<h2><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.<br/> BLOOD-GUILTY</h2>
<p>His overwhelming horror was not alleviated by a moment’s doubt. He
marvelled rather that he had never guessed what he had done. The walking in his
sleep, the shot that woke him, the first words of Dr. Baumgartner, his first
swift action, and the warm pistol in his own unconscious hand: these burning
memories spoke more eloquently than any words. They would have told their own
tale at once, if only he had known the man was dead. Why had he been deceived?
It was cruel, it was infamous, to have kept the truth from him for a single
instant. Thus wildly did the stricken youth turn and rend his benefactor for
the very benefaction of a day’s rest in ignorance of his deed. The doctor
defended himself firmly, frankly, with much patience and some cynicism. Pocket
was reminded of the state he himself had been in at the time. He also might
have been a dying man, he was assured, and could well believe on looking back.
Baumgartner had actually opened his lips to tell him the truth, but had checked
himself in sheer humanity. Again the boy could confirm the outward detail out
of his own recollection. To have told him later in the morning, the doctor went
on to say, with an emphasis not immediately understood, could have undone
nothing. He acknowledged a grave responsibility, but rightly or wrongly he had
put the living before the dead.</p>
<p>How had he known the man was dead? Baumgartner smiled at the question. He was
not only a doctor, but an old soldier who had fought in one at least of the
bloodiest battles in European history. He had seen too many men fall shot
through the heart to be mistaken for a moment; but in point of fact he had
confirmed his conviction by brief examination while Pocket was fetching his
things from behind the bush. Pocket pressed for earlier details with a morbid
appetite which was not gratified without reluctance, and out of a laconic
interchange the deed was gradually reconstructed with appealing verisimilitude.
It was Baumgartner who had first caught sight of the somnambulist, treading
warily like the blind, yet waving the revolver as he went, as though any moment
he might let it off. The moment came with a wretched reeling man who joined
Baumgartner on the path, and would not be warned. The poor man had raised a
drunken shout and been shot pointblank through the heart. The doctor described
him as leaping backward from the levelled barrel, then into the air and down in
the dew upon his face.</p>
<p>The boy buried his face and wept; but even in his anguish he now recalled the
shout before the shot. The enforced description had been so vivid in the end
that he beheld the scene as plainly as though he had been wide awake. Then he
dwelt upon the dead man, looking nothing else as he now remembered him, and
that sent him off at a final tangent.</p>
<p>He cried, looking up with a shudder for all his tears, “What about that
negative you smashed? It was the poor dead man all the time!”</p>
<p>“It was,” replied Baumgartner; “but it was never meant to be.
I had you in focus when you fired. What I did was done instinctively, but with
time to think I should have done just the same. You had given me the chance of
a lifetime, though nothing has come of it so far. And that was another reason
for saving you, ill as you were, from the immediate consequences of an innocent
act.”</p>
<p>Pocket was passionately honest, as his worst friends knew; he had an
instinctive admiration for downright honesty in another. His young soul was
torn with grief and pity for the dead; he was already haunted by the inevitable
and complex consequences of his fatal misadventure, and yet he could dimly
appreciate the candid declaration of one who had attempted to turn that tragedy
to instantaneous and inconceivable account. It was the mistaken kindness to
himself that he still found most difficult to forgive.</p>
<p>“It’s got to come out,” he groaned; “this will make it
all the worse.”</p>
<p>“You mean the delay?”</p>
<p>“Yes! Who’s to tell them I didn’t do it on purpose, and run
away, and then think better of it?”</p>
<p>Baumgartner smiled.</p>
<p>“Surely I am,” said he; but his smile went out with the words.
“If only they believe me!” he added as though it was a new idea to
him.</p>
<p>It was a terrifying one to Pocket.</p>
<p>“Why shouldn’t they?” was his broken exclamation.</p>
<p>“I don’t know. I never thought of it before. But what can I swear
to, after all? I can swear you shot a man, but I can’t swear you shot him
in your sleep!”</p>
<p>“You said you saw I did!”</p>
<p>“So I did, my young fellow,” replied the doctor, with a kinder
smile; “at least I can swear that you were walking with your eyes shut,
and I thought you were walking in your sleep. It’s not quite the same
thing. It is near it. But we are talking about my evidence on oath in a court
of justice.”</p>
<p>“Shall I be tried?” asked the schoolboy in a hoarse whisper.</p>
<p>“Perhaps only by the magistrate,” replied the other, soothingly;
“let us hope it will stop at that.”</p>
<p>“But it must, it must!” cried Pocket wildly. “I’m
absolutely innocent! You said so yourself a minute ago; you’ve only to
swear it as a doctor? They can’t do anything to me—they can’t
possibly!”</p>
<p>The doctor stood looking into the sunless garden with a troubled face.</p>
<p>“Dr. Baumgartner!”</p>
<p>“Yes, my young fellow?”</p>
<p>“They can’t do anything to me, can they?”</p>
<p>Baumgartner returned to the fireside with his foreign shrug.</p>
<p>“It depends what you call anything,” said he. “They cannot
hang you; after what I should certainly have to say I doubt if they could even
detain you in custody. But you would only be released on bail; the case would
be sent for trial; it would get into every paper in England; your family could
not stop it, your schoolfellows would devour it, you would find it difficult
to live down both at home and at school. In years to come it will mean at best
a certain smile at your expense! That is what they can do to you,”
concluded the doctor, apologetically. “You asked me to tell you. It is
better to be candid. I hoped you would bear it like a man.”</p>
<p>Pocket was not even bearing it like a manly boy; he had flung himself back into
the big chair, and broken down for the first time utterly. One name became
articulate through his sobs. “My mother!” he moaned.
“It’ll kill her! I know it will! Oh, that I should live to kill my
mother too!”</p>
<p>“Mothers have more lives than that; they have more than most
people,” remarked Baumgartner sardonically.</p>
<p>“You don’t understand! She has had a frightful illness, bad news of
any kind has to be kept from her, and can you imagine worse news than this? She
mustn’t hear it!” cried the boy, leaping to feet with streaming
eyes. “For God’s sake, sir, help me to hush it up!”</p>
<p>“It’s in the papers already,” replied Baumgartner, with a
forbearing shrug.</p>
<p>“But my part in it!”</p>
<p>“You said it had got to come out.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t realise all it meant—to her!”</p>
<p>“I thought you meant to make a clean breast of it?”</p>
<p>“So I did; but now I don’t!” cried Pocket, vehemently.
“Now I would give my own life, cheerfully, rather than let her know what
I’ve done—than drag them all through that!”</p>
<p>“Do you mean what you say?”</p>
<p>Baumgartner appeared to be forming some conditional intention.</p>
<p>“Every syllable!” said Pocket.</p>
<p>“Because, you know,” explained the doctor, “it is a case of
now or never so far as going to Scotland Yard is concerned.”</p>
<p>“Then it’s never!”</p>
<p>“I must put it plainly to you. It’s not too late to do whatever you
decide, but you must decide now. I would still go with you to Scotland Yard,
and the chances are that they would still accept the true story of to-day. I
have told you what I believe to be the worst that can happen to you; it may be
that rather more may happen to me for harbouring you all day as I have done. I
hope not, but I took the law into my own hands, and I I am prepared to abide by
the law if you so decide this minute.”</p>
<p>“I have decided.”</p>
<p>“Mind you, it would mean putting yourself unreservedly in my hands, at
any rate for the present,” said Baumgartner, impressively. “Better
come to Scotland Yard this minute than go back to school and blab about the
whole thing there!”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t do that.”</p>
<p>“I’m not so sure,” replied the acute doctor. “I believe
I know you better than you know yourself; one learns more of a person in an
hour like this than in a whole humdrum lifetime. I believe you would find it
very difficult not to tell somebody.”</p>
<p>Pocket admitted it with a natural outburst of his leading quality. In truth no
previous act or word of Baumgartner’s had inspired such confidence as
this unerring piece of insight. It seemed to the boy a perfect miracle of
discernment. He was not old enough to know that what he would have done, in his
weakness, most grown-up men and women of his temperament would have done in
theirs.</p>
<p>“Remember,” resumed the doctor, “you would have the whole of
to-day to account for; it’s not as though you wouldn’t have some
very awkward questions to answer the moment you got back to school.”</p>
<p>And again the lad marvelled at this intuition into public-school conditions on
the part of one who could have no first-hand knowledge of those insular
institutions. But this fresh display of understanding only confirmed him in his
resolve.</p>
<p>“I trust you, sir,” said he; “haven’t you done enough
for me to make me? I put myself, as you say, absolutely in your hands; and
I’m grateful to you for all you’ve done and whatever you mean to
do!”</p>
<p>“Even though it comes to hiding with us here in London?”</p>
<p>“No matter what it comes to,” cried Pocket, strangely exalted now,
“so long as my people never know!”</p>
<p>“They may think you dead.” He thought of saying that he wished he
was; but it would not have been true; even then it would have been a lie, and
Pocket was not the boy to tell one if he knew it.</p>
<p>“That would be better than knowing what I have done,” was what he
said; and in his exaltation he believed no less.</p>
<p>“You quite see that you are taking a step which must be final?”</p>
<p>“It is final—absolutely—so far as I am concerned.”</p>
<p>And it was meant to be, in all good faith; the very fulness and fairness of the
doctor’s warnings served but to strengthen that resolve. But Baumgartner,
as if to let well or ill alone, dropped the matter with a clinching shrug; and
presently he left his visitor, less wisely, to brood on it alone.</p>
<p>Pocket was a dab at brooding! That is the worst of your conscientious ass; he
takes his decision like a man; he means to stick to it like a sportsman; but he
cannot help wondering whether he has decided for the best, and what would have
happened if he had decided otherwise, and what his world will say about him as
it is.</p>
<p>This one went much further in the unique stress of his extraordinary position.
He pictured his people dressing for dinner at home; he pictured his form
sitting down to private-work in his form-master’s hall; there was no end
to his mental pictures, for they included one of himself on the scaffold in the
broad-arrows of the little old waxwork at Madame Tassaud’s! He could not
help himself; his mind was crumbling with his dreadful deed and its awful
possibilities. Now his heart bled honestly for the poor dead man, now for his
own mother and sister, and now not less freely for himself. He had been so
innocent in the whole matter; he had only been an innocent and rather sporting
fool. And now one of these lives was ended by his hand, and all the rest would
be darkened for ever after!</p>
<p>It was too great a burden for a boy to bear; but Pocket bore it far into the
long June twilight, scarcely stirring in the big soft chair, yet never leaning
back in it again. He sat hunched up as though once more battling for breath,
but curiously enough his bodily distress had flown before that of the mind.
Pocket would thankfully have changed them back again, for his brain was as
clear as his bronchial tubes, its capacity for suffering undimmed by a single
physical preoccupation. Between seven and eight the young lady of the house
came in with candles and a kind of high-tea on a tray; she also brought a box
of d’Auvergne Cigarettes and the latest evening paper, which her uncle
thought that Mr. Upton would like to see. That was how the girl addressed the
boy, and the style always made him feel, and wish to seem, something of a man.
But his present effort in that direction was sadly perfunctory: he almost
ejected little Miss Platts in his eagerness to shut the door on her and see the
news.</p>
<p>It was neither unimportant nor at first sight reassuring. The dead man had been
identified by the police, who knew him of old, and were reported as hopeful of
obtaining a clue through his identity. The clue was the point that stuck like a
burr in the boyish brain; his idea of a clue was one leading straight to
himself; it took Dr. Baumgartner to explain the true value of the identity
clause, and bid the boy eat his meal.</p>
<p>“Trust the police!” said he. “They’re on a false scent
already; they may try at that end till it turns their hair grey!”</p>
<p>Pocket disliked this tone; he had begun to think almost as reverentially of his
victim as of a dead member of his own family. It appeared thus early, however,
that in life the defunct had been by no means worthy of respect. Rowton Houses
had been his only home, except when his undistinguished offences got him into
gaol; the surreptitious practices of the professional mendicant, his sole means
of livelihood. So much was to be read between the few brief lines in the
stop-press column of the latest evening paper. Again it required Baumgartner to
extract comfort from such items.</p>
<p>“At all events,” said he, “you cannot reproach yourself with
the destruction of a valuable life! The man was evidently the worthless
creature that he looked. You talk about your undesirable aliens, but here in
England you breed undesirables enough to manure the world! It’s a public
service to reduce their number.”</p>
<p>This pitch of nauseous cynicism had not been reached at a bound; the doctor had
been working up to it all the evening, and this was the climax of his
cold-blooded consolation as the schoolboy mechanically undressed himself for
bed. His host had accompanied him up two pairs of stairs, carrying candles,
and his meerschaum pipe in aromatic blast. Pocket felt a new chill through his
veins, but he was not revolted as he would have been at first. This
extraordinary man had shown him still more extraordinary kindness; the die was
cast for them to stand or fall together; and there was something about the
gaunt old visionary, a confidential candour, a dry intellectual plausibility,
which could not but stimulate respect for his ungodliest views. Whether they
really were his views, or only a tortuous attempt at comfort, the sympathy
underlying their expression was undoubted and indubitable. But the doctor spoke
as though he meant every word, and the boy only longed to agree with him: his
conscientious failure to do so declared itself in a series of incoherent
expostulations to which Baumgartner himself gave articulate shape in order to
demolish them in the next breath.</p>
<p>“You say his life was as much to him as yours to you? Is that it, my
young fellow?”</p>
<p>Pocket acknowledged the interpretation, and watched the Turk’s head
wreathed in cool blue clouds.</p>
<p>“You might as well compare withered weed with budding flower!”
cried the poetic doctor. “You have an honourable life before you; he had
a disreputable one behind him. You were bred and nurtured in the lap of
luxury; he finds it for the first time in his——”</p>
<p>But here even Baumgartner broke off abruptly. The boy was writhing in his bed;
the man sat down on the end of it.</p>
<p>“You do such poor devils a service,” said he, “in sending
them to a world that cannot use them worse than this one. They are better under
the ground than lying on it drenched and drunk!”</p>
<p>“It was a human life,” groaned the boy, shutting his eyes in pain.</p>
<p>“Human life!” cried Baumgartner, leaping to his feet, his huge
shadow guying him on the ceiling. “What is this human life, and who are
you and I, that we set such store by it? The great men of this world never did;
it’s only the little people and the young who pule and whine about human
life. The ancient Roman sacrificed his weaklings as on an altar; there are some
of us in these days who would prescribe a Tarpeian Rock for modern decadence.
So much in pious parenthesis! Napoleon thought nothing of your human life. Von
Moltke, Bismarck, and our staff in Germany thought as little of it as Napoleon;
the Empire of my countrymen was founded on a proper appreciation of the
infinitesimal value of human life, and your British Empire will be lost through
exaggerating its importance. Blood and Iron were our watchwords; they’re
on the tip of every Fleet Street pen to-day, but I speak of what I know.
I’ve heard the Iron shriek without ceasing, like the wind, and I’ve
felt the Blood like spray from a hot spring! I fought at Gravelotte; as a
public schoolboy you probably never heard the name before this minute. I fought
in the Prussian Guard. I saw you looking at the pictures downstairs. I was in
that charge across those hellish ridges. Over two thousand of us fell dead in
half an hour, but we gained the victory. More Germans were killed that
day—that sweltering August afternoon—than English in your whole
South African War that took you years! The flower of Germany fell at
Gravelotte; that was human life with a vengeance! But an Empire rose out of my
comrades’ ashes. And that’s all it’s for, this human life of
yours: for the master-builders to lay out in their wisdom on the upward
road.”</p>
<p>The schoolboy was carried away. In the sudden eloquence of this strange
outburst, with its poetic frenzy, its ruthless idealism, its wild bloodthirsty
nobility, the youthful listener lost sight of its irrelevancy, or rather it was
the irrevelant features that flared up first in his brain. It was a childish
question, but here was a very child, and he could not help asking the fierce
old soldier whether he had escaped without a wound.</p>
<p>“Without a scratch,” was the reply. “I come home. I leave the
army. I ally my human life with one that is all but divine. My Queen is struck
down dead at my side within a year. And you expect me to pity the veriest pawn
in the game!”</p>
<p>The boy was never to forget these bitter speeches altogether; there was not a
single sentence of them that he failed to recall at one time or another word
for word. He would see a wild arm waving, wisps of smoke from a waving pipe, a
core of nicotine in a curve of amber, and the Turk’s face glistening in
its heat like that of the hard old man himself. He would hear the cynical and
scornful voice softening in a breath to the simple, tender, and domestic
humanity of his race. The voice and the face were with him throughout that
night of his own manifold misery; but the time had not come for so young a boy
to realise that Dr. Baumgartner had begun to say one thing, and been carried
away like his listener.</p>
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