Murder On Christmas Eve

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Murder On Christmas Eve Page 11

by G. K. Chesterton


  ‘Why,’ said Boyne, ‘I should have thought that a rascal could pretty well profess any religion he chose.’

  ‘Yes,’ assented the other; ‘he could profess any religion; that is he could pretend to any religion, if it was all a pretence. If it was mere mechanical hypocrisy and nothing else, no doubt it could be done by a mere mechanical hypocrite. Any sort of mask can be put on any sort of face. Anybody can learn certain phrases or state verbally that he holds certain views. I can go out into the street and state that I am a Wesleyan Methodist or a Sandemanian, though I fear in no very convincing accent. But we are talking about an artist; and for the enjoyment of the artist the mask must be to some extent moulded on the face. What he makes outside him must correspond to something inside him; he can only make his effects out of some of the materials of his soul. I suppose he could have said he was a Wesleyan Methodist; but he could never be an eloquent Methodist as he can be an eloquent mystic and fatalist. I am talking of the sort of ideal such a man thinks of if he really tries to be idealistic. It was his whole game with me to be as idealistic as possible; and whenever that is attempted by that sort of man, you will generally find it is that sort of ideal. That sort of man may be dripping with gore; but he will always be able to tell you quite sincerely that Buddhism is better than Christianity. Nay, he will tell you quite sincerely that Buddhism is more Christian than Christianity. That alone is enough to throw a hideous and ghastly ray of light on his notion of Christianity.’

  ‘Upon my soul,’ said the doctor, laughing, ‘I can’t make out whether you’re denouncing or defending him.’

  ‘It isn’t defending a man to say he is a genius,’ said Father Brown. ‘Far from it. And it is simply a psychological fact that an artist will betray himself by some sort of sincerity. Leonardo da Vinci cannot draw as if he couldn’t draw. Even if he tried, it will always be a strong parody of a weak thing. This man would have made something much too fearful and wonderful out of the Wesleyan Methodist.’

  When the priest went forth again and set his face homeward, the cold had grown more intense and yet was somehow intoxicating. The trees stood up like silver candelabra of some incredible cold candlemas of purification. It was a piercing cold, like that silver sword of pure pain that once pierced the very heart of purity. But it was not a killing cold, save in the sense of seeming to kill all the mortal obstructions to our immortal and immeasurable vitality. The pale green sky of twilight, with one star like the star of Bethlehem, seemed by some strange contradiction to be a cavern of clarity. It was as if there could be a green furnace of cold which wakened all things to life like warmth, and that the deeper they went into those cold crystalline colours the more were they light like winged creatures and clear like coloured glass. It tingled with truth and it divided truth from error with a blade like ice; but all that was left had never felt so much alive. It was as if all joy were a jewel in the heart of an iceberg. The priest hardly understood his own mood as he advanced deeper and deeper into the green gloaming, drinking deeper and deeper draughts of that virginal vivacity of the air. Some forgotten muddle and morbidity seemed to be left behind, or wiped out as the snow had painted out the footprints of the man of blood. As he shuffled homewards through the snow, he muttered to himself: ‘And yet he is right enough about there being a white magic, if he only knows where to look for it.’

  Cambric Tea

  Marjorie Bowen

  The situation was bizarre; the accurately trained mind of Bevis Holroyd was impressed foremost by this; that the opening of a door would turn it into tragedy.

  ‘I am afraid I can’t stay,’ he had said pleasantly, humouring a sick man; he was too young and had not been long enough completely successful to have a professional manner but a certain balanced tolerance just showed in his attitude to this prostrate creature.

  ‘I’ve got a good many claims on my time,’ he added, ‘and I’m afraid it would be impossible. And it isn’t the least necessary, you know. You’re quite all right. I’ll come back after Christmas if you really think it worth while.’

  The patient opened one eye; he was lying flat on his back in a deep, wide-fashioned bed hung with a thick, dark, silk-lined tapestry; the room was dark for there were thick curtains of the same material drawn half across the windows, rigidly excluding all save a moiety of the pallid winter light; to make his examination Dr Holroyd had had to snap on the electric light that stood on the bedside table; he thought it a dreary unhealthy room, but had hardly found it worthwhile to say as much.

  The patient opened one eye; the other lid remained fluttering feebly over an immobile orb.

  He said in a voice both hoarse and feeble:

  ‘But, doctor, I’m being poisoned.’

  Professional curiosity and interest masked by genial incredulity instantly quickened the doctor’s attention.

  ‘My dear sir,’ he smiled, ‘poisoned by this nasty bout of ’flu you mean, I suppose –’

  ‘No,’ said the patient, faintly and wearily dropping both lids over his blank eyes, ‘by my wife.’

  ‘That’s an ugly sort of fancy for you to get hold of,’ replied the doctor instantly. ‘Acute depression – we must see what we can do for you –’

  The sick man opened both eyes now; he even slightly raised his head as he replied, not without dignity:

  ‘I fetched you from London, Dr Holroyd, that you might deal with my case impartially – from the local man there is no hope of that, he is entirely impressed by my wife.’

  Dr Holroyd made a movement as if to protest but a trembling sign from the patient made him quickly subsist.

  ‘Please let me speak. She will come in soon and I shall have no chance. I sent for you secretly, she knows nothing about that. I had heard you very well spoken of – as an authority on this sort of thing. You made a name over the Pluntre murder case as witness for the Crown.’

  ‘I don’t specialize in murder,’ said Dr Holroyd, but his keen handsome face was alight with interest. ‘And I don’t care much for this kind of case – Sir Harry.’

  ‘But you’ve taken it on,’ murmured the sick man. ‘You couldn’t abandon me now.’

  ‘I’ll get you into a nursing home,’ said the doctor cheerfully, ‘and there you’ll dispel all these ideas.’

  ‘And when the nursing home has cured me I’m to come back to my wife for her to begin again?’

  Dr Holroyd bent suddenly and sharply over the sombre bed. With his right hand he deftly turned on the electric lamp and tipped back the coral silk shade so that the bleached acid light fell full over the patient lying on his back on the big fat pillows.

  ‘Look here,’ said the doctor, ‘what you say is pretty serious.’

  And the two men stared at each other, the patient examining his physician as acutely as his physician examined him.

  Bevis Holroyd was still a young man with a look of peculiar energy and austere intelligence that heightened by contrast purely physical dark good looks that many men would have found sufficient passport to success; resolution, dignity, and a certain masculine sweetness, serene and strong, different from feminine sweetness, marked his demeanour which was further softened by a quick humour and a sensitive judgment.

  The patient, on the other hand, was a man of well past middle age, light, flabby and obese with a flaccid, fallen look about his large face which was blurred and dimmed by the colours of ill health, being one pasty livid hue that threw into unpleasant relief the grey speckled red of his scant hair.

  Altogether an unpleasing man, but of a certain fame and importance that had induced the rising young doctor to come at once when hastily summoned to Strangeways Manor House; a man of a fine, renowned family, a man of repute as a scholar, an essayist who had once been a politician who was rather above politics; a man whom Dr Holroyd only knew vaguely by reputation, but who seemed to him symbolical of all that was staid, respectable, and stolid.

  And this man blinked up at him and whimpered:

  ‘My wife is poisoning me.’
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  Dr Holroyd sat back and snapped off the electric light.

  ‘What makes you think so?’ he asked sharply.

  ‘To tell you that,’ came the laboured voice of the sick man, ‘I should have to tell you my story.’

  ‘Well, if you want me to take this up –’

  ‘I sent for you to do that, doctor.’

  ‘Well, how do you think you are being poisoned?’

  ‘Arsenic, of course.’

  ‘Oh? And how administered?’

  Again the patient looked up with one eye, seeming too fatigued to open the other.

  ‘Cambric tea,’ he replied.

  And Dr Holroyd echoed:

  ‘Cambric tea!’ with a soft amazement and interest. Cambric tea had been used as the medium for arsenic in the Pluntre case and the expression had become famous; it was Bevis Holroyd who had discovered the doses in the cambric tea and who had put his finger on this pale beverage as the means of murder.

  ‘Very possibly,’ continued Sir Harry, ‘the Pluntre case made her think of it.’

  ‘For God’s sake, don’t,’ said Dr Holroyd; for in that hideous affair the murderer had been a woman; and to see a woman on trial for her life, to see a woman sentenced to death, was not an experience he wished to repeat.

  ‘Lady Strangeways,’ continued the sick man, ‘is much younger than I – I over persuaded her to marry me, she was at that time very much attracted by a man of her own age, but he was in a poor position and she was ambitious.’

  He paused, wiped his quivering lips on a silk handkerchief, and added faintly:

  ‘Lately our marriage has been extremely unhappy. The man she preferred is now prosperous, successful, and unmarried – she wishes to dispose of me that she may marry her first choice.’

  ‘Have you proof of any of this?’

  ‘Yes. I know she buys arsenic. I know she reads books on poisons. I know she is eating her heart out for this other man.’

  ‘Forgive me, Sir Harry,’ replied the doctor, ‘but have you no near friend nor relation to whom you can confide your – suspicions?’

  ‘No one,’ said the sick man impatiently. ‘I have lately come from the East and am out of touch with people. Besides I want a doctor, a doctor with skill in this sort of thing. I thought from the first of the Pluntre case and of you.’

  Bevis Holroyd sat back quietly; it was then that he thought of the situation as bizarre; the queerness of the whole thing was vividly before him, like a twisted figure on a gem – a carving at once writhing and immobile.

  ‘Perhaps,’ continued Sir Harry wearily, ‘you are married, doctor?’

  ‘No.’ Dr Holroyd slightly smiled; his story was something like the sick man’s story but taken from another angle; when he was very poor and unknown he had loved a girl who had preferred a wealthy man; she had gone out to India, ten years ago, and he had never seen her since; he remembered this, with sharp distinctness, and in the same breath he remembered that he still loved this girl; it was, after all, a common-place story.

  Then his mind swung to the severe professional aspect of the case; he had thought that his patient, an unhealthy type of man, was struggling with a bad attack of influenza and the resultant depression and weakness, but then he had never thought, of course, of poison, nor looked nor tested for poison.

  The man might be lunatic, he might be deceived, he might be speaking the truth; the fact that he was a mean, unpleasant beast ought not to weigh in the matter; Dr Holroyd had some enjoyable Christmas holidays in prospect and now he was beginning to feel that he ought to give these up to stay and investigate this case; for he could readily see that it was one in which the local doctor would be quite useless.

  ‘You must have a nurse,’ he said, rising.

  But the sick man shook his head.

  ‘I don’t wish to expose my wife more than need be,’ he grumbled. ‘Can’t you manage the affair yourself?’

  As this was the first hint of decent feeling he had shown, Bevis Holroyd forgave him his brusque rudeness.

  ‘Well, I’ll stay the night anyhow,’ he conceded.

  And then the situation changed, with the opening of a door, from the bizarre to the tragic.

  This door opened in the far end of the room and admitted a bloom of bluish winter light from some uncurtained, high-windowed corridor; the chill impression was as if invisible snow had entered the shaded, dun, close apartment.

  And against this background appeared a woman in a smoke-coloured dress with some long lace about the shoulders and a high comb; she held a little tray carrying jugs and a glass of crystal in which the cold light splintered.

  Dr Holroyd stood in his usual attitude of attentive courtesy, and then, as the patient, feebly twisting his gross head from the fat pillow, said:

  ‘My wife – doctor –’ he recognized in Lady Strange-ways the girl to whom he had once been engaged in marriage, the woman he still loved.

  ‘This is Doctor Holroyd,’ added Sir Harry. ‘Is that cambric tea you have there?’

  She inclined her head to the stranger by her husband’s bed as if she had never seen him before, and he, taking his cue, and for many other reasons, was silent.

  ‘Yes, this is your cambric tea,’ she said to her husband. ‘You like it just now, don’t you? How do you find Sir Harry, Dr Holroyd?’

  There were two jugs on the tray; one of crystal half full of cold milk, and one of white porcelain full of hot water; Lady Strangeways proceeded to mix these fluids in equal proportions and gave the resultant drink to her husband, helping him first to sit up in bed.

  ‘I think that Sir Harry has a nasty turn of influenza,’ answered the doctor mechanically. ‘He wants me to stay. I’ve promised till the morning, anyhow.’

  ‘That will be a pleasure and a relief,’ said Lady Strange-ways gravely. ‘My husband has been ill some time and seems so much worse than he need – for influenza.’

  The patient, feebly sipping his cambric tea, grinned queerly at the doctor.

  ‘So much worse – you see, doctor!’ he muttered.

  ‘It is good of you to stay,’ continued Lady Strangeways equally. ‘I will see about your room, you must be as comfortable as possible.’

  She left as she had come, a shadow-coloured figure retreating to a chill light.

  The sick man held up his glass as if he gave a toast.

  ‘You see! Cambric tea!’

  And Bevis Holroyd was thinking: does she not want to know me? Does he know what we once were to each other? How comes she to be married to this man – her husband’s name was Custiss – and the horror of the situation shook the calm that was his both from character and training; he went to the window and looked out on the bleached park; light, slow snow was falling, a dreary dance over the frozen grass and before the grey corpses that paled, one behind the other, to the distance shrouded in colourless mist.

  The thin voice of Harry Strangeways recalled him to the bed.

  ‘Would you like to take a look at this, doctor?’ He held out the half drunk glass of milk and water.

  ‘I’ve no means of making a test here,’ said Dr Holroyd, troubled. ‘I brought a few things, nothing like that.’

  ‘You are not so far from Harley Street,’ said Sir Harry. ‘My car can fetch everything you want by this afternoon – or perhaps you would like to go yourself?’

  ‘Yes,’ replied Bevis Holroyd sternly. ‘I would rather go myself.’

  His trained mind had been rapidly covering the main aspects of his problem and he had instantly seen that it was better for Lady Strangeways to have this case in his hands. He was sure there was some hideous, fantastic hallucination on the part of Sir Harry, but it was better for Lady Strangeways to leave the matter in the hands of one who was friendly towards her. He rapidly found and washed a medicine bottle from among the sick room paraphernalia and poured it full of the cambric tea, casting away the remainder.

  ‘Why did you drink any?’ he asked sharply.

  ‘I don’t want her
to think that I guess,’ whispered Sir Harry. ‘Do you know, doctor, I have a lot of her love letters – written by –’

  Dr Holroyd cut him short.

  ‘I couldn’t listen to this sort of thing behind Lady Strangeways’s back,’ he said quickly. ‘That is between you and her. My job is to get you well. I’ll try and do that.’

  And he considered, with a faint disgust, how repulsive this man looked sitting up with pendant jowl and drooping cheeks and discoloured, pouchy eyes sunk in pads of unhealthy flesh and above the spiky crown of Judas-coloured hair.

  Perhaps a woman, chained to this man, living with him, blocked and thwarted by him, might be wrought upon to –

  Dr Holroyd shuddered inwardly and refused to continue his reflection.

  As he was leaving the gaunt sombre house about which there was something definitely blank and unfriendly, a shrine in which the sacred flames had flickered out so long ago that the lamps were blank and cold, he met Lady Strangeways.

  She was in the wide entrance hall standing by the wood fire that but faintly dispersed the gloom of the winter morning and left untouched the shadows in the rafters of the open roof.

  Now he would not, whether she wished or no, deny her; he stopped before her, blocking out her poor remnant of light.

  ‘Mollie,’ he said gently, ‘I don’t quite understand – you married a man named Custiss in India.’

  ‘Yes. Harry had to take this name when he inherited this place. We’ve been home three years from the East, but lived so quietly here that I don’t suppose anyone has heard of us.’

  She stood between him and the firelight, a shadow among the shadows; she was much changed; in her thinness and pallor, in her restless eyes and nervous mouth he could read signs of discontent, even of unhappiness.

 

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