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<h1> THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH </h1>
<h2> By Gilbert K. Chesterton </h2>
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<h2> I. THE FACE IN THE TARGET </h2>
<p>Harold March, the rising reviewer and social critic, was walking
vigorously across a great tableland of moors and commons, the horizon of
which was fringed with the far-off woods of the famous estate of Torwood
Park. He was a good-looking young man in tweeds, with very pale curly hair
and pale clear eyes. Walking in wind and sun in the very landscape of
liberty, he was still young enough to remember his politics and not merely
try to forget them. For his errand at Torwood Park was a political one; it
was the place of appointment named by no less a person than the Chancellor
of the Exchequer, Sir Howard Horne, then introducing his so-called
Socialist budget, and prepared to expound it in an interview with so
promising a penman. Harold March was the sort of man who knows everything
about politics, and nothing about politicians. He also knew a great deal
about art, letters, philosophy, and general culture; about almost
everything, indeed, except the world he was living in.</p>
<p>Abruptly, in the middle of those sunny and windy flats, he came upon a
sort of cleft almost narrow enough to be called a crack in the land. It
was just large enough to be the water-course for a small stream which
vanished at intervals under green tunnels of undergrowth, as if in a
dwarfish forest. Indeed, he had an odd feeling as if he were a giant
looking over the valley of the pygmies. When he dropped into the hollow,
however, the impression was lost; the rocky banks, though hardly above the
height of a cottage, hung over and had the profile of a precipice. As he
began to wander down the course of the stream, in idle but romantic
curiosity, and saw the water shining in short strips between the great
gray boulders and bushes as soft as great green mosses, he fell into quite
an opposite vein of fantasy. It was rather as if the earth had opened and
swallowed him into a sort of underworld of dreams. And when he became
conscious of a human figure dark against the silver stream, sitting on a
large boulder and looking rather like a large bird, it was perhaps with
some of the premonitions proper to a man who meets the strangest
friendship of his life.</p>
<p>The man was apparently fishing; or at least was fixed in a fisherman’s
attitude with more than a fisherman’s immobility. March was able to
examine the man almost as if he had been a statue for some minutes before
the statue spoke. He was a tall, fair man, cadaverous, and a little
lackadaisical, with heavy eyelids and a highbridged nose. When his face
was shaded with his wide white hat, his light mustache and lithe figure
gave him a look of youth. But the Panama lay on the moss beside him; and
the spectator could see that his brow was prematurely bald; and this,
combined with a certain hollowness about the eyes, had an air of headwork
and even headache. But the most curious thing about him, realized after a
short scrutiny, was that, though he looked like a fisherman, he was not
fishing.</p>
<p>He was holding, instead of a rod, something that might have been a
landing-net which some fishermen use, but which was much more like the
ordinary toy net which children carry, and which they generally use
indifferently for shrimps or butterflies. He was dipping this into the
water at intervals, gravely regarding its harvest of weed or mud, and
emptying it out again.</p>
<p>“No, I haven’t caught anything,” he remarked, calmly, as
if answering an unspoken query. “When I do I have to throw it back
again; especially the big fish. But some of the little beasts interest me
when I get ‘em.”</p>
<p>“A scientific interest, I suppose?” observed March.</p>
<p>“Of a rather amateurish sort, I fear,” answered the strange
fisherman. “I have a sort of hobby about what they call ‘phenomena
of phosphorescence.’ But it would be rather awkward to go about in
society carrying stinking fish.”</p>
<p>“I suppose it would,” said March, with a smile.</p>
<p>“Rather odd to enter a drawing-room carrying a large luminous cod,”
continued the stranger, in his listless way. “How quaint it would be
if one could carry it about like a lantern, or have little sprats for
candles. Some of the seabeasts would really be very pretty like
lampshades; the blue sea-snail that glitters all over like starlight; and
some of the red starfish really shine like red stars. But, naturally, I’m
not looking for them here.”</p>
<p>March thought of asking him what he was looking for; but, feeling unequal
to a technical discussion at least as deep as the deep-sea fishes, he
returned to more ordinary topics.</p>
<p>“Delightful sort of hole this is,” he said. “This little
dell and river here. It’s like those places Stevenson talks about,
where something ought to happen.”</p>
<p>“I know,” answered the other. “I think it’s
because the place itself, so to speak, seems to happen and not merely to
exist. Perhaps that’s what old Picasso and some of the Cubists are
trying to express by angles and jagged lines. Look at that wall like low
cliffs that juts forward just at right angles to the slope of turf
sweeping up to it. That’s like a silent collision. It’s like a
breaker and the back-wash of a wave.”</p>
<p>March looked at the low-browed crag overhanging the green slope and
nodded. He was interested in a man who turned so easily from the
technicalities of science to those of art; and asked him if he admired the
new angular artists.</p>
<p>“As I feel it, the Cubists are not Cubist enough,” replied the
stranger. “I mean they’re not thick enough. By making things
mathematical they make them thin. Take the living lines out of that
landscape, simplify it to a right angle, and you flatten it out to a mere
diagram on paper. Diagrams have their own beauty; but it is of just the
other sort. They stand for the unalterable things; the calm, eternal,
mathematical sort of truths; what somebody calls the 'white radiance of’—”</p>
<p>He stopped, and before the next word came something had happened almost
too quickly and completely to be realized. From behind the overhanging
rock came a noise and rush like that of a railway train; and a great motor
car appeared. It topped the crest of cliff, black against the sun, like a
battle-chariot rushing to destruction in some wild epic. March
automatically put out his hand in one futile gesture, as if to catch a
falling tea-cup in a drawing-room.</p>
<p>For the fraction of a flash it seemed to leave the ledge of rock like a
flying ship; then the very sky seemed to turn over like a wheel, and it
lay a ruin amid the tall grasses below, a line of gray smoke going up
slowly from it into the silent air. A little lower the figure of a man
with gray hair lay tumbled down the steep green slope, his limbs lying all
at random, and his face turned away.</p>
<p>The eccentric fisherman dropped his net and walked swiftly toward the
spot, his new acquaintance following him. As they drew near there seemed a
sort of monstrous irony in the fact that the dead machine was still
throbbing and thundering as busily as a factory, while the man lay so
still.</p>
<p>He was unquestionably dead. The blood flowed in the grass from a
hopelessly fatal fracture at the back of the skull; but the face, which
was turned to the sun, was uninjured and strangely arresting in itself. It
was one of those cases of a strange face so unmistakable as to feel
familiar. We feel, somehow, that we ought to recognize it, even though we
do not. It was of the broad, square sort with great jaws, almost like that
of a highly intellectual ape; the wide mouth shut so tight as to be traced
by a mere line; the nose short with the sort of nostrils that seem to gape
with an appetite for the air. The oddest thing about the face was that one
of the eyebrows was cocked up at a much sharper angle than the other.
March thought he had never seen a face so naturally alive as that dead
one. And its ugly energy seemed all the stranger for its halo of hoary
hair. Some papers lay half fallen out of the pocket, and from among them
March extracted a card-case. He read the name on the card aloud.</p>
<p>“Sir Humphrey Turnbull. I’m sure I’ve heard that name
somewhere.”</p>
<p>His companion only gave a sort of a little sigh and was silent for a
moment, as if ruminating, then he merely said, “The poor fellow is
quite gone,” and added some scientific terms in which his auditor
once more found himself out of his depth.</p>
<p>“As things are,” continued the same curiously well-informed
person, “it will be more legal for us to leave the body as it is
until the police are informed. In fact, I think it will be well if nobody
except the police is informed. Don’t be surprised if I seem to be
keeping it dark from some of our neighbors round here.” Then, as if
prompted to regularize his rather abrupt confidence, he said: “I’ve
come down to see my cousin at Torwood; my name is Horne Fisher. Might be a
pun on my pottering about here, mightn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Is Sir Howard Horne your cousin?” asked March. “I’m
going to Torwood Park to see him myself; only about his public work, of
course, and the wonderful stand he is making for his principles. I think
this Budget is the greatest thing in English history. If it fails, it will
be the most heroic failure in English history. Are you an admirer of your
great kinsman, Mr. Fisher?”</p>
<p>“Rather,” said Mr. Fisher. “He’s the best shot I
know.”</p>
<p>Then, as if sincerely repentant of his nonchalance, he added, with a sort
of enthusiasm:</p>
<p>“No, but really, he’s a <i>beautiful</i> shot.”</p>
<p>As if fired by his own words, he took a sort of leap at the ledges of the
rock above him, and scaled them with a sudden agility in startling
contrast to his general lassitude. He had stood for some seconds on the
headland above, with his aquiline profile under the Panama hat relieved
against the sky and peering over the countryside before his companion had
collected himself sufficiently to scramble up after him.</p>
<p>The level above was a stretch of common turf on which the tracks of the
fated car were plowed plainly enough; but the brink of it was broken as
with rocky teeth; broken boulders of all shapes and sizes lay near the
edge; it was almost incredible that any one could have deliberately driven
into such a death trap, especially in broad daylight.</p>
<p>“I can’t make head or tail of it,” said March. “Was
he blind? Or blind drunk?”</p>
<p>“Neither, by the look of him,” replied the other.</p>
<p>“Then it was suicide.”</p>
<p>“It doesn’t seem a cozy way of doing it,” remarked the
man called Fisher. “Besides, I don’t fancy poor old Puggy
would commit suicide, somehow.”</p>
<p>“Poor old who?” inquired the wondering journalist. “Did
you know this unfortunate man?”</p>
<p>“Nobody knew him exactly,” replied Fisher, with some
vagueness. “But one <i>knew</i> him, of course. He’d been a
terror in his time, in Parliament and the courts, and so on; especially in
that row about the aliens who were deported as undesirables, when he
wanted one of 'em hanged for murder. He was so sick about it that he
retired from the bench. Since then he mostly motored about by himself; but
he was coming to Torwood, too, for the week-end; and I don’t see why
he should deliberately break his neck almost at the very door. I believe
Hoggs—I mean my cousin Howard—was coming down specially to
meet him.”</p>
<p>“Torwood Park doesn’t belong to your cousin?” inquired
March.</p>
<p>“No; it used to belong to the Winthrops, you know,” replied
the other. “Now a new man’s got it; a man from Montreal named
Jenkins. Hoggs comes for the shooting; I told you he was a lovely shot.”</p>
<p>This repeated eulogy on the great social statesman affected Harold March
as if somebody had defined Napoleon as a distinguished player of nap. But
he had another half-formed impression struggling in this flood of
unfamiliar things, and he brought it to the surface before it could
vanish.</p>
<p>“Jenkins,” he repeated. “Surely you don’t mean
Jefferson Jenkins, the social reformer? I mean the man who’s
fighting for the new cottage-estate scheme. It would be as interesting to
meet him as any Cabinet Minister in the world, if you’ll excuse my
saying so.”</p>
<p>“Yes; Hoggs told him it would have to be cottages,” said
Fisher. “He said the breed of cattle had improved too often, and
people were beginning to laugh. And, of course, you must hang a peerage on
to something; though the poor chap hasn’t got it yet. Hullo, here’s
somebody else.”</p>
<p>They had started walking in the tracks of the car, leaving it behind them
in the hollow, still humming horribly like a huge insect that had killed a
man. The tracks took them to the corner of the road, one arm of which went
on in the same line toward the distant gates of the park. It was clear
that the car had been driven down the long straight road, and then,
instead of turning with the road to the left, had gone straight on over
the turf to its doom. But it was not this discovery that had riveted
Fisher’s eye, but something even more solid. At the angle of the
white road a dark and solitary figure was standing almost as still as a
finger post. It was that of a big man in rough shooting-clothes,
bareheaded, and with tousled curly hair that gave him a rather wild look.
On a nearer approach this first more fantastic impression faded; in a full
light the figure took on more conventional colors, as of an ordinary
gentleman who happened to have come out without a hat and without very
studiously brushing his hair. But the massive stature remained, and
something deep and even cavernous about the setting of the eyes redeemed
his animal good looks from the commonplace. But March had no time to study
the man more closely, for, much to his astonishment, his guide merely
observed, “Hullo, Jack!” and walked past him as if he had
indeed been a signpost, and without attempting to inform him of the
catastrophe beyond the rocks. It was relatively a small thing, but it was
only the first in a string of singular antics on which his new and
eccentric friend was leading him.</p>
<p>The man they had passed looked after them in rather a suspicious fashion,
but Fisher continued serenely on his way along the straight road that ran
past the gates of the great estate.</p>
<p>“That’s John Burke, the traveler,” he condescended to
explain. “I expect you’ve heard of him; shoots big game and
all that. Sorry I couldn’t stop to introduce you, but I dare say you’ll
meet him later on.”</p>
<p>“I know his book, of course,” said March, with renewed
interest. “That is certainly a fine piece of description, about
their being only conscious of the closeness of the elephant when the
colossal head blocked out the moon.”</p>
<p>“Yes, young Halkett writes jolly well, I think. What? Didn’t
you know Halkett wrote Burke’s book for him? Burke can’t use
anything except a gun; and you can’t write with that. Oh, he’s
genuine enough in his way, you know, as brave as a lion, or a good deal
braver by all accounts.”</p>
<p>“You seem to know all about him,” observed March, with a
rather bewildered laugh, “and about a good many other people.”</p>
<p>Fisher’s bald brow became abruptly corrugated, and a curious
expression came into his eyes.</p>
<p>“I know too much,” he said. “That’s what’s
the matter with me. That’s what’s the matter with all of us,
and the whole show; we know too much. Too much about one another; too much
about ourselves. That’s why I’m really interested, just now,
about one thing that I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“And that is?” inquired the other.</p>
<p>“Why that poor fellow is dead.”</p>
<p>They had walked along the straight road for nearly a mile, conversing at
intervals in this fashion; and March had a singular sense of the whole
world being turned inside out. Mr. Horne Fisher did not especially abuse
his friends and relatives in fashionable society; of some of them he spoke
with affection. But they seemed to be an entirely new set of men and
women, who happened to have the same nerves as the men and women mentioned
most often in the newspapers. Yet no fury of revolt could have seemed to
him more utterly revolutionary than this cold familiarity. It was like
daylight on the other side of stage scenery.</p>
<p>They reached the great lodge gates of the park, and, to March’s
surprise, passed them and continued along the interminable white, straight
road. But he was himself too early for his appointment with Sir Howard,
and was not disinclined to see the end of his new friend’s
experiment, whatever it might be. They had long left the moorland behind
them, and half the white road was gray in the great shadow of the Torwood
pine forests, themselves like gray bars shuttered against the sunshine and
within, amid that clear noon, manufacturing their own midnight. Soon,
however, rifts began to appear in them like gleams of colored windows; the
trees thinned and fell away as the road went forward, showing the wild,
irregular copses in which, as Fisher said, the house-party had been
blazing away all day. And about two hundred yards farther on they came to
the first turn of the road.</p>
<p>At the corner stood a sort of decayed inn with the dingy sign of The
Grapes. The signboard was dark and indecipherable by now, and hung black
against the sky and the gray moorland beyond, about as inviting as a
gallows. March remarked that it looked like a tavern for vinegar instead
of wine.</p>
<p>“A good phrase,” said Fisher, “and so it would be if you
were silly enough to drink wine in it. But the beer is very good, and so
is the brandy.”</p>
<p>March followed him to the bar parlor with some wonder, and his dim sense
of repugnance was not dismissed by the first sight of the innkeeper, who
was widely different from the genial innkeepers of romance, a bony man,
very silent behind a black mustache, but with black, restless eyes.
Taciturn as he was, the investigator succeeded at last in extracting a
scrap of information from him, by dint of ordering beer and talking to him
persistently and minutely on the subject of motor cars. He evidently
regarded the innkeeper as in some singular way an authority on motor cars;
as being deep in the secrets of the mechanism, management, and
mismanagement of motor cars; holding the man all the time with a
glittering eye like the Ancient Mariner. Out of all this rather mysterious
conversation there did emerge at last a sort of admission that one
particular motor car, of a given description, had stopped before the inn
about an hour before, and that an elderly man had alighted, requiring some
mechanical assistance. Asked if the visitor required any other assistance,
the innkeeper said shortly that the old gentleman had filled his flask and
taken a packet of sandwiches. And with these words the somewhat
inhospitable host had walked hastily out of the bar, and they heard him
banging doors in the dark interior.</p>
<p>Fisher’s weary eye wandered round the dusty and dreary inn parlor
and rested dreamily on a glass case containing a stuffed bird, with a gun
hung on hooks above it, which seemed to be its only ornament.</p>
<p>“Puggy was a humorist,” he observed, “at least in his
own rather grim style. But it seems rather too grim a joke for a man to
buy a packet of sandwiches when he is just going to commit suicide.”</p>
<p>“If you come to that,” answered March, “it isn’t
very usual for a man to buy a packet of sandwiches when he’s just
outside the door of a grand house he’s going to stop at.”</p>
<p>“No . . . no,” repeated Fisher, almost mechanically; and then
suddenly cocked his eye at his interlocutor with a much livelier
expression.</p>
<p>“By Jove! that’s an idea. You’re perfectly right. And
that suggests a very queer idea, doesn’t it?”</p>
<p>There was a silence, and then March started with irrational nervousness as
the door of the inn was flung open and another man walked rapidly to the
counter. He had struck it with a coin and called out for brandy before he
saw the other two guests, who were sitting at a bare wooden table under
the window. When he turned about with a rather wild stare, March had yet
another unexpected emotion, for his guide hailed the man as Hoggs and
introduced him as Sir Howard Horne.</p>
<p>He looked rather older than his boyish portraits in the illustrated
papers, as is the way of politicians; his flat, fair hair was touched with
gray, but his face was almost comically round, with a Roman nose which,
when combined with his quick, bright eyes, raised a vague reminiscence of
a parrot. He had a cap rather at the back of his head and a gun under his
arm. Harold March had imagined many things about his meeting with the
great political reformer, but he had never pictured him with a gun under
his arm, drinking brandy in a public house.</p>
<p>“So you’re stopping at Jink’s, too,” said Fisher.
“Everybody seems to be at Jink’s.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the Chancellor of the Exchequer. “Jolly
good shooting. At least all of it that isn’t Jink’s shooting.
I never knew a chap with such good shooting that was such a bad shot. Mind
you, he’s a jolly good fellow and all that; I don’t say a word
against him. But he never learned to hold a gun when he was packing pork
or whatever he did. They say he shot the cockade off his own servant’s
hat; just like him to have cockades, of course. He shot the weathercock
off his own ridiculous gilded summerhouse. It’s the only cock he’ll
ever kill, I should think. Are you coming up there now?”</p>
<p>Fisher said, rather vaguely, that he was following soon, when he had fixed
something up; and the Chancellor of the Exchequer left the inn. March
fancied he had been a little upset or impatient when he called for the
brandy; but he had talked himself back into a satisfactory state, if the
talk had not been quite what his literary visitor had expected. Fisher, a
few minutes afterward, slowly led the way out of the tavern and stood in
the middle of the road, looking down in the direction from which they had
traveled. Then he walked back about two hundred yards in that direction
and stood still again.</p>
<p>“I should think this is about the place,” he said.</p>
<p>“What place?” asked his companion.</p>
<p>“The place where the poor fellow was killed,” said Fisher,
sadly.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” demanded March.</p>
<p>“He was smashed up on the rocks a mile and a half from here.”</p>
<p>“No, he wasn’t,” replied Fisher. “He didn’t
fall on the rocks at all. Didn’t you notice that he only fell on the
slope of soft grass underneath? But I saw that he had a bullet in him
already.”</p>
<p>Then after a pause he added:</p>
<p>“He was alive at the inn, but he was dead long before he came to the
rocks. So he was shot as he drove his car down this strip of straight
road, and I should think somewhere about here. After that, of course, the
car went straight on with nobody to stop or turn it. It’s really a
very cunning dodge in its way; for the body would be found far away, and
most people would say, as you do, that it was an accident to a motorist.
The murderer must have been a clever brute.”</p>
<p>“But wouldn’t the shot be heard at the inn or somewhere?”
asked March.</p>
<p>“It would be heard. But it would not be noticed. That,”
continued the investigator, “is where he was clever again. Shooting
was going on all over the place all day; very likely he timed his shot so
as to drown it in a number of others. Certainly he was a first-class
criminal. And he was something else as well.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” asked his companion, with a creepy
premonition of something coming, he knew not why.</p>
<p>“He was a first-class shot,” said Fisher. He had turned his
back abruptly and was walking down a narrow, grassy lane, little more than
a cart track, which lay opposite the inn and marked the end of the great
estate and the beginning of the open moors. March plodded after him with
the same idle perseverance, and found him staring through a gap in giant
weeds and thorns at the flat face of a painted paling. From behind the
paling rose the great gray columns of a row of poplars, which filled the
heavens above them with dark-green shadow and shook faintly in a wind
which had sunk slowly into a breeze. The afternoon was already deepening
into evening, and the titanic shadows of the poplars lengthened over a
third of the landscape.</p>
<p>“Are you a first-class criminal?” asked Fisher, in a friendly
tone. “I’m afraid I’m not. But I think I can manage to
be a sort of fourth-rate burglar.”</p>
<p>And before his companion could reply he had managed to swing himself up
and over the fence; March followed without much bodily effort, but with
considerable mental disturbance. The poplars grew so close against the
fence that they had some difficulty in slipping past them, and beyond the
poplars they could see only a high hedge of laurel, green and lustrous in
the level sun. Something in this limitation by a series of living walls
made him feel as if he were really entering a shattered house instead of
an open field. It was as if he came in by a disused door or window and
found the way blocked by furniture. When they had circumvented the laurel
hedge, they came out on a sort of terrace of turf, which fell by one green
step to an oblong lawn like a bowling green. Beyond this was the only
building in sight, a low conservatory, which seemed far away from
anywhere, like a glass cottage standing in its own fields in fairyland.
Fisher knew that lonely look of the outlying parts of a great house well
enough. He realized that it is more of a satire on aristocracy than if it
were choked with weeds and littered with ruins. For it is not neglected
and yet it is deserted; at any rate, it is disused. It is regularly swept
and garnished for a master who never comes.</p>
<p>Looking over the lawn, however, he saw one object which he had not
apparently expected. It was a sort of tripod supporting a large disk like
the round top of a table tipped sideways, and it was not until they had
dropped on to the lawn and walked across to look at it that March realized
that it was a target. It was worn and weatherstained; the gay colors of
its concentric rings were faded; possibly it had been set up in those
far-off Victorian days when there was a fashion of archery. March had one
of his vague visions of ladies in cloudy crinolines and gentlemen in
outlandish hats and whiskers revisiting that lost garden like ghosts.</p>
<p>Fisher, who was peering more closely at the target, startled him by an
exclamation.</p>
<p>“Hullo!” he said. “Somebody has been peppering this
thing with shot, after all, and quite lately, too. Why, I believe old Jink’s
been trying to improve his bad shooting here.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and it looks as if it still wanted improving,” answered
March, laughing. “Not one of these shots is anywhere near the bull’s-eye;
they seem just scattered about in the wildest way.”</p>
<p>“In the wildest way,” repeated Fisher, still peering intently
at the target. He seemed merely to assent, but March fancied his eye was
shining under its sleepy lid and that he straightened his stooping figure
with a strange effort.</p>
<p>“Excuse me a moment,” he said, feeling in his pockets. “I
think I’ve got some of my chemicals; and after that we’ll go
up to the house.” And he stooped again over the target, putting
something with his finger over each of the shot-holes, so far as March
could see merely a dull-gray smear. Then they went through the gathering
twilight up the long green avenues to the great house.</p>
<p>Here again, however, the eccentric investigator did not enter by the front
door. He walked round the house until he found a window open, and, leaping
into it, introduced his friend to what appeared to be the gun-room. Rows
of the regular instruments for bringing down birds stood against the
walls; but across a table in the window lay one or two weapons of a
heavier and more formidable pattern.</p>
<p>“Hullo! these are Burke’s big-game rifles,” said Fisher.
“I never knew he kept them here.” He lifted one of them,
examined it briefly, and put it down again, frowning heavily. Almost as he
did so a strange young man came hurriedly into the room. He was dark and
sturdy, with a bumpy forehead and a bulldog jaw, and he spoke with a curt
apology.</p>
<p>“I left Major Burke’s guns here,” he said, “and he
wants them packed up. He’s going away to-night.”</p>
<p>And he carried off the two rifles without casting a glance at the
stranger; through the open window they could see his short, dark figure
walking away across the glimmering garden. Fisher got out of the window
again and stood looking after him.</p>
<p>“That’s Halkett, whom I told you about,” he said.
“I knew he was a sort of secretary and had to do with Burke’s
papers; but I never knew he had anything to do with his guns. But he’s
just the sort of silent, sensible little devil who might be very good at
anything; the sort of man you know for years before you find he’s a
chess champion.”</p>
<p>He had begun to walk in the direction of the disappearing secretary, and
they soon came within sight of the rest of the house-party talking and
laughing on the lawn. They could see the tall figure and loose mane of the
lion-hunter dominating the little group.</p>
<p>“By the way,” observed Fisher, “when we were talking
about Burke and Halkett, I said that a man couldn’t very well write
with a gun. Well, I’m not so sure now. Did you ever hear of an
artist so clever that he could draw with a gun? There’s a wonderful
chap loose about here.”</p>
<p>Sir Howard hailed Fisher and his friend the journalist with almost
boisterous amiability. The latter was presented to Major Burke and Mr.
Halkett and also (by way of a parenthesis) to his host, Mr. Jenkins, a
commonplace little man in loud tweeds, whom everybody else seemed to treat
with a sort of affection, as if he were a baby.</p>
<p>The irrepressible Chancellor of the Exchequer was still talking about the
birds he had brought down, the birds that Burke and Halkett had brought
down, and the birds that Jenkins, their host, had failed to bring down. It
seemed to be a sort of sociable monomania.</p>
<p>“You and your big game,” he ejaculated, aggressively, to
Burke. “Why, anybody could shoot big game. You want to be a shot to
shoot small game.”</p>
<p>“Quite so,” interposed Horne Fisher. “Now if only a
hippopotamus could fly up in the air out of that bush, or you preserved
flying elephants on the estate, why, then—”</p>
<p>“Why even Jink might hit that sort of bird,” cried Sir Howard,
hilariously slapping his host on the back. “Even he might hit a
haystack or a hippopotamus.”</p>
<p>“Look here, you fellows,” said Fisher. “I want you to
come along with me for a minute and shoot at something else. Not a
hippopotamus. Another kind of queer animal I’ve found on the estate.
It’s an animal with three legs and one eye, and it’s all the
colors of the rainbow.”</p>
<p>“What the deuce are you talking about?” asked Burke.</p>
<p>“You come along and see,” replied Fisher, cheerfully.</p>
<p>Such people seldom reject anything nonsensical, for they are always
seeking for something new. They gravely rearmed themselves from the
gun-room and trooped along at the tail of their guide, Sir Howard only
pausing, in a sort of ecstasy, to point out the celebrated gilt
summerhouse on which the gilt weathercock still stood crooked. It was dusk
turning to dark by the time they reached the remote green by the poplars
and accepted the new and aimless game of shooting at the old mark.</p>
<p>The last light seemed to fade from the lawn, and the poplars against the
sunset were like great plumes upon a purple hearse, when the futile
procession finally curved round, and came out in front of the target. Sir
Howard again slapped his host on the shoulder, shoving him playfully
forward to take the first shot. The shoulder and arm he touched seemed
unnaturally stiff and angular. Mr. Jenkins was holding his gun in an
attitude more awkward than any that his satiric friends had seen or
expected.</p>
<p>At the same instant a horrible scream seemed to come from nowhere. It was
so unnatural and so unsuited to the scene that it might have been made by
some inhuman thing flying on wings above them or eavesdropping in the dark
woods beyond. But Fisher knew that it had started and stopped on the pale
lips of Jefferson Jenkins, of Montreal, and no one at that moment catching
sight of Jefferson Jenkins’s face would have complained that it was
commonplace. The next moment a torrent of guttural but good-humored oaths
came from Major Burke as he and the two other men saw what was in front of
them. The target stood up in the dim grass like a dark goblin grinning at
them, and it was literally grinning. It had two eyes like stars, and in
similar livid points of light were picked out the two upturned and open
nostrils and the two ends of the wide and tight mouth. A few white dots
above each eye indicated the hoary eyebrows; and one of them ran upward
almost erect. It was a brilliant caricature done in bright dotted lines
and March knew of whom. It shone in the shadowy grass, smeared with sea
fire as if one of the submarine monsters had crawled into the twilight
garden; but it had the head of a dead man.</p>
<p>“It’s only luminous paint,” said Burke. “Old
Fisher’s been having a joke with that phosphorescent stuff of his.”</p>
<p>“Seems to be meant for old Puggy”’ observed Sir Howard.
“Hits him off very well.”</p>
<p>With that they all laughed, except Jenkins. When they had all done, he
made a noise like the first effort of an animal to laugh, and Horne Fisher
suddenly strode across to him and said:</p>
<p>“Mr. Jenkins, I must speak to you at once in private.”</p>
<p>It was by the little watercourse in the moors, on the slope under the
hanging rock, that March met his new friend Fisher, by appointment,
shortly after the ugly and almost grotesque scene that had broken up the
group in the garden.</p>
<p>“It was a monkey-trick of mine,” observed Fisher, gloomily,
“putting phosphorus on the target; but the only chance to make him
jump was to give him the horrors suddenly. And when he saw the face he’d
shot at shining on the target he practiced on, all lit up with an infernal
light, he did jump. Quite enough for my own intellectual satisfaction.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I don’t quite understand even now,”
said March, “exactly what he did or why he did it.”</p>
<p>“You ought to,” replied Fisher, with his rather dreary smile,
“for you gave me the first suggestion yourself. Oh yes, you did; and
it was a very shrewd one. You said a man wouldn’t take sandwiches
with him to dine at a great house. It was quite true; and the inference
was that, though he was going there, he didn’t mean to dine there.
Or, at any rate, that he might not be dining there. It occurred to me at
once that he probably expected the visit to be unpleasant, or the
reception doubtful, or something that would prevent his accepting
hospitality. Then it struck me that Turnbull was a terror to certain shady
characters in the past, and that he had come down to identify and denounce
one of them. The chances at the start pointed to the host—that is,
Jenkins. I’m morally certain now that Jenkins was the undesirable
alien Turnbull wanted to convict in another shooting-affair, but you see
the shooting gentleman had another shot in his locker.”</p>
<p>“But you said he would have to be a very good shot,” protested
March.</p>
<p>“Jenkins is a very good shot,” said Fisher. “A very good
shot who can pretend to be a very bad shot. Shall I tell you the second
hint I hit on, after yours, to make me think it was Jenkins? It was my
cousin’s account of his bad shooting. He’d shot a cockade off
a hat and a weathercock off a building. Now, in fact, a man must shoot
very well indeed to shoot so badly as that. He must shoot very neatly to
hit the cockade and not the head, or even the hat. If the shots had really
gone at random, the chances are a thousand to one that they would not have
hit such prominent and picturesque objects. They were chosen because they
were prominent and picturesque objects. They make a story to go the round
of society. He keeps the crooked weathercock in the summerhouse to
perpetuate the story of a legend. And then he lay in wait with his evil
eye and wicked gun, safely ambushed behind the legend of his own
incompetence.</p>
<p>“But there is more than that. There is the summerhouse itself. I
mean there is the whole thing. There’s all that Jenkins gets chaffed
about, the gilding and the gaudy colors and all the vulgarity that’s
supposed to stamp him as an upstart. Now, as a matter of fact, upstarts
generally don’t do this. God knows there’s enough of ‘em
in society; and one knows ‘em well enough. And this is the very last
thing they do. They’re generally only too keen to know the right
thing and do it; and they instantly put themselves body and soul into the
hands of art decorators and art experts, who do the whole thing for them.
There’s hardly another millionaire alive who has the moral courage
to have a gilt monogram on a chair like that one in the gun-room. For that
matter, there’s the name as well as the monogram. Names like
Tompkins and Jenkins and Jinks are funny without being vulgar; I mean they
are vulgar without being common. If you prefer it, they are commonplace
without being common. They are just the names to be chosen to <i>look</i>
ordinary, but they’re really rather extraordinary. Do you know many
people called Tompkins? It’s a good deal rarer than Talbot. It’s
pretty much the same with the comic clothes of the parvenu. Jenkins
dresses like a character in Punch. But that’s because he is a
character in Punch. I mean he’s a fictitious character. He’s a
fabulous animal. He doesn’t exist.</p>
<p>“Have you ever considered what it must be like to be a man who doesn’t
exist? I mean to be a man with a fictitious character that he has to keep
up at the expense not merely of personal talents: To be a new kind of
hypocrite hiding a talent in a new kind of napkin. This man has chosen his
hypocrisy very ingeniously; it was really a new one. A subtle villain has
dressed up as a dashing gentleman and a worthy business man and a
philanthropist and a saint; but the loud checks of a comical little cad
were really rather a new disguise. But the disguise must be very irksome
to a man who can really do things. This is a dexterous little cosmopolitan
guttersnipe who can do scores of things, not only shoot, but draw and
paint, and probably play the fiddle. Now a man like that may find the
hiding of his talents useful; but he could never help wanting to use them
where they were useless. If he can draw, he will draw absent-mindedly on
blotting paper. I suspect this rascal has often drawn poor old Puggy’s
face on blotting paper. Probably he began doing it in blots as he
afterward did it in dots, or rather shots. It was the same sort of thing;
he found a disused target in a deserted yard and couldn’t resist
indulging in a little secret shooting, like secret drinking. You thought
the shots all scattered and irregular, and so they were; but not
accidental. No two distances were alike; but the different points were
exactly where he wanted to put them. There’s nothing needs such
mathematical precision as a wild caricature. I’ve dabbled a little
in drawing myself, and I assure you that to put one dot where you want it
is a marvel with a pen close to a piece of paper. It was a miracle to do
it across a garden with a gun. But a man who can work those miracles will
always itch to work them, if it’s only in the dark.”</p>
<p>After a pause March observed, thoughtfully, “But he couldn’t
have brought him down like a bird with one of those little guns.”</p>
<p>“No; that was why I went into the gun-room,” replied Fisher.
“He did it with one of Burke’s rifles, and Burke thought he
knew the sound of it. That’s why he rushed out without a hat,
looking so wild. He saw nothing but a car passing quickly, which he
followed for a little way, and then concluded he’d made a mistake.”</p>
<p>There was another silence, during which Fisher sat on a great stone as
motionless as on their first meeting, and watched the gray and silver
river eddying past under the bushes. Then March said, abruptly, “Of
course he knows the truth now.”</p>
<p>“Nobody knows the truth but you and I,” answered Fisher, with
a certain softening in his voice. “And I don’t think you and I
will ever quarrel.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” asked March, in an altered accent. “What
have you done about it?”</p>
<p>Horne Fisher continued to gaze steadily at the eddying stream. At last he
said, “The police have proved it was a motor accident.”</p>
<p>“But you know it was not.”</p>
<p>“I told you that I know too much,” replied Fisher, with his
eye on the river. “I know that, and I know a great many other
things. I know the atmosphere and the way the whole thing works. I know
this fellow has succeeded in making himself something incurably
commonplace and comic. I know you can’t get up a persecution of old
Toole or Little Tich. If I were to tell Hoggs or Halkett that old Jink was
an assassin, they would almost die of laughter before my eyes. Oh, I don’t
say their laughter’s quite innocent, though it’s genuine in
its way. They want old Jink, and they couldn’t do without him. I don’t
say I’m quite innocent. I like Hoggs; I don’t want him to be
down and out; and he’d be done for if Jink can’t pay for his
coronet. They were devilish near the line at the last election. But the
only real objection to it is that it’s impossible. Nobody would
believe it; it’s not in the picture. The crooked weathercock would
always turn it into a joke.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you think this is infamous?” asked March,
quietly.</p>
<p>“I think a good many things,” replied the other. “If you
people ever happen to blow the whole tangle of society to hell with
dynamite, I don’t know that the human race will be much the worse.
But don’t be too hard on me merely because I know what society is.
That’s why I moon away my time over things like stinking fish.”</p>
<p>There was a pause as he settled himself down again by the stream; and then
he added:</p>
<p>“I told you before I had to throw back the big fish.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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