I
For a part of the distance between Auburn and Newcastle the road --
first on one side of a creek and then on the other -- occupies the whole
bottom of the ravine, being partly cut out of the steep hillside, and
partly built up with boulders removed from the creek-bed by the miners.
The hills are wooded, the course of the ravine is sinuous. In a dark
night careful driving is required in order not to go off into the water.
The night that I have in memory was dark, the creek a torrent, swollen
by a recent storm. I had driven up from Newcastle and was within about a
mile of Auburn in the darkest and narrowest part of the ravine, looking
intently ahead of my horse for the roadway. Suddenly I saw a man almost
under the animal's nose, and reined in with a jerk that came near
setting the creature upon its haunches.
'I beg your pardon,' I said; 'I did not see you, sir.'
'You could hardly be expected to see me,' the man replied civilly,
approaching the side of the vehicle; 'and the noise of the creek
prevented my hearing you.'
I at once recognized the voice, although five years had passed
since I had heard it. I was not particularly well pleased to hear it now.
'You are Dr. Dorrimore, I think,' said I.
'Yes; and you are my good friend Mr. Manrich. I am more than glad
to see you -- the excess,' he added, with a light laugh, 'being due to
the fact that I am going your way, and naturally expect an invitation to
ride with you.'
'Which I extend with all my heart.'
That was not altogether true.
Dr. Dorrimore thanked me as he seated himself beside me, and I
drove cautiously forward, as before. Doubtless it is fancy, but it seems
to me now that the remaining distance was made in a chill fog; that I
was uncomfortably cold; that the way was longer than ever before, and
the town, when we reached it, cheerless, forbidding, and desolate. It
must have been early in the evening, yet I do not recollect a light in
any of the houses nor a living thing in the streets. Dorrimore explained
at some length how he happened to be there, and where he had been during
the years that had elapsed since I had seen him. I recall the fact of
the narrative, but none of the facts narrated. He had been in foreign
countries and had returned -- this is all that my memory retains, and
this I already knew. As to myself I cannot remember that I spoke a word,
though doubtless I did.
Of one thing I am distinctly conscious: the man's presence at my
side was strangely distasteful and disquieting -- so much so that when I
at last pulled up under the lights of the Putnam House I experienced a
sense of having escaped some spiritual peril of a nature peculiarly
forbidding. This sense of relief was somewhat modified by the discovery
that Dr. Dorrimore was living at the same hotel.
II
In partial explanation of my feelings regarding Dr. Dorrimore I will
relate briefly the circumstances under which I had met him some years
before. One evening a half-dozen men of whom I was one were sitting in
the library of the Bohemian Club in San Francisco. The conversation had
turned to the subject of sleight-of-hand and the feats of the
prestidigitateurs, one of whom was then exhibiting at a local theatre.
'These fellows are pretenders in a double sense,' said one of the
party; 'they can do nothing which it is worth one's while to be made a
dupe by. The humblest wayside juggler in India could mystify them to the
verge of lunacy.'
'For example, how?' asked another, lighting a cigar.
'For example, by all their common and familiar performances --
throwing large objects into the air which never come down; causing
plants to sprout, grow visibly and blossom, in bare ground chosen by
spectators; putting a man into a wicker basket, piercing him through and
through with a sword while he shrieks and bleeds, and then -- the basket
being opened nothing is there; tossing the free end of a silken ladder
into the air, mounting it and disappearing.'
'Nonsense!' I said, rather uncivilly, I fear. 'You surely do not
believe such things?'
'Certainly not: I have seen them too often.'
'But I do,' said a journalist of considerable local fame as a
picturesque reporter. 'I have so frequently related them that nothing
but observation could shake my conviction. Why, gentlemen, I have my own
word for it.'
Nobody laughed -- all were looking at something behind me. Turning
in my seat I saw a man in evening dress who had just entered the room.
He was exceedingly dark, almost swarthy, with a thin face, black-bearded
to the lips, an abundance of coarse black hair in some disorder, a high
nose and eyes that glittered with as soulless an expression as those of
a cobra. One of the group rose and introduced him as Dr. Dorrimore, of
Calcutta. As each of us was presented in turn he acknowledged the fact
with a profound bow in the Oriental manner, but with nothing of Oriental
gravity. His smile impressed me as cynical and a trifle contemptuous.
His whole demeanour I can describe only as disagreeably engaging.
His presence led the conversation into other channels. He said
little -- I do not recall anything of what he did say. I thought his
voice singularly rich and melodious, but it affected me in the same way
as his eyes and smile. In a few minutes I rose to go. He also rose and
put on his overcoat.
'Mr. Manrich,' he said, 'I am going your way.'
'The devil you are!' I thought. 'How do you know which way I am
going?' Then I said, 'I shall be pleased to have your company.'
We left the building together. No cabs were in sight, the street
cars had gone to bed, there was a full moon and the cool night air was
delightful; we walked up the California Street Hill. I took that
direction thinking he would naturally wish to take another, toward one
of the hotels.
'You do not believe what is told of the Hindu jugglers,' he said
abruptly.
'How do you know that?' I asked.
Without replying he laid his hand lightly upon my arm and with the
other pointed to the stone sidewalk directly in front. There, almost at
our feet, lay the dead body of a man, the face upturned and white in the
moonlight! A sword whose hilt sparkled with gems stood fixed and upright
in the breast; a pool of blood had collected on the stones of the sidewalk.
I was startled and terrified -- not only by what I saw, but by the
circumstances under which I saw it. Repeatedly during our ascent of the
hill my eyes, I thought, had traversed the whole reach of that sidewalk,
from street to street. How could they have been insensible to this
dreadful object now so conspicuous in the white moonlight.
As my dazed faculties cleared I observed that the body was in
evening dress; the overcoat thrown wide open revealed the dress-coat,
the white tie, the broad expanse of shirt front pierced by the sword.
And -- horrible revelation! -- the face, except for its pallor, was that
of my companion! It was to the minutest detail of dress and feature Dr.
Dorrimore himself. Bewildered and horrified, I turned to look for the
living man. He was nowhere visible, and with an added terror I retired
from the place, down the hill in the direction whence I had come. I had
taken but a few strides when a strong grasp upon my shoulder arrested
me. I came near crying out with terror: the dead man, the sword still
fixed in his breast, stood beside me! Pulling out the sword with his
disengaged hand, he flung it from him, the moonlight glinting upon the
jewels of its hilt and the unsullied steel of its blade. It fell with a
clang upon the sidewalk ahead and -- vanished! The man, swarthy as
before, relaxed his grasp upon my shoulder and looked at me with the
same cynical regard that I had observed on first meeting him. The dead
have not that look -- it partly restored me, and turning my head
backward, I saw the smooth white expanse of sidewalk, unbroken from
street to street.
'What is all this nonsense, you devil?' I demanded, fiercely
enough, though weak and trembling in every limb.
'It is what some are pleased to call jugglery,' he answered, with a
light, hard laugh.
He turned down Dupont Street and I saw him no more until we met in
the Auburn ravine.
III
On the day after my second meeting with Dr. Dorrimore I did not see him:
the clerk in the Putnam House explained that a slight illness confined
him to his rooms. That afternoon at the railway station I was surprised
and made happy by the unexpected arrival of Miss Margaret Corray and her
mother, from Oakland.
This is not a love story. I am no story-teller, and love as it is
cannot be portrayed in a literature dominated and enthralled by the
debasing tyranny which 'sentences letters' in the name of the Young
Girl. Under the Young Girl's blighting reign -- or rather under the rule
of those false Ministers of the Censure who have appointed themselves to
the custody of her welfare --
Love veils her sacred fires,
And, unaware, Morality expires,
famished upon the sifted meal and distilled water of a prudish purveyance.
Let it suffice that Miss Corray and I were engaged in marriage. She
and her mother went to the hotel at which I lived, and for two weeks I
saw her daily. That I was happy needs hardly be said; the only bar to my
perfect enjoyment of those golden days was the presence of Dr.
Dorrimore, whom I had felt compelled to introduce to the ladies.
By them he was evidently held in favour. What could I say? I knew
absolutely nothing to his discredit. His manners were those of a
cultivated and considerate gentleman; and to women a man's manner is the
man. On one or two occasions when I saw Miss Corray walking with him I
was furious, and once had the indiscretion to protest. Asked for
reasons, I had none to give, and fancied I saw in her expression a shade
of contempt for the vagaries of a jealous mind. In time I grew morose
and consciously disagreeable, and resolved in my madness to return to
San Francisco the next day. Of this, however, I said nothing.
IV
There was at Auburn an old, abandoned cemetery. It was nearly in the
heart of the town, yet by night it was as gruesome a place as the most
dismal of human moods could crave. The railings about the plots were
prostrate, decayed, or altogether gone. Many of the graves were sunken,
from others grew sturdy pines, whose roots had committed unspeakable
sin. The headstones were fallen and broken across; brambles overran the
ground; the fence was mostly gone, and cows and pigs wandered there at
will; the place was a dishonour to the living, a calumny on the dead, a
blasphemy against God.
The evening of the day on which I had taken my madman's resolution
to depart in anger from all that was dear to me found me in that
congenial spot. The light of the half moon fell ghostly through the
foliage of trees in spots and patches, revealing much that was
unsightly, and the black shadows seemed conspiracies withholding to the
proper time revelations of darker import. Passing along what had been a
gravel path, I saw emerging from shadow the figure of Dr. Dorrimore. I
was myself in shadow, and stood still with clenched hands and set teeth,
trying to control the impulse to leap upon and strangle him. A moment
later a second figure joined him and clung to his arm. It was Margaret
Corray!
I cannot rightly relate what occurred. I know that I sprang
forward, bent upon murder; I know that I was found in the grey of the
morning, bruised and bloody, with finger marks upon my throat. I was
taken to the Putnam House, where for days I lay in a delirium. All this
I know, for I have been told. And of my own knowledge I know that when
consciousness returned with convalescence I sent for the clerk of the
hotel.
'Are Mrs. Corray and her daughter still here?' I asked.
'What name did you say?'
'Corray.'
'Nobody of that name has been here.'
'I beg you will not trifle with me,' I said petulantly. 'You see
that I am all right now; tell me the truth.'
'I give you my word,' he replied with evident sincerity, 'we have
had no guests of that name.'
His words stupefied me. I lay for a few moments in silence; then I
asked: 'Where is Dr. Dorrimore?'
'He left on the morning of your fight and has not been heard of
since. It was a rough deal he gave you.'
V
Such are the facts of this case. Margaret Corray is now my wife. She has
never seen Auburn, and during the weeks whose history as it shaped
itself in my brain I have endeavoured to relate, was living at her home
in Oakland, wondering where her lover was and why he did not write. The
other day I saw in the Baltimore Sun the following paragraph:
'Professor Valentine Dorrimore, the hypnotist, had a large audience
last night. The lecturer, who has lived most of his life in India, gave
some marvellous exhibitions of his power, hypnotizing anyone who chose
to submit himself to the experiment, by merely looking at him. In fact,
he twice hypnotized the entire audience (reporters alone exempted),
making all entertain the most extraordinary illusions. The most valuable
feature of the lecture was the disclosure of the methods of the Hindu
jugglers in their famous performances, familiar in the mouths of
travellers. The professor declares that these thaumaturgists have
acquired such skill in the art which he learned at their feet that they
perform their miracles by simply throwing the "spectators" into a state
of hypnosis and telling them what to see and hear. His assertion that a
peculiarly susceptible subject may be kept in the realm of the unreal
for weeks, months, and even years, dominated by whatever delusions and
hallucinations the operator may from time to time suggest, is a trifle
disquieting.'