Violet had gone to her room.
She had a task before her. That afternoon, a
packet had been left at the door, which, from a certain
letter scribbled in one corner, she knew to be from
her employer. The contents of that packet must
be read, and she had made herself comfortable with
the intention of setting to work at once. But
ten o’clock struck and then eleven before she
could bring herself to give any attention to the manuscript
awaiting her perusal. In her present mood, a quiet
sitting by the fire, with her eyes upon the changeful
flame, was preferable to the study of any affair her
employer might send her. Yet, because she was
conscious of the duty she thus openly neglected, she
sat crouched over her desk with her hand on the mysterious
packet, the string of which, however, she made no
effort to loosen.
What was she thinking of?
We are not alone in our curiosity
on this subject. Her brother Arthur, coming unperceived
into the room, gives tokens of a similar interest.
Never before had he seen her oblivious to an approaching
step; and after a momentary contemplation of her absorbed
figure, so girlishly sweet and yet so deeply intent,
he advances to her side, and peering earnestly into
her face, observes with a seriousness quite unusual
to him:
“Puss, you are looking worried, not
like yourself at all. I’ve noticed it for
some time. What’s up. Getting tired
of the business?”
“No not altogether that
is, it’s not that, if it’s anything.
I’m not sure that it’s anything.
I ”
She had turned back to her desk and
was pushing about the various articles with which
it was plentifully bespread; but this did not hide
the flush which had crept into her cheeks and even
dyed the snowy whiteness of her neck. Arthur’s
astonishment at this evidence of emotion was very
great; but he said nothing, only watched her still
more closely, as with a light laugh she regained her
self-possession, and with the practical air of a philosopher
uttered this trite remark:
“Everyone has his sober moments. I was
only thinking ”
“Of some new case?”
“Not exactly.” The
words came softly but with a touch of mingled humour
and gravity which made Arthur stare again.
“See here, Puss!” he cried.
His tone had changed. “I’ve just come
up from the den. Father and I have had a row a
beastly row.”
“A row? You and father?
Oh, Arthur, I don’t like that. Don’t
quarrel with father. Don’t, don’t.
Some day he and I may have a serious difference about
what I am doing. Don’t let him feel that
he has lost us all.”
“That’s all right, Puss;
but I’ve got to think of you a bit. I can’t
see you spoil all your good times with these police
horrors and not do something to help. To-morrow
I begin life as a salesman in Clarke & Stebbin’s.
The salary is not great, but every little helps and
I don’t dislike the business. But father
does. He had rather see me loafing about town
setting the fashions for fellows as idle as myself
than soil my hands with handling merchandise.
That’s why we quarreled. But don’t
worry. Your name didn’t come up, or or you
know whose. He hasn’t an idea of why I
want to work There, Violet there!”
Two soft arms were around his neck
and Violet was letting her heart out in a succession
of sisterly kisses.
“O, Arthur, you good, good boy!
Together we’ll soon make up the amount, and
then ”
“Then what?”
A sweet soft look robbed her face
of its piquancy, but gave it an aspect of indescribable
beauty quite new to Arthur’s eyes.
Tapping his lips with a thoughtful forefinger, he
asked:
“Who was that sombre-looking
chap I saw bowing to you as we came out of church
last Sunday?”
She awoke from her dreamy state with
an astonishing quickness.
“He? Surely you remember
him. Have you forgotten that evening in Massachusetts the
grotto and ”
“Oh, it’s Upjohn, is it?
Yes, I remember him. He’s fond of church,
isn’t he? That is, when he’s in New
York.”
Her lips took a roguish curve then
a very serious one; but she made no answer.
“I have noticed that he’s
always in his seat and always looking your way.”
“That’s very odd of him,”
she declared, her dimples coming and going in a most
bewildering fashion. “I can’t imagine
why he should do that.”
“Nor I, ” retorted
Arthur with a smile. “But he’s human,
I suppose. Only do be careful, Violet. A
man so melancholy will need a deal of cheering.”
He was gone before he had fully finished
this daring remark, and Violet, left again with her
thoughts, lost her glowing colour but not her preoccupation.
The hand which lay upon the packet already alluded
to did not move for many minutes, and when she roused
at last to the demands of her employer, it was with
a start and a guilty look at the small gold clock
ticking out its inexorable reminder.
“He will want an answer the
first thing in the morning,” she complained
to herself. And opening the packet, she took out
first a letter, and then a mass of typewritten manuscript.
She began with the letter which was
as characteristic of the writer as all the others
she had had from his hand; as witness:
You probably remember the Hasbrouck
murder, or, perhaps, you don’t; it
being one of a time previous to your interest in such
matters. But whether you remember it or not,
I beg you to read the accompanying summary with due
care and attention to business. When you have
well mastered it with all its details, please communicate
with me in any manner most convenient to yourself,
for I shall have a word to say to you then, which
you may be glad to hear, if as you have lately intimated
you need to earn but one or two more substantial rewards
in order to cry halt to the pursuit for which you
have proved yourself so well qualified.
The story, in deference to yourself
as a young and much preoccupied woman, has been written
in a way to interest. Though the work of an everyday
police detective, you will find in it no lack of mystery
or romance; and if at the end you perceive that it
runs, as such cases frequently do, up against a perfectly
blank wall, you must remember that openings can be
made in walls, and that the loosening of one weak stone
from its appointed place, sometimes leads to the downfall
of all.
So much for the letter.
Laying it aside, with a shrug of her
expressive shoulders, Violet took up the manuscript.
Let us take it up too. It runs thus:
On the 17th of July, 19 ,
a tragedy of no little interest occurred in one of
the residences of the Colonnade in Lafayette Place.
Mr. Hasbrouck, a well known and highly
respected citizen, was attacked in his room by an
unknown assailant, and shot dead before assistance
could reach him. His murderer escaped, and the
problem offered to the police was how to identify
this person who, by some happy chance or by the exercise
of the most remarkable forethought, had left no traces
behind him, or any clue by which he could be followed.
The details of the investigation which
ended so unsatisfactorily are here given by the man
sent from headquarters at the first alarm.
When, some time after midnight on
the date above mentioned, I reached Lafayette Place,
I found the block lighted from end to end. Groups
of excited men and women peered from the open doorways,
and mingled their shadows with those of the huge pillars
which adorn the front of this picturesque block of
dwellings.
The house in which the crime had been
committed was near the centre of the row, and, long
before I reached it, I had learned from more than one
source that the alarm was first given to the street
by a woman’s shriek, and secondly by the shouts
of an old man-servant who had appeared, in a half-dressed
condition, at the window of Mr. Hasbrouck’s room,
crying “Murder! murder!”
But when I had crossed the threshold,
I was astonished at the paucity of facts to be gleaned
from the inmates themselves. The old servant,
who was the first to talk, had only this account of
the crime to give:
The family, which consisted of Mr.
Hasbrouck, his wife, and three servants, had retired
for the night at the usual hour and under the usual
auspices. At eleven o’clock the lights were
all extinguished, and the whole household asleep,
with the possible exception of Mr. Hasbrouck himself,
who, being a man of large business responsibilities,
was frequently troubled with insomnia.
Suddenly Mrs. Hasbrouck woke with
a start. Had she dreamed the words that were
ringing in her ears, or had they been actually uttered
in her hearing? They were short, sharp words,
full of terror and menace, and she had nearly satisfied
herself that she had imagined them, when there came,
from somewhere near the door, a sound she neither understood
nor could interpret, but which filled her with inexplicable
terror, and made her afraid to breathe, or even to
stretch forth her hand towards her husband, whom she
supposed to be sleeping at her side. At length
another strange sound, which she was sure was not
due to her imagination, drove her to make an attempt
to rouse him, when she was horrified to find that
she was alone in bed, and her husband nowhere within
reach.
Filled now with something more than
nervous apprehension, she flung herself to the floor,
and tried to penetrate with frenzied glances, the
surrounding darkness. But the blinds and shutters
both having been carefully closed by Mr. Hasbrouck
before retiring, she found this impossible, and she
was about to sink in terror to the floor, when she
heard a low gasp on the other side of the room followed
by a suppressed cry.
“God! what have I done!”
The voice was a strange one, but before
the fear aroused by this fact could culminate in a
shriek of dismay, she caught the sound of retreating
footsteps, and, eagerly listening, she heard them descend
the stairs and depart by the front door.
Had she known what had occurred had
there been no doubt in her mind as to what lay in
the darkness on the other side of the room it
is likely that, at the noise caused by the closing
front door, she would have made at once for the balcony
that opened out from the window before which she was
standing, and taken one look at the flying figure below.
But her uncertainty as to what lay hidden from her
by the darkness chained her feet to the floor, and
there is no knowing when she would have moved, if
a carriage had not at that moment passed down Astor
Place, bringing with it a sense of companionship which
broke the spell holding her, and gave her strength
to light the gas which was in ready reach of her hand.
As the sudden blaze illuminated the
room, revealing in a burst the old familiar walls
and well-known pieces of furniture, she felt for a
moment as if released from some heavy nightmare and
restored to the common experiences of life. But
in another instant her former dread returned, and
she found herself quaking at the prospect of passing
around the foot of the bed into that part of the room
which was as yet hidden from her eyes.
But the desperation which comes with
great crises finally drove her from her retreat; and,
creeping slowly forward, she cast one glance at the
floor before her, when she found her worst fears realized
by the sight of the dead body of her husband lying
prone before the open doorway, with a bullet-hole
in his forehead.
Her first impulse was to shriek, but,
by a powerful exercise of will, she checked herself,
and ringing frantically for the servants who slept
on the top floor of the house, flew to the nearest
window and endeavoured to open it. But the shutters
had been bolted so securely by Mr. Hasbrouck, in his
endeavour to shut out all light and sound, that by
the time she had succeeded in unfastening them, all
trace of the flying murderer had vanished from the
street.
Sick with grief and terror, she stepped
back into the room just as the three frightened servants
descended the stairs. As they appeared in the
open doorway, she pointed at her husband’s inanimate
form, and then, as if suddenly realizing in its full
force the calamity which had befallen her, she threw
up her arms, and sank forward to the floor in a dead
faint.
The two women rushed to her assistance,
but the old butler, bounding over the bed, sprang
to the window, and shrieked his alarm to the street.
In the interim that followed, Mrs.
Hasbrouck was revived, and the master’s body
laid decently on the bed; but no pursuit was made,
nor any inquiries started likely to assist me in establishing
the identity of the assailant.
Indeed, everyone both in the house
and out, seemed dazed by the unexpected catastrophe,
and as no one had any suspicions to offer as to the
probable murderer, I had a difficult task before me.
I began in the usual way, by inspecting
the scene of the murder. I found nothing in the
room, or in the condition of the body itself, which
added an iota to the knowledge already obtained.
That Mr. Hasbrouck had been in bed; that he had risen
upon hearing a noise; and that he had been shot before
reaching the door, were self-evident facts. But
there was nothing to guide me further. The very
simplicity of the circumstances caused a dearth of
clues, which made the difficulty of procedure as great
as any I had ever encountered.
My search through the hall and down
the stairs elicited nothing; and an investigation
of the bolts and bars by which the house was secured,
assured me that the assassin had either entered by
the front door, or had already been secreted in the
house when it was locked up for the night.
“I shall have to trouble Mrs.
Hasbrouck for a short interview,” I hereupon
announced to the trembling old servant, who had followed
me like a dog about the house.
He made no demur, and in a few minutes
I was ushered into the presence of the newly made
widow, who sat quite alone, in a large chamber in
the rear. As I crossed the threshold she looked
up, and I encountered a good, plain face, without
the shadow of guile in it.
“Madam,” said I, “I
have not come to disturb you. I will ask two or
three questions only, and then leave you to your grief.
I am told that some words came from the assassin before
he delivered his fatal shot. Did you hear these
distinctly enough to tell me what they were?”
“I was sound asleep,”
said she, “and dreamt, as I thought, that a
fierce, strange voice cried somewhere to some one:
’Ah! you did not expect me!’ But I dare
not say that these words were really uttered to my
husband, for he was not the man to call forth hate,
and only a man in the extremity of passion could address
such an exclamation in such a tone as rings in my
memory in connection with the fatal shot which woke
me.”
“But that shot was not the work
of a friend,” I argued. “If, as these
words seem to prove, the assassin had some other motive
than plunder in his assault, then your husband had
an enemy, though you never suspected it.”
“Impossible!” was her
steady reply, uttered in the most convincing tone.
“The man who shot him was a common burglar, and
frightened at having been betrayed into murder, fled
without looking for booty. I am sure I heard
him cry out in terror and remorse: ‘God!
what have I done!’”
“Was that before you left the side of the bed?”
“Yes; I did not move from my
place till I heard the front door close. I was
paralysed by fear and dread.”
“Are you in the habit of trusting
to the security of a latch-lock only in the fastening
of your front door at night? I am told that the
big key was not in the lock, and that the bolt at
the bottom of the door was not drawn.”
“The bolt at the bottom of the
door is never drawn. Mr. Hasbrouck was so good
a man that he never mistrusted any one. That is
why the big lock was not fastened. The key, not
working well, he took it some days ago to the locksmith,
and when the latter failed to return it, he laughed,
and said he thought no one would ever think of meddling
with his front door.”
“Is there more than one night-key
to your house?” I now asked.
She shook her head.
“And when did Mr. Hasbrouck last use his?”
“To-night, when he came home
from prayer meeting,” she answered, and burst
into tears.
Her grief was so real and her loss
so recent that I hesitated to afflict her by further
questions. So returning to the scene of the tragedy,
I stepped out upon the balcony which ran in front.
Soft voices instantly struck my ears. The neighbours
on either side were grouped in front of their own
windows, and were exchanging the remarks natural under
the circumstances. I paused, as in duty bound,
and listened. But I heard nothing worth recording,
and would have instantly reentered the house, if I
had not been impressed by the appearance of a very
graceful woman who stood at my right. She was
clinging to her husband, who was gazing at one of
the pillars before him in a strange fixed way which
astonished me till he attempted to move, and then
I saw that he was blind. I remembered that there
lived in this row a blind doctor, equally celebrated
for his skill and for his uncommon personal attractions,
and greatly interested not only by his affliction,
but in the sympathy evinced by his young and affectionate
wife, I stood still, till I heard her say in the soft
and appealing tones of love:
“Come in, Constant; you have
heavy duties for to-morrow, and you should get a few
hours’ rest if possible.”
He came from the shadow of the pillar,
and for one minute I saw his face with the lamplight
shining full upon it. It was as regular of feature
as a sculptured Adonis, and it was as white.
“Sleep!” he repeated,
in the measured tones of deep but suppressed feeling.
“Sleep! with murder on the other side of the
wall!” And he stretched out his arms in a dazed
way that insensibly accentuated the horror I myself
felt of the crime which had so lately taken place in
the room behind me.
She, noting the movement, took one
of the groping hands in her own and drew him gently
towards her.
“This way,” she urged;
and, guiding him into the house, she closed the window
and drew down the shades.
I have no excuse to offer for my curiosity,
but the interest excited in me by this totally irrelevant
episode was so great that I did not leave the neighbourhood
till I had learned something of this remarkable couple.
The story told me was very simple.
Dr. Zabriskie had not been born blind, but had become
so after a grievous illness which had stricken him
down soon after he received his diploma. Instead
of succumbing to an affliction which would have daunted
most men, he expressed his intention of practising
his profession, and soon became so successful in it
that he found no difficulty in establishing himself
in one of the best paying quarters of the city.
Indeed, his intuition seemed to have developed in
a remarkable degree after the loss of his sight, and
he seldom, if ever, made a mistake in diagnosis.
Considering this fact, and the personal attractions
which gave him distinction, it was no wonder that he
soon became a popular physician whose presence was
a benefaction and whose word law.
He had been engaged to be married
at the time of his illness, and when he learned what
was likely to be its result, had offered to release
the young lady from all obligation to him. But
she would not be released, and they were married.
This had taken place some five years previous to Mr.
Hasbrouck’s death, three of which had been spent
by them in Lafayette Place.
So much for the beautiful woman next door.
There being absolutely no clue to
the assailant of Mr. Hasbrouck, I naturally looked
forward to the inquest for some evidence upon which
to work. But there seemed to be no underlying
facts to this tragedy. The most careful study
into the habits and conduct of the deceased brought
nothing to light save his general beneficence and rectitude,
nor was there in his history or in that of his wife,
any secret or hidden obligation calculated to provoke
any such act of revenge as murder. Mrs. Hasbrouck’s
surmise that the intruder was simply a burglar, and
that she had rather imagined than heard the words
which pointed to the shooting as a deed of vengeance,
soon gained general credence.
But though the police worked long
and arduously in this new direction their efforts
were without fruit and the case bids fair to remain
an unsolvable mystery.
That was all. As Violet dropped
the last page from her hand, she recalled a certain
phrase in her employer’s letter. “If
at the end you come upon a perfectly blank wall ”
Well, she had come upon this wall. Did he expect
her to make an opening in it? Or had he already
done so himself, and was merely testing her much vaunted
discernment.
Piqued by the thought, she carefully
reread the manuscript, and when she had again reached
its uncompromising end, she gave herself up to a few
minutes of concentrated thought, then, taking a sheet
of paper from the rack before her, she wrote upon
it a single sentence, and folding the sheet, put it
in an envelope which she left unaddressed. This
done, she went to bed and slept like the child she
really was.
At an early hour the next morning
she entered her employer’s office. Acknowledging
with a nod his somewhat ceremonious bow, she handed
him the envelope in which she had enclosed that one
mysterious sentence.
He took it with a smile, opened it
offhand, glanced at what she had written, and flushed
a vivid red.
“You are a brick,”
he was going to say, but changed the last word to
one more in keeping with her character and appearance.
“Look here. I expected this from you and
so prepared myself.” Taking out a similar
piece of paper from his own pocket-book, he laid it
down beside hers on the desk before him. It also
held a single sentence and, barring a slight difference
of expression, the one was the counterpart of the
other. “The one loose stone,” he murmured.
“Seen and noted by both.”
“Why not?” he asked.
Then as she glanced expectantly his way, he earnestly
added: “Together we may be able to do something.
The reward offered by Mrs. Hasbrouck for the detection
of the murderer was a very large one. She is
a woman of means. I have never heard of its being
withdrawn.”
“Then it never has been,”
was Violet’s emphatic conclusion, her dimples
enforcing the statement as only such dimples can.
“But what do you want of me in an
affair of this kind? Something more than to help
you locate the one possible clue to further enlightenment.
You would not have mentioned the big reward just for
that.”
“Perhaps not. There is
a sequel to the story I sent you. I have written
it out, with my own hand. Take it home and read
it at your leisure. When you see into what an
unhappy maze my own inquiries have led me, possibly
you will be glad to assist me in clearing up a situation
which is inflicting great suffering on one whom you
will be the first to pity. If so, a line mentioning
the fact will be much appreciated by me.”
And disregarding her startled look and the impetuous
shaking of her head, he bowed her out with something
more than his accustomed suavity but also with a seriousness
which affected her in spite of herself and effectually
held back the protest it was in her heart to make.
She was glad of this when she read his story; but
later on
However, it is not for me to intrude
Violet, or Violet’s feelings into an affair
which she is so anxious to forget. I shall therefore
from this moment on, leave her as completely out of
this tale of crime and retribution as is possible
and keep a full record of her work. When she
is necessary to the story, you will see her again.
Meanwhile, read with her, this relation of her employer’s
unhappy attempt to pursue an investigation so openly
dropped by the police. You will perceive, from
its general style and the accentuation put upon the
human side of this sombre story, a likeness to the
former manuscript which may prove to you, as it certainly
did to Violet, to whose consideration she was indebted
for the readableness of the policeman’s report,
which in all probability had been a simple statement
of facts.
But there, I am speaking of Violet
again. To prevent a further mischance of this
nature, I will introduce at once the above mentioned
account.
II
No man in all New York was ever more
interested than myself in the Hasbrouck affair, when
it was the one and only topic of interest at a period
when news was unusually scarce. But, together
with many such inexplicable mysteries, it had passed
almost completely from my mind, when it was forcibly
brought back, one day, by a walk I took through Lafayette
Place.
At sight of the long row of uniform
buildings, with their pillared fronts and connecting
balconies every detail of the crime which had filled
the papers at the time with innumerable conjectures
returned to me with extraordinary clearness, and,
before I knew it, I found myself standing stockstill
in the middle of the block with my eye raised to the
Hasbrouck house and my ears or rather my
inner consciousness, for no one spoke I am sure ringing
with a question which, whether the echo of some old
thought or the expression of a new one, so affected
me by the promise it held of some hitherto unsuspected
clue, that I hesitated whether to push this new inquiry
then or there by an attempted interview with Mrs.
Hasbrouck, or to wait till I had given it the thought
which such a stirring of dead bones rightfully demanded.
You know what that question was.
I shall have communicated it to you, if you have not
already guessed it, before perusing these lines:
“Who uttered the scream which
gave the first alarm of Mr. Hasbrouck’s violent
death?”
I was in a state of such excitement
as I walked away for I listened to my better
judgment as to the inadvisability of my disturbing
Mrs. Hasbrouck with these new inquiries that
the perspiration stood out on my forehead. The
testimony she had given at the inquest recurred to
me, and I remembered as distinctly as if she were
then speaking, that she had expressly stated that
she did not scream when confronted by the sight of
her husband’s dead body. But someone had
screamed and that very loudly. Who was it, then?
One of the maids, startled by the sudden summons from
below, or someone else some involuntary
witness of the crime, whose testimony had been suppressed
at the inquest, by fear or influence?
The possibility of having come upon
a clue even at this late day so fired my ambition
that I took the first opportunity of revisiting Lafayette
Place. Choosing such persons as I thought most
open to my questions, I learned that there were many
who could testify to having heard a woman’s
shrill scream on that memorable night, just prior to
the alarm given by old Cyrus, but no one who could
tell from whose lips it had come. One fact, however,
was immediately settled. It had not been the
result of the servant-women’s fears. Both
of the girls were positive that they had uttered no
sound, nor had they themselves heard any till Cyrus
rushed to the window with his wild cries. As the
scream, by whomever given, was uttered before they
descended the stairs, I was convinced by these assurances
that it had issued from one of the front windows,
and not from the rear of the house, where their own
rooms lay. Could it be that it had sprung from
the adjoining dwelling, and that
I remembered who had lived there and
was for ringing the bell at once. But, missing
the doctor’s sign, I made inquiries and found
that he had moved from the block. However, a
doctor is soon found, and in less than fifteen, minutes
I was at the door of his new home, where I asked, not
for him, but for Mrs. Zabriskie.
It required some courage to do this,
for I had taken particular notice of the doctor’s
wife at the inquest, and her beauty, at that time,
had worn such an aspect of mingled sweetness and dignity
that I hesitated to encounter it under any circumstances
likely to disturb its pure serenity. But a clue
once grasped cannot be lightly set aside by a true
detective, and it would have taken more than a woman’s
frowns to stop me at this point.
However, it was not with frowns she
received me, but with a display of emotion for which
I was even less prepared. I had sent up my card
and I saw it trembling in her hand as she entered
the room. As she neared me, she glanced at it,
and with a show of gentle indifference which did not
in the least disguise her extreme anxiety, she courteously
remarked:
“Your name is an unfamiliar
one to me. But you told my maid that your business
was one of extreme importance, and so I have consented
to see you. What can an agent from a private
detective office have to say to me?”
Startled by this evidence of the existence
of some hidden skeleton in her own closet, I made
an immediate attempt to reassure her.
“Nothing which concerns you
personally,” said I. “I simply wish
to ask you a question in regard to a small matter
connected with Mr. Hasbrouck’s violent death
in Lafayette Place, a couple of years ago. You
were living in the adjoining house at the time I believe,
and it has occurred to me that you might on that account
be able to settle a point which has never been fully
cleared up.”
Instead of showing the relief I expected,
her pallor increased and her fine eyes, which had
been fixed curiously upon me, sank in confusion to
the floor.
“Great heaven!” thought
I. “She looks as if at one more word from
me, she would fall at my feet in a faint. What
is this I have stumbled upon!”
“I do not see how you can have
any question to ask me on that subject,” she
began with an effort at composure which for some reason
disturbed me more than her previous open display of
fear. “Yet if you have,” she continued,
with a rapid change of manner that touched my heart
in spite of myself, “I shall, of course, do
my best to answer you.”
There are women whose sweetest tones
and most charming smiles only serve to awaken distrust
in men of my calling; but Mrs. Zabriskie was not of
this number. Her face was beautiful, but it was
also candid in its expression, and beneath the agitation
which palpably disturbed her, I was sure there lurked
nothing either wicked or false. Yet I held fast
by the clue which I had grasped as it were in the
dark, and without knowing whither I was tending, much
less whither I was leading her, I proceeded to say:
“The question which I presume
to put to you as the next door neighbour of Mr. Hasbrouck
is this: Who was the woman who on the night of
that gentleman’s assassination screamed out so
loudly that the whole neighbourhood heard her?”
The gasp she gave answered my question
in a way she little realized, and struck as I was
by the impalpable links that had led me to the threshold
of this hitherto unsolvable mystery, I was about to
press my advantage and ask another question, when
she quickly started forward and laid her hand on my
lips.
Astonished, I looked at her inquiringly,
but her head was turned aside, and her eyes, fixed
upon the door, showed the greatest anxiety. Instantly
I realized what she feared. Her husband was entering
the house, and she dreaded lest his ears should catch
a word of our conversation.
Not knowing what was in her mind,
and unable to realize the importance of the moment
to her, I yet listened to the advance of her blind
husband with an almost painful interest. Would
he enter the room where we were, or would he pass
immediately to his office in the rear? She seemed
to wonder too, and almost held her breath as he neared
the door, paused, and stood in the open doorway, with
his ear turned towards us.
As for myself, I remained perfectly
still, gazing at his face in mingled surprise and
apprehension. For besides its beauty, which was
of a marked order, as I have already observed, it
had a touching expression which irresistibly aroused
both pity and interest in the spectator. This
may have been the result of his affliction, or it
may have sprung from some deeper cause; but, whatever
its source, this look in his face produced a strong
impression upon me and interested me at once in his
personality. Would he enter; or would he pass
on? Her look of silent appeal showed me in which
direction her wishes lay, but while I answered her
glance by complete silence, I was conscious in some
indistinct way that the business I had undertaken
would be better furthered by his entrance.
The blind have often been said to
possess a sixth sense in place of the one they have
lost. Though I am sure we made no noise, I soon
perceived that he was aware of our presence.
Stepping hastily forward he said, in the high and
vibrating tone of restrained passion:
“Zulma, are you there?”
For a moment I thought she did not
mean to answer, but knowing doubtless from experience
the impossibility of deceiving him, she answered with
a cheerful assent, dropping her hand as she did so
from before my lips.
He heard the slight rustle which accompanied
the movement, and a look I found it hard to comprehend
flashed over his features, altering his expression
so completely that he seemed another man.
“You have someone with you,”
he declared, advancing another step, but with none
of the uncertainty which usually accompanies the movements
of the blind. “Some dear friend,”
he went on, with an almost sarcastic emphasis and
a forced smile that had little of gaiety in it.
The agitated and distressed blush
which answered him could have but one interpretation.
He suspected that her hand had been clasped in mine,
and she perceived his thought and knew that I perceived
it also.
Drawing herself up, she moved towards
him, saying in a sweet womanly tone:
“It is no friend, Constant,
not even an acquaintance. The person whom I now
present to you is a representative from some detective
agency. He is here upon a trivial errand which
will soon be finished, when I will join you in the
office.”
I knew she was but taking a choice
between two evils, that she would have saved her husband
the knowledge of my calling as well as of my presence
in the house, if her self-respect would have allowed
it; but neither she nor I anticipated the effect which
this introduction of myself in my business capacity
would produce upon him.
“A detective,” he repeated,
staring with his sightless eyes, as if, in his eagerness
to see, he half hoped his lost sense would return.
“He can have no trivial errand here; he has
been sent by God Himself to ”
“Let me speak for you,”
hastily interposed his wife, springing to his side
and clasping his arm with a fervour that was equally
expressive of appeal and command. Then turning
to me, she explained: “Since Mr. Hasbrouck’s
unaccountable death, my husband has been labouring
under an hallucination which I have only to mention,
for you to recognize its perfect absurdity. He
thinks oh! do not look like that, Constant;
you know it is an hallucination which must vanish
the moment we drag it into broad daylight that
he he, the best man in all the world, was
himself the assailant of Mr. Hasbrouck.”
“Good God!”
“I say nothing of the impossibility
of this being so,” she went on in a fever of
expostulation. “He is blind, and could not
have delivered such a shot even if he had desired
to; besides, he had no weapon. But the inconsistency
of the thing speaks for itself, and should assure him
that his mind is unbalanced and that he is merely
suffering from a shock that was greater than we realized.
He is a physician and has had many such instances
in his own practice. Why, he was very much attached
to Mr. Hasbrouck! They were the best of friends,
and though he insists that he killed him, he cannot
give any reason for the deed.”
At these words the doctor’s
face grew stern, and he spoke like an automaton repeating
some fearful lesson:
“I killed him. I went to
his room and deliberately shot him. I had nothing
against him, and my remorse is extreme. Arrest
me and let me pay the penalty of my crime. It
is the only way in which I can obtain peace.”
Shocked beyond all power of self-control
by this repetition of what she evidently considered
the unhappy ravings of a madman, she let go his arm
and turned upon me in frenzy.
“Convince him!” she cried.
“Convince him by your questions that he never
could have done this fearful thing.”
I was labouring under great excitement
myself, for as a private agent with no official authority
such as he evidently attributed to me in the blindness
of his passion, I felt the incongruity of my position
in the face of a matter of such tragic consequence.
Besides, I agreed with her that he was in a distempered
state of mind, and I hardly knew how to deal with
one so fixed in his hallucination and with so much
intelligence to support it. But the emergency
was great, for he was holding out his wrists in the
evident expectation of my taking him into instant
custody; and the sight was killing his wife, who had
sunk on the floor between us, in terror and anguish.
“You say you killed Mr. Hasbrouck,”
I began. “Where did you get your pistol,
and what did you do with it after you left his house?”
“My husband had no pistol; never
had any pistol,” put in Mrs. Zabriskie, with
vehement assertion. “If I had seen him with
such a weapon ”
“I threw it away. When
I left the house, I cast it as far from me as possible,
for I was frightened at what I had done, horribly frightened.”
“No pistol was ever found,”
I answered with a smile, forgetting for the moment
that he could not see. “If such an instrument
had been found in the street after a murder of such
consequence, it certainly would have been brought
to the police.”
“You forget that a good pistol
is valuable property,” he went on stolidly.
“Someone came along before the general alarm
was given; and seeing such a treasure lying on the
sidewalk, picked it up and carried it off. Not
being an honest man, he preferred to keep it to drawing
the attention of the police upon himself.”
“Hum, perhaps,” said I;
“but where did you get it. Surely you can
tell where you procured such a weapon, if, as your
wife intimates, you did not own one.”
“I bought it that selfsame night
of a friend; a friend whom I will not name, since
he resides no longer in this country. I ”
He paused; intense passion was in his face; he turned
towards his wife, and a low cry escaped him, which
made her look up in fear.
“I do not wish to go into any
particulars,” said he. “God forsook
me and I committed a horrible crime. When I am
punished, perhaps peace will return to me and happiness
to her. I would not wish her to suffer too long
or too bitterly for my sin.”
“Constant!” What love
was in the cry! It seemed to move him and turn
his thoughts for a moment into a different channel.
“Poor child!” he murmured,
stretching out his hands by an irresistible impulse
towards her. But the change was but momentary,
and he was soon again the stem and determined self-accuser.
“Are you going to take me before a magistrate?”
he asked. “If so, I have a few duties to
perform which you are welcome to witness.”
This was too much; I felt that the
time had come for me to disabuse his mind of the impression
he had unwittingly formed of me. I therefore said
as considerately as I could:
“You mistake my position, Dr.
Zabriskie. Though a detective of some experience,
I have no connection with the police and no right to
intrude myself in a matter of such tragic importance.
If, however, you are as anxious as you say to subject
yourself to police examination, I will mention the
same to the proper authorities, and leave them to take
such action as they think best.”
“That will be still more satisfactory
to me,” said he; “for though I have many
times contemplated giving myself up, I have still much
to do before I can leave my home and practice without
injury to others. Good-day; when you want me
you will find me here.”
He was gone, and the poor young wife
was left crouching on the floor alone. Pitying
her shame and terror, I ventured to remark that it
was not an uncommon thing for a man to confess to
a crime he had never committed, and assured her that
the matter would be inquired into very carefully before
any attempt was made upon his liberty.
She thanked me, and slowly rising,
tried to regain her equanimity; but the manner as
well as the matter of her husband’s self-condemnation
was too overwhelming in its nature for her to recover
readily from her emotions.
“I have long dreaded this,”
she acknowledged. “For months I have foreseen
that he would make some rash communication or insane
avowal. If I had dared, I would have consulted
some physician about this hallucination of his; but
he was so sane on other points that I hesitated to
give my dreadful secret to the world. I kept hoping
that time and his daily pursuits would have their
effect and restore him to himself. But his illusion
grows, and now I fear that nothing will ever convince
him that he did not commit the deed of which he accuses
himself. If he were not blind I would have more
hope, but the blind have so much time for brooding.”
“I think he had better be indulged
in his fancies for the present,” I ventured.
“If he is labouring under an illusion it might
be dangerous to cross him.”
“If?” she echoed in an
indescribable tone of amazement and dread. “Can
you for a moment harbour the idea that he has spoken
the truth?”
“Madam,” I returned, with
something of the cynicism of my calling, “what
caused you to give such an unearthly scream just before
this murder was made known to the neighbourhood?”
She stared, paled, and finally began
to tremble, not, as I now believe, at the insinuation
latent in my words, but at the doubts which my question
aroused in her own breast.
“Did I?” she asked; then
with a burst of candour which seemed inseparable from
her nature, she continued: “Why do I try
to mislead you or deceive myself? I did give
a shriek just before the alarm was raised next door;
but it was not from any knowledge I had of a crime
having been committed, but because I unexpectedly
saw before me my husband whom I supposed to be on
his way to Poughkeepsie. He was looking very pale
and strange, and for a moment I thought I stood face
to face with his ghost. But he soon explained
his appearance by saying that he had fallen from the
train and had only been saved by a miracle from being
dismembered; and I was just bemoaning his mishap and
trying to calm him and myself, when that terrible
shout was heard next door of ’Murder! murder!’
Coming so soon after the shock he had himself experienced,
it quite unnerved him, and I think we can date his
mental disturbance from that moment. For he began
immediately to take a morbid interest in the affair
next door, though it was weeks, if not months, before
he let a word fall of the nature of those you have
just heard. Indeed it was not till I repeated
to him some of the expressions he was continually
letting fall in his sleep, that he commenced to accuse
himself of crime and talk of retribution.”
“You say that your husband frightened
you on that night by appearing suddenly at the door
when you thought him on his way to Poughkeepsie.
Is Dr. Zabriskie in the habit of thus going and coming
alone at an hour so late as this must have been?”
“You forget that to the blind,
night is less full of perils than the day. Often
and often has my husband found his way to his patients’
houses alone after midnight; but on this especial evening
he had Leonard with him. Leonard was his chauffeur,
and always accompanied him when he went any distance.”
“Well, then,” said I,
“all we have to do is to summon Leonard and hear
what he has to say concerning this affair. He
will surely know whether or not his master went into
the house next door.”
“Leonard has left us,”
she said. “Dr. Zabriskie has another chauffeur
now. Besides (I have nothing to conceal from you),
Leonard was not with him when he returned to the house
that evening or the doctor would not have been without
his portmanteau till the next day. Something I
have never known what caused them to separate,
and that is why I have no answer to give the doctor
when he accuses himself of committing a deed that
night so wholly out of keeping with every other act
of his life.”
“And have you never asked Leonard
why they separated and why he allowed his master to
come home alone after the shock he had received at
the station?”
“I did not know there was any
reason for my doing so till long after he had left
us.”
“And when did he leave?”
“That I do not remember.
A few weeks or possibly a few days after that dreadful
night.”
“And where is he now?”
“Ah, that I have not the least
means of knowing. But,” she objected, in
sudden distrust, “what do you want of Leonard?
If he did not follow Dr. Zabriskie to his own door,
he could tell us nothing that would convince my husband
that he is labouring under an illusion.”
“But he might tell us something
which would convince us that Dr. Zabriskie was not
himself after the accident; that he ”
“Hush!” came from her
lips in imperious tones. “I will not believe
that he shot Mr. Hasbrouck even if you prove him to
have been insane at the time. How could he?
My husband is blind. It would take a man of very
keen sight to force himself into a house closed for
the night, and kill a man in the dark at one shot.”
“On the contrary, it is only
a blind man who could do this,” cried a voice
from the doorway. “Those who trust to eyesight
must be able to catch a glimpse of the mark they aim
at, and this room, as I have been told, was without
a glimmer of light. But the blind trust to sound,
and as Mr. Hasbrouck spoke ”
“Oh!” burst from the horrified
wife, “is there no one to stop him when he speaks
like that?”
III
As you will see, this matter, so recklessly
entered into, had proved to be of too serious a nature
for me to pursue it farther without the cognizance
of the police. Having a friend on the force in
whose discretion I could rely, I took him into my
confidence and asked for his advice. He pooh-poohed
the doctor’s statements, but said that he would
bring the matter to the attention of the superintendent
and let me know the result. I agreed to this,
and we parted with the mutual understanding that mum
was the word till some official decision had been
arrived at. I had not long to wait. At an
early day he came in with the information that there
had been, as might be expected, a division of opinion
among his superiors as to the importance of Dr. Zabriskie’s
so-called confession, but in one point they had been
unanimous and that was the desirability of his appearing
before them at Headquarters for a personal examination.
As, however, in the mind of two out of three of them
his condition was attributed entirely to acute mania,
it had been thought best to employ as their emissary
one in whom he had already confided and submitted
his case to, in other words, myself.
The time was set for the next afternoon at the close
of his usual office hours.
He went without reluctance, his wife
accompanying him. In the short time which elapsed
between their leaving home and entering Headquarters,
I embraced the opportunity of observing them, and I
found the study equally exciting and interesting.
His face was calm but hopeless, and his eye, dark
and unfathomable, but neither frenzied nor uncertain.
He spoke but once and listened to nothing, though
now and then his wife moved as if to attract his attention,
and once even stole her hand towards his, in the tender
hope that he would feel its approach and accept her
sympathy. But he was deaf as well as blind; and
sat wrapped up in thoughts which she, I know, would
have given worlds to penetrate.
Her countenance was not without its
mystery also. She showed in every lineament passionate
concern and misery, and a deep tenderness from which
the element of fear was not absent. But she, as
well as he, betrayed that some misunderstanding deeper
than any I had previously suspected drew its intangible
veil between them and made the near proximity in which
they sat at once a heart-piercing delight and an unspeakable
pain. What was the misunderstanding; and what
was the character of the fear that modified her every
look of love in his direction? Her perfect indifference
to my presence proved that it was not connected with
the position in which he had placed himself towards
the police by his voluntary confession of crime, nor
could I thus interpret the expression, of frantic
question which now and then contracted her features,
as she raised her eyes towards his sightless orbs,
and strove to read in his firm set lips the meaning
of those assertions she could only ascribe to loss
of reason.
The stopping of the carriage seemed
to awaken both from thoughts that separated rather
than united them. He turned his face in her direction,
and she stretching forth her hand, prepared to lead
him from the carriage, without any of that display
of timidity which had previously been evident in her
manner.
As his guide she seemed to fear nothing;
as his lover, everything.
“There is another and a deeper
tragedy underlying the outward and obvious one,”
was my inward conclusion, as I followed them into the
presence of the gentlemen awaiting them.
Dr. Zabriskie’s quiet appearance
was in itself a shock to those who had anticipated
the feverish unrest of a madman; so was his speech,
which was calm, straightforward, and quietly determined.
“I shot Mr. Hasbrouck,”
was his steady affirmation, given without any show
of frenzy or desperation. “If you ask me
why I did it, I cannot answer; if you ask me how,
I am ready to state all that I know concerning the
matter.”
“But, Dr. Zabriskie,”
interposed one of the inspectors, “the why is
the most important thing for us to consider just now.
If you really desire to convince us that you committed
this dreadful crime of killing a totally inoffensive
man, you should give us some reason for an act so
opposed to all your instincts and general conduct.”
But the doctor continued unmoved:
“I had no reason for murdering
Mr. Hasbrouck. A hundred questions can elicit
no other reply; you had better keep to the how.”
A deep-drawn breath from the wife
answered the looks of the three gentlemen to whom
this suggestion was offered. “You see,”
that breath seemed to protest, “that he is not
in his right mind.”
I began to waver in my own opinion,
and yet the intuition which has served me in cases
seemingly as impenetrable as this bade me beware of
following the general judgment.
“Ask him to inform you how he
got into the house,” I whispered to Inspector
D , who sat nearest me.
Immediately the inspector put the
question which I had suggested:
“By what means did you enter
Mr. Hasbrouck’s house at so late an hour as
this murder occurred?”
The blind doctor’s head fell
forward on his breast, and he hesitated for the first
and only time.
“You will not believe me,”
said he; “but the door was ajar when I came
to it. Such things make crime easy; it is the
only excuse I have to offer for this dreadful deed.”
The front door of a respectable citizen’s
house ajar at half-past eleven at night! It was
a statement that fixed in all minds the conviction
of the speaker’s irresponsibility. Mrs.
Zabriskie’s brow cleared, and her beauty became
for a moment dazzling as she held out her hands in
irrepressible relief towards those who were interrogating
her husband. I alone kept my impassibility.
A possible explanation of this crime had flashed like
lightning across my mind; an explanation from which
I inwardly recoiled, even while I felt forced to consider
it.
“Dr. Zabriskie,” remarked
the inspector formerly mentioned as friendly to him,
“such old servants as those kept by Mr. Hasbrouck
do not leave the front door ajar at twelve o’clock
at night.”
“Yet ajar it was,” repeated
the blind doctor, with quiet emphasis; “and
finding it so, I went in. When I came out again,
I closed it. Do you wish me to swear to what
I say? If so, I am ready.”
What reply could they give? To
see this splendid-looking man, hallowed by an affliction
so great that in itself it called forth the compassion
of the most indifferent, accusing himself of a cold-blooded
crime, in tones which sounded dispassionate because
of the will forcing their utterance, was too painful
in itself for any one to indulge in unnecessary words.
Compassion took the place of curiosity, and each and
all of us turned involuntary looks of pity upon the
young wife pressing so eagerly to his side.
“For a blind man,” ventured
one, “the assault was both deft and certain.
Are you accustomed to Mr. Hasbrouck’s house,
that you found your way with so little difficulty
to his bedroom?”
“I am accustomed ” he began.
But here his wife broke in with irrepressible passion:
“He is not accustomed to that
house. He has never been beyond the first floor.
Why, why do you question him? Do you not see ”
His hand was on her lips.
“Hush!” he commanded.
“You know my skill in moving about a house; how
I sometimes deceive those who do not know me into believing
that I can see, by the readiness with which I avoid
obstacles and find my way even in strange and untried
scenes. Do not try to make them think I am not
in my right mind, or you will drive me into the very
condition you attribute to me.”
His face, rigid, cold, and set, looked
like that of a mask. Hers, drawn with horror
and filled with question that was fast taking the form
of doubt, bespoke an awful tragedy from which more
than one of us recoiled.
“Can you shoot a man dead without
seeing him?” asked the Superintendent, with
painful effort.
“Give me a pistol and I will
show you,” was the quick reply.
A low cry came from the wife.
In a drawer near to every one of us there lay a pistol,
but no one moved to take it out. There was a look
in the doctor’s eye which made us fear to trust
him with a pistol just then.
“We will accept your assurance
that you possess a skill beyond that of most men,”
returned the Superintendent. And beckoning me
forward, he whispered: “This is a case
for the doctors and not for the police. Remove
him quietly, and notify Dr. Southyard of what I say.”
But Dr. Zabriskie, who seemed to have
an almost supernatural acuteness of hearing, gave
a violent start at this, and spoke up for the first
time with real passion in his voice:
“No, no, I pray you. I
can bear anything but that. Remember, gentlemen,
that I am blind; that I cannot see who is about me;
that my life would be a torture if I felt myself surrounded
by spies watching to catch some evidence of madness
in me. Rather conviction at once, death, dishonour,
and obloquy. These I have incurred. These
I have brought upon myself by crime, but not this
worse fate oh! not this worse fate.”
His passion was so intense and yet
so confined within the bounds of decorum, that we
felt strangely impressed by it. Only the wife
stood transfixed, with the dread growing in her heart,
till her white, waxen visage seemed even more terrible
to contemplate than his passion-distorted one.
“It is not strange that my wife
thinks me demented,” the doctor continued, as
if afraid of the silence that answered him. “But
it is your business to discriminate, and you should
know a sane man when you see him.”
Inspector D no longer hesitated.
“Very well,” said he,
“give me the least proof that your assertions
are true, and we will lay your case before the prosecuting
attorney.”
“Proof? Is not a man’s word ”
“No man’s confession is
worth much without some evidence to support it.
In your case there is none. You cannot even produce
the pistol with which you assert yourself to have
committed the deed.”
“True, true. I was frightened
by what I had done, and the instinct of self-preservation
led me to rid myself of the weapon in any way I could.
But someone found this pistol; someone picked it up
from the sidewalk of Lafayette Place on that fatal
night. Advertise for it. Offer a reward.
I will give you the money.” Suddenly he
appeared to realize how all this sounded. “Alas!”
cried he, “I know the story seems improbable;
but it is not the probable things that happen in this
life, as, you should know, who every day dig deep
into the heart of human affairs.”
Were these the ravings of insanity?
I began to understand the wife’s terror.
“I bought the pistol,”
he went on, “of alas! I cannot
tell you his name. Everything is against me.
I cannot adduce one proof; yet even she is beginning
to fear that my story is true. I know it by her
silence, a silence that yawns between us like a deep
and unfathomable gulf.”
But at these words her voice rang
out with passionate vehemence.
“No, no, it is false! I
will never believe that your hands have been plunged
in blood. You are my own pure-hearted Constant,
cold, perhaps, and stern, but with no guilt upon your
conscience save in your own wild imagination.”
“Zulma, you are no friend to
me,” he declared, pushing her gently aside.
“Believe me innocent, but say nothing to lead
these others to doubt my word.”
And she said no more, but her looks spoke volumes.
The result was that he was not detained,
though he prayed for instant commitment. He seemed
to dread his own home, and the surveillance to which
he instinctively knew he would henceforth be subjected.
To see him shrink from his wife’s hand as she
strove to lead him from the room was sufficiently
painful; but the feeling thus aroused was nothing to
that with which we observed the keen and agonized
expectancy of his look as he turned and listened for
the steps of the officer who followed him.
“From this time on I shall never
know whether or not I am alone,” was his final
observation as he left the building.
Here is where the matter rests and
here, Miss Strange, is where you come in. The
police were for sending an expert alienist into the
house; but agreeing with me, and, in fact, with the
doctor himself, that if he were not already out of
his mind, this would certainly make them so, they,
at my earnest intercession, have left the next move
to me.
That move as you must by this time
understand involves you. You have advantages
for making Mrs. Zabriskie’s acquaintance of which
I beg you to avail yourself. As friend or patient,
you must win your way into that home? You must
sound to its depths one or both of these two wretched
hearts. Not so much now for any possible reward
which may follow the elucidation of this mystery which
has come so near being shelved, but for pity’s
sake and the possible settlement of a question which
is fast driving a lovely member of your sex distracted.
May I rely on you? If so
Various instructions followed, over
which Violet mused with a deprecatory shaking of her
head till the little clock struck two. Why should
she, already in a state of secret despondency, intrude
herself into an affair at once so painful and so hopeless?
IV
But by morning her mood changed.
The pathos of the situation had seized upon her in
her dreams, and before the day was over, she was to
be seen, as a prospective patient, in Dr. Zabriskie’s
office. She had a slight complaint as her excuse,
and she made the most of it. That is, at first,
but as the personality of this extraordinary man began
to make its usual impression, she found herself forgetting
her own condition in the intensity of interest she
felt in his. Indeed, she had to pull herself
together more than once lest he should suspect the
double nature of her errand, and she actually caught
herself at times rejoicing in his affliction since
it left her with only her voice to think of, in her
hated but necessary task of deception.
That she succeeded in this effort,
even with one of his nice ear, was evident from the
interested way in which he dilated upon her malady,
and the minute instructions he was careful to give
her the physician being always uppermost
in his strange dual nature, when he was in his office
or at the bedside of the sick; and had she
not been a deep reader of the human soul she would
have left his presence in simple wonder at his skill
and entire absorption in an exacting profession.
But as it was, she carried with her
an image of subdued suffering, which drove her, from
that moment on, to ask herself what she could do to
aid him in his fight against his own illusion; for
to associate such a man with a senseless and cruel
murder was preposterous.
What this wish, helped by no common
determination, led her into, it was not in her mind
to conceive. She was making her one great mistake,
but as yet she was in happy ignorance of it, and pursued
the course laid out for her without a doubt of the
ultimate result.
Having seen and made up her mind about
the husband, she next sought to see and gauge the
wife. That she succeeded in doing this by means
of one of her sly little tricks is not to the point;
but what followed in natural consequence is very much
so. A mutual interest sprang up between them
which led very speedily to actual friendship.
Mrs. Zabriskie’s hungry heart opened to the
sympathetic little being who clung to her in such
evident admiration; while Violet, brought face to face
with a real woman, succumbed to feelings which made
it no imposition on her part to spend much of her
leisure in Zulma Zabriskie’s company.
The result were the following naïve
reports which drifted into her employer’s office
from day to day, as this intimacy deepened.
The doctor is settling into a deep
melancholy, from which he tries to rise at times,
but with only indifferent success. Yesterday he
rode around to all his patients for the purpose of
withdrawing his services on the plea of illness.
But he still keeps his office open, and today I had
the opportunity of witnessing his reception and treatment
of the many sufferers who came to him for aid.
I think he was conscious of my presence, though an
attempt had been made to conceal it. For the
listening look never left his face from the moment
he entered the room, and once he rose and passed quickly
from wall to wall, groping with out-stretched hands
into every nook and corner, and barely escaping contact
with the curtain behind which I was hidden. But
if he suspected my presence, he showed no displeasure
at it, wishing perhaps for a witness to his skill
in the treatment of disease.
And truly I never beheld a finer manifestation
of practical insight in cases of a more or less baffling
nature. He is certainly a most wonderful physician,
and I feel bound to record that his mind is as clear
for business as if no shadow had fallen upon it.
Dr. Zabriskie loves his wife, but
in a way torturing to himself and to her. If
she is gone from the house he is wretched, and yet
when she returns he often forbears to speak to her,
or if he does speak it is with a constraint that hurts
her more than his silence. I was present when
she came in today. Her step, which had been eager
on the stairway, flagged as she approached the room,
and he naturally noted the change and gave his own
interpretation to it. His face, which had been
very pale, flushed suddenly, and a nervous trembling
seized him which he sought in vain to hide. But
by the time her tall and beautiful figure stood in
the doorway, he was his usual self again in all but
the expression of his eyes, which stared straight
before him in an agony of longing only to be observed
in those who have once seen.
“Where have you been, Zulma?”
he asked, as contrary to his wont, he moved to meet
her.
“To my mother’s, to Arnold
& Constable’s, and to the hospital, as you requested,”
was her quick answer, made without faltering or embarrassment.
He stepped still nearer and took her
hand, and as he did so my eye fell on his and I noted
that his finger lay over her pulse in seeming unconsciousness.
“Nowhere else?” he queried.
She smiled the saddest kind of smile
and shook her head; then, remembering that he could
not see this movement, she cried in a wistful tone:
“Nowhere else, Constant; I was too anxious to
get back.”
I expected him to drop her hand at
this, but he did not; and his finger still rested
on her pulse.
“And whom did you see while you were gone?”
he continued.
She told him, naming over several names.
“You must have enjoyed yourself,”
was his cold comment, as he let go her hand and turned
away. But his manner showed relief, and I could
not but sympathize with the pitiable situation of
a man who found himself forced into means like this
for probing the heart of his young wife.
Yet when I turned towards her, I realized
that her position was but little happier than his.
Tears are no strangers to her eyes, but those which
welled up at this moment seemed to possess a bitterness
that promised but little peace for her future.
Yet she quickly dried them and busied herself with
ministrations for his comfort.
If I am any judge of woman, Zulma
Zabriskie is superior to most of her sex. That
her husband mistrusts her is evident, but whether this
is the result of the stand she has taken in his regard,
or only a manifestation of dementia, I have as yet
been unable to determine. I dread to leave them
alone together, and yet when I presume to suggest that
she should be on her guard in her interviews with
him, she smiles very placidly and tells me that nothing
would give her greater joy than to see him lift his
hand against her, for that would argue that he is not
accountable for his deeds or assertions.
Yet it would be a grief to see her
injured by this passionate and unhappy man.
You have said that you wanted all
the details I could give; so I feel bound to say that
Dr. Zabriskie tries to be considerate of his wife,
though he often fails in the attempt. When she
offers herself as his guide, or assists him with his
mail or performs any of the many acts of kindness
by which she continually manifests her sense of his
affliction, he thanks her with courtesy and often
with kindness, yet I know she would willingly exchange
all his set phrases for one fond embrace or impulsive
smile of affection. It would be too much to say
that he is not in the full possession of his faculties,
and yet upon what other hypothesis can we account
for the inconsistencies of his conduct?
I have before me two visions of mental
suffering. At noon I passed the office door,
and looking within, saw the figure of Dr. Zabriskie
seated in his great chair, lost in thought or deep
in those memories which make an abyss in one’s
consciousness. His hands, which were clenched,
rested upon the arms of his chair, and in one of them
I detected a woman’s glove, which I had no difficulty
in recognizing as one of the pair worn by his wife
this morning. He held it as a tiger might hold
his prey or a miser his gold, but his set features
and sightless eyes betrayed that a conflict of emotions
was being waged within him, among which tenderness
had but little share. Though alive as he usually
is to every sound, he was too absorbed at this moment
to notice my presence, though I had taken no pains
to approach quietly. I therefore stood for a full
minute watching him, till an irresistible sense of
the shame at thus spying upon a blind man in his moments
of secret anguish compelled me to withdraw. But
not before I saw his features relax in a storm of
passionate feeling, as he rained kisses after kisses
on the senseless kid he had so long held in his motionless
grasp. Yet when an hour later he entered the
dining-room on his wife’s arm, there was nothing
in his manner to show that he had in any way changed
in his attitude towards her.
The other picture was more tragic
still. I was seeking Mrs. Zabriskie in her own
room, when I caught a fleeting vision of her tall form,
with her arms thrown up over her head in a paroxysm
of feeling which made her as oblivious to my presence
as her husband had been several hours before.
Were the words that escaped her lips “Thank God
we have no children!” or was this exclamation
suggested to me by the passion and unrestrained impulse
of her action?
So much up to date. Interesting
enough, or so her employer seemed to think, as he
went hurriedly through the whole story, one special
afternoon in his office, tapping each sheet as he laid
it aside with his sagacious forefinger, as though
he would say, “Enough! My theory still
holds good; nothing contradictory here; on the contrary
complete and undisputable confirmation of the one
and only explanation of this astounding crime.”
What was that theory; and in what
way and through whose efforts had he been enabled
to form one? The following notes may enlighten
us. Though written in his own hand, and undoubtedly
a memorandum of his own activities, he evidently thinks
it worth while to reperuse them in connection with
those he had just laid aside.
We can do no better than read them also.
We omit dates.
Watched the Zabriskie mansion for
five hours this morning, from the second story window
of an adjoining hotel. Saw the doctor when he
drove away on his round of visits, and saw him when
he returned. A coloured man accompanied him.
Today I followed Mrs. Zabriskie.
She went first to a house in Washington Place where
I am told her mother lives. Here she stayed some
time, after which she drove down to Canal Street,
where she did some shopping, and later stopped at
the hospital, into which I took the liberty of following
her. She seemed to know many there, and passed
from cot to cot with a smile in which I alone discerned
the sadness of a broken heart. When she left,
I left also, without having learned anything beyond
the fact that Mrs. Zabriskie is one who does her duty
in sorrow as in joy. A rare, and trustworthy
woman I should say, and yet her husband does not trust
her. Why?
I have spent this day in accumulating
details in regard to Dr. and Mrs. Zabriskie’s
life previous to the death of Mr. Hasbrouck. I
learned from sources it would be unwise to quote just
here, that Mrs. Zabriskie had not lacked enemies to
charge her with coquetry; that while she had never
sacrificed her dignity in public, more than one person
had been heard to declare that Dr. Zabriskie was fortunate
in being blind, since the sight of his wife’s
beauty would have but poorly compensated him for the
pain he would have suffered in seeing how that beauty
was admired.
That all gossip is more or less tinged
with exaggeration I have no doubt, yet when a name
is mentioned in connection with such stories, there
is usually some truth at the bottom of them. And
a name is mentioned in this case, though I do not
think it worth my while to repeat it here; and loth
as I am to recognize the fact, it is a name that carries
with it doubts that might easily account for the husband’s
jealousy. True, I have found no one who dares
hint that she still continues to attract attention
or to bestow smiles in any direction save where they
legally belong. For since a certain memorable
night which we all know, neither Dr. Zabriskie nor
his wife have been seen save in their own domestic
circle, and it is not into such scenes that this serpent,
to whom I have just alluded, ever intrudes, nor is
it in places of sorrow or suffering that his smile
shines, or his fascinations flourish.
And so one portion of my theory is
proved to be sound. Dr. Zabriskie is jealous
of his wife; whether with good cause or bad I am not
prepared to decide; since her present attitude, clouded
as it is by the tragedy in which she and her husband
are both involved, must differ very much from that
which she held when her life was unshadowed by doubt,
and her admirers could be counted by the score.
I have just found out where Leonard
is. As he is in service some miles up the river,
I shall have to be absent from my post for several
hours, but I consider the game well worth the candle.
Light at last. I have not only
seen Leonard, but succeeded in making him talk.
His story is substantially this: That on the night
so often mentioned, he packed his master’s portmanteau
at eight o’clock and at ten called a taxi and
rode with the doctor to the Central station. He
was told to buy tickets to Poughkeepsie where his master
had been called in consultation, and having done this,
hurried back to join Dr. Zabriskie on the platform.
They had walked together as far as the cars, and Dr.
Zabriskie was just stepping on to the train, when a
man pushed himself hurriedly between them and whispered
something into his master’s ear, which caused
him to fall back and lose his footing. Dr. Zabriskie’s
body slid half under the car, but he was withdrawn
before any harm was done, though the cars gave a lurch
at that moment which must have frightened him exceedingly,
for his face was white when he rose to his feet, and
when Leonard offered to assist him again on the train,
he refused to go and said he would return home and
not attempt to ride to Poughkeepsie that night.
The gentleman, whom Leonard now saw
to be Mr. Stanton, an intimate friend of Dr. Zabriskie,
smiled very queerly at this, and taking the doctor’s
arm led him back to his own auto. Leonard naturally
followed them, but the doctor, hearing his steps,
turned and bade him, in a very peremptory tone, to
take the cars home, and then, as if on second thought,
told him to go to Poughkeepsie in his stead and explain
to the people there that he was too shaken up by his
misstep to do his duty, and that he would be with
them next morning. This seemed strange to Leonard,
but he had no reasons for disobeying his master’s
orders, and so rode to Poughkeepsie. But the
doctor did not follow him the next day; on the contrary
he telegraphed for him to return, and when he got back
dismissed him with a month’s wages. This
ended Leonard’s connection with the Zabriskie
family.
A simple story bearing out what the
wife has already told us; but it furnishes a link
which may prove invaluable. Mr. Stanton, whose
first name is Theodore, knows the real reason why
Dr. Zabriskie returned home on the night of the seventeenth
of July, 19 . Mr. Stanton, consequently,
is the man to see, and this shall be my business tomorrow.
Checkmate! Theodore Stanton is
not in this country. Though this points him out
as the man from whom Dr. Zabriskie bought the pistol,
it does not facilitate my work, which is becoming
more and more difficult.
Mr. Stanton’s whereabouts are
not even known to his most intimate friends.
He sailed from this country most unexpectedly on the
eighteenth of July a year ago, which was the day after
the murder of Mr. Hasbrouck. It looks like a
flight, especially as he has failed to maintain open
communication even with his relatives. Was he
the man who shot Mr. Hasbrouck? No; but he was
the man who put the pistol in Dr. Zabriskie’s
hand that night, and whether he did this with purpose
or not, was evidently so alarmed at the catastrophe
which followed that he took the first outgoing steamer
to Europe. So far, all is clear, but there are
mysteries yet to be solved, which will require my utmost
tact. What if I should seek out the gentleman
with whose name that of Mrs. Zabriskie has been linked,
and see if I can in any way connect him with Mr. Stanton
or the events of that night.
Eureka! I have discovered that
Mr. Stanton cherished a mortal hatred for the gentleman
above mentioned. It was a covert feeling, but
no less deadly on that account; and while it never
led him into any extravagances, it was of force
sufficient to account for many a secret misfortune
occurring to that gentleman. Now if I can prove
that he is the Méphistophélès who whispered insinuations
into the ear of our blind Faust, I may strike a fact
that will lead me out of this maze.
But how can I approach secrets so
delicate without compromising the woman I feel bound
to respect if only for the devoted love she manifests
for her unhappy husband!
I shall have to appeal to Joe Smithers.
This is something which I always hate to do, but as
long as he will take money, and as long as he is fertile
in resources for obtaining the truth from people I
am myself unable to reach, I must make use of his
cupidity and his genius. He is an honourable
fellow in one way, and never retails as gossip what
he acquires for our use. How will he proceed
in this case, and by what tactics will he gain the
very delicate information which we need? I own
that I am curious to see.
I shall really have to put down at
length the incidents of this night. I always
knew that Joe Smithers was invaluable not only to myself
but to the police, but I really did not know he possessed
talents of so high an order. He wrote me this
morning that he had succeeded in getting Mr. T ’s
promise to spend the evening with him, and advised
me that if I desired to be present as well, his own
servant would not be at home, and that an opener of
bottles would be required.
As I was very anxious to see Mr. T
with my own eyes, I accepted this invitation to play
the spy, and went at the proper hour to Mr. Smithers’s
rooms. I found them picturesque in the extreme.
Piles of books stacked here and there to the ceiling
made nooks and corners which could be quite shut off
by a couple of old pictures set into movable frames
capable of swinging out or in at the whim or convenience
of the owner.
As I had use for the dark shadows
cast by these pictures, I pulled them both out, and
made such other arrangements as appeared likely to
facilitate the purpose I had in view; then I sat down
and waited for the two gentlemen who were expected
to come in together.
They arrived almost immediately, whereupon
I rose and played my part with all necessary discretion.
While ridding Mr. T of his overcoat,
I stole a look at his face. It is not a handsome
one, but it boasts of a gay, devil-may-care expression
which doubtless makes it dangerous to many women,
while his manners are especially attractive, and his
voice the richest and most persuasive that I ever
heard. I contrasted him, almost against my will,
with Dr. Zabriskie, and decided that with most women
the former’s undoubted fascinations of speech
and bearing would outweigh the latter’s great
beauty and mental endowments; but I doubted if they
would with her.
The conversation which immediately
began was brilliant but desultory, for Mr. Smithers,
with an airy lightness for which he is remarkable,
introduced topic after topic, perhaps for the purpose
of showing off Mr. T-’s versatility, and perhaps
for the deeper and more sinister purpose of shaking
the kaleidoscope of talk so thoroughly, that the real
topic which we were met to discuss should not make
an undue impression on the mind of his guest.
Meanwhile one, two, three bottles
passed, and I had the pleasure of seeing Joe Smithers’s
eye grow calmer and that of Mr. T
more brilliant and more uncertain. As the last
bottle was being passed, Joe cast me a meaning glance,
and the real business of the evening began.
I shall not attempt to relate the
half dozen failures which Joe made in endeavouring
to elicit the facts we were in search of, without arousing
the suspicion of his visitor. I am only going
to relate the successful attempt. They had been
talking now for some hours, and I, who had long before
been waved aside from their immediate presence, was
hiding my curiosity and growing excitement behind
one of the pictures, when I suddenly heard Joe say:
“He has the most remarkable
memory I ever met. He can tell to a day when
any notable event occurred.”
“Pshaw!” answered his
companion, who, by the way, was known to pride himself
upon his own memory for dates, “I can state where
I went and what I did on every day in the year.
That may not embrace what you call ‘notable
events,’ but the memory required is all the more
remarkable, is it not?”
“Pooh!” was his friend’s
provoking reply, “you are bluffing, Ben; I will
never believe that.”
Mr. T-, who had passed by this time
into that stage of intoxication which makes persistence
in an assertion a duty as well as a pleasure, threw
back his head, and as the wreaths of smoke rose in
airy spirals from his lips, reiterated his statement,
and offered to submit to any test of his vaunted powers
which the other might dictate.
“You keep a diary ” began Joe.
“Which at the present moment is at home,”
completed the other.
“Will you allow me to refer
to it tomorrow, if I am suspicious of the accuracy
of your recollections?”
“Undoubtedly,” returned the other.
“Very well, then, I will wager
you a cool fifty that you cannot tell where you were
between the hours of ten and eleven on a certain night
which I will name.”
“Done!” cried the other,
bringing out his pocket-book and laying it on the
table before him.
Joe followed his example and then summoned me.
“Write a date down here,”
he commanded, pushing a piece of paper towards me,
with a look keen as the flash of a blade. “Any
date, man,” he added, as I appeared to hesitate
in the embarrassment I thought natural under the circumstances.
“Put down day, month, and year, only don’t
go too far back; not farther than two years.”
Smiling with the air of a flunkey
admitted to the sports of his superiors, I wrote a
line and laid it before Mr. Smithers, who at once
pushed it with a careless gesture towards his companion.
You can of course guess the date I made use of:
July 17, 19 . Mr. T , who had
evidently looked upon this matter as mere play, flushed
scarlet as he read these words, and for one instant
looked as if he had rather fly the house than answer
Joe Smithers’s nonchalant glance of inquiry.
“I have given my word and will
keep it,” he said at last, but with a look in
my direction that sent me reluctantly back to my retreat.
“I don’t suppose you want names,”
he went on; “that is, if anything I have to
tell is of a delicate nature?”
“Oh, no,” answered the other, “only
facts and places.”
“I don’t think places
are necessary either,” he returned. “I
will tell you what I did and that must serve you.
I did not promise to give number and street.”
“Well, well,” Joe exclaimed;
“earn your fifty, that is all. Show that
you remember where you were on the night of” and
with an admirable show of indifference he pretended
to consult the paper between them “the
seventeenth of July, two years ago, and I shall be
satisfied.”
“I was at the club for one thing,”
said Mr. T-; “then I went to see a lady friend,
where I stayed until eleven. She wore a blue muslin What
is that?”
I had betrayed myself by a quick movement
which sent a glass tumbler crashing to the floor.
Zulma Zabriskie had worn a blue muslin on that same
night. You will find it noted in the report given
me by the policeman who saw her on their balcony.
“That noise?” It was Joe
who was speaking. “You don’t know
Reuben as well as I do or you wouldn’t ask.
It is his practice, I am sorry to say, to accentuate
his pleasure in draining my bottles by dropping a glass
at every third one.”
Mr. T went on.
“She was a married woman and
I thought she loved me; but and this is
the greatest proof I can offer you that I am giving
you a true account of that night she had
not the slightest idea of the extent of my passion,
and only consented to see me at all because she thought,
poor thing, that a word from her would set me straight,
and rid her of attentions she evidently failed to
appreciate. A sorry figure for a fellow like
me to cut; but you caught me on the most detestable
date in my calendar and ”
There he ceased being interesting
and I anxious. The secret of a crime for which
there seemed to be no reasonable explanation is no
longer a mystery to me. I have but to warn Miss
Strange
He had got thus far when a sound in
the room behind him led him to look up. A lady
had entered; a lady heavily veiled and trembling with
what appeared to be an intense excitement.
He thought he knew the figure, but
the person, whoever it was, stood so still and remained
so silent, he hesitated to address her; which seeing,
she pushed up her veil and all doubt vanished.
It was Violet herself. In disregard
of her usual practice she had come alone to the office.
This meant urgency of some kind. Had she too
sounded this mystery? No, or her aspect would
not have worn this look of triumph. What had
happened then? He made an instant endeavour to
find out.
“You have news,” he quietly
remarked. “Good news, I should judge, by
your very cheery smile.”
“Yes; I think I have found the
way of bringing Dr. Zabriskie to himself.”
Astonished beyond measure, so little
did these words harmonize with the impressions and
conclusions at which he had just arrived, something
very like doubt spoke in his voice as he answered with
the simple exclamation:
“You do!”
“Yes. He is obsessed by
a fixed idea, and must be given an opportunity to
test the truth of that idea. The shock of finding
it a false one may restore him to his normal condition.
He believes that he shot Mr. Hasbrouck with no other
guidance than his sense of hearing. Now if it
can be proved that his hearing is an insufficient guide
for such an act (as of course it is) the shock of
the discovery may clear his brain of its cobwebs.
Mrs. Zabriskie thinks so, and the police ”
“What’s that? The police?”
“Yes, Dr. Zabriskie would be
taken before them again this morning. No entreaties
on the part of his wife would prevail; he insisted
upon his guilt and asked her to accompany him there;
and the poor woman found herself forced to go.
Of course he encountered again the same division of
opinion among the men he talked with. Three out
of the four judged him insane, which observing, he
betrayed great agitation and reiterated his former
wish to be allowed an opportunity to prove his sanity
by showing his skill in shooting. This made an
impression; and a disposition was shown to grant his
request then and there. But Mrs. Zabriskie would
not listen to this. She approved of the experiment
but begged that it might be deferred till another
day and then take place in some spot remote from the
city. For some reason they heeded her, and she
has just telephoned me that this attempt of his is
to take place tomorrow in the New Jersey woods.
I am sorry that this should have been put through
without you; and when I tell you that the idea originated
with me that from some word I purposely
let fall one day, they both conceived this plan of
ending the uncertainty that was devouring their lives,
you will understand my excitement and the need I have
of your support. Tell me that I have done well.
Do not show me such a face you frighten
me ”
“I do not wish to frighten you.
I merely wish to know just who are going on this expedition.”
“Some members of the police,
Dr. Zabriskie, his wife, and and myself.
She begged ”
“You must not go.”
“Why? The affair is to
be kept secret. The doctor will shoot, fail Oh!”
she suddenly broke in, alarmed by his expression, “you
think he will not fail ”
“I think that you had better
heed my advice and stay out of it. The affair
is now in the hands of the police, and your place is
anywhere but where they are.”
“But I go as her particular
friend. They have given her the privilege of
taking with her one of her own sex and she has chosen
me. I shall not fail her. Father is away,
and if the awful disappointment you suggest awaits
her, there is all the more reason why she should have
some sympathetic support?”
This was so true, that the fresh protest
he was about to utter died on his lips. Instead,
he simply remarked as he bowed her out:
“I foresee that we shall not
work much longer together. You are nearing the
end of your endurance.”
He never forgot the smile she threw back at him.
V
There are some events which impress
the human mind so deeply that their memory mingles
with all after-experiences. Though Violet had
made it a rule to forget as soon as possible the tragic
episodes incident to the strange career upon which
she had so mysteriously embarked, there was destined
to be one scene, if not more, which she has never been
able to dismiss at will.
This was the sight which met her eyes
from the bow of the small boat in which Dr. Zabriskie
and his wife were rowed over to Jersey on the afternoon
which saw the end of this most sombre drama.
Though it was by no means late in
the day, the sun was already sinking, and the bright
red glare which filled the west and shone full upon
the faces of the half dozen people before her added
much to the tragic nature of the scene, though she
was far from comprehending its full significance.
The doctor sat with his wife in the
stern and it was upon their faces Violet’s glance
was fixed. The glare shone luridly on his sightless
eyeballs, and as she noticed his unwinking lids, she
realized as never before what it was to be blind in
the midst of sunshine. His wife’s eyes,
on the contrary, were lowered, but there was a look
of hopeless misery in her colourless face which made
her appearance infinitely pathetic, and Violet felt
confident that if he could only have seen her, he
would not have maintained the cold and unresponsive
manner which chilled the words on his poor wife’s
lips and made all advance on her part impossible.
On the seat in front of them sat an
inspector and from some quarter, possibly from under
the inspector’s coat, there came the monotonous
ticking of the small clock, which was to serve as a
target for the blind man’s aim.
This ticking was all Violet heard,
though the river was alive with traffic and large
and small boats were steaming by them on every side.
And I am sure it was all that Mrs. Zabriskie heard
also, as with hand pressed to her heart, and eyes
fixed on the opposite shore, she waited for the event
which was to determine whether the man she loved was
a criminal or only a being afflicted of God and worthy
of her unceasing care and devotion.
As the sun cast its last scarlet gleam
over the water, the boat grounded, and Violet was
enabled to have one passing word with Mrs. Zabriskie.
She hardly knew what she said but the look she received
in return was like that of a frightened child.
But there was always to be seen in
Mrs. Zabriskie’s countenance this characteristic
blending of the severe and the childlike, and beyond
an added pang of pity for this beautiful but afflicted
woman, Violet let the moment pass without giving it
the weight it perhaps demanded.
“The doctor and his wife had
a long talk last night,” was whispered in her
ear as she wound her way with the rest into the heart
of the woods. With a start she turned and perceived
her employer following close behind her. He had
come by another boat.
“But it did not seem to heal
whatever breach lies between them,” he proceeded.
Then, in a quick, anxious tone, he whispered:
“Whatever happens, do not lift your veil.
I thought I saw a reporter skulking in the rear.”
“I will be careful,” Violet
assured him, and could say no more, as they had already
reached the ground which had been selected for this
trial at arms, and the various members of the party
were being placed in their several positions.
The doctor, to whom light and darkness
were alike, stood with his face towards the western
glow, and at his side were grouped the inspector and
the two physicians. On the arm of one of the latter
hung Dr. Zabriskie’s overcoat, which he had
taken off as soon as he reached the field.
Mrs. Zabriskie stood at the other
end of the opening near a tall stump, upon which it
had been decided that the clock should be placed when
the moment came for the doctor to show his skill.
She had been accorded the privilege of setting the
clock on this stump, and Violet saw it shining in
her hand as she paused for a moment to glance back
at the circle of gentlemen who were awaiting her movements.
The hands of the clock stood at five minutes to five,
though Violet scarcely noted it at the time, for Mrs.
Zabriskie was passing her and had stopped to say:
“If he is not himself, he cannot
be trusted. Watch him carefully and see that
he does no mischief to himself or others. Ask
one of the inspectors to stand at his right hand,
and stop him if he does not handle his pistol properly.”
Violet promised, and she passed on,
setting the clock upon the stump and immediately drawing
back to a suitable distance at the right, where she
stood, wrapped in her long dark cloak. Her face
shone ghastly white, even in its environment of snow-covered
boughs, and noting this, Violet wished the minutes
fewer between the present moment and the hour of five,
at which time he was to draw the trigger.
“Dr. Zabriskie,” quoth
the inspector, “we have endeavoured to make this
trial a perfectly fair one. You are to have a
shot at a small clock which has been placed within
a suitable distance, and which you are expected to
hit, guided only by the sound which it will make in
striking the hour of five. Are you satisfied
with the arrangement?”
“Perfectly. Where is my wife?”
“On the other side of the field
some ten paces from the stump upon which the clock
is fixed.” He bowed, and his face showed
satisfaction.
“May I expect the clock to strike soon?”
“In less than five minutes,” was the answer.
“Then let me have the pistol;
I wish to become acquainted with its size and weight.”
We glanced at each other, then across at her.
She made a gesture; it was one of acquiescence.
Immediately the inspector placed the
weapon in the blind man’s hand. It was
at once apparent that he understood the instrument,
and Violet’s hopes which had been strong up
to this moment, sank at his air of confidence.
“Thank God I am blind this hour
and cannot see her,” fell from his lips, then,
before the echo of these words had died away, he raised
his voice and observed calmly enough, considering
that he was about to prove himself a criminal in order
to save himself from being thought a madman:
“Let no one move. I must
have my ears free for catching the first stroke of
the clock.” And he raised the pistol before
him.
There was a moment of torturing suspense
and deep, unbroken silence. Violet’s eyes
were on him so she did not watch the clock, but she
was suddenly moved by some irresistible impulse to
note how Mrs. Zabriskie was bearing herself at this
critical moment, and casting a hurried glance in her
direction she perceived her tall figure swaying from
side to side, as if under an intolerable strain of
feeling. Her eyes were on the clock, the hands
of which seemed to creep with snail-like pace along
the dial, when unexpectedly, and a full minute before
the minute hand had reached the stroke of five, Violet
caught a movement on her part, saw the flash of something
round and white show for an instant against the darkness
of her cloak, and was about to shriek warning to the
doctor, when the shrill, quick stroke of a clock rang
out on the frosty air, followed by the ping and flash
of a pistol.
A sound of shattered glass, followed
by a suppressed cry, told the bystanders that the
bullet had struck the mark, but before any one could
move, or they could rid their eyes of the smoke which
the wind had blown into their faces, there came another
sound which made their hair stand on end and sent
the blood back in terror to their hearts. Another
clock was striking, which they now perceived was still
standing upright on the stump where Mrs. Zabriskie
had placed it.
Whence came the clock, then, which
had struck before the time and been shattered for
its pains? One quick look told them. On the
ground, ten paces to the right, lay Zulma Zabriskie,
a broken clock at her side, and in her breast a bullet
which was fast sapping the life from her sweet eyes.
They had to tell him, there was such
pleading in her looks; and never will any of the hearers
forget the scream which rang from his lips as he realized
the truth. Breaking from their midst, he rushed
forward, and fell at her feet as if guided by some
supernatural instinct.
“Zulma,” he shrieked,
“what is this? Were not my hands dyed deep
enough in blood that you should make me answerable
for your life also?”
Her eyes were closed but she opened
them. Looking long and steadily at his agonized
face, she faltered forth:
“It is not you who have killed
me; it is your crime. Had you been innocent of
Mr. Hasbrouck’s death your bullet would never
have found my heart. Did you think I could survive
the proof that you had killed that good man?”
“I did it unwittingly. I ”
“Hush!” she commanded,
with an awful look, which happily he could not see.
“I had another motive. I wished to prove
to you, even at the cost of my life, that I loved
you, had always loved you, and not ”
It was now his turn to silence her.
His hand crept to her lips, and his despairing face
turned itself blindly towards those about them.
“Go!” he cried; “leave
us! Let me take a last farewell of my dying wife,
without listeners or spectators.”
Consulting the eye of her employer
who stood close beside her, and seeing no hope in
it, Violet fell slowly back. The others, followed,
and the doctor was left alone with his wife.
From the distant position they took, they saw her
arms creep round his neck, saw her head fall confidingly
on his breast, then silence settled upon them, and
upon all nature, the gathering twilight deepening,
till the last glow disappeared from the heavens above
and from the circle of leafless trees which enclosed
this tragedy from the outside world.
But at last there came a stir, and
Dr. Zabriskie, rising up before them with the dead
body of his wife held closely to his breast, confronted
them with a countenance so rapturous that he looked
like a man transfigured.
“I will carry her to the boat,”
said he. “Not another hand shall touch
her. She was my true wife, my true wife!”
And he towered into an attitude of such dignity and
passion that for a moment he took on heroic proportions
and they forgot that he had just proved himself to
have committed a cold-blooded and ghastly crime.
The stars were shining when the party
again took their seats in the boat; and if the scene
of their crossing to Jersey was impressive, what shall
be said of the return?
The doctor, as before, sat in the
stern, an awesome figure, upon which the moon shone
with a white radiance that seemed to lift his face
out of the surrounding darkness and set it like an
image of frozen horror before their eyes. Against
his breast he held the form of his dead wife, and
now and then Violet saw him stoop as if he were listening
for some token of life from her set lips. Then
he would lift himself again with hopelessness stamped
upon his features, only to lean forward in renewed
hope that was again destined to disappointment.
Violet had been so overcome by this
tragic end to all her hopes, that her employer had
been allowed to enter the boat with her. Seated
at her side in the seat directly in front of the doctor,
he watched with her these simple tokens of a breaking
heart, saying nothing till they reached midstream,
when true to his instincts for all his awe and compassion,
he suddenly bent towards him and said:
“Dr. Zabriskie, the mystery
of your crime is no longer a mystery to me. Listen
and see if I do not understand your temptation, and
how you, a conscientious and God-fearing man, came
to slay your innocent neighbour.
“A friend of yours, or so he
called himself, had for a long time filled your ears
with tales tending to make you suspicious of your wife
and jealous of a certain man whom I will not name.
You knew that your friend had a grudge against this
man, and so for many months turned a deaf ear to his
insinuations. But finally some change which you
detected in your wife’s bearing or conversation
roused your own suspicions, and you began to doubt
her truth and to curse your blindness, which in a measure
rendered you helpless. The jealous fever grew
and had risen to a high point when one night a
memorable night this friend met you just
as you were leaving town, and with cruel craft whispered
in your ear that the man you hated was even then with
your wife and that if you would return at once to
your home you would find him in her company.
“The demon that lurks at the
heart of all men, good or bad, thereupon took complete
possession, of you, and you answered this false friend
by saying that you would not return without a pistol.
Whereupon he offered to take you to his house and
give you his. You consented, and getting rid
of your servant by sending him to Poughkeepsie with
your excuses, you entered your friend’s automobile.
“You say you bought the pistol,
and perhaps you did, but, however that may be, you
left his house with it in your pocket, and declining
companionship, walked home, arriving at the Colonnade
a little before midnight.
“Ordinarily you have no difficulty
in recognizing your own doorstep. But, being
in a heated frame of mind, you walked faster than usual
and so passed your own house and stopped at that of
Mr. Hasbrouck, one door beyond. As the entrances
of these houses are all alike, there was but one way
by which you could have made yourself sure that you
had reached your own dwelling, and that was by feeling
for the doctor’s sign at the side of the door.
But you never thought of that. Absorbed in dreams
of vengeance, your sole impulse was to enter by the
quickest means possible. Taking out your night
key, you thrust it into the lock. It fitted,
but it took strength to turn it, so much strength that
the key was twisted and bent by the effort. But
this incident, which would have attracted your attention
at another time, was lost upon you at this moment.
An entrance had been effected, and you were in too
excited a frame of mind to notice at what cost, or
to detect the small differences apparent in the atmosphere
and furnishings of the two houses, trifles which would
have arrested your attention under other circumstances,
and made you pause before the upper floor had been
reached.
“It was while going up the stairs
that you took out your pistol, so that by the time
you arrived at the front room door you held it already
drawn and cocked in your hand. For, being blind,
you feared escape on the part of your victim, and
so waited for nothing but the sound of a man’s
voice before firing. When, therefore, the unfortunate
Mr. Hasbrouck, roused by this sudden intrusion, advanced
with an exclamation of astonishment, you pulled the
trigger, and killed him on the spot. It must have
been immediately upon his fall that you recognized
from some word he uttered, or from some contact you
may have had with your surroundings, that you were
in the wrong house and had killed the wrong man; for
you cried out, in evident remorse, ‘God! what
have I done!’ and fled without approaching your
victim.
“Descending the stairs, you
rushed from the house, closing the front door behind
you and regaining your own without being seen.
But here you found yourself baffled in your attempted
escape, by two things. First, by the pistol you
still held in your hand, and secondly, by the fact
that the key upon which you depended for entering your
own door was so twisted out of shape that you knew
it would be useless for you to attempt to use it.
What did you do in this emergency? You have already
told us, though the story seemed so improbable at the
time, you found nobody to believe it but myself.
The pistol you flung far away from you down the pavement,
from which, by one of those rare chances which sometimes
happen in this world, it was presently picked up by
some late passer-by of more or less doubtful character.
The door offered less of an obstacle than you had
anticipated; for when you turned again you found it,
if I am not greatly mistaken, ajar, left so, as we
have reason to believe, by one who had gone out of
it but a few minutes before in a state which left
him but little master of his actions. It was this
fact which provided you with an answer when you were
asked how you succeeded in getting into Mr. Hasbrouck’s
house after the family had retired for the night.
“Astonished at the coincidence,
but hailing with gladness the deliverance which it
offered, you went in and ascended at once into your
wife’s presence; and it was from her lips, and
not from those of Mrs. Hasbrouck, that the cry arose
which startled the neighbourhood and prepared men’s
minds for the tragic words which were shouted a moment
later from the next house.
“But she who uttered the scream
knew of no tragedy save that which was taking place
in her own breast. She had just repulsed a dastardly
suitor, and seeing you enter so unexpectedly in a state
of unaccountable horror and agitation, was naturally
stricken with dismay, and thought she saw your ghost,
or what was worse, a possible avenger; while you,
having failed to kill the man you sought, and having
killed a man you esteemed, let no surprise on her
part lure you into any dangerous self-betrayal.
You strove instead to soothe her, and even attempted
to explain the excitement under which you laboured,
by an account of your narrow escape at the station,
till the sudden alarm from next door distracted her
attention, and sent both your thoughts and hers in
a different direction. Not till conscience had
fully awakened and the horror of your act had had
time to tell upon your sensitive nature, did you breathe
forth those vague confessions, which, not being supported
by the only explanations which would have made them
credible, led her, as well as the police, to consider
you affected in your mind. Your pride as a man
and your consideration for her as a woman kept you
silent, but did not keep the worm from preying upon
your heart.
“Am I not correct in my surmises,
Dr. Zabriskie, and is not this the true explanation
of your crime?”
With a strange look, he lifted up his face.
“Hush!” said he; “you
will waken her. See how peacefully she sleeps!
I should not like to have her wakened now, she is
so tired, and I I have not watched over
her as I should.”
Appalled at his gesture, his look,
his tone, Violet drew back, and for a few minutes
no sound was to be heard but the steady dip-dip of
the oars and the lap-lap of the waters against the
boat. Then there came a quick uprising, the swaying
before her of something dark and tall and threatening,
and before she could speak or move, or even stretch
forth her hands to stay him, the seat before her was
empty and darkness had filled the place where but
an instant previous he had sat, a fearsome figure,
erect and rigid as a sphinx.
What little moonlight there was, only
served to show a few rising bubbles, marking the spot
where the unfortunate man had sunk with his much-loved
burden. As the widening circles fled farther and
farther out, the tide drifted the boat away, and the
spot was lost which had seen the termination of one
of earth’s saddest tragedies.