<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
<h3>THE CONFESSION (<i>Continued</i>)</h3>
<p>"In Geneva Square, Pimlico, I found the house
I wanted. It was No. 13, and was said to be haunted,
as cries had been heard in it at night, and lights
had been seen flitting from window to window when
no one was in the house. I looked at it without entering,
or calling on the landlord, and then I went
into Jersey Street to see the back. The house in
the same section with it was kept by a Mrs. Bensusan,
who took in lodgers. Her rooms were vacant,
and as it suited me very well that I should be a
neighbour to Clear, I took the rooms. They proved—as
I shall explain—better for our purpose than
I was aware of.</p>
<p>"When I told Ferruci of my discovery, he gave
Clear money and made him hire the house and furnish
two rooms for himself. I supplied the money.
In this way Clear, calling himself Berwin, which
was the name of Vrain's house in the country, came
to live in Pimlico. We also removed the real Vrain
to Mrs. Clear's at Bayswater, and he passed as her
husband. So weak were his brains, and so cowed
was his spirit, that there was no difficulty in keep<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</SPAN></span>ing
him in the house, and the neighbours were told
merely that Clear was ill.</p>
<p>"For my part, I took up my abode in Jersey
Street under the name of Wrent, and met Clear
outside on occasions when it was necessary for me
to see him; but I never entered the house—for obvious
reasons.</p>
<p>"I was constantly afraid lest Clear, in his drunken
fits—for he was always more or less drunk—should
reveal our secret, and I took as my bedroom
an apartment in Mrs. Bensusan's out of the window
of which I could overlook the back of No. 13. One
night, when I was watching, I saw a dark figure
glide into Mrs. Bensusan's yard and climb over
the fence, only to disappear. I was terribly alarmed,
and wondering what was wrong, I put on my
clothes and hurried downstairs into the yard. Also
I climbed over the fence into the yard of No. 13.
Here I could not see where the figure had disappeared
to, as the doors and windows at the back
of the house were all locked. I could not conjecture
who the woman was—for it was a woman I
saw—who had entered, or why she had done so, or
in what way she had gained admission.</p>
<p>"While I was thus thinking I saw the woman
again. She apparently rose out of the earth, and
after closing what appeared to be a trap-door, she
made for the fence. I stopped her before she got
there, and found to my surprise that she was a red-headed
servant of Mrs. Bensusan's—a kind of
gypsy, very clever, and—I think—with much evil
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</SPAN></span>in her. She was alarmed at being discovered, and
begged me not to tell on her. For my own sake,
I promised not to do so, but made her explain how
she got into the house, and why she entered it. Then
she told me an extraordinary tale.</p>
<p>"For some years, she said, she had been with
Mrs. Bensusan, who had taken her from the gypsies
to civilise her, and hating the restraint of civilised
life, she had been in the habit of roaming about
at night. Knowing that the house at the back was
unoccupied, this Rhoda—for that is her name—climbed
over the fence and tried to get into it, but
found the doors and windows bolted and barred.</p>
<p>"Then one night she saw a kind of grated window
amid the grass, and as this proved not to be
bolted, she pulled it open. Taking a candle with
her, she went on a voyage of discovery, and dropped
through this hole some distance into a disused cellar.
Only a cat could have got in safely, for the
height was considerable; and, indeed, Rhoda did
not risk that mode of entrance again, for, finding
a ladder in the cellar, which, I presume, had been
used to get at the higher bins of wine, she placed
this against the aperture, and thus was enabled
to ascend and descend without difficulty. Frequently
by this means she entered the empty house, and
went from room to room with her candle, singing
gypsy songs as she wandered. So here I had found
the ghost of No. 13, although I don't suppose this
impish gypsy girl knew as much. She haunted the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</SPAN></span>house just to amuse herself, when fat Mrs. Bensusan
thought she was safe in bed.</p>
<p>"I asked Rhoda why she had entered the house
on that particular night when I had caught her.
She confessed that she had seen some articles of silver
in Clear's rooms which she wished to steal; but
on this occasion he had locked the door—a thing
which he did not always do in his drunken humours—and
so Rhoda was returning disappointed. After
this confession I made her go back to her own house
and promised to keep her secret. I also told her
that if she held her tongue I would give her a
present. For this purpose I made Ferruci buy me
a cloak lined with rabbit skins, as Rhoda on her
night excursions wanted something to keep her
warm. When Ferruci gave it to me, and it was
lying in my room, Mrs. Clear came one night to see
me, and finding it cold, she borrowed the cloak to
wrap round her. She kept it for some time, and
brought it back on Christmas Eve, when I gave it
next day to Rhoda. It was Ferruci who bought
the cloak, not I; and it was purchased for Rhoda,
not for Mrs. Clear.</p>
<p>"The next night I entered No. 13 by the cellarway,
and found it of great advantage, as I could
visit Clear without exciting suspicion, and so keep
an eye on him. At first he was alarmed by my unexpected
appearance, but when I showed him the
secret way, he made use of it also. We used it only
on dark nights, and it was for this reason that we
were not noticed by the neighbours. It would never
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</SPAN></span>have done for any one of us to be seen climbing over
the fence. Mrs. Clear once visited her husband,
and had a quarrel with him about his drinking. It
was her shadow and Clear's which Denzil saw on
the blind. As soon as they heard his ring they both
went out the back way, and in climbing hurriedly
over the fence Mrs. Clear tore her veil. It was a
portion of this which Denzil found.</p>
<p>"On that night, Clear, after leaving his wife,
entered the square by the front, and so met with
Denzil, much to the latter's surprise. I was very
angry when Clear showed Denzil over the house;
but he said that the young man was very suspicious,
and he only showed him the house to prove that
there was no one in it, and that he must have been
mistaken about the shadows on the blind. Notwithstanding
this explanation, I did not approve of
Clear's act, nor, indeed, of his acquaintance with
Denzil.</p>
<p>"For some months matters went on in this way.
Clear remained in the Silent House, drinking himself
to death; Mrs. Clear looked after Vrain in her
Bayswater house; and I, in my old-man disguise,
remained in Jersey Street, although at times I left
there and went to see my daughter. All this time
Lydia had no idea of what we were preparing.
Then I began to grow wearied of the position, for
Clear proved tougher than we anticipated, and
showed no signs of dying. In despair, I thought I
would give him the means to kill himself.</p>
<p>"Mind, I did not wish to murder him myself;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</SPAN></span>but the man, when in his drinking fits, thought he
was attacked by enemies, and when in a melancholic
frame of mind, on recovery, would frequently hint
at suicide. I therefore thought that if a weapon
were left within his reach he might kill himself.
I don't defend my conduct in this case, but surely
this drunken scoundrel was better dead than alive.
In choosing a weapon, I wished to select one that
would implicate Ferruci rather than myself, in case
there was any trouble over the matter; so I chose
for my purpose a stiletto which hung by a parti-coloured
ribbon on the walls of the library at Berwin
Manor. I fancied that the stiletto, having
been bought in Florence, and Ferruci coming from
Florence, he, if anyone—should any of these facts
come to light—would be credited with giving it
to Clear.</p>
<p>"I took this stiletto from Berwin Manor some
time before Christmas, and, bringing it up to town,
I left it, on the day before Christmas, on the table
in Clear's sitting-room. That was at nine o'clock
in the night, and that was when I last saw him
alive. Who killed him I know no more than any
one else.</p>
<p>"On Christmas Eve I was ill, and wrote to Lydia
to come up. She met me at the Pegalls', but as I
felt ill, I left there at six o'clock, and Lydia stayed
with the family all night. At seven o'clock Mrs.
Clear came to me with Ferruci, and brought back
the cloak which I gave afterwards to Rhoda. She
wanted to see her husband again, but I refused to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</SPAN></span>let her risk the visit. Ferruci came to tell me that
he was arranging to place Vrain—who was becoming
too violent to be restrained—in the private
asylum of Dr. Jorce, at Hampstead. Mrs. Clear
was to go with him, and we conversed about the
matter.</p>
<p>"Ferruci went away first, as he desired to see
Clear, and for that purpose waited about until it
was darker, and went into the back yard shortly
after eight o'clock. There he was seen by Rhoda
as he was about to climb the fence, and, not knowing
it was the girl, he took fright and ran out of the
yard into Jersey Street. Here he found Mrs. Clear,
who had left me and was waiting for him, and
the pair went off to see Dr. Jorce at Hampstead.
I believe they remained there all night.</p>
<p>"Left alone, I climbed over the fence about nine
o'clock, and saw Clear. He was celebrating Christmas
Eve by drinking heavily, and I was unable to
bring him to reason. I therefore left the stiletto
which I had brought with me on the table, and
returned to my house in Jersey Street. I never saw
him alive again. I went to bed and slept all night,
so I was aware of nothing in connection with the
death until late on Christmas Day. Then Mrs.
Bensusan was told by Miss Greeb, the landlady of
Denzil, that the tenant of No. 13 had been murdered.
I fancied that he had killed himself in a
fit of melancholia, with the stiletto I had left on
his table; but I did not dare to go near the house
to find this out.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Afterwards I learned that the doctor who examined
the body was of the opinion that Clear had
been murdered; and, being afraid about the police
taking up the case, I paid Mrs. Bensusan a week's
rent and left her house two days after Christmas.
I returned to Berwin Manor, and shortly afterwards
Ferruci joined me there, as he had successfully
incarcerated Vrain in the asylum under the
name of Michael Clear.</p>
<p>"When the advertisement came out, it was I
who hinted to Lydia that the dead man—seeing
that he was called Berwin—might be her husband.
We went up to town: Lydia identified the body of
Clear as her husband in all innocence—for after
death the man looked more like Vrain than ever;
and in due time the assurance money was obtained.</p>
<p>"I do not think there is anything more to tell,
save that I did not know that Mrs. Clear had betrayed
me. I could not pay her the money, as I
could not get it from Lydia. I told Lydia I was
going to Paris, but in reality I was hunting for
Rhoda, who had run away from Jersey Street. I
fancied she might betray us, and wished to make
things safe with her. Before I found her, however,
I saw in the papers that Ferruci had committed
suicide; also that Lydia—who had gone to
Dover to meet me, thinking I was returning from
Paris—had been arrested. Then I saw Mrs. Clear's
advertisement saying she would betray me if I did
not pay the money. I consented to meet her in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</SPAN></span>order to implore her silence, and so fell into the
clutches of the law.</p>
<p>"I may state that I did not kill Clear, as I never
saw him after nine o'clock, and then he was alive.
In spite of what the doctor said, I am still inclined
to think he killed himself. Now I have made a
clean breast of it—I am willing to be punished; but
I hope Lydia will be set free, for whosoever is
guilty, she is innocent. I have been an unlucky
man, and I remain one at this moment when I sign
myself for the last time, <span class="smcap">Jabez Clyne</span>."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Needless to say, both Link and Denzil were
greatly surprised at this confession, which revealed
all things save the one they wished to know.</p>
<p>"What do you think of this idea of suicide?"
asked Lucian.</p>
<p>"It is quite out of the question," replied the detective
decidedly. "The doctor who examined the
body said that it was impossible the man could have
committed suicide. The position of the wound
shows that; also the power of the stroke. No man
could drive a stiletto so dexterously and strongly
into the heart. Also the room was in confusion,
which points to a struggle, and the stiletto is missing.
It was not suicide, but murder, and I believe
either Clyne or Ferruci killed the man."</p>
<p>"But Ferruci was not——"</p>
<p>"He was not there after ten," interrupted Link,
"but he was there about eight. I dare say when
Rhoda saw him he was coming back after having
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</SPAN></span>committed the deed, and Clyne says the stiletto was
not there at the time just to screen him."</p>
<p>"It is of little use to screen the dead," said Lucian.
"I think only one person can tell the truth
about this murder, and that is Rhoda."</p>
<p>"I'm looking for her, Mr. Denzil."</p>
<p>This was easy saying, but harder doing, for
weeks passed away, and in spite of all the efforts of
the police Rhoda could not be found. Then one
morning the detective, much excited, burst into
Lucian's rooms waving a paper over his head.</p>
<p>"A confession!" he cried. "Another confession!"</p>
<p>"Of whom?" asked Lucian, surprised.</p>
<p>"Of Rhoda!" replied Link excitedly. "She has
confessed! It was Rhoda who killed Michael
Clear!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />