<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/cover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="[Illustration]" /></div>
<h1>The Camera Fiend</h1>
<h2 class="no-break">by E.W. Hornung</h2>
<h4>
London<br/>
T. Fisher Unwin, Ltd.<br/>
Adelphi Terrace<br/>
1911
</h4>
<hr />
<h2>Contents</h2>
<table summary="" >
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap01">I. A CONSCIENTIOUS ASS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap02">II. A BOY ABOUT TOWN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap03">III. HIS PEOPLE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap04">IV. A GRIM SAMARITAN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap05">V. THE GLASS EYE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap06">VI. AN AWAKENING</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap07">VII. BLOOD-GUILTY</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap08">VIII. POINTS OF VIEW</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap09">IX. MR. EUGENE THRUSH</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap10">X. SECOND THOUGHTS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap11">XI. ON PAROLE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap12">XII. HUNTING WITH THE HOUNDS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap13">XIII. BOY AND GIRL</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap14">XIV. BEFORE THE STORM</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap15">XV. A LIKELY STORY</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap16">XVI. MALINGERING</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap17">XVII. ON THE TRACK OF THE TRUTH</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap18">XVIII. A THIRD CASE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap19">XIX. THE FOURTH CASE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap20">XX. WHAT THE THAMES GAVE UP</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap21">XXI. AFTER THE FAIR</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap22">XXII. THE SECRET OF THE CAMERA</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<h2><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.<br/> A CONSCIENTIOUS ASS</h2>
<p>Pocket Upton had come down late and panting, in spite of his daily exemption
from first school, and the postcard on his plate had taken away his remaining
modicum of breath. He could have wept over it in open hall, and would probably
have done so in the subsequent seclusion of his own study, had not an obvious
way out of his difficulty been bothering him by that time almost as much as the
difficulty itself. For it was not a very honest way, and the unfortunate Pocket
had been called “a conscientious ass” by some of the nicest fellows
in his house. Perhaps he deserved the epithet for going even as straight as he
did to his house-master, who was discovered correcting proses with a blue
pencil and a briar pipe.</p>
<p>“Please, sir, Mr. Coverley can’t have me, sir. He’s got a
case of chicken-pox, sir.”</p>
<p>The boy produced the actual intimation in a few strokes of an honoured but
laconic pen. The man poised his pencil and puffed his pipe.</p>
<p>“Then you must come back to-night, and I’m just as glad. It’s
all nonsense your staying the night whenever you go up to see that doctor of
yours.”</p>
<p>“He makes a great point of it, sir. He likes to try some fresh stuff on
me, and then see what sort of night I have.”</p>
<p>“You could go up again to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Of course I could, sir,” replied Pocket Upton, with a delicate
emphasis on his penultimate. At the moment he was perhaps neither so acutely
conscientious nor such an ass as his critics considered him.</p>
<p>“What else do you propose?” inquired Mr. Spearman.</p>
<p>“Well, sir, I have plenty of other friends in town, sir. Either the
Knaggses or Miss Harbottle would put me up in a minute, sir.”</p>
<p>“Who are the Knaggses?”</p>
<p>“The boys were with me at Mr. Coverley’s, sir; they go to
Westminster now. One of them stayed with us last holidays. They live in St.
John’s Wood Park.”</p>
<p>“And the lady you mentioned?”</p>
<p>“Miss Harbottle, sir, an old friend of my mother’s; it was through
her I went to Mr. Coverley’s, and I’ve often stayed there.
She’s in the Wellington Road, sir, quite close to Lord’s.”</p>
<p>Mr. Spearman smiled at the gratuitous explanation of an eagerness that other
lads might have taken more trouble to conceal. But there was no guile in any
Upton; in that one respect the third and last of them resembled the great twin
brethren of whom he had been prematurely voted a “pocket edition”
on his arrival in the school. He had few of their other merits, though he took
a morbid interest in the games they played by light of nature, as well as in
things both beyond and beneath his brothers and the average boy. You cannot sit
up half your nights with asthma and be an average boy. This was obvious even to
Mr. Spearman, who was an average man. He had never disguised his own
disappointment in the youngest Upton, but had often made him the butt of
outspoken and disastrous comparisons. Yet in his softer moments he had some
sympathy with the failure of an otherwise worthy family; this fine June morning
he seemed even to understand the joy of a jaunt to London for a boy who was
getting very little out of his school life. He made a note of the two names and
addresses.</p>
<p>“You’re quite sure they’ll put you up, are you?”
“Absolutely certain, sir.”</p>
<p>“But you’ll come straight back if they can’t?”</p>
<p>“Rather, sir!”</p>
<p>“Then run away, and don’t miss your train.”</p>
<p>Pocket interpreted the first part of the injunction so literally as to arrive
very breathless in his study. That diminutive cell was garnished with more
ambitious pictures than the generality of its order; but the best of them was
framed in the ivy round the lattice window, and its foreground was the
nasturtiums in the flower-box. Pocket glanced down into the quad, where the
fellows were preparing construes for second school in sunlit groups on garden
seats. At that moment the bell began. And by the time Pocket had changed his
black tie for a green one with red spots, in which he had come back after the
Easter holidays, the bell had stopped and the quad was empty; before it filled
again he would be up in town and on his way to Welbeck Street in a hansom.</p>
<p>The very journey was a joy. It was such sport to be flying through a world of
buttercups and daisies in a train again, so refreshing to feel as good as
anybody else in the third smoker; for even the grown men in the corner seats
did not dream of calling the youth an “old ass,” much less a young
one, to his face. His friends and contemporaries at school were in the habit of
employing the ameliorating adjective, but there were still a few fellows in
Pocket’s house who made an insulting point of the other. All, however,
seemed agreed as to the noun; and it was pleasant to cast off friend and foe
for a change, to sit comfortably unknown and unsuspected of one’s foibles
in the train. It made Pocket feel a bit of a man; but then he really was almost
seventeen, and in the Middle Fifth, and allowed to smoke asthma cigarettes in
bed. He took one out of a cardboard box in his bag, and thought it might do him
good to smoke it now. But an adult tobacco-smoker looked so curiously at the
little thin cross between cigar and cigarette, that it was transferred to a
pocket unlit, and the coward hid himself behind his paper, in which there were
several items of immediate interest to him. Would the match hold out at
Lord’s? If not, which was the best of the Wednesday matinees? Pocket had
received a pound from home for his expenses, so that these questions took an
adventitious precedence over even such attractive topics as an execution and a
murder that bade fair to lead to one. But the horrors had their turn, and
having supped on the newspaper supply, he continued the feast in <i>Henry
Dunbar</i>, the novel he had brought with him in his bag. There was something
like a murder! It was so exciting as to detach Pocket Upton from the flying
buttercups and daisies, from the reek of the smoking carriage, the real crimes
in the paper, and all thoughts of London until he found himself there too soon.</p>
<p>The asthma specialist was one of those enterprising practitioners whose
professional standing is never quite on a par with their material success. The
injurious discrepancy may have spoilt his temper, or it may be that his temper
was at the root of the prejudice against him. He was never very amiable with
Pocket Upton, a casual patient in every sense; but this morning Dr. Bompas had
some call to complain.</p>
<p>“You mean to tell me,” he expostulated, “that you’ve
gone back to the cigarettes in spite of what I said last time? If you
weren’t a stupid schoolboy I should throw up your case!”</p>
<p>Pocket did not wish to have his case thrown up; it would mean no more days and
nights in town. So he accepted his rebuke without visible resentment.</p>
<p>“It’s the only way I can stop an attack,” he mumbled.</p>
<p>“Nonsense!” snapped the specialist. “You can make yourself
coffee in the night, as you’ve done before.”</p>
<p>“I can’t at school. They draw the line at that.”</p>
<p>“Then a public school is no place for you. I’ve said so from the
first. Your people should have listened to me, and sent you on a long sea
voyage under the man I recommended, in the ship I told them about. She sails
the day after to-morrow, and you should have sailed in her.”</p>
<p>The patient made no remark; but he felt as sore as his physician on the subject
of that long sea voyage. It would have meant a premature end to his
undistinguished schooldays, and goodbye to all thought of following in his
brothers’ steps on the field of schoolboy glory. But he might have had
adventures beyond the pale of that circumscribed arena, he might have been
shipwrecked on a desert island, and lived to tell a tale beyond the dreams of
envious athletes, if his people had but taken kindly to the scheme. But they
had been so very far from taking to it at all, with the single exception of his
only sister, that the boy had not the heart to discuss it now.</p>
<p>“If only there were some medicine one could take to stop an
attack!” he sighed. “But there doesn’t seem to be any.”</p>
<p>“There are plenty of preventives,” returned the doctor.
“That’s what we want. Smoking and inhaling all sorts of rubbish is
merely a palliative that does more harm than good in the long run.”</p>
<p>“But it does you good when the preventives fail. If I could get a good
night without smoking I should be thankful.”</p>
<p>“If I promise you a good night will you give me your cigarettes to keep
until to-morrow?”</p>
<p>“If you like.”</p>
<p>The doctor wrote a prescription while the boy produced the cardboard box from
his bag.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Bompas, as they made an exchange. “I
don’t want you even to be tempted to smoke to-night, because I know what
the temptation must be when you can’t get your breath. You will get this
prescription made up in two bottles; take the first before you go to bed
to-night, and the second if you wake with an attack before five in the morning.
You say you are staying the night with friends; better give me the name and let
me see if they’re on the telephone before you go. I want you to go to bed
early, tell them not to call you in the morning, and come back to me the moment
you’ve had your breakfast.”</p>
<p>They parted amicably after all, and Pocket went off only wondering whether he
ought to have said positively that he was staying with friends when he might be
going back to school. But Dr. Bompas had been so short with him at first as to
discourage unnecessary explanations; besides, there could be no question of his
going back that night. And the difficulty of the morning, which he had quite
forgotten in the train, was not allowed to mar a moment of his day in town.</p>
<p>The time-table of that boy’s day must speak for itself. It was already
one o’clock, and he was naturally hungry, especially after the way his
breakfast had been spoilt by Coverley’s card. At 1.15 he was munching a
sausage roll and sipping chocolate at a pastry-cook’s in Oxford Street.
The sausage roll, like the cup of chocolate, was soon followed by another; and
a big Bath bun completed a debauch of which Dr. Bompas would undoubtedly have
disapproved.</p>
<p>At 1.45, from the top of an Atlas omnibus in Baker Street, he espied a placard
with “Collapse of Middlesex” in appalling capitals. And at the
station he got down to learn the worst before going on to Lord’s for
nothing.</p>
<p>The worst was so hopelessly bad that Pocket wished himself nearer the theatres,
and then it was that the terra-cotta pile of Madame Tussaud’s thrust
itself seductively upon his vision. He had not been there for years. He had
often wanted to go again, and go alone. He remembered being taken by his sister
when a little boy at Coverley’s, but she had refused to go into the
Chamber of Horrors, and he had been relieved at the time but sorry ever
afterwards, because so many of the boys of those days had seen everything and
seemed none the worse for the adventure. It was one of the things he had always
wanted not so much to do as to have done. The very name of the Chamber of
Horrors had frozen his infant blood when he first heard it on the lips of a
criminological governess. On the brink of seventeen there was something of the
budding criminologist about Pocket Upton himself; had not a real murder and
<i>Henry Dunbar</i> formed his staple reading in the train? And yet the boy had
other sensibilities which made him hesitate outside the building, and enter
eventually with quite a nutter under the waistcoat.</p>
<p>A band in fantastic livery was playing away in the marble hall; but Pocket had
no ear for their music, though he was fond enough of a band. And though history
was one of his few strong points at school, the glittering galaxy of kings and
queens appealed to him no more than the great writers at their little desks and
the great cricketers in their unconvincing flannels. They were waxworks one and
all. But when the extra sixpence had been paid at the inner turnstile, and he
had passed down a dungeon stair into the dim vaults below, his imagination was
at work upon the dreadful faces in the docks before he had brought his
catalogue to bear on one of them.</p>
<p>Here were wretches whose vile deeds had long been familiar to the schoolboy
through a work on his father’s shelves called <i>Annals of Our Time</i>.
He recalled bad nights when certain of those annals had kept him awake long
after his attack; and here were the actual monsters, not scowling and ferocious
as he had always pictured them, but far more horribly demure and plump. Here
were immortal malefactors like the Mannings; here were Rush and Greenacre cheek
by jowl, looking as though they had stepped out of Dickens in their obsolete
raiment, looking anything but what they had been. Some wore the very clothes
their quick bodies had filled; here and there were authentic tools of death,
rusty pistols, phials of poison with the seals still bright, and a smug face
smirking over all in self-conscious infamy. There was not enough of the waxwork
about these creatures; in the poor light, and their own clothes, and the
veritable dock in which many of them had heard their doom, they looked
hideously human and alive. One, a little old man, sat not in the dock but on
the drop itself, the noose dangling in front of him; and the schoolboy felt
sorry for him, for his silver bristles, for the broad arrows on his poor legs,
until he found out who it was. Then he shuddered. It was Charles Peace. He had
first heard of Charles Peace from the nice governess aforesaid; and here under
his nose were the old ruffian’s revolver, and the strap that strapped it
to his wrist, with the very spectacles he had wiped and worn. The hobbledehoy
was almost as timorously entranced as he had been in infancy by untimely tale
of crime. He stood gloating over the gruesome relics, over ropes which had
hanged men whose trials he had read for himself in later days, and yet
wondering with it all whether he would ever get these things out of his mind
again. They filled it to overflowing. He might have had the horrid place to
himself. Yet he had entered it with much amusement at the heels of a whole
family in deep mourning, a bereaved family drowning their sorrow in a sea of
gore, their pilot through the catalogue a conscientious orphan with a
monotonous voice and a genius for mis-pronunciation. Pocket had soon ceased to
see or hear him or any other being not made of wax. And it was only when he was
trying to place a nice-looking murderer in a straw hat, who suddenly moved into
a real sightseer like himself, that the unwholesome spell was broken.</p>
<p>Pocket was not sorry to be back in the adulterated sunshine and the
comparatively fresh air of the Marylebone Road. He was ashamed to find that it
was after four o’clock. Guy and Vivian Knaggs would be home from
Westminster in another hour. Still it was no use getting there before them, and
he might as well walk as not; it was pleasant to rub shoulders with flesh and
blood once more, and to look in faces not made of wax in the devil’s
image. His way, which he knew of old, would naturally have led him past Miss
Harbottle’s door; but, as she was only to be his second string for the
night, he preferred not to be seen by that old lady yet. Such was the tiny
spring of an important action; it led the wanderer into Circus Road and a quite
unforeseen temptation.</p>
<p>In the Circus Road there happens to be a highly respectable pawnbroker’s
shop; in the pawnbroker’s window the chances are that you might still
find a motley collection of umbrellas, mandolines, family Bibles, ornaments and
clocks, strings of watches, trays of purses, opera-glasses, biscuit-boxes,
photograph frames and cheap jewellery, all of which could not tempt you less
than they did Pocket Upton the other June. There were only two things in the
window that interested him at all, and they were not both temptations. One was
an old rosewood camera, and Pocket was interested in cameras old and new; but
the thing that tempted him was a little revolver at five-and-six, with what
looked like a box of cartridges beside it, apparently thrown in for the price.
A revolver to take back to school! A revolver to fire in picked places on the
slow walks with a slow companion which were all the exercise this unfortunate
fellow could take! A revolver and cartridges complete, so that one could try it
now, in no time, with Guy and Vivian at the end of their garden in St.
John’s Wood Park! And all very likely for five bob if one bargained a
bit!</p>
<p>Pocket took out his purse and saw what a hole the expenditure of any such sum
would make. But what was that if it filled a gap in his life? Of coure it would
have been breaking a school rule, but he was prepared to take the consequences
if found out; it need not involve his notion of dishonour. Still, it must be
recorded that the young or old as was conscientious enough to hesitate before
making his fatal plunge into the pawnbroker’s shop.</p>
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