The excitement in the little town
of S——, when Jacob returned from
Boston, and told his singular story, may well be imagined.
The whole community was in a buzz.
It was found that Mrs. Allen had so
arranged matters, as to get all the servants away
from the house, on one pretence or another, for that
night, except an old negro woman, famous for her good
sleeping qualities; and she was in the land of forgetfulness
long before the hour appointed for flight.
Many conjectures were made, and one
or two rather philanthropic individuals proposed,
as a common duty, an attempt to arrest the fugitives
and bring them back. But there were none to second
this, the general sentiment being, that Captain Allen
was fully competent to look after his own affairs.
And that he wood look after them, and promptly too,
on his return, none doubted for an instant. As
for Jacob Perkins, no one professed a willingness
to stand in his shoes. The fire-eating Captain
would most probably blow that gentleman’s brains
out in the heat of his first excitement. Poor
Jacob, not a very courageous man, was almost beside
himself with fear, when his view of the case was confidently
asserted. One advised this course of conduct
on the part of Jacob, and another advised that, while
all agreed that it would on no account be safe for
him to fall in the Captain’s way immediately
on his return. More than a dozen people, friends
of Jacob, were on the alert, to give him the earliest
intelligence of Captain Allen’s arrival in S——,
that he might hide himself until the first fearful
outbreak of passion was over.
Well, in about two weeks the Captain
returned with his little son. Expectation was
on tip-toe. People’s hearts beat in their
mouths. There were some who would not have been
surprised at any startling occurrence; an apparition
of the scarred sea-dog, rushing along the streets,
slashing his sword about like a madman, would have
seemed to them nothing extraordinary, under the circumstances.
But expectation stood so long on tip-toe
that it grew tired, and came down a few inches.
Nothing occurred to arouse the quiet inhabitants.
Captain Allen was seen to enter his dwelling about
two o’clock in the afternoon, and although not
less than twenty sharp pairs of eyes were turned in
that direction, and never abated their vigilance until
night drew down her curtains, no one got even a glimpse
of his person.
Jacob Perkins left the town, and took
refuge with a neighbor living two miles away, on the
first intimation of the Captain’s return.
The next day passed, but no one saw
the Captain. On the third day a member of the
inquisitorial committee, who had his house under constant
observation, saw him drive out with his son, and take
the road that went direct to the neighborhood where
Jacob Perkins lay concealed in the house of a friend.
Poor Jacob! None doubted but
the hour of retribution for him was at hand.
That he might have timely warning, if possible, a lad
was sent out on a fleet horse, who managed to go by
Captain Allen’s chaise on the road. Pale
with affright, the unhappy fugitive hid himself under
a hay rick, and remained there for an hour. But
the Captain passed through without pause or inquiry,
and in due course of time returned to his home, having
committed no act in the least degree notable.
And so, as if nothing unusual had
happened, he was seen, day after day, going about
as of old, with not a sign of change in his deportment
that any one could read. In a week, Jacob Perkins
returned to his home, fully assured that no harm was
likely to visit him.
No event touching Captain Allen or
his family, worthy of record, transpired for several
years. The only servants in the house were negro
slaves, brought from a distance, and kept as much as
possible away from others of their class in town.
Among these, the boy, John, grew up. When he
was ten years old, Jacob Perkins, though in some fear,
performed the sacred duty promised to his mother on
that memorable morning, when he looked upon her pale,
statuesque countenance for the last time. A flush
covered the boy’s face, as he received the locket,
and understood from whence it came. He stood
for some minutes, wholly abstracted, as if under the
spell of some vivid memory.
Tears at length filled his eyes, and
glistened on the long fringed lashes. Then there
was a single, half-repressed sob—and then,
grasping the locket tightly in his hand, he turned
from Jacob, and, without a word, walked hastily away.
When the boy was sixteen, Captain
Allen took him to sea. From that period for n
any years, both of them were absent for at least two-thirds
of the time. At twenty-five, John took command
of a large merchant-man, trading to the South American
coast, and his father, now worn down by hard service,
as well as by years, retired to his home in S——,
to close up there, in such repose of mind as he could
gain, the last days of his eventful life. He died
soon after by apoplexy.
Prior to this event, his son, the
younger Captain Allen, had brought home from Cuba
a Spanish woman, who took the name of his wife.
Of her family, or antecedents, no one in our town
knew anything; and it was questioned by many whether
any rite of marriage had ever been celebrated between
them. Of this, however, nothing certain was known.
None of the best people, so called, in S——paid
her the hospitable compliment of a visit; and she
showed no disposition to intrude herself upon them.
And so they stood towards each other as strangers;
and the Allen house remained, as from the beginning,
to most people a terra incognita.
Neither Captain Allen nor his Spanish
consort, to whom no children were born, as they advanced
in years, “grew old gracefully.” Both
had repulsive features, which were strongly marked
by passion and sensuality. During the last two
years of his life I was frequently called to see him,
and prescribe for his enemy, the gout, by which he
was sorely afflicted. Mrs. Allen also required
treatment. Her nervous system was disordered;
and, on closer observation, I detected signs of a
vagrant imagination, leading her away into states
verging upon insanity. She was fretful and ill-tempered;
and rarely spoke to the Captain except complainingly,
or in anger. The visits I made to the Allen house,
during the lifetime of Captain Allen, were among the
most unsatisfactory of all my professional calls.
I think, from signs which met my eyes, that something
more than bitter words passed occasionally between
the ill-matched couple.
Late in the day, nearly five years
anterior to the time of which I am now writing, I
was summoned in haste to visit Captain Allen.
I found him lying on a bed in the north-west chamber,
where he usually slept, in a state of insensibility.
Mrs. Allen received me at the door of the chamber
with a frightened countenance. On inquiry as to
the cause of his condition, she informed me that he
had gone to his own room about an hour before, a little
the worse for a bottle of wine; and that she had heard
nothing more from him, until she was startled by a
loud, jarring noise in his chamber. On running
up stairs, she found him lying upon the floor, insensible.
I looked at her steadily, as she gave
me this relation, but could not hold her eyes in mine.
She seemed more uneasy than troubled. There was
a contused wound just below the right temple, which
covered, with its livid stain, a portion of the cheek.
A cursory examination satisfied me that, whatever
might be the cause of his fall, congestion of the
brain had occurred, and that but few chances for life
remained. So I informed Mrs. Allen. At the
words, I could see a shudder run through her frame,
and an expression of something like terror sweep over
her face.
“His father died of apoplexy,”
said she in a hoarse whisper, looking at me with a
side-long, almost stealthy glance, not full and open-eyed.
“This is something more than
apoplexy,” I remarked; still observing her closely.
“The fall may have injured him,” she suggested.
“The blow on his temple has done the fearful
work,” said I.
There was a perceptible start, and
another look of fear-almost terror.
“For heaven’s sake, doctor,”
she said, rousing herself, and speaking half imperatively,
“do something! Don’t stand speculating
about the cause; but do something if you have any
skill.”
Thus prompted, I set myself to work,
in good earnest, with my patient. The result
was in no way flattering to my skill, for he passed
to his account in less than an hour, dying without
a sign.
I shall never forget the wild screams
which rang awfully through the old mansion, when it
was announced to Mrs. Allen that the Captain was dead.
She flung herself upon his body, tore her hair, and
committed other extravagances. All the slumbering
passions of her undisciplined nature seemed quickened
into sudden life, overmastering her in their strong
excitement. So it would have seemed to a less
suspicious observer; but I thought that I could detect
the overacting of pretence. I may have done her
wrong; but the impression still remains. At the
funeral, this extravagant role of grief was re-enacted,
and the impression was left on many minds that she
was half mad with grief.
Occasionally, after this event, I
was summoned to the Allen House to see its unhappy
mistress. I say unhappy, for no human being ever
had a face written all over with the characters you
might read in hers, that was not miserable. I
used to study it, sometimes, to see if I could get
anything like a true revelation of her inner life.
The sudden lighting up of her countenance at times,
as you observed its rapidly varying expression, made
you almost shudder, for the gleam which shot across
it looked like a reflection from hell. I know
no other word to express what I mean. Remorse,
at times, I could plainly read.
One thing I soon noticed; the room
in which Captain Allen died—the north-west
chamber before mentioned—remained shut up;
and an old servant told me, years afterwards, that
Mrs. Allen had never been inside of it since the fatal
day on which I attended him in his last moments.
At the time when this story opens
the old lady was verging on to sixty. The five
years which had passed since she was left alone had
bent her form considerably, and the diseased state
of mind which I noticed when first called in to visit
the family as a physician, was now but a little way
removed from insanity. She was haunted by many
strange hallucinations; and the old servant above alluded
to, informed me, that she was required to sleep in
the room with her mistress, as she never would be
alone after dark. Often, through the night, she
would start up in terror, her diseased imagination
building up terrible phantoms in the land of dreams,
alarming the house with her cries.
I rarely visited her that I did not
see new evidences of waning reason. In the beginning
I was fearful that she might do some violence to herself
or her servants, but her insanity began to assume
a less excitable form; and at last she sank into a
condition of torpor, both of mind and body, from which
I saw little prospect of her ever rising.
“It is well,” I said to
myself. “Life had better wane slowly away
than to go out in lurid gleams like the flashes of
a dying volcano.”