登陆注册
18370100000031

第31章 THE STREET OF THE BLANK WALL.(8)

Deprived by this blow of what he no doubt had come to consider his natural means of support, and his sister, fortunately for herself, being well out of his reach, he next fixed upon his brother Michael as his stay-by. Michael, weak, timid, and not perhaps without some remains of boyish affection for a strong, handsome, elder brother, foolishly yielded. The demands, of course, increased, until, in the end, it came almost as a relief when the man's vicious life led to his getting mixed up with a crime of a particularly odious nature.

He was anxious now for his own sake to get away, and Michael, with little enough to spare for himself, provided him with the means, on the solemn understanding that he would never return.

But the worry and misery of it all had left young Michael a broken man. Unable to concentrate his mind any longer upon his profession, his craving was to get away from all his old associations--to make a fresh start in life. It was Ellenby who suggested London and the ship furnishing business, where Michael's small remaining capital would be of service. The name of Hepworth would be valuable in shipping circles, and Ellenby, arguing this consideration, but chiefly with the hope of giving young Michael more interest in the business, had insisted that the firm should be Hepworth and Co.

They had not been started a year before the man returned, as usual demanding more money. Michael, acting under Ellenby's guidance, refused in terms that convinced his brother that the game of bullying was up. He waited a while, and then wrote pathetically that he was ill and starving. If only for the sake of his young wife, would not Michael come and see them?

This was the first they had heard of his marriage. There was just a faint hope that it might have effected a change, and Michael, against Ellenby's advice, decided to go. In a miserable lodging-house in the East End he found the young wife, but not his brother, who did not return till he was on the point of leaving. In the interval the girl seems to have confided her story to Michael.

She had been a singer, engaged at a music-hall in Rotterdam. There Alex Hepworth, calling himself Charlie Martin, had met her and made love to her. When he chose, he could be agreeable enough, and no doubt her youth and beauty had given to his protestations, for the time being, a genuine ring of admiration and desire. It was to escape from her surroundings, more than anything else, that she had consented. She was little more than a child, and anything seemed preferable to the nightly horror to which her life exposed her.

He had never married her. At least, that was her belief at the time. During his first drunken bout he had flung it in her face that the form they had gone through was mere bunkum. Unfortunately for her, this was a lie. He had always been coolly calculating. It was probably with the idea of a safe investment that he had seen to it that the ceremony had been strictly legal.

Her life with him, so soon as the first novelty of her had worn off, had been unspeakable. The band that she wore round her neck was to hide where, in a fit of savagery, because she had refused to earn money for him on the streets, he had tried to cut her throat. Now that she had got back to England she intended to leave him. If he followed and killed her she did not care.

It was for her sake that young Hepworth eventually offered to help his brother again, on the condition that he would go away by himself. To this the other agreed. He seems to have given a short display of remorse. There must have been a grin on his face as he turned away. His cunning eyes had foreseen what was likely to happen. The idea of blackmail was no doubt in his mind from the beginning. With the charge of bigamy as a weapon in his hand, he might rely for the rest of his life upon a steady and increasing income.

Michael saw his brother off as a second-class passenger on a ship bound for the Cape. Of course, there was little chance of his keeping his word, but there was always the chance of his getting himself knocked on the head in some brawl. Anyhow, he would be out of the way for a season, and the girl, Lola, would be left. A month later he married her, and four months after that received a letter from his brother containing messages to Mrs. Martin, "from her loving husband, Charlie," who hoped before long to have the pleasure of seeing her again.

Inquiries through the English Consul in Rotterdam proved that the threat was no mere bluff. The marriage had been legal and binding.

What happened on the night of the murder, was very much as my friend had reconstructed it. Ellenby, reaching the office at his usual time the next morning, had found Hepworth waiting for him. There he had remained in hiding until one morning, with dyed hair and a slight moustache, he had ventured forth.

Had the man's death been brought about by any other means, Ellenby would have counselled his coming forward and facing his trial, as he himself was anxious to do; but, viewed in conjunction with the relief the man's death must have been to both of them, that loaded revolver was too suggestive of premeditation. The isolation of the house, that conveniently near pond, would look as if thought of beforehand. Even if pleading extreme provocation, Michael escaped the rope, a long term of penal servitude would be inevitable.

Nor was it certain that even then the woman would go free. The murdered man would still, by a strange freak, be her husband; the murderer--in the eye of the law--her lover.

Her passionate will had prevailed. Young Hepworth had sailed for America. There he had no difficulty in obtaining employment--of course, under another name--in an architects office; and later had set up for himself. Since the night of the murder they had not seen each other till some three weeks ago.

* * *

I never saw the woman again. My friend, I believe, called on her.

Hepworth had already returned to America, and my friend had succeeded in obtaining for her some sort of a police permit that practically left her free.

Sometimes of an evening I find myself passing through the street.

And always I have the feeling of having blundered into an empty theatre--where the play is ended.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 网游之至尊生活玩家

    网游之至尊生活玩家

    副职业也能创造辉煌努力!勤奋!就可以登上人生巅峰
  • 爱的切入点

    爱的切入点

    《爱的切入点》作者张记书的小小说里知识性的因素、新闻性的因素较多,可以说,他是靠一种机智的小小说构思来展示一种小小说的理性来启迪读者。张记书《不鼓掌的人》的构思、叙述以及立意的表达都十分理智和理性,不鼓掌的汉子用他独特的动作和神态对那种好大喜功、只追求表面政绩的领导是个直白的批评。张记书的小小说还注重情感与理性并重,双管齐下。《冠军轶事》一文,他在一种表面上不点破的情感故事罩机智地显影了一个金教授的教育艺术和阔大的爱心,情感性的感人故事包涵了一个理性的小小说内核。
  • 强势夺爱

    强势夺爱

    沐风曾经和七爷打过一场,痛快的打过一场,七爷曾说过,真正展现实力的他,像是一个浴血修罗,那一次他将七爷打到内出血。七爷的身手自小训练,肖任和肖笑联手都只能七爷打个持平,七爷说他打架是在搏命,狠劲从骨血里透出来的。他就是如此一个血腥的男人,却为了一个女人放下了自己的血腥变成了一个温柔的男人……
  • 帮主,可敢一战

    帮主,可敢一战

    一次误会,让自恋“女侠”妄自思宁,与“呆蠢冷艳美”的踏歌暮归结仇,期间,二人总能有意无意地遇上,接着死战到底。怎奈妄自思宁总是技不如人,每每喊打喊杀,偷袭群殴无所不用其极,依旧败北,一次次的较量,一次次的相遇,只有一句:下次,有本事你等着下次啊!走着瞧!!!哎,衣服又掉耐久了……
  • 嫡枝难缠:冷帝欺上身

    嫡枝难缠:冷帝欺上身

    前世,她助纣为虐,逆天改命,倾尽所有换来灭门之灾。今生,她手握重权斗渣虐菜,手撕绿茶婊,不亦乐乎。奈何,却惹上了某男,轰不走,吵不散,只因她的一句缘分天定。某女气急败坏,“王爷,你能滚远点么?”某男邪魅一笑,揽她入怀,双双滚倒床榻,“原来爱妃喜欢滚的,够远么?”“……”
  • 《中国近现代史纲要》百题问答

    《中国近现代史纲要》百题问答

    本书分“从鸦片战争到五四运动前夜”、“从五四运动到新中国成立”、“从新中国成立到社会主义现代化建设新时期”三部分,对中国近现代史发展中的若干重大热点和难点问题进行了解析。
  • 供诸天科仪

    供诸天科仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 爱上咖啡师

    爱上咖啡师

    这是国内首创、业界推崇的“咖啡师主题”第一读物!铂澜咖啡学院创始人、著名咖啡专家、畅销书作家齐鸣多年实践、厚积薄发,将自己从业近10年的咖啡实践、咖啡师培训、咖啡馆经营等宝贵经验倾囊相授。本书以“咖啡师”为主题线索展开论述,将咖啡专业技术与咖啡、咖啡馆文艺气质相结合,不仅深入讲解了咖啡师吧台实操所需的各项核心技能,还从多个侧面全方位展现了咖啡馆中所需的各种知识和能力。同时,专门介绍了咖啡师职业发展、咖啡行业历程与前景等知识,并开辟有“咖啡师群英会”一章,全景式展现了全球一线优秀咖啡师的咖啡之道。这里有咖啡师想知道、所需要的一切!
  • 焚经坑神

    焚经坑神

    出身于九幽之地,成长于俗世之中,一个生性疲怠的少年,原本只想在这大陆上度过平凡的一生,但是作为天演之数遁去的一个变数,他注定历尽劫难,当看清了苍穹之上的冷酷无情后,毅然踏上了弑天之路!既然天不容我,那就炼化诸天,地不容我,那就打个地陷山崩!
  • 三燕大慕容

    三燕大慕容

    三国没落,晋朝崛起,五胡乱华,开启了一个大动荡大融合的时代,来自大鲜卑山的鲜卑慕容,一时间英雄辈出,登上了历史的舞台,以摧枯拉朽之势演绎出一幕幕生动鲜活的人间神话。