Repaired
THE REPAIRER OF
REPUTATIONS
I
"Ne raillons pas les fous; leur folie dure plus longtemps que
la nôtre.... Voila toute la différence."
Toward the end of the year 1920 the Government
of the United States had practically completed the programme, adopted during
the last months of President Winthrop's administration. The country was
apparently tranquil. Everybody knows how the Tariff and Labour questions were
settled. The war with Germany, incident on that country's seizure of the Samoan
Islands, had left no visible scars upon the republic, and the temporary
occupation of Norfolk by the invading army had been forgotten in the joy over
repeated naval victories, and the subsequent ridiculous plight of General Von
Gartenlaube's forces in the State of New Jersey. The Cuban and Hawaiian
investments had paid one hundred per cent and the territory of Samoa was well
worth its cost as a coaling station. The country was in a superb state of
defence. Every coast city had been well supplied with land fortifications; the army
under the parental eye of the General Staff, organized according to the
Prussian system, had been increased to 300,000 men, with a territorial reserve
of a million; and six magnificent squadrons of cruisers and battle-ships
patrolled the six stations of the navigable seas, leaving a steam reserve amply
fitted to control home waters. The gentlemen from the West had at last been
constrained to acknowledge that a college for the training of diplomats was as
necessary as law schools are for the training of barristers; consequently we
were no longer represented abroad by incompetent patriots. The nation was
prosperous; Chicago, for a moment paralyzed after a second great fire, had
risen from its ruins, white and imperial, and more beautiful than the white city
which had been built for its plaything in 1893. Everywhere good architecture
was replacing bad, and even in New York, a sudden craving for decency had swept
away a great portion of the existing horrors. Streets had been widened,
properly paved and lighted, trees had been planted, squares laid out, elevated
structures demolished and underground roads built to replace them. The new
government buildings and barracks were fine bits of architecture, and the long
system of stone quays which completely surrounded the island had been turned
into parks which proved a god-send to the population. The subsidizing of the
state theatre and state opera brought its own reward. The United States
National Academy of Design was much like European institutions of the same kind.
Nobody envied the Secretary of Fine Arts, either his cabinet position or his
portfolio. The Secretary of Forestry and Game Preservation had a much easier
time, thanks to the new system of National Mounted Police. We had profited well
by the latest treaties with France and England; the exclusion of foreign-born
Jews as a measure of self-preservation, the settlement of the new independent
negro state of Suanee, the checking of immigration, the new laws concerning
naturalization, and the gradual centralization of power in the executive all
contributed to national calm and prosperity. When the Government solved the
Indian problem and squadrons of Indian cavalry scouts in native costume were
substituted for the pitiable organizations tacked on to the tail of skeletonized
regiments by a former Secretary of War, the nation drew a long sigh of relief.
When, after the colossal Congress of Religions, bigotry and intolerance were
laid in their graves and kindness and charity began to draw warring sects
together, many thought the millennium had arrived, at least in the new world
which after all is a world by itself.
But self-preservation is the first law, and the
United States had to look on in helpless sorrow as Germany, Italy, Spain and
Belgium writhed in the throes of Anarchy, while Russia, watching from the
Caucasus, stooped and bound them one by one.
In the city of New York the summer of 1899 was
signalized by the dismantling of the Elevated Railroads. The summer of 1900
will live in the memories of New York people for many a cycle; the Dodge Statue
was removed in that year. In the following winter began that agitation for the
repeal of the laws prohibiting suicide which bore its final fruit in the month
of April, 1920, when the first Government Lethal Chamber was opened on
Washington Square.
I had walked down that day from Dr. Archer's
house on Madison Avenue, where I had been as a mere formality. Ever since that
fall from my horse, four years before, I had been troubled at times with pains
in the back of my head and neck, but now for months they had been absent, and
the doctor sent me away that day saying there was nothing more to be cured in
me. It was hardly worth his fee to be told that; I knew it myself. Still I did
not grudge him the money. What I minded was the mistake which he made at first.
When they picked me up from the pavement where I lay unconscious, and somebody
had mercifully sent a bullet through my horse's head, I was carried to Dr.
Archer, and he, pronouncing my brain affected, placed me in his private asylum
where I was obliged to endure treatment for insanity. At last he decided that I
was well, and I, knowing that my mind had always been as sound as his, if not
sounder, "paid my tuition" as he jokingly called it, and left. I told
him, smiling, that I would get even with him for his mistake, and he laughed
heartily, and asked me to call once in a while. I did so, hoping for a chance
to even up accounts, but he gave me none, and I told him I would wait.
The fall from my horse had fortunately left no
evil results; on the contrary it had changed my whole character for the better.
From a lazy young man about town, I had become active, energetic, temperate,
and above all—oh, above all else—ambitious. There was only one thing which
troubled me, I laughed at my own uneasiness, and yet it troubled me.
During my convalescence I had bought and read
for the first time, The King in Yellow. I remember after finishing
the first act that it occurred to me that I had better stop. I started up and
flung the book into the fireplace; the volume struck the barred grate and fell
open on the hearth in the firelight. If I had not caught a glimpse of the
opening words in the second act I should never have finished it, but as I
stooped to pick it up, my eyes became riveted to the open page, and with a cry
of terror, or perhaps it was of joy so poignant that I suffered in every nerve,
I snatched the thing out of the coals and crept shaking to my bedroom, where I
read it and reread it, and wept and laughed and trembled with a horror which at
times assails me yet. This is the thing that troubles me, for I cannot forget
Carcosa where black stars hang in the heavens; where the shadows of men's
thoughts lengthen in the afternoon, when the twin suns sink into the lake of
Hali; and my mind will bear for ever the memory of the Pallid Mask. I pray God
will curse the writer, as the writer has cursed the world with this beautiful,
stupendous creation, terrible in its simplicity, irresistible in its truth—a
world which now trembles before the King in Yellow. When the French Government
seized the translated copies which had just arrived in Paris, London, of
course, became eager to read it. It is well known how the book spread like an
infectious disease, from city to city, from continent to continent, barred out
here, confiscated there, denounced by Press and pulpit, censured even by the
most advanced of literary anarchists. No definite principles had been violated
in those wicked pages, no doctrine promulgated, no convictions outraged. It
could not be judged by any known standard, yet, although it was acknowledged
that the supreme note of art had been struck in The King in Yellow,
all felt that human nature could not bear the strain, nor thrive on words in
which the essence of purest poison lurked. The very banality and innocence of
the first act only allowed the blow to fall afterward with more awful effect.
It was, I remember, the 13th day of April, 1920,
that the first Government Lethal Chamber was established on the south side of
Washington Square, between Wooster Street and South Fifth Avenue. The block
which had formerly consisted of a lot of shabby old buildings, used as cafés
and restaurants for foreigners, had been acquired by the Government in the
winter of 1898. The French and Italian cafés and restaurants were torn down;
the whole block was enclosed by a gilded iron railing, and converted into a
lovely garden with lawns, flowers and fountains. In the centre of the garden
stood a small, white building, severely classical in architecture, and
surrounded by thickets of flowers. Six Ionic columns supported the roof, and
the single door was of bronze. A splendid marble group of the "Fates"
stood before the door, the work of a young American sculptor, Boris Yvain, who
had died in Paris when only twenty-three years old.
The inauguration ceremonies were in progress as
I crossed University Place and entered the square. I threaded my way through
the silent throng of spectators, but was stopped at Fourth Street by a cordon
of police. A regiment of United States lancers were drawn up in a hollow square
round the Lethal Chamber. On a raised tribune facing Washington Park stood the
Governor of New York, and behind him were grouped the Mayor of New York and
Brooklyn, the Inspector-General of Police, the Commandant of the state troops,
Colonel Livingston, military aid to the President of the United States, General
Blount, commanding at Governor's Island, Major-General Hamilton, commanding the
garrison of New York and Brooklyn, Admiral Buffby of the fleet in the North
River, Surgeon-General Lanceford, the staff of the National Free Hospital,
Senators Wyse and Franklin of New York, and the Commissioner of Public Works.
The tribune was surrounded by a squadron of hussars of the National Guard.
The Governor was finishing his reply to the
short speech of the Surgeon-General. I heard him say: "The laws prohibiting
suicide and providing punishment for any attempt at self-destruction have been
repealed. The Government has seen fit to acknowledge the right of man to end an
existence which may have become intolerable to him, through physical suffering
or mental despair. It is believed that the community will be benefited by the
removal of such people from their midst. Since the passage of this law, the
number of suicides in the United States has not increased. Now the Government
has determined to establish a Lethal Chamber in every city, town and village in
the country, it remains to be seen whether or not that class of human creatures
from whose desponding ranks new victims of self-destruction fall daily will
accept the relief thus provided." He paused, and turned to the white
Lethal Chamber. The silence in the street was absolute. "There a painless
death awaits him who can no longer bear the sorrows of this life. If death is
welcome let him seek it there." Then quickly turning to the military aid
of the President's household, he said, "I declare the Lethal Chamber
open," and again facing the vast crowd he cried in a clear voice:
"Citizens of New York and of the United States of America, through me the
Government declares the Lethal Chamber to be open."
The solemn hush was broken by a sharp cry of
command, the squadron of hussars filed after the Governor's carriage, the
lancers wheeled and formed along Fifth Avenue to wait for the commandant of the
garrison, and the mounted police followed them. I left the crowd to gape and
stare at the white marble Death Chamber, and, crossing South Fifth Avenue,
walked along the western side of that thoroughfare to Bleecker Street. Then I
turned to the right and stopped before a dingy shop which bore the sign:
HAWBERK, ARMOURER.
I glanced in at the doorway and saw Hawberk busy
in his little shop at the end of the hall. He looked up, and catching sight of
me cried in his deep, hearty voice, "Come in, Mr. Castaigne!"
Constance, his daughter, rose to meet me as I crossed the threshold, and held
out her pretty hand, but I saw the blush of disappointment on her cheeks, and
knew that it was another Castaigne she had expected, my cousin Louis. I smiled
at her confusion and complimented her on the banner she was embroidering from a
coloured plate. Old Hawberk sat riveting the worn greaves of some ancient suit
of armour, and the ting! ting! ting! of his little hammer sounded pleasantly in
the quaint shop. Presently he dropped his hammer, and fussed about for a moment
with a tiny wrench. The soft clash of the mail sent a thrill of pleasure
through me. I loved to hear the music of steel brushing against steel, the
mellow shock of the mallet on thigh pieces, and the jingle of chain armour.
That was the only reason I went to see Hawberk. He had never interested me
personally, nor did Constance, except for the fact of her being in love with
Louis. This did occupy my attention, and sometimes even kept me awake at night.
But I knew in my heart that all would come right, and that I should arrange
their future as I expected to arrange that of my kind doctor, John Archer.
However, I should never have troubled myself about visiting them just then, had
it not been, as I say, that the music of the tinkling hammer had for me this
strong fascination. I would sit for hours, listening and listening, and when a
stray sunbeam struck the inlaid steel, the sensation it gave me was almost too
keen to endure. My eyes would become fixed, dilating with a pleasure that
stretched every nerve almost to breaking, until some movement of the old
armourer cut off the ray of sunlight, then, still thrilling secretly, I leaned
back and listened again to the sound of the polishing rag, swish! swish!
rubbing rust from the rivets.
Constance worked with the embroidery over her
knees, now and then pausing to examine more closely the pattern in the coloured
plate from the Metropolitan Museum.
"Who is this for?" I asked.
Hawberk explained, that in addition to the
treasures of armour in the Metropolitan Museum of which he had been appointed
armourer, he also had charge of several collections belonging to rich amateurs.
This was the missing greave of a famous suit which a client of his had traced
to a little shop in Paris on the Quai d'Orsay. He, Hawberk, had negotiated for
and secured the greave, and now the suit was complete. He laid down his hammer
and read me the history of the suit, traced since 1450 from owner to owner
until it was acquired by Thomas Stainbridge. When his superb collection was
sold, this client of Hawberk's bought the suit, and since then the search for
the missing greave had been pushed until it was, almost by accident, located in
Paris.
"Did you continue the search so
persistently without any certainty of the greave being still in
existence?" I demanded.
"Of course," he replied coolly.
Then for the first time I took a personal
interest in Hawberk.
"It was worth something to you," I
ventured.
"No," he replied, laughing, "my
pleasure in finding it was my reward."
"Have you no ambition to be rich?" I
asked, smiling.
"My one ambition is to be the best armourer
in the world," he answered gravely.
Constance asked me if I had seen the ceremonies
at the Lethal Chamber. She herself had noticed cavalry passing up Broadway that
morning, and had wished to see the inauguration, but her father wanted the
banner finished, and she had stayed at his request.
"Did you see your cousin, Mr. Castaigne,
there?" she asked, with the slightest tremor of her soft eyelashes.
"No," I replied carelessly.
"Louis' regiment is manœuvring out in Westchester County." I rose and
picked up my hat and cane.
"Are you going upstairs to see the lunatic
again?" laughed old Hawberk. If Hawberk knew how I loathe that word
"lunatic," he would never use it in my presence. It rouses certain
feelings within me which I do not care to explain. However, I answered him
quietly: "I think I shall drop in and see Mr. Wilde for a moment or
two."
"Poor fellow," said Constance, with a
shake of the head, "it must be hard to live alone year after year poor,
crippled and almost demented. It is very good of you, Mr. Castaigne, to visit
him as often as you do."
"I think he is vicious," observed
Hawberk, beginning again with his hammer. I listened to the golden tinkle on
the greave plates; when he had finished I replied:
"No, he is not vicious, nor is he in the
least demented. His mind is a wonder chamber, from which he can extract
treasures that you and I would give years of our life to acquire."'
Hawberk laughed.
I continued a little impatiently: "He knows
history as no one else could know it. Nothing, however trivial, escapes his
search, and his memory is so absolute, so precise in details, that were it
known in New York that such a man existed, the people could not honour him
enough."
"Nonsense," muttered Hawberk, searching
on the floor for a fallen rivet.
"Is it nonsense," I asked, managing to
suppress what I felt, "is it nonsense when he says that the tassets and
cuissards of the enamelled suit of armour commonly known as the 'Prince's
Emblazoned' can be found among a mass of rusty theatrical properties, broken
stoves and ragpicker's refuse in a garret in Pell Street?"
Hawberk's hammer fell to the ground, but he
picked it up and asked, with a great deal of calm, how I knew that the tassets
and left cuissard were missing from the "Prince's Emblazoned."
"I did not know until Mr. Wilde mentioned
it to me the other day. He said they were in the garret of 998 Pell
Street."
"Nonsense," he cried, but I noticed
his hand trembling under his leathern apron.
"Is this nonsense too?" I asked
pleasantly, "is it nonsense when Mr. Wilde continually speaks of you as
the Marquis of Avonshire and of Miss Constance—"
I did not finish, for Constance had started to
her feet with terror written on every feature. Hawberk looked at me and slowly smoothed
his leathern apron.
"That is impossible," he observed,
"Mr. Wilde may know a great many things—"
"About armour, for instance, and the
'Prince's Emblazoned,'" I interposed, smiling.
"Yes," he continued, slowly,
"about armour also—may be—but he is wrong in regard to the Marquis of
Avonshire, who, as you know, killed his wife's traducer years ago, and went to
Australia where he did not long survive his wife."
"Mr. Wilde is wrong," murmured
Constance. Her lips were blanched, but her voice was sweet and calm.
"Let us agree, if you please, that in this
one circumstance Mr. Wilde is wrong," I said.
II
I climbed the three dilapidated flights of
stairs, which I had so often climbed before, and knocked at a small door at the
end of the corridor. Mr. Wilde opened the door and I walked in.
When he had double-locked the door and pushed a
heavy chest against it, he came and sat down beside me, peering up into my face
with his little light-coloured eyes. Half a dozen new scratches covered his
nose and cheeks, and the silver wires which supported his artificial ears had
become displaced. I thought I had never seen him so hideously fascinating. He
had no ears. The artificial ones, which now stood out at an angle from the fine
wire, were his one weakness. They were made of wax and painted a shell pink,
but the rest of his face was yellow. He might better have revelled in the
luxury of some artificial fingers for his left hand, which was absolutely
fingerless, but it seemed to cause him no inconvenience, and he was satisfied
with his wax ears. He was very small, scarcely higher than a child of ten, but
his arms were magnificently developed, and his thighs as thick as any
athlete's. Still, the most remarkable thing about Mr. Wilde was that a man of
his marvellous intelligence and knowledge should have such a head. It was flat
and pointed, like the heads of many of those unfortunates whom people imprison
in asylums for the weak-minded. Many called him insane, but I knew him to be as
sane as I was.
I do not deny that he was eccentric; the mania
he had for keeping that cat and teasing her until she flew at his face like a
demon, was certainly eccentric. I never could understand why he kept the
creature, nor what pleasure he found in shutting himself up in his room with
this surly, vicious beast. I remember once, glancing up from the manuscript I
was studying by the light of some tallow dips, and seeing Mr. Wilde squatting
motionless on his high chair, his eyes fairly blazing with excitement, while
the cat, which had risen from her place before the stove, came creeping across
the floor right at him. Before I could move she flattened her belly to the
ground, crouched, trembled, and sprang into his face. Howling and foaming they
rolled over and over on the floor, scratching and clawing, until the cat
screamed and fled under the cabinet, and Mr. Wilde turned over on his back, his
limbs contracting and curling up like the legs of a dying spider. He was eccentric.
Mr. Wilde had climbed into his high chair, and,
after studying my face, picked up a dog's-eared ledger and opened it.
"Henry B. Matthews," he read,
"book-keeper with Whysot Whysot and Company, dealers in church ornaments.
Called April 3rd. Reputation damaged on the race-track. Known as a welcher.
Reputation to be repaired by August 1st. Retainer Five Dollars." He turned
the page and ran his fingerless knuckles down the closely-written columns.
"P. Greene Dusenberry, Minister of the
Gospel, Fairbeach, New Jersey. Reputation damaged in the Bowery. To be repaired
as soon as possible. Retainer $100."
He coughed and added, "Called, April
6th."
"Then you are not in need of money, Mr.
Wilde," I inquired.
"Listen," he coughed again.
"Mrs. C. Hamilton Chester, of Chester Park,
New York City. Called April 7th. Reputation damaged at Dieppe, France. To be
repaired by October 1st Retainer $500.
"Note.—C. Hamilton Chester, Captain U.S.S.
'Avalanche', ordered home from South Sea Squadron October 1st."
"Well," I said, "the profession
of a Repairer of Reputations is lucrative."
His colourless eyes sought mine, "I only
wanted to demonstrate that I was correct. You said it was impossible to succeed
as a Repairer of Reputations; that even if I did succeed in certain cases it
would cost me more than I would gain by it. To-day I have five hundred men in
my employ, who are poorly paid, but who pursue the work with an enthusiasm
which possibly may be born of fear. These men enter every shade and grade of
society; some even are pillars of the most exclusive social temples; others are
the prop and pride of the financial world; still others, hold undisputed sway
among the 'Fancy and the Talent.' I choose them at my leisure from those who
reply to my advertisements. It is easy enough, they are all cowards. I could
treble the number in twenty days if I wished. So you see, those who have in
their keeping the reputations of their fellow-citizens, I have in my pay."
"They may turn on you," I suggested.
He rubbed his thumb over his cropped ears, and
adjusted the wax substitutes. "I think not," he murmured
thoughtfully, "I seldom have to apply the whip, and then only once.
Besides they like their wages."
"How do you apply the whip?" I
demanded.
His face for a moment was awful to look upon.
His eyes dwindled to a pair of green sparks.
"I invite them to come and have a little
chat with me," he said in a soft voice.
A knock at the door interrupted him, and his
face resumed its amiable expression.
"Who is it?" he inquired.
"Mr. Steylette," was the answer.
"Come to-morrow," replied Mr. Wilde.
"Impossible," began the other, but was
silenced by a sort of bark from Mr. Wilde.
"Come to-morrow," he repeated.
We heard somebody move away from the door and
turn the corner by the stairway.
"Who is that?" I asked.
"Arnold Steylette, Owner and Editor in
Chief of the great New York daily."
He drummed on the ledger with his fingerless
hand adding: "I pay him very badly, but he thinks it a good bargain."
"Arnold Steylette!" I repeated amazed.
"Yes," said Mr. Wilde, with a
self-satisfied cough.
The cat, which had entered the room as he spoke,
hesitated, looked up at him and snarled. He climbed down from the chair and
squatting on the floor, took the creature into his arms and caressed her. The
cat ceased snarling and presently began a loud purring which seemed to increase
in timbre as he stroked her. "Where are the notes?" I asked. He
pointed to the table, and for the hundredth time I picked up the bundle of
manuscript entitled—
"THE IMPERIAL DYNASTY OF AMERICA."
One by one I studied the well-worn pages, worn
only by my own handling, and although I knew all by heart, from the beginning,
"When from Carcosa, the Hyades, Hastur, and Aldebaran," to
"Castaigne, Louis de Calvados, born December 19th, 1877," I read it
with an eager, rapt attention, pausing to repeat parts of it aloud, and
dwelling especially on "Hildred de Calvados, only son of Hildred Castaigne
and Edythe Landes Castaigne, first in succession," etc., etc.
When I finished, Mr. Wilde nodded and coughed.
"Speaking of your legitimate
ambition," he said, "how do Constance and Louis get along?"
"She loves him," I replied simply.
The cat on his knee suddenly turned and struck
at his eyes, and he flung her off and climbed on to the chair opposite me.
"And Dr. Archer! But that's a matter you
can settle any time you wish," he added.
"Yes," I replied, "Dr. Archer can
wait, but it is time I saw my cousin Louis."
"It is time," he repeated. Then he
took another ledger from the table and ran over the leaves rapidly. "We
are now in communication with ten thousand men," he muttered. "We can
count on one hundred thousand within the first twenty-eight hours, and in
forty-eight hours the state will rise en masse. The country follows
the state, and the portion that will not, I mean California and the Northwest,
might better never have been inhabited. I shall not send them the Yellow
Sign."
The blood rushed to my head, but I only
answered, "A new broom sweeps clean."
"The ambition of Caesar and of Napoleon
pales before that which could not rest until it had seized the minds of men and
controlled even their unborn thoughts," said Mr. Wilde.
"You are speaking of the King in
Yellow," I groaned, with a shudder.
"He is a king whom emperors have
served."
"I am content to serve him," I
replied.
Mr. Wilde sat rubbing his ears with his crippled
hand. "Perhaps Constance does not love him," he suggested.
I started to reply, but a sudden burst of
military music from the street below drowned my voice. The twentieth dragoon
regiment, formerly in garrison at Mount St. Vincent, was returning from the
manœuvres in Westchester County, to its new barracks on East Washington Square.
It was my cousin's regiment. They were a fine lot of fellows, in their pale
blue, tight-fitting jackets, jaunty busbys and white riding breeches with the
double yellow stripe, into which their limbs seemed moulded. Every other
squadron was armed with lances, from the metal points of which fluttered yellow
and white pennons. The band passed, playing the regimental march, then came the
colonel and staff, the horses crowding and trampling, while their heads bobbed
in unison, and the pennons fluttered from their lance points. The troopers, who
rode with the beautiful English seat, looked brown as berries from their bloodless
campaign among the farms of Westchester, and the music of their sabres against
the stirrups, and the jingle of spurs and carbines was delightful to me. I saw
Louis riding with his squadron. He was as handsome an officer as I have ever
seen. Mr. Wilde, who had mounted a chair by the window, saw him too, but said
nothing. Louis turned and looked straight at Hawberk's shop as he passed, and I
could see the flush on his brown cheeks. I think Constance must have been at
the window. When the last troopers had clattered by, and the last pennons
vanished into South Fifth Avenue, Mr. Wilde clambered out of his chair and
dragged the chest away from the door.
"Yes," he said, "it is time that
you saw your cousin Louis."
He unlocked the door and I picked up my hat and
stick and stepped into the corridor. The stairs were dark. Groping about, I set
my foot on something soft, which snarled and spit, and I aimed a murderous blow
at the cat, but my cane shivered to splinters against the balustrade, and the
beast scurried back into Mr. Wilde's room.
Passing Hawberk's door again I saw him still at
work on the armour, but I did not stop, and stepping out into Bleecker Street,
I followed it to Wooster, skirted the grounds of the Lethal Chamber, and
crossing Washington Park went straight to my rooms in the Benedick. Here I
lunched comfortably, read the Herald and the Meteor,
and finally went to the steel safe in my bedroom and set the time combination.
The three and three-quarter minutes which it is necessary to wait, while the
time lock is opening, are to me golden moments. From the instant I set the
combination to the moment when I grasp the knobs and swing back the solid steel
doors, I live in an ecstasy of expectation. Those moments must be like moments
passed in Paradise. I know what I am to find at the end of the time limit. I
know what the massive safe holds secure for me, for me alone, and the exquisite
pleasure of waiting is hardly enhanced when the safe opens and I lift, from its
velvet crown, a diadem of purest gold, blazing with diamonds. I do this every
day, and yet the joy of waiting and at last touching again the diadem, only
seems to increase as the days pass. It is a diadem fit for a King among kings,
an Emperor among emperors. The King in Yellow might scorn it, but it shall be
worn by his royal servant.
I held it in my arms until the alarm in the safe
rang harshly, and then tenderly, proudly, I replaced it and shut the steel
doors. I walked slowly back into my study, which faces Washington Square, and
leaned on the window sill. The afternoon sun poured into my windows, and a
gentle breeze stirred the branches of the elms and maples in the park, now
covered with buds and tender foliage. A flock of pigeons circled about the
tower of the Memorial Church; sometimes alighting on the purple tiled roof,
sometimes wheeling downward to the lotos fountain in front of the marble arch.
The gardeners were busy with the flower beds around the fountain, and the
freshly turned earth smelled sweet and spicy. A lawn mower, drawn by a fat
white horse, clinked across the green sward, and watering-carts poured showers
of spray over the asphalt drives. Around the statue of Peter Stuyvesant, which
in 1897 had replaced the monstrosity supposed to represent Garibaldi, children
played in the spring sunshine, and nurse girls wheeled elaborate baby carriages
with a reckless disregard for the pasty-faced occupants, which could probably
be explained by the presence of half a dozen trim dragoon troopers languidly
lolling on the benches. Through the trees, the Washington Memorial Arch
glistened like silver in the sunshine, and beyond, on the eastern extremity of
the square the grey stone barracks of the dragoons, and the white granite
artillery stables were alive with colour and motion.
I looked at the Lethal Chamber on the corner of
the square opposite. A few curious people still lingered about the gilded iron
railing, but inside the grounds the paths were deserted. I watched the
fountains ripple and sparkle; the sparrows had already found this new bathing
nook, and the basins were covered with the dusty-feathered little things. Two
or three white peacocks picked their way across the lawns, and a drab coloured
pigeon sat so motionless on the arm of one of the "Fates," that it
seemed to be a part of the sculptured stone.
As I was turning carelessly away, a slight
commotion in the group of curious loiterers around the gates attracted my
attention. A young man had entered, and was advancing with nervous strides
along the gravel path which leads to the bronze doors of the Lethal Chamber. He
paused a moment before the "Fates," and as he raised his head to
those three mysterious faces, the pigeon rose from its sculptured perch,
circled about for a moment and wheeled to the east. The young man pressed his
hand to his face, and then with an undefinable gesture sprang up the marble
steps, the bronze doors closed behind him, and half an hour later the loiterers
slouched away, and the frightened pigeon returned to its perch in the arms of
Fate.
I put on my hat and went out into the park for a
little walk before dinner. As I crossed the central driveway a group of
officers passed, and one of them called out, "Hello, Hildred," and
came back to shake hands with me. It was my cousin Louis, who stood smiling and
tapping his spurred heels with his riding-whip.
"Just back from Westchester," he said;
"been doing the bucolic; milk and curds, you know, dairy-maids in
sunbonnets, who say 'haeow' and 'I don't think' when you tell them they are
pretty. I'm nearly dead for a square meal at Delmonico's. What's the
news?"
"There is none," I replied pleasantly.
"I saw your regiment coming in this morning."
"Did you? I didn't see you. Where were
you?"
"In Mr. Wilde's window."
"Oh, hell!" he began impatiently,
"that man is stark mad! I don't understand why you—"
He saw how annoyed I felt by this outburst, and
begged my pardon.
"Really, old chap," he said, "I
don't mean to run down a man you like, but for the life of me I can't see what
the deuce you find in common with Mr. Wilde. He's not well bred, to put it
generously; he is hideously deformed; his head is the head of a criminally
insane person. You know yourself he's been in an asylum—"
"So have I," I interrupted calmly.
Louis looked startled and confused for a moment,
but recovered and slapped me heartily on the shoulder. "You were
completely cured," he began; but I stopped him again.
"I suppose you mean that I was simply
acknowledged never to have been insane."
"Of course that—that's what I meant,"
he laughed.
I disliked his laugh because I knew it was
forced, but I nodded gaily and asked him where he was going. Louis looked after
his brother officers who had now almost reached Broadway.
"We had intended to sample a Brunswick
cocktail, but to tell you the truth I was anxious for an excuse to go and see
Hawberk instead. Come along, I'll make you my excuse."
We found old Hawberk, neatly attired in a fresh
spring suit, standing at the door of his shop and sniffing the air.
"I had just decided to take Constance for a
little stroll before dinner," he replied to the impetuous volley of
questions from Louis. "We thought of walking on the park terrace along the
North River."
At that moment Constance appeared and grew pale
and rosy by turns as Louis bent over her small gloved fingers. I tried to
excuse myself, alleging an engagement uptown, but Louis and Constance would not
listen, and I saw I was expected to remain and engage old Hawberk's attention.
After all it would be just as well if I kept my eye on Louis, I thought, and
when they hailed a Spring Street horse-car, I got in after them and took my
seat beside the armourer.
The beautiful line of parks and granite terraces
overlooking the wharves along the North River, which were built in 1910 and
finished in the autumn of 1917, had become one of the most popular promenades
in the metropolis. They extended from the battery to 190th Street, overlooking
the noble river and affording a fine view of the Jersey shore and the Highlands
opposite. Cafés and restaurants were scattered here and there among the trees,
and twice a week military bands from the garrison played in the kiosques on the
parapets.
We sat down in the sunshine on the bench at the
foot of the equestrian statue of General Sheridan. Constance tipped her
sunshade to shield her eyes, and she and Louis began a murmuring conversation
which was impossible to catch. Old Hawberk, leaning on his ivory headed cane,
lighted an excellent cigar, the mate to which I politely refused, and smiled at
vacancy. The sun hung low above the Staten Island woods, and the bay was dyed
with golden hues reflected from the sun-warmed sails of the shipping in the
harbour.
Brigs, schooners, yachts, clumsy ferry-boats,
their decks swarming with people, railroad transports carrying lines of brown,
blue and white freight cars, stately sound steamers, déclassé tramp steamers,
coasters, dredgers, scows, and everywhere pervading the entire bay impudent
little tugs puffing and whistling officiously;—these were the craft which
churned the sunlight waters as far as the eye could reach. In calm contrast to
the hurry of sailing vessel and steamer a silent fleet of white warships lay
motionless in midstream.
Constance's merry laugh aroused me from my
reverie.
"What are you staring
at?" she inquired.
"Nothing—the fleet," I smiled.
Then Louis told us what the vessels were,
pointing out each by its relative position to the old Red Fort on Governor's
Island.
"That little cigar shaped thing is a
torpedo boat," he explained; "there are four more lying close
together. They are the Tarpon, the Falcon, the Sea
Fox, and the Octopus. The gun-boats just above are the Princeton,
the Champlain, the Still Water and the Erie.
Next to them lie the cruisers Faragut and Los Angeles,
and above them the battle ships California, and Dakota,
and the Washington which is the flag ship. Those two squatty
looking chunks of metal which are anchored there off Castle William are the
double turreted monitors Terrible and Magnificent;
behind them lies the ram, Osceola."
Constance looked at him with deep approval in
her beautiful eyes. "What loads of things you know for a soldier,"
she said, and we all joined in the laugh which followed.
Presently Louis rose with a nod to us and
offered his arm to Constance, and they strolled away along the river wall.
Hawberk watched them for a moment and then turned to me.
"Mr. Wilde was right," he said.
"I have found the missing tassets and left cuissard of the 'Prince's
Emblazoned,' in a vile old junk garret in Pell Street."
"998?" I inquired, with a smile.
"Yes."
"Mr. Wilde is a very intelligent man,"
I observed.
"I want to give him the credit of this most
important discovery," continued Hawberk. "And I intend it shall be
known that he is entitled to the fame of it."
"He won't thank you for that," I
answered sharply; "please say nothing about it."
"Do you know what it is worth?" said
Hawberk.
"No, fifty dollars, perhaps."
"It is valued at five hundred, but the
owner of the 'Prince's Emblazoned' will give two thousand dollars to the person
who completes his suit; that reward also belongs to Mr. Wilde."
"He doesn't want it! He refuses it!" I
answered angrily. "What do you know about Mr. Wilde? He doesn't need the
money. He is rich—or will be—richer than any living man except myself. What
will we care for money then—what will we care, he and I, when—when—"
"When what?" demanded Hawberk,
astonished.
"You will see," I replied, on my guard
again.
He looked at me narrowly, much as Doctor Archer
used to, and I knew he thought I was mentally unsound. Perhaps it was fortunate
for him that he did not use the word lunatic just then.
"No," I replied to his unspoken
thought, "I am not mentally weak; my mind is as healthy as Mr. Wilde's. I
do not care to explain just yet what I have on hand, but it is an investment
which will pay more than mere gold, silver and precious stones. It will secure
the happiness and prosperity of a continent—yes, a hemisphere!"
"Oh," said Hawberk.
"And eventually," I continued more
quietly, "it will secure the happiness of the whole world."
"And incidentally your own happiness and
prosperity as well as Mr. Wilde's?"
"Exactly," I smiled. But I could have
throttled him for taking that tone.
He looked at me in silence for a while and then
said very gently, "Why don't you give up your books and studies, Mr.
Castaigne, and take a tramp among the mountains somewhere or other? You used to
be fond of fishing. Take a cast or two at the trout in the Rangelys."
"I don't care for fishing any more," I
answered, without a shade of annoyance in my voice.
"You used to be fond of everything,"
he continued; "athletics, yachting, shooting, riding—"
"I have never cared to ride since my
fall," I said quietly.
"Ah, yes, your fall," he repeated,
looking away from me.
I thought this nonsense had gone far enough, so
I brought the conversation back to Mr. Wilde; but he was scanning my face again
in a manner highly offensive to me.
"Mr. Wilde," he repeated, "do you
know what he did this afternoon? He came downstairs and nailed a sign over the
hall door next to mine; it read:
MR. WILDE,
REPAIRER OF REPUTATIONS.
Third Bell.
"Do you know what a Repairer of Reputations
can be?"
"I do," I replied, suppressing the
rage within.
"Oh," he said again.
Louis and Constance came strolling by and
stopped to ask if we would join them. Hawberk looked at his watch. At the same
moment a puff of smoke shot from the casemates of Castle William, and the boom
of the sunset gun rolled across the water and was re-echoed from the Highlands
opposite. The flag came running down from the flag-pole, the bugles sounded on
the white decks of the warships, and the first electric light sparkled out from
the Jersey shore.
As I turned into the city with Hawberk I heard
Constance murmur something to Louis which I did not understand; but Louis
whispered "My darling," in reply; and again, walking ahead with
Hawberk through the square I heard a murmur of "sweetheart," and
"my own Constance," and I knew the time had nearly arrived when I
should speak of important matters with my cousin Louis.
III
One morning early in May I stood before the
steel safe in my bedroom, trying on the golden jewelled crown. The diamonds
flashed fire as I turned to the mirror, and the heavy beaten gold burned like a
halo about my head. I remembered Camilla's agonized scream and the awful words
echoing through the dim streets of Carcosa. They were the last lines in the
first act, and I dared not think of what followed—dared not, even in the spring
sunshine, there in my own room, surrounded with familiar objects, reassured by
the bustle from the street and the voices of the servants in the hallway
outside. For those poisoned words had dropped slowly into my heart, as
death-sweat drops upon a bed-sheet and is absorbed. Trembling, I put the diadem
from my head and wiped my forehead, but I thought of Hastur and of my own
rightful ambition, and I remembered Mr. Wilde as I had last left him, his face
all torn and bloody from the claws of that devil's creature, and what he
said—ah, what he said. The alarm bell in the safe began to whirr harshly, and I
knew my time was up; but I would not heed it, and replacing the flashing
circlet upon my head I turned defiantly to the mirror. I stood for a long time
absorbed in the changing expression of my own eyes. The mirror reflected a face
which was like my own, but whiter, and so thin that I hardly recognized it. And
all the time I kept repeating between my clenched teeth, "The day has
come! the day has come!" while the alarm in the safe whirred and
clamoured, and the diamonds sparkled and flamed above my brow. I heard a door
open but did not heed it. It was only when I saw two faces in the mirror:—it
was only when another face rose over my shoulder, and two other eyes met mine.
I wheeled like a flash and seized a long knife from my dressing-table, and my
cousin sprang back very pale, crying: "Hildred! for God's sake!" then
as my hand fell, he said: "It is I, Louis, don't you know me?" I
stood silent. I could not have spoken for my life. He walked up to me and took
the knife from my hand.
"What is all this?" he inquired, in a
gentle voice. "Are you ill?"
"No," I replied. But I doubt if he
heard me.
"Come, come, old fellow," he cried,
"take off that brass crown and toddle into the study. Are you going to a
masquerade? What's all this theatrical tinsel anyway?"
I was glad he thought the crown was made of brass
and paste, yet I didn't like him any the better for thinking so. I let him take
it from my hand, knowing it was best to humour him. He tossed the splendid
diadem in the air, and catching it, turned to me smiling.
"It's dear at fifty cents," he said.
"What's it for?"
I did not answer, but took the circlet from his
hands, and placing it in the safe shut the massive steel door. The alarm ceased
its infernal din at once. He watched me curiously, but did not seem to notice
the sudden ceasing of the alarm. He did, however, speak of the safe as a
biscuit box. Fearing lest he might examine the combination I led the way into
my study. Louis threw himself on the sofa and flicked at flies with his eternal
riding-whip. He wore his fatigue uniform with the braided jacket and jaunty
cap, and I noticed that his riding-boots were all splashed with red mud.
"Where have you been?" I inquired.
"Jumping mud creeks in Jersey," he
said. "I haven't had time to change yet; I was rather in a hurry to see
you. Haven't you got a glass of something? I'm dead tired; been in the saddle
twenty-four hours."
I gave him some brandy from my medicinal store,
which he drank with a grimace.
"Damned bad stuff," he observed.
"I'll give you an address where they sell brandy that is brandy."
"It's good enough for my needs," I
said indifferently. "I use it to rub my chest with." He stared and
flicked at another fly.
"See here, old fellow," he began,
"I've got something to suggest to you. It's four years now that you've
shut yourself up here like an owl, never going anywhere, never taking any
healthy exercise, never doing a damn thing but poring over those books up there
on the mantelpiece."
He glanced along the row of shelves.
"Napoleon, Napoleon, Napoleon!" he read. "For heaven's sake,
have you nothing but Napoleons there?"
"I wish they were bound in gold," I
said. "But wait, yes, there is another book, The King in Yellow."
I looked him steadily in the eye.
"Have you never read it?" I asked.
"I? No, thank God! I don't want to be
driven crazy."
I saw he regretted his speech as soon as he had
uttered it. There is only one word which I loathe more than I do lunatic and
that word is crazy. But I controlled myself and asked him why he thought The
King in Yellow dangerous.
"Oh, I don't know," he said, hastily.
"I only remember the excitement it created and the denunciations from
pulpit and Press. I believe the author shot himself after bringing forth this
monstrosity, didn't he?"
"I understand he is still alive," I
answered.
"That's probably true," he muttered;
"bullets couldn't kill a fiend like that."
"It is a book of great truths," I
said.
"Yes," he replied, "of 'truths'
which send men frantic and blast their lives. I don't care if the thing is, as
they say, the very supreme essence of art. It's a crime to have written it, and
I for one shall never open its pages."
"Is that what you have come to tell
me?" I asked.
"No," he said, "I came to tell
you that I am going to be married."
I believe for a moment my heart ceased to beat,
but I kept my eyes on his face.
"Yes," he continued, smiling happily,
"married to the sweetest girl on earth."
"Constance Hawberk," I said
mechanically.
"How did you know?" he cried,
astonished. "I didn't know it myself until that evening last April, when
we strolled down to the embankment before dinner."
"When is it to be?" I asked.
"It was to have been next September, but an
hour ago a despatch came ordering our regiment to the Presidio, San Francisco.
We leave at noon to-morrow. To-morrow," he repeated. "Just think,
Hildred, to-morrow I shall be the happiest fellow that ever drew breath in this
jolly world, for Constance will go with me."
I offered him my hand in congratulation, and he
seized and shook it like the good-natured fool he was—or pretended to be.
"I am going to get my squadron as a wedding
present," he rattled on. "Captain and Mrs. Louis Castaigne, eh,
Hildred?"
Then he told me where it was to be and who were
to be there, and made me promise to come and be best man. I set my teeth and
listened to his boyish chatter without showing what I felt, but—
I was getting to the limit of my endurance, and
when he jumped up, and, switching his spurs till they jingled, said he must go,
I did not detain him.
"There's one thing I want to ask of
you," I said quietly.
"Out with it, it's promised," he
laughed.
"I want you to meet me for a quarter of an
hour's talk to-night."
"Of course, if you wish," he said,
somewhat puzzled. "Where?"
"Anywhere, in the park there."
"What time, Hildred?"
"Midnight."
"What in the name of—" he began, but
checked himself and laughingly assented. I watched him go down the stairs and
hurry away, his sabre banging at every stride. He turned into Bleecker Street,
and I knew he was going to see Constance. I gave him ten minutes to disappear
and then followed in his footsteps, taking with me the jewelled crown and the
silken robe embroidered with the Yellow Sign. When I turned into Bleecker
Street, and entered the doorway which bore the sign—
MR. WILDE,
REPAIRER OF REPUTATIONS.
Third Bell.
I saw old Hawberk moving about in his shop, and
imagined I heard Constance's voice in the parlour; but I avoided them both and
hurried up the trembling stairways to Mr. Wilde's apartment. I knocked and
entered without ceremony. Mr. Wilde lay groaning on the floor, his face covered
with blood, his clothes torn to shreds. Drops of blood were scattered about
over the carpet, which had also been ripped and frayed in the evidently recent
struggle.
"It's that cursed cat," he said,
ceasing his groans, and turning his colourless eyes to me; "she attacked
me while I was asleep. I believe she will kill me yet."
This was too much, so I went into the kitchen,
and, seizing a hatchet from the pantry, started to find the infernal beast and
settle her then and there. My search was fruitless, and after a while I gave it
up and came back to find Mr. Wilde squatting on his high chair by the table. He
had washed his face and changed his clothes. The great furrows which the cat's
claws had ploughed up in his face he had filled with collodion, and a rag hid
the wound in his throat. I told him I should kill the cat when I came across
her, but he only shook his head and turned to the open ledger before him. He
read name after name of the people who had come to him in regard to their
reputation, and the sums he had amassed were startling.
"I put on the screws now and then," he
explained.
"One day or other some of these people will
assassinate you," I insisted.
"Do you think so?" he said, rubbing
his mutilated ears.
It was useless to argue with him, so I took down
the manuscript entitled Imperial Dynasty of America, for the last time I should
ever take it down in Mr. Wilde's study. I read it through, thrilling and
trembling with pleasure. When I had finished Mr. Wilde took the manuscript and,
turning to the dark passage which leads from his study to his bed-chamber,
called out in a loud voice, "Vance." Then for the first time, I
noticed a man crouching there in the shadow. How I had overlooked him during my
search for the cat, I cannot imagine.
"Vance, come in," cried Mr. Wilde.
The figure rose and crept towards us, and I
shall never forget the face that he raised to mine, as the light from the
window illuminated it.
"Vance, this is Mr. Castaigne," said
Mr. Wilde. Before he had finished speaking, the man threw himself on the ground
before the table, crying and grasping, "Oh, God! Oh, my God! Help me!
Forgive me! Oh, Mr. Castaigne, keep that man away. You cannot, you cannot mean
it! You are different—save me! I am broken down—I was in a madhouse and
now—when all was coming right—when I had forgotten the King—the King in Yellow
and—but I shall go mad again—I shall go mad—"
His voice died into a choking rattle, for Mr.
Wilde had leapt on him and his right hand encircled the man's throat. When
Vance fell in a heap on the floor, Mr. Wilde clambered nimbly into his chair
again, and rubbing his mangled ears with the stump of his hand, turned to me
and asked me for the ledger. I reached it down from the shelf and he opened it.
After a moment's searching among the beautifully written pages, he coughed
complacently, and pointed to the name Vance.
"Vance," he read aloud, "Osgood
Oswald Vance." At the sound of his name, the man on the floor raised his
head and turned a convulsed face to Mr. Wilde. His eyes were injected with
blood, his lips tumefied. "Called April 28th," continued Mr. Wilde.
"Occupation, cashier in the Seaforth National Bank; has served a term of
forgery at Sing Sing, from whence he was transferred to the Asylum for the
Criminal Insane. Pardoned by the Governor of New York, and discharged from the
Asylum, January 19, 1918. Reputation damaged at Sheepshead Bay. Rumours that he
lives beyond his income. Reputation to be repaired at once. Retainer $1,500.
"Note.—Has embezzled sums amounting to
$30,000 since March 20, 1919, excellent family, and secured present position
through uncle's influence. Father, President of Seaforth Bank."
I looked at the man on the floor.
"Get up, Vance," said Mr. Wilde in a
gentle voice. Vance rose as if hypnotized. "He will do as we suggest
now," observed Mr. Wilde, and opening the manuscript, he read the entire
history of the Imperial Dynasty of America. Then in a kind and soothing murmur
he ran over the important points with Vance, who stood like one stunned. His
eyes were so blank and vacant that I imagined he had become half-witted, and
remarked it to Mr. Wilde who replied that it was of no consequence anyway. Very
patiently we pointed out to Vance what his share in the affair would be, and he
seemed to understand after a while. Mr. Wilde explained the manuscript, using
several volumes on Heraldry, to substantiate the result of his researches. He
mentioned the establishment of the Dynasty in Carcosa, the lakes which
connected Hastur, Aldebaran and the mystery of the Hyades. He spoke of Cassilda
and Camilla, and sounded the cloudy depths of Demhe, and the Lake of Hali.
"The scolloped tatters of the King in Yellow must hide Yhtill
forever," he muttered, but I do not believe Vance heard him. Then by
degrees he led Vance along the ramifications of the Imperial family, to Uoht
and Thale, from Naotalba and Phantom of Truth, to Aldones, and then tossing
aside his manuscript and notes, he began the wonderful story of the Last King.
Fascinated and thrilled I watched him. He threw up his head, his long arms were
stretched out in a magnificent gesture of pride and power, and his eyes blazed
deep in their sockets like two emeralds. Vance listened stupefied. As for me,
when at last Mr. Wilde had finished, and pointing to me, cried, "The
cousin of the King!" my head swam with excitement.
Controlling myself with a superhuman effort, I
explained to Vance why I alone was worthy of the crown and why my cousin must
be exiled or die. I made him understand that my cousin must never marry, even
after renouncing all his claims, and how that least of all he should marry the
daughter of the Marquis of Avonshire and bring England into the question. I
showed him a list of thousands of names which Mr. Wilde had drawn up; every man
whose name was there had received the Yellow Sign which no living human being
dared disregard. The city, the state, the whole land, were ready to rise and
tremble before the Pallid Mask.
The time had come, the people should know the
son of Hastur, and the whole world bow to the black stars which hang in the sky
over Carcosa.
Vance leaned on the table, his head buried in
his hands. Mr. Wilde drew a rough sketch on the margin of yesterday's Herald with
a bit of lead pencil. It was a plan of Hawberk's rooms. Then he wrote out the
order and affixed the seal, and shaking like a palsied man I signed my first
writ of execution with my name Hildred-Rex.
Mr. Wilde clambered to the floor and unlocking
the cabinet, took a long square box from the first shelf. This he brought to
the table and opened. A new knife lay in the tissue paper inside and I picked
it up and handed it to Vance, along with the order and the plan of Hawberk's
apartment. Then Mr. Wilde told Vance he could go; and he went, shambling like
an outcast of the slums.
I sat for a while watching the daylight fade
behind the square tower of the Judson Memorial Church, and finally, gathering
up the manuscript and notes, took my hat and started for the door.
Mr. Wilde watched me in silence. When I had
stepped into the hall I looked back. Mr. Wilde's small eyes were still fixed on
me. Behind him, the shadows gathered in the fading light. Then I closed the
door behind me and went out into the darkening streets.
I had eaten nothing since breakfast, but I was
not hungry. A wretched, half-starved creature, who stood looking across the
street at the Lethal Chamber, noticed me and came up to tell me a tale of
misery. I gave him money, I don't know why, and he went away without thanking
me. An hour later another outcast approached and whined his story. I had a
blank bit of paper in my pocket, on which was traced the Yellow Sign, and I
handed it to him. He looked at it stupidly for a moment, and then with an
uncertain glance at me, folded it with what seemed to me exaggerated care and
placed it in his bosom.
The electric lights were sparkling among the
trees, and the new moon shone in the sky above the Lethal Chamber. It was
tiresome waiting in the square; I wandered from the Marble Arch to the
artillery stables and back again to the lotos fountain. The flowers and grass
exhaled a fragrance which troubled me. The jet of the fountain played in the
moonlight, and the musical splash of falling drops reminded me of the tinkle of
chained mail in Hawberk's shop. But it was not so fascinating, and the dull
sparkle of the moonlight on the water brought no such sensations of exquisite
pleasure, as when the sunshine played over the polished steel of a corselet on
Hawberk's knee. I watched the bats darting and turning above the water plants
in the fountain basin, but their rapid, jerky flight set my nerves on edge, and
I went away again to walk aimlessly to and fro among the trees.
The artillery stables were dark, but in the
cavalry barracks the officers' windows were brilliantly lighted, and the
sallyport was constantly filled with troopers in fatigue, carrying straw and
harness and baskets filled with tin dishes.
Twice the mounted sentry at the gates was
changed while I wandered up and down the asphalt walk. I looked at my watch. It
was nearly time. The lights in the barracks went out one by one, the barred
gate was closed, and every minute or two an officer passed in through the side
wicket, leaving a rattle of accoutrements and a jingle of spurs on the night
air. The square had become very silent. The last homeless loiterer had been
driven away by the grey-coated park policeman, the car tracks along Wooster
Street were deserted, and the only sound which broke the stillness was the
stamping of the sentry's horse and the ring of his sabre against the saddle
pommel. In the barracks, the officers' quarters were still lighted, and
military servants passed and repassed before the bay windows. Twelve o'clock
sounded from the new spire of St. Francis Xavier, and at the last stroke of the
sad-toned bell a figure passed through the wicket beside the portcullis,
returned the salute of the sentry, and crossing the street entered the square
and advanced toward the Benedick apartment house.
"Louis," I called.
The man pivoted on his spurred heels and came
straight toward me.
"Is that you, Hildred?"
"Yes, you are on time."
I took his offered hand, and we strolled toward
the Lethal Chamber.
He rattled on about his wedding and the graces
of Constance, and their future prospects, calling my attention to his captain's
shoulder-straps, and the triple gold arabesque on his sleeve and fatigue cap. I
believe I listened as much to the music of his spurs and sabre as I did to his
boyish babble, and at last we stood under the elms on the Fourth Street corner
of the square opposite the Lethal Chamber. Then he laughed and asked me what I
wanted with him. I motioned him to a seat on a bench under the electric light,
and sat down beside him. He looked at me curiously, with that same searching
glance which I hate and fear so in doctors. I felt the insult of his look, but
he did not know it, and I carefully concealed my feelings.
"Well, old chap," he inquired,
"what can I do for you?"
I drew from my pocket the manuscript and notes
of the Imperial Dynasty of America, and looking him in the eye said:
"I will tell you. On your word as a
soldier, promise me to read this manuscript from beginning to end, without
asking me a question. Promise me to read these notes in the same way, and
promise me to listen to what I have to tell later."
"I promise, if you wish it," he said
pleasantly. "Give me the paper, Hildred."
He began to read, raising his eyebrows with a
puzzled, whimsical air, which made me tremble with suppressed anger. As he
advanced his, eyebrows contracted, and his lips seemed to form the word
"rubbish."
Then he looked slightly bored, but apparently
for my sake read, with an attempt at interest, which presently ceased to be an
effort. He started when in the closely written pages he came to his own name,
and when he came to mine he lowered the paper, and looked sharply at me for a
moment. But he kept his word, and resumed his reading, and I let the
half-formed question die on his lips unanswered. When he came to the end and
read the signature of Mr. Wilde, he folded the paper carefully and returned it
to me. I handed him the notes, and he settled back, pushing his fatigue cap up
to his forehead, with a boyish gesture, which I remembered so well in school. I
watched his face as he read, and when he finished I took the notes with the
manuscript, and placed them in my pocket. Then I unfolded a scroll marked with
the Yellow Sign. He saw the sign, but he did not seem to recognize it, and I
called his attention to it somewhat sharply.
"Well," he said, "I see it. What
is it?"
"It is the Yellow Sign," I said
angrily.
"Oh, that's it, is it?" said Louis, in
that flattering voice, which Doctor Archer used to employ with me, and would
probably have employed again, had I not settled his affair for him.
I kept my rage down and answered as steadily as
possible, "Listen, you have engaged your word?"
"I am listening, old chap," he replied
soothingly.
I began to speak very calmly.
"Dr. Archer, having by some means become
possessed of the secret of the Imperial Succession, attempted to deprive me of
my right, alleging that because of a fall from my horse four years ago, I had
become mentally deficient. He presumed to place me under restraint in his own
house in hopes of either driving me insane or poisoning me. I have not
forgotten it. I visited him last night and the interview was final."
Louis turned quite pale, but did not move. I
resumed triumphantly, "There are yet three people to be interviewed in the
interests of Mr. Wilde and myself. They are my cousin Louis, Mr. Hawberk, and
his daughter Constance."
Louis sprang to his feet and I arose also, and
flung the paper marked with the Yellow Sign to the ground.
"Oh, I don't need that to tell you what I
have to say," I cried, with a laugh of triumph. "You must renounce
the crown to me, do you hear, to me."
Louis looked at me with a startled air, but
recovering himself said kindly, "Of course I renounce the—what is it I
must renounce?"
"The crown," I said angrily.
"Of course," he answered, "I
renounce it. Come, old chap, I'll walk back to your rooms with you."
"Don't try any of your doctor's tricks on
me," I cried, trembling with fury. "Don't act as if you think I am
insane."
"What nonsense," he replied.
"Come, it's getting late, Hildred."
"No," I shouted, "you must
listen. You cannot marry, I forbid it. Do you hear? I forbid it. You shall
renounce the crown, and in reward I grant you exile, but if you refuse you
shall die."
He tried to calm me, but I was roused at last,
and drawing my long knife barred his way.
Then I told him how they would find Dr. Archer
in the cellar with his throat open, and I laughed in his face when I thought of
Vance and his knife, and the order signed by me.
"Ah, you are the King," I cried,
"but I shall be King. Who are you to keep me from Empire over all the
habitable earth! I was born the cousin of a king, but I shall be King!"
Louis stood white and rigid before me. Suddenly
a man came running up Fourth Street, entered the gate of the Lethal Temple,
traversed the path to the bronze doors at full speed, and plunged into the
death chamber with the cry of one demented, and I laughed until I wept tears,
for I had recognized Vance, and knew that Hawberk and his daughter were no
longer in my way.
"Go," I cried to Louis, "you have
ceased to be a menace. You will never marry Constance now, and if you marry any
one else in your exile, I will visit you as I did my doctor last night. Mr.
Wilde takes charge of you to-morrow." Then I turned and darted into South
Fifth Avenue, and with a cry of terror Louis dropped his belt and sabre and
followed me like the wind. I heard him close behind me at the corner of
Bleecker Street, and I dashed into the doorway under Hawberk's sign. He cried,
"Halt, or I fire!" but when he saw that I flew up the stairs leaving
Hawberk's shop below, he left me, and I heard him hammering and shouting at
their door as though it were possible to arouse the dead.
Mr. Wilde's door was open, and I entered crying,
"It is done, it is done! Let the nations rise and look upon their
King!" but I could not find Mr. Wilde, so I went to the cabinet and took
the splendid diadem from its case. Then I drew on the white silk robe,
embroidered with the Yellow Sign, and placed the crown upon my head. At last I
was King, King by my right in Hastur, King because I knew the mystery of the
Hyades, and my mind had sounded the depths of the Lake of Hali. I was King! The
first grey pencillings of dawn would raise a tempest which would shake two
hemispheres. Then as I stood, my every nerve pitched to the highest tension,
faint with the joy and splendour of my thought, without, in the dark passage, a
man groaned.
I seized the tallow dip and sprang to the door.
The cat passed me like a demon, and the tallow dip went out, but my long knife
flew swifter than she, and I heard her screech, and I knew that my knife had
found her. For a moment I listened to her tumbling and thumping about in the
darkness, and then when her frenzy ceased, I lighted a lamp and raised it over
my head. Mr. Wilde lay on the floor with his throat torn open. At first I
thought he was dead, but as I looked, a green sparkle came into his sunken
eyes, his mutilated hand trembled, and then a spasm stretched his mouth from
ear to ear. For a moment my terror and despair gave place to hope, but as I
bent over him his eyeballs rolled clean around in his head, and he died. Then
while I stood, transfixed with rage and despair, seeing my crown, my empire,
every hope and every ambition, my very life, lying prostrate there with the
dead master, they came, seized me from behind, and bound me
until my veins stood out like cords, and my voice failed with the paroxysms of
my frenzied screams. But I still raged, bleeding and infuriated among them, and
more than one policeman felt my sharp teeth. Then when I could no longer move
they came nearer; I saw old Hawberk, and behind him my cousin Louis' ghastly
face, and farther away, in the corner, a woman, Constance, weeping softly.
"Ah! I see it now!" I shrieked.
"You have seized the throne and the empire. Woe! woe to you who are
crowned with the crown of the King in Yellow!"
[EDITOR'S NOTE.—Mr. Castaigne died yesterday in the Asylum for Criminal Insane.]
Comments
Post a Comment