“It is finished,” said
the woman, speaking very quietly to herself. “Not
another day, nor a night, if I can be ready before
morning!”
She stood alone in her own room, with
none to mark the white-hot pallor of the oval face,
the scornful curve of quivering nostrils, the dry
lustre of flashing eyes. But while she stood a
heavy step went blustering down two flights of stairs,
and double doors slammed upon the ground floor.
It was a little London house, with
five floors from basement to attic, and a couple of
rooms upon each, like most little houses in London;
but this one had latterly been the scene of an equally
undistinguished drama of real life, upon which the
curtain was even now descending. Although a third
was whispered by the world, the persons of this drama
were really only two.
Rachel Minchin, before the disastrous
step which gave her that surname, was a young Australian
lady whose apparent attractions were only equalled
by her absolute poverty; that is to say, she had been
born at Heidelberg, near Melbourne, of English parents
more gentle than practical, who soon left her to fight
the world and the devil with no other armory than
a good face, a fine nature, and the pride of any heiress.
It is true that Rachel also had a voice; but there
was never enough of it to augur an income. At
twenty, therefore, she was already a governess in
the wilds, where women are as scarce as water, but
where the man for Rachel did not breathe. A few
years later she earned a berth to England as companion
to a lady; and her fate awaited her on board.
Mr. Minchin had reached his prime
in the underworld, of which he also was a native,
without touching affluence, until his fortieth year.
Nevertheless, he was a travelled man, and no mere nomad
of the bush. As a mining expert he had seen much
life in South Africa as well as in Western Australia,
but at last he was to see more in Europe as a gentleman
of means. A wife had no place in his European
scheme; a husband was the last thing Rachel wanted;
but a long sea voyage, an uncongenial employ, and
the persistent chivalry of a handsome, entertaining,
self-confident man of the world, formed a combination
as fatal to her inexperience as that of so much poverty,
pride, and beauty proved to Alexander Minchin.
They were married without ceremony on the very day
that they arrived in England, where they had not an
actual friend between them, nor a relative to whom
either was personally known. In the beginning
this mattered nothing; they had to see Europe and enjoy
themselves; that they could do unaided; and the bride
did it only the more thoroughly, in a sort of desperation,
as she realized that the benefits of her marriage
were to be wholly material after all.
In the larger life of cities, Alexander
Minchin was no longer the idle and good-humored cavalier
to whom Rachel had learned to look for unfailing consideration
at sea. The illustrative incidents may be omitted;
but here he gambled, there he drank; and in his cups
every virtue dissolved. Rachel’s pride
did not mend matters; she was a thought too ready
with her resentment; of this, however, she was herself
aware, and would forgive the more freely because there
was often some obvious fault on her side before all
was said. Quarrels of infinite bitterness were
thus patched up, and the end indefinitely delayed.
In the meantime, tired of travelling,
and impoverished by the husband’s follies, the
hapless couple returned to London, where a pure fluke
with some mining shares introduced Minchin to finer
gambling than he had found abroad. The man was
bitten. There was a fortune waiting for special
knowledge and a little ready cash; and Alexander Minchin
settled down to make it, taking for the nonce a furnished
house in a modest neighborhood. And here it was
that the quarrelling continued to its culmination
in the scene just ended.
“Not another day,” said
Rachel, “nor a night-if I can be ready
before morning!”
Being still a woman with some strength
of purpose, Mrs. Minchin did not stop at idle words.
The interval between the slamming of doors below and
another noise at the top of the house was not one of
many minutes. The other noise was made by Rachel
and her empty trunk upon the loftiest and the narrowest
flight of stairs; one of the maids opened their door
an inch.
“I am sorry if I disturbed you,”
their mistress said. “These stairs are
so very narrow. No, thank you, I can manage quite
well.” And they heard her about until they
slept.
It was no light task to which Rachel
had set her hand; she was going back to Australia
by the first boat, and her packing must be done that
night. Her resolve only hardened as her spirit
cooled. The sooner her departure, the less his
opposition; let her delay, and the callousness of
the passing brute might give place to the tyranny of
the normal man. But she was going, whether or
no; not another day-though she would doubtless
see its dawn. It was the month of September.
And she was not going to fly empty-handed, nor fly
at all; she was going deliberately away, with a trunk
containing all that she should want upon the voyage.
The selection was not too easily made. In his
better moods the creature had been lavish enough;
and more than once did Rachel snatch from drawer or
wardrobe that which remained some moments in her hand,
while the incidents of purchase and the first joys
of possession, to one who had possessed so little
in her life, came back to her with a certain poignancy.
But her resolve remained unshaken.
It might hurt her to take his personal gifts, but
that was all she had ever had from him; he had never
granted her a set allowance; for every penny she must
needs ask and look grateful. It would be no fault
of hers if she had to strip her fingers for passage-money.
Yet the exigency troubled her; it touched her honor,
to say nothing of her pride; and, after an unforeseen
fit of irresolution, Rachel suddenly determined to
tell her husband of her difficulty, making direct
appeal to the capricious generosity which had been
recalled to her mind as an undeniably redeeming point.
It was true that he had given her hearty leave to
go to the uttermost ends of the earth, and highly
probable that he would bid her work her own way.
She felt an impulse to put it to him, however, and
at once.
She looked at her watch-it
at least had been her mother’s-and
the final day was already an hour old. But Alexander
Minchin was a late sitter, as his young wife knew
to her cost, and to-night he had told her where he
meant to sleep, but she had not heard him come up.
The room would have been the back drawing-room in
the majority of such houses, and Rachel peeped in
on her way down. It was empty; moreover, the bed
was not made, nor the curtains drawn. Rachel repaired
the first omission, then hesitated, finally creeping
upstairs again for clean sheets. And as she made
his bed, not out of any lingering love for him, but
from a sense of duty and some consideration for his
comfort, there was yet something touching in her instinctive
care, that breathed the wife she could have been.
He did not hear her, though the stairs
creaked the smallness of the hour-or if
he heard he made no sign. This discouraged Rachel
as she stole down the lower flight; she would have
preferred the angriest sign. But there were few
internal sounds which penetrated to the little study
at the back of the dining-room, for the permanent tenant
was the widow of an eminent professor lately deceased,
and that student had protected his quiet with double
doors. The outer one, in dark red baize, made
an alarming noise as Rachel pulled it open; but, though
she waited, no sound came from within; nor was Minchin
disturbed by the final entry of his wife, whose first
glance convinced her of the cause. In the professor’s
armchair sat his unworthy successor, chin on waistcoat,
a newspaper across his knees, an empty decanter at
one elbow. Something remained in the glass beside
the bottle; he had tumbled off before the end.
There were even signs of deliberate preparations for
slumber, for the shade was tilted over the electric
light by which he had been reading, as a hat is tilted
over the eyes.
Rachel had a touch of pity at seeing
him in a chair for the night; but the testimony of
the decanter forbade remorse. She had filled it
herself in the evening against her husband’s
return from an absence of mysterious length.
Now she understood that mystery, and her face darkened
as she recalled the inconceivable insult which his
explanation had embraced. No, indeed; not another
minute that she could help! And he would sleep
there till all hours of the morning; he had done it
before; the longer the better, this time.
She had recoiled into the narrow hall,
driven by an uncontrollable revulsion; and there she
stood, pale and quivering with a disgust that only
deepened as she looked her last upon the shaded face
and the inanimate frame in the chair. Rachel
could not account for the intensity of her feeling;
it bordered upon nausea, and for a time prevented her
from retracing the single step which at length enabled
her to shut both doors as quietly as she had opened
them, after switching off the light from force of
habit. There was another light still glowing in
the hall, and, again from habit, Rachel put it out
also before setting foot upon the stairs. A moment
later she was standing terror-stricken in the dark.
It was no sound from the study, but
the tiniest of metallic rattles from the flap of the
letter-box in the front door. The wind might have
done it, for the flap had lost its spring; and, though
the noise was not repeated, to the wind Rachel put
it down, as she mounted the stairs at last in a flutter
that caused her both shame and apprehension. Her
nerve was going, and she needed it so! It should
not go; it should not; and as if to steady it, she
opened the landing window, and spent some minutes
gazing out into the cool and starry night. Not
that she could see very far. The backs of houses
hid half the stars in front and on either hand, making,
with the back of this house and its fellows, a kind
of square turned inside out. Miserable little
gardens glimmered through an irregular network of
grimy walls, with here and there a fair tree in autumnal
tatters; but Rachel looked neither at these nor at
the stars that lit them dimly. In a single window
of those right opposite a single lamp had burnt all
night. It was the only earthly light that Rachel
could see, the only one of earth or heaven upon which
she looked; and she discovered it with thanksgiving,
and tore her eyes away from it with a prayer.
In time the trunk was packed, and
incontinently carried downstairs, by an effort which
left Rachel racked in every muscle and swaying giddily.
But she could not have made much noise, for still there
was no sign from the study. She scarcely paused
to breathe. A latchkey closed the door behind
her very softly; she was in the crisp, clean air at
last.
But it was no hour for finding cabs;
it was the hour of the scavenger and no other being;
and Rachel walked into broad sunlight before she spied
a solitary hansom. It was then she did the strangest
thing; instead of driving straight back for her trunk,
when near the house she gave the cabman other directions,
subsequently stopping him at one with a card in the
window.
A woman answered the bell with surprising
celerity, and a face first startled and then incensed
at the sight of Mrs. Minchin.
“So you never came!” cried the woman,
bitterly.
“I was prevented,” Rachel replied coldly.
“Well?”
And the monosyllable was a whisper.
“He is still alive,” said the woman at
the door.
“Is that all?” asked Rachel, a catch in
her voice.
“It is all I’ll say till the doctor has
been.”
“But he has got through the
night,” sighed Rachel, thankfully. “I
could see the light in his room from hour to hour,
even though I could not come. Did you sit up
with him all night long?”
“Every minute of the night,”
said the other, with undisguised severity in her fixed
red eyes. “I never left him, and I never
closed a lid.”
“I am so sorry!” cried
Rachel, too sorry even for renewed indignation at
the cause. “But I couldn’t help it,”
she continued, “I really could not. We-I
am going abroad-very suddenly. Poor
Mr. Severino! I do wish there was anything I
could do! But you must get a professional nurse.
And when he does recover-for something
assures me that he will-you can tell him-”
Rachel hesitated, the red eyes reading hers.
“Tell him I hope he will recover
altogether,” she said at length; “mind,
altogether! I have gone away for good, tell Mr.
Severino; but, as I wasn’t able to do so after
all, I would rather you didn’t mention that I
ever thought of nursing him, or that I called last
thing to ask how he was.”
And that was her farewell message
to the very young man with whom a hole-and-corner
scandal had coupled Rachel Minchin’s name; it
was to be a final utterance in yet another respect,
and one of no slight or private significance, as the
sequel will show. Within a minute or two of its
delivery, Rachel was on her own doorstep for the last
time, deftly and gently turning the latchkey, while
the birds sang to frenzy in a neighboring garden,
and the early sun glanced fierily from the brass knocker
and letter-box. Another moment and the door had
been flung wide open by a police officer, who seemed
to fill the narrow hall, with a comrade behind him
and both servants on the stairs. And with little
further warning Mrs. Minchin was shown her husband,
seated much as she had left him in the professor’s
chair, but with his feet raised stiffly upon another,
and the hand of death over every inch of him in the
broad north light that filled the room.
The young widow stood gazing upon
her dead, and four pairs of eyes gazed yet more closely
at her. But there was little to gather from the
strained profile with the white cheek and the unyielding
lips. Not a cry had left them; she had but crossed
the threshold, and stopped that instant in the middle
of the worn carpet, the sharpest of silhouettes against
a background of grim tomes. There was no swaying
of the lissome figure, no snatching for support, no
question spoken or unspoken. In moments of acute
surprise the most surprising feature is often the way
in which we ourselves receive the shock; a sudden and
complete detachment, not the least common of immediate
results, makes us sometimes even conscious of our
failure to feel as we would or should; and it was
so with Rachel Minchin in the first moments of her
tragic freedom. So God had sundered whom God
had joined together! And this was the man whom
she had married for love; and she could look upon his
clay unmoved! Her mind leapt to a minor consideration,
that still made her shudder, as eight eyes noted from
the door; he must have been dead when she came down
and found him seated in shadow; she had misjudged the
dead, if not the living. The pose of the head
was unaltered, the chin upon the chest, the mouth
closed in death as naturally as in sleep. No
wonder his wife had been deceived. And yet there
was something unfamiliar, something negligent and
noble, and all unlike the living man; so that Rachel
could already marvel that she had not at once detected
this dignity and this distinction, only too foreign
to her husband as she had learnt to know him best,
but unattainable in the noblest save by death.
And her eyes had risen to the slice of sky in the
upper half of the window, and at last the tears were
rising in her eyes, when they filled instead with
sudden horror and enlightenment.
There was a jagged hole in the pane
above the hasp; an upset of ink on the desk beneath
the window; and the ink was drying with the dead man’s
blood, in which she now perceived him to be soaked,
while the newspaper on the floor beside him was crisp
as toast from that which it had hidden when she saw
him last.
“Murdered!” whispered
Rachel, breaking her long silence with a gasp.
“The work of thieves!”
The policemen exchanged a rapid glance.
“Looks like it,” said the one who had
opened the door, “I admit.”
There was a superfluous dryness in
his tone; but Rachel no more noticed this than the
further craning of heads in the doorway.
“But can you doubt it?”
she cried, pointing from the broken window to the
spilled ink. “Did you think that he had
shot himself?”
And her horror heightened at a thought
more terrible to her than all the rest. But the
constable shook his head.
“We should have found the pistol-which
we can’t,” said he. “But shot
he is, and through the heart.”
“Then who could it be but thieves?”
“That’s what we all want
to know,” said the officer; and still Rachel
had no time to think about his tone; for now she was
bending over the body, her white hands clenched, and
agony enough in her white face.
“Look! look!” she cried,
beckoning to them all. “He was wearing his
watch last night; that I can swear; and it has gone!”
“You are sure he was wearing
it?” asked the same constable, approaching.
“Absolutely certain.”
“Well, if that’s so,”
said he, “and it can’t be found, it will
be a point in your favor.”
Rachel sprang upright, her wet eyes
wide with pure astonishment.
“In my favor?” she cried.
“Will you have the goodness to explain yourself?”
The constables were standing on either side of her
now.
“Well,” replied the spokesman
of the pair, “I don’t like the way that
window’s broken, for one thing, and if you look
at it you’ll see what I mean. The broken
glass is all outside on the sill. But that’s
not all, ma’am; and, as you have a cab, we might
do worse than drive to the station before more people
are about.”