KATHERINE HEARS THE SLY STEP OF DEATH AT THE CEDARS
The night of his grandfather’s
mysterious death at the Cedars, Bobby Blackburn was,
at least until midnight, in New York. He was held
there by the unhealthy habits and companionships which
recently had angered his grandfather to the point
of threatening a disciplinary change in his will.
As a consequence he drifted into that strange adventure
which later was to surround him with dark shadows
and overwhelming doubts.
Before following Bobby through his
black experience, however, it is better to know what
happened at the Cedars where his cousin, Katherine
Perrine was, except for the servants, alone with old
Silas Blackburn who seemed apprehensive of some sly
approach of disaster.
At twenty Katherine was too young,
too light-hearted for this care of her uncle in which
she had persisted as an antidote for Bobby’s
shortcomings. She was never in harmony with the
mouldy house or its surroundings, bleak, deserted,
unfriendly to content.
Bobby and she had frequently urged
the old man to give it up, to move, as it were, into
the light. He had always answered angrily that
his ancestors had lived there since before the Revolution,
and that what had been good enough for them was good
enough for him. So that night Katherine had to
hear alone the sly stalking of death in the house.
She told it all to Bobby the next day-what
happened, her emotions, the impression made on her
by the people who came when it was too late to save
Silas Blackburn.
She said, then, that the old man had
behaved oddly for several days, as if he were afraid.
That night he ate practically no dinner. He couldn’t
keep still. He wandered from room to room, his
tired eyes apparently seeking. Several times
she spoke to him.
“What is the matter, Uncle? What worries
you?”
He grumbled unintelligibly or failed to answer at
all.
She went into the library and tried
to read, but the late fall wind swirled mournfully
about the house and beat down the chimney, causing
the fire to cast disturbing shadows across the walls.
Her loneliness, and her nervousness, grew sharper.
The restless, shuffling footsteps stimulated her imagination.
Perhaps a mental breakdown was responsible for this
alteration. She was tempted to ring for Jenkins,
the butler, to share her vigil; or for one of the
two women servants, now far at the back of the house.
“And Bobby,” she said
to herself, “or somebody will have to come out
here to-morrow to help.”
But Silas Blackburn shuffled in just
then, and she was a trifle ashamed as she studied
him standing with his back to the fire, glaring around
the room, fumbling with hands that shook in his pocket
for his pipe and some loose tobacco. It was unjust
to be afraid of him. There was no question.
The man himself was afraid-terribly afraid.
His fingers trembled so much that
he had difficulty lighting his pipe. His heavy
brows, gray like his beard, contracted in a frown.
His voice quavered unexpectedly. He spoke of
his grandson:
“Bobby! Damned waster! God knows what
he’ll do next.”
“He’s young, Uncle Silas, and too popular.”
He brushed aside her customary defence.
As he continued speaking she noticed that always his
voice shook as his fingers shook, as his stooped shoulders
jerked spasmodically.
“I ordered Mr. Robert here to-night.
Not a word from him. I’d made up my mind
anyway. My lawyer’s coming in the morning.
My money goes to the Bedford Foundation-all
except a little annuity for you, Katy. It’s
hard on you, but I’ve got no faith left in my
flesh and blood.”
His voice choked with a sentiment
a little repulsive in view of his ruthless nature,
his unbending egotism.
“It’s sad, Katy, to grow
old with nobody caring for you except to covet your
money.”
She arose and went close to him. He drew back,
startled.
“You’re not fair, Uncle.”
With an unexpected movement, nearly
savage, he pushed her aside and started for the door.
“Uncle!” she cried. “Tell me!
You must tell me! What makes you afraid?”
He turned at the door. He didn’t answer.
She laughed feverishly.
“It-it’s not Bobby you’re
afraid of?”
“You and Bobby,” he grumbled, “are
thicker than thieves.”
She shook her head.
“Bobby and I,” she said
wistfully, “aren’t very good friends, largely
because of this life he’s leading.”
He went on out of the room, mumbling again incoherently.
She resumed her vigil, unable to read
because of her misgivings, staring at the fire, starting
at a harsher gust of wind or any unaccustomed sound.
And for a long time there beat against her brain the
shuffling, searching tread of her uncle. Its
cessation about eleven o’clock increased her
uneasiness. He had been so afraid! Suppose
already the thing he had feared had overtaken him?
She listened intently. Even then she seemed to
sense the soundless footsteps of disaster straying
in the decayed house, and searching, too.
A morbid desire to satisfy herself
that her uncle’s silence meant nothing evil
drove her upstairs. She stood in the square main
hall at the head of the stairs, listening. Her
uncle’s bedroom door lay straight ahead.
To her right and left narrow corridors led to the wings.
Her room and Bobby’s and a spare room were in
the right-hand wing. The opposite corridor was
seldom used, for the left-hand wing was the oldest
portion of the house, and in the march of years too
many legends had gathered about it. The large
bedroom was there with its private hall beyond, and
a narrow, enclosed staircase, descending to the library.
Originally it had been the custom for the head of
the family to use that room. Its ancient furniture
still faded within stained walls. For many years
no one had slept in it, because it had sheltered too
much suffering, because it had witnessed the reluctant
spiritual departure of too many Blackburns.
Katherine shrank a little from the
black entrance of the corridor, but her anxiety centred
on the door ahead. She was about to call when
a stirring beyond it momentarily reassured her.
The door opened and her uncle stepped
out. He wore an untidy dressing-gown. His
hair was disordered. His face appeared grayer
and more haggard than it had downstairs. A lighted
candle shook in his right hand.
“What are you doing up here, Katy?” he
quavered.
She broke down before the picture
of his increased fear. He shuffled closer.
“What you crying for, Katy?”
She controlled herself. She begged him for an
answer to her doubts.
“You make me afraid.”
He laughed scornfully.
“You! What you got to be afraid of?”
“I’m afraid because you
are,” she urged. “You’ve got
to tell me. I’m all alone. I can’t
stand it. What are you afraid of?”
He didn’t answer. He shuffled
on toward the disused wing. Her hand tightened
on the banister.
“Where are you going?” she whispered.
He turned at the entrance to the corridor.
“I am going to the old bedroom.”
“Why? Why?” she asked
hysterically. “You can’t sleep there.
The bed isn’t even made.”
He lowered his voice to a hoarse whisper:
“Don’t you mention I’ve
gone there. If you want to know, I am afraid.
I’m afraid to sleep in my own room any longer.”
She nodded.
“And you don’t think they’d
look for you there. What is it? Tell me what
it is. Why don’t you send for some one-a
man?”
“Leave me alone,” he mumbled.
“Nothing for you to be worried about, except
Bobby.”
“Yes, there is,” she cried. “Yes,
there is.”
He paid no attention to her fright.
He entered the corridor. She heard him shuffling
between its narrow walls. She saw his candle disappear
in its gloomy reaches.
She ran to her own room and locked
the door. She hurried to the window and leaned
out, her body shaking, her teeth chattering as if from
a sudden chill. The quiet, assured tread of disaster
came nearer.
The two wings, stretching at right
angles from the main building, formed a narrow court.
Clouds harrying the moon failed quite to destroy its
power, so that she could see, across the court, the
façade of the old wing and the two windows of the
large room through whose curtains a spectral glow
was diffused. She heard one of the windows opened
with a grating noise. The court was a sounding
board. It carried to her even the shuffling of
the old man’s feet as he must have approached
the bed. The glow of his candle vanished.
She heard a rustling as if he had stretched himself
on the bed, a sound like a long-drawn sigh.
She tried to tell herself there was
no danger-that these peculiar actions sprang
from the old man’s fancy-but the house,
her surroundings, her loneliness, contradicted her.
To her over-acute senses the thought of Blackburn
in that room, so often consecrated to the formula of
death, suggested a special and unaccountable menace.
Under such a strain the supernatural assumed vague
and singular shapes.
She slept for only a little while.
Then she lay awake, listening with a growing expectancy
for some message to slip across the court. The
moon had ceased struggling. The wind cried.
The baying of a dog echoed mournfully from a great
distance. It was like a remote alarm bell which
vibrates too perfectly, whose resonance is too prolonged.
She sat upright. She sprang from
the bed and, her heart beating insufferably, felt
her way to the window. From the wing opposite
the message had come-a soft, shrouded sound,
another long-drawn sigh.
She tried to call across the court.
At first no response came from her tight throat.
When it did at last, her voice was unfamiliar in her
own ears, the voice of one who has to know a thing
but shrinks from asking.
“Uncle!”
The wind mocked her.
“It is nothing,” she told herself, “nothing.”
But her vigil had been too long, her
loneliness too complete. Her earlier impression
of the presence of death in the decaying house tightened
its hold. She had to assure herself that Silas
Blackburn slept untroubled. The thing she had
heard was peculiar, and he hadn’t answered across
the court. The dark, empty corridors at first
were an impassable barrier, but while she put on her
slippers and her dressing-gown she strengthened her
courage. There was a bell rope in the upper hall.
She might get Jenkins.
When she stood in the main hall she
hesitated. It would probably be a long time,
provided he heard at all, before Jenkins could answer
her. Her candle outlined the entrance to the
musty corridor. Just a few running steps down
there, a quick rap at the door, and, perhaps, in an
instant her uncle’s voice, and the blessed power
to return to her room and sleep!
While her fear grew she called on
her pride to let her accomplish that brief, abhorrent
journey.
Then for the first time a different
doubt came to her. As she waited alone in this
disturbing nocturnal intimacy of an old house, she
shrank from no thought of human intrusion, and she
wondered if her uncle had been afraid of that, too,
of the sort of thing that might lurk in the ancient
wing with its recollections of birth and suffering
and death. But he had gone there as an escape.
Surely he had been afraid of men. It shamed her
that, in spite of that, her fear defined itself ever
more clearly as something indefinable. With a
passionate determination to strangle such thoughts
she held her breath. She tried to close her mind.
She entered the corridor. She ran its length.
She knocked at the locked door of the old bedroom.
She shrank as the echoes rattled from the dingy walls
where her candle cast strange reflections. There
was no other answer. A sense of an intolerable
companionship made her want to cry out for brilliant
light, for help. She screamed.
“Uncle Silas! Uncle Silas!”
Through the silence that crushed her
voice she became aware finally of the accomplishment
of its mission by death in this house. And she
fled into the main hall. She jerked at the bell
rope. The contact steadied her, stimulated her
to reason. One slender hope remained. The
oppressive bedroom might have driven Silas Blackburn
through the private hall and down the enclosed staircase.
Perhaps he slept on the lounge in the library.
She stumbled down, hoping to meet
Jenkins. She crossed the hall and the dining
room and entered the library. She bent over the
lounge. It was empty. Her candle was reflected
in the face of the clock on the mantel. Its hands
pointed to half-past two.
She pulled at the bell cord by the
fireplace. Why didn’t the butler come?
Alone she couldn’t climb the enclosed staircase
to try the other door. It seemed impossible to
her that she should wait another instant alone-
The butler, as old and as gray as
Silas Blackburn, faltered in. He started back
when he saw her.
“My God, Miss Katherine!
What’s the matter? You look like death.”
“There’s death,” she said.
She indicated the door of the enclosed
staircase. She led the way with the candle.
The panelled, narrow hall was empty. That door,
too, was locked and the key, she knew, must be on
the inside.
“Who-who is it?”
Jenkins asked. “Who would be in that room?
Has Mr. Bobby come back?”
She descended to the library before
answering. She put the candle down and spread
her hands.
“It’s happened, Jenkins-whatever
he feared.”
“Not Mr. Silas?”
“We have to break in,”
she said with a shiver. “Get a hammer, a
chisel, whatever is necessary.”
“But if there’s anything
wrong,” the butler objected, “if anybody’s
been there, the other door must be open.”
She shook her head. Those two
first of all faced that extraordinary puzzle.
How had the murderer entered and left the room with
both doors locked on the inside, with the windows
too high for use? They went to the upper story.
She urged the butler into the sombre corridor.
“We have to know,” she
whispered, “what’s happened beyond those
locked doors.”
She still vibrated to the feeling
of unconformable forces in the old house. Jenkins,
she saw, responded to the same superstitious misgivings.
He inserted the chisel with maladroit hands. He
forced the lock back and opened the door. Dust
arose from the long-disused room, flecking the yellow
candle flame. They hesitated on the threshold.
They forced themselves to enter. Then they looked
at each other and smiled with relief, for Silas Blackburn,
in his dressing-gown, lay on the bed, his placid,
unmarked face upturned, as if sleeping.
“Why, miss,” Jenkins gasped. “He’s
all right.”
Almost with confidence Katherine walked to the bed.
“Uncle Silas-” she began, and
touched his hand.
She drew back until the wall supported
her. Jenkins must have read everything in her
face, for he whimpered:
“But he looks all right. He can’t
be-”
“Cold-already! If I hadn’t
touched-”
The horror of the thing descended
upon her, stifling thought. Automatically she
left the room and told Jenkins what to do. After
he had telephoned police headquarters in the county
seat and had summoned Doctor Groom, a country physician,
she sat without words, huddled over the library fire.
The detective, a competent man named
Howells, and Doctor Groom arrived at about the same
time. The detective made Katherine accompany them
upstairs while he questioned her. In the absence
of the coroner he wouldn’t let the doctor touch
the body.
“I must repair this lock,”
he said, “the first thing, so nothing can be
disturbed.”
Doctor Groom, a grim and dark man,
had grown silent on entering the room. For a
long time he stared at the body in the candle light,
making as much of an examination as he could, evidently,
without physical contact.
“Why did he ever come here to
sleep?” he asked in his rumbling bass voice.
“Nasty room! Unhealthy room! Ten to
one you’re a formality, policeman. Coroner’s
a formality.”
He sneered a little.
“I daresay he died what the
hard-headed world will call a natural death.
Wonder what the coroner’ll say.”
The detective didn’t answer.
He shot rapid, uneasy glances about the room in which
a single candle burned. After a time he said with
an accent of complete conviction:
“That man was murdered.”
Perhaps the doctor’s significant
words, added to her earlier dread of the abnormal,
made Katherine read in the detective’s manner
an apprehension of conditions unfamiliar to the brutal
routine of his profession. Her glances were restless,
too. She had a feeling that from the shadowed
corners of the faded, musty room invisible faces mocked
the man’s stubbornness.
All this she recited to Bobby when,
under extraordinary circumstances neither of them
could have foreseen, he arrived at the Cedars many
hours later.
Of the earlier portion of the night
of his grandfather’s death Bobby retained a
minute recollection. The remainder was like a
dim, appalling nightmare whose impulse remains hidden.
When he went to his apartment to dress
for dinner he found the letter of which Silas Blackburn
had spoken to Katherine. It mentioned the change
in the will as an approaching fact nothing could alter.
Bobby fancied that the old man merely craved the satisfaction
of terrorizing him, of casting him out with all the
ugly words at his command. Still a good deal
more than a million isn’t to be relinquished
lightly as long as a chance remains. Bobby had
an engagement for dinner. He would think the situation
over until after dinner, then he might go.
It was, perhaps, unfortunate that
at his club he met friends who drew him in a corner
and offered him too many cocktails. As he drank
his anger grew, and it wasn’t all against his
grandfather. He asked himself why during the
last few months he had avoided the Cedars, why he had
drifted into too vivid a life in New York. It
increased his anger that he hesitated to give himself
a frank answer. But always at such moments it
was Katherine rather than his grandfather who entered
his mind. He had cared too much for her, and
lately, beyond question, the bond of their affection
had weakened.
He raised his glass and drank.
He set the glass down quickly as if he would have
liked to hide it. A big man, clear-eyed and handsome,
walked into the room and came straight to the little
group in the corner. Bobby tried to carry it
off.
“’Lo, Hartley, old preacher.
You fellows all know Hartley Graham? Sit down.
We’re going to have a little cocktail.”
Graham looked at the glasses, shaking his head.
“If you’ve time, Bobby, I’d like
a word with you.”
“No preaching,” Bobby bargained.
“It isn’t Sunday.”
Graham laughed pleasantly.
“It’s about money. That talks any
day.”
Bobby edged a way out and followed
Graham to an unoccupied room. There the big man
turned on him.
“See here, Bobby! When are you going out
to the Cedars?”
Bobby flushed.
“You’re a dear friend,
Hartley, and I’ve always loved you, but I’m
in no mood for preaching tonight. Besides, I’ve
got my own life to lead”-he glanced
away-“my own reasons for leading it.”
“I’m not going to preach,”
Graham answered seriously, “although it’s
obvious you’re raising the devil with your life.
I wanted to tell you that I’ve had a note from
Katherine to-day. She says your grandfather’s
threats are taking too much form; that the new will’s
bound to come unless you do something. She cares
too much for you, Bobby, to see you throw everything
away. She’s asked me to persuade you to
go out.”
“Why didn’t she write to me?”
“Have you been very friendly
with Katherine lately? And that’s not fair.
You’re both without parents. You owe Katherine
something on that account.”
Bobby didn’t answer, because
it was clear that while Katherine’s affection
for him had weakened, her friendship for Graham had
grown too fast. Looking at the other he didn’t
wonder.
“There’s another thing,”
Graham was saying. “The gloomy old Cedars
has got on Katherine’s nerves, and she says
there’s been a change in the old man the last
few days-wanders around as if he were afraid
of something.”
Bobby laughed outright.
“Him afraid of something!
It’s always been his system to make everybody
and everything afraid of him. But you’re
right about Katherine. We have always depended
on each other. I think I’ll go out after
dinner.”
“Then come have a bite with
me,” Graham urged. “I’ll see
you off afterward. If you catch the eight-thirty
you ought to be out there before half-past ten.”
Bobby shook his head.
“An engagement for dinner, Hartley.
I’m expecting Carlos Paredes to pick me up here
any minute.”
Graham’s disapproval was belligerent.
“Why, in the name of heaven,
Bobby, do you run around with that damned Panamanian?
Steer him off to-night. I’ve argued with
you before. It’s unpleasant, I know, but
the man carries every mark of crookedness.”
“Easy with my friends, Hartley!
You don’t understand Carlos. He’s
good fun when you know him-awfully good
fun.”
“So,” Graham said, “is
this sort of thing. Too many cocktails, too much
wine. Paredes has the same pleasant, dangerous
quality.”
A club servant entered.
“In the reception room, Mr. Blackburn.”
Bobby took the card, tore it into
little bits, and dropped them one by one into the
waste-paper basket.
“Tell him I’ll be right out.”
He turned to Graham.
“Sorry you don’t like
my playmates. I’ll probably run out after
dinner and let the old man terrorize me as a cure
for his own fear. Pleasant prospect! So
long.”
Graham caught at his arm.
“I’m sorry. Can’t
we forget to-night that we disagree about Paredes?
Let me dine with you.”
Bobby’s laugh was uncomfortable.
“Come on, if you wish, and be my guardian angel.
God knows I need one.”
He walked across the hall and into
the reception room. The light was not brilliant
there. One or two men sat reading newspapers about
a green-shaded lamp on the centre table, but Bobby
didn’t see Paredes at first. Then from
the obscurity of a corner a form, tall and graceful,
emerged with a slow monotony of movement suggestive
of stealth. The man’s dark, sombre eyes
revealed nothing. His jet-black hair, parted in
the middle, and his carefully trimmed Van Dyke beard
gave him an air of distinction, an air, at the same
time, a trifle too reserved. For a moment, as
the green light stained his face unhealthily, Bobby
could understand Graham’s aversion. He
brushed the idea aside.
“Glad you’ve come, Carlos.”
The smile of greeting vanished abruptly
from Paredes’s face. He looked with steady
eyes beyond Bobby’s shoulder. Bobby turned.
Graham stood on the threshold, his face a little too
frank. But the two men shook hands.
“I’d an idea until I saw
Bobby,” Graham said, “that you’d
gone back to Panama.”
Paredes yawned.
“Each year I spend more time
in New York. Business suggests it. Pleasure
demands it.”
His voice was deep and pleasant, but
Bobby had often remarked that it, like Paredes’s
eyes, was too reserved. It seemed never to call
on its obvious powers of expression. Its accent
was noticeable only in a pleasant, polished sense.
“Hartley,” Bobby explained, “is
dining with us.”
Paredes let no disapproval slip, but Graham hastened
to explain.
“Bobby and I have an engagement immediately
after dinner.”
“An engagement after dinner! I didn’t
understand-”
“Let’s think of dinner
first,” Bobby said. “We can talk about
engagements afterward. Perhaps you’ll have
a cocktail here while we decide where we’re
going.”
“The aperitif I should like
very much,” Paredes said. “About dinner
there is nothing to decide. I have arranged everything.
There’s a table waiting in the Fountain Room
at the C - and there I have planned
a little surprise for you.”
He wouldn’t explain further.
While they drank their cocktails Bobby watched Graham’s
disapproval grow. The man glanced continually
at his watch. In the restaurant, when Paredes
left them to produce, as he called it, his surprise,
Graham appraised with a frown the voluble people who
moved intricately through the hall.
“I’m afraid Paredes has
planned a thorough evening,” he said, “for
which he’ll want you to pay. Don’t
be angry, Bobby. The situation is serious enough
to excuse facts. You must go to the Cedars to-night.
Do you understand? You must go, in spite of Paredes,
in spite of everything.”
“Peace until train time,” Bobby demanded.
He caught his breath.
“There they are. Carlos
has kept his word. See her, Hartley.
She’s glorious.”
A young woman accompanied the Panamanian
as he came back through the hall. She appeared
more foreign than her guide-the Spanish
of Spain rather than of South America. Her clothing
was as unusual and striking as her beauty, yet one
felt there was more than either to attract all the
glances in this room, to set people whispering as she
passed. Clearly she knew her notoriety was no
little thing. Pride filled her eyes.
Paredes had first introduced her to
Bobby a month or more ago. He had seen her a
number of times since in her dressing-room at the theatre
where she was featured, or at crowded luncheons in
her apartment. At such moments she had managed
to be exceptionally nice to him. Bobby, however,
had answered merely to the glamour of her fame, to
the magnetic response her beauty always brought in
places like this.
“Paredes,” Graham muttered,
“will have a powerful ally. You won’t
fail me, Bobby? You will go?”
Bobby scarcely heard. He hurried
forward and welcomed the woman. She tapped his
arm with her fan.
“Leetle Bobby!” she lisped.
“I haven’t seen very much of you lately.
So when Carlos proposed-you see I don’t
dance until late. Who is that behind you?
Mr. Graham, is it not? He would, maybe, not remember
me. I danced at a dinner where you were one night,
at Mr. Ward’s. Even lawyers, I find, take
enjoyment in my dancing.”
“I remember,” Graham said.
“It is very pleasant we are to dine together.”
He continued tactlessly: “But, as I’ve
explained to Mr. Paredes, we must hurry. Bobby
and I have an early engagement.”
Her head went up.
“An early engagement! I do not often dine
in public.”
“An unavoidable thing,” Graham explained.
“Bobby will tell you.”
Bobby nodded.
“It’s a nuisance, particularly when you’re
so condescending, Maria.”
She shrugged her shoulders. With
Bobby she entered the dining-room at the heels of
Paredes and Graham.
Paredes had foreseen everything.
There were flowers on the table. The dinner had
been ordered. Immediately the waiter brought cocktails.
Graham glanced at Bobby warningly. He wouldn’t,
as an example Bobby appreciated, touch his own.
Maria held hers up to the light.
“Pretty yellow things! I never drink them.”
She smiled dreamily at Bobby.
“But see! I shall place
this to my lips in order that you may make pretty
speeches, and maybe tell me it is the most divine aperitif
you have ever drunk.”
She passed the glass to him, and Bobby,
avoiding Graham’s eyes, wondering why she was
so gracious, emptied it. And afterward frequently
she reminded him of his wine by going through the
same elaborate formula. Probably because of that,
as much as anything else, constraint grasped the little
company tighter. Graham couldn’t hide his
anxiety. Paredes mocked it with sneering phrases
which he turned most carefully. Before the meal
was half finished Graham glanced at his watch.
“We’ve just time for the
eight-thirty,” he whispered to Bobby, “if
we pick up a taxi.”
Maria had heard. She pouted.
“There is no engagement,”
she lisped, “as sacred as a dinner, no entanglement
except marriage that cannot be easily broken.
Perhaps I have displeased you, Mr. Graham. Perhaps
you fancy I excite unpleasant comment. It is
unjust. I assure you my reputation is above reproach”-her
dark eyes twinkled-“certainly in New
York.”
“It isn’t that,”
Graham answered. “We must go. It’s
not to be evaded.”
She turned tempestuously.
“Am I to be humiliated so?
Carlos! Why did you bring me? Is all the
world to see my companions leave in the midst of a
dinner as if I were plague-touched? Is Bobby
not capable of choosing his own company?”
“You are thoroughly justified,
Maria,” Paredes said in his expressionless tones.
“Bobby, however, has said very little about this
engagement. I did not know, Mr. Graham, that
you were the arbiter of Bobby’s actions.
In a way I must resent your implication that he is
no longer capable of caring for himself.”
Graham accepted the challenge.
He leaned across the table, speaking directly to Bobby,
ignoring the others:
“You’ve not forgotten
what I told you. Will you come while there’s
time? You must see. I can’t remain
here any longer.”
Bobby, hating warfare in his present
mood, sought to temporize:
“It’s all right, Hartley.
Don’t worry. I’ll catch a later train.”
Maria relaxed.
“Ah! Bobby still chooses for himself.”
“I’ll have enough rumpus,”
Bobby muttered, “when I get to the Cedars.
Don’t grudge me a little peace here.”
Graham arose. His voice was discouraged.
“I’m sorry. I’ll hope, Bobby.”
Without a word to the others he walked out of the
room.
So far, when Bobby tried afterward
to recall the details of the evening, everything was
perfectly distinct in his memory. The remainder
of the meal, made uncomfortable by Maria’s sullenness
and Paredes’s sneers, his attempt to recapture
the earlier gayety of the evening by continuing to
drink the wine, his determination to go later to the
Cedars in spite of Graham’s doubt-of
all these things no particular lacked. He remembered
paying the check, as he usually did when he dined with
Paredes. He recalled studying the time-table
and finding that he had just missed another train.
Maria’s spirits rose then.
He was persuaded to accompany her and Paredes to the
music hall. In her dressing-room, while she was
on the stage, he played with the boxes of make-up,
splashing the mirror with various colours while Paredes
sat silently watching.
The alteration, he was sure, came
a little later in the cafe at a table close to the
dancing floor. Maria had insisted that Paredes
and he should wait there while she changed.
“But,” he had protested, “I have
missed too many trains.”
She had demanded his time-table, scanning the columns
of close figures.
“There is one,” she had
said, “at twelve-fifteen-time for
a little something in the cafe, and who knows?
If you are agreeable I might forgive everything and
dance with you once, Bobby, on the public floor.”
So he sat for some time, expectant,
with Paredes, watching the boisterous dancers, listening
to the violent music, sipping absent-mindedly at his
glass. He wondered why Paredes had grown so quiet.
“I mustn’t miss that twelve-fifteen,”
he said, “You know, Carlos, you weren’t
quite fair to Hartley. He’s a splendid fellow.
Roomed with me at college, played on same team, and
all that. Only wanted me to do the right thing.
Must say it was the right thing. I won’t
miss that twelve-fifteen.”
“Graham,” Paredes sneered,
“is a wonderful type-Apollo in the
flesh and Billy Sunday in the conscience.”
Then, as Bobby started to protest,
Maria entered, more dazzling than at dinner; and the
dancers swayed less boisterously, the chatter at the
tables subsided, the orchestra seemed to hesitate as
a sort of obeisance.
A man Bobby had never seen before
followed her to the table. His middle-aged figure
was loudly clothed. His face was coarse and clean
shaven. He acknowledged the introductions sullenly.
“I’ve only a minute,” Bobby said
to Maria.
He continued, however, to raise his
glass indifferently to his lips. All at once
his glass shook. Maria’s dark and sparkling
face became blurred. He could no longer define
the features of the stranger. He had never before
experienced anything of the kind. He tried to
account for it, but his mind became confused.
“Maria!” he burst out.
“Why are you looking at me like that?”
Her contralto laugh rippled.
“Bobby looks so funny!
Carlos! Leetle Bobby looks so queer! What
is the matter with him?”
Bobby’s anger was lost in the
increased confusion of his senses, but through that
mental turmoil tore the thought of Graham and his intention
of going to the Cedars. With shaking fingers he
dragged out his watch. He couldn’t read
the dial. He braced his hands against the table,
thrust back his chair, and arose. The room tumbled
about him. Before his eyes the dancers made long
nebulous bands of colour in which nothing had form
or coherence. Instinctively he felt he hadn’t
dined recklessly enough to account for these amazing
symptoms. He was suddenly afraid.
“Carlos!” he whispered.
He heard Maria’s voice dimly:
“Take him home.”
A hand touched his arm. With
a supreme effort of will he walked from the room,
guided by the hand on his arm. And always his
brain recorded fewer and fewer impressions for his
memory to struggle with later.
At the cloak room some one helped
him put on his coat. He was walking down steps.
He was in some kind of a conveyance. He didn’t
know what it was. An automobile, a carriage,
a train? He didn’t know. He only understood
that it went swiftly, swaying from side to side through
a sable pit. Whenever his mind moved at all it
came back to that sensation of a black pit in which
he remained suspended, swinging from side to side,
trying to struggle up against impossible odds.
Once or twice words flashed like fire through the
pit: “Tyrant!-Fool to go.”
From a long immersion deeper in the
pit he struggled frantically. He must get out.
Somehow he must find wings. He realized that his
eyes were closed. He tried to open them and failed.
So the pit persisted and he surrendered himself, as
one accepts death, to its hateful blackness.
Abruptly he experienced a momentary
release. There was no more swaying, no more movement
of any kind. He heard a strange, melancholy voice,
whispering without words, always whispering with a
futile perseverance as if it wished him to understand
something it could not express.
“What is it trying to tell me?” he asked
himself.
Then he understood. It was the
voice of the wind, and it tried to tell him to open
his eyes, and he found that he could. But in spite
of his desire they closed again almost immediately.
Yet, from that swift glimpse, a picture outlined itself
later in his memory.
In the midst of wild, rolling clouds,
the moon was a drowning face. Stunted trees bent
before the wind like puny men who strained impotently
to advance. Over there was one more like a real
man-a figure, Bobby thought, with a black
thing over its face-a mask.
“This is the forest near the
Cedars,” Bobby said to himself. “I’ve
come to face the old devil after all.”
He heard his own voice, harsh, remote,
unnatural, speaking to the dim figure with a black
mask that waited half hidden by the straining trees.
“Why am I here in the woods near the Cedars?”
And he thought the thing answered:
“Because you hate your grandfather.”
Bobby laughed, thinking he understood.
The figure in the black mask that accompanied him
was his conscience. He could understand why it
went masked.
The wind resumed its whispering.
The figures, straining like puny men, fought harder.
The drowning face disappeared, wet and helpless.
Bobby felt himself sinking back, back into the sable
pit.
“I don’t want to go,” he moaned.
A long time afterward he heard a whisper
again, and he wondered if it was the wind or his conscience.
He laughed through the blackness because the words
seemed so absurd.
“Take off your shoes and carry
them in your hand. Always do that. It is
the only safe way.”
He laughed again, thinking:
“What a careful conscience!”
He retained only one more impression.
He was dully aware that some time had passed.
He shivered. He thought the wind had grown angry
with him, for it no longer whispered. It shrieked,
and he could make nothing of its wrath. He struggled
frantically to emerge from the pit. The quality
of the blackness deepened. His fright grew.
He felt himself slipping, slowly at first then faster,
faster down into impossible depths, and there was
nothing at all he could do to save himself.
“Go away! For God’s sake, go away!”
Bobby thought he was speaking to the
sombre figure in the mask. His voice aroused
him to one more effort at escape, but he felt that
there was no use. He was too deep.
Something hurt his eyes. He opened
them and for a time was blinded by a narrow shaft,
of sunlight resting on his face. With an effort
he moved his head to one side and closed his eyes
again, at first merely thankful that he had escaped
from the black hell, trying to control his sensations
of physical evil. Subtle curiosity forced its
way into his sick brain and stung him wide awake.
This time his eyes remained open, staring about him,
dilating with a wilder fright than he had experienced
in the dark mazes of his nightmare adventure.
He had never seen this place before.
He lay on the floor of an empty room. The shaft
of sunlight that had aroused him entered through a
crack in one of the tightly drawn blinds. There
were dust and grime on the wails, and cobwebs clustered
in the corners.
In the silent, deserted room the beating
of his heart became audible. He struggled to
a sitting posture. He gasped for breath.
He knew it was very cold in here, but perspiration
moistened his face. He could recall no such suffering
as this since, when a boy, he had slipped from the
crisis of a destructive fever.
Had he been drugged? But he had
been with friends. There was no motive.
What house was this? Was it,
like this room, empty and deserted? How had he
come here? For the first time he went through
that dreadful process of trying to draw from the black
pit useful memories.
He started, recalling the strange
voice and its warning, for his shoes lay near by as
though he might have dropped them carelessly when he
had entered the room and stretched himself on the
floor. Damp earth adhered to the soles.
The leather above was scratched.
“Then,” he thought, “that
much is right. I was in the woods. What was
I doing there? That dim figure! My imagination.”
He suffered the agony of a man who
realizes that he has wandered unawares in strange
places, and retains no recollection of his actions,
of his intentions. He went back to that last unclouded
moment in the cafe with Maria, Paredes, and the stranger.
Where had he gone after he had left them? He
had looked at his watch. He had told himself he
must catch the twelve-fifteen train. He must
have gone from the restaurant, proceeding automatically,
and caught the train. That would account for
the sensation of motion in a swift vehicle, and perhaps
there had been a taxicab to the station. Doubtless
in the woods near the Cedars he had decided it was
too late to go in, or that it was wiser not to.
He had answered to the necessity of sleeping somewhere.
But why had he come here? Where, indeed, was
he?
At least he could answer that.
He drew on his shoes-a pair of patent leather
pumps. He fumbled for his handkerchief, thinking
he would brush the earth from them. He searched
each of his pockets. His handkerchief was gone.
No matter. He got to his feet, lurching for a
moment dizzily. He glanced with distaste at his
rumpled evening clothing. To hide it as far as
possible he buttoned his overcoat collar about his
neck. On tip-toe he approached the door, and,
with the emotions of a thief, opened it quietly.
He sighed. The rest of the house was as empty
as this room. The hall was thick with dust.
The rear door by which he must have entered stood
half open. The lock was broken and rusty.
He commenced to understand. There
was a deserted farmhouse less than two miles from
the Cedars. Since he had always known about it,
it wasn’t unusual he should have taken shelter
there after deciding not to go in to his grandfather.
He stepped through the doorway to
the unkempt yard about whose tumbled fences the woods
advanced thickly. He recognized the place.
For some time he stood ashamed, yet fair enough to
seek the cause of his experience in some mental unhealth
deeper than any reaction from last night’s folly.
He glanced at his watch. It was
after two o’clock. The mournful neighbourhood,
the growing chill in the air, the sullen sky, urged
him away. He walked down the road. Of course
he couldn’t go to the Cedars in this condition.
He would return to his apartment in New York where
he could bathe, change his clothes, recover from this
feeling of physical ill, and remember, perhaps, something
more.
It wasn’t far to the little
village on the railroad, and at this hour there were
plenty of trains. He hoped no one he knew would
see him at the station. He smiled wearily.
What difference did that make? He might as well
face old Blackburn, himself, as he was. By this
time the thing was done. The new will had been
made. He was penniless and an outcast. But
his furtive manner clung. He didn’t want
Katherine to see him like this.
From the entrance of the village it
was only a few steps to the station. Several
carriages stood at the platform, testimony that a
train was nearly due. He prayed that it would
be for New York. He didn’t want to wait
around. He didn’t want to risk Katherine’s
driving in on some errand.
His mind, intent only on escaping
prying eyes, was drawn by a man who stepped from behind
a carriage and started across the roadway in his direction,
staring at him incredulously. His quick apprehension
vanished. He couldn’t recall that surprised
face. There was no harm being seen, miserable
as he was, dressed as he was, by this stranger.
He looked at him closer. The man was plainly
clothed. He had small, sharp eyes. His hairless
face was intricately wrinkled. His lips were thin,
making a straight line.
To avoid him Bobby stepped aside,
thinking he must be going past, but the stranger stopped
and placed a firm hand on Bobby’s shoulder.
He spoke in a quick, authoritative voice:
“Certainly you are Mr. Robert Blackburn?”
For Bobby, in his nervous, bewildered
condition, there was an ominous note in this surprise,
this assurance, this peremptory greeting.
“What’s amazing about that?” he
jerked out.
The stranger’s lips parted in a straight smile.
“Amazing! That’s
the word I was thinking of. Hoped you might come
in from New York. Seemed you were here all the
time. That’s a good one on me-a
very good one.”
The beating of Bobby’s heart
was more pronounced than it had been in the deserted
house. He asked himself why he should shrink from
this stranger who had an air of threatening him.
The answer lay in that black pit of last night and
this morning. Unquestionably he had been indiscreet.
The man would tell him how.
“You mean,” he asked with
dry lips, “that you’ve been looking for
me? Who are you? Please take your hand off.”
The stranger’s grasp tightened.
“Not so fast, Mr. Robert Blackburn.
I daresay you haven’t just now come from the
Cedars?”
“No, no. I’m on my
way to New York. There’s a train soon, I
think.”
His voice trailed away. The stranger’s
straight smile widened. He commenced to laugh
harshly and uncouthly.
“Sure there’s a train,
but you don’t want to take it. And why haven’t
you been at the Cedars? Grandpa’s death
grieved you too much to go near his body?”
Bobby drew back. The shock robbed
him for a moment of the power to reason.
“Dead! The old man! How-”
The stranger’s smile faded.
“Here it is nearly three o’clock
in the afternoon, and you’re all dressed up
for last night. That’s lucky.”
Bobby couldn’t meet the narrow eyes.
“Who are you?”
The stranger with his free hand threw back his coat
lapel.
“My name’s Howells.
I’m a county detective. I’m on the
case, because your grandfather died very strangely.
He was murdered, very cleverly murdered. Queerest
case I’ve ever handled. What do you think?”
In his own ears Bobby’s voice
sounded as remote and unreal as it had through the
blackness last night.
“Why do you talk to me like this?”
“Because I tell you I’m
on the case, and I want you to turn about and go straight
to the Cedars.”
“This is-absurd. You mean you
suspect-You’re placing me under arrest?”
The detective’s straight smile returned.
“How we jump at conclusions!
I’m simply telling you not to bother me with
questions. I’m telling you to go straight
to the Cedars where you’ll stay. Understand?
You’ll stay there until you’re wanted-Until
you’re wanted.”
The merciless repetition settled it
for Bobby. He knew it would be dangerous to talk
or argue. Moreover, he craved an opportunity to
think, to probe farther into the black pit. He
turned and walked away. When he reached the last
houses he glanced back. The detective remained
in the middle of the road, staring after him with that
straight and satisfied smile.
Bobby walked on, his shaking hands
tightly clenched, muttering to himself:
“I’ve got to remember.
Good God! I’ve got to remember. It’s
the only way I can ever know he’s not right,
that I’m not a murderer.”