<h2><SPAN name="#id8">CHAPTER VII--The Woman Who Knew</SPAN></h2>
<p>Joan went straight from Cornwall to
London and the Bloomsbury boarding-house
in which some of her curiously earned
money was invested. All was to begin
over again now; but to the girl this idea
brought inspiration rather than discouragement,
for the world was still her oyster, if
she could open it, and experience had already
taught her some dexterity in the use of the
knife. At this house in Woburn Place
she had the right to live without paying,
while she "looked round," and Miss Witt,
who owed her present position to Joan, was
only too delighted to welcome her benefactress.</p>
<p>The place was doing well, and the corner
of difficulty had been turned; this was the
news the manager-housekeeper had to give
Joan. Every room but one was full, and so
far the boarders seemed to be "good pay,"
with perhaps a single exception.</p>
<p>"There's only the little top floor back
that's empty," cheerfully went on Miss Witt.
"Of course, I will take that and give you mine."</p>
<p>"You'll do nothing of the sort, my dear
woman," said Joan. "I like running up
and down stairs. It does me good. Besides,
I'd rather be at the back. There's a tree,
or something that once tried hard to be a
tree, to look at, as I know well, for the room
used to be mine; so there's no use talking
any more about that matter--it's settled.
You stay where you are, and I will rise, like
cream, to the top. Now tell me about
this doubtful person you are afraid won't
pay. Is it a man or a woman?"</p>
<p>"A woman," replied Miss Witt, "and
one of the strangest beings I ever saw. It
is a great comfort to me that you are here,
miss, for you can decide what is to be done
about her. She hasn't paid her board for a
fortnight, but she keeps pleading that as
soon as she is well, and can go out, she will
get remittances which have been delayed."</p>
<p>"Oh, she is ill, then?"</p>
<p>"So she says. But I'm not sure, miss,
it isn't just an excuse to work upon my
compassion, for why should she have to go
out for remittances? She stops in her room,
lying upon a sofa, and makes a deal of bother
with her meals being carried up so many
pairs of stairs, though it's hardly worth
while her having them at all, she eats so
little. Yet she doesn't look a bit different
from what she did when she was supposed
to be well and going about as much like
anybody else as one of her sort could <em class="italics">ever</em> do."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" asked Joan,
whose curiosity was fired.</p>
<p>"Only that she is, and was, more a ghost
than a human being, with her great, hollow,
black eyes, like burning coals, set deep under
her thick eyebrows and overhanging
forehead; with her thin cheeks--why, miss,
they almost meet in the middle--her yellow-white
skin, her tall, gliding figure and stealthy
way of walking, so that you never hear a
sound till she's at your back."</p>
<p>"Queer kind of boarder," commented Joan.</p>
<p>"That she is, miss; and when she applied
for a room, I would have said we were full
up, but in those days we had several of our
best rooms empty, and, strange as she was,
her clothes were so good, and the luggage
on the four-wheeler waiting outside was so
promising, as you might say, that it did
seem a pity to send away two guineas a
week because Providence had given it a
scarecrow face. So I showed her the best
back room on the top floor----"</p>
<p>"Next to mine," cut in Joan.</p>
<p>"If you will have it so, miss; and there
she's been for the last six weeks, not having
paid a penny since the end of the first month."</p>
<p>"What is the ghost's name and age?"
the girl went on with her catechism.</p>
<p>"Her name, if one was to take her word,
which I'm far from being certain of, is
Mrs. Gone; and as for her age, miss, she might
be almost anywhere between fifty and a
hundred."</p>
<p>"What a clever old lady!" laughed the
girl. "Well, we can't turn the poor wretch
away while she's ill, if she is ill, can we? I
know too well what it is to be alone in the
world and down on your luck, to be hard
on anybody else, especially a woman. We
must give Mrs. Gone the benefit of the doubt
for a little while. But your description
has quite interested me; I should like to see
this ghost who doesn't walk."</p>
<p>"The house is the same as yours, miss,"
said Miss Witt. "You have the right to
go into her room at any time, more
particularly as she hasn't paid for it."</p>
<p>"Perhaps I'll carry up her dinner this
evening, by way of an excuse," returned
Joan--"if you think she could bear the
shock of seeing a strange face."</p>
<p>Upon this, Miss Witt, who adored the
girl, protested that, in her opinion, the sight
of such a face could only be a pleasure to
any person and in any circumstances. Joan
laughed at the compliment, but she did not
forget her intention. Mrs. Gone's meals were
usually taken up a few minutes before the
gong summoned the guests to the dining-room,
because it was easier to spare a servant
then than later, and it was just after the
dressing-bell had rung that the girl knocked
at the "ghost's" door.</p>
<p>Joan was surprised to find her heart
quickening its beats as she waited for a
bidding to "Come in!" One would think
that a sight of this old woman who would
not pay her board was an exciting event!
She smiled at herself, but the smile faded
as she threw open the door in answer to a
faint murmur on the other side. Miss Witt's
sketch of Mrs. Gone had not been an exaggeration.</p>
<p>There she lay on a sofa by the window,
her face gleaming white in the twilight;
and it was a wonderful face. A shiver went
creeping up and down Joan's spine, as a flame
leaped out from the shadowy hollows of
two sunken eyes to hers.</p>
<p>"This woman has been some one in particular--some
one extraordinary," the girl thought
quickly; and as politely as if she had
addressed a duchess, she explained her intrusion.
"The servants were busy, and I offered
to carry up your dinner," Joan said. "I
arrived only to-day; and as Miss Witt
looks upon me as a sort of proprietor, she
told me how ill you have been. I hope
you are better."</p>
<p>The old woman with the strange face
looked steadily at the beautiful girl in the
pretty, simple, evening frock which was to
grace the boarding-house dinner. "Did Miss
Witt tell you nothing else?" she asked, in a
voice which would have made the fortune
of a tragic actress in the death scene of some
aged queen.</p>
<p>"She told me that she was afraid you
were in trouble," promptly answered Joan,
who had her own way of dressing the truth.
By this time the girl had entered the room,
set the tray on a table near the sofa, and
taking a rose from her bodice, laid it on
the pile of plates. This she did on the
impulse of the moment, not with a preconceived
idea of effect, and she was rewarded
by a slight softening of the tense muscles
round the once handsome mouth.</p>
<p>"I hope you like roses?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Yes," Mrs. Gone answered brusquely.
"Why do you give it to me?"</p>
<p>"Because I'm sorry you are ill, and
perhaps lonely," said Joan, able for once to
account for an action without a single mental
reserve. "I have had a good deal of worry
in my life, and can sympathise with others,
as I told Miss Witt when she spoke of you.
One reason why I came was to say that you
needn't distress yourself about your indebtedness
to this house. Try to get well, and
pay at your convenience. You shall not be pressed."</p>
<p>Joan had not meant to say all this when
she arranged to have a sight of Mrs. Gone.
She had merely wished to satisfy her
curiosity; but now she felt impelled to utter
these words of encouragement--why, she
did not know, for she had not conceived
any sudden fancy for the sinister old woman.
On the contrary, the white face, with its
burning eyes and secretive mouth, inspired
her with something like fear. A woman
with such a face could not have many sweet,
redeeming graces of character or heart.
There was, to supersensitive nerves, an
atmosphere of evil as well as mystery about her;
but though Joan felt this, it gave a keener
edge to her interest.</p>
<p>"Thank you," said Mrs. Gone. "You are
kind, as well as pretty. I do not like young
people usually, but I might learn to like
you. I hope you will come again."</p>
<p>The words were a dismissal and a compliment.
Joan accepted them as both. She
promised to repeat her visit, and after lighting
the shaded lamp on the table, left Mrs. Gone
to eat her dinner.</p>
<p>The girl would have given much to lift
the veil of mystery wrapped about this
woman's past and personality. She even
boasted to herself that she would find
some way, sooner or later, at least to peep
under its edge; but day after day passed,
and though she went often to Mrs. Gone's
room, and was always thanked for her kind
attentions, she seemed no nearer to attaining
her object than at first. Beyond occupying
a room which she did not pay for, Mrs. Gone
was not an expensive guest. She ate almost
nothing; and when Joan had been in Woburn
Place for a week, the white face with its
burning eyes had become so drawn with
suffering that in real compassion the girl
offered to call a doctor at her own expense.
But Mrs. Gone would not consent. "I hate
doctors," she said. "No one could tell me
more about myself than I know."</p>
<p>The girl's own affairs were absorbing
enough, for she saw no new opening yet
for her ambition; still, she found time to
think a great deal about Mrs. Gone. "Am
I a soft-hearted idiot, allowing myself to be
imposed upon by a professional 'sponge'?"
she wondered; "or is there something in
my odd feeling that I shall be rewarded
for all I do for this extraordinary woman?"</p>
<p>Such questions were passing through her
mind one night when she had gone to bed
late, after being out at the theatre. She had
been in Woburn Place eight days, and was
growing impatient, for none of the boarders
were of the kind to be used as "stepping-stones,"
and none of the Society and financial
papers, which she studied, afforded any
hopeful suggestion for another phase of her
career. To be sure, the young man with
whom she had consented to go to the theatre
was employed as a reporter for a great
London daily, and she had been "nice"
to him, with the vague idea that she might
somehow be able to profit by his infatuation;
but at present she did not see her way, and
it appeared that she was wasting sweetness
on the desert air.</p>
<p>"I suppose," Joan said to herself, turning
over her hot pillow, "that if I were an
ordinary girl, I might be contented to go on as I
am. I can live here for nothing, and get
enough interest on the money I've put into
this concern to buy clothes and pay my
way about, with strict economy. All the
men in the house are in love with me; and
if they were more interesting, that might
be amusing. But I'm not born to be
contented with small people or things. I don't
want clothes. I want creations. I don't
want the admiration of young men from
the City. I want to be appreciated by
princes. I believe I must have been a
princess in another state of existence, for I
always feel that the best of everything is
hardly good enough for me."</p>
<p>As she thought this, half laughing, there
came a sound from the next room--that
room which might have been the grave of the
strange woman who occupied it, so dead
was the silence which reigned there day and
night. Never before had Joan heard the
least noise on the other side of the dividing
wall, but now she was startled by a crash as
of breaking glass, followed by the dull, soft
thud which could only have been made by
the fall of a human body. Joan sat up,
her heart thumping, and it gave a frightened
bound as a groan came brokenly to her ears.</p>
<p>She waited no longer, but slipped her bare
feet into a pair of satin <em class="italics">mules</em>, flung on her
dressing-gown, and in another moment was
out of her room and in the dark passage,
fumbling for the handle of the other door.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gone kept her door unlocked in the
daytime, perhaps to save herself the trouble
of rising to admit servants, or her only
visitor, Joan Carthew; but the girl feared
that it might not be so at night, and that
before she could penetrate the mystery of
the fall and the groan, the whole house
would have to be disturbed. She was
relieved, therefore, to find that the door yielded
to her touch. Pushing it open, she listened
for an instant, but only the dead silence
throbbed in her ears.</p>
<p>As she got into her dressing-gown, with
characteristic presence of mind Joan had
caught up a box of matches and put it into
her pocket. The room was as dark as the
passage outside, and the girl struck a match
before crossing the threshold. The little
flame leaped and brightened. Something on
the floor glimmered white in the darkness,
and Joan did not need to bend down to
know what it was.</p>
<p>The gas was close to the door, and she
lighted it with the dying match, which burnt
her fingers. Then she saw clearly what had
happened. In tottering uncertainly across
the floor, Mrs. Gone had knocked over a
small table holding a china candlestick, a
water-bottle, and a goblet. She had fallen,
and after uttering that one groan which had
crept to Joan's ears, she had lost consciousness.</p>
<p>The girl's quick eyes sought for an
explanation of the catastrophe. The long, white
figure lay at some distance from the bed, and
near the mantel. On the mantel stood a
curiously shaped, dark green bottle, which
Joan had once been requested to give to
Mrs. Gone. She had seen a few drops of some
colourless liquid poured into a wineglass of
water; and when it had been swallowed, the
ghastly pallor of the face had changed to a
more natural tint. Mrs. Gone had then
said that she took the medicine when very
ill. If she used it oftener, its effect would
disappear, and she would have nothing left
to turn to at the worst.</p>
<p>"It was that bottle she was trying to
find in the dark," Joan guessed. "She
must have been too ill to try and light the
gas. Now, how much was it that I saw her
pour out? It might have been ten drops--no more."</p>
<p>So thinking, the girl filled a glass on the
wash-handstand a third full of water,
measured ten drops of the medicine with a steady
hand, and raising Mrs. Gone's head, put the
tumbler to her lips. The strong teeth seemed
clenched, but some of the liquid must have
passed their barrier, for the dark eyes opened
wide and looked up into Joan's face.</p>
<p>"Too late----" the woman panted, with
a gurgling in the throat which choked her
words. "Dying--now. Wish that--you--you
have been kind--only one in the world.
My secret--you might have--Lord Northmuir
would have given----"</p>
<p>The voice trailed away into silence. The
gurgle died into a rattle; the woman's
breast heaved and was still. Her eyes had
not closed, but though they stared into
Joan's, the spark of life behind their windows
had gone out. Mrs. Gone was dead, and
had taken her secret with her into the unknown.</p>
<p>Joan had never seen death before, but
there was no mistaking it. Her first impulse
was to run downstairs, call Miss Witt and a
young doctor who had his office and
bedroom on the dining-room floor. Nevertheless,
when she had laid the heavy head gently
down and sprung to her feet, she remained
standing.</p>
<p>For some minutes she stood motionless,
almost rigid, her lips pressed together, her
eyes hard and bright. Then she struck
one hand lightly upon the other, exclaiming
half aloud: "I'll do it!"</p>
<p>It seemed certain by this time that no one
had heard the crash of glass and the fall
which had alarmed her, for the house was
still. Nevertheless, Joan tiptoed to the door
and bolted it. When she had done this,
she opened all the drawers of the dressing-table
and searched them carefully for papers.
Discovering none, she left everything exactly
as she had found it. Next she examined
the pockets of the three or four dresses
hanging in the wardrobe, but they were limp
and empty. There were still left the leather
portmanteau and handbag which had
appealed to Miss Witt's respectful admiration.
Both were locked, but Joan's instinct led
her to look under the pillows on the bed, and
there lay a key-ring. She was able to open
portmanteau and bag, but not a paper of any
kind was to be seen, and the girl recalled a
remark of Miss Witt's, that never since
Mrs. Gone had become a boarder in Woburn
Place had she been known to receive or send
a letter.</p>
<p>Having assured herself that no information
was to be gained among the dead woman's
possessions, Joan unlocked the door and
went softly downstairs to rouse Miss Witt.
She justified what she had done by reason
of Mrs. Gone's last words, for she believed
that the dead woman would have made her a
present of the secret if she could.</p>
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