Sept.
4.—I have hunted
all over London for rooms suited to my income—£120 a year—and have
at last found them. Two rooms, without modern conveniences, it is true,
and in an old, ramshackle building, but within a stone’s throw of P—
Place and in an eminently respectable street. The rent is only £25
a year. I had begun to despair when at last I found them by chance.
The chance was a mere chance, and unworthy of record. I had to sign a
lease for a year, and I did so willingly. The furniture from our old
place in Hampshire, which has been stored so long, will just suit them.
Oct.
1.—Here I am in my two rooms, in the centre of London, and not far
from the offices of the periodicals, where occasionally I dispose of an
article or two. The building is at the end of a cul-de-sac.
The alley is well paved and clean, and lined chiefly with the backs
of sedate and institutional-looking buildings. There is a stable in it.
My own house is dignified with the title of “Chambers “. I feel as
if one day the honour must prove too much for it, and it will swell with
pride—and fall asunder. It is very old. The floor of my sitting-room
has valleys and low hills on it, and the top of the door slants away
from the ceiling with a glorious disregard of what is usual. They must
have quarrelled—fifty years ago—and have been going apart ever
since.
Oct.
2.—My landlady is
old and thin, with a faded, dusty face. She is uncommunicative. The few
words she utters seem to cost her pain. Probably her lungs are half
choked with dust. She keeps my rooms as free from this commodity as
possible, and has the assistance of a strong girl who brings up the
breakfast and lights the fire. As I have said already, she is not
communicative. In reply to pleasant efforts on my part she informed me
briefly that I was the only occupant of the house at present. My rooms
had not been occupied for some years. There had been other gentlemen
upstairs, but they had left.
She never looks straight at me when she
speaks, but fixes her dim eyes on my middle waistcoat button, till I get
nervous and begin to think it isn’t on straight, or is the wrong
sort of button altogether.
Oct.
8.—My
week’s book is nicely kept, and so far is reasonable. Milk and
sugar 7d., bread 6d., butter 8d., marmalade 6d., eggs 1s. 8d.,
laundress 2s. 9d., oil 6d., attendance 5s.; total 12s. 2d.
The landlady has a son who, she told
me, is “somethink on a homnibus”. He comes occasionally to see her.
I think he drinks, for he talks very loud, regardless of the hour of the
day or night, and tumbles about over the furniture downstairs.
All the morning I sit indoors
writing—articles; verses for the comic papers; a novel I’ve been
“at” for three years, and concerning which I have dreams; a
children’s book, in which the imagination has free rein; and another
book which is to last as long as myself, since it is an honest record of
my soul’s advance or retreat in the struggle of life. Besides these, I
keep a book of poems which I use as a safety valve, and concerning which
I have no dreams whatsoever. Between the lot I am always occupied. In
the afternoons I generally try to take a walk for my health’s sake,
through Regent’s Park, into Kensington Gardens, or farther afield to
Hampstead Heath.
Oct. 10.—Everything went wrong
to-day. I have two eggs for breakfast. This morning one of them was bad.
I rang the bell for Emily. When she came in I was reading the paper,
and, without looking up, I said, “Egg’s bad.” “Oh, is it, sir?
“ she said; “I’ll get another one,” and went out, taking the egg
with her. I waited my breakfast for her return, which was in five
minutes. She put the new egg on the table and went away. But, when I
looked down, I saw that she had taken away the good egg and left the bad
one—all green and yellow—in the slop basin. I rang again.
“You’ve taken the wrong egg,” I
said.
“Oh! “ she exclaimed; “ I thought
the one I took down didn’t smell so very
bad.” In due time she returned with the good egg, and I resumed my
breakfast with two eggs, but less appetite. It was all very trivial, to
be sure, but so stupid that I felt annoyed. The character of that egg
influenced everything I did. I wrote a bad article, and tore it up. I
got a bad headache. I used bad words—to myself. Everything was bad, so
I “chucked” work and went for a long walk.
I dined at a cheap chop-house on my way
back, and reached home about nine o’clock.
Rain was just beginning to fall as I
came in, and the wind was rising. It promised an ugly night. The alley
looked dismal and dreary, and the hall of the house, as I passed through
it, felt chilly as a tomb. It was the first stormy night I had
experienced in my new quarters. The draughts were awful. They came criss-cross,
met in the middle of the room, and formed eddies and whirlpools and cold
silent currents that almost lifted the hair of my head. I stuffed up the
sashes of the windows with neckties and odd socks, and sat over the
smoky fire to keep warm. First I tried to write, but found it too cold.
My hand turned to ice on the paper.
What tricks the wind did play with the
old place! It came rushing up the forsaken alley with a sound like the
feet of a hurrying crowd of people who stopped suddenly at the door. I
felt as if a lot of curious folk had arranged themselves just outside
and were staring up at my windows. Then they took to their heels again
and fled whispering and laughing down the lane, only, however, to return
with the next gust of wind and repeat their impertinence. On the other
side of my room a single square window opens into a sort of shaft, or
well, that measures about six feet across to the back wall of another
house. Down this funnel the wind dropped, and puffed and shouted. Such
noises I never heard before. Between these two entertainments I sat over
the fire in a great-coat, listening to the deep booming in the chimney.
It was like being in a ship at sea, and I almost looked for the floor to
rise in undulations and rock to and fro.
Oct.
12.—I
wish I were not quite so lonely—and so poor. And yet I love both
my loneliness and my poverty. The former makes me appreciate the
companionship of the wind and rain, while the latter preserves my liver
and prevents me wasting time in dancing attendance upon women. Poor,
ill-dressed men are not acceptable “attendants”.
My parents are dead, and my only sister
is—no, not dead exactly, but married to a very rich man. They travel
most of the time, he to find his health, she to lose herself. Through
sheer neglect on her part she has long passed out of my life. The door
closed when, after an absolute silence of five years, she sent me a
cheque for £50 at Christmas.
It was signed by her husband! I returned it to her in a thousand pieces
and in an unstamped envelope. So at least I had the satisfaction of
knowing that it cost her something! She wrote back with a broad quill
pen that covered a whole page with three lines, “You are evidently as
cracked as ever, and rude and ungrateful into the bargain.” It had
always been my special terror lest the insanity of my father’s family
should leap across the generations and appear in me. This thought
haunted me, and she knew it. So after this little exchange of civilities
the door slammed, never to open again. I heard the crash it made, and,
with it, the falling from the walls of my heart of many little bits of
china with their own peculiar value—rare china, some of it, that only
needed dusting. The same walls, too, carried mirrors in which I used
sometimes to see reflected the misty lawns of childhood, the daisy
chains, the wind-torn blossoms scattered through the orchard by warm
rains, the robbers’ cave in the long walk, and the hidden store of
apples in the hayloft. She was my inseparable companion then—but,
when the door slammed, the mirrors cracked across their entire length,
and the visions they held vanished for ever. Now I am quite alone. At
forty one cannot begin all over again to build up careful friendships,
and all others are comparatively worthless.
Oct.
14.—My bedroom is 10 by 10. It is below the level of the front
room, and a step leads down into it. Both rooms are very quiet on calm
nights, for there is no traffic down this forsaken alley-way. In spite
of the occasional larks of the wind, it is a most sheltered strip. At
its upper end, below my windows, all the cats of the neighbourhood congregate
as soon as darkness gathers. They lie undisturbed on the long ledge of a
blind window of the opposite building, for after the postman has come
and gone at 9.30, no footsteps ever dare to interrupt their sinister
conclave, no step but my own, or sometimes the unsteady footfall of the
son who “is somethink on a homnibus”.
Oct.
15.—I dined at an “A.B.C.” shop on poached eggs and coffee,
and then went for a stroll round the outer edge of Regent’s Park. It
was ten o’clock when I got home.1 counted no less than thirteen cats,
all of a dark colour, crouching under the lee side of the alley walls.
It was a cold night, and the stars shone like points of ice in a
blue-black sky. The cats turned their heads and stared at me in silence
as I passed. An odd sensation of shyness took possession of me under
the glare of so many pairs of unblinking eyes. As I fumbled with the
latch-key they jumped noiselessly down and pressed against my legs, as
if anxious to be let in. But I slammed the door in their faces and ran
quickly upstairs. The front room, as I entered to grope for the matches,
felt as cold as a stone vault, and the air held an unusual dampness.
Oct.
17.—For several days I have been working on a ponderous article
that allows no play for the fancy. My imagination requires a judicious
rein; I am afraid to let it loose, for it carries me sometimes into
appalling places beyond the stars and beneath the world. No one realises
the danger more than I do. But what a foolish thins to write here—for
there is no one to know, no one to realize! My mind of late has held
unusual thoughts, thoughts I have never had before, about medicines and
drugs and the treatment of strange illnesses. I cannot imagine their
source. At no time in my life have I dwelt upon such ideas now
constantly throng my brain. I have had no exercise lately, for the
weather has been shocking; and all my afternoons have been spent in
the reading-room of the British Museum, where I have a reader’s
ticket.
I have made an unpleasant discovery:
there are rats in the house. At night from my bed I have heard them
scampering across the hills and valleys of the front room, and my sleep
has been a good deal disturbed in consequence.
Oct.
19.—The landlady, I find, has a little boy with her, probably her
son’s child. In fine weather he plays in the alley, and draws a wooden
cart over the cobbles. One of the wheels is off,
and it makes a most distracting noise. After putting up with it as
long as possible, I found it was getting on my nerves, and I could not
write. So I rang the bell. Emily answered it.
“Emily, will you ask the little
fellow to make less noise? It’s impossible to work.”
The girl went downstairs, and soon
afterwards the child was called in by the kitchen door. I felt rather a
brute for spoiling his play. In a few minutes, however, the noise began
again, and I felt that he was the brute. He dragged the broken toy with
a string over the stones till the rattling noise jarred every nerve in
my body. It became unbearable, and I rang the bell a second time.
“That noise must
be put a stop to!” I said to the girl, with decision.
“Yes, sir,” she grinned, “I know;
but one of the wheels is hoff. The men in the stable offered to mend it
for ’im, but he wouldn’t let them. He says he likes it that way.”
“I can’t help what he likes. The
noise must stop. I can’t write.”
“Yes, sir; I’ll tell Mrs.
Monson.”
The noise stopped for the day then.
Oct.
23.—Every day for the past week that cart has rattled over
the stones, till I have come to think of it as a huge carrier’s van
with four wheels and two horses; and every morning I have been obliged
to ring the bell and have it stopped. The last time Mrs. Monson herself
came up, and said she was sorry I had been annoyed; the sounds should
not occur again. With rare discursiveness she went on to ask if I was
comfortable, and how I liked the rooms. I replied cautiously. I
mentioned the rats. She said they were mice. I spoke of the draughts.
She said, “Yes, it were a draughty ’ouse.” I referred to the cats,
and she said they had been as long as she could remember. By way of conclusion,
she informed me that the house was over two hundred years old, and that
the last gentleman who had occupied my rooms was a painter who “’ad
real Jimmy Bueys and Raffles ’anging all hover the walls”. It took
me some moments to discern that Cimabue and Raphael were in the
woman’s mind.
Oct.
24.—Last night the
son who is “somethink on a homnibus” came in. He had evidently been
drinking, for I heard loud and angry voices below in the kitchen long
after I had gone to bed. Once, too, I caught the singular words rising
up to me through the floor, “Burning from top to bottom is the only
thing that’ll ever make this ’ouse right.” I knocked on the floor,
and the voices ceased suddenly, though later I again heard their
clamour in my dreams.
These rooms are very quiet, almost too
quiet sometimes. On windless nights they are silent as the grave, and
the house might be miles in the country. The roar of London’s traffic
reaches me only in heavy, distant vibrations. It holds an ominous note
sometimes, like that of an approaching army, or an immense tidal-wave
very far away thundering in the night.
Oct.
27.—Mrs. Monson,
though admirably silent, is a foolish, fussy woman. She does such stupid
things. In dusting the room she puts all my things in the wrong places.
The ash-trays, which should be on the writing-table, she sets in a silly
row on the mantelpiece. The pen-tray, which should be beside the
inkstand, she hides away cleverly among the books on my reading-desk. My
gloves she arranges daily in idiotic array upon a half-filled bookshelf,
and I always have to rearrange them on the low table by the door. She
places my armchair at impossible angles between the fire and the light,
and the tablecloth—the one with Trinity Hall stains—she puts on the
table in such a fashion that when I look at it I feel as if my tie and
all my clothes were on crooked and awry. She exasperates me. Her very
silence and meekness are irritating. Sometimes I feel inclined to throw
the inkstand at her, just to bring an expression into her watery eyes
and a squeak from those colourless lips. Dear me! What violent
expressions I am making use of! How very foolish of me! And yet it
almost seems as if the words were not my own, but had been spoken into
my ear—I mean, I never make use of such terms naturally.
Oct.
30.—I have been here a month. The place does not agree with me, I
think. My headaches are more frequent and violent, and my nerves are a
perpetual source of discomfort and annoyance.
I have conceived a great dislike for
Mrs. Monson, a feeling I am certain she reciprocates. Somehow, the
impression comes frequently to me that there are goings on in this house
of which I know nothing, and which she is careful to hide from me.
Last night her son slept in the house,
and this morning as I was standing at the window I saw him go out. He
glanced up and caught my eye. It was a loutish figure and a singularly
repulsive face that I saw, and he gave me the benefit of a very
unpleasant leer. At least, so I imagined.
Evidently I am getting absurdly sensitive to trifles, and I
suppose it is my disordered nerves making themselves felt. In the
British Museum this afternoon I noticed several people at the readers’
table staring at me and watching every movement I made. Whenever I
looked up from my books I found their eyes upon me. It seemed to me unnecessary
and unpleasant, and I left earlier than was my custom. When I reached
the door I threw back a last look into the room, and saw every head at
the table turned in my direction. It annoyed me very much, and yet I
know it is foolish to take note of such things. When I am well they pass
me by. I must get more regular exercise. Of late I have had next to
none.
Nov.
2.—The utter
stillness of this house is beginning to oppress me. I wish there were
other fellows living upstairs. No footsteps ever sound overhead, and no
tread ever passes my door to go up the next flight of stairs. I am
beginning to feel some curiosity to go up myself and see what the upper
rooms are like. I feel lonely here and isolated, swept into a deserted
corner of the world and forgotten. . . . Once I actually caught myself
gazing into the long, cracked mirrors, trying to sec the sunlight
dancing beneath the trees in the orchard. But only deep shadows seemed
to congregate there now, and I soon desisted.
It has been very dark all day, and no
wind stirring. The fogs have begun. I had to use a reading-lamp all this
morning. There was no cart to be heard to-day. I actually missed it.
This morning, in the gloom and silence, I think I could almost have
welcomed it. After all, the sound is a very human one, and this empty
house at the end of the alley holds other noises that are not quite so
satisfactory.
I have never once seen a policeman in
the lane, and the postmen always hurry out with no evidence of a desire
to loiter.
10 p.m.—As I write this I hear no
sound but the deep murmur of the distant traffic and the low sighing of
the wind. The two sounds melt into one another. Now and again a cat
raises its shrill, uncanny cry upon the darkness. The cats are always
there under my windows when the darkness falls. The wind is dropping
into the funnel with a noise like the sudden sweeping of immense distant
wings. It is a dreary night. I feel lost and forgotten.
Nov.
3—From my windows
I can see arrivals. When anyone comes to the door I can just see the
hat and shoulders and the hand on the bell. Only two fellows have been
to see me since I came here two months ago. Both of them I saw from the
window before they came tip, and heard their voices asking if I was in.
Neither of them ever came back.
I have finished the ponderous article.
On reading it through, however, I was dissatisfied with it, and drew my
pencil through almost every page. There were strange expressions and
ideas in it that 1 could not explain, and viewed with amazement, not to
say alarm. They did not sound like my very
own, and I could not remember having written them. Can it be that my
memory is beginning to be affected?
My pens are never to be found. That
stupid old woman puts them in a different place each day. I must give
her due credit for finding so many new hiding places; such ingenuity is
wonderful. I have told her repeatedly, but she always says, “I’ll
speak to Emily, sir.” Emily always says, “I’ll tell Mrs. Monson,
sir.” Their foolishness makes me irritable and scatters all my
thoughts. I should like to stick the lost pens into them and turn them
out, blind-eyed, to be scratched and mauled by those thousand hungry
cats. Whew! What a ghastly thought! Where in the world did it come from?
Such an idea is no more my own than it is the policeman’s. Yet I felt
I had to write it. It was like a voice singing in my head, and my pen
wouldn’t stop till the last word was finished. What ridiculous
nonsense! I must and will restrain myself. I must take more regular
exercise; my nerves and liver plague me horribly.
Nov.
4.—I attended a
curious lecture in the French quarter on “Death”, but the room was
so hot and I was so weary that I fell asleep. The only part I heard,
however, touched my imagination vividly. Speaking of suicides, the
lecturer said that self-murder was no escape from the miseries of the
present, but only a preparation of greater sorrow for the future.
Suicides, he declared, cannot shirk their responsibilities so easily.
They must return to take up life exactly where they laid it so violently
down, but with the added pain and punishment of their weakness. Many of
them wander the earth in unspeakable misery till they can reclothe themselves in the body of someone else—generally a
lunatic, or weak-minded person, who cannot resist the hideous obsession.
This is their only means of escape. Surely a weird and horrible idea! I
wish I had slept all the time and not heard it at all. My mind is morbid
enough without such ghastly fancies. Such mischievous propaganda should
be stopped by the police. I’ll write to the Times
and suggest it. Good idea!
I walked home through Greek Street,
Soho, and imagined that a hundred years had slipped back into place and
De Quincey was still there, haunting the night with invocations to his
“just, subtle, and mighty” drug. His vast dreams seemed to hover not
very far away. Once started in my brain, the pictures refused to go
away; and I saw him sleeping in that cold, tenantless mansion with the
strange little waif who was afraid of its ghosts, both together in the
shadows under a single horseman’s cloak; or wandering in the
companionship of the spectral Anne; or, later still, on his way to the
eternal rendezvous at the foot of Great Titchfield Street, the
rendezvous she never was able to keep. What an unutterable gloom, what
an untold horror of sorrow and suffering comes over me as I try to
realise something of what that man—boy he then was—must have taken
into his lonely heart.
As I came up the alley I saw a light in
the top window, and a head and shoulders thrown in an exaggerated shadow
upon the blind. I wondered what the son could be doing up there at such
an hour.
Nov.
5.—This morning, while writing, someone came up the creaking
stairs and knocked cautiously at my door. Thinking it was the landlady,
I said, “Come in! “ The knock was repeated, and I cried louder,
“Come in, come in!” But no one turned the handle, and I continued my
writing with a vexed “Well, stay out, then!” under my breath. Went
on writing? I tried to, but my thoughts had suddenly dried up at their
source. I could not set down a single word. It was a dark, yellow-fog
morning, and there was little enough inspiration in the air as it was,
but that stupid woman standing just outside my door waiting to be told
again to come in roused a spirit of vexation that filled my head to the
exclusion of all else. At last I jumped up and opened the door myself.
“What do you want, and why in the
world don’t you come in?” I cried out. But the words dropped into
empty air. There was no one there. The fog poured up the dingy staircase
in deep yellow coils, but there was no sign of a human being anywhere.
I slammed the door, with imprecations
upon the house and its noises, and went back to my work. A few minutes
later Emily came in with a letter.
“Were you or Mrs. Monson outside a
few minutes ago knocking at my door?”
“No, sir.”
“Are you sure?
“Mrs. Monson’s gone to market, and
there’s no one but me and the child in the ’ole ’ouse, and I’ve
been washing the dishes for the last hour, sir.”
I fancied the girl’s face turned a
shade paler. She fidgeted towards the door with a glance over her
shoulder.
“Wait, Emily,” I said, and then
told her what I had heard. She stared stupidly at me, though her eyes
shifted now and then over the articles in the room.
“Who was it? “I asked when I had
come to the end. “Mrs. Monson says it’s honly mice,” she said, as
if repeating a learned lesson.
“Mice!” I exclaimed; “it’s
nothing of the sort. Someone was feeling about outside my door. Who
was it? Is the son in the house?”
Her whole manner changed suddenly, and
she became earnest instead of evasive. She seemed anxious to tell the
truth.
“Oh no, sir; there’s no one in the
house at all but you and me and the child, and there couldn’t ’ave
been nobody at your door. As for them knocks—” She stopped abruptly,
as though she had said too much.
“Well, what about the knocks?” I
said more gently.
“Of course,” she stammered, “the
knocks isn’t mice, nor the footsteps neither, but then—” Again she
came to a full halt.
“Anything wrong with the house?”
“Lor’, no, sir; the drains is
splendid!”
“I don’t mean drains, girl. I mean,
did anything—anything bad ever happen here?”
She flushed up to the roots of her
hair, and then turned suddenly pale again. She was obviously in
considerable distress, and there was something she was anxious, yet
afraid to tell—some forbidden thing she was not allowed to mention.
“I don’t mind what it was, only I
should like to know,” I said encouragingly.
Raising her frightened eyes to my face,
she began to blurt out something about “that which ’appened once to
a gentleman that lived hupstairs”, when a shrill voice calling her
name sounded below.
“Emily, Emily!” It was the
returning landlady, and the girl tumbled downstairs as if pulled
backwards by a rope, leaving me full of conjectures as to what in the
world could have happened to a gentleman upstairs
that could in so curious a manner affect my ears downstairs.
Nov.
10.—I have done capital work; have finished the ponderous article
and had it accepted for the Review,
and another one ordered. I feel well and cheerful, and have had
regular exercise and good sleep; no headaches, no nerves, no liver!
Those pills the chemist recommended are wonderful. I can watch the child
playing with his cart and feel no annoyance; sometimes I almost feel
inclined to join him. Even the grey-faced landlady rouses pity in me; I
am sorry for her: so worn, so weary, so oddly put together, just like
the building. She looks as if she had once suffered some shock of
terror, and was momentarily dreading another. When I spoke to her
to-day very gently about not putting the pens in the ash-tray and the
gloves on the hook-shelf she raised her faint eyes to mine for the first
time, and said with the ghost of a smile, “I’ll try and remember,
sir.” I felt inclined to pat her on the back and say, “Come, cheer
up and be jolly. Life’s not so bad after all.” Oh! I am much better.
There’s nothing like open air and success and good sleep. They build
up as if by magic the portions of the heart eaten down by despair and
unsatisfied yearnings. Even to the cats I feel friendly. When I came in
at eleven o’clock to-night they followed me to the door in a stream,
and I stooped down to stroke the one nearest to me. Bah! The brute
hissed and spat, and struck at me with her paws. The claw caught my hand
and drew blood in a thin line. The others danced sideways into the darkness,
screeching, as though I had done them an injury. I believe these cats
really hate me. Perhaps they are only waiting to be reinforced. Then
they will attack me. Ha, ha! In spite of the momentary annoyance, this
fancy sent me laughing upstairs to my room.
The fire was out, and the room seemed
unusually cold. As I groped my way over to the mantelpiece to find the
matches I realised all at once that there was another person standing
beside me in the darkness. I could, of course, see nothing, but my
fingers, feeling along the ledge, came into forcible contact with
something that was at once withdrawn. It was cold and moist. I could
have sworn it was somebody’s hand. My flesh began to creep instantly.
“Who’s that?” I exclaimed in a
loud voice.
My voice dropped into the silence like
a pebble into a deep well. There was no answer, but at the same moment I
heard someone moving away from me across the room in the direction of
the door. It was a confused sort of footstep, and the sound of
garments brushing the furniture on the way. The same second my hand
stumbled upon the match-box, and I struck a light. I expected to see
Mrs. Monson, or Emily, or perhaps the son who is something on an
omnibus. But the flare of the gas-jet illumined an empty room; there was
not a sign of a person anywhere. I felt the hair stir upon my head, and
instinctively I backed tip against the wall, lest something should
approach me from behind. I was distinctly alarmed. But the next minute I
recovered myself. The door was open on to the landing, and I crossed the
room, not without some inward trepidation, and went out. The light from
the room fell upon the stairs, but there was no one to be seen anywhere,
nor was there any sound on the creaking wooden staircase to indicate a
departing creature.
I was in the act of turning to go in
again when a sound overhead caught my ear. It was a very faint sound,
not unlike the sigh of wind; yet it could not have been the wind, for
the night was still as the grave. Though it was not repeated, I resolved
to go upstairs and see for myself what it all meant. Two senses had been
affected—touch and hearing—and I could not believe that I had been
deceived. So, with a lighted candle, I went stealthily forth on my
unpleasant journey into the upper regions of this queer little old
house.
On the first landing there was only one
door, and it was locked. On the second there was also only one door, but
when I turned the handle it opened. There came forth to meet me the
chill musty air that is characteristic of a long unoccupied room. With
it there came an indescribable odour. I use the adjective advisedly.
Though very faint, diluted as it were, it was nevertheless an odour that
made my gorge rise. I had never smelt anything like it before, and I
cannot describe it.
The room was small and square, close
under the roof, with a sloping ceiling and two tiny windows. It was cold
as the grave, without a shred of carpet or a stick of furniture. The icy
atmosphere and the nameless odour combined to make the room abominable
to me, and, after lingering a moment to see that it contained no
cupboards or corners into which a person might have crept for
concealment, I made haste to shut the door, and went downstairs again to
bed. Evidently I had been deceived after all as to the noise.
In the night I had a foolish but very
vivid dream. I dreamed that the landlady and another person, dark and
not properly visible, entered my room on all fours, followed by a horde
of immense cats. They attacked me as I lay in bed, and murdered me, and
then dragged my body upstairs and deposited it on the floor of that cold
little square room under the roof.
Nov.
11.—Since my talk with Emily—the unfinished talk—I have hardly
once set eyes on her. Mrs. Monson now attends wholly to my wants. As
usual, she does everything exactly as I don’t like it done. It is all
too utterly trivial to mention, but it is exceedingly irritating. Like
small doses of morphine often repeated, she has finally a cumulative
effect.
Nov. 12.—This morning I woke
early, and came into the front room to get a book, meaning to read in
bed till it was time to get tip. Emily was laying the fire.
“Good morning!” I said cheerfully.
“Mind you make a good fire. It’s very cold.”
The girl turned and showed me a
startled face. It was not Emily at all!
“Where’s Emily? “ I exclaimed.
“You mean the girl as was ’ere
before me?”
“Has Emily left?”
“I came on the 6th,” she replied
sullenly, “and she’d gone then.” I got my book and went back to
bed. Emily must have been sent away almost immediately after our
conversation. This reflection kept coming between me and the printed
page. I was glad when it was time to get up. Such prompt energy, such
merciless decision, seemed to argue something of importance—to
somebody.
Nov.
13.—The wound
inflicted by the cat’s claw has swollen, and causes me annoyance and
some pain. It throbs and itches. I’m afraid my blood must be in poor
condition, or it would have healed by now. I opened it with a penknife
soaked in an antiseptic solution, and cleansed it thoroughly. I have
heard unpleasant stories of the results of wounds inflicted by cats.
Nov.
14.—In spite of the curious effect this house certainly
exercises upon my nerves, I like it. It is lonely and deserted in the
very heart of London, but it is also for that reason quiet to work in. I
wonder why it is so cheap. Some people might he suspicious, but I did
not even ask the reason. No answer is better than a lie. If only I could
remove the cats from the outside and the rats from the inside. I feel
that I shall grow accustomed more and more to its peculiarities, and
shall die here. Ah, that expression reads queerly and gives a wrong
impression: I meant live and die here.
I shall renew the lease from year to year till one of us crumbles to
pieces. From present indications the building will be the first to go.
Nov. 16.—It is abominable the way my nerves go up and down
with me—and rather discouraging. This morning I woke to find my
clothes scattered about the room, and a cane chair overturned beside the
bed. My coat and waistcoat looked just as if they had been tried
on by someone in the night. I had horribly vivid dreams, too, in
which someone covering his face with his hands kept coming close up to
me, crying out as if in pain. “Where can I find covering? Oh, who will
clothe me?” How silly, and yet it frightened me a little. It was so
dreadfully real. It is now over a year since I last walked in my sleep
and woke up with such a shock on the cold pavement of Earl’s Court
Road, where I then lived. I thought I was cured, but evidently not. This
discovery has rather a disquieting effect upon me. To-night I shall
resort to the old trick of tying my toe to the bed-post.
Nov.
17.—Last night I
was again troubled by most oppressive dreams. Someone seemed to be
moving in the night up and down my room, sometimes passing into the
front room, and then returning to stand beside the bed and stare
intently down upon me. I was being watched by this person all night
long. I never actually awoke, though I was often very near it. I suppose
it was a nightmare from indigestion, for this morning I have one of my
old vile headaches. Yet all my clothes lay about the floor when I awoke,
where they had evidently been flung (had I so tossed them?) during the
dark hours, and my trousers trailed over the step into the front room.
Worse than this, though—I fancied I
noticed about the room in the morning that strange, fetid odour. Though
very faint, its mere suggestion is foul and nauseating. ‘What in the
world can it be, I wonder? . . . In future I shall lock my door.
Nov.
26.—I have accomplished a lot of good work during this past week,
and have also managed to get regular exercise. I have felt well and in
an equable state of mind. Only two things have occurred to disturb my
equanimity. The first is trivial in itself, and no doubt to be easily
explained. The upper window where I saw the light on the night of
November 4, with the shadow of a large head and shoulders upon the
blind, is one of the windows in the square room under the roof. In
reality it has no blind at all!
Here
is the other thing. I was coming home last night in a fresh fall of snow
about eleven o’clock, my umbrella low down over my head. Half-way up
the alley, where the snow was wholly untrodden, I saw a man’s legs in
front of me. The umbrella hid the rest of his figure, but on raising it
I saw that he was tall and broad and was walking, as I was, towards the
door of my house. He could not have been four feet ahead of me. I had
thought the alley was empty when I entered it, but might of course have
been mistaken very easily.
A sudden gust of wind compelled me to
lower the umbrella, and when I raised it again, not half a minute later,
there was no longer any man to be seen. With a few
more steps I reached the door. It was closed as usual. I then
noticed with a sudden sensation of dismay that the surface of the
freshly fallen snow was unbroken. My
own foot-marks were the only ones to be seen anywhere, and though I
retraced my way to tile point where I had first seen the man, I could
find no slightest impression of any other boots. Feeling creepy and
uncomfortable, I went upstairs, and was glad to get into bed.
Nov.
28.—With the
fastening of my bedroom door the disturbances ceased. I am convinced
that I walked in my sleep. Probably I untied my toe and then tied it up
again. The fancied security of the locked door would alone have been
enough to restore sleep to my troubled spirit and enable me to rest
quietly.
Last night, however, the annoyance was
suddenly renewed another and more aggressive form. I woke in the darkness
with the impression that someone was standing outside my bedroom door listening. As I became more awake the impression grew into positive
knowledge. Though there was no appreciable sound of moving or breathing,
I was so convinced of the propinquity of a listener that I crept out of
bed and approached the door. As I did so there came faintly from the
next room the unmistakable sound of someone retreating stealthily across
the floor. Yet, as I heard it, it was neither the tread of a man nor a
regular footstep, but rather, it seemed to me, a confused sort of
crawling, almost as of someone on his hands and knees.
I unlocked the door in less than a
second, and passed quickly into the front room, and I could feel, as by
the subtlest imaginable vibrations upon my nerves, that the spot I was
standing in had just that instant been vacated! The Listener had moved;
he was now behind the other door, standing in the passage. Yet this door
was also closed. I moved swiftly, and as silently as possible, across
the floor, and turned the handle. A cold rush of air met me from the
passage and sent shiver after shiver down my back. There was no one in
the doorway; there was no one on the little landing; there was no one
moving down the staircase. Yet I had been so quick that this midnight
Listener could not be very far away, and I felt that if I persevered I
should eventually come face to face with him. And the courage that came
so opportunely to overcome my nervousness and horror seemed born of the
unwelcome conviction that it was somehow necessary for my safety as well
as my sanity that I should find this intruder and force his secret from
him. For was it not the intent action of his mind upon my own, in
concentrated listening, that had awakened me with such a vivid
realisation of his presence?
Advancing across the narrow landing, I
peered down into the well of the little house. There was nothing to be
seen; no one was moving in the darkness. How cold the oilcloth was to my
bare feet.
I cannot say what it was that suddenly
drew my eyes upwards. I only know that, without apparent reason, I
looked up and saw a person about half-way up the next turn of the
stairs, leaning forward over the balustrade and staring straight into my
face. It was a man. He appeared to be clinging to the rail rather than
standing on the stairs. The gloom made it impossible to see much beyond
the general outline, but the head and shoulders were seemingly enormous,
and stood sharply silhouetted against the skylight in the roof
immediately above. The idea flashed into my brain in a moment that I was
looking into the visage of something monstrous. The huge skull, the
mane-like hair, the wide-humped shoulders, suggested, in a way I did not
pause to analyse, that which was scarcely human; and for some seconds,
fascinated by horror, I returned the gaze and stared into the dark,
inscrutable countenance above me, without knowing exactly where I was or
what I was doing.
Then I realised in quite a new way that
I was face to face with the secret midnight Listener, and I steeled
myself as best I could for what was about to come.
The source of the rash courage that
came to me at this awful moment will ever be to me an inexplicable
mystery. Though shivering with fear, and my forehead wet with an unholy
dew, I resolved to advance. Twenty questions leaped to my lips: What are
you? What do you want? Why do you listen and watch? Why do you come into
my room? But none of them found articulate utterance.
I began forthwith to climb the stairs,
and with the first signs of my advance he
drew himself back into the shadows and began to move. He retreated
as swiftly as I advanced. I heard the sound of his crawling motion a few
steps ahead of me, ever maintaining the same distance. When I reached
the landing he was half-way up the next flight, and when I was half-way
up the next flight he had already arrived at the top landing. I then
heard him open the door of the little square room under the roof and go
in. Immediately, though the door did not close after him, the sound of
his moving entirely ceased.
At this moment I longed for a light, or
a stick, or any weapon whatsoever; but I had none of these things, and
it was impossible to go back. So I marched steadily up the rest of the
stairs, and in less than a minute found myself standing in the gloom
face to face with the door through which this creature had just entered.
For a moment I hesitated. The door was
about half-way open, and the Listener was standing evidently in his
favourite attitude just behind it—listening. To search through that
dark room for him seemed hopeless; to enter the same small space where
he was seemed horrible. The very idea filled me with loathing, and I
almost decided to turn back.
It is strange at such times how trivial
things impinge on the consciousness with a shock as of something
important and immense. Something—it may have been a beetle or a
mouse—scuttled over the bare boards behind me. The door moved a
quarter of an inch, closing. My decision came back with a sudden rush,
as it were, and thrusting out a foot, I kicked the door so that it swung
sharply back to its full extent, and permitted me to walk forward slowly
into the aperture of profound blackness beyond. What a queer soft sound
my bare feet made on the boards! how the blood sang and buzzed in my
head!
I was inside. The darkness closed over
me, hiding even the windows. I began to grope my way round the walls in
a thorough search; but in order to prevent all possibility of the
other’s escape, I first of all closcd
the door.
There
we were, we two, shut in together between four walls, within a few feet
of one another. But with what, with whom, was I thus momentarily
imprisoned? A new light flashed suddenly over the affair with a swift,
illuminating brilliance—and I knew I was a fool, an utter fool! I was
wide awake at last, and the horror was evaporating. My cursed nerves
again; a dream, a nightmare, and the old result—walking in my sleep.
The figure was a dream-figure. Many a time before had the actors in my
dreams stood before me for some moments after I was awake. . . . There
was a chance match in my pyjamas’ pocket, and I struck it on the wall.
The room was utterly empty. It held not even a shadow. I went quickly
down to bed, cursing my wretched nerves and my foolish, vivid dreams.
But as soon as ever I was asleep again, the same uncouth figure of a man
crept back to my bedside, and bending over me with his immense head
close to my ear, whispered repeatedly in my dreams, “I want your body;
I want its covering. I’m waiting for it, and listening always.”
Words scarcely less foolish than the dream.
But I wonder what that queer odour was
up in the square room. I noticed it again, and stronger than ever
before, and it seemed to be also in my bedroom when I woke this morning.
Nov. 29.—Slowly, as moonbeams rise over a misty sea in
June, the thought is entering my mind that my nerves and somnambulistic
dreams do not adequately account for the influence this house exercises
upon me. It holds me as with a fine, invisible net. I cannot escape if I
would. It draws me, and it means to keep me.
Nov.
30.—The post this
morning brought me a letter from Aden, forwarded from my old rooms in
Earl’s Court. It was from Chapter, my former Trinity chum, who is on
his way home from the East, and asks for my address. I sent it to him at
the hotel he mentioned, “to await arrival”.
As I have already said, my windows
command a view of the alley, and I can see an arrival without
difficulty. This morning, while I was busy writing, the sound of
footsteps coming up the alley filled me with a sense of vague alarm that
I could in no way account for. I went over to the window, and saw a man
standing below waiting for the door to be opened. His shoulders were
broad, his top-hat glossy, and his overcoat fitted beautifully round the
collar. All this I could see, but no more. Presently the door was
opened, and the shock to my nerves was unmistakable when I heard a
man’s voice ask, “Is Mr. — still here?” mentioning my name. I
could not catch the answer, but it could only have been in the
affirmative, for the man entered the hall and the door shut to behind
him. But I waited in vain for the sound of his steps on the stairs.
There was no sound of any kind. It seemed to me so strange that I opened
my door and looked out. No one was anywhere to be seen. I walked across
the narrow landing, and looked through the window that commands the
whole length of the alley. There was no sign of a human being, coming or
going. The lane was deserted. Then I deliberately walked downstairs
into the kitchen, and asked the grey-faced landlady if a gentleman had
just that minute called for me.
The answer, given with an odd, weary
sort of smile, was “No!”
Dec.
1.—I
feel genuinely alarmed and uneasy over the state of my nerves.
Dreams are dreams, but never before have I had dreams in broad daylight.
I am looking forward very much to
Chapter’s arrival. He is a capital fellow, vigorous, healthy, with no
nerves, and even less imagination; and he has £2,000 a year into the
bargain. Periodically he makes me offers—the last was to travel round
the world with him as secretary, which was a delicate way of paying my
expenses and giving me some pocket-money—offers, however, which I
invariably decline. I prefer to keep his friendship. Women could not
come between us; money might—therefore I give it no opportunity.
Chapter always laughed at what he called my “fancies”, being himself
possessed only of that thin-blooded quality of imagination which is
ever associated with the prosaic-minded man. Yet, if taunted with this
obvious lack, his wrath is deeply stirred. His psychology is that of the
crass materialist—always a rather funny article. It will afford me
genuine relief, none the less, to hear the cold judgment his mind will
have to pass upon the story of this house as I shall have it to tell.
Dec.
2.—The strangest part of it all I have not referred to in
this brief diary. Truth to tell, I have been afraid to set it down in
black and white. I have kept it in the background of my thoughts,
preventing it as far as possible from taking shape. In spite of my
efforts, however, it has continued to grow stronger.
Now that I come to face the issue
squarely it is harder to express than I imagined. Like a half-remembered
melody that trips in the head but vanishes the moment you try to sing
it, these thoughts form a group in the background of my mnind, behind
my mind, as it were, and refuse to come forward. They are crouching
ready to spring, but the actual leap never takes place.
In these rooms, except when my mind is
strongly concentrated on my own work, I find myself suddenly dealing
in thoughts and ideas that are not my own! New, strange conceptions,
wholly foreign to my temperament, are for ever cropping up in my head.
What precisely they are is of no particular importance. The point is
that they are entirely apart from the channel in which my thoughts have
hitherto been accustomed to flow. Especially they come when my mind is
at rest, unoccupied; when I’m dreaming over the fire, or sitting with
a book which fails to hold my attention. Then these thoughts which are
not mine spring into life and make me feel exceedingly uncomfortable.
Sometimes they are so strong that I almost feel as if someone were in
the room beside me, thinking aloud.
Evidently my nerves and liver are
shockingly out of order. I must work harder and take more vigorous
exercise. The horrid thoughts never come when my mind is much occupied.
But they are always there—waiting and as it were alive.
What
I have attempted to describe above came first upon me gradually after I
had been some days in the house, and then grew steadily in strength. The
other strange thing has come to me only twice in all these weeks. It
appals me. It is the consciousness of the propinquity of some deadly
and loathsome disease. It comes over me like a wave of fever heat, and
then passes off, leaving me cold and trembling. The air seems for a
few seconds to become tainted. So penetrating and convincing is the
thought of this sickness, that on both occasions my brain has turned
momentarily dizzy, and through my mind, like flames of white heat,
have flashed the ominous names of all the dangerous illnesses I know. I
can no more explain these visitations than I can fly, yet I know there
is no dreaming about the clammy skin and palpitating heart which they
always leave as witnesses of their brief visit.
Most strongly of all was I aware of
this nearness of a mortal sickness when, on the night of the 28th, I
went upstairs in pursuit of the listening figure. When we were shut in
together in that little square room under the roof, I felt that I was
face to face with the actual essence of this invisible and malignant
disease. Such a feeling never entered my heart before, and I pray to God
it never may again.
There! Now I have confessed. I have
given some expression at least to the feelings that so far I have been
afraid to see in my own writing. For—since I can no longer deceive
myself—the experiences of that night (28th) were no more a dream than
my daily breakfast is a dream; and the trivial entry in this diary by
which I sought to explain away an occurrence that caused me unutterable
horror was due solely to my desire not to acknowledge in words what I
really felt and believed to be true. The increase that would have
accrued to my horror by so doing might have been more than I could
stand.
Dec.
3.—I wish Chapter
would come. My facts are all ready marshalled, and I can see his cool,
grey eyes fixed incredulously on my face as I relate them: the knocking
at my door, the well-dressed caller, the light in the upper window and
the shadow upon the blind, the man who preceded me in the snow, the
scattering of my clothes at night, Emily’s arrested confession, the
landlady’s suspicious reticence, the midnight listener on the
stairs, and those awful subsequent words in my sleep; and above all, and
hardest to tell, the presence of the abominable sickness, and the stream
of thoughts and ideas that are not my own.
I can see Chapter’s face, and I can
almost hear his deliberate words, “You’ve been at the tea again,
and underfeeding, I expect, as usual. Better see my nerve doctor, and
then come with me to the south of France.” For this fellow, who knows
nothing of disordered liver or high-strung nerves, goes regularly to a
great nerve specialist with the periodical belief that his nervous
system is beginning to decay.
Dec.
5.—Ever since the incident of the Listener, I have kept a
night-light burning in my bedroom, and my sleep has been undisturbed.
Last night, however, I was subjected to a far worse annoyance. I woke
suddenly, and saw a man in front of the dressing-table regarding himself
in the mirror. The door was locked, as usual. I knew at once it was the
Listener, and the blood turned to ice in my veins. Such a wave of horror
and dread swept over me that it seemed to turn me rigid in the bed, and
I could neither move nor speak. I noted, however, that the odour I so
abhorred was strong in the room.
The man seemed to be tall and broad. He
was stooping forward over the mirror. His back was turned to me, but in
the glass I saw the reflection of a huge head and face illumined
fitfully by the flicker of the night-light. The spectral grey of very
early morning stealing in round the edges of the curtains lent an
additional horror to the picture, for it fell upon hair that was tawny
and mane-like, hanging loosely about a face whose swollen, rugose
features bore the once seen never forgotten leonine expression of— I
dare not write down that awful word. But, byway of corroborative
proof, I saw in the faint mingling of the two lights that there were
several bronze-coloured blotches on the cheeks which the man was
evidently examining with great care in the glass. The lips were pale and
very thick and large. One hand I could not see, but the other rested on
the ivory back of my hair-brush. Its muscles were strangely contracted,
the fingers thin to emaciation, the back of the hand closely puckered
up. It was like a big grey spider crouching to spring, or the claw of a
great bird.
The full realisation that I was alone
in the room with this nameless creature, almost within arm’s reach of
him, overcame me to such a degree that, when he suddenly turned and
regarded me with small beady eyes, wholly out of proportion to the
grandeur of their massive setting, I sat bolt upright in bed, uttered a
loud cry, and then fell back in a dead swoon of terror upon the bed.
Dec.
5.—. . . When I came to this morning, the first thing I noticed
was that my clothes were strewn all over the floor. . . . I find it
difficult to put my thoughts together, and have sudden accesses of
violent trembling. I determined that I would go at once to Chapter’s
hotel and find out when he is expected. I cannot refer to what happened
in the night; it is too awful, and I have to keep my thoughts rigorously
away from it. I feel light-headed and queer, couldn’t eat any
breakfast, and have twice vomited with blood. While dressing to go out,
a hansom rattled up noisily over the cobbles, and a minute later the
door opened, and to my great joy in walked the very subject of my
thoughts.
The sight of his strong face and quiet
eyes had an immediate effect upon me, and I grew calmer again. His
very handshake was a sort of tonic. But, as I listened eagerly to the
deep tones of his reassuring voice, and the visions of the night-time
paled a little, I began to realise how very hard it was going to be to
tell him my wild intangible tale. Some men radiate an animal vigour that
destroys the delicate woof of a vision and effectually prevents its
reconstruction. Chapter was one of these men.
We talked of incidents that had filled
the interval since we last met, and he told me something of his travels.
He talked and I listened. But, so full was I of the horrid thing I had
to tell, that I made a poor listener. I was for ever watching my
opportunity to leap in and explode it all under his nose.
Before very long, however, it was borne
in upon me that he too was merely talking for time. He too held
something of importance in the background of his mind, something too
weighty to let fall till the right moment presented itself. So that
during the whole of the first half-hour we were both waiting for the
psychological moment in which properly to release our respective bombs;
and the intensity of our minds’ action set up opposing forces that
merely sufficed to hold one another in check—and nothing more. As soon
as I realised this, therefore, I resolved to yield. I renounced for the
time my purpose of telling my story, and had the satisfaction of
seeing that his mind, released from the restraint of my own, at once
began to make preparations for the discharge of its momentous burden.
The talk grew less and less magnetic; the interest waned; the
descriptions of his travels became less alive. There were pauses between
his sentences. Presently he repeated himself. His words clothed no
living thoughts. The pauses grew longer. Then the interest dwindled
altogether and went out like a candle in the wind. His voice ceased, and
he looked up squarely into my face with serious and anxious eyes.
The psychological moment had come at
last!
“I say—” he began, and then
stopped short.
I made an unconscious gesture of
encouragement, but said no word. I dreaded the impending disclosure
exceedingly. A dark shadow seemed to precede it.
“I say,” he blurted out at last,
“what in the world made you ever come to this place—to these rooms,
I mean?”
“They’re cheap, for one thing,” I
began, “and central and—”
“They’re too cheap,” he
interrupted. “Didn’t you ask what made ’em so cheap?”
“It never occurred to me at the
time.”
There was a pause in which he avoided
my eyes.
“For God’s sake, go on, man, and
tell it!” I cried, for the suspense was getting more than I could
stand in my nervous condition.
“This was where Blount lived so
long,” he said quietly, “and where he—died. You know, in the old
days I often used to come here and see him, and do what I could to
alleviate his—” He stuck fast again.
“Well!” I said with a great effort.
“Please go on— faster.”
“But,” Chapter went on, turning his
face to the window with a perceptible shiver, “he finally got so
terrible I simply couldn’t stand it, though I always thought I could
stand anything. It got on my nerves and made me dream, and haunted me
day and night.”
I stared at him, and said nothing. I
had never heard of Blount in my life, and didn’t know what he was
talking about. But, all the same, I was trembling, and my mouth had
become strangely dry.
“This is the first time I’ve been
back here since,” he said almost in a whisper, “and, ’pon my word,
it gives me the creeps. I swear it isn’t fit for a man to live in. I
never saw you look so bad, old man.”
“I’ve got it for a year,” I
jerked out, with a forced laugh; “signed the lease and all. I thought
it was rather a bargain.”
Chapter shuddered, and buttoned his
overcoat up to his neck. Then he spoke in a low voice, looking
occasionally behind him as though he thought someone was listening. I
too could have sworn someone else was in the room with us.
“He did it himself, you know, and no
one blamed him a bit; his sufferings were awful. For the last two years
he used to wear a veil when he went out, and even then it was always in
a closed carriage. Even the attendant who had nursed him for so long was
at length obliged to leave. The extremities of both the lower limbs were
gone, dropped off, and he moved about the ground on all fours with a
sort of crawling motion. The odour, too, was——”
I was obliged to interrupt him here. I
could hear no more details of that sort. My skin was moist, I felt hot
and cold by turns, for at last I was beginning to understand.
“Poor devil,” Chapter went on; “I
used to keep my eyes closed as much as possible. He always begged to be
allowed to take his veil off, and asked if I minded very much. I used to
stand by the open window. He never touched me, though. He rented the
whole house. Nothing would induce him to leave it.”
“Did he occupy—these very rooms?”
“No. He had the little room on the
top floor, the square one just under the roof. He preferred it because
it was dark. These rooms were too near the ground, and he was afraid
people might see him through the windows. A crowd had been known to
follow him up to the very door, and then stand below the windows in the
hope of catching a glimpse of his face.”
“But there were hospitals.”
“He wouldn’t go near one, and they
didn’t like to force him. You know, they say it’s not
contagious, so there was nothing to prevent his staying here if he
wanted to. He spent all his time reading medical books, about drugs and
so on. His head and face were something appalling, just like a
lion’s.”
I held up my hand to arrest further
description.
“He was a burden to the world, and he
knew it. One night I suppose he realised it too keenly to wish to live.
He had the free use of drugs—and in the morning he was found dead on
the floor. Two years ago, that was, and they said then he had still
several years to live.”
“Then, in Heaven’s name!” I
cried, unable to bear the suspense any longer, “tell me what it was he
had, and be quick about it.”
“I thought you knew!” he exclaimed,
with genuine surprise. “I thought you knew!”
He leaned forward and our eyes met. In
a scarcely audible whisper I caught the words his lips seemed almost
afraid to utter:
“He was a leper!”