<h3 class='c001'>CHAPTER XXV</h3></div>
<p class='c015'>Sin and hedgehogs are born without spikes, but how they wound and prick
after their birth we all know. The most unhappy being is he who feels remorse
before the deed, and brings forth a sin already furnished with teeth in its birth,
the bite of which is soon prolonged into an incurable wound of conscience.</p>
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<div class='line'>—<span class='sc'>Richter.</span></div>
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<p class='c010'>On the steps of the rostrum, as he descended them,
John Gregory was met by a man of singular aspect, a
man who has been encountered by us before, in the
house of Senator Ingraham,—his son, Oliver.</p>
<p class='c011'>As the two clergymen whom he had then addressed
had been disturbed, and even dismayed, by this strange
face and figure, the smooth, egglike face with its enormous
forehead, narrow eyes, and wide, thin-lipped
mouth, so now Gregory drew back instinctively, finding
the singular apparition thus suddenly before him.</p>
<p class='c011'>Mr. Oliver Ingraham did not appear to notice the
movement, but, smiling his peculiarly complacent smile,
held out one long, sinuous hand, and as Gregory took
it, not over eagerly, he remarked in his high, feminine
voice:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“I liked your line very much, Mr. Gregory. Nothing
would suit me better than to see these rich men
brought to book. They’ll get their come-uppance in the
next world, anyway; but I sometimes get tired of waiting.
It would be a satisfaction to see Dives, Esquire,
taking his torments here once in a while, don’t you
think so?” and the malevolent leer with which the question
was accompanied gave Gregory a chill of disgust.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>Oliver held in his left hand a handsomely bound
note-book and silver pencil-case which it was his custom
to carry everywhere. Gregory, now about to pass on,
and greet the crowds who were waiting to speak with
him just below, was again stopped.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Just a moment, Mr. Gregory,” said the other, slipping
off the elastic, and opening the note-book with the
dexterity of constant habit; “I want you to help me a
little in gathering some very valuable statistics. It’s
rather in your line, I take it. I have been engaged in
this work for several years, and find it extremely interesting.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Gregory noted the long, white, flexible fingers of the
man, and the look, half of deficient intellect and half of
cunning, in his face.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Please make haste, Mr. Ingraham,” he said shortly,
“there are others waiting.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I am making a computation,” Oliver continued
imperturbably, “in fact, a carefully tabulated record, according
to nations, of the probable number of souls from
each nation now in Sheol—it is considered polite now
to call it Sheol, I believe. We used to say hell when
we were boys, didn’t we, Mr. Gregory?” and Oliver
laughed his low, cruel laugh.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Excuse me,” exclaimed Gregory, impatiently; “I
could not give you any information on that subject. I
have never been there. Allow me to pass on, if you
please.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Oliver closed his book as if not unaccustomed to
rebuffs; but, as Gregory’s forward movement obliged him
to retreat down the steps, he remarked slyly:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“I had a message to you from the senator, if you only
weren’t in such a hurry. He is one of the fellows that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>will have to go to now, weep and howl. He has the
shekels, I can tell you! What he wants of you is more
than I can figure out. I should suppose Ahab would
as soon have sent for Elijah.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Did your father send for me?” asked Gregory,
surprised. They were now at the foot of the steps, and
the crowd was gathering about them.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Yes; he would like to see you in his office on this
same block, next building, as soon as you can get away
from here. You work him right, and you can get something
out of him for your Utopia.” The last words were
called back aloud with a series of confidential nods, as
Oliver turned and plunged into the crowd, who seemed
to make a way for him with especial facility. Gregory
saw him go with a keen sense of heat and discomfort.</p>
<p class='c011'>Half an hour later, Gregory found himself in the
office of Senator Ingraham, seated in a substantial office-chair
by the well-appointed desk, while Mr. Ingraham,
himself in evident and most unusual mental disturbance,
walked up and down the room. Suddenly he wheeled,
and confronted Gregory, as if with sudden, though difficult,
resolution.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Mr. Gregory,” he said, low, and with the stern,
terse brevity of a man who finds himself forced to
speak what he would rather leave unsaid, “for over
thirty years I have carried certain facts in my personal
history shut up in my own memory. Not one other
being, to the best of my belief, has shared my knowledge.
To-night, I cannot tell how, I do not know why, I feel
that I must break silence, and before you—stranger as
you are—unload my burden. A strange compulsion
seems upon me to disclose the things I have hitherto
lived to conceal. What there is in you or in what I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>have heard you say, to bring me to this point, I cannot
understand; but I feel in you something which makes
you alone, of all men I have ever met, the one to whom
I can speaks—and must. Are you willing to hear
me?”</p>
<p class='c011'>John Gregory noted the set, hard lines in the lawyer’s
face, the knotted cords in his hands, and the tone,
half of defiance, half of self-abasement, with which he
threw out this abrupt question. Accustomed to encounters
with men in their innermost spiritual struggles,
Gregory was in no way astonished or excited by this
surprising beginning of their interview, and simply nodded
gravely in token that Ingraham should proceed.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I will not affront you by demanding secrecy on
your part,” the latter began haughtily; “if it were
possible for you to betray my confidence, it would have
been impossible for me to give it to you. I understand
men.”</p>
<p class='c011'>He paused. Gregory made no remark in confirmation
of this assertion, but the direct, unflinching look with
which he met the appeal in the eyes of the speaker was
full guarantee of good faith. There was promise of
profound and sympathetic attention in Gregory’s look,
there was also judicial calmness and reserve; in fine, the
characteristics of the priest and the judge were singularly
united in him, and it was to the perception of this fact
that he owed the present interview.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I do not know whether I am a respectable citizen
or a murderer,” Ingraham now began, turning again to
walk the floor, while an uncontrollable groan as of
physical anguish accompanied this unexpected declaration.
“Imagine, if you will, what thirty years have been
inwardly with this uncertainty as food for thought, served
<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>to me by conscience, or some fiend, morning and night.
If I could have forgotten for one blessed day, it has
been ingeniously rendered impossible, for sin in bodily
form is ever before me. You have seen my son.”</p>
<p class='c011'>With this sentence, harsh and curt, Ingraham paused,
glanced aside at Gregory, who assented, and then continued
to walk and speak. His voice and manner alike
showed that he was holding himself in control by the
effort of all his will. Strange distorting lines appeared
in his face, and there was heavy sweat on his forehead.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I was twenty-five years old when I was married,
and was alone in the world save for one brother,—Jim, we
always called him,—two years younger than I. We had
inherited a good name, strong physique, and some little
property from our parents, and started in life shoulder to
shoulder. In Burlington, where we first began business
life together, we became intimately acquainted with a
family in which there were two daughters. The elder,
Cornelia, was very pretty and singularly attractive. Men
always fell in love with her. I did, desperately. The
younger sister was a commonplace, uninteresting girl,
rather sentimental perhaps, not otherwise remarkable.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I shall make this story as short as possible. I offered
myself to Cornelia after long wooing, and was refused.
I was bitterly wounded, angry, defiant. While I was in
that state of mind, it became apparent to me that I was
secretly an object of peculiar interest to the younger sister.
Like many another fool, half in spite and half in heart-sickness,
I sought her hand, and was at once accepted,
and our marriage followed quickly. Within the year
Cornelia and Jim became engaged. There was a hard,
silent grudge against Jim in my heart from the day I first
suspected that it was he who had stood between Cornelia
<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>and me, and their engagement increased the grudge to
hate.</p>
<p class='c011'>“We had, before this, put the whole of our inheritance
into mining fields in what was then the far West, buying
up a large tract of land, divided equally between us. The
year after my marriage we moved West for a time, and I
started out on a prospecting tour of our land; Jim to follow
me when he had finished establishing a kind of business
office in pioneer quarters, in a small town as near the base
of our operations as was feasible. My wife remained in
this town.</p>
<p class='c011'>“On horseback, with two engineers and a copper
expert and an Indian guide, I rode through our possessions.
Miners were already at work, and had pursued
the lead far enough to prove pretty distinctly that,
while Jim’s part of the tract was likely to be fairly productive,
the vein stopped short of mine, which was thus
practically worthless.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I rode back to our camp in a black mood. Jim, it
seemed, was to succeed in everything; all that he sought
was his, and for me there was nothing but failure and
defeat. All the way back I brooded bitterly on the
contrast between us, until I was in a still frenzy of
jealousy when I reached the camp. The contrast
between Cornelia, for whom I still had a wild, hopeless
passion, and my wife, sickly, dull, indeed disagreeable
to me already, was maddening, and had been
sufficiently so before. But now, when I thought of
Jim, with Cornelia for his wife and the certain prospect
of large wealth to add to his elation, while I was without
a penny or a prospect of any sort, the rage and fury in
my mind became almost intoxicating.</p>
<p class='c011'>“We had encountered hostile Indians on the trail as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>we returned, but our bold, dare-devil dash through this
danger made slight impression on me. I think death
would have been welcome to me that night. God
knows I wish I had met it then. My heart was evil
enough, but at least it had not the guilt that came later.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I suppose, Mr. Gregory, that I am answerable for
my brother’s death—not in the eye of the law, but
before God. And yet—if you could tell me that I
am mistaken, that I exaggerate, that other men would
have done the same and held themselves guiltless—if
that could be—” Ingraham broke off and fixed his eyes
on Gregory’s face once more, as if in appeal for his life.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Please go on,” was Gregory’s response, but the
words were gently spoken, as the words of a physician
when he is diagnosing a manifestly mortal disease.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Very well,” said Ingraham, harshly. “Jim was at
the camp, and was boy enough to parade a letter from
Cornelia before me. We quarrelled fiercely, about what
I cannot remember, but I could not restrain the storm
of rage and jealousy in me. It had to break loose somewhere.
I refused to tell Jim what I had discovered
regarding the lead, and he declared he would go and find
out for himself. I said he would be a fool if he did,
but gave him no hint of the fact that there were hostile
Indians on the way. He knew nothing of the conditions,
nor the character of the people about us, having
never been in the country before. It was early in the
morning. We had ridden all night, and the men had
gone to their tents and were sleeping off the effects of
our struggle. I told Jim he could not get a guide. He
merely whistled in a light-hearted, careless way he had,
and started off to a neighbouring camp, in search, as I
inferred, of some escort. I saw him no more, and made
<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>no attempt to govern his actions, and did not even know
whether he had started. Who and what the guide was
whom he obtained, I learned later.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I slept most of that day, after Jim disappeared, exhausted
in body and mind, and continued to sleep far
into the night, keeping my tent door securely closed, as
I wished to see and speak to no one. It was, perhaps,
three o’clock of the morning following when I was
roused by a strange noise at my tent door. Starting up
from my bed on the ground, I saw that some one had
cut open the fastenings, and that the flap was drawn
back. In the opening thus formed stood the shape
of an Indian rider on horseback, perfectly motionless.
The moonlight, which was unusually brilliant, fell full
upon the face of this man, and I recognized him at
once, with a horrible chill of foreboding, as a half-witted
Indian who sometimes acted as guide, but only to those
who knew no better than to accept his services, which
were worthless and treacherous. He was a half-breed,
an odious, repulsive being, with only wit enough to be
malicious, and of abnormal treachery and cruelty even
for his kind. Never can I forget that face of his in the
moonlight. He spoke not one word, but simply sat
his horse and looked at me with his narrow, gleaming
eyes, a malignant grin making his ugliness fairly fiendish.
If you want to get a faint idea of his look, recall
the face of Oliver—my son;” Ingraham’s voice sunk
to a whisper, and he added, “I can never escape it.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Gregory’s brows knit heavily, and his face reflected
something of the tortured misery of the man before
him.</p>
<p class='c011'>“It was not,” said Ingraham, “until I had staggered
to my feet that I saw that across his saddle-bow this
<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>creature carried a dead body—Jim. There was an
Indian arrow in his side.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“No matter, no matter for the rest; I understand,”
said Gregory, hastily.</p>
<p class='c011'>There was silence for a moment, and then Ingraham,
with a strong effort, rallied himself to conclude his story.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I was Jim’s heir.” These words were spoken with
hard and scornful emphasis. “That was a feature of
the case which presents complications to a man in forming
a judgment. Perhaps you will believe me when I
say that this issue had not entered my mind in letting
the boy go to his death. Indeed, the whole series of
events was without deliberation, but under the influence
of blind, sullen anger.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I believe you,” said Gregory.</p>
<p class='c011'>“All the same, I profited by his death. The mines
proved immensely valuable, and are even to-day. They
have made me rich—and incomparably wretched. A
word or two more, and you will know the whole story.
Jim was brought home, here, for burial, my wife and I
returning with his body. All through that journey, and
continually, for many months, I saw before me, waking
or sleeping, that face of cruelty incarnate, the half-witted
Indian guide, as I had seen him on that awful night.
That face was my Nemesis. It is still.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Within the year my wife gave birth to a son,
Oliver,—a strange perversion, made up of moral obliquity,
mental distortion, and physical deformity, like an
embodiment of sin. On his face was stamped by some
strange trick of nature the image which had haunted
me—as if the Fates, or the Fiends, or God himself, had
feared I might forget, and know a day of respite.</p>
<p class='c011'>“My wife died when Oliver was a few months old,—died
<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>of cold, I believe, the chill of our loveless marriage.
Two years later Cornelia and I were married. I
believe she has been happy. I have been prospered,
and have risen to a position of some influence, and we
have all that could be desired in our home, in our three
daughters. But when, to-night, I heard you pronounce
the judgments of God on men who had built up prosperity
upon a lie, I was like a man struck in his very
heart. I felt that I could no longer endure my hidden
load, and must confess to one human being my past, and
make restitution, if by any means it is yet possible.
The Romish Church is merciful, when it provides the
possibility of confession to sinful men.</p>
<p class='c011'>“What have you to say to me? Have you healing
for such a sore as mine?”</p>
<p class='c011'>With these abrupt words Ingraham threw himself
into a leather-covered arm-chair with the action of complete
exhaustion. His aspect was changed from that of
the alert, confident man of the world and of affairs, to
that of a broken down and shattered age.</p>
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<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>
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