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<h2> VII. THE TEMPLE OF SILENCE </h2>
<p>Harold March and the few who cultivated the friendship of Horne Fisher,
especially if they saw something of him in his own social setting, were
conscious of a certain solitude in his very sociability. They seemed to be
always meeting his relations and never meeting his family. Perhaps it
would be truer to say that they saw much of his family and nothing of his
home. His cousins and connections ramified like a labyrinth all over the
governing class of Great Britain, and he seemed to be on good, or at least
on good-humored, terms with most of them. For Horne Fisher was remarkable
for a curious impersonal information and interest touching all sorts of
topics, so that one could sometimes fancy that his culture, like his
colorless, fair mustache and pale, drooping features, had the neutral
nature of a chameleon. Anyhow, he could always get on with viceroys and
Cabinet Ministers and all the great men responsible for great departments,
and talk to each of them on his own subject, on the branch of study with
which he was most seriously concerned. Thus he could converse with the
Minister for War about silkworms, with the Minister of Education about
detective stories, with the Minister of Labor about Limoges enamel, and
with the Minister of Missions and Moral Progress (if that be his correct
title) about the pantomime boys of the last four decades. And as the first
was his first cousin, the second his second cousin, the third his
brother-in-law, and the fourth his uncle by marriage, this conversational
versatility certainly served in one sense to create a happy family. But
March never seemed to get a glimpse of that domestic interior to which men
of the middle classes are accustomed in their friendships, and which is
indeed the foundation of friendship and love and everything else in any
sane and stable society. He wondered whether Horne Fisher was both an
orphan and an only child.</p>
<p>It was, therefore, with something like a start that he found that Fisher
had a brother, much more prosperous and powerful than himself, though
hardly, March thought, so entertaining. Sir Henry Harland Fisher, with
half the alphabet after his name, was something at the Foreign Office far
more tremendous than the Foreign Secretary. Apparently, it ran in the
family, after all; for it seemed there was another brother, Ashton Fisher,
in India, rather more tremendous than the Viceroy. Sir Henry Fisher was a
heavier, but handsomer edition of his brother, with a brow equally bald,
but much more smooth. He was very courteous, but a shade patronizing, not
only to March, but even, as March fancied, to Horne Fisher as well. The
latter gentleman, who had many intuitions about the half-formed thoughts
of others, glanced at the topic himself as they came away from the great
house in Berkeley Square.</p>
<p>“Why, don’t you know,” he observed quietly, “that
I am the fool of the family?”</p>
<p>“It must be a clever family,” said Harold March, with a smile.</p>
<p>“Very gracefully expressed,” replied Fisher; “that is
the best of having a literary training. Well, perhaps it is an
exaggeration to say I am the fool of the family. It’s enough to say
I am the failure of the family.”</p>
<p>“It seems queer to me that you should fail especially,”
remarked the journalist. “As they say in the examinations, what did
you fail in?”</p>
<p>“Politics,” replied his friend. “I stood for Parliament
when I was quite a young man and got in by an enormous majority, with loud
cheers and chairing round the town. Since then, of course, I’ve been
rather under a cloud.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I don’t quite understand the ‘of
course,’” answered March, laughing.</p>
<p>“That part of it isn’t worth understanding,” said
Fisher. “But as a matter of fact, old chap, the other part of it was
rather odd and interesting. Quite a detective story in its way, as well as
the first lesson I had in what modern politics are made of. If you like, I’ll
tell you all about it.” And the following, recast in a less allusive
and conversational manner, is the story that he told.</p>
<p>Nobody privileged of late years to meet Sir Henry Harland Fisher would
believe that he had ever been called Harry. But, indeed, he had been
boyish enough when a boy, and that serenity which shone on him through
life, and which now took the form of gravity, had once taken the form of
gayety. His friends would have said that he was all the more ripe in his
maturity for having been young in his youth. His enemies would have said
that he was still light minded, but no longer light hearted. But in any
case, the whole of the story Horne Fisher had to tell arose out of the
accident which had made young Harry Fisher private secretary to Lord
Saltoun. Hence his later connection with the Foreign Office, which had,
indeed, come to him as a sort of legacy from his lordship when that great
man was the power behind the throne. This is not the place to say much
about Saltoun, little as was known of him and much as there was worth
knowing. England has had at least three or four such secret statesmen. An
aristocratic polity produces every now and then an aristocrat who is also
an accident, a man of intellectual independence and insight, a Napoleon
born in the purple. His vast work was mostly invisible, and very little
could be got out of him in private life except a crusty and rather cynical
sense of humor. But it was certainly the accident of his presence at a
family dinner of the Fishers, and the unexpected opinion he expressed,
which turned what might have been a dinner-table joke into a sort of small
sensational novel.</p>
<p>Save for Lord Saltoun, it was a family party of Fishers, for the only
other distinguished stranger had just departed after dinner, leaving the
rest to their coffee and cigars. This had been a figure of some interest—a
young Cambridge man named Eric Hughes who was the rising hope of the party
of Reform, to which the Fisher family, along with their friend Saltoun,
had long been at least formally attached. The personality of Hughes was
substantially summed up in the fact that he talked eloquently and
earnestly through the whole dinner, but left immediately after to be in
time for an appointment. All his actions had something at once ambitious
and conscientious; he drank no wine, but was slightly intoxicated with
words. And his face and phrases were on the front page of all the
newspapers just then, because he was contesting the safe seat of Sir
Francis Verner in the great by-election in the west. Everybody was talking
about the powerful speech against squirarchy which he had just delivered;
even in the Fisher circle everybody talked about it except Horne Fisher
himself who sat in a corner, lowering over the fire.</p>
<p>“We jolly well have to thank him for putting some new life into the
old party,” Ashton Fisher was saying. “This campaign against
the old squires just hits the degree of democracy there is in this county.
This act for extending county council control is practically his bill; so
you may say he’s in the government even before he’s in the
House.”</p>
<p>“One’s easier than the other,” said Harry, carelessly.
“I bet the squire’s a bigger pot than the county council in
that county. Verner is pretty well rooted; all these rural places are what
you call reactionary. Damning aristocrats won’t alter it.”</p>
<p>“He damns them rather well,” observed Ashton. “We never
had a better meeting than the one in Barkington, which generally goes
Constitutional. And when he said, ‘Sir Francis may boast of blue
blood; let us show we have red blood,’ and went on to talk about
manhood and liberty, the room simply rose at him.”</p>
<p>“Speaks very well,” said Lord Saltoun, gruffly, making his
only contribution to the conversation so far.</p>
<p>Then the almost equally silent Horne Fisher suddenly spoke, without taking
his brooding eyes off the fire.</p>
<p>“What I can’t understand,” he said, “is why nobody
is ever slanged for the real reason.”</p>
<p>“Hullo!” remarked Harry, humorously, “you beginning to
take notice?”</p>
<p>“Well, take Verner,” continued Horne Fisher. “If we want
to attack Verner, why not attack him? Why compliment him on being a
romantic reactionary aristocrat? Who is Verner? Where does he come from?
His name sounds old, but I never heard of it before, as the man said of
the Crucifixion. Why talk about his blue blood? His blood may be gamboge
yellow with green spots, for all anybody knows. All we know is that the
old squire, Hawker, somehow ran through his money (and his second wife’s,
I suppose, for she was rich enough), and sold the estate to a man named
Verner. What did he make his money in? Oil? Army contracts?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said Saltoun, looking at him
thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“First thing I ever knew you didn’t know,” cried the
exuberant Harry.</p>
<p>“And there’s more, besides,” went on Horne Fisher, who
seemed to have suddenly found his tongue. “If we want country people
to vote for us, why don’t we get somebody with some notion about the
country? We don’t talk to people in Threadneedle Street about
nothing but turnips and pigsties. Why do we talk to people in Somerset
about nothing but slums and socialism? Why don’t we give the squire’s
land to the squire’s tenants, instead of dragging in the county
council?”</p>
<p>“Three acres and a cow,” cried Harry, emitting what the
Parliamentary reports call an ironical cheer.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied his brother, stubbornly. “Don’t you
think agricultural laborers would rather have three acres and a cow than
three acres of printed forms and a committee? Why doesn’t somebody
start a yeoman party in politics, appealing to the old traditions of the
small landowner? And why don’t they attack men like Verner for what
they are, which is something about as old and traditional as an American
oil trust?”</p>
<p>“You’d better lead the yeoman party yourself,” laughed
Harry. “Don’t you think it would be a joke, Lord Saltoun, to
see my brother and his merry men, with their bows and bills, marching down
to Somerset all in Lincoln green instead of Lincoln and Bennet hats?”</p>
<p>“No,” answered Old Saltoun, “I don’t think it
would be a joke. I think it would be an exceedingly serious and sensible
idea.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m jiggered!” cried Harry Fisher, staring at
him. “I said just now it was the first fact you didn’t know,
and I should say this is the first joke you didn’t see.”</p>
<p>“I’ve seen a good many things in my time,” said the old
man, in his rather sour fashion. “I’ve told a good many lies
in my time, too, and perhaps I’ve got rather sick of them. But there
are lies and lies, for all that. Gentlemen used to lie just as schoolboys
lie, because they hung together and partly to help one another out. But I’m
damned if I can see why we should lie for these cosmopolitan cads who only
help themselves. They’re not backing us up any more; they’re
simply crowding us out. If a man like your brother likes to go into
Parliament as a yeoman or a gentleman or a Jacobite or an Ancient Briton,
I should say it would be a jolly good thing.”</p>
<p>In the rather startled silence that followed Horne Fisher sprang to his
feet and all his dreary manner dropped off him.</p>
<p>“I’m ready to do it to-morrow,” he cried. “I
suppose none of you fellows would back me up.”</p>
<p>Then Harry Fisher showed the finer side of his impetuosity. He made a
sudden movement as if to shake hands.</p>
<p>“You’re a sport,” he said, “and I’ll back
you up, if nobody else will. But we can all back you up, can’t we? I
see what Lord Saltoun means, and, of course, he’s right. He’s
always right.”</p>
<p>“So I will go down to Somerset,” said Horne Fisher.</p>
<p>“Yes, it is on the way to Westminster,” said Lord Saltoun,
with a smile.</p>
<p>And so it happened that Horne Fisher arrived some days later at the little
station of a rather remote market town in the west, accompanied by a light
suitcase and a lively brother. It must not be supposed, however, that the
brother’s cheerful tone consisted entirely of chaff. He supported
the new candidate with hope as well as hilarity; and at the back of his
boisterous partnership there was an increasing sympathy and encouragement.
Harry Fisher had always had an affection for his more quiet and eccentric
brother, and was now coming more and more to have a respect for him. As
the campaign proceeded the respect increased to ardent admiration. For
Harry was still young, and could feel the sort of enthusiasm for his
captain in electioneering that a schoolboy can feel for his captain in
cricket.</p>
<p>Nor was the admiration undeserved. As the new three-cornered contest
developed it became apparent to others besides his devoted kinsman that
there was more in Horne Fisher than had ever met the eye. It was clear
that his outbreak by the family fireside had been but the culmination of a
long course of brooding and studying on the question. The talent he
retained through life for studying his subject, and even somebody else’s
subject, had long been concentrated on this idea of championing a new
peasantry against a new plutocracy. He spoke to a crowd with eloquence and
replied to an individual with humor, two political arts that seemed to
come to him naturally. He certainly knew much more about rural problems
than either Hughes, the Reform candidate, or Verner, the Constitutional
candidate. And he probed those problems with a human curiosity, and went
below the surface in a way that neither of them dreamed of doing. He soon
became the voice of popular feelings that are never found in the popular
press. New angles of criticism, arguments that had never before been
uttered by an educated voice, tests and comparisons that had been made
only in dialect by men drinking in the little local public houses, crafts
half forgotten that had come down by sign of hand and tongue from remote
ages when their fathers were free—all this created a curious and
double excitement. It startled the well informed by being a new and
fantastic idea they had never encountered. It startled the ignorant by
being an old and familiar idea they never thought to have seen revived.
Men saw things in a new light, and knew not even whether it was the sunset
or the dawn.</p>
<p>Practical grievances were there to make the movement formidable. As Fisher
went to and fro among the cottages and country inns, it was borne in on
him without difficulty that Sir Francis Verner was a very bad landlord.
Nor was the story of his acquisition of the land any more ancient and
dignified than he had supposed; the story was well known in the county and
in most respects was obvious enough. Hawker, the old squire, had been a
loose, unsatisfactory sort of person, had been on bad terms with his first
wife (who died, as some said, of neglect), and had then married a flashy
South American Jewess with a fortune. But he must have worked his way
through this fortune also with marvelous rapidity, for he had been
compelled to sell the estate to Verner and had gone to live in South
America, possibly on his wife’s estates. But Fisher noticed that the
laxity of the old squire was far less hated than the efficiency of the new
squire. Verner’s history seemed to be full of smart bargains and
financial flutters that left other people short of money and temper. But
though he heard a great deal about Verner, there was one thing that
continually eluded him; something that nobody knew, that even Saltoun had
not known. He could not find out how Verner had originally made his money.</p>
<p>“He must have kept it specially dark,” said Horne Fisher to
himself. “It must be something he’s really ashamed of. Hang it
all! what <i>is</i> a man ashamed of nowadays?”</p>
<p>And as he pondered on the possibilities they grew darker and more
distorted in his mind; he thought vaguely of things remote and repulsive,
strange forms of slavery or sorcery, and then of ugly things yet more
unnatural but nearer home. The figure of Verner seemed to be blackened and
transfigured in his imagination, and to stand against varied backgrounds
and strange skies.</p>
<p>As he strode up a village street, brooding thus, his eyes encountered a
complete contrast in the face of his other rival, the Reform candidate.
Eric Hughes, with his blown blond hair and eager undergraduate face, was
just getting into his motor car and saying a few final words to his agent,
a sturdy, grizzled man named Gryce. Eric Hughes waved his hand in a
friendly fashion; but Gryce eyed him with some hostility. Eric Hughes was
a young man with genuine political enthusiasms, but he knew that political
opponents are people with whom one may have to dine any day. But Mr. Gryce
was a grim little local Radical, a champion of the chapel, and one of
those happy people whose work is also their hobby. He turned his back as
the motor car drove away, and walked briskly up the sunlit high street of
the little town, whistling, with political papers sticking out of his
pocket.</p>
<p>Fisher looked pensively after the resolute figure for a moment, and then,
as if by an impulse, began to follow it. Through the busy market place,
amid the baskets and barrows of market day, under the painted wooden sign
of the Green Dragon, up a dark side entry, under an arch, and through a
tangle of crooked cobbled streets the two threaded their way, the square,
strutting figure in front and the lean, lounging figure behind him, like
his shadow in the sunshine. At length they came to a brown brick house
with a brass plate, on which was Mr. Gryce’s name, and that
individual turned and beheld his pursuer with a stare.</p>
<p>“Could I have a word with you, sir?” asked Horne Fisher,
politely. The agent stared still more, but assented civilly, and led the
other into an office littered with leaflets and hung all round with highly
colored posters which linked the name of Hughes with all the higher
interests of humanity.</p>
<p>“Mr. Horne Fisher, I believe,” said Mr. Gryce. “Much
honored by the call, of course. Can’t pretend to congratulate you on
entering the contest, I’m afraid; you won’t expect that. Here
we’ve been keeping the old flag flying for freedom and reform, and
you come in and break the battle line.”</p>
<p>For Mr. Elijah Gryce abounded in military metaphors and in denunciations
of militarism. He was a square-jawed, blunt-featured man with a pugnacious
cock of the eyebrow. He had been pickled in the politics of that
countryside from boyhood, he knew everybody’s secrets, and
electioneering was the romance of his life.</p>
<p>“I suppose you think I’m devoured with ambition,” said
Horne Fisher, in his rather listless voice, “aiming at a
dictatorship and all that. Well, I think I can clear myself of the charge
of mere selfish ambition. I only want certain things done. I don’t
want to do them. I very seldom want to do anything. And I’ve come
here to say that I’m quite willing to retire from the contest if you
can convince me that we really want to do the same thing.”</p>
<p>The agent of the Reform party looked at him with an odd and slightly
puzzled expression, and before he could reply, Fisher went on in the same
level tones:</p>
<p>“You’d hardly believe it, but I keep a conscience concealed
about me; and I am in doubt about several things. For instance, we both
want to turn Verner out of Parliament, but what weapon are we to use? I’ve
heard a lot of gossip against him, but is it right to act on mere gossip?
Just as I want to be fair to you, so I want to be fair to him. If some of
the things I’ve heard are true he ought to be turned out of
Parliament and every other club in London. But I don’t want to turn
him out of Parliament if they aren’t true.”</p>
<p>At this point the light of battle sprang into Mr. Gryce’s eyes and
he became voluble, not to say violent. He, at any rate, had no doubt that
the stories were true; he could testify, to his own knowledge, that they
were true. Verner was not only a hard landlord, but a mean landlord, a
robber as well as a rackrenter; any gentleman would be justified in
hounding him out. He had cheated old Wilkins out of his freehold by a
trick fit for a pickpocket; he had driven old Mother Biddle to the
workhouse; he had stretched the law against Long Adam, the poacher, till
all the magistrates were ashamed of him.</p>
<p>“So if you’ll serve under the old banner,” concluded Mr.
Gryce, more genially, “and turn out a swindling tyrant like that, I’m
sure you’ll never regret it.”</p>
<p>“And if that is the truth,” said Horne Fisher, “are you
going to tell it?”</p>
<p>“What do you mean? Tell the truth?” demanded Gryce.</p>
<p>“I mean you are going to tell the truth as you have just told it,”
replied Fisher. “You are going to placard this town with the
wickedness done to old Wilkins. You are going to fill the newspapers with
the infamous story of Mrs. Biddle. You are going to denounce Verner from a
public platform, naming him for what he did and naming the poacher he did
it to. And you’re going to find out by what trade this man made the
money with which he bought the estate; and when you know the truth, as I
said before, of course you are going to tell it. Upon those terms I come
under the old flag, as you call it, and haul down my little pennon.”</p>
<p>The agent was eying him with a curious expression, surly but not entirely
unsympathetic. “Well,” he said, slowly, “you have to do
these things in a regular way, you know, or people don’t understand.
I’ve had a lot of experience, and I’m afraid what you say
wouldn’t do. People understand slanging squires in a general way,
but those personalities aren’t considered fair play. Looks like
hitting below the belt.”</p>
<p>“Old Wilkins hasn’t got a belt, I suppose,” replied
Horne Fisher. “Verner can hit him anyhow, and nobody must say a
word. It’s evidently very important to have a belt. But apparently
you have to be rather high up in society to have one. Possibly,” he
added, thoughtfully—“possibly the explanation of the phrase
‘a belted earl,’ the meaning of which has always escaped me.”</p>
<p>“I mean those personalities won’t do,” returned Gryce,
frowning at the table.</p>
<p>“And Mother Biddle and Long Adam, the poacher, are not
personalities,” said Fisher, “and suppose we mustn’t ask
how Verner made all the money that enabled him to become—a
personality.”</p>
<p>Gryce was still looking at him under lowering brows, but the singular
light in his eyes had brightened. At last he said, in another and much
quieter voice:</p>
<p>“Look here, sir. I like you, if you don’t mind my saying so. I
think you are really on the side of the people and I’m sure you’re
a brave man. A lot braver than you know, perhaps. We daren’t touch
what you propose with a barge pole; and so far from wanting you in the old
party, we’d rather you ran your own risk by yourself. But because I
like you and respect your pluck, I’ll do you a good turn before we
part. I don’t want you to waste time barking up the wrong tree. You
talk about how the new squire got the money to buy, and the ruin of the
old squire, and all the rest of it. Well, I’ll give you a hint about
that, a hint about something precious few people know.”</p>
<p>“I am very grateful,” said Fisher, gravely. “What is it?”</p>
<p>“It’s in two words,” said the other. “The new
squire was quite poor when he bought. The old squire was quite rich when
he sold.”</p>
<p>Horne Fisher looked at him thoughtfully as he turned away abruptly and
busied himself with the papers on his desk. Then Fisher uttered a short
phrase of thanks and farewell, and went out into the street, still very
thoughtful.</p>
<p>His reflection seemed to end in resolution, and, falling into a more rapid
stride, he passed out of the little town along a road leading toward the
gate of the great park, the country seat of Sir Francis Verner. A glitter
of sunlight made the early winter more like a late autumn, and the dark
woods were touched here and there with red and golden leaves, like the
last rays of a lost sunset. From a higher part of the road he had seen the
long, classical facade of the great house with its many windows, almost
immediately beneath him, but when the road ran down under the wall of the
estate, topped with towering trees behind, he realized that it was half a
mile round to the lodge gates. After walking for a few minutes along the
lane, however, he came to a place where the wall had cracked and was in
process of repair. As it was, there was a great gap in the gray masonry
that looked at first as black as a cavern and only showed at a second
glance the twilight of the twinkling trees. There was something
fascinating about that unexpected gate, like the opening of a fairy tale.</p>
<p>Horne Fisher had in him something of the aristocrat, which is very near to
the anarchist. It was characteristic of him that he turned into this dark
and irregular entry as casually as into his own front door, merely
thinking that it would be a short cut to the house. He made his way
through the dim wood for some distance and with some difficulty, until
there began to shine through the trees a level light, in lines of silver,
which he did not at first understand. The next moment he had come out into
the daylight at the top of a steep bank, at the bottom of which a path ran
round the rim of a large ornamental lake. The sheet of water which he had
seen shimmering through the trees was of considerable extent, but was
walled in on every side with woods which were not only dark, but decidedly
dismal. At one end of the path was a classical statue of some nameless
nymph, and at the other end it was flanked by two classical urns; but the
marble was weather-stained and streaked with green and gray. A hundred
other signs, smaller but more significant, told him that he had come on
some outlying corner of the grounds neglected and seldom visited. In the
middle of the lake was what appeared to be an island, and on the island
what appeared to be meant for a classical temple, not open like a temple
of the winds, but with a blank wall between its Doric pillars. We may say
it only seemed like an island, because a second glance revealed a low
causeway of flat stones running up to it from the shore and turning it
into a peninsula. And certainly it only seemed like a temple, for nobody
knew better than Horne Fisher that no god had ever dwelt in that shrine.</p>
<p>“That’s what makes all this classical landscape gardening so
desolate,” he said to himself. “More desolate than Stonehenge
or the Pyramids. We don’t believe in Egyptian mythology, but the
Egyptians did; and I suppose even the Druids believed in Druidism. But the
eighteenth-century gentleman who built these temples didn’t believe
in Venus or Mercury any more than we do; that’s why the reflection
of those pale pillars in the lake is truly only the shadow of a shade.
They were men of the age of Reason; they, who filled their gardens with
these stone nymphs, had less hope than any men in all history of really
meeting a nymph in the forest.”</p>
<p>His monologue stopped abruptly with a sharp noise like a thundercrack that
rolled in dreary echoes round the dismal mere. He knew at once what it was—somebody
had fired off a gun. But as to the meaning of it he was momentarily
staggered, and strange thoughts thronged into his mind. The next moment he
laughed; for he saw lying a little way along the path below him the dead
bird that the shot had brought down.</p>
<p>At the same moment, however, he saw something else, which interested him
more. A ring of dense trees ran round the back of the island temple,
framing the facade of it in dark foliage, and he could have sworn he saw a
stir as of something moving among the leaves. The next moment his
suspicion was confirmed, for a rather ragged figure came from under the
shadow of the temple and began to move along the causeway that led to the
bank. Even at that distance the figure was conspicuous by its great height
and Fisher could see that the man carried a gun under his arm. There came
back into his memory at once the name Long Adam, the poacher.</p>
<p>With a rapid sense of strategy he sometimes showed, Fisher sprang from the
bank and raced round the lake to the head of the little pier of stones. If
once a man reached the mainland he could easily vanish into the woods. But
when Fisher began to advance along the stones toward the island, the man
was cornered in a blind alley and could only back toward the temple.
Putting his broad shoulders against it, he stood as if at bay; he was a
comparatively young man, with fine lines in his lean face and figure and a
mop of ragged red hair. The look in his eyes might well have been
disquieting to anyone left alone with him on an island in the middle of a
lake.</p>
<p>“Good morning,” said Horne Fisher, pleasantly. “I
thought at first you were a murderer. But it seems unlikely, somehow, that
the partridge rushed between us and died for love of me, like the heroines
in the romances; so I suppose you are a poacher.”</p>
<p>“I suppose you would call me a poacher,” answered the man; and
his voice was something of a surprise coming from such a scarecrow; it had
that hard fastidiousness to be found in those who have made a fight for
their own refinement among rough surroundings. “I consider I have a
perfect right to shoot game in this place. But I am well aware that people
of your sort take me for a thief, and I suppose you will try to land me in
jail.”</p>
<p>“There are preliminary difficulties,” replied Fisher. “To
begin with, the mistake is flattering, but I am not a gamekeeper. Still
less am I three gamekeepers, who would be, I imagine, about your fighting
weight. But I confess I have another reason for not wanting to jail you.”</p>
<p>“And what is that?” asked the other.</p>
<p>“Only that I quite agree with you,” answered Fisher. “I
don’t exactly say you have a right to poach, but I never could see
that it was as wrong as being a thief. It seems to me against the whole
normal notion of property that a man should own something because it flies
across his garden. He might as well own the wind, or think he could write
his name on a morning cloud. Besides, if we want poor people to respect
property we must give them some property to respect. You ought to have
land of your own; and I’m going to give you some if I can.”</p>
<p>“Going to give me some land!” repeated Long Adam.</p>
<p>“I apologize for addressing you as if you were a public meeting,”
said Fisher, “but I am an entirely new kind of public man who says
the same thing in public and in private. I’ve said this to a hundred
huge meetings throughout the country, and I say it to you on this queer
little island in this dismal pond. I would cut up a big estate like this
into small estates for everybody, even for poachers. I would do in England
as they did in Ireland—buy the big men out, if possible; get them
out, anyhow. A man like you ought to have a little place of his own. I don’t
say you could keep pheasants, but you might keep chickens.”</p>
<p>The man stiffened suddenly and he seemed at once to blanch and flame at
the promise as if it were a threat.</p>
<p>“Chickens!” he repeated, with a passion of contempt.</p>
<p>“Why do you object?” asked the placid candidate. “Because
keeping hens is rather a mild amusement for a poacher? What about poaching
eggs?”</p>
<p>“Because I am not a poacher,” cried Adam, in a rending voice
that rang round the hollow shrines and urns like the echoes of his gun.
“Because the partridge lying dead over there is my partridge.
Because the land you are standing on is my land. Because my own land was
only taken from me by a crime, and a worse crime than poaching. This has
been a single estate for hundreds and hundreds of years, and if you or any
meddlesome mountebank comes here and talks of cutting it up like a cake,
if I ever hear a word more of you and your leveling lies—”</p>
<p>“You seem to be a rather turbulent public,” observed Horne
Fisher, “but do go on. What will happen if I try to divide this
estate decently among decent people?”</p>
<p>The poacher had recovered a grim composure as he replied. “There
will be no partridge to rush in between.”</p>
<p>With that he turned his back, evidently resolved to say no more, and
walked past the temple to the extreme end of the islet, where he stood
staring into the water. Fisher followed him, but, when his repeated
questions evoked no answer, turned back toward the shore. In doing so he
took a second and closer look at the artificial temple, and noted some
curious things about it. Most of these theatrical things were as thin as
theatrical scenery, and he expected the classic shrine to be a shallow
thing, a mere shell or mask. But there was some substantial bulk of it
behind, buried in the trees, which had a gray, labyrinthian look, like
serpents of stone, and lifted a load of leafy towers to the sky. But what
arrested Fisher’s eye was that in this bulk of gray-white stone
behind there was a single door with great, rusty bolts outside; the bolts,
however, were not shot across so as to secure it. Then he walked round the
small building, and found no other opening except one small grating like a
ventilator, high up in the wall. He retraced his steps thoughtfully along
the causeway to the banks of the lake, and sat down on the stone steps
between the two sculptured funeral urns. Then he lit a cigarette and
smoked it in ruminant manner; eventually he took out a notebook and wrote
down various phrases, numbering and renumbering them till they stood in
the following order: “(1) Squire Hawker disliked his first wife. (2)
He married his second wife for her money. (3) Long Adam says the estate is
really his. (4) Long Adam hangs round the island temple, which looks like
a prison. (5) Squire Hawker was not poor when he gave up the estate. (6)
Verner was poor when he got the estate.”</p>
<p>He gazed at these notes with a gravity which gradually turned to a hard
smile, threw away his cigarette, and resumed his search for a short cut to
the great house. He soon picked up the path which, winding among clipped
hedges and flower beds, brought him in front of its long Palladian facade.
It had the usual appearance of being, not a private house, but a sort of
public building sent into exile in the provinces.</p>
<p>He first found himself in the presence of the butler, who really looked
much older than the building, for the architecture was dated as Georgian;
but the man’s face, under a highly unnatural brown wig, was wrinkled
with what might have been centuries. Only his prominent eyes were alive
and alert, as if with protest. Fisher glanced at him, and then stopped and
said:</p>
<p>“Excuse me. Weren’t you with the late squire, Mr. Hawker?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said the man, gravely. “Usher is my name.
What can I do for you?”</p>
<p>“Only take me into Sir Francis Verner,” replied the visitor.</p>
<p>Sir Francis Verner was sitting in an easy chair beside a small table in a
large room hung with tapestries. On the table were a small flask and
glass, with the green glimmer of a liqueur and a cup of black coffee. He
was clad in a quiet gray suit with a moderately harmonious purple tie; but
Fisher saw something about the turn of his fair mustache and the lie of
his flat hair—it suddenly revealed that his name was Franz Werner.</p>
<p>“You are Mr. Horne Fisher,” he said. “Won’t you
sit down?”</p>
<p>“No, thank you,” replied Fisher. “I fear this is not a
friendly occasion, and I shall remain standing. Possibly you know that I
am already standing—standing for Parliament, in fact—”</p>
<p>“I am aware we are political opponents,” replied Verner,
raising his eyebrows. “But I think it would be better if we fought
in a sporting spirit; in a spirit of English fair play.”</p>
<p>“Much better,” assented Fisher. “It would be much better
if you were English and very much better if you had ever played fair. But
what I’ve come to say can be said very shortly. I don’t quite
know how we stand with the law about that old Hawker story, but my chief
object is to prevent England being entirely ruled by people like you. So
whatever the law would say, I will say no more if you will retire from the
election at once.”</p>
<p>“You are evidently a lunatic,” said Verner.</p>
<p>“My psychology may be a little abnormal,” replied Horne
Fisher, in a rather hazy manner. “I am subject to dreams, especially
day-dreams. Sometimes what is happening to me grows vivid in a curious
double way, as if it had happened before. Have you ever had that mystical
feeling that things have happened before?”</p>
<p>“I hope you are a harmless lunatic,” said Verner.</p>
<p>But Fisher was still staring in an absent fashion at the golden gigantic
figures and traceries of brown and red in the tapestries on the walls;
then he looked again at Verner and resumed: “I have a feeling that
this interview has happened before, here in this tapestried room, and we
are two ghosts revisiting a haunted chamber. But it was Squire Hawker who
sat where you sit and it was you who stood where I stand.” He paused
a moment and then added, with simplicity, “I suppose I am a
blackmailer, too.”</p>
<p>“If you are,” said Sir Francis, “I promise you you shall
go to jail.” But his face had a shade on it that looked like the
reflection of the green wine gleaming on the table. Horne Fisher regarded
him steadily and answered, quietly enough:</p>
<p>“Blackmailers do not always go to jail. Sometimes they go to
Parliament. But, though Parliament is rotten enough already, you shall not
go there if I can help it. I am not so criminal as you were in bargaining
with crime. You made a squire give up his country seat. I only ask you to
give up your Parliamentary seat.”</p>
<p>Sir Francis Verner sprang to his feet and looked about for one of the bell
ropes of the old-fashioned, curtained room.</p>
<p>“Where is Usher?” he cried, with a livid face.</p>
<p>“And who is Usher?” said Fisher, softly. “I wonder how
much Usher knows of the truth.”</p>
<p>Verner’s hand fell from the bell rope and, after standing for a
moment with rolling eyes, he strode abruptly from the room. Fisher went
but by the other door, by which he had entered, and, seeing no sign of
Usher, let himself out and betook himself again toward the town.</p>
<p>That night he put an electric torch in his pocket and set out alone in the
darkness to add the last links to his argument. There was much that he did
not know yet; but he thought he knew where he could find the knowledge.
The night closed dark and stormy and the black gap in the wall looked
blacker than ever; the wood seemed to have grown thicker and darker in a
day. If the deserted lake with its black woods and gray urns and images
looked desolate even by daylight, under the night and the growing storm it
seemed still more like the pool of Acheron in the land of lost souls. As
he stepped carefully along the jetty stones he seemed to be traveling
farther and farther into the abyss of night, and to have left behind him
the last points from which it would be possible to signal to the land of
the living. The lake seemed to have grown larger than a sea, but a sea of
black and slimy waters that slept with abominable serenity, as if they had
washed out the world. There was so much of this nightmare sense of
extension and expansion that he was strangely surprised to come to his
desert island so soon. But he knew it for a place of inhuman silence and
solitude; and he felt as if he had been walking for years.</p>
<p>Nerving himself to a more normal mood, he paused under one of the dark
dragon trees that branched out above him, and, taking out his torch,
turned in the direction of the door at the back of the temple. It was
unbolted as before, and the thought stirred faintly in him that it was
slightly open, though only by a crack. The more he thought of it, however,
the more certain he grew that this was but one of the common illusions of
light coming from a different angle. He studied in a more scientific
spirit the details of the door, with its rusty bolts and hinges, when he
became conscious of something very near him—indeed, nearly above his
head. Something was dangling from the tree that was not a broken branch.
For some seconds he stood as still as a stone, and as cold. What he saw
above him were the legs of a man hanging, presumably a dead man hanged.
But the next moment he knew better. The man was literally alive and
kicking; and an instant after he had dropped to the ground and turned on
the intruder. Simultaneously three or four other trees seemed to come to
life in the same fashion. Five or six other figures had fallen on their
feet from these unnatural nests. It was as if the place were an island of
monkeys. But a moment after they had made a stampede toward him, and when
they laid their hands on him he knew that they were men.</p>
<p>With the electric torch in his hand he struck the foremost of them so
furiously in the face that the man stumbled and rolled over on the slimy
grass; but the torch was broken and extinguished, leaving everything in a
denser obscurity. He flung another man flat against the temple wall, so
that he slid to the ground; but a third and fourth carried Fisher off his
feet and began to bear him, struggling, toward the doorway. Even in the
bewilderment of the battle he was conscious that the door was standing
open. Somebody was summoning the roughs from inside.</p>
<p>The moment they were within they hurled him upon a sort of bench or bed
with violence, but no damage; for the settee, or whatever it was, seemed
to be comfortably cushioned for his reception. Their violence had in it a
great element of haste, and before he could rise they had all rushed for
the door to escape. Whatever bandits they were that infested this desert
island, they were obviously uneasy about their job and very anxious to be
quit of it. He had the flying fancy that regular criminals would hardly be
in such a panic. The next moment the great door crashed to and he could
hear the bolts shriek as they shot into their place, and the feet of the
retreating men scampering and stumbling along the causeway. But rapidly as
it happened, it did not happen before Fisher had done something that he
wanted to do. Unable to rise from his sprawling attitude in that flash of
time, he had shot out one of his long legs and hooked it round the ankle
of the last man disappearing through the door. The man swayed and toppled
over inside the prison chamber, and the door closed between him and his
fleeing companions. Clearly they were in too much haste to realize that
they had left one of their company behind.</p>
<p>The man sprang to his feet again and hammered and kicked furiously at the
door. Fisher’s sense of humor began to recover from the struggle and
he sat up on his sofa with something of his native nonchalance. But as he
listened to the captive captor beating on the door of the prison, a new
and curious reflection came to him.</p>
<p>The natural course for a man thus wishing to attract his friends’
attention would be to call out, to shout as well as kick. This man was
making as much noise as he could with his feet and hands, but not a sound
came from his throat. Why couldn’t he speak? At first he thought the
man might be gagged, which was manifestly absurd. Then his fancy fell back
on the ugly idea that the man was dumb. He hardly knew why it was so ugly
an idea, but it affected his imagination in a dark and disproportionate
fashion. There seemed to be something creepy about the idea of being left
in a dark room with a deaf mute. It was almost as if such a defect were a
deformity. It was almost as if it went with other and worse deformities.
It was as if the shape he could not trace in the darkness were some shape
that should not see the sun.</p>
<p>Then he had a flash of sanity and also of insight. The explanation was
very simple, but rather interesting. Obviously the man did not use his
voice because he did not wish his voice to be recognized. He hoped to
escape from that dark place before Fisher found out who he was. And who
was he? One thing at least was clear. He was one or other of the four or
five men with whom Fisher had already talked in these parts, and in the
development of that strange story.</p>
<p>“Now I wonder who you are,” he said, aloud, with all his old
lazy urbanity. “I suppose it’s no use trying to throttle you
in order to find out; it would be displeasing to pass the night with a
corpse. Besides I might be the corpse. I’ve got no matches and I’ve
smashed my torch, so I can only speculate. Who could you be, now? Let us
think.”</p>
<p>The man thus genially addressed had desisted from drumming on the door and
retreated sullenly into a corner as Fisher continued to address him in a
flowing monologue.</p>
<p>“Probably you are the poacher who says he isn’t a poacher. He
says he’s a landed proprietor; but he will permit me to inform him
that, whatever he is, he’s a fool. What hope can there ever be of a
free peasantry in England if the peasants themselves are such snobs as to
want to be gentlemen? How can we make a democracy with no democrats? As it
is, you want to be a landlord and so you consent to be a criminal. And in
that, you know, you are rather like somebody else. And, now I think of it,
perhaps you are somebody else.”</p>
<p>There was a silence broken by breathing from the corner and the murmur of
the rising storm, that came in through the small grating above the man’s
head. Horne Fisher continued:</p>
<p>“Are you only a servant, perhaps, that rather sinister old servant
who was butler to Hawker and Verner? If so, you are certainly the only
link between the two periods. But if so, why do you degrade yourself to
serve this dirty foreigner, when you at least saw the last of a genuine
national gentry? People like you are generally at least patriotic. Doesn’t
England mean anything to you, Mr. Usher? All of which eloquence is
possibly wasted, as perhaps you are not Mr. Usher.</p>
<p>“More likely you are Verner himself; and it’s no good wasting
eloquence to make you ashamed of yourself. Nor is it any good to curse you
for corrupting England; nor are you the right person to curse. It is the
English who deserve to be cursed, and are cursed, because they allowed
such vermin to crawl into the high places of their heroes and their kings.
I won’t dwell on the idea that you’re Verner, or the
throttling might begin, after all. Is there anyone else you could be?
Surely you’re not some servant of the other rival organization. I
can’t believe you’re Gryce, the agent; and yet Gryce had a
spark of the fanatic in his eye, too; and men will do extraordinary things
in these paltry feuds of politics. Or if not the servant, is it the . . .
No, I can’t believe it . . . not the red blood of manhood and
liberty . . . not the democratic ideal . . .”</p>
<p>He sprang up in excitement, and at the same moment a growl of thunder came
through the grating beyond. The storm had broken, and with it a new light
broke on his mind. There was something else that might happen in a moment.</p>
<p>“Do you know what that means?” he cried. “It means that
God himself may hold a candle to show me your infernal face.”</p>
<p>Then next moment came a crash of thunder; but before the thunder a white
light had filled the whole room for a single split second.</p>
<p>Fisher had seen two things in front of him. One was the black-and-white
pattern of the iron grating against the sky; the other was the face in the
corner. It was the face of his brother.</p>
<p>Nothing came from Horne Fisher’s lips except a Christian name, which
was followed by a silence more dreadful than the dark. At last the other
figure stirred and sprang up, and the voice of Harry Fisher was heard for
the first time in that horrible room.</p>
<p>“You’ve seen me, I suppose,” he said, “and we may
as well have a light now. You could have turned it on at any time, if you’d
found the switch.”</p>
<p>He pressed a button in the wall and all the details of that room sprang
into something stronger than daylight. Indeed, the details were so
unexpected that for a moment they turned the captive’s rocking mind
from the last personal revelation. The room, so far from being a dungeon
cell, was more like a drawing-room, even a lady’s drawing-room,
except for some boxes of cigars and bottles of wine that were stacked with
books and magazines on a side table. A second glance showed him that the
more masculine fittings were quite recent, and that the more feminine
background was quite old. His eye caught a strip of faded tapestry, which
startled him into speech, to the momentary oblivion of bigger matters.</p>
<p>“This place was furnished from the great house,” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the other, “and I think you know why.”</p>
<p>“I think I do,” said Horne Fisher, “and before I go on
to more extraordinary things I will, say what I think. Squire Hawker
played both the bigamist and the bandit. His first wife was not dead when
he married the Jewess; she was imprisoned on this island. She bore him a
child here, who now haunts his birthplace under the name of Long Adam. A
bankruptcy company promoter named Werner discovered the secret and
blackmailed the squire into surrendering the estate. That’s all
quite clear and very easy. And now let me go on to something more
difficult. And that is for you to explain what the devil you are doing
kidnaping your born brother.”</p>
<p>After a pause Henry Fisher answered:</p>
<p>“I suppose you didn’t expect to see me,” he said.
“But, after all, what could you expect?”’</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I don’t follow,” said Horne Fisher.</p>
<p>“I mean what else could you expect, after making such a muck of it?”
said his brother, sulkily. “We all thought you were so clever. How
could we know you were going to be—well, really, such a rotten
failure?”</p>
<p>“This is rather curious,” said the candidate, frowning.
“Without vanity, I was not under the impression that my candidature
was a failure. All the big meetings were successful and crowds of people
have promised me votes.”</p>
<p>“I should jolly well think they had,” said Henry, grimly.
“You’ve made a landslide with your confounded acres and a cow,
and Verner can hardly get a vote anywhere. Oh, it’s too rotten for
anything!”</p>
<p>“What on earth do you mean?”</p>
<p>“Why, you lunatic,” cried Henry, in tones of ringing
sincerity, “you don’t suppose you were meant to <i>win</i> the
seat, did you? Oh, it’s too childish! I tell you Verner’s got
to get in. Of course he’s got to get in. He’s to have the
Exchequer next session, and there’s the Egyptian loan and Lord knows
what else. We only wanted you to split the Reform vote because accidents
might happen after Hughes had made a score at Barkington.”</p>
<p>“I see,” said Fisher, “and you, I think, are a pillar
and ornament of the Reform party. As you say, I am not clever.”</p>
<p>The appeal to party loyalty fell on deaf ears; for the pillar of Reform
was brooding on other things. At last he said, in a more troubled voice:</p>
<p>“I didn’t want you to catch me; I knew it would be a shock.
But I tell you what, you never would have caught me if I hadn’t come
here myself, to see they didn’t ill treat you and to make sure
everything was as comfortable as it could be.” There was even a sort
of break in his voice as he added, “I got those cigars because I
knew you liked them.”</p>
<p>Emotions are queer things, and the idiocy of this concession suddenly
softened Horne Fisher like an unfathomable pathos.</p>
<p>“Never mind, old chap,” he said; “we’ll say no
more about it. I’ll admit that you’re really as kind-hearted
and affectionate a scoundrel and hypocrite as ever sold himself to ruin
his country. There, I can’t say handsomer than that. Thank you for
the cigars, old man. I’ll have one if you don’t mind.”</p>
<p>By the time that Horne Fisher had ended his telling of this story to
Harold March they had come out into one of the public parks and taken a
seat on a rise of ground overlooking wide green spaces under a blue and
empty sky; and there was something incongruous in the words with which the
narration ended.</p>
<p>“I have been in that room ever since,” said Horne Fisher.
“I am in it now. I won the election, but I never went to the House.
My life has been a life in that little room on that lonely island. Plenty
of books and cigars and luxuries, plenty of knowledge and interest and
information, but never a voice out of that tomb to reach the world
outside. I shall probably die there.” And he smiled as he looked
across the vast green park to the gray horizon.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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