An ages old horror awakens from its sleep!
April 15th, 190-
Dear Sir, - I am requested by the Council of the ___ Association
to return to you the draft of a paper on The Truth of Alchemy,
which you have been good enough to offer to read at our forthcoming
meeting, and to inform you that the Council do not see their way
to including it in the programme.
I am,
Yours faithfully,
--Secretary
April 18th
Dear Sir, - I am sorry to say that my engagements do not permit
of my affording you an interview on the subject of your proposed
paper. Nor do our laws allow of your discussing the matter with
a Committee of our Council, as you suggest. Please allow me to
assure you that the fullest consideration was given to the draft
which you submitted, and that it was not declined without having
been referred to the judgement of a most competent authority.
No personal question (it can hardly be necessary for me to add)
can have had the slightest influence on the decision of the Council.
Believe me (ut supra).
April 20th
The Secretary of the ___ Association begs respectfully to inform
Mr Karswell that it is impossible for him to communicate the name
of any person or persons to whom the draft of Mr Karswell's paper
may have been submitted; and further desires to intimate that
he cannot undertake to reply to any further letters on this subject.
'And who is Mr Karswell?' inquired the Secretary's wife. She had
called at his office, and (perhaps unwarrantably) had picked up
the last of these three letters, which the typist had just brought
in.
'Why, my dear, just at present Mr Karswell is a very angry man.
But I don't know much about him otherwise, except that he is a
person of wealth, his address is Lufford Abbey, Warwickshire,
and he's an alchemist, apparently, and wants to tell us all about
it; and that's about all--except that I don't want to meet him
for the next week or two. Now, if you're ready to leave this place,
I am.'
'What have you been doing to make him angry?' asked Mrs Secretary.
'The usual thing, my dear, the usual thing: he sent in a draft
of a paper he wanted to read at the next meeting, and we referred
it to Edward Dunning--almost the only man in England who knows
about these things--and he said it was perfectly hopeless, so
we declined it. So Karswell has been pelting me with letters ever
since. The last thing he wanted was the name of the man we referred
his nonsense to; you saw my answer to that. But don't you say
anything about it, for goodness' sake.'
'I should think not, indeed. Did I ever do such a thing? I do
hope, though, he won't get to know that it was poor Mr Dunning.'
'Poor Mr Dunning? I don't know why you call him that; he's a
very happy man, is Dunning. Lots of hobbies and a comfortable
home, and all his time to himself.'
'I only meant I should be sorry for him if this man got hold
of his name, and came and bothered him.'
'Oh, ah! yes. I dare say he would be poor Mr Dunning then.'
The Secretary and his wife were lunching out, and the friends
to whose house they were bound were Warwickshire people. So Mrs
Secretary had already settled it in her own mind that she would
question them judiciously about Mr Karswell. But she was saved
the trouble of leading up to the subject, for the hostess said
to the host, before many minutes had passed, 'I saw the Abbot
of Lufford this morning.' The host whistled. 'Did you? What in
the world brings him up to town?' 'Goodness knows; he was coming
out of the British Museum gate as I drove past.' It was not unnatural
that Mrs Secretary should inquire whether this was a real Abbot
who was being spoken of. 'Oh no, my dear: only a neighbour of
ours in the country who bought Lufford Abbey a few years ago.
His real name is Karswell.' 'Is he a friend of yours?' asked Mr
Secretary, with a private wink to his wife. The question let loose
a torrent of declamation. There was really nothing to be said
for Mr Karswell. Nobody knew what he did with himself: his servants
were a horrible set of people; he had invented a new religion
for himself, and practised no one could tell what appalling rites;
he was very easily offended, and never forgave anybody: he had
a dreadful face (so the lady insisted, her husband somewhat demurring);
he never did a kind action, and whatever influence he did exert
was mischievous. 'Do the poor man justice, dear,' the husband
interrupted. 'You forgot the treat he gave the school children.'
'Forget it, indeed! But I'm glad you mentioned it, because it
gives an idea of the man. Now, Florence, listen to this. The first
winter he was at Lufford this delightful neighbour of ours wrote
to the clergyman of his parish (he's not ours, but we know him
very well) and offered to show the school children some magic-lantern
slides. He said he had some new kinds, which he thought would
interest them. Well, the clergyman was rather surprised, because
Mr Karswell had shown himself inclined to be unpleasant to the
children--complaining of their trespassing, or something of the
sort; but of course he accepted, and the evening was fixed, and
our friend went himself to see that everything went right. He
said he never had been so thankful for anything as that his own
children were all prevented from being there: they were at a children's
party at our house, as a matter of fact. Because this Mr Karswell
had evidently set out with the intention of frightening these
poor village children out of their wits, and I do believe, if
he had been allowed to go on, he would actually have done so.
He began with some comparatively mild things. Red Riding Hood
was one, and even then, Mr Farrer said, the wolf was so dreadful
that several of the smaller children had to be taken out: and
he said Mr Karswell began the story by producing a noise like
a wolf howling in the distance, which was the most gruesome thing
he had ever heard. All the slides he showed, Mr Farrer said, were
most clever; they were absolutely realistic, and where he had
got them or how he worked them he could not imagine. Well, the
show went on, and the stories kept on becoming a little more terrifying
each time, and the children were mesmerized into complete silence.
At last he produced a series which represented a little boy passing
through his own park--Lufford, I mean--in the evening. Every child
in the room could recognize the place from the pictures. And this
poor boy was followed, and at last pursued and overtaken, and
either torn in pieces or somehow made away with, by a horrible
hopping creature in white, which you saw first dodging about among
the trees, and gradually it appeared more and more plainly. Mr
Farrer said it gave him one of the worst nightmares he ever remembered,
and what it must have meant to the children doesn't bear thinking
of. Of course this was too much, and he spoke very sharply indeed
to Mr Karswell, and said it couldn't go on. All he said was: 'Oh,
you think it's time to bring our little show to an end and send
them home to their beds? Very well!' And then, if you please,
he switched on another slide, which showed a great mass of snakes,
centipedes, and disgusting creatures with wings, and somehow or
other made it seem as if they were climbing out of the picture
and getting in amongst the audience; and this was accompanied
by a sort of dry rustling noise which sent the children nearly
mad, and of course they stampeded. A good many of them were rather
hurt in getting out of the room, and I don't suppose one of them
closed an eye that night. There was the most dreadful trouble
in the village afterwards. Of course the mothers threw a good
part of the blame on poor Mr Farrer, and, if they could have got
past the gates, I believe the fathers would have broken every
window in the Abbey. Well, now, that's Mr Karswell: that's the
Abbot of Lufford, my dear, and you can imagine how we covet his
society.'
'Yes, I think he has all the possibilities of a distinguished
criminal, has Karswell,' said the host. 'I should be sorry for
anyone who got into his bad books.'
'Is he the man, or am I mixing him up with someone else?' asked
the Secretary (who for some minutes had been wearing the frown
of the man who is trying to recollect something). 'Is he the man
who brought out a History of Witchcraft some time back--ten years
or more?'
'That's the man; do you remember the reviews of it?'
'Certainly I do; and what's equally to the point, I knew the
author of the most incisive of the lot. So did you: you must remember
John Harrington; he was at John's in our time.'
'Oh, very well indeed, though I don't think I saw or heard anything
of him between the time I went down and the day I read the account
of the inquest on him.'
'Inquest?' said one of the ladies. 'What has happened to him?'
'Why, what happened was that he fell out of a tree and broke
his neck. But the puzzle was, what could have induced him to get
up there. It was a mysterious business, I must say. Here was this
man--not an athletic fellow, was he? and with no eccentric twist
about him that was ever noticed--walking home along a country
road late in the evening--no tramps about--well known and liked
in the place--and he suddenly begins to run like mad, loses his
hat and stick, and finally shins up a tree--quite a difficult
tree--growing in the hedgerow: a dead branch gives way, and he
comes down with it and breaks his neck, and there he's found next
morning with the most dreadful face of fear on him that could
be imagined. It was pretty evident, of course, that he had been
chased by something, and people talked of savage dogs, and beasts
escaped out of menageries; but there was nothing to be made of
that. That was in '89, and I believe his brother Henry (whom I
remember as well at Cambridge, but you probably don't) has been
trying to get on the track of an explanation ever since. He, of
course, insists there was malice in it, but I don't know. It's
difficult to see how it could have come in.'
After a time the talk reverted to the History of Witchcraft.
'Did you ever look into it?' asked the host.
'Yes, I did,' said the Secretary. 'I went so far as to read
it.'
'Was it as bad as it was made out to be?'
'Oh, in point of style and form, quite hopeless. It deserved
all the pulverizing it got. But, besides that, it was an evil
book. The man believed every word of what he was saying, and I'm
very much mistaken if he hadn't tried the greater part of his
receipts.'
'Well, I only remember Harrington's review of it, and I must
say if I'd been the author it would have quenched my literary
ambition for good. I should never have held up my head again.'
'It hasn't had that effect in the present case. But come, it's
half-past three; I must be off.'
On the way home the Secretary's wife said, 'I do hope that horrible
man won't find out that Mr Dunning had anything to do with the
rejection of his paper.' 'I don't think there's much chance of
that,' said the Secretary. 'Dunning won't mention it himself,
for these matters are confidential, and none of us will for the
same reason. Karswell won't know his name, for Dunning hasn't
published anything on the same subject yet. The only danger is
that Karswell might find out, if he was to ask the British Museum
people who was in the habit of consulting alchemical manuscripts:
I can't very well tell them not to mention Dunning, can I? It
would set them talking at once. Let's hope it won't occur to him.'
However, Mr Karswell was an astute man.
This much is in the way of prologue. On an evening rather later
in the same week, Mr Edward Dunning was returning from the British
Museum, where he had been engaged in research, to the comfortable
house in a suburb where he lived alone, tended by two excellent
women who had been long with him. There is nothing to be added
by way of description of him to what we have heard already. Let
us follow him as he takes his sober course homewards.
A train took him to within a mile or two of his house, and an
electric tram a stage farther. The line ended at a point some
three hundred yards from his front door. He had had enough of
reading when he got into the car, and indeed the light was not
such as to allow him to do more than study the advertisements
on the panes of glass that faced him as he sat. As was not unnatural,
the advertisements in this particular line of cars were objects
of his frequent contemplation, and, with the possible exception
of the brilliant and convincing dialogue between Mr Lamplough
and an eminent KC on the subject of Pyretic Saline, none of them
afforded much scope to his imagination. I am wrong: there was
one at the corner of the car farthest from him which did not seem
familiar. It was in blue letters on a yellow ground, and all that
he could read of it was a name--John Harrington--and something
like a date. It could be of no interest to him to know more; but
for all that, as the car emptied, he was just curious enough to
move along the seat until he could read it well. He felt to a
slight extent repaid for his trouble; the advertisement was not
of the usual type. It ran thus: 'In memory of John Harrington,
FSA, of The Laurels, Ashbrooke. Died Sept. 18th, 1889. Three months
were allowed.'
The car stopped. Mr Dunning, still contemplating the blue letters
on the yellow ground, had to be stimulated to rise by a word from
the conductor. 'I beg your pardon,' he said, 'I was looking at
that advertisement; it's a very odd one, isn't it?' The conductor
read it slowly. 'Well, my word,' he said, 'I never see that one
before. Well, that is a cure, ain't it? Someone bin up to their
jokes 'ere, I should think.' He got out a duster and applied it,
not without saliva, to the pane and then to the outside. 'No,'
he said, returning, 'that ain't no transfer; seems to me as if
it was reg'lar in the glass, what I mean in the substance, as
you may say. Don't you think so, sir?' Mr Dunning examined it
and rubbed it with his glove, and agreed. 'Who looks after these
advertisements, and gives leave for them to be put up? I wish
you would inquire. I will just take a note of the words.' At this
moment there came a call from the driver: 'Look alive, George,
time's up.' 'All right, all right; there's somethink else what's
up at this end. You come and look at this 'ere glass.' 'What's
gorn with the glass?' said the driver, approaching. 'Well, and
oo's 'Arrington? What's it all about?' 'I was just asking who
was responsible for putting the advertisements up in your cars,
and saying it would be as well to make some inquiry about this
one.' 'Well, sir, that's all done at the Company's orfice, that
work is: it's our Mr Timms, I believe, looks into that. When we
put up tonight I'll leave word, and per'aps I'll be able to tell
you tomorrer if you 'appen to be coming this way.'
This was all that passed that evening. Mr Dunning did just go
to the trouble of looking up Ashbrooke, and found that it was
in Warwickshire.
Next day he went to town again. The car (it was the same car)
was too full in the morning to allow of his getting a word with
the conductor: he could only be sure that the curious advertisement
had been made away with. The close of the day brought a further
element of mystery into the transaction. He had missed the tram,
or else preferred walking home, but at a rather late hour, while
he was at work in his study, one of the maids came to say that
two men from the tramways was very anxious to speak to him. This
was a reminder of the advertisement, which he had, he says, nearly
forgotten. He had the men in--they were the conductor and driver
of the car--and when the matter of refreshment had been attended
to, asked what Mr Timms had had to say about the advertisement.
'Well, sir, that's what we took the liberty to step round about,'
said the conductor. 'Mr Timms 'e give William 'ere the rough side
of his tongue about that: 'cordin' to 'im there warn't no advertisement
of that description sent in, nor ordered, nor paid for, nor put
up, nor nothink, let alone not bein' there, and we was playing
the fool takin' up his time. "Well," I says, "if
that's the case, all I ask of you, Mr Timms," I says, "is
to take and look at it for yourself," I says. "Of course
if it ain't there," I says, "you may take and call me
what you like." "Right," he says, "I will":
and we went straight off. Now, I leave it to you, sir, if that
ad., as we term 'em, with 'Arrington on it warn't as plain as
ever you see anythink--blue letters on yeller glass, and as I
says at the time, and you borne me out, reg'lar in the glass,
because, if you remember, you recollect of me swabbing it with
my duster.' 'To be sure I do, quite clearly--well?' 'You may say
well, I don't think. Mr Timms he gets in that car with a light--no,
he telled William to 'old the light outside. "Now,"
he says, "where's your precious ad. what we've 'eard so much
about?' "'Ere it is," I says, "Mr Timms,"
and I laid my 'and on it.' The conductor paused.
'Well,' said Mr Dunning, 'it was gone, I suppose. Broken?'
'Broke! --not it. There warn't, if you'll believe me, no more
trace of them letters--blue letters they was--on that piece o'
glass, than--well, it's no good me talkin'. I never see such a
thing. I leave it to William here if--but there, as I says, where's
the benefit in me going on about it?'
'And what did Mr Timms say?'
'Why 'e did what I give 'im leave to--called us pretty much
anythink he liked, and I don't know as I blame him so much neither.
But what we thought, William and me did, was as we seen you take
down a bit of a note about that well, that letterin'--,
'I certainly did that, and I have it now. Did you wish me to
speak to Mr Timms myself, and show it to him? Was that what you
came in about?'
'There, didn't I say as much?' said William. 'Deal with a gent
if you can get on the track of one, that's my word. Now perhaps,
George, you'll allow as I ain't took you very far wrong tonight.'
'Very well, William, very well; no need for you to go on as
if you'd 'ad to frog's-march me 'ere. I come quiet, didn't I!
All the same for that, we 'adn't ought to take up your time this
way, sir; but if it so 'appened you could find time to step round
to the Company's orfice in the morning and tell Mr Timms what
you seen for yourself, we should lay under a very 'igh obligation
to you for the trouble. You see it ain't bein' called--well, one
thing and another, as we mind, but if they got it into their 'ead
at the orfice as we seen things as warn't there, why, one thing
leads to another, and where we should be a twelvemunce 'ence--well,
you can understand what I mean.'
Amid further elucidations of the proposition, George, conducted
by William, left the room.
The incredulity of Mr Timms (who had a nodding acquaintance
with Mr Dunning) was greatly modified on the following day by
what the latter could tell and show him; and any bad mark that
might have been attached to the names of William and George was
not suffered to remain on the Company's books; but explanation
there was none.
Mr Dunning's interest in the matter was kept alive by an incident
of the following afternoon. He was walking from his club to the
train, and he noticed some way ahead a man with a handful of leaflets
such as are distributed to passers-by by agents of enterprising
firms. This agent had not chosen a very crowded street for his
operations: in fact, Mr Dunning did not see him get rid of a single
leaflet before he himself reached the spot. One was thrust into
his hand as he passed: the hand that gave it touched his, and
he experienced a sort of little shock as it did so. It seemed
unnaturally rough and hot. He looked in passing at the giver,
but the impression he got was so unclear that, however much he
tried to reckon it up subsequently, nothing would come. He was
walking quickly, and as he went on glanced at the paper. It was
a blue one. The name of Harrington in large capitals caught his
eye. He stopped, startled, and felt for his glasses. The next
instant the leaflet was twitched out of his hand by a man who
hurried past, and was irrecoverably gone. He ran back a few paces,
but where was the passer-by? and where the distributor?
It was in a somewhat pensive frame of mind that Mr Dunning passed
on the following day into the Select Manuscript Room of the British
Museum, and filled up tickets for Harley 3586, and some other
volumes. After a few minutes they were brought to him, and he
was settling the one he wanted first upon the desk, when he thought
he heard his own name whispered behind him. He turned round hastily,
and in doing so, brushed his little portfolio of loose papers
on to the floor. He saw no one he recognized except one of the
staff in charge of the room, who nodded to him, and he proceeded
to pick up his papers. He thought he had them all, and was turning
to begin work, when a stout gentleman at the table behind him,
who was just rising to leave, and had collected his own belongings,
touched him on the shoulder, saying, 'May I give you this? I think
it should be yours,' and handed him a missing quire. 'It is mine,
thank you,' said Mr Dunning. In another moment the man had left
the room. Upon finishing his work for the afternoon, Mr Dunning
had some conversation with the assistant in charge, and took occasion
to ask who the stout gentleman was. 'Oh, he's a man named Karswell,'
said the assistant; 'he was asking me a week ago who were the
great authorities on alchemy, and of course I told him you were
the only one in the country. I'll see if I can't catch him: he'd
like to meet you, I'm sure.'
'For heaven's sake don't dream of it!' said Mr Dunning, 'I'm
particularly anxious to avoid him.'
'Oh! very well,' said the assistant, 'he doesn't come here often:
I dare say you won't meet him.'
More than once on the way home that day Mr Dunning confessed
to himself that he did not look forward with his usual cheerfulness
to a solitary evening. It seemed to him that something ill-defined
and impalpable had stepped in between him and his fellow-men--had
taken him in charge, as it were. He wanted to sit close up to
his neighbours in the train and in the tram, but as luck would
have it both train and car were markedly empty. The conductor
George was thoughtful, and appeared to be absorbed in calculations
as to the number of passengers. On arriving at his house he found
Dr Watson, his medical man, on his doorstep. 'I've had to upset
your household arrangements, I'm sorry to say, Dunning. Both your
servants hors de combat. In fact, I've had to send them to the
Nursing Home.'
'Good heavens! what's the matter?'
'It's something like ptomaine poisoning, I should think: you've
not suffered yourself, I can see, or you wouldn't be walking about.
I think they'll pull through all right.'
'Dear, dear! Have you any idea what brought it on?'
'Well, they tell me they bought some shell-fish from a hawker
at their dinner-time. It's odd. I've made inquiries, but I can't
find that any hawker has been to other houses in the street. I
couldn't send word to you; they won't be back for a bit yet. You
come and dine with me tonight, anyhow, and we can make arrangements
for going on. Eight o'clock. Don't be too anxious.'
The solitary evening was thus obviated; at the expense of some
distress and inconvenience, it is true. Mr Dunning spent the time
pleasantly enough with the doctor (a rather recent settler), and
returned to his lonely home at about 11.30. The night he passed
is not one on which he looks back with any satisfaction. He was
in bed and the light was out. He was wondering if the charwoman
would come early enough to get him hot water next morning, when
he heard the unmistakable sound of his study door opening. No
step followed it on the passage floor, but the sound must mean
mischief, for he knew that he had shut the door that evening after
putting his papers away in his desk. It was rather shame than
courage that induced him to slip out into the passage and lean
over the banister in his nightgown, listening. No light was visible;
no further sound came: only a gust of warm, or even hot air played
for an instant round his shins. He went back and decided to lock
himself into his room. There was more unpleasantness, however.
Either an economical suburban company had decided that their light
would not be required in the small hours, and had stopped working,
or else something was wrong with the meter; the effect was in
any case that the electric light was off. The obvious course was
to find a match, and also to consult his watch: he might as well
know how many hours of discomfort awaited him. So he put his hand
into the well-known nook under the pillow: only, it did not get
so far. What he touched was, according to his account, a mouth,
with teeth, and with hair about it, and, he declares, not the
mouth of a human being. I do not think it is any use to guess
what he said or did; but he was in a spare room with the door
locked and his ear to it before he was clearly conscious again.
And there he spent the rest of a most miserable night, looking
every moment for some fumbling at the door: but nothing came.
The venturing back to his own room in the morning was attended
with many listenings and quiverings. The door stood open, fortunately,
and the blinds were up (the servants had been out of the house
before the hour of drawing them down); there was, to be short,
no trace of an inhabitant. The watch, too, was in its usual place;
nothing was disturbed, only the wardrobe door had swung open,
in accordance with its confirmed habit. A ring at the back door
now announced the charwoman, who had been ordered the night before,
and nerved Mr Dunning, after letting her in, to continue his search
in other parts of the house. It was equally fruitless.
The day thus begun went on dismally enough. He dared not go
to the Museum: in spite of what the assistant had said, Karswell
might turn up there, and Dunning felt he could not cope with a
probably hostile stranger. His own house was odious; he hated
sponging on the doctor. He spent some little time in a call at
the Nursing Home, where he was slightly cheered by a good report
of his housekeeper and maid. Towards lunch-time he betook himself
to his club, again experiencing a gleam of satisfaction at seeing
the Secretary of the Association. At luncheon Dunning told his
friend the more material of his woes, but could not bring himself
to speak to those that weighed most heavily on his spirits. 'My
poor dear man,' said the Secretary, 'what an upset! Look here:
we're alone at home, absolutely. You must put up with us. Yes!
no excuse: send your things in this afternoon.' Dunning was unable
to stand out: he was, in truth, becoming acutely anxious, as the
hours went on, as to what that night might have waiting for him.
He was almost happy as he hurried home to pack up.
His friends, when they had time to take stock of him, were rather
shocked at his lorn appearance, and did their best to keep him
up to the mark. Not altogether without success: but, when the
two men were smoking alone later, Dunning became dull again. Suddenly
he said, 'Gayton, I believe that alchemist man knows it was I
who got his paper rejected.' Gayton whistled. 'What makes you
think that?' he said. Dunning told of his conversation with the
Museum assistant, and Gayton could only agree that the guess seemed
likely to be correct. 'Not that I care much,' Dunning went on,
'only it might be a nuisance if we were to meet. He's a bad-tempered
party, I imagine.' Conversation dropped again; Gayton became more
and more strongly impressed with the desolateness that came over
Dunning's face and bearing, and finally--though with a considerable
effort--he asked him point-blank whether something serious was
not bothering him. Dunning gave an exclamation of relief. 'I was
perishing to get it off my mind,' he said. 'Do you know anything
about a man named John Harrington?' Gayton was thoroughly startled,
and at the moment could only ask why. Then the complete story
of Dunning's experiences came out--what had happened in the tramcar,
in his own house, and in the street, the troubling of spirit that
had crept over him, and still held him; and he ended with the
question he had begun with. Gayton was at a loss how to answer
him. To tell the story of Harrington's end would perhaps be right;
only, Dunning was in a nervous state, the story was a grim one,
and he could not help asking himself whether there were not a
connecting link between these two cases, in the person of Karswell.
It was a difficult concession for a scientific man, but it could
be eased by the phrase 'hypnotic suggestion'. In the end he decided
that his answer tonight should be guarded; he would talk the situation
over with his wife. So he said that he had known Harrington at
Cambridge, and believed he had died suddenly in 1889, adding a
few details about the man and his published work. He did talk
over the matter with Mrs Gayton, and, as he had anticipated, she
leapt at once to the conclusion which had been hovering before
him. It was she who reminded him of the surviving brother, Henry
Harrington, and she also who suggested that he might be got hold
of by means of their hosts of the day before. 'He might be a hopeless
crank,' objected Gayton. 'That could be ascertained from the Bennetts,
who knew him,' Mrs Gayton retorted; and she undertook to see the
Bennetts the very next day.
It is not necessary to tell in further detail the steps by which
Henry Harrington and Dunning were brought together.
The next scene that does require to be narrated is a conversation
that took place between the two. Dunning had told Harrington of
the strange ways in which the dead man's name had been brought
before him, and had said something, besides, of his own subsequent
experiences. Then he had asked if Harrington was disposed, in
return, to recall any of the circumstances connected with his
brother's death. Harrington's surprise at what he heard can be
imagined: but his reply was readily given.
'John,' he said, 'was in a very odd state, undeniably, from
time to time, during some weeks before, though not immediately
before, the catastrophe. There were several things; the principal
notion he had was that he thought he was being followed. No doubt
he was an impressionable man, but he never had had such fancies
as this before. I cannot get it out of my mind that there was
ill-will at work, and what you tell me about yourself reminds
me very much of my brother. Can you think of any possible connecting
link?'
'There is just one that has been taking shape vaguely in my
mind. I've been told that your brother reviewed a book very severely
not long before he died, and just lately I have happened to cross
the path of the man who wrote that book in a way he would resent.'
'Don't tell me the man was called Karswell.'
'Why not? that is exactly his name.'
Henry Harrington leant back. 'That is final to my mind. Now
I must explain further. From something he said, I feel sure that
my brother John was beginning to believe--very much against his
will--that Karswell was at the bottom of his trouble. I want to
tell you what seems to me to have a bearing on the situation.
My brother was a great musician, and used to run up to concerts
in town. He came back, three months before he died, from one of
these, and gave me his programme to look at--an analytical programme:
he always kept them. "I nearly missed this one," he
said. "I suppose I must have dropped it: anyhow, I was looking
for it under my seat and in my pockets and so on, and my neighbour
offered me his: said 'might he give it me, he had no further use
for it', and he went away just afterwards. I don't know who he
was--a stout, clean-shaven man. I should have been sorry to miss
it; of course I could have bought another, but this cost me nothing."
At another time he told me that he had been very uncomfortable
both on the way to his hotel and during the night. I piece things
together now in thinking it over. Then, not very long after, he
was going over these programmes, putting them in order to have
them bound up, and in this particular one (which by the way I
had hardly glanced at), he found quite near the beginning a strip
of paper with some very odd writing on it in red and black--most
carefully done--it looked to me more like Runic letters than anything
else. "Why," he said, "this must belong to my fat
neighbour. It looks as if it might be worth returning to him;
it may be a copy of something; evidently someone has taken trouble
over it. How can I find his address?" We talked it over for
a little and agreed that it wasn't worth advertising about, and
that my brother had better look out for the man at the next concert,
to which he was going very soon. The paper was lying on the book
and we were both by the fire; it was a cold, windy summer evening.
I suppose the door blew open, though I didn't notice it: at any
rate a gust--a warm gust it was--came quite suddenly between us,
took the paper and blew it straight into the fire: it was light,
thin paper, and flared and went up the chimney in a single ash.
"Well," I said, "you can't give it back now."
He said nothing for a minute: then rather crossly, "No, I
can't; but why you should keep on saying so I don't know."
I remarked that I didn't say it more than once. "Not more
than four times, you mean," was all he said. I remember all
that very clearly, without any good reason; and now to come to
the point. I don't know if you looked at that book of Karswell's
which my unfortunate brother reviewed. It's not likely that you
should: but I did, both before his death and after it. The first
time we made game of it together. It was written in no style at
all--split infinitives, and every sort of thing that makes an
Oxford gorge rise. Then there was nothing that the man didn't
swallow: mixing up classical myths, and stories out of the Golden
Legend with reports of savage customs of today--all very proper,
no doubt, if you know how to use them, but he didn't: he seemed
to put the Golden Legend and the Golden Bough exactly on a par,
and to believe both: a pitiable exhibition, in short. Well, after
the misfortune, I looked over the book again. It was no better
than before, but the impression which it left this time on my
mind was different. I suspected--as I told you--that Karswell
had borne ill-will to my brother, even that he was in some way
responsible for what had happened; and now his book seemed to
me to be a very sinister performance indeed. One chapter in particular
struck me, in which he spoke of "casting the Runes"
on people, either for the purpose of gaining their affection or
of getting them out of the way--perhaps more especially the latter:
he spoke of all this in a way that really seemed to me to imply
actual knowledge. I've got no time to go into details, but the
upshot is that I am pretty sure from information received that
the civil man at the concert was Karswell: I suspect--I more than
suspect--that the paper was of importance: and I do believe that
if my brother had been able to give it back, he might have been
alive now. Therefore, it occurs to me to ask you whether you have
anything to put beside what I have told you.'
By way of answer, Dunning had the episode in the Manuscript
Room at the British Museum to relate. 'Then he did actually hand
you some papers; have you examined them? No? because we must,
if you'll allow it, look at them at once, and very carefully.'
They went to the still empty house--empty, for the two servants
were not yet able to return to work. Dunning's portfolio of papers
was gathering dust on the writing-table. In it were the quires
of small-sized scribbling paper which he used for his transcripts:
and from one of these, as he took it up, there slipped and fluttered
out into the room with uncanny quickness, a strip of thin light
paper. The window was open, but Harrington slammed it to, just
in time to intercept the paper, which he caught. 'I thought so,'
he said; 'it might be the identical thing that was given to my
brother. You'll have to look out, Dunning; this may mean something
quite serious for you.'
A long consultation took place. The paper was narrowly examined.
As Harrington had said, the characters on it were more like Runes
than anything else, but not decipherable by either man, and both
hesitated to copy them, for fear, as they confessed, of perpetuating
whatever evil purpose they might conceal. So it has remained impossible
(if I may anticipate a little) to ascertain what was conveyed
in this curious message or commission. Both Dunning and Harrington
are firmly convinced that it had the effect of bringing its possessors
into very undesirable company. That it must be returned to the
source whence it came they were agreed, and further, that the
only safe and certain way was that of personal service; and here
contrivance would be necessary, for Dunning was known by sight
to Karswell. He must, for one thing, alter his appearance by shaving
his beard. But then might not the blow fall first? Harrington
thought they could time it. He knew the date of the concert at
which the 'black spot' had been put on his brother: it was June
18th. The death had followed on Sept. 18th. Dunning reminded him
that three months had been mentioned on the inscription on the
car-window. 'Perhaps,' he added, with a cheerless laugh, 'mine
may be a bill at three months too. I believe I can fix it by my
diary. Yes, April 23rd was the day at the Museum; that brings
us to July 23rd. Now, you know, it becomes extremely important
to me to know anything you will tell me about the progress of
your brother's trouble, if it is possible for you to speak of
it.' 'Of course. Well, the sense of being watched whenever he
was alone was the most distressing thing to him. After a time
I took to sleeping in his room, and he was the better for that:
still, he talked a great deal in his sleep. What about? Is it
wise to dwell on that, at least before things are straightened
out? I think not, but I can tell you this: two things came for
him by post during those weeks, both with a London postmark, and
addressed in a commercial hand. One was a woodcut of Bewick's,
roughly torn out of the page: one which shows a moonlit road and
a man walking along it, followed by an awful demon creature. Under
it were written the lines out of the "Ancient Mariner"
(which I suppose the cut illustrates) about one who, having once
looked round--
walks on,
And turns no more his head,
Because he knows a frightful fiend
Doth close behind him tread.
The other was a calendar, such as tradesmen often send. My brother
paid no attention to this, but I looked at it after his death,
and found that everything after Sept. 18 had been torn out. You
may be surprised at his having gone out alone the evening he was
killed, but the fact is that during the last ten days or so of
his life he had been quite free from the sense of being followed
or watched.'
The end of the consultation was this. Harrington, who knew a
neighbour of Karswell's, thought he saw a way of keeping a watch
on his movements. It would be Dunning's part to be in readiness
to try to cross Karswell's path at any moment, to keep the paper
safe and in a place of ready access.
They parted. The next weeks were no doubt a severe strain upon
Dunning's nerves: the intangible barrier which had seemed to rise
about him on the day when he received the paper, gradually developed
into a brooding blackness that cut him off from the means of escape
to which one might have thought he might resort. No one was at
hand who was likely to suggest them to him, and he seemed robbed
of all initiative. He waited with inexpressible anxiety as May,
June, and early July passed on, for a mandate from Harrington.
But all this time Karswell remained immovable at Lufford.
At last, in less than a week before the date he had come to
look upon as the end of his earthly activities, came a telegram:
'Leaves Victoria by boat train Thursday night. Do not miss. I
come to you tonight. Harrington.'
He arrived accordingly, and they concocted plans. The train
left Victoria at nine and its last stop before Dover was Croydon
West. Harrington would mark down Karswell at Victoria, and look
out for Dunning at Croydon, calling to him if need were by a name
agreed upon. Dunning, disguised as far as might be, was to have
no label or initials on any hand luggage, and must at all costs
have the paper with him.
Dunning's suspense as he waited on the Croydon platform I need
not attempt to describe. His sense of danger during the last days
had only been sharpened by the fact that the cloud about him had
perceptibly been lighter; but relief was an ominous symptom, and,
if Karswell eluded him now, hope was gone: and there were so many
chances of that. The rumour of the journey might be itself a device.
The twenty minutes in which he paced the platform and persecuted
every porter with inquiries as to the boat train were as bitter
as any he had spent. Still, the train came, and Harrington was
at the window. It was important, of course, that there should
be no recognition: so Dunning got in at the farther end of the
corridor carriage, and only gradually made his way to the compartment
where Harrington and Karswell were. He was pleased, on the whole,
to see that the train was far from full.
Karswell was on the alert, but gave no sign of recognition.
Dunning took the seat not immediately facing him, and attempted,
vainly at first, then with increasing command of his faculties,
to reckon the possibilities of making the desired transfer. Opposite
to Karswell, and next to Dunning, was a heap of Karswell's coats
on the seat. It would be of no use to slip the paper into these--he
would not be safe, or would not feel so, unless in some way it
could be proffered by him and accepted by the other. There was
a handbag, open, and with papers in it. Could he manage to conceal
this (so that perhaps Karswell might leave the carriage without
it), and then find and give it to him? This was the plan that
suggested itself. If he could only have counselled with Harrington!
but that could not be. The minutes went on. More than once Karswell
rose and went out into the corridor. The second time Dunning was
on the point of attempting to make the bag fall off the seat,
but he caught Harrington's eye, and read in it a warning. Karswell,
from the corridor, was watching: probably to see if the two men
recognized each other. He returned, but was evidently restless:
and, when he rose the third time, hope dawned, for something did
slip off his seat and fall with hardly a sound to the floor. Karswell
went out once more, and passed out of range of the corridor window.
Dunning picked up what had fallen, and saw that the key was in
his hands in the form of one of Cook's ticket-cases, with tickets
in it. These cases have a pocket in the cover, and within very
few seconds the paper of which we have heard was in the pocket
of this one. To make the operation more secure, Harrington stood
in the doorway of the compartment and fiddled with the blind.
It was done, and done at the right time, for the train was now
slowing down towards Dover.
In a moment more Karswell re-entered the compartment. As he
did so, Dunning, managing, he knew not how, to suppress the tremble
in his voice, handed him the ticket-case, saying, 'May I give
you this, sir? I believe it is yours.' After a brief glance at
the ticket inside, Karswell uttered the hoped-for response, 'Yes,
it is; much obliged to you, sir,' and he placed it in his breast
pocket.
Even in the few moments that remained--moments of tense anxiety,
for they knew not to what a premature finding of the paper might
lead--both men noticed that the carriage seemed to darken about
them and to grow warmer; that Karswell was fidgety and oppressed;
that he drew the heap of loose coats near to him and cast it back
as if it repelled him; and that he then sat upright and glanced
anxiously at both. They, with sickening anxiety, busied themselves
in collecting their belongings; but they both thought that Karswell
was on the point of speaking when the train stopped at Dover Town.
It was natural that in the short space between town and pier they
should both go into the corridor.
At the pier they got out, but so empty was the train that they
were forced to linger on the platform until Karswell should have
passed ahead of them with his porter on the way to the boat, and
only then was it safe for them to exchange a pressure of the hand
and a word of concentrated congratulation. The effect upon Dunning
was to make him almost faint. Harrington made him lean up against
the wall, while he himself went forward a few yards within sight
of the gangway to the boat, at which Karswell had now arrived.
The man at the head of it examined his ticket, and, laden with
coats, he passed down into the boat. Suddenly the official called
after him, 'You, sir, beg pardon, did the other gentleman show
his ticket?' 'What the devil do you mean by the other gentleman?'
Karswell's snarling voice called back from the deck. The man bent
over and looked at him. 'The devil? Well, I don't know, I'm sure,'
Harrington heard him say to himself, and then aloud, 'My mistake,
sir; must have been your rugs! ask your pardon.' And then, to
a subordinate near him, ''Ad he got a dog with him, or what? Funny
thing: I could 'a' swore 'e wasn't alone. Well, whatever it was,
they'll 'ave to see to it aboard. She's off now. Another week
and we shall be gettin' the 'oliday customers.' In five minutes
more there was nothing but the lessening lights of the boat, the
long line of the Dover lamps, the night breeze, and the moon.
Long and long the two sat in their room at the 'Lord Warden'.
In spite of the removal of their greatest anxiety, they were oppressed
with a doubt, not of the lightest. Had they been justified in
sending a man to his death, as they believed they had? Ought they
not to warn him, at least? 'No,' said Harrington; 'if he is the
murderer I think him, we have done no more than is just. Still,
if you think it better--but how and where can you warn him?' 'He
was booked to Abbéville only,' said Dunning. 'I saw that.
If I wired to the hotels there in Joanne's Guide, "Examine
your ticket-case, Dunning," I should feel happier. This is
the 21st: he will have a day. But I am afraid he has gone into
the dark.' So telegrams were left at the hotel office.
It is not clear whether these reached their destination, or
whether, if they did, they were understood. All that is known
is that, on the afternoon of the 23rd, an English traveller, examining
the front of St Wulfram's Church at Abbéville, then under
extensive repair, was struck on the head and instantly killed
by a stone falling from the scaffold erected round the north-western
tower, there being, as was clearly proved, no workman on the scaffold
at that moment: and the traveller's papers identified him as Mr
Karswell.
Only one detail shall be added. At Karswell's sale a set of
Bewick, sold with all faults, was acquired by Harrington. The
page with the woodcut of the traveller and the demon was, as he
had expected, mutilated. Also, after a judicious interval, Harrington
repeated to Dunning something of what he had heard his brother
say in his sleep: but it was not long before Dunning stopped him.
_________________________________________________________________
FINIS