AN UNFORTUNATE EPISODE IN THE LIFE OF NO. 5010
Number 5010 was at the time when I
received the details of this story from his lips a
stalwart man of thirty-eight, swart of hue, of pleasing
address, and altogether the last person one would take
for a convict serving a term for sneak-thieving.
The only outer symptoms of his actual condition were
the striped suit he wore, the style and cut of which
are still in vogue at Sing Sing prison, and the closely
cropped hair, which showed off the distinctly intellectual
lines of his head to great advantage. He was
engaged in making shoes when I first saw him, and so
impressed was I with the contrast between his really
refined features and grace of manner and those of
his brutish-looking companions, that I asked my guide
who he was, and what were the circumstances which had
brought him to Sing Sing.
[Illustration]
“He pegs shoes like a gentleman,” I said.
“Yes,” returned the keeper.
“He’s werry troublesome that way.
He thinks he’s too good for his position.
We can’t never do nothing with the boots he
makes.”
“Why do you keep him at work in the shoe department?”
I queried.
“We haven’t got no work
to be done in his special line, so we have to put
him at whatever we can. He pegs shoes less badly
than he does anything else.”
“What was his special line?”
“He was a gentleman of leisure
travellin’ for his health afore he got into
the toils o’ the law. His real name is Marmaduke
Fitztappington De Wolfe, of Pelhamhurst-by-the-Sea,
Warwickshire. He landed in this country of a
Tuesday, took to collectin’ souvenir spoons of
a Friday, was jugged the same day, tried, convicted,
and there he sets. In for two years more.”
“How interesting!” I said. “Was
the evidence against him conclusive?”
“Extremely. A half-dozen spoons was found
on his person.”
“He pleaded guilty, I suppose?”
“Not him. He claimed to
be as innocent as a new-born babe. Told a cock-and-bull
story about havin’ been deluded by spirits, but
the judge and jury wasn’t to be fooled.
They gave him every chance, too. He even cabled
himself, the judge did, to Pelhamhurst-by-the-Sea,
Warwickshire, at his own expense, to see if the man
was an impostor, but he never got no reply. There
was them as said there wasn’t no such place as
Pelhamhurst-by-the-Sea in Warwickshire, but they never
proved it.”
“I should like very much to interview him,”
said I.
“It can’t be done, sir,” said my
guide. “The rules is very strict.”
“You couldn’t—er—arrange
an interview for me,” I asked, jingling a bunch
of keys in my pocket.
He must have recognized the sound,
for he colored and gruffly replied, “I has me
orders, and I obeys ’em.”
“Just—er—add
this to the pension fund,” I put in, handing
him a five-dollar bill. “An interview is
impossible, eh?”
[Illustration]
“I didn’t say impossible,”
he answered, with a grateful smile. “I said
against the rules, but we has been known to make exceptions.
I think I can fix you up.”
Suffice it to say that he did “fix
me up,” and that two hours later 5010 and I
sat down together in the cell of the former, a not
too commodious stall, and had a pleasant chat, in
the course of which he told me the story of his life,
which, as I had surmised, was to me, at least, exceedingly
interesting, and easily worth twice the amount of my
contribution to the pension fund under the management
of my guide of the morning.
“My real name,” said the
unfortunate convict, “as you may already have
guessed, is not 5010. That is an alias forced
upon me by the State authorities. My name is
really Austin Merton Surrennes.”
“Ahem!” I said. “Then
my guide erred this morning when he told me that in
reality you were Marmaduke Fitztappington De Wolfe,
of Pelhamhurst-by-the-Sea, Warwickshire?”
Number 5010 laughed long and loud.
“Of course he erred. You don’t suppose
that I would give the authorities my real name, do
you? Why, man, I am a nephew! I have an
aged uncle—a rich millionaire uncle—whose
heart and will it would break were he to hear of my
present plight. Both the heart and will are in
my favor, hence my tender solicitude for him.
I am innocent, of course—convicts always
are, you know—but that wouldn’t make
any difference. He’d die of mortification
just the same. It’s one of our family traits,
that. So I gave a false name to the authorities,
and secretly informed my uncle that I was about to
set out for a walking trip across the great American
desert, requesting him not to worry if he did not
hear from me for a number of years, America being in
a state of semi-civilization, to which mails outside
of certain districts are entirely unknown. My
uncle being an Englishman and a conservative gentleman,
addicted more to reading than to travel, accepts the
information as veracious and suspects nothing, and
when I am liberated I shall return to him, and at
his death shall become a conservative man of wealth
myself. See?”
“But if you are innocent and
he rich and influential, why did you not appeal to
him to save you?” I asked.
“Because I was afraid that he,
like the rest of the world, would decline to believe
my defence,” sighed 5010. “It was
a good defence, if the judge had only known it, and
I’m proud of it.”
“But ineffectual,” I put in. “And
so, not good.”
“Alas, yes! This is an
incredulous age. People, particularly judges,
are hard-headed practical men of affairs. My
defence was suited more for an age of mystical tendencies.
Why, will you believe it, sir, my own lawyer, the
man to whom I paid eighteen dollars and seventy-five
cents for championing my cause, told me the defence
was rubbish, devoid even of literary merit. What
chance could a man have if his lawyer even didn’t
believe in him?”
“None,” I answered, sadly.
“And you had no chance at all, though innocent?”
“Yes, I had one, and I chose
not to take it. I might have proved myself non
compos mentis; but that involved my making a fool
of myself in public before a jury, and I have too
much dignity for that, I can tell you. I told
my lawyer that I should prefer a felon’s cell
to the richly furnished flat of a wealthy lunatic,
to which he replied, ’Then all is lost!’
And so it was. I read my defence in court.
The judge laughed, the jury whispered, and I was convicted
instanter of stealing spoons, when murder itself was
no further from my thoughts than theft.”
“But they tell me you were caught
red-handed,” said I. “Were not a
half-dozen spoons found upon your person?”
“In my hand,” returned
the prisoner. “The spoons were in my hand
when I was arrested, and they were seen there by the
owner, by the police, and by the usual crowd of small
boys that congregate at such embarrassing moments,
springing up out of sidewalks, dropping down from the
heavens, swarming in from everywhere. I had no
idea there were so many small boys in the world until
I was arrested, and found myself the cynosure of a
million or more innocent blue eyes.”
[Illustration]
“Were they all blue-eyed?”
I queried, thinking the point interesting from a scientific
point of view, hoping to discover that curiosity of
a morbid character was always found in connection
with eyes of a specified hue.
“Oh no; I fancy not,”
returned my host. “But to a man with a load
of another fellow’s spoons in his possession,
and a pair of handcuffs on his wrists, everything
looks blue.”
“I don’t doubt it,”
I replied. “But—er—just
how, now, could you defend yourself when every bit
of evidence, and—you will excuse me for
saying so—conclusive evidence at that,
pointed to your guilt?”
“The spoons were a gift,” he answered.
“But the owner denied that.”
“I know it; that’s where
the beastly part of it all came in. They were
not given to me by the owner, but by a lot of mean,
low-down, practical-joke-loving ghosts.”
Number 5010’s anger as he spoke
these words was terrible to witness, and as he strode
up and down the floor of his cell and dashed his arms
right and left, I wished for a moment that I was elsewhere.
I should not have flown, however, even had the cell
door been open and my way clear, for his suggestion
of a supernatural agency in connection with his crime
whetted my curiosity until it was more keen than ever,
and I made up my mind to hear the story to the end,
if I had to commit a crime and get myself sentenced
to confinement in that prison for life to do so.
Fortunately, extreme measures of this
nature were unnecessary, for after a few moments Surrennes
calmed down, and seating himself beside me on the
cot, drained his water-pitcher to the dregs, and began.
“Excuse me for not offering
you a drink,” he said, “but the wine they
serve here while moist is hardly what a connoisseur
would choose except for bathing purposes, and I compliment
you by assuming that you do not wish to taste it.”
“Thank you,” I said.
“I do not like to take water straight, exactly.
I always dilute it, in fact, with a little of this.”
Here I extracted a small flask from
my pocket and handed it to him.
“Ah!” he said, smacking
his lips as he took a long pull at its contents, “that
puts spirit into a man.”
“Yes, it does,” I replied,
ruefully, as I noted that he had left me very little
but the flask; “but I don’t think it was
necessary for you to deprive me of all mine.”
“No; that is, you can’t
appreciate the necessity unless you—er—you
have suffered in your life as I am suffering.
You were never sent up yourself?”
I gave him a glance which was all
indignation. “I guess not,” I said.
“I have led a life that is above reproach.”
“Good!” he replied.
“And what a satisfaction that is, eh? I
don’t believe I’d be able to stand this
jail life if it wasn’t for my conscience, which
is as clear and clean as it would be if I’d never
used it.”
“Would you mind telling me what
your defence was?” I asked.
“Certainly not,” said
he, cheerfully. “I’d be very glad
to give it to you. But you must remember one
thing—it is copyrighted.”
“Fire ahead!” I said,
with a smile. “I’ll respect your copyright.
I’ll give you a royalty on what I get for the
story.”
“Very good,” he answered.
“It was like this. To begin, I must tell
you that when I was a boy preparing for college I
had for a chum a brilliant fun-loving fellow named
Hawley Hicks, concerning whose future various prophecies
had been made. His mother often asserted that
he would be a great poet; his father thought he was
born to be a great general; our head-master at the
Scarberry Institute for Young Gentlemen prophesied
the gallows. They were all wrong; though, for
myself, I think that if he had lived long enough almost
any one of the prophecies might have come true.
The trouble was that Hawley died at the age of twenty-three.
Fifteen years elapsed. I was graduated with high
honors at Brazenose, lived a life of elegant leisure,
and at the age of thirty-seven broke down in health.
That was about a year ago. My uncle, whose heir
and constant companion I was, gave me a liberal allowance,
and sent me off to travel. I came to America,
landed in New York early in September, and set about
winning back the color which had departed from my
cheeks by an assiduous devotion to such pleasures
as New York affords. Two days after my arrival,
I set out for an airing at Coney Island, leaving my
hotel at four in the afternoon. On my way down
Broadway I was suddenly startled at hearing my name
spoken from behind me, and appalled, on turning, to
see standing with outstretched hands no less a person
than my defunct chum, Hawley Hicks.”
[Illustration]
“Impossible,” said I.
“Exactly my remark,” returned
Number 5010. “To which I added, ’Hawley
Hicks, it can’t be you!’
“‘But it is me,’ he replied.
“And then I was convinced, for
Hawley never was good on his grammar. I looked
at him a minute, and then I said, ’But, Hawley,
I thought you were dead.’
“‘I am,’ he answered.
’But why should a little thing like that stand
between friends?’
“‘It shouldn’t,
Hawley,’ I answered, meekly; ’but it’s
condemnedly unusual, you know, for a man to associate
even with his best friends fifteen years after they’ve
died and been buried.’
“’Do you mean to say,
Austin, that just because I was weak enough once to
succumb to a bad cold, you, the dearest friend of my
youth, the closest companion of my school-days, the
partner of my childish joys, intend to go back on
me here in a strange city?’
“‘Hawley,’ I answered,
huskily, ’not a bit of it. My letter of
credit, my room at the hotel, my dress suit, even
my ticket to Coney Island, are at your disposal; but
I think the partner of your childish joys ought first
to be let in on the ground-floor of this enterprise,
and informed how the deuce you manage to turn up in
New York fifteen years subsequent to your obsequies.
Is New York the hereafter for boys of your kind, or
is this some freak of my imagination?’”
“That was an eminently proper
question,” I put in, just to show that while
the story I was hearing terrified me, I was not altogether
speechless.
“It was, indeed,” said
5010; “and Hawley recognized it as such, for
he replied at once.
“‘Neither,’ said
he. ’Your imagination is all right, and
New York is neither heaven nor the other place.
The fact is, I’m spooking, and I can tell you,
Austin, it’s just about the finest kind of work
there is. If you could manage to shuffle off
your mortal coil and get in with a lot of ghosts,
the way I have, you’d be playing in great luck.’
“‘Thanks for the hint,
Hawley,’ I said, with a grateful smile; ’but,
to tell you the truth, I do not find that life is
entirely bad. I get my three meals a day, keep
my pocket full of coin, and sleep eight hours every
night on a couch that couldn’t be more desirable
if it were studded with jewels and had mineral springs.’
“‘That’s your mortal
ignorance, Austin,’ he retorted. ’I
lived long enough to appreciate the necessity of being
ignorant, but your style of existence is really not
to be mentioned in the same cycle with mine. You
talk about three meals a day, as if that were an ideal;
you forget that with the eating your labor is just
begun; those meals have to be digested, every one
of ’em, and if you could only understand it,
it would appall you to see what a fearful wear and
tear that act of digestion is. In my life you
are feasting all the time, but with no need for digestion.
You speak of money in your pockets; well, I have none,
yet am I the richer of the two. I don’t
need money. The world is mine. If I chose
to I could pour the contents of that jeweller’s
window into your lap in five seconds, but cui bono?
The gems delight my eye quite as well where they are;
and as for travel, Austin, of which you have always
been fond, the spectral method beats all. Just
watch me!’
“I watched him as well as I
could for a minute,” said 5010; “and then
he disappeared. In another minute he was before
me again.
“‘Well,’ I said,
’I suppose you’ve been around the block
in that time, eh?’
“He roared with laughter.
‘Around the block?’ he ejaculated.
’I have done the Continent of Europe, taken
a run through China, haunted the Emperor of Japan,
and sailed around the Horn since I left you a minute
ago.’
[Illustration]
“He was a truthful boy in spite
of his peculiarities, Hawley was,” said Surrennes,
quietly, “so I had to believe what he said.
He abhorred lies.”
“That was pretty fast travelling,
though,” said I. “He’d make
a fine messenger-boy.”
“That’s so. I wish
I’d suggested it to him,” smiled my host.
“But I can tell you, sir, I was astonished.
‘Hawley,’ I said, ’you always were
a fast youth, but I never thought you would develop
into this. I wonder you’re not out of breath
after such a journey.’
“’Another point, my dear
Austin, in favor of my mode of existence. We
spooks have no breath to begin with. Consequently,
to get out of it is no deprivation. But, I say,’
he added, ‘whither are you bound?’
“‘To Coney Island to see
the sights,’ I replied. ‘Won’t
you join me?’
“‘Not I,’ he replied.
’Coney Island is tame. When I first joined
the spectre band, it seemed to me that nothing could
delight me more than an eternal round of gayety like
that; but, Austin, I have changed. I have developed
a good deal since you and I were parted at the grave.’
“‘I should say you had,’
I answered. ’I doubt if many of your old
friends would know you.’
“‘You seem to have had
difficulty in so doing yourself, Austin,’ he
replied, regretfully; ’but see here, old chap,
give up Coney Island, and spend the evening with me
at the club. You’ll have a good time, I
can assure you.’
“‘The club?’ I said.
‘You don’t mean to say you visions have
a club?’
“’I do indeed; the Ghost
Club is the most flourishing association of choice
spirits in the world. We have rooms in every city
in creation; and the finest part of it is there are
no dues to be paid. The membership list holds
some of the finest names in history—Shakespeare,
Milton, Chaucer, Napoleon Bonaparte, Caesar, George
Washington, Mozart, Frederick the Great, Marc Antony—Cassius
was black-balled on Caesar’s account—Galileo,
Confucius.’
[Illustration]
“‘You admit the Chinese, eh?’ I
queried.
“‘Not always,’ he
replied. ’But Con was such a good fellow
they hadn’t the heart to keep him out; but you
see, Austin, what a lot of fine fellows there are
in it.’
“’Yes, it’s a magnificent
list, and I should say they made a pretty interesting
set of fellows to hear talk,’ I put in.
“‘Well, rather,’
Hawley replied. ’I wish you could have heard
a debate between Shakespeare and Caesar on the resolution,
“The Pen is mightier than the Sword;”
it was immense.’
“‘I should think it might have been,’
I said. ‘Which won?’
“’The sword party.
They were the best fighters; though on the merits of
the argument Shakespeare was ‘way ahead.’
“’If I thought I’d
stand a chance of seeing spooks like that, I think
I’d give up Coney Island and go with you,’
I said.
“‘Well,’ replied
Hawley, ’that’s just the kind of a chance
you do stand. They’ll all be there to-night,
and as this is ladies’ day, you might meet Lucretia
Borgia, Cleopatra, and a few other feminine apparitions
of considerable note.’
“‘That settles it.
I am yours for the rest of the day,’ I said,
and so we adjourned to the rooms of the Ghost Club.
“These rooms were in a beautiful
house on Fifth Avenue; the number of the house you
will find on consulting the court records. I have
forgotten it. It was a large, broad, brown-stone
structure, and must have been over one hundred and
fifty feet in depth. Such fittings I never saw
before; everything was in the height of luxury, and
I am quite certain that among beings to whom money
is a measure of possibility no such magnificence is
attainable. The paintings on the walls were by
the most famous artists of our own and other days.
The rugs on the superbly polished floors were worth
fortunes, not only for their exquisite beauty, but
also for their extreme rarity. In keeping with
these were the furniture and bric-a-brac. In
short, my dear sir, I had never dreamed of anything
so dazzlingly, so superbly magnificent as that apartment
into which I was ushered by the ghost of my quondam
friend Hawley Hicks.
[Illustration]
“At first I was speechless with
wonder, which seemed to amuse Hicks very much.
“‘Pretty fine, eh?’ he said, with
a short laugh.
“‘Well,’ I replied,
in a moment, ’considering that you can get along
without money, and that all the resources of the world
are at your disposal, it is not more than half bad.
Have you a library?’
“I was always fond of books,”
explained 5010 in parenthesis to me, “and so
was quite anxious to see what the club of ghosts could
show in the way of literary treasures. Imagine
my surprise when Hawley informed me that the club
had no collection of the sort to appeal to the bibliophile.
“‘No,’ he answered, ‘we have
no library.’
“‘Rather strange,’
I said, ’that a club to which men like Shakespeare,
Milton, Edgar Allan Poe, and other deceased literati
belong should be deficient in that respect.’
“‘Not at all,’ said
he. ’Why should we want books when we have
the men themselves to tell their tales to us?
Would you give a rap to possess a set of Shakespeare
if William himself would sit down and rattle off the
whole business to you any time you chose to ask him
to do it? Would you follow Scott’s printed
narratives through their devious and tedious periods
if Sir Walter in spirit would come to you on demand,
and tell you all the old stories over again in a tenth
part of the time it would take you to read the introduction
to one of them?’
“‘I fancy not,’ I said. ‘Are
you in such luck?’
“‘I am,’ said Hawley;
’only personally I never send for Scott or Shakespeare.
I prefer something lighter than either—Douglas
Jerrold or Marryat. But best of all, I like to
sit down and hear Noah swap animal stories with Davy
Crockett. Noah’s the brightest man of his
age in the club. Adam’s kind of slow.’
“‘How about Solomon?’
I asked, more to be flippant than with any desire
for information. I was much amused to hear Hawley
speak of these great spirits as if he and they were
chums of long standing.
[Illustration]
“‘Solomon has resigned
from the club,’ he said, with a sad sigh.
’He was a good fellow, Solomon was, but he thought
he knew it all until old Doctor Johnson got hold of
him, and then he knuckled under. It’s rather
rough for a man to get firmly established in his belief
that he is the wisest creature going, and then, after
a couple of thousand years, have an Englishman come
along and tell him things he never knew before, especially
the way Sam Johnson delivers himself of his opinions.
Johnson never cared whom he hurt, you know, and when
he got after Solomon, he did it with all his might.’”
“I wonder if Boswell was there?”
I ventured, interrupting 5010 in his extraordinary
narrative for an instant.
“Yes, he was there,” returned
the prisoner. “I met him later in the evening;
but he isn’t the spook he might be. He never
had much spirit anyhow, and when he died he had to
leave his nose behind him, and that settled him.”
“Of course,” I answered.
“Boswell with no nose to stick into other people’s
affairs would have been like Othello with Desdemona
left out. But go on. What did you do next?”
“Well,” 5010 resumed,
“after I’d looked about me, and drunk my
fill of the magnificence on every hand, Hawley took
me into the music-room, and introduced me to Mozart
and Wagner and a few other great composers. In
response to my request, Wagner played an impromptu
version of ’Daisy Bell’ on the organ.
It was great; not much like ‘Daisy Bell,’
of course; more like a collision between a cyclone
and a simoom in a tin-plate mining camp, in fact,
but, nevertheless, marvellous. I tried to remember
it afterwards, and jotted down a few notes, but I found
the first bar took up seven sheets of fool’s-cap,
and so gave it up. Then Mozart tried his hand
on a banjo for my amusement, Mendelssohn sang a half-dozen
of his songs without words, and then Gottschalk played
one of Poe’s weird stories on the piano.
“Then Carlyle came in, and Hawley
introduced me to him. He was a gruff old gentleman,
and seemingly anxious to have Froude become an eligible,
and I judged from the rather fierce manner in which
he handled a club he had in his hand, that there were
one or two other men of prominence still living he
was anxious to meet. Dickens, too, was desirous
of a two-minute interview with certain of his at present
purely mortal critics; and, between you and me, if
the wink that Bacon gave Shakespeare when I spoke
of Ignatius Donnelly meant anything, the famous cryptogrammarian
will do well to drink a bottle of the elixir of life
every morning before breakfast, and stave off dissolution
as long as he can. There’s no getting around
the fact, sir,” Surrennes added, with a significant
shake of the head, “that the present leaders
of literary thought with critical tendencies are going
to have the hardest kind of a time when they cross
the river and apply for admission to the Ghost Club.
I don’t ask for any better fun than that
of watching from a safe distance the initiation ceremonies
of the next dozen who go over. And as an Englishman,
sir, who thoroughly believes in and admires Lord Wolseley,
if I were out of jail and able to do it, I’d
write him a letter, and warn him that he would better
revise his estimates of certain famous soldiers no
longer living if he desires to find rest in that mysterious
other world whither he must eventually betake himself.
They’ve got their swords sharpened for him,
and he’ll discover an instance when he gets over
there in which the sword is mightier than the pen.
[Illustration]
“After that, Hawley took me
up-stairs and introduced me to the spirit of Napoleon
Bonaparte, with whom I passed about twenty-five minutes
talking over his victories and defeats. He told
me he never could understand how a man like Wellington
came to defeat him at Waterloo, and added that he had
sounded the Iron Duke on the subject, and found him
equally ignorant.
“So the afternoon and evening
passed. I met quite a number of famous ladies—Catherine,
Marie Louise, Josephine, Queen Elizabeth, and others.
Talked architecture with Queen Anne, and was surprised
to learn that she never saw a Queen Anne cottage.
I took Peg Woffington down to supper, and altogether
had a fine time of it.”
[Illustration]
“But, my dear Surrennes,”
I put in at this point, “I fail to see what this
has to do with your defence in your trial for stealing
spoons.”
“I am coming to that,”
said 5010, sadly. “I dwell on the moments
passed at the club because they were the happiest
of my life, and am loath to speak of what followed,
but I suppose I must. It was all due to Queen
Isabella that I got into trouble. Peg Woffington
presented me to Queen Isabella in the supper-room,
and while her majesty and I were talking, I spoke of
how beautiful everything in the club was, and admired
especially a half-dozen old Spanish spoons upon the
side-board. When I had done this, the Queen called
to Ferdinand, who was chatting with Columbus on the
other side of the room, to come to her, which he did
with alacrity. I was presented to the King, and
then my troubles began.
“‘Mr. Surrennes admires
our spoons, Ferdinand,’ said the Queen.
“The King smiled, and turning
to me observed, ’Sir, they are yours. Er—waiter,
just do these spoons up and give them to Mr. Surrennes.’
“Of course,” said 5010,
“I protested against this; whereupon the King
looked displeased.
“’It is a rule of our
club, sir, as well as an old Spanish custom, for us
to present to our guests anything that they may happen
openly to admire. You are surely sufficiently
well acquainted with the etiquette of club life to
know that guests may not with propriety decline to
be governed by the regulations of the club whose hospitality
they are enjoying.’
“‘I certainly am aware
of that, my dear King,’ I replied, ’and
of course I accept the spoons with exceeding deep
gratitude. My remonstrance was prompted solely
by my desire to explain to you that I was unaware of
any such regulation, and to assure you that when I
ventured to inform your good wife that the spoons
had excited my sincerest admiration, I was not hinting
that it would please me greatly to be accounted their
possessor.’
“‘Your courtly speech,
sir,’ returned the King, with a low bow, ’is
ample assurance of your sincerity, and I beg that
you will put the spoons in your pocket and say no
more. They are yours. Verb. sap.’
[Illustration]
“I thanked the great Spaniard
and said no more, pocketing the spoons with no little
exultation, because, having always been a lover of
the quaint and beautiful, I was glad to possess such
treasures, though I must confess to some misgivings
as to the possibility of their being unreal. Shortly
after this episode I looked at my watch and discovered
that it was getting well on towards eleven o’clock,
and I sought out Hawley for the purpose of thanking
him for a delightful evening and of taking my leave.
I met him in the hall talking to Euripides on the
subject of the amateur stage in the United States.
What they said I did not stop to hear, but offering
my hand to Hawley informed him of my intention to
depart.
“‘Well, old chap,’
he said, affectionately, ’I’m glad you
came. It’s always a pleasure to see you,
and I hope we may meet again some time soon.’
And then, catching sight of my bundle, he asked, ’What
have you there?’
“I informed him of the episode
in the supper-room, and fancied I perceived a look
of annoyance on his countenance.
“‘I didn’t want
to take them, Hawley,’ I said; ‘but Ferdinand
insisted.’
“‘Oh, it’s all right!’
returned Hawley. ’Only I’m sorry!
You’d better get along home with them as quickly
as you can and say nothing; and, above all, don’t
try to sell them.’
“‘But why?’ I asked.
’I’d much prefer to leave them here if
there is any question of the propriety of my—’
“Here,” continued 5010,
“Hawley seemed to grow impatient, for he stamped
his foot angrily, and bade me go at once or there might
be trouble. I proceeded to obey him, and left
the house instanter, slamming the door somewhat angrily
behind me. Hawley’s unceremonious way of
speeding his parting guest did not seem to me to be
exactly what I had a right to expect at the time.
I see now what his object was, and acquit him of any
intention to be rude, though I must say if I ever catch
him again, I’ll wring an explanation from him
for having introduced me into such bad company.
“As I walked down the steps,”
said 5010, “the chimes of the neighboring church
were clanging out the hour of eleven. I stopped
on the last step to look for a possible hansom-cab,
when a portly gentleman accompanied by a lady started
to mount the stoop. The man eyed me narrowly for
a moment, and then, sending the lady up the steps,
he turned to me and said,
“‘What are you doing here?’
“‘I’ve just left
the club,’ I answered. ’It’s
all right. I was Hawley Hicks’s guest.
Whose ghost are you?’
“‘What the deuce are you
talking about?’ he asked, rather gruffly, much
to my surprise and discomfort.
“‘I tried to give you
a civil answer to your question,’ I returned,
indignantly.
“‘I guess you’re crazy—or
a thief,’ he rejoined.
“‘See here, friend,’
I put in, rather impressively, ’just remember
one thing. You are talking to a gentleman, and
I don’t take remarks of that sort from anybody,
spook or otherwise. I don’t care if you
are the ghost of the Emperor Nero, if you give me
any more of your impudence I’ll dissipate you
to the four quarters of the universe—see?’
“Then he grabbed me and shouted
for the police, and I was painfully surprised to find
that instead of coping with a mysterious being from
another world, I had two hundred and ten pounds of
flesh and blood to handle. The populace began
to gather. The million and a half of small boys
of whom I have already spoken—mostly street
gamins, owing to the lateness of the hour—sprang
up from all about us. Hansom-cab drivers, attracted
by the noise of our altercation, drew up to the sidewalk
to watch developments, and then, after the usual fifteen
or twenty minutes, the blue-coat emissary of justice
appeared.
“‘Phat’s dthis?’ he asked.
“‘I have detected this
man leaving my house in a suspicious manner,’
said my adversary. ‘I have reason to suspect
him of thieving.’
“‘Your house!’
I ejaculated, with fine scorn. ’I’ve
got you there; this is the house of the New York Branch
of the Ghost Club. If you want it proved,’
I added, turning to the policeman, ‘ring the
bell, and ask.’
“‘Oi t’ink dthat’s
a fair prophosition,’ observed the policeman.
’Is the motion siconded?’
“‘Oh, come now!’
cried my captor. ’Stop this nonsense, or
I’ll report you to the department. This
is my house, and has been for twenty years. I
want this man searched.’
“‘Oi hov no warrant permithin’
me to invistigate the contints ov dthe gintlemon’s
clothes,’ returned the intelligent member of
the force. ’But av yez ‘ll take yer
solemn alibi dthat yez hov rayson t’ belave the
gintlemon has worked ony habeas corpush business on
yure propherty, oi’ll jug dthe blag-yard.’
“‘I’ll be responsible,’
said the alleged owner of the house. ’Take
him to the station.’
“‘I refuse to move,’ I said.
“‘Oi’ll not carry
yez,’ said the policeman, ’and oi’d
advoise ye to furnish yure own locomotion. Av
ye don’t, oi’ll use me club. Dthot’s
th’ ounly waa yez ‘ll git dthe ambulanch.’
“‘Oh, well, if you insist,’
I replied, ’of course I’ll go. I have
nothing to fear.’
“You see,” added 5010
to me, in parenthesis, “the thought suddenly
flashed across my mind that if all was as my captor
said, if the house was really his and not the Ghost
Club’s, and if the whole thing was only my fancy,
the spoons themselves would turn out to be entirely
fanciful; so I was all right—or at least
I thought I was. So we trotted along to the police
station. On the way I told the policeman the whole
story, which impressed him so that he crossed himself
a half-dozen times, and uttered numerous ejaculatory
prayers—’Maa dthe shaints presharve
us,’ and ’Hivin hov mershy,’ and
others of a like import.
“‘Waz dthe ghosht ov Dan O’Connell
dthere?’ he asked.
“Yes,’ I replied. ‘I shook
hands with it.’
“‘Let me shaak dthot hand,’
he said, his voice trembling with emotion, and then
he whispered in my ear: ’Oi belave yez to
be innoshunt; but av yez ain’t, for the love
of Dan, oi’ll let yez eshcape.’
[Illustration]
“‘Thanks, old fellow,’
I replied. ’But I am innocent of wrong-doing,
as I can prove.’
“Alas!” sighed the convict,
“it was not to be so. When I arrived at
the station-house, I was dumfounded to learn that
the spoons were all too real. I told my story
to the sergeant, and pointed to the monogram, ‘G.C.,’
on the spoons as evidence that my story was correct;
but even that told against me, for the alleged owner’s
initials were G.C.—his name I withhold—and
the monogram only served to substantiate his claim
to the spoons. Worst of all, he claimed that he
had been robbed on several occasions before this,
and by midnight I found myself locked up in a dirty
cell to await trial.
“I got a lawyer, and, as I said
before, even he declined to believe my story, and
suggested the insanity dodge. Of course I wouldn’t
agree to that. I tried to get him to subpoena
Ferdinand and Isabella and Euripides and Hawley Hicks
in my behalf, and all he’d do was to sit there
and shake his head at me. Then I suggested going
up to the Metropolitan Opera-house some fearful night
as the clock struck twelve, and try to serve papers
on Wagner’s spook—all of which he
treated as unworthy of a moment’s consideration.
Then I was tried, convicted, and sentenced to live
in this beastly hole; but I have one strong hope to
buoy me up, and if that is realized, I’ll be
free to-morrow morning.”
“What is that?” I asked.
“Why,” he answered, with
a sigh, as the bell rang summoning him to his supper—“why,
the whole horrid business has been so weird and uncanny
that I’m beginning to believe it’s all
a dream. If it is, why, I’ll wake up, and
find myself at home in bed; that’s all.
I’ve clung to that hope for nearly a year now,
but it’s getting weaker every minute.”
“Yes, 5010,” I answered,
rising and shaking him by the hand in parting; “that’s
a mighty forlorn hope, because I’m pretty wide
awake myself at this moment, and can’t be a
part of your dream. The great pity is you didn’t
try the insanity dodge.”
“Tut!” he answered.
“That is the last resource of a weak mind.”