Lady Audley's Secret (Oxford World's Classics)

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Lady Audley's Secret (Oxford World's Classics) Page 21

by Mary Elizabeth Braddon


  ‘I’ll go and see the locksmith before I have my dinner.’

  He took up his hat as he announced his determination, and walked towards the door.

  ‘The man’s address, Mrs M.?’

  The Irishwoman directed him to a small street at the back of St Bride’s Church, and thither Mr Robert Audley quietly strolled, through the miry slush which simple Londoners call snow.

  He found the locksmith, and, at the sacrifice of the crown of his hat, contrived to enter the low narrow doorway of a little open shop. A jet of gas was flaring in the unglazed window, and there was a very merry party in the little room behind the shop; but no one responded to Robert’s ‘Hulloa!’. The reason of this was sufficiently obvious. This merry party was so much absorbed in its own merriment as to be deaf to all common-place summonses from the outer world; and it was only when Robert, advancing further into the cavernous little shop, made so bold as to open the half-glass door which separated him from the merry-makers, that he succeeded in obtaining their attention.

  A very jovial picture of the Teniers school* was presented to Mr Robert Audley upon the opening of this door.

  The locksmith, with his wife and family, and two or three droppers-in of the female sex, were clustered about a table, which was adorned by two bottles: not vulgar bottles of that colourless extract of the juniper berry;* much affected by the masses; but of bonâ fide port and sherry—fiercely strong sherry, which left a fiery taste in the mouth; nut-brown sherry—rather unnaturally brown, if anything—and fine old port; no sickly vintage, faded and thin from excessive age; but a rich, full-bodied wine, sweet and substantial, and high coloured.

  The locksmith was speaking as Robert Audley opened the door.

  ‘And with that,’ he said, ‘she walked off, as graceful as you please.’

  The whole party was thrown into confusion by the appearance of Mr Audley; but it was to be observed that the locksmith was more embarrassed than his companions. He set down his glass so hurriedly, that he spilt his wine, and wiped his mouth nervously with the back of his dirty hand.

  ‘You called at my chambers to-day,’ Robert said, quietly. ‘Don’t let me disturb you, ladies.’ This to the droppers-in. ‘You called at my chambers to-day, Mr White, and——’

  The man interrupted him.

  ‘I hope, sir, you’ll be so good as to look over the mistake,’ he stammered. ‘I’m sure, sir, I’m very sorry it should have occurred. I was sent for to another gentleman’s chambers, Mr Aulwin, in Garden Court; and the name slipped my memory; and havin’ done odd jobs before for you, I thought it must be you as wanted me to-day; and I called at Mrs Maloney’s for the key accordin’; but directly I see the locks in your chambers, I says to myself, “the gentleman’s locks ain’t out of order; the gentleman don’t want all his locks repaired.”’

  ‘But you stayed half an hour.’

  ‘Yes, sir; for there was one lock out of order—the door nighest the staircase—and I took it off and cleaned it, and put it on again. I won’t charge you nothin’ for the job, and I hope as you’ll be so good as to look over the mistake as has occurred, which I’ve been in business thirteen year come July, and——’

  ‘Nothing of this kind ever happened before, I suppose,’ said Robert, gravely. ‘No, it’s altogether a singular kind of business, not likely to come about every day. You’ve been enjoying yourself this evening, I see, Mr White. You’ve done a good stroke of work to-day, I’ll wager—made a lucky hit, and you’re what you call “standing treat,” eh?’

  Robert Audley looked straight into the man’s dingy face as he spoke. The locksmith was not a bad-looking fellow, and there was nothing that he need have been ashamed of in his face, except the dirt, and that, as Hamlet’s mother says, ‘is common;’* but in spite of this, Mr White’s eyelids dropped under the young barrister’s calm scrutiny, and he stammered out some apologetic sort of speech about his ‘missus,’ and his missus’s neighbours, and port wine and sherry wine, with as much confusion as if he, an honest mechanic in a free country, were called upon to excuse himself to Mr Robert Audley for being caught in the act of enjoying himself in his own parlour.

  Robert cut him short with a careless nod.

  ‘Pray don’t apologise,’ he said; ‘I like to see people enjoy themselves. Good night, Mr White—good night, ladies.’

  He lifted his hat to ‘the missus,’ and the missus’s neighbours, who were much fascinated by his easy manner and his handsome face, and left the shop.

  ‘And so,’ he muttered to himself as he went back to his chambers, “with that she walked off as graceful as you please.” Who was it that walked off? and what was the story which the locksmith was telling when I interrupted him at that sentence? Oh, George Talboys, George Talboys, am I ever to come any nearer to the secret of your fate? Am I coming nearer to it now, slowly but surely? Is the radius to grow narrower day by day, until it draws a dark circle round the home of those I love? How is it all to end?’

  He sighed wearily as he walked slowly back across the flagged quadrangles in the Temple to his own solitary chambers.

  Mrs Maloney had prepared for him that bachelor’s dinner which, however excellent and nutritious in itself, has no claim to the special charm of novelty. She had cooked for him a mutton chop, which was soddening itself between two plates upon the little table near the fire.

  Robert Audley sighed as he sat down to the familiar meal; remembering his uncle’s cook with a fond, regretful sorrow.

  ‘Her cutlets à la Maintenon* made mutton seem more than mutton; a sublimated meat that could scarcely have grown upon any mundane sheep,’ he murmured, sentimentally, ‘and Mrs Maloney’s chops are apt to be tough; but such is life—what does it matter?’

  He pushed away his plate impatiently after eating a few mouthfuls.

  ‘I have never eaten a good dinner at this table since I lost George Talboys,’ he said. ‘The place seems as gloomy as if the poor fellow had died in the next room, and had never been taken away to be buried. How long ago that September afternoon appears as I look back at it—that September afternoon upon which I parted with him alive and well; and lost him as suddenly and unaccountably as if a trapdoor had opened in the solid earth, and let him through to the Antipodes!’

  END OF VOL. I

  VOLUME II

  CHAPTER I

  THE WRITING IN THE BOOK

  MR AUDLEY rose from the dinner-table and walked over to the cabinet in which he kept the document he had drawn up relating to George Talboys. He unlocked the doors of his cabinet, took the paper from the pigeon-hole marked Important, and seated himself at his desk to write. He added several paragraphs to those in the document, numbering the fresh paragraphs as carefully as he had numbered the old ones.

  ‘Heaven help us all,’ he muttered once; ‘is this paper, with which no attorney has had any hand, to be my first brief?’

  He wrote for about half an hour, then replaced the document in the pigeon-hole, and locked the cabinet. When he had done this, he took a candle in his hand, and went into the room in which were his own portmanteaus and the trunk belonging to George Talboys.

  He took a bunch of keys from his pocket, and tried them one by one. The lock of the shabby old trunk was a common one, and at the fifth trial the key turned easily.

  ‘There’d be no need for any one to break open such a lock as this,’ muttered Robert, as he lifted the lid of the trunk.

  He slowly emptied it of its contents, taking out each article separately, and laying it carefully upon a chair by his side. He handled the things with a respectful tenderness, as if he had been lifting the dead body of his lost friend. One by one he laid the neatly folded mourning garments on the chair. He found old meerschaum pipes, and soiled, crumpled gloves that had once been fresh from the Parisian maker; old play bills, whose biggest letters spelled the names of actors who were dead and gone; old perfume bottles, fragrant with essences, whose fashion had passed away; neat little parcels of letters, each carefully labell
ed with the name of the writer; fragments of old newspapers; and a little heap of shabby dilapidated books, each of which tumbled into as many pieces as a pack of cards in Robert’s incautious hand. But amongst all the mass of worthless litter, each scrap of which had once had its separate purpose, Robert Audley looked in vain for that which he sought—the packet of letters written to the missing man by his dead wife, Helen Talboys. He had heard George allude more than once to the existence of these letters. He had seen him once sorting the faded papers with a reverent hand; and he had seen him replace them, carefully tied together with a faded ribbon which had once been Helen’s, amongst the mourning garments in the trunk. Whether he had afterwards removed them, or whether they had been removed since his disappearance by some other hand, it was not easy to say; but they were gone.

  Robert Audley sighed wearily as he replaced the things in the empty box, one by one, as he had taken them out. He stopped with the little heap of tattered books in his hand, and hesitated for a moment.

  ‘I will keep these out,’ he muttered: ‘there may be something to help me in one of them.’

  George’s library was no very brilliant collection of literature. There was an old Greek Testament and the Eton Latin Grammar; a French pamphlet on the cavalry sword exercise; an odd volume of Tom Jones,* with one half of its stiff leather cover hanging to it by a thread; Byron’s Don Juan,* printed in a murderous type, which must have been invented for the special advantage of oculists and opticians; and a fat book in a faded gilt and crimson cover.

  Robert Audley locked the trunk and took the books under his arm. Mrs Maloney was clearing away the remains of his repast when he returned to his sitting-room. He put the books aside on a little table in a corner of the fire-place, and waited patiently while the laundress finished her work. He was in no humour even for his meerschaum consoler; the yellow-papered fictions on the shelves above his head seemed stale and profitless—he opened a volume of Balzac, but his uncle’s wife’s golden curls danced and trembled in a glittering haze, alike upon the metaphysical diablerie of the Peau de Chagrin, and the hideous social horrors of Cousine Bette.* The volume dropped from his hand, and he sat wearily watching Mrs Maloney as she swept up the ashes on the hearth, replenished the fire, drew the dark damask curtains, supplied the simple wants of the canaries, and put on her bonnet in the disused clerk’s office, prior to bidding her employer good night. As the door closed upon the Irishwoman, he rose impatiently from his chair, and paced up and down the room.

  ‘Why do I go on with this,’ he said, ‘when I know that it is leading me, step by step, day by day, hour by hour, nearer to that conclusion which of all others I should avoid? Am I tied to a wheel, and must I go with its every revolution, let it take me where it will? Or can I sit down here to-night and say, I have done my duty to my missing friend; I have searched for him patiently, but I have searched in vain? Should I be justified in doing this? Should I be justified in letting the chain which I have slowly put together, link by link, drop at this point, or must I go on adding fresh links to that fatal chain until the last rivet drops into its place and the circle is complete? I think and believe that I shall never see my friend’s face again; and that no exertion of mine can ever be of any benefit to him. In plainer, crueller words, I believe him to be dead. Am I bound to discover how and where he died? or being, as I think, on the road to that discovery, shall I do a wrong to the memory of George Talboys by turning back or stopping still? What am I to do? What am I to do?’

  He rested his elbows on his knees and buried his face in his hands. The one purpose which had slowly grown up in his careless nature until it had become powerful enough to work a change in that very nature, made him what he had never been before—a Christian; conscious of his own weakness; anxious to keep to the strict line of duty; fearful to swerve from the conscientious discharge of the strange task that had been forced upon him; and reliant on a stronger hand than his own to point the way which he was to go. Perhaps he uttered his first thoroughly earnest prayer that night, seated by his lonely fireside, thinking of George Talboys. When he raised his head from that long and silent reverie, his eyes had a bright, determined glance, and every feature in his face seemed to wear a new expression.

  ‘Justice to the dead first,’ he said, ‘mercy to the living afterwards.’

  He wheeled his easy chair to the table, trimmed the lamp, and settled himself to the examination of the books.

  He took them up one by one, and looked carefully through them, first looking at the page on which the name of the owner is ordinarily written; and then searching for any scrap of paper which might have been left within the leaves. On the first page of the Eton Latin Grammar the name of Master Talboys was written in a prim scholastic hand; the French pamphlet had a careless G. T. scrawled on the cover in pencil, in George’s big, slovenly calligraphy; the Tom Jones had evidently been bought at a book-stall, and bore an inscription, dated March 14th, 1788, setting forth that the work was a tribute of respect to Mr Thomas Scrowton, from his obedient servant, James Anderley; the Don Juan and the Testament were blank. Robert Audley breathed more freely: he had arrived at the last but one of the books without any result whatever, and there only remained the fat gilt-and-crimson-bound volume to be examined before his task was finished.

  It was an annual* of the year 1845. The copper-plate engravings of lovely ladies who had flourished in that day were yellow and spotted with mildew; the costumes grotesque and outlandish; the simpering beauties faded and common-place. Even the little clusters of verses (in which the poet’s feeble candle shed its sickly light upon the obscurities of the artist’s meaning) had an old-fashioned twang; like music on a lyre whose strings are slackened by the damps of time. Robert Audley did not stop to read any of these mild productions. He ran rapidly through the leaves, looking for any scrap of writing or fragment of a letter which might have been used to mark a place. He found nothing but a bright ring of golden hair, of that glittering hue which is so rarely seen except upon the head of a child,—a sunny lock which curled as naturally as the tendril of a vine; and was very opposite in texture, if not different in hue, to the soft, smooth tress which the landlady at Ventnor had given to George Talboys after his wife’s death. Robert Audley suspended his examination of the book, and folded this yellow lock in a sheet of letter-paper, which he sealed with his signet-ring, and laid aside, with the memorandum about George Talboys and Alicia’s letter, in the pigeon-hole marked Important. He was going to replace the fat annual amongst the other books, when he discovered that the two blank leaves at the beginning were stuck together. He was so determined to prosecute his search to the very uttermost, that he took the trouble to part these leaves with the sharp end of his paper-knife; and he was rewarded for his perseverance by finding an inscription upon one of them. This inscription was in three parts and in three different hands. The first paragraph was dated as far back as the year in which the annual had been published, and set forth that the book was the property of a certain Miss Elizabeth Ann Bince who had obtained the precious volume as a reward for habits of order, and for obedience to the authorities of Camford-house Seminary, Torquay. The second paragraph was dated five years later, and was in the handwriting of Miss Bince herself, who presented the book as a mark of undying affection and unfading esteem (Miss Bince was evidently of a romantic temperament) to her beloved friend Helen Maldon. The third paragraph was dated September, 1853, and was in the hand of Helen Maldon, who gave the annual to George Talboys; and it was at the sight of this third paragraph that Mr Robert Audley’s face changed from its natural hue to a sickly, leaden pallor.

  ‘I thought it would be so,’ said the young man, shutting the book with a weary sigh. ‘God knows I was prepared for the worst, and the worst has come. I can understand all now. My next visit must be to Southampton. I must place the boy in better hands.’

  CHAPTER II

  MRS PLOWSON

  AMONGST the packet of letters which Robert Audley had found in George’s
trunk, there was one labelled with the name of the missing man’s father—the father, who had never been too indulgent a friend to his only son, and who had gladly availed himself of the excuse afforded by George’s imprudent marriage to abandon the young man to his own resources. Robert Audley had never seen Mr Harcourt Talboys; but George’s careless talk of his father had given his friend some notion of that gentleman’s character. He had written to Mr Talboys immediately after the disappearance of George, carefully wording his letter, which vaguely hinted at the writer’s fear of some foul play in the mysterious business; and after the lapse of several weeks, he had received a formal epistle, in which Mr Harcourt Talboys expressly declared that he had washed his hands of all responsibility in his son George’s affairs upon the young man’s wedding-day; and that his absurd disappearance was only in character with his preposterous marriage. The writer of this fatherly letter added in a postscript that if Mr George Talboys had any low design of alarming his friends by this pretended disappearance, and thereby playing on their feelings with a view to pecuniary advantage, he was most egregiously deceived in the character of those persons with whom he had to deal.

  Robert Audley had answered this letter by a few indignant lines, informing Mr Talboys that his son was scarcely likely to hide himself for the furtherance of any deep-laid design on the pockets of his relatives, as he had left twenty thousand pounds in his bankers’ hands at the time of his disappearance. After despatching this letter, Robert had abandoned all thought of assistance from the man who, in the natural course of things, should have been most interested in George’s fate; but now that he found himself advancing every day some step nearer to the end that lay so darkly before him, his mind reverted to this heartlessly-indifferent Mr Harcourt Talboys.

  ‘I will run into Dorsetshire after I leave Southampton,’ he said, ‘and see this man. If he is content to let his son’s fate rest a dark and cruel mystery to all who knew him—if he is content to go down to his grave uncertain to the last of this poor fellow’s end—why should I try to unravel the tangled skein, to fit the pieces of the terrible puzzle, and gather together the stray fragments which when collected may make such a hideous whole? I will go to him and lay my darkest doubts freely before him. It will be for him to say what I am to do.’

 

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