So ends the story of the strange and
evil experiments of the Invisible Man. And if
you would learn more of him you must go to a little
inn near Port Stowe and talk to the landlord.
The sign of the inn is an empty board save for a hat
and boots, and the name is the title of this story.
The landlord is a short and corpulent little man with
a nose of cylindrical proportions, wiry hair, and a
sporadic rosiness of visage. Drink generously,
and he will tell you generously of all the things
that happened to him after that time, and of how the
lawyers tried to do him out of the treasure found
upon him.
“When they found they couldn’t
prove who’s money was which, I’m blessed,”
he says, “if they didn’t try to make me
out a blooming treasure trove! Do I look
like a Treasure Trove? And then a gentleman gave
me a guinea a night to tell the story at the Empire
Music ’All—just to tell ’em
in my own words—barring one.”
And if you want to cut off the flow
of his reminiscences abruptly, you can always do so
by asking if there weren’t three manuscript
books in the story. He admits there were and proceeds
to explain, with asseverations that everybody thinks
he has ’em! But bless you! he hasn’t.
“The Invisible Man it was took ’em off
to hide ’em when I cut and ran for Port Stowe.
It’s that Mr. Kemp put people on with the idea
of my having ’em.”
And then he subsides into a pensive
state, watches you furtively, bustles nervously with
glasses, and presently leaves the bar.
He is a bachelor man—his
tastes were ever bachelor, and there are no women
folk in the house. Outwardly he buttons—it
is expected of him—but in his more vital
privacies, in the matter of braces for example, he
still turns to string. He conducts his house
without enterprise, but with eminent decorum.
His movements are slow, and he is a great thinker.
But he has a reputation for wisdom and for a respectable
parsimony in the village, and his knowledge of the
roads of the South of England would beat Cobbett.
And on Sunday mornings, every Sunday
morning, all the year round, while he is closed to
the outer world, and every night after ten, he goes
into his bar parlour, bearing a glass of gin faintly
tinged with water, and having placed this down, he
locks the door and examines the blinds, and even looks
under the table. And then, being satisfied of
his solitude, he unlocks the cupboard and a box in
the cupboard and a drawer in that box, and produces
three volumes bound in brown leather, and places them
solemnly in the middle of the table. The covers
are weather-worn and tinged with an algal green—for
once they sojourned in a ditch and some of the pages
have been washed blank by dirty water. The landlord
sits down in an armchair, fills a long clay pipe slowly—gloating
over the books the while. Then he pulls one towards
him and opens it, and begins to study it—turning
over the leaves backwards and forwards.
His brows are knit and his lips move
painfully. “Hex, little two up in the air,
cross and a fiddle-de-dee. Lord! what a one he
was for intellect!”
Presently he relaxes and leans back,
and blinks through his smoke across the room at things
invisible to other eyes. “Full of secrets,”
he says. “Wonderful secrets!”
“Once I get the haul of them—Lord!”
“I wouldn’t do what he
did; I’d just—well!” He pulls
at his pipe.
So he lapses into a dream, the undying
wonderful dream of his life. And though Kemp
has fished unceasingly, no human being save the landlord
knows those books are there, with the subtle secret
of invisibility and a dozen other strange secrets
written therein. And none other will know of
them until he dies.