THE AMAZING MEETING IN THE SHADOWS OF THE OLD COURTYARD
Bobby returned to his bed. He
lay there still shivering, beneath the heavy blankets.
“I don’t dare!” He echoed Graham’s
words. “There’s nothing else any
one can say. I must decide what to do. I
must think it over.”
But, as always, thought brought no
release. It merely insisted that the case against
him was proved. At last he had been seen slipping
unconsciously from his room-and at the same
hour. All that remained was to learn how he had
accomplished the apparent miracles. Then no excuse
would remain for not going to Robinson and confessing.
The woman at the lake and in the courtyard, the movement
of the body and the vanishing of the evidence under
his hand, Paredes’s odd behaviour, all became
in his mind puzzling details that failed to obscure
the chief fact. After this something must be
done about Paredes’s detention.
He hadn’t dreamed that his weariness
could placate even momentarily such reflections, but
at last he slept again. He was aroused by the
tramping of men around the house, and strange, harsh
voices. He raised himself on his elbow and glanced
from the window. It had long been daylight.
Two burly fellows in overalls, carrying pick and spade
across their shoulders, pushed through the underbrush
at the edge of the clearing. He turned.
Graham, fully dressed, stood at the side of the bed.
“Those men?” Bobby asked wearily.
“The grave diggers,” Graham
answered. “They are going to work in the
old cemetery to prepare a place for Silas Blackburn
with his fathers. That’s why I’ve
come to wake you up. The minister’s telephoned
Katherine. He will be here before noon.
Do you know it’s after ten o’clock?”
For some time Bobby stared through
the window at the desolate, ragged landscape.
It was abnormally cold even for the late fall.
Dull clouds obscured the sun and furnished an illusion
of crowding earthward.
“A funereal day.”
The words slipped into his mind. He repeated
them.
“When your grandfather’s
buried,” Graham answered softly, “we’ll
all feel happier.”
“Why?” Bobby asked. “It won’t
lessen the fact of his murder.”
“Time,” Graham said, “lessens such
facts-even for the police.”
Bobby glanced at him, flushing.
“You mean you’ve decided to stand by me
after what happened last night?”
Graham smiled.
“I’ve thought it all over.
I slept like a top last night. I heard nothing.
I saw nothing.”
“Ought I to want you to stand
by me?” Bobby said. “Oughtn’t
I to make a clean breast of it? At least I must
do something about Paredes.”
Graham frowned.
“It’s hard to believe
he had any connection with your sleep-walking last
night, yet it’s as clear as ever that Maria and
he are up to some game in which you figure.”
“He shouldn’t be in jail,” Bobby
persisted.
“Get up,” Graham advised.
“Bathe, and have some breakfast, then we can
decide. There’s no use talking of the other
thing. I’ve forgotten it. As far as
possible you must.”
Bobby sprang upright.
“How can I forget it? If
it was hard to face sleep before, what do you think
it is now? Have I any right-”
“Don’t,” Graham
said. “I’ll be with you again to-night.
If I were satisfied beyond the shadow of a doubt I’d
advise you to confess, but I can’t be until
I know what Maria and Paredes are doing.”
When Bobby had bathed and dressed
he found, in spite of his mental turmoil, that his
sleep had done him good. While he breakfasted
Graham urged him to eat, tried to drive from his brain
the morbid aftermath of last night’s revealing
moment.
“The manager took my advice,
but Maria’s still missing. Her pictures
are in most of the papers. There have been reporters
here this morning, about the murders.”
He strolled over and handed Bobby a number of newspapers.
“Where’s Robinson?” Bobby asked.
“I saw him in the court a while
ago. I daresay he’s wandering around-perhaps
watching the men at the grave.”
“He learned nothing new last night?”
“I was with him at breakfast. I gather
not.”
Bobby looked up.
“Isn’t that an automobile coming through
the woods?” he asked.
“Maybe Rawlins back from Smithtown, or the minister.”
The car stopped at the entrance of
the court. They heard the remote tinkling of
the front door bell. Jenkins passed through.
The cold air invading the hall and the dining room
told them he had opened the door. His sharp exclamation
recalled Howells’s report which, at their direction,
he had failed to mail. Had his exclamation been
drawn by an accuser? Bobby started to rise.
Graham moved toward the door. Then Jenkins entered
and stood to one side. Bobby shared his astonishment,
for Paredes walked in, unbuttoning his overcoat, the
former easy-mannered, uncommunicative foreigner.
He appeared, moreover, to have slept pleasantly.
His eyes showed no weariness, his clothing no disarrangement.
He spoke at once, quite as if nothing disagreeable
had shadowed his departure.
“Good morning. If I had
dreamed of this change in the weather I would have
brought a heavier overcoat. I’ve nearly
frozen driving from Smithtown.”
Before either man could grope for
a suitable greeting he faced Bobby. He felt in
his pockets with whimsical discouragement.
“Fact is, Bobby, I left New
York too suddenly. I hadn’t noticed until
a little while ago. You see I spent a good deal
in Smithtown yesterday.”
Bobby spoke with an obvious confusion:
“What do you mean, Carlos? I thought you
were-”
Graham interrupted with a flat demand for an explanation.
“How did you get away?”
Paredes waved his hand.
“Later, Mr. Graham. There
is a hack driver outside who is even more suspicious
than you. He wants to be paid. I asked Rawlins
to drive me back, but he rushed from the courthouse,
probably to telephone his rotund superior. Fact
is, this fellow wants five dollars-an outrageous
rate. I’ve told him so-but it
doesn’t do any good. So will you lend me
Bobby-”
Bobby handed him a banknote.
He didn’t miss Graham’s meaning glance.
Paredes gave the money to the butler.
“Pay him, will you, Jenkins? Thanks.”
He surveyed the remains of Bobby’s breakfast.
He sat down.
“May I? My breakfast was
early, and prison food, when you’re not in the
habit-”
Bobby tried to account for Paredes’s
friendly manner. That he should have come back
at all was sufficiently strange, but it was harder
to understand why he should express no resentment
for his treatment yesterday, why he should fail to
refer to Bobby’s questions at the moment of
his arrest, or to the openly expressed enmity of Graham.
Only one theory promised to fit at all. It was
necessary for the Panamanian to return to the Cedars.
His purpose, whatever it was, compelled him to remain
for the present in the mournful, tragic house.
Therefore, he would crush his justifiable anger.
He would make it practically impossible for Bobby
to refuse his hospitality. And he had asked for
money-only a trifling sum, yet Graham would
grasp at the fact to support his earlier suspicion.
Paredes’s arrival possessed
one virtue: It diverted Bobby’s thoughts
temporarily from his own dilemma, from his inability
to chart a course.
Graham, on the other hand, was ill
at ease. Beyond a doubt he was disarmed by Paredes’s
good humour. For him yesterday’s incident
was not so lightly to be passed over. Eventually
his curiosity conquered. The words came, nevertheless,
with some difficulty:
“We scarcely expected you back.”
His laugh was short and embarrassed.
“We took it for granted you
would find it necessary to stay in Smithtown for a
while.”
Paredes sipped the coffee which Jenkins had poured.
“Splendid coffee! You should
have tasted what I had this morning. Simple enough,
Mr. Graham. I telephoned as soon as Rawlins got
me to the Bastille. I communicated with the lawyer
who represents the company for which I once worked.
He’s a prominent and brilliant man. He planned
it with some local fellow. When I was arraigned
at the opening of court this morning the judge could
hold me only as a material witness. He fixed a
pretty stiff bail, but the local lawyer was there with
a bondsman, and I came back. My clothes are here.
You don’t mind, Bobby?”
That moment in the hall when Graham
had awakened him urged Bobby to reply with a genuine
warmth:
“I don’t mind. I’m
glad you’re out of it. I’m sorry you
went as you did. I was tired, at my wits’
end. Your presence in the private staircase was
the last straw. You will forgive us, Carlos?”
Paredes smiled. He put down his
coffee cup and lighted a cigarette. He smoked
with a vast contentment.
“That’s better. Nothing
to forgive, Bobby. Let us call it a misunderstanding.”
Graham moved closer.
“Perhaps you’ll tell us
now what you were doing in the private staircase.”
Paredes blew a wreath of smoke.
His eyes still smiled, but his voice was harder:
“Bygones are bygones. Isn’t that
so, Bobby?”
“Since you wish it,” Bobby said.
But more important than the knowledge
Graham desired, loomed the old question. What
was the man’s game? What held him here?
Robinson entered. The flesh around
his eyes was puffier than it had been yesterday.
Worry had increased the incongruous discontent of his
round face. Clearly he had slept little.
“I saw you arrive,” he
said. “Rawlins warned me. But I must
say I didn’t think you’d use your freedom
to come to us.”
Paredes laughed.
“Since the law won’t hold
me at your convenience in Smithtown I keep myself
at your service here-if Bobby permits it.
Could you ask more?”
Bobby shrank from the man with whom
he had idled away so much time and money. That
fleeting, satanic impression of yesterday came back,
sharper, more alarming. Paredes’s clear
challenge to the district attorney was the measure
of his strength. His mind was subtler than theirs.
His reserve and easy daring mastered them all; and
always, as now, he laughed at the futility of their
efforts to sound his purposes, to limit his freedom
of action. Bobby didn’t care to meet the
uncommunicative eyes whose depths he had never been
able to explore. Was there a special power there
that could control the destinies of other people,
that might make men walk unconsciously to accomplish
the ends of an unscrupulous brain?
The district attorney appeared as
much at sea as the others.
“Thanks,” he said dryly to Paredes.
And glancing at Bobby, he asked with a hollow scorn:
“You’ve no objection to the gentleman
visiting you for the present?”
“If he wishes,” Bobby
answered, a trifle amused at Robinson’s obvious
fancy of a collusion between Paredes and himself.
Robinson jerked his head toward the window.
“I’ve been watching the
preparations out there. I guess when he’s
laid away you’ll be thinking about having the
will read.”
“No hurry,” Bobby answered with a quick
intake of breath.
“I suppose not,” Robinson
sneered, “since everybody knows well enough
what’s in it.”
Bobby arose. Robinson still sneered.
“You’ll be at the grave-as
chief mourner?”
Bobby walked from the room. He
hadn’t cared to reply. He feared, as it
was, that he had let slip his increased self-doubt.
He put on his coat and hat and left the house.
The raw cold, the year’s first omen of winter,
made his blood run quicker, forced into his mind a
cleansing stimulation. But almost immediately
even that prophylactic was denied him. With his
direction a matter of indifference, chance led him
into the thicket at the side of the house. He
had walked some distance. The underbrush had
long interposed a veil between him and the Cedars above
whose roofs smoke wreathed in the still air like fantastic
figures weaving a shroud to lower over the time-stained,
melancholy walls. For once he was grateful to
the forest because it had forbidden him to glance
perpetually back at that dismal and pensive picture.
Then he became aware of twigs hastily lopped off,
of bushes bent and torn, of the uncovering, through
these careless means, of an old path. Simultaneously
there reached his ears the scraping of metal implements
in the soft soil, the dull thud of earth falling regularly.
He paused, listening. The labour of the men was
given an uncouth rhythm by their grunting expulsions
of breath. Otherwise the nature of their industry
and its surroundings had imposed upon them a silence,
in itself beast-like and unnatural.
At last a harsh voice came to Bobby.
Its brevity pointed the previous dumbness of the speaker:
“Deep enough!”
And Bobby turned and hurried back
along the roughly restored path, as if fleeing from
an immaterial thing suddenly quickened with the power
of accusation.
He could picture the fresh oblong
excavation in the soil of the family burial ground.
He could see where the men had had to tear bushes from
among the graves in order to insert their tools.
There was an ironical justice in the condition of
the old cemetery. It had received no interment
since the death of Katherine’s father. Like
everything about the Cedars, Silas Blackburn had delivered
it to the swift, obliterating fingers of time.
If the old man in his selfishness had paused to gaze
beyond the inevitable fact of death, Bobby reflected,
he would have guarded with a more precious interest
the drapings of his final sleep.
This necessary task on which Bobby
had stumbled had made the thicket less congenial than
the house. As he walked back he forecasted with
a keen apprehension his approaching ordeal. It
would, doubtless, be more difficult to endure than
Howells’s experiment over Silas Blackburn’s
body in the old room. Could he witness the definite
imprisonment of his grandfather in a narrow box; could
he watch the covering earth fall noisily in that bleak
place of silence without displaying for Robinson the
guilt that impressed him more and more?
A strange man appeared, walking from
the direction of the house. His black clothing,
relieved only by narrow edges of white cuffs between
the sleeves and the heavy mourning gloves, fitted
with solemn harmony into the landscape and Bobby’s
mood. Such a figure was appropriate to the Cedars.
Bobby stepped to one side, placing a screen of dead
foliage between himself and the man whose profession
it was to mourn. He emerged from the forest and
saw again the leisurely weaving of the smoke shroud
above the house. Then his eyes were drawn by the
restless movements of a pair of horses, standing in
the shafts of a black wagon at the court entrance,
and his ordeal became like a vast morass which offers
no likely path yet whose crossing is the price of
salvation.
He was glad to see Graham leave the
court and hurry toward him.
“I was coming to hunt you up,
Bobby. The minister’s arrived. So has
Doctor Groom. Everything’s about ready.”
“Doctor Groom?”
“Yes. He used to see a
good deal of your grandfather. It’s natural
enough he should be here.”
Bobby agreed indifferently. They
walked slowly back to the house. Graham made
it plain that his mind was far from the sad business
ahead.
“What do you think of Paredes
coming back as if nothing were wrong?” he asked.
“He ignores what happened yesterday. He
settles himself in the Cedars again.”
“I don’t know what to
think of it,” Bobby answered. “This
morning Carlos gave me the creeps.”
Graham glanced at him curiously.
He spoke with pronounced deliberation, startling Bobby;
for this friend expressed practically the thought that
Paredes’s arrival had driven into his own mind.
“Gave me the creeps, too.
Makes me surer than ever that he has an abominably
deep purpose in using his wits to hang on here.
He suggests resources as hard to understand as anything
that has happened in the old room. You’ll
confess, Bobby, he’s had a good deal of influence
over you-an influence for evil?”
“I’ve liked to go around
with him, if that’s what you mean.”
“Isn’t he the cause of
the last two or three months nonsense in New York?”
“I won’t blame Carlos for that,”
Bobby muttered.
“He influenced you against your
better judgment,” Graham persisted, “to
refuse to leave with me the night of your grandfather’s
death.”
“Maria did her share,” Bobby said.
He broke off, looking at Graham.
“What are you driving at?”
“I’ve been asking myself
since he came back,” Graham answered, “if
there’s any queer power behind his quiet manner.
Maybe he is psychic. Maybe he can do things
we don’t understand. I’ve wondered
if he had, without your knowing it, acquired sufficient
influence to direct your body when your mind no longer
controlled it. It’s a nasty thought, but
I’ve heard of such things.”
“You mean Carlos may have made
me go to the hall last night, perhaps sent me to the
old room those other times?”
Now that another had expressed the
idea Bobby fought it with all his might.
“No. I won’t believe
it. I’ve been weak, Hartley, but not that
weak. And I tell you I did feel Howells’s
body move under my hand.”
“Don’t misunderstand me,”
Graham said gently. “I must consider every
possibility. You were excited and imaginative
when you went to the old room to take the evidence.
It was a shock to have your candle go out. Your
own hand, reaching out to Howells, might have moved
spasmodically. I mean, you may have been responsible
for the thing without realizing it.”
“And the disappearance of the
evidence?” Bobby defended himself.
“If it had been stolen earlier
the coat pocket might have retained its bulging shape.
We know now that Paredes is capable of sneaking around
the house.”
“No, no,” Bobby said hotly.
“You’re trying to take away my one hope.
But I was there, and you weren’t. I know
with my own senses what happened, and you don’t.
Paredes has no such influence over me. I won’t
think of it.”
“If it’s so far-fetched,”
Graham asked quietly, “why do you revolt from
the idea?”
Bobby turned on him.
“And why do you fill my mind
with such thoughts? If you think I’m guilty
say so. Go tell Robinson so.”
He glanced away while the angry colour
left his face. He was a little dazed by the realization
that he had spoken to Graham as he might have done
to an enemy, as he had spoken to Howells in the old
bedroom. He felt the touch of Graham’s
hand on his shoulder.
“I’m only working in your
service,” Graham said kindly. “I’m
sorry if I’ve troubled you by seeking physical
facts in order to escape the ghosts. For Groom
has brought the ghosts back with him. Don’t
make any mistake about that. You want the truth,
don’t you?”
“Yes,” Bobby said, “even
if it does for me. But I want it quickly.
I can’t go on this way indefinitely.”
Yet that flash of temper had given
him courage to face the ordeal. A lingering resentment
at Graham’s suggestion lessened the difficulty
of his position. Entering the court, he scarcely
glanced at the black wagon.
There were more dark-clothed men in
the hall. Rawlins had returned. From the
rug in front of the fireplace he surveyed the group
with a bland curiosity. Robinson sat near by,
glowering at Paredes. The Panamanian had changed
his clothing. He, too, was sombrely dressed,
and, instead of the vivid necktie he had worn from
the courthouse, a jet-black scarf was perfectly arranged
beneath his collar. He lounged opposite the district
attorney, his eyes studying the fire. His fingers
on the chair arm were restless.
Doctor Groom stood at the foot of
the stairs, talking with the clergyman, a stout and
unctuous figure. Bobby noticed that the great
stolid form of the doctor was ill at ease. From
his thickly bearded face his reddish eyes gleamed
forth with a fresh instability.
The clergyman shook hands with Bobby.
“We need not delay. Your cousin is upstairs.”
He included the company in his circling turn of the
head.
“Any one who cares to go-”
Bobby forced himself to walk up the
staircase, facing the first phase of his ordeal.
He saw that the district attorney realized that, too,
for he sprang from his chair, and, followed by Rawlins,
started upward. The entire company crowded the
stairs. At the top Bobby found Paredes at his
side.
“Carlos! Why do you come?”
“I would like to be of some comfort,”
Paredes answered gravely.
His fingers on the banister made that restless, groping
movement.
Graham summoned Katherine. One
of the black-clothed men opened the door of Silas
Blackburn’s room. He stepped aside, beckoning.
He had an air of a showman craving approbation for
the surprise he has arranged.
Bobby went in with the others.
Automatically through the dim light he catalogued
remembered objects, all intimate to his grandfather,
each oddly entangled in his mind with his dislike
of the old man. The iron bed; the chest of drawers,
scratched and with broken handles; the closed colonial
desk; the miserly rag carpet-all seemed
mutely asking, as Bobby did, why their owner had deserted
them the other night and delivered himself to the
ghostly mystery of the old bedroom.
Reluctantly Bobby’s glance went
to the centre of the floor where the casket rested
on trestles. From the chest of drawers two candles,
the only light, played wanly over the still figure
and the ashen face. So for the second time the
living met the dead, and the law watched hopefully.
Robinson stood opposite, but he didn’t
look at Silas Blackburn who could no longer accuse.
He stared instead at Bobby, and Bobby kept repeating
to himself:
“I didn’t do this thing. I didn’t
do this thing.”
And he searched the face of the dead
man for a confirmation. A chill thought, not
without excuse under the circumstances and in this
vague light, raced along his nerves. Silas Blackburn
had moved once since his death. If the power
to move and speak should miraculously return to him
now! In this house there appeared to be no impossibilities.
The cold control of death had been twice broken.
Katherine’s entrance swung his
thoughts and released him for a moment from Robinson’s
watchfulness. He found he could turn from the
wrinkled face that had fascinated him, that had seemed
to question him with a calm and complete knowledge,
to the lovely one that was active with a little smile
of encouragement. He was grateful for that.
It taught him that in the heavy presence of death
and from the harsh trappings of mourning the magnetism
of youth is unconquerable. So in affection he
found an antidote for fear. Even Graham’s
quick movement to her side couldn’t make her
presence less helpful to Bobby. He looked at his
grandfather again. He glanced at Robinson.
As in a dream he heard, the clergyman say:
“The service will be read at the grave.”
Almost indifferently he saw the dark-clothed
men sidle forward, lift a grotesquely shaped plate
of metal from the floor, and fit it in place, hiding
from his eyes the closed eyes of the dead man.
He nodded and stepped to the hall when Robinson tapped
his arm and whispered:
“Make way, Mr. Blackburn.”
He watched the sombre men carry their
heavy burden across the hall, down the stairs, and
into the dull autumn air. He followed at the side
of Katherine across the clearing and into the overgrown
path. He was aware of the others drifting behind.
Katherine slipped her hand in his.
“It is dreadful we shouldn’t
feel more sorrow, more regret,” she said.
“Perhaps we never understood him. That is
dreadful, too; for no one understood him. We
are the only mourners.”
Bobby, as they threaded the path behind
the stumbling bearers, found a grim justice in that
also. Because of his selfishness Silas Blackburn
had lived alone. Because of it he must go to
his long rest with no other mourners than these, and
their eyes were dry.
Bobby clung to Katherine’s hand.
“If I could only know!” he whispered.
She pressed his hand. She did not reply.
Ahead the forest was scarred by a
yellow wound. The bearers set their burden down
beside it, glancing at each other with relief.
Across the heap of earth Bobby saw the waiting excavation.
In his ears vibrated the memory of the harsh voice:
“It’s deep enough!”
Another voice droned. It was
soft and unctuous. It seemed to take a pleasure
in the terrible words it loosed to stray eternally
through the decaying forest.
Bobby glanced at bent stones, strangled
by the underbrush; at other slabs, cracked and brown,
which lay prone, half covered by creeping vines.
The tones of the clergyman were no longer revolting
in his ears. He scarcely heard them. He
imagined a fantasy. He pictured the inhabitants
of these forgotten, narrow houses straying to the great
dwelling where they had lived, punishing this one,
bringing him to suffer with them the degradation of
their neglect. So Robinson became less important
in his mind. Through such fancies the ordeal was
made bearable.
A wind sprang up, rattling through
the trees and disturbing the vines on the fallen stones.
Later, he thought, it would snow, and he shivered for
those left helpless to sleep in the sad forest.
The dark-clothed men strained at ropes
now. They glanced at Katherine and Bobby as at
those most to be impressed by their skill. They
lowered Silas Blackburn’s grimly shaped casing
into the sorrel pit. It passed from Bobby’s
sight. The two roughly dressed labourers came
from the thicket where they had hidden, and with their
spades approached the grave. The sound from whose
imminence Bobby had shrunk rattled in his ears.
The yellow earth cut across the stormy twilight of
the cemetery and scattered in the trench. After
a time the response lost its metallic petulance.
Katherine pulled at Bobby’s
hand. He started and glanced up. One of the
black-clothed men was speaking to him with a professional
gentleness:
“You needn’t wait, Mr.
Blackburn. Everything is finished.”
He saw now that Robinson stood across
the grave still staring at him. The professional
mourner smiled sympathetically and moved away.
Katherine, Robinson, the two grave diggers, and Bobby
alone were left of the little company; and Bobby,
staring back at the district attorney, took a sombre
pride in facing it out until even the men with the
spades had gone. The ordeal, he reflected, had
lost its poignancy. His mind was intent on the
empty trappings he had witnessed. He wondered
if there was, after all, no justice against his grandfather
in this unkempt burial. The place might have
something to tell him. If it could only make
him believe that beyond the inevitable fact nothing
mattered. If he were sure of that it would offer
a way out at the worst; perhaps the happiest exit
for Katherine’s sake.
Then Doctor Groom returned. His
huge hairy figure dominated the cemetery. His
infused eyes, beneath the thick black brows, were far-seeing.
They seemed to penetrate Bobby’s thought.
Then they glanced at the excavation, appearing to
intimate that Silas Blackburn’s earthy blanket
could hide nothing from the closed eyes it sheltered.
At his age he faced the near approach of that inevitable
fact, and he didn’t hesitate to look beyond.
Bobby knew what Graham had meant when he had said that
Groom had brought the ghosts back with him. It
was as if the cemetery had recalled the old doctor
to answer his presumptuous question.
“There’s no use your staying here.”
The resonance of the deep voice jarred
through the woods. The broad shoulders twitched.
One of the hairy hands made a half circle.
“I hope you’ll clean this
up, my boy. You ought to replace the stones and
trim the graves. You couldn’t blame them,
could you, if these old people were restless and tried
to go abroad?”
For Bobby, in spite of himself, the
man on whose last shelter the earth continued to fall
became once more a potent thing, able to appraise the
penalty of his own carelessness.
“Come,” Katherine whispered.
But Bobby lingered, oddly fascinated,
supporting the ordeal to its final moment. The
blows of the backs of the spades on the completed mound
beat into his brain the end. The workmen wandered
off through the woods. From a distance the harsh
voice of one of them came back:
“I don’t want to dig again
in such a place. People don’t seem dead
there.”
Robinson tried to laugh.
“That man’s wise,”
he said to the doctor. “If Paredes spoke
of this cemetery as being full of ghosts I could understand
him.”
The doctor’s deep bass answered thoughtfully:
“Paredes is probably right.
The man has a special sense, but I have felt it myself.
The Cedars and the forest are full of things that seem
to whisper, things that one never sees. Such
things might have an excuse for evil.”
“Let’s get out of it,” Robinson
said gruffly.
Katherine withdrew her hand.
Bobby reached for it again, but she seemed not to
notice. She walked ahead of him along the path,
her shoulders a trifle bent. Bobby caught up
with her.
“Katherine!” he said.
“Don’t talk to me, Bobby.”
He looked closer. He saw that
she was crying at last. Tears stained her cheeks.
Her lips were strange to him in the distortion of a
grief that seeks to control itself. He slackened
his pace and let her walk ahead. He followed
with a sort of awe that there should have been grief
for Silas Blackburn after all. He blamed himself
because his own eyes were not moist.
Back of him he heard the murmuring
conversation of the doctor and the district attorney.
Strangely it made him sorry that Robinson should have
been more impressed than Howells by the doctor’s
beliefs.
They stepped into the clearing.
The wind had dissipated the smoke shroud. It
was no longer low over the roofs. Against the
forest and the darker clouds the house had a stark
appearance. It was like a frame from which the
flesh has fallen.
The black wagon had gone. The
Cedars was left alone to the solution of its mystery.
Paredes, Graham, and Rawlins waited
for them in the hall. There was nothing to say.
Paredes placed with a delicate accuracy fresh logs
upon the fire. He arose, flecking the wood dust
from his hands.
“How cold it will be here,”
he mused, “how impossible of entrance when the
house is left as empty as the woods to those who only
go unseen!”
Bobby saw Katherine’s shoulders
shake. She had dried her eyes, but in her face
was expressed an aversion for solitude, a desire for
any company, even that of the man she disliked and
feared.
Robinson took Rawlins to the library
for another futile consultation, Bobby guessed.
Katherine sat on the arm of a chair, thrusting one
foot toward the fresh blaze.
“It will snow,” she said. “It
is very early for that.”
No one answered. The strain tightened.
The flames leapt, throwing evanescent pulsations of
brilliancy about the dusky hall. They welcomed
Jenkins’s announcement that luncheon was ready,
but they scarcely disturbed the hurriedly prepared
dishes, and afterward they gathered again in the hall,
silent and depressed, appalled by the long, dreary
afternoon, which, however, possessed the single virtue
of dividing them from another night.
For long periods the district attorney
and the detective were closeted in the library.
Now and then they passed upstairs, and they could be
heard moving about, but no one, save Graham, seemed
to care. Already the officers had had every opportunity
to search the house. The old room no longer held
an inhabitant to set its fatal machinery in motion.
Yet Bobby realized in a dull way that at any moment
the two men might come down to him, saying:
“We have found something. You are guilty.”
The heavy atmosphere of the house
crushed such forecasts, made them seem a little trivial.
Bobby fancied it gathering density to cradle new mysteries.
The long minutes loitered. Doctor Groom made a
movement to go.
“Why should I stay?” he
grumbled. “What is there to keep me?”
Yet he sat back in his chair again
and appeared to have forgotten his intention.
Graham wandered off. Bobby thought
he had joined Rawlins and Robinson in the library.
The only daylight entered the hall
through narrow slits of windows on either side of
the front door. Bobby, watching these, was, even
with the problems night brought to him now, glad when
they grew paler.
Paredes, who had been smoking cigarette
after cigarette, arose and brought his card table.
Drawing it close to him, he arranged the cards in
neat piles. The uncertain firelight made it barely
possible to identify their numbers. Doctor Groom
gestured his disgust. Katherine stooped forward,
placing her hands on the table.
“Is it kind,” she asked,
“so soon after he has left his house?”
Paredes started.
“Wait!” he said softly.
Puzzled, she glanced at him.
“Stay just as you are,”
he directed. “There has been so much death
in this house-who knows?”
Languidly he placed his fingers on the edge of the
table opposite hers.
“What are you doing?” Dr. Groom asked
hoarsely.
“Wait!” Paredes said again.
Then Bobby, scarcely aware of what
was going on, saw the cards glide softly across the
face of the table and flutter to the floor. The
table had lifted slowly toward the Panamanian.
It stood now on two legs.
“What is it?” Katherine
said. “It’s moving. I can feel
it move beneath my fingers.”
Her words recalled to Bobby unavoidably his experience
in the old room.
“Don’t do that!” the doctor cried.
Paredes smiled.
“If,” he answered, “the
source of these crimes is, as you think, spiritual,
why not ask the spirits for a solution? You see
how quickly the table responds. It is as I thought.
There is something in this hall. Haven’t
you a feeling that the dead are in this dark hall with
us? They may wish to speak. See!”
The table settled softly down without
any noise. It commenced to rise again. Katherine
lifted her hands with a visible effort, as if the table
had tried to hold them against her will. She covered
her face and sat trembling.
“I won’t! I-”
Paredes shrugged his shoulders, appealing
to the doctor. The huge, shaggy head shook determinedly.
“I’m not so sure I don’t
agree with you. I’m not so sure the dead
aren’t in this hall. That is why I’ll
have nothing to do with such dangerous play.
It has shown us, at least, that you are psychic, Mr.
Paredes.”
“I have a gift,” Paredes
murmured. “It would be useful to speak with
them. They see so much more than we do.”
He lifted his hands. He waved
them dejectedly. He stooped and commenced picking
up the cards. The doctor arose.
“I shall go now.”
He sighed. “I don’t know why I have
stayed.”
Bobby got his coat and hat.
“I’ll walk to the stable with you.”
He was glad to escape from the dismal
hall in which the firelight grew more eccentric.
The court was colder and damper, and even beyond the
chill was more penetrating than it had been at the
grave that noon. Uneven flakes of snow sifted
from the swollen sky, heralds of a white invasion.
“No more sleep-walking?”
the doctor asked when he had taken the blanket from
his horse and climbed into the buggy.
Bobby leaned against the wall of the
stable and told how Graham had brought him back the
previous night from the stairhead, to which he had
gone with a purpose he didn’t dare sound.
The doctor shook his head.
“You shouldn’t tell me
that. You shouldn’t tell any one. You
place yourself too much in my hands, as you are already
in Graham’s hands. Maybe that is all right.
But the district attorney? You’re sure he
knows nothing of this habit which seems to have commenced
the night of the first murder?”
“No, and I think Paredes alone
of those who know about that first night would be
likely to tell him.”
“See that he doesn’t,”
the doctor said shortly. “I’ve been
watching Robinson. If he doesn’t make an
arrest pretty soon with something back of it he’ll
lose his mind. He mightn’t stop to ask,
as I do, as Howells did, about the locked doors and
the nature of the wounds.”
“How shall I find the courage
to sleep to-night?” Bobby asked.
The doctor thought for a moment.
“Suppose I come back?”
he said. “I’ve only one or two unimportant
cases to look after. I ought to return before
dinner. I’ll take Graham’s place
for to-night. It’s time your reactions were
better diagnosed. I’ll share your room,
and you can go to sleep, assured that you’ll
come to no harm, that harm will come to no one through
you. I’ll bring some books on the subject.
I’ll read them while you sleep. Perhaps
I can learn the impulse that makes your body active
while your mind’s a blank.”
The idea of the influence of Paredes,
which Graham had put into words, slipped back to Bobby.
He was, nevertheless, strengthened by the doctor’s
promise. To an extent the dread of the night fell
from him like a smothering garment. This old
man, who had always filled him with discomfort, had
become a capable support in his difficult hour.
He saw him drive away. He studied his watch,
computing the time that must elapse before he could
return. He wanted him at the Cedars even though
the doctor believed more thoroughly than any one else
in the spiritual survival of old passions and the
power of the dead to project a physical evil.
He didn’t care to go back to
the hall. It would do him good to walk, to force
as far as he could from his mind the memory of the
ordeal at the grave, the grim, impending atmosphere
of the house. And suppose he should accomplish
something useful? Suppose he should succeed where
Graham had failed?
So he walked toward the stagnant lake.
The flakes of snow fell thicker. Already they
had gathered in white patches on the floor of the forest.
If this weather continued the woods would cease to
be habitable for that dark feminine figure through
which they had accounted for the mournful crying after
Howells’s death, which Graham had tried to identify
with the dancer, Maria.
As he passed the neighbourhood of
the cemetery; he walked faster. Many yards of
underbrush separated him from the little time-devastated
city of the dead, but its mere proximity forced on
him, as the old room had done, a feeling of a stealthy
and intangible companionship.
He stepped from the fringe of trees
about the open space in the centre of which the lake
brooded. The water received with a destructive
indifference the fluttering caresses of the snowflakes.
Bobby paused with a quick expectancy. He saw
nothing of the woman who had startled him that first
evening, but he heard from the thicket a sound like
muffled sobbing, and he responded again to the sense
of a malevolent regard.
He hid himself among the trees, and
in their shelter skirted the lake. The sobbing
had faded into nothing. For a long time he heard
only the whispers of the snow and the grief of the
wind. When he had rounded the lake and was some
distance beyond it, however, the moaning reached him
again, and through the fast-deepening twilight he saw,
as indistinctly as he had before, a black feminine
figure flitting among the trees in the direction of
the lake. Graham’s theory lost its value.
It was impossible to fancy the brilliant, colourful
dancer in this black, shadowy thing. He commenced
to run in pursuit, calling out:
“Stop! Who are you? Why do you cry
through the woods?”
But the dusk was too thick, the forest
too eager. The black figure disappeared.
In retrospect it was again as unsubstantial as a phantom.
The flakes whispered mockingly. The wind was ironical.
He found his pursuit had led him back
to the end of the lake nearest the Cedars. He
paused. His triumph was not unmixed with fear.
A black figure stood in the open, quite close to him,
gazing over the stagnant water that was like a veil
for sinister things. He knew now that the woman
was flesh and blood, for she did not glide away, and
the snow made pallid scars on her black cloak.
He crept carefully forward until he
was close behind the black figure.
“Now,” he said, “you’ll
tell me who you are and why you cry about the Cedars.”
The woman swung around with a cry.
He stepped back, abashed, not knowing what to say,
for there was still enough light to disclose to him
the troubled face of Katherine, and there were tears
in her eyes as if she might recently have expressed
an audible grief.
“You frightened me, Bobby.”
Without calculation he spoke his swift
thought: “Was it you I saw here before?
But surely you didn’t cry in the house the other
night and afterward when we followed Carlos!”
The tranquil beauty of her face was
disturbed. When she answered her voice had lost
something of its music:
“What do you mean?”
“It was you who cried just now?
It was you I saw running through the woods?”
“What do you mean?” she
asked again. “I have not run. I-I
am not your woman in black, if that’s what you
think. I happened to pick up this cloak.
You’ve seen it often enough before. And
I haven’t cried.”
She brushed the tears angrily from her eyes.
“At least I haven’t cried
so any one could hear me. I wanted to walk.
I hoped I would find you. I thought you had come
this way, so I came, too. Why, Bobby, you’re
suspecting me of something!”
But the problem of the fugitive figure
receded before the more intimate one of his heart.
There was a thrill in her desire to find him in the
solitude of the forest.
Only the faintest gray survived in
the sky above the trees. The shadows were thick
about them. The whispering snow urged him to use
this moment for his happiness. It wasn’t
the thought of Graham that held him back. Last
night, under an equal temptation, he might have spoken.
To-night a new element silenced him and bound his
eager hands. His awakening at the head of the
stairs raised an obstacle to self-revelation around
which there seemed to exist no path.
“I’m sorry. Let us go back,”
he said.
She looked at him inquiringly.
“What is it, Bobby? You
are more afraid to-day than you have ever been before.
Has something happened I know nothing of?”
He shook his head. He couldn’t
increase her own trouble by telling her of that.
The woods seemed to receive an ashy
illumination from the passage of the snowflakes.
Katherine walked a little faster.
“Don’t be discouraged,
Bobby,” she begged him. “Everything
will come out straight. You must keep telling
yourself that. You must fight until you believe
it.”
The nearness of her dusk-clothed,
slender figure filled him with a new courage, obscured
to an extent his real situation. He burst out
impulsively:
“Don’t worry. I’ll
fight. I’ll make myself believe. If
necessary I’ll tell everything I know in order
to find the guilty person.”
She placed her hand on his arm.
Her voice fell to a whisper.
“Don’t fight that way.
Uncle Silas is dead; Howells has been taken away.
The police will find nothing. By and by they will
leave. It will all be forgotten. Why should
you keep it active and dangerous by trying to find
who is guilty?”
“Katherine!” he cried, surprised.
“Why do you say that?”
Her hand left his arm. She walked
on without answering. Paredes came back to him-Paredes
serenely calling attention to the fact that Katherine
had alarmed the household and had led it to the discovery
of the Cedars’s successive mysteries. He
shrank from asking her any more.
They left the thicket. In the
open space about the house the snow had spread a white
mantle. From it the heavy walls rose black and
forbidding.
“I don’t want to go in,” Katherine
said.
Their feet lagged as they followed
the driveway to the entrance of the court. The
curtains of the room of death, they saw, had been
raised. A dim, unhealthy light slipped from the
small-paned windows across the court, staining the
snow. Robinson and Rawlins were probably searching
again.
Suddenly Katherine stopped. She pointed.
“What’s that?” she asked sharply.
Bobby followed the direction of her
glance. He saw a black patch against the wall
of the wing opposite the lighted windows.
“It is a shadow,” he said.
She relaxed and they walked on.
They entered the court. There she turned, and
Bobby stopped, too, with a sudden fear. For the
thing he had called a shadow was moving. He stared
at it with a hypnotic belief that the Cedars was at
last disclosing its supernatural secret. He knew
it could be no illusion, since Katherine swayed, half-fainting,
against him. The moving shadow assumed the shape
of a stout figure, slightly bent at the shoulders.
A pipe protruded from the bearded mouth. One hand
waved a careless welcome.
Bobby’s first instinct was to
cry out, to command this old man they had seen buried
that day to return to his grave. For there wasn’t
the slightest doubt. The unhealthy candlelight
from the room of death shone full on the gray and
wrinkled face of Silas Blackburn.