In which is enacted a bloody tragedy
I began to observe with considerable
uneasiness, that Mr. Romaine stealthily regarded his
wife with looks of intense hatred and malignant ferocity;
then he would transfer his gaze from her to Mr. Anderson,
who was altogether unconscious of the scrutiny.
My employer was usually a very quiet man, but I knew
that his passions were very violent, and that, when
once thoroughly aroused, he was capable of perpetrating
almost any act of savage vengeance. I began to
fear that he suspected the intimacy which existed
between his adulterous wife and her paramour.
By the way it may be as well to remark that I had never
told either Anderson or Mrs. Romaine of the intrigue
between Mr. Romaine and the widow, Mrs. Raymond; and
it is scarcely necessary to observe that I was equally
discreet in withholding from my employer and his “ladye
love” all knowledge of the state of affairs
between the other parties.
I communicated my fears to Mr. Anderson, but he laughed at them saying
“Nonsense, my dear boy why
should Romaine suspect anything of the kind?
I and Harriet (Mrs. Romaine) have always been very
discreet and careful. Our intimacy began three
or four years ago; and as it has lasted that length
of time without discovery, it is scarcely likely to
be detected now. You are quite sure that
you have given Romaine no hint of the affair?”
“Do you think me capable of
such base treachery?” I demanded, with an offended
air.
“Forgive me,” said Anderson,
“I did wrong to doubt you. Believe me, your
fears are groundless; however, I thank you for the
caution, and shall hereafter exercise additional care,
so as to prevent the possibility of discovery.
Here is a ticket for the opera to-night; when you return,
which will be about midnight, come to Harriet’s
room, and we three will sup like two kings and a queen.”
Having dressed myself with unusual
care, I went to the opera. While listening to
the divine strains of a celebrated prima donna,
my attention was attracted by a group occupying one
of the most conspicuous boxes. This group consisted
of a youth apparently about my own age, and two showy
looking females whose dresses were cut so low as to
reveal much more of their busts than decency could
sanction, even among an opera audience. There
could be no doubt as to the character of these two
women. I examined their youthful cavalier with
attention; and soon recognized my quondum friend
and pitcher JACK SLACK. Jack was magnificently
dressed, and his appearance was truly superb.
The most fastidious Parisian exquisite even
the great Count D’Orsay himself might have
envied him the arrangement of his hair, the tie of
his cravat, the spotlessness of his white kids.
He flourished a glittering, jeweled lorgnette,
and the way the fellow put on “French airs”
must have been a caution to the proudest scion of
aristocracy in the house.
After a little while Jack saw me;
and, having taken a good long stare at me through
his opera-glass, he beckoned me to come to him, at
the same time pointing significantly at one of his
“lady” companions, as if to intimate that
she was entirely at my disposal. But I shook my
head, and did not stir, for I had no desire to resume
my acquaintance with that fascinating but mysterious
youth. Perhaps I entertained a presentiment that
he was destined to become, to both of us, the cause
of a great misfortune.
Jack looked angry and disappointed,
at my refusal to accept of his hospitable invitation.
He directed the attention of his women towards me,
and I saw that they were attempting to titter and sneer
at my expense; but the effort was a total
failure, for there was not a better-dressed person
in the house than I was. Having honored the envious
party with a smile of scorn, which, I flattered
myself, was perfectly successful, I turned
towards the stage, and did not indulge in another
look at Jack or his friends during the remainder of
the opera. I am convinced that from that hour,
Jack Slack became my mortal foe.
At the conclusion of the performances,
I left the house and saw Jack getting into a carriage
with the two courtezans. He observed me, and
uttered a decisive shout, to which I paid no attention,
but hurried home, anxious to make one of the little
party in the apartment of Mrs. Romaine, and quite
ready to partake of the delicacies which, I knew,
would be provided.
On my arrival home, I immediately
repaired to Mrs. Romaine’s private room, where
I found that good lady in company with Mr. Anderson.
We three sat down to supper in the highest possible
spirits. Alas! how little did we anticipate the
terrible catastrophe that was so soon to follow!
The more substantial portion of the
banquet having been disposed of, the sparkling wine-cup
was circulated freely, and we became very gay and
jovial. Unrestrained by my presence, and exhilarated
by the rosy beverage of jolly Bacchus, the lovers
indulged in many little acts of tender dalliance.
Always making it a point to mind my own business, I
applied myself diligently to the bottle, for the wine
was excellent and the sardines had made me thirsty.
I had just lighted a cigar, and was resigning myself
to the luxurious and deliciously soothing influence
of the weed, when the door was thrown violently open,
and Mr. Romaine rushed into the room.
His appearance was frightful! his
face was dreadfully pale, and his eyes glared with
the combined fires of jealousy and rage. Intense
excitement caused him to quiver in every limb.
In one hand he grasped a pistol, and in the other
a bowie knife of the largest and most formidable kind.
It was but too evident that my fears
had been well founded, and that Mr. Romaine had discovered
the intimacy between Anderson and his wife.
The reader will agree with me that
the “injured husband” was equally culpable
on account of his intrigue with the young and handsome
widow, Mrs. Raymond. How prone are many
people to lose sight of their own imperfections while
they censure and severely punish the failings of those
who are not a whit more guilty than themselves!
The swinish glutton condemns the drunkard the
villainous seducer reproves the frequenter of brothels the
arch hypocrite takes to task the open, undisguised
sinner and the rich, miserly old reprobate,
whose wealth places him above the possibility of ever
coming to want, who would sooner “hang the guiltless
than eat his mutton cold,” and who would not
bestow a cent upon a poor devil to keep him from starving that
old rascal, perhaps, in his capacity as a magistrate,
sentences to jail an unfortunate man whom hunger has
driven into the “crime” of stealing a
loaf of bread! Bah! ladies and gentlemen, take
the beams out of your own eyes before you allude
to the motes in the optics of your fellow beings.
That’s my advice, free of charge.
On seeing her husband enter in that
furious and threatening manner, Mrs. Romaine, overcome
with fear and shame for she well knew that
her guilt had been detected fell to the
floor insensible. Anderson, confused and not
knowing what to say, sat motionless as a statue; while
I awaited, with almost trembling anxiety, the issue
of this most extraordinary state of affairs.
Romaine was the first to break the
silence, and he spoke in a tone of voice that was
singularly calm considering his physical agitation.
“Well, sir,” said he,
addressing Anderson “you are enjoying
yourself finely drinking my wine, devouring
my provisions, and making love to my wife in her own
bed-chamber. Anderson, for some time past I have
suspected you and Harriet of being guilty of criminal
intimacy. I have noticed your secret signs, and
have read and interpreted the language of your eyes,
whenever you and she have exchanged glances in my presence.
You both took me to be a weak fool, too blind and imbecile
to detect your adulterous intercourse; but I have
now come to convince you that I am a man capable of
avenging his ruined conjugal honor!”
Anderson, recovering some degree of
his usual self-possession, remarked,
“Your accusation, sir, is unjust.
Your wife and myself are friends, and nothing more.
She invited me to sup with her here to-night and that
is all about it. If our intentions were criminal,
would we have courted the presence of a third party?”
With these words, Anderson pointed
towards me, but Romaine, without observing me at all,
continued to address the paramour of his wife.
“Anderson, you are a liar, and
the falsehoods which you have uttered, only serve
to increase your guilt, and confirm me in my resolution
to sacrifice both you and that guilty woman who lies
yonder. Can I disbelieve the evidence of my own
eyes? Must I go into particulars, and say that
last night, at about this hour, in the kitchen ha!
you turn pale you tremble your
guilt is confessed. I would have killed you last
night, Anderson, but I had not the weapons. This
knife and pistol I purchased to-day, and I shall
use them!
“Try and revive that harlot,
for I would speak with her ere she dies!”
Anderson mechanically obeyed.
Placing the insensible form of Mrs. Romaine upon a
sofa, he sprinkled water upon her face, and she was
soon restored to a state of consciousness. For
a few moments she gazed about her wildly; and then,
when her eyes settled upon her husband, and she saw
the terrible weapons with which he was armed, she covered
her face with her hands and trembled in an agony of
terror, for she knew that her life was in the greatest
possible danger.
Romaine now addressed his wife in
a tone of calmness which was, under the circumstances,
far more terrible than the most violent outburst of
passion:
“Harriet,” said he “I
now fully comprehend your reasons for requesting to
be allowed to occupy a separate apartment. You
desired an opportunity to gratify your licentious
propensities without any restraint. Woman, why
have you used me thus? Have I deserved this infamous
treatment? Have I ever used you unkindly, or
spoken a harsh word to you? Do you think that
I will tamely wear the horns which you and your paramour
have planted upon my brow? Do you think that
I will suffer myself to be made an object of scorn,
and allow myself to be pointed at and ridiculed by
a sneering community?”
“Forgive me,” murmured
the unhappy wife “I will not offend
again. I acknowledge that I have committed a
grievous sin; but Heaven only knows how sincerely
I repent of it!”
“Your repentance comes too late,”
said Romaine, hoarsely “Heaven may
forgive you, but I shall not! You say that
you will not offend again. Having forever destroyed
my happiness, my peace of mind, and my honor, you
will not offend again! You shall not have
the opportunity, wretched woman. You shall no
longer survive your infamy. You and the partner
of your guilt must die!”
With these words, Romaine cocked his pistol and approached his wife, saying,
in a low, savage tone that evinced the desperate purpose of his heart
“Take your choice, madam; do
you prefer to die by lead or by steel?”
The miserable woman threw herself upon her knees, exclaiming
“Mercy, husband mercy!
Do not kill me, for I am not prepared to die!”
“You call me husband now you,
who have so long refused to receive me as a husband.
Come I am impatient to shed your blood,
and that of your paramour. Breathe a short prayer
to Heaven, for mercy and forgiveness, and then resign
your body to death and your soul to eternity!”
So saying the desperate and half-crazy
man raised on high the glittering knife. Poor
Mrs. Romaine uttered a shriek, and, before she could
repeat it, the knife descended with the swiftness
of lightning, and penetrated her heart. Her blood
spouted all over her white dress, and she sank down
at the murderer’s feet, a lifeless corpse!
Paralyzed with horror, I could neither
move nor speak. Anderson also stood motionless,
like a bird which is subjected to the fascinating gaze
of a serpent. Notwithstanding the terrible danger
in which he was placed, he seemed to be rooted to
the spot and incapable of making a single effort to
save himself by either resistance or flight.
The scene was most extraordinary,
thrilling and awful. The luxurious chamber the
failing lamp the murderer, holding in his
hand the bloody knife the doomed Anderson,
whose soul was quivering on the brink of the dread
abyss of eternity; all these combined to form a spectacle
of the most strange and appalling character.
Romaine now raised his pistol and
took deliberate aim at Anderson, saying,
“My work is but half done; it
is your turn now! Are you ready?”
“Do not shoot me like a dog,”
implored the unfortunate young man, who, to do him
justice, possessed a considerable amount of courage “give
me, at least, some chance for my life.
If I have wronged you, and I candidly confess that
I have, I am ready to give you the satisfaction of
a gentleman. Give me a pistol, place me upon an
equal footing with yourself, and we will settle the
matter as becomes men of honor. This boy, here,
will be a witness of the affair.”
To this proposition, Romaine scornfully replied,
“I admire your assurance, sir. After
seducing the wife, you want a chance to shoot the
husband. Well, as I am an accommodating man, it
shall be as you say, for I am sick of life and care
not if I am killed. But I have no other pistol.
Stay! suppose we toss up a coin,
and thus decide which of us shall have this weapon,
with the privilege of using it. Here is a quarter
of a dollar; I will throw it up in the air, and when
it falls upon the floor, if the head is uppermost,
the pistol is mine; but if the tail
is uppermost, the pistol shall be yours.
I warn you that if I win, I shall show you no mercy;
and, if you win, I shall expect none from you.
Do you agree to this?”
“I do,” replied Anderson,
firmly, “and I thank you for your fairness.”
Romaine threw up the coin, which spun
around in the air and landed upon the carpet.
How strange that it should have become the province
of that insignificant coin to decide which of those
two men must die!
Romaine calmly took the dim lamp from
the table, and knelt down upon the carpet in a pool
of his wife’s blood.
“Watch me closely, and see that
I do not touch the coin,” said he, as he bent
eagerly over the life-deciding quarter of a dollar.
How my heart beat at that moment,
and what must have been the sensation of poor Anderson!
“The head is uppermost, and
I have won!” said Romaine, in a hoarse whisper “come
and see for yourself.”
“I am satisfied, your word is
sufficient,” said Anderson, with a shudder,
as he folded his arms across his breast and seemed
to abandon himself to profound despair.
Romaines pale face assumed an expression of savage delight, as he raised the
pistol and pointed it at the head of his intended victim, saying
“Then, sir, nothing remains
but for me to avail myself of the favor which fortune
has conferred upon me. Young man, in five seconds
I shall fire!”
“Hold!” cried Anderson,
“I have a favor to ask, which I am sure you will
not refuse to grant me. Before I die, let me write
a couple of letters, and make a few notes of the manner
in which I wish my property to be disposed of.
It is the last request of a dying man.”
“It is granted,” said
Romaine, “there, upon that escritoire,
are writing materials. But make haste, for I
am impatient to finish this disagreeable business.”
Anderson sat down, and began to write
rapidly. I longed to rush out and give the alarm,
so that the impending tragedy might be averted; but
I feared that any movement on my part might result
in the passage of a bullet through my brain, and therefore
I remained quiet, for which I am sure, no sensible
reader will blame me.
Poor Anderson! tears gushed from his eyes and streamed down his cheeks while
he was writing one of the letters, which, as I afterwards ascertained, was
addressed to a young lady to whom he was engaged to be married. He wrote
two letters, folded, sealed and directed them; these he handed to me, saying
“Have the kindness to deliver
these letters to the persons to whom they are addressed.
Will you faithfully promise to do this?”
I promised, of course; he shook hands
with me, and bade me farewell; then, calmly turning
towards Romaine, he announced his readiness to die.
Up to that moment, I had tried to persuade myself that
Anderson’s life would be spared, thinking that
Romaine must have had enough of blood after slaying
his wife in that barbarous manner. But I was doomed
to be terribly disappointed. Scarcely had Anderson
muttered the words, “I am ready to die,”
when Romaine pulled the trigger of the upraised pistol,
and the young merchant fell dead upon the floor, the
bullet having penetrated his brain.
“Now I am satisfied, for I have
had my revenge,” said the murderer, coolly,
as he wiped the perspiration from his pallid brow.
“Blood-thirsty villain!”
exclaimed I, unable longer to restrain my indignation “you
will swing upon the gallows for this night’s
work!”
“Not so,” rejoined Romaine,
calmly, “for I do not intend to survive this
wholesale butchery, and did not, from the first.
I was determined that Anderson should die, at all
events. He won the pistol, for the coin fell
with the tail uppermost. Had he stooped to examine
it, I would have blown out his brains, just the same.
But hark! the boarders and inmates of the house have
been aroused by the report of the pistol, and they
are hastening here. The gallows no,
no, I must avoid that! They shall not
take me alive. Now, may heaven have mercy upon
my guilty soul!”
With these words the unhappy man seized
the Bowie knife and plunged it into his heart, thus
adding the crime of suicide to the two atrocious murders
which he had just committed.
Scarcely had this crowning point of
the fearful tragedy been enacted, when a crowd of
people, half-dressed and excited, rushed into the room.
Among them was the beautiful widow, Mrs. Raymond.
On seeing the bleeding corpse of Romaine stretched
upon the floor, she gave utterance to a piercing scream
and fell down insensible.
In the horror and confusion that prevailed,
I was unnoticed. I determined to leave the house,
never to return, for I dreaded being brought before
the public, as a witness, being a great hater of notoriety
in any shape. (The reader may smile at this last remark;
but I assure him, or her, that my frequent appearance
before the public as a writer, has been the result
of necessity not of inclination.)
Accordingly, I left the house unobserved,
and took lodgings for the remainder of the night at
a hotel. But sleep visited me not, for my mind
was too deeply engrossed with the bloody scenes which
I had witnessed, to suffer the approach of “tired
nature’s sweet restorer.” In the
morning I arose early, and investigated the condition
of my finances. The result of this examination
was highly satisfactory, for I found that I was the
possessor of a considerable sum of money.
I walked about the city until noon,
uncertain how to act. I felt a strong disposition
to travel, and see the world; but I could
not make up my mind in what direction to go.
After a sumptuous dinner at Sandy Welch’s “Terrapin
Lunch,” one of the most famous restaurants
of the day I indulged in a contemplative
walk up Broadway. Such thoughts as these ran
through my mind: “I cannot help contrasting
my present situation with the position I was in, three
years ago. Then I was almost penniless, and gladly
breakfasted on dry bread at a street pump; now I have
three hundred dollars in my pocket, and have just dined
like an epicurean prince. Then I was clad in
garments that were coarse and cheap; now I am dressed
in the finest raiment that money could procure.
Then I had no trade; now I have a profession which
will be to me an unfailing means of support.
But, alas! then I was comparatively innocent, and
ignorant of the wicked ways of the world; now, although
only fifteen years of age, I am too thoroughly posted
up on all the mysteries of city follies and vices.
No matter: there’s nothing like experience,
after all.”
Comforting myself with this philosophical
reflection, I strolled on. A newsboy came along,
bawling out, at the top of his voice “Here’s
the extra Sun, with a full account of the two
murders and suicide in William street last night only
one cent!” Of course I purchased a copy; and,
upon perusing the account, I could not help smiling
at the ludicrous and absurd exaggerations which it
contained. It was a perfect modern tragedy of
Othello, with Romaine as the Moor, Mrs. Romaine
as Desdemona, and Anderson as a sort of cross between
Iago and Michael Cassio. I was not alluded to
in any way whatever, which caused me to rejoice exceedingly.
Suddenly remembering the two letters
which had been confided to my care by the unfortunate
Anderson, I resolved to deliver them immediately.
One was directed to a Mr. Sargent, in Pine street.
I soon found the place, which was a large mercantile
establishment. Over the door was the sign “Anderson
& Sargent. This had been poor Andersons place of business, and
Sargent had been his partner. I entered, found Mr. Sargent in the
counting-room, and delivered to him the letter. He opened it, read it
through coolly, shrugged his shoulders, and said
“I have already been made acquainted
with the full particulars of this melancholy affair.
Anderson was a clever fellow, and I’m sorry he’s
gone, although his death will certainly promote my
interests. He gives me, in this letter, every
necessary instruction as to the disposition of his
property, and he also directs me to present you with
the sum of two hundred dollars, both as an acknowledgement
of your services and as a token of his friendship.
I will fill out a check for the amount immediately.”
This instance of Anderson’s
kindness and generosity, almost at the very moment
of his death, deeply affected me; and, at the same
time, I could not help feeling disgusted with the
heartlessness displayed by Sargent, who regarded the
tragical death of his partner merely as an event calculated
to advance his own interests.
Having received the check, I withdrew
from the august presence of Mr. Sargent, who was a
tall, thin, hook-nosed personage, of unwholesome aspect
and abrupt manners. I drew the money at the bank,
and then hastened to deliver the other letter, which
was addressed to Miss Grace Arlington, whose residence
was designated as being situated in one of the fashionable
squares up-town. I had no difficulty in finding
the house, which was of the most elegant and aristocratic
appearance. My appeal to the doorbell was responded
to by a smart-looking female domestic, who, on learning
my errand, ushered me into the presence of her mistress.
Miss Grace Arlington was a very lovely and delicate
young lady, whose soft eyes beamed with tenderness
and sensibility, whose voice was as sweet as the music
of an angel’s harp, while her step was as light
as the tread of a fairy whose tiny feet will not crush
the leaves of a rose. When I handed her the letter,
and she recognized the well known handwriting, she
bestowed upon me a winning and grateful smile which
I shall never forget. My heart misgave me as she
opened the missive, for I could well divine its contents;
and I almost reproached myself for being the messenger
of such evil tidings. I watched her closely as
she read. She was naturally somewhat pale, but
I saw her face grow ghastly white before she had read
two lines. When she had finished the perusal
of the fatal letter, she pressed her hand upon her
breast, murmured “Oh God!” and would have
fallen to the floor if I had not caught her in my
arms.
“Curses on my stupidity!”
I muttered, as I placed her insensible form upon a
sofa “I ought to have prepared her
gradually for the terrible announcement which I knew
that letter to contain!”
I rang the bell furiously, and the
almost deafening summons was answered by half-a-dozen
female servants, who, on seeing the condition of their
young Mistress, set up a loud chorus of screams.
The uproar brought Mr. Arlington, the father of the
young lady, to the scene. He was a fine-looking
old gentleman, a retired merchant and a millionaire.
I hastened to explain to him all that had occurred,
and Anderson’s letter, which lay upon the floor,
confirmed my statements. Mr. Arlington was horror-struck,
for he, as well as his daughter, had until that moment
been in happy ignorance of the bloody affair.
The old gentleman had first established Anderson in
business, and he had always cherished for that unfortunate
young man the warmest friendship. No wonder, then,
that he was overpowered when he became aware of the
tragical end of him whom he had expected so shortly
to become his son-in-law.
A celebrated physician, who resided
next door, was sent for. He happened to be at
home, and arrived almost instantly. He knelt down
beside the broken-hearted girl, and, as his fingers
touched her wrist, a look of profound grief settled
upon his benevolent face.
“Well, Doctor,” exclaimed
Mr. Arlington, breathlessly, “what is the matter
with my child? She will recover soon, will she
not? It is merely a fainting fit produced by
the reception of unwelcome news.”
“Alas, sir!” replied the
Doctor, in a tone of deep sympathy, as he brushed
away the tears from his eyes “I may
as well tell you the melancholy truth at once.
The sudden shock caused by the unwelcome news you
speak of, has proved fatal; your daughter is dead!”
Poor old Arlington staggered to a
seat, covered his face with his hands, and moaned
in the agony of his spirits. Notwithstanding all
his wealth, how I pitied him!
Seeing that I could be of no service
whatever, I left the house of mourning and walked
down town in a very thoughtful mood. I had already
begun to enter upon an experience such as few youths
of fifteen are ever called upon to encounter; and
I wondered what the dim, uncertain Future had in store
for me.
However, as the reader will see in
the next chapter, I did not long suffer my mind to
be intruded upon by melancholy reflections.