Near the end of my fourteenth year I was apprenticed to
Valentine, King & Co., cotton importers, Liverpool, as a
"pair of legs." My father had died suddenly, leaving me and
his property in the possession of my stepmother and my
guardian. It was in deference to their urgent advice that I
left my home in London (with little reluctance, since my
life there had never been happy) to study the art of
money-making. On arriving at the scene of my expected
triumphs I was assigned to the somewhat humble position of
errand boy. In common with other boys who performed a like
service for the firm I was known as "a pair of legs."
Lodgings of a rather modest character had been secured for
me in the western outskirts of the city near the banks of
the Mersey. I was slow to make friends, and my evenings were
spent in the perusal of some story books, which I had
brought with me from London. One night, not long after the
beginning of my new life in Liverpool, I was lying in bed
listening to the wind and rain beating over the housetops
and driving against the windows, when suddenly there came a
loud rap at my door.
"Who's there?" I demanded, starting out of bed.
As I heard no answer, I repeated my inquiry and stood a
moment listening. I could hear nothing, however, but the
wind and rain. Lighting a candle and dressing myself with
all haste, I opened the door. I could just discern the
figure of a bent old man standing in the hallway, when a
gust of wind suddenly put out the candle. The door leading
to the street was open, and the old man was probably a
straggler come to importune me for shelter or for something
to eat. As I relit the candle, he entered my room and stood
facing me, but he did not speak. His clothes were dripping
and he was blinking at me with strange, gleaming eyes. His
hair was snow-white, and as I looked into his face the
deathly pallor of it frightened me. His general appearance
was more than startling; it was uncanny.
"What can I do for you?" I asked.
Greatly to my surprise he made no reply, but with a look of
pain and great anxiety sank into a chair. Then he withdrew
from his pocket a letter which he extended to me. The
envelope was wet and dirty. It was directed to Kendric Lane,
Esq., No. Old Broad street, London, England. The address was
crossed and "22 Kirkland street, Liverpool," written under
it in the familiar hand of my guardian. A strange
proceeding! thought I. Was the letter intended for my
father, who was long dead, and who had removed from that
address more than ten years ago? The old man began to grin
and nod as I examined the superscription. I broke the seal
on the envelope and found the following letter, undated, and
with no indication of the place from which it was sent:
"Dear Brother--I need your help. Come to me at
once if you can. Consequences of vast importance to
me and to mankind depend upon your prompt compliance.
I cannot tell you where I am. The bearer will
bring you to me. Follow him and ask no questions.
Moreover, be silent, like him, regarding the subject of
this letter. If you can come, procure passage in the
first steamer for New York. My messenger is provided
with funds. Your loving brother,
"Revis Lane."
I had often heard my father speak of my uncle Revis, who
went to America almost twenty years before I was born. Now
he was my nearest living relative. No news of him had
reached us for many years before my father died. I was
familiar with his handwriting and the specimen before me was
either genuine, or remarkably like it. If genuine he had
evidently not heard of my father's death.
Extraordinary as the message was, the messenger was more so.
He sat peering at me with a strange, half-crazed expression
on his face.
"When did you leave my uncle?" I asked.
He sat as if unconscious that I had spoken.
I drew my chair to his side and repeated the words in a loud
voice, but he did not seem to hear me. Evidently the old man
could neither hear nor speak. In a moment he began groping
in his pockets, and presently handed me a card which
contained the following words:
"If you can come, tear this card in halves and return the
right half to him."
I examined the card carefully. The words were undoubtedly in
my uncle's handwriting. The back of the card was covered
with strange characters in red ink. I tore the card as
directed and handed him the right half.
He held it up to the light and examined it carefully, then
put it away in a pocket of his waistcoat. The look of pain
returned to his face, and he coughed feebly as if suffering
from a severe cold. The hour being late I intimated by
pantomime that I desired him to occupy my bed. He understood
me readily enough and began feebly to remove his clothing,
while I prepared a sofa for myself. He was soon sound
asleep, but I lay awake long after the light was
extinguished. He was evidently quite ill, and I determined
to go for a physician at the first appearance of daylight.
As soon as possible I would go with him to my uncle. There
were no ties to detain me, and it was clearly my duty to do
so. Perhaps my uncle was in some great peril. If so, I might
be of service to him.
When I arose in the morning my strange lodger seemed to be
sleeping quietly. His face looked pale and ghastly in the
light of day. I stepped close to his bed and, laying my hand
upon his brow, was horrified to discover that he was dead.
What was I to do? I sat down to think, trembling with
fright. I must call in a policeman and tell him all I knew
about my strange visitor. No, not all; I must not tell him
about the letter, thought I. My uncle might not wish it to
be published to the world. I ran out upon the street and
told the first officer I met how the old man had rapped at
my door during the storm; how I had given him my bed out of
pity, and how I had discovered on awaking in the morning
that he was dead.
That day the body was taken to the morgue. The sum of L100
were found in his pockets, a part of which gave him a decent
burial. But while he had gone to his long rest, he had sown
in my mind the seed of unrest. I went about my work clinging
to the thread of a mystery half told. Whither would it lead
me?
Strange as that messenger had seemed, he was certainly a
good man to carry secrets.