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<h3>CHAPTER XXVII</h3>
<h2><i>MORE ABOUT TOM CHARKE'S SUICIDE</i></h2>
<p> </p>
<p>So the inquest was held, and Mr. Manwaring, of Wail Forest,
was the only juryman who seemed to entertain the idea during
the inquiry that Mr. Charke had died by any hand but his
own.</p>
<p>'And how <i>could</i> he fancy such a thing?' I exclaimed indignantly.</p>
<p>'Well, you will see the result was quite enough to justify
them in saying as they did, that he died by his own hand. The
window was found fastened with a screw on the inside, as it
had been when the chambermaid had arranged it at nine o'-clock;
no one could have entered through it. Besides, it was
on the third story, and the rooms are lofty, so it stood at a
great height from the ground, and there was no ladder long
enough to reach it. The house is built in the form of a hollow
square, and Mr. Charke's room looked into the narrow court-yard
within. There is but one door leading into this, and it
did not show any sign of having been open for years. The door
was locked upon the inside, and the key in the lock, so that
nobody could have made an entrance that way either, for it was
impossible, you see, to unlock the door from the outside.'</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page162" id="page162"></SPAN></span>
<p>'And how could they affect to question anything so clear?' I asked.</p>
<p>'There did come, nevertheless, a kind of mist over the subject, which gave
those who chose to talk unpleasantly an opportunity of insinuating
suspicions, though they could not themselves find the clue of the mystery.
In the first place, it appeared that he had gone to bed very tipsy, and
that he was heard singing and noisy in his room while getting to bed—not
the mood in which men make away with themselves. Then, although his own
razor was found in that dreadful blood (it is shocking to have to hear all
this) near his right hand, the fingers of his left were cut to the bone.
Then the memorandum book in which his bets were noted was nowhere to be
found. That, you know,
was very odd. His keys were there attached to a chain. He wore a great deal
of gold and trinkets. I saw him, wretched man, on the course. They had got
off their horses. He and your uncle were walking on the course.'</p>
<p>'Did he look like a gentleman?' I inquired, as I dare say, other young
ladies would.</p>
<p>'He looked like a Jew, my dear. He had a horrid brown coat with a velvet
cape, curling black hair over his collar, and great whiskers, very high
shoulders, and he was puffing a cigar straight up into the air. I was
shocked to see Silas in such company.'</p>
<p>'And did his keys discover anything?' I asked.</p>
<p>'On opening his travelling desk and a small japanned box within it a vast
deal less money was found than was expected—in fact, very little. Your
uncle said that he had won some of it the night before at play, and that
Charke complained to him when tipsy of having had severe losses to
counterbalance his gains on the races. Besides, he had been paid but a
small part of those gains. About his book it appeared that there were
little notes of bets on the backs of letters, and it was said that he
sometimes made no other memorandum of his wagers—but this was
disputed—and among those notes there was not one referring to Silas. But,
then, there was an omission of all allusion to his transactions with two
other well-known gentlemen. So that was
not singular.'</p>
<p>'No, certainly; that was quite accounted for,' said I.</p>
<p>'And then came the question,' continued she, 'what motive
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page163" id="page163"></SPAN></span>
could Mr. Charke possibly have had for making away with
himself.'</p>
<p>'But is not that very difficult to make out in many cases?' I
interposed.</p>
<p>'It was said that he had some mysterious troubles in London,
at which he used to hint. Some people said that he really was
in a scrape, but others that there was no such thing, and that
when he talked so he was only jesting. There was no suspicion
during the inquest that your uncle Silas was involved, except
those questions of Mr. Manwaring's.'</p>
<p>'What were they?' I asked.</p>
<p>'I really forget; but they greatly offended your uncle, and
there was a little scene in the room. Mr. Manwaring seemed to
think that some one had somehow got into the room. Through
the door it could not be, nor down the chimney, for they found
an iron bar across the flue, near the top in the masonry. The
window looked into a court-yard no bigger than a ball-room.
They went down and examined it, but, though the ground beneath was moist,
they could not discover the slightest trace of
a footprint. So far as they could make out, Mr. Charke had
hermetically sealed himself into his room, and then cut his
throat with his own razor.'</p>
<p>'Yes,' said I, 'for it was all secured—that is, the window and
the door—upon the inside, and no sign of any attempt to get
in.'</p>
<p>'Just so; and when the walls were searched, and, as your
uncle Silas directed, the wainscoting removed, some months afterwards,
when the scandal grew loudest, then it was evident that
there was no concealed access to the room.'</p>
<p>'So the answer to all those calumnies was simply that the
crime was impossible,' said I. 'How dreadful that such a slander
should have required an answer at all!'</p>
<p>'It was an unpleasant affair even then, although I cannot say
that anyone supposed Silas guilty; but you know the whole
thing was disreputable, that Mr. Charke was a discreditable inmate,
the occurrence was horrible, and there was a glare of publicity which
brought into relief the scandals of Bartram-Haugh.
But in a little time it became, all on a sudden, a great deal
worse.'</p>
<p>My cousin paused to recollect exactly.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page164" id="page164"></SPAN></span>
<p>'There were very disagreeable whispers among the sporting
people in London. This person, Charke, had written two letters.
Yes—two. They were published about two months after, by the
villain to whom they were written; he wanted to extort money.
They were first talked of a great deal among that set in town;
but the moment they were published they produced a sensation
in the country, and a storm of newspaper commentary. The first
of these was of no great consequence, but the second was very
startling, embarrassing, and even alarming.'</p>
<p>'What was it, Cousin Monica?' I whispered.</p>
<p>'I can only tell you in a general way, it is so very long since
I read it; but both were written in the same kind of slang,
and parts as hard to understand as a prize fight. I hope you
never read those things.'</p>
<p>I satisfied this sudden educational alarm, and Lady Knollys
proceeded.</p>
<p>'I am afraid you hardly hear me, the wind makes such an
uproar. Well, listen. The letter said distinctly, that he, Mr.
Charke, had made a very profitable visit to Bartram-Haugh, and
mentioned in exact figures for how much he held your uncle
Silas's I.O.U.'s, for he could not pay him. I can't say what the
sum was. I only remember that it was quite frightful. It took
away my breath when I read it.'</p>
<p>'Uncle Silas had lost it?' I asked.</p>
<p>'Yes, and owed it; and had given him those papers called
I.O.U.'s promising to pay, which, of course, Mr. Charke had
locked up with his money; and the insinuation was that Silas
had made away with him, to get rid of this debt, and that he had
also taken a great deal of his money.</p>
<p>'I just recollect these points which were exactly what made
the impression,' continued Lady Knollys, after a short pause;
'the letter was written in the evening of the last day of the
wretched man's life, so that there had not been much time for
your uncle Silas to win back his money; and he stoutly alleged
that he did not owe Mr. Charke a guinea. It mentioned an
enormous sum as being actually owed by Silas; and it cautioned
the man, an agent, to whom he wrote, not to mention the circumstance,
as Silas could only pay by getting the money from
his wealthy brother, who would have the management; and he
distinctly said that he had kept the matter very close at Silas's
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page165" id="page165"></SPAN></span>
request. That, you know, was a very awkward letter, and all
the worse that it was written in brutally high spirits, and not
at all like a man meditating an exit from the world. You can't
imagine what a sensation the publication of these letters produced.
In a moment the storm was up, and certainly Silas did
meet it bravely—yes, with great courage and ability. What a pity
he did not early enter upon some career of ambition! Well, well,
it is idle regretting. He suggested that the letters were forgeries.
He alleged that Charke was in the habit of boasting, and telling
enormous falsehoods about his gambling transactions, especially
in his letters. He reminded the world how often men affect high
animal spirits at the very moment of meditating suicide. He alluded,
in a manly and graceful way, to his family and their
character. He took a high and menacing tone with his adversaries,
and he insisted that what they dared to insinuate against
him was physically impossible.'</p>
<p>I asked in what form this vindication appeared.</p>
<p>'It was a letter, printed as a pamphlet; everybody admired
its ability, ingenuity, and force, and it was written with immense
rapidity.'</p>
<p>'Was it at all in the style of his letters?' I innocently asked.</p>
<p>My cousin laughed.</p>
<p>'Oh, dear, no! Ever since he avowed himself a religious
character, he had written nothing but the most vapid and nerveless
twaddle. Your poor dear father used to send his letters to
me to read, and I sometimes really thought that Silas was losing
his faculties; but I believe he was only trying to write in character.'</p>
<p>'I suppose the general feeling was in his favour?' I said.</p>
<p>'I don't think it was, anywhere; but in his own county it was
certainly unanimously against him. There is no use in asking
why; but so it was, and I think it would have been easier for
him with his unaided strength to uproot the Peak than to change
the convictions of the Derbyshire gentlemen. They were all
against him. Of course there were predisposing causes. Your
uncle published a very bitter attack upon them, describing himself
as the victim of a political conspiracy: and I recollect he
mentioned that from the hour of the shocking catastrophe in his
house, he had forsworn the turf and all pursuits and amusements
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page166" id="page166"></SPAN></span>
connected with it. People sneered, and said he might as well go
as wait to be kicked out.'</p>
<p>'Were there law-suits about all this?' I asked.</p>
<p>'Everybody expected that there would, for there were very
savage things printed on both sides, and I think, too, that the
persons who thought worst of him expected that evidence would
yet turn up to convict Silas of the crime they chose to impute;
and so years have glided away, and many of the people who
remembered the tragedy of Bartram-Haugh, and took the strongest
part in the denunciation, and ostracism that followed, are
dead, and no new light had been thrown upon the occurrence,
and your uncle Silas remains an outcast. At first he was quite
wild with rage, and would have fought the whole county, man
by man, if they would have met him. But he had since changed
his habits and, as he says, his aspirations altogether.'</p>
<p>'He has become religious.'</p>
<p>'The only occupation remaining to him. He owes money; he
is poor; he is isolated; and he says, sick and religious. Your
poor father, who was very decided and inflexible, never helped
him beyond the limit he had prescribed, after Silas's <i>mésalliance</i>.
He wanted to get him into Parliament, and would have paid
his expenses, and made him an allowance; but either Silas had
grown lazy, or he understood his position better than poor Austin,
or he distrusted his powers, or possibly he really is in ill-health;
but he objected his religious scruples. Your poor papa
thought self-assertion possible, where an injured man has right to
rely upon, but he had been very long out of the world, and the
theory won't do. Nothing is harder than to get a person who has
once been effectually slurred, received again. Silas, I think, was
right. I don't think it was practicable.</p>
<p>'Dear child, how late it is!' exclaimed Lady Knollys suddenly,
looking at the Louis Quatorze clock, that crowned the mantelpiece.</p>
<p>It was near one o'clock. The storm had a little subsided, and
I took a less agitated and more confident view of Uncle Silas
than I had at an earlier hour of that evening.</p>
<p>'And what do you think of him?' I asked.</p>
<p>Lady Knollys drummed on the table with her finger points
as she looked into the fire.</p>
<p>'I don't understand metaphysics, my dear, nor witchcraft. I
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page167" id="page167"></SPAN></span>
sometimes believe in the supernatural, and sometimes I don't.
Silas Ruthyn is himself alone, and I can't define him, because
I don't understand him. Perhaps other souls than human are
sometimes born into the world, and clothed in flesh. It is not only
about that dreadful occurrence, but nearly always throughout
his life; early and late he has puzzled me. I have tried in vain
to understand him. But at one time of his life I am sure he was
awfully wicked—eccentric indeed in his wickedness—gay, frivolous,
secret, and dangerous. At one time I think he could have
made poor Austin do almost anything; but his influence vanished
with his marriage, never to return again. No; I don't understand
him. He always bewildered me, like a shifting face, sometimes
smiling, but always sinister, in an unpleasant dream.'</p>
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