Of the dealings of Edward Bellingham
with William Monkhouse Lee, and of the cause of the
great terror of Abercrombie Smith, it may be that no
absolute and final judgment will ever be delivered.
It is true that we have the full and clear narrative
of Smith himself, and such corroboration as he could
look for from Thomas Styles the servant, from the
Reverend Plumptree Peterson, Fellow of Old’s,
and from such other people as chanced to gain some
passing glance at this or that incident in a singular
chain of events. Yet, in the main, the story
must rest upon Smith alone, and the most will think
that it is more likely that one brain, however outwardly
sane, has some subtle warp in its texture, some strange
flaw in its workings, than that the path of Nature
has been overstepped in open day in so famed a centre
of learning and light as the University of Oxford.
Yet when we think how narrow and how devious this
path of Nature is, how dimly we can trace it, for all
our lamps of science, and how from the darkness which
girds it round great and terrible possibilities loom
ever shadowly upwards, it is a bold and confident
man who will put a limit to the strange by-paths into
which the human spirit may wander.
In a certain wing of what we will
call Old College in Oxford there is a corner turret
of an exceeding great age. The heavy arch which
spans the open door has bent downwards in the centre
under the weight of its years, and the grey, lichen-blotched
blocks of stone are, bound and knitted together with
withes and strands of ivy, as though the old mother
had set herself to brace them up against wind and weather.
From the door a stone stair curves upward spirally,
passing two landings, and terminating in a third one,
its steps all shapeless and hollowed by the tread
of so many generations of the seekers after knowledge.
Life has flowed like water down this winding stair,
and, waterlike, has left these smooth-worn grooves
behind it. From the long-gowned, pedantic scholars
of Plantagenet days down to the young bloods of a later
age, how full and strong had been that tide of young
English life. And what was left now of all those
hopes, those strivings, those fiery energies, save
here and there in some old-world churchyard a few scratches
upon a stone, and perchance a handful of dust in a
mouldering coffin? Yet here were the silent
stair and the grey old wall, with bend and saltire
and many another heraldic device still to be read upon
its surface, like grotesque shadows thrown back from
the days that had passed.
In the month of May, in the year 1884,
three young men occupied the sets of rooms which opened
on to the separate landings of the old stair.
Each set consisted simply of a sitting-room and of
a bedroom, while the two corresponding rooms upon
the ground-floor were used, the one as a coal-cellar,
and the other as the living-room of the servant, or
gyp, Thomas Styles, whose duty it was to wait upon
the three men above him. To right and to left
was a line of lecture-rooms and of offices, so that
the dwellers in the old turret enjoyed a certain seclusion,
which made the chambers popular among the more studious
undergraduates. Such were the three who occupied
them now Abercrombie Smith above, Edward
Bellingham beneath him, and William Monkhouse Lee
upon the lowest storey.
It was ten o’clock on a bright
spring night, and Abercrombie Smith lay back in his
arm-chair, his feet upon the fender, and his briar-root
pipe between his lips. In a similar chair, and
equally at his ease, there lounged on the other side
of the fireplace his old school friend Jephro Hastie.
Both men were in flannels, for they had spent their
evening upon the river, but apart from their dress
no one could look at their hard-cut, alert faces without
seeing that they were open-air men men
whose minds and tastes turned naturally to all that
was manly and robust. Hastie, indeed, was stroke
of his college boat, and Smith was an even better
oar, but a coming examination had already cast its
shadow over him and held him to his work, save for
the few hours a week which health demanded.
A litter of medical books upon the table, with scattered
bones, models and anatomical plates, pointed to the
extent as well as the nature of his studies, while
a couple of single-sticks and a set of boxing-gloves
above the mantelpiece hinted at the means by which,
with Hastie’s help, he might take his exercise
in its most compressed and least distant form.
They knew each other very well so well
that they could sit now in that soothing silence which
is the very highest development of companionship.
“Have some whisky,” said
Abercrombie Smith at last between two cloudbursts.
“Scotch in the jug and Irish in the bottle.”
“No, thanks. I’m
in for the sculls. I don’t liquor when
I’m training. How about you?”
“I’m reading hard. I think it best
to leave it alone.”
Hastie nodded, and they relapsed into a contented
silence.
“By-the-way, Smith,” asked
Hastie, presently, “have you made the acquaintance
of either of the fellows on your stair yet?”
“Just a nod when we pass. Nothing more.”
“Hum! I should be inclined
to let it stand at that. I know something of
them both. Not much, but as much as I want.
I don’t think I should take them to my bosom
if I were you. Not that there’s much amiss
with Monkhouse Lee.”
“Meaning the thin one?”
“Precisely. He is a gentlemanly
little fellow. I don’t think there is
any vice in him. But then you can’t know
him without knowing Bellingham.”
“Meaning the fat one?”
“Yes, the fat one. And
he’s a man whom I, for one, would rather not
know.”
Abercrombie Smith raised his eyebrows
and glanced across at his companion.
“What’s up, then?”
he asked. “Drink? Cards? Cad?
You used not to be censorious.”
“Ah! you evidently don’t
know the man, or you wouldn’t ask. There’s
something damnable about him something reptilian.
My gorge always rises at him. I should put
him down as a man with secret vices an
evil liver. He’s no fool, though.
They say that he is one of the best men in his line
that they have ever had in the college.”
“Medicine or classics?”
“Eastern languages. He’s
a demon at them. Chillingworth met him somewhere
above the second cataract last long, and he told me
that he just prattled to the Arabs as if he had been
born and nursed and weaned among them. He talked
Coptic to the Copts, and Hebrew to the Jews, and Arabic
to the Bedouins, and they were all ready to kiss the
hem of his frock-coat. There are some old hermit
Johnnies up in those parts who sit on rocks and scowl
and spit at the casual stranger. Well, when
they saw this chap Bellingham, before he had said five
words they just lay down on their bellies and wriggled.
Chillingworth said that he never saw anything like
it. Bellingham seemed to take it as his right,
too, and strutted about among them and talked down
to them like a Dutch uncle. Pretty good for
an undergrad. of Old’s, wasn’t it?”
“Why do you say you can’t
know Lee without knowing Bellingham?”
“Because Bellingham is engaged
to his sister Eveline. Such a bright little
girl, Smith! I know the whole family well.
It’s disgusting to see that brute with her.
A toad and a dove, that’s what they always
remind me of.”
Abercrombie Smith grinned and knocked
his ashes out against the side of the grate.
“You show every card in your
hand, old chap,” said he. “What a
prejudiced, green-eyed, evil-thinking old man it is!
You have really nothing against the fellow except
that.”
“Well, I’ve known her
ever since she was as long as that cherry-wood pipe,
and I don’t like to see her taking risks.
And it is a risk. He looks beastly. And
he has a beastly temper, a venomous temper. You
remember his row with Long Norton?”
“No; you always forget that I am a freshman.”
“Ah, it was last winter.
Of course. Well, you know the towpath along
by the river. There were several fellows going
along it, Bellingham in front, when they came on an
old market-woman coming the other way. It had
been raining you know what those fields
are like when it has rained and the path
ran between the river and a great puddle that was
nearly as broad. Well, what does this swine do
but keep the path, and push the old girl into the
mud, where she and her marketings came to terrible
grief. It was a blackguard thing to do, and Long
Norton, who is as gentle a fellow as ever stepped,
told him what he thought of it. One word led
to another, and it ended in Norton laying his stick
across the fellow’s shoulders. There was
the deuce of a fuss about it, and it’s a treat
to see the way in which Bellingham looks at Norton
when they meet now. By Jove, Smith, it’s
nearly eleven o’clock!”
“No hurry. Light your pipe again.”
“Not I. I’m supposed
to be in training. Here I’ve been sitting
gossiping when I ought to have been safely tucked up.
I’ll borrow your skull, if you can share it.
Williams has had mine for a month. I’ll
take the little bones of your ear, too, if you are
sure you won’t need them. Thanks very
much. Never mind a bag, I can carry them very
well under my arm. Good-night, my son, and take
my tip as to your neighbour.”
When Hastie, bearing his anatomical
plunder, had clattered off down the winding stair,
Abercrombie Smith hurled his pipe into the wastepaper
basket, and drawing his chair nearer to the lamp, plunged
into a formidable green-covered volume, adorned with
great colored maps of that strange internal kingdom
of which we are the hapless and helpless monarchs.
Though a freshman at Oxford, the student was not so
in medicine, for he had worked for four years at Glasgow
and at Berlin, and this coming examination would place
him finally as a member of his profession. With
his firm mouth, broad forehead, and clear-cut, somewhat
hard-featured face, he was a man who, if he had no
brilliant talent, was yet so dogged, so patient, and
so strong that he might in the end overtop a more
showy genius. A man who can hold his own among
Scotchmen and North Germans is not a man to be easily
set back. Smith had left a name at Glasgow and
at Berlin, and he was bent now upon doing as much
at Oxford, if hard work and devotion could accomplish
it.
He had sat reading for about an hour,
and the hands of the noisy carriage clock upon the
side table were rapidly closing together upon the
twelve, when a sudden sound fell upon the student’s
ear a sharp, rather shrill sound, like
the hissing intake of a man’s breath who gasps
under some strong emotion. Smith laid down his
book and slanted his ear to listen. There was
no one on either side or above him, so that the interruption
came certainly from the neighbour beneath the
same neighbour of whom Hastie had given so unsavoury
an account. Smith knew him only as a flabby,
pale-faced man of silent and studious habits, a man,
whose lamp threw a golden bar from the old turret even
after he had extinguished his own. This community
in lateness had formed a certain silent bond between
them. It was soothing to Smith when the hours
stole on towards dawning to feel that there was another
so close who set as small a value upon his sleep as
he did. Even now, as his thoughts turned towards
him, Smith’s feelings were kindly. Hastie
was a good fellow, but he was rough, strong-fibred,
with no imagination or sympathy. He could not
tolerate departures from what he looked upon as the
model type of manliness. If a man could not be
measured by a public-school standard, then he was beyond
the pale with Hastie. Like so many who are themselves
robust, he was apt to confuse the constitution with
the character, to ascribe to want of principle what
was really a want of circulation. Smith, with
his stronger mind, knew his friend’s habit,
and made allowance for it now as his thoughts turned
towards the man beneath him.
There was no return of the singular
sound, and Smith was about to turn to his work once
more, when suddenly there broke out in the silence
of the night a hoarse cry, a positive scream the
call of a man who is moved and shaken beyond all control.
Smith sprang out of his chair and dropped his book.
He was a man of fairly firm fibre, but there was
something in this sudden, uncontrollable shriek of
horror which chilled his blood and pringled in his
skin. Coming in such a place and at such an
hour, it brought a thousand fantastic possibilities
into his head. Should he rush down, or was it
better to wait? He had all the national hatred
of making a scene, and he knew so little of his neighbour
that he would not lightly intrude upon his affairs.
For a moment he stood in doubt and even as he balanced
the matter there was a quick rattle of footsteps upon
the stairs, and young Monkhouse Lee, half dressed and
as white as ashes, burst into his room.
“Come down!” he gasped. “Bellingham’s
ill.”
Abercrombie Smith followed him closely
down stairs into the sitting-room which was beneath
his own, and intent as he was upon the matter in hand,
he could not but take an amazed glance around him as
he crossed the threshold. It was such a chamber
as he had never seen before a museum rather
than a study. Walls and ceiling were thickly
covered with a thousand strange relics from Egypt and
the East. Tall, angular figures bearing burdens
or weapons stalked in an uncouth frieze round the
apartments. Above were bull-headed, stork-headed,
cat-headed, owl-headed statues, with viper-crowned,
almond-eyed monarchs, and strange, beetle-like deities
cut out of the blue Egyptian lapis lazuli. Horus
and Isis and Osiris peeped down from every niche and
shelf, while across the ceiling a true son of Old Nile,
a great, hanging-jawed crocodile, was slung in a double
noose.
In the centre of this singular chamber
was a large, square table, littered with papers, bottles,
and the dried leaves of some graceful, palm-like plant.
These varied objects had all been heaped together
in order to make room for a mummy case, which had
been conveyed from the wall, as was evident from the
gap there, and laid across the front of the table.
The mummy itself, a horrid, black, withered thing,
like a charred head on a gnarled bush, was lying half
out of the case, with its clawlike hand and bony forearm
resting upon the table. Propped up against the
sarcophagus was an old yellow scroll of papyrus, and
in front of it, in a wooden armchair, sat the owner
of the room, his head thrown back, his widely-opened
eyes directed in a horrified stare to the crocodile
above him, and his blue, thick lips puffing loudly
with every expiration.
“My God! he’s dying!” cried Monkhouse
Lee distractedly.
He was a slim, handsome young fellow,
olive-skinned and dark-eyed, of a Spanish rather than
of an English type, with a Celtic intensity of manner
which contrasted with the Saxon phlegm of Abercombie
Smith.
“Only a faint, I think,”
said the medical student. “Just give me
a hand with him. You take his feet. Now
on to the sofa. Can you kick all those little
wooden devils off? What a litter it is!
Now he will be all right if we undo his collar and
give him some water. What has he been up to
at all?”
“I don’t know. I
heard him cry out. I ran up. I know him
pretty well, you know. It is very good of you
to come down.”
“His heart is going like a pair
of castanets,” said Smith, laying his hand on
the breast of the unconscious man. “He
seems to me to be frightened all to pieces.
Chuck the water over him! What a face he has
got on him!”
It was indeed a strange and most repellent
face, for colour and outline were equally unnatural.
It was white, not with the ordinary pallor of fear
but with an absolutely bloodless white, like the under
side of a sole. He was very fat, but gave the
impression of having at some time been considerably
fatter, for his skin hung loosely in creases and folds,
and was shot with a meshwork of wrinkles. Short,
stubbly brown hair bristled up from his scalp, with
a pair of thick, wrinkled ears protruding on either
side. His light grey eyes were still open, the
pupils dilated and the balls projecting in a fixed
and horrid stare. It seemed to Smith as he looked
down upon him that he had never seen nature’s
danger signals flying so plainly upon a man’s
countenance, and his thoughts turned more seriously
to the warning which Hastie had given him an hour
before.
“What the deuce can have frightened him so?”
he asked.
“It’s the mummy.”
“The mummy? How, then?”
“I don’t know. It’s beastly
and morbid. I wish he would drop it.
It’s the second fright he has given me.
It was the same last winter.
I found him just like this, with that horrid thing
in front of him.”
“What does he want with the mummy, then?”
“Oh, he’s a crank, you
know. It’s his hobby. He knows more
about these things than any man in England.
But I wish he wouldn’t! Ah, he’s
beginning to come to.”
A faint tinge of colour had begun
to steal back into Bellingham’s ghastly cheeks,
and his eyelids shivered like a sail after a calm.
He clasped and unclasped his hands, drew a long,
thin breath between his teeth, and suddenly jerking
up his head, threw a glance of recognition around
him. As his eyes fell upon the mummy, he sprang
off the sofa, seized the roll of papyrus, thrust it
into a drawer, turned the key, and then staggered
back on to the sofa.
“What’s up?” he asked. “What
do you chaps want?”
“You’ve been shrieking
out and making no end of a fuss,” said Monkhouse
Lee. “If our neighbour here from above
hadn’t come down, I’m sure I don’t
know what I should have done with you.”
“Ah, it’s Abercrombie
Smith,” said Bellingham, glancing up at him.
“How very good of you to come in! What
a fool I am! Oh, my God, what a fool I am!”
He sunk his head on to his hands,
and burst into peal after peal of hysterical laughter.
“Look here! Drop it!”
cried Smith, shaking him roughly by the shoulder.
“Your nerves are all in a jangle.
You must drop these little midnight games with mummies,
or you’ll be going off your chump. You’re
all on wires now.”
“I wonder,” said Bellingham,
“whether you would be as cool as I am if you
had seen ”
“What then?”
“Oh, nothing. I meant
that I wonder if you could sit up at night with a
mummy without trying your nerves. I have no doubt
that you are quite right. I dare say that I
have been taking it out of myself too much lately.
But I am all right now. Please don’t go,
though. Just wait for a few minutes until I
am quite myself.”
“The room is very close,”
remarked Lee, throwing open the window and letting
in the cool night air.
“It’s balsamic resin,”
said Bellingham. He lifted up one of the dried
palmate leaves from the table and frizzled it over
the chimney of the lamp. It broke away into
heavy smoke wreaths, and a pungent, biting odour filled
the chamber. “It’s the sacred plant the
plant of the priests,” he remarked. “Do
you know anything of Eastern languages, Smith?”
“Nothing at all. Not a word.”
The answer seemed to lift a weight from the Egyptologist’s
mind.
“By-the-way,” he continued,
“how long was it from the time that you ran
down, until I came to my senses?”
“Not long. Some four or five minutes.”
“I thought it could not be very
long,” said he, drawing a long breath.
“But what a strange thing unconsciousness is!
There is no measurement to it. I could not
tell from my own sensations if it were seconds or
weeks. Now that gentleman on the table was packed
up in the days of the eleventh dynasty, some forty
centuries ago, and yet if he could find his tongue
he would tell us that this lapse of time has been but
a closing of the eyes and a reopening of them.
He is a singularly fine mummy, Smith.”
Smith stepped over to the table and
looked down with a professional eye at the black and
twisted form in front of him. The features, though
horribly discoloured, were perfect, and two little
nut-like eyes still lurked in the depths of the black,
hollow sockets. The blotched skin was drawn
tightly from bone to bone, and a tangled wrap of black
coarse hair fell over the ears. Two thin teeth,
like those of a rat, overlay the shrivelled lower
lip. In its crouching position, with bent joints
and craned head, there was a suggestion of energy about
the horrid thing which made Smith’s gorge rise.
The gaunt ribs, with their parchment-like covering,
were exposed, and the sunken, leaden-hued abdomen,
with the long slit where the embalmer had left his
mark; but the lower limbs were wrapt round with coarse
yellow bandages. A number of little clove-like
pieces of myrrh and of cassia were sprinkled over
the body, and lay scattered on the inside of the case.
“I don’t know his name,”
said Bellingham, passing his hand over the shrivelled
head. “You see the outer sarcophagus with
the inscriptions is missing. Lot 249 is all
the title he has now. You see it printed on
his case. That was his number in the auction
at which I picked him up.”
“He has been a very pretty sort
of fellow in his day,” remarked Abercrombie
Smith.
“He has been a giant.
His mummy is six feet seven in length, and that would
be a giant over there, for they were never a very robust
race. Feel these great knotted bones, too.
He would be a nasty fellow to tackle.”
“Perhaps these very hands helped
to build the stones into the pyramids,” suggested
Monkhouse Lee, looking down with disgust in his eyes
at the crooked, unclean talons.
“No fear. This fellow
has been pickled in natron, and looked after in the
most approved style. They did not serve hodsmen
in that fashion. Salt or bitumen was enough for
them. It has been calculated that this sort
of thing cost about seven hundred and thirty pounds
in our money. Our friend was a noble at the least.
What do you make of that small inscription near his
feet, Smith?”
“I told you that I know no Eastern tongue.”
“Ah, so you did. It is
the name of the embalmer, I take it. A very
conscientious worker he must have been. I wonder
how many modern works will survive four thousand years?”
He kept on speaking lightly and rapidly,
but it was evident to Abercrombie Smith that he was
still palpitating with fear. His hands shook,
his lower lip trembled, and look where he would, his
eye always came sliding round to his gruesome companion.
Through all his fear, however, there was a suspicion
of triumph in his tone and manner. His eye shone,
and his footstep, as he paced the room, was brisk and
jaunty. He gave the impression of a man who has
gone through an ordeal, the marks of which he still
bears upon him, but which has helped him to his end.
“You’re not going yet?”
he cried, as Smith rose from the sofa.
At the prospect of solitude, his fears
seemed to crowd back upon him, and he stretched out
a hand to detain him.
“Yes, I must go. I have
my work to do. You are all right now. I
think that with your nervous system you should take
up some less morbid study.”
“Oh, I am not nervous as a rule;
and I have unwrapped mummies before.”
“You fainted last time,” observed Monkhouse
Lee.
“Ah, yes, so I did. Well,
I must have a nerve tonic or a course of electricity.
You are not going, Lee?”
“I’ll do whatever you wish, Ned.”
“Then I’ll come down with
you and have a shake-down on your sofa. Good-night,
Smith. I am so sorry to have disturbed you with
my foolishness.”
They shook hands, and as the medical
student stumbled up the spiral and irregular stair
he heard a key turn in a door, and the steps of his
two new acquaintances as they descended to the lower
floor.
In this strange way began the acquaintance
between Edward Bellingham and Abercrombie Smith, an
acquaintance which the latter, at least, had no desire
to push further. Bellingham, however, appeared
to have taken a fancy to his rough-spoken neighbour,
and made his advances in such a way that he could
hardly be repulsed without absolute brutality.
Twice he called to thank Smith for his assistance,
and many times afterwards he looked in with books,
papers, and such other civilities as two bachelor
neighbours can offer each other. He was, as Smith
soon found, a man of wide reading, with catholic tastes
and an extraordinary memory. His manner, too,
was so pleasing and suave that one came, after a time,
to overlook his repellent appearance. For a jaded
and wearied man he was no unpleasant companion, and
Smith found himself, after a time, looking forward
to his visits, and even returning them.
Clever as he undoubtedly was, however,
the medical student seemed to detect a dash of insanity
in the man. He broke out at times into a high,
inflated style of talk which was in contrast with the
simplicity of his life.
“It is a wonderful thing,”
he cried, “to feel that one can command powers
of good and of evil a ministering angel
or a demon of vengeance.” And again, of
Monkhouse Lee, he said, “Lee is a
good fellow, an honest fellow, but he is without strength
or ambition. He would not make a fit partner
for a man with a great enterprise. He would
not make a fit partner for me.”
At such hints and innuendoes stolid
Smith, puffing solemnly at his pipe, would simply
raise his eyebrows and shake his head, with little
interjections of medical wisdom as to earlier
hours and fresher air.
One habit Bellingham had developed
of late which Smith knew to be a frequent herald of
a weakening mind. He appeared to be forever talking
to himself. At late hours of the night, when
there could be no visitor with him, Smith could still
hear his voice beneath him in a low, muffled monologue,
sunk almost to a whisper, and yet very audible in
the silence. This solitary babbling annoyed and
distracted the student, so that he spoke more than
once to his neighbour about it. Bellingham, however,
flushed up at the charge, and denied curtly that he
had uttered a sound; indeed, he showed more annoyance
over the matter than the occasion seemed to demand.
Had Abercrombie Smith had any doubt
as to his own ears he had not to go far to find corroboration.
Tom Styles, the little wrinkled man-servant who had
attended to the wants of the lodgers in the turret
for a longer time than any man’s memory could
carry him, was sorely put to it over the same matter.
“If you please, sir,”
said he, as he tidied down the top chamber one morning,
“do you think Mr. Bellingham is all right, sir?”
“All right, Styles?”
“Yes sir. Right in his head, sir.”
“Why should he not be, then?”
“Well, I don’t know, sir.
His habits has changed of late. He’s not
the same man he used to be, though I make free to say
that he was never quite one of my gentlemen, like
Mr. Hastie or yourself, sir. He’s took
to talkin’ to himself something awful.
I wonder it don’t disturb you. I don’t
know what to make of him, sir.”
“I don’t know what business it is of yours,
Styles.”
“Well, I takes an interest,
Mr. Smith. It may be forward of me, but I can’t
help it. I feel sometimes as if I was mother
and father to my young gentlemen. It all falls
on me when things go wrong and the relations come.
But Mr. Bellingham, sir. I want to know what
it is that walks about his room sometimes when he’s
out and when the door’s locked on the outside.”
“Eh! you’re talking nonsense, Styles.”
“Maybe so, sir; but I heard it more’n
once with my own ears.”
“Rubbish, Styles.”
“Very good, sir. You’ll ring the
bell if you want me.”
Abercrombie Smith gave little heed
to the gossip of the old man-servant, but a small
incident occurred a few days later which left an unpleasant
effect upon his mind, and brought the words of Styles
forcibly to his memory.
Bellingham had come up to see him
late one night, and was entertaining him with an interesting
account of the rock tombs of Beni Hassan in Upper
Egypt, when Smith, whose hearing was remarkably acute,
distinctly heard the sound of a door opening on the
landing below.
“There’s some fellow gone in or out of
your room,” he remarked.
Bellingham sprang up and stood helpless
for a moment, with the expression of a man who is
half incredulous and half afraid.
“I surely locked it. I
am almost positive that I locked it,” he stammered.
“No one could have opened it.”
“Why, I hear someone coming
up the steps now,” said Smith.
Bellingham rushed out through the
door, slammed it loudly behind him, and hurried down
the stairs. About half-way down Smith heard him
stop, and thought he caught the sound of whispering.
A moment later the door beneath him shut, a key creaked
in a lock, and Bellingham, with beads of moisture
upon his pale face, ascended the stairs once more,
and re-entered the room.
“It’s all right,”
he said, throwing himself down in a chair. “It
was that fool of a dog. He had pushed the door
open. I don’t know how I came to forget
to lock it.”
“I didn’t know you kept
a dog,” said Smith, looking very thoughtfully
at the disturbed face of his companion.
“Yes, I haven’t had him
long. I must get rid of him. He’s
a great nuisance.”
“He must be, if you find it
so hard to shut him up. I should have thought
that shutting the door would have been enough, without
locking it.”
“I want to prevent old Styles
from letting him out. He’s of some value,
you know, and it would be awkward to lose him.”
“I am a bit of a dog-fancier
myself,” said Smith, still gazing hard at his
companion from the corner of his eyes. “Perhaps
you’ll let me have a look at it.”
“Certainly. But I am afraid
it cannot be to-night; I have an appointment.
Is that clock right? Then I am a quarter of
an hour late already. You’ll excuse me,
I am sure.”
He picked up his cap and hurried from
the room. In spite of his appointment, Smith
heard him re-enter his own chamber and lock his door
upon the inside.
This interview left a disagreeable
impression upon the medical student’s mind.
Bellingham had lied to him, and lied so clumsily that
it looked as if he had desperate reasons for concealing
the truth. Smith knew that his neighbour had
no dog. He knew, also, that the step which he
had heard upon the stairs was not the step of an animal.
But if it were not, then what could it be?
There was old Styles’s statement about the something
which used to pace the room at times when the owner
was absent. Could it be a woman? Smith
rather inclined to the view. If so, it would
mean disgrace and expulsion to Bellingham if it were
discovered by the authorities, so that his anxiety
and falsehoods might be accounted for. And yet
it was inconceivable that an undergraduate could keep
a woman in his rooms without being instantly detected.
Be the explanation what it might, there was something
ugly about it, and Smith determined, as he turned to
his books, to discourage all further attempts at intimacy
on the part of his soft-spoken and ill-favoured neighbour.
But his work was destined to interruption
that night. He had hardly caught tip the broken
threads when a firm, heavy footfall came three steps
at a time from below, and Hastie, in blazer and flannels,
burst into the room.
“Still at it!” said he,
plumping down into his wonted arm-chair. “What
a chap you are to stew! I believe an earthquake
might come and knock Oxford into a cocked hat, and
you would sit perfectly placid with your books among
the rains. However, I won’t bore you long.
Three whiffs of baccy, and I am off.”
“What’s the news, then?”
asked Smith, cramming a plug of bird’s-eye into
his briar with his forefinger.
“Nothing very much. Wilson
made 70 for the freshmen against the eleven.
They say that they will play him instead of Buddicomb,
for Buddicomb is clean off colour. He used to
be able to bowl a little, but it’s nothing but
half-vollies and long hops now.”
“Medium right,” suggested
Smith, with the intense gravity which comes upon a
’varsity man when he speaks of athletics.
“Inclining to fast, with a work
from leg. Comes with the arm about three inches
or so. He used to be nasty on a wet wicket.
Oh, by-the-way, have you heard about Long Norton?”
“What’s that?”
“He’s been attacked.”
“Attacked?”
“Yes, just as he was turning
out of the High Street, and within a hundred yards
of the gate of Old’s.”
“But who ”
“Ah, that’s the rub!
If you said ‘what,’ you would be more
grammatical. Norton swears that it was not human,
and, indeed, from the scratches on his throat, I should
be inclined to agree with him.”
“What, then? Have we come down to spooks?”
Abercrombie Smith puffed his scientific contempt.
“Well, no; I don’t think
that is quite the idea, either. I am inclined
to think that if any showman has lost a great ape lately,
and the brute is in these parts, a jury would find
a true bill against it. Norton passes that way
every night, you know, about the same hour. There’s
a tree that hangs low over the path the
big elm from Rainy’s garden. Norton thinks
the thing dropped on him out of the tree. Anyhow,
he was nearly strangled by two arms, which, he says,
were as strong and as thin as steel bands. He
saw nothing; only those beastly arms that tightened
and tightened on him. He yelled his head nearly
off, and a couple of chaps came running, and the thing
went over the wall like a cat. He never got
a fair sight of it the whole time. It gave Norton
a shake up, I can tell you. I tell him it has
been as good as a change at the sea-side for him.”
“A garrotter, most likely,” said
Smith.
“Very possibly. Norton
says not; but we don’t mind what he says.
The garrotter had long nails, and was pretty
smart at swinging himself over walls. By-the-way,
your beautiful neighbour would be pleased if he heard
about it. He had a grudge against Norton, and
he’s not a man, from what I know of him, to
forget his little debts. But hallo, old chap,
what have you got in your noddle?”
“Nothing,” Smith answered curtly.
He had started in his chair, and the
look had flashed over his face which comes upon a
man who is struck suddenly by some unpleasant idea.
“You looked as if something
I had said had taken you on the raw. By-the-way,
you have made the acquaintance of Master B. since I
looked in last, have you not? Young Monkhouse
Lee told me something to that effect.”
“Yes; I know him slightly.
He has been up here once or twice.”
“Well, you’re big enough
and ugly enough to take care of yourself. He’s
not what I should call exactly a healthy sort of Johnny,
though, no doubt, he’s very clever, and all
that. But you’ll soon find out for yourself.
Lee is all right; he’s a very decent little
fellow. Well, so long, old chap! I row
Mullins for the Vice-Chancellor’s pot on Wednesday
week, so mind you come down, in case I don’t
see you before.”
Bovine Smith laid down his pipe and
turned stolidly to his books once more. But
with all the will in the world, he found it very hard
to keep his mind upon his work. It would slip
away to brood upon the man beneath him, and upon the
little mystery which hung round his chambers.
Then his thoughts turned to this singular attack of
which Hastie had spoken, and to the grudge which Bellingham
was said to owe the object of it. The two ideas
would persist in rising together in his mind, as though
there were some close and intimate connection between
them. And yet the suspicion was so dim and vague
that it could not be put down in words.
“Confound the chap!” cried
Smith, as he shied his book on pathology across the
room. “He has spoiled my night’s
reading, and that’s reason enough, if there
were no other, why I should steer clear of him in the
future.”
For ten days the medical student confined
himself so closely to his studies that he neither
saw nor heard anything of either of the men beneath
him. At the hours when Bellingham had been accustomed
to visit him, he took care to sport his oak, and though
he more than once heard a knocking at his outer door,
he resolutely refused to answer it. One afternoon,
however, he was descending the stairs when, just as
he was passing it, Bellingham’s door flew open,
and young Monkhouse Lee came out with his eyes sparkling
and a dark flush of anger upon his olive cheeks.
Close at his heels followed Bellingham, his fat, unhealthy
face all quivering with malignant passion.
“You fool!” he hissed. “You’ll
be sorry.”
“Very likely,” cried the
other. “Mind what I say. It’s
off! I won’t hear of it!”
“You’ve promised, anyhow.”
“Oh, I’ll keep that!
I won’t speak. But I’d rather little
Eva was in her grave. Once for all, it’s
off. She’ll do what I say. We don’t
want to see you again.”
So much Smith could not avoid hearing,
but he hurried on, for he had no wish to be involved
in their dispute. There had been a serious breach
between them, that was clear enough, and Lee was going
to cause the engagement with his sister to be broken
off. Smith thought of Hastie’s comparison
of the toad and the dove, and was glad to think that
the matter was at an end. Bellingham’s
face when he was in a passion was not pleasant to
look upon. He was not a man to whom an innocent
girl could be trusted for life. As he walked,
Smith wondered languidly what could have caused the
quarrel, and what the promise might be which Bellingham
had been so anxious that Monkhouse Lee should keep.
It was the day of the sculling match
between Hastie and Mullins, and a stream of men were
making their way down to the banks of the Isis.
A May sun was shining brightly, and the yellow path
was barred with the black shadows of the tall elm-trees.
On either side the grey colleges lay back from the
road, the hoary old mothers of minds looking out from
their high, mullioned windows at the tide of young
life which swept so merrily past them. Black-clad
tutors, prim officials, pale reading men, brown-faced,
straw-hatted young athletes in white sweaters or many-coloured
blazers, all were hurrying towards the blue winding
river which curves through the Oxford meadows.
Abercrombie Smith, with the intuition
of an old oarsman, chose his position at the point
where he knew that the struggle, if there were a struggle,
would come. Far off he heard the hum which announced
the start, the gathering roar of the approach, the
thunder of running feet, and the shouts of the men
in the boats beneath him. A spray of half-clad,
deep-breathing runners shot past him, and craning over
their shoulders, he saw Hastie pulling a steady thirty-six,
while his opponent, with a jerky forty, was a good
boat’s length behind him. Smith gave a
cheer for his friend, and pulling out his watch, was
starting off again for his chambers, when he felt a
touch upon his shoulder, and found that young Monkhouse
Lee was beside him.
“I saw you there,” he
said, in a timid, deprecating way. “I wanted
to speak to you, if you could spare me a half-hour.
This cottage is mine. I share it with Harrington
of King’s. Come in and have a cup of tea.”
“I must be back presently,”
said Smith. “I am hard on the grind at
present. But I’ll come in for a few minutes
with pleasure. I wouldn’t have come out
only Hastie is a friend of mine.”
“So he is of mine. Hasn’t
he a beautiful style? Mullins wasn’t in
it. But come into the cottage. It’s
a little den of a place, but it is pleasant to work
in during the summer months.”
It was a small, square, white building,
with green doors and shutters, and a rustic trellis-work
porch, standing back some fifty yards from the river’s
bank. Inside, the main room was roughly fitted
up as a study deal table, unpainted shelves
with books, and a few cheap oleographs upon the wall.
A kettle sang upon a spirit-stove, and there were
tea things upon a tray on the table.
“Try that chair and have a cigarette,”
said Lee. “Let me pour you out a cup of
tea. It’s so good of you to come in, for
I know that your time is a good deal taken up.
I wanted to say to you that, if I were you, I should
change my rooms at once.”
“Eh?”
Smith sat staring with a lighted match
in one hand and his unlit cigarette in the other.
“Yes; it must seem very extraordinary,
and the worst of it is that I cannot give my reasons,
for I am under a solemn promise a very solemn
promise. But I may go so far as to say that I
don’t think Bellingham is a very safe man to
live near. I intend to camp out here as much
as I can for a time.”
“Not safe! What do you mean?”
“Ah, that’s what I mustn’t
say. But do take my advice, and move your rooms.
We had a grand row to-day. You must have heard
us, for you came down the stairs.”
“I saw that you had fallen out.”
“He’s a horrible chap,
Smith. That is the only word for him. I
have had doubts about him ever since that night when
he fainted you remember, when you came
down. I taxed him to-day, and he told me things
that made my hair rise, and wanted me to stand in with
him. I’m not strait-laced, but I am a
clergyman’s son, you know, and I think there
are some things which are quite beyond the pale.
I only thank God that I found him out before it was
too late, for he was to have married into my family.”
“This is all very fine, Lee,”
said Abercrombie Smith curtly. “But either
you are saying a great deal too much or a great deal
too little.”
“I give you a warning.”
“If there is real reason for
warning, no promise can bind you. If I see a
rascal about to blow a place up with dynamite no pledge
will stand in my way of preventing him.”
“Ah, but I cannot prevent him,
and I can do nothing but warn you.”
“Without saying what you warn me against.”
“Against Bellingham.”
“But that is childish. Why should I fear
him, or any man?”
“I can’t tell you.
I can only entreat you to change your rooms.
You are in danger where you are. I don’t
even say that Bellingham would wish to injure you.
But it might happen, for he is a dangerous neighbour
just now.”
“Perhaps I know more than you
think,” said Smith, looking keenly at the young
man’s boyish, earnest face. “Suppose
I tell you that some one else shares Bellingham’s
rooms.”
Monkhouse Lee sprang from his chair
in uncontrollable excitement.
“You know, then?” he gasped.
“A woman.”
Lee dropped back again with a groan.
“My lips are sealed,” he said. “I
must not speak.”
“Well, anyhow,” said Smith,
rising, “it is not likely that I should allow
myself to be frightened out of rooms which suit me
very nicely. It would be a little too feeble
for me to move out all my goods and chattels because
you say that Bellingham might in some unexplained way
do me an injury. I think that I’ll just
take my chance, and stay where I am, and as I see
that it’s nearly five o’clock, I must ask
you to excuse me.”
He bade the young student adieu in
a few curt words, and made his way homeward through
the sweet spring evening feeling half-ruffled, half-amused,
as any other strong, unimaginative man might who has
been menaced by a vague and shadowy danger.
There was one little indulgence which
Abercrombie Smith always allowed himself, however
closely his work might press upon him. Twice
a week, on the Tuesday and the Friday, it was his
invariable custom to walk over to Farlingford, the
residence of Dr. Plumptree Peterson, situated about
a mile and a half out of Oxford. Peterson had
been a close friend of Smith’s elder brother
Francis, and as he was a bachelor, fairly well-to-do,
with a good cellar and a better library, his house
was a pleasant goal for a man who was in need of a
brisk walk. Twice a week, then, the medical
student would swing out there along the dark country
roads, and spend a pleasant hour in Peterson’s
comfortable study, discussing, over a glass of old
port, the gossip of the ’varsity or the latest
developments of medicine or of surgery.
On the day which followed his interview
with Monkhouse Lee, Smith shut up his books at a quarter
past eight, the hour when he usually started for his
friend’s house. As he was leaving his room,
however, his eyes chanced to fall upon one of the
books which Bellingham had lent him, and his conscience
pricked him for not having returned it. However
repellent the man might be, he should not be treated
with discourtesy. Taking the book, he walked
downstairs and knocked at his neighbour’s door.
There was no answer; but on turning the handle he
found that it was unlocked. Pleased at the thought
of avoiding an interview, he stepped inside, and placed
the book with his card upon the table.
The lamp was turned half down, but
Smith could see the details of the room plainly enough.
It was all much as he had seen it before the
frieze, the animal-headed gods, the banging crocodile,
and the table littered over with papers and dried
leaves. The mummy case stood upright against
the wall, but the mummy itself was missing. There
was no sign of any second occupant of the room, and
he felt as he withdrew that he had probably done Bellingham
an injustice. Had he a guilty secret to preserve,
he would hardly leave his door open so that all the
world might enter.
The spiral stair was as black as pitch,
and Smith was slowly making his way down its irregular
steps, when he was suddenly conscious that something
had passed him in the darkness. There was a faint
sound, a whiff of air, a light brushing past his elbow,
but so slight that he could scarcely be certain of
it. He stopped and listened, but the wind was
rustling among the ivy outside, and he could hear nothing
else.
“Is that you, Styles?” he shouted.
There was no answer, and all was still
behind him. It must have been a sudden gust
of air, for there were crannies and cracks in the old
turret. And yet he could almost have sworn that
he heard a footfall by his very side. He had
emerged into the quadrangle, still turning the matter
over in his head, when a man came running swiftly across
the smooth-cropped lawn.
“Is that you, Smith?”
“Hullo, Hastie!”
“For God’s sake come at
once! Young Lee is drowned! Here’s
Harrington of King’s with the news. The
doctor is out. You’ll do, but come along
at once. There may be life in him.”
“Have you brandy?”
“No.”
“I’ll bring some. There’s
a flask on my table.”
Smith bounded up the stairs, taking
three at a time, seized the flask, and was rushing
down with it, when, as he passed Bellingham’s
room, his eyes fell upon something which left him
gasping and staring upon the landing.
The door, which he had closed behind
him, was now open, and right in front of him, with
the lamp-light shining upon it, was the mummy case.
Three minutes ago it had been empty. He could
swear to that. Now it framed the lank body of
its horrible occupant, who stood, grim and stark,
with his black shrivelled face towards the door.
The form was lifeless and inert, but it seemed to
Smith as he gazed that there still lingered a lurid
spark of vitality, some faint sign of consciousness
in the little eyes which lurked in the depths of the
hollow sockets. So astounded and shaken was
he that he had forgotten his errand, and was still
staring at the lean, sunken figure when the voice of
his friend below recalled him to himself.
“Come on, Smith!” he shouted.
“It’s life and death, you know.
Hurry up! Now, then,” he added, as the
medical student reappeared, “let us do a sprint.
It is well under a mile, and we should do it in five
minutes. A human life is better worth running
for than a pot.”
Neck and neck they dashed through
the darkness, and did not pull up until, panting and
spent, they had reached the little cottage by the
river. Young Lee, limp and dripping like a broken
water-plant, was stretched upon the sofa, the green
scum of the river upon his black hair, and a fringe
of white foam upon his leaden-hued lips. Beside
him knelt his fellow-student Harrington, endeavouring
to chafe some warmth back into his rigid limbs.
“I think there’s life
in him,” said Smith, with his hand to the lad’s
side. “Put your watch glass to his lips.
Yes, there’s dimming on it. You take one
arm, Hastie. Now work it as I do, and we’ll
soon pull him round.”
For ten minutes they worked in silence,
inflating and depressing the chest of the unconscious
man. At the end of that time a shiver ran through
his body, his lips trembled, and he opened his eyes.
The three students burst out into an irrepressible
cheer.
“Wake up, old chap. You’ve frightened
us quite enough.”
“Have some brandy. Take a sip from the
flask.”
“He’s all right now,”
said his companion Harrington. “Heavens,
what a fright I got! I was reading here, and
he had gone for a stroll as far as the river, when
I heard a scream and a splash. Out I ran, and
by the time that I could find him and fish him out,
all life seemed to have gone. Then Simpson couldn’t
get a doctor, for he has a game-leg, and I had to
run, and I don’t know what I’d have done
without you fellows. That’s right, old
chap. Sit up.”
Monkhouse Lee had raised himself on
his hands, and looked wildly about him.
“What’s up?” he
asked. “I’ve been in the water.
Ah, yes; I remember.”
A look of fear came into his eyes,
and he sank his face into his hands.
“How did you fall in?”
“I didn’t fall in.”
“How, then?”
“I was thrown in. I was
standing by the bank, and something from behind picked
me up like a feather and hurled me in. I heard
nothing, and I saw nothing. But I know what
it was, for all that.”
“And so do I,” whispered Smith.
Lee looked up with a quick glance
of surprise. “You’ve learned, then!”
he said. “You remember the advice I gave
you?”
“Yes, and I begin to think that I shall take
it.”
“I don’t know what the
deuce you fellows are talking about,” said Hastie,
“but I think, if I were you, Harrington, I should
get Lee to bed at once. It will be time enough
to discuss the why and the wherefore when he is a
little stronger. I think, Smith, you and I can
leave him alone now. I am walking back to college;
if you are coming in that direction, we can have a
chat.”
But it was little chat that they had
upon their homeward path. Smith’s mind
was too full of the incidents of the evening, the absence
of the mummy from his neighbour’s rooms, the
step that passed him on the stair, the reappearance the
extraordinary, inexplicable reappearance of the grisly
thing and then this attack upon Lee, corresponding
so closely to the previous outrage upon another man
against whom Bellingham bore a grudge. All this
settled in his thoughts, together with the many little
incidents which had previously turned him against
his neighbour, and the singular circumstances under
which he was first called in to him. What had
been a dim suspicion, a vague, fantastic conjecture,
had suddenly taken form, and stood out in his mind
as a grim fact, a thing not to be denied. And
yet, how monstrous it was! how unheard of! how entirely
beyond all bounds of human experience. An impartial
judge, or even the friend who walked by his side, would
simply tell him that his eyes had deceived him, that
the mummy had been there all the time, that young
Lee had tumbled into the river as any other man tumbles
into a river, and that a blue pill was the best thing
for a disordered liver. He felt that he would
have said as much if the positions had been reversed.
And yet he could swear that Bellingham was a murderer
at heart, and that he wielded a weapon such as no man
had ever used in all the grim history of crime.
Hastie had branched off to his rooms
with a few crisp and emphatic comments upon his friend’s
unsociability, and Abercrombie Smith crossed the quadrangle
to his corner turret with a strong feeling of repulsion
for his chambers and their associations. He would
take Lee’s advice, and move his quarters as
soon as possible, for how could a man study when his
ear was ever straining for every murmur or footstep
in the room below? He observed, as he crossed
over the lawn, that the light was still shining in
Bellingham’s window, and as he passed up the
staircase the door opened, and the man himself looked
out at him. With his fat, evil face he was like
some bloated spider fresh from the weaving of his
poisonous web.
“Good-evening,” said he. “Won’t
you come in?”
“No,” cried Smith, fiercely.
“No? You are busy as ever?
I wanted to ask you about Lee. I was sorry
to hear that there was a rumour that something was
amiss with him.”
His features were grave, but there
was the gleam of a hidden laugh in his eyes as he
spoke. Smith saw it, and he could have knocked
him down for it.
“You’ll be sorrier still
to hear that Monkhouse Lee is doing very well, and
is out of all danger,” he answered. “Your
hellish tricks have not come off this time.
Oh, you needn’t try to brazen it out. I
know all about it.”
Bellingham took a step back from the
angry student, and half-closed the door as if to protect
himself.
“You are mad,” he said.
“What do you mean? Do you assert that
I had anything to do with Lee’s accident?”
“Yes,” thundered Smith.
“You and that bag of bones behind you; you
worked it between you. I tell you what it is,
Master B., they have given up burning folk like you,
but we still keep a hangman, and, by George! if any
man in this college meets his death while you are here,
I’ll have you up, and if you don’t swing
for it, it won’t be my fault. You’ll
find that your filthy Egyptian tricks won’t answer
in England.”
“You’re a raving lunatic,” said
Bellingham.
“All right. You just remember
what I say, for you’ll find that I’ll be
better than my word.”
The door slammed, and Smith went fuming
up to his chamber, where he locked the door upon the
inside, and spent half the night in smoking his old
briar and brooding over the strange events of the evening.
Next morning Abercrombie Smith heard
nothing of his neighbour, but Harrington called upon
him in the afternoon to say that Lee was almost himself
again. All day Smith stuck fast to his work,
but in the evening he determined to pay the visit
to his friend Dr. Peterson upon which he had started
upon the night before. A good walk and a friendly
chat would be welcome to his jangled nerves.
Bellingham’s door was shut as
he passed, but glancing back when he was some distance
from the turret, he saw his neighbour’s head
at the window outlined against the lamp-light, his
face pressed apparently against the glass as he gazed
out into the darkness. It was a blessing to
be away from all contact with him, but if for a few
hours, and Smith stepped out briskly, and breathed
the soft spring air into his lungs. The half-moon
lay in the west between two Gothic pinnacles, and threw
upon the silvered street a dark tracery from the stone-work
above. There was a brisk breeze, and light, fleecy
clouds drifted swiftly across the sky. Old’s
was on the very border of the town, and in five minutes
Smith found himself beyond the houses and between the
hedges of a May-scented Oxfordshire lane.
It was a lonely and little frequented
road which led to his friend’s house.
Early as it was, Smith did not meet a single soul upon
his way. He walked briskly along until he came
to the avenue gate, which opened into the long gravel
drive leading up to Farlingford. In front of
him he could see the cosy red light of the windows
glimmering through the foliage. He stood with
his hand upon the iron latch of the swinging gate,
and he glanced back at the road along which he had
come. Something was coming swiftly down it.
It moved in the shadow of the hedge,
silently and furtively, a dark, crouching figure,
dimly visible against the black background. Even
as he gazed back at it, it had lessened its distance
by twenty paces, and was fast closing upon him.
Out of the darkness he had a glimpse of a scraggy
neck, and of two eyes that will ever haunt him in his
dreams. He turned, and with a cry of terror he
ran for his life up the avenue. There were the
red lights, the signals of safety, almost within a
stone’s throw of him. He was a famous runner,
but never had he run as he ran that night.
The heavy gate had swung into place
behind him, but he heard it dash open again before
his pursuer. As he rushed madly and wildly through
the night, he could hear a swift, dry patter behind
him, and could see, as he threw back a glance, that
this horror was bounding like a tiger at his heels,
with blazing eyes and one stringy arm outthrown.
Thank God, the door was ajar. He could see
the thin bar of light which shot from the lamp in
the hall. Nearer yet sounded the clatter from
behind. He heard a hoarse gurgling at his very
shoulder. With a shriek he flung himself against
the door, slammed and bolted it behind him, and sank
half-fainting on to the hall chair.
“My goodness, Smith, what’s
the matter?” asked Peterson, appearing at the
door of his study.
“Give me some brandy!”
Peterson disappeared, and came rushing
out again with a glass and a decanter.
“You need it,” he said,
as his visitor drank off what he poured out for him.
“Why, man, you are as white as a cheese.”
Smith laid down his glass, rose up,
and took a deep breath.
“I am my own man again now,”
said he. “I was never so unmanned before.
But, with your leave, Peterson, I will sleep here to-night,
for I don’t think I could face that road again
except by daylight. It’s weak, I know,
but I can’t help it.”
Peterson looked at his visitor with
a very questioning eye.
“Of course you shall sleep here
if you wish. I’ll tell Mrs. Burney to
make up the spare bed. Where are you off to now?”
“Come up with me to the window
that overlooks the door. I want you to see what
I have seen.”
They went up to the window of the
upper hall whence they could look down upon the approach
to the house. The drive and the fields on either
side lay quiet and still, bathed in the peaceful moonlight.
“Well, really, Smith,”
remarked Peterson, “it is well that I know you
to be an abstemious man. What in the world can
have frightened you?”
“I’ll tell you presently.
But where can it have gone? Ah, now look, look!
See the curve of the road just beyond your gate.”
“Yes, I see; you needn’t
pinch my arm off. I saw someone pass. I
should say a man, rather thin, apparently, and tall,
very tall. But what of him? And what of
yourself? You are still shaking like an aspen
leaf.”
“I have been within hand-grip
of the devil, that’s all. But come down
to your study, and I shall tell you the whole story.”
He did so. Under the cheery
lamplight, with a glass of wine on the table beside
him, and the portly form and florid face of his friend
in front, he narrated, in their order, all the events,
great and small, which had formed so singular a chain,
from the night on which he had found Bellingham fainting
in front of the mummy case until his horrid experience
of an hour ago.
“There now,” he said as
he concluded, “that’s the whole black business.
It is monstrous and incredible, but it is true.”
Dr. Plumptree Peterson sat for some
time in silence with a very puzzled expression upon
his face.
“I never heard of such a thing
in my life, never!” he said at last. “You
have told me the facts. Now tell me your inferences.”
“You can draw your own.”
“But I should like to hear yours.
You have thought over the matter, and I have not.”
“Well, it must be a little vague
in detail, but the main points seem to me to be clear
enough. This fellow Bellingham, in his Eastern
studies, has got hold of some infernal secret by which
a mummy or possibly only this particular
mummy can be temporarily brought to life.
He was trying this disgusting business on the night
when he fainted. No doubt the sight of the creature
moving had shaken his nerve, even though he had expected
it. You remember that almost the first words
he said were to call out upon himself as a fool.
Well, he got more hardened afterwards, and carried
the matter through without fainting. The vitality
which he could put into it was evidently only a passing
thing, for I have seen it continually in its case
as dead as this table. He has some elaborate
process, I fancy, by which he brings the thing to
pass. Having done it, he naturally bethought
him that he might use the creature as an agent.
It has intelligence and it has strength. For
some purpose he took Lee into his confidence; but Lee,
like a decent Christian, would have nothing to do
with such a business. Then they had a row, and
Lee vowed that he would tell his sister of Bellingham’s
true character. Bellingham’s game was to
prevent him, and he nearly managed it, by setting
this creature of his on his track. He had already
tried its powers upon another man Norton towards
whom he had a grudge. It is the merest chance
that he has not two murders upon his soul. Then,
when I taxed him with the matter, he had the strongest
reasons for wishing to get me out of the way before
I could convey my knowledge to anyone else.
He got his chance when I went out, for he knew my
habits, and where I was bound for. I have had
a narrow shave, Peterson, and it is mere luck you
didn’t find me on your doorstep in the morning.
I’m not a nervous man as a rule, and I never
thought to have the fear of death put upon me as it
was to-night.”
“My dear boy, you take the matter
too seriously,” said his companion. “Your
nerves are out of order with your work, and you make
too much of it. How could such a thing as this
stride about the streets of Oxford, even at night,
without being seen?”
“It has been seen. There
is quite a scare in the town about an escaped ape,
as they imagine the creature to be. It is the
talk of the place.”
“Well, it’s a striking
chain of events. And yet, my dear fellow, you
must allow that each incident in itself is capable
of a more natural explanation.”
“What! even my adventure of to-night?”
“Certainly. You come out
with your nerves all unstrung, and your head full
of this theory of yours. Some gaunt, half-famished
tramp steals after you, and seeing you run, is emboldened
to pursue you. Your fears and imagination do
the rest.”
“It won’t do, Peterson; it won’t
do.”
“And again, in the instance
of your finding the mummy case empty, and then a few
moments later with an occupant, you know that it was
lamplight, that the lamp was half turned down, and
that you had no special reason to look hard at the
case. It is quite possible that you may have
overlooked the creature in the first instance.”
“No, no; it is out of the question.”
“And then Lee may have fallen
into the river, and Norton been garrotted. It
is certainly a formidable indictment that you have
against Bellingham; but if you were to place it before
a police magistrate, he would simply laugh in your
face.”
“I know he would. That
is why I mean to take the matter into my own hands.”
“Eh?”
“Yes; I feel that a public duty
rests upon me, and, besides, I must do it for my own
safety, unless I choose to allow myself to be hunted
by this beast out of the college, and that would be
a little too feeble. I have quite made up my
mind what I shall do. And first of all, may I
use your paper and pens for an hour?”
“Most certainly. You will
find all that you want upon that side table.”
Abercrombie Smith sat down before
a sheet of foolscap, and for an hour, and then for
a second hour his pen travelled swiftly over it.
Page after page was finished and tossed aside while
his friend leaned back in his arm-chair, looking across
at him with patient curiosity. At last, with
an exclamation of satisfaction, Smith sprang to his
feet, gathered his papers up into order, and laid
the last one upon Peterson’s desk.
“Kindly sign this as a witness,” he said.
“A witness? Of what?”
“Of my signature, and of the
date. The date is the most important. Why,
Peterson, my life might hang upon it.”
“My dear Smith, you are talking wildly.
Let me beg you to go to bed.”
“On the contrary, I never spoke
so deliberately in my life. And I will promise
to go to bed the moment you have signed it.”
“But what is it?”
“It is a statement of all that
I have been telling you to-night. I wish you
to witness it.”
“Certainly,” said Peterson,
signing his name under that of his companion.
“There you are! But what is the idea?”
“You will kindly retain it,
and produce it in case I am arrested.”
“Arrested? For what?”
“For murder. It is quite
on the cards. I wish to be ready for every event.
There is only one course open to me, and I am determined
to take it.”
“For Heaven’s sake, don’t do anything
rash!”
“Believe me, it would be far
more rash to adopt any other course. I hope
that we won’t need to bother you, but it will
ease my mind to know that you have this statement
of my motives. And now I am ready to take your
advice and to go to roost, for I want to be at my best
in the morning.”
Abercrombie Smith was not an entirely
pleasant man to have as an enemy. Slow and easytempered,
he was formidable when driven to action. He
brought to every purpose in life the same deliberate
resoluteness which had distinguished him as a scientific
student. He had laid his studies aside for a
day, but he intended that the day should not be wasted.
Not a word did he say to his host as to his plans,
but by nine o’clock he was well on his way to
Oxford.
In the High Street he stopped at Clifford’s,
the gun-maker’s, and bought a heavy revolver,
with a box of central-fire cartridges. Six of
them he slipped into the chambers, and half-cocking
the weapon, placed it in the pocket of his coat.
He then made his way to Hastie’s rooms, where
the big oarsman was lounging over his breakfast, with
the Sporting Times propped up against the coffeepot.
“Hullo! What’s up?” he asked.
“Have some coffee?”
“No, thank you. I want
you to come with me, Hastie, and do what I ask you.”
“Certainly, my boy.”
“And bring a heavy stick with you.”
“Hullo!” Hastie stared. “Here’s
a hunting-crop that would fell an ox.”
“One other thing. You
have a box of amputating knives. Give me the
longest of them.”
“There you are. You seem
to be fairly on the war trail. Anything else?”
“No; that will do.”
Smith placed the knife inside his coat, and led the
way to the quadrangle. “We are neither
of us chickens, Hastie,” said he. “I
think I can do this job alone, but I take you as a
precaution. I am going to have a little talk
with Bellingham. If I have only him to deal
with, I won’t, of course, need you. If
I shout, however, up you come, and lam out with your
whip as hard as you can lick. Do you understand?”
“All right. I’ll come if I hear
you bellow.”
“Stay here, then. It may
be a little time, but don’t budge until I come
down.”
“I’m a fixture.”
Smith ascended the stairs, opened
Bellingham’s door and stepped in. Bellingham
was seated behind his table, writing. Beside
him, among his litter of strange possessions, towered
the mummy case, with its sale number 249 still stuck
upon its front, and its hideous occupant stiff and
stark within it. Smith looked very deliberately
round him, closed the door, locked it, took the key
from the inside, and then stepping across to the fireplace,
struck a match and set the fire alight. Bellingham
sat staring, with amazement and rage upon his bloated
face.
“Well, really now, you make yourself at home,”
he gasped.
Smith sat himself deliberately down,
placing his watch upon the table, drew out his pistol,
cocked it, and laid it in his lap. Then he took
the long amputating knife from his bosom, and threw
it down in front of Bellingham.
“Now, then,” said he,
“just get to work and cut up that mummy.”
“Oh, is that it?” said Bellingham with
a sneer.
“Yes, that is it. They
tell me that the law can’t touch you. But
I have a law that will set matters straight.
If in five minutes you have not set to work, I swear
by the God who made me that I will put a bullet through
your brain!”
“You would murder me?”
Bellingham had half risen, and his face was the colour
of putty.
“Yes.”
“And for what?”
“To stop your mischief. One minute has
gone.”
“But what have I done?”
“I know and you know.”
“This is mere bullying.”
“Two minutes are gone.”
“But you must give reasons.
You are a madman a dangerous madman.
Why should I destroy my own property? It is
a valuable mummy.”
“You must cut it up, and you must burn it.”
“I will do no such thing.”
“Four minutes are gone.”
Smith took up the pistol and he looked
towards Bellingham with an inexorable face.
As the second-hand stole round, he raised his hand,
and the finger twitched upon the trigger.
“There! there! I’ll do it!”
screamed Bellingham.
In frantic haste he caught up the
knife and hacked at the figure of the mummy, ever
glancing round to see the eye and the weapon of his
terrible visitor bent upon him. The creature
crackled and snapped under every stab of the keen
blade. A thick yellow dust rose up from it.
Spices and dried essences rained down upon the floor.
Suddenly, with a rending crack, its backbone snapped
asunder, and it fell, a brown heap of sprawling limbs,
upon the floor.
“Now into the fire!” said Smith.
The flames leaped and roared as the
dried and tinderlike debris was piled upon it.
The little room was like the stoke-hole of a steamer
and the sweat ran down the faces of the two men; but
still the one stooped and worked, while the other
sat watching him with a set face. A thick, fat
smoke oozed out from the fire, and a heavy smell of
burned rosin and singed hair filled the air.
In a quarter of an hour a few charred and brittle
sticks were all that was left of Lot N.
“Perhaps that will satisfy you,”
snarled Bellingham, with hate and fear in his little
grey eyes as he glanced back at his tormenter.
“No; I must make a clean sweep
of all your materials. We must have no more
devil’s tricks. In with all these leaves!
They may have something to do with it.”
“And what now?” asked
Bellingham, when the leaves also had been added to
the blaze.
“Now the roll of papyrus which
you had on the table that night. It is in that
drawer, I think.”
“No, no,” shouted Bellingham.
“Don’t burn that! Why, man, you
don’t know what you do. It is unique;
it contains wisdom which is nowhere else to be found.”
“Out with it!”
“But look here, Smith, you can’t
really mean it. I’ll share the knowledge
with you. I’ll teach you all that is in
it. Or, stay, let me only copy it before you
burn it!”
Smith stepped forward and turned the
key in the drawer. Taking out the yellow, curled
roll of paper, he threw it into the fire, and pressed
it down with his heel. Bellingham screamed,
and grabbed at it; but Smith pushed him back, and
stood over it until it was reduced to a formless grey
ash.
“Now, Master B.,” said
he, “I think I have pretty well drawn your teeth.
You’ll hear from me again, if you return to
your old tricks. And now good-morning, for I
must go back to my studies.”
And such is the narrative of Abercrombie
Smith as to the singular events which occurred in
Old College, Oxford, in the spring of ’84.
As Bellingham left the university immediately afterwards,
and was last heard of in the Soudan, there is no one
who can contradict his statement. But the wisdom
of men is small, and the ways of nature are strange,
and who shall put a bound to the dark things which
may be found by those who seek for them?