THE ISLE OF PINES
For many years there lived near the
town of Gallipolis, Ohio, an old man named Herman
Deluse. Very little was known of his history,
for he would neither speak of it himself nor suffer
others. It was a common belief among his neighbors
that he had been a pirate—if upon any better
evidence than his collection of boarding pikes, cutlasses,
and ancient flintlock pistols, no one knew. He
lived entirely alone in a small house of four rooms,
falling rapidly into decay and never repaired further
than was required by the weather. It stood on
a slight elevation in the midst of a large, stony field
overgrown with brambles, and cultivated in patches
and only in the most primitive way. It was his
only visible property, but could hardly have yielded
him a living, simple and few as were his wants.
He seemed always to have ready money, and paid cash
for all his purchases at the village stores roundabout,
seldom buying more than two or three times at the
same place until after the lapse of a considerable
time. He got no commendation, however, for this
equitable distribution of his patronage; people were
disposed to regard it as an ineffectual attempt to
conceal his possession of so much money. That
he had great hoards of ill-gotten gold buried somewhere
about his tumble-down dwelling was not reasonably to
be doubted by any honest soul conversant with the
facts of local tradition and gifted with a sense of
the fitness of things.
On the 9th of November, 1867, the
old man died; at least his dead body was discovered
on the 10th, and physicians testified that death had
occurred about twenty-four hours previously—precisely
how, they were unable to say; for the post-mortem
examination showed every organ to be absolutely healthy,
with no indication of disorder or violence.
According to them, death must have taken place about
noonday, yet the body was found in bed. The verdict
of the coroner’s jury was that he “came
to his death by a visitation of God.”
The body was buried and the public administrator took
charge of the estate.
A rigorous search disclosed nothing
more than was already known about the dead man, and
much patient excavation here and there about the premises
by thoughtful and thrifty neighbors went unrewarded.
The administrator locked up the house against the time
when the property, real and personal, should be sold
by law with a view to defraying, partly, the expenses
of the sale.
The night of November 20 was boisterous.
A furious gale stormed across the country, scourging
it with desolating drifts of sleet. Great trees
were torn from the earth and hurled across the roads.
So wild a night had never been known in all that region,
but toward morning the storm had blown itself out
of breath and day dawned bright and clear. At
about eight o’clock that morning the Rev. Henry
Galbraith, a well-known and highly esteemed Lutheran
minister, arrived on foot at his house, a mile and
a half from the Deluse place. Mr. Galbraith
had been for a month in Cincinnati. He had come
up the river in a steamboat, and landing at Gallipolis
the previous evening had immediately obtained a horse
and buggy and set out for home. The violence
of the storm had delayed him over night, and in the
morning the fallen trees had compelled him to abandon
his conveyance and continue his journey afoot.
“But where did you pass the
night?” inquired his wife, after he had briefly
related his adventure.
“With old Deluse at the ‘Isle
of Pines,’” {1} was the laughing reply;
“and a glum enough time I had of it. He
made no objection to my remaining, but not a word
could I get out of him.”
Fortunately for the interests of truth
there was present at this conversation Mr. Robert
Mosely Maren, a lawyer and litterateur of Columbus,
the same who wrote the delightful “Mellowcraft
Papers.” Noting, but apparently not sharing,
the astonishment caused by Mr. Galbraith’s answer
this ready-witted person checked by a gesture the
exclamations that would naturally have followed, and
tranquilly inquired: “How came you to
go in there?”
This is Mr. Maren’s version of Mr. Galbraith’s
reply:
“I saw a light moving about
the house, and being nearly blinded by the sleet,
and half frozen besides, drove in at the gate and put
up my horse in the old rail stable, where it is now.
I then rapped at the door, and getting no invitation
went in without one. The room was dark, but
having matches I found a candle and lit it. I
tried to enter the adjoining room, but the door was
fast, and although I heard the old man’s heavy
footsteps in there he made no response to my calls.
There was no fire on the hearth, so I made one and
laying [sic] down before it with my overcoat under
my head, prepared myself for sleep. Pretty soon
the door that I had tried silently opened and the
old man came in, carrying a candle. I spoke to
him pleasantly, apologizing for my intrusion, but
he took no notice of me. He seemed to be searching
for something, though his eyes were unmoved in their
sockets. I wonder if he ever walks in his sleep.
He took a circuit a part of the way round the room,
and went out the same way he had come in. Twice
more before I slept he came back into the room, acting
precisely the same way, and departing as at first.
In the intervals I heard him tramping all over the
house, his footsteps distinctly audible in the pauses
of the storm. When I woke in the morning he
had already gone out.”
Mr. Maren attempted some further questioning,
but was unable longer to restrain the family’s
tongues; the story of Deluse’s death and burial
came out, greatly to the good minister’s astonishment.
“The explanation of your adventure
is very simple,” said Mr. Maren. “I
don’t believe old Deluse walks in his sleep—not
in his present one; but you evidently dream in yours.”
And to this view of the matter Mr.
Galbraith was compelled reluctantly to assent.
Nevertheless, a late hour of the next
night found these two gentlemen, accompanied by a
son of the minister, in the road in front of the old
Deluse house. There was a light inside; it appeared
now at one window and now at another. The three
men advanced to the door. Just as they reached
it there came from the interior a confusion of the
most appalling sounds—the clash of weapons,
steel against steel, sharp explosions as of firearms,
shrieks of women, groans and the curses of men in combat!
The investigators stood a moment, irresolute, frightened.
Then Mr. Galbraith tried the door. It was fast.
But the minister was a man of courage, a man, moreover,
of Herculean strength. He retired a pace or
two and rushed against the door, striking it with his
right shoulder and bursting it from the frame with
a loud crash. In a moment the three were inside.
Darkness and silence! The only sound was the
beating of their hearts.
Mr. Maren had provided himself with
matches and a candle. With some difficulty,
begotten of his excitement, he made a light, and they
proceeded to explore the place, passing from room to
room. Everything was in orderly arrangement,
as it had been left by the sheriff; nothing had been
disturbed. A light coating of dust was everywhere.
A back door was partly open, as if by neglect, and
their first thought was that the authors of the awful
revelry might have escaped. The door was opened,
and the light of the candle shone through upon the
ground. The expiring effort of the previous
night’s storm had been a light fall of snow;
there were no footprints; the white surface was unbroken.
They closed the door and entered the last room of
the four that the house contained—that
farthest from the road, in an angle of the building.
Here the candle in Mr. Maren’s hand was suddenly
extinguished as by a draught of air. Almost
immediately followed the sound of a heavy fall.
When the candle had been hastily relighted young Mr.
Galbraith was seen prostrate on the floor at a little
distance from the others. He was dead.
In one hand the body grasped a heavy sack of coins,
which later examination showed to be all of old Spanish
mintage. Directly over the body as it lay, a
board had been torn from its fastenings in the wall,
and from the cavity so disclosed it was evident that
the bag had been taken.
Another inquest was held: another
post-mortem examination failed to reveal a probable
cause of death. Another verdict of “the
visitation of God” left all at liberty to form
their own conclusions. Mr. Maren contended that
the young man died of excitement.