Can Such Things Be? By Ambrose Bierce
The death of Halpin Frayser
I
For by death is wrought greater change than hath been shown.
Whereas in general the spirit that removed cometh back upon
occasion, and is sometimes seen of those in flesh (appearing in
the form of the body it bore) yet it hath happened that the
veritable body without the spirit hath walked. And it is
attested of those encountering who have lived to speak thereon
that a lich so raised up hath no natural affection, nor
remembrance thereof, but only hate. Also, it is known that some
spirits which in life were benign become by death evil
altogether. - Hali.
One dark night in midsummer a man waking from a
dreamless sleep in a forest lifted his head from the earth, and
staring a few moments into the blackness, said: “Catherine
Larue.” He said nothing more; no reason was known to him
why he should have said so much.
The man was Halpin Frayser. He lived in St. Helena, but where he
lives now is uncertain, for he is dead. One who practices
sleeping in the woods with nothing under him but the dry leaves
and the damp earth, and nothing over him but the branches from
which the leaves have fallen and the sky from which the earth has
fallen, cannot hope for great longevity, and Frayser had already
attained the age of thirty-two. There are persons in this world,
millions of persons, and far and away the best persons, who
regard that as a very advanced age. They are the children. To
those who view the voyage of life from the port of departure the
bark that has accomplished any considerable distance appears
already in close approach to the farther shore. However, it is
not certain that Halpin Frayser came to his death by
exposure.
He had been all day in the hills west of the Napa Valley, looking
for doves and such small game as was in season. Late in the
afternoon it had come on to be cloudy, and he had lost his
bearings; and although he had only to go always downhill -
everywhere the way to safety when one is lost - the absence of
trails had so impeded him that he was overtaken by night while
still in the forest. Unable in the darkness to penetrate the
thickets of manzanita and other undergrowth, utterly bewildered
and overcome with fatigue, he had lain down near the root of a
large madroño and fallen into a dreamless sleep. It was
hours later, in the very middle of the night, that one of
God’s mysterious messengers, gliding ahead of the
incalculable host of his companions sweeping westward with the
dawn line, pronounced the awakening word in the ear of the
sleeper, who sat upright and spoke, he knew not why, a name, he
knew not whose.
Halpin Frayser was not much of a philosopher, nor a scientist.
The circumstance that, waking from a deep sleep at night in the
midst of a forest, he had spoken aloud a name that he had not in
memory and hardly had in mind did not arouse an enlightened
curiosity to investigate the phenomenon. He thought it odd, and
with a little perfunctory shiver, as if in deference to a
seasonal presumption that the night was chill, he lay down again
and went to sleep. But his sleep was no longer dreamless.
He thought he was walking along a dusty road that showed white in
the gathering darkness of a summer night. Whence and whither it
led, and why he traveled it, he did not know, though all seemed
simple and natural, as is the way in dreams; for in the Land
Beyond the Bed surprises cease from troubling and the judgment is
at rest. Soon he came to a parting of the ways; leading from the
highway was a road less traveled, having the appearance, indeed,
of having been long abandoned, because, he thought, it led to
something evil; yet he turned into it without hesitation,
impelled by some imperious necessity.
As he pressed forward he became conscious that his way was
haunted by invisible existences whom he could not definitely
figure to his mind. From among the trees on either side he
caught broken and incoherent whispers in a strange tongue which
yet he partly understood. They seemed to him fragmentary
utterances of a monstrous conspiracy against his body and
soul.
It was now long after nightfall, yet the interminable forest
through which he journeyed was lit with a wan glimmer having no
point of diffusion, for in its mysterious lumination nothing cast
a shadow. A shallow pool in the guttered depression of an old
wheel rut, as from a recent rain, met his eye with a crimson
gleam. He stooped and plunged his hand into it. It stained his
fingers; it was blood! Blood, he then observed, was about him
everywhere. The weeds growing rankly by the roadside showed it
in blots and splashes on their big, broad leaves. Patches of dry
dust between the wheelways were pitted and spattered as with a
red rain. Defiling the trunks of the trees were broad
maculations of crimson, and blood dripped like dew from their
foliage.
All this he observed with a terror which seemed not incompatible
with the fulfillment of a natural expectation. It seemed to him
that it was all in expiation of some crime which, though
conscious of his guilt, he could not rightly remember. To the
menaces and mysteries of his surroundings the consciousness was
an added horror. Vainly he sought by tracing life backward in
memory, to reproduce the moment of his sin; scenes and incidents
came crowding tumultuously into his mind, one picture effacing
another, or commingling with it in confusion and obscurity, but
nowhere could he catch a glimpse of what he sought. The failure
augmented his terror; he felt as one who has murdered in the
dark, not knowing whom nor why. So frightful was the situation -
the mysterious light burned with so silent and awful a menace;
the noxious plants, the trees that by common consent are invested
with a melancholy or baleful character, so openly in his sight
conspired against his peace; from overhead and all about came so
audible and startling whispers and the sighs of creatures so
obviously not of earth - that he could endure it no longer, and
with a great effort to break some malign spell that bound his
faculties to silence and inaction, he shouted with the full
strength of his lungs! His voice broken, it seemed, into an
infinite multitude of unfamiliar sounds, went babbling and
stammering away into the distant reaches of the forest, died into
silence, and all was as before. But he had made a beginning at
resistance and was encouraged. He said:
“I will not submit unheard. There may be powers that are
not malignant traveling this accursed road. I shall leave them a
record and an appeal. I shall relate my wrongs, the persecutions
that I endure - I, a helpless mortal, a penitent, an unoffending
poet!” Halpin Frayser was a poet only as he was a
penitent: in his dream.
Taking from his clothing a small red-leather pocketbook, one-half
of which was leaved for memoranda, he discovered that he was
without a pencil. He broke a twig from a bush, dipped it into a
pool of blood and wrote rapidly. He had hardly touched the paper
with the point of his twig when a low, wild peal of laughter
broke out at a measureless distance away, and growing ever
louder, seemed approaching ever nearer; a soulless, heartless,
and unjoyous laugh, like that of the loon, solitary by the
lakeside at midnight; a laugh which culminated in an unearthly
shout close at hand, then died away by slow gradations, as if the
accursed being that uttered it had withdrawn over the verge of
the world whence it had come. But the man felt that this was not
so - that it was near by and had not moved.
A strange sensation began slowly to take possession of his body
and his mind. He could not have said which, if any, of his
senses was affected; he felt it rather as a consciousness - a
mysterious mental assurance of some overpowering presence - some
supernatural malevolence different in kind from the invisible
existences that swarmed about him, and superior to them in
power. He knew that it had uttered that hideous laugh. And now
it seemed to be approaching him; from what direction he did not
know - dared not conjecture. All his former fears were forgotten
or merged in the gigantic terror that now held him in thrall.
Apart from that, he had but one thought: to complete his written
appeal to the benign powers who, traversing the haunted wood,
might some time rescue him if he should be denied the blessing of
annihilation. He wrote with terrible rapidity, the twig in his
fingers rilling blood without renewal; but in the middle of a
sentence his hands denied their service to his will, his arms
fell to his sides, the book to the earth; and powerless to move
or cry out, he found himself staring into the sharply drawn face
and blank, dead eyes of his own mother, standing white and silent
in the garments of the grave!
II
In his youth Halpin Frayser had lived with his parents in
Nashville, Tennessee. The Fraysers were well-to-do, having a
good position in such society as had survived the wreck wrought
by civil war. Their children had the social and educational
opportunities of their time and place, and had responded to good
associations and instruction with agreeable manners and
cultivated minds. Halpin being the youngest and not over robust
was perhaps a trifle “spoiled.” He had the double
disadvantage of a mother’s assiduity and a father’s
neglect. Frayser père was what no Southern man of means
is not - a politician. His country, or rather his section and
State, made demands upon his time and attention so exacting that
to those of his family he was compelled to turn an ear partly
deafened by the thunder of the political captains and the
shouting, his own included.
Young Halpin was of a dreamy, indolent and rather romantic turn,
somewhat more addicted to literature than law, the profession to
which he was bred. Among those of his relations who professed
the modern faith of heredity it was well understood that in him
the character of the late Myron Bayne, a maternal
great-grandfather, had revisited the glimpses of the moon - by
which orb Bayne had in his lifetime been sufficiently affected to
be a poet of no small Colonial distinction. If not specially
observed, it was observable that while a Frayser who was not the
proud possessor of a sumptuous copy of the ancestral
“poetical works” (printed at the family expense, and
long ago withdrawn from an inhospitable market) was a rare
Frayser indeed, there was an illogical indisposition to honor the
great deceased in the person of his spiritual successor. Halpin
was pretty generally deprecated as an intellectual black sheep
who was likely at any moment to disgrace the flock by bleating in
meter. The Tennessee Fraysers were a practical folk - not
practical in the popular sense of devotion to sordid pursuits,
but having a robust contempt for any qualities unfitting a man
for the wholesome vocation of politics.
In justice to young Halpin it should be said that while in him
were pretty faithfully reproduced most of the mental and moral
characteristics ascribed by history and family tradition to the
famous Colonial bard, his succession to the gift and faculty
divine was purely inferential. Not only had he never been known
to court the muse, but in truth he could not have written
correctly a line of verse to save himself from the Killer of the
Wise. Still, there was no knowing when the dormant faculty might
wake and smite the lyre.
In the meantime the young man was rather a loose fish, anyhow.
Between him and his mother was the most perfect sympathy, for
secretly the lady was herself a devout disciple of the late and
great Myron Bayne, though with the tact so generally and justly
admired in her sex (despite the hardy calumniators who insist
that it is essentially the same thing as cunning) she had always
taken care to conceal her weakness from all eyes but those of him
who shared it. Their common guilt in respect of that was an
added tie between them. If in Halpin’s youth his mother
had “spoiled” him, he had assuredly done his part
toward being spoiled. As he grew to such manhood as is
attainable by a Southerner who does not care which way elections
go the attachment between him and his beautiful mother - whom
from early childhood he had called Katy - became yearly stronger
and more tender. In these two romantic natures was manifest in a
signal way that neglected phenomenon, the dominance of the sexual
element in all the relations of life, strengthening, softening,
and beautifying even those of consanguinity. The two were nearly
inseparable, and by strangers observing their manner were not
infrequently mistaken for lovers.
Entering his mother’s boudoir one day Halpin Frayser kissed
her upon the forehead, toyed for a moment with a lock of her dark
hair which had escaped from its confining pins, and said, with an
obvious effort at calmness:
“Would you greatly mind, Katy, if I were called away to
California for a few weeks?”
It was hardly needful for Katy to answer with her lips a question
to which her telltale cheeks had made instant reply. Evidently
she would greatly mind; and the tears, too, sprang into her large
brown eyes as corroborative testimony.
“Ah, my son,” she said, looking up into his face with
infinite tenderness, “I should have known that this was
coming. Did I not lie awake a half of the night weeping because,
during the other half, Grandfather Bayne had come to me in a
dream, and standing by his portrait - young, too, and handsome as
that - pointed to yours on the same wall? And when I looked it
seemed that I could not see the features; you had been painted
with a face cloth, such as we put upon the dead. Your father has
laughed at me, but you and I, dear, know that such things are not
for nothing. And I saw below the edge of the cloth the marks of
hands on your throat - forgive me, but we have not been used to
keep such things from each other. Perhaps you have another
interpretation. Perhaps it does not mean that you will go to
California. Or maybe you will take me with you?”
It must be confessed that this ingenious interpretation of the
dream in the light of newly discovered evidence did not wholly
commend itself to the son’s more logical mind; he had, for
the moment at least, a conviction that it foreshadowed a more
simple and immediate, if less tragic, disaster than a visit to
the Pacific Coast. It was Halpin Frayser’s impression that
he was to be garroted on his native heath.
“Are there not medicinal springs in California?” Mrs.
Frayser resumed before he had time to give her the true reading
of the dream - “places where one recovers from rheumatism
and neuralgia? Look - my fingers feel so stiff; and I am almost
sure they have been giving me great pain while I
slept.”
She held out her hands for his inspection. What diagnosis of her
case the young man may have thought it best to conceal with a
smile the historian is unable to state, but for himself he feels
bound to say that fingers looking less stiff, and showing fewer
evidences of even insensible pain, have seldom been submitted for
medical inspection by even the fairest patient desiring a
prescription of unfamiliar scenes.
The outcome of it was that of these two odd persons having
equally odd notions of duty, the one went to California, as the
interest of his client required, and the other remained at home
in compliance with a wish that her husband was scarcely conscious
of entertaining.
While in San Francisco Halpin Frayser was walking one dark night
along the water front of the city, when, with a suddenness that
surprised and disconcerted him, he became a sailor. He was in
fact “shanghaied” aboard a gallant, gallant ship, and
sailed for a far countree. Nor did his misfortunes end with the
voyage; for the ship was cast ashore on an island of the South
Pacific, and it was six years afterward when the survivors were
taken off by a venturesome trading schooner and brought back to
San Francisco.
Though poor in purse, Frayser was no less proud in spirit than he
had been in the years that seemed ages and ages ago. He would
accept no assistance from strangers, and it was while living with
a fellow survivor near the town of St. Helena, awaiting news and
remittances from home, that he had gone gunning and
dreaming.
III
The apparition confronting the dreamer in the haunted wood - the
thing so like, yet so unlike his mother - was horrible! It
stirred no love nor longing in his heart; it came unattended with
pleasant memories of a golden past - inspired no sentiment of any
kind; all the finer emotions were swallowed up in fear. He tried
to turn and run from before it, but his legs were as lead; he was
unable to lift his feet from the ground. His arms hung helpless
at his sides; of his eyes only he retained control, and these he
dared not remove from the lusterless orbs of the apparition,
which he knew was not a soul without a body, but that most
dreadful of all existences infesting that haunted wood - a body
without a soul! In its blank stare was neither love, nor pity,
nor intelligence - nothing to which to address an appeal for
mercy. “An appeal will not lie,” he thought, with an
absurd reversion to professional slang, making the situation more
horrible, as the fire of a cigar might light up a tomb.
For a time, which seemed so long that the world grew gray with
age and sin, and the haunted forest, having fulfilled its purpose
in this monstrous culmination of its terrors, vanished out of his
consciousness with all its sights and sounds, the apparition
stood within a pace, regarding him with the mindless malevolence
of a wild brute; then thrust its hands forward and sprang upon
him with appalling ferocity! The act released his physical
energies without unfettering his will; his mind was still
spellbound, but his powerful body and agile limbs, endowed with a
blind, insensate life of their own, resisted stoutly and well.
For an instant he seemed to see this unnatural contest between a
dead intelligence and a breathing mechanism only as a spectator -
such fancies are in dreams; then he regained his identity almost
as if by a leap forward into his body, and the straining
automaton had a directing will as alert and fierce as that of its
hideous antagonist.
But what mortal can cope with a creature of his dream? The
imagination creating the enemy is already vanquished; the
combat’s result is the combat’s cause. Despite his
struggles - despite his strength and activity, which seemed
wasted in a void, he felt the cold fingers close upon his
throat. Borne backward to the earth, he saw above him the dead
and drawn face within a hand’s breadth of his own, and then
all was black. A sound as of the beating of distant drums - a
murmur of swarming voices, a sharp, far cry signing all to
silence, and Halpin Frayser dreamed that he was dead.
IV
A warm, clear night had been followed by a morning of drenching
fog. At about the middle of the afternoon of the preceding day a
little whiff of light vapor - a mere thickening of the
atmosphere, the ghost of a cloud - had been observed clinging to
the western side of Mount St. Helena, away up along the barren
altitudes near the summit. It was so thin, so diaphanous, so
like a fancy made visible, that one would have said: “Look
quickly! in a moment it will be gone.”
In a moment it was visibly larger and denser. While with one
edge it clung to the mountain, with the other it reached farther
and farther out into the air above the lower slopes. At the same
time it extended itself to north and south, joining small patches
of mist that appeared to come out of the mountainside on exactly
the same level, with an intelligent design to be absorbed. And
so it grew and grew until the summit was shut out of view from
the valley, and over the valley itself was an ever-extending
canopy, opaque and gray. At Calistoga, which lies near the head
of the valley and the foot of the mountain, there were a starless
night and a sunless morning. The fog, sinking into the valley,
had reached southward, swallowing up ranch after ranch, until it
had blotted out the town of St. Helena, nine miles away. The
dust in the road was laid; trees were adrip with moisture; birds
sat silent in their coverts; the morning light was wan and
ghastly, with neither color nor fire.
Two men left the town of St. Helena at the first glimmer of dawn,
and walked along the road northward up the valley toward
Calistoga. They carried guns on their shoulders, yet no one
having knowledge of such matters could have mistaken them for
hunters of bird or beast. They were a deputy sheriff from Napa
and a detective from San Francisco - Holker and Jaralson,
respectively. Their business was man-hunting.
“How far is it?” inquired Holker, as they strode
along, their feet stirring white the dust beneath the damp
surface of the road.
“The White Church? Only a half mile farther,” the
other answered. “By the way,” he added, “it is
neither white nor a church; it is an abandoned schoolhouse, gray
with age and neglect. Religious services were once held in it -
when it was white, and there is a graveyard that would delight a
poet. Can you guess why I sent for you, and told you to come
heeled?”
“Oh, I never have bothered you about things of that kind.
I’ve always found you communicative when the time came.
But if I may hazard a guess, you want me to help you arrest one
of the corpses in the graveyard.”
“You remember Branscom?” said Jaralson, treating his
companion’s wit with the inattention that it
deserved.
“The chap who cut his wife’s throat? I ought; I
wasted a week’s work on him and had my expenses for my
trouble. There is a reward of five hundred dollars, but none of
us ever got a sight of him. You don’t mean to say -
”
“Yes, I do. He has been under the noses of you fellows all
the time. He comes by night to the old graveyard at the White
Church.”
“The devil! That’s where they buried his
wife.”
“Well, you fellows might have had sense enough to suspect
that he would return to her grave some time.”
“The very last place that anyone would have expected him to
return to.”
“But you had exhausted all the other places. Learning your
failure at them, I ‘laid for him’ there.”
“And you found him?”
“Damn it! he found me. The rascal got the drop on
me - regularly held me up and made me travel. It’s
God’s mercy that he didn’t go through me. Oh,
he’s a good one, and I fancy the half of that reward is
enough for me if you’re needy.”
Holker laughed good humoredly, and explained that his creditors
were never more importunate.
“I wanted merely to show you the ground, and arrange a plan
with you,” the detective explained. “I thought it as
well for us to be heeled, even in daylight.”
“The man must be insane,” said the deputy sheriff.
“The reward is for his capture and conviction. If
he’s mad he won’t be convicted.”
Mr. Holker was so profoundly affected by that possible failure of
justice that he involuntarily stopped in the middle of the road,
then resumed his walk with abated zeal.
“Well, he looks it,” assented Jaralson.
“I’m bound to admit that a more unshaven, unshorn,
unkempt, and uneverything wretch I never saw outside the ancient
and honorable order of tramps. But I’ve gone in for him,
and can’t make up my mind to let go. There’s glory
in it for us, anyhow. Not another soul knows that he is this
side of the Mountains of the Moon.”
“All right,” Holker said; “we will go and view
the ground,” and he added, in the words of a once favorite
inscription for tombstones: “‘where you must shortly
lie’ - I mean, if old Branscom ever gets tired of you and
your impertinent intrusion. By the way, I heard the other day
that ‘Branscom’ was not his real name.”
“What is?”
“I can’t recall it. I had lost all interest in the
wretch, and it did not fix itself in my memory - something like
Pardee. The woman whose throat he had the bad taste to cut was a
widow when he met her. She had come to California to look up
some relatives - there are persons who will do that sometimes.
But you know all that.”
“Naturally.”
“But not knowing the right name, by what happy inspiration
did you find the right grave? The man who told me what the name
was said it had been cut on the headboard.”
“I don’t know the right grave.” Jaralson was
apparently a trifle reluctant to admit his ignorance of so
important a point of his plan. “I have been watching about
the place generally. A part of our work this morning will be to
identify that grave. Here is the White Church.”
For a long distance the road had been bordered by fields on both
sides, but now on the left there was a forest of oaks,
madroños, and gigantic spruces whose lower parts only
could be seen, dim and ghostly in the fog. The undergrowth was,
in places, thick, but nowhere impenetrable. For some moments
Holker saw nothing of the building, but as they turned into the
woods it revealed itself in faint gray outline through the fog,
looking huge and far away. A few steps more, and it was within
an arm’s length, distinct, dark with moisture, and
insignificant in size. It had the usual country-schoolhouse form
- belonged to the packing-box order of architecture; had an
underpinning of stones, a moss-grown roof, and blank window
spaces, whence both glass and sash had long departed. It was
ruined, but not a ruin - a typical Californian substitute for
what are known to guide-bookers abroad as “monuments of the
past.” With scarcely a glance at this uninteresting
structure Jaralson moved on into the dripping undergrowth
beyond.
“I will show you where he held me up,” he said.
“This is the graveyard.”
Here and there among the bushes were small inclosures containing
graves, sometimes no more than one. They were recognized as
graves by the discolored stones or rotting boards at head and
foot, leaning at all angles, some prostrate; by the ruined picket
fences surrounding them; or, infrequently, by the mound itself
showing its gravel through the fallen leaves. In many instances
nothing marked the spot where lay the vestiges of some poor
mortal - who, leaving “a large circle of sorrowing
friends,” had been left by them in turn - except a
depression in the earth, more lasting than that in the spirits of
the mourners. The paths, if any paths had been, were long
obliterated; trees of a considerable size had been permitted to
grow up from the graves and thrust aside with root or branch the
inclosing fences. Over all was that air of abandonment and decay
which seems nowhere so fit and significant as in a village of the
forgotten dead.
As the two men, Jaralson leading, pushed their way through the
growth of young trees, that enterprising man suddenly stopped and
brought up his shotgun to the height of his breast, uttered a low
note of warning, and stood motionless, his eyes fixed upon
something ahead. As well as he could, obstructed by brush, his
companion, though seeing nothing, imitated the posture and so
stood, prepared for what might ensue. A moment later Jaralson
moved cautiously forward, the other following.
Under the branches of an enormous spruce lay the dead body of a
man. Standing silent above it they noted such particulars as
first strike the attention - the face, the attitude, the
clothing; whatever most promptly and plainly answers the unspoken
question of a sympathetic curiosity.
The body lay upon its back, the legs wide apart. One arm was
thrust upward, the other outward; but the latter was bent
acutely, and the hand was near the throat. Both hands were
tightly clenched. The whole attitude was that of desperate but
ineffectual resistance to - what?
Near by lay a shotgun and a game bag through the meshes of which
was seen the plumage of shot birds. All about were evidences of
a furious struggle; small sprouts of poison-oak were bent and
denuded of leaf and bark; dead and rotting leaves had been pushed
into heaps and ridges on both sides of the legs by the action of
other feet than theirs; alongside the hips were unmistakable
impressions of human knees.
The nature of the struggle was made clear by a glance at the dead
man’s throat and face. While breast and hands were white,
those were purple - almost black. The shoulders lay upon a low
mound, and the head was turned back at an angle otherwise
impossible, the expanded eyes staring blankly backward in a
direction opposite to that of the feet. From the froth filling
the open mouth the tongue protruded, black and swollen. The
throat showed horrible contusions; not mere finger-marks, but
bruises and lacerations wrought by two strong hands that must
have buried themselves in the yielding flesh, maintaining their
terrible grasp until long after death. Breast, throat, face,
were wet; the clothing was saturated; drops of water, condensed
from the fog, studded the hair and mustache.
All this the two men observed without speaking - almost at a
glance. Then Holker said:
“Poor devil! he had a rough deal.”
Jaralson was making a vigilant circumspection of the forest, his
shotgun held in both hands and at full cock, his finger upon the
trigger.
“The work of a maniac,” he said, without withdrawing
his eyes from the inclosing wood. “It was done by Branscom
- Pardee.”
Something half hidden by the disturbed leaves on the earth caught
Holker’s attention. It was a red-leather pocketbook. He
picked it up and opened it. It contained leaves of white paper
for memoranda, and upon the first leaf was the name “Halpin
Frayser.” Written in red on several succeeding leaves -
scrawled as if in haste and barely legible - were the following
lines, which Holker read aloud, while his companion continued
scanning the dim gray confines of their narrow world and hearing
matter of apprehension in the drip of water from every burdened
branch:
“Enthralled by some mysterious spell, I stood
In the lit gloom of an enchanted wood.
The cypress there and myrtle twined their boughs,
Significant, in baleful brotherhood.
“The brooding willow whispered to the yew;
Beneath, the deadly nightshade and the rue,
With immortelles self-woven into strange
Funereal shapes, and horrid nettles grew.
“No song of bird nor any drone of bees,
Nor light leaf lifted by the wholesome breeze:
The air was stagnant all, and Silence was
A living thing that breathed among the trees.
“Conspiring spirits whispered in the gloom,
Half-heard, the stilly secrets of the tomb.
With blood the trees were all adrip; the leaves
Shone in the witch-light with a ruddy bloom.
“I cried aloud! - the spell, unbroken still,
Rested upon my spirit and my will.
Unsouled, unhearted, hopeless and forlorn,
I strove with monstrous presages of ill!
“At last the viewless - ”
Holker ceased reading; there was no more to read. The manuscript
broke off in the middle of a line.
“That sounds like Bayne,” said Jaralson, who was
something of a scholar in his way. He had abated his vigilance
and stood looking down at the body.
“Who’s Bayne?” Holker asked rather
incuriously.
“Myron Bayne, a chap who flourished in the early years of
the nation - more than a century ago. Wrote mighty dismal stuff;
I have his collected works. That poem is not among them, but it
must have been omitted by mistake.”
“It is cold,” said Holker; “let us leave here;
we must have up the coroner from Napa.”
Jaralson said nothing, but made a movement in compliance.
Passing the end of the slight elevation of earth upon which the
dead man’s head and shoulders lay, his foot struck some
hard substance under the rotting forest leaves, and he took the
trouble to kick it into view. It was a fallen headboard, and
painted on it were the hardly decipherable words,
“Catharine Larue.”
“Larue, Larue!” exclaimed Holker, with sudden
animation. “Why, that is the real name of Branscom - not
Pardee. And - bless my soul! how it all comes to me - the
murdered woman’s name had been Frayser!”
“There is some rascally mystery here,” said Detective
Jaralson. “I hate anything of that kind.”
There came to them out of the fog - seemingly from a great
distance - the sound of a laugh, a low, deliberate, soulless
laugh, which had no more of joy than that of a hyena
night-prowling in the desert; a laugh that rose by slow
gradation, louder and louder, clearer, more distinct and
terrible, until it seemed barely outside the narrow circle of
their vision; a laugh so unnatural, so unhuman, so devilish, that
it filled those hardy man-hunters with a sense of dread
unspeakable! They did not move their weapons nor think of them;
the menace of that horrible sound was not of the kind to be met
with arms. As it had grown out of silence, so now it died away;
from a culminating shout which had seemed almost in their ears,
it drew itself away into the distance, until its failing notes,
joyless and mechanical to the last, sank to silence at a
measureless remove.
Index | Next: The secret of Macarger’s Gulch