<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<h3>SHADOWS ON THE BLIND</h3>
<p>The landlady of Denzil was a rather uncommon
specimen of the class. She inclined to plumpness,
was lively in the extreme, wore very fashionable
garments of the brightest colours, and—although
somewhat elderly—still cherished a hope
that some young man would elevate her to the rank
of a matron.</p>
<p>At present, Miss Julia Greeb was an unwedded
damsel of forty summers, who, with the aid of art,
was making desperate but ineffectual efforts to detain
the youth which was slipping from her. She
pinched her waist, dyed her hair, powdered her
face, and affected juvenile dress of the white frock
and blue sash kind. In the distance she looked a
girlish twenty; close at hand various artifices aided
her to pass for thirty; and it was only in the solitude
of her own room that her real age was apparent.
Never did woman wage a more resolute
fight with Time than did Miss Greeb.</p>
<p>But this was the worst and most frivolous side
of her character, for she was really a good-hearted,
cheery little woman, with a brisk manner, and a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span>
flow of talk unequalled in Geneva Square. She had
been born in the house she occupied, after the death
of her father, and had grown up to assist her mother
in ministering to the exactions of a continuous
procession of lodgers. These came and went, married
and died; but not one of the desirable young
men had borne Miss Greeb to the altar, so that
when her mother died the fair Julia almost despaired
of attaining to the dignity of wifehood.
Nevertheless, she continued to keep boarders, and
to make attempts to captivate the hearts of such
bachelors as she judged weak in character.</p>
<p>Hitherto all her efforts had been more or less
of a mercantile character, with an eye to money;
but when Lucian Denzil appeared on the scene, the
poor little woman really fell in love with his handsome
face. But, in strange contrast to her other
efforts, Miss Greeb never for a moment deemed
that Lucian would marry her. He was her god,
her ideal of manhood, and to him she offered worship,
and burnt incense after the manner of her
kind.</p>
<p>Denzil occupied a bedroom and sitting-room,
both pleasant, airy apartments, looking out on to
the square. Miss Greeb attended to his needs herself,
and brought up his breakfast with her own
fair hands, happy for the day if her admired lodger
conversed with her for a few moments before reading
the morning paper. Then Miss Greeb would
retire to her own sitting-room and indulge in day
dreams which she well knew would never be real<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span>ised.
The romances she wove herself were even
more marvellous than those she read in her favourite
penny novelettes; but, unlike the printed tales,
her romance never culminated in marriage. Poor
brainless, silly, pitiful Miss Greeb; she would have
made a good wife and a fond mother, but by some
irony of fate she was destined to be neither; and the
comedy of her husband-hunting youth was now
changing into the lonely tragedy of disappointed
spinsterhood. She was one of the world's unknown
martyrs, and her fate merits tears rather than laughter.</p>
<p>On the morning after his meeting with Berwin,
the young barrister sat at breakfast, with Miss
Greeb in anxious attendance. Having poured out
his tea, and handed him his paper, and ascertained
that his breakfast was to his liking, Miss Greeb
lingered about the room, putting this straight and
that crooked, in the hope that Lucian would converse
with her. In this she was gratified, as Denzil
wished to learn details about the strange man he
had assisted on the previous night, and he knew
that no one could afford him more precise information
than his brisk landlady, to whom was known
all the gossip of the neighbourhood. His first word
made Miss Greeb flutter back to the table like a
dove to its nest.</p>
<p>"Do you know anything about No. 13?" asked
Lucian, stirring his tea.</p>
<p>"Do I know anything about No. 13?" repeated
Miss Greeb in shrill amazement. "Of course I do,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span>Mr. Denzil. There ain't a thing I don't know
about that house. Ghosts and vampires and crawling
spectres live in it—that they do."</p>
<p>"Do you call Mr. Berwin a ghost?"</p>
<p>"No; nor nothing half so respectable. He is
a mystery, sir, that's what Mr. Berwin is, and I
don't care if he hears me commit myself so far."</p>
<p>"In what way is he a mystery?" demanded Denzil,
approaching the matter with more particularity.</p>
<p>"Why," said Miss Greeb, evidently puzzled how
to answer this leading question, "no one can find out
anything about him. He's full of secrets and underhand
goings on. It ain't respectable not to be
fair and above board—that it ain't."</p>
<p>"I see no reason why a quiet-living old gentleman
should tell his private affairs to the whole
square," remarked Lucian drily.</p>
<p>"Those who have nothing bad to conceal needn't
be afraid of speaking out," retorted Miss Greeb
tartly. "And the way in which Mr. Berwin lives
is enough to make one think him a coiner, or a
thief, or even a murderer—that it is!"</p>
<p>"But what grounds have you to believe him any
one of the three?"</p>
<p>This question also puzzled the landlady, as she
had no reasonable grounds for her wild statements.
Nevertheless, she made a determined attempt to
substantiate them by hearsay evidence. "Mr. Berwin,"
said she in significant tones, "lives all alone
in that haunted house."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why not? Every man has the right to be a
misanthrope if he chooses."</p>
<p>"He has no right to behave so, in a respectable
square," replied Miss Greeb, shaking her head.
"There's only two rooms of that large house furnished,
and all the rest is given up to dust and
ghosts. Mr. Berwin won't have a servant to live
under his roof, and Mrs. Kebby, who does his charing,
says he drinks awful. Then he has his meals
sent in from the Nelson Hotel round the corner,
and eats them all alone. He don't receive no letters,
he don't read no newspapers, and stays in all
day, only coming out at night, like an owl. If he
ain't a criminal, Mr. Denzil, why does he carry
on so?"</p>
<p>"He may dislike his fellow-men, and desire to
live a secluded life."</p>
<p>Miss Greeb still shook her head. "He may
dislike his fellow-men," she said with emphasis,
"but that don't keep him from seeing them—ah!
that it don't."</p>
<p>"Is there anything wrong in that?" said Lucian,
contemptuous of these cobweb objections.</p>
<p>"Perhaps not, Mr. Denzil; but where do those
he sees come from?"</p>
<p>"How do you mean, Miss Greeb?"</p>
<p>"They don't go in by the front door, that's certain,"
continued the little woman darkly. "There's
only one entrance to this square, sir, and Blinders,
the policeman, is frequently on duty there. Two
or three nights he's met Mr. Berwin coming in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>after dark and exchanged friendly greetings with
him, and each time Mr. Berwin has been alone!"</p>
<p>"Well! well! What of that?" said Denzil impatiently.</p>
<p>"This much, Mr. Denzil, that Blinders has gone
round the square, after seeing Mr. Berwin, and has
seen shadows—two or three of them—on the sitting-room
blind. Now, sir," cried Miss Greeb,
clinching her argument, "if Mr. Berwin came into
the square alone, how did his visitors get in?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps by the back," conjectured Lucian.</p>
<p>Again Miss Greeb shook her head. "I know
the back of No. 13 as well as I know my own
face," she declared. "There's a yard and a fence,
but no entrance. To get in there you have to go
in by the front door or down the aiery steps; and
you can't do neither without coming past Blinders
at the square's entrance, and that," finished Miss
Greeb triumphantly, "these visitors don't do."</p>
<p>"They may have come into the square during the
day, when Blinders was not on duty."</p>
<p>"No, sir," said Miss Greeb, ready for this objection.
"I thought of that myself, and as my duty
to the square I have inquired—that I have. On
two occasions I've asked the day policeman, and he
says no one passed."</p>
<p>"Then," said Lucian, rather puzzled, "Mr. Berwin
cannot live alone in the house."</p>
<p>"Begging your pardon, I'm sure," cried the pertinacious
woman, "but he does. Mrs. Kebby has
been all over the house, and there isn't another soul
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>in it. No, Mr. Denzil, take it what way you will,
there's something that ain't right about Mr. Berwin—if
that's his real name, which I don't believe
it is."</p>
<p>"Why, Miss Greeb?"</p>
<p>"Just because I don't," replied the landlady, with
feminine logic. "And if you think of having anything
to do with this mystery, Mr. Denzil, I beg
of you not to, else you may come to something as
is too terrible to consider—that you may."</p>
<p>"Such as—"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know," cried Miss Greeb, tossing
her head and gliding towards the door. "It ain't
for me to say what I think. I am the last person
in the world to meddle with what don't concern
me—that I am." And thus ending the conversation,
Miss Greeb vanished, with significant look and
pursed-up lips.</p>
<p>The reason of this last speech and rapid retreat
lay in the fact that Miss Greeb could bring no tangible
charge against her opposite neighbour; and
therefore hinted at his complicity in all kinds of
horrors, which she was quite unable to define save
in terms more or less vague.</p>
<p>Lucian dismissed such hints of criminality from
his mind as the outcome of Miss Greeb's very lively
imagination; yet, even though he reduced her communications
to bare facts, he could not but acknowledge
that there was something queer about Mr. Berwin
and his mode of life. The man's self-pity and
self-condemnation; his hints that certain people
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>wished to do him harm; the curious episode of the
shadows on the blind—these things engaged the
curiosity of Denzil in no ordinary degree; and he
could not but admit to himself that it would greatly
ease his mind to arrive at some reasonable explanation
of Berwin's eccentricities.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, he held that he had no right to
pry into the secrets of the stranger, and honourably
strove to dismiss the tenant of No. 13 and
his tantalising environments from his mind. But
such dismissal of unworthy curiosity was more difficult
to effect than he expected.</p>
<p>For the next week Lucian resolutely banished
the subject from his thoughts, and declined to discuss
the matter further with Miss Greeb. That
little woman, all on fire with curiosity, made various
inquiries of her gossips regarding the doings
of Mr. Berwin, and in default of reporting the
same to her lodger, occupied herself in discussing
them with her neighbours. The consequence of
this incessant gossip was that the eyes of the whole
square fixed themselves on No. 13 in expectation
of some catastrophe, although no one knew exactly
what was going to happen.</p>
<p>This undefinable feeling of impending disaster
communicating itself to Lucian, stimulated his curiosity
to such a pitch that, with some feeling of
shame for his weakness, he walked round the square
on two several evenings in the hope of meeting
Berwin. But on both occasions he was unsuccessful.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>On the third evening he was more fortunate, for
having worked at his law books until late at night,
he went out for a brisk walk before retiring to
rest. The night was cold, and there had been a
slight fall of snow, so Lucian wrapped himself up
well, lighted his pipe, and proceeded to take the
air by tramping twice or thrice round the square.
Overhead the sky was clear and frosty, with chill
glittering stars and a wintry moon. A thin covering
of snow lay on the pavement, and there was
a white rime on the bare branches of the central
trees.</p>
<p>On coming to the house of Berwin, the barrister
saw that the sitting-room was lighted up and the
curtains undrawn, so that the window presented a
square of illuminated blind. Even as he looked,
two shadows darkened the white surface—the shadows
of a man and a woman. Evidently they had
come between the lamp and the window, and so,
quite unknowingly, revealed their actions to the
watcher. Curious to see the end of this shadow
pantomime, Lucian stood still and looked intently
at the window.</p>
<p>The two figures seemed to be arguing, for their
heads nodded violently and their arms waved constantly.
They retreated out of the sphere of light,
and again came into it, still continuing their furious
gestures. Unexpectedly the male shadow seized
the female by the throat and swung her like a feather
to and fro. The struggling figures reeled out of
the radiance and Lucian heard a faint cry.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Thinking that something was wrong, he rushed
up the steps and rang the bell violently. Almost
before the sound died away the light in the room
was extinguished, and he could see nothing more.
Again and again he rang, but without attracting
attention; so Lucian finally left the house and went
in search of Blinders, the policeman, to narrate his
experience. At the entrance of Geneva Square he
ran against a man whom he recognised in the clear
moonlight.</p>
<p>To his surprise he beheld Mark Berwin.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span></p>
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