The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Dynamiter, by Robert Louis Stevenson (#32 in our series by Robert Louis Stevenson) Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the header without written permission. Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. **Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** **eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** *****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** Title: The Dynamiter Author: Robert Louis Stevenson and Fanny van de Grift Stevenson Release Date: September, 1996 [EBook #647] [This file was first posted on September 13, 1996] [Most recently updated: September 2, 2002] Edition: 10 Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII
Transcribed from the 1903 Longmans, Green And Co. edition by David Price,
email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
THE DYNAMITER
TO MESSRS. COLE AND COX, POLICE OFFICERS
Gentlemen, - In the volume now in your hands, the authors have touched
upon that ugly devil of crime, with which it is your glory to have contended.
It were a waste of ink to do so in a serious spirit. Let us dedicate
our horror to acts of a more mingled strain, where crime preserves some
features of nobility, and where reason and humanity can still relish
the temptation. Horror, in this case, is due to Mr. Parnell: he
sits before posterity silent, Mr. Forster’s appeal echoing down
the ages. Horror is due to ourselves, in that we have so long
coquetted with political crime; not seriously weighing, not acutely
following it from cause to consequence; but with a generous, unfounded
heat of sentiment, like the schoolboy with the penny tale, applauding
what was specious. When it touched ourselves (truly in a vile
shape), we proved false to the imaginations; discovered, in a clap,
that crime was no less cruel and no less ugly under sounding names;
and recoiled from our false deities.
But seriousness comes most in place when we are to speak of our defenders.
Whoever be in the right in this great and confused war of politics;
whatever elements of greed, whatever traits of the bully, dishonour
both parties in this inhuman contest; - your side, your part, is at
least pure of doubt. Yours is the side of the child, of the breeding
woman, of individual pity and public trust. If our society were
the mere kingdom of the devil (as indeed it wears some of his colours)
it yet embraces many precious elements and many innocent persons whom
it is a glory to defend. Courage and devotion, so common in the
ranks of the police, so little recognised, so meagrely rewarded, have
at length found their commemoration in an historical act. History,
which will represent Mr. Parnell sitting silent under the appeal of
Mr. Forster, and Gordon setting forth upon his tragic enterprise, will
not forget Mr. Cole carrying the dynamite in his defenceless hands,
nor Mr. Cox coming coolly to his aid.
Robert Louis Stevenson
Fanny Van De Grift Stevenson
A NOTE FOR THE READER
It is within the bounds of possibility that you may take up this volume,
and yet be unacquainted with its predecessor: the first series of NEW
ARABIAN NIGHTS. The loss is yours - and mine; or to be more exact,
my publishers’. But if you are thus unlucky, the least I
can do is to pass you a hint. When you shall find a reference
in the following pages to one Theophilus Godall of the Bohemian Cigar
Divan in Rupert Street, Soho, you must be prepared to recognise, under
his features, no less a person than Prince Florizel of Bohemia, formerly
one of the magnates of Europe, now dethroned, exiled, impoverished,
and embarked in the tobacco trade.
R. L. S.
NEW ARABIAN NIGHTS
A SECOND SERIES
THE DYNAMITER
PROLOGUE OF THE CIGAR DIVAN
In the city of encounters, the Bagdad of the West, and, to be more
precise, on the broad northern pavement of Leicester Square, two young
men of five- or six-and-twenty met after years of separation.
The first, who was of a very smooth address and clothed in the best
fashion, hesitated to recognise the pinched and shabby air of his companion.
‘What!’ he cried, ‘Paul Somerset!’
‘I am indeed Paul Somerset,’ returned the other, ‘or
what remains of him after a well-deserved experience of poverty and
law. But in you, Challoner, I can perceive no change; and time
may be said, without hyperbole, to write no wrinkle on your azure brow.’
‘All,’ replied Challoner, ‘is not gold that glitters.
But we are here in an ill posture for confidences, and interrupt the
movement of these ladies. Let us, if you please, find a more private
corner.’
‘If you will allow me to guide you,’ replied Somerset, ‘I
will offer you the best cigar in London.’
And taking the arm of his companion, he led him in silence and at a
brisk pace to the door of a quiet establishment in Rupert Street, Soho.
The entrance was adorned with one of those gigantic Highlanders of wood
which have almost risen to the standing of antiquities; and across the
window-glass, which sheltered the usual display of pipes, tobacco, and
cigars, there ran the gilded legend: ‘Bohemian Cigar Divan, by
T. Godall.’ The interior of the shop was small, but commodious
and ornate; the salesman grave, smiling, and urbane; and the two young
men, each puffing a select regalia, had soon taken their places on a
sofa of mouse-coloured plush and proceeded to exchange their stories.
‘I am now,’ said Somerset, ‘a barrister; but Providence
and the attorneys have hitherto denied me the opportunity to shine.
A select society at the Cheshire Cheese engaged my evenings; my afternoons,
as Mr. Godall could testify, have been generally passed in this divan;
and my mornings, I have taken the precaution to abbreviate by not rising
before twelve. At this rate, my little patrimony was very rapidly,
and I am proud to remember, most agreeably expended. Since then
a gentleman, who has really nothing else to recommend him beyond the
fact of being my maternal uncle, deals me the small sum of ten shillings
a week; and if you behold me once more revisiting the glimpses of the
street lamps in my favourite quarter, you will readily divine that I
have come into a fortune.’
‘I should not have supposed so,’ replied Challoner.
‘But doubtless I met you on the way to your tailors.’
‘It is a visit that I purpose to delay,’ returned Somerset,
with a smile. ‘My fortune has definite limits. It
consists, or rather this morning it consisted, of one hundred pounds.’
‘That is certainly odd,’ said Challoner; ‘yes, certainly
the coincidence is strange. I am myself reduced to the same margin.’
‘You!’ cried Somerset. ‘And yet Solomon in all
his glory - ’
‘Such is the fact. I am, dear boy, on my last legs,’
said Challoner. ‘Besides the clothes in which you see me,
I have scarcely a decent trouser in my wardrobe; and if I knew how,
I would this instant set about some sort of work or commerce.
With a hundred pounds for capital, a man should push his way.’
‘It may be,’ returned Somerset; ‘but what to do with
mine is more than I can fancy. Mr. Godall,’ he added, addressing
the salesman, ‘you are a man who knows the world: what can a young
fellow of reasonable education do with a hundred pounds?’
‘It depends,’ replied the salesman, withdrawing his cheroot.
‘The power of money is an article of faith in which I profess
myself a sceptic. A hundred pounds will with difficulty support
you for a year; with somewhat more difficulty you may spend it in a
night; and without any difficulty at all you may lose it in five minutes
on the Stock Exchange. If you are of that stamp of man that rises,
a penny would be as useful; if you belong to those that fall, a penny
would be no more useless. When I was myself thrown unexpectedly
upon the world, it was my fortune to possess an art: I knew a good cigar.
Do you know nothing, Mr. Somerset?’
‘Not even law,’ was the reply.
‘The answer is worthy of a sage,’ returned Mr. Godall.
‘And you, sir,’ he continued, turning to Challoner, ‘as
the friend of Mr. Somerset, may I be allowed to address you the same
question?’
‘Well,’ replied Challoner, ‘I play a fair hand at
whist.’
‘How many persons are there in London,’ returned the salesman,
‘who have two-and-thirty teeth? Believe me, young gentleman,
there are more still who play a fair hand at whist. Whist, sir,
is wide as the world; ’tis an accomplishment like breathing.
I once knew a youth who announced that he was studying to be Chancellor
of England; the design was certainly ambitious; but I find it less excessive
than that of the man who aspires to make a livelihood by whist.’
‘Dear me,’ said Challoner, ‘I am afraid I shall have
to fall to be a working man.’
‘Fall to be a working man?’ echoed Mr. Godall. ‘Suppose
a rural dean to be unfrocked, does he fall to be a major? suppose a
captain were cashiered, would he fall to be a puisne judge? The
ignorance of your middle class surprises me. Outside itself, it
thinks the world to lie quite ignorant and equal, sunk in a common degradation;
but to the eye of the observer, all ranks are seen to stand in ordered
hierarchies, and each adorned with its particular aptitudes and knowledge.
By the defects of your education you are more disqualified to be a working
man than to be the ruler of an empire. The gulf, sir, is below;
and the true learned arts - those which alone are safe from the competition
of insurgent laymen - are those which give his title to the artisan.’
‘This is a very pompous fellow,’ said Challoner, in the
ear of his companion.
‘He is immense,’ said Somerset.
Just then the door of the divan was opened, and a third young fellow
made his appearance, and rather bashfully requested some tobacco.
He was younger than the others; and, in a somewhat meaningless and altogether
English way, he was a handsome lad. When he had been served, and
had lighted his pipe and taken his place upon the sofa, he recalled
himself to Challoner by the name of Desborough.
‘Desborough, to be sure,’ cried Challoner. ‘Well,
Desborough, and what do you do?’
‘The fact is,’ said Desborough, ‘that I am doing nothing.’
‘A private fortune possibly?’ inquired the other.
‘Well, no,’ replied Desborough, rather sulkily. ‘The
fact is that I am waiting for something to turn up.’
‘All in the same boat!’ cried Somerset. ‘And
have you, too, one hundred pounds?’
‘Worse luck,’ said Mr. Desborough.
‘This is a very pathetic sight, Mr. Godall,’ said Somerset:
‘Three futiles.’
‘A character of this crowded age,’ returned the salesman.
‘Sir,’ said Somerset, ‘I deny that the age is crowded;
I will admit one fact, and one fact only: that I am futile, that he
is futile, and that we are all three as futile as the devil. What
am I? I have smattered law, smattered letters, smattered geography,
smattered mathematics; I have even a working knowledge of judicial astrology;
and here I stand, all London roaring by at the street’s end, as
impotent as any baby. I have a prodigious contempt for my maternal
uncle; but without him, it is idle to deny it, I should simply resolve
into my elements like an unstable mixture. I begin to perceive
that it is necessary to know some one thing to the bottom - were it
only literature. And yet, sir, the man of the world is a great
feature of this age; he is possessed of an extraordinary mass and variety
of knowledge; he is everywhere at home; he has seen life in all its
phases; and it is impossible but that this great habit of existence
should bear fruit. I count myself a man of the world, accomplished,
cap-à-pie. So do you, Challoner. And you,
Mr. Desborough?’
‘Oh yes,’ returned the young man.
‘Well then, Mr. Godall, here we stand, three men of the world,
without a trade to cover us, but planted at the strategic centre of
the universe (for so you will allow me to call Rupert Street), in the
midst of the chief mass of people, and within ear-shot of the most continuous
chink of money on the surface of the globe. Sir, as civilised
men, what do we do? I will show you. You take in a paper?’
‘I take,’ said Mr. Godall solemnly, ‘the best paper
in the world, the Standard.’
‘Good,’ resumed Somerset. ‘I now hold it in
my hand, the voice of the world, a telephone repeating all men’s
wants. I open it, and where my eye first falls - well, no, not
Morrison’s Pills - but here, sure enough, and but a little above,
I find the joint that I was seeking; here is the weak spot in the armour
of society. Here is a want, a plaint, an offer of substantial
gratitude: “Two hundred Pounds Reward. - The above reward
will be paid to any person giving information as to the identity and
whereabouts of a man observed yesterday in the neighbourhood of the
Green Park. He was over six feet in height, with shoulders disproportionately
broad, close shaved, with black moustaches, and wearing a sealskin great-coat.”
There, gentlemen, our fortune, if not made, is founded.’
‘Do you then propose, dear boy, that we should turn detectives?’
inquired Challoner.
‘Do I propose it? No, sir,’ cried Somerset.
‘It is reason, destiny, the plain face of the world, that commands
and imposes it. Here all our merits tell; our manners, habit of
the world, powers of conversation, vast stores of unconnected knowledge,
all that we are and have builds up the character of the complete detective.
It is, in short, the only profession for a gentleman.’
‘The proposition is perhaps excessive,’ replied Challoner;
‘for hitherto I own I have regarded it as of all dirty, sneaking,
and ungentlemanly trades, the least and lowest.’
‘To defend society?’ asked Somerset; ‘to stake one’s
life for others? to deracinate occult and powerful evil? I appeal
to Mr. Godall. He, at least, as a philosophic looker-on at life,
will spit upon such philistine opinions. He knows that the policeman,
as he is called upon continually to face greater odds, and that both
worse equipped and for a better cause, is in form and essence a more
noble hero than the soldier. Do you, by any chance, deceive yourself
into supposing that a general would either ask or expect, from the best
army ever marshalled, and on the most momentous battle-field, the conduct
of a common constable at Peckham Rye?’ {1}
‘I did not understand we were to join the force,’ said Challoner.
‘Nor shall we. These are the hands; but here - here, sir,
is the head,’ cried Somerset. ‘Enough; it is decreed.
We shall hunt down this miscreant in the sealskin coat.’
‘Suppose that we agreed,’ retorted Challoner, ‘you
have no plan, no knowledge; you know not where to seek for a beginning.’
‘Challoner!’ cried Somerset, ‘is it possible that
you hold the doctrine of Free Will? And are you devoid of any
tincture of philosophy, that you should harp on such exploded fallacies?
Chance, the blind Madonna of the Pagan, rules this terrestrial bustle;
and in Chance I place my sole reliance. Chance has brought us
three together; when we next separate and go forth our several ways,
Chance will continually drag before our careless eyes a thousand eloquent
clues, not to this mystery only, but to the countless mysteries by which
we live surrounded. Then comes the part of the man of the world,
of the detective born and bred. This clue, which the whole town
beholds without comprehension, swift as a cat, he leaps upon it, makes
it his, follows it with craft and passion, and from one trifling circumstance
divines a world.’
‘Just so,’ said Challoner; ‘and I am delighted that
you should recognise these virtues in yourself. But in the meanwhile,
dear boy, I own myself incapable of joining. I was neither born
nor bred as a detective, but as a placable and very thirsty gentleman;
and, for my part, I begin to weary for a drink. As for clues and
adventures, the only adventure that is ever likely to occur to me will
be an adventure with a bailiff.’
‘Now there is the fallacy,’ cried Somerset. ‘There
I catch the secret of your futility in life. The world teems and
bubbles with adventure; it besieges you along the street: hands waving
out of windows, swindlers coming up and swearing they knew you when
you were abroad, affable and doubtful people of all sorts and conditions
begging and truckling for your notice. But not you: you turn away,
you walk your seedy mill round, you must go the dullest way. Now
here, I beg of you, the next adventure that offers itself, embrace it
in with both your arms; whatever it looks, grimy or romantic, grasp
it. I will do the like; the devil is in it, but at least we shall
have fun; and each in turn we shall narrate the story of our fortunes
to my philosophic friend of the divan, the great Godall, now hearing
me with inward joy. Come, is it a bargain? Will you, indeed,
both promise to welcome every chance that offers, to plunge boldly into
every opening, and, keeping the eye wary and the head composed, to study
and piece together all that happens? Come, promise: let me open
to you the doors of the great profession of intrigue.’
‘It is not much in my way,’ said Challoner, ‘but,
since you make a point of it, amen.’
‘I don’t mind promising,’ said Desborough, ‘but
nothing will happen to me.’
‘O faithless ones!’ cried Somerset. ‘But at
least I have your promises; and Godall, I perceive, is transported with
delight.’
‘I promise myself at least much pleasure from your various narratives,’
said the salesman, with the customary calm polish of his manner.
‘And now, gentlemen,’ concluded Somerset, ‘let us
separate. I hasten to put myself in fortune’s way.
Hark how, in this quiet corner, London roars like the noise of battle;
four million destinies are here concentred; and in the strong panoply
of one hundred pounds, payable to the bearer, I am about to plunge into
that web.’
CHALLONER’S ADVENTURE: THE SQUIRE OF DAMES
Mr. Edward Challoner had set up lodgings in the suburb of Putney,
where he enjoyed a parlour and bedroom and the sincere esteem of the
people of the house. To this remote home he found himself, at
a very early hour in the morning of the next day, condemned to set forth
on foot. He was a young man of a portly habit; no lover of the
exercises of the body; bland, sedentary, patient of delay, a prop of
omnibuses. In happier days he would have chartered a cab; but
these luxuries were now denied him; and with what courage he could muster
he addressed himself to walk.
It was then the height of the season and the summer; the weather was
serene and cloudless; and as he paced under the blinded houses and along
the vacant streets, the chill of the dawn had fled, and some of the
warmth and all the brightness of the July day already shone upon the
city. He walked at first in a profound abstraction, bitterly reviewing
and repenting his performances at whist; but as he advanced into the
labyrinth of the south-west, his ear was gradually mastered by the silence.
Street after street looked down upon his solitary figure, house after
house echoed upon his passage with a ghostly jar, shop after shop displayed
its shuttered front and its commercial legend; and meanwhile he steered
his course, under day’s effulgent dome and through this encampment
of diurnal sleepers, lonely as a ship.
‘Here,’ he reflected, ‘if I were like my scatter-brained
companion, here were indeed the scene where I might look for an adventure.
Here, in broad day, the streets are secret as in the blackest night
of January, and in the midst of some four million sleepers, solitary
as the woods of Yucatan. If I but raise my voice I could summon
up the number of an army, and yet the grave is not more silent than
this city of sleep.’
He was still following these quaint and serious musings when he came
into a street of more mingled ingredients than was common in the quarter.
Here, on the one hand, framed in walls and the green tops of trees,
were several of those discreet, bijou residences on which propriety
is apt to look askance. Here, too, were many of the brick-fronted
barracks of the poor; a plaster cow, perhaps, serving as ensign to a
dairy, or a ticket announcing the business of the mangler. Before
one such house, that stood a little separate among walled gardens, a
cat was playing with a straw, and Challoner paused a moment, looking
on this sleek and solitary creature, who seemed an emblem of the neighbouring
peace. With the cessation of the sound of his own steps the silence
fell dead; the house stood smokeless: the blinds down, the whole machinery
of life arrested; and it seemed to Challoner that he should hear the
breathing of the sleepers.
As he so stood, he was startled by a dull and jarring detonation from
within. This was followed by a monstrous hissing and simmering
as from a kettle of the bigness of St. Paul’s; and at the same
time from every chink of door and window spirted an ill-smelling vapour.
The cat disappeared with a cry. Within the lodging-house feet
pounded on the stairs; the door flew back, emitting clouds of smoke;
and two men and an elegantly dressed young lady tumbled forth into the
street and fled without a word. The hissing had already ceased,
the smoke was melting in the air, the whole event had come and gone
as in a dream, and still Challoner was rooted to the spot. At
last his reason and his fear awoke together, and with the most unwonted
energy he fell to running.
Little by little this first dash relaxed, and presently he had resumed
his sober gait and begun to piece together, out of the confused report
of his senses, some theory of the occurrence. But the occasion
of the sounds and stench that had so suddenly assailed him, and the
strange conjunction of fugitives whom he had seen to issue from the
house, were mysteries beyond his plummet. With an obscure awe
he considered them in his mind, continuing, meanwhile, to thread the
web of streets, and once more alone in morning sunshine.
In his first retreat he had entirely wandered; and now, steering vaguely
west, it was his luck to light upon an unpretending street, which presently
widened so as to admit a strip of gardens in the midst. Here was
quite a stir of birds; even at that hour, the shadow of the leaves was
grateful; instead of the burnt atmosphere of cities, there was something
brisk and rural in the air; and Challoner paced forward, his eyes upon
the pavement and his mind running upon distant scenes, till he was recalled,
upon a sudden, by a wall that blocked his further progress. This
street, whose name I have forgotten, is no thoroughfare.
He was not the first who had wandered there that morning; for as he
raised his eyes with an agreeable deliberation, they alighted on the
figure of a girl, in whom he was struck to recognise the third of the
incongruous fugitives. She had run there, seemingly, blindfold;
the wall had checked her career: and being entirely wearied, she had
sunk upon the ground beside the garden railings, soiling her dress among
the summer dust. Each saw the other in the same instant of time;
and she, with one wild look, sprang to her feet and began to hurry from
the scene.
Challoner was doubly startled to meet once more the heroine of his adventure,
and to observe the fear with which she shunned him. Pity and alarm,
in nearly equal forces, contested the possession of his mind; and yet,
in spite of both, he saw himself condemned to follow in the lady’s
wake. He did so gingerly, as fearing to increase her terrors;
but, tread as lightly as he might, his footfalls eloquently echoed in
the empty street. Their sound appeared to strike in her some strong
emotion; for scarce had he begun to follow ere she paused. A second
time she addressed herself to flight; and a second time she paused.
Then she turned about, and with doubtful steps and the most attractive
appearance of timidity, drew near to the young man. He on his
side continued to advance with similar signals of distress and bashfulness.
At length, when they were but some steps apart, he saw her eyes brim
over, and she reached out both her hands in eloquent appeal.
‘Are you an English gentleman?’ she cried.
The unhappy Challoner regarded her with consternation. He was
the spirit of fine courtesy, and would have blushed to fail in his devoirs
to any lady; but, in the other scale, he was a man averse from amorous
adventures. He looked east and west; but the houses that looked
down upon this interview remained inexorably shut; and he saw himself,
though in the full glare of the day’s eye, cut off from any human
intervention. His looks returned at last upon the suppliant.
He remarked with irritation that she was charming both in face and figure,
elegantly dressed and gloved; a lady undeniable; the picture of distress
and innocence; weeping and lost in the city of diurnal sleep.
‘Madam,’ he said, ‘I protest you have no cause to
fear intrusion; and if I have appeared to follow you, the fault is in
this street, which has deceived us both.’ An unmistakable
relief appeared upon the lady’s face. ‘I might have
guessed it!’ she exclaimed. ‘Thank you a thousand
times! But at this hour, in this appalling silence, and among
all these staring windows, I am lost in terrors - oh, lost in them!’
she cried, her face blanching at the words. ‘I beg you to
lend me your arm,’ she added with the loveliest, suppliant inflection.
‘I dare not go alone; my nerve is gone - I had a shock, oh, what
a shock! I beg of you to be my escort.’
‘My dear madam,’ responded Challoner heavily, ‘my
arm is at your service.’
‘She took it and clung to it for a moment, struggling with her
sobs; and the next, with feverish hurry, began to lead him in the direction
of the city. One thing was plain, among so much that was obscure:
it was plain her fears were genuine. Still, as she went, she spied
around as if for dangers; and now she would shiver like a person in
a chill, and now clutch his arm in hers. To Challoner her terror
was at once repugnant and infectious; it gained and mastered, while
it still offended him; and he wailed in spirit and longed for release.
‘Madam,’ he said at last, ‘I am, of course, charmed
to be of use to any lady; but I confess I was bound in a direction opposite
to that you follow, and a word of explanation - ’
‘Hush!’ she sobbed, ‘not here - not here!’
The blood of Challoner ran cold. He might have thought the lady
mad; but his memory was charged with more perilous stuff; and in view
of the detonation, the smoke and the flight of the ill-assorted trio,
his mind was lost among mysteries. So they continued to thread
the maze of streets in silence, with the speed of a guilty flight, and
both thrilling with incommunicable terrors. In time, however,
and above all by their quick pace of walking, the pair began to rise
to firmer spirits; the lady ceased to peer about the corners; and Challoner,
emboldened by the resonant tread and distant figure of a constable,
returned to the charge with more of spirit and directness.
‘I thought,’ said he, in the tone of conversation, ‘that
I had indistinctly perceived you leaving a villa in the company of two
gentlemen.’
‘Oh!’ she said, ‘you need not fear to wound me by
the truth. You saw me flee from a common lodging-house, and my
companions were not gentlemen. In such a case, the best of compliments
is to be frank.’
‘I thought,’ resumed Challoner, encouraged as much as he
was surprised by the spirit of her reply, ‘to have perceived,
besides, a certain odour. A noise, too - I do not know to what
I should compare it - ’
‘Silence!’ she cried. ‘You do not know the danger
you invoke. Wait, only wait; and as soon as we have left those
streets, and got beyond the reach of listeners, all shall be explained.
Meanwhile, avoid the topic. What a sight is this sleeping city!’
she exclaimed; and then, with a most thrilling voice, ‘“Dear
God,” she quoted, “the very houses seem asleep, and all
that mighty heart is lying still.”’
‘I perceive, madam,’ said he, ‘you are a reader.’
‘I am more than that,’ she answered, with a sigh.
‘I am a girl condemned to thoughts beyond her age; and so untoward
is my fate, that this walk upon the arm of a stranger is like an interlude
of peace.’
They had come by this time to the neighbourhood of the Victoria Station
and here, at a street corner, the young lady paused, withdrew her arm
from Challoner’s, and looked up and down as though in pain or
indecision. Then, with a lovely change of countenance, and laying
her gloved hand upon his arm -
‘What you already think of me,’ she said, ‘I tremble
to conceive; yet I must here condemn myself still further. Here
I must leave you, and here I beseech you to wait for my return.
Do not attempt to follow me or spy upon my actions. Suspend yet
awhile your judgment of a girl as innocent as your own sister; and do
not, above all, desert me. Stranger as you are, I have none else
to look to. You see me in sorrow and great fear; you are a gentleman,
courteous and kind: and when I beg for a few minutes’ patience,
I make sure beforehand you will not deny me.’
Challoner grudgingly promised; and the young lady, with a grateful eye-shot,
vanished round the corner. But the force of her appeal had been
a little blunted; for the young man was not only destitute of sisters,
but of any female relative nearer than a great-aunt in Wales.
Now he was alone, besides, the spell that he had hitherto obeyed began
to weaken; he considered his behaviour with a sneer; and plucking up
the spirit of revolt, he started in pursuit. The reader, if he
has ever plied the fascinating trade of the noctambulist, will not be
unaware that, in the neighbourhood of the great railway centres, certain
early taverns inaugurate the business of the day. It was into
one of these that Challoner, coming round the corner of the block, beheld
his charming companion disappear. To say he was surprised were
inexact, for he had long since left that sentiment behind him.
Acute disgust and disappointment seized upon his soul; and with silent
oaths, he damned this commonplace enchantress. She had scarce
been gone a second, ere the swing-doors reopened, and she appeared again
in company with a young man of mean and slouching attire. For
some five or six exchanges they conversed together with an animated
air; then the fellow shouldered again into the tap; and the young lady,
with something swifter than a walk, retraced her steps towards Challoner.
He saw her coming, a miracle of grace; her ankle, as she hurried, flashing
from her dress; her movements eloquent of speed and youth; and though
he still entertained some thoughts of flight, they grew miserably fainter
as the distance lessened. Against mere beauty he was proof: it
was her unmistakable gentility that now robbed him of the courage of
his cowardice. With a proved adventuress he had acted strictly
on his right; with one who, in spite of all, he could not quite deny
to be a lady, he found himself disarmed. At the very corner from
whence he had spied upon her interview, she came upon him, still transfixed,
and - ‘Ah!’ she cried, with a bright flush of colour.
‘Ah! Ungenerous!’
The sharpness of the attack somewhat restored the Squire of Dames to
the possession of himself.
‘Madam,’ he returned, with a fair show of stoutness, ‘I
do not think that hitherto you can complain of any lack of generosity;
I have suffered myself to be led over a considerable portion of the
metropolis; and if I now request you to discharge me of my office of
protector, you have friends at hand who will be glad of the succession.’
She stood a moment dumb.
‘It is well,’ she said. ‘Go! go, and may God
help me! You have seen me - me, an innocent girl! fleeing from
a dire catastrophe and haunted by sinister men; and neither pity, curiosity,
nor honour move you to await my explanation or to help in my distress.
Go!’ she repeated. ‘I am lost indeed.’
And with a passionate gesture she turned and fled along the street.
Challoner observed her retreat and disappear, an almost intolerable
sense of guilt contending with the profound sense that he was being
gulled. She was no sooner gone than the first of these feelings
took the upper hand; he felt, if he had done her less than justice,
that his conduct was a perfect model of the ungracious; the cultured
tone of her voice, her choice of language, and the elegant decorum of
her movements, cried out aloud against a harsh construction; and between
penitence and curiosity he began slowly to follow in her wake.
At the corner he had her once more full in view. Her speed was
failing like a stricken bird’s. Even as he looked, she threw
her arm out gropingly, and fell and leaned against the wall. At
the spectacle, Challoner’s fortitude gave way. In a few
strides he overtook her and, for the first time removing his hat, assured
her in the most moving terms of his entire respect and firm desire to
help her. He spoke at first unheeded; but gradually it appeared
that she began to comprehend his words; she moved a little, and drew
herself upright; and finally, as with a sudden movement of forgiveness,
turned on the young man a countenance in which reproach and gratitude
were mingled. ‘Ah, madam,’ he cried, ‘use me
as you will!’ And once more, but now with a great air of
deference, he offered her the conduct of his arm. She took it
with a sigh that struck him to the heart; and they began once more to
trace the deserted streets. But now her steps, as though exhausted
by emotion, began to linger on the way; she leaned the more heavily
upon his arm; and he, like the parent bird, stooped fondly above his
drooping convoy. Her physical distress was not accompanied by
any failing of her spirits; and hearing her strike so soon into a playful
and charming vein of talk, Challoner could not sufficiently admire the
elasticity of his companion’s nature. ‘Let me forget,’
she had said, ‘for one half hour, let me forget;’ and sure
enough, with the very word, her sorrows appeared to be forgotten.
Before every house she paused, invented a name for the proprietor, and
sketched his character: here lived the old general whom she was to marry
on the fifth of the next month, there was the mansion of the rich widow
who had set her heart on Challoner; and though she still hung wearily
on the young man’s arm, her laughter sounded low and pleasant
in his ears. ‘Ah,’ she sighed, by way of commentary,
‘in such a life as mine I must seize tight hold of any happiness
that I can find.’
When they arrived, in this leisurely manner, at the head of Grosvenor
Place, the gates of the park were opening and the bedraggled company
of night-walkers were being at last admitted into that paradise of lawns.
Challoner and his companion followed the movement, and walked for awhile
in silence in that tatterdemalion crowd; but as one after another, weary
with the night’s patrolling of the city pavement, sank upon the
benches or wandered into separate paths, the vast extent of the park
had soon utterly swallowed up the last of these intruders; and the pair
proceeded on their way alone in the grateful quiet of the morning.
Presently they came in sight of a bench, standing very open on a mound
of turf. The young lady looked about her with relief.
‘Here,’ she said, ‘here at last we are secure from
listeners. Here, then, you shall learn and judge my history.
I could not bear that we should part, and that you should still suppose
your kindness squandered upon one who was unworthy.’
Thereupon she sat down upon the bench, and motioning Challoner to take
a place immediately beside her, began in the following words, and with
the greatest appearance of enjoyment, to narrate the story of her life.
STORY OF THE DESTROYING ANGEL
My father was a native of England, son of a cadet of a great, ancient,
but untitled family; and by some event, fault or misfortune, he was
driven to flee from the land of his birth and to lay aside the name
of his ancestors. He sought the States; and instead of lingering
in effeminate cities, pushed at once into the far West with an exploring
party of frontiersmen. He was no ordinary traveller; for he was
not only brave and impetuous by character, but learned in many sciences,
and above all in botany, which he particularly loved. Thus it
fell that, before many months, Fremont himself, the nominal leader of
the troop, courted and bowed to his opinion.
They had pushed, as I have said, into the still unknown regions of the
West. For some time they followed the track of Mormon caravans,
guiding themselves in that vast and melancholy desert by the skeletons
of men and animals. Then they inclined their route a little to
the north, and, losing even these dire memorials, came into a country
of forbidding stillness.
I have often heard my father dwell upon the features of that ride: rock,
cliff, and barren moor alternated; the streams were very far between;
and neither beast nor bird disturbed the solitude. On the fortieth
day they had already run so short of food that it was judged advisable
to call a halt and scatter upon all sides to hunt. A great fire
was built, that its smoke might serve to rally them; and each man of
the party mounted and struck off at a venture into the surrounding desert.
My father rode for many hours with a steep range of cliffs upon the
one hand, very black and horrible; and upon the other an unwatered vale
dotted with boulders like the site of some subverted city. At
length he found the slot of a great animal, and from the claw-marks
and the hair among the brush, judged that he was on the track of a cinnamon
bear of most unusual size. He quickened the pace of his steed,
and still following the quarry, came at last to the division of two
watersheds. On the far side the country was exceeding intricate
and difficult, heaped with boulders, and dotted here and there with
a few pines, which seemed to indicate the neighbourhood of water.
Here, then, he picketed his horse, and relying on his trusty rifle,
advanced alone into that wilderness.
Presently, in the great silence that reigned, he was aware of the sound
of running water to his right; and leaning in that direction, was rewarded
by a scene of natural wonder and human pathos strangely intermixed.
The stream ran at the bottom of a narrow and winding passage, whose
wall-like sides of rock were sometimes for miles together unscalable
by man. The water, when the stream was swelled with rains, must
have filled it from side to side; the sun’s rays only plumbed
it in the hour of noon; the wind, in that narrow and damp funnel, blew
tempestuously. And yet, in the bottom of this den, immediately
below my father’s eyes as he leaned over the margin of the cliff,
a party of some half a hundred men, women, and children lay scattered
uneasily among the rocks. They lay some upon their backs, some
prone, and not one stirring; their upturned faces seemed all of an extraordinary
paleness and emaciation; and from time to time, above the washing of
the stream, a faint sound of moaning mounted to my father’s ears.
While he thus looked, an old man got staggering to his feet, unwound
his blanket, and laid it, with great gentleness, on a young girl who
sat hard by propped against a rock. The girl did not seem to be
conscious of the act; and the old man, after having looked upon her
with the most engaging pity, returned to his former bed and lay down
again uncovered on the turf. But the scene had not passed without
observation even in that starving camp. From the very outskirts
of the party, a man with a white beard and seemingly of venerable years,
rose upon his knees, and came crawling stealthily among the sleepers
towards the girl; and judge of my father’s indignation, when he
beheld this cowardly miscreant strip from her both the coverings and
return with them to his original position. Here he lay down for
a while below his spoils, and, as my father imagined, feigned to be
asleep; but presently he had raised himself again upon one elbow, looked
with sharp scrutiny at his companions, and then swiftly carried his
hand into his bosom and thence to his mouth. By the movement of
his jaws he must be eating; in that camp of famine he had reserved a
store of nourishment; and while his companions lay in the stupor of
approaching death, secretly restored his powers.
My father was so incensed at what he saw that he raised his rifle; and
but for an accident, he has often declared, he would have shot the fellow
dead upon the spot. How different would then have been my history!
But it was not to be: even as he raised the barrel, his eye lighted
on the bear, as it crawled along a ledge some way below him; and ceding
to the hunters instinct, it was at the brute, not at the man, that he
discharged his piece. The bear leaped and fell into a pool of
the river; the canyon re-echoed the report; and in a moment the camp
was afoot. With cries that were scarce human, stumbling, falling
and throwing each other down, these starving people rushed upon the
quarry; and before my father, climbing down by the ledge, had time to
reach the level of the stream, many were already satisfying their hunger
on the raw flesh, and a fire was being built by the more dainty.
His arrival was for some time unremarked. He stood in the midst
of these tottering and clay-faced marionettes; he was surrounded by
their cries; but their whole soul was fixed on the dead carcass; even
those who were too weak to move, lay, half-turned over, with their eyes
riveted upon the bear; and my father, seeing himself stand as though
invisible in the thick of this dreary hubbub, was seized with a desire
to weep. A touch upon the arm restrained him. Turning about,
he found himself face to face with the old man he had so nearly killed;
and yet, at the second glance, recognised him for no old man at all,
but one in the full strength of his years, and of a strong, speaking,
and intellectual countenance stigmatised by weariness and famine.
He beckoned my father near the cliff, and there, in the most private
whisper, begged for brandy. My father looked at him with scorn:
‘You remind me,’ he said, ‘of a neglected duty.
Here is my flask; it contains enough, I trust, to revive the women of
your party; and I will begin with her whom I saw you robbing of her
blankets.’ And with that, not heeding his appeals, my father
turned his back upon the egoist.
The girl still lay reclined against the rock; she lay too far sunk in
the first stage of death to have observed the bustle round her couch;
but when my father had raised her head, put the flask to her lips, and
forced or aided her to swallow some drops of the restorative, she opened
her languid eyes and smiled upon him faintly. Never was there
a smile of a more touching sweetness; never were eyes more deeply violet,
more honestly eloquent of the soul! I speak with knowledge, for
these were the same eyes that smiled upon me in the cradle. From
her who was to be his wife, my father, still jealously watched and followed
by the man with the grey beard, carried his attentions to all the women
of the party, and gave the last drainings of his flask to those among
the men who seemed in the most need.
‘Is there none left? not a drop for me?’ said the man with
the beard.
‘Not one drop,’ replied my father; ‘and if you find
yourself in want, let me counsel you to put your hand into the pocket
of your coat.’
‘Ah!’ cried the other, ‘you misjudge me. You
think me one who clings to life for selfish and commonplace considerations.
But let me tell you, that were all this caravan to perish, the world
would but be lightened of a weight. These are but human insects,
pullulating, thick as May-flies, in the slums of European cities, whom
I myself have plucked from degradation and misery, from the dung-heap
and gin-palace door. And you compare their lives with mine!’
‘You are then a Mormon missionary?’ asked my father.
‘Oh!’ cried the man, with a strange smile, ‘a Mormon
missionary if you will! I value not the title. Were I no
more than that, I could have died without a murmur. But with my
life as a physician is bound up the knowledge of great secrets and the
future of man. This it was, when we missed the caravan, tried
for a short cut and wandered to this desolate ravine, that ate into
my soul, and, in five days, has changed my beard from ebony to silver.’
‘And you are a physician,’ mused my father, looking on his
face, ‘bound by oath to succour man in his distresses.’
‘Sir,’ returned the Mormon, ‘my name is Grierson:
you will hear that name again; and you will then understand that my
duty was not to this caravan of paupers, but to mankind at large.’
My father turned to the remainder of the party, who were now sufficiently
revived to hear; told them that he would set off at once to bring help
from his own party; ‘and,’ he added, ‘if you be again
reduced to such extremities, look round you, and you will see the earth
strewn with assistance. Here, for instance, growing on the under
side of fissures in this cliff, you will perceive a yellow moss.
Trust me, it is both edible and excellent.’
‘Ha!’ said Doctor Grierson, ‘you know botany!’
‘Not I alone,’ returned my father, lowering his voice; ‘for
see where these have been scraped away. Am I right? Was
that your secret store?’
My father’s comrades, he found, when he returned to the signal-fire,
had made a good day’s hunting. They were thus the more easily
persuaded to extend assistance to the Mormon caravan; and the next day
beheld both parties on the march for the frontiers of Utah. The
distance to be traversed was not great; but the nature of the country,
and the difficulty of procuring food, extended the time to nearly three
weeks; and my father had thus ample leisure to know and appreciate the
girl whom he had succoured. I will call my mother Lucy.
Her family name I am not at liberty to mention; it is one you would
know well. By what series of undeserved calamities this innocent
flower of maidenhood, lovely, refined by education, ennobled by the
finest taste, was thus cast among the horrors of a Mormon caravan, I
must not stay to tell you. Let it suffice, that even in these
untoward circumstances, she found a heart worthy of her own. The
ardour of attachment which united my father and mother was perhaps partly
due to the strange manner of their meeting; it knew, at least, no bounds
either divine or human; my father, for her sake, determined to renounce
his ambitions and abjure his faith; and a week had not yet passed upon
the march before he had resigned from his party, accepted the Mormon
doctrine, and received the promise of my mother’s hand on the
arrival of the party at Salt Lake.
The marriage took place, and I was its only offspring. My father
prospered exceedingly in his affairs, remained faithful to my mother;
and though you may wonder to hear it, I believe there were few happier
homes in any country than that in which I saw the light and grew to
girlhood. We were, indeed, and in spite of all our wealth, avoided
as heretics and half-believers by the more precise and pious of the
faithful: Young himself, that formidable tyrant, was known to look askance
upon my father’s riches; but of this I had no guess. I dwelt,
indeed, under the Mormon system, with perfect innocence and faith.
Some of our friends had many wives; but such was the custom; and why
should it surprise me more than marriage itself? From time to
time one of our rich acquaintances would disappear, his family be broken
up, his wives and houses shared among the elders of the Church, and
his memory only recalled with bated breath and dreadful headshakings.
When I had been very still, and my presence perhaps was forgotten, some
such topic would arise among my elders by the evening fire; I would
see them draw the closer together and look behind them with scared eyes;
and I might gather from their whisperings how some one, rich, honoured,
healthy, and in the prime of his days, some one, perhaps, who had taken
me on his knees a week before, had in one hour been spirited from home
and family, and vanished like an image from a mirror, leaving not a
print behind. It was terrible, indeed; but so was death, the universal
law. And even if the talk should wax still bolder, full of ominous
silences and nods, and I should hear named in a whisper the Destroying
Angels, how was a child to understand these mysteries? I heard
of a Destroying Angel as some more happy child might hear in England
of a bishop or a rural dean, with vague respect and without the wish
for further information. Life anywhere, in society as in nature,
rests upon dread foundations; I beheld safe roads, a garden blooming
in the desert, pious people crowding to worship; I was aware of my parents’
tenderness and all the harmless luxuries of my existence; and why should
I pry beneath this honest seeming surface for the mysteries on which
it stood?
We dwelt originally in the city; but at an early date we moved to a
beautiful house in a green dingle, musical with splashing water, and
surrounded on almost every side by twenty miles of poisonous and rocky
desert. The city was thirty miles away; there was but one road,
which went no further than my father’s door; the rest were bridle-tracks
impassable in winter; and we thus dwelt in a solitude inconceivable
to the European. Our only neighbour was Dr. Grierson. To
my young eyes, after the hair-oiled, chin-bearded elders of the city,
and the ill-favoured and mentally stunted women of their harems, there
was something agreeable in the correct manner, the fine bearing, the
thin white hair and beard, and the piercing looks of the old doctor.
Yet, though he was almost our only visitor, I never wholly overcame
a sense of fear in his presence; and this disquietude was rather fed
by the awful solitude in which he lived and the obscurity that hung
about his occupations. His house was but a mile or two from ours,
but very differently placed. It stood overlooking the road on
the summit of a steep slope, and planted close against a range of overhanging
bluffs. Nature, you would say, had here desired to imitate the
works of man; for the slope was even, like the glacis of a fort, and
the cliffs of a constant height, like the ramparts of a city.
Not even spring could change one feature of that desolate scene; and
the windows looked down across a plain, snowy with alkali, to ranges
of cold stone sierras on the north. Twice or thrice I remember
passing within view of this forbidding residence; and seeing it always
shuttered, smokeless, and deserted, I remarked to my parents that some
day it would certainly be robbed.
‘Ah, no,’ said my father, ‘never robbed;’ and
I observed a strange conviction in his tone.
At last, and not long before the blow fell on my unhappy family, I chanced
to see the doctor’s house in a new light. My father was
ill; my mother confined to his bedside; and I was suffered to go, under
the charge of our driver, to the lonely house some twenty miles away,
where our packages were left for us. The horse cast a shoe; night
overtook us halfway home; and it was well on for three in the morning
when the driver and I, alone in a light waggon, came to that part of
the road which ran below the doctor’s house. The moon swam
clear; the cliffs and mountains in this strong light lay utterly deserted;
but the house, from its station on the top of the long slope and close
under the bluff, not only shone abroad from every window like a place
of festival, but from the great chimney at the west end poured forth
a coil of smoke so thick and so voluminous, that it hung for miles along
the windless night air, and its shadow lay far abroad in the moonlight
upon the glittering alkali. As we continued to draw near, besides,
a regular and panting throb began to divide the silence. First
it seemed to me like the beating of a heart; and next it put into my
mind the thought of some giant, smothered under mountains and still,
with incalculable effort, fetching breath. I had heard of the
railway, though I had not seen it, and I turned to ask the driver if
this resembled it. But some look in his eye, some pallor, whether
of fear or moonlight on his face, caused the words to die upon my lips.
We continued, therefore, to advance in silence, till we were close below
the lighted house; when suddenly, without one premonitory rustle, there
burst forth a report of such a bigness that it shook the earth and set
the echoes of the mountains thundering from cliff to cliff. A
pillar of amber flame leaped from the chimney-top and fell in multitudes
of sparks; and at the same time the lights in the windows turned for
one instant ruby red and then expired. The driver had checked
his horse instinctively, and the echoes were still rumbling farther
off among the mountains, when there broke from the now darkened interior
a series of yells - whether of man or woman it was impossible to guess
- the door flew open, and there ran forth into the moonlight, at the
top of the long slope, a figure clad in white, which began to dance
and leap and throw itself down, and roll as if in agony, before the
house. I could no more restrain my cries; the driver laid his
lash about the horse’s flank, and we fled up the rough track at
the peril of our lives; and did not draw rein till, turning the corner
of the mountain, we beheld my father’s ranch and deep, green groves
and gardens, sleeping in the tranquil light.
This was the one adventure of my life, until my father had climbed to
the very topmost point of material prosperity, and I myself had reached
the age of seventeen. I was still innocent and merry like a child;
tended my garden or ran upon the hills in glad simplicity; gave not
a thought to coquetry or to material cares; and if my eye rested on
my own image in a mirror or some sylvan spring, it was to seek and recognise
the features of my parents. But the fears which had long pressed
on others were now to be laid on my youth. I had thrown myself,
one sultry, cloudy afternoon, on a divan; the windows stood open on
the verandah, where my mother sat with her embroidery; and when my father
joined her from the garden, their conversation, clearly audible to me,
was of so startling a nature that it held me enthralled where I lay.
‘The blow has come,’ my father said, after a long pause.
I could hear my mother start and turn, but in words she made no reply.
‘Yes,’ continued my father, ‘I have received to-day
a list of all that I possess; of all, I say; of what I have lent privately
to men whose lips are sealed with terror; of what I have buried with
my own hand on the bare mountain, when there was not a bird in heaven.
Does the air, then, carry secrets? Are the hills of glass?
Do the stones we tread upon preserve the footprint to betray us?
Oh, Lucy, Lucy, that we should have come to such a country!’
‘But this,’ returned my mother, ‘is no very new or
very threatening event. You are accused of some concealment.
You will pay more taxes in the future, and be mulcted in a fine.
It is disquieting, indeed, to find our acts so spied upon, and the most
private known. But is this new? Have we not long feared
and suspected every blade of grass?’
‘Ay, and our shadows!’ cried my father. ‘But
all this is nothing. Here is the letter that accompanied the list.’
I heard my mother turn the pages, and she was some time silent.
‘I see,’ she said at last; and then, with the tone of one
reading: ‘“From a believer so largely blessed by Providence
with this world’s goods,”’ she continued, ‘“the
Church awaits in confidence some signal mark of piety.”
There lies the sting. Am I not right? These are the words
you fear?’
‘These are the words,’ replied my father. ‘Lucy,
you remember Priestley? Two days before he disappeared, he carried
me to the summit of an isolated butte; we could see around us for ten
miles; sure, if in any quarter of this land a man were safe from spies,
it were in such a station; but it was in the very ague-fit of terror
that he told me, and that I heard, his story. He had received
a letter such as this; and he submitted to my approval an answer, in
which he offered to resign a third of his possessions. I conjured
him, as he valued life, to raise his offering; and, before we parted,
he had doubled the amount. Well, two days later he was gone -
gone from the chief street of the city in the hour of noon - and gone
for ever. O God!’ cried my father, ‘by what art do
they thus spirit out of life the solid body? What death do they
command that leaves no traces? that this material structure, these strong
arms, this skeleton that can resist the grave for centuries, should
be thus reft in a moment from the world of sense? A horror dwells
in that thought more awful than mere death.’
‘Is there no hope in Grierson?’ asked my mother.
‘Dismiss the thought,’ replied my father. ‘He
now knows all that I can teach, and will do naught to save me.
His power, besides, is small, his own danger not improbably more imminent
than mine; for he, too, lives apart; he leaves his wives neglected and
unwatched; he is openly cited for an unbeliever; and unless he buys
security at a more awful price - but no; I will not believe it: I have
no love for him, but I will not believe it.’
‘Believe what?’ asked my mother; and then, with a change
of note, ‘But oh, what matters it?’ she cried. ‘Abimelech,
there is but one way open: we must fly!’
‘It is in vain,’ returned my father. ‘I should
but involve you in my fate. To leave this land is hopeless: we
are closed in it as men are closed in life; and there is no issue but
the grave.’
‘We can but die then,’ replied my mother. ‘Let
us at least die together. Let not Asenath {2}
and myself survive you. Think to what a fate we should be doomed!’
My father was unable to resist her tender violence; and though I could
see he nourished not one spark of hope, he consented to desert his whole
estate, beyond some hundreds of dollars that he had by him at the moment,
and to flee that night, which promised to be dark and cloudy.
As soon as the servants were asleep, he was to load two mules with provisions;
two others were to carry my mother and myself; and, striking through
the mountains by an unfrequented trail, we were to make a fair stroke
for liberty and life. As soon as they had thus decided, I showed
myself at the window, and, owning that I had heard all, assured them
that they could rely on my prudence and devotion. I had no fear,
indeed, but to show myself unworthy of my birth; I held my life in my
hand without alarm; and when my father, weeping upon my neck, had blessed
Heaven for the courage of his child, it was with a sentiment of pride
and some of the joy that warriors take in war, that I began to look
forward to the perils of our flight.
Before midnight, under an obscure and starless heaven, we had left far
behind us the plantations of the valley, and were mounting a certain
canyon in the hills, narrow, encumbered with great rocks, and echoing
with the roar of a tumultuous torrent. Cascade after cascade thundered
and hung up its flag of whiteness in the night, or fanned our faces
with the wet wind of its descent. The trail was breakneck, and
led to famine-guarded deserts; it had been long since deserted for more
practicable routes; and it was now a part of the world untrod from year
to year by human footing. Judge of our dismay, when turning suddenly
an angle of the cliffs, we found a bright bonfire blazing by itself
under an impending rock; and on the face of the rock, drawn very rudely
with charred wood, the great Open Eye which is the emblem of the Mormon
faith. We looked upon each other in the firelight; my mother broke
into a passion of tears; but not a word was said. The mules were
turned about; and leaving that great eye to guard the lonely canyon,
we retraced our steps in silence. Day had not yet broken ere we
were once more at home, condemned beyond reprieve.
What answer my father sent I was not told; but two days later, a little
before sundown, I saw a plain, honest-looking man ride slowly up the
road in a great pother of dust. He was clad in homespun, with
a broad straw hat; wore a patriarchal beard; and had an air of a simple
rustic farmer, that was, in my eyes, very reassuring. He was,
indeed, a very honest man and pious Mormon; with no liking for his errand,
though neither he nor any one in Utah dared to disobey; and it was with
every mark of diffidence that he had had himself announced as Mr. Aspinwall,
and entered the room where our unhappy family was gathered. My
mother and me, he awkwardly enough dismissed; and as soon as he was
alone with my father laid before him a blank signature of President
Young’s, and offered him a choice of services: either to set out
as a missionary to the tribes about the White Sea, or to join the next
day, with a party of Destroying Angels, in the massacre of sixty German
immigrants. The last, of course, my father could not entertain,
and the first he regarded as a pretext: even if he could consent to
leave his wife defenceless, and to collect fresh victims for the tyranny
under which he was himself oppressed, he felt sure he would never be
suffered to return. He refused both; and Aspinwall, he said, betrayed
sincere emotion, part religious, at the spectacle of such disobedience,
but part human, in pity for my father and his family. He besought
him to reconsider his decision; and at length, finding he could not
prevail, gave him till the moon rose to settle his affairs, and say
farewell to wife and daughter. ‘For,’ said he, ‘then,
at the latest, you must ride with me.’
I dare not dwell upon the hours that followed: they fled all too fast;
and presently the moon out-topped the eastern range, and my father and
Mr. Aspinwall set forth, side by side, on their nocturnal journey.
My mother, though still bearing an heroic countenance, had hastened
to shut herself in her apartment, thenceforward solitary; and I, alone
in the dark house, and consumed by grief and apprehension, made haste
to saddle my Indian pony, to ride up to the corner of the mountain,
and to enjoy one farewell sight of my departing father. The two
men had set forth at a deliberate pace; nor was I long behind them,
when I reached the point of view. I was the more amazed to see
no moving creature in the landscape. The moon, as the saying is,
shone bright as day; and nowhere, under the whole arch of night, was
there a growing tree, a bush, a farm, a patch of tillage, or any evidence
of man, but one. From the corner where I stood, a rugged bastion
of the line of bluffs concealed the doctor’s house; and across
the top of that projection the soft night wind carried and unwound about
the hills a coil of sable smoke. What fuel could produce a vapour
so sluggish to dissipate in that dry air, or what furnace pour it forth
so copiously, I was unable to conceive; but I knew well enough that
it came from the doctor’s chimney; I saw well enough that my father
had already disappeared; and in despite of reason, I connected in my
mind the loss of that dear protector with the ribbon of foul smoke that
trailed along the mountains.
Days passed, and still my mother and I waited in vain for news; a week
went by, a second followed, but we heard no word of the father and husband.
As smoke dissipates, as the image glides from the mirror, so in the
ten or twenty minutes that I had spent in getting my horse and following
upon his trail, had that strong and brave man vanished out of life.
Hope, if any hope we had, fled with every hour; the worst was now certain
for my father, the worst was to be dreaded for his defenceless family.
Without weakness, with a desperate calm at which I marvel when I look
back upon it, the widow and the orphan awaited the event. On the
last day of the third week we rose in the morning to find ourselves
alone in the house, alone, so far as we searched, on the estate; all
our attendants, with one accord, had fled: and as we knew them to be
gratefully devoted, we drew the darkest intimations from their flight.
The day passed, indeed, without event; but in the fall of the evening
we were called at last into the verandah by the approaching clink of
horse’s hoofs.
The doctor, mounted on an Indian pony, rode into the garden, dismounted,
and saluted us. He seemed much more bent, and his hair more silvery
than ever; but his demeanour was composed, serious, and not unkind.
‘Madam,’ said he, ‘I am come upon a weighty errand;
and I would have you recognise it as an effect of kindness in the President,
that he should send as his ambassador your only neighbour and your husband’s
oldest friend in Utah.’
‘Sir,’ said my mother, ‘I have but one concern, one
thought. You know well what it is. Speak: my husband?’
‘Madam,’ returned the doctor, taking a chair on the verandah,
‘if you were a silly child, my position would now be painfully
embarrassing. You are, on the other hand, a woman of great intelligence
and fortitude: you have, by my forethought, been allowed three weeks
to draw your own conclusions and to accept the inevitable. Farther
words from me are, I conceive, superfluous.’
My mother was as pale as death, and trembled like a reed; I gave her
my hand, and she kept it in the folds of her dress and wrung it till
I could have cried aloud. ‘Then, sir,’ said she at
last, ‘you speak to deaf ears. If this be indeed so, what
have I to do with errands? What do I ask of Heaven but to die?’
‘Come,’ said the doctor, ‘command yourself.
I bid you dismiss all thoughts of your late husband, and bring a clear
mind to bear upon your own future and the fate of that young girl.’
‘You bid me dismiss - ’ began my mother. ‘Then
you know!’ she cried.
‘I know,’ replied the doctor.
‘You know?’ broke out the poor woman. ‘Then
it was you who did the deed! I tear off the mask, and with dread
and loathing see you as you are - you, whom the poor fugitive beholds
in nightmares, and awakes raving - you, the Destroying Angel!’
‘Well, madam, and what then?’ returned the doctor.
‘Have not my fate and yours been similar? Are we not both
immured in this strong prison of Utah? Have you not tried to flee,
and did not the Open Eye confront you in the canyon? Who can escape
the watch of that unsleeping eye of Utah? Not I, at least.
Horrible tasks have, indeed, been laid upon me; and the most ungrateful
was the last; but had I refused my offices, would that have spared your
husband? You know well it would not. I, too, had perished
along with him; nor would I have been able to alleviate his last moments,
nor could I to-day have stood between his family and the hand of Brigham
Young.’
‘Ah!’ cried I, ‘and could you purchase life by such
concessions?’
‘Young lady,’ answered the doctor, ‘I both could and
did; and you will live to thank me for that baseness. You have
a spirit, Asenath, that it pleases me to recognise. But we waste
time. Mr. Fonblanque’s estate reverts, as you doubtless
imagine, to the Church; but some part of it has been reserved for him
who is to marry the family; and that person, I should perhaps tell you
without more delay, is no other than myself.’
At this odious proposal my mother and I cried out aloud, and clung together
like lost souls.
‘It is as I supposed,’ resumed the doctor, with the same
measured utterance. ‘You recoil from this arrangement.
Do you expect me to convince you? You know very well that I have
never held the Mormon view of women. Absorbed in the most arduous
studies, I have left the slatterns whom they call my wives to scratch
and quarrel among themselves; of me, they have had nothing but my purse;
such was not the union I desired, even if I had the leisure to pursue
it. No: you need not, madam, and my old friend’ - and here
the doctor rose and bowed with something of gallantry - ‘you need
not apprehend my importunities. On the contrary, I am rejoiced
to read in you a Roman spirit; and if I am obliged to bid you follow
me at once, and that in the name, not of my wish, but of my orders,
I hope it will be found that we are of a common mind.’
So, bidding us dress for the road, he took a lamp (for the night had
now fallen) and set off to the stable to prepare our horses.
‘What does it mean? - what will become of us?’ I cried.
‘Not that, at least,’ replied my mother, shuddering.
‘So far we can trust him. I seem to read among his words
a certain tragic promise. Asenath, if I leave you, if I die, you
will not forget your miserable parents?’
Thereupon we fell to cross-purposes: I beseeching her to explain her
words; she putting me by, and continuing to recommend the doctor for
a friend. ‘The doctor!’ I cried at last; ‘the
man who killed my father?’
‘Nay,’ said she, ‘let us be just. I do believe
before, Heaven, he played the friendliest part. And he alone,
Asenath, can protect you in this land of death.’
At this the doctor returned, leading our two horses; and when we were
all in the saddle, he bade me ride on before, as he had matter to discuss
with Mrs. Fonblanque. They came at a foot’s pace, eagerly
conversing in a whisper; and presently after the moon rose and showed
them looking eagerly in each other’s faces as they went, my mother
laying her hand upon the doctor’s arm, and the doctor himself,
against his usual custom, making vigorous gestures of protest or asseveration.
At the foot of the track which ascended the talus of the mountain to
his door, the doctor overtook me at a trot.
‘Here,’ he said, ‘we shall dismount; and as your mother
prefers to be alone, you and I shall walk together to my house.’
‘Shall I see her again?’ I asked.
‘I give you my word,’ he said, and helped me to alight.
‘We leave the horses here,’ he added. ‘There
are no thieves in this stone wilderness.’
The track mounted gradually, keeping the house in view. The windows
were once more bright; the chimney once more vomited smoke; but the
most absolute silence reigned, and, but for the figure of my mother
very slowly following in our wake, I felt convinced there was no human
soul within a range of miles. At the thought, I looked upon the
doctor, gravely walking by my side, with his bowed shoulders and white
hair, and then once more at his house, lit up and pouring smoke like
some industrious factory. And then my curiosity broke forth.
‘In Heaven’s name,’ I cried, ‘what do you make
in this inhuman desert?’
He looked at me with a peculiar smile, and answered with an evasion
-
‘This is not the first time,’ said he, ‘that you have
seen my furnaces alight. One morning, in the small hours, I saw
you driving past; a delicate experiment miscarried; and I cannot acquit
myself of having startled either your driver or the horse that drew
you.’
‘What!’ cried I, beholding again in fancy the antics of
the figure, ‘could that be you?’
‘It was I,’ he replied; ‘but do not fancy that I was
mad. I was in agony. I had been scalded cruelly.’
We were now near the house, which, unlike the ordinary houses of the
country, was built of hewn stone and very solid. Stone, too, was
its foundation, stone its background. Not a blade of grass sprouted
among the broken mineral about the walls, not a flower adorned the windows.
Over the door, by way of sole adornment, the Mormon Eye was rudely sculptured;
I had been brought up to view that emblem from my childhood; but since
the night of our escape, it had acquired a new significance, and set
me shrinking. The smoke rolled voluminously from the chimney top,
its edges ruddy with the fire; and from the far corner of the building,
near the ground, angry puffs of steam shone snow-white in the moon and
vanished.
The doctor opened the door and paused upon the threshold. ‘You
ask me what I make here,’ he observed. ‘Two things:
Life and Death.’ And he motioned me to enter.
‘I shall await my mother,’ said I.
‘Child,’ he replied, ‘look at me: am I not old and
broken? Of us two, which is the stronger, the young maiden or
the withered man?’
I bowed, and passing by him, entered a vestibule or kitchen, lit by
a good fire and a shaded reading-lamp. It was furnished only with
a dresser, a rude table, and some wooden benches; and on one of these
the doctor motioned me to take a seat; and passing by another door into
the interior of the house, he left me to myself. Presently I heard
the jar of iron from the far end of the building; and this was followed
by the same throbbing noise that had startled me in the valley, but
now so near at hand as to be menacing by loudness, and even to shake
the house with every recurrence of the stroke. I had scarce time
to master my alarm when the doctor returned, and almost in the same
moment my mother appeared upon the threshold. But how am I to
describe to you the peace and ravishment of that face? Years seemed
to have passed over her head during that brief ride, and left her younger
and fairer; her eyes shone, her smile went to my heart; she seemed no
more a woman but the angel of ecstatic tenderness. I ran to her
in a kind of terror; but she shrank a little back and laid her finger
on her lips, with something arch and yet unearthly. To the doctor,
on the contrary, she reached out her hand as to a friend and helper;
and so strange was the scene that I forgot to be offended.
‘Lucy,’ said the doctor, ‘all is prepared. Will
you go alone, or shall your daughter follow us?’
‘Let Asenath come,’ she answered, ‘dear Asenath!
At this hour, when I am purified of fear and sorrow, and already survive
myself and my affections, it is for your sake, and not for mine, that
I desire her presence. Were she shut out, dear friend, it is to
be feared she might misjudge your kindness.’
‘Mother,’ I cried wildly, ‘mother, what is this?’
But my mother, with her radiant smile, said only ‘Hush!’
as though I were a child again, and tossing in some fever-fit; and the
doctor bade me be silent and trouble her no more. ‘You have
made a choice,’ he continued, addressing my mother, ‘that
has often strangely tempted me. The two extremes: all, or else
nothing; never, or this very hour upon the clock - these have been my
incongruous desires. But to accept the middle term, to be content
with a half-gift, to flicker awhile and to burn out - never for an hour,
never since I was born, has satisfied the appetite of my ambition.’
He looked upon my mother fixedly, much of admiration and some touch
of envy in his eyes; then, with a profound sigh, he led the way into
the inner room.
It was very long. From end to end it was lit up by many lamps,
which by the changeful colour of their light, and by the incessant snapping
sounds with which they burned, I have since divined to be electric.
At the extreme end an open door gave us a glimpse into what must have
been a lean-to shed beside the chimney; and this, in strong contrast
to the room, was painted with a red reverberation as from furnace-doors.
The walls were lined with books and glazed cases, the tables crowded
with the implements of chemical research; great glass accumulators glittered
in the light; and through a hole in the gable near the shed door, a
heavy driving-belt entered the apartment and ran overhead upon steel
pulleys, with clumsy activity and many ghostly and fluttering sounds.
In one corner I perceived a chair resting upon crystal feet, and curiously
wreathed with wire. To this my mother advanced with a decisive
swiftness.
‘Is this it?’ she asked.
The doctor bowed in silence.
‘Asenath,’ said my mother, ‘in this sad end of my
life I have found one helper. Look upon him: it is Doctor Grierson.
Be not, oh my daughter, be not ungrateful to that friend!’
She sate upon the chair, and took in her hands the globes that terminated
the arms.
‘Am I right?’ she asked, and looked upon the doctor with
such a radiancy of face that I trembled for her reason. Once more
the doctor bowed, but this time leaning hard against the wall.
He must have touched a spring. The least shock agitated my mother
where she sat; the least passing jar appeared to cross her features;
and she sank back in the chair like one resigned to weariness.
I was at her knees that moment; but her hands fell loosely in my grasp;
her face, still beatified with the same touching smile, sank forward
on her bosom: her spirit had for ever fled.
I do not know how long may have elapsed before, raising for a moment
my tearful face, I met the doctor’s eyes. They rested upon
mine with such a depth of scrutiny, pity, and interest, that even from
the freshness of my sorrow, I was startled into attention.
‘Enough,’ he said, ‘to lamentation. Your mother
went to death as to a bridal, dying where her husband died. It
is time, Asenath, to think of the survivors. Follow me to the
next room.’
I followed him, like a person in a dream; he made me sit by the fire,
he gave me wine to drink; and then, pacing the stone floor, he thus
began to address me -
‘You are now, my child, alone in the world, and under the immediate
watch of Brigham Young. It would be your lot, in ordinary circumstances,
to become the fiftieth bride of some ignoble elder, or by particular
fortune, as fortune is counted in this land, to find favour in the eyes
of the President himself. Such a fate for a girl like you were
worse than death; better to die as your mother died than to sink daily
deeper in the mire of this pit of woman’s degradation. But
is escape conceivable? Your father tried; and you beheld yourself
with what security his jailers acted, and how a dumb drawing on a rock
was counted a sufficient sentry over the avenues of freedom. Where
your father failed, will you be wiser or more fortunate? or are you,
too, helpless in the toils?’
I had followed his words with changing emotion, but now I believed I
understood.
‘I see,’ I cried; ‘you judge me rightly. I must
follow where my parents led; and oh! I am not only willing, I am eager!’
‘No,’ replied the doctor, ‘not death for you.
The flawed vessel we may break, but not the perfect. No, your
mother cherished a different hope, and so do I. I see,’
he cried, ‘the girl develop to the completed woman, the plan reach
fulfilment, the promise - ay, outdone! I could not bear to arrest
so lively, so comely a process. It was your mother’s thought,’
he added, with a change of tone, ‘that I should marry you myself.’
I fear I must have shown a perfect horror of aversion from this fate,
for he made haste to quiet me. ‘Reassure yourself, Asenath,’
he resumed. ‘Old as I am, I have not forgotten the tumultuous
fancies of youth. I have passed my days, indeed, in laboratories;
but in all my vigils I have not forgotten the tune of a young pulse.
Age asks with timidity to be spared intolerable pain; youth, taking
fortune by the beard, demands joy like a right. These things I
have not forgotten; none, rather, has more keenly felt, none more jealously
considered them; I have but postponed them to their day. See,
then: you stand without support; the only friend left to you, this old
investigator, old in cunning, young in sympathy. Answer me but
one question: Are you free from the entanglement of what the world calls
love? Do you still command your heart and purposes? or are you
fallen in some bond-slavery of the eye and ear?’
I answered him in broken words; my heart, I think I must have told him,
lay with my dead parents.
‘It is enough,’ he said. ‘It has been my fate
to be called on often, too often, for those services of which we spoke
to-night; none in Utah could carry them so well to a conclusion; hence
there has fallen into my hands a certain share of influence which I
now lay at your service, partly for the sake of my dead friends, your
parents; partly for the interest I bear you in your own right.
I shall send you to England, to the great city of London, there to await
the bridegroom I have selected. He shall be a son of mine, a young
man suitable in age and not grossly deficient in that quality of beauty
that your years demand. Since your heart is free, you may well
pledge me the sole promise that I ask in return for much expense and
still more danger: to await the arrival of that bridegroom with the
delicacy of a wife.’
I sat awhile stunned. The doctor’s marriages, I remembered
to have heard, had been unfruitful; and this added perplexity to my
distress. But I was alone, as he had said, alone in that dark
land; the thought of escape, of any equal marriage, was already enough
to revive in me some dawn of hope; and in what words I know not, I accepted
the proposal.
He seemed more moved by my consent than I could reasonably have looked
for. ‘You shall see,’ he cried; ‘you shall judge
for yourself.’ And hurrying to the next room he returned
with a small portrait somewhat coarsely done in oils. It showed
a man in the dress of nearly forty years before, young indeed, but still
recognisable to be the doctor. ‘Do you like it?’ he
asked. ‘That is myself when I was young. My - my boy
will be like that, like but nobler; with such health as angels might
condescend to envy; and a man of mind, Asenath, of commanding mind.
That should be a man, I think; that should be one among ten thousand.
A man like that - one to combine the passions of youth with the restraint,
the force, the dignity of age - one to fill all the parts and faculties,
one to be man’s epitome - say, will that not satisfy the needs
of an ambitious girl? Say, is not that enough?’ And
as he held the picture close before my eyes, his hands shook.
I told him briefly I would ask no better, for I was transpierced with
this display of fatherly emotion; but even as I said the words, the
most insolent revolt surged through my arteries. I held him in
horror, him, his portrait, and his son; and had there been any choice
but death or a Mormon marriage, I declare before Heaven I had embraced
it.
‘It is well,’ he replied, ‘and I had rightly counted
on your spirit. Eat, then, for you have far to go.’
So saying, he set meat before me; and while I was endeavouring to obey,
he left the room and returned with an armful of coarse raiment.
‘There,’ said he, ‘is your disguise. I leave
you to your toilet.’
The clothes had probably belonged to a somewhat lubberly boy of fifteen;
and they hung about me like a sack, and cruelly hampered my movements.
But what filled me with uncontrollable shudderings, was the problem
of their origin and the fate of the lad to whom they had belonged.
I had scarcely effected the exchange when the doctor returned, opened
a back window, helped me out into the narrow space between the house
and the overhanging bluffs, and showed me a ladder of iron footholds
mortised in the rock. ‘Mount,’ he said, ‘swiftly.
When you are at the summit, walk, so far as you are able, in the shadow
of the smoke. The smoke will bring you, sooner or later, to a
canyon; follow that down, and you will find a man with two horses.
Him you will implicitly obey. And remember, silence! That
machinery, which I now put in motion for your service, may by one word
be turned against you. Go; Heaven prosper you!’
The ascent was easy. Arrived at the top of the cliff, I saw before
me on the other side a vast and gradual declivity of stone, lying bare
to the moon and the surrounding mountains. Nowhere was any vantage
or concealment; and knowing how these deserts were beset with spies,
I made haste to veil my movements under the blowing trail of smoke.
Sometimes it swam high, rising on the night wind, and I had no more
substantial curtain than its moon-thrown shadow; sometimes again it
crawled upon the earth, and I would walk in it, no higher than to my
shoulders, like some mountain fog. But, one way or another, the
smoke of that ill-omened furnace protected the first steps of my escape,
and led me unobserved to the canyon.
There, sure enough, I found a taciturn and sombre man beside a pair
of saddle-horses; and thenceforward, all night long, we wandered in
silence by the most occult and dangerous paths among the mountains.
A little before the dayspring we took refuge in a wet and gusty cavern
at the bottom of a gorge; lay there all day concealed; and the next
night, before the glow had faded out of the west, resumed our wanderings.
About noon we stopped again, in a lawn upon a little river, where was
a screen of bushes; and here my guide, handing me a bundle from his
pack, bade me change my dress once more. The bundle contained
clothing of my own, taken from our house, with such necessaries as a
comb and soap. I made my toilet by the mirror of a quiet pool;
and as I was so doing, and smiling with some complacency to see myself
restored to my own image, the mountains rang with a scream of far more
than human piercingness; and while I still stood astonished, there sprang
up and swiftly increased a storm of the most awful and earth-rending
sounds. Shall I own to you, that I fell upon my face and shrieked?
And yet this was but the overland train winding among the near mountains:
the very means of my salvation: the strong wings that were to carry
me from Utah!
When I was dressed, the guide gave me a bag, which contained, he said,
both money and papers; and telling me that I was already over the borders
in the territory of Wyoming, bade me follow the stream until I reached
the railway station, half a mile below. ‘Here,’ he
added, ‘is your ticket as far as Council Bluffs. The East
express will pass in a few hours.’ With that, he took both
horses, and, without further words or any salutation, rode off by the
way that we had come.
Three hours afterwards, I was seated on the end platform of the train
as it swept eastward through the gorges and thundered in tunnels of
the mountain. The change of scene, the sense of escape, the still
throbbing terror of pursuit - above all, the astounding magic of my
new conveyance, kept me from any logical or melancholy thought.
I had gone to the doctor’s house two nights before prepared to
die, prepared for worse than death; what had passed, terrible although
it was, looked almost bright compared to my anticipations; and it was
not till I had slept a full night in the flying palace car, that I awoke
to the sense of my irreparable loss and to some reasonable alarm about
the future. In this mood, I examined the contents of the bag.
It was well supplied with gold; it contained tickets and complete directions
for my journey as far as Liverpool, and a long letter from the doctor,
supplying me with a fictitious name and story, recommending the most
guarded silence, and bidding me to await faithfully the coming of his
son. All then had been arranged beforehand: he had counted upon
my consent, and what was tenfold worse, upon my mother’s voluntary
death. My horror of my only friend, my aversion for this son who
was to marry me, my revolt against the whole current and conditions
of my life, were now complete. I was sitting stupefied by my distress
and helplessness, when, to my joy, a very pleasant lady offered me her
conversation. I clutched at the relief; and I was soon glibly
telling her the story in the doctor’s letter: how I was a Miss
Gould, of Nevada City, going to England to an uncle, what money I had,
what family, my age, and so forth, until I had exhausted my instructions,
and, as the lady still continued to ply me with questions, began to
embroider on my own account. This soon carried one of my inexperience
beyond her depth; and I had already remarked a shadow on the lady’s
face, when a gentleman drew near and very civilly addressed me.
‘Miss Gould, I believe?’ said he; and then, excusing himself
to the lady by the authority of my guardian, drew me to the fore platform
of the Pullman car. ‘Miss Gould,’ he said in my ear,
‘is it possible that you suppose yourself in safety? Let
me completely undeceive you. One more such indiscretion and you
return to Utah. And, in the meanwhile, if this woman should again
address you, you are to reply with these words: “Madam, I do not
like you, and I will be obliged if you will suffer me to choose my own
associates.”’
Alas, I had to do as I was bid; this lady, to whom I already felt myself
drawn with the strongest cords of sympathy, I dismissed with insult;
and thenceforward, through all that day, I sat in silence, gazing on
the bare plains and swallowing my tears. Let that suffice: it
was the pattern of my journey. Whether on the train, at the hotels,
or on board the ocean steamer, I never exchanged a friendly word with
any fellow-traveller but I was certain to be interrupted. In every
place, on every side, the most unlikely persons, man or woman, rich
or poor, became protectors to forward me upon my journey, or spies to
observe and regulate my conduct. Thus I crossed the States, thus
passed the ocean, the Mormon Eye still following my movements; and when
at length a cab had set me down before that London lodging-house from
which you saw me flee this morning, I had already ceased to struggle
and ceased to hope.
The landlady, like every one else through all that journey, was expecting
my arrival. A fire was lighted in my room, which looked upon the
garden; there were books on the table, clothes in the drawers; and there
(I had almost said with contentment, and certainly with resignation)
I saw month follow month over my head. At times my landlady took
me for a walk or an excursion, but she would never suffer me to leave
the house alone; and I, seeing that she also lived under the shadow
of that widespread Mormon terror, felt too much pity to resist.
To the child born on Mormon soil, as to the man who accepts the engagements
of a secret order, no escape is possible; so I had clearly read, and
I was thankful even for this respite. Meanwhile, I tried honestly
to prepare my mind for my approaching nuptials. The day drew near
when my bridegroom was to visit me, and gratitude and fear alike obliged
me to consent. A son of Doctor Grierson’s, be he what he
pleased, must still be young, and it was even probable he should be
handsome; on more than that, I felt I dared not reckon; and in moulding
my mind towards consent I dwelt the more carefully on these physical
attractions which I felt I might expect, and averted my eyes from moral
or intellectual considerations. We have a great power upon our
spirits; and as time passed I worked myself into a frame of acquiescence,
nay, and I began to grow impatient for the hour. At night sleep
forsook me; I sat all day by the fire, absorbed in dreams, conjuring
up the features of my husband, and anticipating in fancy the touch of
his hand and the sound of his voice. In the dead level and solitude
of my existence, this was the one eastern window and the one door of
hope. At last, I had so cultivated and prepared my will, that
I began to be besieged with fears upon the other side. How if
it was I that did not please? How if this unseen lover should
turn from me with disaffection? And now I spent hours before the
glass, studying and judging my attractions, and was never weary of changing
my dress or ordering my hair.
When the day came I was long about my toilet; but at last, with a sort
of hopeful desperation, I had to own that I could do no more, and must
now stand or fall by nature. My occupation ended, I fell a prey
to the most sickening impatience, mingled with alarms; giving ear to
the swelling rumour of the streets, and at each change of sound or silence,
starting, shrinking, and colouring to the brow. Love is not to
be prepared, I know, without some knowledge of the object; and yet,
when the cab at last rattled to the door and I heard my visitor mount
the stairs, such was the tumult of hopes in my poor bosom that love
itself might have been proud to own their parentage. The door
opened, and it was Doctor Grierson that appeared. I believe I
must have screamed aloud, and I know, at least, that I fell fainting
to the floor.
When I came to myself he was standing over me, counting my pulse.
‘I have startled you,’ he said. ‘A difficulty
unforeseen - the impossibility of obtaining a certain drug in its full
purity - has forced me to resort to London unprepared. I regret
that I should have shown myself once more without those poor attractions
which are much, perhaps, to you, but to me are no more considerable
than rain that falls into the sea. Youth is but a state, as passing
as that syncope from which you are but just awakened, and, if there
be truth in science, as easy to recall; for I find, Asenath, that I
must now take you for my confidant. Since my first years, I have
devoted every hour and act of life to one ambitious task; and the time
of my success is at hand. In these new countries, where I was
so long content to stay, I collected indispensable ingredients; I have
fortified myself on every side from the possibility of error; what was
a dream now takes the substance of reality; and when I offered you a
son of mine I did so in a figure. That son - that husband, Asenath,
is myself - not as you now behold me, but restored to the first energy
of youth. You think me mad? It is the customary attitude
of ignorance. I will not argue; I will leave facts to speak.
When you behold me purified, invigorated, renewed, restamped in the
original image - when you recognise in me (what I shall be) the first
perfect expression of the powers of mankind - I shall be able to laugh
with a better grace at your passing and natural incredulity. To
what can you aspire - fame, riches, power, the charm of youth, the dear-bought
wisdom of age - that I shall not be able to afford you in perfection?
Do not deceive yourself. I already excel you in every human gift
but one: when that gift also has been restored to me you will recognise
your master.’
Hereupon, consulting his watch, he told me he must now leave me to myself;
and bidding me consult reason, and not girlish fancies, he withdrew.
I had not the courage to move; the night fell and found me still where
he had laid me during my faint, my face buried in my hands, my soul
drowned in the darkest apprehensions. Late in the evening he returned,
carrying a candle, and, with a certain irritable tremor, bade me rise
and sup. ‘Is it possible,’ he added, ‘that I
have been deceived in your courage? A cowardly girl is no fit
mate for me.’
I flung myself before him on my knees, and with floods of tears besought
him to release me from this engagement, assuring him that my cowardice
was abject, and that in every point of intellect and character I was
his hopeless and derisible inferior.
‘Why, certainly,’ he replied. ‘I know you better
than yourself; and I am well enough acquainted with human nature to
understand this scene. It is addressed to me,’ he added
with a smile, ‘in my character of the still untransformed.
But do not alarm yourself about the future. Let me but attain
my end, and not you only, Asenath, but every woman on the face of the
earth becomes my willing slave.’
Thereupon he obliged me to rise and eat; sat down with me to table;
helped and entertained me with the attentions of a fashionable host;
and it was not till a late hour, that, bidding me courteously good-night,
he once more left me alone to my misery.
In all this talk of an elixir and the restoration of his youth, I scarce
knew from which hypothesis I should the more eagerly recoil. If
his hopes reposed on any base of fact, if indeed, by some abhorrent
miracle, he should discard his age, death were my only refuge from that
most unnatural, that most ungodly union. If, on the other hand,
these dreams were merely lunatic, the madness of a life waxed suddenly
acute, my pity would become a load almost as heavy to bear as my revolt
against the marriage. So passed the night, in alternations of
rebellion and despair, of hate and pity; and with the next morning I
was only to comprehend more fully my enslaved position. For though
he appeared with a very tranquil countenance, he had no sooner observed
the marks of grief upon my brow than an answering darkness gathered
on his own. ‘Asenath.’ he said, ‘you owe me
much already; with one finger I still hold you suspended over death;
my life is full of labour and anxiety; and I choose,’ said he,
with a remarkable accent of command, ‘that you shall greet me
with a pleasant face.’ He never needed to repeat the recommendation;
from that day forward I was always ready to receive him with apparent
cheerfulness; and he rewarded me with a good deal of his company, and
almost more than I could bear of his confidence. He had set up
a laboratory in the back part of the house, where he toiled day and
night at his elixir, and he would come thence to visit me in my parlour:
now with passing humours of discouragement; now, and far more often,
radiant with hope. It was impossible to see so much of him, and
not to recognise that the sands of his life were running low; and yet
all the time he would be laying out vast fields of future, and planning,
with all the confidence of youth, the most unbounded schemes of pleasure
and ambition. How I replied I know not; but I found a voice and
words to answer, even while I wept and raged to hear him.
A week ago the doctor entered my room with the marks of great exhilaration
contending with pitiful bodily weakness. ‘Asenath,’
said he, ‘I have now obtained the last ingredient. In one
week from now the perilous moment of the last projection will draw nigh.
You have once before assisted, although unconsciously, at the failure
of a similar experiment. It was the elixir which so terribly exploded
one night when you were passing my house; and it is idle to deny that
the conduct of so delicate a process, among the million jars and trepidations
of so great a city, presents a certain element of danger. From
this point of view, I cannot but regret the perfect stillness of my
house among the deserts; but, on the other hand, I have succeeded in
proving that the singularly unstable equilibrium of the elixir, at the
moment of projection, is due rather to the impurity than to the nature
of the ingredients; and as all are now of an equal and exquisite nicety,
I have little fear for the result. In a week then from to-day,
my dear Asenath, this period of trial will be ended.’ And
he smiled upon me in a manner unusually paternal.
I smiled back with my lips, but at my heart there raged the blackest
and most unbridled terror. What if he failed? And oh, tenfold
worse! what if he succeeded? What detested and unnatural changeling
would appear before me to claim my hand? And could there, I asked
myself with a dreadful sinking, be any truth in his boasts of an assured
victory over my reluctance? I knew him, indeed, to be masterful,
to lead my life at a sign. Suppose, then, this experiment to succeed;
suppose him to return to me, hideously restored, like a vampire in a
legend; and suppose that, by some devilish fascination . . . My head
turned; all former fears deserted me: and I felt I could embrace the
worst in preference to this.
My mind was instantly made up. The doctor’s presence in
London was justified by the affairs of the Mormon polity. Often,
in our conversation, he would gloat over the details of that great organisation,
which he feared even while yet he wielded it; and would remind me, that
even in the humming labyrinth of London, we were still visible to that
unsleeping eye in Utah. His visitors, indeed, who were of every
sort, from the missionary to the destroying angel, and seemed to belong
to every rank of life, had, up to that moment, filled me with unmixed
repulsion and alarm. I knew that if my secret were to reach the
ear of any leader my fate were sealed beyond redemption; and yet in
my present pass of horror and despair, it was to these very men that
I turned for help. I waylaid upon the stair one of the Mormon
missionaries, a man of a low class, but not inaccessible to pity; told
him I scarce remember what elaborate fable to explain my application;
and by his intermediacy entered into correspondence with my father’s
family. They recognised my claim for help, and on this very day
I was to begin my escape.
Last night I sat up fully dressed, awaiting the result of the doctor’s
labours, and prepared against the worst. The nights at this season
and in this northern latitude are short; and I had soon the company
of the returning daylight. The silence in and around the house
was only broken by the movements of the doctor in the laboratory; to
these I listened, watch in hand, awaiting the hour of my escape, and
yet consumed by anxiety about the strange experiment that was going
forward overhead. Indeed, now that I was conscious of some protection
for myself, my sympathies had turned more directly to the doctor’s
side; I caught myself even praying for his success; and when some hours
ago a low, peculiar cry reached my ears from the laboratory, I could
no longer control my impatience, but mounted the stairs and opened the
door.
The doctor was standing in the middle of the room; in his hand a large,
round-bellied, crystal flask, some three parts full of a bright amber-coloured
liquid; on his face a rapture of gratitude and joy unspeakable.
As he saw me he raised the flask at arm’s length. ‘Victory!’
he cried. ‘Victory, Asenath!’ And then - whether
the flask escaped his trembling fingers, or whether the explosion were
spontaneous, I cannot tell - enough that we were thrown, I against the
door-post, the doctor into the corner of the room; enough that we were
shaken to the soul by the same explosion that must have startled you
upon the street; and that, in the brief space of an indistinguishable
instant, there remained nothing of the labours of the doctor’s
lifetime but a few shards of broken crystal and those voluminous and
ill-smelling vapours that pursued me in my flight.
THE SQUIRE OF DAMES (Concluded)
What with the lady’s animated manner and dramatic conduct
of her voice, Challoner had thrilled to every incident with genuine
emotion. His fancy, which was not perhaps of a very lively character,
applauded both the matter and the style; but the more judicial functions
of his mind refused assent. It was an excellent story; and it
might be true, but he believed it was not. Miss Fonblanque was
a lady, and it was doubtless possible for a lady to wander from the
truth; but how was a gentleman to tell her so? His spirits for
some time had been sinking, but they now fell to zero; and long after
her voice had died away he still sat with a troubled and averted countenance,
and could find no form of words to thank her for her narrative.
His mind, indeed, was empty of everything beyond a dull longing for
escape. From this pause, which grew the more embarrassing with
every second, he was roused by the sudden laughter of the lady.
His vanity was alarmed; he turned and faced her; their eyes met; and
he caught from hers a spark of such frank merriment as put him instantly
at ease.
‘You certainly,’ he said, ‘appear to bear your calamities
with excellent spirit.’
‘Do I not?’ she cried, and fell once more into delicious
laughter. But from this access she more speedily recovered.
‘This is all very well,’ said she, nodding at him gravely,
‘but I am still in a most distressing situation, from which, if
you deny me your help, I shall find it difficult indeed to free myself.’
At this mention of help Challoner fell back to his original gloom.
‘My sympathies are much engaged with you,’ he said, ‘and
I should be delighted, I am sure. But our position is most unusual;
and circumstances over which I have, I can assure you, no control, deprive
me of the power - the pleasure - Unless, indeed,’ he added, somewhat
brightening at the thought, ‘I were to recommend you to the care
of the police?’
She laid her hand upon his arm and looked hard into his eyes; and he
saw with wonder that, for the first time since the moment of their meeting,
every trace of colour had faded from her cheek.
‘Do so,’ she said, ‘and - weigh my words well - you
kill me as certainly as with a knife.’
‘God bless me!’ exclaimed Challoner.
‘Oh,’ she cried, ‘I can see you disbelieve my story
and make light of the perils that surround me; but who are you to judge?
My family share my apprehensions; they help me in secret; and you saw
yourself by what an emissary, and in what a place, they have chosen
to supply me with the funds for my escape. I admit that you are
brave and clever and have impressed me most favourably; but how are
you to prefer your opinion before that of my uncle, an ex-minister of
state, a man with the ear of the Queen, and of a long political experience?
If I am mad, is he? And you must allow me, besides, a special
claim upon your help. Strange as you may think my story, you know
that much of it is true; and if you who heard the explosion and saw
the Mormon at Victoria, refuse to credit and assist me, to whom am I
to turn?’
‘He gave you money then?’ asked Challoner, who had been
dwelling singly on that fact.
‘I begin to interest you,’ she cried. ‘But,
frankly, you are condemned to help me. If the service I had to
ask of you were serious, were suspicious, were even unusual, I should
say no more. But what is it? To take a pleasure trip (for
which, if you will suffer me, I propose to pay) and to carry from one
lady to another a sum of money! What can be more simple?’
‘Is the sum,’ asked Challoner, ‘considerable?’
She produced a packet from her bosom; and observing that she had not
yet found time to make the count, tore open the cover and spread upon
her knees a considerable number of Bank of England notes. It took
some time to make the reckoning, for the notes were of every degree
of value; but at last, and counting a few loose sovereigns, she made
out the sum to be a little under £710 sterling. The sight
of so much money worked an immediate revolution in the mind of Challoner.
‘And you propose, madam,’ he cried, ‘to intrust that
money to a perfect stranger?’
‘Ah!’ said she, with a charming smile, ‘but I no longer
regard you as a stranger.’
‘Madam,’ said Challoner, ‘I perceive I must make you
a confession. Although of a very good family - through my mother,
indeed, a lineal descendant of the patriot Bruce - I dare not conceal
from you that my affairs are deeply, very deeply involved. I am
in debt; my pockets are practically empty; and, in short, I am fallen
to that state when a considerable sum of money would prove to many men
an irresistible temptation.’
‘Do you not see,’ returned the young lady, ‘that by
these words you have removed my last hesitation? Take them.’
And she thrust the notes into the young man’s hand.
He sat so long, holding them, like a baby at the font, that Miss Fonblanque
once more bubbled into laughter.
‘Pray,’ she said, ‘hesitate no further; put them in
your pocket; and to relieve our position of any shadow of embarrassment,
tell me by what name I am to address my knight-errant, for I find myself
reduced to the awkwardness of the pronoun.’
Had borrowing been in question, the wisdom of our ancestors had come
lightly to the young man’s aid; but upon what pretext could he
refuse so generous a trust? Upon none he saw, that was not unpardonably
wounding; and the bright eyes and the high spirits of his companion
had already made a breach in the rampart of Challoner’s caution.
The whole thing, he reasoned, might be a mere mystification, which it
were the height of solemn folly to resent. On the other hand,
the explosion, the interview at the public-house, and the very money
in his hands, seemed to prove beyond denial the existence of some serious
danger; and if that were so, could he desert her? There was a
choice of risks: the risk of behaving with extraordinary incivility
and unhandsomeness to a lady, and the risk of going on a fool’s
errand. The story seemed false; but then the money was undeniable.
The whole circumstances were questionable and obscure; but the lady
was charming, and had the speech and manners of society. While
he still hung in the wind, a recollection returned upon his mind with
some of the dignity of prophecy. Had he not promised Somerset
to break with the traditions of the commonplace, and to accept the first
adventure offered? Well, here was the adventure.
He thrust the money into his pocket.
‘My name is Challoner,’ said he.
‘Mr. Challoner,’ she replied, ‘you have come very
generously to my aid when all was against me. Though I am myself
a very humble person, my family commands great interest; and I do not
think you will repent this handsome action.’
Challoner flushed with pleasure.
‘I imagine that, perhaps, a consulship,’ she added, her
eyes dwelling on him with a judicial admiration, ‘a consulship
in some great town or capital - or else - But we waste time; let us
set about the work of my delivery.’
She took his arm with a frank confidence that went to his heart; and
once more laying by all serious thoughts, she entertained him, as they
crossed the park, with her agreeable gaiety of mind. Near the
Marble Arch they found a hansom, which rapidly conveyed them to the
terminus at Euston Square; and here, in the hotel, they sat down to
an excellent breakfast. The young lady’s first step was
to call for writing materials and write, upon one corner of the table,
a hasty note; still, as she did so, glancing with smiles at her companion.
‘Here,’ said she, ‘here is the letter which will introduce
you to my cousin.’ She began to fold the paper. ‘My
cousin, although I have never seen her, has the character of a very
charming woman and a recognised beauty; of that I know nothing, but
at least she has been very kind to me; so has my lord her father; so
have you - kinder than all - kinder than I can bear to think of.’
She said this with unusual emotion; and, at the same time, sealed the
envelope. ‘Ah!’ she cried, ‘I have shut my letter!
It is not quite courteous; and yet, as between friends, it is perhaps
better so. I introduce you, after all, into a family secret; and
though you and I are already old comrades, you are still unknown to
my uncle. You go then to this address, Richard Street, Glasgow;
go, please, as soon as you arrive; and give this letter with your own
hands into those of Miss Fonblanque, for that is the name by which she
is to pass. When we next meet, you will tell me what you think
of her,’ she added, with a touch of the provocative.
‘Ah,’ said Challoner, almost tenderly, ‘she can be
nothing to me.’
‘You do not know,’ replied the young lady, with a sigh.
‘By-the-bye, I had forgotten - it is very childish, and I am almost
ashamed to mention it - but when you see Miss Fonblanque, you will have
to make yourself a little ridiculous; and I am sure the part in no way
suits you. We had agreed upon a watchword. You will have
to address an earl’s daughter in these words: “Nigger,
nigger, never die;” but reassure yourself,’ she
added, laughing, ‘for the fair patrician will at once finish the
quotation. Come now, say your lesson.’
‘“Nigger, nigger, never die,”’ repeated Challoner,
with undisguised reluctance.
Miss Fonblanque went into fits of laughter. ‘Excellent,’
said she, ‘it will be the most humorous scene.’ And
she laughed again.
‘And what will be the counterword?’ asked Challoner stiffly.
‘I will not tell you till the last moment,’ said she; ‘for
I perceive you are growing too imperious.’
Breakfast over, she accompanied the young man to the platform, bought
him the Graphic, the Athenaeum, and a paper-cutter, and
stood on the step conversing till the whistle sounded. Then she
put her head into the carriage. ‘Black face and shining
eye!’ she whispered, and instantly leaped down upon the
platform, with a thrill of gay and musical laughter. As the train
steamed out of the great arch of glass, the sound of that laughter still
rang in the young man’s ears.
Challoner’s position was too unusual to be long welcome to his
mind. He found himself projected the whole length of England,
on a mission beset with obscure and ridiculous circumstances, and yet,
by the trust he had accepted, irrevocably bound to persevere.
How easy it appeared, in the retrospect, to have refused the whole proposal,
returned the money, and gone forth again upon his own affairs, a free
and happy man! And it was now impossible: the enchantress who
had held him with her eye had now disappeared, taking his honour in
pledge; and as she had failed to leave him an address, he was denied
even the inglorious safety of retreat. To use the paper-knife,
or even to read the periodicals with which she had presented him, was
to renew the bitterness of his remorse; and as he was alone in the compartment,
he passed the day staring at the landscape in impotent repentance, and
long before he was landed on the platform of St. Enoch’s, had
fallen to the lowest and coldest zones of self-contempt.
As he was hungry, and elegant in his habits, he would have preferred
to dine and to remove the stains of travel; but the words of the young
lady, and his own impatient eagerness, would suffer no delay.
In the late, luminous, and lamp-starred dusk of the summer evening,
he accordingly set forward with brisk steps.
The street to which he was directed had first seen the day in the character
of a row of small suburban villas on a hillside; but the extension of
the city had long since, and on every hand, surrounded it with miles
of streets. From the top of the hill a range of very tall buildings,
densely inhabited by the poorest classes of the population and variegated
by drying-poles from every second window, overplumbed the villas and
their little gardens like a sea-board cliff. But still, under
the grime of years of city smoke, these antiquated cottages, with their
venetian blinds and rural porticoes, retained a somewhat melancholy
savour of the past.
The street when Challoner entered it was perfectly deserted. From
hard by, indeed, the sound of a thousand footfalls filled the ear; but
in Richard Street itself there was neither light nor sound of human
habitation. The appearance of the neighbourhood weighed heavily
on the mind of the young man; once more, as in the streets of London,
he was impressed with the sense of city deserts; and as he approached
the number indicated, and somewhat falteringly rang the bell, his heart
sank within him.
The bell was ancient, like the house; it had a thin and garrulous note;
and it was some time before it ceased to sound from the rear quarters
of the building. Following upon this an inner door was stealthily
opened, and careful and catlike steps drew near along the hall.
Challoner, supposing he was to be instantly admitted, produced his letter,
and, as well as he was able, prepared a smiling face. To his indescribable
surprise, however, the footsteps ceased, and then, after a pause and
with the like stealthiness, withdrew once more, and died away in the
interior of the house. A second time the young man rang violently
at the bell; a second time, to his keen hearkening, a certain bustle
of discreet footing moved upon the hollow boards of the old villa; and
again the fainthearted garrison only drew near to retreat. The
cup of the visitor’s endurance was now full to overflowing; and,
committing the whole family of Fonblanque to every mood and shade of
condemnation, he turned upon his heel and redescended the steps.
Perhaps the mover in the house was watching from a window, and plucked
up courage at the sight of this desistance; or perhaps, where he lurked
trembling in the back parts of the villa, reason in its own right had
conquered his alarms. Challoner, at least, had scarce set foot
upon the pavement when he was arrested by the sound of the withdrawal
of an inner bolt; one followed another, rattling in their sockets; the
key turned harshly in the lock; the door opened; and there appeared
upon the threshold a man of a very stalwart figure in his shirt sleeves.
He was a person neither of great manly beauty nor of a refined exterior;
he was not the man, in ordinary moods, to attract the eyes of the observer;
but as he now stood in the doorway, he was marked so legibly with the
extreme passion of terror that Challoner stood wonder-struck.
For a fraction of a minute they gazed upon each other in silence; and
then the man of the house, with ashen lips and gasping voice, inquired
the business of his visitor. Challoner replied, in tones from
which he strove to banish his surprise, that he was the bearer of a
letter to a certain Miss Fonblanque. At this name, as at a talisman,
the man fell back and impatiently invited him to enter; and no sooner
had the adventurer crossed the threshold, than the door was closed behind
him and his retreat cut off.
It was already long past eight at night; and though the late twilight
of the north still lingered in the streets, in the passage it was already
groping dark. The man led Challoner directly to a parlour looking
on the garden to the back. Here he had apparently been supping;
for by the light of a tallow dip the table was seen to be covered with
a napkin, and set out with a quart of bottled ale and the heel of a
Gouda cheese. The room, on the other hand, was furnished with
faded solidity, and the walls were lined with scholarly and costly volumes
in glazed cases. The house must have been taken furnished; for
it had no congruity with this man of the shirt sleeves and the mean
supper. As for the earl’s daughter, the earl and the visionary
consulships in foreign cities, they had long ago begun to fade in Challoner’s
imagination. Like Doctor Grierson and the Mormon angels, they
were plainly woven of the stuff of dreams. Not an illusion remained
to the knight-errant; not a hope was left him, but to be speedily relieved
from this disreputable business.
The man had continued to regard his visitor with undisguised anxiety,
and began once more to press him for his errand.
‘I am here,’ said Challoner, ‘simply to do a service
between two ladies; and I must ask you, without further delay, to summon
Miss Fonblanque, into whose hands alone I am authorised to deliver the
letter that I bear.’
A growing wonder began to mingle on the man’s face with the lines
of solicitude. ‘I am Miss Fonblanque,’ he said; and
then, perceiving the effect of this communication, ‘Good God!’
he cried, ‘what are you staring at? I tell you, I am Miss
Fonblanque.’
Seeing the speaker wore a chin-beard of considerable length, and the
remainder of his face was blue with shaving, Challoner could only suppose
himself the subject of a jest. He was no longer under the spell
of the young lady’s presence; and with men, and above all with
his inferiors, he was capable of some display of spirit.
‘Sir,’ said he, pretty roundly, ‘I have put myself
to great inconvenience for persons of whom I know too little, and I
begin to be weary of the business. Either you shall immediately
summon Miss Fonblanque, or I leave this house and put myself under the
direction of the police.’
‘This is horrible!’ exclaimed the man. ‘I declare
before Heaven I am the person meant, but how shall I convince you?
It must have been Clara, I perceive, that sent you on this errand -
a madwoman, who jests with the most deadly interests; and here we are
incapable, perhaps, o