The morning which broke after that
night of storm was serene and beautiful. The
air had a crystal clearness, and as you looked away
up into the cloudless azure, it seemed as if the eye
could penetrate to an immeasurable distance.
The act of breathing was a luxury. You drew in
draught after draught of the rich air, feeling, with
every inhalation, that a new vitality was absorbed
through the lungs, giving to the heart a nobler beat,
and to the brain a fresh activity. With what
a different feeling did I take up my round of duties
for the day! Yesterday I went creeping forth like
a reluctant school boy; to-day, with an uplifted countenance
and a willing step.
Having a few near calls to make, I
did not order my horse, as both health and inclination
were better served by walking. Soon after breakfast
I started out, and was going in the direction of Judge
Bigelow’s office, when, hearing a step behind
me that had in it a familiar sound, I turned to find
myself face to face with Henry Wallingford! He
could hardly have failed to see the look of surprise
in my face.
“Good morning, Henry,”
I said, giving him my hand, and trying to speak with
that cheerful interest in the young man which I had
always endeavored to show.
He smiled in his usual quiet way as
he took my hand and said in return,
“Good-morning, Doctor.”
“You were not out, I believe,
yesterday,” I remarked, as we moved on together.
“I didn’t feel very well,”
he answered, in a voice pitched to a lower key than
usual; “and, the day being a stormy one, I shut
myself up at home.”
“Ah,” said I, in a cheerful
way, “you lawyers have the advantage of us knights
of the pill box and lancet. Rain or shine, sick
or well, we must travel round our parish.”
“All have their share of the
good as well as the evil things of life,” he
replied, a little soberly. “Doctors and
lawyers included.”
I did not observe any marked change
in the young man, except that he was paler, and had
a different look out of his eyes from any that I had
hitherto noticed; a more matured look, which not only
indicated deeper feeling, but gave signs of will and
endurance. I carried that new expression away
with me as we parted at the door of his office, and
studied it as a new revelation of the man. It
was very certain that profounder depths had been opened
in his nature—opened to his own consciousness—than
had ever seen the light before. That he was more
a man than he had ever been, and more worthy to be
mated with a true woman. Up to this time I had
thought of him more as a boy than as a man, for the
years had glided by so quietly that bore him onward
with the rest, that he had not arisen in my thought
to the full mental stature which the word manhood
includes.
“Ah,” said I, as I walked
on, “what a mistake in Delia Floyd! She
is just as capable of high development as a woman
as he is as a man. How admirably would they have
mated. In him, self-reliance, reason, judgment,
and deep feeling would have found in her all the qualities
they seek—taste, perception, tenderness
and love. They would have grown upwards into
higher ideas of life, not downwards into sensualism
and mere worldliness, like the many. Alas!
This mistake on her part may ruin them both; for a
man of deep, reserved feelings, who suffers a disappointment
in love, is often warped in his appreciation of the
sex, and grows one-sided in his character as he advances
through the cycles of life.
I had parted from Henry only a few
minutes when I met his rival, Ralph Dewey. Let
me describe him. In person he was taller than
Wallingford, and had the easy, confident manner of
one who had seen the world, as we say. His face
was called handsome; but it was not a manly face—manly
in that best sense which includes character and thought.
The chin and mouth were feeble, and the forehead narrow,
throwing the small orbs close together. But he
had a fresh complexion, dark, sprightly eyes, and
a winning smile. His voice was not very good,
having in it a kind of unpleasant rattle; but he managed
it rather skillfully in conversation, and you soon,
ceased to notice the peculiarity.
Ralph lived in New York, where he
had recently been advanced to the position of fourth
partner in a dry goods jobbing house, with a small
percentage on the net profits. Judging from the
air with which he spoke of his firm’s operations,
and his relation to the business, you might have inferred
that he was senior instead of junior partner, and
that the whole weight of the concern rested on his
shoulders.
Judge Bigelow, a solid man, and from
professional habit skilled in reading character, was,
singularly enough, quite carried away with his smart
nephew, and really believed his report of himself.
Prospectively, he saw him a merchant prince, surrounded
by palatial splendors.
Our acquaintance was as yet but slight,
so we only nodded in passing. As we were in the
neighborhood of Squire Floyd’s pleasant cottage,
I was naturally curious, under the circumstances, to
see whether the young man was going to make a visit
at so early an hour; and I managed to keep long enough
in sight to have this matter determined. Ralph
called at the Squire’s, and I saw him admitted.
So I shook my head disapprovingly, and kept on my
way.
Not until late in the afternoon did
I find occasion to go into that part of the town where
the old Allen house was located, though the image
of its gleaming north-west windows was frequently in
my thought. The surprise occasioned by that incident
was in no way lessened on seeing a carriage drive
in through the gateway, and two ladies alight therefrom
and enter the house. Both were in mourning.
I did not see their faces; but, judging from the dress
and figure of each, it was evident that one was past
the meridian of life, and the other young. Still
more to my surprise, the carriage was not built after
our New England fashion, but looked heavy, and of a
somewhat ancient date. It was large and high,
with a single seat for the driver perched away up
in the air, and a footman’s stand and hangings
behind. There was, moreover, a footman in attendance,
who sprung to his place after the ladies had alighted,
and rode off to the stables.
“Am I dreaming?” said
I to myself, as I kept on my way, after witnessing
this new incident in the series of strange events that
were half-bewildering me. But it was in vain that
I rubbed my eyes; I could not wake up to a different
reality.
It was late when I got home from my
round of calls, and found tea awaiting my arrival.
“Any one been here?” I asked—my
usual question.
“No one.’ The answer
pleased me for I had many things on my mind, and I
wished to have a good long evening with my wife.
Baby Mary and Louis were asleep: but we had the
sweet, gentle face of Agnes, our first born, to brighten
the meal-time. After she was in dream-land, guarded
by the loving angels who watch with children in sleep,
and Constance was through with her household cares
for the evening, I came into the sitting-room from
my office, and taking the large rocking-chair, leaned
my head back, mind and body enjoying a sense of rest
and comfort.
“You are not the only one,”
said my wife, looking up from the basket of work through
which she had been searching for some article, “who
noticed lights in the Allen House last evening.”
“Who else saw them?” I asked.
“Mrs. Dean says she heard two
or three people say that the house was lit up all
over—a perfect illumination.”
“Stories lose nothing in being
re-told. The illumination was confined to the
room in which Captain Allen died. I am witness
to that. But I have something more for your ears.
This afternoon, as I rode past, I saw an old-fashioned
English coach, with a liveried driver and footman,
turn into the gate. From this two ladies alighted
and went into the house; when the coach was driven
to the stables. Now, what do you think of that?”
“We are to have a romance enacted
in our very midst, it would seem,” replied my
wife, in her unimpassioned way. “Other eyes
have seen this also, and the strange fact is buzzing
through the town. I was only waiting until we
were alone to tell you that these two ladies whom
you saw, arrived at the Allen House in their carriage
near about daylight, on the day before yesterday.
But no one knows who they are, or from whence they
came. It is said that they made themselves as
completely at home as if they were in their own house;
selected the north-west chamber as their sleeping apartment;
and ordered the old servants about with an air of
authority that subdued them to obedience.”
“But what of Mrs. Allen?”
I asked, in astonishment at all this.
“The stories about her reception
of the strangers do not agree. According to one,
the old lady was all resistance and indignation at
this intrusion; according to another, she gave way,
passively, as if she were no longer sole mistress
of the house.”
Constance ceased speaking, for there
came the usual interruption to our evening tete-a-tete—the
ringing of my office bell.
“You are wanted up at the Allen
House, Doctor, said my boy, coming in from the office
a few moments afterwards.
“Who is sick?” I asked.
“The old lady.”
“Any thing serious?”
“I don’t know, sir.
But I should think there was from the way old Aunty
looked. She says, come up as quickly as you can.”
“Is she in the office?”
“No, sir. She just said that, and then
went out in a hurry.”
“The plot thickens,” said I, looking at
Constance.
“Poor old lady!” There was a shade of
pity in her tones.
“You have not seen her for many years?”
“No.”
“Poor old witch of Endor! were better said.”
“Oh!” answered my wife,
smiling, “you know that the painter’s idea
of this celebrated individual has been reversed by
some, who affirm that she was young and handsome instead
of old and ugly like modern witches.”
“I don’t know how that
may be, but if you could see Mrs. Allen, you would
say that ‘hag’ were a better term for her
than woman. If the good grow beautiful as they
grow old, the loving spirit shining like a lamp through
the wasted and failing walls of flesh, so do the evil
grow ugly and repulsive. Ah, Constance, the lesson
is for all of us. If we live true lives, our
countenances will grow radiant from within, as we
advance in years; if selfish, worldly, discontented
lives, they will grow cold, hard, and repulsive.”
I drew on my boots and coat, and started
on my visit to the Allen House. The night was
in perfect contrast with the previous one. There
was no moon, but every star shone with its highest
brilliancy, while the galaxy threw its white scarf
gracefully across the sky, veiling millions of suns
in their own excessive brightness. I paused several
times in my walk, as broader expanses opened between
the great elms that gave to our town a sylvan beauty,
and repeated, with a rapt feeling of awe and admiration,
the opening stanza of a familiar hymn:—
“The spacious firmament on high,
With all the blue ethereal sky,
And spangled heavens, a shining frame,
Their great Original proclaim.”
How the beauty and grandeur of nature
move the heart, as if it recognized something of its
own in every changing aspect. The sun and moon
and stars—the grand old mountains lifting
themselves upwards into serene heights—the
limitless expanse of ocean, girdling the whole earth—rivers,
valleys, and plains—trees, flowers, the
infinite forms of life—to all the soul gives
some response, as if they were akin.
I half forgot my interest in old Mrs.
Allen, as my heart beat responsive to the pulsings
of nature, and my thoughts flew upwards and away as
on the wings of eagles. But my faithful feet had
borne me steadily onwards, and I was at the gate opening
to the grounds of the Allen House, before I was conscious
of having passed over half the distance that lay between
that and my home. I looked up, and saw a light
in the north-west chamber, but the curtains were down.
On entering the house, I was shown
by the servant who admitted me, into the small office
or reception room opening from the hall. I had
scarcely seated myself, when a tall woman, dressed
in black, came in, and said, with a graceful, but
rather stately manner—
“The Doctor, I believe?”
How familiar the voice sounded!
And yet I did not recognise it as the voice of any
one whom I had known, but rather as a voice heard
in dreams. Nor was the calm, dignified countenance
on which my eyes rested, strange in every lineament.
The lady was, to all appearance, somewhere in the
neighborhood of sixty, and, for an elderly lady, handsome.
I thought of my remark to Constance about the beauty
and deformity of age, and said to myself, “Here
is one who has not lived in vain.”
I arose as she spoke, and answered in the affirmative.
“You have come too late,”
she said, with a touch of feeling in her voice.
“Not dead?” I ejaculated.
“Yes, dead. Will you walk up stairs and
see her?”
I followed in silence, ascending to
the chamber which had been occupied by Mrs. Allen
since the old Captain’s death. It was true
as she had said; a ghastly corpse was before me.
I use the word ghastly, for it fully expresses the
ugliness of that lifeless face, withered, marred,
almost shorn of every true aspect of humanity.
I laid my hand upon her—the skin was cold.
I felt for her pulse, but there was no sign of motion
in the arteries.
“It is over,” I said,
lifting myself from my brief examination, “and
may God have mercy upon her soul!” The last part
of the sentence was involuntary.
“Amen!”
I felt that this response was no idle ejaculation.
“How was she affected?”
I asked. “Has she been sick for any time?
Or did life go out suddenly?”
“It went out suddenly,”
replied the lady—“as suddenly as a
lamp in the wind.”
“Was she excited from any cause?”
“She has been in an excited
state ever since our arrival, although every thing
that lay in our power has been done to quiet her mind
and give it confidence and repose.”
She spoke calmly, as one, who held
a controlling position there, and of right. I
looked into her serene face, almost classic in its
outlines, with an expression of blended inquiry and
surprise, that it was evident did not escape her observation,
although she offered no explanation in regard to herself.
I turned again to the corpse, and
examined it with some care. There was nothing
in its appearance that gave me any clue to the cause
which had produced this sudden extinguishment of life.
“In what way was she excited?”
I asked, looking at the stranger as I stepped back
from the couch on which the dead body was lying.
She returned my steady gaze, without
answering, for some moments. Either my tone or
manner affected her unpleasantly, for I saw her brows
contract slightly, her full lips close upon themselves,
and her eyes acquire an intenser look.
“You have been her physician,
I believe?” There was no sign of feeling in
the steady voice which made the inquiry.
“Yes.”
“I need not, in that
case, describe to you her unhappy state of mind. I
need not tell you that an evil will had the mastery
over her understanding, and that, in the fierce struggle
of evil passion with evil passion, mind and body had
lost their right adjustment.”
“I know all this,” said
I. “Still, madam, in view of my professional
duty, I must repeat my question, and urge upon you
the propriety of an undisguised answer. In what
way was she excited? and what was the cause leading
to an excitement which has ended thus fatally?”
“I am not in the habit of putting
on disguises,” she answered, with a quiet dignity
that really looked beautiful.
“I pray you, madam, not to misunderstand
me,” said I. “As a physician, I must
report the cause of all deaths in the range of my
practice. If I were not to do so in this case,
a permit for burial would not be issued until a regular
inquest was held by the Coroner.”
“Ah, I see,” she replied,
yet with an air of indecision. “You are
perfectly right, Doctor, and we must answer to your
satisfaction. But let us retire from this chamber.”
She led the way down stairs.
As we passed the memorable north-west room, she pushed
the door open, and said,
“Blanche, dear, I wish to see
you. Come down to the parlor.”
I heard faintly the answer, in a very
musical voice. We had scarcely entered the parlor,
when the lady said—
“My daughter, Doctor.”
A vision of beauty and innocence met
my gaze. A young girl, not over seventeen, tall
like her mother, very fair, with a face just subdued
into something of womanly seriousness, stood in the
door, as I turned at mention of her presence.
A single lamp gave its feeble light
to the room, only half subduing the shadows that went
creeping into corners and recesses. Something
of a weird aspect was on every thing; and I could not
but gaze at the two strangers in that strange place
to them, under such peculiar circumstances, and wonder
to see them so calm, dignified, and self-possessed.
We sat down by the table on which the lamp was standing,
the elder of the two opposite, and the younger a little
turned away, so that her features were nearly concealed.
“Blanche,” said the former,
“the Doctor wishes to know the particular incidents
connected with the death of Mrs. Allen.”
I thought there was an uneasy movement
on the part of the girl. She did not reply.
There was a pause.
“The facts are simply these,
Doctor,” and the mother looked me steadily in
the face, which stood out clear, as the lamp shone
full on every feature. “From the moment
of our arrival, Mrs. Allen has seemed like one possessed
of an evil Spirit. How she conducted herself
before, is known to me only as reported by the servants.
From the little they have communicated, I infer that
for some time past she has not been ii her right mind.
How is it? You must know as to her sanity or
insanity.”
“She has not, in my opinion,
been a truly sane woman for years,” was my answer.
“As I just said,” she
continued, “she has seemed like one possessed
of an evil spirit. In no way could we soften or
conciliate her. Her conduct resembled more nearly
that of some fierce wild beast whose den was invaded,
than that of a human being. She would hold no
friendly intercourse with us, and if we met at any
time, or in any part of the house, she would fix her
keen black eyes upon us, with an expression that sent
a shudder to the heart. My daughter scarcely
dared venture from her room. She so dreaded to
meet her. Twice, as she flew past me, in her
restless wanderings over the house, muttering to herself,
I heard her say, as she struck her clenched hand in
the air, ‘I can do it again, and I will!’”
A cold chill crept over me, for I
remembered the death of Captain Allen; and this was
like a confirmation of what I had feared as to foul
play.
“There is no trusting one wholly
or even partially insane. So we were always on
our guard. Not once, but many times during the
few nights we have spent here, have we heard the door
of our chamber tried after midnight. It was plain
to us that it was not safe to live in this way, and
so we had come to the reluctant conclusion that personal
restraint must be secured. The question as to
how this could best be done we had not yet decided,
when death unraveled the difficulty.”
The speaker ceased at this part of
her narrative, and lifting from the table a small
bell, rung it. A maid entered. I had never
seen her before.
“Tell Jackson that I want him.”
The girl curtsied respectfully, and withdrew.
Nothing more was said, until a man,
whom I recognized at a glance to be a regularly trained
English servant, presented himself.
“Jackson,” said the lady,
“I wish you to relate exactly, what occurred
just previously to, and at the time of Mrs. Allen’s
death.”
The man looked bewildered for a moment
or two; but soon recovering himself, answered without
hesitation.
“Hit ‘appened just in
this way, ma’am. I was a comin’ hup
stairs, when I met the hold lady a tearin’ down
like a mad cat. She looked kind o’ awful.
I never saw anybody out of an ’ospital look that
way in all my life before. She ’eld an
hiron poker in ’er ’and. As my young
lady—” and he looked towards Blanche—”
was in the ’all, I didn’t think it safe
for ’er if I let the hold woman go down.
So I just stood in ’er way, and put my harms
across the stairs so”—stretching
his arms out. “My! but ’ow she did
fire up! She stood almost a minute, and then
sprung on me as if she was a tiger. But I was
the strongest, and ’olding ’er in my harms
like as I would a mad kitten, I carried ’er
hup to ’er room, put ’er hin, and shut
the door. My young lady saw it hall, for she followed
right hup after me.”
He looked towards Blanche.
“Just as it occurred,” she said, in a
low, sweet fluttering voice.
“I heard the strife,”
said her mother, “and ran up to see what was
the matter. I reached the door of Mrs. Allen’s
room just as Jackson thrust her in. He did not
use any more violence than was needed in a case of
such sudden emergency. He is strong, and held
her so tightly that she could not even struggle.
One wild, fierce scream rent the air, as he shut the
door, and then all was silent as death. I went
in to her instantly. She was on the floor in a
convulsion. You were sent for immediately; but
it was too late for human intervention. Jackson,
you can go.”
The man bowed with an air of deferential respect,
and retired.
“Now, sir,” she added,
turning to me, “you have the facts as they occurred.
I have no wish to give them publicity, for they are
family matters, and these are always in their degree,
sacred. If, however, you think it your duty as
a physician, to make the matter one of official investigation,
I can have nothing to say.”
I thought for some minutes before
answering. The story, as related by the servant,
I fully credited.
“Let me see the body again,”
said I, coming at length to a conclusion.
We went up stairs, all three together;
but only two of us entered the chamber of death.
As we neared the door, Blanche caught at her mother’s
arm, and I heard her say, in a whisper:
“Dear mamma! spare me that sight
again. It is too horrible!”
“The presence of your daughter
is not needed,” said I, interposing. “Let
her retire to her own room.”
“Thank you!” There was
a grateful expression in her voice, as she uttered
these brief words, and then went back, while we passed
in to the apartment where the dead woman was still
lying.
As I looked upon her face again, it
seemed even more ghastly than before; and I could
hardly repress a shudder. My companion held a
lamp; while I made as careful an examination as was
possible under the circumstances. I did not expect
to find any marks of violence, though I searched for
them about her head, neck, and chest. But, under
the circumstances, I felt it to be my duty to know,
from actual search, that no such signs existed.
In every aspect presented by the corpse, there was
a corroboration of the story related by the serving
man. It was plain, that in a fit of half insane,
uncontrollable passion, the nice adjustment of physical
forces had been lost.
“I am fully satisfied, madam,”
said I, at length, turning from my unpleasant task.
She let her calm, earnest eyes dwell
on mine for a few moments, and then answered, with
a softened tone, in which there was just a perceptible
thrill of feeling—
“If I were a believer in omens,
I should take this sad incident, following so quickly
on our removal to a new country and a new home, as
foreshadowing evil to me or mine. But I do not
so read external events.”
“Between a life like hers, and
a life like yours, madam, there can be no possible
nearness; nor any relation between your spiritual
affinities and hers. The antipodes are not farther
apart,” said I, in return; “therefore,
nothing that has befallen her can be ominous as to
you.”
“I trust not,” she gravely
answered, as we left the room together.
To my inquiry if I could serve her
in any way, in the present matter, she simply requested
me to send a respectable undertaker, who would perform
what was fitting in the last rites due to the dead.
I promised, and retired.