<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE SPIRIT'S STORY IS CONCLUDED.</div>
<div class='unindent'>"<span class="smcap">I should</span> say," volunteered Hopkins, with a
shake of his head, "that that was about the
most unpleasant situation he had got you into
yet; and yet he was not entirely to blame. He
requested candour from you, and you declined
to be candid. You should have told him of
your engagement to Miss Hicksworthy-Johnstone.
That would at least have prevented his
kicking her father out of your office and rolling
downstairs with him."</div>
<p>"It is easy enough to say now what ought
to have been done," sobbed the exile. "I do
not think you would have done very differently
if you had been in my position. I was jealous
of the fiend, I suppose, and I didn't know but
what he would insist upon doing some of the
courting—which would have been intolerable."</p>
<p>"Better that than to be set down by your<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></SPAN></span>
<i>fiancée</i> as a heartless trifler," returned Hopkins.
"But what happened next? Was the old
gentleman hurt?"</p>
<p>"Not he," replied the exile. "When he and
I, as he supposed me to be, reached the bottom
of the stairs he landed on top, and was the first
to get on his feet again. And then, Hopkins,
I was glad not to be in my normal condition;
for as the fiend attempted to rise my Arabella's
father, who still retained his grip upon that
oak stick, gave me the worst licking I ever had
in my life, and I—well, I really enjoyed the
spectacle, because I knew that I deserved it.
The fiend, hampered somewhat by the corse to
which he was not yet entirely accustomed was
at a tremendous disadvantage, and I know Mr.
Hicksworthy-Johnstone's blows caused him
considerable pain. The only possible escape
for him was to leave the body, which he did
just as the attacking party landed a resounding
thwack upon the back of my neck. Of course,
the minute the fiend evacuated the premises, I
appeared to Mr. Hicksworthy-Johnstone to
have been killed, because there was in reality
no slightest bit of animation left in my body.
It was the horror of this discovery that covered
the retreat of the fiend, who, more horribly
green than ever—the green that comes from
rage—mounted the steps he had so summarily<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN></span>
descended a moment before, and hurried into
my room, dragging me by sheer force of will,
which I was unable to resist, after him. You
see, Hopkins, we were now nothing more than
two consciousnesses; two minds, one mortal,
the other immortal; one infinitely strong, the
other finite in its limitations, and I was of
course as powerless in the presence of the
fiend as a babe in the arms of its nurse. Mr.
Hicksworthy-Johnstone, thinking that he had
killed me, after a vain endeavour to restore my
stricken body to consciousness—in which he
would have succeeded had the fiend permitted
me to take possession again, for I did not wish
Arabella's father to suppose for one instant
that he was a murderer—sneaked on tip-toes
from the building, and, mumbling to himself in
an insane fashion, disappeared in the crowd of
pedestrians on the street.</p>
<p>"'This is a pretty mess you've got us into,'
said the fiend. 'I should like to know what
excuse you can have for such infernal duplicity
as you have been guilty of?'</p>
<p>"'I cannot discuss this matter with you,' I
answered. 'The duplicity is not mine, but
yours. You have endeavoured to exercise
rights which were clearly not yours to exercise.
I informed you that in matters of love—'</p>
<p>"'Matters of love!' he ejaculated. 'Do you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN></span>
call this a matter of love? Do you think it's
a matter of love for an entire stranger to throw
a two-pound crystal inkstand loaded with ink
at the very core of my waistcoat? Is it a
matter of love for a grey-haired villain like that
to drag me or you, whichever way you choose
to put it, down a flight of stairs and then knock
the life out of us? It seems to me, you have a
strange idea of love.'</p>
<p>"'Don't you understand!' I cried. 'That
man was only doing his duty. He is Arabella's
father!'</p>
<p>"'Again, I must ask,' said the fiend, in a
manner that aggravated me as it had aggravated
the old gentleman, 'who, in all creation, is
Arabella?'</p>
<p>"'My <i>fiancée!</i>' I yelled. 'My <i>fiancée</i>, you
poor blind omniscient! Whom did you
suppose?'</p>
<p>"As I uttered these words, Hopkins, the
fiend's whole manner changed. He was no
longer flustered and angry merely; he was a
determined and very angry being. He rose
from his chair, and fixing his eye upon the
point where he thought I was—and he had
a faculty of establishing that point accurately
at all times—and pointing that horrible finger
of his at me, fairly hissed with rage.</p>
<p>"'That settles it, sir,' he cried. 'You and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></SPAN></span>
I part for ever. You, by your foolish perversity,
by your inexplicable lack of candour, by your
sinful refusal to trust your welfare to my hands,
who have done so much for you, have nearly
overthrown the whole structure of the greatness
I have builded up. Your idiotic behaviour has
decided me to do that which from the very
beginning I have most feared. I have been
haunted by the fear that you would want to
marry some woman simply for the empty,
mortal reason that you loved her, utterly
ignoring the fact that by a judicious matrimonial
step you could attain to heights that
otherwise could never be yours. Having your
interests entirely in view, I had arranged a
match which would strengthen into permanence
your, at present, rather uncertain hold upon
society. Lady Ariadne Maude Fackleton, to
whom you are at present engaged, as the
daughter of the Earl of Pupley, can give you
the <i>entrée</i> to the best circles in London or out
of it; while this Arabella of yours can serve
only to assist you in spending your income and
keeping your parlour free from dust. Now,
what earthly use was there in your philandering—'</p>
<p>"'I fancy I have a right to select my own
wife,' I said.</p>
<p>"'You always were strong on fancies,' he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></SPAN></span>
retorted. 'You might have known that with
the career opening up before you a plain
Arabella would never do. Do you suppose you
could take her to a ball at the Earl of
Mawlberry's? Do you suppose that any
woman, in fact, who would consent to marry
you as your weak inefficient self could go anywhere
and do me justice? I guess not; and
your behaviour has settled our partnership for
ever. We part for good.'</p>
<p>"'Well, I'm glad of it,' I retorted, goaded
to anger by his words. 'Get out. I don't
want to see you again. You've ruined me by
putting me in false positions from the time we
met until now, and I am sick of it. You can't
leave too soon to suit me.'</p>
<p>"When I had spoken these words he darted
one final venomous glance at me, and walked
whistling from the room. As long as his
whistle was perceptible I remained quiet—quiet
as my agitation would permit; and then,
when the last flute-like note died away in the
distance, I floated from the room and down
the stairs to get my poor bruised body and put
it in shape to call on Arabella.</p>
<p>"Hopkins, when I reached the foot of the
stairs my body had disappeared! I was
frantic with fear. I did not know whether it
had been found by the janitor and conveyed to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></SPAN></span>
the morgue, whether Arabella's father had
returned to conceal it, and so conceal his fancied
crime, or whether the fiend had finally crowned
his infamous work by stealing it. I sought for
it in vain. Forgetful of my invisibility, I asked
the janitor if he had seen it, and he fled shrieking
with fear from the building, and declined
ever thereafter to enter it again. Every nook
and corner in the Temple I searched and found
it not, and then I floated dejectedly to Arabella's
home, where I found her embracing her father
in a last fond farewell. The old gentleman was
about leaving the country to escape the consequences
of his crime.</p>
<p>"'Arabella!' I cried, as I entered the
room.</p>
<p>"The girl turned a deadly white, and her
father fell cringing upon his knees, and then I
realized that, recognizing my voice, they feared
my ghost had come to haunt them, and with
this realization came to my consciousness the
overwhelming thought that both would go
insane were I to persist in speaking while
invisible.</p>
<p>"The situation, Hopkins, was absolutely
terrible, and if I had had my teeth I should
have gnashed them for the very helplessness of
my condition."</p>
<p>"Did the old gentleman persist in his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></SPAN></span>
determination to leave the country?" asked
Hopkins.</p>
<p>"He did. He sailed for the United States
on a small freight schooner that night, and
reached New York in time to hear in that far-off
clime of the marriage of his supposed
victim; but I must not anticipate," said the
exile.</p>
<p>"For three weeks after that horrible day I
never caught sight of my missing person, nor
did I discover the slightest clue as to its
whereabouts. It never turned up at my
quarters that I could learn, but that it was not
dead or buried I had good reason to believe;
for one morning, while I was away from my
rooms floating along Rotten Row, hoping to
catch sight of myself if perchance I still lived,
four truckmen arrived at the Temple here and
moved all my clothes and furniture, whither I
never discovered, in consequence of which act,
upon my return here, I found the room cold
and bare as a barn."</p>
<p>"That was rank robbery," said Toppleton.</p>
<p>"We should have trouble in establishing
that fact in court," returned the exile. "I could
not deny on oath that my hand had penned
the order for the removal of the goods, and as
for the clothes and other things, most of them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></SPAN></span>
had been bought by the money I had earned
through the fiend's instrumentality."</p>
<p>"That is so," said Toppleton, hastily acquiescing
in the exile's words, lest he should
seem to his visitor less acute than a full-fledged
lawyer should be. "And how long was it
before you encountered yourself once more?"</p>
<p>"Three weeks," returned the exile. "And
where do you suppose the meeting took
place?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," said Hopkins. "At Buckingham
Palace?"</p>
<p>"No, sir. In Arabella's parlour! It was
just three weeks from the hour in which Mr.
Hicksworthy-Johnstone appeared at my office
door in the Temple that, for the want of something
better to do, I floated into Arabella's
parlour again, and was filled with consternation
to see standing there before the mirror,
adjusting his tie, the fiend in full possession of
my treasured self. I was about to utter a cry
of delight when I heard an ejaculation of fear
behind me, and turning saw Arabella herself
entering the room, pale as a sheet. I tell you
Hopkins, it was dramatic; though, as far as the
fiend was concerned, he was as nonchalant as
could be.</p>
<p>"'You are not dead!' cried Arabella,
hoarsely.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'Not that I am aware of, madam,' said the
fiend coolly.' Have I the honour of addressing
Miss Arabella Hicksworthy-Johnstone?'</p>
<p>"'Oh, Edward, Edward,' she cried—'I forgot
to tell you, Hopkins,' explained the spirit, 'my
name was Edward'—'oh, Edward, what does
this mean?' she cried. 'My father has fled to
America, thinking that in that unhappy
moment of Saturday three weeks ago he had
killed you.'</p>
<p>"'Indeed!' returned the fiend. 'I sincerely
hope he will enjoy the trip, though he
did inflict injuries upon me from which I shall
be a long time in recovering. But tell me,
madame, are you Miss Arabella Hicksworthy-Johnstone?'</p>
<p>"'Edward,' she replied, 'are you mad?'</p>
<p>"'I have a right to be indignant at your
father's treatment of me, if that vilely vindictive
old person was your father, but I am not
what you might call mad. I cherish no vindictive
feelings. But as my time is limited I
should like to proceed at once to the business
I have in hand, if you will permit me.'</p>
<p>"Arabella sat aghast as the man she deemed
her <i>fiancé</i> spoke these words to her. She
was utterly unable to comprehend the situation,
and I could not clarify the cloud upon her
understanding without imperilling her reason.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></SPAN></span>
Oh, Hopkins, Hopkins, were the fires of Hades
to become extinguished to-day, there are other
tortures for the spirit close at hand more
hideously unbearable even than they!"</p>
<p>"It would seem so," said Hopkins. "If I
had my choice between your experience and
Hades, I think I should warm up to the latter.
But go on. What did Arabella say?"</p>
<p>"She drew herself up proudly after a moment
of hesitation, and said, 'I have no desire to
hinder you in going about your business.'</p>
<p>"'Thanks,' said the fiend. 'Assuming that
you are Miss Arabella Hicksworthy-Johnstone,
I would say to you that I should like to know
upon what your father's claim that you and I
are engaged rests.'</p>
<p>"'Really, Edward,' she returned impatiently,
'I cannot comprehend your singular behaviour
this afternoon. You know how we became
engaged. You know you asked me to be your
wife, and you know that after keeping you on
your knees for several hours I consented.'</p>
<p>"'Madam,' observed the fiend, 'I never
went on my knees to a woman in my life. I
never asked but one woman in this world to be
my wife, and you are not she.'</p>
<p>"'What!' cried Arabella. 'Do you mean
to say to me, Edward, that you did <i>not</i> ask me
to be your wife?'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'I meant to say exactly what I said. That
I am engaged to be married to Lady Ariadne
Maude Fackleton, daughter of the Earl of
Pupley, the only woman to whom I ever spoke
or thought of speaking a word of love in my
life. I mean to say that Lady Ariadne Maude
Fackleton and I expect to be married before
the month is up. I mean to say that I never
saw you before in my life, and I should like to
know what your intentions are concerning this
absurd claim that I am engaged to you may be,
for I do not intend to have my future marred
by any breach of promise suits. In short,
madam, do you intend to claim me as your
matrimonial prize or not? If not, all well
and good. If so, I shall secure an injunction
restraining you from doing anything of the sort.
Even should you force me to the altar itself I
should then and there forbid the banns.'</p>
<p>"'Sir,' said my Arabella, drawing herself up
like a queen, 'you may leave this house, and
never set foot again within its walls. I should
as soon think of claiming that celebrated biblical
personage, of whom you remind me, Ananias,
for a husband as you. Do not flatter yourself
that I shall ever dispute the Lady Ariadne's
possession of so accomplished a lord and master
as yourself,—though I should do so were I
more philanthropically disposed. If it be the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></SPAN></span>
duty of one woman to protect the happiness
of another, I should do all that lies in my
power to prevent this marriage; but inasmuch
as my motive in so doing would, in all likelihood,
be misconstrued, I must abstain; I
must hold myself aloof, though the whole
future happiness of one of my own sex be
at stake. Farewell, sir, and good riddance.
If you will leave me Lady Ariadne's address,
I will send her my sympathy as a wedding
gift.'</p>
<p>"'Madam,' returned the fiend, bowing low,
'your kind words have taken a heavy load from
my heart. You deserve a better fate; but farewell.'</p>
<p>"Then as the fiend departed Arabella swooned
away. My first impulse was to follow the
fiend, and to discover if possible his address;
but I could not bring myself to leave Arabella
at that moment, she was so overcome. I floated
to the prostrate woman, and whispered the love
I felt for her in her ear.</p>
<p>"'Arabella,' I said. 'Arabella—my love—it
is all a mistake. Open your eyes and see. I
am here ready to explain all if you will only
listen.'</p>
<p>"Her answer was a moan and a fluttering of
the eyelids.</p>
<p>"'Arabella,' I repeated. 'Don't you hear<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></SPAN></span>
me, sweetheart? Open your eyes and look at
me. It is I, Edward.'</p>
<p>"'Edward!' she gasped, her eyes still closed.
'What <i>does</i> it all mean? Why have you treated
me so?'</p>
<p>"'It is not I who have done this Arabella; it
is another vile being over whose actions I have
no control. He is a fiend who has me in his
power. He is—oh, Arabella, do not ask me, do
not insist upon knowing all, only believe that
I am not to blame!'</p>
<p>"'Kiss me, Edward,' she murmured. 'One
little kiss.'</p>
<p>"Hopkins," moaned the exile, "just think
of that! One little kiss was all she asked, and
I—I hadn't anything to kiss her with—not
the vestige of a lip.</p>
<p>"'Kiss me, Edward,' she repeated.</p>
<p>"'I cannot,' I cried out in anguish.</p>
<p>"'Why not?' she demanded, sitting up on
the floor and gazing wildly around her, and
then seeing that she was absolutely alone in
the room, and had been conversing with—"</p>
<p>"Oh!" ejaculated Hopkins, wringing his
hands. "Dear me! The poor girl must have
been nearly crazy."</p>
<p>"Nearly, Hopkins?" said the exile, in a
sepulchral tone. "Nearly? Arabella never
did anything by halves or by nearlies. She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></SPAN></span>
became quite crazy, and as far as I know has
remained so until this day, for with the restoration
of consciousness, and the shock of opening
her eyes to see nothing that could speak with
her, and yet had spoken, her mind gave way,
and she fled chattering like an imbecile from the
room. I have never seen her since!"</p>
<p>"And the fiend?" queried Toppleton.</p>
<p>"I saw him at St. George's on the following
Wednesday," returned the exile. "I had
been wandering aimlessly and distractedly about
London for four days since the dreadful episode
at Arabella's, when I came to St. George's
Church. There was an awning before the door,
and from the handsome equipages drawn up
before the edifice I knew that some notable
function was going on within. The crowds,
the usual London crowds, were being kept
back by the police, but I, of course, being invisible,
floated over their heads, past the
guards, through the awning into the church.
There was a wedding in progress, and the
groom's back seemed familiar, though I could
not place it at first, and naturally, Toppleton,
for it was my own, as I discovered, a moment
later. When the last irrevocable words binding
me to a woman I had never before seen had
been spoken, and the organ began to peal
forth the melodious measures of the Lohengrin<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></SPAN></span>
March, the bride and groom, made one, turned
and faced the brilliant assemblage of guests,
among whom were the premier and the members
of his cabinet, and as complete a set of
nabobs, mentioned in Burke, as could be
gathered in London at that time of the year,
and I recognized my own face wreathed in
smiles, my own body dressed in wedding garb,
standing on the chancel steps ready to descend.</p>
<p>"I was married, Hopkins, at last. Married
to a woman of beauty and wealth and high
position, utterly unknown to me, and not only
were my own mother and my best friends
absent, but I myself had only happened in by
accident.</p>
<p>"My rage knew no bounds, and as the fiend
and his bride passed down the aisle amid the
showered congratulations of the aristocratic
multitude, I impotently endeavoured to strike
him, of which he was serenely unconscious; but
as he left the church my voice, which had been
stifled with indignation, at last grew clear, and
I howled out high above the crowds,—</p>
<p>"'You vile scoundrel, restore me to myself!
Give me back the presence of which you have
robbed me, or may every curse in all the
universe fall upon you and your house for
ever.'</p>
<p>"He heard me, Toppleton, and his answer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></SPAN></span>
was a smile—a green smile—seeing which his
bride, the Lady Ariadne Maude Fackleton,
fainted as they drove away.</p>
<p>"That, Hopkins, is substantially the tale of
villainy I have come to tell. Little remains to
be told. The fiend has been true to his promise
to make me famous, for every passing
year has brought some new honour to my name.
I have been elevated to the peerage; I have
been ambassador to the most brilliant courts of
Europe; I have been all that one could hope
to be, and yet I have not been myself. I ask
your assistance. Will you not give it to me?"</p>
<p>"Edward," said Toppleton warmly, "I will.
I will be candid with you, Edward. I am
almost as ignorant of law as a justice of the
peace, but for your sake I will study and see
what can be done. I will fight your case for
you to the very last, but first tell me one
thing. Your name is what?"</p>
<p>"Edward Pompton Chatford."</p>
<p>"What!" cried Toppleton, "the famous
novelist?"</p>
<p>"He made me so," said the exile.</p>
<p>"And the fiend's present title is?"</p>
<p>"Lord Barncastle of Burningford."</p>
<p>"He?" said Toppleton, incredulously, recognizing
the name as that of one who fairly bent
beneath the honours of the world.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"None other," returned the exile.</p>
<p>"Heavens!" ejaculated Toppleton. "How
Morley, Harkins, Perkins, Mawson, Bronson,
Smithers, and Hicks will open their eyes when
I tell them that I have been retained to institute
<i>habeas corpus</i> proceedings in the case of
Chatford v. Barncastle of Burningford! Morley
particularly, I am afraid will die of fright!"</p>
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