‘There’s nothing ill
Can dwell in such a temple.’
—THE TEMPEST
THIS astounding discovery made a most unhappy impression upon me. It was true, then. Eleanore the beautiful, the lovesome, was—I did not, could not finish the sentence, even in the silence of my own mind.
‘You look surprised,’ said Mr Gryce, glancing curiously towards the key. ‘Now, I ain’t. A woman does not thrill, blush, equivocate, and faint for nothing; especially such a woman as Miss Leavenworth.’
‘A woman who could do such a deed would be the last to thrill, equivocate, and faint,’ I retorted. ‘Give me the key; let me see it.’
He complacently put it in my hand. ‘It is the one we want. No getting out of that.’
I returned it. ‘If she declares herself innocent, I will believe her.’
He stared with great amazement. ‘You have strong faith in the women,’ he laughed. ‘I hope they will never disappoint you.’
I had no reply for this, and a short silence ensued, first broken by Mr Gryce. ‘There is but one thing left to do,’ said he. ‘Fobbs, you will have to request Miss Leavenworth to come down. Do not alarm her; only see that she comes. To the reception room,’ he added, as the man drew off.
No sooner were we left alone than I made a move to return to Mary, but he stopped me.
‘Come and see it out,’ he whispered. ‘She will be down in a moment; see it out; you had best.’
Glancing back, I hesitated; but the prospect of beholding Eleanore again drew me, in spite of myself. Telling him to wait, I returned to Mary’s side to make my excuses.
‘What is the matter—what has occurred?’ she breathlessly asked.
‘Nothing as yet to disturb you much. Do not be alarmed.’ But my face betrayed me.
‘There is something!’ said she.
‘Your cousin is coming down.’
‘Down here?’ and she shrank visibly.
‘No, to the reception room.’
‘I do not understand. It is all dreadful; and no one tells me anything.’
‘I pray God there may be nothing to tell. Judging from your present faith in your cousin, there will not be. Take comfort, then, and be assured I will inform you if anything occurs which you ought to know.’
Giving her a look of encouragement, I left her crushed against the crimson pillows of the sofa on which she sat, and rejoined Mr Gryce. We had scarcely entered the reception room when Eleanore Leavenworth came in.
More languid than she was an hour before, but haughty still, she slowly advanced, and, meeting my eye, gently bent her head.
‘I have been summoned here,’ said she, directing herself exclusively to Mr Gryce, ‘by an individual whom I take to be in your employ. If so, may I request you to make your wishes known at once, as I am quite exhausted, and am in great need of rest.’
‘Miss Leavenworth,’ returned Mr Gryce, rubbing his hands together and staring in quite a fatherly manner at the door-knob, ‘I am very sorry to trouble you, but the fact is I wish to ask you—’
But here she stopped him. ‘Anything in regard to the key which that man has doubtless told you he saw me drop into the ashes?’
‘Yes, Miss.’
‘Then I must refuse to answer any questions concerning it. I have nothing to say on the subject, unless it is this’—giving him a look full of suffering, but full of a certain sort of courage, too—‘that he was right if he told you I had the key in hiding about my person, and that I attempted to conceal it in the ashes of the grate.’
‘Still, Miss—’
But she had already withdrawn to the door. ‘I pray you to excuse me,’ said she. ‘No argument you could advance would make any difference in my determination; therefore it would be but a waste of energy on your part to attempt any.’ And, with a flitting glance in my direction, not without its appeal, she quietly left the room.
For a moment Mr Gryce stood gazing after her with a look of great interest, then, bowing with almost exaggerated homage, he hastily followed her out.
I had scarcely recovered from the surprise occasioned by this unexpected movement when a quick step was heard in the hall, and Mary, flushed and anxious, appeared at my side.
‘What is it?’ she inquired. ‘What has Eleanore been saying?’
‘Alas!’ I answered, ‘she has not said anything. That is the trouble, Miss Leavenworth. Your cousin preserves a reticence upon certain points very painful to witness. She ought to understand that if she persists in doing this, that—’
‘That what?’ There was no mistaking the deep anxiety prompting this question.
‘That she cannot avoid the trouble that will ensue.’
For a moment she stood gazing at me, with great horror-stricken, incredulous eyes; then sinking back into a chair, flung her hands over her face with the cry:
‘Oh, why were we ever born! Why were we allowed to live! Why did we not perish with those who gave us birth!’
In the face of anguish like this, I could not keep still.
‘Dear Miss Leavenworth,’ I essayed, ‘there is no cause for such despair as this. The future looks dark, but not impenetrable. Your cousin will listen to reason, and in explaining—’
But she, deaf to my words, had again risen to her feet, and stood before me in an attitude almost appalling.
‘Some women in my position would go mad! mad! mad!’
I surveyed her with growing wonder. I thought I knew what she meant. She was conscious of having given the cue which had led to this suspicion of her cousin, and that in this way the trouble which hung over their heads was of her own making. I endeavoured to soothe her, but my efforts were all unavailing. Absorbed in her own anguish, she paid but little attention to me. Satisfied at last that I could do nothing more for her, I turned to go. The movement seemed to arouse her.
‘I am sorry to leave,’ said I, ‘without having afforded you any comfort. Believe me; I am very anxious to assist you. Is there no one I can send to your side; no woman friend or relative? It is sad to leave you alone in this house at such a time.’
‘And do you expect me to remain here? Why, I should die! Here tonight?’ and the long shudders shook her very frame.
‘It is not at all necessary for you to do so, Miss Leavenworth,’ broke in a bland voice over our shoulders.
I turned with a start. Mr Gryce was not only at our back, but had evidently been there for some moments. Seated near the door, one hand in his pocket, the other caressing the arm of his chair, he met our gaze with a sidelong smile that seemed at once to beg pardon for the intrusion, and to assure us it was made with no unworthy motive. ‘Everything will be properly looked after, Miss; you can leave with perfect safety.’
I expected to see her resent this interference; but instead of that, she manifested a certain satisfaction in beholding him there.
Drawing me to one side, she whispered, ‘You think this Mr Gryce very clever, do you not?’
‘Well,’ I cautiously replied, ‘he ought to be to hold the position he does. The authorities evidently repose great confidence in him.’
Stepping from my side as suddenly as she had approached it, she crossed the room and stood before Mr Gryce.
‘Sir,’ said she, gazing at him with a glance of entreaty: ‘I hear you have great talents; that you can ferret out the real criminal from a score of doubtful characters, and that nothing can escape the penetration of your eye. If this is so, have pity on two orphan girls, suddenly bereft of their guardian and protector, and use your acknowledged skill in finding out who has committed this crime. It would be folly in me to endeavour to hide from you that my cousin in her testimony has given cause for suspicion; but I here declare her to be as innocent of wrong as I am; and I am only endeavouring to turn the eye of justice from the guiltless to the guilty when I entreat you to look elsewhere for the culprit who committed this deed.’ Pausing, she held her two hands out before him. ‘It must have been some common burglar or desperado; can you not bring him, then, to justice?’
Her attitude was so touching, her whole appearance so earnest and appealing, that I saw Mr Gryce’s countenance brim with suppressed emotion, though his eye never left the coffee-urn upon which it had fixed itself at her first approach.
‘You must find out—you can!’ she went on. ‘Hannah—the girl who is gone—must know all about it. Search for her, ransack the city, do anything; my property is at your disposal. I will offer a large reward for the detection of the burglar who did this deed!’
Mr Gryce slowly rose. ‘Miss Leavenworth,’ he began, and stopped; the man was actually agitated. ‘Miss Leavenworth, I did not need your very touching appeal to incite me to my utmost duty in this case. Personal and professional pride were in themselves sufficient. But, since you have honoured me with this expression of your wishes, I will not conceal from you that I shall feel a certain increased interest in the affair from this hour. What mortal man can do, I will do, and if in one month from this day I do not come to you for my reward, Ebenezer Gryce is not the man I have always taken him to be.’
‘And Eleanore?’
‘We will mention no names,’ said he, gently waving his hand to and fro.
A few minutes later, I left the house with Miss Leavenworth, she having expressed a wish to have me accompany her to the home of her friend, Mrs Gilbert, with whom she had decided to take refuge. As we rolled down the street in the carriage Mr Gryce had been kind enough to provide for us, I noticed my companion cast a look of regret behind her, as if she could not help feeling some compunctions at this desertion of her cousin.
But this expression was soon changed for the alert look of one who dreads to see a certain face start up from some unknown quarter. Glancing up and down the street, peering furtively into doorways as we passed, starting and trembling if a sudden figure appeared on the curbstone, she did not seem to breathe with perfect ease till we had left the avenue behind us and entered upon Thirty-seventh Street. Then, all at once her natural colour returned and, leaning gently toward me, she asked if I had a pencil and piece of paper I could give her. I fortunately possessed both. Handing them to her, I watched her with some little curiosity while she wrote two or three lines, wondering she could choose such a time and place for the purpose.
‘A little note I wish to send,’ she explained, glancing at the almost illegible scrawl with an expression of doubt. ‘Couldn’t you stop the carriage a moment while I direct it?’
I did so, and in another instant the leaf which I had torn from my note-book was folded, directed, and sealed with a stamp which she had taken from her own pocket-book.
‘That is a crazy-looking epistle,’ she muttered, as she laid it, direction downwards, in her lap.
‘Why not wait, then, till you arrive at your destination, where you can seal it properly, and direct it at your leisure?’
‘Because I am in haste. I wish to mail it now. Look, there is a box on the corner; please ask the driver to stop once more.’
‘Shall I not post it for you?’ I asked, holding out my hand.
But she shook her head, and, without waiting for my assistance, opened the door on her own side of the carriage and leaped to the ground. Even then she paused to glance up and down the street, before venturing to drop her hastily written letter into the box. But when it had left her hand, she looked brighter and more hopeful than I had yet seen her. And when, a few moments later, she turned to bid me good-bye in front of her friend’s house, it was with almost a cheerful air she put out her hand and entreated me to call on her the next day, and inform her how the inquest progressed.
I shall not attempt to disguise from you the fact that I spent all that long evening in going over the testimony given at the inquest, endeavouring to reconcile what I had heard with any other theory than that of Eleanore’s guilt. Taking a piece of paper, I jotted down the leading causes of suspicion as follows:
1. Her late disagreement with her uncle, and evident estrangement from him, as testified to by Mr Harwell.
2. The mysterious disappearance of one of the servants of the house.
3. The forcible accusation made by her cousin—overheard, however, only by Mr Gryce and myself.
4. Her equivocation in regard to the handkerchief found stained with pistol smut on the scene of the tragedy.
5. Her refusal to speak in regard to the paper which she was supposed to have taken from Mr Leavenworth’s table immediately upon the removal of the body.
6. The finding of the library key in her possession.
‘A dark record,’ I involuntarily decided, as I looked it over; but even in doing so began jotting down on the other side of the sheet the following explanatory notes:
1. Disagreements and even estrangements between relatives are common. Cases where such disagreements and estrangements have led to crime, rare.
2. The disappearance of Hannah points no more certainly in one direction than another.
3. If Mary’s private accusation of her cousin was forcible and convincing, her public declaration that she neither knew nor suspected who might be the author of this crime, was equally so. To be sure, the former possessed the advantage of being uttered spontaneously; but it was likewise true that it was spoken under momentary excitement, without foresight of the consequences, and possibly without due consideration of the facts.
4. An innocent man or woman, under the influence of terror, will often equivocate in regard to matters that seem to criminate them.
But the key! What could I say to that? Nothing. With that key in her possession, and unexplained, Eleanore Leavenworth stood in an attitude of suspicion which even I felt forced to recognise. Brought to this point, I thrust the paper into my pocket, and took up the evening Express. Instantly my eye fell upon these words:
SHOCKING MURDER
MR LEAVENWORTH, THE WELL-KNOWN MILLIONAIRE,
FOUND DEAD IN HIS ROOM.
NO CLUE TO THE PERPETRATOR OF THE DEED.
THE AWFUL CRIME COMMITTED WITH A PISTOL—
EXTRAORDINARY FEATURES OF THE AFFAIR.
Ah! Here at least was one comfort; her name was not yet mentioned as that of a suspected party. But what might not the morrow bring? I thought of Mr Gryce’s expressive look as he handed me that key, and shuddered.
‘She must be innocent; she cannot be otherwise,’ I reiterated to myself, and then pausing, asked what warranty I had of this? Only her beautiful face; only, only her beautiful face. Abashed, I dropped the newspaper, and went downstairs just as a telegraph boy arrived with a message from Mr Veeley. It was signed by the proprietor of the hotel at which Mr Veeley was then stopping and ran thus:
‘WASHINGTON, D.C.
‘MR EVERETT RAYMOND—
‘Mr Veeley is lying at my house ill. Have not shown him telegram, fearing results. Will do so as soon as advisable.
‘THOMAS LOWORTHY.’
I went in musing. Why this sudden sensation of relief on my part? Could it be that I had unconsciously been guilty of cherishing a latent dread of my senior’s return? Why, who else could know so well the secret springs which governed this family? Who else could so effectually put me upon the right track? Was it possible that I, Everett Raymond, hesitated to know the truth in any case? No, that should never be said; and, sitting down again, I drew out the memoranda I had made and, looking them carefully over, wrote against No. 6 the word SUSPICIOUS in good round characters. There! No one could say, after that, I had allowed myself to be blinded by a bewitching face from seeing what, in a woman with no claims to comeliness, would be considered at once an almost indubitable evidence of guilt.
And yet, after it was all done, I found myself repeating aloud as I gazed at it: ‘If she declares herself innocent, I will believe her.’ So completely are we the creatures of our own predilections.