Checkmate - The Original Classic Edition. Fanu Joseph
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"Where's Franklin?"
"Arranging things in your room, Sir."
"Give me a candle. The cab is paid. Mr. Arden, mind, may call in the morning; if I should not be down, show him to my room. You are not to let him go without seeing me."
Upstairs went the pale master of the house. "Franklin!" he called, as he mounted the last flight of stairs, next his bed-room.
"Yes, Sir."
"I sha'n't want you to-night, I think--that is, I shall manage what I want for myself; but I mean to ring for you by-and-by." He was in his dressing-room by this time, and looked round to see that his comforts were provided for as usual--his foot-bath and hot water.
"Shall I fetch your tea, Sir?"
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"I'll drink no tea to-night; I've been disgusted. I've seen a dead man, quite unexpectedly; and I sha'n't get over it for some hours, I daresay. I feel ill. And what you must do is this: when I ring my bell, you come back, and you must sit up here till eight in the morning. I shall leave the door between this and the next room open; and should you hear me sleeping uneasily, moaning, or anything
like nightmare, you must come in and waken me. And you are not to go to sleep, mind; the moment I call, I expect you in my room. Keep yourself awake how you can; you may sleep all to-morrow, if you like."
With this charge Franklin departed.
But Mr. Longcluse's preparations for bed occupied a longer time than he had anticipated. When nearly an hour had passed, Mr. Franklin ventured up-stairs, and quietly approached the dressing-room door; but there he heard his master still busy with his preparations, and withdrew. It was not until nearly half-an-hour more had passed that his bell gave the promised signal, and Mr. Franklin established himself for the night, in the easy-chair in the dressing-room, with the connecting door between the two rooms open.
Mr. Longcluse was right. The shock which his nerves had received did not permit him to sleep very soon. Two hours later he called for the Eau-de-Cologne that stood on his dressing-table; and although he made belief to wet his temples with it, and kept it at his bedside with that professed design, it was Mr. Franklin's belief that he drank the greater part of what remained in the capacious
cut-glass bottle. It was not until people were beginning to "turn out" for their daily labour that sleep at length visited the wearied eyeballs of the Croesus.
Three hours of death-like sleep, and Mr. Longcluse, with a little start, was wide awake. "Franklin!"
"Yes, Sir." And Mr. Franklin stood at his bedside. "What o'clock is it?"
"Just struck ten, Sir."
"Hand me the Times." This was done.
"Tell them to get breakfast as usual. I'm coming down. Open the shutters, and draw the curtains, quite."
When Franklin had done this and gone down, Mr. Longcluse read the Times with a stern eagerness, still in bed. The great billiard match between Hood and Markham was given in spirited detail; but he was looking for something else. Just under this piece of news, he found it--"Murder and Robbery, in the Saloon Tavern." He read this twice over, and then searched the paper in vain for any further news respecting it. After this search, he again read the short account he had seen before, very carefully, and more than once. Then he jumped out of bed, and looked at himself in the glass in his dressing-room.
"How awfully seedy I am looking!" he muttered, after a careful inspection. "Better by-and-by."
His hand was shaking like that of a man who had made a debauch, or was worn out with ague. He looked ten years older. "I should hardly know myself," muttered he. "What a confounded, sinful old fogey I look, and I so young and innocent!"
The sneer was for himself and at himself. The delivery of such is an odd luxury which, at one time or other, most men indulge in. Perhaps it should teach us to take them more kindly when other people crack such cynical jokes on our heads, or, at least, to perceive that they don't always argue personal antipathy.
The sour smile which had, for a moment, flickered with a wintry light on his face, gave place suddenly to a dark fatigue; his features
sank, and he heaved a long, deep, and almost shuddering sigh.
There are moments, happily very rare, when the idea of suicide is distinct enough to be dangerous, and having passed which, a man feels that Death has looked him very nearly in the face. Nothing more trite and true than the omnipresence of suffering. The possession of wealth exempts the unfortunate owner from, say, two-thirds of the curse that lies heavy on the human race. Two thirds is a great deal; but so is the other third, and it may have in it, at times, something as terrible as human nature can support.
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Mr. Longcluse, the millionaire, had, of course, many poor enviers. Had any one of all these uttered such a sigh that morning? Or did any one among them feel wearier of life?
"When I have had my tub, I shall be quite another man," said he.
But it did not give him the usual fillip; on the contrary, he felt rather chilled.
"What can the matter be? I'm a changed man," said he, wondering, as people do at the days growing shorter in autumn, that time
had produced some changes. "I remember when a scene or an excitement produced no more effect upon me, after the moment, than a glass of champagne; and now I feel as if I had swallowed poison, or drunk the cup of madness. Shaking!--hand, heart, every joint. I have grown such a muff !"
Mr. Longcluse had at length completed his very careless toilet, and looking ill, went downstairs in his dressing-gown and slippers.
CHAPTER VII. FAST FRIENDS.
N little more than half-an-hour, as Mr. Longcluse was sitting at his breakfast in his dining-room, Richard Arden was shown in. "Dressing-gown and slippers--what a lazy dog I am compared with you!" said Longcluse gaily as he entered.
"Don't say another word on that subject, I beg. I should have been later myself, had I dared; but my Uncle David had appointed to
meet me at ten."
"Won't you take something?"
"Well, as I have had no breakfast, I don't mind if I do," said Arden, laughing. Longcluse rang the bell.
"When did you leave that place last night?" asked Longcluse.
"I fancy about the same time that you went--about five or ten minutes after the match ended. You heard there was a man murdered
in a passage there? I tried to get down and see it but the crowd was awful."
"I was more lucky--I came earlier," said Longcluse. "It was perfectly sickening, and I have been seedy ever since. You may guess what a shock it was to me. The murdered man was that poor little Frenchman I told you of, who had been talking to me, in high spirits, just before the play began--and there he was, poor fellow! You'll see it all there; it makes me sick."
He handed him the Times.
"Yes, I see. I daresay the police will make him out," said Arden, as he glanced hastily over it. "Did you remark some awfully ill-looking fellows there?"