Having given the statement of Israel
Stakes in extenso, I shall append a short memorandum
from Dr. Easterling, now practising at Stranraer.
It is true that the doctor was only once within the
walls of Cloomber during its tenancy by General Heatherstone,
but there were some circumstances connected with this
visit which made it valuable, especially when considered
as a supplement to the experiences which I have just
submitted to the reader.
The doctor has found time amid the
calls of a busy country practice to jot down his recollections,
and I feel that I cannot do better than subjoin them
exactly as they stand.
I have very much pleasure in furnishing
Mr. Fothergill West with an account of my solitary
visit to Cloomber Hall, not only on account of the
esteem which I have formed for that gentleman ever
since his residence at Branksome, but also because
it is my conviction that the facts in the case of
General Heatherstone are of such a singular nature
that it is of the highest importance that they should
be placed before the public in a trustworthy manner.
It was about the beginning of September
of last year that I received a note from Mrs. Heatherstone,
of Cloomber Hall, desiring me to make a professional
call upon her husband, whose health, she said, had
been for some time in a very unsatisfactory state.
I had heard something of the Heatherstones
and of the strange seclusion in which they lived,
so that I was very much pleased at this opportunity
of making their closer acquaintance, and lost no time
in complying with her request.
I had known the Hall in the old days
of Mr. McVittie, the original proprietor, and I was
astonished on arriving at the avenue gate to observe
the changes which had taken place.
The gate itself, which used to yawn
so hospitably upon the road, was now barred and locked,
and a high wooden fence, with nails upon the top,
encircled the whole grounds. The drive itself
was leaf-strewn and uncared-for, and the whole place
had a depressing air of neglect and decay.
I had to knock twice before a servant-maid
opened the door and showed me through a dingy hall
into a small room, where sat an elderly, careworn
lady, who introduced herself as Mrs. Heatherstone.
With her pale face, her grey hair, her sad, colourless
eyes, and her faded silk dress, she was in perfect
keeping with her melancholy surroundings.
“You find us in much trouble,
doctor,” she said, in a quiet, refined voice.
“My poor husband has had a great deal to worry
him, and his nervous system for a long time has been
in a very weak state. We came to this part of
the country in the hope that the bracing air and the
quiet would have a good effect upon him. Instead
of improving, however, he has seemed to grow weaker,
and this morning he is in a high fever and a little
inclined to be delirious. The children and I were
so frightened that we sent for you at once. If
you will follow me I will take you to the general’s
bedroom.”
She led the way down a series of corridors
to the chamber of the sick man, which was situated
in the extreme wing of the building.
It was a carpetless, bleak-looking
room, scantily furnished with a small truckle bed,
a campaigning chair, and a plain deal table, on which
were scattered numerous papers and books. In
the centre of this table there stood a large object
of irregular outline, which was covered over with a
sheet of linen.
All round the walls and in the corners
were arranged a very choice and varied collection
of arms, principally swords, some of which were of
the straight pattern in common use in the British Army,
while among the others were scimitars, tulwars, cuchurries,
and a score of other specimens of Oriental workmanship.
Many of these were richly mounted, with inlaid sheaths
and hilts sparkling with precious stones, so that
there was a piquant contrast between the simplicity
of the apartment and the wealth which glittered on
the walls.
I had little time, however, to observe
the general’s collection, since the general
himself lay upon the couch and was evidently in sore
need of my services.
He was lying with his head turned
half away from us. Breathing heavily, and apparently
unconscious of our presence. His bright, staring
eyes and the deep, hectic flush upon his cheek showed
that his fever was at its height.
I advanced to the bedside, and, stooping
over him, I placed my fingers upon his pulse, when
immediately he sprang up into the sitting position
and struck at me frenziedly with his clenched hands.
I have never seen such intensity of fear and horror
stamped upon a human face as appeared upon that that
which was now glaring up at me.
“Bloodhound!” he yelled;
“let me go let me go, I say!
Keep your hands off me! Is it not enough that
my life has been ruined? When is it all to end?
How long am I to endure it?”
“Hush, dear, hush!” said
his wife in a soothing voice, passing her cool hand
over his heated forehead. “This is Doctor
Easterling, from Stranraer. He has not come to
harm you, but to do you good.”
The general dropped wearily back upon
his pillow, and I could see by the changed expression
of his face that his delirium had left him, and that
he understood what had been said.
I slipped my clinical thermometer
into his armpit and counted his pulse rate. It
amounted to 120 per minute, and his temperature proved
to be 104 degrees. Clearly it was a case of remittent
fever, such as occurs in men who have spent a great
part of their lives in the tropics.
“There is no danger,”
I remarked. “With a little quinine and arsenic
we shall very soon overcome the attack and restore
his health.”
“No danger, eh?” he said.
“There never is any danger for me. I am
as hard to kill as the Wandering Jew. I am quite
clear in the head now, Mary; so you may leave me with
the doctor.”
Mrs. Heatherstone left the room-rather
unwillingly, as I thought and I sat down
by the bedside to listen to anything which my patient
might have to communicate.
“I want you to examine my liver,”
he said when the door was closed. “I used
to have an abscess there, and Brodie, the staff-surgeon,
said that it was ten to one that it would carry me
off. I have not felt much of it since I left
the East. This is where it used to be, just under
the angle of the ribs.”
“I can find the place,”
said I, after making a careful examination; “but
I am happy to tell you that the abscess has either
been entirely absorbed, or has turned calcareous,
as these solitary abscesses will. There is no
fear of its doing you any harm now.”
He seemed to be by no means overjoyed
at the intelligence.
“Things always happen so with
me,” he said moodily. “Now, if another
fellow was feverish and delirious he would surely be
in some danger, and yet you will tell me that I am
in none. Look at this, now.” He bared
his chest and showed me a puckered wound over the region
of the heart. “That’s where the jezail
bullet of a Hillman went in. You would think
that was in the right spot to settle a man, and yet
what does it do but glance upon a rib, and go clean
round and out at the back, without so much as penetrating
what you medicos call the pleura. Did ever you
hear of such a thing?”
“You were certainly born under
a lucky star,” I observed, with a smile.
“That’s a matter of opinion,”
he answered, shaking his head. “Death has
no terrors for me, if it will but come in some familiar
form, but I confess that the anticipation of some
strange, some preternatural form of death is very
terrible and unnerving.”
“You mean,” said I, rather
puzzled at his remark, “that you would prefer
a natural death to a death by violence?”
“No, I don’t mean that
exactly,” he answered. “I am too familiar
with cold steel and lead to be afraid of either.
Do you know anything about odyllic force, doctor?”
“No, I do not,” I replied,
glancing sharply at him to see if there were any signs
of his delirium returning. His expression was
intelligent, however, and the feverish flush had faded
from his cheeks.
“Ah, you Western scientific
men are very much behind the day in some things,”
he remarked. “In all that is material and
conducive to the comfort of the body you are pre-eminent,
but in what concerns the subtle forces of Nature and
the latent powers of the human spirit your best men
are centuries behind the humblest coolies of India.
Countless generations of beef-eating, comfort loving
ancestors have given our animal instincts the command
over our spiritual ones. The body, which should
have been a mere tool for the use of the soul, has
now become a degrading prison in which it is confined.
The Oriental soul and body are not so welded together
as ours are, and there is far less wrench when they
part in death.”
“They do not appear to derive
much benefit from this peculiarity in their organisation,”
I remarked incredulously.
“Merely the benefit of superior
knowledge,” the general answered. “If
you were to go to India, probably the very first thing
you would see in the way of amusement would be a native
doing what is called the mango trick. Of course
you have heard or read of it. The fellow plants
a mango seed, and makes passes over it until it sprouts
and bears leaves and fruit all in the space
of half-an-hour. It is not really a trick it
is a power. These men know more than your Tyndalls
or Huxleys do about Nature’s processes, and
they can accelerate or retard her workings by subtle
means of which we have no conception. These low-caste
conjurers as they are called are
mere vulgar dabblers, but the men who have trod the
higher path are as far superior to us in knowledge
as we are to the Hottentots or Patagonians.”
“You speak as if you were well
acquainted with them,” I remarked.
“To my cost, I am,” he
answered. “I have been brought in contact
with them in a way in which I trust no other poor
chap ever will be. But, really, as regards odyllic
force, you ought to know something of it, for it has
a great future before it in your profession. You
should read Reichcnbach’s ‘Researches
on Magnetism and Vital Force,’ and Gregory’s
‘Letters on Animal Magnetism.’ These,
supplemented by the twenty-seven Aphorisms of Mesmer,
and the works of Dr. Justinus Kerner, of Weinsberg,
would enlarge your ideas.”
I did not particularly relish having
a course of reading prescribed for me on a subject
connected with my own profession, so I made no comment,
but rose to take my departure. Before doing so
I felt his pulse once more, and found that the fever
had entirely left him in the sudden, unaccountable
fashion which is peculiar to these malarious types
of disease.
I turned my face towards him to congratulate
him upon his improvement, and stretched out my hand
at the same time to pick my gloves from the table,
with the result that I raised not only my own property,
but also the linen cloth which was arranged over some
object in the centre.
I might not have noticed what I had
done had I not seen an angry look upon the invalid’s
face and heard him utter an impatient exclamation.
I at once turned, and replaced the cloth so promptly
that I should have been unable to say what was underneath
it, beyond having a general impression that it looked
like a bride-cake.
“All right, doctor,” the
general said good-humouredly, perceiving how entirely
accidental the incident was. “There is no
reason why you should not see it,” and stretching
out his hand, he pulled away the linen covering for
the second time.
I then perceived that what I had taken
for a bride-cake was really an admirably executed
model of a lofty range of mountains, whose snow-clad
peaks were not unlike the familiar sugar pinnacles
and minarets.
“These are the Himalayas, or
at least the Surinam branch of them,” he remarked,
“showing the principal passes between India and
Afghanistan. It is an excellent model. This
ground has a special interest for me, because it is
the scene of my first campaign. There is the pass
opposite Kalabagh and the Thul valley, where I was
engaged during the summer of 1841 in protecting the
convoys and keeping the Afridis in order. It
wasn’t a sinecure, I promise you.”
“And this,” said I, indicating
a blood-red spot which had been marked on one side
of the pass which he had pointed out “this
is the scene of some fight in which you were engaged.”
“Yes, we had a skirmish there,”
he answered, leaning forward and looking at the red
mark. “We were attacked by ”
At this moment he fell back upon his
pillow as if he had been shot, while the same look
of horror came over his face which I had observed
when I first entered the room. At the same instant
there came, apparently from the air immediately above
his bed, a sharp, ringing, tinkling sound, which I
can only compare with the noise made by a bicycle
alarm, though it differed from this in having a distinctly
throbbing character. I have never, before or since,
heard any sound which could be confounded with it.
I stared round in astonishment, wondering
where it could have come from, but without perceiving
anything to which it could be ascribed.
“It’s all right, doctor,”
the general said with a ghastly smile. “It’s
only my private gong. Perhaps you had better step
downstairs and write my prescription in the dining-room.”
He was evidently anxious to get rid
of me, so I was forced to take my departure, though
I would gladly have stayed a little longer, in the
hope of learning something as to the origin of the
mysterious sound.
I drove away from the house with the
full determination of calling again upon my interesting
patient, and endeavouring to elicit some further particulars
as to his past life and his present circumstances.
I was destined, however, to be disappointed, for I
received that very evening a note from the general
himself, enclosing a handsome fee for my single visit,
and informing me that my treatment had done him so
much good that he considered himself to be convalescent,
and would not trouble me to see him again.
This was the last and only communication
which I ever received from the tenant of Cloomber.
I have been asked frequently by neighbours
and others who were interested in the matter whether
he gave me the impression of insanity. To this
I must unhesitatingly answer in the negative.
On the contrary, his remarks gave me the idea of a
man who had both read and thought deeply.
I observed, however, during our single
interview, that his reflexes were feeble, his arcus
senilis well marked, and his arteries atheromatous all
signs that his constitution was in an unsatisfactory
condition, and that a sudden crisis might be apprehended.