THE TREASURE.
A week of horror and anxiety, during
which the customary legal processes had been gone
through.
A jury had visited the Dark House
and been conducted through the two rooms, to go away
disappointed at not seeing the inside of the great
iron safe.Then, after the evidence had been
given, by the various witnesses at the inquest, including
that of the two doctors who had performed the post-mortem
examination, a verdict was returned which charged
Charles Pillar with wilful murder, and stated that
the Indian had committed justifiable homicide.
The doctors had differed, as it is
proverbially said that they will, Dr Heston, the young
medical man, who had been called in first, telling
the jury that he was not satisfied that the blows
given had caused the death, and drawing attention
to the peculiar odour he had noticed.But the
Coroner, an old medical man, sided with the colleague,
who pooh-poohed the idea, and the verdict was given.
The coroner was a good deal exercised
in his mind whether some proceedings ought not to
have been taken in respect to the remains of the late
Colonel, but he obtained no legal support, and the
terrible murder and attempted robbery at Number 9A,
Albemarle Square, with the history of the embalming,
and the mysterious inner chamber, were public property
for the usual nine days, when something fresh occurred,
and the interest died away.
Then, once more, there was the old
peace in the Dark House, where the remains of Colonel
Capel lay in state in the mystery-haunted room.
The servants were very reticent, and
consequently but little was heard of the proceedings
in Albemarle Square.A good many loiterers had
stopped to stare at the darkened windows of the great
mansion; but as two coffins had been borne from the
place, it was forgotten outside that another still
remained.What might have been some busy-body’s
business, became no one’s, and the horrible
tragedy tended towards the simplification, of the
dead man’s instructions.
“It is nine days now since the
Colonel’s commands should have been fulfilled,”
said Mr Girtle, as they were seated at lunch in the
darkened dining-room the same party, for
Katrine had expressed her determination to stay in
the house through all the trouble, and Lydia had offered
to remain with her.
Katrine and Lydia had kept a great
deal to their rooms; Mr Girtle spent most of his time
in the library, busy over papers, only appearing at
meal times, and, consequently, Paul Capel was thrown
a great deal into the society of Gerard Artis, treating
him always in the most friendly way, and declining
to notice the barbs of the verbal arrows the other
was fond of launching.
One of Artis’s favourite allusions
was to the house his companion inherited.
“I felt horribly jealous of
you at first,” he said.“Seemed such
a pot of money; but with special commands to live
here with a haunted room, and a mausoleum beyond it no,
thank you.”
“What shall you do with the
chamber of horrors?” said Artis, on another
occasion.
“You heard it is to be built-up.”
“No, no; I mean the bedroom.Ugh!”
“I shall take that as my own.”
“What?A room haunted
with the spirits of three dead men!Bah!Impossible.”
Then came the ninth day, and Mr Girtle
announced that on the next his instructions should
be carried out precisely at twelve.
“That will give you ample time,
Mr Capel, to visit a banker afterwards; for, after
the late experience, I should not lose an hour in depositing
your great uncle’s bequest in the hands of your
banker.”
“You will go with me, I hope.”
The old man looked pleased, and nodded.
“But I had reckoned upon seeing
the jewels,” said Katrine, with a smile at the
young heir, which made his heart throb, and Lydia shrink.
“That pleasure must be deferred,
Miss D’Enghien,” said the old lawyer,
crustily; and no more was said.
At twelve o’clock punctually,
the next day, Mr Girtle unlocked the door of the Colonel’s
room, and fulfilling Ramo’s duty, held it back
while the young men bore in lights; Katrine and Lydia
followed, and the old butler, looking shrunken and
depressed, came last, to close the door and draw the
curtain.
It was mid-day, but it might have
been midnight.Candles were lit again on chimney-piece
and dressing-table, and after the old solicitor had
seen that the door was fastened within, he took out
his key, drew the portal curtain at the end, and then
unlocked and slowly pushed open the iron door.
At a given order the butler solemnly
carried a couple of candles down into the vault, and
stood there in the gloomy stone chamber, where, to
those who stood waiting his return, they seemed to
cast a peculiarly weird light.
Then, in utter silence, the lid was
placed over the calm, sleeping features, and the four
men, taking each a handle, lifted and bore the coffin
down.There was some little difficulty in the
sharp turn of the steps, but in a few minutes all
was done, and the coffin lay upon the flagstones,
while the two girls stood hand clasping hand.
Mr Girtle walked round to the back
of the iron safe and stooped down, when a peculiar
clang was heard, as if a spring had been set free,
and a large panel at the end where Capel was standing,
dropped down.
As the old lawyer came back, candle
in hand, it was now seen that the panel that had fallen
laid bare a key-hole.
Upon the key being inserted in this,
and turned, the panel flew back, and glided over the
key-hole as soon as the key was drawn out, displaying
a second key-hole, crossed by a row of lettered brass
slides.
These the old lawyer manipulated till
the letters formed in a row a particular word, when
the second key-hole was laid bare, the key inserted
and turned, and one end of the iron safe revolved on
a pair of huge pivots, shewing the interior plain,
rectangular and dark, with an oblong mass of black
metal in the centre.
“The steel chest,” said
the old lawyer, in a whisper, as he stepped inside
the great safe, in which he could nearly stand upright.
Candle in hand he went to the other
end, put down the light for a moment to set his hands
free to get a second key a curiously long,
thin key, with the end of which he pushed something
at the back of the chest.Then, going to one
side, he repeated the act, went back round to the
other side, and again repeated it, after which he came
to the front, and as he held down the light, those
who were intently watching his actions saw that there
was a small circle of Roman figures, with a hand like
that of a small clock, which he pushed round with the
end of the key, till it was at the letter V. This
done, he bent over the chest, and repeated the action
twice upon the top.
Then, as he stepped out, a sharp sound
was heard, and a key-hole was laid bare once more.In this he placed the key, turned it, and the steel
chest seemed to split open from end to end, dividing
in equal parts, which slowly turned over on massive
hinges, leaving the centre a space large
enough to hold the coffin wide open.
“Mr Capel,” said the old
lawyer, stepping aside, “the next duty is yours.There lie the bank notes and the case of precious
stones.I give them over to your care.”
Paul Capel hesitated for a moment,
glanced at his companions, then back at the opening
leading to the Colonel’s room, where Katrine
and Lydia were watching.
The young man’s heart beat heavily
as he took the candle, and, stooping down, entered
the iron chamber to take from its hiding place his
enormous fortune.
It was but a step, and he had only
to stretch out his hand to pick up the two cases,
but
The steel chest held nothing.
The treasure was not there.