<SPAN name="chap28"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XXVIII </h3>
<p>So the Second Act ended.</p>
<p>Turning to the Third Act, Henry looked wearily at the pages as he let
them slip through his fingers. Both in mind and body, he began to feel
the need of repose.</p>
<p>In one important respect, the later portion of the manuscript differed
from the pages which he had just been reading. Signs of an overwrought
brain showed themselves, here and there, as the outline of the play
approached its end. The handwriting grew worse and worse. Some of the
longer sentences were left unfinished. In the exchange of dialogue,
questions and answers were not always attributed respectively to the
right speaker. At certain intervals the writer's failing intelligence
seemed to recover itself for a while; only to relapse again, and to
lose the thread of the narrative more hopelessly than ever.</p>
<p>After reading one or two of the more coherent passages Henry recoiled
from the ever-darkening horror of the story. He closed the manuscript,
heartsick and exhausted, and threw himself on his bed to rest. The
door opened almost at the same moment. Lord Montbarry entered the room.</p>
<p>'We have just returned from the Opera,' he said; 'and we have heard the
news of that miserable woman's death. They say you spoke to her in her
last moments; and I want to hear how it happened.'</p>
<p>'You shall hear how it happened,' Henry answered; 'and more than that.
You are now the head of the family, Stephen; and I feel bound, in the
position which oppresses me, to leave you to decide what ought to be
done.'</p>
<p>With those introductory words, he told his brother how the Countess's
play had come into his hands. 'Read the first few pages,' he said. 'I
am anxious to know whether the same impression is produced on both of
us.'</p>
<p>Before Lord Montbarry had got half-way through the First Act, he
stopped, and looked at his brother. 'What does she mean by boasting of
this as her own invention?' he asked. 'Was she too crazy to remember
that these things really happened?'</p>
<p>This was enough for Henry: the same impression had been produced on
both of them. 'You will do as you please,' he said. 'But if you will
be guided by me, spare yourself the reading of those pages to come,
which describe our brother's terrible expiation of his heartless
marriage.'</p>
<p>'Have you read it all, Henry?'</p>
<p>'Not all. I shrank from reading some of the latter part of it.
Neither you nor I saw much of our elder brother after we left school;
and, for my part, I felt, and never scrupled to express my feeling,
that he behaved infamously to Agnes. But when I read that unconscious
confession of the murderous conspiracy to which he fell a victim, I
remembered, with something like remorse, that the same mother bore us.
I have felt for him to-night, what I am ashamed to think I never felt
for him before.'</p>
<p>Lord Montbarry took his brother's hand.</p>
<p>'You are a good fellow, Henry,' he said; 'but are you quite sure that
you have not been needlessly distressing yourself? Because some of
this crazy creature's writing accidentally tells what we know to be the
truth, does it follow that all the rest is to be relied on to the end?'</p>
<p>'There is no possible doubt of it,' Henry replied.</p>
<p>'No possible doubt?' his brother repeated. 'I shall go on with my
reading, Henry—and see what justification there may be for that
confident conclusion of yours.'</p>
<p>He read on steadily, until he had reached the end of the Second Act.
Then he looked up.</p>
<p>'Do you really believe that the mutilated remains which you discovered
this morning are the remains of our brother?' he asked. 'And do you
believe it on such evidence as this?'</p>
<p>Henry answered silently by a sign in the affirmative.</p>
<p>Lord Montbarry checked himself—evidently on the point of entering an
indignant protest.</p>
<p>'You acknowledge that you have not read the later scenes of the piece,'
he said. 'Don't be childish, Henry! If you persist in pinning your
faith on such stuff as this, the least you can do is to make yourself
thoroughly acquainted with it. Will you read the Third Act? No? Then
I shall read it to you.'</p>
<p>He turned to the Third Act, and ran over those fragmentary passages
which were clearly enough written and expressed to be intelligible to
the mind of a stranger.</p>
<p>'Here is a scene in the vaults of the palace,' he began. 'The victim
of the conspiracy is sleeping on his miserable bed; and the Baron and
the Countess are considering the position in which they stand. The
Countess (as well as I can make it out) has raised the money that is
wanted by borrowing on the security of her jewels at Frankfort; and the
Courier upstairs is still declared by the Doctor to have a chance of
recovery. What are the conspirators to do, if the man does recover?
The cautious Baron suggests setting the prisoner free. If he ventures
to appeal to the law, it is easy to declare that he is subject to
insane delusion, and to call his own wife as witness. On the other
hand, if the Courier dies, how is the sequestrated and unknown nobleman
to be put out of the way? Passively, by letting him starve in his
prison? No: the Baron is a man of refined tastes; he dislikes
needless cruelty. The active policy remains—say, assassination by the
knife of a hired bravo? The Baron objects to trusting an accomplice;
also to spending money on anyone but himself. Shall they drop their
prisoner into the canal? The Baron declines to trust water; water will
show him on the surface. Shall they set his bed on fire? An excellent
idea; but the smoke might be seen. No: the circumstances being now
entirely altered, poisoning him presents the easiest way out of it. He
has simply become a superfluous person. The cheapest poison will
do.—Is it possible, Henry, that you believe this consultation really
took place?'</p>
<p>Henry made no reply. The succession of the questions that had just
been read to him, exactly followed the succession of the dreams that
had terrified Mrs. Norbury, on the two nights which she had passed in
the hotel. It was useless to point out this coincidence to his
brother. He only said, 'Go on.'</p>
<p>Lord Montbarry turned the pages until he came to the next intelligible
passage.</p>
<p>'Here,' he proceeded, 'is a double scene on the stage—so far as I can
understand the sketch of it. The Doctor is upstairs, innocently
writing his certificate of my Lord's decease, by the dead Courier's
bedside. Down in the vaults, the Baron stands by the corpse of the
poisoned lord, preparing the strong chemical acids which are to reduce
it to a heap of ashes—Surely, it is not worth while to trouble
ourselves with deciphering such melodramatic horrors as these? Let us
get on! let us get on!'</p>
<p>He turned the leaves again; attempting vainly to discover the meaning
of the confused scenes that followed. On the last page but one, he
found the last intelligible sentences.</p>
<p>'The Third Act seems to be divided,' he said, 'into two Parts or
Tableaux. I think I can read the writing at the beginning of the
Second Part. The Baron and the Countess open the scene. The Baron's
hands are mysteriously concealed by gloves. He has reduced the body to
ashes by his own system of cremation, with the exception of the head—'</p>
<p>Henry interrupted his brother there. 'Don't read any more!' he
exclaimed.</p>
<p>'Let us do the Countess justice,' Lord Montbarry persisted. 'There are
not half a dozen lines more that I can make out! The accidental
breaking of his jar of acid has burnt the Baron's hands severely. He
is still unable to proceed to the destruction of the head—and the
Countess is woman enough (with all her wickedness) to shrink from
attempting to take his place—when the first news is received of the
coming arrival of the commission of inquiry despatched by the insurance
offices. The Baron feels no alarm. Inquire as the commission may, it
is the natural death of the Courier (in my Lord's character) that they
are blindly investigating. The head not being destroyed, the obvious
alternative is to hide it—and the Baron is equal to the occasion. His
studies in the old library have informed him of a safe place of
concealment in the palace. The Countess may recoil from handling the
acids and watching the process of cremation; but she can surely
sprinkle a little disinfecting powder—'</p>
<p>'No more!' Henry reiterated. 'No more!'</p>
<p>'There is no more that can be read, my dear fellow. The last page
looks like sheer delirium. She may well have told you that her
invention had failed her!'</p>
<p>'Face the truth honestly, Stephen, and say her memory.'</p>
<p>Lord Montbarry rose from the table at which he had been sitting, and
looked at his brother with pitying eyes.</p>
<p>'Your nerves are out of order, Henry,' he said. 'And no wonder, after
that frightful discovery under the hearth-stone. We won't dispute about
it; we will wait a day or two until you are quite yourself again. In
the meantime, let us understand each other on one point at least. You
leave the question of what is to be done with these pages of writing to
me, as the head of the family?'</p>
<p>'I do.'</p>
<p>Lord Montbarry quietly took up the manuscript, and threw it into the
fire. 'Let this rubbish be of some use,' he said, holding the pages
down with the poker. 'The room is getting chilly—the Countess's play
will set some of these charred logs flaming again.' He waited a little
at the fire-place, and returned to his brother. 'Now, Henry, I have a
last word to say, and then I have done. I am ready to admit that you
have stumbled, by an unlucky chance, on the proof of a crime committed
in the old days of the palace, nobody knows how long ago. With that
one concession, I dispute everything else. Rather than agree in the
opinion you have formed, I won't believe anything that has happened.
The supernatural influences that some of us felt when we first slept in
this hotel—your loss of appetite, our sister's dreadful dreams, the
smell that overpowered Francis, and the head that appeared to Agnes—I
declare them all to be sheer delusions! I believe in nothing, nothing,
nothing!' He opened the door to go out, and looked back into the room.
'Yes,' he resumed, 'there is one thing I believe in. My wife has
committed a breach of confidence—I believe Agnes will marry you. Good
night, Henry. We leave Venice the first thing to-morrow morning.</p>
<p>So Lord Montbarry disposed of the mystery of The Haunted Hotel.</p>
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