THE LEAVENWORTH CASE: A LAWYER'S STORY
by Anna Katharine Green
XXIX
THE MISSING WITNESS
"I fled and cried out death."
--Milton.
"MR RAYMOND!"
The voice was low and searching; it reached
me in my dreams, waked
me, and caused me to look up. Morning had begun to break, and by its
light I saw, standing in the open door leading into the dining-room,
the forlorn figure of the tramp who had been admitted into the house
the night before. Angry and perplexed, I was about to bid her be gone,
when, to my great surprise, she pulled out a red handkerchief from
her
pocket, and I recognized Q.
"Read that," said he, hastily advancing and
putting a slip of
paper into my hand. And, without another word or look, left the room,
closing the door behind him.
Rising in considerable agitation, I took it
to the window, and by
the rapidly increasing light, succeeded in making out the rudely
scrawled lines as follows:
"She is here; I have seen her;
in the room marked with a cross in the
accompanying plan. Wait till eight o'clock, then go up.
I will contrive some
means of getting Mrs. B— out of the house."
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Sketched below this was the following plan
of the upper floor:
Hannah, then, was in the small back room over
the dining-room, and
I had not been deceived in thinking I had heard steps overhead, the
evening before. Greatly relieved, and yet at the same time much moved
at the near prospect of being brought face to face with one who we
had
every reason to believe was acquainted with the dreadful secret
involved in the Leavenworth murder, I lay down once more, and
endeavored to catch another hour's rest. But I soon gave up the effort
in despair, and contented myself with listening to the sounds of
awakening life which now began to make themselves heard in the house
and neighborhood.
As Q had closed the door after him, I could
only faintly hear Mrs.
Belden when she came down-stairs. But the short, surprised exclamation
which she uttered upon reaching the kitchen and finding the tramp gone
and the back-door wide open, came plainly enough to my ears, and for
a
moment I was not sure but that Q had made a mistake in thus leaving
so
unceremoniously. But he had not studied Mrs. Belden's character in
vain. As she came, in the course of her preparations for breakfast,
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into the room adjoining mine, I could hear her murmur to herself:
"Poor thing! She has lived so long in the
fields and at the
roadside, she finds it unnatural to be cooped up in the house all
night."
The trial of that breakfast! The effort to
eat and appear
unconcerned, to chat and make no mistake,—may I never be called
upon to go through such another! But at last it was over, and I was
left
free to await in my own room the time for the dreaded though
much-to-be-desired interview. Slowly the minutes passed; eight o'clock
struck, when, just as the last vibration ceased, there came a loud
knock at the backdoor, and a little boy burst into the kitchen, crying
at the top of his voice: "Papa's got a fit! Oh, Mrs. Belden! papa's
got a fit; do come!"
Rising, as was natural, I hastened towards
the kitchen, meeting Mrs.
Belden's anxious face in the doorway.
"A poor wood-chopper down the street has fallen
in a fit," she
said. "Will you please watch over the house while I see what I can
do
for him? I won't be absent any longer than I can help."
And almost without waiting for my reply, she
caught up a shawl,
threw it over her head, and followed the urchin, who was in a state
of
great excitement, out into the street.
Instantly the silence of death seemed to fill
the house, and a dread
the greatest I had ever experienced settled upon me. To leave the
kitchen, go up those stairs, and confront that girl seemed for the
moment beyond my power; but, once on the stair, I found myself
relieved from the especial dread which had overwhelmed me, and
possessed, instead, of a sort of
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combative curiosity that led me to throw open the door which I saw
at the top with a certain fierceness new to my nature, and not altogether
suitable, perhaps, to the occasion.
I found myself in a large bedroom, evidently
the one occupied by
Mrs. Belden the night before. Barely stopping to note certain evidences
of her having passed a restless night, I passed on to the door leading
into the room marked with a cross in the plan drawn for me by Q. It
was
a rough affair, made of pine boards rudely painted. Pausing before
it,
I listened. All was still. Raising the latch, I endeavored to enter.
The door was locked. Pausing again, I bent my ear to the keyhole. Not
a
sound came from within; the grave itself could not have been stiller.
Awe-struck and irresolute, I looked about me and questioned what I
had
best do. Suddenly I remembered that, in the plan Q had given me, I
had
seen intimation of another door leading into this same room from the
one on the opposite side of the hall. Going hastily around to it, I
tried it with my hand. But it was as fast as the other. Convinced at
last that nothing was left me but force, I spoke for the first time,
and, calling the girl by name, commanded her to open the door.
Receiving no response, I said aloud with an accent of severity:
"Hannah Chester, you are discovered; if you
do not open the door,
we shall be obliged to break it down; save us the trouble, then, and
open immediately."
Still no reply.
Going back a step, I threw my whole weight
against the door. It
creaked ominously, but still resisted. Stopping only long enough to
be
sure no movement had taken place within, I pressed against it once
more, this time with all my strength, when it flew from its hinges,
and I
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fell forward into a room so stifling, chill, and dark that I paused
for a
moment to collect my scattered senses before venturing to look around
me. It was well I did so. In another moment, the pallor and fixity
of the
pretty Irish face staring upon me from amidst the tumbled clothes of
a bed,
drawn up against the wall at my side, struck me with so deathlike a
chill
that, had it not been for that one instant of preparation, I should
have been
seriously dismayed. As it was, I could not prevent a feeling of sickly
apprehension from seizing me as I turned towards the silent figure
stretched so near, and observed with what marble-like repose it lay
beneath the patchwork quilt drawn across it, asking myself if sleep
could be indeed so like death in its appearance. For that it was a
sleeping woman I beheld, I did not seriously doubt. There were too
many
evidences of careless life in the room for any other inference. The
clothes, left just as she had stepped from them in a circle on the
floor; the liberal plate of food placed in waiting for her on the
chair by the door, —food amongst which I recognized, even in this
casual glance, the same dish which we had had for breakfast —all
and everything in the room spoke of robust life and reckless belief
in
the morrow.
And yet so white was the brow turned up to
the bare beams of the
unfinished wall above her, so glassy the look of the half-opened eyes,
so motionless the arm lying half under, half over, the edge of the
coverlid that it was impossible not to shrink from contact with a
creature so sunk in unconsciousness. But contact seemed to be
necessary; any cry which I could raise at that moment would be
ineffectual enough to pierce those dull ears. Nerving myself,
therefore, I stooped and lifted the hand which lay with its telltale
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scar mockingly uppermost, intending to speak, call, do something,
anything, to arouse her. But at the first touch of her hand on mine
an
unspeakable horror thrilled me. It was not only icy cold, but stiff.
Dropping it in my agitation, I started back and again surveyed the
face. Great God! when did life ever look like that? What sleep ever
wore such pallid hues, such accusing fixedness? Bending once more I
listened at the lips. Not a breath, nor a stir. Shocked to the core
of
my being, I made one final effort. Tearing down the clothes, I laid
my
hand upon her heart. It was pulseless as stone.
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The Leavenworth Case
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