The stranger came early in February, one wintry day,
through a biting wind and a driving snow, the last snowfall of the year, over
the down, walking from Bramblehurst railway station, and carrying a little
black portmanteau in his thickly gloved hand. He was wrapped up from head to
foot, and the brim of his soft felt hat hid every inch of his face but the shiny
tip of his nose; the snow had piled itself against his shoulders and chest, and
added a white crest to the burden he carried. He staggered into the "Coach
and Horses" more dead than alive, and flung his portmanteau down. "A
fire," he cried, "in the name of human charity! A room and a
fire!" He stamped and shook the snow from off himself in the bar, and
followed Mrs. Hall into her guest parlour to strike his bargain. And with that
much introduction, that and a couple of sovereigns flung upon the table, he took
up his quarters in the inn.
Mrs. Hall lit the fire and left him there while she went to prepare him a
meal with her own hands. A guest to stop at Iping in the wintertime was an
unheard-of piece of luck, let alone a guest who was no "haggler," and
she was resolved to show herself worthy of her good fortune. As soon as the
bacon was well under way, and Millie, her lymphatic aid, had been brisked up a
bit by a few deftly chosen expressions of contempt, she carried the cloth,
plates, and glasses into the parlour and began to lay them with the utmost éclat.
Although the fire was burning up briskly, she was surprised to see that her
visitor still wore his hat and coat, standing with his back to her and staring
out of the window at the falling snow in the yard. His gloved hands were
clasped behind him, and he seemed to be lost in thought. She noticed that the
melting snow that still sprinkled his shoulders dripped upon her carpet.
"Can I take your hat and coat, sir?" she said, "and give them a
good dry in the kitchen?"
"No," he said without turning.
She was not sure she had heard him, and was about to repeat her question.
He turned his head and looked at her over his shoulder. "I prefer to
keep them on," he said with emphasis, and she noticed that he wore big blue
spectacles with sidelights, and had a bush side-whisker over his coat-collar
that completely hid his cheeks and face.
"Very well, sir," she said. "As you like. In a bit the
room will be warmer."
He made no answer, and had turned his face away from her again, and Mrs.
Hall, feeling that her conversational advances were ill-timed, laid the rest of
the table things in a quick staccato and whisked out of the room. When she
returned he was still standing there, like a man of stone, his back hunched,
his collar turned up, his dripping hat-brim turned down, hiding his face and
ears completely. She put down the eggs and bacon with considerable emphasis,
and called rather than said to him, "Your lunch is served, sir."
"Thank you," he said at the same time, and did not stir until she
was closing the door. Then he swung round and approached the table with a
certain eager quickness.
As she went behind the bar to the kitchen she heard a sound repeated at
regular intervals. Chirk, chirk, chirk, it went, the sound of a spoon being
rapidly whisked round a basin. "That girl!" she said. "There! I
clean forgot it. It's her being so long!" And while she herself finished
mixing the mustard, she gave Millie a few verbal stabs for her excessive
slowness. She had cooked the ham and eggs, laid the table, and done everything,
while Millie (help indeed!) had only succeeded in delaying the mustard. And him
a new guest and wanting to stay! Then she filled the mustard pot, and, putting
it with a certain stateliness upon a gold and black tea-tray, carried it into
the parlour.
She rapped and entered promptly. As she did so her visitor moved quickly, so
that she got but a glimpse of a white object disappearing behind the table. It
would seem he was picking something from the floor. She rapped down the mustard
pot on the table, and then she noticed the overcoat and hat had been taken off
and put over a chair in front of the fire, and a pair of wet boots threatened
rust to her steel fender. She went to these things resolutely. "I suppose I
may have them to dry now," she said in a voice that brooked no denial.
"Leave the hat," said her visitor, in a muffled voice, and turning
she saw he had raised his head and was sitting and looking at her.
For a moment she stood gaping at him, too surprised to speak.
He held a white cloth—it was a serviette he had brought with him—over the
lower part of his face, so that his mouth and jaws were completely hidden, and
that was the reason of his muffled voice. But it was not that which startled
Mrs. Hall. It was the fact that all his forehead above his blue glasses was
covered by a white bandage, and that another covered his ears, leaving not a
scrap of his face exposed excepting only his pink, peaked nose. It was bright,
pink, and shiny just as it had been at first. He wore a dark-brown velvet
jacket with a high, black, linen-lined collar turned up about his neck. The
thick black hair, escaping as it could below and between the cross bandages,
projected in curious tails and horns, giving him the strangest appearance
conceivable. This muffled and bandaged head was so unlike what she had
anticipated, that for a moment she was rigid.
He did not remove the serviette, but remained holding it, as she saw now,
with a brown gloved hand, and regarding her with his inscrutable blue glasses.
"Leave the hat," he said, speaking very distinctly through the white
cloth.
Her nerves began to recover from the shock they had received. She placed the
hat on the chair again by the fire. "I didn't know, sir," she began,
"that—" and she stopped embarrassed.
"Thank you," he said drily, glancing from her to the door and then
at her again.
"I'll have them nicely dried, sir, at once," she said, and carried
his clothes out of the room. She glanced at his white-swathed head and blue
goggles again as she was going out of the door; but his napkin was still in
front of his face. She shivered a little as she closed the door behind her, and
her face was eloquent of her surprise and perplexity. "I never,"
she whispered. "There!" She went quite softly to the kitchen, and was
too preoccupied to ask Millie what she was messing about with now, when
she got there.
The visitor sat and listened to her retreating feet. He glanced inquiringly
at the window before he removed his serviette, and resumed his meal. He took a
mouthful, glanced suspiciously at the window, took another mouthful, then rose
and, taking the serviette in his hand, walked across the room and pulled the
blind down to the top of the white muslin that obscured the lower panes. This
left the room in a twilight. This done, he returned with an easier air to the
table and his meal.
"The poor soul's had an accident or an op'ration or somethin',"
said Mrs. Hall. "What a turn them bandages did give me, to be sure!"
She put on some more coal, unfolded the clothes-horse, and extended the
traveller's coat upon this. "And they goggles! Why, he looked more like a
divin' helmet than a human man!" She hung his muffler on a corner of the
horse. "And holding that handkerchief over his mouth all the time. Talkin'
through it! ... Perhaps his mouth was hurt too—maybe."
She turned round, as one who suddenly remembers. "Bless my soul
alive!" she said, going off at a tangent; "ain't you done them taters
yet, Millie?"
When Mrs. Hall went to clear away the stranger's lunch, her idea that his
mouth must also have been cut or disfigured in the accident she supposed him to
have suffered, was confirmed, for he was smoking a pipe, and all the time that
she was in the room he never loosened the silk muffler he had wrapped round the
lower part of his face to put the mouthpiece to his lips. Yet it was not
forgetfulness, for she saw he glanced at it as it smouldered out. He sat in the
corner with his back to the window-blind and spoke now, having eaten and drunk
and being comfortably warmed through, with less aggressive brevity than before.
The reflection of the fire lent a kind of red animation to his big spectacles
they had lacked hitherto.
"I have some luggage," he said, "at Bramblehurst
station," and he asked her how he could have it sent. He bowed his
bandaged head quite politely in acknowledgment of her explanation.
"To-morrow?" he said. "There is no speedier delivery?" and
seemed quite disappointed when she answered, "No." Was she quite sure?
No man with a trap who would go over?
Mrs. Hall, nothing loath, answered his questions and developed a
conversation. "It's a steep road by the down, sir," she said in
answer to the question about a trap; and then, snatching at an opening, said,
"It was there a carriage was upsettled, a year ago and more. A gentleman
killed, besides his coachman. Accidents, sir, happen in a moment, don't
they?"
But the visitor was not to be drawn so easily. "They do," he said
through his muffler, eyeing her quietly through his impenetrable glasses.
"But they take long enough to get well, don't they? ... There was my
sister's son, Tom, jest cut his arm with a scythe, tumbled on it in the
'ayfield, and, bless me! he was three months tied up sir. You'd hardly believe
it. It's regular given me a dread of a scythe, sir."
"I can quite understand that," said the visitor.
"He was afraid, one time, that he'd have to have an op'ration—he was
that bad, sir."
The visitor laughed abruptly, a bark of a laugh that he seemed to bite and
kill in his mouth. "Was he?" he said.
"He was, sir. And no laughing matter to them as had the doing for him,
as I had—my sister being took up with her little ones so much. There was
bandages to do, sir, and bandages to undo. So that if I may make so bold as to
say it, sir—"
"Will you get me some matches?" said the visitor, quite abruptly.
"My pipe is out."
Mrs. Hall was pulled up suddenly. It was certainly rude of him, after
telling him all she had done. She gasped at him for a moment, and remembered
the two sovereigns. She went for the matches.
"Thanks," he said concisely, as she put them down, and turned his
shoulder upon her and stared out of the window again. It was altogether too
discouraging. Evidently he was sensitive on the topic of operations and
bandages. She did not "make so bold as to say," however, after all.
But his snubbing way had irritated her, and Millie had a hot time of it that
afternoon.
The visitor remained in the parlour until four o'clock, without giving the
ghost of an excuse for an intrusion. For the most part he was quite still
during that time; it would seem he sat in the growing darkness smoking in the
firelight—perhaps dozing.
Once or twice a curious listener might have heard him at the coals, and for
the space of five minutes he was audible pacing the room. He seemed to be
talking to himself. Then the armchair creaked as he sat down again.
At four o'clock, when it was fairly dark and Mrs.
Hall was screwing up her courage to go in and ask her visitor if he would take some
tea, Teddy Henfrey, the clock-jobber, came into the bar. "My sakes! Mrs.
Hall," said he, "but this is terrible weather for thin boots!"
The snow outside was falling faster.
Mrs. Hall agreed, and then noticed he had his bag with him. "Now you're
here, Mr. Teddy," said she, "I'd be glad if you'd give th' old clock
in the parlour a bit of a look. 'Tis going, and it strikes well and hearty; but
the hour-hand won't do nuthin' but point at six."
And leading the way, she went across to the parlour door and rapped and
entered.
Her visitor, she saw as she opened the door, was seated in the armchair
before the fire, dozing it would seem, with his bandaged head drooping on one
side. The only light in the room was the red glow from the fire—which lit his
eyes like adverse railway signals, but left his downcast face in darkness—and
the scanty vestiges of the day that came in through the open door. Everything
was ruddy, shadowy, and indistinct to her, the more so since she had just been
lighting the bar lamp, and her eyes were dazzled. But for a second it seemed to
her that the man she looked at had an enormous mouth wide open—a vast and
incredible mouth that swallowed the whole of the lower portion of his face. It
was the sensation of a moment: the white-bound head, the monstrous goggle eyes,
and this huge yawn below it. Then he stirred, started up in his chair, put up
his hand. She opened the door wide, so that the room was lighter, and she saw
him more clearly, with the muffler held up to his face just as she had seen him
hold the serviette before. The shadows, she fancied, had tricked her.
"Would you mind, sir, this man a-coming to look at the clock,
sir?" she said, recovering from the momentary shock.
"Look at the clock?" he said, staring round in a drowsy manner,
and speaking over his hand, and then, getting more fully awake,
"certainly."
Mrs. Hall went away to get a lamp, and he rose and stretched himself. Then
came the light, and Mr. Teddy Henfrey, entering, was confronted by this
bandaged person. He was, he says, "taken aback."
"Good afternoon," said the stranger, regarding him—as Mr. Henfrey
says, with a vivid sense of the dark spectacles—"like a lobster."
"I hope," said Mr. Henfrey, "that it's no intrusion."
"None whatever," said the stranger. "Though, I
understand," he said turning to Mrs. Hall, "that this room is really
to be mine for my own private use."
"I thought, sir," said Mrs. Hall, "you'd prefer the
clock—"
"Certainly," said the stranger, "certainly—but, as a rule, I
like to be alone and undisturbed.
"But I'm really glad to have the clock seen to," he said, seeing a
certain hesitation in Mr. Henfrey's manner. "Very glad." Mr. Henfrey
had intended to apologise and withdraw, but this anticipation reassured him.
The stranger turned round with his back to the fireplace and put his hands
behind his back. "And presently," he said, "when the
clock-mending is over, I think I should like to have some tea. But not till the
clock-mending is over."
Mrs. Hall was about to leave the room—she made no conversational advances
this time, because she did not want to be snubbed in front of Mr. Henfrey—when
her visitor asked her if she had made any arrangements about his boxes at
Bramblehurst. She told him she had mentioned the matter to the postman, and
that the carrier could bring them over on the morrow. "You are certain
that is the earliest?" he said.
She was certain, with a marked coldness.
"I should explain," he added, "what I was really too cold and
fatigued to do before, that I am an experimental investigator."
"Indeed, sir," said Mrs. Hall, much impressed.
"And my baggage contains apparatus and appliances."
"Very useful things indeed they are, sir," said Mrs. Hall.
"And I'm very naturally anxious to get on with my inquiries."
"Of course, sir."
"My reason for coming to Iping," he proceeded, with a certain
deliberation of manner, "was ... a desire for solitude. I do not wish to
be disturbed in my work. In addition to my work, an accident—"
"I thought as much," said Mrs. Hall to herself.
"—necessitates a certain retirement. My eyes—are sometimes so weak and
painful that I have to shut myself up in the dark for hours together. Lock
myself up. Sometimes—now and then. Not at present, certainly. At such times the
slightest disturbance, the entry of a stranger into the room, is a source of
excruciating annoyance to me—it is well these things should be
understood."
"Certainly, sir," said Mrs. Hall. "And if I might make so
bold as to ask—"
"That I think, is all," said the stranger, with that quietly
irresistible air of finality he could assume at will. Mrs. Hall reserved her
question and sympathy for a better occasion.
After Mrs. Hall had left the room, he remained standing in front of the
fire, glaring, so Mr. Henfrey puts it, at the clock-mending. Mr. Henfrey not
only took off the hands of the clock, and the face, but extracted the works;
and he tried to work in as slow and quiet and unassuming a manner as possible.
He worked with the lamp close to him, and the green shade threw a brilliant
light upon his hands, and upon the frame and wheels, and left the rest of the
room shadowy. When he looked up, coloured patches swam in his eyes. Being
constitutionally of a curious nature, he had removed the works—a quite
unnecessary proceeding—with the idea of delaying his departure and perhaps
falling into conversation with the stranger. But the stranger stood there,
perfectly silent and still. So still, it got on Henfrey's nerves. He felt alone
in the room and looked up, and there, grey and dim, was the bandaged head and
huge blue lenses staring fixedly, with a mist of green spots drifting in front
of them. It was so uncanny to Henfrey that for a minute they remained staring
blankly at one another. Then Henfrey looked down again. Very uncomfortable
position! One would like to say something. Should he remark that the weather
was very cold for the time of year?
He looked up as if to take aim with that introductory shot. "The
weather—" he began.
"Why don't you finish and go?" said the rigid figure, evidently in
a state of painfully suppressed rage. "All you've got to do is to fix the
hour-hand on its axle. You're simply humbugging—"
"Certainly, sir—one minute more. I overlooked—" and Mr. Henfrey
finished and went.
But he went feeling excessively annoyed. "Damn it!" said Mr.
Henfrey to himself, trudging down the village through the thawing snow; "a
man must do a clock at times, sure-ly."
And again "Can't a man look at you?—Ugly!"
And yet again, "Seemingly not. If the police was wanting you you
couldn't be more wropped and bandaged."
At Gleeson's corner he saw Hall, who had recently married the stranger's
hostess at the "Coach and Horses," and who now drove the Iping
conveyance, when occasional people required it, to Sidderbridge Junction,
coming towards him on his return from that place. Hall had evidently been
"stopping a bit" at Sidderbridge, to judge by his driving. "'Ow
do, Teddy?" he said, passing.
"You got a rum un up home!" said Teddy.
Hall very sociably pulled up. "What's that?" he asked.
"Rum-looking customer stopping at the 'Coach and Horses,'" said
Teddy. "My sakes!"
And he proceeded to give Hall a vivid description of his grotesque guest.
"Looks a bit like a disguise, don't it? I'd like to see a man's face if I
had him stopping in my place," said Henfrey. "But women are
that trustful—where strangers are concerned. He's took your rooms and he ain't
even given a name, Hall."
"You don't say so!" said Hall, who was a man of sluggish
apprehension.
"Yes," said Teddy. "By the week. Whatever he is, you can't
get rid of him under the week. And he's got a lot of luggage coming to-morrow,
so he says. Let's hope it won't be stones in boxes, Hall."
He told Hall how his aunt at Hastings had been swindled by a stranger with
empty portmanteaux. Altogether he left Hall vaguely suspicious. "Get up,
old girl," said Hall. "I s'pose I must see 'bout this."
Teddy trudged on his way with his mind considerably relieved.
Instead of "seeing 'bout it," however, Hall on his return was
severely rated by his wife on the length of time he had spent in Sidderbridge,
and his mild inquiries were answered snappishly and in a manner not to the
point. But the seed of suspicion Teddy had sown germinated in the mind of Mr.
Hall in spite of these discouragements. "You wim' don't know
everything," said Mr. Hall, resolved to ascertain more about the
personality of his guest at the earliest possible opportunity. And after the
stranger had gone to bed, which he did about half-past nine, Mr. Hall went very
aggressively into the parlour and looked very hard at his wife's furniture,
just to show that the stranger wasn't master there, and scrutinised closely and
a little contemptuously a sheet of mathematical computations the stranger had
left. When retiring for the night he instructed Mrs. Hall to look very closely
at the stranger's luggage when it came next day.
"You mind you own business, Hall," said Mrs. Hall, "and I'll
mind mine."
She was all the more inclined to snap at Hall because the stranger was
undoubtedly an unusually strange sort of stranger, and she was by no means
assured about him in her own mind. In the middle of the night she woke up
dreaming of huge white heads like turnips, that came trailing after her, at the
end of interminable necks, and with vast black eyes. But being a sensible
woman, she subdued her terrors and turned over and went to sleep again.
So it was that on the twenty-ninth day of February,
at the beginning of the thaw, this singular person fell out of infinity into
Iping village. Next day his luggage arrived through the slush—and very
remarkable luggage it was. There were a couple of trunks indeed, such as a
rational man might need, but in addition there were a box of books—big, fat
books, of which some were just in an incomprehensible handwriting—and a dozen
or more crates, boxes, and cases, containing objects packed in straw, as it
seemed to Hall, tugging with a casual curiosity at the straw—glass bottles. The
stranger, muffled in hat, coat, gloves, and wrapper, came out impatiently to
meet Fearenside's cart, while Hall was having a word or so of gossip
preparatory to helping being them in. Out he came, not noticing Fearenside's
dog, who was sniffing in a dilettante spirit at Hall's legs. "Come
along with those boxes," he said. "I've been waiting long
enough."
And he came down the steps towards the tail of the cart as if to lay hands
on the smaller crate.
No sooner had Fearenside's dog caught sight of him, however, than it began
to bristle and growl savagely, and when he rushed down the steps it gave an
undecided hop, and then sprang straight at his hand. "Whup!" cried
Hall, jumping back, for he was no hero with dogs, and Fearenside howled, "Lie
down!" and snatched his whip.
They saw the dog's teeth had slipped the hand, heard a kick, saw the dog
execute a flanking jump and get home on the stranger's leg, and heard the rip
of his trousering. Then the finer end of Fearenside's whip reached his
property, and the dog, yelping with dismay, retreated under the wheels of the
waggon. It was all the business of a swift half-minute. No one spoke, everyone
shouted. The stranger glanced swiftly at his torn glove and at his leg, made as
if he would stoop to the latter, then turned and rushed swiftly up the steps
into the inn. They heard him go headlong across the passage and up the
uncarpeted stairs to his bedroom.
"You brute, you!" said Fearenside, climbing off the waggon with
his whip in his hand, while the dog watched him through the wheel. "Come
here," said Fearenside—"You'd better."
Hall had stood gaping. "He wuz bit," said Hall. "I'd better
go and see to en," and he trotted after the stranger. He met Mrs. Hall in
the passage. "Carrier's darg," he said "bit en."
He went straight upstairs, and the stranger's door being ajar, he pushed it
open and was entering without any ceremony, being of a naturally sympathetic
turn of mind.
The blind was down and the room dim. He caught a glimpse of a most singular
thing, what seemed a handless arm waving towards him, and a face of three huge
indeterminate spots on white, very like the face of a pale pansy. Then he was
struck violently in the chest, hurled back, and the door slammed in his face
and locked. It was so rapid that it gave him no time to observe. A waving of
indecipherable shapes, a blow, and a concussion. There he stood on the dark
little landing, wondering what it might be that he had seen.
A couple of minutes after, he rejoined the little group that had formed
outside the "Coach and Horses." There was Fearenside telling about it
all over again for the second time; there was Mrs. Hall saying his dog didn't
have no business to bite her guests; there was Huxter, the general dealer from
over the road, interrogative; and Sandy Wadgers from the forge, judicial;
besides women and children, all of them saying fatuities: "Wouldn't let en
bite me, I knows"; "'Tasn't right have such
dargs"; "Whad 'e bite 'n for, than?" and so forth.
Mr. Hall, staring at them from the steps and listening, found it incredible
that he had seen anything so very remarkable happen upstairs. Besides, his
vocabulary was altogether too limited to express his impressions.
"He don't want no help, he says," he said in answer to his wife's
inquiry. "We'd better be a-takin' of his luggage in."
"He ought to have it cauterised at once," said Mr. Huxter;
"especially if it's at all inflamed."
"I'd shoot en, that's what I'd do," said a lady in the group.
Suddenly the dog began growling again.
"Come along," cried an angry voice in the doorway, and there stood
the muffled stranger with his collar turned up, and his hat-brim bent down.
"The sooner you get those things in the better I'll be pleased." It
is stated by an anonymous bystander that his trousers and gloves had been
changed.
"Was you hurt, sir?" said Fearenside. "I'm rare sorry the
darg—"
"Not a bit," said the stranger. "Never broke the skin. Hurry
up with those things."
He then swore to himself, so Mr. Hall asserts.
Directly the first crate was, in accordance with his directions, carried
into the parlour, the stranger flung himself upon it with extraordinary
eagerness, and began to unpack it, scattering the straw with an utter disregard
of Mrs. Hall's carpet. And from it he began to produce bottles—little fat
bottles containing powders, small and slender bottles containing coloured and
white fluids, fluted blue bottles labeled Poison, bottles with round bodies and
slender necks, large green-glass bottles, large white-glass bottles, bottles with
glass stoppers and frosted labels, bottles with fine corks, bottles with bungs,
bottles with wooden caps, wine bottles, salad-oil bottles—putting them in rows
on the chiffonnier, on the mantel, on the table under the window, round the
floor, on the bookshelf—everywhere. The chemist's shop in Bramblehurst could
not boast half so many. Quite a sight it was. Crate after crate yielded
bottles, until all six were empty and the table high with straw; the only
things that came out of these crates besides the bottles were a number of
test-tubes and a carefully packed balance.
And directly the crates were unpacked, the stranger went to the window and
set to work, not troubling in the least about the litter of straw, the fire
which had gone out, the box of books outside, nor for the trunks and other
luggage that had gone upstairs.
When Mrs. Hall took his dinner in to him, he was already so absorbed in his
work, pouring little drops out of the bottles into test-tubes, that he did not
hear her until she had swept away the bulk of the straw and put the tray on the
table, with some little emphasis perhaps, seeing the state that the floor was
in. Then he half turned his head and immediately turned it away again. But she
saw he had removed his glasses; they were beside him on the table, and it
seemed to her that his eye sockets were extraordinarily hollow. He put on his
spectacles again, and then turned and faced her. She was about to complain of
the straw on the floor when he anticipated her.
"I wish you wouldn't come in without knocking," he said in the
tone of abnormal exasperation that seemed so characteristic of him.
"I knocked, but seemingly—"
"Perhaps you did. But in my investigations—my really very urgent and
necessary investigations—the slightest disturbance, the jar of a door—I must
ask you—"
"Certainly, sir. You can turn the lock if you're like that, you know.
Any time."
"A very good idea," said the stranger.
"This stror, sir, if I might make so bold as to remark—"
"Don't. If the straw makes trouble put it down in the bill." And
he mumbled at her—words suspiciously like curses.
He was so odd, standing there, so aggressive and explosive, bottle in one
hand and test-tube in the other, that Mrs. Hall was quite alarmed. But she was
a resolute woman. "In which case, I should like to know, sir, what you
consider—"
"A shilling—put down a shilling. Surely a shilling's enough?"
"So be it," said Mrs. Hall, taking up the table-cloth and
beginning to spread it over the table. "If you're satisfied, of
course—"
He turned and sat down, with his coat-collar toward her.
All the afternoon he worked with the door locked and, as Mrs. Hall
testifies, for the most part in silence. But once there was a concussion and a
sound of bottles ringing together as though the table had been hit, and the
smash of a bottle flung violently down, and then a rapid pacing athwart the
room. Fearing "something was the matter," she went to the door and
listened, not caring to knock.
"I can't go on," he was raving. "I can't go on. Three
hundred thousand, four hundred thousand! The huge multitude! Cheated! All my
life it may take me! ... Patience! Patience indeed! ... Fool! fool!"
There was a noise of hobnails on the bricks in the bar, and Mrs. Hall had
very reluctantly to leave the rest of his soliloquy. When she returned the room
was silent again, save for the faint crepitation of his chair and the
occasional clink of a bottle. It was all over; the stranger had resumed work.
When she took in his tea she saw broken glass in the corner of the room
under the concave mirror, and a golden stain that had been carelessly wiped.
She called attention to it.
"Put it down in the bill," snapped her visitor. "For God's
sake don't worry me. If there's damage done, put it down in the bill," and
he went on ticking a list in the exercise book before him.
"I'll tell you something," said Fearenside, mysteriously. It was
late in the afternoon, and they were in the little beer-shop of Iping Hanger.
"Well?" said Teddy Henfrey.
"This chap you're speaking of, what my dog bit. Well—he's black.
Leastways, his legs are. I seed through the tear of his trousers and the tear
of his glove. You'd have expected a sort of pinky to show, wouldn't you?
Well—there wasn't none. Just blackness. I tell you, he's as black as my
hat."
"My sakes!" said Henfrey. "It's a rummy case altogether. Why,
his nose is as pink as paint!"
"That's true," said Fearenside. "I knows that. And I tell 'ee
what I'm thinking. That marn's a piebald, Teddy. Black here and white there—in
patches. And he's ashamed of it. He's a kind of half-breed, and the colour's
come off patchy instead of mixing. I've heard of such things before. And it's
the common way with horses, as any one can see."
I have told the circumstances of the stranger's
arrival in Iping with a certain fulness of detail, in order that the curious
impression he created may be understood by the reader. But excepting two odd
incidents, the circumstances of his stay until the extraordinary day of the
club festival may be passed over very cursorily. There were a number of
skirmishes with Mrs. Hall on matters of domestic discipline, but in every case
until late April, when the first signs of penury began, he over-rode her by the
easy expedient of an extra payment. Hall did not like him, and whenever he
dared he talked of the advisability of getting rid of him; but he showed his
dislike chiefly by concealing it ostentatiously, and avoiding his visitor as
much as possible. "Wait till the summer," said Mrs. Hall sagely,
"when the artisks are beginning to come. Then we'll see. He may be a bit
overbearing, but bills settled punctual is bills settled punctual, whatever
you'd like to say."
The stranger did not go to church, and indeed made no difference between
Sunday and the irreligious days, even in costume. He worked, as Mrs. Hall
thought, very fitfully. Some days he would come down early and be continuously
busy. On others he would rise late, pace his room, fretting audibly for hours
together, smoke, sleep in the armchair by the fire. Communication with the
world beyond the village he had none. His temper continued very uncertain; for
the most part his manner was that of a man suffering under almost unendurable
provocation, and once or twice things were snapped, torn, crushed, or broken in
spasmodic gusts of violence. He seemed under a chronic irritation of the
greatest intensity. His habit of talking to himself in a low voice grew
steadily upon him, but though Mrs. Hall listened conscientiously she could make
neither head nor tail of what she heard.
He rarely went abroad by daylight, but at twilight he would go out muffled
up invisibly, whether the weather were cold or not, and he chose the loneliest
paths and those most overshadowed by trees and banks. His goggling spectacles
and ghastly bandaged face under the penthouse of his hat, came with a
disagreeable suddenness out of the darkness upon one or two home-going
labourers, and Teddy Henfrey, tumbling out of the "Scarlet Coat" one
night, at half-past nine, was scared shamefully by the stranger's skull-like
head (he was walking hat in hand) lit by the sudden light of the opened inn
door. Such children as saw him at nightfall dreamt of bogies, and it seemed
doubtful whether he disliked boys more than they disliked him, or the reverse;
but there was certainly a vivid enough dislike on either side.
It was inevitable that a person of so remarkable an appearance and bearing
should form a frequent topic in such a village as Iping. Opinion was greatly
divided about his occupation. Mrs. Hall was sensitive on the point. When
questioned, she explained very carefully that he was an "experimental
investigator," going gingerly over the syllables as one who dreads
pitfalls. When asked what an experimental investigator was, she would say with
a touch of superiority that most educated people knew such things as that, and
would thus explain that he "discovered things." Her visitor had had
an accident, she said, which temporarily discoloured his face and hands, and
being of a sensitive disposition, he was averse to any public notice of the
fact.
Out of her hearing there was a view largely entertained that he was a
criminal trying to escape from justice by wrapping himself up so as to conceal
himself altogether from the eye of the police. This idea sprang from the brain
of Mr. Teddy Henfrey. No crime of any magnitude dating from the middle or end
of February was known to have occurred. Elaborated in the imagination of Mr.
Gould, the probationary assistant in the National School, this theory took the
form that the stranger was an Anarchist in disguise, preparing explosives, and
he resolved to undertake such detective operations as his time permitted. These
consisted for the most part in looking very hard at the stranger whenever they
met, or in asking people who had never seen the stranger, leading questions
about him. But he detected nothing.
Another school of opinion followed Mr. Fearenside, and either accepted the
piebald view or some modification of it; as, for instance, Silas Durgan, who
was heard to assert that "if he choses to show enself at fairs he'd make
his fortune in no time," and being a bit of a theologian, compared the
stranger to the man with the one talent. Yet another view explained the entire
matter by regarding the stranger as a harmless lunatic. That had the advantage
of accounting for everything straight away.
Between these main groups there were waverers and compromisers. Sussex folk
have few superstitions, and it was only after the events of early April that
the thought of the supernatural was first whispered in the village. Even then
it was only credited among the women folk.
But whatever they thought of him, people in Iping, on the whole, agreed in
disliking him. His irritability, though it might have been comprehensible to an
urban brain-worker, was an amazing thing to these quiet Sussex villagers. The
frantic gesticulations they surprised now and then, the headlong pace after
nightfall that swept him upon them round quiet corners, the inhuman bludgeoning
of all tentative advances of curiosity, the taste for twilight that led to the
closing of doors, the pulling down of blinds, the extinction of candles and
lamps—who could agree with such goings on? They drew aside as he passed down
the village, and when he had gone by, young humourists would up with
coat-collars and down with hat-brims, and go pacing nervously after him in
imitation of his occult bearing. There was a song popular at that time called
"The Bogey Man". Miss Statchell sang it at the schoolroom concert (in
aid of the church lamps), and thereafter whenever one or two of the villagers
were gathered together and the stranger appeared, a bar or so of this tune,
more or less sharp or flat, was whistled in the midst of them. Also belated little
children would call "Bogey Man!" after him, and make off tremulously
elated.
Cuss, the general practitioner, was devoured by curiosity. The bandages
excited his professional interest, the report of the thousand and one bottles
aroused his jealous regard. All through April and May he coveted an opportunity
of talking to the stranger, and at last, towards Whitsuntide, he could stand it
no longer, but hit upon the subscription-list for a village nurse as an excuse.
He was surprised to find that Mr. Hall did not know his guest's name. "He
give a name," said Mrs. Hall—an assertion which was quite
unfounded—"but I didn't rightly hear it." She thought it seemed so
silly not to know the man's name.
Cuss rapped at the parlour door and entered. There was a fairly audible
imprecation from within. "Pardon my intrusion," said Cuss, and then
the door closed and cut Mrs. Hall off from the rest of the conversation.
She could hear the murmur of voices for the next ten minutes, then a cry of
surprise, a stirring of feet, a chair flung aside, a bark of laughter, quick
steps to the door, and Cuss appeared, his face white, his eyes staring over his
shoulder. He left the door open behind him, and without looking at her strode
across the hall and went down the steps, and she heard his feet hurrying along
the road. He carried his hat in his hand. She stood behind the door, looking at
the open door of the parlour. Then she heard the stranger laughing quietly, and
then his footsteps came across the room. She could not see his face where she
stood. The parlour door slammed, and the place was silent again.
Cuss went straight up the village to Bunting the vicar. "Am I
mad?" Cuss began abruptly, as he entered the shabby little study. "Do
I look like an insane person?"
"What's happened?" said the vicar, putting the ammonite on the
loose sheets of his forth-coming sermon.
"That chap at the inn—"
"Well?"
"Give me something to drink," said Cuss, and he sat down.
When his nerves had been steadied by a glass of cheap sherry—the only drink
the good vicar had available—he told him of the interview he had just had.
"Went in," he gasped, "and began to demand a subscription for
that Nurse Fund. He'd stuck his hands in his pockets as I came in, and he sat
down lumpily in his chair. Sniffed. I told him I'd heard he took an interest in
scientific things. He said yes. Sniffed again. Kept on sniffing all the time;
evidently recently caught an infernal cold. No wonder, wrapped up like that! I
developed the nurse idea, and all the while kept my eyes open. Bottles—chemicals—everywhere.
Balance, test-tubes in stands, and a smell of—evening primrose. Would he
subscribe? Said he'd consider it. Asked him, point-blank, was he researching.
Said he was. A long research? Got quite cross. 'A damnable long research,' said
he, blowing the cork out, so to speak. 'Oh,' said I. And out came the
grievance. The man was just on the boil, and my question boiled him over. He
had been given a prescription, most valuable prescription—what for he wouldn't
say. Was it medical? 'Damn you! What are you fishing after?' I apologised.
Dignified sniff and cough. He resumed. He'd read it. Five ingredients. Put it
down; turned his head. Draught of air from window lifted the paper. Swish,
rustle. He was working in a room with an open fireplace, he said. Saw a
flicker, and there was the prescription burning and lifting chimneyward. Rushed
towards it just as it whisked up the chimney. So! Just at that point, to
illustrate his story, out came his arm."
"Well?"
"No hand—just an empty sleeve. Lord! I thought, that's a
deformity! Got a cork arm, I suppose, and has taken it off. Then, I thought,
there's something odd in that. What the devil keeps that sleeve up and open, if
there's nothing in it? There was nothing in it, I tell you. Nothing down it, right
down to the joint. I could see right down it to the elbow, and there was a
glimmer of light shining through a tear of the cloth. 'Good God!' I said. Then
he stopped. Stared at me with those black goggles of his, and then at his
sleeve."
"Well?"
"That's all. He never said a word; just glared, and put his sleeve back
in his pocket quickly. 'I was saying,' said he, 'that there was the
prescription burning, wasn't I?' Interrogative cough. 'How the devil,' said I,
'can you move an empty sleeve like that?' 'Empty sleeve?' 'Yes,' said I, 'an
empty sleeve.'
"'It's an empty sleeve, is it? You saw it was an empty sleeve?' He
stood up right away. I stood up too. He came towards me in three very slow
steps, and stood quite close. Sniffed venomously. I didn't flinch, though I'm
hanged if that bandaged knob of his, and those blinkers, aren't enough to
unnerve any one, coming quietly up to you.
"'You said it was an empty sleeve?' he said. 'Certainly,' I said. At
staring and saying nothing a barefaced man, unspectacled, starts scratch. Then
very quietly he pulled his sleeve out of his pocket again, and raised his arm
towards me as though he would show it to me again. He did it very, very slowly.
I looked at it. Seemed an age. 'Well?' said I, clearing my throat, 'there's nothing
in it.'
"Had to say something. I was beginning to feel frightened. I could see
right down it. He extended it straight towards me, slowly, slowly—just like
that—until the cuff was six inches from my face. Queer thing to see an empty
sleeve come at you like that! And then—"
"Well?"
"Something—exactly like a finger and thumb it felt—nipped my
nose."
Bunting began to laugh.
"There wasn't anything there!" said Cuss, his voice running up
into a shriek at the "there." "It's all very well for you to
laugh, but I tell you I was so startled, I hit his cuff hard, and turned
around, and cut out of the room—I left him—"
Cuss stopped. There was no mistaking the sincerity of his panic. He turned
round in a helpless way and took a second glass of the excellent vicar's very
inferior sherry. "When I hit his cuff," said Cuss, "I tell you,
it felt exactly like hitting an arm. And there wasn't an arm! There wasn't the
ghost of an arm!"
Mr. Bunting thought it over. He looked suspiciously at Cuss. "It's a
most remarkable story," he said. He looked very wise and grave indeed.
"It's really," said Mr. Bunting with judicial emphasis, "a most
remarkable story."
The facts of the burglary at the vicarage came to us
chiefly through the medium of the vicar and his wife. It occurred in the small
hours of Whit Monday, the day devoted in Iping to the Club festivities. Mrs.
Bunting, it seems, woke up suddenly in the stillness that comes before the
dawn, with the strong impression that the door of their bedroom had opened and
closed. She did not arouse her husband at first, but sat up in bed listening.
She then distinctly heard the pad, pad, pad of bare feet coming out of the
adjoining dressing-room and walking along the passage towards the staircase. As
soon as she felt assured of this, she aroused the Rev. Mr. Bunting as quietly
as possible. He did not strike a light, but putting on his spectacles, her
dressing-gown and his bath slippers, he went out on the landing to listen. He
heard quite distinctly a fumbling going on at his study desk down-stairs, and
then a violent sneeze.
At that he returned to his bedroom, armed himself with the most obvious
weapon, the poker, and descended the staircase as noiselessly as possible. Mrs.
Bunting came out on the landing.
The hour was about four, and the ultimate darkness of the night was past.
There was a faint shimmer of light in the hall, but the study doorway yawned
impenetrably black. Everything was still except the faint creaking of the
stairs under Mr. Bunting's tread, and the slight movements in the study. Then
something snapped, the drawer was opened, and there was a rustle of papers.
Then came an imprecation, and a match was struck and the study was flooded with
yellow light. Mr. Bunting was now in the hall, and through the crack of the
door he could see the desk and the open drawer and a candle burning on the
desk. But the robber he could not see. He stood there in the hall undecided
what to do, and Mrs. Bunting, her face white and intent, crept slowly
downstairs after him. One thing kept Mr. Bunting's courage; the persuasion that
this burglar was a resident in the village.
They heard the chink of money, and realised that the robber had found the
housekeeping reserve of gold—two pounds ten in half sovereigns altogether. At
that sound Mr. Bunting was nerved to abrupt action. Gripping the poker firmly,
he rushed into the room, closely followed by Mrs. Bunting.
"Surrender!" cried Mr. Bunting, fiercely, and then stooped amazed.
Apparently the room was perfectly empty.
Yet their conviction that they had, that very moment, heard somebody moving
in the room had amounted to a certainty. For half a minute, perhaps, they stood
gaping, then Mrs. Bunting went across the room and looked behind the screen,
while Mr. Bunting, by a kindred impulse, peered under the desk. Then Mrs.
Bunting turned back the window-curtains, and Mr. Bunting looked up the chimney
and probed it with the poker. Then Mrs. Bunting scrutinised the waste-paper
basket and Mr. Bunting opened the lid of the coal-scuttle. Then they came to a
stop and stood with eyes interrogating each other.
"I could have sworn—" said Mr. Bunting.
"The candle!" said Mr. Bunting. "Who lit the candle?"
"The drawer!" said Mrs. Bunting. "And the money's gone!"
She went hastily to the doorway.
"Of all the strange occurrences—"
There was a violent sneeze in the passage. They rushed out, and as they did
so the kitchen door slammed. "Bring the candle," said Mr. Bunting,
and led the way. They both heard a sound of bolts being hastily shot back.
As he opened the kitchen door he saw through the scullery that the back door
was just opening, and the faint light of early dawn displayed the dark masses
of the garden beyond. He is certain that nothing went out of the door. It
opened, stood open for a moment, and then closed with a slam. As it did so, the
candle Mrs. Bunting was carrying from the study flickered and flared. It was a
minute or more before they entered the kitchen.
The place was empty. They refastened the back door, examined the kitchen,
pantry, and scullery thoroughly, and at last went down into the cellar. There
was not a soul to be found in the house, search as they would.
Daylight found the vicar and his wife, a quaintly-costumed little couple,
still marvelling about on their own ground floor by the unnecessary light of a
guttering candle.
Now it happened that in the early hours of Whit
Monday, before Millie was hunted out for the day, Mr. Hall and Mrs. Hall both
rose and went noiselessly down into the cellar. Their business there was of a
private nature, and had something to do with the specific gravity of their
beer. They had hardly entered the cellar when Mrs. Hall found she had forgotten
to bring down a bottle of sarsaparilla from their joint-room. As she was the
expert and principal operator in this affair, Hall very properly went upstairs
for it.
On the landing he was surprised to see that the stranger's door was ajar. He
went on into his own room and found the bottle as he had been directed.
But returning with the bottle, he noticed that the bolts of the front door
had been shot back, that the door was in fact simply on the latch. And with a
flash of inspiration he connected this with the stranger's room upstairs and
the suggestions of Mr. Teddy Henfrey. He distinctly remembered holding the
candle while Mrs. Hall shot these bolts overnight. At the sight he stopped,
gaping, then with the bottle still in his hand went upstairs again. He rapped
at the stranger's door. There was no answer. He rapped again; then pushed the
door wide open and entered.
It was as he expected. The bed, the room also, was empty. And what was
stranger, even to his heavy intelligence, on the bedroom chair and along the
rail of the bed were scattered the garments, the only garments so far as he
knew, and the bandages of their guest. His big slouch hat even was cocked
jauntily over the bed-post.
As Hall stood there he heard his wife's voice coming out of the depth of the
cellar, with that rapid telescoping of the syllables and interrogative cocking
up of the final words to a high note, by which the West Sussex villager is wont
to indicate a brisk impatience. "George! You gart whad a wand?"
At that he turned and hurried down to her. "Janny," he said, over
the rail of the cellar steps, "'tas the truth what Henfrey sez. 'E's not
in uz room, 'e en't. And the front door's onbolted."
At first Mrs. Hall did not understand, and as soon as she did she resolved
to see the empty room for herself. Hall, still holding the bottle, went first.
"If 'e en't there," he said, "'is close are. And what's 'e doin'
'ithout 'is close, then? 'Tas a most curious business."
As they came up the cellar steps they both, it was afterwards ascertained,
fancied they heard the front door open and shut, but seeing it closed and
nothing there, neither said a word to the other about it at the time. Mrs. Hall
passed her husband in the passage and ran on first upstairs. Someone sneezed on
the staircase. Hall, following six steps behind, thought that he heard her
sneeze. She, going on first, was under the impression that Hall was sneezing.
She flung open the door and stood regarding the room. "Of all the
curious!" she said.
She heard a sniff close behind her head as it seemed, and turning, was
surprised to see Hall a dozen feet off on the topmost stair. But in another
moment he was beside her. She bent forward and put her hand on the pillow and
then under the clothes.
"Cold," she said. "He's been up this hour or more."
As she did so, a most extraordinary thing happened. The bed-clothes gathered
themselves together, leapt up suddenly into a sort of peak, and then jumped
headlong over the bottom rail. It was exactly as if a hand had clutched them in
the centre and flung them aside. Immediately after, the stranger's hat hopped
off the bed-post, described a whirling flight in the air through the better
part of a circle, and then dashed straight at Mrs. Hall's face. Then as swiftly
came the sponge from the washstand; and then the chair, flinging the stranger's
coat and trousers carelessly aside, and laughing drily in a voice singularly
like the stranger's, turned itself up with its four legs at Mrs. Hall, seemed
to take aim at her for a moment, and charged at her. She screamed and turned,
and then the chair legs came gently but firmly against her back and impelled
her and Hall out of the room. The door slammed violently and was locked. The
chair and bed seemed to be executing a dance of triumph for a moment, and then
abruptly everything was still.
Mrs. Hall was left almost in a fainting condition in Mr. Hall's arms on the
landing. It was with the greatest difficulty that Mr. Hall and Millie, who had
been roused by her scream of alarm, succeeded in getting her downstairs, and
applying the restoratives customary in such cases.
"'Tas sperits," said Mrs. Hall. "I know 'tas sperits. I've
read in papers of en. Tables and chairs leaping and dancing..."
"Take a drop more, Janny," said Hall. "'Twill steady
ye."
"Lock him out," said Mrs. Hall. "Don't let him come in again.
I half guessed—I might ha' known. With them goggling eyes and bandaged head,
and never going to church of a Sunday. And all they bottles—more'n it's right
for any one to have. He's put the sperits into the furniture.... My good old
furniture! 'Twas in that very chair my poor dear mother used to sit when I was
a little girl. To think it should rise up against me now!"
"Just a drop more, Janny," said Hall. "Your nerves is all
upset."
They sent Millie across the street through the golden five o'clock sunshine
to rouse up Mr. Sandy Wadgers, the blacksmith. Mr. Hall's compliments and the
furniture upstairs was behaving most extraordinary. Would Mr. Wadgers come
round? He was a knowing man, was Mr. Wadgers, and very resourceful. He took
quite a grave view of the case. "Arm darmed if thet ent witchcraft,"
was the view of Mr. Sandy Wadgers. "You warnt horseshoes for such gentry
as he."
He came round greatly concerned. They wanted him to lead the way upstairs to
the room, but he didn't seem to be in any hurry. He preferred to talk in the
passage. Over the way Huxter's apprentice came out and began taking down the
shutters of the tobacco window. He was called over to join the discussion. Mr.
Huxter naturally followed over in the course of a few minutes. The Anglo-Saxon
genius for parliamentary government asserted itself; there was a great deal of
talk and no decisive action. "Let's have the facts first," insisted
Mr. Sandy Wadgers. "Let's be sure we'd be acting perfectly right in
bustin' that there door open. A door onbust is always open to bustin', but ye
can't onbust a door once you've busted en."
And suddenly and most wonderfully the door of the room upstairs opened of
its own accord, and as they looked up in amazement, they saw descending the
stairs the muffled figure of the stranger staring more blackly and blankly than
ever with those unreasonably large blue glass eyes of his. He came down stiffly
and slowly, staring all the time; he walked across the passage staring, then
stopped.
"Look there!" he said, and their eyes followed the direction of
his gloved finger and saw a bottle of sarsaparilla hard by the cellar door.
Then he entered the parlour, and suddenly, swiftly, viciously, slammed the door
in their faces.
Not a word was spoken until the last echoes of the slam had died away. They
stared at one another. "Well, if that don't lick everything!" said
Mr. Wadgers, and left the alternative unsaid.
"I'd go in and ask'n 'bout it," said Wadgers, to Mr. Hall.
"I'd d'mand an explanation."
It took some time to bring the landlady's husband up to that pitch. At last
he rapped, opened the door, and got as far as, "Excuse me—"
"Go to the devil!" said the stranger in a tremendous voice, and
"Shut that door after you." So that brief interview terminated.
The stranger went into the little parlour of the
"Coach and Horses" about half-past five in the morning, and there he
remained until near midday, the blinds down, the door shut, and none, after
Hall's repulse, venturing near him.
All that time he must have fasted. Thrice he rang his bell, the third time
furiously and continuously, but no one answered him. "Him and his 'go to
the devil' indeed!" said Mrs. Hall. Presently came an imperfect rumour of
the burglary at the vicarage, and two and two were put together. Hall, assisted
by Wadgers, went off to find Mr. Shuckleforth, the magistrate, and take his
advice. No one ventured upstairs. How the stranger occupied himself is unknown.
Now and then he would stride violently up and down, and twice came an outburst
of curses, a tearing of paper, and a violent smashing of bottles.
The little group of scared but curious people increased. Mrs. Huxter came
over; some gay young fellows resplendent in black ready-made jackets and piqué
paper ties—for it was Whit Monday—joined the group with confused
interrogations. Young Archie Harker distinguished himself by going up the yard
and trying to peep under the window-blinds. He could see nothing, but gave
reason for supposing that he did, and others of the Iping youth presently
joined him.
It was the finest of all possible Whit Mondays, and down the village street
stood a row of nearly a dozen booths, a shooting gallery, and on the grass by
the forge were three yellow and chocolate waggons and some picturesque
strangers of both sexes putting up a cocoanut shy. The gentlemen wore blue
jerseys, the ladies white aprons and quite fashionable hats with heavy plumes.
Wodger, of the "Purple Fawn," and Mr. Jaggers, the cobbler, who also
sold old second-hand ordinary bicycles, were stretching a string of union-jacks
and royal ensigns (which had originally celebrated the first Victorian Jubilee)
across the road.
And inside, in the artificial darkness of the parlour, into which only one
thin jet of sunlight penetrated, the stranger, hungry we must suppose, and
fearful, hidden in his uncomfortable hot wrappings, pored through his dark
glasses upon his paper or chinked his dirty little bottles, and occasionally
swore savagely at the boys, audible if invisible, outside the windows. In the
corner by the fireplace lay the fragments of half a dozen smashed bottles, and
a pungent twang of chlorine tainted the air. So much we know from what was
heard at the time and from what was subsequently seen in the room.
About noon he suddenly opened his parlour door and stood glaring fixedly at
the three or four people in the bar. "Mrs. Hall," he said. Somebody
went sheepishly and called for Mrs. Hall.
Mrs. Hall appeared after an interval, a little short of breath, but all the
fiercer for that. Hall was still out. She had deliberated over this scene, and
she came holding a little tray with an unsettled bill upon it. "Is it your
bill you're wanting, sir?" she said.
"Why wasn't my breakfast laid? Why haven't you prepared my meals and
answered my bell? Do you think I live without eating?"
"Why isn't my bill paid?" said Mrs. Hall. "That's what I want
to know."
"I told you three days ago I was awaiting a remittance—"
"I told you two days ago I wasn't going to await no remittances. You
can't grumble if your breakfast waits a bit, if my bill's been waiting these
five days, can you?"
The stranger swore briefly but vividly.
"Nar, nar!" from the bar.
"And I'd thank you kindly, sir, if you'd keep your swearing to
yourself, sir," said Mrs. Hall.
The stranger stood looking more like an angry diving-helmet than ever. It
was universally felt in the bar that Mrs. Hall had the better of him. His next
words showed as much.
"Look here, my good woman—" he began.
"Don't 'good woman' me," said Mrs. Hall.
"I've told you my remittance hasn't come."
"Remittance indeed!" said Mrs. Hall.
"Still, I daresay in my pocket—"
"You told me three days ago that you hadn't anything but a sovereign's
worth of silver upon you."
"Well, I've found some more—"
"'Ul-lo!" from the bar.
"I wonder where you found it," said Mrs. Hall.
That seemed to annoy the stranger very much. He stamped his foot. "What
do you mean?" he said.
"That I wonder where you found it," said Mrs. Hall. "And
before I take any bills or get any breakfasts, or do any such things
whatsoever, you got to tell me one or two things I don't understand, and what
nobody don't understand, and what everybody is very anxious to understand. I
want to know what you been doing t'my chair upstairs, and I want to know how
'tis your room was empty, and how you got in again. Them as stops in this house
comes in by the doors—that's the rule of the house, and that you didn't
do, and what I want to know is how you did come in. And I want to
know—"
Suddenly the stranger raised his gloved hands clenched, stamped his foot,
and said, "Stop!" with such extraordinary violence that he silenced
her instantly.
"You don't understand," he said, "who I am or what I am. I'll
show you. By Heaven! I'll show you." Then he put his open palm over his
face and withdrew it. The centre of his face became a black cavity.
"Here," he said. He stepped forward and handed Mrs. Hall something
which she, staring at his metamorphosed face, accepted automatically. Then,
when she saw what it was, she screamed loudly, dropped it, and staggered back.
The nose—it was the stranger's nose! pink and shining—rolled on the floor.
Then he removed his spectacles, and everyone in the bar gasped. He took off
his hat, and with a violent gesture tore at his whiskers and bandages. For a
moment they resisted him. A flash of horrible anticipation passed through the
bar. "Oh, my Gard!" said some one. Then off they came.
It was worse than anything. Mrs. Hall, standing open-mouthed and
horror-struck, shrieked at what she saw, and made for the door of the house.
Everyone began to move. They were prepared for scars, disfigurements, tangible
horrors, but nothing! The bandages and false hair flew across the passage into
the bar, making a hobbledehoy jump to avoid them. Everyone tumbled on everyone
else down the steps. For the man who stood there shouting some incoherent
explanation, was a solid gesticulating figure up to the coat-collar of him, and
then—nothingness, no visible thing at all!
People down the village heard shouts and shrieks, and looking up the street
saw the "Coach and Horses" violently firing out its humanity. They
saw Mrs. Hall fall down and Mr. Teddy Henfrey jump to avoid tumbling over her,
and then they heard the frightful screams of Millie, who, emerging suddenly
from the kitchen at the noise of the tumult, had come upon the headless
stranger from behind. These increased suddenly.
Forthwith everyone all down the street, the sweetstuff seller, cocoanut shy
proprietor and his assistant, the swing man, little boys and girls, rustic
dandies, smart wenches, smocked elders and aproned gipsies—began running
towards the inn, and in a miraculously short space of time a crowd of perhaps
forty people, and rapidly increasing, swayed and hooted and inquired and
exclaimed and suggested, in front of Mrs. Hall's establishment. Everyone seemed
eager to talk at once, and the result was Babel. A small group supported Mrs.
Hall, who was picked up in a state of collapse. There was a conference, and the
incredible evidence of a vociferous eye-witness. "O Bogey!"
"What's he been doin', then?" "Ain't hurt the girl, 'as
'e?" "Run at en with a knife, I believe." "No 'ed, I tell
ye. I don't mean no manner of speaking. I mean marn 'ithout a 'ed!"
"Narnsense! 'tis some conjuring trick." "Fetched off 'is
wrapping, 'e did—"
In its struggles to see in through the open door, the crowd formed itself
into a straggling wedge, with the more adventurous apex nearest the inn.
"He stood for a moment, I heerd the gal scream, and he turned. I saw her
skirts whisk, and he went after her. Didn't take ten seconds. Back he comes
with a knife in uz hand and a loaf; stood just as if he was staring. Not a moment
ago. Went in that there door. I tell 'e, 'e ain't gart no 'ed at all. You just
missed en—"
There was a disturbance behind, and the speaker stopped to step aside for a
little procession that was marching very resolutely towards the house; first
Mr. Hall, very red and determined, then Mr. Bobby Jaffers, the village
constable, and then the wary Mr. Wadgers. They had come now armed with a
warrant.
People shouted conflicting information of the recent circumstances.
"'Ed or no 'ed," said Jaffers, "I got to 'rest en, and 'rest en
I will."
Mr. Hall marched up the steps, marched straight to the door of the parlour
and flung it open. "Constable," he said, "do your duty."
Jaffers marched in. Hall next, Wadgers last. They saw in the dim light the
headless figure facing them, with a gnawed crust of bread in one gloved hand
and a chunk of cheese in the other.
"That's him!" said Hall.
"What the devil's this?" came in a tone of angry expostulation
from above the collar of the figure.
"You're a damned rum customer, mister," said Mr. Jaffers.
"But 'ed or no 'ed, the warrant says 'body,' and duty's duty—"
"Keep off!" said the figure, starting back.
Abruptly he whipped down the bread and cheese, and Mr. Hall just grasped the
knife on the table in time to save it. Off came the stranger's left glove and
was slapped in Jaffers' face. In another moment Jaffers, cutting short some
statement concerning a warrant, had gripped him by the handless wrist and
caught his invisible throat. He got a sounding kick on the shin that made him
shout, but he kept his grip. Hall sent the knife sliding along the table to
Wadgers, who acted as goal-keeper for the offensive, so to speak, and then
stepped forward as Jaffers and the stranger swayed and staggered towards him,
clutching and hitting in. A chair stood in the way, and went aside with a crash
as they came down together.
"Get the feet," said Jaffers between his teeth.
Mr. Hall, endeavouring to act on instructions, received a sounding kick in
the ribs that disposed of him for a moment, and Mr. Wadgers, seeing the
decapitated stranger had rolled over and got the upper side of Jaffers,
retreated towards the door, knife in hand, and so collided with Mr. Huxter and
the Sidderbridge carter coming to the rescue of law and order. At the same
moment down came three or four bottles from the chiffonnier and shot a web of
pungency into the air of the room.
"I'll surrender," cried the stranger, though he had Jaffers down,
and in another moment he stood up panting, a strange figure, headless and
handless—for he had pulled off his right glove now as well as his left.
"It's no good," he said, as if sobbing for breath.
It was the strangest thing in the world to hear that voice coming as if out
of empty space, but the Sussex peasants are perhaps the most matter-of-fact
people under the sun. Jaffers got up also and produced a pair of handcuffs.
Then he stared.
"I say!" said Jaffers, brought up short by a dim realization of
the incongruity of the whole business, "Darn it! Can't use 'em as I can
see."
The stranger ran his arm down his waistcoat, and as if by a miracle the
buttons to which his empty sleeve pointed became undone. Then he said something
about his shin, and stooped down. He seemed to be fumbling with his shoes and
socks.
"Why!" said Huxter, suddenly, "that's not a man at all. It's
just empty clothes. Look! You can see down his collar and the linings of his
clothes. I could put my arm—"
He extended his hand; it seemed to meet something in mid-air, and he drew it
back with a sharp exclamation. "I wish you'd keep your fingers out of my
eye," said the aerial voice, in a tone of savage expostulation. "The
fact is, I'm all here—head, hands, legs, and all the rest of it, but it happens
I'm invisible. It's a confounded nuisance, but I am. That's no reason why I
should be poked to pieces by every stupid bumpkin in Iping, is it?"
The suit of clothes, now all unbuttoned and hanging loosely upon its unseen
supports, stood up, arms akimbo.
Several other of the men folks had now entered the room, so that it was
closely crowded. "Invisible, eh?" said Huxter, ignoring the
stranger's abuse. "Who ever heard the likes of that?"
"It's strange, perhaps, but it's not a crime. Why am I assaulted by a
policeman in this fashion?"
"Ah! that's a different matter," said Jaffers. "No doubt you
are a bit difficult to see in this light, but I got a warrant and it's all
correct. What I'm after ain't no invisibility,—it's burglary. There's a house
been broke into and money took."
"Well?"
"And circumstances certainly point—"
"Stuff and nonsense!" said the Invisible Man.
"I hope so, sir; but I've got my instructions."
"Well," said the stranger, "I'll come. I'll come. But
no handcuffs."
"It's the regular thing," said Jaffers.
"No handcuffs," stipulated the stranger.
"Pardon me," said Jaffers.
Abruptly the figure sat down, and before any one could realise was was being
done, the slippers, socks, and trousers had been kicked off under the table.
Then he sprang up again and flung off his coat.
"Here, stop that," said Jaffers, suddenly realising what was
happening. He gripped at the waistcoat; it struggled, and the shirt slipped out
of it and left it limply and empty in his hand. "Hold him!" said
Jaffers, loudly. "Once he gets the things off—"
"Hold him!" cried everyone, and there was a rush at the fluttering
white shirt which was now all that was visible of the stranger.
The shirt-sleeve planted a shrewd blow in Hall's face that stopped his
open-armed advance, and sent him backward into old Toothsome the sexton, and in
another moment the garment was lifted up and became convulsed and vacantly
flapping about the arms, even as a shirt that is being thrust over a man's
head. Jaffers clutched at it, and only helped to pull it off; he was struck in
the mouth out of the air, and incontinently threw his truncheon and smote Teddy
Henfrey savagely upon the crown of his head.
"Look out!" said everybody, fencing at random and hitting at
nothing. "Hold him! Shut the door! Don't let him loose! I got something! Here
he is!" A perfect Babel of noises they made. Everybody, it seemed, was
being hit all at once, and Sandy Wadgers, knowing as ever and his wits
sharpened by a frightful blow in the nose, reopened the door and led the rout.
The others, following incontinently, were jammed for a moment in the corner by
the doorway. The hitting continued. Phipps, the Unitarian, had a front tooth
broken, and Henfrey was injured in the cartilage of his ear. Jaffers was struck
under the jaw, and, turning, caught at something that intervened between him
and Huxter in the mêlée, and prevented their coming together. He felt a
muscular chest, and in another moment the whole mass of struggling, excited men
shot out into the crowded hall.
"I got him!" shouted Jaffers, choking and reeling through them
all, and wrestling with purple face and swelling veins against his unseen
enemy.
Men staggered right and left as the extraordinary conflict swayed swiftly
towards the house door, and went spinning down the half-dozen steps of the inn.
Jaffers cried in a strangled voice—holding tight, nevertheless, and making play
with his knee—spun around, and fell heavily undermost with his head on the
gravel. Only then did his fingers relax.
There were excited cries of "Hold him!" "Invisible!" and
so forth, and a young fellow, a stranger in the place whose name did not come
to light, rushed in at once, caught something, missed his hold, and fell over
the constable's prostrate body. Half-way across the road a woman screamed as
something pushed by her; a dog, kicked apparently, yelped and ran howling into
Huxter's yard, and with that the transit of the Invisible Man was accomplished.
For a space people stood amazed and gesticulating, and then came panic, and
scattered them abroad through the village as a gust scatters dead leaves.
But Jaffers lay quite still, face upward and knees bent, at the foot of the
steps of the inn.
The eighth chapter is exceedingly brief, and relates
that Gibbons, the amateur naturalist of the district, while lying out on the
spacious open downs without a soul within a couple of miles of him, as he
thought, and almost dozing, heard close to him the sound as of a man coughing,
sneezing, and then swearing savagely to himself; and looking, beheld nothing.
Yet the voice was indisputable. It continued to swear with that breadth and
variety that distinguishes the swearing of a cultivated man. It grew to a
climax, diminished again, and died away in the distance, going as it seemed to
him in the direction of Adderdean. It lifted to a spasmodic sneeze and ended.
Gibbons had heard nothing of the morning's occurrences, but the phenomenon was
so striking and disturbing that his philosophical tranquillity vanished; he got
up hastily, and hurried down the steepness of the hill towards the village, as
fast as he could go.
You must picture Mr. Thomas Marvel as a person of
copious, flexible visage, a nose of cylindrical protrusion, a liquorish, ample,
fluctuating mouth, and a beard of bristling eccentricity. His figure inclined
to embonpoint; his short limbs accentuated this inclination. He wore a furry
silk hat, and the frequent substitution of twine and shoe-laces for buttons,
apparent at critical points of his costume, marked a man essentially bachelor.
Mr. Thomas Marvel was sitting with his feet in a ditch by the roadside over
the down towards Adderdean, about a mile and a half out of Iping. His feet,
save for socks of irregular open-work, were bare, his big toes were broad, and
pricked like the ears of a watchful dog. In a leisurely manner—he did
everything in a leisurely manner—he was contemplating trying on a pair of
boots. They were the soundest boots he had come across for a long time, but too
large for him; whereas the ones he had were, in dry weather, a very comfortable
fit, but too thin-soled for damp. Mr. Thomas Marvel hated roomy shoes, but then
he hated damp. He had never properly thought out which he hated most, and it
was a pleasant day, and there was nothing better to do. So he put the four
shoes in a graceful group on the turf and looked at them. And seeing them there
among the grass and springing agrimony, it suddenly occurred to him that both
pairs were exceedingly ugly to see. He was not at all startled by a voice
behind him.
"They're boots, anyhow," said the Voice.
"They are—charity boots," said Mr. Thomas Marvel, with his head on
one side regarding them distastefully; "and which is the ugliest pair in
the whole blessed universe, I'm darned if I know!"
"H'm," said the Voice.
"I've worn worse—in fact, I've worn none. But none so owdacious ugly—if
you'll allow the expression. I've been cadging boots—in particular—for days.
Because I was sick of them. They're sound enough, of course. But a
gentleman on tramp sees such a thundering lot of his boots. And if you'll
believe me, I've raised nothing in the whole blessed country, try as I would,
but them. Look at 'em! And a good country for boots, too, in a general
way. But it's just my promiscuous luck. I've got my boots in this country ten
years or more. And then they treat you like this."
"It's a beast of a country," said the Voice. "And pigs for
people."
"Ain't it?" said Mr. Thomas Marvel. "Lord! But them boots! It
beats it."
He turned his head over his shoulder to the right, to look at the boots of
his interlocutor with a view to comparisons, and lo! where the boots of his
interlocutor should have been were neither legs nor boots. He was irradiated by
the dawn of a great amazement. "Where are yer?" said Mr.
Thomas Marvel over his shoulder and coming on all fours. He saw a stretch of
empty downs with the wind swaying the remote green-pointed furze bushes.
"Am I drunk?" said Mr. Marvel. "Have I had visions? Was I
talking to myself? What the—"
"Don't be alarmed," said a Voice.
"None of your ventriloquising me," said Mr. Thomas Marvel,
rising sharply to his feet. "Where are yer? Alarmed, indeed!"
"Don't be alarmed," repeated the Voice.
"You'll be alarmed in a minute, you silly fool," said Mr.
Thomas Marvel. "Where are yer? Lemme get my mark on yer...
"Are yer buried?" said Mr. Thomas Marvel, after an
interval.
There was no answer. Mr. Thomas Marvel stood bootless and amazed, his jacket
nearly thrown off.
"Peewit," said a peewit, very remote.
"Peewit, indeed!" said Mr. Thomas Marvel. "This ain't no time
for foolery." The down was desolate, east and west, north and south; the
road with its shallow ditches and white bordering stakes, ran smooth and empty
north and south, and, save for that peewit, the blue sky was empty too.
"So help me," said Mr. Thomas Marvel, shuffling his coat on to his
shoulders again. "It's the drink! I might ha' known."
"It's not the drink," said the Voice. "You keep your nerves
steady."
"Ow!" said Mr. Marvel, and his face grew white amidst its patches.
"It's the drink!" his lips repeated noiselessly. He remained staring
about him, rotating slowly backwards. "I could have swore I heard a
voice," he whispered.
"Of course you did."
"It's there again," said Mr. Marvel, closing his eyes and clasping
his hand on his brow with a tragic gesture. He was suddenly taken by the collar
and shaken violently, and left more dazed than ever. "Don't be a
fool," said the Voice.
"I'm—off—my—blooming—chump," said Mr. Marvel. "It's no good.
It's fretting about them blarsted boots. I'm off my blessed blooming chump. Or
it's spirits."
"Neither one thing nor the other," said the Voice.
"Listen!"
"Chump," said Mr. Marvel.
"One minute," said the Voice, penetratingly, tremulous with
self-control.
"Well?" said Mr. Thomas Marvel, with a strange feeling of having
been dug in the chest by a finger.
"You think I'm just imagination? Just imagination?"
"What else can you be?" said Mr. Thomas Marvel, rubbing the
back of his neck.
"Very well," said the Voice, in a tone of relief. "Then I'm
going to throw flints at you till you think differently."
"But where are yer?"
The Voice made no answer. Whizz came a flint, apparently out of the air, and
missed Mr. Marvel's shoulder by a hair's-breadth. Mr. Marvel, turning, saw a
flint jerk up into the air, trace a complicated path, hang for a moment, and
then fling at his feet with almost invisible rapidity. He was too amazed to
dodge. Whizz it came, and ricochetted from a bare toe into the ditch. Mr.
Thomas Marvel jumped a foot and howled aloud. Then he started to run, tripped
over an unseen obstacle, and came head over heels into a sitting position.
"Now," said the Voice, as a third stone curved upward and
hung in the air above the tramp. "Am I imagination?"
Mr. Marvel by way of reply struggled to his feet, and was immediately rolled
over again. He lay quiet for a moment. "If you struggle any more,"
said the Voice, "I shall throw the flint at your head."
"It's a fair do," said Mr. Thomas Marvel, sitting up, taking his
wounded toe in hand and fixing his eye on the third missile. "I don't
understand it. Stones flinging themselves. Stones talking. Put yourself down.
Rot away. I'm done."
The third flint fell.
"It's very simple," said the Voice. "I'm an invisible
man."
"Tell us something I don't know," said Mr. Marvel, gasping with
pain. "Where you've hid—how you do it—I don't know. I'm beat."
"That's all," said the Voice. "I'm invisible. That's what I
want you to understand."
"Anyone could see that. There is no need for you to be so confounded
impatient, mister. Now then. Give us a notion. How are you hid?"
"I'm invisible. That's the great point. And what I want you to
understand is this—"
"But whereabouts?" interrupted Mr. Marvel.
"Here! Six yards in front of you."
"Oh, come! I ain't blind. You'll be telling me next you're just
thin air. I'm not one of your ignorant tramps—"
"Yes, I am—thin air. You're looking through me."
"What! Ain't there any stuff to you. Vox et—what is it?—jabber.
Is it that?"
"I am just a human being—solid, needing food and drink, needing
covering too—But I'm invisible. You see? Invisible. Simple idea.
Invisible."
"What, real like?"
"Yes, real."
"Let's have a hand of you," said Marvel, "if you are
real. It won't be so darn out-of-the-way like, then—Lord!" he said,
"how you made me jump!—gripping me like that!"
He felt the hand that had closed round his wrist with his disengaged
fingers, and his fingers went timorously up the arm, patted a muscular chest,
and explored a bearded face. Marvel's face was astonishment.
"I'm dashed!" he said. "If this don't beat cock-fighting!
Most remarkable!—And there I can see a rabbit clean through you, 'arf a mile
away! Not a bit of you visible—except—"
He scrutinised the apparently empty space keenly. "You 'aven't been
eatin' bread and cheese?" he asked, holding the invisible arm.
"You're quite right, and it's not quite assimilated into the
system."
"Ah!" said Mr. Marvel. "Sort of ghostly, though."
"Of course, all this isn't half so wonderful as you think."
"It's quite wonderful enough for my modest wants," said Mr.
Thomas Marvel. "Howjer manage it! How the dooce is it done?"
"It's too long a story. And besides—"
"I tell you, the whole business fairly beats me," said Mr. Marvel.
"What I want to say at present is this: I need help. I have come to
that—I came upon you suddenly. I was wandering, mad with rage, naked, impotent.
I could have murdered. And I saw you—"
"Lord!" said Mr. Marvel.
"I came up behind you—hesitated—went on—"
Mr. Marvel's expression was eloquent.
"—then stopped. 'Here,' I said, 'is an outcast like myself. This is the
man for me.' So I turned back and came to you—you. And—"
"Lord!" said Mr. Marvel. "But I'm all in a tizzy. May
I ask—How is it? And what you may be requiring in the way of
help?—Invisible!"
"I want you to help me get clothes—and shelter—and then, with other
things. I've left them long enough. If you won't—well! But you will—must."
"Look here," said Mr. Marvel. "I'm too flabbergasted. Don't
knock me about any more. And leave me go. I must get steady a bit. And you've
pretty near broken my toe. It's all so unreasonable. Empty downs, empty sky.
Nothing visible for miles except the bosom of Nature. And then comes a voice. A
voice out of heaven! And stones! And a fist—Lord!"
"Pull yourself together," said the Voice, "for you have to do
the job I've chosen for you."
Mr. Marvel blew out his cheeks, and his eyes were round.
"I've chosen you," said the Voice. "You are the only man
except some of those fools down there, who knows there is such a thing as an
invisible man. You have to be my helper. Help me—and I will do great things for
you. An invisible man is a man of power." He stopped for a moment to
sneeze violently.
"But if you betray me," he said, "if you fail to do as I
direct you—" He paused and tapped Mr. Marvel's shoulder smartly. Mr.
Marvel gave a yelp of terror at the touch. "I don't want to betray
you," said Mr. Marvel, edging away from the direction of the fingers.
"Don't you go a-thinking that, whatever you do. All I want to do is to
help you—just tell me what I got to do. (Lord!) Whatever you want done, that
I'm most willing to do."
After the first gusty panic had spent itself Iping
became argumentative. Scepticism suddenly reared its head—rather nervous
scepticism, not at all assured of its back, but scepticism nevertheless. It is
so much easier not to believe in an invisible man; and those who had actually
seen him dissolve into air, or felt the strength of his arm, could be counted
on the fingers of two hands. And of these witnesses Mr. Wadgers was presently
missing, having retired impregnably behind the bolts and bars of his own house,
and Jaffers was lying stunned in the parlour of the "Coach and
Horses." Great and strange ideas transcending experience often have less
effect upon men and women than smaller, more tangible considerations. Iping was
gay with bunting, and everybody was in gala dress. Whit Monday had been looked
forward to for a month or more. By the afternoon even those who believed in the
Unseen were beginning to resume their little amusements in a tentative fashion,
on the supposition that he had quite gone away, and with the sceptics he was
already a jest. But people, sceptics and believers alike, were remarkably
sociable all that day.
Haysman's meadow was gay with a tent, in which Mrs. Bunting and other ladies
were preparing tea, while, without, the Sunday-school children ran races and
played games under the noisy guidance of the curate and the Misses Cuss and
Sackbut. No doubt there was a slight uneasiness in the air, but people for the
most part had the sense to conceal whatever imaginative qualms they
experienced. On the village green an inclined strong, down which, clinging the
while to a pulley-swung handle, one could be hurled violently against a sack at
the other end, came in for considerable favour among the adolescent, as also
did the swings and the cocoanut shies. There was also promenading, and the
steam organ attached to a small roundabout filled the air with a pungent
flavour of oil and with equally pungent music. Members of the club, who had
attended church in the morning, were splendid in badges of pink and green, and
some of the gayer-minded had also adorned their bowler hats with
brilliant-coloured favours of ribbon. Old Fletcher, whose conceptions of
holiday-making were severe, was visible through the jasmine about his window or
through the open door (whichever way you chose to look), poised delicately on a
plank supported on two chairs, and whitewashing the ceiling of his front room.
About four o'clock a stranger entered the village from the direction of the
downs. He was a short, stout person in an extraordinarily shabby top hat, and
he appeared to be very much out of breath. His cheeks were alternately limp and
tightly puffed. His mottled face was apprehensive, and he moved with a sort of
reluctant alacrity. He turned the corner of the church, and directed his way to
the "Coach and Horses." Among others old Fletcher remembers seeing
him, and indeed the old gentleman was so struck by his peculiar agitation that
he inadvertently allowed a quantity of whitewash to run down the brush into the
sleeve of his coat while regarding him.
This stranger, to the perceptions of the proprietor of the cocoanut shy,
appeared to be talking to himself, and Mr. Huxter remarked the same thing. He
stopped at the foot of the "Coach and Horses" steps, and, according
to Mr. Huxter, appeared to undergo a severe internal struggle before he could
induce himself to enter the house. Finally he marched up the steps, and was
seen by Mr. Huxter to turn to the left and open the door of the parlour. Mr.
Huxter heard voices from within the room and from the bar apprising the man of
his error. "That room's private!" said Hall, and the stranger shut
the door clumsily and went into the bar.
In the course of a few minutes he reappeared, wiping his lips with the back
of his hand with an air of quiet satisfaction that somehow impressed Mr. Huxter
as assumed. He stood looking about him for some moments, and then Mr. Huxter
saw him walk in an oddly furtive manner towards the gates of the yard, upon
which the parlour window opened. The stranger, after some hesitation, leant
against one of the gate-posts, produced a short clay pipe, and prepared to fill
it. His fingers trembled while doing so. He lit it clumsily, and folding his
arms began to smoke in a languid attitude, an attitude which his occasional
glances up the yard altogether belied.
All this Mr. Huxter saw over the canisters of the tobacco window, and the
singularity of the man's behaviour prompted him to maintain his observation.
Presently the stranger stood up abruptly and put his pipe in his pocket.
Then he vanished into the yard. Forthwith Mr. Huxter, conceiving he was witness
of some petty larceny, leapt round his counter and ran out into the road to
intercept the thief. As he did so, Mr. Marvel reappeared, his hat askew, a big
bundle in a blue table-cloth in one hand, and three books tied together—as it
proved afterwards with the Vicar's braces—in the other. Directly he saw Huxter
he gave a sort of gasp, and turning sharply to the left, began to run.
"Stop, thief!" cried Huxter, and set off after him. Mr. Huxter's
sensations were vivid but brief. He saw the man just before him and spurting
briskly for the church corner and the hill road. He saw the village flags and
festivities beyond, and a face or so turned towards him. He bawled,
"Stop!" again. He had hardly gone ten strides before his shin was
caught in some mysterious fashion, and he was no longer running, but flying with
inconceivable rapidity through the air. He saw the ground suddenly close to his
face. The world seemed to splash into a million whirling specks of light, and
subsequent proceedings interested him no more.
Now in order clearly to understand what had happened
in the inn, it is necessary to go back to the moment when Mr. Marvel first came
into view of Mr. Huxter's window.
At that precise moment Mr. Cuss and Mr. Bunting were in the parlour. They
were seriously investigating the strange occurrences of the morning, and were,
with Mr. Hall's permission, making a thorough examination of the Invisible
Man's belongings. Jaffers had partially recovered from his fall and had gone
home in the charge of his sympathetic friends. The stranger's scattered
garments had been removed by Mrs. Hall and the room tidied up. And on the table
under the window where the stranger had been wont to work, Cuss had hit almost
at once on three big books in manuscript labelled "Diary."
"Diary!" said Cuss, putting the three books on the table.
"Now, at any rate, we shall learn something." The Vicar stood with
his hands on the table.
"Diary," repeated Cuss, sitting down, putting two volumes to
support the third, and opening it. "H'm—no name on the fly-leaf.
Bother!—cypher. And figures."
The vicar came round to look over his shoulder.
Cuss turned the pages over with a face suddenly disappointed. "I'm—dear
me! It's all cypher, Bunting."
"There are no diagrams?" asked Mr. Bunting. "No illustrations
throwing light—"
"See for yourself," said Mr. Cuss. "Some of it's mathematical
and some of it's Russian or some such language (to judge by the letters), and
some of it's Greek. Now the Greek I thought you—"
"Of course," said Mr. Bunting, taking out and wiping his
spectacles and feeling suddenly very uncomfortable—for he had no Greek left in
his mind worth talking about; "yes—the Greek, of course, may furnish a
clue."
"I'll find you a place."
"I'd rather glance through the volumes first," said Mr. Bunting,
still wiping. "A general impression first, Cuss, and then, you
know, we can go looking for clues."
He coughed, put on his glasses, arranged them fastidiously, coughed again,
and wished something would happen to avert the seemingly inevitable exposure.
Then he took the volume Cuss handed him in a leisurely manner. And then
something did happen.
The door opened suddenly.
Both gentlemen started violently, looked round, and were relieved to see a
sporadically rosy face beneath a furry silk hat. "Tap?" asked the
face, and stood staring.
"No," said both gentlemen at once.
"Over the other side, my man," said Mr. Bunting. And "Please
shut that door," said Mr. Cuss, irritably.
"All right," said the intruder, as it seemed in a low voice
curiously different from the huskiness of its first inquiry. "Right you
are," said the intruder in the former voice. "Stand clear!" and
he vanished and closed the door.
"A sailor, I should judge," said Mr. Bunting. "Amusing
fellows, they are. Stand clear! indeed. A nautical term, referring to his
getting back out of the room, I suppose."
"I daresay so," said Cuss. "My nerves are all loose to-day.
It quite made me jump—the door opening like that."
Mr. Bunting smiled as if he had not jumped. "And now," he said
with a sigh, "these books."
Someone sniffed as he did so.
"One thing is indisputable," said Bunting, drawing up a chair next
to that of Cuss. "There certainly have been very strange things happen in
Iping during the last few days—very strange. I cannot of course believe in this
absurd invisibility story—"
"It's incredible," said Cuss—"incredible. But the fact
remains that I saw—I certainly saw right down his sleeve—"
"But did you—are you sure? Suppose a mirror, for instance—
hallucinations are so easily produced. I don't know if you have ever seen a
really good conjuror—"
"I won't argue again," said Cuss. "We've thrashed that out,
Bunting. And just now there's these books—Ah! here's some of what I take to be
Greek! Greek letters certainly."
He pointed to the middle of the page. Mr. Bunting flushed slightly and
brought his face nearer, apparently finding some difficulty with his glasses.
Suddenly he became aware of a strange feeling at the nape of his neck. He tried
to raise his head, and encountered an immovable resistance. The feeling was a
curious pressure, the grip of a heavy, firm hand, and it bore his chin
irresistibly to the table. "Don't move, little men," whispered a
voice, "or I'll brain you both!" He looked into the face of Cuss,
close to his own, and each saw a horrified reflection of his own sickly
astonishment.
"I'm sorry to handle you so roughly," said the Voice, "but
it's unavoidable."
"Since when did you learn to pry into an investigator's private
memoranda," said the Voice; and two chins struck the table simultaneously,
and two sets of teeth rattled.
"Since when did you learn to invade the private rooms of a man in
misfortune?" and the concussion was repeated.
"Where have they put my clothes?"
"Listen," said the Voice. "The windows are fastened and I've
taken the key out of the door. I am a fairly strong man, and I have the poker
handy—besides being invisible. There's not the slightest doubt that I could
kill you both and get away quite easily if I wanted to—do you understand? Very
well. If I let you go will you promise not to try any nonsense and do what I
tell you?"
The vicar and the doctor looked at one another, and the doctor pulled a
face. "Yes," said Mr. Bunting, and the doctor repeated it. Then the
pressure on the necks relaxed, and the doctor and the vicar sat up, both very
red in the face and wriggling their heads.
"Please keep sitting where you are," said the Invisible Man.
"Here's the poker, you see."
"When I came into this room," continued the Invisible Man, after
presenting the poker to the tip of the nose of each of his visitors, "I
did not expect to find it occupied, and I expected to find, in addition to my
books of memoranda, an outfit of clothing. Where is it? No—don't rise. I can
see it's gone. Now, just at present, though the days are quite warm enough for
an invisible man to run about stark, the evenings are quite chilly. I want
clothing—and other accommodation; and I must also have those three books."
It is unavoidable that at this point the narrative
should break off again, for a certain very painful reason that will presently
be apparent. While these things were going on in the parlour, and while Mr.
Huxter was watching Mr. Marvel smoking his pipe against the gate, not a dozen
yards away were Mr. Hall and Teddy Henfrey discussing in a state of cloudy
puzzlement the one Iping topic.
Suddenly there came a violent thud against the door of the parlour, a sharp
cry, and then—silence.
"Hul-lo!" said Teddy Henfrey.
"Hul-lo!" from the Tap.
Mr. Hall took things in slowly but surely. "That ain't right," he
said, and came round from behind the bar towards the parlour door.
He and Teddy approached the door together, with intent faces. Their eyes
considered. "Summat wrong," said Hall, and Henfrey nodded agreement.
Whiffs of an unpleasant chemical odour met them, and there was a muffled sound
of conversation, very rapid and subdued.
"You all right thur?" asked Hall, rapping.
The muttered conversation ceased abruptly, for a moment silence, then the
conversation was resumed, in hissing whispers, then a sharp cry of "No!
no, you don't!" There came a sudden motion and the oversetting of a chair,
a brief struggle. Silence again.
"What the dooce?" exclaimed Henfrey, sotto voce.
"You—all—right thur?" asked Mr. Hall, sharply, again.
The Vicar's voice answered with a curious jerking intonation: "Quite
ri-right. Please don't—interrupt."
"Odd!" said Mr. Henfrey.
"Odd!" said Mr. Hall.
"Says, 'Don't interrupt,'" said Henfrey.
"I heerd'n," said Hall.
"And a sniff," said Henfrey.
They remained listening. The conversation was rapid and subdued. "I can't,"
said Mr. Bunting, his voice rising; "I tell you, sir, I will
not."
"What was that?" asked Henfrey.
"Says he wi' nart," said Hall. "Warn't speaking to us, wuz
he?"
"Disgraceful!" said Mr. Bunting, within.
"'Disgraceful,'" said Mr. Henfrey. "I heard
it—distinct."
"Who's that speaking now?" asked Henfrey.
"Mr. Cuss, I s'pose," said Hall. "Can you
hear—anything?"
Silence. The sounds within indistinct and perplexing.
"Sounds like throwing the table-cloth about," said Hall.
Mrs. Hall appeared behind the bar. Hall made gestures of silence and
invitation. This aroused Mrs. Hall's wifely opposition. "What yer
listenin' there for, Hall?" she asked. "Ain't you nothin' better to
do—busy day like this?"
Hall tried to convey everything by grimaces and dumb show, but Mrs. Hall was
obdurate. She raised her voice. So Hall and Henfrey, rather crestfallen,
tiptoed back to the bar, gesticulating to explain to her.
At first she refused to see anything in what they had heard at all. Then she
insisted on Hall keeping silence, while Henfrey told her his story. She was
inclined to think the whole business nonsense—perhaps they were just moving the
furniture about. "I heerd'n say 'disgraceful'; that I did,"
said Hall.
"I heerd that, Mrs. Hall," said Henfrey.
"Like as not—" began Mrs. Hall.
"Hsh!" said Mr. Teddy Henfrey. "Didn't I hear the
window?"
"What window?" asked Mrs. Hall.
"Parlour window," said Henfrey.
Everyone stood listening intently. Mrs. Hall's eyes, directed straight
before her, saw without seeing the brilliant oblong of the inn door, the road
white and vivid, and Huxter's shop-front blistering in the June sun. Abruptly
Huxter's door opened and Huxter appeared, eyes staring with excitement, arms
gesticulating. "Yap!" cried Huxter. "Stop thief!" and he
ran obliquely across the oblong towards the yard gates, and vanished.
Simultaneously came a tumult from the parlour, and a sound of windows being
closed.
Hall, Henfrey, and the human contents of the tap rushed out at once
pell-mell into the street. They saw someone whisk round the corner towards the
road, and Mr. Huxter executing a complicated leap in the air that ended on his
face and shoulder. Down the street people were standing astonished or running
towards them.
Mr. Huxter was stunned. Henfrey stopped to discover this, but Hall and the
two labourers from the Tap rushed at once to the corner, shouting incoherent
things, and saw Mr. Marvel vanishing by the corner of the church wall. They
appear to have jumped to the impossible conclusion that this was the Invisible
Man suddenly become visible, and set off at once along the lane in pursuit. But
Hall had hardly run a dozen yards before he gave a loud shout of astonishment
and went flying headlong sideways, clutching one of the labourers and bringing
him to the ground. He had been charged just as one charges a man at football.
The second labourer came round in a circle, stared, and conceiving that Hall
had tumbled over of his own accord, turned to resume the pursuit, only to be
tripped by the ankle just as Huxter had been. Then, as the first labourer
struggled to his feet, he was kicked sideways by a blow that might have felled
an ox.
As he went down, the rush from the direction of the village green came round
the corner. The first to appear was the proprietor of the cocoanut shy, a burly
man in a blue jersey. He was astonished to see the lane empty save for three
men sprawling absurdly on the ground. And then something happened to his
rear-most foot, and he went headlong and rolled sideways just in time to graze
the feet of his brother and partner, following headlong. The two were then
kicked, knelt on, fallen over, and cursed by quite a number of over-hasty
people.
Now when Hall and Henfrey and the labourers ran out of the house, Mrs. Hall,
who had been disciplined by years of experience, remained in the bar next the
till. And suddenly the parlour door was opened, and Mr. Cuss appeared, and
without glancing at her rushed at once down the steps toward the corner.
"Hold him!" he cried. "Don't let him drop that parcel."
He knew nothing of the existence of Marvel. For the Invisible Man had handed
over the books and bundle in the yard. The face of Mr. Cuss was angry and
resolute, but his costume was defective, a sort of limp white kilt that could
only have passed muster in Greece. "Hold him!" he bawled. "He's
got my trousers! And every stitch of the Vicar's clothes!"
"'Tend to him in a minute!" he cried to Henfrey as he passed the
prostrate Huxter, and, coming round the corner to join the tumult, was promptly
knocked off his feet into an indecorous sprawl. Somebody in full flight trod
heavily on his finger. He yelled, struggled to regain his feet, was knocked
against and thrown on all fours again, and became aware that he was involved
not in a capture, but a rout. Everyone was running back to the village. He rose
again and was hit severely behind the ear. He staggered and set off back to the
"Coach and Horses" forthwith, leaping over the deserted Huxter, who
was now sitting up, on his way.
Behind him as he was halfway up the inn steps he heard a sudden yell of
rage, rising sharply out of the confusion of cries, and a sounding smack in
someone's face. He recognised the voice as that of the Invisible Man, and the
note was that of a man suddenly infuriated by a painful blow.
In another moment Mr. Cuss was back in the parlour. "He's coming back,
Bunting!" he said, rushing in. "Save yourself!"
Mr. Bunting was standing in the window engaged in an attempt to clothe
himself in the hearth-rug and a West Surrey Gazette. "Who's
coming?" he said, so startled that his costume narrowly escaped
disintegration.
"Invisible Man," said Cuss, and rushed on to the window.
"We'd better clear out from here! He's fighting mad! Mad!"
In another moment he was out in the yard.
"Good heavens!" said Mr. Bunting, hesitating between two horrible
alternatives. He heard a frightful struggle in the passage of the inn, and his
decision was made. He clambered out of the window, adjusted his costume
hastily, and fled up the village as fast as his fat little legs would carry
him.
From the moment when the Invisible Man screamed with rage and Mr. Bunting
made his memorable flight up the village, it became impossible to give a
consecutive account of affairs in Iping. Possibly the Invisible Man's original
intention was simply to cover Marvel's retreat with the clothes and books. But
his temper, at no time very good, seems to have gone completely at some chance
blow, and forthwith he set to smiting and overthrowing, for the mere
satisfaction of hurting.
You must figure the street full of running figures, of doors slamming and
fights for hiding-places. You must figure the tumult suddenly striking on the
unstable equilibrium of old Fletcher's planks and two chairs—with cataclysmic
results. You must figure an appalled couple caught dismally in a swing. And
then the whole tumultuous rush has passed and the Iping street with its gauds
and flags is deserted save for the still raging unseen, and littered with
cocoanuts, overthrown canvas screens, and the scattered stock in trade of a
sweetstuff stall. Everywhere there is a sound of closing shutters and shoving
bolts, and the only visible humanity is an occasional flitting eye under a
raised eyebrow in the corner of a window pane.
The Invisible Man amused himself for a little while by breaking all the
windows in the "Coach and Horses," and then he thrust a street lamp
through the parlour window of Mrs. Gribble. He it must have been who cut the
telegraph wire to Adderdean just beyond Higgins' cottage on the Adderdean road.
And after that, as his peculiar qualities allowed, he passed out of human
perceptions altogether, and he was neither heard, seen, nor felt in Iping any
more. He vanished absolutely.
But it was the best part of two hours before any human being ventured out
again into the desolation of Iping street.
When the dusk was gathering and Iping was just
beginning to peep timorously forth again upon the shattered wreckage of its
Bank Holiday, a short, thick-set man in a shabby silk hat was marching
painfully through the twilight behind the beechwoods on the road to
Bramblehurst. He carried three books bound together by some sort of ornamental
elastic ligature, and a bundle wrapped in a blue table-cloth. His rubicund face
expressed consternation and fatigue; he appeared to be in a spasmodic sort of
hurry. He was accompanied by a voice other than his own, and ever and again he
winced under the touch of unseen hands.
"If you give me the slip again," said the Voice, "if you
attempt to give me the slip again—"
"Lord!" said Mr. Marvel. "That shoulder's a mass of bruises
as it is."
"On my honour," said the Voice, "I will kill you."
"I didn't try to give you the slip," said Marvel, in a voice that
was not far remote from tears. "I swear I didn't. I didn't know the
blessed turning, that was all! How the devil was I to know the blessed turning?
As it is, I've been knocked about—"
"You'll get knocked about a great deal more if you don't mind,"
said the Voice, and Mr. Marvel abruptly became silent. He blew out his cheeks,
and his eyes were eloquent of despair.
"It's bad enough to let these floundering yokels explode my little
secret, without your cutting off with my books. It's lucky for some of
them they cut and ran when they did! Here am I ... No one knew I was invisible!
And now what am I to do?"
"What am I to do?" asked Marvel, sotto voce.
"It's all about. It will be in the papers! Everybody will be looking
for me; everyone on their guard—" The Voice broke off into vivid curses
and ceased.
The despair of Mr. Marvel's face deepened, and his pace slackened.
"Go on!" said the Voice.
Mr. Marvel's face assumed a greyish tint between the ruddier patches.
"Don't drop those books, stupid," said the Voice,
sharply—overtaking him.
"The fact is," said the Voice, "I shall have to make use of
you.... You're a poor tool, but I must."
"I'm a miserable tool," said Marvel.
"You are," said the Voice.
"I'm the worst possible tool you could have," said Marvel.
"I'm not strong," he said after a discouraging silence.
"I'm not over strong," he repeated.
"No?"
"And my heart's weak. That little business—I pulled it through, of
course—but bless you! I could have dropped."
"Well?"
"I haven't the nerve and strength for the sort of thing you want."
"I'll stimulate you."
"I wish you wouldn't. I wouldn't like to mess up your plans, you know.
But I might—out of sheer funk and misery."
"You'd better not," said the Voice, with quiet emphasis.
"I wish I was dead," said Marvel.
"It ain't justice," he said; "you must admit.... It seems to
me I've a perfect right—"
"Get on!" said the Voice.
Mr. Marvel mended his pace, and for a time they went in silence again.
"It's devilish hard," said Mr. Marvel.
This was quite ineffectual. He tried another tack.
"What do I make by it?" he began again in a tone of unendurable
wrong.
"Oh! shut up!" said the Voice, with sudden amazing vigour.
"I'll see to you all right. You do what you're told. You'll do it all
right. You're a fool and all that, but you'll do—"
"I tell you, sir, I'm not the man for it. Respectfully—but it is
so—"
"If you don't shut up I shall twist your wrist again," said the
Invisible Man. "I want to think."
Presently two oblongs of yellow light appeared through the trees, and the
square tower of a church loomed through the gloaming. "I shall keep my
hand on your shoulder," said the Voice, "all through the village. Go
straight through and try no foolery. It will be the worse for you if you
do."
"I know that," sighed Mr. Marvel, "I know all that."
The unhappy-looking figure in the obsolete silk hat passed up the street of
the little village with his burdens, and vanished into the gathering darkness
beyond the lights of the windows.
Ten o'clock the next morning found Mr. Marvel,
unshaven, dirty, and travel-stained, sitting with the books beside him and his
hands deep in his pockets, looking very weary, nervous, and uncomfortable, and
inflating his cheeks at infrequent intervals, on the bench outside a little inn
on the outskirts of Port Stowe. Beside him were the books, but now they were
tied with string. The bundle had been abandoned in the pine-woods beyond
Bramblehurst, in accordance with a change in the plans of the Invisible Man.
Mr. Marvel sat on the bench, and although no one took the slightest notice of
him, his agitation remained at fever heat. His hands would go ever and again to
his various pockets with a curious nervous fumbling.
When he had been sitting for the best part of an hour, however, an elderly
mariner, carrying a newspaper, came out of the inn and sat down beside him.
"Pleasant day," said the mariner.
Mr. Marvel glanced about him with something very like terror.
"Very," he said.
"Just seasonable weather for the time of year," said the mariner,
taking no denial.
"Quite," said Mr. Marvel.
The mariner produced a toothpick, and (saving his regard) was engrossed
thereby for some minutes. His eyes meanwhile were at liberty to examine Mr.
Marvel's dusty figure, and the books beside him. As he had approached Mr.
Marvel he had heard a sound like the dropping of coins into a pocket. He was
struck by the contrast of Mr. Marvel's appearance with this suggestion of
opulence. Thence his mind wandered back again to a topic that had taken a
curiously firm hold of his imagination.
"Books?" he said suddenly, noisily finishing with the toothpick.
Mr. Marvel started and looked at them. "Oh, yes," he said.
"Yes, they're books."
"There's some extra-ordinary things in books," said the mariner.
"I believe you," said Mr. Marvel.
"And some extra-ordinary things out of 'em," said the mariner.
"True likewise," said Mr. Marvel. He eyed his interlocutor, and
then glanced about him.
"There's some extra-ordinary things in newspapers, for example,"
said the mariner.
"There are."
"In this newspaper," said the mariner.
"Ah!" said Mr. Marvel.
"There's a story," said the mariner, fixing Mr. Marvel with an eye
that was firm and deliberate; "there's a story about an Invisible Man, for
instance."
Mr. Marvel pulled his mouth askew and scratched his cheek and felt his ears
glowing. "What will they be writing next?" he asked faintly.
"Ostria, or America?"
"Neither," said the mariner. "Here."
"Lord!" said Mr. Marvel, starting.
"When I say here," said the mariner, to Mr. Marvel's
intense relief, "I don't of course mean here in this place, I mean
hereabouts."
"An Invisible Man!" said Mr. Marvel. "And what's he
been up to?"
"Everything," said the mariner, controlling Marvel with his eye,
and then amplifying, "every—blessed—thing."
"I ain't seen a paper these four days," said Marvel.
"Iping's the place he started at," said the mariner.
"In-deed!" said Mr. Marvel.
"He started there. And where he came from, nobody don't seem to know.
Here it is: 'Pe-culiar Story from Iping.' And it says in this paper that the
evidence is extra-ordinary strong—extra-ordinary."
"Lord!" said Mr. Marvel.
"But then, it's an extra-ordinary story. There is a clergyman and a
medical gent witnesses—saw 'im all right and proper—or leastways didn't see
'im. He was staying, it says, at the 'Coach an' Horses,' and no one don't seem
to have been aware of his misfortune, it says, aware of his misfortune, until
in an Altercation in the inn, it says, his bandages on his head was torn off.
It was then ob-served that his head was invisible. Attempts were At Once made
to secure him, but casting off his garments, it says, he succeeded in escaping,
but not until after a desperate struggle, in which he had inflicted serious
injuries, it says, on our worthy and able constable, Mr. J. A. Jaffers. Pretty
straight story, eh? Names and everything."
"Lord!" said Mr. Marvel, looking nervously about him, trying to
count the money in his pockets by his unaided sense of touch, and full of a
strange and novel idea. "It sounds most astonishing."
"Don't it? Extra-ordinary, I call it. Never heard tell of
Invisible Men before, I haven't, but nowadays one hears such a lot of
extra-ordinary things—that—"
"That all he did?" asked Marvel, trying to seem at his ease.
"It's enough, ain't it?" said the mariner.
"Didn't go Back by any chance?" asked Marvel. "Just escaped
and that's all, eh?"
"All!" said the mariner. "Why!—ain't it enough?"
"Quite enough," said Marvel.
"I should think it was enough," said the mariner. "I should
think it was enough."
"He didn't have any pals—it don't say he had any pals, does it?"
asked Mr. Marvel, anxious.
"Ain't one of a sort enough for you?" asked the mariner. "No,
thank Heaven, as one might say, he didn't."
He nodded his head slowly. "It makes me regular uncomfortable, the bare
thought of that chap running about the country! He is at present At Large, and
from certain evidence it is supposed that he has—taken—took, I suppose
they mean—the road to Port Stowe. You see we're right in it! None of
your American wonders, this time. And just think of the things he might do!
Where'd you be, if he took a drop over and above, and had a fancy to go for
you? Suppose he wants to rob—who can prevent him? He can trespass, he can
burgle, he could walk through a cordon of policemen as easy as me or you could
give the slip to a blind man! Easier! For these here blind chaps hear uncommon sharp,
I'm told. And wherever there was liquor he fancied—"
"He's got a tremenjous advantage, certainly," said Mr. Marvel.
"And—well..."
"You're right," said the mariner. "He has."
All this time Mr. Marvel had been glancing about him intently, listening for
faint footfalls, trying to detect imperceptible movements. He seemed on the
point of some great resolution. He coughed behind his hand.
He looked about him again, listened, bent towards the mariner, and lowered
his voice: "The fact of it is—I happen—to know just a thing or two about
this Invisible Man. From private sources."
"Oh!" said the mariner, interested. "You?"
"Yes," said Mr. Marvel. "Me."
"Indeed!" said the mariner. "And may I ask—"
"You'll be astonished," said Mr. Marvel behind his hand.
"It's tremenjous."
"Indeed!" said the mariner.
"The fact is," began Mr. Marvel eagerly in a confidential
undertone. Suddenly his expression changed marvellously. "Ow!" he
said. He rose stiffly in his seat. His face was eloquent of physical suffering.
"Wow!" he said.
"What's up?" said the mariner, concerned.
"Toothache," said Mr. Marvel, and put his hand to his ear. He
caught hold of his books. "I must be getting on, I think," he said.
He edged in a curious way along the seat away from his interlocutor. "But
you was just a-going to tell me about this here Invisible Man!" protested
the mariner. Mr. Marvel seemed to consult with himself. "Hoax," said
a Voice. "It's a hoax," said Mr. Marvel.
"But it's in the paper," said the mariner.
"Hoax all the same," said Marvel. "I know the chap that
started the lie. There ain't no Invisible Man whatsoever—Blimey."
"But how 'bout this paper? D'you mean to say—?"
"Not a word of it," said Marvel, stoutly.
The mariner stared, paper in hand. Mr. Marvel jerkily faced about.
"Wait a bit," said the mariner, rising and speaking slowly,
"D'you mean to say—?"
"I do," said Mr. Marvel.
"Then why did you let me go on and tell you all this blarsted stuff,
then? What d'yer mean by letting a man make a fool of himself like that for?
Eh?"
Mr. Marvel blew out his cheeks. The mariner was suddenly very red indeed; he
clenched his hands. "I been talking here this ten minutes," he said;
"and you, you little pot-bellied, leathery-faced son of an old boot,
couldn't have the elementary manners—"
"Don't you come bandying words with me," said Mr. Marvel.
"Bandying words! I'm a jolly good mind—"
"Come up," said a Voice, and Mr. Marvel was suddenly whirled about
and started marching off in a curious spasmodic manner. "You'd better move
on," said the mariner. "Who's moving on?" said Mr. Marvel. He
was receding obliquely with a curious hurrying gait, with occasional violent
jerks forward. Some way along the road he began a muttered monologue, protests
and recriminations.
"Silly devil!" said the mariner, legs wide apart, elbows akimbo,
watching the receding figure. "I'll show you, you silly ass—hoaxing me!
It's here—on the paper!"
Mr. Marvel retorted incoherently and, receding, was hidden by a bend in the
road, but the mariner still stood magnificent in the midst of the way, until
the approach of a butcher's cart dislodged him. Then he turned himself towards
Port Stowe. "Full of extra-ordinary asses," he said softly to
himself. "Just to take me down a bit—that was his silly game—It's on the
paper!"
And there was another extraordinary thing he was presently to hear, that had
happened quite close to him. And that was a vision of a "fist full of
money" (no less) travelling without visible agency, along by the wall at
the corner of St. Michael's Lane. A brother mariner had seen this wonderful
sight that very morning. He had snatched at the money forthwith and had been
knocked headlong, and when he had got to his feet the butterfly money had
vanished. Our mariner was in the mood to believe anything, he declared, but that
was a bit too stiff. Afterwards, however, he began to think things over.
The story of the flying money was true. And all about that neighbourhood,
even from the august London and Country Banking Company, from the tills of
shops and inns—doors standing that sunny weather entirely open—money had been
quietly and dexterously making off that day in handfuls and rouleaux, floating
quietly along by walls and shady places, dodging quickly from the approaching
eyes of men. And it had, though no man had traced it, invariably ended its
mysterious flight in the pocket of that agitated gentleman in the obsolete silk
hat, sitting outside the little inn on the outskirts of Port Stowe.
It was ten days after—and indeed only when the Burdock story was already
old—that the mariner collated these facts and began to understand how near he
had been to the wonderful Invisible Man.
In the early evening time Dr. Kemp was sitting in
his study in the belvedere on the hill overlooking Burdock. It was a pleasant
little room, with three windows—north, west, and south—and bookshelves covered
with books and scientific publications, and a broad writing-table, and, under
the north window, a microscope, glass slips, minute instruments, some cultures,
and scattered bottles of reagents. Dr. Kemp's solar lamp was lit, albeit the
sky was still bright with the sunset light, and his blinds were up because
there was no offence of peering outsiders to require them pulled down. Dr. Kemp
was a tall and slender young man, with flaxen hair and a moustache almost
white, and the work he was upon would earn him, he hoped, the fellowship of the
Royal Society, so highly did he think of it.
And his eye, presently wandering from his work, caught the sunset blazing at
the back of the hill that is over against his own. For a minute perhaps he sat,
pen in mouth, admiring the rich golden colour above the crest, and then his
attention was attracted by the little figure of a man, inky black, running over
the hill-brow towards him. He was a shortish little man, and he wore a high
hat, and he was running so fast that his legs verily twinkled.
"Another of those fools," said Dr. Kemp. "Like that ass who
ran into me this morning round a corner, with the ''Visible Man a-coming, sir!'
I can't imagine what possess people. One might think we were in the thirteenth
century."
He got up, went to the window, and stared at the dusky hillside, and the
dark little figure tearing down it. "He seems in a confounded hurry,"
said Dr. Kemp, "but he doesn't seem to be getting on. If his pockets were
full of lead, he couldn't run heavier."
"Spurted, sir," said Dr. Kemp.
In another moment the higher of the villas that had clambered up the hill
from Burdock had occulted the running figure. He was visible again for a
moment, and again, and then again, three times between the three detached
houses that came next, and then the terrace hid him.
"Asses!" said Dr. Kemp, swinging round on his heel and walking
back to his writing-table.
But those who saw the fugitive nearer, and perceived the abject terror on
his perspiring face, being themselves in the open roadway, did not share in the
doctor's contempt. By the man pounded, and as he ran he chinked like a
well-filled purse that is tossed to and fro. He looked neither to the right nor
the left, but his dilated eyes stared straight downhill to where the lamps were
being lit, and the people were crowded in the street. And his ill-shaped mouth
fell apart, and a glairy foam lay on his lips, and his breath came hoarse and
noisy. All he passed stopped and began staring up the road and down, and
interrogating one another with an inkling of discomfort for the reason of his
haste.
And then presently, far up the hill, a dog playing in the road yelped and
ran under a gate, and as they still wondered something—a wind—a pad, pad,
pad,—a sound like a panting breathing, rushed by.
People screamed. People sprang off the pavement: It passed in shouts, it
passed by instinct down the hill. They were shouting in the street before
Marvel was halfway there. They were bolting into houses and slamming the doors
behind them, with the news. He heard it and made one last desperate spurt. Fear
came striding by, rushed ahead of him, and in a moment had seized the town.
"The Invisible Man is coming! The Invisible Man!"
The "Jolly Cricketers" is just at the
bottom of the hill, where the tram-lines begin. The barman leant his fat red
arms on the counter and talked of horses with an anaemic cabman, while a
black-bearded man in grey snapped up biscuit and cheese, drank Burton, and
conversed in American with a policeman off duty.
"What's the shouting about!" said the anaemic cabman, going off at
a tangent, trying to see up the hill over the dirty yellow blind in the low
window of the inn. Somebody ran by outside. "Fire, perhaps," said the
barman.
Footsteps approached, running heavily, the door was pushed open violently,
and Marvel, weeping and dishevelled, his hat gone, the neck of his coat torn
open, rushed in, made a convulsive turn, and attempted to shut the door. It was
held half open by a strap.
"Coming!" he bawled, his voice shrieking with terror. "He's
coming. The 'Visible Man! After me! For Gawd's sake! 'Elp! 'Elp! 'Elp!"
"Shut the doors," said the policeman. "Who's coming? What's
the row?" He went to the door, released the strap, and it slammed. The
American closed the other door.
"Lemme go inside," said Marvel, staggering and weeping, but still
clutching the books. "Lemme go inside. Lock me in—somewhere. I tell you
he's after me. I give him the slip. He said he'd kill me and he will."
"You're safe," said the man with the black beard. "The
door's shut. What's it all about?"
"Lemme go inside," said Marvel, and shrieked aloud as a blow
suddenly made the fastened door shiver and was followed by a hurried rapping
and a shouting outside. "Hullo," cried the policeman, "who's
there?" Mr. Marvel began to make frantic dives at panels that looked like
doors. "He'll kill me—he's got a knife or something. For Gawd's
sake—!"
"Here you are," said the barman. "Come in here." And he
held up the flap of the bar.
Mr. Marvel rushed behind the bar as the summons outside was repeated.
"Don't open the door," he screamed. "Please don't open the
door. Where shall I hide?"
"This, this Invisible Man, then?" asked the man with the black
beard, with one hand behind him. "I guess it's about time we saw
him."
The window of the inn was suddenly smashed in, and there was a screaming and
running to and fro in the street. The policeman had been standing on the settee
staring out, craning to see who was at the door. He got down with raised
eyebrows. "It's that," he said. The barman stood in front of the
bar-parlour door which was now locked on Mr. Marvel, stared at the smashed
window, and came round to the two other men.
Everything was suddenly quiet. "I wish I had my truncheon," said
the policeman, going irresolutely to the door. "Once we open, in he comes.
There's no stopping him."
"Don't you be in too much hurry about that door," said the anaemic
cabman, anxiously.
"Draw the bolts," said the man with the black beard, "and if
he comes—" He showed a revolver in his hand.
"That won't do," said the policeman; "that's murder."
"I know what country I'm in," said the man with the beard.
"I'm going to let off at his legs. Draw the bolts."
"Not with that blinking thing going off behind me," said the
barman, craning over the blind.
"Very well," said the man with the black beard, and stooping down,
revolver ready, drew them himself. Barman, cabman, and policeman faced about.
"Come in," said the bearded man in an undertone, standing back and
facing the unbolted doors with his pistol behind him. No one came in, the door
remained closed. Five minutes afterwards when a second cabman pushed his head
in cautiously, they were still waiting, and an anxious face peered out of the
bar-parlour and supplied information. "Are all the doors of the house
shut?" asked Marvel. "He's going round—prowling round. He's as artful
as the devil."
"Good Lord!" said the burly barman. "There's the back! Just
watch them doors! I say—!" He looked about him helplessly. The bar-parlour
door slammed and they heard the key turn. "There's the yard door and the
private door. The yard door—"
He rushed out of the bar.
In a minute he reappeared with a carving-knife in his hand. "The yard
door was open!" he said, and his fat underlip dropped. "He may be in
the house now!" said the first cabman.
"He's not in the kitchen," said the barman. "There's two
women there, and I've stabbed every inch of it with this little beef slicer.
And they don't think he's come in. They haven't noticed—"
"Have you fastened it?" asked the first cabman.
"I'm out of frocks," said the barman.
The man with the beard replaced his revolver. And even as he did so the flap
of the bar was shut down and the bolt clicked, and then with a tremendous thud
the catch of the door snapped and the bar-parlour door burst open. They heard
Marvel squeal like a caught leveret, and forthwith they were clambering over
the bar to his rescue. The bearded man's revolver cracked and the looking-glass
at the back of the parlour starred and came smashing and tinkling down.
As the barman entered the room he saw Marvel, curiously crumpled up and
struggling against the door that led to the yard and kitchen. The door flew
open while the barman hesitated, and Marvel was dragged into the kitchen. There
was a scream and a clatter of pans. Marvel, head down, and lugging back obstinately,
was forced to the kitchen door, and the bolts were drawn.
Then the policeman, who had been trying to pass the barman, rushed in,
followed by one of the cabmen, gripped the wrist of the invisible hand that
collared Marvel, was hit in the face and went reeling back. The door opened,
and Marvel made a frantic effort to obtain a lodgment behind it. Then the
cabman collared something. "I got him," said the cabman. The barman's
red hands came clawing at the unseen. "Here he is!" said the barman.
Mr. Marvel, released, suddenly dropped to the ground and made an attempt to
crawl behind the legs of the fighting men. The struggle blundered round the
edge of the door. The voice of the Invisible Man was heard for the first time,
yelling out sharply, as the policeman trod on his foot. Then he cried out
passionately and his fists flew round like flails. The cabman suddenly whooped
and doubled up, kicked under the diaphragm. The door into the bar-parlour from
the kitchen slammed and covered Mr. Marvel's retreat. The men in the kitchen
found themselves clutching at and struggling with empty air.
"Where's he gone?" cried the man with the beard. "Out?"
"This way," said the policeman, stepping into the yard and
stopping.
A piece of tile whizzed by his head and smashed among the crockery on the
kitchen table.
"I'll show him," shouted the man with the black beard, and
suddenly a steel barrel shone over the policeman's shoulder, and five bullets
had followed one another into the twilight whence the missile had come. As he
fired, the man with the beard moved his hand in a horizontal curve, so that his
shots radiated out into the narrow yard like spokes from a wheel.
A silence followed. "Five cartridges," said the man with the black
beard. "That's the best of all. Four aces and a joker. Get a lantern,
someone, and come and feel about for his body."
Dr. Kemp had continued writing in his study until
the shots aroused him. Crack, crack, crack, they came one after the other.
"Hullo!" said Dr. Kemp, putting his pen into his mouth again and
listening. "Who's letting off revolvers in Burdock? What are the asses at
now?"
He went to the south window, threw it up, and leaning out stared down on the
network of windows, beaded gas-lamps and shops, with its black interstices of
roof and yard that made up the town at night. "Looks like a crowd down the
hill," he said, "by 'The Cricketers,'" and remained watching.
Thence his eyes wandered over the town to far away where the ships' lights
shone, and the pier glowed—a little illuminated, facetted pavilion like a gem
of yellow light. The moon in its first quarter hung over the westward hill, and
the stars were clear and almost tropically bright.
After five minutes, during which his mind had travelled into a remote speculation
of social conditions of the future, and lost itself at last over the time
dimension, Dr. Kemp roused himself with a sigh, pulled down the window again,
and returned to his writing desk.
It must have been about an hour after this that the front-door bell rang. He
had been writing slackly, and with intervals of abstraction, since the shots.
He sat listening. He heard the servant answer the door, and waited for her feet
on the staircase, but she did not come. "Wonder what that was," said
Dr. Kemp.
He tried to resume his work, failed, got up, went downstairs from his study
to the landing, rang, and called over the balustrade to the housemaid as she
appeared in the hall below. "Was that a letter?" he asked.
"Only a runaway ring, sir," she answered.
"I'm restless to-night," he said to himself. He went back to his
study, and this time attacked his work resolutely. In a little while he was
hard at work again, and the only sounds in the room were the ticking of the
clock and the subdued shrillness of his quill, hurrying in the very centre of
the circle of light his lampshade threw on his table.
It was two o'clock before Dr. Kemp had finished his work for the night. He
rose, yawned, and went downstairs to bed. He had already removed his coat and
vest, when he noticed that he was thirsty. He took a candle and went down to
the dining-room in search of a syphon and whiskey.
Dr. Kemp's scientific pursuits have made him a very observant man, and as he
recrossed the hall, he noticed a dark spot on the linoleum near the mat at the
foot of the stairs. He went on upstairs, and then it suddenly occurred to him
to ask himself what the spot on the linoleum might be. Apparently some
subconscious element was at work. At any rate, he turned with his burden, went
back to the hall, put down the syphon and whiskey, and bending down, touched
the spot. Without any great surprise he found it had the stickiness and colour
of drying blood.
He took up his burden again, and returned upstairs, looking about him and
trying to account for the blood-spot. On the landing he saw something and
stopped astonished. The door-handle of his own room was blood-stained.
He looked at his own hand. It was quite clean, and then he remembered that
the door of his room had been open when he came down from his study, and that
consequently he had not touched the handle at all. He went straight into his
room, his face quite calm—perhaps a trifle more resolute than usual. His
glance, wandering inquisitively, fell on the bed. On the counterpane was a mess
of blood, and the sheet had been torn. He had not noticed this before because
he had walked straight to the dressing-table. On the further side the
bedclothes were depressed as if someone had been recently sitting there.
Then he had an odd impression that he had heard a low voice say, "Good
Heavens!—Kemp!" But Dr. Kemp was no believer in voices.
He stood staring at the tumbled sheets. Was that really a voice? He looked
about again, but noticed nothing further than the disordered and blood-stained
bed. Then he distinctly heard a movement across the room, near the wash-hand
stand. All men, however highly educated, retain some superstitious inklings.
The feeling that is called "eerie" came upon him. He closed the door
of the room, came forward to the dressing-table, and put down his burdens.
Suddenly, with a start, he perceived a coiled and blood-stained bandage of
linen rag hanging in mid-air, between him and the wash-hand stand.
He stared at this in amazement. It was an empty bandage, a bandage properly
tied but quite empty. He would have advanced to grasp it, but a touch arrested
him, and a voice speaking quite close to him.
"Kemp!" said the Voice.
"Eh?" said Kemp, with his mouth open.
"Keep your nerve," said the Voice. "I'm an Invisible
Man."
Kemp made no answer for a space, simply stared at the bandage.
"Invisible Man," he said.
"I am an Invisible Man," repeated the Voice.
The story he had been active to ridicule only that morning rushed through
Kemp's brain. He does not appear to have been either very much frightened or
very greatly surprised at the moment. Realisation came later.
"I thought it was all a lie," he said. The thought uppermost in
his mind was the reiterated arguments of the morning. "Have you a bandage
on?" he asked.
"Yes," said the Invisible Man.
"Oh!" said Kemp, and then roused himself. "I say!" he
said. "But this is nonsense. It's some trick." He stepped forward
suddenly, and his hand, extended towards the bandage, met invisible fingers.
He recoiled at the touch and his colour changed.
"Keep steady, Kemp, for God's sake! I want help badly. Stop!"
The hand gripped his arm. He struck at it.
"Kemp!" cried the Voice. "Kemp! Keep steady!" and the
grip tightened.
A frantic desire to free himself took possession of Kemp. The hand of the
bandaged arm gripped his shoulder, and he was suddenly tripped and flung
backwards upon the bed. He opened his mouth to shout, and the corner of the
sheet was thrust between his teeth. The Invisible Man had him down grimly, but
his arms were free and he struck and tried to kick savagely.
"Listen to reason, will you?" said the Invisible Man, sticking to
him in spite of a pounding in the ribs. "By Heaven! you'll madden me in a
minute!
"Lie still, you fool!" bawled the Invisible Man in Kemp's ear.
Kemp struggled for another moment and then lay still.
"If you shout, I'll smash your face," said the Invisible Man,
relieving his mouth.
"I'm an Invisible Man. It's no foolishness, and no magic. I really am
an Invisible Man. And I want your help. I don't want to hurt you, but if you
behave like a frantic rustic, I must. Don't you remember me, Kemp? Griffin, of
University College?"
"Let me get up," said Kemp. "I'll stop where I am. And let me
sit quiet for a minute."
He sat up and felt his neck.
"I am Griffin, of University College, and I have made myself invisible.
I am just an ordinary man—a man you have known—made invisible."
"Griffin?" said Kemp.
"Griffin," answered the Voice. A younger student than you were,
almost an albino, six feet high, and broad, with a pink and white face and red
eyes, who won the medal for chemistry."
"I am confused," said Kemp. "My brain is rioting. What has
this to do with Griffin?"
"I am Griffin."
Kemp thought. "It's horrible," he said. "But what devilry
must happen to make a man invisible?"
"It's no devilry. It's a process, sane and intelligible enough—"
"It's horrible!" said Kemp. "How on earth—?"
"It's horrible enough. But I'm wounded and in pain, and tired ... Great
God! Kemp, you are a man. Take it steady. Give me some food and drink, and let
me sit down here."
Kemp stared at the bandage as it moved across the room, then saw a basket
chair dragged across the floor and come to rest near the bed. It creaked, and the
seat was depressed the quarter of an inch or so. He rubbed his eyes and felt
his neck again. "This beats ghosts," he said, and laughed stupidly.
"That's better. Thank Heaven, you're getting sensible!"
"Or silly," said Kemp, and knuckled his eyes.
"Give me some whiskey. I'm near dead."
"It didn't feel so. Where are you? If I get up shall I run into you? There!
all right. Whiskey? Here. Where shall I give it to you?"
The chair creaked and Kemp felt the glass drawn away from him. He let go by
an effort; his instinct was all against it. It came to rest poised twenty
inches above the front edge of the seat of the chair. He stared at it in
infinite perplexity. "This is—this must be—hypnotism. You have suggested
you are invisible."
"Nonsense," said the Voice.
"It's frantic."
"Listen to me."
"I demonstrated conclusively this morning," began Kemp, "that
invisibility—"
"Never mind what you've demonstrated!—I'm starving," said the
Voice, "and the night is chilly to a man without clothes."
"Food?" said Kemp.
The tumbler of whiskey tilted itself. "Yes," said the Invisible
Man rapping it down. "Have you a dressing-gown?"
Kemp made some exclamation in an undertone. He walked to a wardrobe and
produced a robe of dingy scarlet. "This do?" he asked. It was taken
from him. It hung limp for a moment in mid-air, fluttered weirdly, stood full
and decorous buttoning itself, and sat down in his chair. "Drawers, socks,
slippers would be a comfort," said the Unseen, curtly. "And
food."
"Anything. But this is the insanest thing I ever was in, in my
life!"
He turned out his drawers for the articles, and then went downstairs to
ransack his larder. He came back with some cold cutlets and bread, pulled up a
light table, and placed them before his guest. "Never mind knives,"
said his visitor, and a cutlet hung in mid-air, with a sound of gnawing.
"Invisible!" said Kemp, and sat down on a bedroom chair.
"I always like to get something about me before I eat," said the
Invisible Man, with a full mouth, eating greedily. "Queer fancy!"
"I suppose that wrist is all right," said Kemp.
"Trust me," said the Invisible Man.
"Of all the strange and wonderful—"
"Exactly. But it's odd I should blunder into your house to get
my bandaging. My first stroke of luck! Anyhow I meant to sleep in this house
to-night. You must stand that! It's a filthy nuisance, my blood showing, isn't
it? Quite a clot over there. Gets visible as it coagulates, I see. It's only
the living tissue I've changed, and only for as long as I'm alive.... I've been
in the house three hours."
"But how's it done?" began Kemp, in a tone of exasperation.
"Confound it! The whole business—it's unreasonable from beginning to
end."
"Quite reasonable," said the Invisible Man. "Perfectly
reasonable."
He reached over and secured the whiskey bottle. Kemp stared at the devouring
dressing gown. A ray of candle-light penetrating a torn patch in the right
shoulder, made a triangle of light under the left ribs. "What were the
shots?" he asked. "How did the shooting begin?"
"There was a real fool of a man—a sort of confederate of mine—curse
him!—who tried to steal my money. Has done so."
"Is he invisible too?"
"No."
"Well?"
"Can't I have some more to eat before I tell you all that? I'm
hungry—in pain. And you want me to tell stories!"
Kemp got up. "You didn't do any shooting?" he asked.
"Not me," said his visitor. "Some fool I'd never seen fired
at random. A lot of them got scared. They all got scared at me. Curse them!—I
say—I want more to eat than this, Kemp."
"I'll see what there is to eat downstairs," said Kemp. "Not
much, I'm afraid."
After he had done eating, and he made a heavy meal, the Invisible Man
demanded a cigar. He bit the end savagely before Kemp could find a knife, and
cursed when the outer leaf loosened. It was strange to see him smoking; his
mouth, and throat, pharynx and nares, became visible as a sort of whirling
smoke cast.
"This blessed gift of smoking!" he said, and puffed vigorously.
"I'm lucky to have fallen upon you, Kemp. You must help me. Fancy tumbling
on you just now! I'm in a devilish scrape—I've been mad, I think. The things I
have been through! But we will do things yet. Let me tell you—"
He helped himself to more whiskey and soda. Kemp got up, looked about him,
and fetched a glass from his spare room. "It's wild—but I suppose I may
drink."
"You haven't changed much, Kemp, these dozen years. You fair men don't.
Cool and methodical—after the first collapse. I must tell you. We will work
together!"
"But how was it all done?" said Kemp, "and how did you get
like this?"
"For God's sake, let me smoke in peace for a little while! And then I
will begin to tell you."
But the story was not told that night. The Invisible Man's wrist was growing
painful; he was feverish, exhausted, and his mind came round to brood upon his
chase down the hill and the struggle about the inn. He spoke in fragments of
Marvel, he smoked faster, his voice grew angry. Kemp tried to gather what he
could.
"He was afraid of me, I could see that he was afraid of me," said
the Invisible Man many times over. "He meant to give me the slip—he was
always casting about! What a fool I was!"
"The cur!
"I should have killed him!"
"Where did you get the money?" asked Kemp, abruptly.
The Invisible Man was silent for a space. "I can't tell you
to-night," he said.
He groaned suddenly and leant forward, supporting his invisible head on
invisible hands. "Kemp," he said, "I've had no sleep for near
three days, except a couple of dozes of an hour or so. I must sleep soon."
"Well, have my room—have this room."
"But how can I sleep? If I sleep—he will get away. Ugh! What does it
matter?"
"What's the shot wound?" asked Kemp, abruptly.
"Nothing—scratch and blood. Oh, God! How I want sleep!"
"Why not?"
The Invisible Man appeared to be regarding Kemp. "Because I've a
particular objection to being caught by my fellow-men," he said slowly.
Kemp started.
"Fool that I am!" said the Invisible Man, striking the table
smartly. "I've put the idea into your head."
Exhausted and wounded as the Invisible Man was, he
refused to accept Kemp's word that his freedom should be respected. He examined
the two windows of the bedroom, drew up the blinds and opened the sashes, to
confirm Kemp's statement that a retreat by them would be possible. Outside the
night was very quiet and still, and the new moon was setting over the down.
Then he examined the keys of the bedroom and the two dressing-room doors, to
satisfy himself that these also could be made an assurance of freedom. Finally
he expressed himself satisfied. He stood on the hearth rug and Kemp heard the
sound of a yawn.
"I'm sorry," said the Invisible Man, "if I cannot tell you
all that I have done to-night. But I am worn out. It's grotesque, no doubt.
It's horrible! But believe me, Kemp, in spite of your arguments of this
morning, it is quite a possible thing. I have made a discovery. I meant to keep
it to myself. I can't. I must have a partner. And you.... We can do such things
... But to-morrow. Now, Kemp, I feel as though I must sleep or perish."
Kemp stood in the middle of the room staring at the headless garment.
"I suppose I must leave you," he said. "It's—incredible. Three
things happening like this, overturning all my preconceptions—would make me
insane. But it's real! Is there anything more that I can get you?"
"Only bid me good-night," said Griffin.
"Good-night," said Kemp, and shook an invisible hand. He walked
sideways to the door. Suddenly the dressing-gown walked quickly towards him.
"Understand me!" said the dressing-gown. "No attempts to hamper
me, or capture me! Or—"
Kemp's face changed a little. "I thought I gave you my word," he
said.
Kemp closed the door softly behind him, and the key was turned upon him
forthwith. Then, as he stood with an expression of passive amazement on his
face, the rapid feet came to the door of the dressing-room and that too was
locked. Kemp slapped his brow with his hand. "Am I dreaming? Has the world
gone mad—or have I?"
He laughed, and put his hand to the locked door. "Barred out of my own
bedroom, by a flagrant absurdity!" he said.
He walked to the head of the staircase, turned, and stared at the locked
doors. "It's fact," he said. He put his fingers to his slightly
bruised neck. "Undeniable fact!
"But—"
He shook his head hopelessly, turned, and went downstairs.
He lit the dining-room lamp, got out a cigar, and began pacing the room,
ejaculating. Now and then he would argue with himself.
"Invisible!" he said.
"Is there such a thing as an invisible animal? ... In the sea, yes. Thousands—millions.
All the larvae, all the little nauplii and tornarias, all the microscopic
things, the jelly-fish. In the sea there are more things invisible than
visible! I never thought of that before. And in the ponds too! All those little
pond-life things—specks of colourless translucent jelly! But in air? No!
"It can't be.
"But after all—why not?
"If a man was made of glass he would still be visible."
His meditation became profound. The bulk of three cigars had passed into the
invisible or diffused as a white ash over the carpet before he spoke again.
Then it was merely an exclamation. He turned aside, walked out of the room, and
went into his little consulting-room and lit the gas there. It was a little
room, because Dr. Kemp did not live by practice, and in it were the day's
newspapers. The morning's paper lay carelessly opened and thrown aside. He
caught it up, turned it over, and read the account of a "Strange Story
from Iping" that the mariner at Port Stowe had spelt over so painfully to
Mr. Marvel. Kemp read it swiftly.
"Wrapped up!" said Kemp. "Disguised! Hiding it! 'No one seems
to have been aware of his misfortune.' What the devil is his game?"
He dropped the paper, and his eye went seeking. "Ah!" he said, and
caught up the St. James' Gazette, lying folded up as it arrived.
"Now we shall get at the truth," said Dr. Kemp. He rent the paper
open; a couple of columns confronted him. "An Entire Village in Sussex
goes Mad" was the heading.
"Good Heavens!" said Kemp, reading eagerly an incredulous account
of the events in Iping, of the previous afternoon, that have already been
described. Over the leaf the report in the morning paper had been reprinted.
He re-read it. "Ran through the streets striking right and left.
Jaffers insensible. Mr. Huxter in great pain—still unable to describe what he
saw. Painful humiliation—vicar. Woman ill with terror! Windows smashed. This
extraordinary story probably a fabrication. Too good not to print—cum grano!"
He dropped the paper and stared blankly in front of him. "Probably a
fabrication!"
He caught up the paper again, and re-read the whole business. "But when
does the Tramp come in? Why the deuce was he chasing a tramp?"
He sat down abruptly on the surgical bench. "He's not only
invisible," he said, "but he's mad! Homicidal!"
When dawn came to mingle its pallor with the lamp-light and cigar smoke of
the dining-room, Kemp was still pacing up and down, trying to grasp the
incredible.
He was altogether too excited to sleep. His servants, descending sleepily,
discovered him, and were inclined to think that over-study had worked this ill
on him. He gave them extraordinary but quite explicit instructions to lay
breakfast for two in the belvedere study—and then to confine themselves to the
basement and ground-floor. Then he continued to pace the dining-room until the
morning's paper came. That had much to say and little to tell, beyond the
confirmation of the evening before, and a very badly written account of another
remarkable tale from Port Burdock. This gave Kemp the essence of the happenings
at the "Jolly Cricketers," and the name of Marvel. "He has made
me keep with him twenty-four hours," Marvel testified. Certain minor facts
were added to the Iping story, notably the cutting of the village telegraph-wire.
But there was nothing to throw light on the connexion between the Invisible Man
and the Tramp; for Mr. Marvel had supplied no information about the three
books, or the money with which he was lined. The incredulous tone had vanished
and a shoal of reporters and inquirers were already at work elaborating the
matter.
Kemp read every scrap of the report and sent his housemaid out to get
everyone of the morning papers she could. These also he devoured.
"He is invisible!" he said. "And it reads like rage growing
to mania! The things he may do! The things he may do! And he's upstairs free as
the air. What on earth ought I to do?"
"For instance, would it be a breach of faith if—? No."
He went to a little untidy desk in the corner, and began a note. He tore
this up half written, and wrote another. He read it over and considered it.
Then he took an envelope and addressed it to "Colonel Adye, Port
Burdock."
The Invisible Man awoke even as Kemp was doing this. He awoke in an evil
temper, and Kemp, alert for every sound, heard his pattering feet rush suddenly
across the bedroom overhead. Then a chair was flung over and the wash-hand
stand tumbler smashed. Kemp hurried upstairs and rapped eagerly.
"What's the matter?" asked Kemp, when the
Invisible Man admitted him.
"Nothing," was the answer.
"But, confound it! The smash?"
"Fit of temper," said the Invisible Man. "Forgot this arm;
and it's sore."
"You're rather liable to that sort of thing."
"I am."
Kemp walked across the room and picked up the fragments of broken glass.
"All the facts are out about you," said Kemp, standing up with the
glass in his hand; "all that happened in Iping, and down the hill. The
world has become aware of its invisible citizen. But no one knows you are
here."
The Invisible Man swore.
"The secret's out. I gather it was a secret. I don't know what your
plans are, but of course I'm anxious to help you."
The Invisible Man sat down on the bed.
"There's breakfast upstairs," said Kemp, speaking as easily as
possible, and he was delighted to find his strange guest rose willingly. Kemp
led the way up the narrow staircase to the belvedere.
"Before we can do anything else," said Kemp, "I must
understand a little more about this invisibility of yours." He had sat
down, after one nervous glance out of the window, with the air of a man who has
talking to do. His doubts of the sanity of the entire business flashed and
vanished again as he looked across to where Griffin sat at the
breakfast-table—a headless, handless dressing-gown, wiping unseen lips on a
miraculously held serviette.
"It's simple enough—and credible enough," said Griffin, putting
the serviette aside and leaning the invisible head on an invisible hand.
"No doubt, to you, but—" Kemp laughed.
"Well, yes; to me it seemed wonderful at first, no doubt. But now,
great God! ... But we will do great things yet! I came on the stuff first at
Chesilstowe."
"Chesilstowe?"
"I went there after I left London. You know I dropped medicine and took
up physics? No; well, I did. Light fascinated me."
"Ah!"
"Optical density! The whole subject is a network of riddles—a network
with solutions glimmering elusively through. And being but two-and-twenty and
full of enthusiasm, I said, 'I will devote my life to this. This is worth
while.' You know what fools we are at two-and-twenty?"
"Fools then or fools now," said Kemp.
"As though knowing could be any satisfaction to a man!
"But I went to work—like a slave. And I had hardly worked and thought
about the matter six months before light came through one of the meshes
suddenly—blindingly! I found a general principle of pigments and refraction—a
formula, a geometrical expression involving four dimensions. Fools, common men,
even common mathematicians, do not know anything of what some general expression
may mean to the student of molecular physics. In the books—the books that tramp
has hidden—there are marvels, miracles! But this was not a method, it was an
idea, that might lead to a method by which it would be possible, without
changing any other property of matter—except, in some instances colours—to
lower the refractive index of a substance, solid or liquid, to that of air—so
far as all practical purposes are concerned."
"Phew!" said Kemp. "That's odd! But still I don't see quite
... I can understand that thereby you could spoil a valuable stone, but
personal invisibility is a far cry."
"Precisely," said Griffin. "But consider, visibility depends
on the action of the visible bodies on light. Either a body absorbs light, or
it reflects or refracts it, or does all these things. If it neither reflects
nor refracts nor absorbs light, it cannot of itself be visible. You see an
opaque red box, for instance, because the colour absorbs some of the light and
reflects the rest, all the red part of the light, to you. If it did not absorb
any particular part of the light, but reflected it all, then it would be a
shining white box. Silver! A diamond box would neither absorb much of the light
nor reflect much from the general surface, but just here and there where the
surfaces were favourable the light would be reflected and refracted, so that
you would get a brilliant appearance of flashing reflections and
translucencies—a sort of skeleton of light. A glass box would not be so
brilliant, not so clearly visible, as a diamond box, because there would be
less refraction and reflection. See that? From certain points of view you would
see quite clearly through it. Some kinds of glass would be more visible than
others, a box of flint glass would be brighter than a box of ordinary window
glass. A box of very thin common glass would be hard to see in a bad light,
because it would absorb hardly any light and refract and reflect very little.
And if you put a sheet of common white glass in water, still more if you put it
in some denser liquid than water, it would vanish almost altogether, because
light passing from water to glass is only slightly refracted or reflected or
indeed affected in any way. It is almost as invisible as a jet of coal gas or
hydrogen is in air. And for precisely the same reason!"
"Yes," said Kemp, "that is pretty plain sailing."
"And here is another fact you will know to be true. If a sheet of glass
is smashed, Kemp, and beaten into a powder, it becomes much more visible while
it is in the air; it becomes at last an opaque white powder. This is because
the powdering multiplies the surfaces of the glass at which refraction and
reflection occur. In the sheet of glass there are only two surfaces; in the
powder the light is reflected or refracted by each grain it passes through, and
very little gets right through the powder. But if the white powdered glass is
put into water, it forthwith vanishes. The powdered glass and water have much
the same refractive index; that is, the light undergoes very little refraction
or reflection in passing from one to the other.
"You make the glass invisible by putting it into a liquid of nearly the
same refractive index; a transparent thing becomes invisible if it is put in
any medium of almost the same refractive index. And if you will consider only a
second, you will see also that the powder of glass might be made to vanish in
air, if its refractive index could be made the same as that of air; for then
there would be no refraction or reflection as the light passed from glass to
air."
"Yes, yes," said Kemp. "But a man's not powdered glass!"
"No," said Griffin. "He's more transparent!"
"Nonsense!"
"That from a doctor! How one forgets! Have you already forgotten your
physics, in ten years? Just think of all the things that are transparent and
seem not to be so. Paper, for instance, is made up of transparent fibres, and
it is white and opaque only for the same reason that a powder of glass is white
and opaque. Oil white paper, fill up the interstices between the particles with
oil so that there is no longer refraction or reflection except at the surfaces,
and it becomes as transparent as glass. And not only paper, but cotton fibre,
linen fibre, wool fibre, woody fibre, and bone, Kemp, flesh,
Kemp, hair, Kemp, nails and nerves, Kemp, in fact the
whole fabric of a man except the red of his blood and the black pigment of
hair, are all made up of transparent, colourless tissue. So little suffices to
make us visible one to the other. For the most part the fibres of a living
creature are no more opaque than water."
"Great Heavens!" cried Kemp. "Of course, of course! I was
thinking only last night of the sea larvae and all jelly-fish!"
"Now you have me! And all that I knew and had in mind a year
after I left London—six years ago. But I kept it to myself. I had to do my work
under frightful disadvantages. Oliver, my professor, was a scientific bounder,
a journalist by instinct, a thief of ideas—he was always prying! And you know
the knavish system of the scientific world. I simply would not publish, and let
him share my credit. I went on working; I got nearer and nearer making my
formula into an experiment, a reality. I told no living soul, because I meant
to flash my work upon the world with crushing effect and become famous at a
blow. I took up the question of pigments to fill up certain gaps. And suddenly,
not by design but by accident, I made a discovery in physiology."
"Yes?"
"You know the red colouring matter of blood; it can be made
white—colourless—and remain with all the functions it has now!"
Kemp gave a cry of incredulous amazement.
The Invisible Man rose and began pacing the little study. "You may well
exclaim. I remember that night. It was late at night—in the daytime one was
bothered with the gaping, silly students—and I worked then sometimes till dawn.
It came suddenly, splendid and complete in my mind. I was alone; the laboratory
was still, with the tall lights burning brightly and silently. In all my great
moments I have been alone. 'One could make an animal—a tissue—transparent! One
could make it invisible! All except the pigments—I could be invisible!' I said,
suddenly realising what it meant to be an albino with such knowledge. It was
overwhelming. I left the filtering I was doing, and went and stared out of the
great window at the stars. 'I could be invisible!' I repeated.
"To do such a thing would be to transcend magic. And I beheld,
unclouded by doubt, a magnificent vision of all that invisibility might mean to
a man—the mystery, the power, the freedom. Drawbacks I saw none. You have only
to think! And I, a shabby, poverty-struck, hemmed-in demonstrator, teaching
fools in a provincial college, might suddenly become—this. I ask you, Kemp if you
... Anyone, I tell you, would have flung himself upon that research. And I
worked three years, and every mountain of difficulty I toiled over showed
another from its summit. The infinite details! And the exasperation! A
professor, a provincial professor, always prying. 'When are you going to
publish this work of yours?' was his everlasting question. And the students,
the cramped means! Three years I had of it—
"And after three years of secrecy and exasperation, I found that to
complete it was impossible—impossible."
"How?" asked Kemp.
"Money," said the Invisible Man, and went again to stare out of
the window.
He turned around abruptly. "I robbed the old man—robbed my father.
"The money was not his, and he shot himself."
For a moment Kemp sat in silence, staring at the
back of the headless figure at the window. Then he started, struck by a
thought, rose, took the Invisible Man's arm, and turned him away from the
outlook.
"You are tired," he said, "and while I sit, you walk about.
Have my chair."
He placed himself between Griffin and the nearest window.
For a space Griffin sat silent, and then he resumed abruptly:
"I had left the Chesilstowe cottage already," he said, "when
that happened. It was last December. I had taken a room in London, a large
unfurnished room in a big ill-managed lodging-house in a slum near Great
Portland Street. The room was soon full of the appliances I had bought with his
money; the work was going on steadily, successfully, drawing near an end. I was
like a man emerging from a thicket, and suddenly coming on some unmeaning
tragedy. I went to bury him. My mind was still on this research, and I did not
lift a finger to save his character. I remember the funeral, the cheap hearse,
the scant ceremony, the windy frost-bitten hillside, and the old college friend
of his who read the service over him—a shabby, black, bent old man with a
snivelling cold.
"I remember walking back to the empty house, through the place that had
once been a village and was now patched and tinkered by the jerry builders into
the ugly likeness of a town. Every way the roads ran out at last into the
desecrated fields and ended in rubble heaps and rank wet weeds. I remember
myself as a gaunt black figure, going along the slippery, shiny pavement, and
the strange sense of detachment I felt from the squalid respectability, the
sordid commercialism of the place.
"I did not feel a bit sorry for my father. He seemed to me to be the
victim of his own foolish sentimentality. The current cant required my
attendance at his funeral, but it was really not my affair.
"But going along the High Street, my old life came back to me for a
space, for I met the girl I had known ten years since. Our eyes met.
"Something moved me to turn back and talk to her. She was a very
ordinary person.
"It was all like a dream, that visit to the old places. I did not feel
then that I was lonely, that I had come out from the world into a desolate
place. I appreciated my loss of sympathy, but I put it down to the general
inanity of things. Re-entering my room seemed like the recovery of reality.
There were the things I knew and loved. There stood the apparatus, the
experiments arranged and waiting. And now there was scarcely a difficulty left,
beyond the planning of details.
"I will tell you, Kemp, sooner or later, all the complicated processes.
We need not go into that now. For the most part, saving certain gaps I chose to
remember, they are written in cypher in those books that tramp has hidden. We
must hunt him down. We must get those books again. But the essential phase was
to place the transparent object whose refractive index was to be lowered
between two radiating centres of a sort of ethereal vibration, of which I will
tell you more fully later. No, not those Röntgen vibrations—I don't know that
these others of mine have been described. Yet they are obvious enough. I needed
two little dynamos, and these I worked with a cheap gas engine. My first
experiment was with a bit of white wool fabric. It was the strangest thing in
the world to see it in the flicker of the flashes soft and white, and then to
watch it fade like a wreath of smoke and vanish.
"I could scarcely believe I had done it. I put my hand into the
emptiness, and there was the thing as solid as ever. I felt it awkwardly, and
threw it on the floor. I had a little trouble finding it again.
"And then came a curious experience. I heard a miaow behind me, and
turning, saw a lean white cat, very dirty, on the cistern cover outside the
window. A thought came into my head. 'Everything ready for you,' I said, and
went to the window, opened it, and called softly. She came in, purring—the poor
beast was starving—and I gave her some milk. All my food was in a cupboard in
the corner of the room. After that she went smelling round the room, evidently
with the idea of making herself at home. The invisible rag upset her a bit; you
should have seen her spit at it! But I made her comfortable on the pillow of my
truckle-bed. And I gave her butter to get her to wash."
"And you processed her?"
"I processed her. But giving drugs to a cat is no joke, Kemp! And the
process failed."
"Failed!"
"In two particulars. These were the claws and the pigment stuff, what
is it?—at the back of the eye in a cat. You know?"
"Tapetum."
"Yes, the tapetum. It didn't go. After I'd given the stuff to
bleach the blood and done certain other things to her, I gave the beast opium,
and put her and the pillow she was sleeping on, on the apparatus. And after all
the rest had faded and vanished, there remained two little ghosts of her
eyes."
"Odd!"
"I can't explain it. She was bandaged and clamped, of course—so I had
her safe; but she woke while she was still misty, and miaowed dismally, and
someone came knocking. It was an old woman from downstairs, who suspected me of
vivisecting—a drink-sodden old creature, with only a white cat to care for in
all the world. I whipped out some chloroform, applied it, and answered the
door. 'Did I hear a cat?' she asked. 'My cat?' 'Not here,' said I, very
politely. She was a little doubtful and tried to peer past me into the room;
strange enough to her no doubt—bare walls, uncurtained windows, truckle-bed,
with the gas engine vibrating, and the seethe of the radiant points, and that
faint ghastly stinging of chloroform in the air. She had to be satisfied at
last and went away again."
"How long did it take?" asked Kemp.
"Three or four hours—the cat. The bones and sinews and the fat were the
last to go, and the tips of the coloured hairs. And, as I say, the back part of
the eye, tough, iridescent stuff it is, wouldn't go at all.
"It was night outside long before the business was over, and nothing
was to be seen but the dim eyes and the claws. I stopped the gas engine, felt
for and stroked the beast, which was still insensible, and then, being tired,
left it sleeping on the invisible pillow and went to bed. I found it hard to
sleep. I lay awake thinking weak aimless stuff, going over the experiment over
and over again, or dreaming feverishly of things growing misty and vanishing
about me, until everything, the ground I stood on, vanished, and so I came to
that sickly falling nightmare one gets. About two, the cat began miaowing about
the room. I tried to hush it by talking to it, and then I decided to turn it
out. I remember the shock I had when striking a light—there were just the round
eyes shining green—and nothing round them. I would have given it milk, but I
hadn't any. It wouldn't be quiet, it just sat down and miaowed at the door. I
tried to catch it, with an idea of putting it out of the window, but it
wouldn't be caught, it vanished. Then it began miaowing in different parts of
the room. At last I opened the window and made a bustle. I suppose it went out
at last. I never saw any more of it.
"Then—Heaven knows why—I fell thinking of my father's funeral again,
and the dismal windy hillside, until the day had come. I found sleeping was
hopeless, and, locking my door after me, wandered out into the morning
streets."
"You don't mean to say there's an invisible cat at large!" said
Kemp.
"If it hasn't been killed," said the Invisible Man. "Why
not?"
"Why not?" said Kemp. "I didn't mean to interrupt."
"It's very probably been killed," said the Invisible Man. "It
was alive four days after, I know, and down a grating in Great Titchfield
Street; because I saw a crowd round the place, trying to see whence the
miaowing came."
He was silent for the best part of a minute. Then he resumed abruptly:
"I remember that morning before the change very vividly. I must have
gone up Great Portland Street. I remember the barracks in Albany Street, and the
horse soldiers coming out, and at last I found the summit of Primrose Hill. It
was a sunny day in January—one of those sunny, frosty days that came before the
snow this year. My weary brain tried to formulate the position, to plot out a
plan of action.
"I was surprised to find, now that my prize was within my grasp, how
inconclusive its attainment seemed. As a matter of fact I was worked out; the
intense stress of nearly four years' continuous work left me incapable of any
strength of feeling. I was apathetic, and I tried in vain to recover the
enthusiasm of my first inquiries, the passion of discovery that had enabled me
to compass even the downfall of my father's grey hairs. Nothing seemed to
matter. I saw pretty clearly this was a transient mood, due to overwork and
want of sleep, and that either by drugs or rest it would be possible to recover
my energies.
"All I could think clearly was that the thing had to be carried
through; the fixed idea still ruled me. And soon, for the money I had was
almost exhausted. I looked about me at the hillside, with children playing and
girls watching them, and tried to think of all the fantastic advantages an
invisible man would have in the world. After a time I crawled home, took some
food and a strong dose of strychnine, and went to sleep in my clothes on my
unmade bed. Strychnine is a grand tonic, Kemp, to take the flabbiness out of a
man."
"It's the devil," said Kemp. "It's the palaeolithic in a
bottle."
"I awoke vastly invigorated and rather irritable. You know?"
"I know the stuff."
"And there was someone rapping at the door. It was my landlord with
threats and inquiries, an old Polish Jew in a long grey coat and greasy
slippers. I had been tormenting a cat in the night, he was sure—the old woman's
tongue had been busy. He insisted on knowing all about it. The laws in this
country against vivisection were very severe—he might be liable. I denied the
cat. Then the vibration of the little gas engine could be felt all over the
house, he said. That was true, certainly. He edged round me into the room,
peering about over his German-silver spectacles, and a sudden dread came into
my mind that he might carry away something of my secret. I tried to keep
between him and the concentrating apparatus I had arranged, and that only made
him more curious. What was I doing? Why was I always alone and secretive? Was
it legal? Was it dangerous? I paid nothing but the usual rent. His had always
been a most respectable house—in a disreputable neighbourhood. Suddenly my
temper gave way. I told him to get out. He began to protest, to jabber of his
right of entry. In a moment I had him by the collar; something ripped, and he
went spinning out into his own passage. I slammed and locked the door and sat
down quivering.
"He made a fuss outside, which I disregarded, and after a time he went
away.
"But this brought matters to a crisis. I did not know what he would do,
nor even what he had the power to do. To move to fresh apartments would have
meant delay; altogether I had barely twenty pounds left in the world, for the
most part in a bank—and I could not afford that. Vanish! It was irresistible.
Then there would be an inquiry, the sacking of my room.
"At the thought of the possibility of my work being exposed or
interrupted at its very climax, I became very angry and active. I hurried out
with my three books of notes, my cheque-book—the tramp has them now—and
directed them from the nearest Post Office to a house of call for letters and
parcels in Great Portland Street. I tried to go out noiselessly. Coming in, I
found my landlord going quietly upstairs; he had heard the door close, I
suppose. You would have laughed to see him jump aside on the landing as came
tearing after him. He glared at me as I went by him, and I made the house
quiver with the slamming of my door. I heard him come shuffling up to my floor,
hesitate, and go down. I set to work upon my preparations forthwith.
"It was all done that evening and night. While I was still sitting
under the sickly, drowsy influence of the drugs that decolourise blood, there
came a repeated knocking at the door. It ceased, footsteps went away and
returned, and the knocking was resumed. There was an attempt to push something
under the door—a blue paper. Then in a fit of irritation I rose and went and
flung the door wide open. 'Now then?' said I.
"It was my landlord, with a notice of ejectment or something. He held
it out to me, saw something odd about my hands, I expect, and lifted his eyes
to my face.
"For a moment he gaped. Then he gave a sort of inarticulate cry,
dropped candle and writ together, and went blundering down the dark passage to
the stairs. I shut the door, locked it, and went to the looking-glass. Then I
understood his terror.... My face was white—like white stone.
"But it was all horrible. I had not expected the suffering. A night of
racking anguish, sickness and fainting. I set my teeth, though my skin was
presently afire, all my body afire; but I lay there like grim death. I
understood now how it was the cat had howled until I chloroformed it. Lucky it
was I lived alone and untended in my room. There were times when I sobbed and
groaned and talked. But I stuck to it.... I became insensible and woke languid
in the darkness.
"The pain had passed. I thought I was killing myself and I did not care.
I shall never forget that dawn, and the strange horror of seeing that my hands
had become as clouded glass, and watching them grow clearer and thinner as the
day went by, until at last I could see the sickly disorder of my room through
them, though I closed my transparent eyelids. My limbs became glassy, the bones
and arteries faded, vanished, and the little white nerves went last. I gritted
my teeth and stayed there to the end. At last only the dead tips of the
fingernails remained, pallid and white, and the brown stain of some acid upon
my fingers.
"I struggled up. At first I was as incapable as a swathed
infant—stepping with limbs I could not see. I was weak and very hungry. I went
and stared at nothing in my shaving-glass, at nothing save where an attenuated
pigment still remained behind the retina of my eyes, fainter than mist. I had
to hang on to the table and press my forehead against the glass.
"It was only by a frantic effort of will that I dragged myself back to
the apparatus and completed the process.
"I slept during the forenoon, pulling the sheet over my eyes to shut
out the light, and about midday I was awakened again by a knocking. My strength
had returned. I sat up and listened and heard a whispering. I sprang to my feet
and as noiselessly as possible began to detach the connections of my apparatus,
and to distribute it about the room, so as to destroy the suggestions of its
arrangement. Presently the knocking was renewed and voices called, first my
landlord's, and then two others. To gain time I answered them. The invisible
rag and pillow came to hand and I opened the window and pitched them out on to
the cistern cover. As the window opened, a heavy crash came at the door.
Someone had charged it with the idea of smashing the lock. But the stout bolts
I had screwed up some days before stopped him. That startled me, made me angry.
I began to tremble and do things hurriedly.
"I tossed together some loose paper, straw, packing paper and so forth,
in the middle of the room, and turned on the gas. Heavy blows began to rain
upon the door. I could not find the matches. I beat my hands on the wall with
rage. I turned down the gas again, stepped out of the window on the cistern
cover, very softly lowered the sash, and sat down, secure and invisible, but quivering
with anger, to watch events. They split a panel, I saw, and in another moment
they had broken away the staples of the bolts and stood in the open doorway. It
was the landlord and his two step-sons, sturdy young men of three or four and
twenty. Behind them fluttered the old hag of a woman from downstairs.
"You may imagine their astonishment to find the room empty. One of the
younger men rushed to the window at once, flung it up and stared out. His
staring eyes and thick-lipped bearded face came a foot from my face. I was half
minded to hit his silly countenance, but I arrested my doubled fist. He stared
right through me. So did the others as they joined him. The old man went and
peered under the bed, and then they all made a rush for the cupboard. They had
to argue about it at length in Yiddish and Cockney English. They concluded I
had not answered them, that their imagination had deceived them. A feeling of
extraordinary elation took the place of my anger as I sat outside the window
and watched these four people—for the old lady came in, glancing suspiciously
about her like a cat, trying to understand the riddle of my behaviour.
"The old man, so far as I could understand his patois, agreed
with the old lady that I was a vivisectionist. The sons protested in garbled
English that I was an electrician, and appealed to the dynamos and radiators.
They were all nervous about my arrival, although I found subsequently that they
had bolted the front door. The old lady peered into the cupboard and under the
bed, and one of the young men pushed up the register and stared up the chimney.
One of my fellow lodgers, a coster-monger who shared the opposite room with a
butcher, appeared on the landing, and he was called in and told incoherent
things.
"It occurred to me that the radiators, if they fell into the hands of
some acute well-educated person, would give me away too much, and watching my
opportunity, I came into the room and tilted one of the little dynamos off its
fellow on which it was standing, and smashed both apparatus. Then, while they
were trying to explain the smash, I dodged out of the room and went softly
downstairs.
"I went into one of the sitting-rooms and waited until they came down,
still speculating and argumentative, all a little disappointed at finding no
'horrors,' and all a little puzzled how they stood legally towards me. Then I
slipped up again with a box of matches, fired my heap of paper and rubbish, put
the chairs and bedding thereby, led the gas to the affair, by means of an
india-rubber tube, and waving a farewell to the room left it for the last
time."
"You fired the house!" exclaimed Kemp.
"Fired the house. It was the only way to cover my trail—and no doubt it
was insured. I slipped the bolts of the front door quietly and went out into the
street. I was invisible, and I was only just beginning to realise the
extraordinary advantage my invisibility gave me. My head was already teeming
with plans of all the wild and wonderful things I had now impunity to do."
"In going downstairs the first time I found an
unexpected difficulty because I could not see my feet; indeed I stumbled twice,
and there was an unaccustomed clumsiness in gripping the bolt. By not looking
down, however, I managed to walk on the level passably well.
"My mood, I say, was one of exaltation. I felt as a seeing man might
do, with padded feet and noiseless clothes, in a city of the blind. I
experienced a wild impulse to jest, to startle people, to clap men on the back,
fling people's hats astray, and generally revel in my extraordinary advantage.
"But hardly had I emerged upon Great Portland Street, however (my
lodging was close to the big draper's shop there), when I heard a clashing
concussion and was hit violently behind, and turning saw a man carrying a
basket of soda-water syphons, and looking in amazement at his burden. Although
the blow had really hurt me, I found something so irresistible in his
astonishment that I laughed aloud. 'The devil's in the basket,' I said, and
suddenly twisted it out of his hand. He let go incontinently, and I swung the
whole weight into the air.
"But a fool of a cabman, standing outside a public house, made a sudden
rush for this, and his extending fingers took me with excruciating violence
under the ear. I let the whole down with a smash on the cabman, and then, with
shouts and the clatter of feet about me, people coming out of shops, vehicles
pulling up, I realised what I had done for myself, and cursing my folly, backed
against a shop window and prepared to dodge out of the confusion. In a moment I
should be wedged into a crowd and inevitably discovered. I pushed by a butcher
boy, who luckily did not turn to see the nothingness that shoved him aside, and
dodged behind the cab-man's four-wheeler. I do not know how they settled the
business, I hurried straight across the road, which was happily clear, and
hardly heeding which way I went, in the fright of detection the incident had
given me, plunged into the afternoon throng of Oxford Street.
"I tried to get into the stream of people, but they were too thick for
me, and in a moment my heels were being trodden upon. I took to the gutter, the
roughness of which I found painful to my feet, and forthwith the shaft of a
crawling hansom dug me forcibly under the shoulder blade, reminding me that I
was already bruised severely. I staggered out of the way of the cab, avoided a
perambulator by a convulsive movement, and found myself behind the hansom. A
happy thought saved me, and as this drove slowly along I followed in its
immediate wake, trembling and astonished at the turn of my adventure. And not
only trembling, but shivering. It was a bright day in January and I was stark
naked and the thin slime of mud that covered the road was freezing. Foolish as
it seems to me now, I had not reckoned that, transparent or not, I was still
amenable to the weather and all its consequences.
"Then suddenly a bright idea came into my head. I ran round and got
into the cab. And so, shivering, scared, and sniffing with the first intimations
of a cold, and with the bruises in the small of my back growing upon my
attention, I drove slowly along Oxford Street and past Tottenham Court Road. My
mood was as different from that in which I had sallied forth ten minutes ago as
it is possible to imagine. This invisibility indeed! The one thought that
possessed me was—how was I to get out of the scrape I was in.
"We crawled past Mudie's, and there a tall woman with five or six
yellow-labelled books hailed my cab, and I sprang out just in time to escape
her, shaving a railway van narrowly in my flight. I made off up the roadway to
Bloomsbury Square, intending to strike north past the Museum and so get into
the quiet district. I was now cruelly chilled, and the strangeness of my
situation so unnerved me that I whimpered as I ran. At the northward corner of
the Square a little white dog ran out of the Pharmaceutical Society's offices,
and incontinently made for me, nose down.
"I had never realised it before, but the nose is to the mind of a dog
what the eye is to the mind of a seeing man. Dogs perceive the scent of a man
moving as men perceive his vision. This brute began barking and leaping,
showing, as it seemed to me, only too plainly that he was aware of me. I
crossed Great Russell Street, glancing over my shoulder as I did so, and went
some way along Montague Street before I realised what I was running towards.
"Then I became aware of a blare of music, and looking along the street
saw a number of people advancing out of Russell Square, red shirts, and the
banner of the Salvation Army to the fore. Such a crowd, chanting in the roadway
and scoffing on the pavement, I could not hope to penetrate, and dreading to go
back and farther from home again, and deciding on the spur of the moment, I ran
up the white steps of a house facing the museum railings, and stood there until
the crowd should have passed. Happily the dog stopped at the noise of the band
too, hesitated, and turned tail, running back to Bloomsbury Square again.
"On came the band, bawling with unconscious irony some hymn about 'When
shall we see His face?' and it seemed an interminable time to me before the
tide of the crowd washed along the pavement by me. Thud, thud, thud, came the
drum with a vibrating resonance, and for the moment I did not notice two
urchins stopping at the railings by me. 'See 'em,' said one. 'See what?' said
the other. 'Why—them footmarks—bare. Like what you makes in mud.'
"I looked down and saw the youngsters had stopped and were gaping at
the muddy footmarks I had left behind me up the newly whitened steps. The
passing people elbowed and jostled them, but their confounded intelligence was
arrested. 'Thud, thud, thud, when, thud, shall we see, thud, his face, thud,
thud.' 'There's a barefoot man gone up them steps, or I don't know nothing,'
said one. 'And he ain't never come down again. And his foot was a-bleeding.'
"The thick of the crowd had already passed. 'Looky there, Ted,' quoth
the younger of the detectives, with the sharpness of surprise in his voice, and
pointed straight to my feet. I looked down and saw at once the dim suggestion
of their outline sketched in splashes of mud. For a moment I was paralysed.
"'Why, that's rum,' said the elder. 'Dashed rum! It's just like the
ghost of a foot, ain't it?' He hesitated and advanced with outstretched hand. A
man pulled up short to see what he was catching, and then a girl. In another
moment he would have touched me. Then I saw what to do. I made a step, the boy
started back with an exclamation, and with a rapid movement I swung myself over
into the portico of the next house. But the smaller boy was sharp-eyed enough
to follow the movement, and before I was well down the steps and upon the
pavement, he had recovered from his momentary astonishment and was shouting out
that the feet had gone over the wall.
"They rushed round and saw my new footmarks flash into being on the
lower step and upon the pavement. 'What's up?' asked someone. 'Feet! Look! Feet
running!'
"Everybody in the road, except my three pursuers, was pouring along
after the Salvation Army, and this blow not only impeded me but them. There was
an eddy of surprise and interrogation. At the cost of bowling over one young
fellow I got through, and in another moment I was rushing headlong round the
circuit of Russell Square, with six or seven astonished people following my
footmarks. There was no time for explanation, or else the whole host would have
been after me.
"Twice I doubled round corners, thrice I crossed the road and came back
upon my tracks, and then, as my feet grew hot and dry, the damp impressions
began to fade. At last I had a breathing space and rubbed my feet clean with my
hands, and so got away altogether. The last I saw of the chase was a little
group of a dozen people perhaps, studying with infinite perplexity a slowly
drying footprint that had resulted from a puddle in Tavistock Square, a
footprint as isolated and incomprehensible to them as Crusoe's solitary
discovery.
"This running warmed me to a certain extent, and I went on with a
better courage through the maze of less frequented roads that runs hereabouts.
My back had now become very stiff and sore, my tonsils were painful from the
cabman's fingers, and the skin of my neck had been scratched by his nails; my
feet hurt exceedingly and I was lame from a little cut on one foot. I saw in
time a blind man approaching me, and fled limping, for I feared his subtle
intuitions. Once or twice accidental collisions occurred and I left people
amazed, with unaccountable curses ringing in their ears. Then came something
silent and quiet against my face, and across the Square fell a thin veil of
slowly falling flakes of snow. I had caught a cold, and do as I would I could
not avoid an occasional sneeze. And every dog that came in sight, with its
pointing nose and curious sniffing, was a terror to me.
"Then came men and boys running, first one and then others, and
shouting as they ran. It was a fire. They ran in the direction of my lodging,
and looking back down a street I saw a mass of black smoke streaming up above
the roofs and telephone wires. It was my lodging burning; my clothes, my
apparatus, all my resources indeed, except my cheque-book and the three volumes
of memoranda that awaited me in Great Portland Street, were there. Burning! I
had burnt my boats—if ever a man did! The place was blazing."
The Invisible Man paused and thought. Kemp glanced nervously out of the
window. "Yes?" he said. "Go on."
"So last January, with the beginning of a
snowstorm in the air about me—and if it settled on me it would betray
me!—weary, cold, painful, inexpressibly wretched, and still but half convinced
of my invisible quality, I began this new life to which I am committed. I had
no refuge, no appliances, no human being in the world in whom I could confide.
To have told my secret would have given me away—made a mere show and rarity of
me. Nevertheless, I was half-minded to accost some passer-by and throw myself
upon his mercy. But I knew too clearly the terror and brutal cruelty my
advances would evoke. I made no plans in the street. My sole object was to get
shelter from the snow, to get myself covered and warm; then I might hope to
plan. But even to me, an Invisible Man, the rows of London houses stood
latched, barred, and bolted impregnably.
"Only one thing could I see clearly before me—the cold exposure and
misery of the snowstorm and the night.
"And then I had a brilliant idea. I turned down one of the roads
leading from Gower Street to Tottenham Court Road, and found myself outside
Omniums, the big establishment where everything is to be bought—you know the
place: meat, grocery, linen, furniture, clothing, oil paintings even—a huge
meandering collection of shops rather than a shop. I had thought I should find
the doors open, but they were closed, and as I stood in the wide entrance a
carriage stopped outside, and a man in uniform—you know the kind of personage
with 'Omnium' on his cap—flung open the door. I contrived to enter, and walking
down the shop—it was a department where they were selling ribbons and gloves
and stockings and that kind of thing—came to a more spacious region devoted to
picnic baskets and wicker furniture.
"I did not feel safe there, however; people were going to and fro, and
I prowled restlessly about until I came upon a huge section in an upper floor
containing multitudes of bedsteads, and over these I clambered, and found a
resting-place at last among a huge pile of folded flock mattresses. The place
was already lit up and agreeably warm, and I decided to remain where I was,
keeping a cautious eye on the two or three sets of shopmen and customers who
were meandering through the place, until closing time came. Then I should be
able, I thought, to rob the place for food and clothing, and disguised, prowl
through it and examine its resources, perhaps sleep on some of the bedding.
That seemed an acceptable plan. My idea was to procure clothing to make myself
a muffled but acceptable figure, to get money, and then to recover my books and
parcels where they awaited me, take a lodging somewhere and elaborate plans for
the complete realisation of the advantages my invisibility gave me (as I still
imagined) over my fellow-men.
"Closing time arrived quickly enough. It could not have been more than
an hour after I took up my position on the mattresses before I noticed the
blinds of the windows being drawn, and customers being marched doorward. And
then a number of brisk young men began with remarkable alacrity to tidy up the
goods that remained disturbed. I left my lair as the crowds diminished, and
prowled cautiously out into the less desolate parts of the shop. I was really
surprised to observe how rapidly the young men and women whipped away the goods
displayed for sale during the day. All the boxes of goods, the hanging fabrics,
the festoons of lace, the boxes of sweets in the grocery section, the displays
of this and that, were being whipped down, folded up, slapped into tidy
receptacles, and everything that could not be taken down and put away had
sheets of some coarse stuff like sacking flung over them. Finally all the
chairs were turned up on to the counters, leaving the floor clear. Directly
each of these young people had done, he or she made promptly for the door with
such an expression of animation as I have rarely observed in a shop assistant
before. Then came a lot of youngsters scattering sawdust and carrying pails and
brooms. I had to dodge to get out of the way, and as it was, my ankle got stung
with the sawdust. For some time, wandering through the swathed and darkened
departments, I could hear the brooms at work. And at last a good hour or more
after the shop had been closed, came a noise of locking doors. Silence came
upon the place, and I found myself wandering through the vast and intricate
shops, galleries, show-rooms of the place, alone. It was very still; in one
place I remember passing near one of the Tottenham Court Road entrances and
listening to the tapping of boot-heels of the passers-by.
"My first visit was to the place where I had seen stockings and gloves
for sale. It was dark, and I had the devil of a hunt after matches, which I
found at last in the drawer of the little cash desk. Then I had to get a
candle. I had to tear down wrappings and ransack a number of boxes and drawers,
but at last I managed to turn out what I sought; the box label called them
lambswool pants, and lambswool vests. Then socks, a thick comforter, and then I
went to the clothing place and got trousers, a lounge jacket, an overcoat and a
slouch hat—a clerical sort of hat with the brim turned down. I began to feel a
human being again, and my next thought was food.
"Upstairs was a refreshment department, and there I got cold meat.
There was coffee still in the urn, and I lit the gas and warmed it up again,
and altogether I did not do badly. Afterwards, prowling through the place in
search of blankets—I had to put up at last with a heap of down quilts—I came
upon a grocery section with a lot of chocolate and candied fruits, more than
was good for me indeed—and some white burgundy. And near that was a toy
department, and I had a brilliant idea. I found some artificial noses—dummy
noses, you know, and I thought of dark spectacles. But Omniums had no optical
department. My nose had been a difficulty indeed—I had thought of paint. But
the discovery set my mind running on wigs and masks and the like. Finally I
went to sleep in a heap of down quilts, very warm and comfortable.
"My last thoughts before sleeping were the most agreeable I had had
since the change. I was in a state of physical serenity, and that was reflected
in my mind. I thought that I should be able to slip out unobserved in the
morning with my clothes upon me, muffling my face with a white wrapper I had
taken, purchase, with the money I had taken, spectacles and so forth, and so
complete my disguise. I lapsed into disorderly dreams of all the fantastic
things that had happened during the last few days. I saw the ugly little Jew of
a landlord vociferating in his rooms; I saw his two sons marvelling, and the
wrinkled old woman's gnarled face as she asked for her cat. I experienced again
the strange sensation of seeing the cloth disappear, and so I came round to the
windy hillside and the sniffing old clergyman mumbling 'Earth to earth, ashes
to ashes, dust to dust,' at my father's open grave.
"'You also,' said a voice, and suddenly I was being forced towards the
grave. I struggled, shouted, appealed to the mourners, but they continued
stonily following the service; the old clergyman, too, never faltered droning
and sniffing through the ritual. I realised I was invisible and inaudible, that
overwhelming forces had their grip on me. I struggled in vain, I was forced
over the brink, the coffin rang hollow as I fell upon it, and the gravel came
flying after me in spadefuls. Nobody heeded me, nobody was aware of me. I made
convulsive struggles and awoke.
"The pale London dawn had come, the place was full of a chilly grey
light that filtered round the edges of the window blinds. I sat up, and for a
time I could not think where this ample apartment, with its counters, its piles
of rolled stuff, its heap of quilts and cushions, its iron pillars, might be.
Then, as recollection came back to me, I heard voices in conversation.
"Then far down the place, in the brighter light of some department
which had already raised its blinds, I saw two men approaching. I scrambled to
my feet, looking about me for some way of escape, and even as I did so the
sound of my movement made them aware of me. I suppose they saw merely a figure
moving quietly and quickly away. 'Who's that?' cried one, and 'Stop, there!'
shouted the other. I dashed around a corner and came full tilt—a faceless
figure, mind you!—on a lanky lad of fifteen. He yelled and I bowled him over,
rushed past him, turned another corner, and by a happy inspiration threw myself
behind a counter. In another moment feet went running past and I heard voices
shouting, 'All hands to the doors!' asking what was 'up,' and giving one
another advice how to catch me.
"Lying on the ground, I felt scared out of my wits. But—odd as it may
seem—it did not occur to me at the moment to take off my clothes as I should
have done. I had made up my mind, I suppose, to get away in them, and that
ruled me. And then down the vista of the counters came a bawling of 'Here he
is!'
"I sprang to my feet, whipped a chair off the counter, and sent it
whirling at the fool who had shouted, turned, came into another round a corner,
sent him spinning, and rushed up the stairs. He kept his footing, gave a view
hallo, and came up the staircase hot after me. Up the staircase were piled a
multitude of those bright-coloured pot things—what are they?"
"Art pots," suggested Kemp.
"That's it! Art pots. Well, I turned at the top step and swung round,
plucked one out of a pile and smashed it on his silly head as he came at me.
The whole pile of pots went headlong, and I heard shouting and footsteps
running from all parts. I made a mad rush for the refreshment place, and there
was a man in white like a man cook, who took up the chase. I made one last
desperate turn and found myself among lamps and ironmongery. I went behind the
counter of this, and waited for my cook, and as he bolted in at the head of the
chase, I doubled him up with a lamp. Down he went, and I crouched down behind
the counter and began whipping off my clothes as fast as I could. Coat, jacket,
trousers, shoes were all right, but a lambswool vest fits a man like a skin. I
heard more men coming, my cook was lying quiet on the other side of the counter,
stunned or scared speechless, and I had to make another dash for it, like a
rabbit hunted out of a wood-pile.
"'This way, policeman!' I heard someone shouting. I found myself in my
bedstead storeroom again, and at the end of a wilderness of wardrobes. I rushed
among them, went flat, got rid of my vest after infinite wriggling, and stood a
free man again, panting and scared, as the policeman and three of the shopmen
came round the corner. They made a rush for the vest and pants, and collared
the trousers. 'He's dropping his plunder,' said one of the young men. 'He must
be somewhere here.'
"But they did not find me all the same.
"I stood watching them hunt for me for a time, and cursing my ill-luck
in losing the clothes. Then I went into the refreshment-room, drank a little
milk I found there, and sat down by the fire to consider my position.
"In a little while two assistants came in and began to talk over the
business very excitedly and like the fools they were. I heard a magnified
account of my depredations, and other speculations as to my whereabouts. Then I
fell to scheming again. The insurmountable difficulty of the place, especially
now it was alarmed, was to get any plunder out of it. I went down into the
warehouse to see if there was any chance of packing and addressing a parcel,
but I could not understand the system of checking. About eleven o'clock, the
snow having thawed as it fell, and the day being finer and a little warmer than
the previous one, I decided that the Emporium was hopeless, and went out again,
exasperated at my want of success, with only the vaguest plans of action in my
mind."
"But you begin now to realise," said the
Invisible Man, "the full disadvantage of my condition. I had no shelter—no
covering—to get clothing was to forego all my advantage, to make myself a
strange and terrible thing. I was fasting; for to eat, to fill myself with
unassimilated matter, would be to become grotesquely visible again."
"I never thought of that," said Kemp.
"Nor had I. And the snow had warned me of other dangers. I could not go
abroad in snow—it would settle on me and expose me. Rain, too, would make me a
watery outline, a glistening surface of a man—a bubble. And fog—I should be
like a fainter bubble in a fog, a surface, a greasy glimmer of humanity.
Moreover, as I went abroad—in the London air—I gathered dirt about my ankles,
floating smuts and dust upon my skin. I did not know how long it would be
before I should become visible from that cause also. But I saw clearly it could
not be for long.
"Not in London at any rate.
"I went into the slums towards Great Portland Street, and found myself
at the end of the street in which I had lodged. I did not go that way, because
of the crowd halfway down it opposite to the still smoking ruins of the house I
had fired. My most immediate problem was to get clothing. What to do with my
face puzzled me. Then I saw in one of those little miscellaneous shops—news,
sweets, toys, stationery, belated Christmas tomfoolery, and so forth—an array of
masks and noses. I realised that problem was solved. In a flash I saw my
course. I turned about, no longer aimless, and went—circuitously in order to
avoid the busy ways, towards the back streets north of the Strand; for I
remembered, though not very distinctly where, that some theatrical costumiers
had shops in that district.
"The day was cold, with a nipping wind down the northward running
streets. I walked fast to avoid being overtaken. Every crossing was a danger,
every passenger a thing to watch alertly. One man as I was about to pass him at
the top of Bedford Street, turned upon me abruptly and came into me, sending me
into the road and almost under the wheel of a passing hansom. The verdict of
the cab-rank was that he had had some sort of stroke. I was so unnerved by this
encounter that I went into Covent Garden Market and sat down for some time in a
quiet corner by a stall of violets, panting and trembling. I found I had caught
a fresh cold, and had to turn out after a time lest my sneezes should attract
attention.
"At last I reached the object of my quest, a dirty, fly-blown little
shop in a by-way near Drury Lane, with a window full of tinsel robes, sham
jewels, wigs, slippers, dominoes and theatrical photographs. The shop was
old-fashioned and low and dark, and the house rose above it for four storeys,
dark and dismal. I peered through the window and, seeing no one within,
entered. The opening of the door set a clanking bell ringing. I left it open,
and walked round a bare costume stand, into a corner behind a cheval glass. For
a minute or so no one came. Then I heard heavy feet striding across a room, and
a man appeared down the shop.
"My plans were now perfectly definite. I proposed to make my way into
the house, secrete myself upstairs, watch my opportunity, and when everything
was quiet, rummage out a wig, mask, spectacles, and costume, and go into the
world, perhaps a grotesque but still a credible figure. And incidentally of
course I could rob the house of any available money.
"The man who had just entered the shop was a short, slight, hunched,
beetle-browed man, with long arms and very short bandy legs. Apparently I had
interrupted a meal. He stared about the shop with an expression of expectation.
This gave way to surprise, and then to anger, as he saw the shop empty. 'Damn
the boys!' he said. He went to stare up and down the street. He came in again
in a minute, kicked the door to with his foot spitefully, and went muttering
back to the house door.
"I came forward to follow him, and at the noise of my movement he
stopped dead. I did so too, startled by his quickness of ear. He slammed the
house door in my face.
"I stood hesitating. Suddenly I heard his quick footsteps returning,
and the door reopened. He stood looking about the shop like one who was still
not satisfied. Then, murmuring to himself, he examined the back of the counter
and peered behind some fixtures. Then he stood doubtful. He had left the house
door open and I slipped into the inner room.
"It was a queer little room, poorly furnished and with a number of big
masks in the corner. On the table was his belated breakfast, and it was a
confoundedly exasperating thing for me, Kemp, to have to sniff his coffee and
stand watching while he came in and resumed his meal. And his table manners
were irritating. Three doors opened into the little room, one going upstairs
and one down, but they were all shut. I could not get out of the room while he
was there; I could scarcely move because of his alertness, and there was a
draught down my back. Twice I strangled a sneeze just in time.
"The spectacular quality of my sensations was curious and novel, but
for all that I was heartily tired and angry long before he had done his eating.
But at last he made an end and putting his beggarly crockery on the black tin
tray upon which he had had his teapot, and gathering all the crumbs up on the
mustard stained cloth, he took the whole lot of things after him. His burden
prevented his shutting the door behind him—as he would have done; I never saw
such a man for shutting doors—and I followed him into a very dirty underground
kitchen and scullery. I had the pleasure of seeing him begin to wash up, and
then, finding no good in keeping down there, and the brick floor being cold on
my feet, I returned upstairs and sat in his chair by the fire. It was burning
low, and scarcely thinking, I put on a little coal. The noise of this brought
him up at once, and he stood aglare. He peered about the room and was within an
ace of touching me. Even after that examination, he scarcely seemed satisfied.
He stopped in the doorway and took a final inspection before he went down.
"I waited in the little parlour for an age, and at last he came up and
opened the upstairs door. I just managed to get by him.
"On the staircase he stopped suddenly, so that I very nearly blundered
into him. He stood looking back right into my face and listening. 'I could have
sworn,' he said. His long hairy hand pulled at his lower lip. His eye went up
and down the staircase. Then he grunted and went on up again.
"His hand was on the handle of a door, and then he stopped again with
the same puzzled anger on his face. He was becoming aware of the faint sounds
of my movements about him. The man must have had diabolically acute hearing. He
suddenly flashed into rage. 'If there's anyone in this house—' he cried with an
oath, and left the threat unfinished. He put his hand in his pocket, failed to
find what he wanted, and rushing past me went blundering noisily and
pugnaciously downstairs. But I did not follow him. I sat on the head of the
staircase until his return.
"Presently he came up again, still muttering. He opened the door of the
room, and before I could enter, slammed it in my face.
"I resolved to explore the house, and spent some time in doing so as
noiselessly as possible. The house was very old and tumble-down, damp so that
the paper in the attics was peeling from the walls, and rat infested. Some of
the door handles were stiff and I was afraid to turn them. Several rooms I did
inspect were unfurnished, and others were littered with theatrical lumber,
bought second-hand, I judged, from its appearance. In one room next to his I
found a lot of old clothes. I began routing among these, and in my eagerness
forgot again the evident sharpness of his ears. I heard a stealthy footstep
and, looking up just in time, saw him peering in at the tumbled heap and
holding an old-fashioned revolver in his hand. I stood perfectly still while he
stared about open-mouthed and suspicious. 'It must have been her,' he said
slowly. 'Damn her!'
"He shut the door quietly, and immediately I heard the key turn in the
lock. Then his footsteps retreated. I realised abruptly that I was locked in.
For a minute I did not know what to do. I walked from door to window and back,
and stood perplexed. A gust of anger came upon me. But I decided to inspect the
clothes before I did anything further, and my first attempt brought down a pile
from an upper shelf. This brought him back, more sinister than ever. That time
he actually touched me, jumped back with amazement and stood astonished in the
middle of the room.
"Presently he calmed a little. 'Rats,' he said in an undertone, fingers
on lips. He was evidently a little scared. I edged quietly out of the room, but
a plank creaked. Then the infernal little brute started going all over the
house, revolver in hand and locking door after door and pocketing the keys.
When I realised what he was up to I had a fit of rage—I could hardly control
myself sufficiently to watch my opportunity. By this time I knew he was alone
in the house, and so I made no more ado, but knocked him on the head."
"Knocked him on the head?" exclaimed Kemp.
"Yes—stunned him—as he was going downstairs. Hit him from behind with a
stool that stood on the landing. He went downstairs like a bag of old
boots."
"But—I say! The common conventions of humanity—"
"Are all very well for common people. But the point was, Kemp, that I
had to get out of that house in a disguise without his seeing me. I couldn't
think of any other way of doing it. And then I gagged him with a Louis Quatorze
vest and tied him up in a sheet."
"Tied him up in a sheet!"
"Made a sort of bag of it. It was rather a good idea to keep the idiot
scared and quiet, and a devilish hard thing to get out of—head away from the
string. My dear Kemp, it's no good your sitting glaring as though I was a
murderer. It had to be done. He had his revolver. If once he saw me he would be
able to describe me—"
"But still," said Kemp, "in England—to-day. And the man was
in his own house, and you were—well, robbing."
"Robbing! Confound it! You'll call me a thief next! Surely, Kemp,
you're not fool enough to dance on the old strings. Can't you see my
position?"
"And his too," said Kemp.
The Invisible Man stood up sharply. "What do you mean to say?"
Kemp's face grew a trifle hard. He was about to speak and checked himself.
"I suppose, after all," he said with a sudden change of manner,
"the thing had to be done. You were in a fix. But still—"
"Of course I was in a fix—an infernal fix. And he made me wild
too—hunting me about the house, fooling about with his revolver, locking and
unlocking doors. He was simply exasperating. You don't blame me, do you? You
don't blame me?"
"I never blame anyone," said Kemp. "It's quite out of fashion.
What did you do next?"
"I was hungry. Downstairs I found a loaf and some rank cheese—more than
sufficient to satisfy my hunger. I took some brandy and water, and then went up
past my impromptu bag—he was lying quite still—to the room containing the old
clothes. This looked out upon the street, two lace curtains brown with dirt
guarding the window. I went and peered out through their interstices. Outside
the day was bright—by contrast with the brown shadows of the dismal house in
which I found myself, dazzlingly bright. A brisk traffic was going by, fruit
carts, a hansom, a four-wheeler with a pile of boxes, a fishmonger's cart. I
turned with spots of colour swimming before my eyes to the shadowy fixtures
behind me. My excitement was giving place to a clear apprehension of my
position again. The room was full of a faint scent of benzoline, used, I
suppose, in cleaning the garments.
"I began a systematic search of the place. I should judge the hunchback
had been alone in the house for some time. He was a curious person. Everything
that could possibly be of service to me I collected in the clothes storeroom,
and then I made a deliberate selection. I found a handbag I thought a suitable
possession, and some powder, rouge, and sticking-plaster.
"I had thought of painting and powdering my face and all that there was
to show of me, in order to render myself visible, but the disadvantage of this
lay in the fact that I should require turpentine and other appliances and a
considerable amount of time before I could vanish again. Finally I chose a mask
of the better type, slightly grotesque but not more so than many human beings,
dark glasses, greyish whiskers, and a wig. I could find no underclothing, but
that I could buy subsequently, and for the time I swathed myself in calico
dominoes and some white cashmere scarfs. I could find no socks, but the
hunchback's boots were rather a loose fit and sufficed. In a desk in the shop
were three sovereigns and about thirty shillings' worth of silver, and in a
locked cupboard I burst in the inner room were eight pounds in gold. I could go
forth into the world again, equipped.
"Then came a curious hesitation. Was my appearance really credible? I
tried myself with a little bedroom looking-glass, inspecting myself from every
point of view to discover any forgotten chink, but it all seemed sound. I was
grotesque to the theatrical pitch, a stage miser, but I was certainly not a
physical impossibility. Gathering confidence, I took my looking-glass down into
the shop, pulled down the shop blinds, and surveyed myself from every point of
view with the help of the cheval glass in the corner.
"I spent some minutes screwing up my courage and then unlocked the shop
door and marched out into the street, leaving the little man to get out of his
sheet again when he liked. In five minutes a dozen turnings intervened between
me and the costumier's shop. No one appeared to notice me very pointedly. My
last difficulty seemed overcome."
He stopped again.
"And you troubled no more about the hunchback?" said Kemp.
"No," said the Invisible Man. "Nor have I heard what became
of him. I suppose he untied himself or kicked himself out. The knots were
pretty tight."
He became silent and went to the window and stared out.
"What happened when you went out into the Strand?"
"Oh!—disillusionment again. I thought my troubles were over.
Practically I thought I had impunity to do whatever I chose, everything—save to
give away my secret. So I thought. Whatever I did, whatever the consequences
might be, was nothing to me. I had merely to fling aside my garments and
vanish. No person could hold me. I could take my money where I found it. I
decided to treat myself to a sumptuous feast, and then put up at a good hotel,
and accumulate a new outfit of property. I felt amazingly confident; it's not
particularly pleasant recalling that I was an ass. I went into a place and was
already ordering lunch, when it occurred to me that I could not eat unless I
exposed my invisible face. I finished ordering the lunch, told the man I should
be back in ten minutes, and went out exasperated. I don't know if you have ever
been disappointed in your appetite."
"Not quite so badly," said Kemp, "but I can imagine it."
"I could have smashed the silly devils. At last, faint with the desire
for tasteful food, I went into another place and demanded a private room. 'I am
disfigured,' I said. 'Badly.' They looked at me curiously, but of course it was
not their affair—and so at last I got my lunch. It was not particularly well
served, but it sufficed; and when I had had it, I sat over a cigar, trying to
plan my line of action. And outside a snowstorm was beginning.
"The more I thought it over, Kemp, the more I realised what a helpless
absurdity an Invisible Man was—in a cold and dirty climate and a crowded
civilised city. Before I made this mad experiment I had dreamt of a thousand
advantages. That afternoon it seemed all disappointment. I went over the heads
of the things a man reckons desirable. No doubt invisibility made it possible
to get them, but it made it impossible to enjoy them when they are got.
Ambition—what is the good of pride of place when you cannot appear there? What
is the good of the love of woman when her name must needs be Delilah? I have no
taste for politics, for the blackguardisms of fame, for philanthropy, for
sport. What was I to do? And for this I had become a wrapped-up mystery, a
swathed and bandaged caricature of a man!"
He paused, and his attitude suggested a roving glance at the window.
"But how did you get to Iping?" said Kemp, anxious to keep his
guest busy talking.
"I went there to work. I had one hope. It was a half idea! I have it
still. It is a full blown idea now. A way of getting back! Of restoring what I
have done. When I choose. When I have done all I mean to do invisibly. And that
is what I chiefly want to talk to you about now."
"You went straight to Iping?"
"Yes. I had simply to get my three volumes of memoranda and my
cheque-book, my luggage and underclothing, order a quantity of chemicals to
work out this idea of mine—I will show you the calculations as soon as I get my
books—and then I started. Jove! I remember the snowstorm now, and the accursed
bother it was to keep the snow from damping my pasteboard nose."
"At the end," said Kemp, "the day before yesterday, when they
found you out, you rather—to judge by the papers—"
"I did. Rather. Did I kill that fool of a constable?"
"No," said Kemp. "He's expected to recover."
"That's his luck, then. I clean lost my temper, the fools! Why couldn't
they leave me alone? And that grocer lout?"
"There are no deaths expected," said Kemp.
"I don't know about that tramp of mine," said the Invisible Man,
with an unpleasant laugh.
"By Heaven, Kemp, you don't know what rage is! ... To have
worked for years, to have planned and plotted, and then to get some fumbling
purblind idiot messing across your course! ... Every conceivable sort of silly
creature that has ever been created has been sent to cross me.
"If I have much more of it, I shall go wild—I shall start mowing 'em.
"As it is, they've made things a thousand times more difficult."
"No doubt it's exasperating," said Kemp, drily.
"But now," said Kemp, with a side glance
out of the window, "what are we to do?"
He moved nearer his guest as he spoke in such a manner as to prevent the
possibility of a sudden glimpse of the three men who were advancing up the hill
road—with an intolerable slowness, as it seemed to Kemp.
"What were you planning to do when you were heading for Port Burdock? Had
you any plan?"
"I was going to clear out of the country. But I have altered that plan
rather since seeing you. I thought it would be wise, now the weather is hot and
invisibility possible, to make for the South. Especially as my secret was
known, and everyone would be on the lookout for a masked and muffled man. You
have a line of steamers from here to France. My idea was to get aboard one and
run the risks of the passage. Thence I could go by train into Spain, or else
get to Algiers. It would not be difficult. There a man might always be
invisible—and yet live. And do things. I was using that tramp as a money box
and luggage carrier, until I decided how to get my books and things sent over
to meet me."
"That's clear."
"And then the filthy brute must needs try and rob me! He has
hidden my books, Kemp. Hidden my books! If I can lay my hands on him!"
"Best plan to get the books out of him first."
"But where is he? Do you know?"
"He's in the town police station, locked up, by his own request, in the
strongest cell in the place."
"Cur!" said the Invisible Man.
"But that hangs up your plans a little."
"We must get those books; those books are vital."
"Certainly," said Kemp, a little nervously, wondering if he heard
footsteps outside. "Certainly we must get those books. But that won't be
difficult, if he doesn't know they're for you."
"No," said the Invisible Man, and thought.
Kemp tried to think of something to keep the talk going, but the Invisible
Man resumed of his own accord.
"Blundering into your house, Kemp," he said, "changes all my
plans. For you are a man that can understand. In spite of all that has
happened, in spite of this publicity, of the loss of my books, of what I have
suffered, there still remain great possibilities, huge possibilities—"
"You have told no one I am here?" he asked abruptly.
Kemp hesitated. "That was implied," he said.
"No one?" insisted Griffin.
"Not a soul."
"Ah! Now—" The Invisible Man stood up, and sticking his arms
akimbo began to pace the study.
"I made a mistake, Kemp, a huge mistake, in carrying this thing through
alone. I have wasted strength, time, opportunities. Alone—it is wonderful how
little a man can do alone! To rob a little, to hurt a little, and there is the
end.
"What I want, Kemp, is a goal-keeper, a helper, and a hiding-place, an
arrangement whereby I can sleep and eat and rest in peace, and unsuspected. I
must have a confederate. With a confederate, with food and rest—a thousand
things are possible.
"Hitherto I have gone on vague lines. We have to consider all that
invisibility means, all that it does not mean. It means little advantage for
eavesdropping and so forth—one makes sounds. It's of little help—a little help
perhaps—in housebreaking and so forth. Once you've caught me you could easily
imprison me. But on the other hand I am hard to catch. This invisibility, in
fact, is only good in two cases: It's useful in getting away, it's useful in
approaching. It's particularly useful, therefore, in killing. I can walk round
a man, whatever weapon he has, choose my point, strike as I like. Dodge as I
like. Escape as I like."
Kemp's hand went to his moustache. Was that a movement downstairs?
"And it is killing we must do, Kemp."
"It is killing we must do," repeated Kemp. "I'm listening to
your plan, Griffin, but I'm not agreeing, mind. Why killing?"
"Not wanton killing, but a judicious slaying. The point is, they know
there is an Invisible Man—as well as we know there is an Invisible Man. And
that Invisible Man, Kemp, must now establish a Reign of Terror. Yes; no doubt
it's startling. But I mean it. A Reign of Terror. He must take some town like
your Burdock and terrify and dominate it. He must issue his orders. He can do
that in a thousand ways—scraps of paper thrust under doors would suffice. And
all who disobey his orders he must kill, and kill all who would defend
them."
"Humph!" said Kemp, no longer listening to Griffin but to the
sound of his front door opening and closing.
"It seems to me, Griffin," he said, to cover his wandering
attention, "that your confederate would be in a difficult position."
"No one would know he was a confederate," said the Invisible Man,
eagerly. And then suddenly, "Hush! What's that downstairs?"
"Nothing," said Kemp, and suddenly began to speak loud and fast.
"I don't agree to this, Griffin," he said. "Understand me, I
don't agree to this. Why dream of playing a game against the race? How can you
hope to gain happiness? Don't be a lone wolf. Publish your results; take the
world—take the nation at least—into your confidence. Think what you might do
with a million helpers—"
The Invisible Man interrupted—arm extended. "There are footsteps coming
upstairs," he said in a low voice.
"Nonsense," said Kemp.
"Let me see," said the Invisible Man, and advanced, arm extended,
to the door.
And then things happened very swiftly. Kemp hesitated for a second and then
moved to intercept him. The Invisible Man started and stood still.
"Traitor!" cried the Voice, and suddenly the dressing-gown opened,
and sitting down the Unseen began to disrobe. Kemp made three swift steps to
the door, and forthwith the Invisible Man—his legs had vanished—sprang to his
feet with a shout. Kemp flung the door open.
As it opened, there came a sound of hurrying feet downstairs and voices.
With a quick movement Kemp thrust the Invisible Man back, sprang aside, and
slammed the door. The key was outside and ready. In another moment Griffin
would have been alone in the belvedere study, a prisoner. Save for one little
thing. The key had been slipped in hastily that morning. As Kemp slammed the
door it fell noisily upon the carpet.
Kemp's face became white. He tried to grip the door handle with both hands.
For a moment he stood lugging. Then the door gave six inches. But he got it
closed again. The second time it was jerked a foot wide, and the dressing-gown
came wedging itself into the opening. His throat was gripped by invisible
fingers, and he left his hold on the handle to defend himself. He was forced
back, tripped and pitched heavily into the corner of the landing. The empty
dressing-gown was flung on the top of him.
Halfway up the staircase was Colonel Adye, the recipient of Kemp's letter,
the chief of the Burdock police. He was staring aghast at the sudden appearance
of Kemp, followed by the extraordinary sight of clothing tossing empty in the
air. He saw Kemp felled, and struggling to his feet. He saw him rush forward,
and go down again, felled like an ox.
Then suddenly he was struck violently. By nothing! A vast weight, it seemed,
leapt upon him, and he was hurled headlong down the staircase, with a grip on
his throat and a knee in his groin. An invisible foot trod on his back, a
ghostly patter passed downstairs, he heard the two police officers in the hall
shout and run, and the front door of the house slammed violently.
He rolled over and sat up staring. He saw, staggering down the staircase,
Kemp, dusty and disheveled, one side of his face white from a blow, his lip
bleeding, and a pink dressing-gown and some underclothing held in his arms.
"My God!" cried Kemp, "the game's up! He's gone!"
For a space Kemp was too inarticulate to make Adye
understand the swift things that had just happened. They stood on the landing,
Kemp speaking swiftly, the grotesque swathings of Griffin still on his arm. But
presently Adye began to grasp something of the situation.
"He is mad," said Kemp; "inhuman. He is pure selfishness. He
thinks of nothing but his own advantage, his own safety. I have listened to
such a story this morning of brutal self-seeking.... He has wounded men. He
will kill them unless we can prevent him. He will create a panic. Nothing can
stop him. He is going out now—furious!"
"He must be caught," said Adye. "That is certain."
"But how?" cried Kemp, and suddenly became full of ideas.
"You must begin at once. You must set every available man to work; you
must prevent his leaving this district. Once he gets away, he may go through
the countryside as he wills, killing and maiming. He dreams of a reign of
terror! A reign of terror, I tell you. You must set a watch on trains and roads
and shipping. The garrison must help. You must wire for help. The only thing
that may keep him here is the thought of recovering some books of notes he
counts of value. I will tell you of that! There is a man in your police
station—Marvel."
"I know," said Adye, "I know. Those books—yes. But the
tramp...."
"Says he hasn't them. But he thinks the tramp has. And you must prevent
him from eating or sleeping; day and night the country must be astir for him.
Food must be locked up and secured, all food, so that he will have to break his
way to it. The houses everywhere must be barred against him. Heaven send us
cold nights and rain! The whole country-side must begin hunting and keep
hunting. I tell you, Adye, he is a danger, a disaster; unless he is pinned and
secured, it is frightful to think of the things that may happen."
"What else can we do?" said Adye. "I must go down at once and
begin organising. But why not come? Yes—you come too! Come, and we must hold a
sort of council of war—get Hopps to help—and the railway managers. By Jove!
it's urgent. Come along—tell me as we go. What else is there we can do? Put
that stuff down."
In another moment Adye was leading the way downstairs. They found the front
door open and the policemen standing outside staring at empty air. "He's
got away, sir," said one.
"We must go to the central station at once," said Adye. "One
of you go on down and get a cab to come up and meet us—quickly. And now, Kemp,
what else?"
"Dogs," said Kemp. "Get dogs. They don't see him, but they
wind him. Get dogs."
"Good," said Adye. "It's not generally known, but the prison
officials over at Halstead know a man with bloodhounds. Dogs. What else?"
"Bear in mind," said Kemp, "his food shows. After eating, his
food shows until it is assimilated. So that he has to hide after eating. You
must keep on beating. Every thicket, every quiet corner. And put all
weapons—all implements that might be weapons, away. He can't carry such things
for long. And what he can snatch up and strike men with must be hidden
away."
"Good again," said Adye. "We shall have him yet!"
"And on the roads," said Kemp, and hesitated.
"Yes?" said Adye.
"Powdered glass," said Kemp. "It's cruel, I know. But think
of what he may do!"
Adye drew the air in sharply between his teeth. "It's unsportsmanlike.
I don't know. But I'll have powdered glass got ready. If he goes too
far...."
"The man's become inhuman, I tell you," said Kemp. "I am as
sure he will establish a reign of terror—so soon as he has got over the
emotions of this escape—as I am sure I am talking to you. Our only chance is to
be ahead. He has cut himself off from his kind. His blood be upon his own
head."
The Invisible Man seems to have rushed out of Kemp's
house in a state of blind fury. A little child playing near Kemp's gateway was
violently caught up and thrown aside, so that its ankle was broken, and
thereafter for some hours the Invisible Man passed out of human perceptions. No
one knows where he went nor what he did. But one can imagine him hurrying
through the hot June forenoon, up the hill and on to the open downland behind
Port Burdock, raging and despairing at his intolerable fate, and sheltering at
last, heated and weary, amid the thickets of Hintondean, to piece together
again his shattered schemes against his species. That seems to most probable
refuge for him, for there it was he re-asserted himself in a grimly tragical
manner about two in the afternoon.
One wonders what his state of mind may have been during that time, and what
plans he devised. No doubt he was almost ecstatically exasperated by Kemp's
treachery, and though we may be able to understand the motives that led to that
deceit, we may still imagine and even sympathise a little with the fury the
attempted surprise must have occasioned. Perhaps something of the stunned
astonishment of his Oxford Street experiences may have returned to him, for he
had evidently counted on Kemp's co-operation in his brutal dream of a
terrorised world. At any rate he vanished from human ken about midday, and no
living witness can tell what he did until about half-past two. It was a
fortunate thing, perhaps, for humanity, but for him it was a fatal inaction.
During that time a growing multitude of men scattered over the countryside
were busy. In the morning he had still been simply a legend, a terror; in the
afternoon, by virtue chiefly of Kemp's drily worded proclamation, he was
presented as a tangible antagonist, to be wounded, captured, or overcome, and
the countryside began organising itself with inconceivable rapidity. By two
o'clock even he might still have removed himself out of the district by getting
aboard a train, but after two that became impossible. Every passenger train
along the lines on a great parallelogram between Southampton, Manchester,
Brighton and Horsham, travelled with locked doors, and the goods traffic was
almost entirely suspended. And in a great circle of twenty miles round Port Burdock,
men armed with guns and bludgeons were presently setting out in groups of three
and four, with dogs, to beat the roads and fields.
Mounted policemen rode along the country lanes, stopping at every cottage
and warning the people to lock up their houses, and keep indoors unless they
were armed, and all the elementary schools had broken up by three o'clock, and
the children, scared and keeping together in groups, were hurrying home. Kemp's
proclamation—signed indeed by Adye—was posted over almost the whole district by
four or five o'clock in the afternoon. It gave briefly but clearly all the
conditions of the struggle, the necessity of keeping the Invisible Man from
food and sleep, the necessity for incessant watchfulness and for a prompt
attention to any evidence of his movements. And so swift and decided was the
action of the authorities, so prompt and universal was the belief in this
strange being, that before nightfall an area of several hundred square miles
was in a stringent state of siege. And before nightfall, too, a thrill of
horror went through the whole watching nervous countryside. Going from
whispering mouth to mouth, swift and certain over the length and breadth of the
country, passed the story of the murder of Mr. Wicksteed.
If our supposition that the Invisible Man's refuge was the Hintondean
thickets, then we must suppose that in the early afternoon he sallied out again
bent upon some project that involved the use of a weapon. We cannot know what
the project was, but the evidence that he had the iron rod in hand before he
met Wicksteed is to me at least overwhelming.
Of course we can know nothing of the details of that encounter. It occurred
on the edge of a gravel pit, not two hundred yards from Lord Burdock's lodge
gate. Everything points to a desperate struggle—the trampled ground, the
numerous wounds Mr. Wicksteed received, his splintered walking-stick; but why
the attack was made, save in a murderous frenzy, it is impossible to imagine.
Indeed the theory of madness is almost unavoidable. Mr. Wicksteed was a man of
forty-five or forty-six, steward to Lord Burdock, of inoffensive habits and
appearance, the very last person in the world to provoke such a terrible
antagonist. Against him it would seem the Invisible Man used an iron rod dragged
from a broken piece of fence. He stopped this quiet man, going quietly home to
his midday meal, attacked him, beat down his feeble defences, broke his arm,
felled him, and smashed his head to a jelly.
Of course, he must have dragged this rod out of the fencing before he met
his victim—he must have been carrying it ready in his hand. Only two details
beyond what has already been stated seem to bear on the matter. One is the
circumstance that the gravel pit was not in Mr. Wicksteed's direct path home,
but nearly a couple of hundred yards out of his way. The other is the assertion
of a little girl to the effect that, going to her afternoon school, she saw the
murdered man "trotting" in a peculiar manner across a field towards
the gravel pit. Her pantomime of his action suggests a man pursuing something
on the ground before him and striking at it ever and again with his
walking-stick. She was the last person to see him alive. He passed out of her
sight to his death, the struggle being hidden from her only by a clump of beech
trees and a slight depression in the ground.
Now this, to the present writer's mind at least, lifts the murder out of the
realm of the absolutely wanton. We may imagine that Griffin had taken the rod
as a weapon indeed, but without any deliberate intention of using it in murder.
Wicksteed may then have come by and noticed this rod inexplicably moving
through the air. Without any thought of the Invisible Man—for Port Burdock is
ten miles away—he may have pursued it. It is quite conceivable that he may not
even have heard of the Invisible Man. One can then imagine the Invisible Man
making off—quietly in order to avoid discovering his presence in the
neighbourhood, and Wicksteed, excited and curious, pursuing this unaccountably
locomotive object—finally striking at it.
No doubt the Invisible Man could easily have distanced his middle-aged
pursuer under ordinary circumstances, but the position in which Wicksteed's
body was found suggests that he had the ill luck to drive his quarry into a
corner between a drift of stinging nettles and the gravel pit. To those who
appreciate the extraordinary irascibility of the Invisible Man, the rest of the
encounter will be easy to imagine.
But this is pure hypothesis. The only undeniable facts—for stories of children
are often unreliable—are the discovery of Wicksteed's body, done to death, and
of the blood-stained iron rod flung among the nettles. The abandonment of the
rod by Griffin, suggests that in the emotional excitement of the affair, the
purpose for which he took it—if he had a purpose—was abandoned. He was
certainly an intensely egotistical and unfeeling man, but the sight of his
victim, his first victim, bloody and pitiful at his feet, may have released
some long pent fountain of remorse which for a time may have flooded whatever
scheme of action he had contrived.
After the murder of Mr. Wicksteed, he would seem to have struck across the
country towards the downland. There is a story of a voice heard about sunset by
a couple of men in a field near Fern Bottom. It was wailing and laughing,
sobbing and groaning, and ever and again it shouted. It must have been queer
hearing. It drove up across the middle of a clover field and died away towards
the hills.
That afternoon the Invisible Man must have learnt something of the rapid use
Kemp had made of his confidences. He must have found houses locked and secured;
he may have loitered about railway stations and prowled about inns, and no
doubt he read the proclamations and realised something of the nature of the campaign
against him. And as the evening advanced, the fields became dotted here and
there with groups of three or four men, and noisy with the yelping of dogs.
These men-hunters had particular instructions in the case of an encounter as to
the way they should support one another. But he avoided them all. We may
understand something of his exasperation, and it could have been none the less
because he himself had supplied the information that was being used so
remorselessly against him. For that day at least he lost heart; for nearly
twenty-four hours, save when he turned on Wicksteed, he was a hunted man. In
the night, he must have eaten and slept; for in the morning he was himself
again, active, powerful, angry, and malignant, prepared for his last great struggle
against the world.
Kemp read a strange missive, written in pencil on a
greasy sheet of paper.
"You have been amazingly energetic and clever," this letter ran,
"though what you stand to gain by it I cannot imagine. You are against me.
For a whole day you have chased me; you have tried to rob me of a night's rest.
But I have had food in spite of you, I have slept in spite of you, and the game
is only beginning. The game is only beginning. There is nothing for it, but to
start the Terror. This announces the first day of the Terror. Port Burdock is
no longer under the Queen, tell your Colonel of Police, and the rest of them;
it is under me—the Terror! This is day one of year one of the new epoch—the
Epoch of the Invisible Man. I am Invisible Man the First. To begin with the
rule will be easy. The first day there will be one execution for the sake of
example—a man named Kemp. Death starts for him to-day. He may lock himself
away, hide himself away, get guards about him, put on armour if he likes—Death,
the unseen Death, is coming. Let him take precautions; it will impress my
people. Death starts from the pillar box by midday. The letter will fall in as
the postman comes along, then off! The game begins. Death starts. Help him not,
my people, lest Death fall upon you also. To-day Kemp is to die."
Kemp read this letter twice, "It's no hoax," he said. "That's
his voice! And he means it."
He turned the folded sheet over and saw on the addressed side of it the
postmark Hintondean, and the prosaic detail "2d. to pay."
He got up slowly, leaving his lunch unfinished—the letter had come by the
one o'clock post—and went into his study. He rang for his housekeeper, and told
her to go round the house at once, examine all the fastenings of the windows,
and close all the shutters. He closed the shutters of his study himself. From a
locked drawer in his bedroom he took a little revolver, examined it carefully,
and put it into the pocket of his lounge jacket. He wrote a number of brief notes,
one to Colonel Adye, gave them to his servant to take, with explicit
instructions as to her way of leaving the house. "There is no
danger," he said, and added a mental reservation, "to you." He
remained meditative for a space after doing this, and then returned to his
cooling lunch.
He ate with gaps of thought. Finally he struck the table sharply. "We
will have him!" he said; "and I am the bait. He will come too
far."
He went up to the belvedere, carefully shutting every door after him.
"It's a game," he said, "an odd game—but the chances are all for
me, Mr. Griffin, in spite of your invisibility. Griffin contra mundum
... with a vengeance."
He stood at the window staring at the hot hillside. "He must get food
every day—and I don't envy him. Did he really sleep last night? Out in the open
somewhere—secure from collisions. I wish we could get some good cold wet
weather instead of the heat.
"He may be watching me now."
He went close to the window. Something rapped smartly against the brickwork
over the frame, and made him start violently back.
"I'm getting nervous," said Kemp. But it was five minutes before
he went to the window again. "It must have been a sparrow," he said.
Presently he heard the front-door bell ringing, and hurried downstairs. He unbolted
and unlocked the door, examined the chain, put it up, and opened cautiously
without showing himself. A familiar voice hailed him. It was Adye.
"Your servant's been assaulted, Kemp," he said round the door.
"What!" exclaimed Kemp.
"Had that note of yours taken away from her. He's close about here. Let
me in."
Kemp released the chain, and Adye entered through as narrow an opening as
possible. He stood in the hall, looking with infinite relief at Kemp
refastening the door. "Note was snatched out of her hand. Scared her
horribly. She's down at the station. Hysterics. He's close here. What was it
about?"
Kemp swore.
"What a fool I was," said Kemp. "I might have known. It's not
an hour's walk from Hintondean. Already?"
"What's up?" said Adye.
"Look here!" said Kemp, and led the way into his study. He handed
Adye the Invisible Man's letter. Adye read it and whistled softly. "And
you—?" said Adye.
"Proposed a trap—like a fool," said Kemp, "and sent my
proposal out by a maid servant. To him."
Adye followed Kemp's profanity.
"He'll clear out," said Adye.
"Not he," said Kemp.
A resounding smash of glass came from upstairs. Adye had a silvery glimpse
of a little revolver half out of Kemp's pocket. "It's a window,
upstairs!" said Kemp, and led the way up. There came a second smash while
they were still on the staircase. When they reached the study they found two of
the three windows smashed, half the room littered with splintered glass, and
one big flint lying on the writing table. The two men stopped in the doorway,
contemplating the wreckage. Kemp swore again, and as he did so the third window
went with a snap like a pistol, hung starred for a moment, and collapsed in
jagged, shivering triangles into the room.
"What's this for?" said Adye.
"It's a beginning," said Kemp.
"There's no way of climbing up here?"
"Not for a cat," said Kemp.
"No shutters?"
"Not here. All the downstairs rooms—Hullo!"
Smash, and then whack of boards hit hard came from downstairs.
"Confound him!" said Kemp. "That must be—yes—it's one of the bedrooms.
He's going to do all the house. But he's a fool. The shutters are up, and the
glass will fall outside. He'll cut his feet."
Another window proclaimed its destruction. The two men stood on the landing
perplexed. "I have it!" said Adye. "Let me have a stick or
something, and I'll go down to the station and get the bloodhounds put on. That
ought to settle him! They're hard by—not ten minutes—"
Another window went the way of its fellows.
"You haven't a revolver?" asked Adye.
Kemp's hand went to his pocket. Then he hesitated. "I haven't one—at
least to spare."
"I'll bring it back," said Adye, "you'll be safe here."
Kemp, ashamed of his momentary lapse from truthfulness, handed him the
weapon.
"Now for the door," said Adye.
As they stood hesitating in the hall, they heard one of the first-floor
bedroom windows crack and clash. Kemp went to the door and began to slip the
bolts as silently as possible. His face was a little paler than usual.
"You must step straight out," said Kemp. In another moment Adye was
on the doorstep and the bolts were dropping back into the staples. He hesitated
for a moment, feeling more comfortable with his back against the door. Then he
marched, upright and square, down the steps. He crossed the lawn and approached
the gate. A little breeze seemed to ripple over the grass. Something moved near
him. "Stop a bit," said a Voice, and Adye stopped dead and his hand
tightened on the revolver.
"Well?" said Adye, white and grim, and every nerve tense.
"Oblige me by going back to the house," said the Voice, as tense
and grim as Adye's.
"Sorry," said Adye a little hoarsely, and moistened his lips with
his tongue. The Voice was on his left front, he thought. Suppose he were to
take his luck with a shot?
"What are you going for?" said the Voice, and there was a quick
movement of the two, and a flash of sunlight from the open lip of Adye's
pocket.
Adye desisted and thought. "Where I go," he said slowly, "is
my own business." The words were still on his lips, when an arm came round
his neck, his back felt a knee, and he was sprawling backward. He drew clumsily
and fired absurdly, and in another moment he was struck in the mouth and the
revolver wrested from his grip. He made a vain clutch at a slippery limb, tried
to struggle up and fell back. "Damn!" said Adye. The Voice laughed.
"I'd kill you now if it wasn't the waste of a bullet," it said. He
saw the revolver in mid-air, six feet off, covering him.
"Well?" said Adye, sitting up.
"Get up," said the Voice.
Adye stood up.
"Attention," said the Voice, and then fiercely, "Don't try
any games. Remember I can see your face if you can't see mine. You've got to go
back to the house."
"He won't let me in," said Adye.
"That's a pity," said the Invisible Man. "I've got no quarrel
with you."
Adye moistened his lips again. He glanced away from the barrel of the
revolver and saw the sea far off very blue and dark under the midday sun, the
smooth green down, the white cliff of the Head, and the multitudinous town, and
suddenly he knew that life was very sweet. His eyes came back to this little
metal thing hanging between heaven and earth, six yards away. "What am I
to do?" he said sullenly.
"What am I to do?" asked the Invisible Man. "You will
get help. The only thing is for you to go back."
"I will try. If he lets me in will you promise not to rush the
door?"
"I've got no quarrel with you," said the Voice.
Kemp had hurried upstairs after letting Adye out, and now crouching among
the broken glass and peering cautiously over the edge of the study window sill,
he saw Adye stand parleying with the Unseen. "Why doesn't he fire?"
whispered Kemp to himself. Then the revolver moved a little and the glint of
the sunlight flashed in Kemp's eyes. He shaded his eyes and tried to see the source
of the blinding beam.
"Surely!" he said, "Adye has given up the revolver."
"Promise not to rush the door," Adye was saying. "Don't push
a winning game too far. Give a man a chance."
"You go back to the house. I tell you flatly I will not promise anything."
Adye's decision seemed suddenly made. He turned towards the house, walking
slowly with his hands behind him. Kemp watched him—puzzled. The revolver
vanished, flashed again into sight, vanished again, and became evident on a
closer scrutiny as a little dark object following Adye. Then things happened
very quickly. Adye leapt backwards, swung around, clutched at this little
object, missed it, threw up his hands and fell forward on his face, leaving a
little puff of blue in the air. Kemp did not hear the sound of the shot. Adye
writhed, raised himself on one arm, fell forward, and lay still.
For a space Kemp remained staring at the quiet carelessness of Adye's
attitude. The afternoon was very hot and still, nothing seemed stirring in all
the world save a couple of yellow butterflies chasing each other through the
shrubbery between the house and the road gate. Adye lay on the lawn near the
gate. The blinds of all the villas down the hill-road were drawn, but in one
little green summer-house was a white figure, apparently an old man asleep.
Kemp scrutinised the surroundings of the house for a glimpse of the revolver,
but it had vanished. His eyes came back to Adye. The game was opening well.
Then came a ringing and knocking at the front door, that grew at last
tumultuous, but pursuant to Kemp's instructions the servants had locked
themselves into their rooms. This was followed by a silence. Kemp sat listening
and then began peering cautiously out of the three windows, one after another.
He went to the staircase head and stood listening uneasily. He armed himself
with his bedroom poker, and went to examine the interior fastenings of the
ground-floor windows again. Everything was safe and quiet. He returned to the
belvedere. Adye lay motionless over the edge of the gravel just as he had
fallen. Coming along the road by the villas were the housemaid and two
policemen.
Everything was deadly still. The three people seemed very slow in
approaching. He wondered what his antagonist was doing.
He started. There was a smash from below. He hesitated and went downstairs
again. Suddenly the house resounded with heavy blows and the splintering of
wood. He heard a smash and the destructive clang of the iron fastenings of the
shutters. He turned the key and opened the kitchen door. As he did so, the
shutters, split and splintering, came flying inward. He stood aghast. The
window frame, save for one crossbar, was still intact, but only little teeth of
glass remained in the frame. The shutters had been driven in with an axe, and now
the axe was descending in sweeping blows upon the window frame and the iron
bars defending it. Then suddenly it leapt aside and vanished. He saw the
revolver lying on the path outside, and then the little weapon sprang into the
air. He dodged back. The revolver cracked just too late, and a splinter from
the edge of the closing door flashed over his head. He slammed and locked the
door, and as he stood outside he heard Griffin shouting and laughing. Then the
blows of the axe with its splitting and smashing consequences, were resumed.
Kemp stood in the passage trying to think. In a moment the Invisible Man
would be in the kitchen. This door would not keep him a moment, and then—
A ringing came at the front door again. It would be the policemen. He ran
into the hall, put up the chain, and drew the bolts. He made the girl speak
before he dropped the chain, and the three people blundered into the house in a
heap, and Kemp slammed the door again.
"The Invisible Man!" said Kemp. "He has a revolver, with two
shots—left. He's killed Adye. Shot him anyhow. Didn't you see him on the lawn?
He's lying there."
"Who?" said one of the policemen.
"Adye," said Kemp.
"We came in the back way," said the girl.
"What's that smashing?" asked one of the policemen.
"He's in the kitchen—or will be. He has found an axe—"
Suddenly the house was full of the Invisible Man's resounding blows on the
kitchen door. The girl stared towards the kitchen, shuddered, and retreated
into the dining-room. Kemp tried to explain in broken sentences. They heard the
kitchen door give.
"This way," said Kemp, starting into activity, and bundled the
policemen into the dining-room doorway.
"Poker," said Kemp, and rushed to the fender. He handed the poker
he had carried to the policeman and the dining-room one to the other. He
suddenly flung himself backward.
"Whup!" said one policeman, ducked, and caught the axe on his
poker. The pistol snapped its penultimate shot and ripped a valuable Sidney
Cooper. The second policeman brought his poker down on the little weapon, as
one might knock down a wasp, and sent it rattling to the floor.
At the first clash the girl screamed, stood screaming for a moment by the
fireplace, and then ran to open the shutters—possibly with an idea of escaping
by the shattered window.
The axe receded into the passage, and fell to a position about two feet from
the ground. They could hear the Invisible Man breathing. "Stand away, you
two," he said. "I want that man Kemp."
"We want you," said the first policeman, making a quick step
forward and wiping with his poker at the Voice. The Invisible Man must have
started back, and he blundered into the umbrella stand.
Then, as the policeman staggered with the swing of the blow he had aimed,
the Invisible Man countered with the axe, the helmet crumpled like paper, and
the blow sent the man spinning to the floor at the head of the kitchen stairs.
But the second policeman, aiming behind the axe with his poker, hit something
soft that snapped. There was a sharp exclamation of pain and then the axe fell
to the ground. The policeman wiped again at vacancy and hit nothing; he put his
foot on the axe, and struck again. Then he stood, poker clubbed, listening
intent for the slightest movement.
He heard the dining-room window open, and a quick rush of feet within. His
companion rolled over and sat up, with the blood running down between his eye
and ear. "Where is he?" asked the man on the floor.
"Don't know. I've hit him. He's standing somewhere in the hall. Unless
he's slipped past you. Doctor Kemp—sir."
Pause.
"Doctor Kemp," cried the policeman again.
The second policeman began struggling to his feet. He stood up. Suddenly the
faint pad of bare feet on the kitchen stairs could be heard. "Yap!"
cried the first policeman, and incontinently flung his poker. It smashed a
little gas bracket.
He made as if he would pursue the Invisible Man downstairs. Then he thought
better of it and stepped into the dining-room.
"Doctor Kemp—" he began, and stopped short.
"Doctor Kemp's a hero," he said, as his companion looked over his
shoulder.
The dining-room window was wide open, and neither housemaid nor Kemp was to
be seen.
The second policeman's opinion of Kemp was terse and vivid.
Mr. Heelas, Mr. Kemp's nearest neighbour among the
villa holders, was asleep in his summer house when the siege of Kemp's house
began. Mr. Heelas was one of the sturdy minority who refused to believe
"in all this nonsense" about an Invisible Man. His wife, however, as
he was subsequently to be reminded, did. He insisted upon walking about his
garden just as if nothing was the matter, and he went to sleep in the afternoon
in accordance with the custom of years. He slept through the smashing of the
windows, and then woke up suddenly with a curious persuasion of something
wrong. He looked across at Kemp's house, rubbed his eyes and looked again. Then
he put his feet to the ground, and sat listening. He said he was damned, but
still the strange thing was visible. The house looked as though it had been
deserted for weeks—after a violent riot. Every window was broken, and every
window, save those of the belvedere study, was blinded by the internal
shutters.
"I could have sworn it was all right"—he looked at his
watch—"twenty minutes ago."
He became aware of a measured concussion and the clash of glass, far away in
the distance. And then, as he sat open-mouthed, came a still more wonderful
thing. The shutters of the drawing-room window were flung open violently, and
the housemaid in her outdoor hat and garments, appeared struggling in a frantic
manner to throw up the sash. Suddenly a man appeared beside her, helping
her—Dr. Kemp! In another moment the window was open, and the housemaid was
struggling out; she pitched forward and vanished among the shrubs. Mr. Heelas
stood up, exclaiming vaguely and vehemently at all these wonderful things. He
saw Kemp stand on the sill, spring from the window, and reappear almost
instantaneously running along a path in the shrubbery and stooping as he ran,
like a man who evades observation. He vanished behind a laburnum, and appeared
again clambering over a fence that abutted on the open down. In a second he had
tumbled over and was running at a tremendous pace down the slope towards Mr.
Heelas.
"Lord!" cried Mr. Heelas, struck with an idea; "it's that
Invisible Man brute! It's right, after all!"
With Mr. Heelas to think things like that was to act, and his cook watching
him from the top window was amazed to see him come pelting towards the house at
a good nine miles an hour. There was a slamming of doors, a ringing of bells,
and the voice of Mr. Heelas bellowing like a bull. "Shut the doors, shut
the windows, shut everything!—the Invisible Man is coming!" Instantly the
house was full of screams and directions, and scurrying feet. He ran himself to
shut the French windows that opened on the veranda; as he did so Kemp's head
and shoulders and knee appeared over the edge of the garden fence. In another
moment Kemp had ploughed through the asparagus, and was running across the
tennis lawn to the house.
"You can't come in," said Mr. Heelas, shutting the bolts.
"I'm very sorry if he's after you, but you can't come in!"
Kemp appeared with a face of terror close to the glass, rapping and then
shaking frantically at the French window. Then, seeing his efforts were
useless, he ran along the veranda, vaulted the end, and went to hammer at the
side door. Then he ran round by the side gate to the front of the house, and so
into the hill-road. And Mr. Heelas staring from his window—a face of horror—had
scarcely witnessed Kemp vanish, ere the asparagus was being trampled this way
and that by feet unseen. At that Mr. Heelas fled precipitately upstairs, and
the rest of the chase is beyond his purview. But as he passed the staircase
window, he heard the side gate slam.
Emerging into the hill-road, Kemp naturally took the downward direction, and
so it was he came to run in his own person the very race he had watched with
such a critical eye from the belvedere study only four days ago. He ran it
well, for a man out of training, and though his face was white and wet, his
wits were cool to the last. He ran with wide strides, and wherever a patch of
rough ground intervened, wherever there came a patch of raw flints, or a bit of
broken glass shone dazzling, he crossed it and left the bare invisible feet
that followed to take what line they would.
For the first time in his life Kemp discovered that the hill-road was
indescribably vast and desolate, and that the beginnings of the town far below
at the hill foot were strangely remote. Never had there been a slower or more
painful method of progression than running. All the gaunt villas, sleeping in
the afternoon sun, looked locked and barred; no doubt they were locked and
barred—by his own orders. But at any rate they might have kept a lookout for an
eventuality like this! The town was rising up now, the sea had dropped out of
sight behind it, and people down below were stirring. A tram was just arriving
at the hill foot. Beyond that was the police station. Was that footsteps he
heard behind him? Spurt.
The people below were staring at him, one or two were running, and his
breath was beginning to saw in his throat. The tram was quite near now, and the
"Jolly Cricketers" was noisily barring its doors. Beyond the tram
were posts and heaps of gravel—the drainage works. He had a transitory idea of
jumping into the tram and slamming the doors, and then he resolved to go for
the police station. In another moment he had passed the door of the "Jolly
Cricketers," and was in the blistering fag end of the street, with human
beings about him. The tram driver and his helper—arrested by the sight of his
furious haste—stood staring with the tram horses unhitched. Further on the
astonished features of navvies appeared above the mounds of gravel.
His pace broke a little, and then he heard the swift pad of his pursuer, and
leapt forward again. "The Invisible Man!" he cried to the navvies,
with a vague indicative gesture, and by an inspiration leapt the excavation and
placed a burly group between him and the chase. Then abandoning the idea of the
police station he turned into a little side street, rushed by a greengrocer's
cart, hesitated for the tenth of a second at the door of a sweetstuff shop, and
then made for the mouth of an alley that ran back into the main Hill Street
again. Two or three little children were playing here, and shrieked and
scattered at his apparition, and forthwith doors and windows opened and excited
mothers revealed their hearts. Out he shot into Hill Street again, three
hundred yards from the tram-line end, and immediately he became aware of a
tumultuous vociferation and running people.
He glanced up the street towards the hill. Hardly a dozen yards off ran a
huge navvy, cursing in fragments and slashing viciously with a spade, and hard
behind him came the tram conductor with his fists clenched. Up the street
others followed these two, striking and shouting. Down towards the town, men
and women were running, and he noticed clearly one man coming out of a
shop-door with a stick in his hand. "Spread out! Spread out!" cried
some one. Kemp suddenly grasped the altered condition of the chase. He stopped,
and looked round, panting. "He's close here!" he cried. "Form a
line across—"
He was hit hard under the ear, and went reeling, trying to face round
towards his unseen antagonist. He just managed to keep his feet, and he struck
a vain counter in the air. Then he was hit again under the jaw, and sprawled
headlong on the ground. In another moment a knee compressed his diaphragm, and
a couple of eager hands gripped his throat, but the grip of one was weaker than
the other; he grasped the wrists, heard a cry of pain from his assailant, and
then the spade of the navvy came whirling through the air above him, and struck
something with a dull thud. He felt a drop of moisture on his face. The grip at
his throat suddenly relaxed, and with a convulsive effort, Kemp loosed himself,
grasped a limp shoulder, and rolled uppermost. He gripped the unseen elbows
near the ground. "I've got him!" screamed Kemp. "Help!
Help—hold! He's down! Hold his feet!"
In another second there was a simultaneous rush upon the struggle, and a
stranger coming into the road suddenly might have thought an exceptionally
savage game of Rugby football was in progress. And there was no shouting after
Kemp's cry—only a sound of blows and feet and heavy breathing.
Then came a mighty effort, and the Invisible Man threw off a couple of his
antagonists and rose to his knees. Kemp clung to him in front like a hound to a
stag, and a dozen hands gripped, clutched, and tore at the Unseen. The tram
conductor suddenly got the neck and shoulders and lugged him back.
Down went the heap of struggling men again and rolled over. There was, I am
afraid, some savage kicking. Then suddenly a wild scream of "Mercy!
Mercy!" that died down swiftly to a sound like choking.
"Get back, you fools!" cried the muffled voice of Kemp, and there
was a vigorous shoving back of stalwart forms. "He's hurt, I tell you.
Stand back!"
There was a brief struggle to clear a space, and then the circle of eager
faces saw the doctor kneeling, as it seemed, fifteen inches in the air, and
holding invisible arms to the ground. Behind him a constable gripped invisible
ankles.
"Don't you leave go of en," cried the big navvy, holding a
blood-stained spade; "he's shamming."
"He's not shamming," said the doctor, cautiously raising his knee;
"and I'll hold him." His face was bruised and already going red; he
spoke thickly because of a bleeding lip. He released one hand and seemed to be
feeling at the face. "The mouth's all wet," he said. And then,
"Good God!"
He stood up abruptly and then knelt down on the ground by the side of the
thing unseen. There was a pushing and shuffling, a sound of heavy feet as fresh
people turned up to increase the pressure of the crowd. People now were coming
out of the houses. The doors of the "Jolly Cricketers" stood suddenly
wide open. Very little was said.
Kemp felt about, his hand seeming to pass through empty air. "He's not
breathing," he said, and then, "I can't feel his heart. His
side—ugh!"
Suddenly an old woman, peering under the arm of the big navvy, screamed
sharply. "Looky there!" she said, and thrust out a wrinkled finger.
And looking where she pointed, everyone saw, faint and transparent as though
it was made of glass, so that veins and arteries and bones and nerves could be
distinguished, the outline of a hand, a hand limp and prone. It grew clouded
and opaque even as they stared.
"Hullo!" cried the constable. "Here's his feet
a-showing!"
And so, slowly, beginning at his hands and feet and creeping along his limbs
to the vital centres of his body, that strange change continued. It was like
the slow spreading of a poison. First came the little white nerves, a hazy grey
sketch of a limb, then the glassy bones and intricate arteries, then the flesh
and skin, first a faint fogginess, and then growing rapidly dense and opaque.
Presently they could see his crushed chest and his shoulders, and the dim
outline of his drawn and battered features.
When at last the crowd made way for Kemp to stand erect, there lay, naked
and pitiful on the ground, the bruised and broken body of a young man about
thirty. His hair and brow were white—not grey with age, but white with the
whiteness of albinism—and his eyes were like garnets. His hands were clenched,
his eyes wide open, and his expression was one of anger and dismay.
"Cover his face!" said a man. "For Gawd's sake, cover that
face!" and three little children, pushing forward through the crowd, were
suddenly twisted round and sent packing off again.
Someone brought a sheet from the "Jolly Cricketers," and having
covered him, they carried him into that house. And there it was, on a shabby
bed in a tawdry, ill-lighted bedroom, surrounded by a crowd of ignorant and
excited people, broken and wounded, betrayed and unpitied, that Griffin, the
first of all men to make himself invisible, Griffin, the most gifted physicist
the world has ever seen, ended in infinite disaster his strange and terrible
career.
So ends the story of the strange and evil
experiments of the Invisible Man. And if you would learn more of him you must
go to a little inn near Port Stowe and talk to the landlord. The sign of the
inn is an empty board save for a hat and boots, and the name is the title of
this story. The landlord is a short and corpulent little man with a nose of
cylindrical proportions, wiry hair, and a sporadic rosiness of visage. Drink
generously, and he will tell you generously of all the things that happened to
him after that time, and of how the lawyers tried to do him out of the treasure
found upon him.
"When they found they couldn't prove who's money was which, I'm
blessed," he says, "if they didn't try to make me out a blooming
treasure trove! Do I look like a Treasure Trove? And then a gentleman
gave me a guinea a night to tell the story at the Empire Music 'All—just to
tell 'em in my own words—barring one."
And if you want to cut off the flow of his reminiscences abruptly, you can
always do so by asking if there weren't three manuscript books in the story. He
admits there were and proceeds to explain, with asseverations that everybody
thinks he has 'em! But bless you! he hasn't. "The Invisible Man it
was took 'em off to hide 'em when I cut and ran for Port Stowe. It's that Mr.
Kemp put people on with the idea of my having 'em."
And then he subsides into a pensive state, watches you furtively, bustles
nervously with glasses, and presently leaves the bar.
He is a bachelor man—his tastes were ever bachelor, and there are no women
folk in the house. Outwardly he buttons—it is expected of him—but in his more
vital privacies, in the matter of braces for example, he still turns to string.
He conducts his house without enterprise, but with eminent decorum. His
movements are slow, and he is a great thinker. But he has a reputation for
wisdom and for a respectable parsimony in the village, and his knowledge of the
roads of the South of England would beat Cobbett.
And on Sunday mornings, every Sunday morning, all the year round, while he
is closed to the outer world, and every night after ten, he goes into his bar
parlour, bearing a glass of gin faintly tinged with water, and having placed
this down, he locks the door and examines the blinds, and even looks under the
table. And then, being satisfied of his solitude, he unlocks the cupboard and a
box in the cupboard and a drawer in that box, and produces three volumes bound
in brown leather, and places them solemnly in the middle of the table. The
covers are weather-worn and tinged with an algal green—for once they sojourned
in a ditch and some of the pages have been washed blank by dirty water. The
landlord sits down in an armchair, fills a long clay pipe slowly—gloating over
the books the while. Then he pulls one towards him and opens it, and begins to
study it—turning over the leaves backwards and forwards.
His brows are knit and his lips move painfully. "Hex, little two up in
the air, cross and a fiddle-de-dee. Lord! what a one he was for
intellect!"
Presently he relaxes and leans back, and blinks through his smoke across the
room at things invisible to other eyes. "Full of secrets," he says.
"Wonderful secrets!"
"Once I get the haul of them—Lord!"
"I wouldn't do what he did; I'd just—well!" He pulls at his
pipe.
So he lapses into a dream, the undying wonderful dream of his life. And though Kemp has fished unceasingly, no human being save the landlord knows those books are there, with the subtle secret of invisibility and a dozen other strange secrets written therein. And none other will know of them until he dies.