name was indeed my husband’s
and the notice one of death.
“Not from my own mind but from
hers came the first suggestion of comfort.
“‘It cannot be your husband
who is meant,’ said she; ’but some one
of the same name. Your husband wrote to you yesterday,
and this person must have been dead at least two days
for the printed notice of his decease to have reached
New York. Some one has remarked the striking similarity
of names, and wishing to startle you, cut the slip
out and pinned it on your cushion.’
“I certainly knew of no one
inconsiderate enough to do this, but the explanation
was so plausible, I at once embraced it and sobbed
aloud in my relief. But in the midst of my rejoicing
I heard the bell ring in my apartment, and, running
thither, encountered a telegraph boy holding in his
outstretched hand the yellow envelope which so often
bespeaks death or disaster. The sight took my
breath away. Summoning my maid, whom I saw hastening
toward me from an inner room, I begged her to open
the telegram for me. Sir, I saw in her face,
before she had read the first line, a confirmation
of my very worst fears. My husband was ”
The young widow, choked with her emotions,
paused, recovered herself for the second time, and
then went on.
“I had better show you the telegram.”
Taking it from her pocketbook, she
held it toward me. I read it at a glance.
It was short, simple, and direct:
“Come at once. Your husband
found dead in his room this morning. Doctors
say heart disease. Please telegraph.”
“You see it says this morning,”
she explained, placing her delicate finger on the
word she so eagerly quoted. “That means
a week ago Wednesday, the same day on which the printed
slip recording his death was found on my cushion.
Do you not see something very strange in this?”
I did; but, before I ventured to express
myself on this subject, I desired her to tell me what
she had learned in her visit to Philadelphia.
Her answer was simple and straightforward.
“But little more than you find
in this telegram. He died in his room. He
was found lying on the floor near the bell-button,
which he had evidently risen to touch. One hand
was clenched on his chest, but his face wore a peaceful
look, as if death had come too suddenly to cause him
much suffering. His bed was undisturbed; he had
died before retiring, possibly in the act of packing
his trunk, for it was found nearly ready for the expressman.
Indeed, there was every evidence of his intention
to leave on an early morning train. He had even
desired to be awakened at six o’clock; and it
was his failure to respond to the summons of the bellboy
which led to so early a discovery of his death.
He had never complained of any distress in breathing,
and we had always considered him a perfectly healthy
man; but there was no reason for assigning any other
cause than heart failure to his sudden death, and so
the burial certificate was made out to that effect,
and I was allowed to bring him home and bury him in
our vault at Woodlawn. But” and
here her earnestness dried up the tears which had
been flowing freely during this recital of her husband’s
lonely death and sad burial “do you
not think an investigation should be made into a death
preceded by a false obituary notice? For I found
when I was in Philadelphia that no paragraph such
as I had found pinned to my cushion had been inserted
in any paper there, nor had any other man of the same
name ever registered at the Colonnade, much less died
there.”
“Have you this notice with you?” I asked.
She immediately produced it, and while I was glancing
it over remarked:
“Some persons would give a superstitious
explanation to the whole matter; think I had received
a supernatural warning and been satisfied with what
they would call a spiritual manifestation. But
I have not a bit of such folly in my composition.
Living hands set up the type and printed the words
which gave me so deathly a shock; and hands, with a
real purpose in them, cut it from the paper and pinned
it to my cushion for me to see when I woke on that
fatal morning. But whose hands? That is
what I want you to discover.”
I had caught the fever of her suspicions
long before this and now felt justified in showing
my interest.
“First, let me ask,” said
I, “who has access to your rooms besides your
maid?”
“No one; absolutely no one.”
“And what of her?”
“She is innocence herself.
She is no common housemaid, but a girl my mother brought
up, who for love of me consents to do such work in
the household as my simple needs require.”
“I should like to see her.”
“There is no objection to your
doing so; but you will gain nothing by it. I
have already talked the subject over with her a dozen
times and she is as much puzzled by it as I am myself.
She says she cannot see how any one could have found
an entrance to my room during my sleep, as the doors
were all locked. Yet, as she very naturally observes,
some one must have done so, for she was in my bedroom
herself just before I returned from the theatre, and
can swear, if necessary, that no such slip of paper
was to be seen on my cushion at that time, for her
duties led her directly to my bureau and kept her
there for full five minutes.”
“And you believed her?” I suggested.
“Implicitly.”
“In what direction, then, do your suspicions
turn?”
“Alas! in no direction.
That is the trouble. I don’t know whom to
mistrust. It was because I was told that you had
the credit of seeing light where others can see nothing
but darkness that I have sought your aid in this emergency.
For the uncertainty surrounding this matter is killing
me and will make my sorrow quite unendurable if I cannot
obtain relief from it.”
“I do not wonder,” I began,
struck by the note of truth in her tones. “And
I shall certainly do what I can for you. But before
we go any further, let us examine this scrap of newspaper
and see what we can make out of it.”
I had already noted two or three points
in connection with it to which I now proceeded to
direct her attention.
“Have you compared this notice,”
I pursued, “with such others as you find every
day in the papers?”
“No,” was her eager answer. “Is
it not like them all ”
“Read,” was my quiet interruption.
“’On this day at the Colonnade’ on
what day? The date is usually given in all the
bona fide notices I have seen.”
“Is it?” she asked, her
eyes, moist with unshed tears, opening widely in her
astonishment.
“Look in the papers on your
return home and see. Then the print. Observe
that the type is identical on both sides of this make-believe
clipping, while in fact there is always a perceptible
difference between that used in the obituary column
and that to be found in the columns devoted to other
matter. Notice also,” I continued, holding
up the scrap of paper between her and the light, “that
the alignment on one side is not exactly parallel
with that on the other; a discrepancy which would not
exist if both sides had been printed on a newspaper
press. These facts lead me to conclude, first,
that the effort to match the type exactly was the
mistake of a man who tried to do too much; and, secondly,
that one of the sides at least, presumably that containing
the obituary notice, was printed on a hand-press,
on the blank side of a piece of galley proof picked
up in some newspaper office.”
“Let me see.” And
stretching out her hand with the utmost eagerness,
she took the slip and turned it over. Instantly
a change took place in her countenance. She sank
back in her seat and a blush of manifest confusion
suffused her cheeks. “Oh!” she exclaimed;
“what will you think of me! I brought this
scrap of print into the house myself, and it
was I who pinned it on the cushion with my own hands!
I remember it now. The sight of those words recalls
the whole occurrence.”
“Then there is one mystery less
for us to solve,” I remarked, somewhat drily.
“Do you think so?” she
protested, with a deprecatory look. “For
me the mystery deepens, and becomes every minute more
serious. It is true that I brought this scrap
of newspaper into the house, and that it had, then
as now, the notice of my husband’s death upon
it, but the time of my bringing it in was Tuesday
night, and he was not found dead till Wednesday morning.”
“A discrepancy worth noting,” I remarked.
“Involving a mystery of some importance,”
she concluded.
I agreed to that.
“And since we have discovered
how the slip came into your room, we can now proceed
to the clearing up of this mystery,” I observed.
“You can, of course, inform me where you procured
this clipping which you say you brought into the house?”
“Yes. You may think it
strange, but when I alighted from the carriage that
night, a man on the sidewalk put this tiny scrap of
paper into my hand. It was done so mechanically
that it made no more impression on my mind than the
thrusting of an advertisement upon me. Indeed,
I supposed it was an advertisement, and I only wonder
that I retained it in my hand at all. But that
I did do so, and that, in a moment of abstraction,
I went so far as to pin it to my cushion, is evident
from the fact that a vague memory remains in my mind
of having read this recipe which you see printed on
the reverse side of the paper.”
“It was the recipe, then, and
not the obituary notice which attracted your attention
the night before?”
“Probably, but in pinning it
to the cushion, it was the obituary notice that chanced
to come uppermost. Oh, why should I not have remembered
this till now! Can you understand my forgetting
a matter of so much importance?”
“Yes,” I allowed, after
a momentary consideration of her ingenuous countenance.
“The words you read in the morning were so startling
that they disconnected themselves from those you had
carelessly glanced at the night before.”
“That is it,” she replied;
“and since then I have had eyes for the one
side only. How could I think of the other?
But who could have printed this thing and who was
the man who put it into my hand? He looked like
a beggar, but Oh!” she suddenly
exclaimed, her cheeks flushing scarlet and her eyes
flashing with a feverish, almost alarming glitter.
“What is it now?” I asked. “Another
recollection?”
“Yes.” She spoke so low I could hardly
hear her. “He coughed and ”
“And what?” I encouragingly
suggested, seeing that she was under some new and
overwhelming emotion.
“That cough had a familiar sound,
now that I think of it. It was like that of a
friend who But no, no; I will not
wrong him by any false surmises. He would stoop
to much, but not to that; yet ”
The flush on her cheeks had died away,
but the two vivid spots which remained showed the
depth of her excitement.
“Do you think,” she suddenly
asked, “that a man out of revenge might plan
to frighten me by a false notice of my husband’s
death, and that God to punish him, made the notice
a prophecy?”
“I think a man influenced by
the spirit of revenge might do almost anything,”
I answered, purposely ignoring the latter part of her
question.
“But I always considered him
a good man. At least I never looked upon him
as a wicked one. Every other beggar we meet has
a cough; and yet,” she added after a moment’s
pause, “if it was not he who gave me this mortal
shock, who was it? He is the only person in the
world I ever wronged.”
“Had you not better tell me his name?”
I suggested.
“No, I am in too great doubt. I should
hate to do him a second injury.”
“You cannot injure him if he is innocent.
My methods are very safe.”
“If I could forget his cough!
but it had that peculiar catch in it that I remembered
so well in the cough of John Graham. I did not
pay any especial heed to it at the time. Old
days and old troubles were far enough from my thoughts;
but now that my suspicions are raised, that low, choking
sound comes back to me in a strangely persistent way,
and I seem to see a well-remembered form in the stooping
figure of this beggar. Oh, I hope the good God
will forgive me if I attribute to this disappointed
man a wickedness he never committed.”
“Who is John Graham?”
I urged, “and what was the nature of the wrong
you did him?”
She rose, cast me one appealing glance,
and perceiving that I meant to have her whole story,
turned towards the fire and stood warming her feet
before the hearth, with her face turned away from my
gaze.
“I was once engaged to marry
him,” she began. “Not because I loved
him, but because we were very poor I mean
my mother and myself and he had a home
and seemed both good and generous. The day came
when we were to be married this was in
the West, way out in Kansas and I was even
dressed for the wedding, when a letter came from my
uncle here, a rich uncle, very rich, who had never
had anything to do with my mother since her marriage,
and in it he promised me fortune and everything else
desirable in life if I would come to him, unencumbered
by any foolish ties. Think of it! And I
within half an hour of marriage with a man I had never
loved and now suddenly hated. The temptation was
overwhelming, and, heartless as my conduct may appear
to you, I succumbed to it. Telling my lover that
I had changed my mind, I dismissed the minister when
he came, and announced my intention of proceeding East
as soon as possible. Mr. Graham was simply paralysed
by his disappointment, and during the few days which
intervened before my departure, I was haunted by his
face, which was like that of a man who had died from
some overwhelming shock. But when I was once
free of the town, especially after I arrived in New
York, I forgot alike his misery and himself.
Everything I saw was so beautiful! Life was so
full of charm, and my uncle so delighted with me and
everything I did! Then there was James Holmes,
and after I had seen him But I cannot
talk of that. We loved each other, and under
the surprise of this new delight how could I be expected
to remember the man I had left behind me in that barren
region in which I had spent my youth? But he
did not forget the misery I had caused him. He
followed me to New York; and on the morning I was married
found his way into the house, and mixing with the wedding
guests, suddenly appeared before me just as I was
receiving the congratulations of my friends.
At sight of him I experienced all the terror he had
calculated upon causing, but remembering our old relations
and my new position, I assumed an air of apparent
haughtiness. This irritated John Graham.
Flushing with anger, and ignoring my imploring look,
he cried peremptorily, ‘Present me to your husband!’
and I felt forced to present him. But his name
produced no effect upon Mr. Holmes. I had never
told him of my early experience with this man, and
John Graham, perceiving this, cast me a bitter glance
of disdain and passed on, muttering between his teeth,
’False to me and false to him! Your punishment
be upon you!’ and I felt as if I had been cursed.”
She stopped here, moved by emotions
readily to be understood. Then with quick impetuosity
she caught up the thread of her story and went on.
“That was six months ago; and
again I forgot. My mother died and my husband
soon absorbed my every thought. How could I dream
that this man, who was little more than a memory to
me and scarcely that, was secretly planning mischief
against me? Yet this scrap about which we have
talked so much may have been the work of his hands;
and even my husband’s death ”
She did not finish, but her face,
which was turned towards me, spoke volumes.
“Your husband’s death
shall be inquired into,” I assured her.
And she, exhausted by the excitement of her discoveries,
asked that she might be excused from further discussion
of the subject at that time.
As I had no wish, myself, to enter
any more fully into the matter just then, I readily
acceded to her request, and the pretty widow left me.
Obviously the first fact to be settled
was whether Mr. Holmes had died from purely natural
causes. I accordingly busied myself the next few
days with the question, and was fortunate enough to
so interest the proper authorities that an order was
issued for the exhumation and examination of the body.
The result was disappointing.
No traces of poison were to be found in the stomach
nor was there to be seen on the body any mark of violence
with the exception of a minute prick upon one of his
thumbs.
This speck was so small that it escaped
every eye but my own.
The authorities assuring the widow
that the doctor’s certificate given her in Philadelphia
was correct, the body was again interred. But
I was not satisfied; and confident that this death
had not been a natural one, I entered upon one of
those secret and prolonged investigations which for
so many years have constituted the pleasure of my life.
First, I visited the Colonnade in Philadelphia, and
being allowed to see the room in which Mr. Holmes
died, went through it carefully. As it had not
been used since that time I had some hopes of coming
upon a clue.
But it was a vain hope, and the only
result of my journey to this place was the assurance
I received that the gentleman had spent the entire
evening preceding his death in his own room, where
he had been brought several letters and one small
package, the latter coming by mail. With this
one point gained if it was a point I
went back to New York.
Calling on Mrs. Holmes, I asked her
if, while her husband was away, she had sent him anything
besides letters, and upon her replying to the contrary,
requested to know if in her visit to Philadelphia she
had noted among her husband’s effects anything
that was new or unfamiliar to her. “For
he received a package while there,” I explained,
“and though its contents may have been perfectly
harmless, it is just as well for us to be assured
of this before going any further.”
“Oh, you think, then, he was
really the victim of some secret violence.”
“We have no proof of it,”
I said. “On the contrary, we are assured
that he died from natural causes. But the incident
of the newspaper slip outweighs, in my mind, the doctor’s
conclusions, and until the mystery surrounding that
obituary notice has been satisfactorily explained by
its author I shall hold to the theory that your husband
has been made away with in some strange and seemingly
unaccountable manner, which it is our duty to bring
to light.”
“You are right! You are right! Oh,
John Graham!”
She was so carried away by this plain
expression of my belief that she forgot the question
I had put to her.
“You have not said whether or
not you found anything among your husband’s
effects that can explain this mystery,” I suggested.
She at once became attentive.
“Nothing,” said she; “his
trunks were already packed and his bag nearly so.
There were a few things lying about the room which
I saw thrust into the latter. Would you like
to look through them? I have not had the heart
to open the bag since I came back.”
As this was exactly what I wished,
I said as much, and she led me into a small room,
against the wall of which stood a trunk with a travelling-bag
on top of it. Opening the latter, she spread the
contents out on the trunk.
“I know all these things,”
she sadly murmured, the tears welling in her eyes.
“This?” I inquired, lifting
up a bit of coiled wire with two or three rings dangling
from it.
“No; why, what is that?”
“It looks like a puzzle of some kind.”
“Then it is of no consequence.
My husband was forever amusing himself over some such
contrivance. All his friends knew how well he
liked these toys and frequently sent them to him.
This one evidently reached him from Philadelphia.”
Meanwhile I was eyeing the bit of
wire curiously. It was undoubtedly a puzzle,
but it had appendages to it that I did not understand.
“It is more than ordinarily
complicated,” I observed, moving the rings up
and down in a vain endeavour to work them off.
“The better he would like it,” she said.
I kept working with the rings.
Suddenly I gave a painful start. A little prong
in the handle of the toy had started out and pierced
me.
“You had better not handle it,”
said I, and laid it down. But the next moment
I took it up again and put it in my pocket. The
prick made by this treacherous bit of mechanism was
in or near the same place on my thumb as the one I
had noticed on the hand of the deceased Mr. Holmes.
There was a fire in the room, and
before proceeding further I cauterised that prick
with the end of a red-hot poker. Then I made my
adieux to Mrs. Holmes and went immediately to a chemist
friend of mine.
“Test the end of this bit of
steel for me,” said I. “I have reason
to believe it carries with it a deadly poison.”
He took the toy, promising to subject
it to every test possible and let me know the result.
Then I went home. I felt ill, or imagined I did,
which under the circumstances was almost as bad.
Next day, however, I was quite well,
with the exception of a certain inconvenience in my
thumb. But not till the following week did I receive
the chemist’s report. It overthrew my whole
theory. He found nothing, and returned me the
bit of steel.
But I was not convinced.
“I will hunt up this John Graham,” thought
I, “and study him.”
But this was not so easy a task as
it may appear. As Mrs. Holmes possessed no clue
to the whereabouts of her quondam lover, I had nothing
to aid me in my search for him, save her rather vague
description of his personal appearance and the fact
that he was constantly interrupted in speaking by
a low, choking cough. However, my natural perseverance
carried me through. After seeing and interviewing
a dozen John Grahams without result, I at last lit
upon a man of that name who presented a figure of
such vivid unrest and showed such a desperate hatred
of his fellows, that I began to entertain hopes of
his being the person I was in search of. But
determined to be sure of this before proceeding further,
I confided my suspicions to Mrs. Holmes, and induced
her to accompany me down to a certain spot on the
“Elevated” from which I had more than
once seen this man go by to his usual lounging place
in Printing House Square.
She showed great courage in doing
this, for she had such a dread of him that she was
in a state of nervous excitement from the moment she
left her house, feeling sure that she would attract
his attention and thus risk a disagreeable encounter.
But she might have spared herself these fears.
He did not even glance up in passing us, and it was
mainly by his walk she recognised him. But she
did recognise him; and this nerved me at once to set
about the formidable task of fixing upon him a crime
which was not even admitted as a fact by the authorities.
He was a man-about-town, living, to
all appearances, by his wits. He was to be seen
mostly in the downtown portions of the city, standing
for hours in front of some newspaper office, gnawing
at his finger-ends, and staring at the passers-by
with a hungry look alarming to the timid and provoking
alms from the benevolent. Needless to say that
he rejected the latter expression of sympathy with
angry contempt.
His face was long and pallid, his
cheek-bones high, and his mouth bitter and resolute
in expression. He wore neither beard nor moustache,
but made up for their lack by an abundance of light-brown
hair, which hung very nearly to his shoulders.
He stooped in standing, but as soon as he moved, showed
decision and a certain sort of pride which caused him
to hold his head high and his body more than usually
erect. With all these good points his appearance
was decidedly sinister, and I did not wonder that
Mrs. Holmes feared him.
My next move was to accost him.
Pausing before the doorway in which he stood, I addressed
him some trivial question. He answered me with
sufficient politeness, but with a grudging attention
which betrayed the hold which his own thoughts had
upon him. He coughed while speaking, and his
eye, which for a moment rested on mine, produced an
impression upon me for which I was hardly prepared,
great as was my prejudice against him. There
was such an icy composure in it; the composure of an
envenomed nature conscious of its superiority to all
surprises. As I lingered to study him more closely,
the many dangerous qualities of the man became more
and more apparent to me; and convinced that to proceed
further without deep and careful thought would be to
court failure where triumph would set me up for life,
I gave up all present attempt at enlisting him in
conversation and went away in an inquiring and serious
mood.
In fact, my position was a peculiar
one, and the problem I had set for myself one of unusual
difficulty. Only by means of some extraordinary
device such as is seldom resorted to by the police
of this or any other nation, could I hope to arrive
at the secret of this man’s conduct, and triumph
in a matter which to all appearance was beyond human
penetration.
But what device? I knew of none,
nor through two days and nights of strenuous thought
did I receive the least light on the subject.
Indeed, my mind seemed to grow more and more confused
the more I urged it into action. I failed to
get inspiration indoors or out; and feeling my health
suffer from the constant irritation of my recurring
disappointment, I resolved to take a day off and carry
myself and my perplexities into the country.
I did so. Governed by an impulse
which I did not then understand, I went to a small
town in New Jersey and entered the first house on which
I saw the sign “Room to Let.” The
result was most fortunate. No sooner had I crossed
the threshold of the neat and homely apartment thrown
open to my use, than it recalled a room in which I
had slept two years before and in which I had read
a little book I was only too glad to remember at this
moment. Indeed, it seemed as if a veritable inspiration
had come to me through this recollection, for though
the tale to which I allude was a simple child’s
story written for moral purposes, it contained an idea
which promised to be invaluable to me at this juncture.
Indeed, by means of it, I believed myself to have
solved the problem that was puzzling me, and, relieved
beyond expression, I paid for the night’s lodging
I had now determined to forego, and returned immediately
to New York, having spent just fifteen minutes in
the town where I had received this happy inspiration.
My first step on entering the city
was to order a dozen steel coils made similar to the
one which I still believed answerable for James Holmes’s
death. My next to learn as far as possible all
of John Graham’s haunts and habits. At
a week’s end I had the springs and knew almost
as well as he did himself where he was likely to be
found at all times of the day and night. I immediately
acted upon this knowledge. Assuming a slight
disguise, I repeated my former stroll through Printing
House Square, looking into each doorway as I passed.
John Graham was in one of them, staring in his old
way at the passing crowd, but evidently seeing nothing
but the images formed by his own disordered brain.
A manuscript roll stuck out of his breast-pocket,
and from the way his nervous fingers fumbled with
it, I began to understand the restless glitter of
his eyes, which were as full of wretchedness as any
eyes I have ever seen.
Entering the doorway where he stood,
I dropped at his feet one of the small steel coils
with which I was provided. He did not see it.
Stopping near him, I directed his attention to it
by saying:
“Pardon me, but did I not see
something drop out of your hand?”
He started, glanced at the seemingly
inoffensive toy I had pointed out, and altered so
suddenly and so vividly that it became instantly apparent
that the surprise I had planned for him was fully as
keen and searching a one as I had anticipated.
Recoiling sharply, he gave me a quick look, then glanced
down again at his feet as if half expecting to find
the object of his terror gone. But, perceiving
it still lying there, he crushed it viciously with
his heel, and uttering some incoherent words dashed
impetuously from the building.
Confident that he would regret this
hasty impulse and return, I withdrew a few steps and
waited. And sure enough, in less than five minutes,
he came slinking back. Picking up the coil with
more than one sly look about, he examined it closely.
Suddenly he gave a sharp cry and went staggering out.
Had he discovered that the seeming puzzle possessed
the same invisible spring which had made the one handled
by James Holmes so dangerous?
Certain as to the place he would be
found next, I made a short cut to an obscure little
saloon in Nassau Street, where I took up my stand in
a spot convenient for seeing without being seen.
In ten minutes he was standing at the bar asking for
a drink.
“Whiskey!” he cried. “Straight.”
It was given him, but as he set the
empty glass down on the counter he saw lying before
him another of the steel springs, and was so confounded
by the sight that the proprietor, who had put it there
at my instigation, thrust out his hand toward him
as if half afraid he would fall.
“Where did that that
thing come from?” stammered John Graham,
ignoring the other’s gesture and pointing with
a trembling hand at the insignificant bit of wire
between them.
“Didn’t it drop from your
coat-pocket?” inquired the proprietor. “It
wasn’t lying here before you came in.”
With a horrible oath the unhappy man
turned and fled from the place. I lost sight
of him after that for three hours, then I suddenly
came upon him again. He was walking uptown with
a set purpose in his face that made him look more
dangerous than ever. Of course I followed him,
expecting him to turn towards Fifty-ninth Street, but
at the corner of Madison Avenue and Forty-seventh
Street he changed his mind and dashed toward Third
Avenue. At Park Avenue he faltered and again turned
north, walking for several blocks as if the fiends
were behind him. I began to think that he was
but attempting to walk off his excitement, when, at
a sudden rushing sound in the cut beside us, he stopped
and trembled. An express train was shooting by.
As it disappeared in the tunnel beyond, he looked
about him with a blanched face and wandering eye; but
his glance did not turn my way, or, if it did, he
failed to attach any meaning to my near presence.
He began to move on again and this
time towards the bridge spanning the cut. I followed
him very closely. In the centre of it he paused
and looked down at the track beneath him. Another
train was approaching. As it came near he trembled
from head to foot, and, catching at the railing against
which he leaned, was about to make a quick move forward
when a puff of smoke arose from below and sent him
staggering backward, gasping with a terror I could
hardly understand till I saw that the smoke had taken
the form of a spiral and was sailing away before him
in what to his disordered imagination must have looked
like a gigantic image of the coil with which twice
before on this day he had found himself confronted.
It may have been chance and it may
have been providence; but whichever it was it saved
him. He could not face that semblance of his haunting
thought; and turning away he cowered down on the neighbouring
curbstone, where he sat for several minutes, with
his head buried in his hands; when he arose again
he was his own daring and sinister self. Knowing
that he was now too much master of his faculties to
ignore me any longer, I walked quickly away and left
him. I knew where he would be at six o’clock
and had already engaged a table at the same restaurant.
It was seven, however, before he put in an appearance,
and by this time he was looking more composed.
There was a reckless air about him, however, which
was perhaps only noticeable to me; for none of the
habitues of this especial restaurant were entirely
without it; wild eyes and unkempt hair being in the
majority.
I let him eat. The dinner he
ordered was simple and I had not the heart to interrupt
his enjoyment of it.
But when he had finished and came
to pay, then I allowed the shock to come. Under
the bill which the waiter laid at the side of his plate
was the inevitable steel coil; and it produced even
more than its usual effect. I own I felt sorry
for him.
He did not dash from the place, however,
as he had from the liquor saloon. A spirit of
resistance had seized him and he demanded to know
where this object of his fear had come from. No
one could tell him (or would). Whereupon he began
to rave and would certainly have done himself or somebody
else an injury if he had not been calmed by a man almost
as wild-looking as himself. Paying his bill,
but vowing he would never enter the place again, he
went out, clay white, but with the swaggering air
of a man who had just asserted himself.
He drooped, however, as soon as he
reached the street, and I had no difficulty in following
him to a certain gambling den, where he gained three
dollars and lost five. From there he went to his
lodgings in West Tenth Street.
I did not follow him. He had
passed through many deep and wearing emotions since
noon, and I had not the heart to add another to them.
But late the next day I returned to
this house and rang the bell. It was already
dusk, but there was light enough for me to notice the
unrepaired condition of the iron railings on either
side of the old stoop and to compare this abode of
decayed grandeur with the spacious and elegant apartment
in which pretty Mrs. Holmes mourned the loss of her
young husband. Had any such comparison ever been
made by the unhappy John Graham, as he hurried up
these battered steps into the dismal halls beyond?
In answer to my summons there came
to the door a young woman to whom I had but to intimate
my wish to see Mr. Graham for her to let me in with
the short announcement:
“Top floor, back room!
Door open, he’s out; door shut, he’s in.”
As an open door meant liberty to enter,
I lost no time in following the direction of her finger,
and presently found myself in a low attic chamber
overlooking an acre of roofs. A fire had been
lighted in the open grate, and the flickering red
beams danced on ceiling and walls with a cheeriness
greatly in contrast to the nature of the business
which had led me there. As they also served to
light the room, I proceeded to make myself at home;
and drawing up a chair, sat down at the fireplace
in such a way as to conceal myself from any one entering
the door.
In less than half an hour he came in.
He was in a state of high emotion.
His face was flushed and his eyes burning. Stepping
rapidly forward, he flung his hat on the table in the
middle of the room, with a curse that was half cry
and half groan. Then he stood silent and I had
an opportunity of noting how haggard he had grown
in the short time which had elapsed since I had seen
him last. But the interval of his inaction was
short, and in a moment he flung up his arms with a
loud “Curse her!” that rang through the
narrow room and betrayed the source of his present
frenzy. Then he again stood still, grating his
teeth and working his hands in a way terribly suggestive
of the murderer’s instinct. But not for
long. He saw something that attracted his attention
on the table, a something upon which my eyes had long
before been fixed, and starting forward with a fresh
and quite different display of emotion, he caught
up what looked like a roll of manuscript and began
to tear it open.
“Back again! Always back!”
wailed from his lips; and he gave the roll a toss
that sent from its midst a small object which he no
sooner saw than he became speechless and reeled back.
It was another of the steel coils.
“Good God!” fell at last
from his stiff and working lips. “Am I mad
or has the devil joined in the pursuit against me?
I cannot eat, I cannot drink, but this diabolical
spring starts up before me. It is here, there,
everywhere. The visible sign of my guilt; the the ”
He had stumbled back upon my chair, and turning, saw
me.
I was on my feet at once, and noting
that he was dazed by the shock of my presence, I slid
quietly between him and the door.
The movement roused him. Turning
upon me with a sarcastic smile in which was concentrated
the bitterness of years, he briefly said:
“So I am caught! Well,
there has to be an end to men as well as to things,
and I am ready for mine. She turned me away from
her door to-day, and after the hell of that moment
I don’t much fear any other.”
“You had better not talk,”
I admonished him. “All that falls from you
now will only tell against you on your trial.”
He broke into a harsh laugh.
“And do you think I care for that? That
having been driven by a woman’s perfidy into
crime I am going to bridle my tongue and keep down
the words which are my only safeguard from insanity?
No, no; while my miserable breath lasts I will curse
her, and if the halter is to cut short my words, it
shall be with her name blistering my lips.”
I attempted to speak, but he would
not give me an opportunity. The passion of weeks
had found vent and he rushed on recklessly:
“I went to her house to-day.
I wanted to see her in her widow’s weeds; I
wanted to see her eyes red with weeping over a grief
which owed its bitterness to me. But she would
not grant me admittance. She had me thrust from
her door, and I shall never know how deeply the iron
has sunk into her soul. But” and
here his face showed a sudden change “I
shall see her if I am tried for murder. She will
be in the courtroom on the witness stand ”
“Doubtless,” I interjected;
but his interruption came quickly and with vehement
passion.
“Then I am ready. Welcome
trial, conviction, death, even. To confront her
eye to eye is all I wish. She shall never forget
it, never!”
“Then you do not deny ”
I began.
“I deny nothing,” he returned,
and held out his hands with a grim gesture. “How
can I, when there falls from everything I touch the
devilish thing which took away the life I hated?”
“Have you anything more to say
or do before you leave these rooms?” I asked.
He shook his head, and then, bethinking
himself, pointed to the roll of paper which he had
flung on the table.
“Burn that!” he cried.
I took up the roll and looked at it.
It was the manuscript of a poem in blank verse.
“I have been with it into a
dozen newspaper and magazine offices,” he explained
with great bitterness. “Had I succeeded
in getting a publisher for it I might have forgotten
my wrongs and tried to build up a new life on the
ruins of the old. But they would not have it,
none of them; so I say, burn it! that no memory of
me may remain in this miserable world.”
“Keep to the facts!” I
severely retorted. “It was while carrying
this poem from one newspaper to another that you secured
that bit of print upon the blank side of which yourself
printed the obituary notice with which you savoured
your revenge upon the woman who had disappointed you.”
“You know that? Then you
know where I got the poison with which I tipped the
silly toy with which that weak man fooled away his
life?”
“No,” said I, “I
do not know where you got it. I merely know it
was no common poison bought at a druggist’s,
or from any ordinary chemist.”
“It was woorali; the deadly,
secret woorali. I got it from but that
is another man’s secret. You will never
hear from me anything that will compromise a friend.
I got it, that is all. One drop, but it killed
my man.”
The satisfaction, the delight, which
he threw into these words are beyond description.
As they left his lips a jet of flame from the neglected
fire shot up and threw his figure for one instant into
bold relief upon the lowering ceiling; then it died
out, and nothing but the twilight dusk remained in
the room and on the countenance of this doomed and
despairing man.