Of my wanderings after I left the
Museum on that black and dismal dies irae,
I have but a dim recollection. But I must have
travelled a quite considerable distance, since it
wanted an hour or two to the time for returning to
the surgery, and I spent the interval walking swiftly
through streets and squares, unmindful of the happenings
around, intent only on my present misfortune, and
driven by a natural impulse to seek relief in bodily
exertion. For mental distress sets up, as it were,
a sort of induced current of physical unrest; a beneficent
arrangement, by which a dangerous excess of emotional
excitement may be transformed into motor energy, and
so safely got rid of. The motor apparatus acts
as a safety-valve to the psychical; and if the engine
races for a while, with the onset of bodily fatigue
the emotional pressure-gauge returns to a normal reading.
And so it was with me. At first
I was conscious of nothing but a sense of utter bereavement,
of the shipwreck of all my hopes. But, by degrees,
as I threaded my way among the moving crowds, I came
to a better and more worthy frame of mind. After
all, I had lost nothing that I had ever had.
Ruth was still all that she had ever been to me perhaps
even more; and if that had been a rich endowment yesterday,
why not to-day also? And how unfair it would
be to her if I should mope and grieve over a disappointment
that was no fault of hers and for which there was no
remedy! Thus I reasoned with myself, and to such
purpose that, by the time I reached Fetter Lane, my
dejection had come to quite manageable proportions
and I had formed the resolution to get back to the
status quo ante bellum as soon as possible.
About eight o’clock, as I was
sitting alone in the consulting-room, gloomily persuading
myself that I was now quite resigned to the inevitable,
Adolphus brought me a registered packet, at the handwriting
on which my heart gave such a bound that I had much
ado to sign the receipt. As soon as Adolphus
had retired (with undissembled contempt of the shaky
signature) I tore open the packet, and as I drew out
a letter a tiny box dropped on the table.
The letter was all too short, and
I devoured it over and over again with the eagerness
of a condemned man reading a reprieve:
“My Dear Paul,
“Forgive me for leaving you
so abruptly this afternoon, and leaving you so unhappy,
too. I am more sane and reasonable now, and so
send you greeting and beg you not to grieve for that
which can never be. It is quite impossible, dear
friend, and I entreat you, as you care for me, never
to speak of it again; never again to make me feel that
I can give so little when you have given so much.
And do not try to see me for a little while.
I shall miss your visits, and so will my father, who
is very fond of you; but it is better that we should
not meet, until we can take up the old relations if
that can ever be.
“I am sending you a little keepsake
in case we should drift apart on the eddies of life.
It is the ring that I told you about the
one that my uncle gave me. Perhaps you may be
able to wear it as you have a small hand, but in any
case keep it in remembrance of our friendship.
The device on it is the Eye of Osiris, a mystic symbol
for which I have a sentimentally superstitious affection,
as also had my poor uncle, who actually bore it tattooed
in scarlet on his breast. It signifies that the
great judge of the dead looks down on men to see that
justice is done and that truth prevails. So I
commend you to the good Osiris; may his eye be upon
you, ever watchful over your welfare in the absence
of
“Your affectionate friend
“RUTH.”
It was a sweet letter, I thought,
even if it carried little comfort; quiet and reticent
like its writer, but with an undertone of sincere
affection. I laid it down at length, and, taking
the ring from its box, examined it fondly. Though
but a copy, it had all the quaintness and feeling
of the antique original, and, above all, it was fragrant
with the spirit of the giver. Dainty and delicate,
wrought of silver and gold, with an inlay of copper,
I would not have exchanged it for the Koh-i-noor;
and when I had slipped it on my finger its tiny eye
of blue enamel looked up at me so friendly and companionable
that I felt the glamour of the old-world superstition
stealing over me, too.
Not a single patient came in this
evening, which was well for me (and also for the patient),
as I was able forthwith to write in reply a long letter;
but this I shall spare the long-suffering reader excepting
its concluding paragraph:
“And now, dearest, I have said
my say; once for all, I have said it, and I will not
open my mouth on the subject again (I am not actually
opening it now) ‘until the times do alter.’
And if the times do never alter if it shall
come to pass, in due course, that we two shall sit
side by side, white-haired, and crinkly-nosed, and
lean our poor old chins upon our sticks and mumble
and gibber amicably over the things that might have
been if the good Osiris had come up to the scratch I
will still be content, because your friendship, Ruth,
is better than another woman’s love. So
you see, I have taken my gruel and come up to time
smiling if you will pardon the pugilistic
metaphor and I promise you loyally to do
your bidding and never again to distress you.
“Your faithful and loving friend,
“PAUL.”
This letter I addressed and stamped,
and then, with a wry grimace which I palmed off on
myself (but not on Adolphus) as a cheerful smile, I
went out and dropped it into the post-box; after which
I further deluded myself by murmuring Nunc dimittis
and assuring myself that the incident was now absolutely
closed.
But, despite this comfortable assurance,
I was, in the days that followed, an exceedingly miserable
young man. It is all very well to write down
troubles of this kind as trivial and sentimental.
They are nothing of the kind. When a man of an
essentially serious nature has found the one woman
of all the world who fulfils his highest ideals of
womanhood, who is, in fact, a woman in ten thousand,
to whom he has given all that he has to give of love
and worship, the sudden wreck of all his hopes is
no small calamity. And so I found it. Resign
myself as I would to the bitter reality, the ghost
of the might-have-been haunted me night and day, so
that I spent my leisure wandering abstractedly about
the streets, always trying to banish thought and never
for an instant succeeding. A great unrest was
upon me; and when I received a letter from Dick Barnard
announcing his arrival at Madeira, homeward bound,
I breathed a sigh of relief. I had no plans for
the future, but I longed to be rid of the, now irksome,
routine of the practice to be free to come
and go when and how I pleased.
One evening, as I sat consuming with
little appetite my solitary supper, there fell on
me a sudden sense of loneliness. The desire that
I had hitherto felt to be alone with my own miserable
reflections gave place to a yearning for human companionship.
That, indeed, which I craved for most was forbidden,
and I must abide by my lady’s wishes; but there
were my friends in the Temple. It was more than
a week since I had seen them; in fact, we had not
met since the morning of that unhappiest day of my
life. They would be wondering what had become
of me. I rose from the table, and, having filled
my pouch from a tin of tobacco, set forth for King’s
Bench Walk.
As I approached the entry of NA
in the gathering darkness I met Thorndyke himself
emerging, encumbered with two deck-chairs, a reading-lantern,
and a book.
“Why, Berkeley!” he exclaimed,
“is it indeed thou? We have been wondering
what had become of you.”
“It is a long time since I looked you
up,” I admitted.
He scrutinised me attentively by the
light of the entry lamp, and then remarked: “Fetter
Lane doesn’t seem to be agreeing with you very
well, my son. You are looking quite thin and
peaky.”
“Well, I’ve nearly done
with it. Barnard will be back in about ten days.
His ship is putting in at Madeira to coal and take
in some cargo, and then he is coming home. Where
are you going with those chairs?”
“I am going to sit down at the
end of the Walk by the garden railings. It’s
cooler there than indoors. If you will wait a
moment I will fetch another chair for Jervis, though
he won’t be back for a little while.”
He ran up the stairs, and presently returned with a
third chair, and we carried our impedimenta down to
the quiet corner at the bottom of the Walk.
“So your term of servitude is
coming to an end,” said he when we had placed
the chairs and hung the lantern on the railings.
“Any other news?”
“No. Have you any?”
“I am afraid I have not.
All my inquiries have yielded negative results.
There is, of course, a considerable body of evidence,
and it all seems to point one way. But I am unwilling
to make a decisive move without something more definite.
I am really waiting for confirmation or otherwise
of my ideas on the subject; for some new item of evidence.”
“I didn’t know there was any evidence.”
“Didn’t you?” said
Thorndyke. “But you know as much as I know.
You have all the essential facts; but apparently you
haven’t collated them and extracted their meaning.
If you had, you would have found them curiously significant.”
“I suppose I mustn’t ask what their significance
is?”
“No, I think not. When
I am conducting a case I mention my surmises to nobody not
even to Jervis. Then I can say confidently that
there has been no leakage. Don’t think
I distrust you. Remember that my thoughts are
my client’s property, and that the essence of
strategy is to keep the enemy in the dark.”
“Yes, I see that. Of course, I ought not
to have asked.”
“You ought not to need to ask,”
Thorndyke replied, with a smile; “you should
put the facts together and reason from them yourself.”
While we had been talking I had noticed
Thorndyke glance at me inquisitively from time to
time. Now, after an interval of silence, he asked
suddenly:
“Is anything amiss, Berkeley?
Are you worrying about your friends’ affairs?”
“No, not particularly; though
their prospects don’t look very rosy.”
“Perhaps they are not quite
so bad as they look,” said he. “But
I am afraid something is troubling you. All your
gay spirits seem to have evaporated.” He
paused for a few moments, and then added: “I
don’t want to intrude on your private affairs,
but if I can help you by advice or otherwise, remember
that we are old friends and that you are my academic
offspring.”
Instinctively, with a man’s
natural reticence, I began to mumble a half-articulate
disclaimer; and then I stopped. After all, why
should I not confide in him? He was a good man
and a wise man, full of human sympathy, as I knew,
though so cryptic and secretive in his professional
capacity. And I wanted a friend badly just now.
“I am afraid,” I began
shyly, “it is not a matter that admits of much
help, and it’s hardly the sort of thing that
I ought to worry you by talking about ”
“If it is enough to make you
unhappy, my dear fellow, it is enough to merit serious
consideration by your friend; so, if you don’t
mind telling me ”
“Of course I don’t, sir!” I exclaimed.
“Then fire away; and don’t
call me ‘sir.’ We are brother practitioners
now.”
Thus encouraged, I poured out the
story of my little romance; bashfully at first and
with halting phrases, but, later, with more freedom
and confidence. He listened with grave attention,
and once or twice put a question when my narrative
became a little disconnected. When I had finished
he laid his hand softly on my arm.
“You have had rough luck, Berkeley.
I don’t wonder that you are miserable.
I am more sorry than I can tell you.”
“Thank you,” I said.
“It’s exceedingly good of you to listen
so patiently, but it’s a shame for me to pester
you with my sentimental troubles.”
“Now, Berkeley, you don’t
think that, and I hope you don’t think that I
do. We should be bad biologists and worse physicians
if we should under-estimate the importance of that
which is Nature’s chiefest care. The one
salient biological truth is the paramount importance
of sex; and we are deaf and blind if we do not hear
and see it in everything that lives when we look abroad
upon the world; when we listen to the spring song
of the birds, or when we consider the lilies of the
field. And as is man to the lower organisms,
so is human love to their merely reflex manifestations
of sex. I will maintain, and you will agree with
me, I know, that the love of a serious and honourable
man for a woman who is worthy of him is the most momentous
of all human affairs. It is the foundation of
social life, and its failure is a serious calamity,
not only to those whose lives may be thereby spoilt,
but to society at large.”
“It’s a serious enough
matter for the parties concerned,” I agreed;
“but that is no reason why they should bore
their friends.”
“But they don’t.
Friends should help one another and think it a privilege.”
“Oh, I shouldn’t mind
coming to you for help, knowing you as I do. But
no one can help a poor devil in a case like this and
certainly not a medical jurist.”
“Oh, come, Berkeley!”
he protested, “don’t rate us too low.
The humblest of creatures has its uses ’even
the little pismire,’ you know, as Isaak Walton
tells us. Why, I have got substantial help from
a stamp-collector. And then reflect upon the
motor-scorcher and the earthworm and the blow-fly.
All these lowly creatures play their parts in the
scheme of Nature; and shall we cast out the medical
jurist as nothing worth?”
I laughed dejectedly at my teacher’s genial
irony.
“What I meant,” said I,
“was that there is nothing to be done but wait perhaps
for ever. I don’t know why she isn’t
able to marry me, and I mustn’t ask her.
She can’t be married already.”
“Certainly not. She told
you explicitly that there was no man in the case.”
“Exactly. And I can think
of no other valid reason, excepting that she doesn’t
care enough for me. That would be a perfectly
sound reason, but then it would only be a temporary
one, not the insuperable obstacle that she assumes
to exist, especially as we really got on excellently
together. I hope it isn’t some confounded
perverse feminine scruple. I don’t see
how it could be; but women are most frightfully tortuous
and wrong-headed at times.”
“I don’t see,” said
Thorndyke, “why we should cast about for perversely
abnormal motives when there is a perfectly reasonable
explanation staring us in the face.”
“Is there?” I exclaimed. “I
see none.”
“You are, not unnaturally, overlooking
some of the circumstances that affect Miss Bellingham;
but I don’t suppose she has failed to grasp
their meaning. Do you realise what her position
really is? I mean with regard to her uncle’s
disappearance?”
“I don’t think I quite understand you.”
“Well, there is no use in blinking
the facts,” said Thorndyke. “The
position is this: If John Bellingham ever went
to his brother’s house at Woodford, it is nearly
certain that he went there after his visit to Hurst.
Mind, I say ‘if he went’; I don’t
say that I believe he did. But it is stated that
he appears to have gone there; and if he did go, he
was never seen alive afterwards. Now, he did not
go in at the front door. No one saw him enter
the house. But there was a back gate, which John
Bellingham knew, and which had a bell which rang in
the library. And you will remember that, when
Hurst and Jellicoe called, Mr. Bellingham had only
just come in. Previous to that time Miss Bellingham
had been alone in the library; that is to say, she
was alone in the library at the very time when John
Bellingham is said to have made his visit. That
is the position, Berkeley. Nothing pointed has
been said up to the present. But, sooner or later,
if John Bellingham is not found, dead or alive, the
question will be opened. Then it is certain that
Hurst, in self-defence, will make the most of any facts
that may transfer suspicion from him to someone else.
And that someone else will be Miss Bellingham.”
I sat for some moments literally paralysed
with horror. Then my dismay gave place to indignation.
“But, damn it!” I exclaimed, starting up “I
beg your pardon but could anyone have the
infernal audacity to insinuate that that gentle, refined
lady murdered her uncle?”
“That is what will be hinted,
if not plainly asserted; and she knows it. And
that being so, is it difficult to understand why she
should refuse to allow you to be publicly associated
with her? To run the risk of dragging your honourable
name into the sordid transactions of the police-court
or the Old Bailey? To invest it, perhaps, with
a dreadful notoriety?”
“Oh, don’t! for God’s
sake! It is too horrible! Not that I would
care for myself. I would be proud to share her
martyrdom of ignominy, if it had to be; but it is
the sacrilege, the blasphemy of even thinking of her
in such terms, that enrages me.”
“Yes,” said Thorndyke;
“I understand and sympathise with you. Indeed,
I share your righteous indignation at this dastardly
affair. So you mustn’t think me brutal
for putting the case so plainly.”
“I don’t. You have
only shown me the danger that I was fool enough not
to see. But you seem to imply that this hideous
position has been brought about deliberately.”
“Certainly I do! This is
no chance affair. Either the appearances indicate
the real events which I am sure they do
not or they have been created of a set
purpose to lead to false conclusions. But the
circumstances convince me that there has been a deliberate
plot; and I am waiting in no spirit of
Christian patience, I can tell you to lay
my hand on the wretch who has done this.”
“What are you waiting for?” I asked.
“I am waiting for the inevitable,”
he replied; “for the false move that the most
artful criminal invariably makes. At present he
is lying low; but presently he must make a move, and
then I shall have him.”
“But he may go on lying low. What will
you do then?”
“Yes, that is the danger.
We may have to deal with the perfect villain who knows
when to leave well alone. I have never met him,
but he may exist, nevertheless.”
“And then we should have to
stand by and see our friends go under.”
“Perhaps,” said Thorndyke;
and we both subsided into gloomy and silent reflection.
The place was peaceful and quiet,
as only a backwater of London can be. Occasional
hoots from far-away tugs and steamers told of the busy
life down below in the crowded Pool. A faint
hum of traffic was borne in from the streets outside
the precincts, and the shrill voices of newspaper
boys came in unceasing chorus from the direction of
Carmelite Street. They were too far away to be
physically disturbing, but the excited yells, toned
down as they were by distance, nevertheless stirred
the very marrow in my bones, so dreadfully suggestive
were they of those possibilities of the future at
which Thorndyke had hinted. They seemed like
the sinister shadows of coming misfortunes.
Perhaps they called up the same association
of ideas in Thorndyke’s mind, for he remarked
presently: “The newsvendor is abroad to-night
like a bird of ill-omen. Something unusual has
happened: some public or private calamity, most
likely, and these yelling ghouls are out to feast
on the remains. The newspaper men have a good
deal in common with the carrion-birds that hover over
a battle-field.”
Again we subsided into silence and
reflection. Then, after an interval, I asked:
“Would it be possible for me
to help in any way in this investigation of yours?”
“That is exactly what I have
been asking myself,” replied Thorndyke.
“It would be right and proper that you should,
and I think you might.”
“How?” I asked eagerly.
“I can’t say off-hand;
but Jervis will be going away for his holiday almost
at once in fact, he will go off actual duty
to-night. There is very little doing; the long
vacation is close upon us, and I can do without him.
But if you would care to come down here and take his
place, you would be very useful to me; and if there
should be anything to be done in the Bellinghams’
case, I am sure you would make up in enthusiasm for
any deficiency in experience.”
“I couldn’t really take
Jervis’s place,” said I, “but if
you would let me help you in any way it would be a
great kindness. I would rather clean your boots
than be out of it altogether.”
“Very well. Let us leave
it that you come here as soon as Barnard has done
with you. You can have Jervis’s room, which
he doesn’t often use nowadays, and you will
be more happy here than elsewhere, I know. I may
as well give you my latchkey now. I have a duplicate
upstairs, and you understand that my chambers are
yours too from this moment.”
He handed me the latchkey and I thanked
him warmly from my heart, for I felt sure that the
suggestion was made, not for any use that I should
be to him, but for my own peace of mind. I had
hardly finished speaking when a quick step on the
paved walk caught my ear.
“Here is Jervis,” said
Thorndyke. “We will let him know that there
is a locum tenens ready to step into his shoes when
he wants to be off.” He flashed the lantern
across the path, and a few moments later his junior
stepped up briskly with a bundle of newspapers tucked
under his arm.
It struck me that Jervis looked at
me a little queerly when he recognised me in the dim
light; also that he was a trifle constrained in his
manner, as if my presence were an embarrassment.
He listened to Thorndyke’s announcement of our
newly made arrangement without much enthusiasm and
with none of his customary facetious comments.
And again I noticed a quick glance at me, half curious,
half uneasy, and wholly puzzling to me.
“That’s all right,”
he said when Thorndyke had explained the situation.
“I daresay you’ll find Berkeley as useful
as me, and, in any case, he’ll be better here
than staying on with Barnard.” He spoke
with unwonted gravity, and there was in his tone a
solicitude for me that attracted my notice and that
of Thorndyke as well, for the latter looked at him
curiously, though he made no comment. After a
short silence, however, he asked: “And
what news does my learned brother bring? There
is a mighty shouting among the outer barbarians, and
I see a bundle of newspapers under my learned friend’s
arm. Has anything in particular happened?”
Jervis looked more uncomfortable than
ever. “Well yes,” he replied
hesitatingly, “something has happened there!
It’s no use beating about the bush; Berkeley
may as well learn it from me as from those yelling
devils outside.” He took a couple of papers
from his bundle and silently handed one to me and
the other to Thorndyke.
Jervis’s ominous manner, naturally
enough, alarmed me not a little. I opened the
paper with a nameless dread. But whatever my vague
fears, they fell far short of the occasion; and when
I saw those yells from without crystallised into scare
headlines and flaming capitals I turned for a moment
sick and dizzy with fear.
The paragraph was only a short one,
and I read it through in less than a minute:
“THE MISSING FINGER
“DRAMATIC DISCOVERY AT WOODFORD.
“The mystery that has surrounded
the remains of a mutilated human body, portions of
which have been found in various places in Kent and
Essex, has received a partial and very sinister solution.
The police have, all along, suspected that these remains
were those of a Mr. John Bellingham who disappeared
under circumstances of some suspicion about two years
ago. There is now no doubt upon the subject, for
the finger which was missing from the hand that was
found at Sidcup has been discovered at the bottom
of a disused well together with a ring, which
has been identified as one habitually worn by Mr.
John Bellingham.
“The house in the garden of
which the well is situated was the property of the
murdered man, and was occupied at the time of the disappearance
by his brother, Mr. Godfrey Bellingham. But the
latter left it very soon after, and it has been empty
ever since. Just lately it has been put in repair,
and it was in this way that the well came to be emptied
and cleaned out. It seems that Detective-Inspector
Badger, who was searching the neighbourhood for further
remains, heard of the emptying of the well and went
down in the bucket to examine the bottom, where he
found the three bones and the ring.
“Thus the identity of the body
is established beyond all doubt, and the question
that remains is, Who killed John Bellingham? It
may be remembered that a trinket, apparently broken
from his watch-chain, was found in the grounds of
this house on the day that he disappeared, and that
he was never again seen alive. What may be the
import of these facts time will show.”
That was all; but it was enough.
I dropped the paper to the ground and glanced round
furtively at Jervis, who sat gazing gloomily at the
toes of his boots. It was horrible; It was incredible!
The blow was so crushing that it left my faculties
numb, and for a while I seemed unable even to think
intelligibly.
I was aroused by Thorndyke’s
voice calm, business-like, composed:
“Time will show, indeed!
But meanwhile we must go warily. And don’t
be unduly alarmed, Berkeley. Go home, take a
good dose of bromide with a little stimulant, and
turn in. I am afraid this has been rather a shock
to you.”
I rose from my chair like one in a
dream and held out my hand to Thorndyke; and even
in the dim light and in my dazed condition I noticed
that his face bore a look that I had never seen before:
the look of a granite mask of Fate grim,
stern, inexorable.
My two friends walked with me as far
as the gateway at the top of Inner Temple Lane, and
as we reached the entry a stranger, coming quickly
up the Lane, overtook and passed us. In the glare
of the lamp outside the porter’s lodge he looked
at us quickly over his shoulder, and though he passed
on without halt or greeting, I recognised him with
a certain dull surprise which I did not understand
then and do not understand now. It was Mr. Jellicoe.
I shook hands once more with my friends
and strode out into Fleet Street, but as soon as I
was outside the gate I made direct for Nevill’s
Court. What was in my mind I do not know; only
that some instinct of protection led me there, where
my lady lay unconscious of the hideous menace that
hung over her. At the entrance to the court a
tall, powerful man was lounging against the wall,
and he seemed to look at me curiously as I passed;
but I hardly noticed him and strode forward into the
narrow passage. By the shabby gateway of the
house I halted and looked up at such of the windows
as I could see over the wall. They were all dark.
All the inmates, then, were in bed. Vaguely comforted
by this, I walked on to the New Street end of the
court and looked out. Here, too, a man a
tall, thick-set man was loitering; and,
as he looked inquisitively into my face, I turned
and reentered the court, slowly retracing my steps.
As I again reached the gate of the house I stopped
to look up once more at the windows, and turning, I
found the man whom I had last noticed close behind
me. Then, in a flash of dreadful comprehension,
I understood. These two men were plain-clothes
policemen.
For a moment a blind fury possessed
me. An insane impulse urged me to give battle
to this intruder; to avenge upon his person the insult
of his presence. Fortunately the impulse was
but momentary, and I recovered myself without making
any demonstration. But the appearance of those
two policemen brought the peril into the immediate
present, imparted to it a horrible actuality.
A chilly sweat of terror stood on my forehead, and
my ears were ringing when I walked with faltering steps
out into Fetter Lane.