As first published in Scribner’s Magazine, March
1909
CHAPTER I
Hubert Granice, pacing the length
of his pleasant lamp-lit library, paused to compare
his watch with the clock on the chimney-piece.
Three minutes to eight.
In exactly three minutes Mr. Peter
Ascham, of the eminent legal firm of Ascham and Pettilow,
would have his punctual hand on the door-bell of the
flat. It was a comfort to reflect that Ascham
was so punctual the suspense was beginning
to make his host nervous. And the sound of the
door-bell would be the beginning of the end after
that there’d be no going back, by God no
going back!
Granice resumed his pacing. Each
time he reached the end of the room opposite the door
he caught his reflection in the Florentine mirror
above the fine old walnut credence he had picked up
at Dijon saw himself spare, quick-moving,
carefully brushed and dressed, but furrowed, gray
about the temples, with a stoop which he corrected
by a spasmodic straightening of the shoulders whenever
a glass confronted him: a tired middle-aged man,
baffled, beaten, worn out.
As he summed himself up thus for the
third or fourth time the door opened and he turned
with a thrill of relief to greet his guest. But
it was only the man-servant who entered, advancing
silently over the mossy surface of the old Turkey
rug.
“Mr. Ascham telephones, sir,
to say he’s unexpectedly detained and can’t
be here till eight-thirty.”
Granice made a curt gesture of annoyance.
It was becoming harder and harder for him to control
these reflexes. He turned on his heel, tossing
to the servant over his shoulder: “Very
good. Put off dinner.”
Down his spine he felt the man’s
injured stare. Mr. Granice had always been so
mild-spoken to his people no doubt the odd
change in his manner had already been noticed and
discussed below stairs. And very likely they
suspected the cause. He stood drumming on the
writing-table till he heard the servant go out; then
he threw himself into a chair, propping his elbows
on the table and resting his chin on his locked hands.
Another half hour alone with it!
He wondered irritably what could have
detained his guest. Some professional matter,
no doubt the punctilious lawyer would have
allowed nothing less to interfere with a dinner engagement,
more especially since Granice, in his note, had said:
“I shall want a little business chat afterward.”
But what professional matter could
have come up at that unprofessional hour? Perhaps
some other soul in misery had called on the lawyer;
and, after all, Granice’s note had given no
hint of his own need! No doubt Ascham thought
he merely wanted to make another change in his will.
Since he had come into his little property, ten years
earlier, Granice had been perpetually tinkering with
his will.
Suddenly another thought pulled him
up, sending a flush to his sallow temples. He
remembered a word he had tossed to the lawyer some
six weeks earlier, at the Century Club. “Yes my
play’s as good as taken. I shall be calling
on you soon to go over the contract. Those theatrical
chaps are so slippery I won’t trust
anybody but you to tie the knot for me!” That,
of course, was what Ascham would think he was wanted
for. Granice, at the idea, broke into an audible
laugh a queer stage-laugh, like the cackle
of a baffled villain in a melodrama. The absurdity,
the unnaturalness of the sound abashed him, and he
compressed his lips angrily. Would he take to
soliloquy next?
He lowered his arms and pulled open
the upper drawer of the writing-table. In the
right-hand corner lay a thick manuscript, bound in
paper folders, and tied with a string beneath which
a letter had been slipped. Next to the manuscript
was a small revolver. Granice stared a moment
at these oddly associated objects; then he took the
letter from under the string and slowly began to open
it. He had known he should do so from the moment
his hand touched the drawer. Whenever his eye
fell on that letter some relentless force compelled
him to re-read it.
It was dated about four weeks back,
under the letter-head of “The Diversity Theatre.”
“My dear Mr. Granice:
“I have given the matter my
best consideration for the last month, and it’s
no use the play won’t do. I have
talked it over with Miss Melrose and you
know there isn’t a gamer artist on our stage and
I regret to tell you she feels just as I do about
it. It isn’t the poetry that scares her or
me either. We both want to do all we can to help
along the poetic drama we believe the public’s
ready for it, and we’re willing to take a big
financial risk in order to be the first to give them
what they want. But we don’t
believe they could be made
to want this. The fact is, there
isn’t enough drama in your play to the allowance
of poetry the thing drags all through.
You’ve got a big idea, but it’s not out
of swaddling clothes.
“If this was your first play
I’d say: Try again. But it
has been just the same with all the others you’ve
shown me. And you remember the result of ‘The
Lee Shore,’ where you carried all the expenses
of production yourself, and we couldn’t fill
the theatre for a week. Yet ‘The Lee Shore’
was a modern problem play much easier to
swing than blank verse. It isn’t as if
you hadn’t tried all kinds ”
Granice folded the letter and put
it carefully back into the envelope. Why on earth
was he re-reading it, when he knew every phrase in
it by heart, when for a month past he had seen it,
night after night, stand out in letters of flame against
the darkness of his sleepless lids?
“It has been
just the same with all the
others you’ve shown me.”
That was the way they dismissed ten
years of passionate unremitting work!
“You remember the result
of ‘the Lee Shore.’”
Good God as if he were
likely to forget it! He re-lived it all now in
a drowning flash: the persistent rejection of
the play, his sudden resolve to put it on at his own
cost, to spend ten thousand dollars of his inheritance
on testing his chance of success the fever
of preparation, the dry-mouthed agony of the “first
night,” the flat fall, the stupid press, his
secret rush to Europe to escape the condolence of his
friends!
“It isn’t as if you
hadn’t tried all kinds.”
No he had tried all kinds:
comedy, tragedy, prose and verse, the light curtain-raiser,
the short sharp drama, the bourgeois-realistic and
the lyrical-romantic finally deciding that
he would no longer “prostitute his talent”
to win popularity, but would impose on the public his
own theory of art in the form of five acts of blank
verse. Yes, he had offered them everything and
always with the same result.
Ten years of it ten years
of dogged work and unrelieved failure. The ten
years from forty to fifty the best ten years
of his life! And if one counted the years before,
the silent years of dreams, assimilation, preparation then
call it half a man’s life-time: half a man’s
life-time thrown away!
And what was he to do with the remaining
half? Well, he had settled that, thank God!
He turned and glanced anxiously at the clock.
Ten minutes past eight only ten minutes
had been consumed in that stormy rush through his
whole past! And he must wait another twenty minutes
for Ascham. It was one of the worst symptoms
of his case that, in proportion as he had grown to
shrink from human company, he dreaded more and more
to be alone.... But why the devil was he waiting
for Ascham? Why didn’t he cut the knot
himself? Since he was so unutterably sick of the
whole business, why did he have to call in an outsider
to rid him of this nightmare of living?
He opened the drawer again and laid
his hand on the revolver. It was a small slim
ivory toy just the instrument for a tired
sufferer to give himself a “hypodermic”
with. Granice raised it slowly in one hand, while
with the other he felt under the thin hair at the back
of his head, between the ear and the nape. He
knew just where to place the muzzle: he had once
got a young surgeon to show him. And as he found
the spot, and lifted the revolver to it, the inevitable
phenomenon occurred. The hand that held the weapon
began to shake, the tremor communicated itself to
his arm, his heart gave a wild leap which sent up a
wave of deadly nausea to his throat, he smelt the
powder, he sickened at the crash of the bullet through
his skull, and a sweat of fear broke out over his
forehead and ran down his quivering face...
He laid away the revolver with an
oath and, pulling out a cologne-scented handkerchief,
passed it tremulously over his brow and temples.
It was no use he knew he could never do
it in that way. His attempts at self-destruction
were as futile as his snatches at fame! He couldn’t
make himself a real life, and he couldn’t get
rid of the life he had. And that was why he had
sent for Ascham to help him...
The lawyer, over the Camembert and
Burgundy, began to excuse himself for his delay.
“I didn’t like to say
anything while your man was about but the
fact is, I was sent for on a rather unusual matter ”
“Oh, it’s all right,”
said Granice cheerfully. He was beginning to
feel the usual reaction that food and company produced.
It was not any recovered pleasure in life that he
felt, but only a deeper withdrawal into himself.
It was easier to go on automatically with the social
gestures than to uncover to any human eye the abyss
within him.
“My dear fellow, it’s
sacrilege to keep a dinner waiting especially
the production of an artist like yours.”
Mr. Ascham sipped his Burgundy luxuriously. “But
the fact is, Mrs. Ashgrove sent for me.”
Granice raised his head with a quick
movement of surprise. For a moment he was shaken
out of his self-absorption.
“Mrs. Ashgrove?”
Ascham smiled. “I thought
you’d be interested; I know your passion for
causes célèbres. And this promises to be
one. Of course it’s out of our line entirely we
never touch criminal cases. But she wanted to
consult me as a friend. Ashgrove was a distant
connection of my wife’s. And, by Jove,
it is a queer case!” The servant re-entered,
and Ascham snapped his lips shut.
Would the gentlemen have their coffee in the dining-room?
“No serve it in the
library,” said Granice, rising. He led the
way back to the curtained confidential room.
He was really curious to hear what Ascham had to tell
him.
While the coffee and cigars were being
served he fidgeted about the library, glancing at
his letters the usual meaningless notes
and bills and picking up the evening paper.
As he unfolded it a headline caught his eye.
“RoseMelrose wants to
play poetry.
“Thinks she has
found her
Poet.”
He read on with a thumping heart found
the name of a young author he had barely heard of,
saw the title of a play, a “poetic drama,”
dance before his eyes, and dropped the paper, sick,
disgusted. It was true, then she was
“game” it was not the manner
but the matter she mistrusted!
Granice turned to the servant, who
seemed to be purposely lingering. “I shan’t
need you this evening, Flint. I’ll lock
up myself.”
He fancied the man’s acquiescence
implied surprise. What was going on, Flint seemed
to wonder, that Mr. Granice should want him out of
the way? Probably he would find a pretext for
coming back to see. Granice suddenly felt himself
enveloped in a network of espionage.
As the door closed he threw himself
into an armchair and leaned forward to take a light
from Ascham’s cigar.
“Tell me about Mrs. Ashgrove,”
he said, seeming to himself to speak stiffly, as if
his lips were cracked.
“Mrs. Ashgrove? Well, there’s not
much to tell.”
“And you couldn’t if there were?”
Granice smiled.
“Probably not. As a matter
of fact, she wanted my advice about her choice of
counsel. There was nothing especially confidential
in our talk.”
“And what’s your impression, now you’ve
seen her?”
“My impression is, very distinctly, that
nothing will ever be known.”
“Ah ?” Granice murmured, puffing
at his cigar.
“I’m more and more convinced
that whoever poisoned Ashgrove knew his business,
and will consequently never be found out. That’s
a capital cigar you’ve given me.”
“You like it? I get them
over from Cuba.” Granice examined his own
reflectively. “Then you believe in the theory
that the clever criminals never are caught?”
“Of course I do. Look about
you look back for the last dozen years none
of the big murder problems are ever solved.”
The lawyer ruminated behind his blue cloud. “Why,
take the instance in your own family: I’d
forgotten I had an illustration at hand! Take
old Joseph Lenman’s murder do you
suppose that will ever be explained?”
As the words dropped from Ascham’s
lips his host looked slowly about the library, and
every object in it stared back at him with a stale
unescapable familiarity. How sick he was of looking
at that room! It was as dull as the face of a
wife one has wearied of. He cleared his throat
slowly; then he turned his head to the lawyer and said:
“I could explain the Lenman murder myself.”
Ascham’s eye kindled: he
shared Granice’s interest in criminal cases.
“By Jove! You’ve
had a theory all this time? It’s odd you
never mentioned it. Go ahead and tell me.
There are certain features in the Lenman case not
unlike this Ashgrove affair, and your idea may be a
help.”
Granice paused and his eye reverted
instinctively to the table drawer in which the revolver
and the manuscript lay side by side. What if he
were to try another appeal to Rose Melrose? Then
he looked at the notes and bills on the table, and
the horror of taking up again the lifeless routine
of life of performing the same automatic
gestures another day displaced his fleeting
vision.
“I haven’t a theory. I know
who murdered Joseph Lenman.”
Ascham settled himself comfortably in his chair, prepared
for enjoyment.
“You know? Well, who did?” he
laughed.
“I did,” said Granice, rising.
He stood before Ascham, and the lawyer
lay back staring up at him. Then he broke into
another laugh.
“Why, this is glorious!
You murdered him, did you? To inherit his money,
I suppose? Better and better! Go on, my boy!
Unbosom yourself! Tell me all about it!
Confession is good for the soul.”
Granice waited till the lawyer had
shaken the last peal of laughter from his throat;
then he repeated doggedly: “I murdered him.”
The two men looked at each other for
a long moment, and this time Ascham did not laugh.
“Granice!”
“I murdered him to get his money,
as you say.”
There was another pause, and Granice,
with a vague underlying sense of amusement, saw his
guest’s look change from pleasantry to apprehension.
“What’s the joke, my dear fellow?
I fail to see.”
“It’s not a joke.
It’s the truth. I murdered him.”
He had spoken painfully at first, as if there were
a knot in his throat; but each time he repeated the
words he found they were easier to say.
Ascham laid down his extinct cigar.
“What’s the matter? Aren’t
you well? What on earth are you driving at?”
“I’m perfectly well.
But I murdered my cousin, Joseph Lenman, and I want
it known that I murdered him.”
“You want it known?”
“Yes. That’s why
I sent for you. I’m sick of living, and
when I try to kill myself I funk it.” He
spoke quite naturally now, as if the knot in his throat
had been untied.
“Good Lord good Lord,” the
lawyer gasped.
“But I suppose,” Granice
continued, “there’s no doubt this would
be murder in the first degree? I’m sure
of the chair if I own up?”
Ascham drew a long breath; then he said slowly:
“Sit down, Granice.
Let’s talk.”
CHAPTER II
Granice told his story simply, connectedly.
He began by a quick survey of his
early years the years of drudgery and privation.
His father, a charming man who could never say “no,”
had so signally failed to say it on certain essential
occasions that when he died he left an illegitimate
family and a mortgaged estate. His lawful kin
found themselves hanging over a gulf of debt, and young
Granice, to support his mother and sister, had to
leave Harvard and bury himself at eighteen in a broker’s
office. He loathed his work, and he was always
poor, always worried and in ill-health. A few
years later his mother died, but his sister, an ineffectual
neurasthenic, remained on his hands. His own
health gave out, and he had to go away for six months,
and work harder than ever when he came back. He
had no knack for business, no head for figures, no
dimmest insight into the mysteries of commerce.
He wanted to travel and write those were
his inmost longings. And as the years dragged
on, and he neared middle-age without making any more
money, or acquiring any firmer health, a sick despair
possessed him. He tried writing, but he always
came home from the office so tired that his brain
could not work. For half the year he did not reach
his dim up-town flat till after dark, and could only
“brush up” for dinner, and afterward lie
on the lounge with his pipe, while his sister droned
through the evening paper. Sometimes he spent
an evening at the theatre; or he dined out, or, more
rarely, strayed off with an acquaintance or two in
quest of what is known as “pleasure.”
And in summer, when he and Kate went to the sea-side
for a month, he dozed through the days in utter weariness.
Once he fell in love with a charming girl but
what had he to offer her, in God’s name?
She seemed to like him, and in common decency he had
to drop out of the running. Apparently no one
replaced him, for she never married, but grew stoutish,
grayish, philanthropic yet how sweet she
had been when he had first kissed her! One more
wasted life, he reflected...
But the stage had always been his
master-passion. He would have sold his soul for
the time and freedom to write plays! It was in
him he could not remember when it
had not been his deepest-seated instinct. As the
years passed it became a morbid, a relentless obsession yet
with every year the material conditions were more
and more against it. He felt himself growing
middle-aged, and he watched the reflection of the
process in his sister’s wasted face. At
eighteen she had been pretty, and as full of enthusiasm
as he. Now she was sour, trivial, insignificant she
had missed her chance of life. And she had no
resources, poor creature, was fashioned simply for
the primitive functions she had been denied the chance
to fulfil! It exasperated him to think of it and
to reflect that even now a little travel, a little
health, a little money, might transform her, make her
young and desirable... The chief fruit of his
experience was that there is no such fixed state as
age or youth there is only health as against
sickness, wealth as against poverty; and age or youth
as the outcome of the lot one draws.
At this point in his narrative Granice
stood up, and went to lean against the mantel-piece,
looking down at Ascham, who had not moved from his
seat, or changed his attitude of rigid fascinated attention.
“Then came the summer when we
went to Wrenfield to be near old Lenman my
mother’s cousin, as you know. Some of the
family always mounted guard over him generally
a niece or so. But that year they were all scattered,
and one of the nieces offered to lend us her cottage
if we’d relieve her of duty for two months.
It was a nuisance for me, of course, for Wrenfield
is two hours from town; but my mother, who was a slave
to family observances, had always been good to the
old man, so it was natural we should be called on and
there was the saving of rent and the good air for
Kate. So we went.
“You never knew Joseph Lenman?
Well, picture to yourself an amoeba or some primitive
organism of that sort, under a Titan’s microscope.
He was large, undifferentiated, inert since
I could remember him he had done nothing but take
his temperature and read the Churchman. Oh, and
cultivate melons that was his hobby.
Not vulgar, out-of-door melons his were
grown under glass. He had miles of it at Wrenfield his
big kitchen-garden was surrounded by blinking battalions
of green-houses. And in nearly all of them melons
were grown early melons and late, French,
English, domestic dwarf melons and monsters:
every shape, colour and variety. They were petted
and nursed like children a staff of trained
attendants waited on them. I’m not sure
they didn’t have a doctor to take their temperature at
any rate the place was full of thermometers.
And they didn’t sprawl on the ground like ordinary
melons; they were trained against the glass like nectarines,
and each melon hung in a net which sustained its weight
and left it free on all sides to the sun and air...
“It used to strike me sometimes
that old Lenman was just like one of his own melons the
pale-fleshed English kind. His life, apathetic
and motionless, hung in a net of gold, in an equable
warm ventilated atmosphere, high above sordid earthly
worries. The cardinal rule of his existence was
not to let himself be ’worried.’...
I remember his advising me to try it myself, one day
when I spoke to him about Kate’s bad health,
and her need of a change. ‘I never let myself
worry,’ he said complacently. ’It’s
the worst thing for the liver and you look
to me as if you had a liver. Take my advice and
be cheerful. You’ll make yourself happier
and others too.’ And all he had to do was
to write a cheque, and send the poor girl off for
a holiday!
“The hardest part of it was
that the money half-belonged to us already. The
old skin-flint only had it for life, in trust for us
and the others. But his life was a good deal
sounder than mine or Kate’s and one
could picture him taking extra care of it for the
joke of keeping us waiting. I always felt that
the sight of our hungry eyes was a tonic to him.
“Well, I tried to see if I couldn’t
reach him through his vanity. I flattered him,
feigned a passionate interest in his melons. And
he was taken in, and used to discourse on them by
the hour. On fine days he was driven to the green-houses
in his pony-chair, and waddled through them, prodding
and leering at the fruit, like a fat Turk in his seraglio.
When he bragged to me of the expense of growing them
I was reminded of a hideous old Lothario bragging
of what his pleasures cost. And the resemblance
was completed by the fact that he couldn’t eat
as much as a mouthful of his melons had
lived for years on buttermilk and toast. ‘But,
after all, it’s my only hobby why
shouldn’t I indulge it?’ he said sentimentally.
As if I’d ever been able to indulge any of mine!
On the keep of those melons Kate and I could have
lived like gods...
“One day toward the end of the
summer, when Kate was too unwell to drag herself up
to the big house, she asked me to go and spend the
afternoon with cousin Joseph. It was a lovely
soft September afternoon a day to lie under
a Roman stone-pine, with one’s eyes on the sky,
and let the cosmic harmonies rush through one.
Perhaps the vision was suggested by the fact that,
as I entered cousin Joseph’s hideous black walnut
library, I passed one of the under-gardeners, a handsome
full-throated Italian, who dashed out in such a hurry
that he nearly knocked me down. I remember thinking
it queer that the fellow, whom I had often seen about
the melon-houses, did not bow to me, or even seem to
see me.
“Cousin Joseph sat in his usual
seat, behind the darkened windows, his fat hands folded
on his protuberant waistcoat, the last number of the
Churchman at his elbow, and near it, on a huge dish,
a fat melon the fattest melon I’d
ever seen. As I looked at it I pictured the ecstasy
of contemplation from which I must have roused him,
and congratulated myself on finding him in such a
mood, since I had made up my mind to ask him a favour.
Then I noticed that his face, instead of looking as
calm as an egg-shell, was distorted and whimpering and
without stopping to greet me he pointed passionately
to the melon.
“’Look at it, look at
it did you ever see such a beauty?
Such firmness roundness such
delicious smoothness to the touch?’ It was as
if he had said ‘she’ instead of ‘it,’
and when he put out his senile hand and touched the
melon I positively had to look the other way.
“Then he told me what had happened.
The Italian under-gardener, who had been specially
recommended for the melon-houses though
it was against my cousin’s principles to employ
a Papist had been assigned to the care
of the monster: for it had revealed itself, early
in its existence, as destined to become a monster,
to surpass its plumpest, pulpiest sisters, carry off
prizes at agricultural shows, and be photographed and
celebrated in every gardening paper in the land.
The Italian had done well seemed to have
a sense of responsibility. And that very morning
he had been ordered to pick the melon, which was to
be shown next day at the county fair, and to bring
it in for Mr. Lenman to gaze on its blonde virginity.
But in picking it, what had the damned scoundrelly
Jesuit done but drop it drop it crash on
the sharp spout of a watering-pot, so that it received
a deep gash in its firm pale rotundity, and was henceforth
but a bruised, ruined, fallen melon?
“The old man’s rage was
fearful in its impotence he shook, spluttered
and strangled with it. He had just had the Italian
up and had sacked him on the spot, without wages or
character had threatened to have him arrested
if he was ever caught prowling about Wrenfield.
’By God, and I’ll do it I’ll
write to Washington I’ll have the
pauper scoundrel deported! I’ll show him
what money can do!’ As likely as not there was
some murderous Black-hand business under it it
would be found that the fellow was a member of a ‘gang.’
Those Italians would murder you for a quarter.
He meant to have the police look into it... And
then he grew frightened at his own excitement.
‘But I must calm myself,’ he said.
He took his temperature, rang for his drops, and turned
to the Churchman. He had been reading an article
on Nestorianism when the melon was brought in.
He asked me to go on with it, and I read to him for
an hour, in the dim close room, with a fat fly buzzing
stealthily about the fallen melon.
“All the while one phrase of
the old man’s buzzed in my brain like the fly
about the melon. ‘I’ll show
him what money can do!’
Good heaven! If I could but show the old man!
If I could make him see his power of giving happiness
as a new outlet for his monstrous egotism! I tried
to tell him something about my situation and Kate’s spoke
of my ill-health, my unsuccessful drudgery, my longing
to write, to make myself a name I stammered
out an entreaty for a loan. ’I can guarantee
to repay you, sir I’ve a half-written
play as security...’
“I shall never forget his glassy
stare. His face had grown as smooth as an egg-shell
again his eyes peered over his fat cheeks
like sentinels over a slippery rampart.
“‘A half-written play a
play of yours as security?’ He looked at
me almost fearfully, as if detecting the first symptoms
of insanity. ’Do you understand anything
of business?’ he enquired mildly. I laughed
and answered: ‘No, not much.’
“He leaned back with closed
lids. ’All this excitement has been too
much for me,’ he said. ‘If you’ll
excuse me, I’ll prepare for my nap.’
And I stumbled out of the room, blindly, like the
Italian.”
Granice moved away from the mantel-piece,
and walked across to the tray set out with decanters
and soda-water. He poured himself a tall glass
of soda-water, emptied it, and glanced at Ascham’s
dead cigar.
“Better light another,” he suggested.
The lawyer shook his head, and Granice
went on with his tale. He told of his mounting
obsession how the murderous impulse had
waked in him on the instant of his cousin’s
refusal, and he had muttered to himself: “By
God, if you won’t, I’ll make you.”
He spoke more tranquilly as the narrative proceeded,
as though his rage had died down once the resolve
to act on it was taken. He applied his whole mind
to the question of how the old man was to be “disposed
of.” Suddenly he remembered the outcry:
“Those Italians will murder you for a quarter!”
But no definite project presented itself: he
simply waited for an inspiration.
Granice and his sister moved to town
a day or two after the incident of the melon.
But the cousins, who had returned, kept them informed
of the old man’s condition. One day, about
three weeks later, Granice, on getting home, found
Kate excited over a report from Wrenfield. The
Italian had been there again had somehow
slipped into the house, made his way up to the library,
and “used threatening language.” The
house-keeper found cousin Joseph gasping, the whites
of his eyes showing “something awful.”
The doctor was sent for, and the attack warded off;
and the police had ordered the Italian from the neighbourhood.
But cousin Joseph, thereafter, languished,
had “nerves,” and lost his taste for toast
and butter-milk. The doctor called in a colleague,
and the consultation amused and excited the old man he
became once more an important figure. The medical
men reassured the family too completely! and
to the patient they recommended a more varied diet:
advised him to take whatever “tempted him.”
And so one day, tremulously, prayerfully, he decided
on a tiny bit of melon. It was brought up with
ceremony, and consumed in the presence of the house-keeper
and a hovering cousin; and twenty minutes later he
was dead...
“But you remember the circumstances,”
Granice went on; “how suspicion turned at once
on the Italian? In spite of the hint the police
had given him he had been seen hanging about the house
since ‘the scene.’ It was said that
he had tender relations with the kitchen-maid, and
the rest seemed easy to explain. But when they
looked round to ask him for the explanation he was
gone gone clean out of sight. He had
been ‘warned’ to leave Wrenfield, and
he had taken the warning so to heart that no one ever
laid eyes on him again.”
Granice paused. He had dropped
into a chair opposite the lawyer’s, and he sat
for a moment, his head thrown back, looking about the
familiar room. Everything in it had grown grimacing
and alien, and each strange insistent object seemed
craning forward from its place to hear him.
“It was I who put the stuff
in the melon,” he said. “And I don’t
want you to think I’m sorry for it. This
isn’t ‘remorse,’ understand.
I’m glad the old skin-flint is dead I’m
glad the others have their money. But mine’s
no use to me any more. My sister married miserably,
and died. And I’ve never had what I wanted.”
Ascham continued to stare; then he
said: “What on earth was your object, then?”
“Why, to get what I wanted what
I fancied was in reach! I wanted change, rest,
life, for both of us wanted, above
all, for myself, the chance to write! I travelled,
got back my health, and came home to tie myself up
to my work. And I’ve slaved at it steadily
for ten years without reward without the
most distant hope of success! Nobody will look
at my stuff. And now I’m fifty, and I’m
beaten, and I know it.” His chin dropped
forward on his breast. “I want to chuck
the whole business,” he ended.
CHAPTER III
It was after midnight when Ascham left.
His hand on Granice’s shoulder,
as he turned to go “District Attorney
be hanged; see a doctor, see a doctor!” he had
cried; and so, with an exaggerated laugh, had pulled
on his coat and departed.
Granice turned back into the library.
It had never occurred to him that Ascham would not
believe his story. For three hours he had explained,
elucidated, patiently and painfully gone over every
detail but without once breaking down the
iron incredulity of the lawyer’s eye.
At first Ascham had feigned to be
convinced but that, as Granice now perceived,
was simply to get him to expose himself, to entrap
him into contradictions. And when the attempt
failed, when Granice triumphantly met and refuted
each disconcerting question, the lawyer dropped the
mask suddenly, and said with a good-humoured laugh:
“By Jove, Granice you’ll write a successful
play yet. The way you’ve worked this all
out is a marvel.”
Granice swung about furiously that
last sneer about the play inflamed him. Was all
the world in a conspiracy to deride his failure?
“I did it, I did it,”
he muttered sullenly, his rage spending itself against
the impenetrable surface of the other’s mockery;
and Ascham answered with a smile: “Ever
read any of those books on hallucination? I’ve
got a fairly good medico-legal library. I could
send you one or two if you like...”
Left alone, Granice cowered down in
the chair before his writing-table. He understood
that Ascham thought him off his head.
“Good God what if they all think
me crazy?”
The horror of it broke out over him
in a cold sweat he sat there and shook,
his eyes hidden in his icy hands. But gradually,
as he began to rehearse his story for the thousandth
time, he saw again how incontrovertible it was, and
felt sure that any criminal lawyer would believe him.
“That’s the trouble Ascham’s
not a criminal lawyer. And then he’s a
friend. What a fool I was to talk to a friend!
Even if he did believe me, he’d never let me
see it his instinct would be to cover the
whole thing up... But in that case if
he did believe me he might think it
a kindness to get me shut up in an asylum...”
Granice began to tremble again. “Good heaven!
If he should bring in an expert one of those
damned alienists! Ascham and Pettilow can do anything their
word always goes. If Ascham drops a hint that
I’d better be shut up, I’ll be in a strait-jacket
by to-morrow! And he’d do it from the kindest
motives be quite right to do it if he thinks
I’m a murderer!”
The vision froze him to his chair.
He pressed his fists to his bursting temples and tried
to think. For the first time he hoped that Ascham
had not believed his story.
“But he did he did!
I can see it now I noticed what a queer
eye he cocked at me. Good God, what shall I do what
shall I do?”
He started up and looked at the clock.
Half-past one. What if Ascham should think the
case urgent, rout out an alienist, and come back with
him? Granice jumped to his feet, and his sudden
gesture brushed the morning paper from the table.
Mechanically he stooped to pick it up, and the movement
started a new train of association.
He sat down again, and reached for
the telephone book in the rack by his chair.
“Give me three-o-ten... yes.”
The new idea in his mind had revived
his flagging energy. He would act act
at once. It was only by thus planning ahead, committing
himself to some unavoidable line of conduct, that
he could pull himself through the meaningless days.
Each time he reached a fresh decision it was like
coming out of a foggy weltering sea into a calm harbour
with lights. One of the queerest phases of his
long agony was the intense relief produced by these
momentary lulls.
“That the office of the Investigator?
Yes? Give me Mr. Denver, please... Hallo,
Denver... Yes, Hubert Granice.... Just caught
you? Going straight home? Can I come and
see you... yes, now... have a talk? It’s
rather urgent... yes, might give you some first-rate
’copy.’... All right!” He hung
up the receiver with a laugh. It had been a happy
thought to call up the editor of the Investigator Robert
Denver was the very man he needed...
Granice put out the lights in the
library it was odd how the automatic gestures
persisted! went into the hall, put on his
hat and overcoat, and let himself out of the flat.
In the hall, a sleepy elevator boy blinked at him
and then dropped his head on his folded arms.
Granice passed out into the street. At the corner
of Fifth Avenue he hailed a crawling cab, and called
out an up-town address. The long thoroughfare
stretched before him, dim and deserted, like an ancient
avenue of tombs. But from Denver’s house
a friendly beam fell on the pavement; and as Granice
sprang from his cab the editor’s electric turned
the corner.
The two men grasped hands, and Denver,
feeling for his latch-key, ushered Granice into the
brightly-lit hall.
“Disturb me? Not a bit.
You might have, at ten to-morrow morning... but this
is my liveliest hour... you know my habits of old.”
Granice had known Robert Denver for
fifteen years watched his rise through
all the stages of journalism to the Olympian pinnacle
of the Investigator’s editorial office.
In the thick-set man with grizzling hair there were
few traces left of the hungry-eyed young reporter who,
on his way home in the small hours, used to “bob
in” on Granice, while the latter sat grinding
at his plays. Denver had to pass Granice’s
flat on the way to his own, and it became a habit,
if he saw a light in the window, and Granice’s
shadow against the blind, to go in, smoke a pipe,
and discuss the universe.
“Well this is like
old times a good old habit reversed.”
The editor smote his visitor genially on the shoulder.
“Reminds me of the nights when I used to rout
you out... How’s the play, by the way?
There is a play, I suppose? It’s as
safe to ask you that as to say to some men: ‘How’s
the baby?’”
Denver laughed good-naturedly, and
Granice thought how thick and heavy he had grown.
It was evident, even to Granice’s tortured nerves,
that the words had not been uttered in malice and
the fact gave him a new measure of his insignificance.
Denver did not even know that he had been a failure!
The fact hurt more than Ascham’s irony.
“Come in come in.”
The editor led the way into a small cheerful room,
where there were cigars and decanters. He pushed
an arm-chair toward his visitor, and dropped into
another with a comfortable groan.
“Now, then help yourself. And
let’s hear all about it.”
He beamed at Granice over his pipe-bowl,
and the latter, lighting his cigar, said to himself:
“Success makes men comfortable, but it makes
them stupid.”
Then he turned, and began: “Denver, I want
to tell you ”
The clock ticked rhythmically on the
mantel-piece. The little room was gradually filled
with drifting blue layers of smoke, and through them
the editor’s face came and went like the moon
through a moving sky. Once the hour struck then
the rhythmical ticking began again. The atmosphere
grew denser and heavier, and beads of perspiration
began to roll from Granice’s forehead.
“Do you mind if I open the window?”
“No. It is stuffy
in here. Wait I’ll do it myself.”
Denver pushed down the upper sash, and returned to
his chair. “Well go on,”
he said, filling another pipe. His composure
exasperated Granice.
“There’s no use in my going on if you
don’t believe me.”
The editor remained unmoved.
“Who says I don’t believe you? And
how can I tell till you’ve finished?”
Granice went on, ashamed of his outburst.
“It was simple enough, as you’ll see.
From the day the old man said to me, ’Those Italians
would murder you for a quarter,’ I dropped everything
and just worked at my scheme. It struck me at
once that I must find a way of getting to Wrenfield
and back in a night and that led to the
idea of a motor. A motor that never
occurred to you? You wonder where I got the money,
I suppose. Well, I had a thousand or so put by,
and I nosed around till I found what I wanted a
second-hand racer. I knew how to drive a car,
and I tried the thing and found it was all right.
Times were bad, and I bought it for my price, and
stored it away. Where? Why, in one of those
no-questions-asked garages where they keep motors that
are not for family use. I had a lively cousin
who had put me up to that dodge, and I looked about
till I found a queer hole where they took in my car
like a baby in a foundling asylum... Then I practiced
running to Wrenfield and back in a night. I knew
the way pretty well, for I’d done it often with
the same lively cousin and in the small
hours, too. The distance is over ninety miles,
and on the third trial I did it under two hours.
But my arms were so lame that I could hardly get dressed
the next morning...
“Well, then came the report
about the Italian’s threats, and I saw I must
act at once... I meant to break into the old man’s
room, shoot him, and get away again. It was a
big risk, but I thought I could manage it. Then
we heard that he was ill that there’d
been a consultation. Perhaps the fates were going
to do it for me! Good Lord, if that could only
be!...”
Granice stopped and wiped his forehead:
the open window did not seem to have cooled the room.
“Then came word that he was
better; and the day after, when I came up from my
office, I found Kate laughing over the news that he
was to try a bit of melon. The house-keeper had
just telephoned her all Wrenfield was in
a flutter. The doctor himself had picked out the
melon, one of the little French ones that are hardly
bigger than a large tomato and the patient
was to eat it at his breakfast the next morning.
“In a flash I saw my chance.
It was a bare chance, no more. But I knew the
ways of the house I was sure the melon would
be brought in over night and put in the pantry ice-box.
If there were only one melon in the ice-box I could
be fairly sure it was the one I wanted. Melons
didn’t lie around loose in that house every
one was known, numbered, catalogued. The old
man was beset by the dread that the servants would
eat them, and he took a hundred mean precautions to
prevent it. Yes, I felt pretty sure of my melon...
and poisoning was much safer than shooting. It
would have been the devil and all to get into the old
man’s bedroom without his rousing the house;
but I ought to be able to break into the pantry without
much trouble.
“It was a cloudy night, too everything
served me. I dined quietly, and sat down at my
desk. Kate had one of her usual headaches, and
went to bed early. As soon as she was gone I
slipped out. I had got together a sort of disguise red
beard and queer-looking ulster. I shoved them
into a bag, and went round to the garage. There
was no one there but a half-drunken machinist whom
I’d never seen before. That served me, too.
They were always changing machinists, and this new
fellow didn’t even bother to ask if the car
belonged to me. It was a very easy-going place...
“Well, I jumped in, ran up Broadway,
and let the car go as soon as I was out of Harlem.
Dark as it was, I could trust myself to strike a sharp
pace. In the shadow of a wood I stopped a second
and got into the beard and ulster. Then away
again it was just eleven-thirty when I got
to Wrenfield.
“I left the car in a dark lane
behind the Lenman place, and slipped through the kitchen-garden.
The melon-houses winked at me through the dark I
remember thinking that they knew what I wanted to know....
By the stable a dog came out growling but
he nosed me out, jumped on me, and went back...
The house was as dark as the grave. I knew everybody
went to bed by ten. But there might be a prowling
servant the kitchen-maid might have come
down to let in her Italian. I had to risk that,
of course. I crept around by the back door and
hid in the shrubbery. Then I listened. It
was all as silent as death. I crossed over to
the house, pried open the pantry window and climbed
in. I had a little electric lamp in my pocket,
and shielding it with my cap I groped my way to the
ice-box, opened it and there was the little
French melon... only one.
“I stopped to listen I
was quite cool. Then I pulled out my bottle of
stuff and my syringe, and gave each section of the
melon a hypodermic. It was all done inside of
three minutes at ten minutes to twelve I
was back in the car. I got out of the lane as
quietly as I could, struck a back road that skirted
the village, and let the car out as soon as I was
beyond the last houses. I only stopped once on
the way in, to drop the beard and ulster into a pond.
I had a big stone ready to weight them with and they
went down plump, like a dead body and at
two o’clock I was back at my desk.”
Granice stopped speaking and looked
across the smoke-fumes at his listener; but Denver’s
face remained inscrutable.
At length he said: “Why did you want to
tell me this?”
The question startled Granice.
He was about to explain, as he had explained to Ascham;
but suddenly it occurred to him that if his motive
had not seemed convincing to the lawyer it would carry
much less weight with Denver. Both were successful
men, and success does not understand the subtle agony
of failure. Granice cast about for another reason.
“Why, I the thing
haunts me... remorse, I suppose you’d call it...”
Denver struck the ashes from his empty pipe.
“Remorse? Bosh!” he said energetically.
Granice’s heart sank. “You don’t
believe in remorse?”
“Not an atom: in the man
of action. The mere fact of your talking of remorse
proves to me that you’re not the man to have
planned and put through such a job.”
Granice groaned. “Well I
lied to you about remorse. I’ve never felt
any.”
Denver’s lips tightened sceptically
about his freshly-filled pipe. “What was
your motive, then? You must have had one.”
“I’ll tell you ”
And Granice began again to rehearse the story of his
failure, of his loathing for life. “Don’t
say you don’t believe me this time... that this
isn’t a real reason!” he stammered out
piteously as he ended.
Denver meditated. “No,
I won’t say that. I’ve seen too many
queer things. There’s always a reason for
wanting to get out of life the wonder is
that we find so many for staying in!” Granice’s
heart grew light. “Then you do believe
me?” he faltered.
“Believe that you’re sick
of the job? Yes. And that you haven’t
the nerve to pull the trigger? Oh, yes that’s
easy enough, too. But all that doesn’t
make you a murderer though I don’t
say it proves you could never have been one.”
“I have been one, Denver I swear
to you.”
“Perhaps.” He meditated. “Just
tell me one or two things.”
“Oh, go ahead. You won’t
stump me!” Granice heard himself say with a
laugh.
“Well how did you
make all those trial trips without exciting your sister’s
curiosity? I knew your night habits pretty well
at that time, remember. You were very seldom
out late. Didn’t the change in your ways
surprise her?”
“No; because she was away at
the time. She went to pay several visits in the
country soon after we came back from Wrenfield, and
was only in town for a night or two before before
I did the job.”
“And that night she went to bed early with a
headache?”
“Yes blinding.
She didn’t know anything when she had that kind.
And her room was at the back of the flat.”
Denver again meditated. “And
when you got back she didn’t hear
you? You got in without her knowing it?”
“Yes. I went straight to
my work took it up at the word where I’d
left off why, Denver, don’t
you remember?” Granice suddenly, passionately
interjected.
“Remember ?”
“Yes; how you found me when
you looked in that morning, between two and three...
your usual hour...?”
“Yes,” the editor nodded.
Granice gave a short laugh. “In
my old coat with my pipe: looked as
if I’d been working all night, didn’t
I? Well, I hadn’t been in my chair ten
minutes!”
Denver uncrossed his legs and then
crossed them again. “I didn’t know
whether you remembered that.”
“What?”
“My coming in that particular night or
morning.”
Granice swung round in his chair.
“Why, man alive! That’s why I’m
here now. Because it was you who spoke for me
at the inquest, when they looked round to see what
all the old man’s heirs had been doing that
night you who testified to having dropped
in and found me at my desk as usual.... I thought
that would appeal to your journalistic sense if
nothing else would!”
Denver smiled. “Oh, my
journalistic sense is still susceptible enough and
the idea’s picturesque, I grant you: asking
the man who proved your alibi to establish your guilt.”
“That’s it that’s
it!” Granice’s laugh had a ring of triumph.
“Well, but how about the other
chap’s testimony I mean that young
doctor: what was his name? Ned Ranney.
Don’t you remember my testifying that I’d
met him at the elevated station, and told him I was
on my way to smoke a pipe with you, and his saying:
’All right; you’ll find him in. I
passed the house two hours ago, and saw his shadow
against the blind, as usual.’ And the lady
with the toothache in the flat across the way:
she corroborated his statement, you remember.”
“Yes; I remember.”
“Well, then?”
“Simple enough. Before
starting I rigged up a kind of mannikin with old coats
and a cushion something to cast a shadow
on the blind. All you fellows were used to seeing
my shadow there in the small hours I counted
on that, and knew you’d take any vague outline
as mine.”
“Simple enough, as you say.
But the woman with the toothache saw the shadow move you
remember she said she saw you sink forward, as if you’d
fallen asleep.”
“Yes; and she was right.
It did move. I suppose some extra-heavy dray
must have jolted by the flimsy building at
any rate, something gave my mannikin a jar, and when
I came back he had sunk forward, half over the table.”
There was a long silence between the
two men. Granice, with a throbbing heart, watched
Denver refill his pipe. The editor, at any rate,
did not sneer and flout him. After all, journalism
gave a deeper insight than the law into the fantastic
possibilities of life, prepared one better to allow
for the incalculableness of human impulses.
“Well?” Granice faltered out.
Denver stood up with a shrug.
“Look here, man what’s wrong
with you? Make a clean breast of it! Nerves
gone to smash? I’d like to take you to
see a chap I know an ex-prize-fighter who’s
a wonder at pulling fellows in your state out of their
hole ”
“Oh, oh ” Granice
broke in. He stood up also, and the two men eyed
each other. “You don’t believe me,
then?”
“This yarn how can
I? There wasn’t a flaw in your alibi.”
“But haven’t I filled it full of them
now?”
Denver shook his head. “I
might think so if I hadn’t happened to know
that you wanted to. There’s the hitch,
don’t you see?”
Granice groaned. “No, I
didn’t. You mean my wanting to be found
guilty ?”
“Of course! If somebody
else had accused you, the story might have been worth
looking into. As it is, a child could have invented
it. It doesn’t do much credit to your ingenuity.”
Granice turned sullenly toward the
door. What was the use of arguing? But on
the threshold a sudden impulse drew him back.
“Look here, Denver I daresay you’re
right. But will you do just one thing to prove
it? Put my statement in the Investigator, just
as I’ve made it. Ridicule it as much as
you like. Only give the other fellows a chance
at it men who don’t know anything
about me. Set them talking and looking about.
I don’t care a damn whether you believe
me what I want is to convince the Grand
Jury! I oughtn’t to have come to a man who
knows me your cursed incredulity is infectious.
I don’t put my case well, because I know in
advance it’s discredited, and I almost end by
not believing it myself. That’s why I can’t
convince you. It’s a vicious circle.”
He laid a hand on Denver’s arm. “Send
a stenographer, and put my statement in the paper.”
But Denver did not warm to the idea.
“My dear fellow, you seem to forget that all
the evidence was pretty thoroughly sifted at the time,
every possible clue followed up. The public would
have been ready enough then to believe that you murdered
old Lenman you or anybody else. All
they wanted was a murderer the most improbable
would have served. But your alibi was too confoundedly
complete. And nothing you’ve told me has
shaken it.” Denver laid his cool hand over
the other’s burning fingers. “Look
here, old fellow, go home and work up a better case then
come in and submit it to the Investigator.”
CHAPTER IV
The perspiration was rolling off Granice’s
forehead. Every few minutes he had to draw out
his handkerchief and wipe the moisture from his haggard
face.
For an hour and a half he had been
talking steadily, putting his case to the District
Attorney. Luckily he had a speaking acquaintance
with Allonby, and had obtained, without much difficulty,
a private audience on the very day after his talk
with Robert Denver. In the interval between he
had hurried home, got out of his evening clothes, and
gone forth again at once into the dreary dawn.
His fear of Ascham and the alienist made it impossible
for him to remain in his rooms. And it seemed
to him that the only way of averting that hideous peril
was by establishing, in some sane impartial mind,
the proof of his guilt. Even if he had not been
so incurably sick of life, the electric chair seemed
now the only alternative to the strait-jacket.
As he paused to wipe his forehead
he saw the District Attorney glance at his watch.
The gesture was significant, and Granice lifted an
appealing hand. “I don’t expect you
to believe me now but can’t you put
me under arrest, and have the thing looked into?”
Allonby smiled faintly under his heavy
grayish moustache. He had a ruddy face, full
and jovial, in which his keen professional eyes seemed
to keep watch over impulses not strictly professional.
“Well, I don’t know that
we need lock you up just yet. But of course I’m
bound to look into your statement ”
Granice rose with an exquisite sense
of relief. Surely Allonby wouldn’t have
said that if he hadn’t believed him!
“That’s all right.
Then I needn’t detain you. I can be found
at any time at my apartment.” He gave the
address.
The District Attorney smiled again,
more openly. “What do you say to leaving
it for an hour or two this evening? I’m
giving a little supper at Rector’s quiet,
little affair, you understand: just Miss Melrose I
think you know her and a friend or two;
and if you’ll join us...”
Granice stumbled out of the office
without knowing what reply he had made.
He waited for four days four
days of concentrated horror. During the first
twenty-four hours the fear of Ascham’s alienist
dogged him; and as that subsided, it was replaced
by the exasperating sense that his avowal had made
no impression on the District Attorney. Evidently,
if he had been going to look into the case, Allonby
would have been heard from before now.... And
that mocking invitation to supper showed clearly enough
how little the story had impressed him!
Granice was overcome by the futility
of any farther attempt to inculpate himself.
He was chained to life a “prisoner
of consciousness.” Where was it he had
read the phrase? Well, he was learning what it
meant. In the glaring night-hours, when his brain
seemed ablaze, he was visited by a sense of his fixed
identity, of his irreducible, inexpugnable selfness,
keener, more insidious, more unescapable, than any
sensation he had ever known. He had not guessed
that the mind was capable of such intricacies of self-realization,
of penetrating so deep into its own dark windings.
Often he woke from his brief snatches of sleep with
the feeling that something material was clinging to
him, was on his hands and face, and in his throat and
as his brain cleared he understood that it was the
sense of his own loathed personality that stuck to
him like some thick viscous substance.
Then, in the first morning hours,
he would rise and look out of his window at the awakening
activities of the street at the street-cleaners,
the ash-cart drivers, and the other dingy workers
flitting hurriedly by through the sallow winter light.
Oh, to be one of them any of them to
take his chance in any of their skins! They were
the toilers the men whose lot was pitied the
victims wept over and ranted about by altruists and
economists; and how gladly he would have taken up
the load of any one of them, if only he might have
shaken off his own! But, no the iron
circle of consciousness held them too: each one
was hand-cuffed to his own hideous ego. Why wish
to be any one man rather than another? The only
absolute good was not to be... And Flint, coming
in to draw his bath, would ask if he preferred his
eggs scrambled or poached that morning?
On the fifth day he wrote a long urgent
letter to Allonby; and for the succeeding two days
he had the occupation of waiting for an answer.
He hardly stirred from his rooms, in his fear of missing
the letter by a moment; but would the District Attorney
write, or send a representative: a policeman,
a “secret agent,” or some other mysterious
emissary of the law?
On the third morning Flint, stepping
softly as if, confound it! his master were
ill entered the library where Granice sat
behind an unread newspaper, and proferred a card on
a tray.
Granice read the name J.
B. Hewson and underneath, in pencil, “From
the District Attorney’s office.” He
started up with a thumping heart, and signed an assent
to the servant.
Mr. Hewson was a slight sallow nondescript
man of about fifty the kind of man of whom
one is sure to see a specimen in any crowd. “Just
the type of the successful detective,” Granice
reflected as he shook hands with his visitor.
And it was in that character that
Mr. Hewson briefly introduced himself. He had
been sent by the District Attorney to have “a
quiet talk” with Mr. Granice to ask
him to repeat the statement he had made about the
Lenman murder.
His manner was so quiet, so reasonable
and receptive, that Granice’s self-confidence
returned. Here was a sensible man a
man who knew his business it would be easy
enough to make him see through that ridiculous
alibi! Granice offered Mr. Hewson a cigar, and
lighting one himself to prove his coolness began
again to tell his story.
He was conscious, as he proceeded,
of telling it better than ever before. Practice
helped, no doubt; and his listener’s detached,
impartial attitude helped still more. He could
see that Hewson, at least, had not decided in advance
to disbelieve him, and the sense of being trusted
made him more lucid and more consecutive. Yes,
this time his words would certainly carry conviction...
CHAPTER V
Despairingly, Granice gazed up and
down the shabby street. Beside him stood a young
man with bright prominent eyes, a smooth but not too
smoothly-shaven face, and an Irish smile. The
young man’s nimble glance followed Granice’s.
“Sure of the number, are you?” he asked
briskly.
“Oh, yes it was 104.”
“Well, then, the new building has swallowed
it up that’s certain.”
He tilted his head back and surveyed
the half-finished front of a brick and limestone flat-house
that reared its flimsy elegance above a row of tottering
tenements and stables.
“Dead sure?” he repeated.
“Yes,” said Granice, discouraged.
“And even if I hadn’t been, I know the
garage was just opposite Leffler’s over there.”
He pointed across the street to a tumble-down stable
with a blotched sign on which the words “Livery
and Boarding” were still faintly discernible.
The young man dashed across to the
opposite pavement. “Well, that’s
something may get a clue there. Leffler’s same
name there, anyhow. You remember that name?”
“Yes distinctly.”
Granice had felt a return of confidence
since he had enlisted the interest of the Explorer’s
“smartest” reporter. If there were
moments when he hardly believed his own story, there
were others when it seemed impossible that every one
should not believe it; and young Peter McCarren, peering,
listening, questioning, jotting down notes, inspired
him with an exquisite sense of security. McCarren
had fastened on the case at once, “like a leech,”
as he phrased it jumped at it, thrilled
to it, and settled down to “draw the last drop
of fact from it, and had not let go till he had.”
No one else had treated Granice in that way even
Allonby’s detective had not taken a single note.
And though a week had elapsed since the visit of that
authorized official, nothing had been heard from the
District Attorney’s office: Allonby had
apparently dropped the matter again. But McCarren
wasn’t going to drop it not he!
He positively hung on Granice’s footsteps.
They had spent the greater part of the previous day
together, and now they were off again, running down
clues.
But at Leffler’s they got none,
after all. Leffler’s was no longer a stable.
It was condemned to demolition, and in the respite
between sentence and execution it had become a vague
place of storage, a hospital for broken-down carriages
and carts, presided over by a blear-eyed old woman
who knew nothing of Flood’s garage across the
way did not even remember what had stood
there before the new flat-house began to rise.
“Well we may run
Leffler down somewhere; I’ve seen harder jobs
done,” said McCarren, cheerfully noting down
the name.
As they walked back toward Sixth Avenue
he added, in a less sanguine tone: “I’d
undertake now to put the thing through if you could
only put me on the track of that cyanide.”
Granice’s heart sank. Yes there
was the weak spot; he had felt it from the first!
But he still hoped to convince McCarren that his case
was strong enough without it; and he urged the reporter
to come back to his rooms and sum up the facts with
him again.
“Sorry, Mr. Granice, but I’m
due at the office now. Besides, it’d be
no use till I get some fresh stuff to work on.
Suppose I call you up tomorrow or next day?”
He plunged into a trolley and left
Granice gazing desolately after him.
Two days later he reappeared at the
apartment, a shade less jaunty in demeanor.
“Well, Mr. Granice, the stars
in their courses are against you, as the bard says.
Can’t get a trace of Flood, or of Leffler either.
And you say you bought the motor through Flood, and
sold it through him, too?”
“Yes,” said Granice wearily.
“Who bought it, do you know?”
Granice wrinkled his brows. “Why,
Flood yes, Flood himself. I sold it
back to him three months later.”
“Flood? The devil!
And I’ve ransacked the town for Flood. That
kind of business disappears as if the earth had swallowed
it.”
Granice, discouraged, kept silence.
“That brings us back to the
poison,” McCarren continued, his note-book out.
“Just go over that again, will you?”
And Granice went over it again.
It had all been so simple at the time and
he had been so clever in covering up his traces!
As soon as he decided on poison he looked about for
an acquaintance who manufactured chemicals; and there
was Jim Dawes, a Harvard classmate, in the dyeing
business just the man. But at the last
moment it occurred to him that suspicion might turn
toward so obvious an opportunity, and he decided on
a more tortuous course. Another friend, Carrick
Venn, a student of medicine whom irremediable ill-health
had kept from the practice of his profession, amused
his leisure with experiments in physics, for the exercise
of which he had set up a simple laboratory. Granice
had the habit of dropping in to smoke a cigar with
him on Sunday afternoons, and the friends generally
sat in Venn’s work-shop, at the back of the old
family house in Stuyvesant Square. Off this work-shop
was the cupboard of supplies, with its row of deadly
bottles. Carrick Venn was an original, a man
of restless curious tastes, and his place, on a Sunday,
was often full of visitors: a cheerful crowd of
journalists, scribblers, painters, experimenters in
divers forms of expression. Coming and going
among so many, it was easy enough to pass unperceived;
and one afternoon Granice, arriving before Venn had
returned home, found himself alone in the work-shop,
and quickly slipping into the cupboard, transferred
the drug to his pocket.
But that had happened ten years ago;
and Venn, poor fellow, was long since dead of his
dragging ailment. His old father was dead, too,
the house in Stuyvesant Square had been turned into
a boarding-house, and the shifting life of New York
had passed its rapid sponge over every trace of their
obscure little history. Even the optimistic McCarren
seemed to acknowledge the hopelessness of seeking for
proof in that direction.
“And there’s the third
door slammed in our faces.” He shut his
note-book, and throwing back his head, rested his bright
inquisitive eyes on Granice’s furrowed face.
“Look here, Mr. Granice you
see the weak spot, don’t you?”
The other made a despairing motion. “I
see so many!”
“Yes: but the one that
weakens all the others. Why the deuce do you want
this thing known? Why do you want to put your
head into the noose?”
Granice looked at him hopelessly,
trying to take the measure of his quick light irreverent
mind. No one so full of a cheerful animal life
would believe in the craving for death as a sufficient
motive; and Granice racked his brain for one more
convincing. But suddenly he saw the reporter’s
face soften, and melt to a naïve sentimentalism.
“Mr. Granice has the memory of it
always haunted you?”
Granice stared a moment, and then
leapt at the opening. “That’s it the
memory of it... always...”
McCarren nodded vehemently. “Dogged
your steps, eh? Wouldn’t let you sleep?
The time came when you had to make a clean breast
of it?”
“I had to. Can’t you understand?”
The reporter struck his fist on the
table. “God, sir! I don’t suppose
there’s a human being with a drop of warm blood
in him that can’t picture the deadly horrors
of remorse ”
The Celtic imagination was aflame,
and Granice mutely thanked him for the word.
What neither Ascham nor Denver would accept as a conceivable
motive the Irish reporter seized on as the most adequate;
and, as he said, once one could find a convincing
motive, the difficulties of the case became so many
incentives to effort.
“Remorse remorse,”
he repeated, rolling the word under his tongue with
an accent that was a clue to the psychology of the
popular drama; and Granice, perversely, said to himself:
“If I could only have struck that note I should
have been running in six theatres at once.”
He saw that from that moment McCarren’s
professional zeal would be fanned by emotional curiosity;
and he profited by the fact to propose that they should
dine together, and go on afterward to some music-hall
or theatre. It was becoming necessary to Granice
to feel himself an object of pre-occupation, to find
himself in another mind. He took a kind of gray
penumbral pleasure in riveting McCarren’s attention
on his case; and to feign the grimaces of moral anguish
became a passionately engrossing game. He had
not entered a theatre for months; but he sat out the
meaningless performance in rigid tolerance, sustained
by the sense of the reporter’s observation.
Between the acts, McCarren amused
him with anecdotes about the audience: he knew
every one by sight, and could lift the curtain from
every physiognomy. Granice listened indulgently.
He had lost all interest in his kind, but he knew
that he was himself the real centre of McCarren’s
attention, and that every word the latter spoke had
an indirect bearing on his own problem.
“See that fellow over there the
little dried-up man in the third row, pulling his
moustache? His memoirs would be worth publishing,”
McCarren said suddenly in the last entr’acte.
Granice, following his glance, recognized
the detective from Allonby’s office. For
a moment he had the thrilling sense that he was being
shadowed.
“Cæsar, if he could talk !”
McCarren continued. “Know who he is, of
course? Dr. John B. Stell, the biggest alienist
in the country ”
Granice, with a start, bent again
between the heads in front of him. “That
man the fourth from the aisle? You’re
mistaken. That’s not Dr. Stell.”
McCarren laughed. “Well,
I guess I’ve been in court enough to know Stell
when I see him. He testifies in nearly all the
big cases where they plead insanity.”
A cold shiver ran down Granice’s
spine, but he repeated obstinately: “That’s
not Dr. Stell.”
“Not Stell? Why, man, I
know him. Look here he comes.
If it isn’t Stell, he won’t speak to me.”
The little dried-up man was moving
slowly up the aisle. As he neared McCarren he
made a slight gesture of recognition.
“How’do, Doctor Stell?
Pretty slim show, ain’t it?” the reporter
cheerfully flung out at him. And Mr. J. B. Hewson,
with a nod of amicable assent, passed on.
Granice sat benumbed. He knew
he had not been mistaken the man who had
just passed was the same man whom Allonby had sent
to see him: a physician disguised as a detective.
Allonby, then, had thought him insane, like the others had
regarded his confession as the maundering of a maniac.
The discovery froze Granice with horror he
seemed to see the mad-house gaping for him.
“Isn’t there a man a good
deal like him a detective named J. B. Hewson?”
But he knew in advance what McCarren’s
answer would be. “Hewson? J. B. Hewson?
Never heard of him. But that was J. B. Stell fast
enough I guess he can be trusted to know
himself, and you saw he answered to his name.”
CHAPTER VI
Some days passed before Granice could
obtain a word with the District Attorney: he
began to think that Allonby avoided him.
But when they were face to face Allonby’s
jovial countenance showed no sign of embarrassment.
He waved his visitor to a chair, and leaned across
his desk with the encouraging smile of a consulting
physician.
Granice broke out at once: “That
detective you sent me the other day ”
Allonby raised a deprecating hand.
“ I know: it
was Stell the alienist. Why did you do that, Allonby?”
The other’s face did not lose
its composure. “Because I looked up your
story first and there’s nothing in
it.”
“Nothing in it?” Granice furiously interposed.
“Absolutely nothing. If
there is, why the deuce don’t you bring me proofs?
I know you’ve been talking to Peter Ascham, and
to Denver, and to that little ferret McCarren of the
Explorer. Have any of them been able to make
out a case for you? No. Well, what am I to
do?”
Granice’s lips began to tremble.
“Why did you play me that trick?”
“About Stell? I had to,
my dear fellow: it’s part of my business.
Stell is a detective, if you come to that every
doctor is.”
The trembling of Granice’s lips
increased, communicating itself in a long quiver to
his facial muscles. He forced a laugh through
his dry throat. “Well and what
did he detect?”
“In you? Oh, he thinks
it’s overwork overwork and too much
smoking. If you look in on him some day at his
office he’ll show you the record of hundreds
of cases like yours, and advise you what treatment
to follow. It’s one of the commonest forms
of hallucination. Have a cigar, all the same.”
“But, Allonby, I killed that man!”
The District Attorney’s large
hand, outstretched on his desk, had an almost imperceptible
gesture, and a moment later, as if an answer to the
call of an electric bell, a clerk looked in from the
outer office.
“Sorry, my dear fellow lot
of people waiting. Drop in on Stell some morning,”
Allonby said, shaking hands.
McCarren had to own himself beaten:
there was absolutely no flaw in the alibi. And
since his duty to his journal obviously forbade his
wasting time on insoluble mysteries, he ceased to
frequent Granice, who dropped back into a deeper isolation.
For a day or two after his visit to Allonby he continued
to live in dread of Dr. Stell. Why might not
Allonby have deceived him as to the alienist’s
diagnosis? What if he were really being shadowed,
not by a police agent but by a mad-doctor? To
have the truth out, he suddenly determined to call
on Dr. Stell.
The physician received him kindly,
and reverted without embarrassment to the conditions
of their previous meeting. “We have to do
that occasionally, Mr. Granice; it’s one of
our methods. And you had given Allonby a fright.”
Granice was silent. He would
have liked to reaffirm his guilt, to produce the fresh
arguments which had occurred to him since his last
talk with the physician; but he feared his eagerness
might be taken for a symptom of derangement, and he
affected to smile away Dr. Stell’s allusion.
“You think, then, it’s
a case of brain-fag nothing more?”
“Nothing more. And I should
advise you to knock off tobacco. You smoke a
good deal, don’t you?”
He developed his treatment, recommending
massage, gymnastics, travel, or any form of diversion
that did not that in short
Granice interrupted him impatiently.
“Oh, I loathe all that and I’m
sick of travelling.”
“H’m. Then some larger
interest politics, reform, philanthropy?
Something to take you out of yourself.”
“Yes. I understand,” said Granice
wearily.
“Above all, don’t lose
heart. I see hundreds of cases like yours,”
the doctor added cheerfully from the threshold.
On the doorstep Granice stood still
and laughed. Hundreds of cases like his the
case of a man who had committed a murder, who confessed
his guilt, and whom no one would believe! Why,
there had never been a case like it in the world.
What a good figure Stell would have made in a play:
the great alienist who couldn’t read a man’s
mind any better than that!
Granice saw huge comic opportunities in the type.
But as he walked away, his fears dispelled,
the sense of listlessness returned on him. For
the first time since his avowal to Peter Ascham he
found himself without an occupation, and understood
that he had been carried through the past weeks only
by the necessity of constant action. Now his
life had once more become a stagnant backwater, and
as he stood on the street corner watching the tides
of traffic sweep by, he asked himself despairingly
how much longer he could endure to float about in
the sluggish circle of his consciousness.
The thought of self-destruction recurred
to him; but again his flesh recoiled. He yearned
for death from other hands, but he could never take
it from his own. And, aside from his insuperable
physical reluctance, another motive restrained him.
He was possessed by the dogged desire to establish
the truth of his story. He refused to be swept
aside as an irresponsible dreamer even
if he had to kill himself in the end, he would not
do so before proving to society that he had deserved
death from it.
He began to write long letters to
the papers; but after the first had been published
and commented on, public curiosity was quelled by a
brief statement from the District Attorney’s
office, and the rest of his communications remained
unprinted. Ascham came to see him, and begged
him to travel. Robert Denver dropped in, and tried
to joke him out of his delusion; till Granice, mistrustful
of their motives, began to dread the reappearance
of Dr. Stell, and set a guard on his lips. But
the words he kept back engendered others and still
others in his brain. His inner self became a
humming factory of arguments, and he spent long hours
reciting and writing down elaborate statements of his
crime, which he constantly retouched and developed.
Then gradually his activity languished under the lack
of an audience, the sense of being buried beneath
deepening drifts of indifference. In a passion
of resentment he swore that he would prove himself
a murderer, even if he had to commit another crime
to do it; and for a sleepless night or two the thought
flamed red on his darkness. But daylight dispelled
it. The determining impulse was lacking and he
hated too promiscuously to choose his victim...
So he was thrown back on the unavailing struggle to
impose the truth of his story. As fast as one
channel closed on him he tried to pierce another through
the sliding sands of incredulity. But every issue
seemed blocked, and the whole human race leagued together
to cheat one man of the right to die.
Thus viewed, the situation became
so monstrous that he lost his last shred of self-restraint
in contemplating it. What if he were really the
victim of some mocking experiment, the centre of a
ring of holiday-makers jeering at a poor creature
in its blind dashes against the solid walls of consciousness?
But, no men were not so uniformly cruel:
there were flaws in the close surface of their indifference,
cracks of weakness and pity here and there...
Granice began to think that his mistake
lay in having appealed to persons more or less familiar
with his past, and to whom the visible conformities
of his life seemed a final disproof of its one fierce
secret deviation. The general tendency was to
take for the whole of life the slit seen between the
blinders of habit: and in his walk down that
narrow vista Granice cut a correct enough figure.
To a vision free to follow his whole orbit his story
would be more intelligible: it would be easier
to convince a chance idler in the street than the trained
intelligence hampered by a sense of his antecedents.
This idea shot up in him with the tropic luxuriance
of each new seed of thought, and he began to walk
the streets, and to frequent out-of-the-way chop-houses
and bars in his search for the impartial stranger to
whom he should disclose himself.
At first every face looked encouragement;
but at the crucial moment he always held back.
So much was at stake, and it was so essential that
his first choice should be decisive. He dreaded
stupidity, timidity, intolerance. The imaginative
eye, the furrowed brow, were what he sought.
He must reveal himself only to a heart versed in the
tortuous motions of the human will; and he began to
hate the dull benevolence of the average face.
Once or twice, obscurely, allusively, he made a beginning once
sitting down at a man’s side in a basement chop-house,
another day approaching a lounger on an east-side wharf.
But in both cases the premonition of failure checked
him on the brink of avowal. His dread of being
taken for a man in the clutch of a fixed idea gave
him an unnatural keenness in reading the expression
of his interlocutors, and he had provided himself
in advance with a series of verbal alternatives, trap-doors
of evasion from the first dart of ridicule or suspicion.
He passed the greater part of the
day in the streets, coming home at irregular hours,
dreading the silence and orderliness of his apartment,
and the critical scrutiny of Flint. His real life
was spent in a world so remote from this familiar
setting that he sometimes had the mysterious sense
of a living metempsychosis, a furtive passage from
one identity to another yet the other as
unescapably himself!
One humiliation he was spared:
the desire to live never revived in him. Not
for a moment was he tempted to a shabby pact with existing
conditions. He wanted to die, wanted it with the
fixed unwavering desire which alone attains its end.
And still the end eluded him! It would not always,
of course he had full faith in the dark
star of his destiny. And he could prove it best
by repeating his story, persistently and indefatigably,
pouring it into indifferent ears, hammering it into
dull brains, till at last it kindled a spark, and
some one of the careless millions paused, listened,
believed...
It was a mild March day, and he had
been loitering on the west-side docks, looking at
faces. He was becoming an expert in physiognomies:
his eagerness no longer made rash darts and awkward
recoils. He knew now the face he needed, as clearly
as if it had come to him in a vision; and not till
he found it would he speak. As he walked eastward
through the shabby reeking streets he had a premonition
that he should find it that morning. Perhaps
it was the promise of spring in the air certainly
he felt calmer than for many days...
He turned into Washington Square,
struck across it obliquely, and walked up University
Place. Its heterogeneous passers always allured
him they were less hurried than in Broadway,
less enclosed and classified than in Fifth Avenue.
He walked slowly, watching for his face.
At Union Square he felt a sudden relapse
into discouragement, like a votary who has watched
too long for a sign from the altar. Perhaps,
after all, he should never find his face... The
air was languid, and he felt tired. He walked
between the bald grass-plots and the twisted trees,
making for an empty seat. Presently he passed
a bench on which a girl sat alone, and something as
definite as the twitch of a cord made him stop before
her. He had never dreamed of telling his story
to a girl, had hardly looked at the women’s
faces as they passed. His case was man’s
work: how could a woman help him? But this
girl’s face was extraordinary quiet
and wide as a clear evening sky. It suggested
a hundred images of space, distance, mystery, like
ships he had seen, as a boy, quietly berthed by a
familiar wharf, but with the breath of far seas and
strange harbours in their shrouds... Certainly
this girl would understand. He went up to her
quietly, lifting his hat, observing the forms wishing
her to see at once that he was “a gentleman.”
“I am a stranger to you,”
he began, sitting down beside her, “but your
face is so extremely intelligent that I feel...
I feel it is the face I’ve waited for... looked
for everywhere; and I want to tell you ”
The girl’s eyes widened:
she rose to her feet. She was escaping him!
In his dismay he ran a few steps after
her, and caught her roughly by the arm.
“Here wait listen!
Oh, don’t scream, you fool!” he shouted
out.
He felt a hand on his own arm; turned
and confronted a policeman. Instantly he understood
that he was being arrested, and something hard within
him was loosened and ran to tears.
“Ah, you know you know I’m
guilty!”
He was conscious that a crowd was
forming, and that the girl’s frightened face
had disappeared. But what did he care about her
face? It was the policeman who had really understood
him. He turned and followed, the crowd at his
heels...
CHAPTER VII
In the charming place in which he
found himself there were so many sympathetic faces
that he felt more than ever convinced of the certainty
of making himself heard.
It was a bad blow, at first, to find
that he had not been arrested for murder; but Ascham,
who had come to him at once, explained that he needed
rest, and the time to “review” his statements;
it appeared that reiteration had made them a little
confused and contradictory. To this end he had
willingly acquiesced in his removal to a large quiet
establishment, with an open space and trees about it,
where he had found a number of intelligent companions,
some, like himself, engaged in preparing or reviewing
statements of their cases, and others ready to lend
an interested ear to his own recital.
For a time he was content to let himself
go on the tranquil current of this existence; but
although his auditors gave him for the most part an
encouraging attention, which, in some, went the length
of really brilliant and helpful suggestion, he gradually
felt a recurrence of his old doubts. Either his
hearers were not sincere, or else they had less power
to aid him than they boasted. His interminable
conferences resulted in nothing, and as the benefit
of the long rest made itself felt, it produced an
increased mental lucidity which rendered inaction
more and more unbearable. At length he discovered
that on certain days visitors from the outer world
were admitted to his retreat; and he wrote out long
and logically constructed relations of his crime, and
furtively slipped them into the hands of these messengers
of hope.
This occupation gave him a fresh lease
of patience, and he now lived only to watch for the
visitors’ days, and scan the faces that swept
by him like stars seen and lost in the rifts
of a hurrying sky.
Mostly, these faces were strange and
less intelligent than those of his companions.
But they represented his last means of access to the
world, a kind of subterranean channel on which he
could set his “statements” afloat, like
paper boats which the mysterious current might sweep
out into the open seas of life.
One day, however, his attention was
arrested by a familiar contour, a pair of bright prominent
eyes, and a chin insufficiently shaved. He sprang
up and stood in the path of Peter McCarren.
The journalist looked at him doubtfully,
then held out his hand with a startled deprecating,
“Why ?”
“You didn’t know me?
I’m so changed?” Granice faltered, feeling
the rebound of the other’s wonder.
“Why, no; but you’re looking
quieter smoothed out,” McCarren smiled.
“Yes: that’s what
I’m here for to rest. And I’ve
taken the opportunity to write out a clearer statement ”
Granice’s hand shook so that
he could hardly draw the folded paper from his pocket.
As he did so he noticed that the reporter was accompanied
by a tall man with grave compassionate eyes.
It came to Granice in a wild thrill of conviction
that this was the face he had waited for...
“Perhaps your friend he
is your friend? would glance over it or
I could put the case in a few words if you have time?”
Granice’s voice shook like his hand. If
this chance escaped him he felt that his last hope
was gone. McCarren and the stranger looked at
each other, and the former glanced at his watch.
“I’m sorry we can’t
stay and talk it over now, Mr. Granice; but my friend
has an engagement, and we’re rather pressed ”
Granice continued to proffer the paper.
“I’m sorry I think I could have
explained. But you’ll take this, at any
rate?”
The stranger looked at him gently.
“Certainly I’ll take it.”
He had his hand out. “Good-bye.”
“Good-bye,” Granice echoed.
He stood watching the two men move
away from him through the long light hall; and as
he watched them a tear ran down his face. But
as soon as they were out of sight he turned and walked
hastily toward his room, beginning to hope again,
already planning a new statement.
Outside the building the two men stood
still, and the journalist’s companion looked
up curiously at the long monotonous rows of barred
windows.
“So that was Granice?”
“Yes that was Granice, poor devil,”
said McCarren.
“Strange case! I suppose
there’s never been one just like it? He’s
still absolutely convinced that he committed that
murder?”
“Absolutely. Yes.”
The stranger reflected. “And
there was no conceivable ground for the idea?
No one could make out how it started? A quiet
conventional sort of fellow like that where
do you suppose he got such a delusion? Did you
ever get the least clue to it?”
McCarren stood still, his hands in
his pockets, his head cocked up in contemplation of
the barred windows. Then he turned his bright
hard gaze on his companion.
“That was the queer part of
it. I’ve never spoken of it but
I did get a clue.”
“By Jove! That’s interesting.
What was it?”
McCarren formed his red lips into
a whistle. “Why that it wasn’t
a delusion.”
He produced his effect the
other turned on him with a pallid stare.
“He murdered the man all right.
I tumbled on the truth by the merest accident, when
I’d pretty nearly chucked the whole job.”
“He murdered him murdered his cousin?”
“Sure as you live. Only
don’t split on me. It’s about the
queerest business I ever ran into... Do
about it? Why, what was I to do?
I couldn’t hang the poor devil, could I?
Lord, but I was glad when they collared him, and had
him stowed away safe in there!”
The tall man listened with a grave
face, grasping Granice’s statement in his hand.
“Here take this;
it makes me sick,” he said abruptly, thrusting
the paper at the reporter; and the two men turned
and walked in silence to the gates.