A ghost story.
Hush! what was that cry, so low but
yet so piercing, so strange but yet so sorrowful?
It was not the marmot upon the side of the Righi it
was not the heron down by the lake; no, it was distinctively
human. Hush! there it is again from
the churchyard which I have just left!
Not ten minutes have elapsed since
I was sitting on the low wall of the churchyard of
Weggis, watching the calm glories of the moonlight
illuminating with silver splendor the lake of Lucerne;
and I am certain there was no one within the inclosure
but myself.
I am mistaken, surely. What a
silence there is upon the night! Not a breath
of air now to break up into a thousand brilliant ripples
the long reflection of the August moon, or to stir
the foliage of the chestnuts; not a voice in the village;
no splash of oar upon the lake. All life seems
at perfect rest, and the solemn stillness that reigns
about the topmost glaciers of S. Gothard has spread
its mantle over the warmer world below.
I must not linger; as it is, I shall
have to wake up the porter to let me into the hotel.
I hurry on.
Not ten paces, though. Again
I hear the cry. This time it sounds to me like
the long, sad sob of a wearied and broken heart.
Without staying to reason with myself, I quickly retrace
my steps.
I stumble about among the iron crosses
and the graves, and displace in my confusion wreaths
of immortelles and fresher flowers. A huge mausoleum
stands between me and the wall upon which I had been
sitting not a quarter of an hour ago. The mausoleum
casts a deep shadow upon the side nearest to me.
Ah! something is stirring there. I strain my
eyes the figure of a man passes slowly out
of the shade, and silently occupies my place upon
the wall. It must have been his lips that gave
out that miserable sound.
What shall I do? Compassion and
curiosity are strong. The man whose heart can
be rent so sorely ought not to be allowed to linger
here with his despair. He is gazing, as I did,
upon the lake. I mark his profile clear-cut
and symmetrical; I catch the lustre of large eyes.
The face, as I can see it, seems very still and placid.
I may be mistaken; he may merely be a wanderer like
myself; perhaps he heard the three strange cries,
and has also come to seek the cause. I feel impelled
to speak to him.
I pass from the path by the church
to the east side of the mausoleum, and so come toward
him, the moon full upon his features. Great heaven!
how pale his face is!
“Good-evening, sir. I thought
myself alone here, and wondered that no other travellers
had found their way to this lovely spot. Charming,
is it not?”
For a moment he says nothing, but
his eyes are full upon me. At last he replies:
“It is charming, as you say, Mr. Reginald Westcar.”
“You know me?” I exclaim, in astonishment.
“Pardon me, I can scarcely claim
a personal acquaintance. But yours is the only
English name entered to-day in the Livre des
Etrangers.”
“You are staying at the Hotel de la Concorde,
then?”
An inclination of the head is all the answer vouchsafed.
“May I ask,” I continue,
“whether you heard just now a very strange cry
repeated three times?”
A pause. The lustrous eyes seem
to search me through and through I can
hardly bear their gaze. Then he replies.
“I fancy I heard the echoes
of some such sounds as you describe.”
The echoes! Is this, then,
the man who gave utterance to those cries of woe!
is it possible? The face seems so passionless;
but the pallor of those features bears witness to
some terrible agony within.
“I thought some one must be
in distress,” I rejoin, hastily; “and I
hurried back to see if I could be of any service.”
“Very good of you,” he
answers, coldly; “but surely such a place as
this is not unaccustomed to the voice of sorrow.”
“No doubt. My impulse was a mistaken one.”
“But kindly meant. You
will not sleep less soundly for acting on that impulse,
Reginald Westcar.”
He rises as he speaks. He throws
his cloak round him, and stands motionless. I
take the hint. My mysterious countryman wishes
to be alone. Some one that he has loved and lost
lies buried here.
“Good-night, sir,” I say,
as I move in the direction of the little chapel at
the gate. “Neither of us will sleep the
less soundly for thinking of the perfect repose that
reigns around this place.”
“What do you mean?” he asks.
“The dead,” I reply, as
I stretch my hand toward the graves. “Do
you not remember the lines in ‘King Lear’?
“‘After life’s
fitful fever he sleeps well.’”
“But you have never died,
Reginald Westcar. You know nothing of the sleep
of death.”
For the third time he speaks my name
almost familiarly, and I know not why a
shudder passes through me. I have no time, in
my turn, to ask him what he means; for he strides
silently away into the shadow of the church, and I,
with a strange sense of oppression upon me, returned
to my hotel.
The events which I have just related
passed in vivid recollection through my mind as I
travelled northward one cold November day in the year
185 . About six months previously I had
taken my degree at Oxford, and had since been enjoying
a trip upon the continent; and on my return to London
I found a letter awaiting me from my lawyers, informing
me somewhat to my astonishment, that I had succeeded
to a small estate in Cumberland. I must tell
you exactly how this came about. My mother was
a Miss Ringwood, and she was the youngest of three
children: the eldest was Aldina, the second was
Geoffrey, and the third (my mother) Alice. Their
mother (who had been a widow since my mother’s
birth) lived at this little place in Cumberland, and
which was known as The Shallows; she died shortly
after my mother’s marriage with my father, Captain
Westcar. My aunt Aldina and my uncle Geoffrey the
one at that time aged twenty-eight, and the other
twenty-six continued to reside at The Shallows.
My father and mother had to go to India, where I was
born, and where, when quite a child, I was left an
orphan. A few months after my mother’s
marriage my aunt disappeared; a few weeks after that
event, and my uncle Geoffrey dropped down dead, as
he was playing at cards with Mr. Maryon, the proprietor
of a neighboring mansion known as The Mere. A
fortnight after my uncle’s death, my aunt Aldina
returned to The Shallows, and never left it again
till she was carried out in her coffin to her grave
in the churchyard. Ever since her return from
her mysterious disappearance she maintained an impenetrable
reserve. As a schoolboy I visited her twice or
thrice, but these visits depressed my youthful spirits
to such an extent, that as I grew older I excused
myself from accepting my aunt’s not very pressing
invitations; and at the time I am now speaking of
I had not seen her for eight or ten years. I
was rather surprised, therefore, when she bequeathed
me The Shallows, which, as the surviving child, she
inherited under her mother’s marriage settlement.
But The Shallows had always exercised
a grim influence over me, and the knowledge that I
was now going to it as my home oppressed me. The
road seemed unusually dark, cold, and lonely.
At last I passed the lodge, and two hundred yards
more brought me to the porch. Very soon the door
was opened by an elderly female, whom I well remembered
as having been my aunt’s housekeeper and cook.
I had pleasant recollections of her, and was glad
to see her. To tell the truth, I had not anticipated
my visit to my newly acquired property with any great
degree of enthusiasm; but a very tolerable dinner
had an inspiriting effect, and I was pleased to learn
that there was a bin of old Madeira in the cellar.
Naturally I soon grew cheerful, and consequently talkative;
and summoned Mrs. Balk for a little gossip. The
substance of what I gathered from her rather diffusive
conversation was as follows:
My aunt had resided at The Shallows
ever since the death of my uncle Geoffrey, but she
had maintained a silent and reserved habit; and Mrs.
Balk was of opinion that she had had some great misfortune.
She had persistently refused all intercourse with
the people at The Mere. Squire Maryon, himself
a cold and taciturn man, had once or twice showed a
disposition to be friendly, but she had sternly repulsed
all such overtures. Mrs. Balk was of opinion
that Miss Ringwood was not “quite right,”
as she expressed it, on some topics; especially did
she seem impressed with the idea that The Mere ought
to belong to her. It appeared that the Ringwoods
and Maryons were distant connections; that The Mere
belonged in former times to a certain Sir Henry Benet;
that he was a bachelor, and that Squire Maryon’s
father and old Mr. Ringwood were cousins of his, and
that there was some doubt as to which was the real
heir; that Sir Henry, who disliked old Maryon, had
frequently said he had set any chance of dispute at
rest, by bequeathing the Mere property by will to
Mr. Ringwood, my mother’s father; that, on his
death, no such will could be found; and the family
lawyers agreed that Mr. Maryon was the legal inheritor,
and my uncle Geoffrey and his sisters must be content
to take the Shallows, or nothing at all. Mr.
Maryon was comparatively rich, and the Ringwoods poor,
consequently they were advised not to enter upon a
costly lawsuit. My aunt Aldina maintained to
the last that Sir Henry had made a will, and that Mr.
Maryon knew it, but had destroyed or suppressed the
document. I did not gather from Mrs. Balk’s
narrative that Miss Ringwood had any foundation for
her belief, and I dismissed the notion at once as baseless.
“And my uncle Geoffrey died
of apoplexy, you say, Mrs. Balk?”
“I don’t say so,
sir, no more did Miss Ringwood; but they said
so.”
“Whom do you mean by they?”
“The people at The Mere the
young doctor, a friend of Squire Maryon’s, who
was brought over from York, and the rest; he fell heavily
from his chair, and his head struck against the fender.”
“Playing at cards with Mr. Maryon, I think you
said.”
“Yes, sir; he was too fond of cards, I believe,
was Mr. Geoffrey.”
“Is Mr. Maryon seen much in the county is
he hospitable?”
“Well, sir, he goes up to London
a good deal, and has some friends down from town occasionally;
but he does not seem to care much about the people
in the neighborhood.”
“He has some children, Mrs. Balk?”
“Only one daughter, sir; a sweet
pretty thing she is. Her mother died when Miss
Agnes was born.”
“You have no idea, Mrs. Balk,
what my aunt Aldina’s great misfortune was?”
“Well, sir, I can’t help
thinking it must have been a love affair. She
always hated men so much.”
“Then why did she leave The Shallows to me,
Mrs. Balk?”
“Ah, you are laughing, sir.
No doubt she considered that The Mere ought to belong
to you, as the heir of the Ringwoods, and she placed
you here, as near as might be to the place.”
“In hopes that I might marry Miss Maryon, eh,
Mrs. Balk?”
“You are laughing again, sir.
I don’t imagine she thought so much of that,
as of the possibility of your discovering something
about the missing will.”
I bade the communicative Mrs. Balk
good night and retired to my bedroom a
low, wide, sombre, oak-panelled chamber. I must
confess that family stories had no great interest
for me, living apart from them at school and college
as I had done; and as I undressed I thought more of
the probabilities of sport the eight hundred acres
of wild shooting belonging to The Shallows would afford
me, than of the supposed will my poor aunt had evidently
worried herself about so much. Thoroughly tired
after my long journey, I soon fell fast asleep amid
the deep shadows of the huge four-poster I mentally
resolved to chop up into firewood at an early date,
and substitute for it a more modern iron bedstead.
How long I had been asleep I do not
know, but I suddenly started up, the echo of a long,
sad cry ringing in my ears.
I listened eagerly sensitive
to the slightest sound painfully sensitive
as one is only in the deep silence of the night.
I heard the old-fashioned clock I
had noticed on the stairs strike three. The reverberation
seemed to last a long time, then all was silent again.
“A dream,” I muttered to myself, as I lay
down upon the pillow; “Madeira is a heating
wine. But what can I have been dreaming of?”
Sleep seemed to have gone altogether,
and the busy mind wandered among the continental scenes
I had lately visited. By and by I found myself
in memory once more within the Weggis churchyard.
I was satisfied; I had traced my dream to the cries
that I had heard there. I turned round to sleep
again. Perhaps I fell into a doze I
cannot say; but again I started up at the repetition,
as it seemed outside my window, of that cry of sadness
and despair. I hastily drew aside the heavy curtains
of my bed at that moment the room seemed
to be illuminated with a dim, unearthly light and
I saw, gradually growing into human shape, the figure
of a woman. I recognized in it my aunt, Miss Ringwood.
Horror-struck, I gazed at the apparition; it advanced
a little the lips moved I heard
it distinctly say:
“Reginald Westcar, The Mere
belongs to you. Compel John Maryon to pay the
debt of honor!”
I fell back senseless.
When next I returned to consciousness,
it was when I was called in the morning; the shutters
were opened, and I saw the red light of the dawning
winter sun.
There is a strange sympathy between
the night and the mind. All one’s troubles
represent themselves as increased a hundredfold if
one wakes in the night, and begins to think about
them. A muscular pain becomes the certainty of
an incurable internal disease; and a headache suggests
incipient softening of the brain. But all these
horrors are dissipated with the morning light, and
the after-glow of a cold bath turns them into jokes.
So it was with me on the morning after my arrival at
The Shallows. I accounted most satisfactorily
for all that had occurred, or seemed to have occurred,
during the night; and resolved that, though the old
Madeira was uncommonly good, I must be careful in future
not to drink more than a couple of glasses after dinner.
I need scarcely say that I said nothing to Mrs. Balk
of my bad dreams, and shortly after breakfast I took
my gun, and went out in search of such game as I might
chance to meet with. At three o’clock I
sent the keeper home, as his capacious pockets were
pretty well filled, telling him that I thought I knew
the country, and should stroll back leisurely.
The gray gloom of the November evening was spreading
over the sky as I came upon a small plantation which
I believed belonged to me. I struck straight across
it; emerging from its shadows, I found myself by a
small stream and some marshy land; on the other side
another small plantation. A snipe got up, I fired,
and tailored it. I marked the bird into this other
plantation, and followed. Up got a covey of partridges bang,
bang one down by the side of an oak.
I was about to enter this covert, when a lady and
gentleman emerged, and, struck with the unpleasant
thought that I was possibly trespassing, I at once
went forward to apologize.
Before I could say a word, the gentleman addressed
me.
“May I ask, sir, if I have given
you permission to shoot over my preserves?”
“I beg to express my great regret,
sir,” I replied, as I lifted my hat in acknowledgment
of the lady’s presence, “that I should
have trespassed upon your land. I can only plead,
as my excuse, that I fully believed I was still upon
the manor belonging to The Shallows.”
“Gentlemen who go out shooting
ought to know the limits of their estates,”
he answered harshly; “the boundaries of The Shallows
are well defined, nor is the area they contain so
very extensive. You have no right upon this side
the stream, sir; oblige me by returning.”
I merely bowed, for I was nettled
by his tone, and as I turned away I noticed that the
young lady whispered to him.
“One moment, sir,” he
said, “my daughter suggests the possibility of
your being the new owner of The Shallows. May
I ask if this is so?”
It had not occurred to me before,
but I understood in a moment to whom I had been speaking,
and I replied:
“Yes, Mr. Maryon my name is Westcar.”
Such was my introduction to Mr. and
Miss Maryon. The proprietor of The Mere appeared
to be a gentleman, but his manners were cold and reserved,
and a careful observer might have remarked a perpetual
restlessness in the eyes, as if they were physically
incapable of regarding the same object for more than
a moment. He was about sixty years of age, apparently;
and though he now and again made an effort to carry
himself upright, the head and shoulders soon drooped
again, as if the weight of years, and, it might be,
the memory of the past, were a heavy load to carry.
Of Miss Maryon it is sufficient to say that she was
nineteen or twenty, and it did not need a second glance
to satisfy me that her beauty was of no ordinary kind.
I must hurry over the records of the
next few weeks. I became a frequent visitor at
The Mere. Mr. Maryon’s manner never became
cordial, but he did not seem displeased to see me;
and as to Agnes, well, she certainly was
not displeased either.
I think it was on Christmas Day that
I suddenly discovered that I was desperately in love.
Miss Maryon had been for two or three days confined
to her room by a bad cold, and I found myself in a
great state of anxiety to see her again. I am
sorry to say that my thoughts wandered a good deal
when I was at church upon that festival, and I could
not help thinking what ample room there was for a
bridal procession up the spacious aisle. Suddenly
my eyes rested upon a mural tablet, inscribed, “To
the memory of Aldina Ringwood.” Then with
a cold thrill there came back upon me what I had almost
forgotten, the dream, or whatever it was, that had
occurred on that first night at The Shallows; and those
strange words “The Mere belongs to
you. Compel John Maryon to pay the debt of honor!”
Nothing but the remembrance of Agnes’ sweet face
availed for the time to banish the vision, the statement,
and the bidding.
Miss Maryon was soon down-stairs again.
Did I flatter myself too much in thinking that she
was as glad to see me as I was to see her? No I
felt sure that I did not. Then I began to reflect
seriously upon my position. My fortune was small,
quite enough for me, but not enough for two; and as
she was heiress of The Mere and a comfortable rent-roll
of some six or eight thousand a year, was it not natural
that Mr. Maryon expected her to make what is called
a “good match”? Still, I could not
conceal from myself the fact, that he evinced no objection
whatever to my frequent visits at his house, nor to
my taking walks with his daughter when he was unable
to accompany us.
One bright, frosty day I had been
down to the lake with Miss Maryon, and had enjoyed
the privilege of teaching her to skate; and on returning
to the house, we met Mr. Maryon upon the terrace,
He walked with us to the conservatory; we went in
to examine the plants, and he remained outside, pacing
up and down the terrace. Both Agnes and myself
were strangely silent; perhaps my tongue had found
an eloquence upon the ice which was well met by a
shy thoughtfulness upon her part. But there was
a lovely color upon her cheeks, and I experienced
a very considerable and unusual fluttering about my
heart. It happened as we were standing at the
door of the conservatory, both of us silently looking
away from the flowers upon the frosty view, that our
eyes lighted at the same time upon Mr. Maryon.
He, too, was apparently regarding the prospect, when
suddenly he paused and staggered back, as if something
unexpected met his gaze.
“Oh, poor papa! I hope
he is not going to have one of his fits!” exclaimed
Agnes.
“Fits! Is he subject to such attacks?”
I inquired.
“Not ordinary fits,” she
answered hurriedly; “I hardly know how to explain
them. They come upon him occasionally, and generally
at this period of the year.”
“Shall we go to him?” I suggested.
“No; you cannot help him; and
he cannot bear that they should be noticed.”
We both watched him. His arms
were stretched up above his head, and again he recoiled
a step or two. I sought for an explanation in
Agnes’ face.
“A stranger!” she exclaimed. “Who
can it be?”
I looked toward Mr. Maryon. A
tall figure of a man had come from the farther side
of the house; he wore a large, loose coat and a kind
of military cap upon his head.
“Doubtless you are surprised
to see me, John,” we heard the new-comer say,
in a confident voice, “but I am not the devil,
man, that you should greet me with such a peculiar
attitude.” He held out his hand, and continued,
“Come, don’t let the warmth of old fellowship
be all on one side, this wintry day.”
We could see that Mr. Maryon took
the proffered right hand with his left for an instant,
then seemed to shrink away, but exchanged no word of
this greeting.
“I don’t understand this,”
said Agnes, and we both hurried forward. The
stranger, seeing Agnes approach, lifted his cap.
“Ah, your daughter, John, no
doubt. I see the likeness to her lamented mother.
Pray introduce me.”
Mr. Maryon’s usually pallid
features had assumed a still paler hue, and he said
in a low voice:
“Colonel Bludyer my daughter.”
Agnes barely bowed.
“Charmed to renew your acquaintance,
Miss Maryon. When last I saw you, you were quite
a baby; but your father and I are very old friends are
we not, John?”
Mr. Maryon vaguely nodded his head.
“Well, John, you have often
pressed your hospitality upon me, but till now I have
never had an opportunity of availing myself of your
kind offers; so I have brought my bag, and intend
at last to give you the pleasure of my company for
a few days.”
I certainly should have thought that
a man of Mr. Maryon’s disposition would have
resented such conduct as this, or, at all events, have
given this self-invited guest a chilling welcome.
Mr. Maryon, however, in a confused and somewhat stammering
tone, said that he was glad Colonel Bludyer had come
at last, and bade his daughter go and make the necessary
arrangements. Agnes, in silent astonishment, entered
the house, and then Mr. Maryon turned to me hastily
and bade me good-by. In a by no means comfortable
frame of mind I returned to The Shallows.
The sudden advent of this miscellaneous
colonel was naturally somewhat irritating to me.
Not only did I regard the man as an intolerable bore,
but I could not help fancying that he was something
more than an old friend of Mr. Maryon’s; in
fact, I was led to judge, by Mr. Maryon’s strange
conduct, that this Bludyer had some power over him
which might be exercised to the detriment of the Maryon
family, and I was convinced there was some mystery
it was my business to penetrate.
The following day I went up to The
Mere to see if Miss Maryon was desirous of renewing
her skating lesson. I found the party in the
billiard-room, Agnes marking for her father and the
Colonel. Mr. Maryon, whom I knew to be an exceptionally
good player, seemed incapable of making a decent stroke;
the Colonel, on the other hand, could evidently give
a professional fifteen, and beat him easily. We
all went down to the lake together. I had no
chance of any quiet conversation with Agnes; the Colonel
was perpetually beside us.
I returned home disgusted. For
two whole days I did not go near The Mere. On
the third day I went up, hoping that the horrid Colonel
would be gone. It was beginning to snow when
I left The Shallows at about two o’clock in
the afternoon, and Mrs. Balk foretold a heavy storm,
and bade me not be late returning.
The black winter darkness in the sky
deepened as I approached The Mere. I was ushered
again into the billiard-room. Agnes was marking,
as upon the previous occasion, but two days had worked
a sad difference in her face. Mr. Maryon hardly
noticed my entrance; he was flushed, and playing eagerly;
the Colonel was boisterous, declaring that John had
never played better twenty years ago. I relieved
Agnes of the duty of marking. The snow fell in
a thick layer upon the skylight, and the Colonel became
seriously anxious about my return home. As I did
not think he was the proper person to give me hints,
I resolutely remained where I was, encouraged in my
behavior by the few words I gained from Agnes, and
by the looks of entreaty she gave me. I had always
considered Mr. Maryon to be an abstemious man, but
he drank a good deal of brandy and soda during the
long game of seven hundred up, and when he succeeded
in beating the Colonel by forty-three, he was in roaring
spirits, and insisted upon my staying to dinner.
Need I say that I accepted the invitation?
I made such toilet as I could in a
most unattainable chamber that was allotted to me,
and hurried back to the drawing-room in the hope that
I might get a few private words with Agnes. I
was not disappointed. She, too, had hurried down,
and in a few words I learned that this abominable
Bludyer was paying her his coarse attentions, and with,
apparently, the full consent of Mr. Maryon. My
indignation was unbounded. Was it possible that
Mr. Maryon intended to sacrifice this fair creature
to that repulsive man?
Mr. Maryon had appeared in excellent
spirits when dinner began, and the first glass or
two of champagne made him merrier than I thought it
possible for him to be. But by the time the dessert
was on the table he had grown silent and thoughtful;
nor did he respond to the warm eulogiums the Colonel
passed upon the magnum of claret which was set before
us.
After dinner we sat in the library.
The Colonel left the room to fetch some cigars he
had been loudly extolling. Then Agnes had an opportunity
of whispering to me.
“Look at papa see
how strangely he sits his hands clenching
the arms of the chair, his eyes fixed upon the blazing
coals! How old he seems to be to-night!
His terrible fits are coming on he is always
like this toward the end of January!” The Colonel’s
return put an end to any further confidential talk.
When we separated for the night, I
felt that my going to bed would be purposeless.
I felt most painfully wide awake. I threw myself
down upon my bed, and worried myself by trying to
imagine what secret there could be between Maryon
and Bludyer for that a secret of some kind
existed, I felt certain. I tossed about till
I heard the stroke of one. A dreadful restlessness
had come upon me. It seemed as if the solemn night-side
of life was busy waking now, but the silence and solitude
of my antique chamber became too much for me.
I rose from my bed, and paced up and down the room.
I raked up the dying embers of the fire, and drew an
arm-chair to the hearth. I fell into a doze.
By and by I woke up suddenly, and I was conscious
of stealthy footsteps in the passage. My sense
of hearing became painfully acute. I heard the
footsteps retreating down the corridor, until they
were lost in the distance. I cautiously opened
the door, and, shading the candle with my hand, looked
out there was nothing to be seen; but I
felt that I could not remain quietly in my room, and,
closing the door behind me, I went out in search of
I knew not what.
The sitting-rooms and bedrooms in
ordinary use at The Mere were in the modern part of
the house; but there was an old Elizabethan wing which
I had often longed to explore, and in this strange
ramble of mine I soon had reason to be satisfied that
I was well within it. At the end of an oak-panelled
narrow passage a door stood open, and I entered a low,
sombre apartment fitted with furniture in the style
of two hundred years ago. There was something
awfully ghostly about the look of this room. A
great four-post bedstead, with heavy hangings, stood
in a deep recess; a round oak table and two high-backed
chairs were in the centre of the room. Suddenly,
as I gazed on these things, I heard stealthy footsteps
in the passage, and saw a dim light advancing.
Acting on a sudden impulse, I extinguished my candle
and withdrew into the shadow of the recess, watching
eagerly. The footsteps came nearer. My heart
seemed to stand still with expectation. They
paused outside the door, for a moment really for
an age it seemed to me. Then, to my astonishment,
I saw Mr. Maryon enter. He carried a small night-lamp
in his hand. Another glance satisfied me that
he was walking in his sleep. He came straight
to the round table, and set down the lamp. He
seated himself in one of the high-backed chairs, his
vacant eyes staring at the chair opposite; then his
lips began to move quickly, as if he were addressing
some one. Then he rose, went to the bureau, and
seemed to take something from it; then he sat down
again. What a strange action of his hands!
At first I could not understand it; then it flashed
upon me that in this dream of his he must be shuffling
cards. Yes, he began to deal; then he was playing
with his adversary his lips moving anxiously
at times.
A look of terrible eagerness came
over the sleepwalker’s countenance. With
nimble fingers he dealt the cards, and played.
Suddenly with a sweep of his hand he seemed to fling
the pack into the fireplace, started from his seat,
grappled with his unseen adversary, raised his powerful
right hand, and struck a tremendous blow. Hush!
more footsteps along the passage! Am I deceived?
From my concealment I watch for what is to follow.
Colonel Bludyer comes in, half dressed, but wide awake.
“You maniac!” I hear him
mutter: “I expected you were given to such
tricks as these. Lucky for you no eyes but mine
have seen your abject folly. Come back to your
room.”
Mr. Maryon is still gazing, his arms
lifted wildly above his head, upon the imagined foe
whom he had felled to the ground. The Colonel
touches him on the shoulder, and leads him away, leaving
the lamp. My reasoning faculties had fully returned
to me. I held a clue to the secret, and for Agnes’
sake it must be followed up. I took the lamp away,
and placed it on a table where the chamber candlesticks
stood, relit my own candle, and found my way back
to my bedroom.
The next morning, when I came down
to breakfast, I found Colonel Bludyer warming himself
satisfactorily at the blazing fire. I learned
from him that our host was far from well, and that
Miss Maryon was in attendance upon her father; that
the Colonel was charged with all kinds of apologies
to me, and good wishes for my safe return home across
the snow. I thanked him for the delivery of the
message, while I felt perfectly convinced that he
had never been charged with it. However that
might be, I never saw Mr. Maryon that morning; and
I started back to The Shallows through the snow.
For the next two or three days the
weather was very wild, but I contrived to get up to
The Mere, and ask after Mr. Maryon. Better, I
was told, but unable to see any one. Miss Maryon,
too, was fatigued with nursing her father. So
there was nothing to do but to trudge home again.
“Reginald Westcar, The Mere
is yours. Compel John Maryon to pay the debt
of honor!”
Again and again these words forced
themselves upon me, as I listlessly gazed out upon
the white landscape. The strange scene that I
had witnessed on that memorable night I passed beneath
Mr. Maryon’s roof had brought them back to my
memory with redoubled force, and I began to think
that the apparition I had seen or dreamed
of on my first night at The Shallows had
more of truth in it than I had been willing to believe.
Three more days passed away, and a
carter-boy from The Mere brought me a note. It
was Agnes’ handwriting. It said:
“DEAR MR. WESTCAR: Pray
come up here, if you possibly can. I cannot understand
what is the matter with papa; and he wishes me to do
a dreadful thing. Do come. I feel that I
have no friend but you. I am obliged to send
this note privately.”
I need scarcely say that five minutes
afterward I was plunging through the snow toward The
Mere. It was already late on that dark February
evening as I gained the shrubbery; and as I was pondering
upon the best method of securing admittance, I became
aware that the figure of a man was hurrying on some
yards in front of me. At first I thought it must
be one of the gardeners, but all of a sudden I stood
still, and my blood seemed to freeze with horror,
as I remarked that the figure in front of me left
no trace of footmarks on the snow! My brain
reeled for a moment, and I thought I should have fallen;
but I recovered my nerves, and when I looked before
me again, it had disappeared. I pressed on eagerly.
I arrived at the front door it was wide
open; and I passed through the hall to the library.
I heard Agnes’ voice.
“No, no, papa. You must
not force me to this! I cannot will
not marry Colonel Bludyer!”
“You must,” answered
Mr. Maryon, in a hoarse voice; “you must
marry him, and save your father from something worse
than disgrace!”
Not feeling disposed to play the eavesdropper,
I entered the room. Mr. Maryon was standing at
the fireplace. Agnes was crouching on the ground
at his feet. I saw at once that it was no use
for me to dissemble the reason of my visit, and, without
a word of greeting, I said:
“Miss Maryon, I have come, in
obedience to your summons. If I can prevent any
misfortune from falling upon you I am ready to help
you, with my life. You have guessed that I love
you. If my love is returned I am prepared to
dispute my claim with any man.”
Agnes, with a cry of joy, rose from
her knees, and rushed toward me. Ah! how strong
I felt as I held her in my arms!
“I have my answer,” I
continued. “Mr. Maryon, I have reason to
believe that your daughter is in fear of the future
you have forecast for her. I ask you to regard
those fears, and to give her to me, to love and cherish
as my wife.”
Mr. Maryon covered his face with his
hands; and I could hear him murmur, “Too late too
late!”
“No, not too late,” I
echoed. “What is this Bludyer to you, that
you should sacrifice your daughter to a man whose
very look proclaims him a villain? Nothing can
compel you to such a deed not even a debt
of honor!”
What it was impelled me to say these
last words I know not, but they had an extraordinary
effect upon Mr. Maryon. He started toward me,
then checked himself; his face was livid, his eyeballs
glaring, and he threw up his arms in the strange manner
I had already witnessed.
“What is all this?” exclaimed
a harsh voice behind me. “Mr. Westcar insulting
Miss Maryon and her father! it is time for me to interfere.”
And Colonel Bludyer approached me menacingly.
All his jovial manner and fulsome courtesy was gone;
and in his flushed face and insolent look the savage
rascal was revealed.
“You will interfere at your
peril,” I replied. “I am a younger
man than you are, and my strength has not been weakened
by drink and dissipation. Take care.”
The villain drew himself up to his
full height; and, though he must have been at least
some sixty years of age, I felt assured that I should
meet no ordinary adversary if a personal struggle
should ensue. Agnes fainted, and I laid her on
a sofa.
“Miss Maryon wants air,”
said the Colonel, in a calmer voice. “Excuse
me, Mr. Maryon, if I open a window.” He
tore open the shutters, and threw up the sash.
“And now, Mr. Westcar, unless you are prepared
to be sensible, and make your exit by the door, I
shall be under the unpleasant necessity of throwing
you out of the window.”
The ruffian advanced toward me as
he spoke. Suddenly he paused. His jaw dropped;
his hair seemed literally to stand on end; his white
lips quivered; he shook, as with an ague; his whole
form appeared to shrink. I stared in amazement
at the awful change. A strange thrill shot through
me, as I heard a quiet voice say:
“Richard Bludyer, your grave is waiting for
you. Go.”
The figure of a man passed between
me and him. The wretched man shrank back, and,
with a wild cry, leaped from the window he had opened.
All this time Mr. Maryon was standing
like a lifeless statue.
In helpless wonder I gazed at the
figure before me. I saw clearly the features
in profile, and, swift as lightning, my memory was
carried back to the unforgotten scene in the churchyard
upon the Lake of Lucerne, and I recognized the white
face of the young man with whom I there had spoken.
“John Maryon,” said the
voice, “this is the night upon which, a quarter
of a century ago, you killed me. It is your last
night on earth. You must go through the tragedy
again.”
Mr. Maryon, still statue-like, beckoned
to the figure, and opened a half-concealed door which
led into his study. The strange but opportune
visitant seemed to motion to me with a gesture of his
hand, which I felt I must obey, and I followed in
this weird procession. From the study we mounted
by a private staircase to a large, well-furnished bed-chamber.
Here we paused. Mr. Maryon looked tremblingly
at the stranger, and said, in a low, stammering voice:
“This is my room. In this
room, on this night, twenty-five years ago, you told
me that you were certain Sir Henry Benet’s will
was in existence, and that you had made up your mind
to dispute my possession to this property. You
had discovered letters from Sir Henry to your father
which gave you a clue to the spot where that will might
be found. You, Geoffrey Ringwood, of generous
and extravagant nature, offered to find the will in
my presence. It was late at night, as now; all
the household slept. I accepted your invitation,
and followed you.”
Mr. Maryon ceased; he seemed physically
unable to continue. The terrible stranger, in
his low, echoing voice, replied:
“Go on; confess all.”
“You and I, Geoffrey, had been
what the world calls friends. We had been much
in London together; we were both passionately fond
of cards. We had a common acquaintance, Richard
Bludyer. He was present on the 2d of February,
when I lost a large sum of money to you at écarte.
He hinted to me that you might possibly use these
sums in instituting a lawsuit against me for the recovery
of this estate. Your intimation that you knew
of the existence of the will alarmed me, as it had
become necessary for me to remain owner of The Mere.
As I have said, I accepted your invitation, and followed
you to Sir Henry Benet’s room; and now I follow
you again.”
As he said these words, Geoffrey Ringwood,
or his ghost, passed silently by Mr. Maryon, and led
the way into the corridor. At the end of the
corridor all three paused outside an oak door which
I remembered well. A gesture from the leader
made Mr. Maryon continue:
“On this threshold you told
me suddenly that Bludyer was a villain, and had betrayed
your sister Aldina; that she had fled with him that
night; that he could never marry her, as you had reason
to know he had a wife alive. You made me swear
to help you in your vengeance against him. We
entered the room, as we enter it now.”
Our leader had opened the door of
the room, and we were in the same chamber I had wandered
to when I had slept at The Mere. The figure of
Geoffrey Ringwood paused at the round table, and looked
again at Mr. Maryon, who proceeded:
“You went straight to the fifth
panel from the fireplace, and then touched a spring,
and the panel opened. You said that the will giving
this property to your father and his heirs was to be
found there. I was convinced that you spoke the
truth, but, suddenly remembering your love of gambling,
I suggested that we should play for it. You accepted
at once. We searched among the papers, and found
the will. We placed the will upon the table,
and began to play. We agreed that we would play
up to ten thousand pounds. Your luck was marvellous.
In two hours the limit was reached. I owed you
ten thousand pounds, and had lost The Mere. You
laughed, and said, ’Well, John, you have had
a fair chance. At ten o’clock this morning
I shall expect you to pay me your debt of honor.’
I rose; the devil of despair strong upon me. With
one hand I swept the cards from the table into the
fire, and with the other seized you by the throat,
and dealt you a blow upon the temple. You fell
dead upon the floor.”
Need I say that as I heard this fearful
narrative, I recognized the actions of the sleep-walker,
and understood them all?
“To the end!” said the
hollow voice. “Confess to the end!”
“The doctor who examined your
body gave his opinion, at the inquest, that you had
died of apoplexy, caused by strong cerebral excitement.
My evidence was to the effect that I believed you
had lost a very large sum of money to Captain Bludyer,
and that you had told me you were utterly unable to
pay it. The jury found their verdict accordingly,
and I was left in undisturbed possession of The Mere.
But the memory of my crime haunted me as only such
memories can haunt a criminal, and I became a morose
and miserable man. One thing bound me to life my
daughter. When Reginald Westcar appeared upon
the scene I thought that the debt of honor would be
satisfied if he married Agnes. Then Bludyer reappeared,
and he told me that he knew that I had killed you.
He threatened to revive the story, to exhume your
body, and to say that Aldina Ringwood had told him
all about the will. I could purchase his silence
only by giving him my daughter, the heiress of The
Mere. To this I consented.”
As he said these last words, Mr. Maryon
sunk heavily into the chair.
The figure of Geoffrey Ringwood placed
one ghostly hand upon his left temple, and then passed
silently out of the room. I started up, and followed
the phantom along the corridor down the
staircase out at the front door, which
still stood open across the snow-covered
lawn into the plantation; and then it disappeared
as strangely as I first had seen it; and, hardly knowing
whether I was mad or dreaming, I found my way back
to The Shallows.
For some weeks I was ill with brain-fever.
When I recovered I was told that terrible things had
happened at The Mere. Mr. Maryon had been found
dead in Sir Henry Benet’s room an
effusion of blood upon the brain, the doctors said and
the body of Colonel Bludyer had been discovered in
the snow in an old disused gravel-pit not far from
the house.
A year afterward I married Agnes Maryon;
and, if all that I had seen and heard upon that 3d
of February was not merely the invention of a fevered
brain, the debt of honor was at last discharged, for
I, the nephew of the murdered Geoffrey Ringwood, became
the owner of The Mere.