Part 13 (1/2)
”These are very private family matters for me to inflict upon you,” said my companion apologetically. ”You must look upon it as done in your professional capacity. I have wanted to speak about it for years.”
”I am honoured by your confidence,” I answered, ”and exceedingly interested by the facts.”
”My father was a man who was noted for his almost morbid love of truth.
He was always pedantically accurate. When he said, therefore, that he hoped to see my mother very soon, and when he said that he had nothing to be ashamed of in that dark room, you may rely upon it that he meant it.”
”Then what can it be?” I e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed.
”Neither my mother nor I could imagine. We carried out his wishes to the letter, and placed the seal upon the door; there it has been ever since.
My mother lived for five years after my father's disappearance, although at the time all the doctors said that she could not survive long. Her heart was terribly diseased. During the first few months she had two letters from my father. Both had the Paris postmark, but no address.
They were short and to the same effect: that they would soon be re-united, and that she should not fret. Then there was a silence, which lasted until her death; and then came a letter to me of so private a nature that I cannot show it to you, begging me never to think evil of him, giving me much good advice, and saying that the sealing of the room was of less importance now than during the lifetime of my mother, but that the opening might still cause pain to others, and that, therefore, he thought it best that it should be postponed until my twenty-first year, for the lapse of time would make things easier. In the meantime, he committed the care of the room to me; so now you can understand how it is that, although I am a very poor man, I can neither let nor sell this great house.”
”You could mortgage it.”
”My father had already done so.”
”It is a most singular state of affairs.”
”My mother and I were gradually compelled to sell the furniture and to dismiss the servants, until now, as you see, I am living unattended in a single room. But I have only two more months.”
”What do you mean?”
”Why, that in two months I come of age. The first thing that I do will be to open that door; the second, to get rid of the house.”
”Why should your father have continued to stay away when these investments had recovered themselves?”
”He must be dead.”
”You say that he had not committed any legal offence when he fled the country?”
”None.”
”Why should he not take your mother with him?”
”I do not know.”
”Why should he conceal his address?”
”I do not know.”
”Why should he allow your mother to die and be buried without coming back?”
”I do not know.”
”My dear sir,” said I, ”if I may speak with the frankness of a professional adviser, I should say that it is very clear that your father had the strongest reasons for keeping out of the country, and that, if nothing has been proved against him, he at least thought that something might be, and refused to put himself within the power of the law. Surely that must be obvious, for in what other possible way can the facts be explained?”
My companion did not take my suggestion in good part.
”You had not the advantage of knowing my father, Mr. Alder,” he said coldly. ”I was only a boy when he left us, but I shall always look upon him as my ideal man. His only fault was that he was too sensitive and too unselfish. That any one should lose money through him would cut him to the heart. His sense of honour was most acute, any theory of his disappearance which conflicts with that is a mistaken one.”