It must have been a beautiful face, no doubt, but I can
honestly say that I would not have looked in that face when there was
life behind it for a thousand guineas, no, nor for twice that sum.’.”
‘My dear sir,’ I said, ‘you surprise me extremely. You say that it
was not the brain of a human being. What was it, then?’
” ‘The brain of a devil.’ He spoke quite coolly, and never moved a
muscle. ‘The brain of a devil,’ he repeated, ‘and I have no doubt
that Black found some way of putting an end to it. I don’t blame him
if he did. Whatever Mrs. Black was, she was not fit to stay in this
world. Will you have anything more? No? Good-night, good-night.’
“It was a queer sort of opinion to get from a man of science, wasn’t
it? When he was saying that he would not have looked on that face
when alive for a thousand guineas, or two thousand guineas, I was
thinking of the face I had seen, but I said nothing. I went again to
Harlesden, and passed from one shop to another, making small
purchases, and trying to find out whether there was anything about
the Blacks which was not already common property, but there was very
little to hear. One of the tradesmen to whom I spoke said he had
known the dead woman well; she used to buy of him such quantities of
grocery as were required for their small household, for they never
kept a servant, but had a charwoman in occasionally, and she had not
seen Mrs. Black for months before she died. According to this man
Mrs. Black was ‘a nice lady,’ always kind and considerate, and so
fond of her husband and he of her, as every one thought. And yet, to
put the doctor’s opinion on one side, I knew what I had seen. And
then after thinking it over, and putting one thing with another, it
seemed to me that the only person likely to give me much assistance
would be Black himself, and I made up my mind to find him. Of course
he wasn’t to be found in Harlesden; he had left, I was told, directly
after the funeral. Everything in the house had been sold, and one
fine day Black got into the train with a small portmanteau, and went,
nobody knew where. It was a chance if he were ever heard of again,
and it was by a mere chance that I came across him at last. I was
walking one day along Gray’s Inn Road, not bound for anywhere in
particular, but looking about me, as usual, and holding on to my hat,
for it was a gusty day in early March, and the wind was making the
treetops in the Inn rock and quiver. I had come up from the Holborn
end, and I had almost got to Theobald’s Road when I noticed a man
walking in front of me, leaning on a stick, and to all appearance
very feeble. There was something about his look that made me curious,
I don’t know why, and I began to walk briskly with the idea of
overtaking him, when of a sudden his hat blew off and came bounding
along the pavement to my feet. Of course I rescued the hat, and gave
it a glance as I went towards its owner. It was a biography in
itself; a Piccadilly maker’s name in the inside, but t don’t think a
beggar would have picked it out of the gutter. Then I looked up and
saw Dr. Black of Harlesden waiting for me. A queer thing, wasn’t it?
But, Salisbury, what a change! When I saw Dr. Black come down the
steps of his house at Harlesden he was an upright man, walking firmly
with well-built limbs; a man, should say, in the prime of his life.
And now before me there crouched this wretched creature, bent and
feeble, with shrunken cheeks, and hair that was whitening fast, and
limbs that trembled and shook together, and misery in his eyes. He
thanked me for bringing him his hat, saying, ‘I don’t think I should
ever have got it, I can’t run much now. A gusty day, sir, isn’t
it?’
and with this he was turning way, but by little and little I
contrived to draw him into the current of conversation, and we walked
together eastward. I think the man would have been glad to get rid of
me; but I didn’t intend to let him go, and he stopped at last in
front of a miserable house in a miserable street.
1 comment