The Story of Charles Strange - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"And I have forgotten my cigar-case!" I exclaimed as I sat down. "I had filled it, all ready, and left it on the table."
"Never mind," said Lake. "I laid in a parcel to-day."
But I did mind, for Lake's "parcels" were never good. He would buy his cigars so dreadfully strong. Nothing pleased him but those full-flavoured Lopez, whilst I liked mild Cabanas: so, generally speaking, I kept to my own. However, I took one, and we sat, talking and smoking. I smoked it out, abominable though it was, and took another; but I couldn't stand a second.
"Lake, I cannot smoke your cigars," I said, flinging it into the fire.
"You know I never can. I must run and fetch my own. There goes eight o'clock."
"What's the matter with them?" asked Lake: his usual question.
"Everything; they are bad all over. I shall be back in a trice."
I went the quickest way, through the pa.s.sages, which brought me into Ess.e.x Street, and had my latch-key ready to open the door with as I approached the house. There were three of these latchkeys. I had one; Lennard another, for it sometimes happened that he had to come in before or after business hours; and Leah had possession of the third.
But I had no use for mine now, for the door was open. A policeman, standing by the area railings, recognised me, and wished me good-evening.
'Whose carelessness is this?' thought I, advancing to the top of the kitchen stairs and calling to Leah.
It appeared useless to call: no Leah made her appearance. I shut the front door and went upstairs, wondering whether Mr. Brightman had left.
Left! I started back as I entered; for there lay Mr. Brightman on the floor by his desk, as if he had pushed back his chair and fallen from it.
"What is the matter?" I exclaimed, throwing my hat anywhere, and hastening to raise him. But his head and shoulders were a dead weight in my arms, and there was an awful look upon his face, as the gaslight fell upon it. A look, in short, of death, and not of an easy death.
My pulses beat quicker, man though I was, and my heart beat with them.
Was I alone in that large house with the dead? I let him fall again and rang the bell violently. I rushed to the door and shouted over the banisters for Leah; and just as I was leaping down for the policeman I had seen outside, or any other help that might be at hand, I heard a latch-key inserted into the lock, and Lennard came in with Dr.
d.i.c.kenson. I knew him well, for he had attended Miss Methold in the days gone by.
As he hastened to Mr. Brightman, Lennard turned to me, speaking in a whisper:
"Mr. Strange, how did it happen? Was he ill?"
"I know nothing about it, Lennard. I came in a minute ago, and found him lying here. What do you know? Had you been here before?"
"I came, as Mr. Brightman had directed," he replied. "It was a little before eight; and when I got upstairs he was lying there as you see. I tried to rouse him, but could not, and I went off for the doctor."
"Did you leave the front door open?"
"I believe I did, in my flurry and haste. I thought of it as I ran up the street, but would not lose time in going back to shut it."
"He is gone, Mr. Strange," said Dr. d.i.c.kenson, advancing towards me, for I and Lennard had stood near the door. "It is a case of sudden death."
I sat down, bewildered. I could not believe it. How awfully sudden!
"Is it apoplexy?" I asked, lifting my head.
"No, I should say not."
"Then what is it?"
"I cannot tell; it may be the heart."
"Are you sure he is dead? Beyond all hope?"
"He is indeed."
A disagreeable doubt rushed over my mind, and I spoke on the impulse of the moment. "Has he come by his death fairly?"
The surgeon paused before he answered. "I see no reason, as yet, to infer otherwise. There are no signs of violence about him."
I cannot describe my feelings as we stood looking down at him. Never had I felt so before. What was I to do next?--how act? A hazy idea was making itself heard that some weighty responsibility lay upon me.
Just then a cab dashed up to the door; we heard it all too plainly in the hushed silence; and someone knocked and rang. Lennard went down to open it, and I told him to send in the policeman and fetch another doctor. Looking over the banisters I saw George Coney come in.
"Such a downfall to my plans, Mr. Strange," he began, seeing me as he ascended the stairs. "I went round to my inn to brush myself up before going to the play, and there I found a letter from my father, which they had forgotten to give me this morning. Our bailiff's been taken ill, cannot leave his bed, and father writes that I had better let the horse and the thirty pounds go for a bad job, and come home, for he can't have me away longer. So my spree's done for, this time, and I am on my way to the station, to catch the nine o'clock train."
"Don't go in until you have heard what is there," I whispered, as he was entering the room. "Mr. Brightman, whom you left well, is lying on the floor, and----"
"And what?" asked young Coney, looking at me.
"I fear he is dead."
After a dismayed pause he went gently into the room, taking off his hat reverently and treading on tiptoe. "Poor fellow! poor gentleman!"
he uttered, after looking at him. "What an awful thing! How was he taken?"
"We do not know how. He was alone."
"What, alone when he was taken! no one to help him!" returned the young man. "That was hard! What has he died of?"
"Probably the heart," interposed Dr. d.i.c.kenson.
"Last summer a carter of ours fell down as he was standing near us; my father was giving him directions about a load of hay, and when we picked him up he was dead," spoke the young man. "That was the heart, they said. But he looked calm and quiet, not as Mr. Brightman looks.
He left seven children, poor chap!"
At that juncture Mr. Lennard returned with the policeman. Another doctor, he said, would be round directly. After some general conversation, George Coney looked at his watch.
"Mr. Strange, my time's up. Would it be convenient to give me that money again? I should like to take it down with me, you see, just to have the laugh against the old folks at home."
"I will give it you," I said.
But for the very life of me, I could not put my hand into the dead man's pocket. I beckoned to Lennard. "Can you take out his keys?"
"Let me do it," said Dr. d.i.c.kenson, for Lennard did not seem to relish the task either. "I am more accustomed to death than you are. Which pocket are they in?"
"The right-hand pocket of his trousers; he always kept them there,"
was my answer.
Dr. d.i.c.kenson found the keys and handed them to me. I unlocked the drawer, being obliged to bend over the dead to do so, and young Coney stepped forward to receive the bag.
But the bag was not there.