<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
<h3>A STRANGE CONFESSION</h3>
<p>"I, Jabez Clyne, write this confession in my
prison cell, of my own free will, and without coercion
from any one; partly because I know that the
evidence concerning my share in the Vrain conspiracy
is strong against me, and partly because I
wish to exonerate my daughter Lydia.</p>
<p>"She is absolutely innocent of all knowledge concerning
the feigned death of her husband and his
actual existence in a private lunatic asylum; and
on the strength of this confession of mine—which
will fix the guilt of the matter on the right persons—I
demand that she shall be set free. It is not
fair that she should suffer, for I and Ferruci
planned and carried out the whole conspiracy. Well,
Ferruci has punished himself, and soon the law will
punish me, so it is only justice that Lydia should
be discharged from all blame. On this understanding
I set out the whole story of the affair—how it
was thought of, how it was contrived, and how it
was carried out. Now that Count Ferruci is dead,
this confession can harm no one but myself, and
may be the means of setting Lydia free. So here I
begin my recital.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I was always an unlucky man, and the end of
my life proves to be as unfortunate as the beginning.
I was born in London some fifty and more
years ago, in a Whitechapel slum, of drunken and
profligate parents, so it is little to be wondered at
that my career has been anything but virtuous or
respectable. In my early childhood—if it may be
called so—I was beaten and starved, set to beg,
forced to thieve, and never had a kind word said
to me or a kind deed done to me. No wonder I
grew up a callous, hardened ruffian. As the twig is
bent, so will the tree grow.</p>
<p>"Out of this depth of degradation I was rescued
by a philanthropist, who had me fed and clothed
and educated. I had at his hands every chance of
leading a respectable life, but I did not want to
become smug and honest. My early training was
too strong for that, so after a year or two of enforced
goodness I ran away to sea. The vessel I
embarked on as a stowaway was bound for America.
When I was discovered hiding among the cargo
we were in mid-ocean, and there was nothing for
it but to carry me to the States. Still, to earn my
passage, I was made cabin-boy to a ruffianly captain,
and once more tasted the early delights of
childhood, viz., kicks, curses, and starvation. When
the ship arrived in New York I was turned adrift in
the city without a penny or a friend.</p>
<p>"It is not my purpose to describe my sufferings,
as such description will do no good and interest nobody;
particularly as the purpose of this confession
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</SPAN></span>is to declare the Vrain conspiracy and its failure;
so I will pass over my early years as speedily as possible.
To be brief: I became a newsboy, then a
reporter; afterwards I went West and tried my
luck in San Francisco, later on in Texas; but in
every case I failed, and became poorer and more
desperate than ever. In New Orleans I set up a
newspaper and had a brief time of prosperity, when
I married the daughter of a hotelkeeper, and for
the time was happy.</p>
<p>"Then the Civil War broke out, and I was ruined.
My wife died, leaving me with one child,
whom I called Lydia, after her, but that child died
also, and I was left alone. After the war I prospered
again for a time, and married a woman with
money. She also died, and left a daughter, and
this child I again called Lydia, in memory of my
first wife, who was the only woman I ever truly
loved. I placed little Lydia in a convent for education,
and devoted my second wife's money to that
purpose; then I started out for the fifth or sixth
time to make my fortune. Needless to say, I did
not make it.</p>
<p>"I pass over a long period of distress and prosperity,
hopes and fears. One day I was rich, the
next poor; and Fate—or whatever malignant deity
looked after my poor affairs—knocked me about
most cruelly, tossed me up, threw me down, and at
the end of a score of years left me comparatively
prosperous, with an income, in English money, of
£500 a year. With this I returned to Washington
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</SPAN></span>to seek Lydia, and found her grown up into a beautiful
and clever girl. Her beauty gave me the idea
that I might marry her well in Europe as an American
heiress. So for Europe we started, and after
many years of travel about the Continent we settled
down in the Pension Donizetti in Florence.
There Lydia was admired for her beauty and wit,
and courted for her money! But save for my ten
pounds a week, which we eked out in the most
frugal manner, we had not a penny between us.</p>
<p>"It was in Florence that we met with Vrain and
his daughter, who came to stay at the Pension. He
was a quiet, harmless old gentleman, a trifle weak
in the head, which his daughter said came from
over-study, but which I discovered afterwards was
due to habitual indulgence in morphia and other
drugs. His daughter watched him closely, and—not
having a will of his own by reason of his weak
brain—he submitted passively to her guidance. I
heard by a side wind that Vrain was rich, and had
a splendid mansion in the country; so I hinted to
Lydia that as it seemed difficult to get her a young
husband, it would be better for her to marry a rich
old one. At that time Lydia was in love with, and
almost engaged to, Count Ercole Ferruci, a penniless
Italian nobleman, who courted my pretty girl
less for her beauty than for her supposed wealth.
When I suggested that Lydia should marry Vrain,
she refused at first to entertain the idea; but afterwards,
seeing that the man was old and weak, she
thought it would be a good thing as his wife to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</SPAN></span>inherit his money, and then, as his widow, to marry
Ferruci. I think, also, that the pointed dislike
which Diana Vrain manifested for us both—although
I am bound to say she hated Lydia more
than she did me—had a great deal to do with my
daughter marrying Vrain. However, the end of
it was that Lydia broke off her engagement with
Ferruci—and very mad he was at losing her—and
married Mark Vrain in Florence.</p>
<p>"After the marriage the old man, who at that
time was quite infatuated with Lydia, made a will
leaving her his assurance money of £20,000, but
the house near Bath, and the land, he left to Diana.
I am bound to say that Lydia behaved very well
in this matter, as she could have had all the money
and land, but she was content with the assurance
money, and did not rob Diana Vrain of her birthright.
Yet Diana hated her, and still hates her;
but I ask any one who reads this confession if my
dear Lyddy is not the better woman of the two?
Who dares to say that such a sweet girl is guilty
of the crimes she is charged with?</p>
<p>"Well, the marriage took place, and we all journeyed
home to Berwin Manor; but here things went
from bad to worse. Old Vrain took again to his
morphia, and nothing would restrain him; then
Lydia and Diana fought constantly, and each
wished the other out of the house. I tried to keep
the peace, and blamed Lyddy—who is no saint, I
admit—for the way in which she was treating
Diana. With Miss Vrain I got on very well, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</SPAN></span>tried to make things easy for her; but in the end
the ill-will between her and my Lydia became so
strong that Diana left the house, and went out to
Australia to live with some relatives.</p>
<p>"So Lydia and I and old Vrain were left alone,
and I thought that everything would be right. So
it would have been if Lydia had not put matters
wrong again by inviting Ferruci over to stay. But
she would insist upon doing so, and although I
begged and prayed and commanded her not to have
so dangerous a man in the house, she held her own;
and in the face of my remonstrances, and those of
her husband, Count Ferruci came to stay with us.</p>
<p>"From the moment he entered the house there
was nothing but trouble. Vrain became jealous,
and, mad with drugs he took, often treated Lydia
with cruelty and violence, and she came to me for
protection. I spoke to Vrain, and he insulted me,
wishing to turn me out of the house; but for Lydia's
sake I remained. Then a Miss Tyler came to stay,
and falling in love with Count Ferruci, grew jealous
of Lydia, and made trouble with Vrain. The
end of it was that after a succession of scenes, in
which the old man behaved like the lunatic he was,
he left the house, and not one of us knew where he
went to. That was the last Lydia saw of her husband.</p>
<p>"After that trouble I insisted that Count Ferruci
should leave the house; also Miss Tyler. They
both did, but came back at times to pay Lydia a
visit. We tried to find Vrain, but could not, as he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</SPAN></span>had vanished altogether. Ferruci, I saw, was in
love with Lydia, and she with him, but neither the
one nor the other hinted at a future marriage should
Vrain die. I do not say that Lydia was a fond wife
to Vrain, but he treated her so badly that he could
not expect her to be; and I dare say I am the one to
blame all through, as I made Lydia marry Vrain
when she loved Ferruci. But I did it all for the
best, so as to get money for my dear girl; and if it
has turned out for the worst, my inordinate affection
for my child is to blame. All I have done has been
for Lydia's sake; all Ferruci did was for Lydia's
sake, as he truly loved her; but I swear by all that
I hold most holy that Lydia knew not how either
of us was working to secure her happiness. Well,
Ferruci is dead, and I am in jail, so we have paid
in full for our wickedness.</p>
<p>"I had no idea of getting rid of Vrain until one
day Ferruci took me aside and told me that he had
found Vrain at Salisbury. He stated that the man
was still taking morphia, but in spite of his excesses
had so strong a constitution that it appeared he
would live for many years. The Count then said
that he loved Lydia dearer than life, and wished
to marry her if Vrain could be got out of the way.
I cried out against murder being done, as I never
entertained such an idea for a moment; but Ferruci
denied that he wished to harm the man. He
wanted him put away in a lunatic asylum, and when
I asked him how even then he could marry Lydia,
he suggested his scheme of substituting a sickly and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</SPAN></span>dying man for Vrain. The scheme—which was
entirely invented by the Count—was as follows:</p>
<p>"Ferruci said that in a minor London theatre he
had seen an actor called Clear, who was wonderfully
like Vrain, save that he had no scar on the
cheek, and had a moustache, whereas Vrain was
always clean-shaved. He had made the acquaintance
of the actor—Michael Clear was his full
name—and of his wife. They proved to be hard
up and mercenary, so Ferruci had no difficulty in
gaining over both for his purpose. For a certain
sum of money (which was to be paid to Mrs. Clear
when her husband was dead and the Count, married
to Lydia, was possessed of the assurance money)
Clear agreed to shave off his moustache and personate
Vrain. Ferruci, who was something of a
chemist, created by means of some acid a scar on
Clear's cheek like that on Vrain's, so that he resembled
my son-in-law in every way save that he
had lost one little finger.</p>
<p>"Ferruci wanted me to join him in the conspiracy
so that I could watch Clear impersonating Vrain,
while he himself kept his eye on the real Vrain, who
was to be received into Mrs. Clear's house at Bayswater
and passed off as her husband. All Mrs.
Clear wanted was the money, as—long since wearied
of her drunken husband—she did not care if he
lived or died. Clear, on his part, knowing that he
could not live long, was quite willing to play the
part of Vrain on condition that he had plenty to
eat and drink, and could live in idleness and lux<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</SPAN></span>ury.
His wishes in this direction cost us a pretty
penny, as he bought everything of the best.</p>
<p>"To this plot I refused consent until I saw how
Vrain was: so when Ferruci brought him from Salisbury—where
he was hiding—to London, I had an
interview with him. He proved to be so stupefied
with drugs that he hardly knew me, so, seeing that
my Lydia would get no good out of her life by being
tied to such a husband, I determined that I would
assist Ferruci, on the understanding, of course, that
Vrain was to be well looked after in every way.
We agreed that when Clear died, and his body was
identified as Vrain's, that the real man should be
put in an asylum, which was—and I am sure every
one will agree with me—the best place for him.</p>
<p>"All this being arranged, I went out to look for
a house in a secluded part of the town, in which
Clear—under the name of Berwin—should live until
he died as Vrain. I did not wish to see about
the house in my new character, lest I should be
recognised, if there was any trouble over the assurance
money; to complicate matters, I determined
to disguise myself as the real Vrain. Of course,
Clear personated Vrain as Lydia had last seen him,
that is, clean-shaven, and neat in his dress. But
the real Vrain, neglecting his personal appearance,
had cultivated a long, white beard, and wore a black
velvet skull-cap to conceal a baldness which had
come upon him. I disguised myself in this fashion,
therefore, and went to Pimlico under the name of
Wrent."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</SPAN></span></p>
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