WHAT HAPPENED AT THE GRAVE
“Hello, Katy! Hello, Bobby!
You shown your face at last? I hope you’ve
come sober.”
The thin, quarrelsome voice of Silas
Blackburn echoed in the mouldy court. The stout,
bent figure in the candlelight studied them suspiciously.
Katherine clung to Bobby, trembling, startled beyond
speech by the apparition. They both stared at
the gray face, at the thick figure, which, three days
after death, they had seen buried that noon in the
overgrown cemetery. Bobby recalled how Doctor
Groom had reminded him that an activity like this
might emerge from such places. He had suggested
that the condition of the family burial ground might
be an inspiration to such strayings. Yet why
should the spirit of Silas Blackburn have escaped?
Why should it have returned forthwith to the Cedars,
unless to face his grandson as his murderer?
Afterward Bobby experienced no shame
for these reflections. The encounter was a fitting
sequel to the moment in the dark room when he had felt
Howells move beneath his hand. He had a fleeting
faith that the void between the living and the dead
had, indeed, been bridged.
Then he wondered that the familiar
figure failed to disintegrate, and he noticed smoke
curling from the blackened briar pipe. He caught
its pungent aroma in the damp air of the court.
Moreover, Silas Blackburn had spoken, challenging
him as usual with a sneer.
“Let us go past,” Katherine whispered.
But Silas Blackburn stepped out, blocking
their way. He spoke again. His whining accents
held a reproach.
“What’s the matter with
you two? You might ‘a’ seen a ghost.
Or maybe you’re sorry to have me back.
Didn’t you wonder where I was, Katy? Reckon
you hoped I was dead, Bobby.”
Bobby answered. He had a fancy of addressing
emptiness.
“Why have you come? That is what you are
to us-dead.”
Silas Blackburn chuckled. He
took the pipe from his mouth and tapped the tobacco
down with a knotted forefinger.
“I’ll show you how dead
I am! Trying to be funny, ain’t you?
I’ll make you laugh on the wrong side of your
face. It’s cold here. I’m going
in.”
The same voice, the same manner!
Yet his presence denied that great fact which during
three days had been impressed upon them with a growing
fear.
The old man jerked his thumb toward
the dimly lighted windows of the wing.
“What you got the old room lighted
up for? What’s going on there? I tried
to sleep there the other night-”
“Uncle!”
Katherine sprang forward. She
stretched out her hand to him with a reluctance as
pronounced as Graham’s when he had touched Howells’s
body. Her fingers brushed his hand. Her
shoulders drooped. She clung to his arm.
To Bobby this resolution was more of a shock, less
to be explained, than his first assurance of an immaterial
visitor. What did it mean to him? Was it
an impossible assurance of safety?
The old man patted Katherine’s shoulder.
“Why, what you crying for, Katy?
Always seems something to scare you lately.”
He jerked his thumb again toward the lighted windows.
“You ain’t told me yet what’s going
on in the old room.”
Bobby’s laugh was dazed, questioning.
“They’re trying to account for your murder
there.”
His grandfather looked at him with blank amazement.
“You out of your head?”
“No,” Katherine cried.
“We saw you lying there, cold and still.
I-I found you.”
“You’ve not forgotten,
Katherine,” Bobby said breathlessly, “that
he moved afterward.”
Silas Blackburn took his hand from Katherine’s
shoulder.
“Trying to scare me? What’s
the matter with you? Some scheme to get my money?”
“You slept in the old room the other night?”
Bobby asked helplessly.
“No, I didn’t sleep there,”
his grandfather whined. “I went in and lay
down, but I didn’t sleep. I defy anybody
to sleep in that room. What you talking about?
It’s cold here. This court was always damp.
I want to go in. Is there a fire in the hall?
We’ll light one, while you tell me what’s
ailin’ you.”
He turned, and grasped the door knob.
They followed him into the hall, shaking the snow
from their coats.
Paredes sat alone by the fire, languidly
engaged in the solitaire which exerted so potent a
fascination for him. He didn’t turn at their
entrance. It wasn’t until Bobby called out
that he moved.
“Carlos!”
Bobby’s tone must have suggested
the abnormal, for Paredes sprang to his feet, knocking
over the table. The cards fell lightly to the
floor, straying as far as the hearth. His hands
caught at the back of his chair. He remained
in an awkward position, rigid, white-faced, staring
at the newcomer.
“I told you all,” he whispered,
“that the court was full of ghosts.”
Silas Blackburn walked to the fire,
and stood with his back to the smouldering logs.
In this light he had the pallor of death-the
lack of colour Bobby remembered beneath the glass
of the coffin. The old man, always so intolerant
and authoritative, was no longer sure of himself.
“Why do you talk about ghosts?”
he whined. “I-I wish I hadn’t
waked up.”
Paredes sank back in his chair.
“Waked up!” he echoed in an awe-struck
voice.
Bobby took a trivial interest, as
one will turn to small things during the most vital
moments, in the reflection that twice within twenty-four
hours the Panamanian had been startled from his cold
reserve.
“Waked up!” Paredes repeated.
His voice rose.
“At what time? Do you remember the time?”
“Not exactly. Sometime after noon.”
Bobby guessed the object of Paredes’s
question. He knew it had been about noon when
they had seen the coffin covered in the restless,
wind-swept cemetery.
Paredes hurried on.
“How long had you been asleep?”
“What makes you ask that?” the other whined.
“I don’t know.”
“It was a long time?”
Blackburn’s voice rose complainingly.
“How did you guess that?
I never slept so. I dozed nearly three days, but
I’m tired now-tired as if I hadn’t
slept at all.”
Paredes made a gesture of surrender.
Bobby struggled against the purpose of the man’s
questions, against the suggestion of his grandfather’s
unexpected answers.
“Your idea is madness, Carlos,” he whispered.
“This house is filled with it,”
Paredes said. “I wish Groom were here.
Groom ought to be here.”
“He’s coming back,”
Bobby told him. “He shouldn’t be long
now. He said before dinner time.”
Paredes stirred.
“I wish he would hurry.”
The Panamanian said nothing more,
as if he realized the futility of pressing the matter
before Doctor Groom should return. Necessary
questions surged in Bobby’s brain. The two
that Paredes had put, however, disturbed his logic.
Katherine, who hadn’t spoken
since entering, kept her eyes fixed on her uncle.
Her lips were slightly parted. She had the appearance
of one afraid to break a silence covering impossible
doubts.
Bobby called on his reason. His
grandfather stood before him in flesh. With the
old man, in spite of Paredes’s ghastly hint,
probably lay the solution of the entire mystery and
his own safety. He was about to speak when he
heard footsteps in the upper hall. His grandfather
glanced inquiringly through the stair-well, asking:
“Who’s that up there?”
The sharp tone confessed that fear
of the Cedars was active in the warped brain.
“The district attorney,”
Bobby answered, “a detective, probably Hartley
Graham.”
“What they doing here?”
He indicated Paredes.
“What’s this fellow doing here? I
never liked him.”
Katherine answered:
“They’ve all come because
I thought I saw you dead, lying in the old room.”
“We all saw,” Bobby cried angrily, and
Paredes nodded.
Blackburn shrank away from them.
The three men descended the stairs. Half way
down they stopped.
“Who is that?” Robinson cried.
Graham’s face whitened. He braced himself
against the banister.
“Next time, Mr. District Attorney,”
Paredes said, “you’ll believe me when
I say the court is full of ghosts. He walked in
from the court. I tell you they found him in
the court.”
Silas Blackburn’s voice rose, shrill and angry:
“What’s the matter with
you all? Why do you talk of ghosts and my being
dead? Haven’t I a right to come in my own
house? You all act as if you were afraid of me.”
Paredes’s questions had clearly
added to the uncertainty of his manner. Katherine
spoke softly:
“We are afraid.”
The others came down. Robinson
walked close to Silas Blackburn and for some time
gazed at the gray face.
“Yes,” he said. “You
are Silas Blackburn. You came to my office in
Smithtown the other day and asked for a detective,
because you were afraid of something out here.”
“There’s no question,”
Graham cried. “Of course it is Mr. Blackburn,
yet it couldn’t be.”
“What you all talking about?
Why are the police in my house? Why do you act
like fools and say I was dead?”
They gathered in a group at some distance
from him. They unconsciously ignored this central
figure, as if he were, in fact, a ghost. Bobby
and Katherine told how they had found the old man,
a black shadow against the wall of the wing.
Paredes repeated the questions he had asked and their
strange answers. Afterward Robinson turned to
Silas Blackburn, who waited, trembling.
“Then you did go to the old
room to sleep. You lay down on the bed, but you
say you didn’t stay. You must tell us why
not, and how you got out, and where you’ve been
during this prolonged sleep. I want everything
that happened from the moment you entered the old
bedroom until you wakened.”
“That’s simple,”
Silas Blackburn mouthed. “I went there along
about ten o’clock, wasn’t it, Katy?”
“Nearly half past,” she said. “And
you frightened me.”
“He must tell us why he went,
why he was afraid to sleep in his own room,”
Graham began.
Robinson held up his hand.
“One question at a time, Mr.
Graham. The important thing now is to learn what
happened in the room. You’re not forgetting
Howells, are you?”
Silas Blackburn glanced at the floor.
He moved his feet restlessly. He fumbled in his
pocket for some loose tobacco. With shaking fingers
he refilled his pipe.
“Except for Bobby and Katherine,”
he quavered, “you don’t know what that
room means to Blackburns; and they only know by hearsay,
because I’ve seen it was kept closed. Don’t
see how I’m going to tell you-”
“You needn’t hesitate,”
Robinson encouraged him. “We’ve all
experienced something of the peculiarities of the
Cedars. Your return alone’s enough to keep
us from laughter.”
“All right,” the old man
stumbled on. “I was raised on stories of
that room-even before my father shot himself
there. Later on I saw Katherine’s father
die in the big bed, and after that I never cared to
go near the place unless I had to. The other night,
when I made up my mind to sleep there, I tried to
tell myself all this talk was tommyrot. I tried
to make myself believe I could sleep as comfortably
in that bed as anywhere. So I went in and locked
the door and raised the window and lay down.”
“You’re sure you locked the door?”
Robinson asked.
“Yes. I remember turning
the key in both doors, because I didn’t want
anything bothering me from outside.”
They all looked at each other, unable
to forecast anything of Blackburn’s experiences;
for both doors had been locked when the body had been
found. Granted life, how would it have been possible
for Silas Blackburn to have left the room to commence
his period of drowsiness? An explanation of that
should also unveil the criminal’s route in and
out.
The tensity of the little group increased,
but no one interposed the obvious questions.
Robinson was right. It would be quicker to let
the protagonist of this unbelievable adventure recite
its details in his own fashion. Paredes ran his
slender fingers gropingly over the faces of several
of the cards he had picked up.
“When I got in bed,” Silas
Blackburn continued, “I thought I’d let
the candle burn for company’s sake, but there
was a wind, and it came in the open window, and it
made the queerest black shadows dance all over the
walls until I couldn’t stand it a minute longer.
I blew the candle out and lay back in the dark.”
He drew harshly on his cold pipe.
He looked at it with an air of surprise, and slipped
it in his pocket.
“It was the funniest darkness.
I didn’t like it. You put your hand out
and closed your fingers as if you could feel it.
But it wasn’t all black, either. Some moonlight
came in with the wind between the curtains. It
wasn’t exactly yellow, and it wasn’t white.
After a little it seemed alive, and I wouldn’t
look at it any more. The only way I could stop
myself was to shut my eyes, and that was worse, for
it made me recollect my father the way I saw him lying
there when I was a boy. God grant none of you
will ever have to see anything like that. Then
I seemed to see Katy’s father, too; and I remembered
his screams. The room got thick with, things
like that-with those two, and with a lot
of others come out of the pictures and the stories
I’ve heard about my family.”
His experience when he had gone to
the room to take the evidence from Howells’s
body became active in Bobby’s memory.
“There I lay with my eyes shut,”
Silas Blackburn went on in his strange, inquiring
voice. “And yet I seemed to see those dead
people all around me, and I thought they were in pain
again, and were mad at me because I didn’t do
anything. I guess maybe I must ‘a’
been dozing a little, for I thought-”
He broke off. He raised his hand
slowly and pointed in the direction of the overgrown
cemetery where they had seen his coffin covered that
noon. His voice was lower and harsher when he
continued:
“I-I thought I heard
them say that things were all broken out there, and-and
awful-so awful they couldn’t stay.”
His voice became defiant.
“I ain’t going to tell
you what I dreamed. It was too horrible, but I
made up my mind I would do what I could if I ever escaped
from that room. I-I was afraid they’d
take me back with them underneath those broken stones.
And you-you stand there trying to tell me
that they did.”
He paused again, looking around with
a more defiant glare in his bloodshot eyes. He
appeared to be surprised not to find them laughing
at him.
“What’s the matter with
you all?” he cried. “Why ain’t
you making me out a fool? You seen something
in that room, too?”
“Go on,” Robinson urged.
“What happened then? What did you do?”
Blackburn’s voice resumed its
throaty monotone. As he spoke he glanced about
slyly, suspecting, perhaps, the watchfulness of the
fancies that had intimidated him.
“I realized I had to get out
if they would let me. So I left the bed.
I went.”
He ceased, intimating that he had told everything.
“I know,” Robinson said,
“but tell us how you got out of the room, for
when you-when the murder was discovered,
both doors were locked on the inside, and you know
how impossible the windows are.”
“I tell you,” Katherine
said hysterically, “it was his body in
the bed.”
Bobby knew her assurance was justified,
but he motioned her to silence.
“Let him answer,” Robinson said.
Silas Blackburn ran his knotted fingers
through his hair. He shook his head doubtfully.
“That’s what I don’t
understand myself. That’s what’s been
worrying me while these young ones have been talking
as if I was dead and buried. I recollect telling
myself I must go. I seem to remember leaving the
bed all right, but I don’t seem to remember
walking on the floor or going through the door.
You’re sure the doors were locked?”
“No doubt about that,” Rawlins said.
“Seems to me,” Blackburn
went on, “that I was in the private staircase,
but did I walk downstairs? First thing I see clearly
is the road through the woods, not far from the station.”
“What did you wear?” Robinson asked.
“I’d had my trousers and
jacket on under my dressing-gown,” the old man
answered, “because I knew the bed wasn’t
made up. That’s what I wore except for
the dressing-gown. I reckon I must have left that
in the room. I wouldn’t have gone back
there for anything. My mind was full of those
angry people. I wanted to get as far away from
the Cedars as possible. I knew the last train
from New York would be along about three o’clock,
so I thought I’d go on into Smithtown and in
the morning see this detective I’d been talking
to. I went to Robert Waters’s house.
I’ve known him for a long time. I guess
you know who he is. He’s such a book worm
I figured he might be up, and he wouldn’t ask
a lot of silly questions, being selfish like most
people that live all the time with books. He came
to the door, and I told him I wanted to spend the
night. He offered to shake hands. That’s
funny, too. I didn’t feel like shaking hands
with anybody. I recollect that, because I’d
felt sort of queer ever since going in the old room,
and something told me I’d better not shake hands.”
Paredes looked up, wide-eyed.
The cards slipped from his fragile, pointed fingers.
“Do you realize, Mr. District
Attorney, what this man is saying?”
But Robinson motioned him to silence.
“Let him go on. What happened then?”
“That’s all,” Blackburn
answered, “except this long sleep I can’t
make out. Old Waters didn’t get mad at
my not shaking hands. He was too tied up in some
book, I guess. I told him I was sleepy and didn’t
want to be bothered, and he nodded to the spare room
off the main hall, and I tumbled into bed and was
off almost before I knew it.”
Paredes sprang to his feet and commenced to walk about
the hall.
“Tell us,” he said, “when you first
woke up?”
“I guess it was late the next
afternoon,” Silas Blackburn quavered, fumbling
with his pipe again. “But it was only for
a minute.”
Paredes stopped in front of Robinson.
“When he turned! You see!”
“It was Waters knocking on the
door,” Blackburn went on. “I guess
he wanted to know what was the matter, and he talked
about some food, but I didn’t want to be bothered,
so I called to him through the door to go away, and
turned over and went to sleep again.”
“He turned over and went to
sleep again!” Katherine said breathlessly, “and
it was about that time that I heard the turning in
the old bedroom.”
“Katherine!” Graham called.
“What are you talking about? What are you
thinking about?”
“What else is there?” she asked.
“She’s thinking about
the truth,” Paredes said tensely. “I’ve
always heard of such things. So have you.
You’ve read of them, if you read at all.
India is full of it. It goes back to ancient Egypt-the
same person simultaneously in two places-the
astral body-whatever you choose to call
it. It’s the projection of one’s self
whether consciously or unconsciously; perhaps the
projection of something that retains reason after
an apparent death. You heard him. He didn’t
seem to walk. He doesn’t remember leaving
the room, which was locked on the inside. His
descent of the stairs was without motion as we know
it. He had gone some distance before his mind
consciously directed the movement of this active image
of Silas Blackburn, while the double from which it
had sprung lay apparently dead in the old room.
You notice he shrank from shaking hands, and he slept
until we hid away the shell. What disintegration
and coming together again has taken place since we
buried that shell in the old graveyard? If his
friend had shaken hands with him would he have grasped
emptiness? Did his normal self come back to him
when the shell was put from our sight, and he awakened?
These are some of the questions we must answer.”
“You’ve a fine imagination,
Mr. Paredes,” Robinson said dryly.
His fat face, nevertheless, was bewildered,
and in the eyes, surrounded by puffy flesh, smouldered
a profound uncertainty.
“I wish Groom were here,”
Paredes was saying. “He would agree with
me. He would know more about it than I.”
Robinson threw back his shoulders.
He turned to Rawlins with his old authority.
The unimaginative detective had stood throughout,
releasing no indication of his emotions; but as he
raised his hand now to an unnecessary adjustment of
his scarf pin, the fingers were not quite steady.
“Telephone this man Waters,”
Robinson directed. “Then get in communication
with the office and put them on that end.”
Rawlins walked away. Robinson
apologized to Silas Blackburn with an uneasy voice.
“Got to check up what I can.
Can’t get anywhere with these things unless
you make sure of your first facts. I daresay Waters’s
story will tally with yours.”
Blackburn nodded. Graham cleared his throat.
“Now perhaps we may ask that
very important question. The day Mr. Blackburn
called at your office in Smithtown he told Howells
he was afraid of being murdered. According to
Howells, he said: ’My heart’s all
right. It won’t stop yet awhile unless it’s
made to. So if I’m found cold some fine
morning you can be sure I was put out of the way.’”
“I know,” Robinson said.
“And that night,” Graham
continued, “when he went to the old room, he
was terrified of something which he wouldn’t
define for Miss Perrine.”
“He warned me not to mention
he’d gone there,” Katherine put in.
“He told me he was afraid-afraid
to sleep in his own room any longer.”
Robinson turned.
“What about that, Mr. Blackburn?”
For a moment Bobby’s curiosity
overcame the confusion aroused by his grandfather’s
apparently occult return. All along they had craved
the knowledge he was about to give them, the statement
on which Bobby’s life had seemed to depend.
Blackburn, however, was unwilling. The question
seemed to have returned to him something of his normal
manner.
“No use,” he mumbled, “going into
that.”
“A good deal of use,” Robinson insisted.
Blackburn shifted his feet. He gazed at his pipe
doubtfully.
“I don’t see why.
That didn’t come, and seems it wasn’t what
I ought to have been afraid of after all. All
along I ought to have been afraid only of the Cedars
and the old room. I’ve been accused of being
unjust. I don’t want to do an injustice
now.”
“Please answer,” Robinson said impatiently.
“You must answer,” Graham urged.
“I don’t see that it makes
the slightest difference,” Paredes drawled.
“What has it got to do with the case as it stands
to-night?”
Robinson snapped at him.
“You keep out of it. Don’t
forget there’s a lot you haven’t answered
yet.”
Silas Blackburn looked straight at
Bobby. Slowly he raised his hand, pointing an
accusing finger at his grandson.
“If you want to know, I was afraid of that young
rascal.”
Katherine started impulsively forward
in an effort to stop him. Blackburn waved her
away.
“You trying to scare me, Katy?” he asked
suspiciously.
“Evidently,” Robinson
commented to Graham, “Howells wasn’t as
dull as we thought him. Go on, Mr. Blackburn.
Why were you afraid of your grandson?”
“Maybe he can tell you better
than I can,” the old man answered. “Don’t
see any use raking up such things, anyway. Maybe
I’d been pretty harsh with him. Anyway,
I knew he hated the ground I walked on and would be
glad enough to see me drop in my tracks.”
“That isn’t so,” Bobby said.
“You keep quiet now. You always talked
too much.”
So the old feeling survived.
“Go on,” Robinson urged.
“I’d always been a hard
worker,” Blackburn whined, “and he was
a waster. Naturally we didn’t get along.
I’d decided to make a new will, leaving my money
to the Bedford Foundation, and I wrote him that, thinking
it would bring him hot foot to make it up with me.
I’d been nervous about him before, because I
didn’t know what might come into his head when
he was on these wild parties. So I’d spoken
to Howells, thinking I’d trip him if he tried
any funny business. When he didn’t come
that night I got scared. He knew I wouldn’t
make the new will until morning, and since I couldn’t
see any man throwing all that money away, I figured
he’d guessed he couldn’t turn me and wouldn’t
waste any time talking.
“When you got a lot of money
and a grandson who hates you, you have to think of
such things. Suppose, I thought, he should come
out here drunk when I was sound asleep. I knew
he had a latch key, and he might sneak up to my room
before I could even get to the telephone. Or I
was afraid he might hire somebody. You can buy
men for that sort of work in New York. I tell
you the more I thought of it the more I was sure he’d
do something. You’d understand if you lived
in this lonely place with all that money and nobody
you wanted to will it to. I nearly sent for Howells
right then. But if nothing had happened I’d
have looked a fool.”
“I wanted you to send for a man,” Katherine
cried.
Bobby leaned against the wall, repeating
to himself the words of Maria’s note which accused
him of having made the very threat his grandfather
had feared.
“So,” Blackburn rambled
on, “I decided I wouldn’t sleep in my room
that night, and I picked out the least likely place
for anybody to find me. I was more afraid of
him than I was of the old room, but, as I’ve
told you, the old room made me forget Master Robert.”
Robinson stepped to Bobby’s side.
“All along Howells was right. Tell me what
you did with that evidence.”
Bobby turned away. Katherine tried to laugh.
Graham beckoned to Robinson.
“What’s the use of bothering
with evidence against a suspected murderer when the
murdered man stands talking to you?”
Robinson frowned helplessly. Paredes sprang to
his feet.
“You’re taking too much
for granted, Graham. There was a murder.
Blackburn was killed. We’ve as many witnesses
to that fact as we have that he’s come back.
This man who talks with us, accusing Bobby, may not
stay. Have you thought of that? I have noticed
something that makes me think it possible. I
have been afraid to speak of it. But it makes
me hesitate to say that this man is alive, as we understand
life. We have to learn the nature of the forces
we are dealing with, exactly how dangerous they are.”
They started at a sharp rap on the front door.
“Now who?” the old man
whined. “I wish you wouldn’t look
at me so. It makes me feel queer. You’re
all crazy.”
“It’s probably Doctor
Groom,” Bobby said, and stepped to the door,
opening it.
It was Groom. The huge man walked
in, struggling out of his coat. At first the
others screened Silas Blackburn from him, but he acknowledged
their strained attitudes, the excitement that still
animated Paredes’s face.
“What’s the matter with
you?” he asked. “Found something,
Mr. District Attorney?”
Robinson moved to one side, jerking
his thumb at Silas Blackburn. The coat and hat
slipped from Doctor Groom’s hand. His mouth
opened. His great body crept slowly back until
the shoulders rested against the wall. He placed
the palms of his hands against the wall as if to push
it away in order to assure further retreat. Always
the little, infused eyes remained fixed on the man
who had been his friend. Such terror was chiefly
arresting because of the great figure conquered by
it.
Blackburn thrust his pipe in his mouth.
He laughed shakily.
“That fellow Groom will have a stroke.”
The Doctor’s greeting had the difficult quality
of a masculine sob.
“Silas Blackburn!”
“Who do you think?” the
other whined. “You going to try to frighten
me out of my skin, too? These people are trying
to say I’ve been lying dead in the old room.
Hoped you’d have enough sense to set them right
and tell me what it’s all about.”
The doctor straightened.
“You did lie dead in the old room.”
His harsh, amazed tones held an unqualified conviction.
“I saw you there. I helped
the coroner make the examination. You had been
dead for many hours. And I saw you bolted in your
coffin. I saw you buried in the graveyard you’d
let go to pieces.”
The others had, as far as possible,
recovered from the first shock, had done their best
to fathom the mystery, but Groom’s fear increased.
His reddish eyes grew always more alarmed. Silas
Blackburn turned with a quick, frightened gesture,
facing the fire. Paredes drew a deep breath.
“Now you’ll see,” he said.
Doctor Groom shrank against the wall
again. After a moment, with the motions of one
drawn by an outside will, he approached the figure
at the fireplace. Then Bobby saw, and he heard
Katherine’s choked scream. For now that
his grandfather’s back was turned there was plainly
visible on the white of the collar, near the base
of the brain, a scarlet stain. And the hair above
it was matted.
“That’s what I meant,” Paredes whispered.
Graham moved back.
“Good God!”
Robinson stared. The fear had found him, too.
Doctor Groom touched Blackburn’s shoulder tentatively.
“What’s the matter with the back of your
neck?”
Blackburn drew fearfully away.
He raised his hand and fumbled at the top of his collar.
He held his fingers to the firelight.
“Why,” he said blankly, “I been
bleeding back there.”
To an extent the doctor controlled himself.
“Sit down here, Silas Blackburn,”
he said. “I want to get the lamplight on
your head.”
“I ain’t badly hurt?” Blackburn
whined.
“I don’t know,” the doctor answered.
“Heaven knows.”
Blackburn sat down. The light
shone full on the stained collar and the dark patch
of hair at the base of the brain. Doctor Groom
examined the wound minutely. He straightened.
He spoke unsteadily:
“It is a healed wound. It was made by something
sharp.”
Robinson thrust his hands in his pockets.
“You’re getting beyond
my depths, Doctor. Bring him up to the old bedroom.
I want him to see that pillow.”
But Blackburn cowered in his chair.
“I won’t go to that room
again. They don’t want me there. I’ll
have work started in the cemetery to-morrow.”
“Mr. Blackburn,” Robinson
said, “the man we buried in the cemetery to-day,
the man these members of your family identify as yourself,
died of just such a wound as the doctor says has healed
in your head.”
Blackburn cowered farther in his chair.
“You’re making fun of
me,” he whimpered. “You’re trying
to scare an old man.”
“No,” Robinson said. “How was
that wound made?”
The crouched figure wagged its head from side to side.
“I don’t know. Nothing’s
touched me there. I remember I had a headache
when I woke up. Why doesn’t Groom tell me
why I slept so long?”
“I only know,” Groom rumbled,
“that the wound I examined upstairs must have
caused instant death.”
Paredes whispered to him. The doctor nodded reluctantly.
“What do you mean?” Blackburn
cried. “You trying to tell me I can’t
stay with you?”
He pointed to Paredes.
“That’s what he said-that
I might have to go back, but I never heard of such
a thing. I’m all right. My neck doesn’t
hurt. I’m alive. I tell you I’m
alive. I’ll teach you-”
Rawlins returned from the telephone.
“His story’s straight,”
he said in his crisp manner. “I’ve
been talking to Waters himself. Says Mr. Blackburn
turned up about three-thirty, looking queer and acting
queer. Wouldn’t shake hands, just as he
says. He went to the spare room and slept practically
all the time until this afternoon. No food.
Waters couldn’t rouse him. Mr. Blackburn
wouldn’t answer at all or else seemed half asleep.
He’d made up his mind to call in a doctor this
afternoon. Then Mr. Blackburn seemed all right
again, and started home.”
Robinson gazed at the fire.
“What’s to be done now, sir?” Rawlins
asked.
“Find the answer if we can,” Robinson
said.
Paredes spoke as softly as he had
done the other night while reciting his sensitive
reaction to the Cedars’s gloomy atmosphere.
Only now his voice wasn’t groping.
“Call me a dreamer if you want,
Mr. District Attorney, but I have given you the only
answer. This man’s soul has dwelt in two
places.”
Robinson grinned.
“I’m going slow on calling
anybody names, but I haven’t forgotten that
there’s been another crime in this house.
Howells was killed in that room, too. I would
like to believe he could return as Mr. Blackburn has.”
Blackburn looked up.
“What’s that? Who’s Howells?”
And as Robinson told him of the second
crime he sank back in his chair again, whimpering
from time to time. His fear was harder to watch.
“Might I suggest,” Graham
said, “that Howells isn’t out of the case
yet? It would be worth looking into.”
“By all means,” Robinson agreed.
Rawlins coughed apologetically.
“I asked them about that at
the office. Howells was taken to his home in
Boston to-day. The funeral’s to be to-morrow.”
“Then,” Robinson said,
“we’re confined for the present to this
end of the case. The facts I have tell me that
two murders have been committed in this house.
It is still my first duty to convict the guilty man.”
Graham indicated the huddled, frightened
figure in the chair.
“You are going against the evidence of your
own eyes.”
“I shall do what I can,”
Robinson said sternly. “We buried one of
those men this noon. His grandson, his niece,
and those who saw him frequently, swear it was this
living being who has such a wound as the one that
caused the death of that man. There is only one
thing to do-see who we buried.”
“The permits?” Graham suggested.
“I shall telephone the judge,”
Robinson answered, “and he can send them out,
but I shan’t wait for hours doing nothing.
I am going to the grave at once.”
“A waste of time,” Paredes murmured.
“I don’t understand,”
Silas Blackburn whined, “You say the doors were
locked. Then how could anybody have got in that
room to be murdered? How did I get out?”
Robinson turned on Paredes angrily.
“I’m not through with
you yet. Before I am I’ll get what I want
from you.”
He stormed away to the telephone.
No one spoke. The doctor’s rumpled head
was still bent over the back of Silas Blackburn’s
chair. The infused eyes didn’t waver from
the crimson stain and the healed wound, and Blackburn
remained huddled among the cushions, his shoulders
twitching. Paredes commenced gathering up his
cards. Katherine watched him out of expressionless
eyes. Graham walked to her side. Rawlins,
as always phlegmatic, remained motionless, waiting
for his superior.
Bobby threw off his recent numbness.
He realized the disturbing parallel in the actions
of his grandfather and himself. He had come to
the Cedars unconsciously, perhaps directed by an evil,
external influence, on the night of the first murder.
Now, it appeared, the man he was accused of killing
had also wandered under an unknown impulse that night.
Was the same subtle control responsible in both cases?
Was there at the Cedars a force that defied physical
laws, moving its inhabitants like puppets for special
aims of its own? Yet, he recalled, there was something
here friendly to him. After the movement of Howells’s
body and the disappearance of the evidence, the return
of Silas Blackburn stripped Robinson’s threats
of power and seemed to place the solution beyond the
district attorney’s trivial reach.
The silence and the delay increased
their weight upon the little group. Silas Blackburn,
huddled in his chair, was grayer, more haggard than
he had been at first. He appeared attentive to
an expected summons. He seemed fighting the idea
of going back.
The proximity of Graham to Katherine
quieted the turmoil of Bobby’s thoughts.
If he could only have foreseen this return he would
have listened to the whispered encouragement of the
forest.
Robinson reappeared. Anxiety
had replaced the anger in the round face which, one
felt, should always have been no more than good-natured.
“Jenkins will have to help,” he said.
Silas Blackburn arose unsteadily.
“I’m coming with you.
You’re not going to leave me here. I won’t
stay here alone.”
“He should come by all means,”
Paredes said, “in case anything should happen-”
The old man put his hands to his ears.
“You keep quiet. I’m not going back,
I tell you.”
Bobby didn’t want to hear any
more. He went to the kitchen and called Jenkins.
He let the butler go to the hall ahead of him in order
that he might not have to witness this new greeting.
But Jenkins’s cry came back to him, and when
he reached the hall he saw that the man’s terror
had not diminished.
They went through the court and around
the house to the stable where they found spades and
shovels. Their grim purpose holding them silent,
they crossed the clearing and entered the pathway
that had been freshly blazed that day for the passage
of the men in black.
The snow was quite deep. It still
drifted down. It filled the woods with a wan,
unnatural radiance. Without really illuminating
the sooty masses of the trees it made the night white.
Silas Blackburn stumbled in the van
with Paredes and Robinson. The doctor and Rawlins
followed. Graham was with Katherine behind them.
Bobby walked last, fighting an instinct to linger,
to avoid whatever they might find beneath the white
blanket of the little, intimate burial ground.
Groom turned and spoke to Graham.
Katherine waited for Bobby, and the white night closed
swiftly about them, whispering until the shuffling
of the others became inaudible.
Was she glad of this solitude?
Had she sought it? Her extraordinary request
in that earlier solitude came to him, and he spoke
of it while he tried to control his emotions, while
he sought to mould the next few minutes reasonably
and justly.
“Why did you tell me to make
no attempt to find the guilty person?”
“Because,” she answered,
“you were too sure it was yourself. Why,
Bobby, did you think I was the-the woman
in black? That has hurt me.”
“I didn’t mean to hurt
you,” he said, “but there is something
I must tell you now that may hurt you a little.”
And he explained how Graham had awakened
him at the head of the stairs.
“You’re right,”
he said. “I was sure then it was myself,
in spite of Howells’s movement. It followed
so neatly on the handkerchief and the footmarks.
But now he has come back, and it changes everything.
So I can tell you.”
He couldn’t be sure whether
it was the cold, white loneliness through which they
paced, or what he had just said that made her tremble.
“Perhaps I shouldn’t have told you that.”
“I am glad,” she answered.
“You must never close your confidence to me
again. Why have you done it these last few months?
I want to know.”
Calculation died.
“Then you shall know.”
Through the white night his hands
reached for her, found her, drew her close. The
moment was too masterful for him to mould. He
became, instead, plastic in its white and stealthy
grasp.
“I couldn’t stay,” he said, “and
see you give yourself to Hartley.”
She raised her hands to his shoulders.
He barely caught her whisper because of the sly communicativeness
of the snow.
“I am glad, but why didn’t you say so
then?”
The intoxication faded. The enterprise
ahead gave to their joy a fugitive quality. Moreover,
with her very surrender came to him a great misgiving.
“But you and Hartley? I’ve watched.
It’s been forced on me.”
“Then you have misunderstood,”
she answered. “You put me too completely
out of your life after our quarrel. That was about
Hartley. You were too jealous, but it was my
fault.”
“Hartley,” he asked, “spoke to you
about that time?”
“Yes, and I told him he was
a very dear friend, and he was kind enough to accept
that and not to go away.”
His measure of the widening of the
rift between them made her more precious because of
its affectionate human quality. She had been kinder
to Graham, more mysterious about him, to draw Bobby
back. Yet ever since his arrival at the Cedars,
Graham had assumed toward Katherine an attitude scarcely
to be limited by friendship. He had done what
he had in Bobby’s service clearly enough for
her sake. For a long time past, indeed, in speaking
of her Graham always seemed to discuss the woman he
expected to marry.
“You are quite sure,”
he asked, puzzled, “that Hartley understood?”
“Why do you ask? He has shown how good
a friend he is.”
“He has always made me think,”
Bobby said, “that he had your love. You’re
sure he guessed that you cared for me?”
In that place, at that moment, there
was a tragic colour to her coquetry.
“I think every one must have
guessed it except you, Bobby.”
He raised her head and touched her
lips. Her lips were as cold as the caresses of
the drifting snowflakes.
“We must go on,” she sighed.
In his memory the chill of her kiss
was bitter. In the forest they could speak no
more of love.
But Bobby, hand in hand with her as
they hurried after the others, received a new strength.
He saw as a condition to their happiness the unveiling
of the mystery at the Cedars. He gathered his
courage for that task. He would not give way
even before the memory of all that he had experienced,
even before the return of his grandfather, even before
the revelation toward which they walked. And
side by side with his determination grew shame for
his former weakness. It was comforting to realize
that the causes for his weakness and his strength were
identical.
The subdued murmur of voices reached
them. They saw among the indistinct masses of
the trees restless patches of black. Katherine
stumbled against one of the fallen stones. They
stood with the others in the burial ground, close
to the mound that had been made that day.
“They haven’t begun,” Bobby whispered.
She freed her hand.
A white flame sprang across the mound.
The trees from formless masses took on individual
shapes. A row of cypresses on which the light
gleamed were like sombre sentinels, guarding the dead.
The snow patches, clustered on their branches, were
like funeral decorations pointing their morbid function.
The light gave the overturned stones an illusion of
striving to struggle from their white imprisonment.
Robinson swung his lamp back to the mound.
“The snow isn’t heavy,”
he said, “and the ground isn’t frozen.
It oughtn’t to take long.”
Silas Blackburn commenced to shake.
“It’s a desecration of the dead.”
“We have to know,” Robinson said, “who
is buried in that grave.”
With a spade Jenkins scraped the snow
from the mound. Rawlins joined him. They
commenced to throw to one side, staining the white
carpet, spadesful of moist, yellow earth. Their
labour was rapid. Silas Blackburn watched with
an unconquerable fascination. He continued to
shake.
“I’m too cold. I’ll
never be warm again,” he whined. “If
anything happens to me, Bobby, try to forget I’ve
been hard, and don’t let them bury me.
Suppose I should be buried alive?”
“Suppose,” Paredes said, “you were
buried alive to-day?”
He turned to Bobby and Katherine.
“That also is possible.
You remember the old theories that have never been
disproved of the disintegration of matter into its
atoms, of its passage through solid substances, of
its reforming in a far place? I wouldn’t
have to ask an East Indian that.”
Jenkins, standing in the excavation, broke into torrential
speech.
“Mr. Robinson! I can’t
work with the light. It makes the stones seem
to move. It throws too many shadows. I seem
to see people behind you, and I’m afraid to
look.”
Nothing aggressive survived in Rawlins’s voice.
“We can work well enough without it, sir.”
Robinson snapped off the light.
The darkness descended eagerly upon them. Above
the noise of the spades in the soft earth Bobby heard
indefinite stirrings. In the graveyard at such
an hour the supernatural legend of the Cedars assumed
an inescapable probability. Bobby wished for
some way to stop the task on which they were engaged.
He felt instinctively it would be better not to tamper
with the mystery of Silas Blackburn’s return.
Bobby grew rigid.
“There it is again,” Graham breathed.
A low keening came from the thicket.
It increased in power a trifle, then drifted into
silence.
It wasn’t the wind. It
was like the moaning Bobby had heard at the stagnant
lake that afternoon, like the cries Graham and he had
suffered in the old room. Seeming at first to
come from a distance, it achieved a sense of intimacy.
It was like an escape of sorrow from the dismantled
tombs.
Bobby turned to Katherine. He
couldn’t see her for the darkness. He reached
out. She was not there.
“Katherine,” he called softly.
Her hand stole into his. He had
been afraid that the forest had taken her. Under
the reassurance of her handclasp he tried to make himself
believe there was actually a woman near by, if not
Maria, some one who had a definite purpose there.
Robinson flashed on his light. Old Blackburn
whimpered:
“The Cedars is at its tricks again, and there’s
nothing we can do.”
“It was like a lost soul,”
Katherine sighed. “It seemed to cry from
this place.”
“It must be traced,” Bobby said.
“Then tell me its direction
certainly,” Robinson challenged. “We’d
flounder in the thicket. A waste of time.
Let us get through here. Hurry, Rawlins!”
The light showed Bobby that the detective
and Jenkins had nearly finished. He shrank from
the first hard sound of metal against metal.
It came. After a moment the light
shone on the dull face of the casket which was streaked
with dirt.
Jenkins rested on his spade.
He groaned. It occurred to Bobby that the man
couldn’t have worked hard enough in this cold
air to have started the perspiration that streamed
down his wrinkled face.
“It would be a tough job to lift it out,”
Rawlins said.
“No need,” Robinson answered. “Get
the soil away from the edges.”
He bent over, passing a screw driver to the detective.
“Take off the top plate. That will let
us see all we want.”
Jenkins climbed out.
“I shan’t look. I don’t dare
look.”
Silas Blackburn touched Bobby’s arm timidly.
“I’ve been a hard man, Bobby-”
He broke off, his bearded lips twitching.
The grating of the screws tore through the silence.
Rawlins glanced up.
“Lend a hand, somebody.”
Groom spoke hoarsely:
“It isn’t too late to let the dead rest.”
Robinson gestured him away. Graham,
Paredes, and he knelt in the snow and helped the detective
raise the heavy lid. They placed it at the side
of the grave.
They all forced themselves to glance downward.
Katherine screamed. Silas Blackburn
leaned on Bobby’s arm, shaking with gross, impossible
sobs. Paredes shrugged his shoulders. The
light wavered in Robinson’s hand. They
continued to stare. There was nothing else to
do.
The coffin was empty.