Side by side with his dignified, handsome wife, Lord Bernard
Clanavon, Earl of Alceston, stood receiving his guests in the
spacious corridor which led into the brilliantly-lit ball-room of
his town mansion. It was getting on toward midnight, but the stream
of arrivals was scarcely yet lessened, and the broad marble
staircase, lined with banks of palms and sweet-smelling exotics,
was still thronged with graceful women in marvellous costumes and
flashing jewelry, and tall, distinguished-looking men, some in
gorgeous uniforms, with crosses and orders glistening upon their
breasts, a few in court dress, and fewer still in the ordinary
evening garb of civilians. For it was the first function of any
social importance of a season which promised to be an exceptionally
brilliant one, and nobody who was anybody at all in the charmed
circle of London society would have thought of missing it. And so
they trooped up the crimson-druggeted stairs in incongruous
array—statesmen and peers, learned men and poets, men of the world
and men of letters, the former with, the latter in most cases
without, their womenkind; and very few indeed passed on into the
ball-room without receiving some graceful little speech of welcome
from their courteous host or charming hostess.
A politician, a diplomatist, and the head of a noble family, Lord
Alceston was a very well-known and popular leader of the world in
which he lived. It would have been strange, indeed, had he been
other that popular. Look at him as he bends low over the plump
little hand of the Duchess of M—— and welcomes her with a little
speech which in one sentence contains an epigram and a compliment.
His face possesses the rare combination of an essentially patrician
type of features and distinct expressiveness. There is nothing cold
about his light blue eyes or his small, firm mouth, although the
former are clear and piercing as an eagle's, and about the latter
there lurks not the slightest trace of that indecision which so
often mars faces of that type. The streaks of gray in his
coal-black hair seem only to lend him an added dignity, and the
slight stoop of his high shoulders is more the stoop of the
horseman or the student than the stoop of gaucherie—rather graceful
than otherwise, for, notwithstanding it, he still towers head and
shoulders over the majority of the guests whom he is welcoming. He
looks what he certainly is—an aristocrat and a man of perfect
breeding: the very prototype of an Englishman of high birth. So
much for his appearance—and enough, for he will not long trouble
the pages of this story. Of his wife it is not necessary here to
say more than that she looks his wife. She, too, is handsome,
dignified, and aristocratic, and if society admires and reverences
Lord Alceston, it adores his wife.
At last the stream grows a little thinner. A great many have
arrived in a body from a ducal dinner-party, and when these have
made their bow and passed on through the curtained archway to where
the Guard's band is playing the most delightful of Waldteufel's
waltzes, there comes a lull. Her ladyship, closing her fan with a
little snap, glances down the empty staircase and up at her
husband. He stifles the very slightest of yawns, and, smiling
apologetically, offers her his arm with a courtesy which, but for
his charm of manner might have seemed a trifle elaborate.
"I think that we might venture now," he remarked suavely. "You are
a little fatigued, I fear."
She shrugged her white shoulders, flashing with diamonds, and laid
her delicate little fingers upon his coat sleeve.
"A mere trifle. Whatever does Neillson want here, I wonder?"
Lord Alceston paused, and, turning round, faced a tall,
grave-looking servant, in a suit of sober black, who was advancing
slowly toward him, making his way through the throng of liveried
footmen who lined the staircase. He carried a small silver salver
in his hand, upon which reposed a single note.
"Is that anything important, Neillson?" asked his master, frowning
slightly.
"I believe so, my lord," the man answered apologetically, "or I
would not have taken the liberty of bringing it now. The bearer
declined to wait for an answer."
During the commencement of his servant's speech Lord Alceston's
eyes had rested idly upon the superscription of the note which lay
before him. Before its conclusion, however, a remarkable change had
taken place in his manner. He made no movement, nor did he ask any
question. He simply stood quite still, as though turned to stone,
holding his breath even, gazing steadfastly down at the one line of
address on the note. It seemed to have fascinated him; he did not
even put out his hand to take it from the salver until Neillson
reminded him of it again.
"Will your lordship take the note?" he said in a low tone.
Lord Alceston stretched out his hand and took it after a momentary
hesitation, which was very much like an involuntary shiver.
Directly his fingers had closed upon it he seemed himself
again.
He looked swiftly around to see that no one had observed his
passing agitation, and was satisfied: The footmen standing in line
were still absorbed, partly in their duties, partly in the
contemplation of their calves. His wife had been struggling with a
refractory bracelet, which she had only just adjusted. Neillson
alone had been in a position to notice anything unusual.
"You did quite right, Neillson. You will excuse me for one moment?"
he added, turning to the Countess. "This despatch may possibly
require my immediate attention."
She bowed her head languidly, and, sinking down upon a settee,
recommenced fanning herself. Lord Alceston moved a little on one
side, crushing up the note which he had taken from the salver in
his slim, delicate fingers. For a moment he hesitated, and seemed
inclined to destroy it unopened. The impulse, however, passed away,
and, standing back behind some tall palms, which half-concealed him
from his wife, fie tore it nervously open.
Whatever the contents might have been they could have consisted of
only a very few words, for he seemed to master them at a glance.
But he did not immediately return to his wife's side. He stood
there for more than a minute, with his back turned to her and the
little troop of servants, and a very strange look in his face. One
hand was pressed close to his side as though to ease some pain
there, and the fingers of the other were locked around the half
sheet of note paper which he had just received, crumpling it up
into a scarcely recognizable mass. He had all the appearance of a
man who has received a blow which for the moment has withered up
all his faculties. His features were still impassive, but his face
had a cold, numbed look, and all the light had died out of his
eyes, leaving them glassy and dim. For a brief while he stood as
motionless as a statue; then suddenly he shivered like a man
awakening from a hideous nightmare, and moved his hand quickly from
his side to his cold, damp forehead.
Lady Alceston, who could only see his back, and that imperfectly,
began to wonder what was the matter. She rose and walked slowly
over toward him. The sound of her rustling skirts trailing over the
thick, soft carpet seemed to suddenly recall him from his
abstracted state. He turned round slowly and faced her.
"It is necessary for me to write an answer to this note," he
remarked quietly. "If my absence for a few minutes is observed, you
will be able to make some excuse for me. The matter is really an
important one."
She raised her eyebrows, but was too well bred to evince much
surprise, or even curiosity.
"From Downing Street?" she inquired, nonchalantly. "I didn't notice
the seal."
"Yes; from Downing Street," he answered. "It may take me some
little time to answer, but you may rely upon my being as
expeditious as possible."
She turned away with a slight inclination of the head, and, leaving
him, entered the ball-room. He moved forward and gravely held the
curtain open for her, taking it from the hand of a servant who was
stationed there; then he retraced his steps, and, leaving the
anteroom by a private door, passed down a flight of stairs, through
another door, and along a passage until he reached the apartment on
the ground-floor which he called his study.
It was a great room, finely proportioned and handsomely furnished,
lined with books from floor to ceiling—a worthy study even for Lord
Alceston, scholar, author, and politician. He paced across the
thick, dark carpet like a man in a dream, with fixed gaze and slow
movements, and sank into a chair in front of a black ebony
writing-table strewn with letters, and piles of correspondence, and
blue-books. For a moment he sat bolt upright, gazing into vacancy,
or rather at the thick crimson curtains which hung before him, then
suddenly his head dropped upon his folded arms and remained buried
there for nearly a quarter of an hour. When he looked up his face
was scarred and lined, as though with some swift, terrible
trouble—as though he were passing through some fierce ordeal.
He poured himself a glass of water from a carafe which stood at his
elbow and drank it slowly. Then he set the empty glass down, and,
leaning forward in his chair, pressed the knob of an electric bell
in the wall opposite to him.
Almost immediately 'there was a soft knock at the door, and his
servant Neillson appeared.
Lord Alceston looked at him fixedly, as though seeking to discover
something in the man's face. If he had hoped to do so, however, he
was disappointed, for it remained absolutely impassive. The only
expression discernible was one of respectful attention. His master
withdrew his searching gaze with a slight movement of impatience,
and gave his orders with his eyes fixed upon the table before
him.
"Get my ulster from my room, Neillson, and fetch me a hansom—to the
mews door, of course."
"Very good, my lord."
Neillson was a perfectly trained servant, but he had not been able
to conceal a slight start of surprise. Lord Alceston noticed it and
frowned.
"Neillson," he said, "you will remember what I told you when you
entered my service?"
The man bowed. "I do, my lord. I was to be surprised at no orders
which you might give me and never to repeat them."
Lord Alceston nodded. "Very good; remember to obey them in the
present instance.
"I shall do so, my lord." The door closed, and Lord Alceston was
left alone for a minute. He looked carefully around, as though to
assure himself of the fact, for the reading-lamp upon his desk was
heavily shaded and was quite insufficient to dispel the gloom which
hung about the vast room. Suddenly he rose and walked with swift
silent footsteps to the furthermost corner, in which stood a black
oak chest with old-fashioned brass rings. He paused to listen for a
moment—there was no sign of Neillson's return. Then he drew a bunch
of keys from his pocket, opened one of the lower drawers, and,
pushing his hand back to the remote corner, felt about for a
moment. Apparently he found what he wanted, for suddenly he
withdrew his hand, transferred some object to his pocket and
returned to his seat. Almost immediately Neillson reappeared,
carrying the ulster under his arm.
"The hansom is at the mews door, my lord," he said, holding up the
coat.
Lord Alceston rose and suffered himself to be helped into it.
"Very good. You fetched it yourself, I hope?"
"Certainly, my lord. Is there anything else?"
His master buttoned his coat up to his ears, and drawing a slouch
cap from the pocket, pulled it over his forehead. Then he hesitated
for a moment.
"No, there is nothing else at present, Neillson," he answered
slowly. "I shall lock this door, and if I am inquired for you can
let it be understood that I am engaged upon an important
despatch."
The man bowed and withdrew. Lord Alceston, drawing out his key from
his pocket, followed him to the door and carefully locked it on the
inside. Then, recrossing the room, he drew aside a Japanese screen
and unlocked a small green baize door, which closed after him with
a spring. He was then in a long dark passage, along which he passed
rapidly until he emerged into a quiet side street, at the corner of
which a cab was waiting. Without waiting to speak to the man, he
stepped quickly inside and pulled down the window. The driver
opened his trap-door and looked down.
"Where to, sir?" he asked.
It was nearly half a minute before Lord Alceston answered. Then he
gave the address with some hesitation, and in so low a tone that he
had to repeat it. The man touched his hat, closed the trap-door,
and drove off.
Two hours had passed since Lord Alceston had left his wife's side,
and he was back among his guests again. Certainly he was amply
atoning for his brief desertion of them, for every one was
declaring that he was one of the most charming of hosts. He seemed
to be in all places at all times, and to be incapable of fatigue.
Now he was the life and soul of a little group of gossiping
politicians, now among a bevy of dowagers, telling a story which
was just sufficiently risque to awaken their keen interest without
making them feel bound to appear unnaturally prudish, and
consequently putting them all into a delightful temper. Now he was
acting as his own master of ceremonies, and introducing exactly the
right people to one another, and now he was walking through the
mazes of a square dance with an old-fashioned stately dignity which
many of the younger men envied. Wherever he went he seemed to drive
gloom before him and to breathe gayety into the dullest of the
dull. Even his wife watched him admiringly, and wished that he
would always exert himself as he was doing then, for there were
times, as she well knew, when he was but a nonchalant host. But
to-night he was excelling himself he was brilliant, dignified, and
full of tact. She began to wonder, as she paced slowly through the
rooms on the arm of a Grand Duke, and answered with sweet smiles
but only partial attention his labored commonplaces, whether that
note from Downing Street had brought any good news. Visions of her
husband at the head of the Cabinet, and entertaining for his party,
began to float before her eyes, and she gave herself up to them
until the growing coolness of her companion's manner warned her to
abandon dreaming for the present and devote herself to her duties.
But she made a mental note to inquire of her husband respecting
that note at her earliest opportunity.
At last the spacious rooms began to thin. Royalty had come and
gone; the perfume of exotics was growing fainter and fainter and
the fairy lights were growing dimmer and dimmer. Faster than before
all the plagues of Egypt do London beauties fly before the daylight
after a night's dancing, and the guests were departing in shoals
before the faint gleams of approaching morning. At last their hour
of release had come, and Lord Alceston sought his wife.
"I have a letter to write for the morning post," he remarked. "With
your permission I will come to you; room for a cup of tea in half
an hour."
Lady Alceston, seeing that save for the servants they were alone,
indulged in the luxury of a yawn before she answered:
"Do. I want to have a few minutes' talk. Don't be longer.
Everything has gone off well, I think?"
"Thanks to your admirable arrangements yes, I think so," he
answered courteously. And then, with the smile still lingering on
his lips, he turned away and went to his library.
Apparently he soon forgot his wife's invitation, for the first
thing he did was to order a cup of strong tea to be brought to him
at once. Neillson laid it down by his side on the table, and was
about to depart when his master called him back.
"Neillson, I've lost the key of the baize door somewhere this
morning. Send down to Bellson's the locksmith, as soon as you think
that he will be up, and have another one made."
"Very good, my lord. Shall you require me again?"
Lord Alceston drew out his watch and looked at it. It was four
o'clock. He hesitated with it still in his hand.
"If I do not ring for you in half an hour you can go to bed," he
decided.
The door closed, and Lord Alceston was left alone. For a moment or
two he sipped his tea leisurely. Then, drawing some paper toward
him, he commenced to write.
He had covered two sheets of note paper and had commenced the third
when he suddenly ceased writing and started violently. Leaning
forward he pressed the knob of the electric bell, and then, half
fearfully, he turned slowly round and glanced across the room. Save
for the heavily-shaded lamp which stood on his table it was still
unilluminated, and the greater part of it was enveloped in shadow,
for the closely-drawn curtains completely shut out the struggling
daylight. Lord Alceston drew the shade from his lamp with fingers
which trembled a little and held it high over his head while he
looked searchingly around.
There was a soft knock at the door, and Neillson entered. Lord
Alceston put down the lamp with an unmistakable gesture of
relief.
"Neillson," he said, quietly, "there is some one in the
room."
Neillson looked around and then back at his master
incredulously.
"Some one in the room, my lord!" he repeated. "Impossible! I beg
your lordship's pardon," he added confusedly, "I meant—"
"Never mind what you meant, Neillson," interrupted his master.
"Look behind that screen."
Neillson approached the screen very gingerly and peered around
it.
"There's no one there, my lord," he declared, with relief. Side by
side they walked round the apartment, Lord Alceston holding the
lamp above his head. They discovered nothing. Obviously, save
themselves there was no one else in the room. Lord Alceston resumed
his seat and set the lamp down.
"It's a very strange thing," he said, in a low tone. "I'm not a
nervous man, and my hearing is remarkably good. I could have sworn
that I heard a shuffling footstep. Neillson, fetch my revolver from
my room, and see that all the chambers are loaded:"
Neillson withdrew, and during his brief absence Lord Alceston sat
round in his chair with his eyes restlessly wandering about the
interior of the apartment. Presently Neillson reappeared and
silently laid a small shining revolver on the desk by his master's
side.
"Anything further, your lordship?"
"No, you can go to bed now! I suppose it must have been fancy. Just
see, though, whether the baize door is securely locked."
Neillson crossed the room and tried it.
"It is locked, your lordship," he declared.
"Very good; you can go."
The door closed, and Lord Alceston, after one more furtive glance
around, slowly finished his tea, drew the revolver close to his
side and recommenced writing. He had barely finished another page,
however, before his pen suddenly stopped upon the paper and his
heart gave a great throb. Again he heard, this time without the
possibility of any mistake, and close behind him, that low,
stealthy sound. He dropped his pen and stretched out his shaking
fingers for the revolver; but even when his hand had closed upon it
he could not turn round. A cold horror seemed to have stolen over
him, freezing his blood and numbing his limbs. All his sensations
were those of a man in a hideous nightmare; but this was no
nightmare.
Again came the stealthy sound of a cat-like tread close to his
chair. A hot breath upon his neck, and then, as life flowed
suddenly again into his veins, and he strove to cry out, a
handkerchief was pressed into his open mouth and he felt his senses
reel before the swift, deadly influence of the chloroform with
which it was soaked. Still he struggled for a moment, half turned
round in his chair, and caught a glimpse of a pair of burning eyes
fixed upon his, and read murder in them.
"You!" he gasped. "You!"
One arm seized his, and held them from behind. A swift gleam of
blue steel flashed before his eyes; a sudden pain. It was over in a
moment.
There was a brisk sale for the evening papers on the following day.
All down the Strand and round Trafalgar Square the eager newsboys
were shouting out their terrible tidings, and for the lover of
sensation there was very good value indeed in exchange for his
penny. Placards leaned against the walls, were spread out upon the
pavement, and were almost thrust into the faces of the
ever-hurrying throngs of passers-by, and this is what they
announced:
AWFUL MURDER
OF THE
EARL OF ALCESTON!
and a little lower down—
ANOTHER TERRIBLE MURDER IN THE
EAST END!
An immense sensation was created this morning in all circles by the
rumor, which has unhappily proved too true, that the Earl of
Alceston had been found at an early hour this morning in his
library with his throat cut and quite dead. On inquiry at Grosvenor
Square this morning, our representative was put in possession of
such facts as are already known. Briefly, they are as
follows:
It seems that during the holding of a reception and ball last night
Lord Alceston received a letter, the origin of which is at present
a mystery, which compelled him to absent himself for some
considerable period from his guests. Later on in the evening,
however, he rejoined them, and it was universally remarked that his
lordship had never appeared in better health or spirits. Nothing
further happened, or has since happened, to connect the receipt of
this letter with the fearful crime which we have to report. After
the departure of his guests, his lordship went straight to his
library, promising to join his wife and take tea with her in half
an hour. All we have been able to gather of what subsequently
occurred is, that about nine o'clock this morning, as she had seen
nothing of her husband, and had not heard him go to his room, Lady
Alceston sent her maid to make inquiries. She went in company with
a footman at once to the library, and, being unable to procure
admission or to obtain any reply, summoned help, with the result
that the door was forced open and the terrible spectacle disclosed
of Lord Alceston leaning forward on the writing-table, with his
clothes and face covered with blood and his throat cut completely
round from side to side.
Although we are not at liberty, for obvious reasons, to state more
at present, we understand that further startling disclosures have
been made to the police by members of the household, but that at
present there is no clue to the murderer.
1.30 P.M.—His late lordship's valet, Philip Neillson, is believed
to have absconded, not having been seen or heard of this
morning.
2 P.M.—A warrant has been issued for the arrest of the man Neillson
on suspicion of having been concerned in the murder of his master,
the Earl of Alceston. The accused has not yet been found.
4 P.M.—It is now ascertained beyond doubt that Neillson has
absconded. The police are making every effort to trace him, and are
confident of success.
The deceased earl was the third son of Lord Rupert Clanavon, Earl
of Alceston, from whom he inherited the title and estates, and was
the sixth peer. During his youth he held a commission in the Second
Life Guards and served with distinction through the Crimean
campaign. On the death of his two elder brothers, however, his
lordship left the army, and, taking his seat in the House of Peers,
devoted himself to politics. His lordship was created a K. C. B. in
18—, was a member of the Privy Council, and quite recently his name
was mentioned as the probable successor to Lord H—in the Cabinet.
The deceased peer was married in 18—to the Lady Margaret Agnes
Montand, only daughter of the Earl of Montand, and leaves an only
son, Lord Bernard Clanavon, who succeeds to the title and entailed
estates.
Below, cast almost into insignificance by such a heinous
crime as the murder of a peer of the realm, was a short paragraph
headed:
ANOTHER TRAGEDY IN THE EAST END.
MURDER OF A WOMAN IN A LODGING-HOUSE.
Just before going to press information came to hand of another
awful murder in Riddell. Street, Bethnal Green Road. On being
called, according to custom, by the proprietress of the
lodging-house, a woman who went by the name of Mary Ward was
discovered lying across her bed quite dead, and stabbed to the
heart by some sharp instrument. The deceased woman was known to
have been visited by three men during the early part of the night,
the latter of whom left hurriedly, but no struggles or cries of any
sort were heard, and no suspicion was entertained of foul play. It
is not known whether any of the other lodgers will be able to
identify or give any description of either of the men alleged to
have visited the deceased. Failing this, it seems highly probable
that this crime will be another addition to the long catalogue of
undiscovered murders in this locality. We are not at present in a
position to state definitely whether there is anything to justify
the supposition that this most recent crime is by the same hand and
for the same purpose as others committed in this neighborhood, as
the police are maintaining a strict reticence in the matter.
And so for one night, at least, Londoners had plenty of
horrors to gorge themselves upon and to discuss eagerly in
public-house and club, railway carriage and omnibus, restaurant and
street corner. Two murders in one night, and both wrapped in
mystery! What food for the sensation monger, what a fund of
conversation for the general public—carmen in their public-houses,
society at their clubs and social functions. Pleasure seekers,
dining and supping at their favorite restaurants, were ready with
their solemn expressions of horror and their more or less absurd
theories. A million tongues were busy with this one subject,
bandying backward and forward the name of the peer and the name of
the woman. Truly there is fame in death!
In his stately bedchamber, on snowy sheets, pillowed with lace, and
strewn with flowers, his fine face white and rigid with the calm of
death, lay Bernard, Lord Alceston, Earl of Harrowdean; and on a
coarse straw mattress, barely covered over by a ragged, none too
clean, coverlet, in a Bethnal Green lodging-house, lay the woman
who had called herself Mary Ward. For him there were mourners, at
least in name, and loud in lament—for her there were none. But,
after all, what did it matter? Around him, as around her, the great
world of London revolved without change in its mighty cycles of
vice and misery, pleasure-seeking and fortune-spending, and if more
voices were lowered at his name than hers, more tears dropped over
his damask sheets than over her ragged coverlet, what matter? Whose
was the profit?