Project Gutenberg's Two Days' Solitary Imprisonment, by Edward Bellamy

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Title: Two Days' Solitary Imprisonment
       1898

Author: Edward Bellamy

Release Date: September 21, 2007 [EBook #22706]
Last Updated: December 17, 2012

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TWO DAYS' SOLITARY IMPRISONMENT ***




Produced by David Widger





 




TWO DAYS' SOLITARY IMPRISONMENT  




By Edward Bellamy 

1898  





Mr. Joseph Kilgore was suffering from one of those spring influenzas which  make a man feel as if he were his own grandfather. His nose had acquired  the shape of a turnip and the complexion of a beet. All his bones ached as  if he had been soundly thrashed, and his eyes were weak and watery. Your  deadly disease is oftener than not a gentleman who takes your life without  mauling you, but the minor diseases are mere bruisers who just go in for  making one as uncomfortable and unpresentable as possible. Mr. Kilgore's  influenza had been coming on for several days, and when he woke up this  particular morning and heard the rain dripping on the piazza-roof just  under his bedroom-window, he concluded, like a sensible man, that he would  stay at home and nurse himself over the fire that day, instead of going to  the office. So he turned over and snoozed for an hour or two, luxuriating  in a sense of aches and pains just pronounced enough to make the warmth  and softness of the bed delightful.  

Toward noon, the edge of this enjoyment becoming dulled, he got up,  dressed, and came downstairs to the parlor, where his brother's wife (he  was a bachelor, living with a married brother) had considerately kindled  up a coal-fire in the grate for his benefit.  

After lying off in the rocking-chair till past dinner-time, he began to  feel better and consequently restless. Concluding that he would like to  read, he went rummaging about the bookcases for a likely-looking novel. At  length he found in the upper shelf of a closet a book calledRôles of a  Detective,containing various thrilling accounts of crimes and the  entanglement of criminals in the meshes of law and evidence.  

One story in particular made a strong impression on his mind. It was a  tale of circumstantial evidence, and about how it very nearly hung an  innocent man for a murder which he had no thought of committing. It struck  Joseph rather forcibly that this victim of circumstantial evidence was as  respectable and inoffensive a person as himself, and probably had never  any more thought of being in danger from the law. Circumstances had set  their trap for him while he was quite unconscious of peril, and he only  awoke to find himself in the toils. And from this he went on to reflect  upon the horrible but unquestionable fact that every year a certain  proportion, and perhaps a very considerable proportion, of those who  suffered the penalties of the law, and even the death-penalty, are  innocent men,victims of false or mistaken evidence. No man, however  wise or virtuous, can be sure that he will not be taken in this fearful  conscription of victims to the blind deity of justice. "None can tell,"  thought Joseph, with a shudder, "that the word he is saying, the road he  is turning, the appointment he is making, or whatever other innocent act  he is now engaged in, may not prove the last mesh in some self-woven  death-net, the closing link in some damning chain of evidence whose  devilish subtlety shall half convince him that he must be guilty as it  wholly convinces others."  

Timidity is generally associated with imaginativeness, if not its result,  and Joseph, although he concealed the fact pretty well under the mask of  reticence, was constitutionally very timid. He had an unprofitable habit  of taking every incident of possible embarrassment or danger that occurred  to his mind as the suggestion for imaginary situations of inconvenience or  peril, which he would then work out, fancying how he would feel and what  he would do, with the utmost elaboration, and often with really more  nervous excitement than he would be likely to experience if the events  supposed should really occur. So now, and all the more because he was a  little out of sorts, the suggestions of this story began to take the form  in his mind of an imaginary case of circumstantial evidence of which he  was the victim. His fancy worked up the details of a fictitious case  against himself, which he, although perfectly innocent, could meet with  nothing more than his bare denial.  

He imagined the first beginnings of suspicion; he saw it filming the eyes  of his acquaintances, then of his friends, and at last sicklying over the  face even of his brother Silas. In fancy he made frantic attempts to  regain the confidence of his friends, to break through the impalpable,  impenetrable barrier which the first stir of suspicion had put between  their minds and his. He cried, he begged, he pleaded. But in vain, all in  vain. Suspicion had made his appeals and adjurations sound even to his  friends as strange and meaningless as the Babel-builders' words of a  sudden became to each other. The yellow badge of suspicion once upon him,  all men kept afar, as if he were a fever-ship in quarantine. No solitary  imprisonment in a cell of stone could so utterly exclude him from the  fellowship of men as the invisible walls of this dungeon of suspicion. And  at last he saw himself giving up the hopeless struggle, yielding to his  fate in dumb despair, only praying that the end might come speedily,  perhaps even reduced to the abject-ness of confessing the crime he had not  committed, in order that he might at least have the pity of men, since he  could not regain their confidence. And so strongly had this vision taken  hold on him that his breath came irregularly, and his forehead was damp as  he drew his hand across it.  

As has been intimated, it was Mr. Joseph Kil-gore's very bad habit to  waste his nervous tissue in the conscientiously minute elaboration of such  painful imaginary situations as that above described, and in his present  experience there was nothing particularly novel or extraordinary for him.  It was the occurrence of a singular coincidence between this internal  experience and a wholly independent course of actual events, which made  that waking nightmare the beginning of a somewhat remarkable comedy, or,  more properly, a tragedy, of errors. For, as Joseph lay back in his chair,  in a state of nervous exhaustion and moral collapse, the parlor-door was  thrown open, and Mrs. Silas Kilgore, his sister-in-law, burst into the  room. She was quite pale, and her black eyes were fixed on Joseph's with  the eager intensity, as if seeking moral support, noticeable in those who  communicate startling news which they have not had time to digest.  

The effect of this apparition upon Joseph in his unstrung condition may be  readily imagined. He sprang up, much paler than Mrs. Kilgore, his lips  apart, and his eyes staring with the premonition of something shocking.  These symptoms of extraordinary excitement even before she had spoken, and  this air as if he had expected a shocking revelation, recurred to her mind  later, in connection with other circumstances, but just now she was too  full of her intelligence to dwell on anything else.  

"A man was murdered in our barn last night. They 've found the body!" she  exclaimed.  

As the meaning of her words broke on him, Joseph was filled with that sort  of mental confusion which one experiences when the scene or circumstances  of a dream recur in actual life. Was he still dreaming that ghostly vision  of suspicion and the death-trap of circumstances? Was this a mere  continuation of it? No, he was awake; his sister-in-law standing there,  with pallid face and staring eyes, was not an apparition. The horrid,  fatal reality which he had been imagining was actually upon him.  

"I did not do it!" dropped from his ashen lips.  

"You do it? Are you crazy? Who said anything about your doing it?" cried  the astounded woman.  

The ring of genuine amazement in her voice was scarcely needed to recall  Joseph to the practical bearing of his surroundings, and break the spell  of superstitious dread. The sound of his own words had done it. With a  powerful effort he regained something like self-control, and said, with a  forced laugh:  

"What an absurd thing for me to say! I don't know what I could have been  thinking of. Very odd, was it not? But, dear me! a man murdered in our  barn? You don't tell me! How terrible!"  

His constrained, overdone manner was not calculated to abate Mrs.  Kilgore's astonishment, and she continued to stare at him with an  expression in which a vague terror began to appear. There are few shorter  transitions than that from panic to anger. Seeing that her astonishment at  his reception of the news increased rather than diminished, he became  exasperated at the intolerable position in which he was placed. His face,  before so pale, flushed with anger.  

"Damnation! What are you staring at me that way for?" he cried fiercely.  

Mrs. Kilgore gave a little cry, half of indignation, half of fright, and  went out of the room, shutting the door after her.  

Joseph had ample opportunity to review the situation before he was again  disturbed, which, indeed, was not till some hours later, at dusk, when  Silas came home, and the tea-table was set. Silas had been promptly  summoned from his shop when the discovery of the body was made, and had  been busy all the afternoon with the police, the coroner, and the crowds  of visitors to the scene of the tragedy.  

The conversation at the tea-table ran entirely upon the various incidents  of the discovery, the inquest, and the measures of the police for the  apprehension of the criminal. Mrs. Kilgore was so full of questions that  she scarcely gave Silas time to answer, and Joseph flattered himself that  his comparative silence was not noticeable. Nevertheless, as they rose  from the table, Silas remarked:  

"You don't seem much interested in our murder, Joseph; you have n't asked  the first question about it."  

Mrs. Kilgore was just leaving the room, and she turned her head to see how  he would answer. But he, too, turned off the matter by saying something  about Maria's loquaciousness having left him no chance. After tea the  little family circle was gathered in the parlor. Mrs. Kilgore was sewing;  Silas read the newspaper, and Joseph sat up by the fire. From time to  time, as he glanced around, he caught Mrs. Kilgore's eyes studying him  very intently. Her manner indicated that her indignation at his behavior  and language earlier in the afternoon had been quite neutralized by her  curiosity as to its cause.  

There 's nothing in the paper to-night but the murder, and I know that  already,exclaimed Silas, finally. "Maria, where's there something to  read? Hullo! what's this?"  

He had taken up from the table the story of circumstantial evidence which  Joseph had been reading that morning.  

"Why, Maria, here's that murder-book you wouldn't let me finish last  summer for fear I'd murder you some night. Who on earth hunted up that  book of all books, to-day of all days?"  

"I did," replied Joseph, clearing his throat, in order to speak with a  natural inflection.  

"You did?" exclaimed Silas.  

"You must have looked the house over to find it, for I hid it carefully,"  said Mrs. Kilgore, looking sharply at him. "What made you so anxious to  get it?"  

I was not particularly anxious. I was merely looking for something to  read,said Joseph, making a pretense of yawning, as if the matter was a  very trivial one.  

"I suppose the murder brought it to his mind," said Silas.  

"Why, no!" exclaimed Mrs. Kilgore quickly. "You must have been reading it  before the murder. Now that I remember, I saw it in your hands."  

Before the murder, were you, Joseph? Why, that's almost enough to make  one feel superstitious,said Silas, turning around in his chair, so as to  look fairly at him.  

Joseph had half a mind to make a clean breast of the matter then and  there, and explain to them how curiously the reading of that book had  affected him. But he reflected that Silas was rather unimaginative, and  would probably be more mystified than enlightened by his explanation.  

I do believe it was reading that book which made you act so queerly when  I brought you in the news of the murder,pursued Mrs. Kilgore.  

"How is that? How did he act queerly?" asked Silas.  

"I am not aware that I acted queerly at all," said Joseph doggedly.  

He knew well enough he had acted queerly, and did not mean to deny that;  but, as children and confused persons often do, he answered to the  underlying motive rather than the language. He only thought of denying the  inference of suspicion that her words seemed to him to suggest. But to  Mrs. Kilgore he very naturally seemed to be prevaricating.  

"Why, Joseph!" said she, in a raised voice, and with a slight asperity;  "you know how you jumped up, looking like a ghost, the moment I opened the  door, and the first thing you said after I 'd told you that they 'd found  a murdered man in the barn, wasWhy, Joseph, what's the matter?"  

But I must go back a little. When the conversation turned on the book and  Joseph's connection with it, a minute or so previous, Silas had quite  naturally glanced over at his brother, and, as the talk went on, his  glance had become a somewhat concentrated gaze, although expressive of  nothing but the curiosity and slight wonder which the circumstances  suggested. It would not do to have Silas think that he avoided his eyes,  and so Joseph had, as soon as he felt this gaze, turned his own face  rather sharply toward it. He had meant merely to meet his brother's look  in a natural and unaffected manner. But, although never more sensible of  just what such a manner would be, he was utterly unable to compass it. He  was perfectly aware that the expression of his eyes was much too serious  and challenging,and yet he could not, for the soul of him, modify  it. Nor did he dare to withdraw his gaze after it had once met his  brother's, although knowing that it was fast becoming a fierce stare, and  perceiving that Silas had already noticed something peculiar in it. For to  drop his eyes would be utter discomfiture and rout. As Mrs. Kilgore  alluded to his queer demeanor when she told him the news, his face began  to flush with the anticipation of the revelation that was coming at this  most unfavorable moment, even while his eyes were locked with the already  startled ones of Silas. As she went on, the flush covered the lower part  of his face, and rose like a spring-tide up his cheeks, and lent a fierce,  congested glare to his eyes. He felt how woeful and irretrievable a thing  it would be for him just then to lose his countenance, and at the thought  the flush burned deeper and merged higher. It overspread his high, bald,  intellectual forehead, and incarnadined his sconce up to the very top of  it. At this moment it was that Mrs. Kilgore broke off her narrative with  the exclamation, "Why, Joseph, what's the matter?"  

At her words it seemed as if every drop of blood in his body poured into  his face. He could endure it no longer. He rose abruptly, strode out of  the parlor, and went to his room, although it was but eight o'clock, and  he had no fire there. If he had staid another moment he must have brained  Silas and his wife with the poker, such an ungovernable anger boiled up in  him with the sense of his causeless, shameful discomfiture.  

As Joseph left the parlor the eyes of Silas and his wife met each other,  his dull with bewilderment and terror at a spectral fear; hers keen  with a definite suspicion. But even her loquacity was subdued by a real  fright. She had nothing to say. Her sensation was like that of one who,  hunting a hare, stumbles upon a wolf. She had been both offended and made  curious by Joseph's demeanor that afternoon, but the horrid idea that  within a moment had been suggested to both their minds had so little  occurred to her as a serious possibility that she was even on the point of  rallying Joseph on it before her husband. Some time after he had left the  parlor Silas asked, with averted face:  

"What was it that he said when you told him the news?" and then she  repeated his words.  

And Joseph, sitting wild-eyed upon his bed in the darkness in the room  above, red no longer, but pale as death, heard the murmur of the voices,  and knew that she was telling him. No one of the household slept much that  night, except Mrs. Kil-gore. Whenever she awoke she heard her husband  tossing restlessly, but she dared not ask him what was the matter. In vain  did Silas rehearse to himself all through the night-hours how petty were  the trifles in Joseph's demeanor which had disturbed him. They were of the  sort of trifles which create that species of certainty known as moral  certainty,the strongest of all in the mind it occupies, although so  incapable of being communicated to others. It mattered little how much  evidence there was, if it sufficed to lodge the faintest trace of  suspicion in his mind. For, like some poisons, an atom of suspicion is as  fatal as the largest quantity, Nay, perhaps, even more surely so, for  against great suspicion the mind often takes arms and makes valiant head;  but a little doubt, by its timid and hesitant demeanor, disarms  opposition, and is readily entertained. And all that night, lying awake,  and knowing that Silas was sleepless just the other side of the partition,  and that the fungus of suspicion was moment by moment overgrowing his  mind, he could hardly wait for morning, but would fain have rushed, even  now in the darkness, to his bedside to cry: "I did not do it! Believe me,  brother, I did not do it!"  

In the morning, however, the sun shone brightly into his room, and last  night's events and misunderstandings seemed like a bad dream. He went  downstairs almost cheery. He did not find Silas, but Mrs. Kilgore was  about. He was rather startled to observe the entire change in her  demeanor. Yesterday she was constantly following him up with her sharp  black eyes and brisk questions and exclamations, but now she seemed  frightened, acted in a constrained manner, and avoided his eyes.  

"Where is Silas?" he asked, as they sat down to table.  

He said that there was something he must see to at the shop before work  began, so he had an early breakfast,replied Mrs. Kilgore, with her eyes  on her plate.  

Had she been looking up, she would have seen a piteous constriction in the  muscles of Joseph's face. His heart was sick, and all his regained courage  sank away. It was no bad dream. Silas was afraid to meet him. He left his  meal untasted, and went to the office. A dozen acquaintances stopped him  on his way down-street to ask about the murder; and all day long somebody  was dropping in to pester him on the same subject. He told them with a  dull, abstracted air all the fresh details he knew, but felt all the time  as if he cheated each auditor of the vital part of the matter, in that he  failed to shout after him:  

"Silas suspects me of it!"  

Silas had, indeed, left the house early for the purpose of avoiding his  brother. He was in a condition of mind and nerve in which he did not dare  to meet him. At tea the brothers met for the first time since the night  previous. There was a constraint between them like that between strangers,  but stronger and more chilling far than ever that is. There is no chill  like that which comes between friends, and the nearer the friends the more  deathly the cold. Silas made a little effort to speak of business-matters,  but could not keep it up, and soon a silence settled over the party, only  broken by the words of table-service. Mrs. Kilgore sat pale and frightened  all through the meal without venturing a single phrase, and scarcely  looking up from her plate.  

The silence was of that kind which all felt to be more expressive than the  loudest, most explicit language could be,more merciless than any  form of verbal accusation. Such silence is a terribly perfect medium, in  which souls are compelled to touch each other, resent as they may the  contact. Several times Joseph was on the point of rising and rushing from  the table. How many more such meals could he stand or could they stand?  All of them recognized that the situation had become perceptibly more  serious and more pronounced on account of that silent tea-table.  

There was in particular not the slightest allusion made by any one to the  murder, which, seeing that it had happened but yesterday, and would  naturally still have been an engrossing topic, was an omission so pointed  as to be an open charge of guilt. There is such a thing as emphasizing a  topic by suppressing it, as letters are sunk into stone. The omission  impressed Silas as it did Joseph, but, regarding it from his point of  view, it did not occur to him but that Joseph was the one solely  responsible for it. He, Silas, had refrained from reference to it because  his suspicions in regard to Joseph made the topic unendurable. But he  could not imagine that Joseph could have had any other motive for his  silence on the subject but a guilty conscience,some secret  knowledge of the crime. Thus regarded, it was a terrible confirmation.  That a perception that he was suspected might cause an innocent man to act  very much as if he were conscious of guilt did not occur to Silas, as,  perhaps, it would have failed to occur to most persons in just his  position.  

After leaving the tea-table the brothers went together into the parlor,  according to the family custom. They took their accustomed seats on  opposite sides of the fireplace, but there was no conversation. A veil was  between them. Both were thinking of the same thing,thinking of it  intensely,and each knew that the other was thinking of it, and yet  neither for worlds could have commanded the courage to speak of it. The  suspicion had grown definite in Silas's mind, and yet, whenever he brought  himself to the point of putting it in words, it suddenly seemed  impossible, cruel, and absurd. But if Silas found it impossible to speak,  far more so it seemed to Joseph.  

To charge another with suspecting us is half to confess ourselves worthy  of suspicion. It is demoralizing,it is to abandon the pride of  conscious rectitude. To deny an accusation is to concede to it a  possibility, a color of reason; and Joseph shrank with unutterable  repugnance from that. He felt that he could be torn limb from limb sooner  than betray by a word that he recognized the existence of suspicion so  abominable. Besides, of what avail would be a denial without evidence to  disprove a suspicion which had arisen without evidence? It was a thing too  impalpable to contend with. As well fight a fog as seek to destroy by mere  denial suspicion so vague, unsubstantial, and subtile, as that which  enveloped him. Silas would, of course, eagerly accept his denial; he well  knew how he would spring to his side, how warm and firm would be his  hand-clasp, and how great, perhaps, his momentary relief. But he was,  after all, but human, and no man can control his doubts. Silas would still  be unable, when he thought the matter over, to help the feeling that there  was, after all, something very strange about his conduct from first to  last. It is the subtiler nature of doubt to penetrate the heart more  profoundly than confidence, and to underlie it. No generous St. George of  faith can reach the nether den where it lurks. Or, rather, is it like the  ineradicable witch-grass which, though it be hewed off at the surface,  still lives at the root, and springs forth luxuriantly again at the first  favoring season?  

Moreover, Joseph hoped that some circumstance, the detection of the  murderer, or a healthier moral tone, might dissipate the cloud of  suspicion between them, and then it would be far better not to have  spoken, for, once put in words, the hateful thing would ever remain a  mutual memory, never again to be denied, and which might come up to their  minds whenever they looked each other in the eye thereafter. And so the  brothers sat opposite each other in silence, their faces growing grayer as  the clock ticked.  

"The weather is growing cooler again," said Joseph, at last, rising to go  to his room.  

It was at least two hours before his usual bedtime, but he could sit there  no longer.  

"Yes, I think we shall have a frost," replied Silas, and the brothers  parted.  

After Joseph had gone, Mrs. Kilgore came into the parlor and sat down with  some sewing. She waited for her husband to speak and tell her if Joseph  had said anything. But he sat there staring at the wall, and took no  notice of her. Although she knew so well what had been preying upon his  mind since last evening, yet he had not once referred to the matter, and  she had not dared to do so. It was hard for a talkative little lady like  her to understand this reticence about a matter so deeply felt. She could  not comprehend that there may be griefs so ghastly that we dare not lift  from them the veil of silence. She wanted to "talk it over" a little. She  felt that would do Silas good, because she knew it would be a relief to  her. Nor was she insensible to the gratification it would afford her  vanity to discuss so serious a matter with her husband, whose general tone  with her was one of jest and pleasantry, to the disparagement of her  intellectual powers, as she thought. So, after glancing up several times  timidly at Silas's still set profile, she said, in a weighty little voice:  

"Don't you think Joseph behaves very strangely about the murder?" Her  words seemed to be several seconds in making an impression on Silas's  mind, and then he slowly turned his face full upon her. It was a terrible  look. The squared jaw, the drawn lips, the dull, distant stare, repulsed  her as one might repulse a stranger intermeddling with a bitter private  grief. Who was she, to come between him and his brother? He did not seem  to think it worth while to say anything to explain so eloquent a glance,  but immediately faced about again, as if dismissing the interruption from  his mind. Mrs. Kilgore did not try to make any more conversation, but went  to her bedroom and cried herself to sleep.  

But Silas sat in his chair in the parlor, and took no note of the hours  till the lamp spluttered and went out. All through the evening, in  Joseph's room, which was directly above, he had heard him walking to and  fro, to and fro, sitting down awhile, and then starting again; and if the  pacing had not finally come to an end, Silas could not have gone to bed,  for his heart went out to his brother wrestling there alone with his  dreadful secret, and he could not rest till he thought that he, too, was  at rest.  

Indeed, for the very reason that Joseph was so dear to him, and he felt  nothing could change that, he actually hesitated the less to admit these  horrible suspicions. Love is impatient of uncertainly, and would rather  presume the guilt of a friend from its longing to pour itself out in pity  and tenderness, than restrain itself while judgment scrutinizes evidence  and decides by a straw's weight.  

A practical reflection, moreover, had occurred to Silas.  

If Joseph had reallyhe did not dare to say to himself whatthen  it was of the utmost importance that they should quickly understand each  other, so as to take steps to place him in safety. His desire to share  Joseph's horrible secret was like the feeling with which one would fain  uncover a friend's loathsome disease in order to help him. Before he went  to sleep that night he resolved, therefore, that he would win his  confidence by letting him see in every possible way, short of actual  words, that he suspected the true state of things, and that Joseph might  still confide in him as a faithful brother who would stand by him in the  worst emergency.  

On first meeting him the following morning he began to carry out this  project so worthy of fraternal devotion. He sought occasion to shake hands  with Joseph, and gave a meaning pressure to his clasp. At breakfast he was  the only one who talked, and endeavored by his manner to let Joseph  understand that he perfectly comprehended the situation, and was talking  to cover his embarrassment and prevent Mrs. Kilgore from suspecting  anything. Several times also he managed to catch his brother's eye, and  give him a glance implying sympathy and mutual understanding. This  demeanor added the last touch to Joseph's exasperation.  

Evading Silas's evident intention of walking down-street, he got away  alone, and took both dinner and tea at a restaurant, to put off meeting  his brother and sister-in-law as long as possible. He lingered long over  his tea in the darkest, loneliest corner of the eating-house, for the  prospect, no longer to be avoided, of returning home to confront his  sister-in-law's frightened face and Silas's pathetic glances appeared  intolerable. Wild ideas of flying from the city and returning never, or  not until the truth about the murder had come to light, occurred to him.  He even began to arrange what sort of a letter he should write to Silas.  But men of forty, especially of Joseph's temperament, who have moved in  the same business and domestic ruts all their lives, do not readily make  up their minds to bold steps of this sort. To endure suffering or  inconvenience is more natural than to change their settled habits. So it  all ended in his going home at about eight o'clock, and being greatly  relieved to find some callers there.  

All three of this strangely stricken family, indeed, shared that feeling.  It was such a rest from the nervous strain whenever either or both were  left alone with Joseph! The earnestness with which Mrs. Kilgore pressed  her guests to stay a little longer was so unusual and apparently uncalled  for that I fancy Mr. and Mrs. Smith had a vague suspicion that they were  being made game of. But they would have been disabused of that impression  could they have appreciated the sinking of heart with which their hosts  heard the frontdoor close, and realized that they were again left to  themselves. Only one thing had occurred to mar the relief which the call  had afforded. The topic of the murder had been exhausted before Joseph  entered, but, just as she was leaving, Mrs. Smith made a return to it,  saying:  

"Mrs. Kilgore, I was telling my husband I should think you must be scared  to be in the house, for fear the murderer might still be hanging around."  

Mrs. Kilgore shuddered, and cast an instantaneous, wholly involuntary  glance at Joseph. Her husband intercepted it, and, catching his eye, she  saw an expression in it as if he could strangle her for what was really  only the fault of her nerves. She stammered something, and the bustle of  the retiring guests covered her confusion well enough.  

Unfortunately, Joseph, too, had caught that sudden, terrified glance of  his sister-in-law's at him, and it affected him more than anything that  had occurred in either of the two days since the murder. As the guests  took their leave, his head dropped on his breast, and his arms fell by the  sides of his chair. Mr. Kilgore wanted to send his wife from the room, but  his voice stuck in his throat, his tongue refused to move. They waited a  moment, and then Joseph said:  

"Send for the police! For God's sake, take me out of this! I can't stand  it any longer!"  

It was not yet nine o'clock, and a boy came by in the street crying:  

"Extra! The Kilgore barn murderer captured! Full confession!"  

Although the words were perfectly audible through the lowered windows to  all in the room, Mrs. Kilgore was the only one who took any mental  cognizance of them. Nor did either of the men, who sat there like stones,  take note of her as she left the room. A minute later they heard her  scream, and she ran back with the open paper in her hands.  

"He did not do it! He is crazy! They have found the murderer!"  

Silas fixed an incredulous, questioning stare upon his wife, and then  turned quickly toward his brother. As for Joseph, at first and for several  moments, he gave no sign that he had heard at all. Then he slowly raised  his eyes to his brother's face with a deliberate, cruel gaze of  contemptuous sarcasm and cold aversion. The first effect of this great  relief was to flood his mind with bitter wrath at those who had done him  the great wrong from which, no thanks to them, he had been rescued.  

Mrs. Kilgore hastily read aloud, in a breathless voice, the newspaper  account It seemed that two tramps had taken refuge in the barn from the  storm that had raged the night of the murder, and getting into some  quarrel before morning, one had stabbed the other and fled, only to be  captured two days later and confess everything. When Mrs. Kilgore ceased  reading, Joseph said:  

"It must be a great disappointment for you that they are not going to hang  me for it. I sincerely condole with you."  

Mrs. Kilgore cried, "Oh, don't!" and Silas made a gesture of deprecation,  but both felt that Joseph had a right to revile them as he chose, and they  had no right to complain. But he, even while he could not deny himself the  gratification of a little cruel reproach, knew that they were not to be  blamed, that they had been as much the victims of a fatality as himself,  and that this was one of those peculiarly exasperating wrongs which do not  leave the sufferer even the satisfaction of being angry. Soon he got up  and walked across the room, stretched himself, drew his hand over his  forehead, and said:  

"I feel as if I had just been dug up after being buried alive."  

At this sign of returning equanimity, Silas took courage and ventured to  say:  

"I know we 've been a pair of crazy fools, Joe, but you 're a little to  blame. What's made you act so queerly? You won't deny that you have acted  so?"  

Joseph smiled,one does n't appreciate the pure luxury of a smile  until he has been deprived of it for a while,lit a cigar, sat down  with his legs over the arm of his arm-chair,he had not indulged in  an unconstrained posture for two days,and told his side of the  story. He explained how, thanks to that tale he was reading, and the  ghastly reverie it suggested, his nerves were all on edge when Mrs.  Kilgore burst in with a piece of news whose extraordinary coincidence with  his train of thought had momentarily thrown him off his balance; and he  tried to make them see that, after that first scene, all the rest was a  logical sequence.  

Mrs. Kilgore, by virtue of her finer feminine nervous organization,  understood him so readily that he saw he had made a mistake in not  unbosoming himself to her at first. But Silas evidently did not so easily  take his idea.  

But why did n't you just tell us that you had n't done it, and end the  misunderstanding at one blow?he asked.  

"Why, don't you see," replied Joseph, "that to deny a thing before you are  distinctly suspected of it is to suggest suspicion; while to deny it  afterward, unless you have proof to offer, is useless?"  

"What should we have come to but for the capture of the real murderer?"  cried Mrs. Kilgore, with a shudder. cried Mrs. Kilgore, with a shudder.  









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