PART - I.
It might seem rash of me to say that
I ascribe the death of my poor friend, John Barrington
Cowles, to any preternatural agency. I am aware
that in the present state of public feeling a chain
of evidence would require to be strong indeed before
the possibility of such a conclusion could be admitted.
I shall therefore merely state the
circumstances which led up to this sad event as concisely
and as plainly as I can, and leave every reader to
draw his own deductions. Perhaps there may be
some one who can throw light upon what is dark to
me.
I first met Barrington Cowles when
I went up to Edinburgh University to take out medical
classes there. My landlady in Northumberland Street
had a large house, and, being a widow without children,
she gained a livelihood by providing accommodation
for several students.
Barrington Cowles happened to have
taken a bedroom upon the same floor as mine, and when
we came to know each other better we shared a small
sitting-room, in which we took our meals. In this
manner we originated a friendship which was unmarred
by the slightest disagreement up to the day of his
death.
Cowles’ father was the colonel
of a Sikh regiment and had remained in India for many
years. He allowed his son a handsome income, but
seldom gave any other sign of parental affection writing
irregularly and briefly.
My friend, who had himself been born
in India, and whose whole disposition was an ardent
tropical one, was much hurt by this neglect.
His mother was dead, and he had no other relation in
the world to supply the blank.
Thus he came in time to concentrate
all his affection upon me, and to confide in me in
a manner which is rare among men. Even when a
stronger and deeper passion came upon him, it never
infringed upon the old tenderness between us.
Cowles was a tall, slim young fellow,
with an olive, Velasquez-like face, and dark, tender
eyes. I have seldom seen a man who was more likely
to excite a woman’s interest, or to captivate
her imagination. His expression was, as a rule,
dreamy, and even languid; but if in conversation a
subject arose which interested him he would be all
animation in a moment. On such occasions his colour
would heighten, his eyes gleam, and he could speak
with an eloquence which would carry his audience with
him.
In spite of these natural advantages
he led a solitary life, avoiding female society, and
reading with great diligence. He was one of the
foremost men of his year, taking the senior medal for
anatomy, and the Neil Arnott prize for physics.
How well I can recollect the first
time we met her! Often and often I have recalled
the circumstances, and tried to remember what the exact
impression was which she produced on my mind at the
time.
After we came to know her my judgment
was warped, so that I am curious to recollect what
my unbiassed{sic} instincts were. It is hard,
however, to eliminate the feelings which reason or
prejudice afterwards raised in me.
It was at the opening of the Royal
Scottish Academy in the spring of 1879. My poor
friend was passionately attached to art in every form,
and a pleasing chord in music or a delicate effect
upon canvas would give exquisite pleasure to his highly-strung
nature. We had gone together to see the pictures,
and were standing in the grand central salon, when
I noticed an extremely beautiful woman standing at
the other side of the room. In my whole life
I have never seen such a classically perfect countenance.
It was the real Greek type the forehead
broad, very low, and as white as marble, with a cloudlet
of delicate locks wreathing round it, the nose straight
and clean cut, the lips inclined to thinness, the
chin and lower jaw beautifully rounded off, and yet
sufficiently developed to promise unusual strength
of character.
But those eyes those wonderful
eyes! If I could but give some faint idea of
their varying moods, their steely hardness, their feminine
softness, their power of command, their penetrating
intensity suddenly melting away into an expression
of womanly weakness but I am speaking now
of future impressions!
There was a tall, yellow-haired young
man with this lady, whom I at once recognised as a
law student with whom I had a slight acquaintance.
Archibald Reeves for that
was his name was a dashing, handsome young
fellow, and had at one time been a ringleader in every
university escapade; but of late I had seen little
of him, and the report was that he was engaged to
be married. His companion was, then, I presumed,
his fiancee. I seated myself upon the velvet
settee in the centre of the room, and furtively watched
the couple from behind my catalogue.
The more I looked at her the more
her beauty grew upon me. She was somewhat short
in stature, it is true; but her figure was perfection,
and she bore herself in such a fashion that it was
only by actual comparison that one would have known
her to be under the medium height.
As I kept my eyes upon them, Reeves
was called away for some reason, and the young lady
was left alone. Turning her back to the pictures,
she passed the time until the return of her escort
in taking a deliberate survey of the company, without
paying the least heed to the fact that a dozen pair
of eyes, attracted by her elegance and beauty, were
bent curiously upon her. With one of her hands
holding the red silk cord which railed off the pictures,
she stood languidly moving her eyes from face to face
with as little self-consciousness as if she were looking
at the canvas creatures behind her. Suddenly,
as I watched her, I saw her gaze become fixed, and,
as it were, intense. I followed the direction
of her looks, wondering what could have attracted
her so strongly.
John Barrington Cowles was standing
before a picture one, I think, by Noel
Paton I know that the subject was a noble
and ethereal one. His profile was turned towards
us, and never have I seen him to such advantage.
I have said that he was a strikingly handsome man,
but at that moment he looked absolutely magnificent.
It was evident that he had momentarily forgotten his
surroundings, and that his whole soul was in sympathy
with the picture before him. His eyes sparkled,
and a dusky pink shone through his clear olive cheeks.
She continued to watch him fixedly, with a look of
interest upon her face, until he came out of his reverie
with a start, and turned abruptly round, so that his
gaze met hers. She glanced away at once, but
his eyes remained fixed upon her for some moments.
The picture was forgotten already, and his soul had
come down to earth once more.
We caught sight of her once or twice
before we left, and each time I noticed my friend
look after her. He made no remark, however, until
we got out into the open air, and were walking arm-in-arm
along Princes Street.
“Did you notice that beautiful
woman, in the dark dress, with the white fur?”
he asked.
“Yes, I saw her,” I answered.
“Do you know her?” he asked eagerly.
“Have you any idea who she is?”
“I don’t know her personally,”
I replied. “But I have no doubt I could
find out all about her, for I believe she is engaged
to young Archie Reeves, and he and I have a lot of
mutual friends.”
“Engaged!” ejaculated Cowles.
“Why, my dear boy,” I
said, laughing, “you don’t mean to say
you are so susceptible that the fact that a girl to
whom you never spoke in your life is engaged is enough
to upset you?”
“Well, not exactly to upset
me,” he answered, forcing a laugh. “But
I don’t mind telling you, Armitage, that I never
was so taken by any one in my life. It wasn’t
the mere beauty of the face though that
was perfect enough but it was the character
and the intellect upon it. I hope, if she is
engaged, that it is to some man who will be worthy
of her.”
“Why,” I remarked, “you
speak quite feelingly. It is a clear case of
love at first sight, Jack. However, to put your
perturbed spirit at rest, I’ll make a point
of finding out all about her whenever I meet any fellow
who is likely to know.”
Barrington Cowles thanked me, and
the conversation drifted off into other channels.
For several days neither of us made any allusion to
the subject, though my companion was perhaps a little
more dreamy and distraught than usual. The incident
had almost vanished from my remembrance, when one
day young Brodie, who is a second cousin of mine,
came up to me on the university steps with the face
of a bearer of tidings.
“I say,” he began, “you know Reeves,
don’t you?”
“Yes. What of him?”
“His engagement is off.”
“Off!” I cried. “Why, I only
learned the other day that it was on.”
“Oh, yes it’s
all off. His brother told me so. Deucedly
mean of Reeves, you know, if he has backed out of
it, for she was an uncommonly nice girl.”
“I’ve seen her,” I said; “but
I don’t know her name.”
“She is a Miss Northcott, and
lives with an old aunt of hers in Abercrombie Place.
Nobody knows anything about her people, or where she
comes from. Anyhow, she is about the most unlucky
girl in the world, poor soul!”
“Why unlucky?”
“Well, you know, this was her
second engagement,” said young Brodie, who had
a marvellous knack of knowing everything about everybody.
“She was engaged to Prescott William
Prescott, who died. That was a very sad affair.
The wedding day was fixed, and the whole thing looked
as straight as a die when the smash came.”
“What smash?” I asked, with some dim recollection
of the circumstances.
“Why, Prescott’s death.
He came to Abercrombie Place one night, and stayed
very late. No one knows exactly when he left,
but about one in the morning a fellow who knew him
met him walking rapidly in the direction of the Queen’s
Park. He bade him good night, but Prescott hurried
on without heeding him, and that was the last time
he was ever seen alive. Three days afterwards
his body was found floating in St. Margaret’s
Loch, under St. Anthony’s Chapel. No one
could ever understand it, but of course the verdict
brought it in as temporary insanity.”
“It was very strange,” I remarked.
“Yes, and deucedly rough on
the poor girl,” said Brodie. “Now
that this other blow has come it will quite crush
her. So gentle and ladylike she is too!”
“You know her personally, then!” I asked.
“Oh, yes, I know her. I
have met her several times. I could easily manage
that you should be introduced to her.”
“Well,” I answered, “it’s
not so much for my own sake as for a friend of mine.
However, I don’t suppose she will go out much
for some little time after this. When she does
I will take advantage of your offer.”
We shook hands on this, and I thought
no more of the matter for some time.
The next incident which I have to
relate as bearing at all upon the question of Miss
Northcott is an unpleasant one. Yet I must detail
it as accurately as possible, since it may throw some
light upon the sequel. One cold night, several
months after the conversation with my second cousin
which I have quoted above, I was walking down one of
the lowest streets in the city on my way back from
a case which I had been attending. It was very
late, and I was picking my way among the dirty loungers
who were clustering round the doors of a great gin-palace,
when a man staggered out from among them, and held
out his hand to me with a drunken leer. The gaslight
fell full upon his face, and, to my intense astonishment,
I recognised in the degraded creature before me my
former acquaintance, young Archibald Reeves, who had
once been famous as one of the most dressy and particular
men in the whole college. I was so utterly surprised
that for a moment I almost doubted the evidence of
my own senses; but there was no mistaking those features,
which, though bloated with drink, still retained something
of their former comeliness. I was determined
to rescue him, for one night at least, from the company
into which he had fallen.
“Holloa, Reeves!” I said.
“Come along with me. I’m going in
your direction.”
He muttered some incoherent apology
for his condition, and took my arm. As I supported
him towards his lodgings I could see that he was not
only suffering from the effects of a recent debauch,
but that a long course of intemperance had affected
his nerves and his brain. His hand when I touched
it was dry and feverish, and he started from every
shadow which fell upon the pavement. He rambled
in his speech, too, in a manner which suggested the
delirium of disease rather than the talk of a drunkard.
When I got him to his lodgings I partially
undressed him and laid him upon his bed. His
pulse at this time was very high, and he was evidently
extremely feverish. He seemed to have sunk into
a doze; and I was about to steal out of the room to
warn his landlady of his condition, when he started
up and caught me by the sleeve of my coat.
“Don’t go!” he cried.
“I feel better when you are here. I am safe
from her then.”
“From her!” I said. “From whom?”
“Her! her!” he answered
peevishly. “Ah! you don’t know her.
She is the devil! Beautiful beautiful;
but the devil!”
“You are feverish and excited,”
I said. “Try and get a little sleep.
You will wake better.”
“Sleep!” he groaned.
“How am I to sleep when I see her sitting down
yonder at the foot of the bed with her great eyes watching
and watching hour after hour? I tell you it saps
all the strength and manhood out of me. That’s
what makes me drink. God help me I’m
half drunk now!”
“You are very ill,” I
said, putting some vinegar to his temples; “and
you are delirious. You don’t know what you
say.”
“Yes, I do,” he interrupted
sharply, looking up at me. “I know very
well what I say. I brought it upon myself.
It is my own choice. But I couldn’t no,
by heaven, I couldn’t accept the alternative.
I couldn’t keep my faith to her. It was
more than man could do.”
I sat by the side of the bed, holding
one of his burning hands in mine, and wondering over
his strange words. He lay still for some time,
and then, raising his eyes to me, said in a most plaintive
voice
“Why did she not give me warning
sooner? Why did she wait until I had learned
to love her so?”
He repeated this question several
times, rolling his feverish head from side to side,
and then he dropped into a troubled sleep. I crept
out of the room, and, having seen that he would be
properly cared for, left the house. His words,
however, rang in my ears for days afterwards, and
assumed a deeper significance when taken with what
was to come.
My friend, Barrington Cowles, had
been away for his summer holidays, and I had heard
nothing of him for several months. When the winter
session came on, however, I received a telegram from
him, asking me to secure the old rooms in Northumberland
Street for him, and telling me the train by which
he would arrive. I went down to meet him, and
was delighted to find him looking wonderfully hearty
and well.
“By the way,” he said
suddenly, that night, as we sat in our chairs by the
fire, talking over the events of the holidays, “you
have never congratulated me yet!”
“On what, my boy?” I asked.
“What! Do you mean to say you have not
heard of my engagement?”
“Engagement! No!”
I answered. “However, I am delighted to
hear it, and congratulate you with all my heart.”
“I wonder it didn’t come
to your ears,” he said. “It was the
queerest thing. You remember that girl whom we
both admired so much at the Academy?”
“What!” I cried, with
a vague feeling of apprehension at my heart. “You
don’t mean to say that you are engaged to her?”
“I thought you would be surprised,”
he answered. “When I was staying with an
old aunt of mine in Peterhead, in Aberdeenshire, the
Northcotts happened to come there on a visit, and
as we had mutual friends we soon met. I found
out that it was a false alarm about her being engaged,
and then well, you know what it is when
you are thrown into the society of such a girl in
a place like Peterhead. Not, mind you,”
he added, “that I consider I did a foolish or
hasty thing. I have never regretted it for a
moment. The more I know Kate the more I admire
her and love her. However, you must be introduced
to her, and then you will form your own opinion.”
I expressed my pleasure at the prospect,
and endeavoured to speak as lightly as I could to
Cowles upon the subject, but I felt depressed and
anxious at heart. The words of Reeves and the
unhappy fate of young Prescott recurred to my recollection,
and though I could assign no tangible reason for it,
a vague, dim fear and distrust of the woman took possession
of me. It may be that this was foolish prejudice
and superstition upon my part, and that I involuntarily
contorted her future doings and sayings to fit into
some half-formed wild theory of my own. This
has been suggested to me by others as an explanation
of my narrative. They are welcome to their opinion
if they can reconcile it with the facts which I have
to tell.
I went round with my friend a few
days afterwards to call upon Miss Northcott.
I remember that, as we went down Abercrombie Place,
our attention was attracted by the shrill yelping
of a dog which noise proved eventually
to come from the house to which we were bound.
We were shown upstairs, where I was introduced to
old Mrs. Merton, Miss Northcott’s aunt, and
to the young lady herself. She looked as beautiful
as ever, and I could not wonder at my friend’s
infatuation. Her face was a little more flushed
than usual, and she held in her hand a heavy dog-whip,
with which she had been chastising a small Scotch terrier,
whose cries we had heard in the street. The poor
brute was cringing up against the wall, whining piteously,
and evidently completely cowed.
“So Kate,” said my friend,
after we had taken our seats, “you have been
falling out with Carlo again.”
“Only a very little quarrel
this time,” she said, smiling charmingly.
“He is a dear, good old fellow, but he needs
correction now and then.” Then, turning
to me, “We all do that, Mr. Armitage, don’t
we? What a capital thing if, instead of receiving
a collective punishment at the end of our lives, we
were to have one at once, as the dogs do, when we
did anything wicked. It would make us more careful,
wouldn’t it?”
I acknowledged that it would.
“Supposing that every time a
man misbehaved himself a gigantic hand were to seize
him, and he were lashed with a whip until he fainted” she
clenched her white fingers as she spoke, and cut out
viciously with the dog-whip “it would
do more to keep him good than any number of high-minded
theories of morality.”
“Why, Kate,” said my friend,
“you are quite savage to-day.”
“No, Jack,” she laughed.
“I’m only propounding a theory for Mr.
Armitage’s consideration.”
The two began to chat together about
some Aberdeenshire reminiscence, and I had time to
observe Mrs. Merton, who had remained silent during
our short conversation. She was a very strange-looking
old lady. What attracted attention most in her
appearance was the utter want of colour which she
exhibited. Her hair was snow-white, and her face
extremely pale. Her lips were bloodless, and
even her eyes were of such a light tinge of blue that
they hardly relieved the general pallor. Her dress
was a grey silk, which harmonised with her general
appearance. She had a peculiar expression of
countenance, which I was unable at the moment to refer
to its proper cause.
She was working at some old-fashioned
piece of ornamental needlework, and as she moved her
arms her dress gave forth a dry, melancholy rustling,
like the sound of leaves in the autumn. There
was something mournful and depressing in the sight
of her. I moved my chair a little nearer, and
asked her how she liked Edinburgh, and whether she
had been there long.
When I spoke to her she started and
looked up at me with a scared look on her face.
Then I saw in a moment what the expression was which
I had observed there. It was one of fear intense
and overpowering fear. It was so marked that
I could have staked my life on the woman before me
having at some period of her life been subjected to
some terrible experience or dreadful misfortune.
“Oh, yes, I like it,”
she said, in a soft, timid voice; “and we have
been here long that is, not very long.
We move about a great deal.” She spoke
with hesitation, as if afraid of committing herself.
“You are a native of Scotland, I presume?”
I said.
“No that is, not
entirely. We are not natives of any place.
We are cosmopolitan, you know.” She glanced
round in the direction of Miss Northcott as she spoke,
but the two were still chatting together near the
window. Then she suddenly bent forward to me,
with a look of intense earnestness upon her face,
and said
“Don’t talk to me any
more, please. She does not like it, and I shall
suffer for it afterwards. Please, don’t
do it.”
I was about to ask her the reason
for this strange request, but when she saw I was going
to address her, she rose and walked slowly out of the
room. As she did so I perceived that the lovers
had ceased to talk and that Miss Northcott was looking
at me with her keen, grey eyes.
“You must excuse my aunt, Mr.
Armitage,” she said; “she is odd, and
easily fatigued. Come over and look at my album.”
We spent some time examining the portraits.
Miss Northcott’s father and mother were apparently
ordinary mortals enough, and I could not detect in
either of them any traces of the character which showed
itself in their daughter’s face. There
was one old daguerreotype, however, which arrested
my attention. It represented a man of about the
age of forty, and strikingly handsome. He was
clean shaven, and extraordinary power was expressed
upon his prominent lower jaw and firm, straight mouth.
His eyes were somewhat deeply set in his head, however,
and there was a snake-like flattening at the upper
part of his forehead, which detracted from his appearance.
I almost involuntarily, when I saw the head, pointed
to it, and exclaimed
“There is your prototype in your family, Miss
Northcott.”
“Do you think so?” she
said. “I am afraid you are paying me a very
bad compliment. Uncle Anthony was always considered
the black sheep of the family.”
“Indeed,” I answered;
“my remark was an unfortunate one, then.”
“Oh, don’t mind that,”
she said; “I always thought myself that he was
worth all of them put together. He was an officer
in the Forty-first Regiment, and he was killed in
action during the Persian War so he died
nobly, at any rate.”
“That’s the sort of death
I should like to die,” said Cowles, his dark
eyes flashing, as they would when he was excited; “I
often wish I had taken to my father’s profession
instead of this vile pill-compounding drudgery.”
“Come, Jack, you are not going
to die any sort of death yet,” she said, tenderly
taking his hand in hers.
I could not understand the woman.
There was such an extraordinary mixture of masculine
decision and womanly tenderness about her, with the
consciousness of something all her own in the background,
that she fairly puzzled me. I hardly knew, therefore,
how to answer Cowles when, as we walked down the street
together, he asked the comprehensive question
“Well, what do you think of her?”
“I think she is wonderfully beautiful,”
I answered guardedly.
“That, of course,” he
replied irritably. “You knew that before
you came!”
“I think she is very clever too,” I remarked.
Barrington Cowles walked on for some
time, and then he suddenly turned on me with the strange
question
“Do you think she is cruel?
Do you think she is the sort of girl who would take
a pleasure in inflicting pain?”
“Well, really,” I answered,
“I have hardly had time to form an opinion.”
We then walked on for some time in silence.
“She is an old fool,” at length muttered
Cowles. “She is mad.”
“Who is?” I asked.
“Why, that old woman that
aunt of Kate’s Mrs. Merton, or whatever
her name is.”
Then I knew that my poor colourless
friend had been speaking to Cowles, but he never said
anything more as to the nature of her communication.
My companion went to bed early that
night, and I sat up a long time by the fire, thinking
over all that I had seen and heard. I felt that
there was some mystery about the girl some
dark fatality so strange as to defy conjecture.
I thought of Prescott’s interview with her before
their marriage, and the fatal termination of it.
I coupled it with poor drunken Reeves’ plaintive
cry, “Why did she not tell me sooner?”
and with the other words he had spoken. Then
my mind ran over Mrs. Merton’s warning to me,
Cowles’ reference to her, and even the episode
of the whip and the cringing dog.
The whole effect of my recollections
was unpleasant to a degree, and yet there was no tangible
charge which I could bring against the woman.
It would be worse than useless to attempt to warn
my friend until I had definitely made up my mind what
I was to warn him against. He would treat any
charge against her with scorn. What could I do?
How could I get at some tangible conclusion as to
her character and antecedents? No one in Edinburgh
knew them except as recent acquaintances. She
was an orphan, and as far as I knew she had never
disclosed where her former home had been. Suddenly
an idea struck me. Among my father’s friends
there was a Colonel Joyce, who had served a long time
in India upon the staff, and who would be likely to
know most of the officers who had been out there since
the Mutiny. I sat down at once, and, having trimmed
the lamp, proceeded to write a letter to the Colonel.
I told him that I was very curious to gain some particulars
about a certain Captain Northcott, who had served
in the Forty-first Foot, and who had fallen in the
Persian War. I described the man as well as I
could from my recollection of the daguerreotype, and
then, having directed the letter, posted it that very
night, after which, feeling that I had done all that
could be done, I retired to bed, with a mind too anxious
to allow me to sleep.
PART - II.
I got an answer from Leicester, where
the Colonel resided, within two days. I have
it before me as I write, and copy it verbatim.
“Dear Bob,”
it said, “I remember the man well. I was
with him at Calcutta, and afterwards at Hyderabad.
He was a curious, solitary sort of mortal; but a gallant
soldier enough, for he distinguished himself at Sobraon,
and was wounded, if I remember right. He was not
popular in his corps they said he was a
pitiless, cold-blooded fellow, with no geniality in
him. There was a rumour, too, that he was a devil-worshipper,
or something of that sort, and also that he had the
evil eye, which, of course, was all nonsense.
He had some strange theories, I remember, about the
power of the human will and the effects of mind upon
matter.
“How are you getting on with
your medical studies? Never forget, my boy, that
your father’s son has every claim upon me, and
that if I can serve you in any way I am always at
your command. Ever affectionately yours,
“Edward Joyce.
“P.S. By the way,
Northcott did not fall in action. He was killed
after peace was declared in a crazy attempt to get
some of the eternal fire from the sun-worshippers’
temple. There was considerable mystery about
his death.”
I read this epistle over several times at
first with a feeling of satisfaction, and then with
one of disappointment. I had come on some curious
information, and yet hardly what I wanted. He
was an eccentric man, a devil-worshipper, and rumoured
to have the power of the evil eye. I could believe
the young lady’s eyes, when endowed with that
cold, grey shimmer which I had noticed in them once
or twice, to be capable of any evil which human eye
ever wrought; but still the superstition was an effete
one. Was there not more meaning in that sentence
which followed “He had theories of
the power of the human will and of the effect of mind
upon matter”? I remember having once read
a quaint treatise, which I had imagined to be mere
charlatanism at the time, of the power of certain
human minds, and of effects produced by them at a
distance.
Was Miss Northcott endowed with some
exceptional power of the sort?
The idea grew upon me, and very shortly
I had evidence which convinced me of the truth of
the supposition.
It happened that at the very time
when my mind was dwelling upon this subject, I saw
a notice in the paper that our town was to be visited
by Dr. Messinger, the well-known medium and mesmerist.
Messinger was a man whose performance, such as it
was, had been again and again pronounced to be genuine
by competent judges. He was far above trickery,
and had the reputation of being the soundest living
authority upon the strange pseudo-sciences of animal
magnetism and electro-biology. Determined, therefore,
to see what the human will could do, even against all
the disadvantages of glaring footlights and a public
platform, I took a ticket for the first night of the
performance, and went with several student friends.
We had secured one of the side boxes,
and did not arrive until after the performance had
begun. I had hardly taken my seat before I recognised
Barrington Cowles, with his fiancee and old Mrs. Merton,
sitting in the third or fourth row of the stalls.
They caught sight of me at almost the same moment,
and we bowed to each other. The first portion
of the lecture was somewhat commonplace, the lecturer
giving tricks of pure legerdemain, with one or two
manifestations of mesmerism, performed upon a subject
whom he had brought with him. He gave us an exhibition
of clairvoyance too, throwing his subject into a trance,
and then demanding particulars as to the movements
of absent friends, and the whereabouts of hidden objects
all of which appeared to be answered satisfactorily.
I had seen all this before, however. What I wanted
to see now was the effect of the lecturer’s
will when exerted upon some independent member of
the audience.
He came round to that as the concluding
exhibition in his performance. “I have
shown you,” he said, “that a mesmerised
subject is entirely dominated by the will of the mesmeriser.
He loses all power of volition, and his very thoughts
are such as are suggested to him by the master-mind.
The same end may be attained without any preliminary
process. A strong will can, simply by virtue of
its strength, take possession of a weaker one, even
at a distance, and can regulate the impulses and the
actions of the owner of it. If there was one man
in the world who had a very much more highly-developed
will than any of the rest of the human family, there
is no reason why he should not be able to rule over
them all, and to reduce his fellow-creatures to the
condition of automatons. Happily there is such
a dead level of mental power, or rather of mental
weakness, among us that such a catastrophe is not
likely to occur; but still within our small compass
there are variations which produce surprising effects.
I shall now single out one of the audience, and endeavour
‘by the mere power of will’ to compel him
to come upon the platform, and do and say what I wish.
Let me assure you that there is no collusion, and
that the subject whom I may select is at perfect liberty
to resent to the uttermost any impulse which I may
communicate to him.”
With these words the lecturer came
to the front of the platform, and glanced over the
first few rows of the stalls. No doubt Cowles’
dark skin and bright eyes marked him out as a man
of a highly nervous temperament, for the mesmerist
picked him out in a moment, and fixed his eyes upon
him. I saw my friend give a start of surprise,
and then settle down in his chair, as if to express
his determination not to yield to the influence of
the operator. Messinger was not a man whose head
denoted any great brain-power, but his gaze was singularly
intense and penetrating. Under the influence
of it Cowles made one or two spasmodic motions of
his hands, as if to grasp the sides of his seat, and
then half rose, but only to sink down again, though
with an evident effort. I was watching the scene
with intense interest, when I happened to catch a
glimpse of Miss Northcott’s face. She was
sitting with her eyes fixed intently upon the mesmerist,
and with such an expression of concentrated power
upon her features as I have never seen on any other
human countenance. Her jaw was firmly set, her
lips compressed, and her face as hard as if it were
a beautiful sculpture cut out of the whitest marble.
Her eyebrows were drawn down, however, and from beneath
them her grey eyes seemed to sparkle and gleam with
a cold light.
I looked at Cowles again, expecting
every moment to see him rise and obey the mesmerist’s
wishes, when there came from the platform a short,
gasping cry as of a man utterly worn out and prostrated
by a prolonged struggle. Messinger was leaning
against the table, his hand to his forehead, and the
perspiration pouring down his face. “I won’t
go on,” he cried, addressing the audience.
“There is a stronger will than mine acting against
me. You must excuse me for to-night.”
The man was evidently ill, and utterly unable to proceed,
so the curtain was lowered, and the audience dispersed,
with many comments upon the lecturer’s sudden
indisposition.
I waited outside the hall until my
friend and the ladies came out. Cowles was laughing
over his recent experience.
“He didn’t succeed with
me, Bob,” he cried triumphantly, as he shook
my hand. “I think he caught a Tartar that
time.”
“Yes,” said Miss Northcott,
“I think that Jack ought to be very proud of
his strength of mind; don’t you! Mr. Armitage?”
“It took me all my time, though,”
my friend said seriously. “You can’t
conceive what a strange feeling I had once or twice.
All the strength seemed to have gone out of me especially
just before he collapsed himself.”
I walked round with Cowles in order
to see the ladies home. He walked in front with
Mrs. Merton, and I found myself behind with the young
lady. For a minute or so I walked beside her
without making any remark, and then I suddenly blurted
out, in a manner which must have seemed somewhat brusque
to her
“You did that, Miss Northcott.”
“Did what?” she asked sharply.
“Why, mesmerised the mesmeriser I
suppose that is the best way of describing the transaction.”
“What a strange idea!”
she said, laughing. “You give me credit
for a strong will then?”
“Yes,” I said. “For a dangerously
strong one.”
“Why dangerous?” she asked, in a tone
of surprise.
“I think,” I answered,
“that any will which can exercise such power
is dangerous for there is always a chance
of its being turned to bad uses.”
“You would make me out a very
dreadful individual, Mr. Armitage,” she said;
and then looking up suddenly in my face “You
have never liked me. You are suspicious of me
and distrust me, though I have never given you cause.”
The accusation was so sudden and so
true that I was unable to find any reply to it.
She paused for a moment, and then said in a voice which
was hard and cold
“Don’t let your prejudice
lead you to interfere with me, however, or say anything
to your friend, Mr. Cowles, which might lead to a difference
between us. You would find that to be very bad
policy.”
There was something in the way she
spoke which gave an indescribable air of a threat
to these few words.
“I have no power,” I said,
“to interfere with your plans for the future.
I cannot help, however, from what I have seen and heard,
having fears for my friend.”
“Fears!” she repeated
scornfully. “Pray what have you seen and
heard. Something from Mr. Reeves, perhaps I
believe he is another of your friends?”
“He never mentioned your name
to me,” I answered, truthfully enough.
“You will be sorry to hear that he is dying.”
As I said it we passed by a lighted window, and I
glanced down to see what effect my words had upon
her. She was laughing there was no
doubt of it; she was laughing quietly to herself.
I could see merriment in every feature of her face.
I feared and mistrusted the woman from that moment
more than ever.
We said little more that night.
When we parted she gave me a quick, warning glance,
as if to remind me of what she had said about the danger
of interference. Her cautions would have made
little difference to me could I have seen my way to
benefiting Barrington Cowles by anything which I might
say. But what could I say? I might say that
her former suitors had been unfortunate. I might
say that I believed her to be a cruel-hearted woman.
I might say that I considered her to possess wonderful,
and almost preternatural powers. What impression
would any of these accusations make upon an ardent
lover a man with my friend’s enthusiastic
temperament? I felt that it would be useless to
advance them, so I was silent.
And now I come to the beginning of
the end. Hitherto much has been surmise and inference
and hearsay. It is my painful task to relate now,
as dispassionately and as accurately as I can, what
actually occurred under my own notice, and to reduce
to writing the events which preceded the death of
my friend.
Towards the end of the winter Cowles
remarked to me that he intended to marry Miss Northcott
as soon as possible probably some time in
the spring. He was, as I have already remarked,
fairly well off, and the young lady had some money
of her own, so that there was no pecuniary reason
for a long engagement. “We are going to
take a little house out at Corstorphine,” he
said, “and we hope to see your face at our table,
Bob, as often as you can possibly come.”
I thanked him, and tried to shake off my apprehensions,
and persuade myself that all would yet be well.
It was about three weeks before the
time fixed for the marriage, that Cowles remarked
to me one evening that he feared he would be late that
night. “I have had a note from Kate,”
he said, “asking me to call about eleven o’clock
to-night, which seems rather a late hour, but perhaps
she wants to talk over something quietly after old
Mrs. Merton retires.”
It was not until after my friend’s
departure that I suddenly recollected the mysterious
interview which I had been told of as preceding the
suicide of young Prescott. Then I thought of the
ravings of poor Reeves, rendered more tragic by the
fact that I had heard that very day of his death.
What was the meaning of it all? Had this woman
some baleful secret to disclose which must be known
before her marriage? Was it some reason which
forbade her to marry? Or was it some reason which
forbade others to marry her? I felt so uneasy
that I would have followed Cowles, even at the risk
of offending him, and endeavoured to dissuade him from
keeping his appointment, but a glance at the clock
showed me that I was too late.
I was determined to wait up for his
return, so I piled some coals upon the fire and took
down a novel from the shelf. My thoughts proved
more interesting than the book, however, and I threw
it on one side. An indefinable feeling of anxiety
and depression weighed upon me. Twelve o’clock
came, and then half-past, without any sign of my friend.
It was nearly one when I heard a step in the street
outside, and then a knocking at the door. I was
surprised, as I knew that my friend always carried
a key however, I hurried down and undid
the latch. As the door flew open I knew in a
moment that my worst apprehensions had been fulfilled.
Barrington Cowles was leaning against the railings
outside with his face sunk upon his breast, and his
whole attitude expressive of the most intense despondency.
As he passed in he gave a stagger, and would have
fallen had I not thrown my left arm around him.
Supporting him with this, and holding the lamp in
my other hand, I led him slowly upstairs into our
sitting-room. He sank down upon the sofa without
a word. Now that I could get a good view of him,
I was horrified to see the change which had come over
him. His face was deadly pale, and his very lips
were bloodless. His cheeks and forehead were clammy,
his eyes glazed, and his whole expression altered.
He looked like a man who had gone through some terrible
ordeal, and was thoroughly unnerved.
“My dear fellow, what is the
matter?” I asked, breaking the silence.
“Nothing amiss, I trust? Are you unwell?”
“Brandy!” he gasped. “Give
me some brandy!”
I took out the decanter, and was about
to help him, when he snatched it from me with a trembling
hand, and poured out nearly half a tumbler of the
spirit. He was usually a most abstemious man,
but he took this off at a gulp without adding any
water to it.
It seemed to do him good, for the
colour began to come back to his face, and he leaned
upon his elbow.
“My engagement is off, Bob,”
he said, trying to speak calmly, but with a tremor
in his voice which he could not conceal. “It
is all over.”
“Cheer up!” I answered, trying to encourage
him.
“Don’t get down on your luck. How
was it? What was it all about?”
“About?” he groaned, covering
his face with his hands. “If I did tell
you, Bob, you would not believe it. It is too
dreadful too horrible unutterably
awful and incredible! O Kate, Kate!” and
he rocked himself to and fro in his grief; “I
pictured you an angel and I find you a ”
“A what?” I asked, for he had paused.
He looked at me with a vacant stare,
and then suddenly burst out, waving his arms:
“A fiend!” he cried. “A ghoul
from the pit! A vampire soul behind a lovely
face! Now, God forgive me!” he went on in
a lower tone, turning his face to the wall; “I
have said more than I should. I have loved her
too much to speak of her as she is. I love her
too much now.”
He lay still for some time, and I
had hoped that the brandy had had the effect of sending
him to sleep, when he suddenly turned his face towards
me.
“Did you ever read of wehr-wolves?” he
asked.
I answered that I had.
“There is a story,” he
said thoughtfully, “in one of Marryat’s
books, about a beautiful woman who took the form of
a wolf at night and devoured her own children.
I wonder what put that idea into Marryat’s head?”
He pondered for some minutes, and
then he cried out for some more brandy. There
was a small bottle of laudanum upon the table, and
I managed, by insisting upon helping him myself, to
mix about half a drachm with the spirits. He
drank it off, and sank his head once more upon the
pillow. “Anything better than that,”
he groaned. “Death is better than that.
Crime and cruelty; cruelty and crime. Anything
is better than that,” and so on, with the monotonous
refrain, until at last the words became indistinct,
his eyelids closed over his weary eyes, and he sank
into a profound slumber. I carried him into his
bedroom without arousing him; and making a couch for
myself out of the chairs, I remained by his side all
night.
In the morning Barrington Cowles was
in a high fever. For weeks he lingered between
life and death. The highest medical skill of Edinburgh
was called in, and his vigorous constitution slowly
got the better of his disease. I nursed him during
this anxious time; but through all his wild delirium
and ravings he never let a word escape him which explained
the mystery connected with Miss Northcott. Sometimes
he spoke of her in the tenderest words and most loving
voice. At others he screamed out that she was
a fiend, and stretched out his arms, as if to keep
her off. Several times he cried that he would
not sell his soul for a beautiful face, and then he
would moan in a most piteous voice, “But I love
her I love her for all that; I shall never
cease to love her.”
When he came to himself he was an
altered man. His severe illness had emaciated
him greatly, but his dark eyes had lost none of their
brightness. They shone out with startling brilliancy
from under his dark, overhanging brows. His manner
was eccentric and variable sometimes irritable,
sometimes recklessly mirthful, but never natural.
He would glance about him in a strange, suspicious
manner, like one who feared something, and yet hardly
knew what it was he dreaded. He never mentioned
Miss Northcott’s name never until
that fatal evening of which I have now to speak.
In an endeavour to break the current
of his thoughts by frequent change of scene, I travelled
with him through the highlands of Scotland, and afterwards
down the east coast. In one of these peregrinations
of ours we visited the Isle of May, an island near
the mouth of the Firth of Forth, which, except in
the tourist season, is singularly barren and desolate.
Beyond the keeper of the lighthouse there are only
one or two families of poor fisher-folk, who sustain
a precarious existence by their nets, and by the capture
of cormorants and solan geese. This grim spot
seemed to have such a fascination for Cowles that we
engaged a room in one of the fishermen’s huts,
with the intention of passing a week or two there.
I found it very dull, but the loneliness appeared to
be a relief to my friend’s mind. He lost
the look of apprehension which had become habitual
to him, and became something like his old self.
He would wander round the island all
day, looking down from the summit of the great cliffs
which gird it round, and watching the long green waves
as they came booming in and burst in a shower of spray
over the rocks beneath.
One night I think it was
our third or fourth on the island Barrington
Cowles and I went outside the cottage before retiring
to rest, to enjoy a little fresh air, for our room
was small, and the rough lamp caused an unpleasant
odour. How well I remember every little circumstance
in connection with that night! It promised to
be tempestuous, for the clouds were piling up in the
north-west, and the dark wrack was drifting across
the face of the moon, throwing alternate belts of light
and shade upon the rugged surface of the island and
the restless sea beyond.
We were standing talking close by
the door of the cottage, and I was thinking to myself
that my friend was more cheerful than he had been
since his illness, when he gave a sudden, sharp cry,
and looking round at him I saw, by the light of the
moon, an expression of unutterable horror come over
his features. His eyes became fixed and staring,
as if riveted upon some approaching object, and he
extended his long thin forefinger, which quivered
as he pointed.
“Look there!” he cried.
“It is she! It is she! You see her
there coming down the side of the brae.”
He gripped me convulsively by the wrist as he spoke.
“There she is, coming towards us!”
“Who?” I cried, straining my eyes into
the darkness.
“She Kate Kate
Northcott!” he screamed. “She has
come for me. Hold me fast, old friend. Don’t
let me go!”
“Hold up, old man,” I
said, clapping him on the shoulder. “Pull
yourself together; you are dreaming; there is nothing
to fear.”
“She is gone!” he cried,
with a gasp of relief. “No, by heaven! there
she is again, and nearer coming nearer.
She told me she would come for me, and she keeps her
word.”
“Come into the house,”
I said. His hand, as I grasped it, was as cold
as ice.
“Ah, I knew it!” he shouted.
“There she is, waving her arms. She is
beckoning to me. It is the signal. I must
go. I am coming, Kate; I am coming!”
I threw my arms around him, but he
burst from me with superhuman strength, and dashed
into the darkness of the night. I followed him,
calling to him to stop, but he ran the more swiftly.
When the moon shone out between the clouds I could
catch a glimpse of his dark figure, running rapidly
in a straight line, as if to reach some definite goal.
It may have been imagination, but it seemed to me that
in the flickering light I could distinguish a vague
something in front of him a shimmering
form which eluded his grasp and led him onwards.
I saw his outlines stand out hard against the sky
behind him as he surmounted the brow of a little hill,
then he disappeared, and that was the last ever seen
by mortal eye of Barrington Cowles.
The fishermen and I walked round the
island all that night with lanterns, and examined
every nook and corner without seeing a trace of my
poor lost friend. The direction in which he had
been running terminated in a rugged line of jagged
cliffs overhanging the sea. At one place here
the edge was somewhat crumbled, and there appeared
marks upon the turf which might have been left by
human feet. We lay upon our faces at this spot,
and peered with our lanterns over the edge, looking
down on the boiling surge two hundred feet below.
As we lay there, suddenly, above the beating of the
waves and the howling of the wind, there rose a strange
wild screech from the abyss below. The fishermen a
naturally superstitious race averred that
it was the sound of a woman’s laughter, and
I could hardly persuade them to continue the search.
For my own part I think it may have been the cry of
some sea-fowl startled from its nest by the flash
of the lantern. However that may be, I never wish
to hear such a sound again.
And now I have come to the end of
the painful duty which I have undertaken. I have
told as plainly and as accurately as I could the story
of the death of John Barrington Cowles, and the train
of events which preceded it. I am aware that
to others the sad episode seemed commonplace enough.
Here is the prosaic account which appeared in the
Scotsman a couple of days afterwards:
“Sad Occurrence on the Isle
of May. The Isle of May has been the scene
of a sad disaster. Mr. John Barrington Cowles,
a gentleman well known in University circles as a
most distinguished student, and the present holder
of the Neil Arnott prize for physics, has been recruiting
his health in this quiet retreat. The night before
last he suddenly left his friend, Mr. Robert Armitage,
and he has not since been heard of. It is almost
certain that he has met his death by falling over the
cliffs which surround the island. Mr. Cowles’
health has been failing for some time, partly from
over study and partly from worry connected with family
affairs. By his death the University loses one
of her most promising alumni.”
I have nothing more to add to my statement.
I have unburdened my mind of all that I know.
I can well conceive that many, after weighing all
that I have said, will see no ground for an accusation
against Miss Northcott. They will say that, because
a man of a naturally excitable disposition says and
does wild things, and even eventually commits self-murder
after a sudden and heavy disappointment, there is no
reason why vague charges should be advanced against
a young lady. To this, I answer that they are
welcome to their opinion. For my own part, I
ascribe the death of William Prescott, of Archibald
Reeves, and of John Barrington Cowles to this woman
with as much confidence as if I had seen her drive
a dagger into their hearts.
You ask me, no doubt, what my own
theory is which will explain all these strange facts.
I have none, or, at best, a dim and vague one.
That Miss Northcott possessed extraordinary powers
over the minds, and through the minds over the bodies,
of others, I am convinced, as well as that her instincts
were to use this power for base and cruel purposes.
That some even more fiendish and terrible phase of
character lay behind this some horrible
trait which it was necessary for her to reveal before
marriage is to be inferred from the experience
of her three lovers, while the dreadful nature of
the mystery thus revealed can only be surmised from
the fact that the very mention of it drove from her
those who had loved her so passionately. Their
subsequent fate was, in my opinion, the result of
her vindictive remembrance of their desertion of her,
and that they were forewarned of it at the time was
shown by the words of both Reeves and Cowles.
Above this, I can say nothing. I lay the facts
soberly before the public as they came under my notice.
I have never seen Miss Northcott since, nor do I wish
to do so. If by the words I have written I can
save any one human being from the snare of those bright
eyes and that beautiful face, then I can lay down my
pen with the assurance that my poor friend has not
died altogether in vain.