THE ATOMS OF CHLADNI.
by James Davenport Whelpley
(1817-1872)
GUSTAV
MOHLER, the once celebrated
inventor and mathematician, died last year
(1858) in a private lunatic asylum. His wife,
more accomplished than her husband, even in
his best days, has also departed. The peace of
God and the love of all went with her. To
disclose the causes of Mohler's alienation from her,
and of the insanity which overtook him soon
after, will offend no man's pride, no woman's
vanity. I wish, as a friend of Madam Mohler,
to justify her. None who enjoyed her splendid
hospitality or the delights of her conversation
will be displeased with me for the attempt.
My first interview with Mohler was preconcerted
by my friend P, the savant. This was
in the winter of 1854. We three met by
appointment in a public library. My friend had
been deceived by the serene enthusiasm of the
inventor, and believed that he could communicate
some valuable secrets. We sat at a round
table in an alcove of the library inspecting plans
and diagrams. For an hour the inventor
explained, calculated; plunged into abysses of
constructive dynamics; his voice sounded drearily,
under the Gothic hollows of the room. The
old folios of alchemy and philosophy, twin
children of ignorance, that cumbered three sides of
the alcove where we sat listening to this
madman, seemed at last to nod and shake, in
sympathy with his wild, interminably worded
digressions. It was like the clown fighting with
the hoop; intellect struggling in a vicious circle,
maddened with its own exertion.
The enthusiast seemed to be between thirty and
forty years of age; well formed, well dressed;
a gentleman in manners. His voice and address
were mild and insinuating, but the feeling he
inspired most was compassion. His inventions
were for the most part mere lunacies, violating
every mechanical law. The instinct of common
sense, a suspicion that he might be wrong,
made him appear timid in his statements. He
deferred to P's superior knowledge; asked
him to point out the errors; smiled sadly when
P intimated, with some asperity, his
contempt for the whole matter.
I would willingly have talked to Mohler about
himself, but his personal reserve repelled
sympathy. He begged P to look farther into
the invention (a new motive power); said that
something might have escaped him in the
calculations; but that, "as all these things were
imparted to him by spiritual communication, he
dared not abandon the research."
"Spirits," replied P, with one of his
cutting scientific laughs, "will not enable you to
circumvent God; and it is He, the Maker of
the universe, who condemns your invention. It
would wreck the universe."
Mohler replied, meekly, that "he should be
grieved to think that his spirit-friends had
deceived him." He then drew me aside, and with
a gleaming look askance at P, who remained
yawning and fretting over the table, "He," said
Mohler, "is a materialist; but in you I have
confidence." He then alluded to another
invention of his own, which, he said, had been
perfected by evil spirits, and had ruined him.
The eyes of the lunatic dilated, and a visible
tremor shook his frame, as he described the
machine. "It was a means," he said, "to
discover falsehood and treachery." The spirit of
Chladni communicated that to him Chladni,
the Frenchman who discovered the dancing of
the atoms. "It is the same," he said, "in the
atoms of the brain; they vibrate in geometrical
forms, which the soul reads."
P, who had been watching us, alarmed
at the maniacal excitement of Mohler,
interrupted our conversation and hurried me away.
Though the froth of madness had gathered upon
his lips, the unfortunate inventor had still power
enough over himself to show, in leave-taking,
the urbanity of a gentleman.
As P and I left the library together, I
expressed a wish to learn something of the
previous life of Gustav Moller. P said I
was over-curious in such matters; for his part,
the history of a madman was, of all, least
entertaining, and useful only to those intelligent but
unhappy persons who have charge of asylums.
Of Gustav Mohler he neither knew nor desired
to know any thing farther, and regretted the
hour wasted in his company; which had
delayed an important analysis of earths in which
he was about to engage that day, in company
with Professor M. "I suppose," he added, with
a half sneer, "you are seeking characters for a
novel, and you fancy the history of this creature
might furnish you a high-seasoned dish of the
horrible."
And so we parted, in no very good humor
with each other I to my meditations, he to his
earths.
Several months had passed, after this interview,
before my accomplished and practical friend, the
savant, saw fit to honor me with a visit. One
cold, rainy night in November of the succeeding
year I heard his firm, quick step in the hall.
There was a knock, and the door of my room
opened intrusively.
The savant stood in the door-way, his sharp
nose peering under a glazed hat, and his form
made shapeless by an ungainly water-proof cloak
against the wind and rain of the night.
"Ah!" said he, "you are a fixture, I fear,
by the fireside. But if you have courage to face
this storm, I have a pleasure to propose."
"Come in; lay off your storm armor, and
we will talk about your pleasure."
He complied in the hasty, discontented manner
peculiar to him, threw his wet hat and cloak
over a table covered with books and papers, and
drew a chair.
"You will go with me," he said, authoritatively,
"to Charles Montague's this evening."
"Forty-second Street through a northeasterly
storm! Be wise I have ordered whisky
and hot water, with lemons." I rang the bell.
Professor P had a weakness for punch,
especially when I made it. He acquiesced, with
a sigh.
"We can go late," said he. "There is to be
a meeting of rare people. At least two
entomologists, an antiquarian, and a collector of
curiosities from Germany, who has a tourmalin
which I must steal or buy; it is yellow, or
rather gold-colored. Then there will be a
woman there a Mrs. Bertaldy, American; a
wonder of science, whom you must see."
"P, you are a fool. Scientific women are
more odious to me than womanish men. The
learning of a woman is only a desperate substitute
for some lost attraction."
"Very true, perhaps; I will think about that:
but Mrs. Bertaldy is a beautiful, not to say a
fascinating woman; only thirty years of age
rich, independent, and a delightful conversationist."
"Hum! a widow?"
"Yes, at least I am so informed."
"A friend of the Montagues?"
"They vouch for her."
"And an American, you say?"
"Yes, with a foreign name assumed, I
suppose, to avoid some unpleasant recollections;
scientific women, you know, have these things
happen to them. Husband dead, and no children.
Charles Montague swears that it is so;
his wife protests it is so; and, of course, it must
be so."
"Another glass, and I am with you. We will
visit the Montagues, and talk with Mrs. Bertaldy;
but if you oblige me to listen to any of
your alchemists or virtuosi, I promise to insult
them."
My first ten minutes' conversation with Mrs.
Bertaldy was a disappointment. She was of
the quiet school of manners, low-voiced, and
without gesture or animation. Her features
were regular, well formed, rather dark, with just
the merest trace of sadness.
The difference between mediocrity in a
woman and the mean of perfection is not instantly
visible, unless to very fine observers. Mrs.
Bertaldy made no impression at the first view, but
I found myself returning often to speak with her.
Her talk was neither apophthegm, argument,
nor commentary; it was a kind of sympathetic
music. She bore her part in the concert of good
words in a subdued and tasteful manner,
putting in a note of great power and sweetness here
and there, when there was a rest or silence.
P was dissatisfied. Mrs. Bertaldy took
no part in the noisy and tedious discussions of
the savans. On our way home he pronounced
her "a humbug a false reputation." I, on the
contrary, resolved to cultivate the acquaintance.
It was agreeable. P sees no points but the
salient, in men or things; he is merely a
naturalist.
My new acquaintance was domiciled with the
Montagues, and I soon became an expected
visitor and friend of their guest. Not, I beg to
have it understood, in the manner of a lover, or
wife hunter, but simply of one seeking agreeable
society. The fastidious Montague and his good
lady were impenetrable about the "antecedents"
of Mrs. Bertaldy; but they treated her with a
confidence and respect which satisfied me that
her previous history was known to them, and
that their sentiments toward her were grounded
in esteem. They seemed to be afraid of losing
a word of hers, when she was conversing. Her
knowledge was various and positive, but she
spoke of things and persons as if each were a
feeling more than an object. I was not long in
discovering that a part of the charm of Mrs.
Bertaldy's society lay in the graceful and kind
attention with which she listened. She
encouraged one to talk, and shaped and turned
conversation with an easy power.
One morning in April, while we were enjoying
the first warm air of spring, and the odor of
flowers, in Montague's magnificent conservatory
the windows open to the south, and the caged
birds cheering and whistling to each other amidst
the orange-trees I was describing a garden in
the South; my language was apt and spontaneous.
The lady listened with her delightful
manner of pleased attention.
She was certainly a beautiful woman!
Her eyes dwelt upon mine, when, by I know
not what association, the vision of the
spirit-haunted enthusiast rose before me, and I was
silent.
Mrs. Bertaldy became pale, and gazing on my
face with an expression of terror, she exclaimed,
"You were thinking of him. How strange!"
"Yes," I said; "but do you know of whom
I am thinking?"
"He is no longer living," she replied; "and
we may now speak of him without wrong."
"Of Mohler, the enthusiast?"
"The same.
"How came you to know it was he I thought
of?"
"You need not be surprised. We have been
much together, and though you have not named
Mohler he was my husband you have made
remarks and allusions which convinced me that
you at least knew him, if not his history."
"True, I have spoken of his inventions, and
often wished they were real and possible."
"And your allusions have made me shudder.
Mohler was mad. You will think me mad, I
am afraid, if I assure you that some of his
inventions, the most wonderful of all, were
perfected and applied before his reason left him."
"You were, then, the wife of this man?" I
said, with a feeling of compassion.
"Yes. Our parents were foreign, though
Gustav and I were born and educated in America."
"Will you tell me something of this
marriage?" said I, touched with deep interest.
She sighed, but after a moment's meditation
spoke with her usual manner.
"We were united by our parents. Mohler
was in his twenty-first year; I but seventeen.
We had no children; were rich, educated,
luxurious. Mohler addicted himself to inventions,
I to society. He faded into a recluse; I
became a woman of the world. Our home was
divided against itself. We occupied a double
house in D Street. One half was reserved
by Mohler for himself and his mechanics; the
other half by me for my friends and visitors,
whom he seldom saw. Within five years after
our marriage I was left to my own guidance.
Our parents died. Fearing the wasteful
expenditure of Mohler on his strange inventions,
they willed their property exclusively to me.
Their fears for him were well-founded. On the
anniversary of the seventh year of our marriage,
at midnight, after a musical entertainment I
was then passionately fond of music Mohler
entered my chamber, which he had not visited
for a year.
He closed the door, locked it quietly,
drew a chair to the bedside, facing me, and
seated himself.
"'Maria Bertaldy,' he said, after a silence
which I took pains not to break, 'we are no
longer man and wife.'
"I made no reply. My heart did not go out,
as formerly, to meet him.
"'My name is not yours,' he added.
"'No? And why, Gustav?'
"'My lawyer is about to furnish me with
evidence which will make our continued union
impossible.'
"'Your lawyer!' I exclaimed, starting up,
involuntarily. 'My friend, Raymond Bonsall?'
"'Your friend, Maria! Has he deceived
me? Forgive me if I have wronged you. My
soul is dark sometimes.'
"There was a manner so wretched and pleading
with what he said, I could not forbear pity.
His dress was soiled; his hair hung in elf locks;
his eyes were bloodshot with glowering over
furnace-fires. The poisonous fume of the crucible
had driven the healthy tinge from his face, and
given it the hue of parchment.
"'It is many a long year,' said I, 'since you
have looked at me with kindness.'
"'I have deserved,' he answered, 'to lose
your affection; but you should have taken better
care of my honor and your own.'
"'The guardianship of both seems to have
been transferred to your lawyer.'
"'I may believe, then, that you are indifferent
in regard to that?'
"'You may believe what you will. I have
been long enough my own guardian to look to
no one for advice or protection.'
"'You are rich.'
"'That is a consolation, truly. I am thus
not without means of defense more fortunate
than most women.'
"'And I have nothing but that of which you
have been willing to deprive me.'
"'Your accusations more especially as you
are the last person who is entitled to make them
I repel with contempt. For your loss of
fortune, miserably expended in futilities, I am
deeply grieved. If you are in need of money
for your personal expenses, take freely of mine.'
"'I am in debt.'
"'How much?'
"He named a large sum. I rose, and going
to the escritoir, wrote an order for the amount.
He followed me. The tears were streaming
from his eyes. Kneeling at my feet, he seized
my hands and covered them with kisses.
"I had formerly entertained an affectionate
regard for Gustav. We were at one time
playmates, friends. Regret made me look kindly
upon him.
"He caught eagerly at the indication.
"'I will not rise, Maria,' he said, 'until you
have forgiven the cruel accusation. So much
goodness and generosity can not proceed from a
faithless or dishonored wife.'
"'You judge truly, my husband.'
"He rose from his knees, still holding my
hands in both of his.
"'You have saved me,' he said, 'by your
liberality. Grant me still another favor: let the
reconciliation be perfect.'
"'Any thing for a better life; but only on
one condition can you and I live happily, as at
first.'
"'And that is ?'
"'That you change your occupation give
up these wild researches spare your body and
your soul, and live as other men do, in
simplicity.'
"'But,' said he, stammering, 'I have an
invention of incalculable value. To give it up
now would be to lose the labor of years.'
"'And this other favor is ?'
"'I must have means to continue my work.'
"'I will not furnish you with the means of
self-destruction.'
"'Limit me. Your income is large; you
will hardly miss what I require.'
"'For how long?'
"'One year. I shall then have perfected
what will immortalize and enrich me. Pity
me, Maria! We have no children. You have
your pleasures and pursuits; I, only this; and
this you deny me!' he exclaimed, with a slight
bitterness, so artfully mingled with affection and
repentance, my heart gave way. I consented.
"Gustav was not without personal beauty or
manliness of character. He now studied again
to please my tastes. We resumed our former
relations. Though his days were devoted to
labor, his evenings were given to me and my
guests. His cheerfulness seemed to have
returned. I was so happy in the change, I allowed
him to draw from me large sums. My
fortune was still ample; and I looked forward to
the happy ending of the appointed year.
"You are doubtless surprised that I could so
easily forgive his accusations. Satisfied that
Raymond Bonsall, the lawyer, who had persecuted
me, before the reconciliation, with
unsolicited attentions, was the originator and cause
of Mohler's suspicions, I had dismissed the
subject from my thoughts. Indeed, my happiness
expelled revengeful passions, even against
Bonsall himself. As the friend of Gustav, I received
him with courtesy, and he continued an accepted
member of the refined and elegant society with
which it was our good fortune to be surrounded.
"With surprising address Bonsall changed
his plan. As before he had been secretly attentive,
now he was openly and constantly devoted,
but shunned me when alone.
"Bonsall's influence over Mohler became, at
last, absolute and inscrutable. It did not satisfy
me to hear them repeat, often and openly, that
they were partners in the invention; that
Bonsall had purchased an interest; and that they
consulted together daily on its progress. Anxiety
led me to observe them. Daily, at a certain
hour in the afternoon, Bonsall entered the house
and passed into the lower work-shop. There he
would remain a while, and then retire. In the
evening he appeared often in the drawing-room,
and never failed to make himself agreeable to
our friends.
"The instinct of a woman, correct in
appreciating character and motives, fails always in
sounding the complicated and strategic depth of
masculine perfidy. I soon knew that Bonsall
had become my enemy, and that his ultimate
purpose was to avenge my repulses and defeat
my reconciliation with Mohler; but the
singularity and constancy of his behavior attentive
in public, and reserved and cautious when alone
with me together with the pains he used to
create for himself relations more and more
intimate with my husband, puzzled and confused
me.
"'Could it be,' thought I, 'that his public
attentions, so embarrassing and yet so blameless;
his watchfulness of my desires, when others
could see them as well as he, are to impress
a belief that his private relations are too
intimate?'
"The suspicion gave me excessive uneasiness.
I gradually broke the matter to Mohler;
but he assured me I was mistaken; that
Bonsall suffered remorse for the injury he had
inflicted upon both of us; that our reconciliation
alone consoled him; that Bonsall was his
adviser in the invention, which already, at the
eighth month of the stipulated period, had nearly
reached perfection. His tenderness quieted
my fears, and I too easily believed him.
"Soon after he proposed certain changes in
the architecture and furniture of my apartments.
His reasons seemed to me satisfactory and kind.
I vacated the rooms for a month, leaving him to
improve and alter. He wished to give me a
surprise. The apartment was large, with a
dressing-room and ante-chamber. These were
refitted under Mohler's direction; after which, in
company with a few friends, we visited the new
rooms.
"The ceiling had been made slightly
concave; in the centre was a large oval mirror.
This mirror, so strangely placed overhead,
excited general admiration. Bonsall was, or
pretended to be, in raptures with it. I observed
that the mirror, beautifully fair and polished,
was not of glass, but of a metal resembling
silver.
"From this brilliant centre-piece radiated
panels exquisitely carved, with frescoes of graceful
and simple design. The carpets, wall
mirrors, fountain, statuettes, jewel and book-cases,
tapestries, tinted and curtained windows, all were
perfectly elegant, and fresh with living colors in
harmonious combination.
"In the centre of the ceilings of the dressing-room
and ante-chambers were smaller mirrors
of the same metal. This new style of ornament,
supported by adequate elegances, and a
perfection of detail of which I had never before
seen the parallel, occupied continual notice and
remark. Some criticised and laughed, but the
most admired; for the beauty of the effect was
undeniable.
"I was surprised and delighted at the results
of my husband's labors. That Mohler, a great
inventor and mechanic, was also a master of
design, I had always believed. With the genius
of Benvenuto Cellini he united a philosophical
intellect, and by long years of research in the
metallurgic arts had acquired extraordinary
tact. In the least details of the work of these
rooms there was novelty and beauty, though,
with the sole exception of the metal mirrors,
I observed nothing absolutely new in material.
"Mohler did not fail to observe, and turn to
his own advantage, my gratification and
surprise. He at once sought and obtained leave
from me to occupy a suit of apartments next
above mine, in exchange for others on his side
of the house, which, he said, were too dark and
narrow for his purpose.
"I sent immediately for my housekeeper,
ordered the change to be made, and the keys given
to the master.
"By a tacit understanding we had never
intruded upon each other. I had not penetrated
the privacy of Mohler's work-rooms, where
certain confidential artisans labored night and day;
nor had he overstepped the limit on my side of
the house. He breakfasted, and generally dined,
in his atelier, superintending operations which
required a constant oversight.
"For more than two months after the
completion of my own apartments I was disturbed
day and night by noises of repairs and changes
going on above. Mohler assured me that this
would not continue; that he had perfected and
was erecting the delicate machinery of his invention.
"Want of curiosity is, I believe, a greater
fault than the excess of it. I am naturally
incurious. It did not irritate my fancy to remain
in ignorance of secrets that did not seem to
concern me. My husband and I lived together in
a manner that was at least satisfactory. Our
affection was only an agreeable friendship, such
as many consider the happiest relation that can
exist between husband and wife. Our too early
and hasty marriage had kept us in ignorance of
the joys and miseries dreamed of and realized
only by mature and long-expectant passion.
"You will not suppose that life was therefore
tedious or fruitless. My parents had given me
a full and judicious education. I could speak
and write several languages. Mature and difficult
studies philosophy, natural history, and
even astronomy established for me relations of
amity with learned and accomplished men. I
wrote verse and prose, attempted plays, observed
and sympathized with political movements. In
order to perfect myself in languages, I cultivated
the admirable art of phonography, and would
sometimes fix in writing the rapid and brilliant
repartee of accomplished persons, who could forget
my presence in the excitement of conversation.
I learned to prefer the living to the written
word. Literature for me was only a feeble
reflection of reality; for I have never found in
books that vivacity, that grace, that unfolding
of the interior life, which makes social converse
the culmination of all that is excellent and
admirable.
"At the expiration of the year Mohler
announced the completion of his grand work, which
he had been seven years in perfecting. I thought
he would have told me its purpose; but with a
cold and embarrassed manner he presented me
with a check upon his banker, just equal to the
sum of all I had advanced to him during the
year. His behavior was mortifying, and even
alarming. I noticed a gradual change in the
manners and conversation of Bonsall. He
assumed airs of authority. Mohler gradually
withdrew himself, and began to be reserved and
serious; criticising my conduct, friends, principles,
and tastes. More mysterious still was the
gradual loss and defection of my most valued
female acquaintances. My parlors were
gradually deserted. Old friends dropped away. It
was as though I had become suddenly poor,
when, in fact, my wealth and magnificence of
living had increased. Persons of good name no
longer responded to or returned my invitations.
I was alone with my wealth, dispossessed of its
power and its enjoyments.
"I knew that Bonsall continued to visit the
friends who had deserted me. He still frequented
our house, was daily closeted with my
husband, and treated me now with a careless
indifference. Mohler, on the other hand, withdrew
until he and I were completely separated. We
no longer spoke to or even saw each other. My
servants became insolent; I procured others,
who, in their turn, insulted me. I grew care
less of externals; lived retired, occupied with
books and music. Through these I acquired
fortitude to resist the contempt of the world.
My knowledge increased. These sad months,
interrupted by short visits to the country,
produced no change in my social or marital
relations, but gave me an inward strength and
consolation which since then has served me like an
arm of God whereon one may lean and sleep.
"While these changes were succeeding I
enjoyed a source of consolation which I need only
name and you will appreciate it; that was the
correspondence of Charles Montague, then in
Europe. He had been the friend and counselor
of my parents, and continued his goodness to
me after their death. I confided to him all my
troubles, giving him each month a written
narrative of events. He replied always in general
terms, mentioning no names, and giving advice
in such a form that it could be understood by no
person but myself. This was a just precaution,
for I had discovered a system of espionage which
Bonsall and my husband maintained over me,
a part of which was the inspection of private
papers.
"Gradually all my valuable papers, receipts,
copies of deeds, important correspondence with
the agents who had charge of my large and
increasing property, Montague's letters, my private
journal, were abstracted. I made no complaint,
trusted no person with my secrets.
"At the expiration of this year of estrangement
and solitude, in the fall, Montague returned
from Europe with his family, and fitted up
this house. Mrs. M. I had not known until
then. Neither of them had visited at my house,
nor were they on terms of intimacy with any of
my friends. Even Bonsall was a stranger to
Montague, and Mohler had disliked and avoided
him. Plain sense and honesty ran counter to
his dreamy vanity.
"I was received by the Montagues with great
kindness. I found the lady, as you have,
intelligent and amiable, and the man himself become,
from a mere guardian of my property, a warm
and devoted friend. I consumed almost an
entire day in narrating what had passed between
myself, Bonsall, my husband, servants, and
acquaintances.
"Montague made minutes, and compared the
narrative with my correspondence.
"'I am convinced,' he said, 'that there is a
conspiracy; but whether your life and property,
or merely a divorce, is the object, can not be
determined without some action on your part.
Find out the purpose of the changes that have
been made in your apartments, and by all means
visit and inspect those that are above you. You
must do this for and by yourself. You are
observing and not easily intimidated. You have
a right to use any means that may be convenient
to pick locks, force open doors, seize and
inspect papers, bribe servants, and in other ways
defend yourself and obtain advantages over the
enemy. Count no longer upon the good-will or
affection of Mohler. He is resolved to sacrifice
you and possess himself of your property, but is
still at a loss for evidence.'
"With these words Montague concluded his
advice. He then led me to a front window, and
pointed to a dark figure in the shadow on the
opposite side of the street.
"'That person,' said Montague, 'is certainly
a spy employed by Mohler and Bonsall. He
arrived at the same moment with yourself, has
passed the house many times, and now watches
for your departure. He has an understanding
with your coachman. I saw them conversing
in the area about noon.'
"It was late, and I proposed to return home.
Montague and his wife wished me to pass the
night with them. But first,' said Charles, 'we
will amuse ourselves a little with the spy.' He
took pistols from a drawer, went out by the
basement, and returned in a few moments to the
study, where Mrs. M. and I were sitting, driving
in the spy before him.
"'Now, Sir,' said Charles, 'sit you down
and tell your story. Out with it. You are
employed by Bonsall and Mohler to watch this
lady.'
"The man grinned, nodded, and seated
himself quietly near the door, much in the manner
of a cat preparing to run.
"'This person,' said Montague to us, 'is a
volunteer detective, employed chiefly by
weak-minded husbands and jealous wives. You can
not insult him. He will voluntarily expose his
person to any degree of violence short of maiming
or murder. Kicks he pays no heed to. He
passes in public for a sporting gentleman, and
is, in fact and name, a Vampire. By-the-by,
Mr. Crag,' said he, changing his tone, 'you may
have forgotten me. You were employed, if I
remember right, in the Parkins murder case,
were you not?'
"'Yes, Sir. You were counsel for defense.'
"'Exactly. I think you followed me to my
lodgings several times at night, and were shot
through the leg for taking so much unnecessary
trouble.'
"'Yes.'
"'Well, Mr. Crag, I caution you that the
same, or a worse matter, will happen to you
again, if you continue to watch persons entering
my house. I may fire upon you.'
"'The law will protect me.'
"'Not at all. You watch my house; you
are not a qualified policeman; you are
consequently either a burglar or a conspirator. I can
shoot you if I wish. You have admitted that
Bonsall and Mohler employed you to watch this
lady. Go to the table and write a full testimonial
of the fact, or take a lodging in the Tombs
to-night. Write dates, facts all in full.'
"The Vampire did not evince any emotion,
but refused to write. After some hesitation,
however, he made a general confession of his
motives in following and watching myself. It
was to the effect that, on the 20th of October,
of the year 185, Raymond Bonsall, lawyer, of
New York, and Gustav Mohler had sent for him
to the house of said Mohler, and had there
proposed to him to watch, follow, and dog the wife
of Mohler, at all hours of the day and night, and
to employ others to do the same, for the space
of one month from that date; and to report all
her actions, movements, speech, disguises, the
names and occupations of all persons with whom
she associated in short, every particular of her
conduct and life; for which they were to give
the sum of twenty dollars a day, the half to Crag,
and the rest to coachmen and assistants in his
employ; that he had been occupied in this work
ten days, and had each day given in a written
account of his espionage. Crag rose to depart.
"'You will see Bonsall and Mohler to-night,'
said Montague, 'and report to them what has
happened.'
"'That,' said Crag, 'is impossible they are
out of town.'
"'Good; then you can not. Please observe
that I shall be in possession of Bonsall's papers
within a month. If any of yours are found
among them you will be terribly handled.'
"'How?' said Crag, anxiously.
"'I will have you up in the Parkins affair,
and some other little matters the burglary in
D Street, for instance, 25th of June.'
"The Vampire's impassible countenance
relaxed into a horrible smile. 'I see, Mr.
Montague, that you are watching me. I will go;
but let her look out. Bonsall has made up his
mind; and he's got Swipes a better man than
I; and if they can't convict her of something
they'll have her poisoned. Bonsall's a better
man than you, Mr. Montague, and he's got the
papers.'
"'What papers?'
"'Proofs against the lady. All kinds. A
will, for instance.'
"'A forgery?'
"'In course; but you can't prove it.'
"'How came you to know that?'
"'Well, you know Bonsall wanted to get rid
of Mohler and marry his widow, years ago. He
was afraid to go the common way to work; so
he encouraged him in working at his lunatic
notions some kind of machinery that no man ever
heard of, thinking it would kill or craze him;
but Mohler succeeded, and Bonsall had to lay a
new plan. He furnished Mohler with the money
to repay the loan he made from his wife. A
German chemist Mohler has in his laboratory
told me this. He can't speak English, but
understands it, and I speak German. Well,
Bonsall and Mohler have got a quantity of written
evidence against Madam Mohler a volume of
it all in writing conversations of hers with
some person who visits her room.'
"At this point of Crag's narrative Montague's
innocent wife looked at me with a sorrowing and
pitiful expression. I paid no heed to it.
"'With your permission, Mr. Montague,' said
I, 'let me continue the examination.'
"He acquiesced.
"'Mr. Crag,' said I, 'do you believe that I
conversed with any person in my room?'
"'It's a common thing, marm, and it might
be, for aught I know. Mohler believes it; but
he is awfully perplexed to know who it was you
were talking with. I believe Bonsall knew who
it was, but he would not tell Mohler.'
"'How came you to be so minutely informed?'
"'Why, marm, you must know every profession
has its ins and outs; it isn't enough to earn
money, you must know how to get it when you
have earned it; that is more than half. Now,
when I am employed by any party to watch
another I watches both; else I couldn't make it
pay. I spend half my time watching Mohler
and Bonsall, when they suppose I am after you.
I thought there was small chance of a conviction, and I wanted to threaten Mohler and
Bonsall for conspiracy, and make 'em pay a bonus
at the end of the business, afore they gev up.'
"'Well?'
"'The German chemist, you must know,
marm, agreed to divide with me, and will be
ready with his evidence when he finds there is
nothing more to be made out of Mohler, who
agreed to give him a share in the invention,
but was obliged to sell the chemist's share to
Bonsall.'
"'What is the invention?'
"'I don't know never could find out. These
Germans are naterally mysterious about mechanical
and chemical matters, though they'll tell
any thing else.'
"'What was the real purpose of Bonsall?'
"'He hated you because you had slighted
him. He has forged a will of old Bertaldy,
your father. The chemist helped him to do
that. This forged will leaves every thing to
Mohler instead of yourself, and Mohler has
mortgaged all in advance to Bonsall for funds to
carry on the work. The chemist says that the
invention is worth more than the telegraph; that
Mohler is the greatest genius in the world or
that ever lived; but, he says, a man without any
feelings, marm, only bitter jealous '
"'Had Mohler a hand in the forging of the
will?'
"'No, that was Bonsall's work; but the other
knew of it. He thought that the property should
have been left to him to accomplish the "great
and beneficial work;" so he called it, meaning
the invention. You, madam, he said, spent
money in frivolities; he, in doing good to the
world.'
"'Did he or Bonsall converse about my
death?'
"No, marm; it is Mohler, I believe, who is
to be made away with, if any one not you;
and then Bonsall would find a means to make
you marry himself.'
"'What means?' interposed Montague.
"'Why, the common means, I suppose. He'd
scare the lady into it. He'd have a pile of
evidence against her to hurt her reputation, and
women, you know, like the madam, are afraid
of that. And there is the forged will in his
possession, leaving all the property to Mohler, and
Bonsall holding claims and notes covering the
estate. In fact, he'd be sure to do it, Sir.'
"During the conversation I had written, in
phonographic characters, all that had been said.
Coming forward, I laid my note-book on the
table. 'Mr. Crag,' I said, 'the testimony you
have given is written here, word for word. I
shall copy it in full, and I expect you to sign
your name to it.'
"'Not without pay, marm,' replied the
Vampire, rising.
"'You will remember,' said Montague, 'that
these ladies are witnesses to your demand.'
"'Black-mail, eh!' chuckled the Vampire.
'I never testify unless I am paid, and I never
sign.'
"'It is unnecessary,' said I, coming before
Crag. 'You are one of three engaged in a
double conspiracy against Mr. Mohler and
myself for life, or money, or both.'
"'I will dispense with the signature,' interposed
Montague; 'but you must leave the city
immediately, or suffer arrest for conspiracy.'
"'It's a good job,' said the Vampire, reflectively,
'and I don't like to leave it. Can't you
make an offer? say fifty dollars on account,
marm and I'll keep dark for a month.'
"'I'm afraid not.'
"'In that case I can't go.'
"Montague looked at his wife; she pulled a
bell-rope. The sight of Montague's pistol, which
he cocked and held ready, kept the Vampire from
moving, though he was near the door. A servant
entered.
"'John, go to Captain Melton, and tell him
to send me a good officer.'
"Fifteen minutes of silence followed, during
which time the Vampire neither moved nor
spoke. The officer entered, recognized Crag,
and took him away.
"The movement of our lives is a tide that
floats us on toward an unknown destiny. This
we call Providence. It is doubtless the will of
God working in events and circumstances. It
is rather like the motion of the great globe,
moving silent and irresistible through the void
of space. We struggle and fret with trifles,
while Divinity wafts us onward. All is for the
development of the soul; to strengthen, expand,
and purify its powers. Grandeur will come
hereafter; in this life there is only a nursing
germ of goodness and power.
"These thoughts came first into my mind
while I sat looking at the miserable face of the
Vampire, waiting to be taken away like a rat in
a cage. Anger, terror, revenge passed away like
a cloud. I hated not Mohler, nor feared the
wiles of the demoniacal Bonsall. Montague
wished me to remain with him, using his house
as an asylum. I thanked him, but declined the
offer. He feared for my life. I knew too well
the weakness of my enemies to entertain such
fears.
"Montague imaged to himself, in the secret
invention, some unheard-of infernal machine
which would take life quietly. He believed that
the metallic mirrors fixed in the ceilings of my
apartments were a portion of the machinery. I
promised that I would not sleep until the
mystery of the mirrors had been explained.
"It was the third hour of the morning when
I reached home, and entered, as usual, by the
side-door of the garden. My servants were
junketing in the kitchen. On Mohler's side of the
house all was dark, closed, and silent. The
conspirators were absent. I passed in unobserved,
changed my dress, and went up stairs to the
rooms above mine. The doors were locked.
The door of the German chemist's room
opposite stood ajar. A gas-jet, turned low, as the
occupant had left it, guided me to a table. In
a small side-drawer were several pass-keys of unusual shape. With one of these I succeeded in
entering the machine-room, over my own. After
closing the shutters and lighting the burners,
I looked around me with a novel sensation of
intense curiosity, not unmingled with fear.
"The apartment was of the full depth and
width of the house; all the partitions having
been removed, and the floors above supported by
posts of wood. Over the centre of each room of
my apartments, and consequently over each of
the three metallic mirrors, stood a table about
six feet square, of the usual height, solidly
framed, and supporting pieces of machinery a
combination of clock-work, galvanic engines,
wires coiled myriads of times around poised,
pendent, or vibrating magnets; a microcosm of
mechanical powers which it were impossible to
describe. The three tables were connected by
decuple systems of copper wires suspended from
the ceiling by glass rods, and associated with a
gang of batteries, sixty in number, arranged in
double tiers along the side of the room, ten paces
in length. From these came out a sickening
fume of acid corrosion, the death and decay of
metals. From these, it seemed to me, an electric
power might be drawn equal to the lightning
in destructive force.
"A shuddering horror seized and shook me
as I gazed around upon this vast and gloomy
apparatus, which some secret intimation told me
had been accumulated and connected here to
work for me either death or ruin; but the terror
was momentary, and again I addressed myself
with courage to the investigation.
"The floor of the apartment had been covered
first with moss, and then with thick felt, which
deadened the sound of footsteps. Around each
of the tables, from their edges, depended threefold
curtains of green baize. I raised one of
these curtains, and the light penetrating beneath,
revealed the upper surface of the metallic mirror,
perfectly polished, of which the lower was a
part of the ceiling of my rooms. Points of
platina wire, as fine and pliable as spider-webs
perhaps a hundred in number touched the
mirror in a certain regular order, the surface
upon which they rested being divided into the
same number of mathematical figures, representing,
as it seemed to me, the system of vibrations
of the plate. The wires were connected above
with the complicated magnetic machinery which
rested on the table. The same arrangement
appeared under each of the three tables.
"Equidistant from the tables, and nearly in
the centre of the apartment, stood a wide desk,
or writing-table, on which rested another piece
of machinery, less complex than the others, but
connected with all of them by a system of wires.
This was evidently a telegraphic apparatus for
the transmission of signals generated by the
larger machinery. On the desk lay a record book,
and a card marked with phonographic signs, for
the use of the operator, corresponding with
others upon the signal-wheel, and which were marked
by a needle-point on a coil of paper, as in the
ordinary telegraph.
"Facing the seat of the operator, on the
table, stood a clock marking hours, minutes, and
seconds.
"I seated myself at the desk, placed the
record before me, and opened it at hazard. It was
a journal of months, weeks, days, hours,
minutes, and even seconds. There were three
handwritings, giving the dates and moments of
making entries. In these I recognized the alternate
work of Mohler, Bonsall, and the German.
"Although the writings were phonographic,
representing only the elementary sounds of the
human voice, I read them easily.
"I had but just begun the perusal of the record
when the touch of a cold hand upon my
shoulder, like the fingers of a corpse, caused me
to spring from my seat with a cry.
"It was Bonsall. He stepped forward as I
rose. The short figure of this man, my persecutor,
in his slouched hat and traveling cloak,
with the eternal saturnine smile, and eyes twinkling
savagely under black projecting brows,
reminded me of all I had read of conspirators.
His face, at that moment of horror, seemed to
me like that of a vulture; the livid skin clung
to the cheek-bones, and the lines of the mouth
were cruel and cold.
"'I should not have returned here to-night,'
he said, 'but for an accident. I was not so far
distant but that a messenger could reach me
with information of Crag's arrest by our friend
Montague. He has, of course, betrayed every
thing?'
"'Yes,' I replied, reassured by the quiet
manner of Bonsall, 'I am acquainted with the
particulars of your conspiracy to destroy Mohler and
myself.'
"'Are you not afraid to confess the knowledge,
alone with me in this solitary place?'
"'Are you a murderer?'
"'Alas! Madam, it is you who are the
destroyer. I fear you now as one who controls
my destiny, and can blast my good name and
fortune with a word.'
"A long, deep sigh of relief escaped silently
from me. I no longer feared Bonsall. He saw
his advantage and hastened to improve it.
"'Montague is my own and your husband's
enemy. We employed a spy to observe him.
The spy endeavored to extort money from your
terrors. Lying is his vocation. Reasonable
persons should not confide in the assertions of a
Vampire. Cease to fear and believe him and
he is powerless.'
"'Mohler's first enemy,' I answered, 'is his
own unnatural jealousy. You may, perhaps,
claim a second place. But we need not speak
of that at present.'
"'Were not you tempted by an equal jealousy
to penetrate the privacy of this apartment?'
"'Beware, Sir, how you trespass upon my
hospitality. Your presence in this house is merely
tolerated. Retire. If you have any repentance
or apology to submit, let it be in the light
of day and in the presence of witnesses, as
heretofore.'
"A flash of rage lighted up the noble but
vulturine face. It was momentary. He assumed
an attitude of polite humility, bowed low, and
seemed willing to leave me, as I desired, but
hesitated.
"'Speak,' I said, quickly, 'if you have any
thing to add: I wish to be alone.'
"'Forget, if only for a moment,' said Bonsall,
doubling his effort to appear humble and
repentant 'forget your enmity, while I explain
to you the uses of this mysterious apparatus. As
a piece of mechanism it is the grandest achievement
of modern science, and besides that,' he
added, in a significant tone, 'you have an
interest in the matter. It was made partly for
you.'
"There was a cold, malicious impudence in
the expression, 'It was partly for you,' that made
me shrink; but I remembered my promise to the
Montagues, and allowed the wily conspirator to
engage my attention by a lucid and wonderfully
condensed and simple explanation of the
machinery. I had read and seen enough of chemistry
and mechanics to comprehend all.
"'It was you,' he said, 'who suggested the
idea of the invention, though you were not
conscious of it at the time. Five years ago, in the
winter of the fifth year after your marriage, Mohler
became intimately acquainted with me. The
following summer he disclosed to me his suspicion
of your fidelity. He knew that your affection
for him had declined into a temperate and
sisterly friendship, and he believed that you had
given your heart to a man of more brilliancy and
personal power than himself.'
"'Whom did he suspect?'
""I am his counselor, and dare not violate
confidence. His suspicions were soon after
transferred to a person much more innocent.'
"'Yourself?'
"'Yes. I own that, at first, I was deeply
impressed by your beauty and intelligence; but
I soon learned that these were defended by your
virtue against ordinary, or even extraordinary,
temptations.'
"'The "extraordinary" being the seductive
manners and the wit of Mr. Bonsall.'
"'The same, Madam,' replied the lawyer,
coldly.
"'Men of genius, Mr. Bonsall, are said to be
the best judges of their own ability.'
"'Even when it is a secret from the rest of
the world. I admire the sarcasm; but let me
proceed. You were reading aloud, to a circle
of savans, a chapter from a French journal,
reviving, with the vivacity and elegance peculiar
to the scientific literature of France, the old
discoveries of Chladni, who found that musical
vibrations imparted to tablets of glass or metal
caused particles of sand, or finer powders, which he
strewed upon their surfaces, to assume a regular
distribution, dancing and arranging themselves,
like sentient beings, to the sound of music. The
hand which held the pamphlet was a delicate, a
beautiful hand, sparkling with diamonds, and
blushing with the same intellectual enthusiasm
which inspired a melodious voice that warbled,
more than it uttered, the mellow periods of the
author. The face, the form, the lips, the eyes,
the fair rounded arm, and the grace of attitude
much more than the interest of what you read
inspired your auditors with admiration.
Mohler alone suffered in that circle: jealousy devoured
his heart. The admiring savans listened with
delight while you spoke of the atoms of Chladni
and of Epicurus, and led us, by a ravishing
disquisition, from the cold, angular ideas of
mechanics into the rich sunlight of poetry and
philosophy. While the dancing atoms of Chladni
became to me the cause of passionate admiration,
they suggested to your jealous spouse a means,
as he conceived, of proving your suspected
infidelity, even in its least and slightest
expressions.'
"'Miserable man!' I exclaimed, with an
expression of equal pity and scorn.
"Bonsall smiled furtively, and continued:
"'Mohler found it necessary to have an
adviser and a confidant. I became both. Yes,
Madam, I confess it. An irresistible passion
seized upon my heart. I burned to separate you,
by all and any means, even the most criminal,
from him, that I might induce you to become
the wife of a man who could better appreciate
you. You seemed to me a woman worthy of
my highest ambition. I was ready to devote
my existence to the hope of one day possessing
you.
"'Ah! beware, Madam, of despising me.
You rejected my involuntary admiration. You
made me, at last, an enemy; but,' he added,
quietly, 'I am now repentant, and desire to become
your friend.'
"Without waiting for my reply, Bonsall,
throwing off his cloak, directed my attention
first to a broad plate of thin metal suspended
from the ceiling by threads of silk. Over this
he strewed fine dust from a woolen bag, and
then, as he drew a violin bow over its edge, I
saw the dust gather and arrange itself in
geometrical forms, consonant with the tone
imparted.
"'See,' said he, 'The ATOMS of Chladni.
They mark the tone; but the plate, as you well
know, has become electrified by vibration. The
mirrors of your ceiling are each a vibrating
plate. From the upper surface of these rise wire
conductors of the electric power generated by
the vibration. This is faint and feeble at first,
but, by passing through metallic threads coiled
a thousand times round small magnets each
geometrical division of the plate corresponding
with a magnet and with a radical sound of the
human voice it has power to connect and
disconnect the keys of the batteries ten thousand
times more powerful, giving motion to the wheels
and pendulums, which, in their turn, move the
needles of the register&E#151; with a slow or swift
motion piercing more or fewer points in this strip
of paper, from which, by such wonderful means,
has been read off and written every clearly
articulated sound uttered in your apartments.'
"Not until that moment did the horrible
reality flash through my heart, attended by a thrill
of hatred and disgust as though given by the
touch of a serpent. Hatred for Bonsall and
withering scorn of my wretched husband took
full possession of me.
"After a brief silence, during which I
succeeded in mastering the violence of these
emotions: 'This record, then,' I said, 'is the result
of your labors?'
"'Yes,' he answered, with the old furtive
smile playing about the cruel mouth; 'in that
book your most secret and confidential conversations
are recorded.'
"'Stolen property,' I said, taking up the
book, 'goes back to the right owner.'
"'Ah!' said he, laughing, 'we have a duplicate,
a copy to which you are welcome; but this
one,' snatching the volume with a slight of hand,
'belongs to me.'
"'A gentleman!' I said, with I know not
what sneering addition, for the littleness of the
action inspired me with contempt.
"'A fine word, Madam, properly used
counterpart of the word "lady;" both significant of
many virtues; and among those I class purity
of mind and conduct. Look,' said he, placing
and opening the volume before me. 'Read for
yourself.'
"The day of the entry was Saturday of the
week previous, one hour and five minutes past
midnight. I read under this date the transcript
of a conversation between two lovers, one of
whom deplored the folly and jealousy of a silly
husband; the other urged an elopement. Then
followed signs of inarticulate sounds.
"Immediately after, dated at ten in the morning
of the next day, was a conversation of mine
with Marian, my dressing maid, concerning
certain garments which she asked from me. I
remembered the conversation.
"'There are ninety distinct entries of the
record,' said Bonsall, closing the book, 'and of
these, more than twenty are conversations
between the same pair of affectionate lovers. All
must have taken place in your room; and please
observe, that whenever these interesting
conversations have occurred you were at home and in
your room.'
"'Either your machinery, or yourself, Mr.
Bonsall, is a contemptible liar. I confess the
ingenuity of the contrivance; but it seems to
me that half a dozen perjured witnesses would
have been a much less expensive and troublesome
apparatus. Have you no better or more
reasonable testimony than this? You are a
lawyer; so am not I.'
"'It would be a profound gratification yes,
a happiness to me,' he answered, 'could you
establish your innocence.'
"'I will do it here, and now. Put your
machinery in order for its work. The ninety-first
entry will explain the others.'
"The lawyer hesitated; but seeing no change
of countenance or movement on my part, but
only a certain resolute passivity, he proceeded
maintaining his rôle of disinterested friend to
adjust the telegraphic machinery and connect
the galvanic apparatus in a continued chain.
He may have been five minutes occupied in this
manner, during which time a low murmur, like
the frothing of the sea, rose from the three
thousand couplets of electrified metals, eroded by the
biting fluids of the troughs; then touching a
heavy pendulum on each of the three tables, and
communicating life to the apparatus by winding
a powerful spring, he stood aside, and asked me
what I would have him do next.
"Without replying, I raised the thick baize
curtain which concealed the metal mirror under
the larger of the tables, and, stooping down,
uttered, slowly, a few distinct words. The clicking
of the needle showed that they had been recorded,
as I spoke, on the slip of paper at the
telegraph desk.
"'It appears to me,' said I, glancing at the
scowling, troubled face of my enemy, 'that you
do not at this moment enjoy so greatly the proof
of my innocence, and pardon me if I add of
your own villainy. Your villainous machine
records words spoken in this room, above the
mirror, as clearly as though they had been
uttered below it, in my chamber. The enamored
conversations that occupy so many pages of this
volume, resembling a poor novel, have been
composed by yourself; proving, Sir, the just
equality of your literary talent and your
virtue.'
"The dark eyes of Bonsall flashed malignant
fires. Shuddering and shrugging with impotent
rage, he began pacing with heavy strides, his
hands clasped nervously behind him, back and
forth the long room. Twice, as he passed me,
he threw deadly glances. I wished to retire.
but would not. There is something awfully
attractive in the exhibition of destructive passions.
My eyes followed the man, who at that moment
contemplated every possibility of violence, with
a fixed regard of terror and curiosity. I felt
that we were acting a part, but the actors were
sincere, and thought nothing of the possible
scorn or applause that might follow the lifting
of the curtain.
"At length utterance returned to him, and
he gave vent to his accumulated rage in a curse.
Raising his right arm, he cursed me as he passed
before me, with the addition of such words as
the man uses when he would destroy all
possibility of reconciliation with the woman. The
nervous arm, raised to enforce the language, in
falling broke a link of the strong connecting-wire
looped along from column to column. The
surging murmurs of the batteries, the whirl of
the magnets, and the click of the heavy pendulums,
ceased on the instant. He stopped in his
way.
"'I see,' said he, 'that you, such as you are,
have the advantage of me in self-command.'
"With a deep sigh he expelled the tumult
from his breast.
"'As easily,' he continued, 'as I can repair
the slight injury my foolish rage has inflicted
upon this thread of metal, so easily can I mend
the mischief you have brought upon me by your
discovery.'
"When Bonsall uttered this threat I lost all
fear. Contempt made me laugh.
"'There was a time,' he continued, 'when I
loved you with a passion equal to my present
hate.'
"'Pray, Sir,' I said, 'may I inquire the cause
of this heroical hatred?'
"'Is it nothing to have suffered, year after
year, the pangs of incurable love, until every
thought, every action was absorbed in that one
grief? If the passion soured into hate '
"'I gave you no invitation to indulge such
folly.'
"'True, you gave none. Becoming daily
more beautiful, more lovely; as the days wore
on, estranged more and more from your miserable
husband '
"'Not a word of that, Sir! You were my
accuser.'
"'Yes, I own it. It was a crime '
"'Crime upon crime, Raymond. First, an
unlawful passion; then treachery to a friend;
then hatred of the object unlawfully loved; then
futile conspiracy to defame, to rob. Do you call
that love? Oh, fool!'
"'It was not I who planned it; the wretch,
Mohler, a mean, suspicious creature, cowardly,
an intellect without a heart it was he, Maria,
who devised your ruin. He called on me to help
him.'
"'And you answered the call?'
"Bonsall was silent.
"'There is no excuse. Your nature is evil.
What you call love is an unholy passion that
would sacrifice every thing to itself.'
"'Would not the highest virtue do the same,
Maria?'
"'You are more subtle than I. Your subtlety
of intellect has destroyed you.'
"'Mixed motives. I loved you, nevertheless;
ay, worshiped that is the word; I love
you still. Bid me die, and I will.'
"'Love!'
"'Yes, deep, absolute. It was your silence,
your avoidance, aversion, that ruined me. Now
I can speak freely with you, and I no longer
hate.'
"In every woman's heart (surely in mine)
there is a degree of compassion and forgiveness
for those who suffer by the effects of love. It is
God's will that it should be so; else all women
would fly from men. Great as my abhorrence
was thoroughly as I despised the baseness of
Raymond an old secret preference, a
long-suppressed feeling, crept up into my throat and
choked me.
"'Raymond,' I exclaimed, with an accent, I
fear, not wholly harsh, 'you have chosen a
base and crooked path to the favor of a woman
who was once proud to call you friend.
During the last two of seven tedious years you
have not acted the part even of a friend much
less '
"'It was the accursed silence,' he exclaimed,
eagerly. 'We should have been more honest.'
"'We, Raymond?'
"'Yes, we. You loved me once.'
"I had gone too far to recede. My courage
rose. Prudery would have been cruel and
absurd. Could I, then, terminate this long career
of crime by a simple explanation?
"'A word more,' I said, 'before we end this
conference which, I hope, may save us both.
Tell me for what purpose you conspired to
deprive me of my fortune? That was the act,
not of a despairing lover, but of an unprincipled
sensualist. Why this complicated and
cumbrous mass of conspiracy against me and
mine?'
"'Judge me as you will,' he answered. 'I
have told you all. I would have restored all
that I had taken from Mohler to you. I wished
to load you with obligations. See, here are
all the evidences.'
"He opened a drawer of the desk, drew forth
a package of papers, and placed them in my
hand. I accepted the gift. It was prudent to
do so.
"'Destroy these papers,' he continued, eagerly,
'and the work of infamy is undone.'
"'I appreciate the motive, but how can I forget
the crime?'
"'By extending pardon to the criminal.'
"Oh! my friend, when the sun-rays of mercy
spread over the soul their warm and tender
light, are we to be blamed if we forget the strict
laws of social propriety?
"'Come near to me,' I said.
"He came and stood before me, with down-cast
eyes.
"'If I will forget the past, will you forget it?
Will you leave me now forever, and let silence
cover all?'
"'Death death! I could not outlive the
separation. Though it must come, while I live
let me live near you!' he exclaimed, turning
away, pale and convulsed.
"'See,' he said, taking up one end of the
broken wire, 'this poor mechanism is like your
favor: while the wires are united that is, your
good-will, your pity it gives life, power, hope;
the strong currents of the soul flow on, and the
man is powerful, useful, happy. Without this
he is only a self-corroding machine. Pardon
me,' he added, while a blush mantled his
features, 'if my long study of these magnetic laws
has suggested an illustration that may seem
mean and trivial to you; but the great laws
work in souls as in matter. Give me, then,
your favor, or '
"He touched, as he spoke, the other depending
piece of the broken wire. A murmurous
sound arose from the batteries. The pent-up,
concentrated lightnings rushed from the wires
through his frame, and he fell dead like one who
has dropped suddenly asleep.
"I went to him, and regarded for a time, in
silent awe, the upturned face of the dead. Ah!
what a terrible anguish is compassion! It is
the grief of God. Kneeling by the side of
Raymond Bonsall, slain by a sudden, unlooked-for
vengeance the work, inadvertent, of his own
hand all the past fled away, and I thought only
of the ages of remorse that, in another world,
would punish the repentant but malformed,
misguided soul. The tears were falling freely
from my eyes as I knelt by the dead, when
I heard behind me a step that I knew to be
Mohler's.
"As I arose I saw the sordid figure of the
German chemist creeping behind. When he
saw me, and at a glance divined the nature of
the accident that had befallen Bonsall, he shrank
away and fled. As for Mohler, he could hardly
clear his sense sufficiently to comprehend the
calamity that had fallen upon himself. His jaw
dropped; he fumbled with his hands. I felt no
pity for him why, I can not tell.
"'Maria! What has happened to Bonsall?
How did you get in here? Oh! I suppose you
understand all now?'
"'I do.'
"'Bonsall is dead!' he murmured. 'Yes, I
see the wires are broken. Three thousand pairs
of plates it would kill an ox! You say you
understand the affair. Hum! You have read
the evidence against you in the book?'
"'Enough to know that Bonsall, who lies
here dead, is the author of these infamous
conversations attributed to me.'
"'How how?'
"'Voices above the mirror are recorded as
well as those spoken beneath.'
"'I never once thought of that!'
"'You? You, then, are not an accomplice?'
"'No,' he said, hesitating, and placing his
hand to his forehead, 'Indeed it troubles me
much. Let us go to your room, Maria, and we
will talk it over.'
"An insipid, futile smile played over his features.
The suddenness of the discovery how he
had been duped by Bonsall the probable loss,
in one moment, of wife, honor, friend, all the
springs of a good life smote through and
through, and wounded to death the poor brain.
I led him away like a child. But why did I feel
no pity none, ever?
"Mohler's lunacy, as you know, was permanent.
To the last moment his brain worked
upon inventions."
Two silver tears, moved gently from her large
eyes by the remonstrance of a smile, coursed
quietly down the cheeks of the beautiful
narrator. Ah! soul full of great courage and
compassion, it was with thee as with the king who
did not change countenance when he saw his
son led to execution, but wept grievously when
a poor drunken bottle-companion went to his
death.
It was a history known only to a few. I first
have given it to the world. Under the names
and dates I have assumed, a few only will
recognize the real persons and events.
(THE END)