Dr. Teesdale had
occasion to attend the condemned man once or twice during the week
before his execution, and found him, as is often the case, when his last
hope of life has vanished, quiet and perfectly resigned to his fate, and
not seeming to look forward with any dread to the morning that each hour
that passed brought nearer and nearer. The bitterness of death appeared
to be over for him: it was done with when he was told that his appeal
was refused. But for those days while hope was not yet quite abandoned,
the wretched man had drunk of death daily. In all his experience the
doctor had never seen a man so wildly and passionately tenacious of
life, nor one so strongly knit to this material world by the sheer
animal lust of living. Then the news that hope could no longer be
entertained was told him, and his spirit passed out of the grip of that
agony of torture and suspense, and accepted the inevitable with
indifference. Yet the change was so extraordinary that it seemed to the
doctor rather that the news had completely stunned his powers of
feeling, and he was below the numbed surface, still knit into material
things as strongly as ever. He had fainted when the result was told him,
and Dr. Teesdale had been called in to attend him. But the fit was but
transient, and he came out of it into full consciousness of what had
happened.
The murder had been a deed of peculiar horror, and
there was nothing of sympathy in the mind of the public towards the
perpetrator. Charles Linkworth, who now lay under capital sentence, was
the keeper of a small stationery store in Sheffield, and there lived
with him his wife and mother. The latter was the victim of his atrocious
crime; the motive of it being to get possession of the sum of five
hundred pounds, which was this woman’s property. Linkworth, as came
out at the trial, was in debt to the extent of a hundred pounds at the
time, and during his wife’s absence from home on a visit to relations,
he strangled his mother, and during the night buried the body in the
small back-garden of his house. On his wife’s return, he had a
sufficiently plausible tale to account for the elder Mrs. Linkworth’s
disappearance, for there had been constant jarrings and bickerings
between him and his mother for the last year or two, and she had more
than once threatened to withdraw herself and the eight shillings a week
which she contributed to household expenses, and purchase an annuity
with her money. It was true, also, that during the younger Mrs.
Linkworth’s absence from home, mother and son had had a violent
quarrel arising originally from some trivial point in household
management, and that in consequence of this, she had actually drawn her
money out of the bank, intending to leave Sheffield next day and settle
in London, where she had friends. That evening she told him this, and
during the night he killed her.
His next step, before his wife’s return, was
logical and sound. He packed up all his mother’s possessions and took
them to the station, from which he saw them despatched to town by
passenger train, and in the evening he asked several friends in to
supper, and told them of his mother’s departure. He did not (logically
also, and in accordance with what they probably already knew) feign
regret, but said that he and she had never got on well together, and
that the cause of peace and quietness was furthered by her going. He
told the same story to his wife on her return, identical in every
detail, adding, however, that the quarrel had been a violent one, and
that his mother had not even left him her address. This again was wisely
thought of: it would prevent his wife from writing to her. She appeared
to accept his story completely: indeed there was nothing strange or
suspicious about it.
For a while he behaved with the composure and astuteness which
most criminals possess up to a certain point, the lack of which, after
that, is generally the cause of their detection. He did not, for
instance, immediately pay off his debts, but took into his house a young
man as lodger, who occupied his mother’s room, and he dismissed the
assistant in his shop, and did the entire serving himself. This gave the
impression of economy, and at the same time he openly spoke of the great
improvement in his trade, and not till a month had passed did he cash
any of the bank-notes which he had found in a locked drawer in his
mother’s room. Then he changed two notes of fifty pounds and paid off
his creditors.
At that point his astuteness and composure failed
him. He opened a deposit account at a local bank with four more
fifty-pound notes, instead of being patient, and increasing his balance
at the savings bank pound by pound, and he got uneasy about that which
he had buried deep enough for security in the back garden. Thinking to
render himself safer in this regard, he ordered a cartload of slag and
stone fragments, and with the help of his lodger employed the summer
evenings when work was over in building a sort of rockery over the spot.
Then came the chance circumstance which really set match to this
dangerous train. There was a fire in the lost luggage office at King’s
Cross Station (from which he ought to have claimed his mother’s
property) and one of the two boxes was partially burned. The company was
liable for compensation, and his mother’s name on her linen, and a
letter with the Sheffield address on it, led to the arrival of a purely
official and formal notice, stating that the company were prepared to
consider claims. It was directed to Mrs. Linkworth’s and Charles
Linkworth’s wife received and read it.
It seemed a sufficiently harmless document, but it
was endorsed with his death-warrant. For he could give no explanation at
all of the fact of the boxes still lying at King’s Cross Station,
beyond suggesting that some accident had happened to his mother. Clearly
he had to put the matter in the hands of the police, with a view to
tracing her movements, and if it proved that she was dead, claiming her
property, which she had already drawn out of the bank. Such at least was
the course urged on him by his wife and lodger, in whose presence the
communication from the railway officials was read out, and it was
impossible to refuse to take it. Then the silent, uncreaking machinery
of justice, characteristic of England, began to move forward. Quiet men
lounged about Smith Street, visited banks, observed the supposed
increase in trade, and from a house near by looked into the garden where
ferns were already flourishing on the rockery. Then came the arrest and
the trial, which did not last very long, and on a certain Saturday night
the verdict. Smart women in large hats had made the court bright with
colour, and in all the crowd there was not one who felt any sympathy
with the young athletic-looking man who was condemned. Many of the
audience were elderly and respectable mothers, and the crime had been an
outrage on motherhood, and they listened to the unfolding of the
flawless evidence with strong approval. They thrilled a little when the
judge put on the awful and ludicrous little black cap, and spoke the
sentence appointed by God.
Linkworth went to pay the penalty for the atrocious
deed, which no one who had heard the evidence could possibly doubt that
he had done with the same indifference as had marked his entire
demeanour since he knew his appeal had failed. The prison chaplain who
had attended him had done his utmost to get him to confess, but his
efforts had been quite ineffectual, and to the last he asserted, though
without protestation, his innocence. On a bright September morning, when
the sun shone warm on the terrible little procession that crossed the
prison yard to the shed where was erected the apparatus of death,
justice was done, and Dr. Teesdale was satisfied that life was
immediately extinct. He had been present on the scaffold, had watched
the bolt drawn, and the hooded and pinioned figure drop into the pit. He
had heard the chunk and creak of the rope as the sudden weight came on
to it, and looking down he had seen the queer twitchings of the hanged
body. They had lasted but a second or the execution had been perfectly
satisfactory.
An hour later he made the post-mortem examination
and found that his view had been correct: the vertebrae of the spine had
been broken at the neck, and death must have been absolutely
instantaneous. It was hardly necessary even to make that little piece of
dissection that proved this, but for the sake of form he did so. And at
that moment he had a very curios and vivid mental impression that the
spirit of the dead man was close beside him, as if it still dwelt in the
broken habitation of its body. But there was no question at all that the
body was dead: it had been dead an hour. Then followed another little
circumstance that at the first seemed insignificant though curious also.
One of the warders entered, and asked if the rope which had been used an
hour ago, and was the hangman’s perquisite, had by mistake been
brought into the mortuary with the body. But there was no trace of it,
and it seemed to have vanished altogether, though it a singular thing to
be lost: it was not here; it was not on the scaffold. And though the
disappearance was of no particular moment it was quite inexplicable.
Dr. Teesdale was a bachelor and a man of
independent means, and lived in a tall-windowed and commodious house in
Bedford Square, where a plain cook of surpassing excellence looked after
his food, and her husband his person. There was no need for him to
practise a profession at all, and he performed his work at the prison
for the sake of the study of the minds of criminals. Most crime — the
transgression, that is, of the rule of conduct which the human race has
framed for the sake of its own preservation — he held to be either the
result of some abnormality, of the brain or of starvation. Crimes of
theft, for instance, he would by no means refer to one head; often it is
true they were the result of actual want, but more often dictated by
some obscure disease of the brain. In marked cases it was labelled as
kleptomania, but he was convinced there were many others which did not
fall directly under the dictation of physical need. More especially was
this the case where the crime in question involved also some deed of
violence, and he mentally placed underneath this heading, as me went
home that evening, the criminal at whose last moments he had been
present that morning. The crime had been abominable, the need of money
not so very pressing, and the very abomination and urnaturalness of the
murder inclined him to consider the murderer as lunatic rather than
criminal. He had been, as far as was known, a man of quiet and kindly
disposition, a good husband, a sociable neighbour. And then he had
committed a crime, just one, which put him outside all pales. So
monstrous a deed, whether perpetrated by a sane man or a mad one, was
intolerable; there was no use for the doer of it on this planet at all.
But somehow the doctor felt that he would have been more at one with the
execution of justice, if the dead man had confessed. It was morally
certain that he was guilty, but he wished that when there was no longer
any hope for him he had endorsed the verdict himself.
He dined alone that evening, and after dinner sat
in his study which adjoined the dining-room, and feeling disinclined to
read, sat in his great red chair opposite the fireplace, and let his
mind graze where it would. At once almost, it went back to the curious
sensation he had experienced that morning, of feeling that the spirit of
Linkworth was present in the mortuary, though life had been extinct for
an hour. It was not the first time, especially in cases of sudden death,
that he had felt a similar conviction, though perhaps it had never been
quite so unmistakable as it had been to-day. Yet the feeling, to his
mind, was quite probably formed on a natural and psychical truth. The
spirit — it may be remarked that he was a believer in the doctrine of
future life, and the non-extinction of the soul with the death of the
body — was very likely unable or unwilling to quit at once and
altogether the earthly habitation, very likely it lingered there,
earth-bound, for a while. In his leisure hours Dr. Teesdale was a
considerable student of the occult, for like most advanced and
proficient physicians, he clearly recognised how narrow was the boundary
of separation between soul and body, how tremendous the influence of the
intangible was over material things, and it presented no difficulty to
his mind that a disembodied spirit should be able to communicate
directly with those who still were bounded by the finite and material.
His meditations, which were beginning to group
themselves into definite sequence, were interrupted at this moment. On
his desk near at hand stood his telephone, and the bell rang, not with
its usual metallic insistence, but very faintly, as if the current was
weak, or the mechanism impaired. However, it certainly was ringing, and
he got up and took the combined ear and mouth-piece off its hook.
Yes, yes,” he said, “who is it?”
There was a whisper in reply almost inaudible, and
quite unintelligible.
“I can’t hear you,” he said.
Again the whisper sounded, but with no greater
distinctness. Then it ceased altogether.
He stood there, for some half minute or so, waiting
for it to be renewed, but beyond the usual chuckling and croaking, which
showed, however, that he was in communication with some other
instrument, there was silence. Then he replaced the receiver, rang up
the Exchange, and gave his number.
“Can you tell me what number rang me up just
now?” he asked.
There was a short pause, then it was given him. It
was the number of the prison, where he was doctor.
“Put me on to it, please,” he said.
This was done.
“You rang me up just now,” he said down the
tube. “Yes; I am Doctor Teesdale. What is it? I could not hear what
you said.”
The voice came back quite clear and intelligible.
“Some mistake, sir,” it said. “We haven’t
rung you up.”
“But the Exchange tells me you did, three minutes
ago.”
“Mistake at the Exchange, sir,” said the voice.
“Very odd. Well, good-night. Warder Draycott,
isn’t it?”
“Yes, sir; good-night, sir.”
Dr. Teesdale went back to his big arm-chair, still
less inclined to read. He let his thoughts wander on for a while,
without giving them definite direction, but ever and again his mind kept
coming back to that strange little incident of the telephone. Often and
often he had been rung up by some mistake, often and often he had been
put on to the wrong number by the Exchange, but there was something in
this very subdued ringing of the telephone bell, and the unintelligible
whisperings at the other end that suggested a very curious train of
reflection to his mind, and soon he found himself pacing up and down his
room, with his thoughts eagerly feeding on a most unusual pasture.
“But it’s impossible,” he said, aloud.
He went down as usual to the prison next morning,
and once again he was strangely beset with the feeling that there was
some unseen presence there. He had before now had some odd psychical
experiences, and knew that he was a “sensitive” — one, that is,
who is capable, under certain circumstances, of receiving supernormal
impressions, and of having glimpses of the unseen world that lies about
us. And this morning the presence of which he was conscious was that of
the man who had been executed yesterday morning. It was local, and he
felt it most strongly in the little prison yard, and as he passed the
door of the condemned cell. So strong was it there that he would not
have been surprised if the figure of the man had been visible to him,
and as he passed through the door at the end of the passage, he turned
round, actually expecting to see it. All the time, too, he was aware of
a profound horror at his heart; this unseen presence strangely disturbed
him. And the poor soul, he felt, wanted something done for it. Not for a
moment did he doubt that this impression of his was objective, it was no
imaginative phantom of his own invention that made itself so real. The
spirit of Linkworth was there.
He passed into the infirmary, and for a couple of
hours busied himself with his work. But all the time he was aware that
the same invisible presence was near him, though its force was
manifestly less here than in those places which had been more intimately
associated with the man. Finally, before he left, in order to test his
theory he looked into the execution shed. But next moment with a face
suddenly stricken pale, he came out again, closing the door hastily. At
the top of the steps stood a figure hooded and pinioned, but hazy of
outline and only faintly visible. But it was visible, there was no
mistake about it.
Dr. Teesdale was a man of good nerve, and he
recovered himself almost immediately, ashamed of his temporary panic.
The terror that had blanched his face was chiefly the effect of startled
nerves, not of terrified heart, and yet deeply interested as he was in
psychical phenomena, he could not command himself sufficiently to go
back there. Or rather he commanded himself, but his muscles refused to
act on the message. If this poor earth-bound spirit had any
communication to make to him, he certainly much preferred that it should
be made at a distance. As far as he could understand, its range was
circumscribed. It haunted the prison yard, the condemned cell, the
execution shed, it was more faintly felt in the infirmary. Then a
further point suggested itself to his mind, and he went back to his room
and sent for Warder Draycort, who had answered him on the telephone last
night.
“You are quite sure,” he asked, “that nobody
rang me up last night, just before I rang you up?”
There was a certain hesitation in the man’s
manner which the doctor noticed.
“I don’t see how it could be possible, sir,”
he said. “I had been sitting close by the telephone for half an hour
before, and again before that. I must have seen him, if anyone had been
to the instrument.”
“And you saw
no one?” said the doctor with a slight emphasis.
The man became more markedly ill at ease.
“No, sir, I saw
no one,” he said, with the same emphasis.
Dr. Teesdale looked away from him.
“But you had perhaps the impression that there
was some one there?” he asked, carelessly, as if it was a point of no
interest.
Clearly Warder Draycott had something on his mind,
which he found it hard to speak of.
“Well, sir, if you put it like that,” he began.
“But you would tell me I was half asleep, or had eaten something that
disagreed with me at my supper.”
The doctor dropped his careless manner.
“I should do nothing of the kind,” he said,
“any more than you would tell me that I had dropped asleep last night,
when I heard my telephone bell ring. Mind you, Draycott, it did not ring
as usual, I could only just hear it ringing, though it
was close to me. And I could only hear a whisper when I put my ear
to it. But when you spoke I heard you quite distinctly. Now I believe
there was something —somebody — at this end of the telephone. You
were here, and though you saw no one, you, too, felt there was someone
there.
The man nodded.
“I’m not a nervous man, sir,” he said, “and
I don’t deal in fancies. But there was something there. It was
hovering about the instrument, and it wasn’t the wind, because there
wasn’t a breath of wind stirring, and the night was warm. And I shut
the window to make certain. But it went about the room, sir, for an hour
or more. It rustled the leaves of the telephone book, and it ruffled my
hair when it came close to me. And it was bitter cold, sir.”
The doctor looked him straight in the face.
“Did it remind you of what had been done
yesterday morning?” he asked suddenly.
Again the man hesitated.
“Yes, sir,” he said at length. “Convict
Charles Linkworth.”
Dr. Teesdale nodded reassuringly.
“That’s it,” he said. “Now, are you on duty
to-night?”
“Yes, sir, I wish I wasn’t.”
“I know how you feel, I have felt exactly the
same myself. Now whatever this is, it seems to want to communicate with
me. By the way, did you have any disturbance in the prison last
night?”
“Yes, sir, there was half a dozen men who had the
nightmare. Yelling and screaming they were, and quiet men too, usually.
It happens sometimes the night after an execution. I’ve known it
before, though nothing like what it was last night.”
“I see. Now, if this — this thing you can’t
see wants to get at the telephone again to-night, give it every chance.
It will probably come about the same time. I can’t tell you why, but
that usually happens. So unless you must, don’t be in this room where
the telephone is, just for an hour to give it plenty of time between
half-past nine and half-past ten. I will be ready for it at the other
end. Supposing I am rung up, I will, when it has finished, ring you up
to make sure that I was not being called in — in the usual way.”
“And there is nothing to be afraid of, sir!”
asked the man.
Dr. Teesdale remembered his own moment of terror
this morning, but he spoke quite sincerely.
“I am sure there is nothing to be afraid of,”
he said, reassuringly.
Dr. Teesdale had a dinner engagement that night,
which he broke, and was sitting alone in his study by half past-nine. In
the present state of human ignorance as to the law which governs the
movements of spirits severed from the body, he could not tell the warder
why it was that their visits are so often periodic, timed to punctuality
according to our scheme of hours, but in scenes of tabulated instances
of the appearance of revenants, especially if the soul was in sore need of help, as might
be the case here, he found that they came at the same hour of day or
night. As a rule, too, their power of making themselves seen or heard or
felt grew greater for some little while after death, subsequently
growing weaker as they became less earth-bound, or often after that
ceasing altogether, and he was prepared to-night for a less indistinct
impression. The spirit apparently for the early hours of its
disembodiment is weak, like a moth newly broken out from its chrysalis
— and then suddenly the telephone bell rang, not so faintly as the
night before, but still not with its ordinary imperative tone.
Dr. Teesdale instantly got up, put the receiver to
his ear. And what he heard was heartbroken sobbing, strong spasms that
seemed to tear the weeper.
He waited for a little before speaking, himself
cold with some nameless fear, and yet profoundly moved to help, if he
was able.
“Yes, yes,” he said at length, hearing his own
voice tremble. “I am Dr. Teesdale. What can I do for you? And who are
you?” he added, though he felt that it was a needless question.
Slowly the sobbing died down, the whispers took its
place, still broken by crying.
“I want to tell, sir — I want to tell — I
must tell.”
“Yes, tell me, what is it?” said the doctor.
“No, not you — another gentleman, who used to
come to see me. Will you speak to him what I say to you? — I can’t
make him hear me or see me.”
“Who are you?” asked Dr. Teesdale suddenly.
“Charles Linkworth. I thought you knew. I am very
miserable. I can’t leave the prison — and it is cold. Will you send
for the other gentleman?”
“Do you mean the chaplain?” asked Dr. Teesdale.
“Yes, the chaplain. He read the service when I
went across the yard yesterday. I shan’t be so miserable when I have
told.”
The doctor hesitated a moment. This was a strange
story that he would have to tell Mr. Dawkins, the prison chaplain, that
at the other end of the telephone was the spirit of the man executed
yesterday. And yet he soberly believed that it was so, that this unhappy
spirit was in misery and wanted to “tell.” There was no need to ask
what he wanted to tell.
“Yes, I will ask him to come here,” he said at
length.
“Thank you, sir, a thousand times. You will make
him come, won’t you?”
The voice was growing fainter.
“It must be to-morrow night,” it said. “I
can’t speak longer now. I have to go to see — oh, my God, my God.”
The sobs broke out afresh, sounding fainter and
fainter. But it was in a frenzy of terrified interest that Dr. Teesdale
spoke.
“To see what?” he cried. “Tell me what you
are doing, what is happening to you?”
“I can’t tell you; I mayn’t tell you,” said
the voice very faint. “That is part—” and it died away altogether.
Dr. Teesdale waited a little, but there was no
further sound of any kind, except the chuckling and croaking of the
instrument. He put the receiver on to its hook again, and then became
aware for the first time that his forehead was streaming with some cold
dew of horror. His ears sang; his heart beat very quick and faint, and
he sat down to recover himself. Once or twice he asked himself if it was
possible that some terrible joke was being played on him, but he knew
that could not be so; he felt perfectly sure that he had been speaking
with a soul in torment of contrition for the terrible and irremediable
act it had committed. It was no delusion of his senses, either; here in
this comfortable room of his in Bedford Square, with London cheerfully
roaring round him, he had spoken with the spirit of Charles Linkworth.
But he had no time (nor indeed inclination, for
somehow his soul sat shuddering within him) to indulge in meditation.
First of all he rang up the prison.
“Warder Draycott?” he asked.
There was a perceptible tremor in the man’s voice
as he answered.
“Yes, sir. Is it Dr. Teesdale?”
“Yes. Has anything happened here with you?”
Twice it seemed that the man tried to speak and
could not. At the third attempt the words came
“Yes, sir. He has been here. I saw him go into
the room where the telephone is.”
“Ah! Did you speak to him?”
“No, sir: I sweated and prayed. And there’s
half a dozen men as have been screaming in their sleep to-night. But
it’s quiet again now. I think he has gone into the execution shed.”
“Yes. Well, I think there will be no more
disturbance now. By the way, please give me Mr. Dawkins’s home
address.”
This was given him, and Dr. Teesdale proceeded to
write to the chaplain, asking him to dine with him on the following
night. But suddenly he found that he could not write at his accustomed
desk, with the telephone standing close to him, and he went upstairs to
the drawing-room which he seldom used, except when he entertained his
friends. There he recaptured the serenity of his nerves, and could
control his hand. The note simply asked Mr. Dawkins to dine with him
next night, when he wished to tell him a very strange history and ask
his help. “Even if you have any other engagement,” he concluded,
“I seriously request you to give it up. To-night, I did the same. I
should bitterly have regretted it if I had not.”
Next night accordingly, the two sat at their dinner
in the doctor’s dining-room, and when they were left to their
cigarettes and coffee the doctor spoke.
“You must not think me mad, my dear Dawkins,”
he said, “when you hear what I have got to tell you.”
Mr. Dawkins laughed.
“I will certainly promise not to do that,” he
said.
“Good. Last night and the night before, a little
later in the evening than this, I spoke through the telephone with the
spirit of the man we saw executed two days ago. Charles Linkworth.”
The chaplain did not laugh. He pushed back his
chair, looking annoyed.
“Teesdale,” he said, “is it to tell me this
— I don’t want to be rude —but this bogey-tale that you have
brought me here this evening?”
“Yes. You have not heard half of it. He asked me
last night to get hold of you. He wants to tell you something. We can
guess, I think, what it is.”
Dawkins got up.
“Please let me hear no more of it,” he said.
“The dead do not return. In what state or under what condition they
exist has not been revealed to us. But they have done with all material
things.”
“But I must tell you more,” said the doctor.
“Two nights ago I was rung up, but very faintly, and could only hear
whispers. I instantly inquired where the call came from and was told it
came from the prison. I rang up the prison, and Warder Draycott told me
that nobody had rung me up. He, too, was conscious of a presence.”
“I think that man drinks,” said Dawkins,
sharply.
The doctor paused a moment.
“My dear fellow, you should not say that sort of
thing,” he said. “He is one of the steadiest men we have got. And if
he drinks, why not I also?”
The chaplain sat down again.
“You must forgive me,” he said, “but I
can’t go into this. These are dangerous matters to meddle with.
Besides, how do you know it is not a hoax?”
“Played by whom?” asked the doctor. “Hark!”
The telephone bell suddenly rang. It was clearly
audible to the doctor.
“Don’t you hear it?” he said.
“Hear what?”
“The telephone bell ringing.”
“I hear no bell,” said the chaplain, rather
angrily. “There is no bell ringing.”
The doctor did not answer, but went through into
his study, and turned on the lights. Then he took the receiver and
mouthpiece off its hook.
“Yes?” he said, in a voice that trembled.
“Who is it? Yes: Mr. Dawkins is here. I will try and get him to speak
to you.” He went back into the other room.
“Dawkins,” he said, “there is a soul in
agony. I pray you to listen. For God’s sake come and listen.”
The chaplain hesitated a moment.
“As you will,” he said.
He took up the receiver and put it to his ear.
“I am Mr. Dawkins,” he said.
He waited.
“I can hear nothing whatever,” he said at
length. “Ah, there was something there. The faintest whisper.”
“Ah, try to hear, try to hear!” said the
doctor.
Again the chaplain listened. Suddenly he laid the
instrument down, frowning.
“Something — somebody said, ‘I killed her, I
confess it. I want to be forgiven.’ It’s a hoax, my dear Teesdale.
Somebody knowing your spiritualistic leanings is playing a very grim
joke on you. I can’t believe
it.”
Dr. Teesdale took up the receiver.
“I am Dr. Teesdale,” he said. “Can you give
Mr. Dawkins some sign that it is you?”
Then he laid it down again.
“He says he thinks he can,” he said. “We must
wait.”
The evening was again very warm, and the window
into the paved yard at the back of the house was open. For five minutes
or so the two men stood in silence, waiting, and nothing happened. Then
the chaplain spoke.
“I think that is sufficiently conclusive,” he
said.
Even as he spoke a very cold draught of air
suddenly blew into the room, making the papers on the desk rustle. Dr.
Teesdale went to the window and closed it.
“Did you feel that?” he asked.
“Yes, a breath of air. Chilly.”
Once again in the closed room it stirred again.
“And did you feel that?” asked the doctor.
The chaplain nodded. He felt his heart hammering in
his throat suddenly.
“Defend us from all peril and danger of this
coming night,” he exclaimed.
“Something is coming!” said the doctor.
As he spoke it came. In the centre of the room not
three yards away from them stood the figure of a man with his head bent
over on to his shoulder, so that the face was not visible. Then he took
his head in both his hands and raised it like a weight, and looked them
in the face. The eyes and tongue protruded, a livid mark was round the
neck. Then there came a sharp rattle on the boards of the floor, and the
figure was no longer there. But on the floor there lay a new rope.
For a long while neither spoke. The sweat poured
off the doctor’s face, and the chaplain’s white lips whispered
prayers. Then by a huge effort the doctor pulled himself together. He
pointed at the rope.
“It has been missing since the execution,” he
said.
Then again the telephone bell rang. This time the
chaplain needed no prompting. He went to it at once and the ringing
ceased. For a while he listened in silence.
“Charles Linkworth,” he said at length, “in
the sight of God, in whose presence you stand, are you truly sorry for
your sin?”
Some answer inaudible to the doctor came, and the
chaplain closed his eyes. And Dr. Teesdale knelt as he heard the words
of the Absolution.
At the close there was silence again.
“I can hear nothing more,” said the chaplain,
replacing the receiver.
Presently the doctor’s man-servant came in with
the tray of spirits and syphon. Dr. Teesdale pointed without looking to
where the apparition had been.
“Take the rope that is there and burn it,
Parker,” he said.
There was a moment’s silence.
“There is no rope, sir,” said Parker.
