JOHN BARTINE’S WATCH
A STORY BY A PHYSICIAN
“The exact time? Good
God! my friend, why do you insist? One would
think—but what does it matter; it is easily
bedtime—isn’t that near enough?
But, here, if you must set your watch, take mine and
see for yourself.”
With that he detached his watch—a
tremendously heavy, old-fashioned one—from
the chain, and handed it to me; then turned away, and
walking across the room to a shelf of books, began
an examination of their backs. His agitation
and evident distress surprised me; they appeared reasonless.
Having set my watch by his, I stepped over to where
he stood and said, “Thank you.”
As he took his timepiece and reattached
it to the guard I observed that his hands were unsteady.
With a tact upon which I greatly prided myself, I
sauntered carelessly to the sideboard and took some
brandy and water; then, begging his pardon for my thoughtlessness,
asked him to have some and went back to my seat by
the fire, leaving him to help himself, as was our
custom. He did so and presently joined me at
the hearth, as tranquil as ever.
This odd little incident occurred
in my apartment, where John Bartine was passing an
evening. We had dined together at the club, had
come home in a cab and—in short, everything
had been done in the most prosaic way; and why John
Bartine should break in upon the natural and established
order of things to make himself spectacular with a
display of emotion, apparently for his own entertainment,
I could nowise understand. The more I thought
of it, while his brilliant conversational gifts were
commending themselves to my inattention, the more
curious I grew, and of course had no difficulty in
persuading myself that my curiosity was friendly solicitude.
That is the disguise that curiosity usually assumes
to evade resentment. So I ruined one of the
finest sentences of his disregarded monologue by cutting
it short without ceremony.
“John Bartine,” I said,
“you must try to forgive me if I am wrong, but
with the light that I have at present I cannot concede
your right to go all to pieces when asked the time
o’ night. I cannot admit that it is proper
to experience a mysterious reluctance to look your
own watch in the face and to cherish in my presence,
without explanation, painful emotions which are denied
to me, and which are none of my business.”
To this ridiculous speech Bartine
made no immediate reply, but sat looking gravely into
the fire. Fearing that I had offended I was
about to apologize and beg him to think no more about
the matter, when looking me calmly in the eyes he
said:
“My dear fellow, the levity
of your manner does not at all disguise the hideous
impudence of your demand; but happily I had already
decided to tell you what you wish to know, and no manifestation
of your unworthiness to hear it shall alter my decision.
Be good enough to give me your attention and you
shall hear all about the matter.
“This watch,” he said,
“had been in my family for three generations
before it fell to me. Its original owner, for
whom it was made, was my great-grandfather, Bramwell
Olcott Bartine, a wealthy planter of Colonial Virginia,
and as stanch a Tory as ever lay awake nights contriving
new kinds of maledictions for the head of Mr. Washington,
and new methods of aiding and abetting good King George.
One day this worthy gentleman had the deep misfortune
to perform for his cause a service of capital importance
which was not recognized as legitimate by those who
suffered its disadvantages. It does not matter
what it was, but among its minor consequences was my
excellent ancestor’s arrest one night in his
own house by a party of Mr. Washington’s rebels.
He was permitted to say farewell to his weeping family,
and was then marched away into the darkness which swallowed
him up forever. Not the slenderest clew to his
fate was ever found. After the war the most diligent
inquiry and the offer of large rewards failed to turn
up any of his captors or any fact concerning his disappearance.
He had disappeared, and that was all.”
Something in Bartine’s manner
that was not in his words—I hardly knew
what it was—prompted me to ask:
“What is your view of the matter—of
the justice of it?”
“My view of it,” he flamed
out, bringing his clenched hand down upon the table
as if he had been in a public house dicing with blackguards—“my
view of it is that it was a characteristically dastardly
assassination by that damned traitor, Washington, and
his ragamuffin rebels!”
For some minutes nothing was said:
Bartine was recovering his temper, and I waited.
Then I said:
“Was that all?”
“No—there was something
else. A few weeks after my great-grandfather’s
arrest his watch was found lying on the porch at the
front door of his dwelling. It was wrapped in
a sheet of letter paper bearing the name of Rupert
Bartine, his only son, my grandfather. I am
wearing that watch.”
Bartine paused. His usually
restless black eyes were staring fixedly into the
grate, a point of red light in each, reflected from
the glowing coals. He seemed to have forgotten
me. A sudden threshing of the branches of a
tree outside one of the windows, and almost at the
same instant a rattle of rain against the glass, recalled
him to a sense of his surroundings. A storm
had risen, heralded by a single gust of wind, and
in a few moments the steady plash of the water on
the pavement was distinctly heard. I hardly know
why I relate this incident; it seemed somehow to have
a certain significance and relevancy which I am unable
now to discern. It at least added an element
of seriousness, almost solemnity. Bartine resumed:
“I have a singular feeling toward
this watch—a kind of affection for it;
I like to have it about me, though partly from its
weight, and partly for a reason I shall now explain,
I seldom carry it. The reason is this:
Every evening when I have it with me I feel an unaccountable
desire to open and consult it, even if I can think
of no reason for wishing to know the time. But
if I yield to it, the moment my eyes rest upon the
dial I am filled with a mysterious apprehension—a
sense of imminent calamity. And this is the more
insupportable the nearer it is to eleven o’clock—by
this watch, no matter what the actual hour may be.
After the hands have registered eleven the desire
to look is gone; I am entirely indifferent. Then
I can consult the thing as often as I like, with no
more emotion than you feel in looking at your own.
Naturally I have trained myself not to look at that
watch in the evening before eleven; nothing could
induce me. Your insistence this evening upset
me a trifle. I felt very much as I suppose an
opium-eater might feel if his yearning for his special
and particular kind of hell were re-enforced by opportunity
and advice.
“Now that is my story, and I
have told it in the interest of your trumpery science;
but if on any evening hereafter you observe me wearing
this damnable watch, and you have the thoughtfulness
to ask me the hour, I shall beg leave to put you to
the inconvenience of being knocked down.”
His humor did not amuse me.
I could see that in relating his delusion he was again
somewhat disturbed. His concluding smile was
positively ghastly, and his eyes had resumed something
more than their old restlessness; they shifted hither
and thither about the room with apparent aimlessness
and I fancied had taken on a wild expression, such
as is sometimes observed in cases of dementia.
Perhaps this was my own imagination, but at any rate
I was now persuaded that my friend was afflicted with
a most singular and interesting monomania. Without,
I trust, any abatement of my affectionate solicitude
for him as a friend, I began to regard him as a patient,
rich in possibilities of profitable study. Why
not? Had he not described his delusion in the
interest of science? Ah, poor fellow, he was
doing more for science than he knew: not only
his story but himself was in evidence. I should
cure him if I could, of course, but first I should
make a little experiment in psychology—
nay, the experiment itself might be a step in his restoration.
“That is very frank and friendly
of you, Bartine,” I said cordially, “and
I’m rather proud of your confidence. It
is all very odd, certainly. Do you mind showing
me the watch?”
He detached it from his waistcoat,
chain and all, and passed it to me without a word.
The case was of gold, very thick and strong, and
singularly engraved. After closely examining
the dial and observing that it was nearly twelve o’clock,
I opened it at the back and was interested to observe
an inner case of ivory, upon which was painted a miniature
portrait in that exquisite and delicate manner which
was in vogue during the eighteenth century.
“Why, bless my soul!”
I exclaimed, feeling a sharp artistic delight—
“how under the sun did you get that done?
I thought miniature painting on ivory was a lost
art.”
“That,” he replied, gravely
smiling, “is not I; it is my excellent great-grandfather,
the late Bramwell Olcott Bartine, Esquire, of Virginia.
He was younger then than later—about my
age, in fact. It is said to resemble me; do
you think so?”
“Resemble you? I should
say so! Barring the costume, which I supposed
you to have assumed out of compliment to the art—or
for vraisemblance, so to say—and the no
mustache, that portrait is you in every feature, line,
and expression.”
No more was said at that time.
Bartine took a book from the table and began reading.
I heard outside the incessant plash of the rain in
the street. There were occasional hurried footfalls
on the sidewalks; and once a slower, heavier tread
seemed to cease at my door—a policeman,
I thought, seeking shelter in the doorway. The
boughs of the trees tapped significantly on the window
panes, as if asking for admittance. I remember
it all through these years and years of a wiser, graver
life.
Seeing myself unobserved, I took the
old-fashioned key that dangled from the chain and
quickly turned back the hands of the watch a full
hour; then, closing the case, I handed Bartine his
property and saw him replace it on his person.
“I think you said,” I
began, with assumed carelessness, “that after
eleven the sight of the dial no longer affects you.
As it is now nearly twelve”—looking
at my own timepiece—“perhaps, if you
don’t resent my pursuit of proof, you will look
at it now.”
He smiled good-humoredly, pulled out
the watch again, opened it, and instantly sprang to
his feet with a cry that Heaven has not had the mercy
to permit me to forget! His eyes, their blackness
strikingly intensified by the pallor of his face,
were fixed upon the watch, which he clutched in both
hands. For some time he remained in that attitude
without uttering another sound; then, in a voice that
I should not have recognized as his, he said:
“Damn you! it is two minutes to eleven!”
I was not unprepared for some such
outbreak, and without rising replied, calmly enough:
“I beg your pardon; I must have
misread your watch in setting my own by it.”
He shut the case with a sharp snap
and put the watch in his pocket. He looked at
me and made an attempt to smile, but his lower lip
quivered and he seemed unable to close his mouth.
His hands, also, were shaking, and he thrust them,
clenched, into the pockets of his sack-coat.
The courageous spirit was manifestly endeavoring to
subdue the coward body. The effort was too great;
he began to sway from side to side, as from vertigo,
and before I could spring from my chair to support
him his knees gave way and he pitched awkwardly forward
and fell upon his face. I sprang to assist him
to rise; but when John Bartine rises we shall all
rise.
The post-mortem examination disclosed
nothing; every organ was normal and sound. But
when the body had been prepared for burial a faint
dark circle was seen to have developed around the neck;
at least I was so assured by several persons who said
they saw it, but of my own knowledge I cannot say
if that was true.
Nor can I set limitations to the law
of heredity. I do not know that in the spiritual
world a sentiment or emotion may not survive the heart
that held it, and seek expression in a kindred life,
ages removed. Surely, if I were to guess at
the fate of Bramwell Olcott Bartine, I should guess
that he was hanged at eleven o’clock in the
evening, and that he had been allowed several hours
in which to prepare for the change.
As to John Bartine, my friend, my
patient for five minutes, and— Heaven forgive
me!—my victim for eternity, there is no
more to say. He is buried, and his watch with
him—I saw to that. May God rest his
soul in Paradise, and the soul of his Virginian ancestor,
if, indeed, they are two souls.