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<h2> CHAPTER X. Gideon Forsyth and the Broadwood Grand </h2>
<p>The reader has perhaps read that remarkable work, Who Put Back the Clock?
by E. H. B., which appeared for several days upon the railway bookstalls
and then vanished entirely from the face of the earth. Whether eating Time
makes the chief of his diet out of old editions; whether Providence has
passed a special enactment on behalf of authors; or whether these last
have taken the law into their own hand, bound themselves into a dark
conspiracy with a password, which I would die rather than reveal, and
night after night sally forth under some vigorous leader, such as Mr James
Payn or Mr Walter Besant, on their task of secret spoliation—certain
it is, at least, that the old editions pass, giving place to new. To the
proof, it is believed there are now only three copies extant of Who Put
Back the Clock? one in the British Museum, successfully concealed by a
wrong entry in the catalogue; another in one of the cellars (the cellar
where the music accumulates) of the Advocates' Library at Edinburgh; and a
third, bound in morocco, in the possession of Gideon Forsyth. To account
for the very different fate attending this third exemplar, the readiest
theory is to suppose that Gideon admired the tale. How to explain that
admiration might appear (to those who have perused the work) more
difficult; but the weakness of a parent is extreme, and Gideon (and not
his uncle, whose initials he had humorously borrowed) was the author of
Who Put Back the Clock? He had never acknowledged it, or only to some
intimate friends while it was still in proof; after its appearance and
alarming failure, the modesty of the novelist had become more pressing,
and the secret was now likely to be better kept than that of the
authorship of Waverley.</p>
<p>A copy of the work (for the date of my tale is already yesterday) still
figured in dusty solitude in the bookstall at Waterloo; and Gideon, as he
passed with his ticket for Hampton Court, smiled contemptuously at the
creature of his thoughts. What an idle ambition was the author's! How far
beneath him was the practice of that childish art! With his hand closing
on his first brief, he felt himself a man at last; and the muse who
presides over the police romance, a lady presumably of French extraction,
fled his neighbourhood, and returned to join the dance round the springs
of Helicon, among her Grecian sisters.</p>
<p>Robust, practical reflection still cheered the young barrister upon his
journey. Again and again he selected the little country-house in its islet
of great oaks, which he was to make his future home. Like a prudent
householder, he projected improvements as he passed; to one he added a
stable, to another a tennis-court, a third he supplied with a becoming
rustic boat-house.</p>
<p>'How little a while ago,' he could not but reflect, 'I was a careless
young dog with no thought but to be comfortable! I cared for nothing but
boating and detective novels. I would have passed an old-fashioned
country-house with large kitchen-garden, stabling, boat-house, and
spacious offices, without so much as a look, and certainly would have made
no enquiry as to the drains. How a man ripens with the years!'</p>
<p>The intelligent reader will perceive the ravages of Miss Hazeltine. Gideon
had carried Julia straight to Mr Bloomfield's house; and that gentleman,
having been led to understand she was the victim of oppression, had
noisily espoused her cause. He worked himself into a fine breathing heat;
in which, to a man of his temperament, action became needful.</p>
<p>'I do not know which is the worse,' he cried, 'the fraudulent old villain
or the unmanly young cub. I will write to the Pall Mall and expose them.
Nonsense, sir; they must be exposed! It's a public duty. Did you not tell
me the fellow was a Tory? O, the uncle is a Radical lecturer, is he? No
doubt the uncle has been grossly wronged. But of course, as you say, that
makes a change; it becomes scarce so much a public duty.'</p>
<p>And he sought and instantly found a fresh outlet for his alacrity. Miss
Hazeltine (he now perceived) must be kept out of the way; his houseboat
was lying ready—he had returned but a day or two before from his
usual cruise; there was no place like a houseboat for concealment; and
that very morning, in the teeth of the easterly gale, Mr and Mrs
Bloomfield and Miss Julia Hazeltine had started forth on their untimely
voyage. Gideon pled in vain to be allowed to join the party. 'No, Gid,'
said his uncle. 'You will be watched; you must keep away from us.' Nor had
the barrister ventured to contest this strange illusion; for he feared if
he rubbed off any of the romance, that Mr Bloomfield might weary of the
whole affair. And his discretion was rewarded; for the Squirradical,
laying a heavy hand upon his nephew's shoulder, had added these notable
expressions: 'I see what you are after, Gid. But if you're going to get
the girl, you have to work, sir.'</p>
<p>These pleasing sounds had cheered the barrister all day, as he sat reading
in chambers; they continued to form the ground-base of his manly musings
as he was whirled to Hampton Court; even when he landed at the station,
and began to pull himself together for his delicate interview, the voice
of Uncle Ned and the eyes of Julia were not forgotten.</p>
<p>But now it began to rain surprises: in all Hampton Court there was no
Kurnaul Villa, no Count Tarnow, and no count. This was strange; but,
viewed in the light of the incoherency of his instructions, not perhaps
inexplicable; Mr Dickson had been lunching, and he might have made some
fatal oversight in the address. What was the thoroughly prompt, manly, and
businesslike step? thought Gideon; and he answered himself at once: 'A
telegram, very laconic.' Speedily the wires were flashing the following
very important missive: 'Dickson, Langham Hotel. Villa and persons both
unknown here, suppose erroneous address; follow self next train.—Forsyth.'
And at the Langham Hotel, sure enough, with a brow expressive of dispatch
and intellectual effort, Gideon descended not long after from a smoking
hansom.</p>
<p>I do not suppose that Gideon will ever forget the Langham Hotel. No Count
Tarnow was one thing; no John Dickson and no Ezra Thomas, quite another.
How, why, and what next, danced in his bewildered brain; from every centre
of what we playfully call the human intellect incongruous messages were
telegraphed; and before the hubbub of dismay had quite subsided, the
barrister found himself driving furiously for his chambers. There was at
least a cave of refuge; it was at least a place to think in; and he
climbed the stair, put his key in the lock and opened the door, with some
approach to hope.</p>
<p>It was all dark within, for the night had some time fallen; but Gideon
knew his room, he knew where the matches stood on the end of the
chimney-piece; and he advanced boldly, and in so doing dashed himself
against a heavy body; where (slightly altering the expressions of the
song) no heavy body should have been. There had been nothing there when
Gideon went out; he had locked the door behind him, he had found it locked
on his return, no one could have entered, the furniture could not have
changed its own position. And yet undeniably there was a something there.
He thrust out his hands in the darkness. Yes, there was something,
something large, something smooth, something cold.</p>
<p>'Heaven forgive me!' said Gideon, 'it feels like a piano.'</p>
<p>And the next moment he remembered the vestas in his waistcoat pocket and
had struck a light.</p>
<p>It was indeed a piano that met his doubtful gaze; a vast and costly
instrument, stained with the rains of the afternoon and defaced with
recent scratches. The light of the vesta was reflected from the varnished
sides, like a staice in quiet water; and in the farther end of the room
the shadow of that strange visitor loomed bulkily and wavered on the wall.</p>
<p>Gideon let the match burn to his fingers, and the darkness closed once
more on his bewilderment. Then with trembling hands he lit the lamp and
drew near. Near or far, there was no doubt of the fact: the thing was a
piano. There, where by all the laws of God and man it was impossible that
it should be—there the thing impudently stood. Gideon threw open the
keyboard and struck a chord. Not a sound disturbed the quiet of the room.
'Is there anything wrong with me?' he thought, with a pang; and drawing in
a seat, obstinately persisted in his attempts to ravish silence, now with
sparkling arpeggios, now with a sonata of Beethoven's which (in happier
days) he knew to be one of the loudest pieces of that powerful composer.
Still not a sound. He gave the Broadwood two great bangs with his clenched
first. All was still as the grave. The young barrister started to his
feet.</p>
<p>'I am stark-staring mad,' he cried aloud, 'and no one knows it but myself.
God's worst curse has fallen on me.'</p>
<p>His fingers encountered his watch-chain; instantly he had plucked forth
his watch and held it to his ear. He could hear it ticking.</p>
<p>'I am not deaf,' he said aloud. 'I am only insane. My mind has quitted me
for ever.'</p>
<p>He looked uneasily about the room, and—gazed with lacklustre eyes at
the chair in which Mr Dickson had installed himself. The end of a cigar
lay near on the fender.</p>
<p>'No,' he thought, 'I don't believe that was a dream; but God knows my mind
is failing rapidly. I seem to be hungry, for instance; it's probably
another hallucination. Still I might try. I shall have one more good meal;
I shall go to the Cafe Royal, and may possibly be removed from there
direct to the asylum.'</p>
<p>He wondered with morbid interest, as he descended the stairs, how he would
first betray his terrible condition—would he attack a waiter? or eat
glass?—and when he had mounted into a cab, he bade the man drive to
Nichol's, with a lurking fear that there was no such place.</p>
<p>The flaring, gassy entrance of the cafe speedily set his mind at rest; he
was cheered besides to recognize his favourite waiter; his orders appeared
to be coherent; the dinner, when it came, was quite a sensible meal, and
he ate it with enjoyment. 'Upon my word,' he reflected, 'I am about
tempted to indulge a hope. Have I been hasty? Have I done what Robert
Skill would have done?' Robert Skill (I need scarcely mention) was the
name of the principal character in Who Put Back the Clock? It had occurred
to the author as a brilliant and probable invention; to readers of a
critical turn, Robert appeared scarce upon a level with his surname; but
it is the difficulty of the police romance, that the reader is always a
man of such vastly greater ingenuity than the writer. In the eyes of his
creator, however, Robert Skill was a word to conjure with; the thought
braced and spurred him; what that brilliant creature would have done
Gideon would do also. This frame of mind is not uncommon; the distressed
general, the baited divine, the hesitating author, decide severally to do
what Napoleon, what St Paul, what Shakespeare would have done; and there
remains only the minor question, What is that? In Gideon's case one thing
was clear: Skill was a man of singular decision, he would have taken some
step (whatever it was) at once; and the only step that Gideon could think
of was to return to his chambers.</p>
<p>This being achieved, all further inspiration failed him, and he stood
pitifully staring at the instrument of his confusion. To touch the keys
again was more than he durst venture on; whether they had maintained their
former silence, or responded with the tones of the last trump, it would
have equally dethroned his resolution. 'It may be a practical jest,' he
reflected, 'though it seems elaborate and costly. And yet what else can it
be? It MUST be a practical jest.' And just then his eye fell upon a
feature which seemed corroborative of that view: the pagoda of cigars
which Michael had erected ere he left the chambers. 'Why that?' reflected
Gideon. 'It seems entirely irresponsible.' And drawing near, he gingerly
demolished it. 'A key,' he thought. 'Why that? And why so conspicuously
placed?' He made the circuit of the instrument, and perceived the keyhole
at the back. 'Aha! this is what the key is for,' said he. 'They wanted me
to look inside. Stranger and stranger.' And with that he turned the key
and raised the lid.</p>
<p>In what antics of agony, in what fits of flighty resolution, in what
collapses of despair, Gideon consumed the night, it would be ungenerous to
enquire too closely.</p>
<p>That trill of tiny song with which the eaves-birds of London welcome the
approach of day found him limp and rumpled and bloodshot, and with a mind
still vacant of resource. He rose and looked forth unrejoicingly on
blinded windows, an empty street, and the grey daylight dotted with the
yellow lamps. There are mornings when the city seems to awake with a sick
headache; this was one of them; and still the twittering reveille of the
sparrows stirred in Gideon's spirit.</p>
<p>'Day here,' he thought, 'and I still helpless! This must come to an end.'
And he locked up the piano, put the key in his pocket, and set forth in
quest of coffee. As he went, his mind trudged for the hundredth time a
certain mill-road of terrors, misgivings, and regrets. To call in the
police, to give up the body, to cover London with handbills describing
John Dickson and Ezra Thomas, to fill the papers with paragraphs,
Mysterious Occurrence in the Temple—Mr Forsyth admitted to bail,
this was one course, an easy course, a safe course; but not, the more he
reflected on it, not a pleasant one. For, was it not to publish abroad a
number of singular facts about himself? A child ought to have seen through
the story of these adventurers, and he had gaped and swallowed it. A
barrister of the least self-respect should have refused to listen to
clients who came before him in a manner so irregular, and he had listened.
And O, if he had only listened; but he had gone upon their errand—he,
a barrister, uninstructed even by the shadow of a solicitor—upon an
errand fit only for a private detective; and alas!—and for the
hundredth time the blood surged to his brow—he had taken their
money! 'No,' said he, 'the thing is as plain as St Paul's. I shall be
dishonoured! I have smashed my career for a five-pound note.'</p>
<p>Between the possibility of being hanged in all innocence, and the
certainty of a public and merited disgrace, no gentleman of spirit could
long hesitate. After three gulps of that hot, snuffy, and muddy beverage,
that passes on the streets of London for a decoction of the coffee berry,
Gideon's mind was made up. He would do without the police. He must face
the other side of the dilemma, and be Robert Skill in earnest. What would
Robert Skill have done? How does a gentleman dispose of a dead body,
honestly come by? He remembered the inimitable story of the hunchback;
reviewed its course, and dismissed it for a worthless guide. It was
impossible to prop a corpse on the corner of Tottenham Court Road without
arousing fatal curiosity in the bosoms of the passers-by; as for lowering
it down a London chimney, the physical obstacles were insurmountable. To
get it on board a train and drop it out, or on the top of an omnibus and
drop it off, were equally out of the question. To get it on a yacht and
drop it overboard, was more conceivable; but for a man of moderate means
it seemed extravagant. The hire of the yacht was in itself a
consideration; the subsequent support of the whole crew (which seemed a
necessary consequence) was simply not to be thought of. His uncle and the
houseboat here occurred in very luminous colours to his mind. A musical
composer (say, of the name of Jimson) might very well suffer, like
Hogarth's musician before him, from the disturbances of London. He might
very well be pressed for time to finish an opera—say the comic opera
Orange Pekoe—Orange Pekoe, music by Jimson—'this young
maestro, one of the most promising of our recent English school'—vigorous
entrance of the drums, etc.—the whole character of Jimson and his
music arose in bulk before the mind of Gideon. What more likely than
Jimson's arrival with a grand piano (say, at Padwick), and his residence
in a houseboat alone with the unfinished score of Orange Pekoe? His
subsequent disappearance, leaving nothing behind but an empty piano case,
it might be more difficult to account for. And yet even that was
susceptible of explanation. For, suppose Jimson had gone mad over a fugal
passage, and had thereupon destroyed the accomplice of his infamy, and
plunged into the welcome river? What end, on the whole, more probable for
a modern musician?</p>
<p>'By Jove, I'll do it,' cried Gideon. 'Jimson is the boy!'</p>
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