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Title: The Collaborators
       1896

Author: Robert S. Hichens

Release Date: November 8, 2007 [EBook #23421]
Last Updated: December 17, 2016

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COLLABORATORS ***




Produced by David Widger





 










THE COLLABORATORS.  

By Robert S. Hichens  




1896  










Contents  

I.

II.

III.















I.  


Why shouldnt we collaborate? said Henley in his most matter-of-fact  way, as Big Ben gave voice to the midnight hour. Everybody does it  nowadays. Two heads may be really better than one, although I seldom  believe in the truth of accepted sayings. Your head is a deuced good one,  Andrew; butnow dont get angryyou are too excitable and too  intense to be left quite to yourself, even in book-writing, much less in  the ordinary affairs of life. I think you were born to collaborate, and to  collaborate with me. You can give me everything I lack, and I can give you  a little of the sense of humour, and act as a drag upon the wheel.  

None of the new humour, Jack; that shall never appear in a book with my  name attached to it. Dickens I can tolerate. He is occasionally  felicitous. The story of The Dying Clown, for instance, crude as it is  it has a certain grim tragedy about it. But the new humour came from the  pit, and should goto the Sporting Times.  

Now, dont get excited. The book is not in proof yetperhaps never  will be. You need not be afraid. My humour will probably be old enough.  But what do you y to the idea?  

Andrew Trenchard sat for awhile in silent consideration. His legs were  stretched out, and his slippered feet rested on the edge of the brass  fender. A nimbus of smoke surrounded his swarthy features, his shock of  black hair, his large, rather morose, dark eyes. He was a man of about  twenty-five, with an almost horribly intelligent face, so observant that  he tried people, so acute that he frightened them. His intellect was never  for a moment at rest, unless in sleep. He devoured himself with his own  emotions, and others with his analysis of theirs. His mind was always  crouching to spring, except when it was springing. He lived an irregular  life, and all horrors had a subtle fascination for him. As Henley had  remarked, he possessed little sense of humour, but immense sense of evil  and tragedy and sorrow. He seldom found time to calmly regard the drama of  life from the front. He was always at the stage-door, sending in his card,  and requesting admittance behind the scenes. What was on the surface only  interested him in so far as it indicated what was beneath, and in all  mental matters his normal procedure was that of the disguised detective.  Stupid people disliked him. Clever people distrusted him while they  admired him. The mediocre suggested that he was liable to go off his head,  and the profound predicted for him fame, tempered by suicide.  

Most people considered him interesting, and a few were sincerely attached  to him. Among these last was Henley, who had been his friend at Oxford,  and had taken rooms in the same house with him in Smiths Square,  Westminster. Both the young men were journalists. Henley, who, as he had  acknowledged, possessed a keen sense of humour, and was not so much  ashamed of it as he ought to have been, wrotevery occasionallyfor  Punch, and more often for Fun, was dramatic critic of a  lively society paper, and did the booksin a sarcastic veinfor  a very unmuzzled weekly, that was libellous by profession and truthful  by oversight. Trenchard, on the other hand, wrote a good deal of very  condensed fiction, and generally placed it; contributed brilliant fugitive  articles to various papers and magazines, and was generally spoken of by  the inner circle of the craft as a rising man, and a man to be afraid  of. Henley was full of common-sense, only moderately introspective,  facile, and vivacious. He might be trusted to tincture a book with the  popular element, and yet not to spoil it; for his literary sense was keen,  despite his jocular leaning toward the new humour. He lacked imagination;  but his descriptive powers were racy, and he knew instinctively what was  likely to take, and what would be caviare to the general.  

Trenchard, as he considered the proposition now made to him, realized that  Henley might supply much that he lacked in any book that was written with  a view to popular success. There could be no doubt of it.  

But we should quarrel inevitably and doggedly, he said at last. If I  can not hold myself in, still less can I be held in. We should tear one  another in pieces. When I write, I feel that what I write must be, however  crude, however improper or horrible it may seem. You would want to hold me  back.  

My dear boy, I should more than want toI should do it. In  collaboration, no man can be a law unto himself. That must be distinctly  understood before we begin. I dont wish to force the proposition on you.  Only we are both ambitious devils. We are both poor. We are both  determined to try a book. Have we more chance of succeeding if we try one  together? I believe so. You have the imagination, the grip, the stern  power to evolve the story, to make it seem inevitable, to force it step by  step on its way. I can lighten that way. I can plant a few flowersthey  shall not be peonies, I promise youon the roadside. And I can, and,  what is more, will, check you when you wish to make the story impossibly  horrible or fantastic to the verge of the insane. Now, you neednt be  angry. This book, if we write it, has got to be a good book, and yet a  book that will bring grist to the mill. That is understood.  

Andrews great eyes flashed in the lamplight.  

The mill, he said. Sometimes I feel inclined to let it stop working.  Who would care if one wheel ceased to turn? There are so many others.  

Ah, thats the sort of thing I shall cut out of the book! cried Henley,  turning the soda-water into his whisky with a cheerful swish.  

We will be powerful, but never morbid; tragic, if you like, but not  without hope. We need not aspire too much; but we will not look at the  stones in the road all the time. And the dunghills, in which those weird  fowl, the pessimistic realists, love to rake, we will sedulously avoid.  Cheer up, old fellow, and be thankful that you possess a corrective in  me.  

Trenchards face lightened in a rare smile as, with a half-sigh, he said:  

I believe you are right, and that I need a collaborator, an opposite, who  is yet in sympathy with me. Yes; either of us might fail alone; together  we should succeed.  

Will succeed, my boy!  

But not by pandering to the popular taste, added Andrew in his most  sombre tones, and with a curl of his thin, delicately-moulded lips. I  shall never consent to that.  

We will not call it pandering. But we must hit the taste of the day, or  we shall look a couple of fools.  

People are always supposed to look fools when, for once, they are not  fools, said Andrew.  

Possibly. But now our bargain is made. Strike hands upon it. Henceforth  we are collaborators as well as friends.  

Andrew extended his long, thin, feverish hand, and, as Henley held it for  a moment, he started at the intense, vivid, abnormal personality its grasp  seemed to reveal. To collaborate with Trenchard was to collaborate with a  human volcano.  

And now for the germ of our book, he said, as the clock struck one.  Where shall we find it?  

Trenchard leaned forward in his chair, with his hands pressed upon the  arms.  

Listen, and I will give it you, he said.  

And, almost until the dawn and the wakening of the slumbering city, Henley  sat and listened, and forgot that his pipe was smoked out, and that his  feet were cold. Trenchard had strange powers, and could enthral as he  could also repel.  


It is a weird idea, and it is very powerful, Henley said at last. But  you stop short at the critical moment. Have you not devised a dénouement?  

Not yet. That is where the collaboration will come in. You must help me.  We must talk it over. I am in doubt.  

He got up and passed his hands nervously through his thick hair.  

My doubt has kept me awake so many nights! he said, and his voice was  rather husky and worn.  

Henley looked at him almost compassionately.  

How intensely you live in your fancies!  

My fancies? said Andrew, with a sudden harsh accent, and darting a  glance of curious watchfulness upon his friend. My Yes,  yes. Perhaps I do. Perhaps I try to. Some people have souls that must  escape from their environment, their miserable life-envelope, or faint.  Many of us labour and produce merely to create an atmosphere in which we  ourselves may breathe for awhile and be happy. Damn this London, and this  lodging, and this buying bread with words! I must create for myself an  atmosphere. I must be always getting away from what is, even if I go  lower, lower. Ah! Wellbut the dénouement. Give me your  impressions.  

Henley meditated for awhile. Then he said; Let us leave it. Let us get to  work; and in time, as the story progresses, it will seem inevitable. We  shall see it in front of us, and we shall not be able to avoid it. Let us  get to workhe glanced at his watch and laughedor, rather,  let us get to bed. It is past four. This way madness lies. When we  collaborate, we will write in the morning. Our book shall be a book of the  dawn, and not of the darkness, despite its sombre theme.  

No, no; it must be a book of the darkness.  

Of the darkness, then, but written in the dawn. Your tragedy tempered by  my trust in human nature, and the power that causes things to right  themselves. Good-night, old boy.  

Good-night.  

When Henley had left the room, Tren-chard sat for a moment with his head  sunk low on his breast and his eyes half closed. Then, with a jerk, he  gained his feet, went to the door, opened it, and looked forth on the  deserted landing. He listened, and heard Henley moving to and fro in his  bedroom. Then he shut the door, took off his smoking-coat, and bared his  left arm. There was a tiny blue mark on it.  

What will the dénouement be? he whispered to himself, as he felt  in his waistcoat pocket with a trembling hand.  







II.  


The book was moving onward by slow degrees and with a great deal of  discussion.  

In those days Henley and Trenchard lived much with sported oaks. They were  battling for fame. They were doing all they knew. Literary gatherings  missed them. First nights knew them no more. The grim intensity that was  always characteristic of Trenchard seemed in some degree communicated to  Henley. He began to more fully understand what the creating for ones self  of an atmosphere meant. The story he and his friend were fashioning  fastened upon him like some strange, determined shadow from the realms of  real life, gripped him more and more closely, held him for long spells of  time in a new and desolate world. For the book so far was a deepening  tragedy, and although, at times, Henley strove to resist the paramount  influence which the genius of Trenchard began to exercise over him, he  found himself comparatively impotent, unable to shed gleams of popular  light upon the darkness of the pages. The power of the tale was undoubted.  Henley felt that it was a big thing that they two were doing; but would it  be a popular thinga money-making thing? That was the question. He  sometimes wished with all his heart they had chosen a different subject to  work their combined talent upon. The germ of the work seemed only capable  of tragic treatment, if the book were to be artistic. Their hero was a man  of strong intellect, of physical beauty, full at first of the joy of life,  chivalrous, a believer in the innate goodness of human nature. Believing  in goodness, he believed also ardently in influence. In fact, he was a  worshipper of influence, and his main passion was to seize upon the  personalities of others, and impose his own personality upon them. He  loved to make men and women see with his eyes and hear with his ears,  adopt his theories as truth, take his judgment for their own. All that he  thought wasto him. He never doubted himself, therefore he  could not bear that those around him should not think with him, act  towards men and women as he acted, face life as he faced it. Yet he was  too subtle ever to be dogmatic. He never shouted in the market-place. He  led those with whom he came in contact as adroitly as if he had been evil,  and to the influence of others he was as adamant.  

Events brought into his life a woman, complex, subtle too, with a  naturally noble character and fine understanding, a woman who, like so  many women, might have been anything, and was far worse than nothinga  hopeless, helpless slave, the victim of the morphia habit, which had  gradually degraded her, driven her through sloughs of immorality, wrecked  a professional career which at one time had been almost great, shattered  her constitution, though not all her still curious beauty, and ruined her,  to all intents and purposes, body and soul. The man and the woman met, and  in a flash the man saw what she had been, what she might have been, what,  perhaps, in spite of all, she still was, somewhere, somehow. In her  horrible degradation, in her dense despair, she fascinated him. He could  only see the fire bursting out of the swamp. He could only feel on his  cheek the breath of the spring in the darkness of the charnel-house. He  knew that she gave to him his great lifework. Her monstrous habit he  simply could not comprehend. It was altogether as fantastic to him as  absolute virtue sometimes seems to absolute vice. He looked upon it, and  felt as little kinship with it as a saint might feel with a vampire. To  him it was merely a hideous and extraordinary growth, which had fastened  like a cancer upon a beautiful and wonderful body, and which must be cut  out. He was profoundly interested.  

He loved the woman. Seeing her governed entirely by a vice, he made the  very common mistake of believing her to have a weak personality, easily  falling, perhaps for that very reason as easily lifted to her feet. He  resolved to save her, to devote all his powers, all his subtlety, all his  intellect, all his strong force of will, to weaning this woman from her  fatal habit. She was a married woman, long ago left, to kill herself if  she would, by the husband whose happiness she had wrecked. He took her to  live with him. For her sake he defied the world, and set himself to do  angels work when people believed him at the devils. He resolved to wrap  her, to envelop her in his influence, to enclose her in his strong  personality. Here, at last, was a grand, a noble opportunity for the  legitimate exercise of his master passion. He was confident of victory.  

But his faith in himself was misplaced. This woman, whom he thought so  weak, was yet stronger than he. Although he could not influence her, he  began to find that she could influence him. At first he struggled with her  vice, which he could not understand. He thought himself merely horrified  at it; then he began to lose the horror in wonder at its power. Its  virility, as it were, fascinated him just a little. A vice so  overwhelmingly strong seemed to him at length almost glorious, almost  God-like. There was a sort of humanity about it. Yes, it was like a being  who lived and who conquered.  

The woman loved him, and he tried to win her from it; but her passion for  it was greater than her passion for him, greater than had been her  original passion for purity, for health, for success, for homage, for all  lovely and happiness-making things. Her passion for it was so great that  it roused the mans curiosity at last; it made him hold his breath, and  stand in awe, and desire furtively to try just once for himself what its  dominion was like, to test its power as one may test the power of an  electric battery. He dared not do this openly, for fear the fact of his  doing so might drive the woman still farther on the downward path. So in  secret he tasted the fascinations of her vice, onceand againand  yet again. But still he struggled for her while he was ceasing to struggle  for himself. Still he combated for her the foe who was conquering him.  Very strange, very terrible was his position in that London house with  her, isolated from the world. For his friends had dropped him. Even those  who were not scandalized at his relations with this woman had ceased to  come near him. They found him blind and deaf to the ordinary interests of  life. He never went out anywhere, unless occasionally with her to some  theatre. He never invited anyone to come and see him. At first the woman  absorbed all his interest, all his powers of loveand then at last  the woman and her vice, which was becoming his too. By degrees he sank  lower and lower, but he never told the woman the truth, and he still urged  her to give up her horrible habit, which now he loved. And she laughed in  his face, and asked him if a human creature who had discovered a new life  would be likely to give it up. A new death, he murmured, and then,  looking in a mirror near to him, saw his lips curved in the thin, pale  smile of the hypocrite.  


So far the two young men had written. They worked hard, but their industry  was occasionally interrupted by the unaccountable laziness of Andrew, who,  after toiling with unremitting fury for some days, and scarcely getting up  from his desk, would disappear, and perhaps not return for several nights.  Henley remonstrated with him, but in vain.  

But what do you do, my dear fellow? he asked. What becomes of you?  

I go away to think out what is coming. The environment I seek helps me,  answered Andrew, with a curious, gleaming smile. I return full of fresh  copy.  

This was true enough. He generally mysteriously departed when the book was  beginning to flag, and on his reappearance he always set to work with new  vigour and confidence.  

It seems to me, Henley said, that it will be your book after all, not  mine. It is your plot, and when I think things over I find that every  detail is yours. You insisted on the house where the man and the woman hid  themselves being on the Chelsea Embankment. You invented the woman, her  character, her appearance. You named her Olive Beauchamp.  

Olive Beauchamp, Andrew repeated, with a strange lingering over the two  words, which he pronounced in a very curious voice that trembled, as if  with some keen emotion, love or hate. Yes; I named her as you say.  

Then, as the man in the play remarks, Where do I come in? Henley  asked, half laughing, half vexed. Upon my word, I shall have some  compunction in putting my name below yours on the title-page when the book  is published, if it ever is.  

Andrews lips twitched once or twice uneasily. Then he said, You need not  have any such compunction. The greatest chapter will probably be written  by you.  

Which chapter do you mean?  

That which winds the story upthat which brings the whole thing to  its legitimate conclusion. You must write the dénouement.  

I doubt if I could. And then we have not even now decided what it is to  be.  

We need not bother about that yet. It will come. Fate will decide it for  us.  

What do you mean, Andrew? How curiously you talk about the book sometimesso  precisely as if it were true!  

Trenchard smiled again, struck a match, and lit his pipe.  

It seems true to mewhen I am writing it, he answered. I have  been writing it these last two days and nights when I have been away, and  now I can go forward, if you agree to the new development which I  suggest.  

It was night. He had been absent for some days, and had just returned.  Henley, meanwhile, had been raging because the book had come to a complete  standstill. He himself could do nothing at it, since they had reached a  dead-lock, and had not talked over any new scenes, or mutually decided  upon the turn events were now to take. He felt rather cross and sore.  

You can go forward, he said: yes, after your holiday. You might  at least tell me when you are going.  

I never know myself, Andrew said rather sadly.  

He was looking very white and worn, and his eyes were heavy.  

But I have thought some fresh material out. My idea is this: The man now  becomes such a complete slave to the morphia habit that concealment of the  fact is scarcely possible. And, indeed, he ceases to desire to conceal it  from the woman. The next scene will be an immensely powerful onethat  in which he tells her the truth.  

You do not think it would be more natural if she found it out against his  will? It seems to me that what he had concealed so long he would try to  hide for ever.  

No, Andrew said emphatically; that would not be so.  

But  

Look here, the other interrupted, with some obvious irritability; let  me tell you what I have conceived, and raise any objections afterwards if  you wish to raise them. He would tell her the truth himself. He would  almost glory in doing so. That is the nature of the man. We have depicted  his pride in his own powers, his temptation, his strugglehis fall,  as it would be called  

As it would be called.  

Well, well!his fall, then. And now comes the moment when his fall  is complete. He bends the neck finally beneath his tyrant, and then he  goes to the woman and he tells her the truth.  

But explain matters a little more. Do you mean that he is glad, and tells  almost with triumph; or that he is appalled, and tells her with horror?  

Ah! That is where the power of the scene lies. He is appalled. He is like  a man plunged at last into hell without hope of future redemption. He  tells her the truth with horror.  

And she?  

It is she who triumphs. Look here: it will be like this.  

Andrew leaned forward across the table that stood between their two worn  armchairs. His thin, feverish-looking hands, with the fingers strongly  twisted together, rested upon it. His dark eyes glittered with excitement.  

It will be like this. It is eveninga dark, dull evening, like the  day before yesterday, closing in early, throttling the afternoon  prematurely, as it were. A drizzling rain falls softly, drenching  everythingthe sodden leaves of the trees on the Embankment, the  road, which is heavy with clinging yellow mud, the stone coping of the  wall that skirts the river.  

And the river heaves along. Its gray, dirty waves are beaten up by a  light, chilly wind, and chase the black barges with a puny, fretful,  sinister fury, falling back from their dark, wet sides with a hiss of  baffled hatred. Yes, it is dreary weather.  

Do you know, Henley, as I know, the strange, subtle influence of certain  kinds of weather? There are days on which I could do great deeds merely  because of the way the sun is shining. There are days, there are evenings,  when I could commit crimes merely because of the way the wind is  whispering, the river is sighing, the dingy night is clustering around me.  There can be an angel in the weather, or there can be a devil. On this  evening I am describing there is a devil in the night!  

The lights twinkle through the drizzling rain, and they are blurred, as  bright eyes are blurred, and made dull and ugly, by tears. Two or three  cabs roll slowly by the houses on the Embankment.. A few people hurry past  along the slippery, shining pavement. But as the night closes in there is  little life outside those tall, gaunt houses that are so near the river!  And in one of those houses the man comes down to the woman to tell her the  truth.  

There is a devil in the weather that night, as I said, and that devil  whispers to the man, and tells him that it is now his struggle must end  finally, and the new era of unresisted yielding to the vice begin. In the  sinister darkness, in the diminutive, drenching mist of rain, he speaks,  and the man listens, and bows his head and answers yes! It is over. He  has fallen finally. He is resolved, with a strange, dull obstinacy that  gives him a strange, dull pleasuredo you see?to go down to  the room below, and tell the woman that she has conquered himthat  his power of will is a reed which can be crushedthat henceforth  there shall be two victims instead of one. He goes down.  

Andrew paused a moment. His lips were twitching again. He looked terribly  excited. Henley listened in silence. He had lost all wish to interrupt.  

He goes down into the room below where the woman is, with her dark hair,  and her dead-white face, and her extraordinary eyeslarge, luminous,  sometimes dull and without expression, sometimes dilated, and with an  unnatural life staring out of them. She is on the sofa near the fire. He  sits down beside her. His head falls into his hands, and at first he is  silent. He is thinking how he will tell her. She puts her soft, dry hand  on his, and she says: I am very tired to-night. Do not begin your evening  sermon. Let me have it to-morrow. How you must love me to be so  persistent! and how you must love me to be so stupid as to think that your  power of will can break the power of such a habit as mine! 

Then he draws his hand away from hers, and he lifts his head from his  hands, and he tells her the truth. She leans back against a cushion  staring at him in silence, devouring him with her eyes, which have become  very bright and eager and searching. Presently he stops.  

Go on, she says, go on. Tell me more. Tell me all you feel. Tell me  how the habit stole upon you, and came to you again and again, and stayed  with you. Tell me how you first liked it, and then loved it, and how it  was something to you, and then much, and then everything. Go on! go on! 

And he catches her excitement. He conceals nothing from her. All the  hideous, terrible, mental processes he has been through, he details to  her, at first almost gloating over his own degradation. He even  exaggerates, as a man exaggerates in telling a story to an eager auditor.  He is carried away by her strange fury of listening. He lays bare his  soul; he exposes its wounds; he sears them with red-hot irons for her to  see. And then at last all is told. He can think of no more details. He has  even embellished the abominable truth. So he is silent, and he looks at  her.  

And what does she do? asked Henley, with a catch in his voice as he  spoke. Undoubtedly in relating a fictitious narrative Andrew had a quite  abnormal power of making it appear true and real.  

She looks at him, and then she bursts out laughing. Her eyes shine with  triumph. She is glad; she is joyous with the joy of a lost soul when it  sees that other souls are irrevocably lost too; she laughs, and she says  nothing.  

And the man?  

Andrews eyes suddenly dilated. He leaned forward and laid his hand on  Henleys arm.  

Ah, the man! that is my great idea. As she laughs his heart is changed.  His love for her suddenly dies. Its place is taken by hatred. He realizes  then, for the first time, while he hears her laugh, what she has done to  him. He knows that she has ruined him, and that she is proud of itthat  she is rejoicing in having won him to destruction. He sees that his  perdition is merely a feather in her cap. He hates her. Oh, how he hates  her!hates her!  

The expression on Andrews face became terrible as he spokecruel,  malignant, almost fiendish. Henley turned cold, and shook off his hand  abruptly.  

That is horrible! he said. I object to that. The book will be one of  unrelieved gloom.  

The book! said Andrew.  

Yes. You behave really as if the story were true, as if everything in it  were ordainedinevitable.  

It seems so to me; it is so. What must be, must be. If you are afraid of  tragedy, you ought never to have joined me in starting upon such a story.  Even what has never happened must be made to seem actual to be successful.  The art of fiction is to imitate truth with absolute fidelity, not to  travesty it. In such circumstances the mans love would be changed to  hatred.  

Yes, if the womans demeanour were such as you have described. But why  should she be so callous? I do not think that is natural.  

You do not know the woman, began Andrew harshly. Then he stopped  speaking abruptly, and a violent flush swept over his face.  

I know her as well as you do, my dear fellow, rejoined Henley, laughing.  How you manage to live in your dreams! You certainly do create an  atmosphere for yourself with a vengeance, and for me too. I believe you  have an abnormal quantity of electricity concealed about you somewhere,  and sometimes you give me a shock and carry me out of myself. If this is  collaboration, it is really a farce. From the very first you have had  things all your own way. You have talked me over to your view upon every  single occasion; but now I am going to strike. I object to the conduct you  have devised for Olive. It will alienate all sympathy from her; it is the  behaviour of a devil.  

It is the behaviour of a woman, said Andrew, with a cold cynicism that  seemed to cut like a knife.  

How can you tell? How can you judge of women so surely?  

I study all strange phenomena, women among the rest.  

Have you ever met an Olive Beauchamp, then, in real life? said Henley.  

The question was put more than half in jest; but Trenchard received it  with a heavy frown.  

Dont let us quarrel about the matter, he said, I can only tell you  this; and mind, Jack, I mean it. It is my unalterable resolve. Either the  story must proceed upon the lines that I have indicated, or I cannot go on  with it at all. It would be impossible for me to write it differently.  

And this is collaboration, is it? exclaimed the other, trying to force a  laugh, though even his good-nature could scarcely stand Trenchards  trampling demeanour.  

I cant help it. I cannot be inartistic and untrue to Nature even for the  sake of a friend.  

Thank you. Well, I have no desire to ruin your work, Andrew; but it is  really useless for this farce to continue. Do what you like, and let us  make no further pretence of collaborating. I cannot act as a drag upon  such a wheel as yours. I will not any longer be a dead-weight upon you.  Our temperaments evidently unfit us to be fellow-workers; and I feel that  your strength and power are so undeniable that you may, perhaps, be able  to carry this weary tragedy through, and by sheer force make it palatable  to the public. I will protest no more; I will only cease any longer to  pretend to have a finger in this literary pie.  

Andrews morose expression passed away like a cloud. He got up and laid  his hand upon Henleys shoulder.  

You make me feel what a beast I am, he said. But I cant help it. I was  made so. Do forgive me, Jack. I have taken the bit between my teeth, I  know. Butthis story seems to me no fiction; it is a piece of life,  as real to me as those stars I see through the window-pane are real to meas  my own emotions are real to me. Jack, this book has seized me. Believe me,  if it is written as I wish, it will make an impression upon the world that  will be great. The mind of the world is given to me like a sheet of blank  paper. I will write upon it with my hearts blood. Butand here his  manner became strangely impressive, and his sombre, heavy eyes gazed  deeply into the eyes of his friendremember this! You will finish  this book. I feel that; I know it. I cannot tell you why. But so it is  ordained. Let me write as far as I can, Jack, and let me write as I will.  But do not let us quarrel. The book is ours, not mine. Anddontdont  take away your friendship from me.  

The last words were said with an outburst of emotion that was almost  feminine in intensity. Henley felt deeply moved, for, as a rule, Andrews  manner was not specially affectionate, or even agreeable.  

It is all right, old fellow, he said, in the embarrassed English manner  which often covers so much that might with advantage be occasionally  revealed. Go on in your own way. I believe you are a genius, and I am  only trying to clip the wings that may carry you through the skies. Go on  in your own way, and consult me only when you feel inclined.  

Andrew took his hand and pressed it in silence.  







III.  


It was some three weeks after this that one afternoon Trenchard laid down  his pen at the conclusion of a chapter, and, getting up, thrust his hands  into his pockets and walked to the window.  

The look-out was rather dreary. A gray sky leaned over the great,  barrack-like church that gives an ecclesiastical flavour to Smiths  Square. A few dirty sparrows fluttered above the gray pavementfeverish,  unresting birds, Trenchard named them silently, as he watched their  meaningless activity, their jerky, ostentatious deportment, with  lacklustre, yet excited, eyes. How gray everything looked, tame,  colourless, indifferent! The light was beginning to fade stealthily out of  things. The gray church was gradually becoming shadowy. The flying forms  of the hurrying sparrows disappeared in the weary abysses of the air and  sky. The sitting-room in Smiths Square was nearly dark now. Henley had  gone out to a matinée at one of the theatres, so Trenchard was  alone. He struck a match presently, lit a candle, carried it over to his  writing-table, and began to examine the littered sheets he had just been  writing. The book was nearing its end. The tragedy was narrowing to a  point. Trenchard read the last paragraph which he had written:  

He hardly knew that he lived, except during those many hours when,  plunged in dreams, he allowed, nay, forced, life to leave him for awhile.  He had sunk to depths below even those which Olive had reached. And the  thought that she was ever so little above him haunted him like a spectre  impelling him to some mysterious deed. When he was not dreaming, he was  dwelling upon this idea which had taken his soul captive. It seemed to be  shaping itself towards an act. Thought was the ante-room through which he  passed to the hall where Fate was sitting, ready to give him audience. He  traversed this ante-room, which seemed lined with fantastic and terrible  pictures, at first with lagging footfalls. But at length he laid his hand  upon the door that divided him from Fate.  


And when he had read the final words he gathered the loose sheets together  with his long, thin fingers, and placed them one on the top of the other  in a neat pile. He put them into a drawer which contained other unfinished  manuscripts, shut the drawer, locked it, and carried the key to Henleys  room. There he scribbled some words on a bit of notepaper, wrapped the key  in it, and inclosed it in an envelope on which he wrote Henleys name.  Then he put on his overcoat, descended the narrow stairs, and opened the  front-door. The landlady heard him, and screamed from the basement to know  if he would be in to dinner.  

I shall not be in at all to-night, he answered, in a hard, dry voice  that travelled along the dingy passage with a penetrating distinctness.  The landlady murmured to the slatternly maidservant an ejaculatory  diatribe on the dissipatedness of young literary gentlemen as the door  banged. Trenchard disappeared in the gathering darkness, and soon left  Smiths Square behind him.  

It chanced that day that, in the theatre, Henley encountered some ladies  who carried him home to tea after the performance. They lived in Chelsea,  and in returning to Smiths Square afterwards Henley took his way along  the Chelsea Embankment. He always walked near to the dingy river when he  could. The contrast of its life to the towns life through which it flowed  had a perpetual fascination for him. In the early evening, too, the river  presents many Doré effects. It is dim, mysterious, sometimes meretricious,  with its streaks of light close to the dense shadows that lie under the  bridges, its wailful, small waves licking the wharves, and bearing up the  inky barges that look like the ferry-boat of the Styx. Henley loved to  feel vivaciously despairing, and he hugged himself in the belief that the  Thames at nightfall tinged his soul with a luxurious melancholy, the  capacity for which was not far from rendering him a poet. So he took his  way by the river. As he neared Cheyne Row, he saw in front of him the  figure of a man leaning over the low stone wall, with his face buried in  his hands. On hearing his approaching footsteps the man lifted himself up,  turned round, and preceded him along the pavement with a sort of listless  stride which seemed to Henley strangely familiar. He hastened his steps,  and on coming closer recognised that the man was Trenchard; but, just as  he was about to hail him, Trenchard crossed the road to one of the houses  opposite, inserted a key in the door, and disappeared within, shutting the  door behind him.  

Henley paused a moment opposite to the house. It was of a dull red colour,  and had a few creepers straggling helplessly about it, looking like a torn  veil that can only partially conceal a dull, heavy face.  

Andrew seems at home here, he thought, gazing up at the blind, tall  windows, which showed no ray of light. I wonder  

And then, still gazing at the windows, he recalled the description of the  house where Olive Beauchamp lived in their book.  

He took it from this, Henley said to himself. Yes, that was obvious.  Trenchard had described the prison-house of despair, where the two victims  of a strange, desolating habit shut themselves up to sink, with a curious  minuteness. He had even devoted a paragraph to the tall iron gate, whose  round handle he had written of as bald, and exposed to the wind from the  river, the paint having long since been worn off it. In the twilight  Henley bent down and examined the handle of the gate. The paint seemed to  have been scraped from it.  

How curiously real that book has become to me! he muttered. I could  almost believe that if I knocked upon that door, and was let in, I should  find Olive Beauchamp stretched on a couch in the room that lies beyond  those gaunt, shuttered windows.  

He gave a last glance at the house, and as he did so he fancied that he  heard a slight cry come from it to him. He listened attentively and heard  nothing more. Then he walked away toward home.  

When he reached his room, he found upon his table the envelope which  Trenchard had directed to him. He opened it, and unwrapped the key from  the inclosed sheet of note-paper, on which were written these words:  
     “Dear Jack,

     “I am off again. And this time I can’t say when I shall be
     back. In any case, I have completed my part of the book, and
     leave the finishing of it in your hands. This is the key of
     the drawer in which I have locked the manuscript. You have
     not seen most of the last volume. Read it, and judge for
     yourself whether the dénouement can be anything but
     utterly tragic. I will not outline to you what I have
     thought of for it. If you have any difficulty about the
     finale, I shall be able to help you with it even if you do
     not see me again for some time. By the way, what nonsense
     that saying is, ‘Dead men tell no tales!’ Half the best
     tales in the world are told, or at least completed, by dead
     men.

    “Yours ever,

     “A. T.”
 

Henley laid this note down and turned cold all over. It was the concluding  sentence which had struck a chill through his heart. He took the key in  his hand, went down to Trenchards room, unlocked the drawer in his  writing-table, and took out the manuscript. What did Andrew mean by that  sinister sentence? A tale completed by a dead man! Henley sat down by the  fire with the manuscript in his hands and began to read. He was called  away to dinner; but immediately afterward he returned to his task, and  till late into the night his glance travelled down the closely-written  sheets one after the other, until the light from the candles grew blurred  and indistinct, and his eyes ached. But still he read on. The power and  gloom of Andrews narrative held him in a vice, and then he was searching  for a clue in the labyrinth of words. At last he came to the final  paragraph, and then to the final sentence:  

But at length he laid his hand upon the door that divided him from Fate.  

Henley put the sheet down carefully upon the table. It was three oclock  in the morning, and the room seemed full of a strange, breathless cold,  the peculiar chilliness that precedes the dawn. The fire was burning  brightly enough, yet the warmth it emitted scarcely seemed to combat the  frosty air that penetrated from without, and Henley shivered as he rose  from his seat. His brows were drawn together, and he was thinking deeply.  A light seemed slowly struggling into his soul. That last sentence of  Tren-chards connected itself with what he had seen in the afternoon on  the Chelsea Embankment. He laid his hand upon the door that divided him  from Fate.  

A strange idea dawned in Henleys mind, an idea which made many things  clear to him. Yet he put it away, and sat down again to read the  unfinished book once more. Andrew had carried on the story of the mans  growing hatred of the woman whom he had tried to rescue, until it had  developed into a deadly fury, threatening immediate action. Then he had  left the dénouement in Henleys hands. He had left it ostensibly in  Henleys hands, but the latter, reading the manuscript again with intense  care, saw that matters had been so contrived that the knot of the novel  could only be cut by murder. As it had been written, the man must  inevitably murder the woman. And Andrew? All through the night Henley  thought of him as he had last seen him, opening the door of the red house  with the tattered creepers climbing over it.  

At last, when it was dawn, he went up to bed tired out, after leaving a  written direction to the servant not to call him in the morning. When he  awoke and looked at his watch it was past two oclock in the afternoon. He  sprang out of bed, dressed, and after a hasty meal, half breakfast, half  lunch, set out towards Chelsea. The day was bright and cold. The sun shone  on the river and sparkled on the windows of the houses on the Embankment.  Many people were about, and they looked cheerful. The weight of depression  that had settled upon Henley was lifted. He thought of the strange, yet  illuminating, idea that had occurred to him in the night, and now, in  broad daylight, it seemed clothed in absurdity. He laughed at it. Yet he  quickened his steps toward the red house with the tarnished iron gate and  the tattered creepers.  

But long before he reached it he met a boy sauntering along the  thoroughfare and shouting newspapers. He sang out unflinchingly in the gay  sunshine, Murder! Murder! and between his shouts he whistled a  music-hall song gaily in snatches. Henley stopped him and bought a paper.  He opened the paper in the wind, which seemed striving to prevent him, and  cast his eyes over the middle pages. Then suddenly he dropped it to the  ground with a white face, and falteringly signed to a cabman. The dénouement  was written. The previous night, in a house on the Chelsea Embankment, a  woman had been done to death, and the murderer had crept out and thrown  himself into the gray, hurrying river.  

The womans name was Olive Beauchamp.  

THE END.  













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