Carl falls under suspicion.
To a person of any age such a sight
as that described at the close of the last chapter
might well have proved startling. To a boy like
Carl it was simply overwhelming. It so happened
that he had but twice seen a dead person, and never
a victim of violence. The peculiar circumstances
increased the effect upon his mind.
He placed his hand upon the man’s
face, and found that he was still warm. He could
have been dead but a short time.
“What shall I do?” thought
Carl, perplexed. “This is terrible!”
Then it flashed upon him that as he
was alone with the dead man suspicion might fall upon
him as being concerned in what might be called a murder.
“I had better leave here at
once,” he reflected. “I shall have
to go away without paying for my meal.”
He started to leave the house, but
had scarcely reached the door when two persons—a
man and a woman—entered. Both looked
at Carl with suspicion.
“What are you doing here?” asked the man.
“I beg your pardon,” answered
Carl; “I was very hungry, and seeing no one
about, took the liberty to sit down at the table and
eat. I am willing to pay for my dinner if you
will tell me how much it amounts to.”
“Wasn’t my husband here?” asked
the woman.
“I—I am afraid something has happened
to your husband,” faltered Carl.
“What do you mean?”
Carl silently pointed to the chamber
door. The woman opened it, and uttered a loud
shriek.
“Look here, Walter!” she cried.
Her companion quickly came to her side.
“My husband is dead!”
cried the woman; “basely murdered, and there,”
pointing fiercely to Carl, “there stands the
murderer!”
“Madam, you cannot believe this!” said
Carl, naturally agitated.
“What have you to say for yourself?” demanded
the man, suspiciously.
“I only just saw—your
husband,” continued Carl, addressing himself
to the woman. “I had finished my meal,
when I began to search for some one whom I could pay,
and so opened this door into the room beyond, when
I saw—him hanging there!”
“Don’t believe him, the
red-handed murderer!” broke out the woman, fiercely.
“He is probably a thief; he killed my poor husband,
and then sat down like a cold-blooded villain that
he is, and gorged himself.”
Things began to look very serious for poor Carl.
“Your husband is larger and
stronger than myself,” he urged, desperately.
“How could I overpower him?”
“It looks reasonable, Maria,”
said the man. “I don’t see how the
boy could have killed Mr. Brown, or lifted him upon
the hook, even if he did not resist.”
“He murdered him, I tell you,
he murdered him!” shrieked the woman, who seemed
bereft of reason. “I call upon you to arrest
him.”
“I am not a constable, Maria.”
“Then tie him so he cannot get
away, and go for a constable. I wouldn’t
feel safe with him in the house, unless he were tied
fast. He might hang me!”
Terrible as the circumstances were,
Carl felt an impulse to laugh. It seemed absurd
to hear himself talked of in this way.
“Tie me if you like!”
he said. “I am willing to wait here till
some one comes who has a little common sense.
Just remember that I am only a boy, and haven’t
the strength of a full-grown man!”
“The boy is right, Maria! It’s a
foolish idea of yours.”
“I call upon you to tie the villain!”
insisted the woman.
“Just as you say! Can you give me some
rope?”
From a drawer Mrs. Brown drew a quantity
of strong cord, and the man proceeded to tie Carl’s
hands.
“Tie his feet, too, Walter!”
“Even if you didn’t tie
me, I would promise to remain here. I don’t
want anybody to suspect me of such a thing,”
put in Carl.
“How artful he is!” said Mrs. Brown.
“Tie him strong, Walter.”
The two were left alone, Carl feeling
decidedly uncomfortable. The newly-made widow
laid her head upon the table and moaned, glancing
occasionally at the body of her husband, as it still
hung suspended from the hook.
“Oh, William, I little expected
to find you dead!” she groaned. “I
only went to the store to buy a pound of salt, and
when I come back, I find you cold and still, the victim
of a young ruffian! How could you be so wicked?”
she demanded fiercely of Carl.
“I have told you that I had
nothing to do with your husband’s death, madam.”
“Who killed him, then?” she cried.
“I don’t know. He must have committed
suicide.”
“Don’t think you are going
to escape in that way. I won’t rest till
I see you hung!”
“I wish I had never entered
the house,” thought Carl, uncomfortably.
“I would rather have gone hungry for twenty four
hours longer than find myself in such a position.”
Half an hour passed. Then a sound
of voices was heard outside, and half a dozen men
entered, including besides the messenger, the constable
and a physician.
“Why was he not cut down?”
asked the doctor, hastily. “There might
have been a chance to resuscitate him.”
“I didn’t think of it,”
said the messenger. “Maria was so excited,
and insisted that the boy murdered him.”
“What boy?”
Carl was pointed out.
“That boy? What nonsense!”
exclaimed Dr. Park. “Why, it would be more
than you or I could do to overpower and hang a man
weighing one hundred and seventy-five pounds.”
“That’s what I thought, but Maria seemed
crazed like.”
“I tell you he did it!
Are you going to let him go, the red-handed murderer?”
“Loose the cord, and I will
question the boy,” said Dr. Park, with an air
of authority.
Carl breathed a sigh of relief, when,
freed from his bonds, he stood upright.
“I’ll tell you all I know,”
he said, “but it won’t throw any light
upon the death.”
Dr. Park listened attentively, and
asked one or two questions.
“Did you hear any noise when
you were sitting at the table?” he inquired.
“No, sir.”
“Was the door closed?”
“Yes, sir.”
“That of itself would probably
prevent your hearing anything. Mrs. Brown, at
what hour did you leave the house?”
“At ten minutes of twelve.”
“It is now five minutes of one.
The deed must have been committed just after you left
the house. Had you noticed anything out of the
way in your—husband’s manner?”
“No, sir, not much. He was always a silent
man.”
“Had anything happened to disturb him?”
“He got a letter this morning. I don’t
know what was in it.”
“We had better search for it.”
The body was taken down and laid on
the bed. Dr. Park searched the pockets, and found
a half sheet of note paper, on which these lines were
written:
“Maria:—I have made
up my mind I can ive no longer. I have made a
terrible discovery. When I married you, I thought
my first wife, who deserted me four years ago, dead.
I learn by a letter received this morning that she
is still living in a town of Illinois. The only
thing I can do is to free you both from my presence.
When you come back from the store you will find me
cold and dead. The little that I leave behind
I give to you. If my first wife should come here,
as she threatens, you can tell her so. Good-by.
“William.”
The reading of this letter made a
sensation. Mrs. Brown went into hysterics, and
there was a scene of confusion.
“Do you think I can go?” Carl asked Dr.
Park.
“Yes. There is nothing to connect you with
the sad event.”
Carl gladly left the cottage, and
it was only when he was a mile on his way that he
remembered that he had not paid for his dinner, after
all.