“One more! just one more well
paying affair, and I promise to stop; really and truly
to stop.”
“But, Puss, why one more?
You have earned the amount you set for yourself, or
very nearly, and though my help is not great,
in three months I can add enough ”
“No, you cannot, Arthur.
You are doing well; I appreciate it; in fact, I am
just delighted to have you work for me in the way you
do, but you cannot, in your present position, make
enough in three months, or in six, to meet the situation
as I see it. Enough does not satisfy me.
The measure must be full, heaped up, and running over.
Possible failure following promise must be provided
for. Never must I feel myself called upon to
do this kind of thing again. Besides, I have never
got over the Zabriskie tragedy. It haunts me
continually. Something new may help to put it
out of my head. I feel guilty. I was responsible ”
“No, Puss. I will not have
it that you were responsible. Some such end was
bound to follow a complication like that. Sooner
or later he would have been driven to shoot himself ”
“But not her.”
“No, not her. But do you
think she would have given those few minutes of perfect
understanding with her blind husband for a few years
more of miserable life?”
Violet made no answer; she was too
absorbed in her surprise. Was this Arthur?
Had a few weeks’ work and a close connection
with the really serious things of life made this change
in him? Her face beamed at the thought, which
seeing, but not understanding what underlay this evidence
of joy, he bent and kissed her, saying with some of
his old nonchalance:
“Forget it, Violet; only don’t
let any one or anything lead you to interest yourself
in another affair of the kind. If you do, I shall
have to consult a certain friend of yours as to the
best way of stopping this folly. I mention no
names. Oh! you need not look so frightened.
Only behave; that’s all.”
“He’s right,” she
acknowledged to herself, as he sauntered away; “altogether
right.”
Yet because she wanted the extra money
The scene invited alarm, that
is, for so young a girl as Violet, surveying it from
an automobile some time after the stroke of midnight.
An unknown house at the end of a heavily shaded walk,
in the open doorway of which could be seen the silhouette
of a woman’s form leaning eagerly forward with
arms outstretched in an appeal for help! It vanished
while she looked, but the effect remained, holding
her to her seat for one startled moment. This
seemed strange, for she had anticipated adventure.
One is not summoned from a private ball to ride a
dozen miles into the country on an errand of investigation,
without some expectation of encountering the mysterious
and the tragic. But Violet Strange, for all her
many experiences, was of a most susceptible nature,
and for the instant in which that door stood open,
with only the memory of that expectant figure to disturb
the faintly lit vista of the hall beyond, she felt
that grip upon the throat which comes from an indefinable
fear which no words can explain and no plummet sound.
But this soon passed. With the
setting of her foot to ground, conditions changed
and her emotions took on a more normal character.
The figure of a man now stood in the place held by
the vanished woman; and it was not only that of one
she knew but that of one whom she trusted a
friend whose very presence gave her courage.
With this recognition came a better understanding
of the situation, and it was with a beaming eye and
unclouded features that she tripped up the walk to
meet the expectant figure and outstretched hand of
Roger Upjohn.
“You here!” she exclaimed,
amid smiles and blushes, as he drew her into the hall.
He at once launched forth into explanations
mingled with apologies for the presumption he had
shown in putting her to this inconvenience. There
was trouble in the house great trouble.
Something had occurred for which an explanation must
be found before morning, or the happiness and honour
of more than one person now under this unhappy roof
would be wrecked. He knew it was late that
she had been obliged to take a long and dreary ride
alone, but her success with the problem which had once
come near wrecking his own life had emboldened him
to telephone to the office and “But
you are in ball-dress,” he cried in amazement.
“Did you think ”
“I came from a ball. Word
reached me between the dances. I did not go home.
I had been bidden to hurry.”
He looked his appreciation, but when
he spoke it was to say:
“This is the situation. Miss Digby ”
“The lady who is to be married tomorrow?”
“Who hopes to be married tomorrow.”
“How, hopes?”
“Who will be married tomorrow,
if a certain article lost in this house tonight can
be found before any of the persons who have been dining
here leave for their homes.”
Violet uttered an exclamation.
“Then, Mr. Cornell,” she began
“Mr. Cornell has our utmost
confidence,” Roger hastened to interpose.
“But the article missing is one which he might
reasonably desire to possess and which he alone of
all present had the opportunity of securing.
You can therefore see why he, with his pride the
pride off a man not rich, engaged to marry a woman
who is should declare that unless his innocence
is established before daybreak, the doors of St. Bartholomew
will remain shut to-morrow.”
“But the article lost what is it?”
“Miss Digby will give you the
particulars. She is waiting to receive you,”
he added with a gesture towards a half-open door at
their right.
Violet glanced that way, then cast
her looks up and down the hall in which they stood.
“Do you know that you have not
told me in whose house I am? Not hers, I know.
She lives in the city.”
“And you are twelve miles from
Harlem. Miss Strange, you are in the Van Broecklyn
mansion, famous enough you will acknowledge. Have
you never been here before?”
“I have been by here, but I
recognized nothing in the dark. What an exciting
place for an investigation!”
“And Mr. Van Broecklyn? Have you never
met him?”
“Once, when a child. He frightened me then.”
“And may frighten you now; though
I doubt it. Time has mellowed him. Besides,
I have prepared him for what might otherwise occasion
him some astonishment. Naturally he would not
look for just the sort of lady investigator I am about
to introduce to him.”
She smiled. Violet Strange was
a very charming young woman, as well as a keen prober
of odd mysteries.
The meeting between herself and Miss
Digby was a sympathetic one. After the first
inevitable shock which the latter felt at sight of
the beauty and fashionable appearance of the mysterious
little being who was to solve her difficulties, her
glance, which, under other circumstances, might have
lingered unduly upon the piquant features and exquisite
dressing of the fairy-like figure before her, passed
at once to Violet’s eyes, in whose steady depths
beamed an intelligence quite at odds with the coquettish
dimples which so often misled the casual observer in
his estimation of a character singularly subtle and
well-poised.
As for the impression she herself
made upon Violet, it was the same she made upon everyone.
No one could look long at Florence Digby and not recognize
the loftiness of her spirit and the generous nature
of her impulses. In person she was tall and as
she leaned to take Violet’s hand, the difference
between them brought out the salient points in each,
to the great admiration of the one onlooker.
Meantime, for all her interest in
the case in hand, Violet could not help casting a
hurried look about her, in gratification of the curiosity
incited by her entrance into a house signalized from
its foundation by such a series of tragic events.
The result was disappointing. The walls were
plain, the furniture simple. Nothing suggestive
in either, unless it was the fact that nothing was
new, nothing modern. As it looked in the days
of Burr and Hamilton so it looked to-day, even to the
rather startling detail of candles which did duty
on every side in place of gas.
As Violet recalled the reason for
this, the fascination of the past seized upon her
imagination. There was no knowing where this might
have carried her, had not the feverish gleam in Miss
Digby’s eyes warned her that the present held
its own excitement. Instantly, she was all attention
and listening with undivided mind to that lady’s
disclosures.
They were brief and to the following effect:
The dinner which had brought some
half-dozen people together in this house had been
given in celebration of her impending marriage.
But it was also in a way meant as a compliment to
one of the other guests, a Mr. Spielhagen, who, during
the week, had succeeded in demonstrating to a few
experts the value of a discovery he had made which
would transform a great industry.
In speaking of this discovery, Miss
Digby did not go into particulars, the whole matter
being far beyond her understanding; but in stating
its value she openly acknowledged that it was in the
line of Mr. Cornell’s own work, and one which
involved calculations and a formula which, if prematurely
disclosed, would invalidate the contract Mr. Spielhagen
hoped to make, and thus destroy his present hopes.
Of this formula but two copies existed.
One was locked up in a safe deposit vault in Boston,
the other he had brought into the house on his person,
and it was the latter which was now missing, having
been abstracted during the evening from a manuscript
of sixteen or more sheets, under circumstances which
she would now endeavour to relate.
Mr. Van Broecklyn, their host, had
in his melancholy life but one interest which could
be at all absorbing. This was for explosives.
As consequence, much of the talk at the dinner-table
had been on Mr. Spielhagen’s discovery, and
possible changes it might introduce into this especial
industry. As these, worked out from a formula
kept secret from the trade, could not but affect greatly
Mr. Cornell’s interests, she found herself listening
intently, when Mr. Van Broecklyn, with an apology
for his interference, ventured to remark that if Mr.
Spielhagen had made a valuable discovery in this line,
so had he, and one which he had substantiated by many
experiments. It was not a marketable one, such
as Mr. Spielhagen’s was, but in his work upon
the same, and in the tests which he had been led to
make, he had discovered certain instances he would
gladly name, which demanded exceptional procedure to
be successful. If Mr. Spielhagen’s method
did not allow for these exceptions, nor make suitable
provision for them, then Mr. Spielhagen’s method
would fail more times than it would succeed. Did
it so allow and so provide? It would relieve
him greatly to learn that it did.
The answer came quickly. Yes,
it did. But later and after some further conversation,
Mr. Spielhagen’s confidence seemed to wane, and
before they left the dinner-table, he openly declared
his intention of looking over his manuscript again
that very night, in order to be sure that the formula
therein contained duly covered all the exceptions mentioned
by Mr. Van Broecklyn.
If Mr. Cornell’s countenance
showed any change at this moment, she for one had
not noticed it; but the bitterness with which he remarked
upon the other’s good fortune in having discovered
this formula of whose entire success he had no doubt,
was apparent to everybody, and naturally gave point
to the circumstances which a short time afterward associated
him with the disappearance of the same.
The ladies (there were two others
besides herself) having withdrawn in a body to the
music-room, the gentlemen all proceeded to the library
to smoke. Here, conversation loosed from the
one topic which had hitherto engrossed it, was proceeding
briskly, when Mr. Spielhagen, with nervous gesture,
impulsively looked about him and said:
“I cannot rest till I have run
through my thesis again. Where can I find a quiet
spot? I won’t be long; I read very rapidly.”
It was for Mr. Van Broecklyn to answer,
but no word coming from him, every eye turned his
way, only to find him sunk in one of those fits of
abstraction so well known to his friends, and from
which no one who has this strange man’s peace
of mind at heart ever presumes to rouse him.
What was to be done? These moods
of their singular host sometimes lasted half an hour,
and Mr. Spielhagen had not the appearance of a man
of patience. Indeed he presently gave proof of
the great uneasiness he was labouring under, for noticing
a door standing ajar on the other side of the room,
he remarked to those around him:
“A den! and lighted! Do
you see any objection to my shutting myself in there
for a few minutes?”
No one venturing to reply, he rose,
and giving a slight push to the door, disclosed a
small room exquisitely panelled and brightly lighted,
but without one article of furniture in it, not even
a chair.
“The very place,” quoth
Mr. Spielhagen, and lifting a light cane-bottomed
chair from the many standing about, he carried it inside
and shut the door behind him.
Several minutes passed during which
the man who had served at table entered with a tray
on which were several small glasses evidently containing
some choice liqueur. Finding his master fixed
in one of his strange moods, he set the tray down
and, pointing to one of the glasses, said:
“That is for Mr. Van Broecklyn.
It contains his usual quieting powder.”
And urging the gentlemen to help themselves, he quietly
left the room. Mr. Upjohn lifted the glass nearest
him, and Mr. Cornell seemed about to do the same when
he suddenly reached forward and catching up one farther
off started for the room in which Mr. Spielhagen had
so deliberately secluded himself.
Why he did all this why,
above all things, he should reach across the tray
for a glass instead of taking the one under his hand,
he can no more explain than why he has followed many
another unhappy impulse. Nor did he understand
the nervous start given by Mr. Spielhagen at his entrance,
or the stare with which that gentleman took the glass
from his hand and mechanically drank its contents,
till he saw how his hand had stretched itself across
the sheet of paper he was reading, in an open attempt
to hide the lines visible between his fingers.
Then indeed the intruder flushed and withdrew in great
embarrassment, fully conscious of his indiscretion
but not deeply disturbed till Mr. Van Broecklyn, suddenly
arousing and glancing down at the tray placed very
near his hand remarked in some surprise: “Dobbs
seems to have forgotten me.” Then indeed,
the unfortunate Mr. Cornell realized what he had done.
It was the glass intended for his host which he had
caught up and carried into the other room the
glass which he had been told contained a drug.
Of what folly he had been guilty, and how tame would
be any effort at excuse!
Attempting none, he rose and with
a hurried glance at Mr. Upjohn who flushed in sympathy
at his distress, he crossed to the door he had lately
closed upon Mr. Spielhagen. But feeling his shoulder
touched as his hand pressed the knob, he turned to
meet the eye of Mr. Van Broecklyn fixed upon him with
an expression which utterly confounded him.
“Where are you going?” that gentleman
asked.
The questioning tone, the severe look,
expressive at once of displeasure and astonishment,
were most disconcerting, but Mr. Cornell managed to
stammer forth:
“Mr. Spielhagen is in here consulting
his thesis. When your man brought in the cordial,
I was awkward enough to catch up your glass and carry
it in to. Mr. Spielhagen. He drank it and
I I am anxious to see if it did him any
harm.”
As he uttered the last word he felt
Mr. Van Broecklyn’s hand slip from his shoulder,
but no word accompanied the action, nor did his host
make the least move to follow him into the room.
This was a matter of great regret
to him later, as it left him for a moment out of the
range of every eye, during which he says he simply
stood in a state of shock at seeing Mr. Spielhagen
still sitting there, manuscript in hand, but with
head fallen forward and eyes closed; dead, asleep
or he hardly knew what; the sight so paralysed
him.
Whether or not this was the exact
truth and the whole truth, Mr. Cornell certainly looked
very unlike himself as he stepped back into Mr. Van
Broecklyn’s presence; and he was only partially
reassured when that gentleman protested that there
was no real harm in the drug, and that Mr. Spielhagen
would be all right if left to wake naturally and without
shock. However, as his present attitude was one
of great discomfort, they decided to carry him back
and lay him on the library lounge. But before
doing this, Mr. Upjohn drew from his flaccid grasp,
the precious manuscript, and carrying it into the
larger room placed it on a remote table, where it
remained undisturbed till Mr. Spielhagen, suddenly
coming to himself at the end of some fifteen minutes,
missed the sheets from his hand, and bounding up,
crossed the room to repossess himself of them.
His face, as he lifted them up and
rapidly ran through them with ever-accumulating anxiety,
told them what they had to expect.
The page containing the formula was gone!
Violet now saw her problem.
II
There was no doubt about the loss
I have mentioned; all could see that page 13 was not
there. In vain a second handling of every sheet,
the one so numbered was not to be found. Page
14 met the eye on the top of the pile, and page 12
finished it off at the bottom, but no page 13 in between,
or anywhere else.
Where had it vanished, and through
whose agency had this misadventure occurred?
No one could say, or, at least, no one there made any
attempt to do so, though everybody started to look
for it.
But where look? The adjoining
small room offered no facilities for hiding a cigar-end,
much less a square of shining white paper. Bare
walls, a bare floor, and a single chair for furniture,
comprised all that was to be seen in this direction.
Nor could the room in which they then stood be thought
to hold it, unless it was on the person of some one
of them. Could this be the explanation of the
mystery? No man looked his doubts; but Mr. Cornell,
possibly divining the general feeling, stepped up
to Mr. Van Broecklyn and in a cool voice, but with
the red burning hotly on either cheek, said, so as
to be heard by everyone present:
“I demand to be searched at once
and thoroughly.”
A moment’s silence, then the common cry:
“We will all be searched.”
“Is Mr. Spielhagen sure that
the missing page was with the others when he sat down
in the adjoining room to read his thesis?” asked
their perturbed host.
“Very sure,” came the
emphatic reply. “Indeed, I was just going
through the formula itself when I fell asleep.”
“You are ready to assert this?”
“I am ready to swear it.”
Mr. Cornell repeated his request.
“I demand that you make a thorough
search of my person. I must be cleared, and instantly,
of every suspicion,” he gravely asserted, “or
how can I marry Miss Digby to-morrow.”
After that there was no further hesitation.
One and all subjected themselves to the ordeal suggested;
even Mr. Spielhagen. But this effort was as futile
as the rest. The lost page was not found.
What were they to think? What were they to do?
There seemed to be nothing left to
do, and yet some further attempt must be made towards
the recovery of this important formula. Mr. Cornell’s
marriage and Mr. Spielhagen’s business success
both depended upon its being in the latter’s
hands before six in the morning, when he was engaged
to hand it over to a certain manufacturer sailing for
Europe on an early steamer.
Five hours!
Had Mr. Van Broecklyn a suggestion
to offer? No, he was as much at sea as the rest.
Simultaneously look crossed look.
Blankness was on every face.
“Let us call the ladies,” suggested one.
It was done, and however great the
tension had been before, it was even greater when
Miss Digby stepped upon the scene. But she was
not a woman to be shaken from her poise even by a
crisis of this importance. When the dilemma had
been presented to her and the full situation grasped,
she looked first at Mr. Cornell and then at Mr. Spielhagen,
and quietly said:
“There is but one explanation
possible of this matter. Mr. Spielhagen will
excuse me, but he is evidently mistaken in thinking
that he saw the lost page among the rest. The
condition into which he was thrown by the unaccustomed
drug he had drank, made him liable to hallucinations.
I have not the least doubt he thought he had been
studying the formula at the time he dropped off to
sleep. I have every confidence in the gentleman’s
candour. But so have I in that of Mr. Cornell,”
she supplemented, with a smile.
An exclamation from Mr. Van Broecklyn
and a subdued murmur from all but Mr. Spielhagen testified
to the effect of this suggestion, and there is no
saying what might have been the result if Mr. Cornell
had not hurriedly put in this extraordinary and most
unexpected protest:
“Miss Digby has my gratitude,”
said he, “for a confidence which I hope to prove
to be deserved. But I must say this for Mr. Spielhagen.
He was correct in stating that he was engaged in looking
over his formula when I stepped into his presence
with the glass of cordial. If you were not in
a position to see the hurried way in which his hand
instinctively spread itself over the page he was reading,
I was; and if that does not seem conclusive to you,
then I feel bound to state that in unconsciously following
this movement of his, I plainly saw the number written
on the top of the page, and that number was 13.”
A loud exclamation, this time from
Spielhagen himself, announced his gratitude and corresponding
change of attitude toward the speaker.
“Wherever that damned page has
gone,” he protested, advancing towards Cornell
with outstretched hand, “you have nothing to
do with its disappearance.”
Instantly all constraint fled, and
every countenance took on a relieved expression.
But the problem remained.
Suddenly those very words passed some
one’s lips, and with their utterance Mr. Upjohn
remembered how at an extraordinary crisis in his own
life he had been helped and an equally difficult problem
settled, by a little lady secretly attached to a private
detective agency. If she could only be found
and hurried here before morning, all might yet be
well. He would make the effort. Such wild
schemes sometimes work. He telephoned to the
office and
Was there anything else Miss Strange would like to
know?
III
Miss Strange, thus appealed to, asked
where the gentlemen were now.
She was told that they were still
all together in the library; the ladies had been sent
home.
“Then let us go to them,”
said Violet, hiding under a smile her great fear that
here was an affair which might very easily spell for
her that dismal word, failure.
So great was that fear that under
all ordinary circumstances she would have had no thought
for anything else in the short interim between this
stating of the problem and her speedy entrance among
the persons involved. But the circumstances of
this case were so far from ordinary, or rather let
me put it in this way, the setting of the case was
so very extraordinary, that she scarcely thought of
the problem before her, in her great interest in the
house through whose rambling halls she was being so
carefully guided. So much that was tragic and
heartrending had occurred here. The Van Broecklyn
name, the Van Broecklyn history, above all the Van
Broecklyn tradition, which made the house unique in
the country’s annals (of which more hereafter),
all made an appeal to her imagination, and centred
her thoughts on what she saw about her. There
was door which no man ever opened had never
opened since Revolutionary times should
she see it? Should she know it if she did see
it? Then Mr. Van Broecklyn himself! just to meet
him, under any conditions and in any place, was an
event. But to meet him here, under the pall of
his own mystery! No wonder she had no words for
her companions, or that her thoughts clung to this
anticipation in wonder and almost fearsome delight.
His story was a well-known one.
A bachelor and a misanthrope, he lived absolutely
alone save for a large entourage of servants, all men
and elderly ones at that. He never visited.
Though he now and then, as on this occasion, entertained
certain persons under his roof, he declined every
invitation for himself, avoiding even, with equal strictness,
all evening amusements of whatever kind, which would
detain him in the city after ten at night. Perhaps
this was to ensure no break in his rule of life never
to sleep out of his own bed. Though he was a man
well over fifty he had not spent, according to his
own statement, but two nights out of his own bed since
his return from Europe in early boyhood, and those
were in obedience to a judicial summons which took
him to Boston.
This was his main eccentricity, but
he had another which is apparent enough from what
has already been said. He avoided women.
If thrown in with them during his short visits into
town, he was invariably polite and at times companionable,
but he never sought them out, nor had gossip, contrary
to its usual habit, ever linked his name with one of
the sex.
Yet he was a man of more than ordinary
attraction. His features were fine and his figure
impressive. He might have been the cynosure of
all eyes had he chosen to enter crowded drawing-rooms,
or even to frequent public assemblages, but having
turned his back upon everything of the kind in his
youth, he had found it impossible to alter his habits
with advancing years; nor was he now expected to.
The position he had taken was respected. Leonard
Van Broecklyn was no longer criticized.
Was there any explanation for this
strangely self-centred life? Those who knew him
best seemed to think so. In the first place he
had sprung from an unfortunate stock. Events
of unusual and tragic nature had marked the family
of both parents. Nor had his parents themselves
been exempt from this seeming fatality. Antagonistic
in tastes and temperament, they had dragged on an
unhappy existence in the old home, till both natures
rebelled, and a separation ensued which not only disunited
their lives but sent them to opposite sides of the
globe never to return again, At least, that was the
inference drawn from the peculiar circumstances attending
the event. On the morning of one never-to-be-forgotten
day, John Van Broecklyn, the grandfather of the present
representative of the family, found the following note
from his son lying on the library table:
“Father:
“Life in this house, or any
house, with her is no longer endurable. One of
us must go. The mother should not be separated
from her child. Therefore it is I whom you will
never see again. Forget me, but be considerate
of her and the boy.
“William.”
Six hours later another note was found, this time
from the wife:
“Father:
“Tied to a rotting corpse what
does one do? Lop off one’s arm if necessary
to rid one of the contact. As all love between
your son and myself is dead, I can no longer live
within the sound of his voice. As this is his
home, he is the one to remain in it. May our child
reap the benefit of his mother’s loss and his
father’s affection.
“Rhoda.”
Both were gone, and gone forever.
Simultaneous in their departure, they preserved each
his own silence and sent no word back. If the
one went east and the other west, they may have met
on the other side of the globe, but never again in
the home which sheltered their boy. For him and
for his grandfather they had sunk from sight in the
great sea of humanity, leaving them stranded on an
isolated and mournful shore. The grand-father
steeled himself to the double loss, for the child’s
sake; but the boy of eleven succumbed. Few of
the world’s great sufferers, of whatever age
or condition, have mourned as this child mourned, or
shown the effects of his grief so deeply or so long.
Not till he had passed his majority did the line,
carved in one day in his baby forehead, lose any of
its intensity; and there are those who declare that
even later than that, the midnight stillness of the
house was disturbed from time to time by his muffled
shriek of “Mother! Mother!”, sending
the servants from the house, and adding one more horror
to the many which clung about this accursed mansion.
Of this cry Violet had heard, and
it was that and the door But I have already
told you about the door which she was still looking
for, when her two companions suddenly halted, and
she found herself on the threshold of the library,
in full view of Mr. Van Broecklyn and his two guests.
Slight and fairy-like in figure, with
an air of modest reserve more in keeping with her
youth and dainty dimpling beauty than with her errand,
her appearance produced an astonishment none of which
the gentlemen were able to disguise. This the
clever detective, with a genius for social problems
and odd elusive cases! This darling of the ball-room
in satin and pearls! Mr. Spielhagen glanced at
Mr. Cornell, and Mr. Cornell at Mr. Spielhagen, and
both at Mr. Upjohn, in very evident distrust.
As for Violet, she had eyes only for Mr. Van Broecklyn
who stood before her in a surprise equal to that of
the others but with more restraint in its expression.
She was not disappointed in him.
She had expected to see a man, reserved almost to
the point of austerity. And she found his first
look even more awe-compelling than her imagination
had pictured; so much so indeed, that her resolution
faltered, and she took a quick step backward; which
seeing, he smiled and her heart and hopes grew warm
again. That he could smile, and smile with absolute
sweetness, was her great comfort when later But
I am introducing you too hurriedly to the catastrophe.
There is much to be told first.
I pass over the preliminaries, and
come at once to the moment when Violet, having listened
to a repetition of the full facts, stood with downcast
eyes before these gentlemen, complaining in some alarm
to herself: “They expect me to tell them
now and without further search or parley just where
this missing page is. I shall have to balk that
expectation without losing their confidence. But
how?”
Summoning up her courage and meeting
each inquiring eye with a look which seemed to carry
a different message to each, she remarked very quietly:
“This is not a matter to guess
at. I must have time and I must look a little
deeper into the facts just given me. I presume
that the table I see over there is the one upon which
Mr. Upjohn laid the manuscript during Mr. Spielhagen’s
unconsciousness.”
All nodded.
“Is it I mean the
table in the same condition it was then?
Has nothing been taken from it except the manuscript?”
“Nothing.”
“Then the missing page is not
there,” she smiled, pointing to its bare top.
A pause, during which she stood with her gaze fixed
on the floor before her. She was thinking and
thinking hard.
Suddenly she came to a decision.
Addressing Mr. Upjohn she asked if he were quite sure
that in taking the manuscript from Mr. Spielhagen’s
hand he had neither disarranged nor dropped one of
its pages.
The answer was unequivocal.
“Then,” she declared,
with quiet assurance and a steady meeting with her
own of every eye, “as the thirteenth page was
not found among the others when they were taken from
this table, nor on the persons of either Mr. Cornell
or Mr. Spielhagen, it is still in that inner room.”
“Impossible!” came from
every lip, each in a different tone. “That
room is absolutely empty.”
“May I have a look at its emptiness?”
she asked, with a naïve glance at Mr. Van Broecklyn.
“There is positively nothing
in the room but the chair Mr. Spielhagen sat on,”
objected that gentleman with a noticeable air of reluctance.
“Still, may I not have a look
at it?” she persisted, with that disarming smile
she kept for great occasions.
Mr. Van Broecklyn bowed. He could
not refuse a request so urged, but his step was slow
and his manner next to ungracious as he led the way
to the door of the adjoining room and threw it open.
Just what she had been told to expect!
Bare walls and floors and an empty chair! Yet
she did not instantly withdraw, but stood silently
contemplating the panelled wainscoting surrounding
her, as though she suspected it of containing some
secret hiding-place not apparent to the eye.
Mr. Van Broecklyn, noting this, hastened to say:
“The walls are sound, Miss Strange. They
contain no hidden cupboards.”
“And that door?” she asked,
pointing to a portion of the wainscoting so exactly
like the rest that only the most experienced eye could
detect the line of deeper colour which marked an opening.
For an instant Mr. Van Broecklyn stood
rigid, then the immovable pallor, which was one of
his chief characteristics, gave way to a deep flush
as he explained:
“There was a door there once;
but it has been permanently closed. With cement,”
he forced himself to add, his countenance losing its
evanescent colour till it shone ghastly again in the
strong light.
With difficulty Violet preserved her
show of composure. “The door!” she
murmured to herself. “I have found it.
The great historic door!” But her tone was light
as she ventured to say:
“Then it can no longer be opened
by your hand or any other?”
“It could not be opened with an axe.”
Violet sighed in the midst of her
triumph. Her curiosity had been satisfied, but
the problem she had been set to solve looked inexplicable.
But she was not one to yield easily to discouragement.
Marking the disappointment approaching to disdain in
every eye but Mr. Upjohn’s, she drew herself
up (she had not far to draw) and made this
final proposal.
“A sheet of paper,” she
remarked, “of the size of this one cannot be
spirited away, or dissolved into thin air. It
exists; it is here; and all we want is some happy
thought in order to find it. I acknowledge that
that happy thought has not come to me yet, but sometimes
I get it in what may seem to you a very odd way.
Forgetting myself, I try to assume the individuality
of the person who has worked the mystery. If I
can think with his thoughts, I possibly may follow
him in his actions. In this case I should like
to make believe for a few moments that I am Mr. Spielhagen”
(with what a delicious smile she said this) “I
should like to hold his thesis in my hand and be interrupted
in my reading by Mr. Cornell offering his glass of
cordial; then I should like to nod and slip off mentally
into a deep sleep. Possibly in that sleep the
dream may come which will clarify the whole situation.
Will you humour me so far?”
A ridiculous concession, but finally
she had her way; the farce was enacted and they left
her as she had requested them to do, alone with her
dreams in the small room.
Suddenly they heard her cry out, and
in another moment she appeared before them, the picture
of excitement.
“Is this chair standing exactly
as it did when Mr. Spielhagen occupied it?”
she asked.
“No,” said Mr. Upjohn, “it faced
the other way.”
She stepped back and twirled the chair about with
her disengaged hand.
“So?”
Mr. Upjohn and Mr. Spielhagen both
nodded, so did the others when she glanced at them.
With a sign of ill-concealed satisfaction,
she drew their attention to herself; then eagerly
cried:
“Gentlemen, look here!”
Seating herself, she allowed her whole
body to relax till she presented the picture of one
calmly asleep. Then, as they continued to gaze
at with fascinated eyes, not knowing what to expect,
they saw something white escape from her lap and slide
across the floor till it touched and was stayed by
the wainscot. It was the top page of the manuscript
she held, and as some inkling of the truth reached
their astonished minds, she sprang impetuously to
her feet and, pointing to the fallen sheet, cried:
“Do you understand now?
Look where it lies and then look here!”
She had bounded towards the wall and
was now on her knees pointing to the bottom of the
wainscot, just a few inches to the left of the fallen
page.
“A crack!” she cried,
“under what was once the door. It’s
a very thin one, hardly perceptible to the eye.
But see!” Here she laid her finger on the fallen
paper and drawing it towards her, pushed it carefully
against the lower edge of the wainscot. Half of
it at once disappeared.
“I could easily slip it all
through,” she assured them, withdrawing the
sheet and leaping to her feet in triumph. “You
know now where the missing page lies, Mr. Spielhagen.
All that remains is for Mr. Van Broecklyn to get it
for you.”
IV
The cries of mingled astonishment
and relief which greeted this simple elucidation of
the mystery were broken by a curiously choked, almost
unintelligible, cry. It came from the man thus
appealed to, who, unnoticed by them all, had started
at her first word and gradually, as action followed
action, withdrawn himself till he now stood alone and
in an attitude almost of defiance behind the large
table in the centre of the library.
“I am sorry,” he began,
with a brusqueness which gradually toned down into
a forced urbanity as he beheld every eye fixed upon
him in amazement, “that circumstances forbid
my being of assistance to you in this unfortunate
matter. If the paper lies where you say, and I
see no other explanation of its loss, I am afraid
it will have to remain there for this night at least.
The cement in which that door is embedded is thick
as any wall; it would take men with pickaxes, possibly
with dynamite, to make a breach there wide enough
for any one to reach in. And we are far from
any such help.”
In the midst of the consternation
caused by these words, the clock on the mantel behind
his back rang out the hour. It was but a double
stroke, but that meant two hours after midnight and
had the effect of a knell in the hearts of those most
interested.
“But I am expected to give that
formula into the hands of our manager before six o’clock
in the morning. The steamer sails at a quarter
after.”
“Can’t you reproduce a
copy of it from memory?” some one asked; “and
insert it in its proper place among the pages you hold
there?”
“The paper would not be the
same. That would lead to questions and the truth
would come out. As the chief value of the process
contained in that formula lies in its secrecy, no
explanation I could give would relieve me from the
suspicions which an acknowledgment of the existence
of a third copy, however well hidden, would entail.
I should lose my great opportunity.”
Mr. Cornell’s state of mind
can be imagined. In an access of mingled regret
and despair, he cast a glance at Violet, who, with
a nod of understanding, left the little room in which
they still stood, and approached Mr. Van Broecklyn.
Lifting up her head, for
he was very tall, and instinctively rising
on her toes the nearer to reach his ear, she asked
in a cautious whisper:
“Is there no other way of reaching that place?”
She acknowledged afterwards, that
for one moment her heart stood still from fear, such
a change took place in his face, though she says he
did not move a muscle. Then, just when she was
expecting from him some harsh or forbidding word,
he wheeled abruptly away from her and crossing to a
window at his side, lifted the shade and looked out.
When he returned, he was his usual self so far as
she could see.
“There is a way,” he now
confided to her in a tone as low as her own, “but
it can only be taken by a child.”
“Not by me?” she asked,
smiling down at her own childish proportions.
For an instant he seemed taken aback,
then she saw his hand begin to tremble and his lips
twitch. Somehow she knew not why she
began to pity him, and asked herself as she felt rather
than saw the struggle in his mind, that here was a
trouble which if once understood would greatly dwarf
that of the two men in the room behind them.
“I am discreet,” she whisperingly
declared. “I have heard the history of
that door how it was against the tradition
of the family to have it opened. There must have
been some very dreadful reason. But old superstitions
do not affect me, and if you will allow me to take
the way you mention, I will follow your bidding exactly,
and will not trouble myself about anything but the
recovery of this paper, which must lie only a little
way inside that blocked-up door.”
Was his look one of rebuke at her
presumption, or just the constrained expression of
a perturbed mind? Probably, the latter, for while
she watched him for some understanding of his mood,
he reached out his hand and touched one of the satin
folds crossing her shoulder.
“You would soil this irretrievably,” said
he.
“There is stuff in the stores
for another,” she smiled. Slowly his touch
deepened into pressure. Watching him she saw the
crust of some old fear or dominant superstition melt
under her eyes, and was quite prepared, when he remarked,
with what for him was a lightsome air:
“I will buy the stuff, if you
will dare the darkness and intricacies of our old
cellar. I can give you no light. You will
have to feel your way according to my direction.”
“I am ready to dare anything.”
He left her abruptly.
“I will warn Miss Digby,”
he called back. “She shall go with you as
far as the cellar.”
V
Violet in her short career as an investigator
of mysteries had been in many a situation calling
for more than womanly nerve and courage. But
never or so it seemed to her at the time had
she experienced a greater depression of spirit than
when she stood with Miss Digby before a small door
at the extreme end of the cellar, and understood that
here was her road a road which once entered,
she must take alone.
First, it was such a small door!
No child older than eleven could possibly squeeze
through it. But she was of the size of a child
of eleven and might possibly manage that difficulty.
Secondly: there are always some
unforeseen possibilities in every situation, and though
she had listened carefully to Mr. Van Broecklyn’s
directions and was sure that she knew them by heart,
she wished she had kissed her father more tenderly
in leaving him that night for the ball, and that she
had not pouted so undutifully at some harsh stricture
he had made. Did this mean fear? She despised
the feeling if it did.
Thirdly: She hated darkness.
She knew this when she offered herself for this undertaking;
but she was in a bright room at the moment and only
imagined what she must now face as a reality.
But one jet had been lit in the cellar and that near
the entrance. Mr. Van Broecklyn seemed not to
need light, even in his unfastening of the small door
which Violet was sure had been protected by more than
one lock.
Doubt, shadow, and a solitary climb
between unknown walls, with only a streak of light
for her goal, and the clinging pressure of Florence
Digby’s hand on her own for solace surely
the prospect was one to tax the courage of her young
heart to its limit. But she had promised, and
she would fulfill. So with a brave smile she stooped
to the little door, and in another moment had started
her journey.
For journey the shortest distance
may seem when every inch means a heart-throb and one
grows old in traversing a foot. At first the way
was easy; she had but to crawl up a slight incline
with the comforting consciousness that two people
were within reach of her voice, almost within sound
of her beating heart. But presently she came to
a turn, beyond which her fingers failed to reach any
wall on her left. Then came a step up which she
stumbled, and farther on a short flight, each tread
of which she had been told to test before she ventured
to climb it, lest the decay of innumerable years should
have weakened the wood too much to bear her weight.
One, two, three, four, five steps! Then a landing
with an open space beyond. Half of her journey
was done. Here she felt she could give a minute
to drawing her breath naturally, if the air, unchanged
in years, would allow her to do so. Besides, here
she had been enjoined to do a certain thing and to
do it according to instructions. Three matches
had been given her and a little night candle.
Denied all light up to now, it was at this point she
was to light her candle and place it on the floor,
so that in returning she should not miss the staircase
and get a fall. She had promised to do this, and
was only too happy to see a spark of light scintillate
into life in the immeasurable darkness.
She was now in a great room long closed
to the world, where once officers in Colonial wars
had feasted, and more than one council had been held.
A room, too, which had seen more than one tragic happening,
as its almost unparalleled isolation proclaimed.
So much Mr. Van Broecklyn had told her; but she was
warned to be careful in traversing it and not upon
any pretext to swerve aside from the right-hand wall
till she came to a huge mantelpiece. This passed,
and a sharp corner turned, she ought to see somewhere
in the dim spaces before her a streak of vivid light
shining through the crack at the bottom of the blocked-up
door. The paper should be somewhere near this
streak.
All simple, all easy of accomplishment,
if only that streak of light were all she was likely
to see or think of. If the horror which was gripping
her throat should not take shape! If things would
remain shrouded in impenetrable darkness, and not
force themselves in shadowy suggestion upon her excited
fancy! But the blackness of the passage-way through
which she had just struggled was not to be found here.
Whether it was the effect of that small flame flickering
at the top of the staircase behind her, or of some
change in her own powers of seeing, surely there was
a difference in her present outlook. Tall shapes
were becoming visible the air was no longer
blank she could see Then suddenly
she saw why. In the wall high up on her right
was a window. It was small and all but invisible,
being covered on the outside with vines, and on the
inside with the cobwebs of a century. But some
small gleams from the star-light night came through,
making phantasms out of ordinary things, which unseen
were horrible enough, and half seen choked her heart
with terror.
“I cannot bear it,” she
whispered to herself even while creeping forward,
her hand upon the wall. “I will close my
eyes” was her next thought. “I will
make my own darkness,” and with a spasmodic forcing
of her lids together, she continued to creep on, passing
the mantelpiece, where she knocked against something
which fell with an awful clatter.
This sound, followed as it was by
that of smothered voices from the excited group awaiting
the result of her experiment from behind the impenetrable
wall she should be nearing now if she had followed
her instructions aright, freed her instantly from
her fancies; and opening her eyes once more, she cast
a look ahead, and to her delight, saw but a few steps
away, the thin streak of bright light which marked
the end of her journey.
It took her but a moment after that
to find the missing page, and picking it up in haste
from the dusty floor, she turned herself quickly about
and joyfully began to retrace her steps. Why then,
was it that in the course of a few minutes more her
voice suddenly broke into a wild, unearthly shriek,
which ringing with terror burst the bounds of that
dungeon-like room, and sank, a barbed shaft, into the
breasts of those awaiting the result of her doubtful
adventure, at either end of this dread no-thoroughfare.
What had happened?
If they had thought to look out, they
would have seen that the moon held in check
by a bank of cloud occupying half the heavens had
suddenly burst its bounds and was sending long bars
of revealing light into every uncurtained window.
VI
Florence Digby, in her short and sheltered
life, had possibly never known any very great or deep
emotion. But she touched the bottom of extreme
terror at that moment, as with her ears still thrilling
with Violet’s piercing cry, she turned to look
at Mr. Van Broecklyn, and beheld the instantaneous
wreck it had made of this seemingly strong man.
Not till he came to lie in his coffin would he show
a more ghastly countenance; and trembling herself
almost to the point of falling, caught him by the
arm and sought to read his face what had happened.
Something disastrous she was sure; something which
he had feared and was partially prepared for, yet
which in happening had crushed him. Was it a
pitfall into which the poor little lady had fallen?
If so But he is speaking mumbling
low words to himself. Some of them she can hear.
He is reproaching himself repeating over
and over that he should never have taken such a chance;
that he should have remembered her youth the
weakness of a young girl’s nerve. He had
been mad, and now and now
With the repetition of this word his
murmuring ceased. All his energies were now absorbed
in listening at the low door separating him from what
he was agonizing to know a door impossible
to enter, impossible to enlarge a barrier
to all help an opening whereby sound might
pass but nothing else, save her own small body, now
lying where?
“Is she hurt?” faltered
Florence, stooping, herself, to listen. “Can
you hear anything anything?”
For an instant he did not answer;
every faculty was absorbed in the one sense; then
slowly and in gasps he began to mutter:
“I think I hear something.
Her step no, no, no step. All is as
quiet as death; not a sound, not a breath she
has fainted. O God! O God! Why this
calamity on top of all!”
He had sprung to his feet at the utterance
this invocation, but next moment was down on knees
again, listening listening.
Never was silence more profound; they
were hearkening for murmurs from a tomb. Florence
began to sense the full horror of it all, and was swaying
helplessly when Mr. Van Broecklyn impulsively lifted
his hand in an admonitory Hush! and through the daze
of her faculties a small far sound began to make itself
heard, growing louder as she waited, then becoming
faint again, then altogether ceasing only to renew
itself once more, till it resolved into an approaching
step, faltering in its course, but coming ever nearer
and nearer.
“She’s safe! She’s
not hurt!” sprang from Florence’s lips
in inexpressible relief; and expecting Mr. Van Broecklyn
to show an equal joy, she turned towards him, with
the cheerful cry,
“Now if she has been so fortunate
as to that missing page, we shall all be repaid for
our fright.”
A movement on his part, a shifting
of position which brought him finally to his feet,
but he gave no other proof of having heard her, nor
did his countenance mirror her relief. “It
is as if he dreaded, instead of hailed, her return,”
was Florence’s inward comment as she watched
him involuntarily recoil at each fresh token of Violet’s
advance.
Yet because this seemed so very unnatural,
she persisted in her efforts to lighten the situation,
and when he made no attempt to encourage Violet in
her approach, she herself stooped and called out a
cheerful welcome which must have rung sweetly in the
poor little detective’s ears.
A sorry sight was Violet, when, helped
by Florence, she finally crawled into view through
the narrow opening and stood once again on the cellar
floor. Pale, trembling, and soiled with the dust
of years, she presented a helpless figure enough,
till the joy in Florence’s face recalled some
of her spirit, and, glancing down at her hand in which
a sheet of paper was visible, she asked for Mr. Spielhagen.
“I’ve got the formula,”
she said. “If you will bring him, I will
hand it over to him here.”
Not a word of her adventure; nor so
much as one glance at Mr. Van Broecklyn, standing
far back in the shadows.
Nor was she more communicative, when,
the formula restored and everything made right with
Mr. Spielhagen, they all came together again in the
library for a final word. “I was frightened
by the silence and the darkness, and so cried out,”
she explained in answer to their questions. “Any
one would have done so who found himself alone in
so musty a place,” she added, with an attempt
at lightsomeness which deepened the pallor on Mr.
Van Broecklyn’s cheek, already sufficiently
noticeable to have been remarked upon by more than
one.
“No ghosts?” laughed Mr.
Cornell, too happy in the return of his hopes to be
fully sensible of the feelings of those about him.
“No whispers from impalpable lips or touches
from spectre hands? Nothing to explain the mystery
of that room long shut up that even Mr. Van Broecklyn
declares himself ignorant of its secret?”
“Nothing,” returned Violet,
showing her dimples in full force now.
“If Miss Strange had any such
experiences if she has anything to tell
worthy of so marked a curiosity, she will tell it now,”
came from the gentleman just alluded to, in tones
so stern and strange that all show of frivolity ceased
on the instant. “Have you anything to tell,
Miss Strange?”
Greatly startled, she regarded him
with widening eyes for a moment, then with a move
towards the door, remarked, with a general look about
her:
“Mr. Van Broecklyn knows his
own house, and doubtless can relate its histories
if he will. I am a busy little body who having
finished my work am now ready to return home, there
to wait for the next problem which an indulgent fate
may offer me.”
She was near the threshold she
was about to take her leave, when suddenly she felt
two hands fall on her shoulder, and turning, met the
eyes of Mr. Van Broecklyn burning into her own.
“You saw!” dropped in
an almost inaudible whisper from his lips.
The shiver which shook her answered
him better than any word.
With an exclamation of despair, he
withdrew his hands, and facing the others now standing
together in a startled group, he said, as soon as he
could recover some of his self-possession:
“I must ask for another hour
of your company. I can no longer keep my sorrow
to myself. A dividing line has just been drawn
across my life, and I must have the sympathy of someone
who knows my past, or I shall go mad in my self-imposed
solitude. Come back, Miss Strange. You of
all others have the prior right to hear.”
VII
“I shall have to begin,”
said he, when they were all seated and ready to listen,
“by giving you some idea, not so much of the
family tradition, as of the effect of this tradition
upon all who bore the name of Van Broecklyn.
This is not the only house, even in America, which
contains a room shut away from intrusion. In
England there are many. But there is this difference
between most of them and ours. No bars or locks
forcibly held shut the door we were forbidden to open.
The command was enough; that and the superstitious
fear which such a command, attended by a long and
unquestioning obedience, was likely to engender.
“I know no more than you do
why some early ancestor laid his ban upon this room.
But from my earliest years I was given to understand
that there was one latch in the house which was never
to be lifted; that any fault would be forgiven sooner
than that; that the honour of the whole family stood
in the way of disobedience, and that I was to preserve
that honour to my dying day. You will say that
all this is fantastic, and wonder that sane people
in these modern times should subject themselves to
such a ridiculous restriction, especially when no good
reason was alleged, and the very source of the tradition
from which it sprung forgotten. You are right;
but if you look long into human nature, you will see
that the bonds which hold the firmest are not material
ones that an idea will make a man and mould
a character that it lies at the source
of all heroisms and is to be courted or feared as the
case may be.
“For me it possessed a power
proportionate to my loneliness. I don’t
think there was ever a more lonely child. My father
and mother were so unhappy in each other’s companionship
that one or other of them was almost always away.
But I saw little of either even when they were at
home. The constraint in their attitude towards
each other affected their conduct towards me.
I have asked myself more than once if either of them
had any real affection for me. To my father I
spoke of her; to her of him; and never pleasurably.
This I am forced to say, or you cannot understand
my story. Would to God I could tell another tale!
Would to God I had such memories as other men have
of a father’s clasp, a mother’s kiss but
no! my grief, already profound, might have become
abysmal. Perhaps it is best as it is; only, I
might have been a different child, and made for myself
a different fate who knows.
“As it was, I was thrown almost
entirely upon my own resources for any amusement.
This led me to a discovery I made one day. In
a far part of the cellar behind some heavy casks,
I found a little door. It was so low so
exactly fitted to my small body, that I had the greatest
desire to enter it. But I could not get around
the casks. At last an expedient occurred to me.
We had an old servant who came nearer loving me than
any one else. One day when I chanced to be alone
in the cellar, I took out my ball and began throwing
it about. Finally it landed behind the casks,
and I ran with a beseeching cry to Michael, to move
them.
“It was a task requiring no
little strength and address, but he managed, after
a few herculean efforts, to shift them aside and I
saw with delight, my way opened to that mysterious
little door. But I did not approach it then;
some instinct deterred me. But when the opportunity
came for me to venture there alone, I did so, in the
most adventurous spirit, and began my operations by
sliding behind the casks and testing the handle of
the little door. It turned, and after a pull or
two the door yielded. With my heart in my mouth,
I stooped and peered in. I could see nothing a
black hole and nothing more. This caused me a
moment’s hesitation. I was afraid of the
dark had always been. But curiosity
and the spirit of adventure triumphed. Saying
to myself that I was Robinson Crusoe exploring the
cave, I crawled in, only to find that I had gained
nothing. It was as dark inside as it had looked
to be from without.
“There was no fun in this, so
I crawled back, and when I tried the experiment again,
it was with a bit of candle in my hand, and a surreptitious
match or two. What I saw, when with a very trembling
little hand I had lighted one of the matches, would
have been disappointing to most boys, but not to me.
The litter and old boards I saw in odd corners about
me were full of possibilities, while in the dimness
beyond I seemed to perceive a sort of staircase which
might lead I do not think I made any attempt
to answer that question even in my own mind, but when,
after some hesitation and a sense of great daring,
I finally crept up those steps, I remember very well
my sensation at finding myself in front of a narrow
closed door. It suggested too vividly the one
in Grandfather’s little room the door
in the wainscot which we were never to open.
I had my first real trembling fit here, and at once
fascinated and repelled by this obstruction I stumbled
and lost my candle, which, going out in the fall, left
me in total darkness and a very frightened state of
mind. For my imagination which had been greatly
stirred by my own vague thoughts of the forbidden
room, immediately began to people the space about me
with ghoulish figures. How should I escape them,
how ever reach my own little room again undetected
and in safety?
“But these terrors, deep as
they were, were nothing to the real fright which seized
me when, the darkness finally braved, and the way found
back into the bright, wide-open halls of the house,
I became conscious of having dropped something besides
the candle. My match-box was gone not
my match-box, but my grandfather’s which I had
found lying on his table and carried off on this adventure,
in all the confidence of irresponsible youth.
To make use of it for a little while, trusting to
his not missing it in the confusion I had noticed about
the house that morning, was one thing; to lose it
was another. It was no common box. Made
of gold and cherished for some special reason well
known to himself, I had often hear him say that some
day I would appreciate its value, and be glad to own
it. And I had left it in that hole and at any
minute he might miss it possibly ask for
it! The day was one of torment. My mother
was away or shut up in her room. My father I
don’t know just what thoughts I had about him.
He was not to be seen either, and the servants cast
strange looks at me when I spoke his name. But
I little realized the blow which had just fallen upon
the house in his definite departure, and only thought
of my own trouble, and of how I should meet my grandfather’s
eye when the hour came for him to draw me to his knee
for his usual good-night.
“That I was spared this ordeal
for the first time this very night first comforted
me, then added to my distress. He had discovered
his loss and was angry. On the morrow he would
ask me for the box and I would have to lie, for never
could I find the courage to tell him where I had been.
Such an act of presumption he would never forgive,
or so I thought as I lay and shivered in my little
bed. That his coldness, his neglect, sprang from
the discovery just made that my mother as well as my
father had just fled the house forever was as little
known to me as the morning calamity. I had been
given my usual tendance and was tucked safely into
bed; but the gloom, the silence which presently settled
upon the house had a very different explanation in
my mind from the real one. My sin (for such it
loomed large in my mind by this time) coloured the
whole situation and accounted for every event.
“At what hour I slipped from
my bed on to the cold floor, I shall never know.
To me it seemed to be in the dead of night; but I doubt
if it were more than ten. So slowly creep away
the moments to a wakeful child. I had made a
great resolve. Awful as the prospect seemed to
me, frightened as I was by the very thought, I
had determined in my small mind to go down into the
cellar, and into that midnight hole again, in search
of the lost box. I would take a candle and matches,
this time from my own mantel-shelf, and if everyone
was asleep, as appeared from the deathly quiet of
the house, I would be able to go and come without
anybody ever being the wiser.
“Dressing in the dark, I found
my matches and my candle and, putting them in one
of my pockets, softly opened my door and looked out.
Nobody was stirring; every light was out except a
solitary one in the lower hall. That this still
burned conveyed no meaning to my mind. How could
I know that the house was so still and the rooms dark
because everyone was out searching for some clue to
my mother’s flight? If I had looked at
the clock but I did not; I was too intent
upon my errand, too filled with the fever of my desperate
undertaking, to be affected by anything not bearing
directly upon it.
“Of the terror caused by my
own shadow on the wall as I made the turn in the hall
below, I have as keen a recollection today as though
it happened yesterday. But that did not deter
me; nothing deterred me, till safe in the cellar I
crouched down behind the casks to get my breath again
before entering the hole beyond.
“I had made some noise in feeling
my way around these casks, and I trembled lest these
sounds had been heard upstairs! But this fear
soon gave place to one far greater. Other sounds
were making themselves heard. A din of small
skurrying feet above, below, on every side of me!
Rats! rats in the wall! rats on the cellar bottom!
How I ever stirred from the spot I do not know, but
when I did stir, it was to go forward, and enter the
uncanny hole.
“I had intended to light my
candle when I got inside; but for some reason I went
stumbling along in the dark, following the wall till
I got to the steps where I had dropped the box.
Here a light was necessary, but my hand did not go
to my pocket. I thought it better to climb the
steps first, and softly one foot found the tread and
then another. I had only three more to climb
and then my right hand, now feeling its way along
the wall, would be free to strike a match. I climbed
the three steps and was steadying myself against the
door for a final plunge, when something happened something
so strange, so unexpected, and so incredible that
I wonder I did not shriek aloud in my terror.
The door was moving under my hand. It was slowly
opening inward. I could feel the chill made by
the widening crack. Moment by moment this chill
increased; the gap was growing a presence
was there-a presence before which I sank in a small
heap upon the landing. Would it advance?
Had it feet hands? Was it a presence
which could be felt?
“Whatever it was, it made no
attempt to pass, and presently I lifted my head only
to quake anew at the sound of a voice a
human voice my mother’s voice so
near me that by putting out my arms I might have touched
her.
“She was speaking to my father.
I knew from the tone. She was saying words which,
little understood as they were, made such a havoc in
my youthful mind that I have never forgotten the effect.
“‘I have come!’
she said. ’They think I have fled the house
and are looking far and wide for me. We shall
not be disturbed. Who would think looking of
here for either you or me.’
“Here! The word sank like
a plummet in my breast. I had known for some
few minutes that I was on the threshold of the forbidden
room; but they were in it. I can scarcely make
you understand the tumult which this awoke in my brain.
Somehow, I had never thought that any such braving
of the house’s law would be possible.
“I heard my father’s answer,
but it conveyed no meaning to me. I also realized
that he spoke from a distance, that he was
at one end of the room while we were at the other.
I was presently to have this idea confirmed, for while
I was striving with all my might and main to subdue
my very heart-throbs so that she would not hear me
or suspect my presence, the darkness I
should rather say the blackness of the place yielded
to a flash of lightning heat lightning,
all glare and no sound and I caught an
instantaneous vision of my father’s figure standing
with gleaming things about him, which affected me at
the moment as supernatural, but which, in later years,
I decided to have been weapons hanging on a wall.
“She saw him too, for she gave
a quick laugh and said they would not need any candles;
and then, there was another flash and I saw something
in his hand and something in hers, and though I did
not yet understand, I felt myself turning deathly
sick and gave a choking gasp which was lost in the
rush she made into the centre of the room, and the
keenness of her swift low cry.
“‘Garde-toi!
for only one of us will ever leave this room alive!’
“A duel! a duel to the death
between this husband and wife this father
and mother in this hole of dead tragedies
and within the sight and hearing of their child!
Has Satan ever devised a scheme more hideous for ruining
the life of an eleven-year-old boy!
“Not that I took it all in at
once. I was too innocent and much too dazed to
comprehend such hatred, much less the passions which
engender it. I only knew that something horrible something
beyond the conception of my childish mind was
going to take place in the darkness before me; and
the terror of it made me speechless; would to God it
had made me deaf and blind and dead!
“She had dashed from her corner
and he had slid away from his, as the next fantastic
glare which lit up the room showed me. It also
showed the weapons in their hands, and for a moment
I felt reassured when I saw that these were swords,
for I had seen them before with foils in their hands
practising for exercise, as they said, in the great
garret. But the swords had buttons on them, and
this time the tips were sharp and shone in the keen
light.
“An exclamation from her and
a growl of rage from him were followed by movements
I could scarcely hear, but which were terrifying from
their very quiet. Then the sound of a clash.
The swords had crossed.
“Had the lightning flashed forth
then, the end of one of them might have occurred.
But the darkness remained undisturbed, and when the
glare relit the great room again, they were already
far apart. This called out a word from him; the
one sentence he spoke I can never forget
it:
“’Rhoda, there is blood
on your sleeve; I have wounded you. Shall we
call it off and fly, as the poor creatures in there
think we have, to the opposite ends of the earth?’
“I almost spoke; I almost added
my childish plea to his for them to stop to
remember me and stop. But not a muscle in my throat
responded to my agonized effort. Her cold, clear
‘No!’ fell before my tongue was loosed
or my heart freed from the ponderous weight crushing
it.
“‘I have vowed and I keep
my promises,’ she went on in a tone quite strange
to me. ’What would either’s life be
worth with the other alive and happy in this world.’
“He made no answer; and those
subtle movements shadows of movements I
might almost call them recommenced.
Then there came a sudden cry, shrill and poignant had
Grandfather been in his room he would surely have
heard it and the flash coming almost simultaneously
with its utterance, I saw what has haunted my sleep
from that day to this, my father pinned against the
wall, sword still in hand, and before him my mother,
fiercely triumphant, her staring eyes fixed on his
and
“Nature could bear no more;
the band loosened from my throat; the oppression lifted
from my breast long enough for me to give one wild
wail and she turned, saw (heaven sent its flashes quickly
at this moment) and recognizing my childish form,
all the horror of her deed (or so I have fondly hoped)
rose within her, and she gave a start and fell full
upon the point upturned to receive her.
“A groan; then a gasping sigh
from him, and silence settled upon the room and upon
my heart, and so far as I knew upon the whole created
world.
“That is my story, friends.
Do you wonder that I have never been or lived like
other men?”
After a few moments of sympathetic
silence, Mr. Van Broecklyn went on, to say:
“I don’t think I ever
had a moment’s doubt that my parents both lay
dead on the floor of that great room. When I
came to myself which may have been soon,
and may not have been for a long while the
lightning had ceased to flash, leaving the darkness
stretching like a blank pall between me and that spot
in which were concentrated all the terrors of which
my imagination was capable. I dared not enter
it. I dared not take one step that way.
My instinct was to fly and hide my trembling body
again in my own bed; and associated with this, in fact
dominating it and making me old before my time, was
another never to tell; never to let any
one, least of all my grandfather know what
that forbidden room now contained. I felt in
an irresistible sort of way that my father’s
and mother’s honour was at stake. Besides,
terror held me back; I felt that I should die if I
spoke. Childhood has such terrors and such heroisms.
Silence often covers in such, abysses of thought and
feeling which astonish us in later years. There
is no suffering like a child’s, terrified by
a secret which it dare not for some reason disclose.
“Events aided me. When,
in desperation to see once more the light and all
the things which linked me to life my little
bed, the toys on the window-sill, my squirrel in its
cage I forced myself to retraverse the
empty house, expecting at every turn to hear my father’s
voice or come upon the image of my mother yes,
such was the confusion of my mind, though I knew well
enough even then that they were dead and that I should
never hear the one or see the other. I was so
benumbed with the cold in my half-dressed condition,
that I woke in a fever next morning after a terrible
dream which forced from my lips the cry of ’Mother!
Mother!’ only that.
“I was cautious even in delirium.
This delirium and my flushed cheeks and shining eyes
led them to be very careful of me. I was told
that my mother was away from home; and when after
two days of search they were quite sure that all effort
to find either her or my father were likely to prove
fruitless, that she had gone to Europe where we would
follow her as soon as I was well. This promise,
offering as it did, a prospect of immediate release
from the terrors which were consuming me, had an extraordinary
effect upon me. I got up out of my bed saying
that I was well now and ready to start on the instant.
The doctor, finding my pulse equable, and my whole
condition wonder fully improved, and attributing it,
as was natural, to my hope of soon joining my mother,
advised my whim to be humoured and this hope kept
active till travel and intercourse with children should
give me strength and prepare me for the bitter truth
ultimately awaiting me. They listened to him and
in twenty-four hours our preparations were made.
We saw the house closed with what emotions
surging in one small breast, I leave you to imagine and
then started on our long tour. For five years
we wandered over the continent of Europe, my grandfather
finding distraction, as well as myself, in foreign
scenes and associations.
“But return was inevitable.
What I suffered on reentering this house, God and
my sleepless pillow alone know. Had any discovery
been made in our absence; or would it be made now
that renovation and repairs of all kinds were necessary?
Time finally answered me. My secret was safe
and likely to continue so, and this fact once settled,
life became endurable, if not cheerful. Since
then I have spent only two nights out of this house,
and they were unavoidable. When my grandfather
died I had the wainscot door cemented in. It
was done from this side and the cement painted to
match the wood. No one opened the door nor have
I ever crossed its threshold. Sometimes I think
I have been foolish; and sometimes I know that I have
been very wise. My reason has stood firm; how
do I know that it would have done so if I had subjected
myself to the possible discovery that one of both
of them might have been saved if I had disclosed instead
of concealed my adventure.”
A pause during which white horror
had shone on every face; then with a final glance
at Violet, he said:
“What sequel do you see to this
story, Miss Strange? I can tell the past, I leave
you to picture the future.”
Rising, she let her eye travel from
face to face till it rested on the one awaiting it,
when she answered dreamily:
“If some morning in the news
column there should appear an account of the ancient
and historic home of the Van Broecklyns having burned
to the ground in the night, the whole country would
mourn, and the city feel defrauded of one of its treasures.
But there are five persons who would see in it the
sequel which you ask for.”
When this happened, as it did happen,
some few weeks later, the astonishing discovery was
made that no insurance had been put upon this house.
Why was it that after such a loss Mr. Van Broecklyn
seemed to renew his youth? It was a constant
source of comment among his friends.