A TALE OF THE X RAY.
CHRISTOPHER HEMBOLD
had a mania for experimenting.
He had tried everything from hypnotism to
electricity, when the "X" ray was first talked
about. He could think or talk of nothing else;
he perused every magazine and paper with
greedy avidity in search of articles concerning it.
"Christopher, do put that paper down and eat
your breakfast," said his wife.
Mrs. Hembold was a nervous little woman,
and it annoyed her to hear the newspaper rattle,
and she disliked to have it held so as to hide her
Christopher from view.
"But, Maria, just listen, here's more about
that wonderful discovery " he exclaimed
excitedly.
"Christopher Hembold! Eat your breakfast!
I care much more that the steak and coffee are
getting cold than I do for that nonsense."
"You have no sympathy, Maria; the mysteries
of science are beyond your appreciation!" he
exclaimed, as he folded the paper in dignified
displeasure.
"Appreciate fiddlesticks!" angrily retorted
Maria, stirring her coffee vigorously.
Said Christopher, the next morning at the
breakfast table:
"Maria, I am going to Abbeyville on business,
and shall in all probability be detained a month."
"What business have you in Abbeyville?"
asked Maria in surprise.
"It is business of a private nature, which you
wouldn't understand," answered he loftily.
"Which is a polite way of telling me that it is
none of my business," retorted Maria in a huff.
Christopher left the house in dignified anger;
his portly figure and handsome profile the
admiration of his wrathful wife. The fact was, he
did not wish to talk; he had determined that he
would investigate the "X" ray to his own
satisfaction. A certain idea haunted him by day,
and mingled with his dreams at night; it thrust
itself between him and the long columns in the
ledger; until, with a finger on the figures, he
would fix his eyes on vacancy, and go off into a
deep study.
At last Mr. Brown, his employer, said to him:
"What is the matter with you Christopher?
Are you ill?"
"No yes not very,"answered Christopher
confusedly.
"You had better take a layoff until you feel
better," said Brown; adding mentally, "You are
of no use here; you'll mix those accounts until
it will take an expert a week to straighten them."
Christopher packed his grip with a sigh of
satisfaction, and left home on the evening train.
Maria gave a little regretful sigh. "He might
have kissed mo; he didn't even say good-by."
She presently began thinking how preoccupied
he looked, and how strange he had acted.
"I do wonder if he was in trouble! I ought
not have been so cross, but he should have told
me; so there!" After a minute of troubled
thought, she added: "Perhaps he didn't want to
worry me."
Whenever Christopher was present she must
give him a dig as often as the opportunity
occurred; but no sooner was he away than all
his good qualities became apparent.
Instead of stopping at Abbeyville, Christopher
hastened on to a city more than a thousand miles
away. "I'll just call myself John Smith, and I
shall not be bothered while making my investigations,"
said he complacently.
The next morning after his arrival he sought
out the noted Professor Blank, and at some
length explained his project; in conclusion he
said:
"You understand that I wish to be
cathodographed many times; the working of the brain
has always been a tantalizing puzzle to me.
What I wish to search out is, how the different
emotions affect the gray matter; for instance, it
is claimed that this bump is combativeness;"
placing his hand on the region indicated. "It
is also claimed that all qualities, whether good
or bad, are capable of being cultivated; that the
bump indicating that trait or quality grows
perceptibly larger; well, then, the substance
known as gray matter must undergo a change;
whenever that emotion is unduly excited, the
gray matter must quiver, vibrate; in fact change
position. Have you never felt as though your
brain must burst with the intensity of emotion?
I have; and am eager to test it with the 'X'
ray." He paused as though for an answer, but
receiving none, continued: "Now in order to
test this, I wish to subject myself to every
possible emotion, and in every change be
photographed."
The professor smiled incredulously.
"How are you to obtain these changes of
mood? such emotions usually come without our
choosing."
"True! Well, I shall endeavor to create the
emotion as I wish it."
The professor laughed aloud. "I think under
such conditions that the emotion would be
altogether too tame to have a visible effect on the
brain."
Christopher resented the laughter: "Perhaps
you are not willing to assist me in making my
experiments?" he questioned angrily.
"Oh, yes; perfectly willing," was the smiling
answer.
"Now, look here! I wish to investigate this
carefully, and I'm willing and able to pay your
price; but I'll not be ridiculed sir, I'm no boy,
I'll have you understand!"
"No, of course not,"answered the professor
soothingly, he thought him a mild lunatic;
really he seemed half insane; no matter what
reply the professor made, he grew more wroth,
until he, out of all patience, said angrily:
"What is the matter with you? You act like a
maniac!"
"Quick! Quick! Photograph me!" cried
Christopher, with livid lips.
"Well, well!" exclaimed the professor in
astonishment, as he hastily complied with the
request; after which Christopher sank back, pale
and trembling.
The professor looked at him admiringly:
"How did you accomplish it?"
"Oh, I don't know; I just let go of the
strings;" smiling faintly.
Thus he went through the whole scale of
emotions; he was taken while under the influence
of anæsthetics; in a placid mood; in a moment
of most uproarious hilarity; in the depths of
despondency; in languishing amorousness; in
fact, in all conceivable moods of the human
mind. He seemed to possess the strange faculty
of producing any desired emotion at will.
After he had exhausted all moods, he one day
stood gazing meditatively, and rather sadly at
the plates.
"Are you not satisfied?" asked the professor.
Christopher sighed deeply: "No, I cannot say
that I am; it is certainly shown that there is a
change, the exact nature of which is by no
means clearly defined. Some future discovery
will, I am sure, enable the scientist to see the
action of the brain as plainly as we now know
the action of the heart."
He nervously ran his fingers through his hair
while speaking; he withdrew his hand with an
exclamation of horror: it was covered with hairs
and a cloud of the same enveloped him.
"Heaven! Is all my hair falling out?" he
cried in dismay.
The professor calmly observed: "I have
noticed it for some time; when you first came
your mustache and eyebrows were very thick
and long, but have been gradually thinning, I
thought several times that I would speak of it,
but we have had so much else to talk about, and
the most of your moods have been so peculiar "
he smiled as he paused.
"Oh, it's all right for you to laugh! You
wouldn't if you were in my shoes! Whatever
will Maria say?"
He stood ruefully looking at his reflection in
the mirror. "I look like a kid!" said he scornfully.
"I have been so busy with this
confounded foolishness that I did not think of
looking in a glass. Pshaw! I'm going to drop
this nonsense and go home; I know that my wife
is worried about me before this time. I haven t
written to her since I came here. I didn't want
her to know what I was doing."
"You ought to have told her, though," said
the professor.
"You don't know Maria!" said Christopher
sadly. "Confound it! How my head aches!
Now that I take time to think of it, I know that
it has ached for a week."
The following morning Christopher was very
ill, and was not able to leave his room for weeks.
When at last he arose, he giddily crossed the
room to the mirror, and looked at himself; he
sank into a chair with a groan; not a vestige of
hair remained on head or face.
He covered his long, leathery face with his
hands, and cried aloud: "I look like a great
big sole-leather baby! Whatever will Maria
say! I'll never tell her that it is the effect of
that confounded "X" ray; if I did I should
never hear the last of it; I've been sick, I am
sick sick of the whole business."
Meanwhile at home, Maria had at first
reproached herself with her irritability, and
finished by writing Christopher a loving, and penitent
little note, which she sent to Abbeyville.
Of course she received no reply.
"He must have been very angry," she
sobbingly exclaimed.
She wrote again, a still more penitent and
pleading letter; this not being answered, she
became very indignant.
"If he wants to be so awfully huffy, let him!"
she said wrathfully; but when a whole month
passed, and no tidings came as to his whereabouts,
she became alarmed, and began to institute
cautious inquiries.
Of course, all search proved unavailing, and
Maria wept and mourned her Christopher as
dead.
Nearly five months from the day he left his
home, Christopher wearily climbed the front
steps of his own residence, and rang the bell.
His clothing hung loosely on his gaunt limbs;
his long, thin face was the color of leather; his
eyes, devoid of lashes, and without eyebrows,
looked perfectly lifeless.
Hannah, an old servant in the family, opened
the door.
"If you want food go to the rear door," she
cried sharply, as she shut him out unceremoniously.
He sat down on the upper step, pale and
trembling.
"What does Hannah mean by insulting me
thus? Can it be that Maria is so angry that she
has ordered the servants to refuse me admittance?"
He mopped his forehead with his handkerchief,
although the air was frosty and nipping.
Presently he muttered to himself: I'll just stay
around until Maria comes out, then I'll persuade
her to forgive me. I've acted the fool, that's
sure."
He walked up and down the street, and hung
around corners, until the whole neighborhood
were watching him.
About three in the afternoon, Maria came out
of the house dressed in the deepest of mourning.
"I wonder who is dead; must be her father!"
he shambled up to her, and laid his hand on her
arm. "Ma" he began; she gave a frightened
scream, and started to run; he clutched her
more frantically, and cried wildly: "Listen to
me! you shall listen to me!"
She screamed again at the top of her voice:
"Help! Murder! Police!"
A gentleman coming toward them, rushed up,
and gave Christopher a stunning blow; Maria
tore herself loose at the expense of much crape;
ran back into the house, and locked the door
after herself.
Christopher arose from the sidewalk and
shuffled off down the street, muttering maledictions
as he went. "Its all a conspiracy! She
has got another lover, and thinks to get rid of
me; she'll find that she can't do it so easily.
I'll wait until dark, and then let myself in with
my latchkey; we ll see whether I am master
in my own house or not."
He paced the street angrily until nightfall;
stationing himself opposite, he then watched the
house until all was dark and silent. Still another
hour he waited: "I'll be sure that the servants
are asleep, evidently they have orders to put me
out, or Hannah would not have ordered me off
as she did. I'll show them that they will not
get the best of Christopher Hembold yet."
About eleven o'clock he cautiously crept up
the steps, and as cautiously let himself in; just
within he removed his boots; then carefully
groped his way to Maria's room. Her door was
unlocked, and by the dim light of the night
lamp he saw her round white arm thrown above
her head, thus framing her delicate face; the
lace on her night robe rising and falling with
every breath.
A rush of love and tenderness came over him;
this was his Maria the dainty bride whom he
had transplanted from her father s home; he
knelt beside the bed, enfolding her in his arms,
and pressed a passionate kiss upon her
half-parted lips. She opened wide her affrighted
eyes; she struggled wildly, letting out one piercing
shriek, then fainted. The half-clad servants
came running into the room, finding Christopher
on his knees beside the bed, chafing
Maria's hands, kissing her pale face, and fondly
calling her: "My love! My little one!"
"
Thomas, the coachman, seized him by the
shoulders; Maria regaining consciousness, began screaming again; Hannah added to the con
fusion by crying excitedly, "Throw him out!
Call the police! The man is crazy!" Thomas
obeyed the first command; he dragged Christopher
down the stairs, opened the door, and
kicked him out, and down the steps.
He lay there a few minutes, completely
bewildered. Just as he was struggling to his feet, a
policeman came along, and seeing his bewildered
condition, his shoeless feet, and battered appearance,
laid his hand roughly on his shoulder, and
said to him: "What are you doing here?"
"This is my home. I am Christopher Hembold?"
answered he.
The policeman laughed: "Oh, come off! This
is the home of the Widow Hembold, all right;
but you look about as much like the defunct
Christopher as a yellow cur resembles a King
Charles spaniel."
Christopher tried to jerk away. "Let me
alone!" he cried angrily.
"Will I?" said the burly policeman. "Where
are your boots?"continued he.
"In the house, if it is any of your business,
was the surly reply.
The tumult within the house still continued;
lights were carried from room to room, and
flashed weirdly up and down the stairs. Thomas
came hurriedly out of the door, kicking
Christopher's boots into the street as he ran down
the steps.
"Hello!" says the policeman: "What's the
matter in there?"
"Some burglar, or lunatic let himself into the
house, and into Mrs. Hembold's room; and she's
gone into hysterics; I'm going after Dr.
Philbrick."
"Let me go! Let go of me! I'm going into
the house to my wife!" said Christopher,
struggling wildly.
"You are going to the station, and if you
don't go decently, I'll call the patrol;" and call
the patrol he did.
Christopher fought like a fury, but in spite of
it he was loaded into the wagon between two
burly promoters of the peace and carried to the
station, where he raved like a madman all night.
The next morning they had him up for drunk
and disorderly. In vain he protested that he
had not touched liquor, and declared that his
name was Christopher Hembold. No one
believed him, so he got fifteen days, and the next
morning saw him marched out with the chain
gang to work on the street. He had quieted
down by this time, and had determined what to
do; he watched his opportunity until the
overseer's back was turned toward him; all the rest
of the gang except his mate also faced the opposite
way. He slipped a dollar into his mate's
willing palm. "You will not see me leave; look
the other way." He obeyed, and Christopher
hurried down a side street, walked swiftly
through a front gate into a private yard, out
through a rear gate into an alley, and was lost to
the chain gang.
He went direct to his lawyers. Mr. Hurd, the
senior member of the firm, was seated at his desk
when Christopher entered; he scarcely looked
up at his salutation: "Good-morning Mr. Hurd."
The lawyer barely nodded his head, and
continued his writing; after several minutes, observing
Christopher still standing: "Well, sir!
Have you business with me?" evidently not
favorably impressed by his visitor's appearance.
"Don't you know me, Mr. Hurd?"
The lawyer looked him over in cynical
surprise: "Can't say that I ever saw you before."
"You ought to know Christopher Hembold?"
interrogatively.
"Yes, sir; I knew him well; good fellow, but
a little cracked in the upper story."
He returned to his writing, evidently considering
the matter disposed of; after a long time
Christopher, still smarting from Mr. Kurd s
contemptuous remark, said: "Well?" in a questioning
tone.
Mr. Hurd looked up in displeasure. "Please
state your business; my time is limited," he
said.
Christopher flushed a sickly green over all his
yellow face. "Mr. Hurd, I came to you to have
you intercede for me with my wife; she will not
allow mo to speak to her, and caused the servants
to throw me out of the house."
The lawyer held up his hand: "First, if you
wish me to take your case, I must receive a
retainer; I do business in no other way."
Christopher opened his lashless eyes in a
grotesque stare. "Sir! You have all of my
business in your hands, and have had it for
years,"answered he angrily.
Mr. Hurd turned around in his office chair,
and gave his caller an angry look; he touched
the button at his side; a colored servant came
instantly.
"James, show this man out." Turning to
Christopher he said:
"I have no time to be bothered with such
nonsense. The idea of your trying to palm yourself
off for Christopher Hembold!" he cried, with
withering contempt.
Christopher stalked out of the office in a rage.
He went direct to his room at the hotel; he
threw himself into a chair, and buried his face
in his hands; his attitude expressed the utmost
dejection; after a time he arose and stood before
the mirror:
"Is it possible that Maria did not know me?"
he looked at himself scornfully: "Who would
know you? You old, yellow-faced, putty baby,
you!" he apostrophized, shaking his fist at his
reflection. "Serves you right; serves you right,
you old idiot! Fool with the 'X' ray, will you,
trying to find out if you do know any thing? I can
tell you that you are a fool. Fool! fool!" he
cried tragically.
After a time he calmed down, and taking out
his purse counted the contents.
There is something akin to the ridiculous in
the near association of pathos and money; they
are very near neighbors, however. Christopher
sighed deeply: "This is all I have left, and
when my lawyer will not acknowledge my identity,
what am I to do?" He drummed impatiently
upon the table with his fingers; finally he
started up excitedly: "Of course! Good Lord!
why didn't I think of that!"
He hauled his gripsack into the middle of the
room; shirts and socks flew right and left, until
he found the cathodographs, also a photograph
taken just previous to his experimenting; he
took them out, and placed them in a row; taking
the photograph, he walked to the mirror and
compared it with the reflection.
"I don't wonder that no one knew you, you
old scarecrow, you!" glaring angrily at his
double.
The next morning he again sought Mr. Hurd;
the lawyer turned angrily upon his entrance: "I
do not wish to be bothered, sir," motioning
toward the door.
Christopher was not to be put off in this
manner; he walked up to the desk, and laid down
the pictures he had brought.
"Will you be kind enough to look at these?"
asked Christopher in a quivering voice.
Mr. Hurd glanced at them impatiently:
"Well! What of them?"
"You know this one as representing Christopher
Hembold?" he asked eagerly, with his
finger on the photograph spoken of.
"Yes, of course; what of that? it does not
resemble you," curtly.
"But I sat for every one of those pictures,"
despondently; the hope which he had cherished
dying within his heart.
"Oh, stuff, nonsense!" scornfully ejaculated
Mr. Hurd. Christopher's head fell forward on
his breast; he looked the picture of despair.
His clothing hung loosely upon his long, gaunt
limbs; his hands, much too large for the bony
wrists, dropped nervelessly at his side; his
lifeless eyes, his hollow cheeks, looked as though
the great Conqueror had already claimed him,
while still permitting him to roam the earth
for some inscrutable purpose.
Mr. Hurd, having little sentiment, thought
only of his annoyance. "Will you please remove
that litter from the desk," he said.
Christopher made one more appeal: "Will you
write to Professor Blank, and find whether
these pictures were taken from my sittings?" he
asked supplicatingly.
"I will not be bothered with it, I tell you;
write for yourself," he answered roughly.
"I will," said Christopher, with vexed
decision, then occurred to him the thought;
Professor Blank knew him as Smith only. He
gathered the photographs up hastily, and rushed
out of the house. "I've a notion to drown my
fool self! Oh, what shall I do! Was ever any
one in such a predicament!" he cried aloud.
Everyone turned to look at him as he ran past
them.
"Hello, Smith! Where are you going in such
a rush? What is the matter with you?" cried a
familiar voice in his very ear.
Christopher gave a great shout; then began to
cry like a veritable baby, as he grasped the
professor's hands. "I was going to drown myself;
you have saved my life,"and he fairy blubbered.
"Smith, you are as crazy as you are
bald-headed," laughingly said the professor.
"Don't call me Smith! My name is Christopher
Hembold," he said excitedly.
"I only know that you called yourself Smith."
"Yes; it's surprising what a fool a man can
make of himself," dejectedly.
He took the photographs from his pocket, and
said entreatingly: "Say, professor, do go with
me to my lawyer, and tell him that you took
these with the "X" ray, and don't say anything
about Smith;" this last in a tone of intense
disgust.
They were just entering a park, and seated
themselves on a bench, while Christopher told
the whole story. The professor laughed, even
as he said: "I'm sorry for you, and will help
you all I can."
Once more Christopher climbed the stairs to
the lawyer s office. Mr. Hurd arose to his feet
wrathfully. "You are the most persistent
annoyance that I ever met "
Christopher interrupted him: "Mr. Hurd,
allow me to introduce to you the eminent
Professor Blank."
The lawyer jerked his head slightly, attaching
no importance to the name. The Professor
bowed courteously, at the same time handing
him his card.
As Mr. Hurd glanced at the bit of pasteboard,
his manner underwent a great change: "Please
be seated," said he urbanely.
Professor Blank bowed again: "This gentleman
requested me to accompany him to your
office, to testify that I took these cathodographs
of him with the 'X' ray. This represents him as
he appeared when I first saw him," laying the
photograph on the desk: "After having the last
of the cathodographs taken he was very ill for a
long time; his hair had nearly all fallen before
his illness, and during that illness he became
emaciated as you see him."
Mr. Hurd stood gazing from Christopher to
the photograph, and back again in amazement.
"But what took his hair off?"
"Oh, the X ray; it sometimes has that
effect," said the professor calmly.
Mr. Hurd turned to Christopher: "You don't
mean to tell me " he paused eloquently.
"Yes, I was experimenting with the 'X' ray
having my brain cathodographed," he answered
humbly.
Maria had entered unperceived: "You mean
that you had your skull pictured; you haven't
any brain, Christopher; the 'X' ray makes but a
slight shadow of soft substances, and none of a
vacuum," said she sweetly.
Said Christopher, in an aside to the professor:
"I told you that you didn't know my Maria!
My! Won't I catch it, though!"