<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>AT BARNCASTLE HALL.</div>
<div class='unindent'><span class="smcap">Toppleton's</span> surmises as to Barncastle's
method of receiving him appeared to be correct,
for upon his arrival, green umbrella and carpet
bag in hand, at the Fenwick Merton station he
was met by no less a person than his host
himself, who recognized him at once.</div>
<p>"I knew it was you," said Barncastle, as he
held out his hand to grasp Toppleton's. "I
knew it was you as soon as I saw you. Your
carpet bag, and the fact that you are the only
person on the train who travelled first class,
were the infallible signs which guided me."</p>
<p>"And I knew you, Barncastle, the minute I
saw you," said Hopkins, returning the compliment,
"because you looked less like a lord
than any man on the platform. How goes it,
anyhow?"</p>
<p>The Englishman's countenance wore a
puzzled expression as Toppleton put the
question.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"How goes it?" he repeated slowly. "How
goes what? The train?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no," laughed Hopkins. "How goes it
is Rocky Mountain for how's things, all your
family well, and your creditors easy?"</p>
<p>"Ah! I see," said Barncastle with a smile.
"All is well with us, thank you. My daughter
is awaiting your coming with very great
interest; and as for my creditors, my dear sir,
I am really uncertain as to whether I have
any. My steward can tell you better than I
how they feel."</p>
<p>"It's a great custom, ain't it?" said Hopkins
with enthusiasm, "that of being dunned by
proxy, eh? I wish we could work it out my
way. If you don't ante up right off out in the
Mountains, your grocer comes around and
collects at the point of his gun, and if you pay
him in promises, he gives you back your change
in lead."</p>
<p>"Fancy!" said Barncastle. "How unpleasant
it must be for the poor."</p>
<p>"Poor!" laughed Toppleton; "there's none
of them in the Rockies. You don't get a
chance to get poor in a country where boys
throw nuggets at birds, and cats are removed
from back-yard fences with silver boot-jacks.
Ever been in the Rockies, Barncastle?"</p>
<p>"No," returned the lord, "I have not, but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></SPAN></span>
if all you say is true, I should like to visit that
section very much."</p>
<p>"True, Barncastle?" said Toppleton, bristling
up. "Why, my dear lord, that if of yours
would have dug your grave out near Pike's
Peak."</p>
<p>"I meant no offence, my dear fellow,"
returned Barncastle, apologetically.</p>
<p>"No need to tell me that," said Toppleton,
affably. "The fact that you still survive
shows I knew it. What time is dinner? I'm
ravenous."</p>
<p>"Eight o'clock," replied Lord Barncastle,
looking at his watch. "It is now only
three."</p>
<p>"Phew!" ejaculated Toppleton. "Five
hours to wait!"</p>
<p>"I thought we might take a little drive
around the country until six, and then we could
return to the Hall and make ready for dinner,"
said Barncastle.</p>
<p>"That suits me," returned Toppleton.
"But I wish you'd send that gentleman with
the mutton-chop whiskers that drives your
waggon to the lunch counter and get me a
snack before we start."</p>
<p>"No," said Barncastle, ushering Toppleton
into his dog-cart. "We'll do better than that.
We'll give up the drive until later. I take you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></SPAN></span>
directly to the Hall, and send a cold bird and
a glass of wine to your apartment."</p>
<p>"Good!" ejaculated Toppleton, with a smack
of the lips. "You must live pretty near as fine
here as we do in our big hotels at home.
They're the only other places I know where
you can get your appetite satisfied at five
minutes' notice."</p>
<p>Toppleton and his host then entered the
carriage, and in a short time they reached the
Hall—a magnificently substantial structure,
with ivy-clad towers, great gables, large arched
windows looking out upon seductive vistas,
and an air of comfortable antiquity about it
that moved Hopkins' tongue to an utterance
somewhat at variance with his assumed
character.</p>
<p>"How beautiful and quiet it all is," he said,
gazing about him in undisguised admiration.
"A home like this, my lord, ought to make a
poet of a man. The very air is an inspiration."</p>
<p>Barncastle shrugged his shoulders and
laughed; and had Toppleton not been looking
in rapt silence out through the large bowed
window at the end of the hall they had entered,
along an avenue of substantial oak trees to the
silver waters of the Barbundle at its other end,
he might have seen a strange greenish light<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></SPAN></span>
come into the eyes of his host, which would
have worried him not a little. He did not see
it, however, and in a moment he remembered
his mission and the means he had adopted to
bring it to a successful issue.</p>
<p>"It beats the deck!" he ejaculated, with a
nervous glance at Barncastle, fearful lest his
enthusiasm had led him to betray himself.</p>
<p>"I find it a pleasant home," said Barncastle,
quietly, ushering him into a spacious and
extremely comfortable room which Toppleton
perceived in a moment was the library, at the
other end of which was a large open fireplace,
large enough to accommodate a small family,
within whose capacious depths three or four
huge logs were blazing fiercely. Before the fire
sat a stately young woman, about twenty-five
years of age, who rose as the Lord of Burningford
and his guest entered.</p>
<p>As she approached Toppleton would have
given all he possessed to be rid of the abominable
costume he had on; and when the young
heiress of Burningford's eye rested upon the
fearfully green cotton umbrella, he felt as if
nothing would so have pleased his soul as the
casting of that adjunct to an alleged Americanism
into the fire; for Lady Alice was, if he
could judge from appearances, a woman for
whose good opinion any man might be willing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></SPAN></span>
to sacrifice immortality itself. But circumstances
would not permit him to falter, and,
despite the fact that it hurt his self-respect to
do it, Hopkins remained true to the object he
had in view.</p>
<p>"Alice, this is Mr. Toppleton. My daughter,
Lady Alice Chatford, Mr. Toppleton," said
Barncastle.</p>
<p>"Howdy," said Hopkins, making an
awkward bow to Lady Alice. "She don't
need her title to show she's a lady," he added,
turning to Barncastle, who seemingly acquiesced
in all that he said.</p>
<p>"My friend Toppleton, my dear," said Barncastle,
"has paid me the compliment of travelling
all the way from his home in the Rocky
Mountains in the United States to see me. He
is the author of that wonderful sonnet I showed
you the other night."</p>
<p>"Yes, I remember," said Lady Alice, with a
gracious smile, which won Toppleton's heart
completely, "it was delightful. Lord Barncastle
and I are great admirers of your genius,
Mr. Toppleton, and we sincerely hope that we
shall be able to make your stay with us here as
pleasant for you as it is for us."</p>
<p>Again Hopkins would have disappeared
through the floor had he been able to act upon
the promptings of his own good taste. It made<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></SPAN></span>
him feel unutterably small to think that he had
come here, under the guise of an uncultivated,
boorish clod with poetical tendencies, to work
the overthrow of the genius of the house.</p>
<p>"Thank you," he said, his voice husky with
emotion. "I had not expected so cordial a
reception. In fact," he added, remembering
his true position, "I had a bet of ten to one
with a friend of mine who is doing the Lakes
this afternoon that I'd get frozen stiff by a
glance of your ladyship's eye. I'm mighty glad
I've lost the bet."</p>
<p>"He has some courtliness beneath his unpolished
exterior," said Lady Alice later, when
recounting the first interview between them to
some of her friends. "I quite forgave his
boorishness when he said he was glad to lose
his wager."</p>
<p>"Now, Mr. Toppleton," said his host, "if
you care to go to your apartment I will see that
you get what you want. Just leave your
umbrella in the coat room, and let Parker take
your bag up to your room."</p>
<p>"Thanks, Barncastle, old fellow," said the
Rocky Mountain poet, "I'll go to my room
gladly; but as for leaving that umbrella out of
my sight, or transferring the handle of that
carpet bag to any other hand than my own, I
can't do it. They're my treasures, my lady,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208"></SPAN></span>
he added, turning to Lady Alice. "That bag
and I have been inseparable companions for
eight consecutive years, and as for the umbrella
we haven't been parted for five. It's my protector
and friend, and since it saved my life in
a shooting scrape at the Papyrus Club dinner
in Denver, I haven't wanted to let it get away
from me."</p>
<p>"How odd he is," said Lady Alice a moment
later to her father, Toppleton having gone to
his room. "Are you sure he is not an impostor?"</p>
<p>"No, I'm not," returned Barncastle with a
strange smile; "but I know he is not a thief.
I fancy he is amusing, and I believe he will be
a valuable acquisition to my circle of acquaintances.
Have you heard from the Duchess of
Bangletop?"</p>
<p>"Yes, she will be here. I told her you had a
real American this time—not an imitation Englishman—a
poet, and, as far as we could judge,
a character who would surely become a worthy
addition to her collection of oddities; a match,
in fact, for her German worshipper of Napoleon
and that other strange freak of nature she had
at her last reception, the young Illinois widow
who whistled the score of Parsifal."</p>
<p>"The duchess must have been pleased," said
Barncastle with a laugh. "This Toppleton<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></SPAN></span>
will prove a perfect godsend to her, for she has
absolutely nothing that is <i>bizarre</i> for her next
reception."</p>
<p>Toppleton, upstairs in a magnificently appointed
chamber, from the windows of which
were to be seen the most superb distances that
he had ever imagined, was a prey alternately to
misery and to joy. He felicitated himself upon
the apparent success of his plan, while bemoaning
his unhappy lot in having to keep his true
self under in a society he felt himself capable of
adorning, and to enter which he had always
aspired.</p>
<p>"It's too late to back out now, though," he
said. "If I were to strike my colours at this
stage of the battle, I should deserve to be put
in a cask and thrown into the Barbundle yonder.
When I look about me and see all these
magnificent acres, when I observe the sumptuous
furnishing of this superb mansion, when
I see unequalled treasures of art scattered in
profusion about this castle, and then think of
that poor devil of a Chatford roaming about
the world without a piece of bric-a-brac to his
name, or an acre, or a house, or bed, or chair,
or table, of any kind, without even a body, it
makes me mad. Here his body, the inferior
part of man, the purely mortal section of his
being, is living in affluence, while his immortal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210"></SPAN></span>
soul is a very tramp, an outcast, a wanderer on
the face of the earth. Barncastle, Barncastle,
you are indeed a villain of the deepest—"</p>
<p>Here Toppleton paused, and looked apprehensively
about him. He seemed to be conscious
of an eye resting upon him. A chill
seized upon his heart, and his breath came short
and quick as it had done but once before when
his invisible client first betrayed his presence in
No. 17.</p>
<p>"I wonder if this is one of those beastly
castles with secret doors in the wainscot and
peep-holes in the pictures," he said nervously
to himself. "It would be just like Barncastle
to have that sort of a house, and of course
nothing would please him better than to try a
haunted chamber on me. The conjunction of a
ghost and a Rocky Mountain poet would be
great, but after my experience with Chatford,
I don't believe there is a ghost in all creation
that could frighten me. Nevertheless, I don't
like being gazed at by an unseen eye. I'll have
to investigate."</p>
<p>Then Toppleton investigated. He mounted
chairs and tables to gaze into the stolid, unresponsive
oil-painted faces of somebody's
ancestry, he knew not whose. Not Barncastle's,
he was sure, for Barncastle was an upstart.
Nothing wrong could be found there. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></SPAN></span>
eyes were absolutely proof against peeping
Toms. Then he rolled the heavy bureau and
several antique chests away from the massive
oak wainscoting that ran about the room, eight
feet in height and superbly carved. He tapped
every panel with his knuckles, and found them
all solid as a rock.</p>
<p>"No secret door in that," he said; and then
for a second time he experienced that nervous
sensation which comes to him who feels that
he is watched, and as the sensation grew more
and more intense and terrifying, an idea flashed
across Toppleton's mind which heightened his
anxiety.</p>
<p>"By Jove!" he said; "I wonder if I am
going mad. Can it be that Chatford is an
illusion, a fanciful creation of a weak mind?
Am I become a prey to hallucinations, and if
so, am I not in grave danger of my personal
liberty here if Barncastle should discover my
weakness?"</p>
<p>It was rather strange, indeed, that this had
not occurred to Hopkins before. It was the
natural explanation of his curious experience,
and the sudden thought that he had foolishly
lent himself to the impulses of a phantasm, and
was carrying on a campaign of destruction
against one of the world's most illustrious men,
based solely upon a figment of a diseased<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></SPAN></span>
imagination, was prostrating. He staggered to
the side of a large tapestried easy-chair, and
limp with fear, toppled over its broad arm into
its capacious depths an almost nerveless mass
of flesh and bones. He would have given worlds
to be back in the land of the midnight sun, in
New York, in London, anywhere but here in
the house of Barncastle of Burningford, and he
resolved then and there that he would return
to London the first thing in the morning, place
himself in the hands of a competent physician,
and trifle with the creations of his fancy no
more.</p>
<p>A prey to these disquieting reflections,
Toppleton lay in the chair for at least an hour.
The last rays of a setting sun trembled through
the leaves of the tree that shaded the western
side of the room, and darkness fell over all;
and with the darkness there came into
Toppleton's life an experience that scattered
his fears of a moment since to the winds, and
so tried and exercised his courage, that that
fast fading quality gained a renewed strength
for the fearful battle with a supernatural foe, in
which he had, out of his goodness of heart,
undertaken to engage.</p>
<p>A clock in the hall outside began to strike
the hour of six in deep measured tones, that to
Toppleton in his agitated state of mind was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></SPAN></span>
uncomfortably suggestive of the bell in
Coleridge's line that "Knells us back to a
world of death." At the last stroke of the
hammer the tone seemed to become discordant,
and in a frenzy of nervous despair Toppleton
opened his eyes and sprang to his feet. As he
did so, his whole being became palpitant with
terror, for staring at him out of the darkness he
perceived a small orb-like something whose hue
was that of an emerald in combustion. He
clapped his hands over his eyes for a moment,
but that phosphorescent gleam penetrated them,
and then he perceived that it was not an eye
that rested upon him, but a ray of light shining
through a small hole that had escaped his
searching glance in the wainscoting. The
relief of this discovery was so great that it gave
him courage to investigate, and stepping lightly
across the room, noiseless as a particle of dust,
he climbed upon a chair and peeped through
the aperture, though it nearly blinded him to do
so. To shade his eyes from the blinding light,
he again covered them with his hand, and again
observed that its intensity was sufficient to
pierce through the obstruction and dazzle his
vision. The hand so softened the light, however,
that he could see what there was on the
other side of the wall, though it was far from
being a pretty sight that met his gaze.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>What he saw was a small oblong room in
which there was no window, and, at first glance,
no means of entrance or exit. It was high-ceiled
like the room in which he stood, and,
with the exception of a narrow couch covered
with a black velvet robe, with a small pillow of
the same material at the far end, the room was
bare of furniture. There was no fire, no fixture
of any kind, lamp or otherwise, from which
illumination could come, and yet the room was
brilliant with that same green light that Chatford
had described to Hopkins at his office in the
Temple. So dazzling was it, that for a moment
Hopkins had difficulty in ascertaining just
what there was in the apartment, but as he
looked he became conscious of forms which
grew more and more distinct as his eye accustomed
itself to the light. On the couch in a
moment appeared, rigid as in death, the body
of Barncastle; the eyes lustreless and staring,
the hands characterless and bluish even in the
green light, the cheeks sunken and the massive
forehead white and cold as marble. The sight
chilled Toppleton to the marrow, and he averted
his eyes from the horrible spectacle only to see
one even more dreadful, for on the other side of
the apartment, grinning fiendishly, the source of
the wonderful light that flooded the room, he
now perceived the fiend, making ready to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></SPAN></span>
assume once more the habiliments of mortality.
He was stirring a potion, and, as Hopkins
watched him, he began to whistle a combination
of discords that went through Toppleton's
ears like a knife.</p>
<p>The watcher became sick at heart. This
was the frightful thing he had to cope with!
So frightful was it that he tried to remove his
eye from the peep-hole, and seek again the easy
chair, when to his horror he found that he
could not move. If his eye had in reality been
glued to the aperture, he would not have found
it more firmly fixed than it was at present. As
he struggled to get away from the vision that
was every moment being burned more and
more indelibly into his mind, the fiend's
fearful mirth increased, at the close of one of
the paroxysms of which he lifted the cup in
which the potion had been mixed to his lips,
and quaffed its contents to the very dregs. As
the last drop trickled down the fiend's throat,
Hopkins was startled further to see the light
growing dim, and then he noticed that the
fiend was rapidly decreasing in size, shrinking
slowly from a huge spectral presence into a
hardly visible ball of green fire which rolled
across the apartment to where the body lay;
up the side of the couch to the pillow; along
the pillow to that marble white forehead, where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></SPAN></span>
it paused. A tremor passed through the
human frame lying prostrate there, and in a
moment all was dark as night. The ball of
fire had disappeared through the forehead, and
a deep groan told Toppleton that the body of
Barncastle was once more a living thing having
the semblance of humanity. A moment later
another light appeared in the apartment into
which Toppleton still found himself compelled
to gaze. This time the light was more
natural, for it was the soft genial light of a lamp
shining through a sliding panel at the other
end of the room, through which the Lord of
Burningford passed. It lasted but a moment,
for as the defendant in this fearful case of
Chatford <i>v.</i> Burningford passed into the room
beyond, the slide flew back and all was black
once more.</p>
<p>With the departure of Barncastle, Toppleton
was able to withdraw from his uncomfortable
position, and in less than a moment lay gasping
in his chair.</p>
<p>"It is too real!" he moaned to himself.
"Chatford did not deceive me. I am not the
victim of hallucination. Alas! I wish I
were."</p>
<p>A knock at the door put an end to his
soliloquizing, and he was relieved to hear it.
Here was something earthly at last. He flew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></SPAN></span>
from his chair across the room through the
darkness to the door and threw it wide open.</p>
<p>"Come in," he cried, and Barncastle himself,
still pale from the effects of the ordeal he had
passed through, entered the room.</p>
<p>"I have come to see if there is anything I
can do for you," he said pleasantly, touching
an electric button which dissipated the darkness
of the room by lighting a hundred lamps.
"The Duchess of Bangletop has arrived and
is anxious to meet you; but you look worn,
Toppleton. You are not ill, I hope?"</p>
<p>"No," stammered Toppleton, slightly overcome
by Barncastle's coolness and affability,
"but I—I've been taking a nap and I've had
the—the most horrible dream I ever had."</p>
<p>"Which was?"</p>
<p>"That I—ah—why, that I was writing an
obituary poem on—"</p>
<p>"Me?" queried Barncastle, calmly.</p>
<p>"No," said Toppleton. "On myself."</p>
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