<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The<br/> House<br/> Opposite<br/> <br/> A Mystery</h1>
<p class="tp1">By<br/>
<span class="f14">Elizabeth Kent</span></p>
<div class="figchap">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_chap01.png" width-obs="418" height-obs="100" alt="Decoration" /></div>
<h2 class="no-break">CHAPTER I<br/> <span class="f8">THROUGH MY NEIGHBOUR’S WINDOWS</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">What</span> I am about to relate occurred but a few
years ago—in the summer of ’99, in fact.
You may remember that the heat that year was something
fearful. Even old New Yorkers, inured by the
sufferings of many summers, were overcome by it, and
everyone who could, fled from the city. On the particular
August day when this story begins, the temperature
had been even more unbearable than usual, and
approaching night brought no perceptible relief. After
dining with Burton (a young doctor like myself),
we spent the evening wandering about town trying to
discover a cool spot.</p>
<p>At last, thoroughly exhausted by our vain search,
I decided to turn in, hoping to sleep from sheer fatigue;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span>
but one glance at my stuffy little bedroom discouraged
me. Dragging a divan before the window of
the front room, I composed myself for the night with
what resignation I could muster.</p>
<p>I found, however, that the light and noise from the
street kept me awake; so, giving up sleep as a bad job,
I decided to try my luck on the roof. Arming myself
with a rug and a pipe, I stole softly upstairs. It was a
beautiful starlight night, and after spreading my rug
against a chimney and lighting my pipe I concluded
that things really might be worse.</p>
<p>Across the street loomed the great Rosemere apartment-house,
and I noted with surprise that, notwithstanding
the lateness of the hour and of the season,
several lights were still burning there. From two
windows directly opposite, and on a level with me,
light filtered dimly through lowered shades, and I
wondered what possible motive people could have for
shutting out the little air there was on such a night.
My neighbours must be uncommonly suspicious, I
thought, to fear observation from so unlikely a place
as my roof; and yet that was the only spot from which
they could by any chance be overlooked.</p>
<p>The only other light in the building shone clear and
unobstructed through the open windows of the corresponding
room two floors higher up. I was too far below
to be able to look into this room, but I caught<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span>
a suggestion of sumptuous satin hangings and could
distinguish the tops of heavy gilt frames and of some
flowering plants and palms.</p>
<p>As I sat idly looking upwards at these latter windows,
my attention was suddenly arrested by the violent
movement of one of the lace curtains. It was
rolled into a cord by some unseen person who was
presumably on the floor, and then dragged across the
window. A dark object, which I took to be a human
head, moved up and down among the palms, one of
which fell with an audible crash. At the same moment
I heard a woman’s voice raised in a cry of terror.
I leaped to my feet in great excitement, but nothing
further occurred.</p>
<p>After a minute or so the curtain fell back into its
accustomed folds, and I distinctly saw a man moving
swiftly away from the window supporting on his
shoulder a fair-haired woman. Soon afterwards the
lights in this room were extinguished, to be followed
almost immediately by the illumination of the floor
above.</p>
<p>What I had just seen and heard would not have surprised
me in a tenement, but that such scenes could
take place in a respectable house like the Rosemere, inhabited
largely by fashionable people, was indeed
startling. Who could the couple be? And what
could have happened? Had the man, coming home<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
drunk, proceeded to beat the woman and been partially
sobered by her cry; or was the woman subject to hysteria,
or even insane? I remembered that the apartments
were what are commonly known as double-deckers.
That is to say: each one contained two floors,
connected by a private staircase—the living rooms
below, the bedrooms above. So I concluded, from
seeing a light in what was in all probability a bedroom,
that the struggle, or whatever the commotion
had been, was over, and that the victim and her assailant,
or perhaps the patient and her nurse, had gone
quietly, and I trusted amicably, to bed.</p>
<p>Still ruminating over these different conjectures, I
heard a neighbouring clock strike two. I now noticed
for the first time signs of life in the lower apartment
which I first mentioned; shadows, reflected on the
blinds, moved swiftly to and fro, and, growing gigantic,
vanished.</p>
<p>But not for long. Soon they reappeared, and the
shades were at last drawn up. I had now an unobstructed
view of the room, which proved to be a
drawing-room, as I had already surmised. It was
dismantled for the summer, and the pictures and furniture
were hidden under brown holland. A man leant
against the window with his head bowed down, in an
attitude expressive of complete exhaustion or of great
grief. It was too dark for me to distinguish his features;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
but I noticed that he was tall and dark, with a
youthful, athletic figure.</p>
<p>After standing there a few minutes, he turned away.
His actions now struck me as most singular. He
crawled on the floor, disappeared under sofas, and
finally moved even the heavy pieces of furniture from
their places. However valuable the thing which he
had evidently lost might be, yet 2 <span class="f8">A.M</span>. seemed hardly
the hour in which to undertake a search for it.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, my attention had been a good deal distracted
from the man by observing a woman in one of
the bedrooms of the floor immediately above, and consequently
belonging to the same suite. When I first
caught sight of her, the room was already ablaze with
light and she was standing by the window, gazing out
into the darkness. At last, as if overcome by her emotions,
she threw up her hands in a gesture of despair,
and, kneeling down with her elbows on the window sill,
buried her head in her arms. Her hair was so dark
that, as she knelt there against the light, it was undistinguishable
from her black dress.</p>
<p>I don’t know how long she stayed in this position,
but the man below had given up his search and turned
out the lights long before she moved. Finally, she rose
slowly up, a tall black-robed figure, and disappeared
into the back of the room. I waited for some time
hoping to see her again, but as she remained invisible<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
and nothing further happened, and the approaching
dawn held out hopes of a more bearable temperature
below, I decided to return to my divan; but the last
thing I saw before descending was that solitary light,
keeping its silent vigil in the great black building.</p>
<div class="figend">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_close01.png" width-obs="194" height-obs="95" alt="Decoration" /></div>
<hr class="l1" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />