Part 11 (2/2)
In it she said: ”I have just got hold of some French papers, and I see that poor woman you told me about, has just died in Petersburg, and the real story has now come out.
”It seems that it _was_ suicide after all, so your vision was quite true!
”She had received large sums in advance for commissions from some of the Russian n.o.bility, and had either spent or speculated with them. That was why she had to invent the story of an embezzling manager, to cover her own shortcomings. But the truth was leaking out in spite of her endeavours, and she made up her mind to commit suicide rather than face the horrors of a Russian prison. The paper goes on to say that she chose a most terrible death, little realising what the torture would be. It seems that she waited till the middle of the night you described, and then covered her whole body with oil, and set fire to it! This accounts, of course, for the horrible shrieks you heard. In her awful agony she seized a knife--that she had either secreted or found in her room--rushed out into the pa.s.sage in a blaze, and when the musjig tried to stop her, she ran from him, and attempted to stab herself as she made her way up the stairs. All this you seem to have seen accurately; also the fact that the musjig pursued her and succeeded in wrenching the knife from her hands before she had injured herself with it. The paper mentions that a Russian gentleman had gone to the rescue when he heard the shrieks, but this was before she had got hold of the knife, and it was the musjig alone who saved her, in the end, from immediate death.”
During this Russian visit we had gone down to Moscow from Petersburg, and here again a curious adventure befell me.
It was, as I have said, in the height of the summer, and one was thankful to have a large, handsome room, with three windows looking over the square, and the famous Kremlin Palace in the distance. My room was divided into two unequal parts, separated from each other by a door which was, during the hot season, thrown wide open and _fastened back securely_. Between this door and the one opening into the outer corridor the was.h.i.+ng apparatus stood, and also a wardrobe of white painted deal, with a very poor lock to it, as I discovered later.
On retiring to rest the first night, I locked the outer door, undressed in this ante-room, and finally hung up my gown in the wardrobe I have mentioned. Then, after looking out of the windows on the fast diminis.h.i.+ng crowd below in the square, I went to bed, feeling quite cheerful, and looking forward to a long night's rest after a journey which had been hot and tiring.
As so often happens, one was probably over-tired, and sleep was not to be wooed by any of the usual methods. In vain I counted sheep getting over a hedge, added a hundred up backward and forward, tried deep breathing, and other little ”parlour games.” It was absolutely useless.
Twelve o'clock struck, then the half hour, and I gathered from the stillness below that the good Moscow citizens had retired to their respective homes. This seemed an added insult! Then one o'clock struck, and after that I lay for a seeming eternity, before two strokes from the clock outside indicated the half hour. Scarcely had the reverberation ceased when I heard cautious sounds in the corridor, which gave me a good fright, and made me regret the silence I had found so irksome. The outer door of my room was quietly being opened, creaking on its hinges in the most ordinary and commonplace way, but evidently opening under a very wary hand. ”Then I could not have locked it after all!” And yet I felt so convinced that I had done so! Certainly I had _intended_ to do so on my first night in a strange hotel! The best I could hope was that some other new arrival had mistaken his room, and was returning late, and consequently trying to be as quiet as possible. This flashed through my mind, and brought a moment's comfort. I expected to see a man's head round the open door at the foot of my bed, and to hear a hurried apology and still more hurried retreat. I say a _man's_ head, for the footsteps, though so quiet and cautious, were without doubt a man's footsteps. But several moments pa.s.sed in horrible suspense. The outer door had creaked on its hinges and opened without a shadow of doubt. _Where was the man?_
The door had not closed again, so far as I could hear. From my bed I could not command a view of the smaller portion of the room, where, presumably, he must be hidden. There was nothing but the wash-hand stand and the wardrobe there. What could he be doing or _waiting for_? My comforting supposition of a mistake in the number of his room, made by an innocent guest, could not be stretched wide enough to account for the long pause. Perhaps it was some robber lurking about the pa.s.sages! He had tried my door gently, and found it open. I had heard the door creak on its hinges in spite of all his care. Now he was doubtless waiting to make sure that this noise had not awakened me before beginning his operations!
This was the only reasonable supposition, and I lay in absolute terror for some minutes, fearing to stir or almost to breathe at such close quarters, and quite incapable of rising and putting an end to my terrible suspense. I longed to hear the next ”quarter” strike, but nothing relieved the dead silence in my room and in the streets outside.
At long last the _quarter to two_ struck, and something in the friendly tones of the ma.s.sive clock relieved the tension and gave me courage--the courage of desperation--to strike a match and light my candle before starting on a tour of discovery. The middle door was fastened back, as I had found it when taking possession of the room. In any case, that was not the door which had been opened--the sound came from the _outer_ door. I _must_ find out if anyone were hiding in the little dressing-room; and in any case, I must lock the outer door, which I had felt so certain I had locked on coming up to my room. I pa.s.sed through the open _inner door_ with fear and trembling. To my relief, the small apartment was apparently empty. The wardrobe stood partly open, but nothing more terrible than my own gown was inside it. Then I made my way to the outer door, which gave on to the corridor, determined to make sure of locking it firmly _this_ time. After all, it must have been a wandering guest, who had discovered his mistake at once, and retreated noiselessly!
I have seldom been more absolutely dumfounded than when I turned the handle of that door, preparatory to locking it, and found _that it was securely locked already_, just as I had supposed! How could the hinges have creaked then, and whose cautious footsteps had I heard?
Once more my eyes fell upon the wardrobe, with its cheap varnish and lock. I had certainly not locked _this_ overnight. Could it have creaked itself farther open? It did not for the moment strike me that the noise came from another quarter, and that the footsteps were still to be explained. I was only too thankful to find the barest apology of an explanation. So I locked the wardrobe as carefully as possible, noticing that the lock was not one of the first quality, and once more retired to bed, and put out my candle, greatly relieved.
Scarcely ten minutes had pa.s.sed (as I afterwards ascertained) when the whole scene was enacted once more! The same cautious tread, the same sound of the _outer door_ creaking slowly on its hinges--there was nothing in the least uncanny about it _per se_. It was just the normal noise that any late comer would make who was thoughtful enough not to disturb a sleeping house.
But my impatience got the better of my fears this time. I was not going to be decoyed out of bed a second time on a wild-goose chase. ”It must have been that wardrobe door after all! As to the footsteps, I don't know and I don't care! The cheap lock must have given way, and I shall find the wardrobe door has swung open, I am sure.”
With this comforting a.s.surance I turned round, and in a few minutes fell into a deep sleep, after the varied excitements of the night.
Next morning I stepped gaily into the smaller division of the room to begin my toilet, and triumphantly turned round to convince myself of the truth of my theory about the wardrobe door. To my infinite astonishment and perplexity _the wardrobe was securely locked_, just as I had left it in the middle of the night.
I have never had any explanation of this mystery; but I changed my fine big room for a much less desirable one that morning, and made some excuse about wis.h.i.+ng for a quieter room at the back of the house.
The next evening, sitting in my new abode with my travelling companion, she showed far more interest in my adventure than in the Petersburg tragedy and subsequent vision of mine.
So much so that I invited her to take a pencil and see if she could get any sort of explanation of the mystery; for although not at all _intuitive_, she knew something of what is called automatic writing.
I give her narrative, not as being in the slightest degree evidential, but for its intrinsic interest, and because I am personally convinced that she had not sufficient imagination to have made it up on the spur of the moment.
Miss Greenlow's ”message” was to the following effect:--
About fifty years previously, a Russian gentleman (an officer, I _think_, but am not certain of this) and his mistress had occupied this large front room. The man had spent all day at a rifle compet.i.tion, combined with some sort of merry-making, and had returned home very late--at one-thirty A.M., in fact--very much the worse for drink. He had opened the door very carefully, trusting he should find the lady asleep; but, unfortunately, she was not only wide awake, but extremely annoyed by his late return and the state in which he had come back to her. A desperate quarrel had ensued, and getting frightened by his violence, she seized his rifle, giving him a blow on the head with the b.u.t.t end of it, hoping to stun him, but with no idea of murder in her mind. Whether she gave a more severe blow, in her nervousness, than she had intended, or whether the rifle fell on some specially vital spot, was not explained in the writing. Anyway, the blow proved fatal--to her extreme regret and remorse.
Under these circ.u.mstances one would have supposed that it would be more reasonable for the lady to haunt the room, and not the gentleman; but I ”tell the tale as 'twas told to us.”
It is, however, remarkable that in most of these stories it is the victim who appears--determined to enact the scene of his or her death--and not the murderer.
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