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ENVOI
THE END OF THE ADVENTURE Six
weeks or so had passed when a four-wheeled cab drew up at the door of 2 Albert
Court, London, E.C. The
progress of this vehicle had excited some remark among the more youthful and
lighter-minded denizens of the City, for on its box, arrayed in an ill-fitting
suit of dittoes and a brown hat some sizes too small for him, sat a most
strange object, whose coal-black countenance, dwarfed frame and enormous nose
and shoulders attracted their ribald observation. ‘Look
at him, Bill,’ said one youth to an acquaintance, ‘he’s escaped from Madame
Tussaud’s, he has. Painted hisself over with Day & Martin’s best, and
bought a second-hand Guy Fawkes nose.’ Just
then his remarks were cut short, for Otter, having they been made to understand
by the driver that they had arrived at their destination, descended from the
box in a manner so original, that it is probably peculiar to the aborigines of
Central Africa, and frightened that boy away. From
the cab emerged Leonard and Juanna, looking very much the better for their sea
journey. Indeed, having recovered her health and spirits, and being very neatly
dressed in a grey frock, with a wide black hat trimmed with ostrich feathers,
Juanna looked what she was, a very lovely woman. Entering an outer office
Leonard asked if Messrs. Thomson & Turner were to be seen. ‘Mr.
Turner is within, sir,’ answered a clerk of venerable appearance. ‘Mr. Thomson’
— here his glance fell upon Otter and suddenly he froze up, then added with a
jerk — ‘has been dead a hundred years! Thomson, sir,’ he explained, recovering
his dignity, but with his eyes still fixed on otter, ‘was the founder of this
firm; he died in the time of George III. That is his picture over the door —
the person with a hare lip and a snuff-box.’ ‘Indeed,’
said Leonard. ‘As Mr. Thomson is not available, perhaps you will tell Mr.
Turner that a gentleman would like to speak to him.’ ‘Certainly,
sir,’ said the old clerk, still staring fixedly at Otter, whose aspect appeared
to fascinate him much as that worthy had been fascinated by the eyes of the
Water Dweller. ‘Have you an appointment, sir?’ ‘No,’
answered Leonard. ‘Tell him that it is in reference to an advertisement which
his firm inserted in the “Times” some months ago.’ The
clerk started, wondering if this could be the missing Mr. Outram. That much sought-for
individual was understood to have resided in Africa, which is the home of
dwarfs and other oddities. Once more he stared at Otter and vanished through a
swing door. Presently
he returned. ‘Mr. Turner will see you, sir, if you and the lady will please to
step in. Does this — gentleman — wish to accompany you?’ ‘No,’
said Leonard, ‘he can stop here.’ Thereupon
the clerk handed Otter a tall stool, on which the dwarf perched himself
disconsolately. Then he opened the swing door and ushered Leonard and his wife
into Mr. Turner’s private room. ‘Whom
have I the pleasure of addressing?’ said a bland, stout gentleman, rising from
before a table strewn with papers. ‘Pray be seated, madam.’ Leonard
drew from his pocket a copy of the ‘Weekly Times’ and handed it to him, saying:
‘I
understand that you inserted this advertisement.’ ‘Certainly
we did,’ answered the lawyer after glancing at it. ‘Do you bring me any news of
Mr. Leonard Outram?’ ‘Yes, I
do. I am he, and this lady is my wife.’ The
lawyer bowed politely. ‘This is most fortunate,’ he said; ‘we had almost given
up hope — but, of course, some proofs of identity will be required.’ ‘I
think that they can be furnished to your satisfaction,’ answered Leonard
briefly. ‘Meanwhile, for the sake of argument, perhaps you will assume that I
am the person whom I state myself to be, and inform me to what this
advertisement refers.’ ‘Certainly,’
answered the lawyer, ‘there can be no harm in that. Sir Thomas Outram, the late
baronet, as you are doubtless aware, had two sons, Thomas and Leonard. Leonard,
the second son, as a young man was engaged to, or rather had some love
entanglement with a lady — really I forget her maiden name, but perhaps you can
inform me of it —’ ‘Do you
happen to mean Miss Jane Beach?’ said Leonard quietly. At this
point Juanna turned in her chair and became extraordinarily, indeed almost
fiercely interested, in the conversation. ‘Quite
so, Beach was the name. You must excuse my forgetfulness. Well, Sir Thomas’s
affairs fell into confusion, and after their father’s death, Mr. Leonard Outram
with his elder brother Thomas, emigrated to South Africa. In that same year
Miss Jane — eh — Beach married a client of ours, Mr. Cohen, whose father had
purchased the estate of Outram from the trustees in bankruptcy.’ ‘Indeed!’
said Leonard. ‘Shortly
afterwards,’ went on the lawyer, ‘Mr. Cohen, or rather Sir Jonas Cohen,
succeeded to the estate on the death of his father. Two years ago he died
leaving all his property, real and personal, to his only child, a daughter
named Jane, with reversion to his widow in fee simple. Within a month of his
death the child Jane died also, and nine months later her mother, Lady Cohen,
née Jane Beach, followed her to the grave.’ ‘Yes,’
said Leonard in a dull voice, and hiding his face in his hand, ‘go on, sir.’ ‘Lady
Cohen made a somewhat peculiar will. Under the terms of that will she bequeaths
the mansion house and estates of Outram, together with most of her personal
property, amounting in all to something over a hundred thousand pounds, to her
old friend, Leonard Outram and the heirs of his body, with reversion to her
brother. This will has not been disputed, therefore if you are Leonard Outram,
I may congratulate you upon being once more the owner of your ancestral estate
and a considerable fortune in cash.’ For a
while Leonard was too agitated to speak. ‘I will
prove to you,’ he said at last, ‘that I am this person, that is I will prove it
prima facie, afterwards you can satisfy yourself of the truth of
my statements by the usual methods.’ And he proceeded to adduce a variety of
evidence as to his identity which need not be set out here. The lawyer listened
in silence, taking a note from time to time. ‘I
think,’ he said when Leonard had finished, ‘that, subject to those inquiries,
of which you yourself have pointed out the necessity in so grave a matter, I
may accept it as proved that you are none other than Mr. Leonard Outram, or
rather,’ he added, correcting himself, ‘if, as I understand, your elder brother
Thomas is dead, than Sir Leonard Outram. Indeed you have so entirely convinced
me that this is the case, that I have no hesitation in placing in your hands a
letter addressed to you by the late Lady Cohen, and deposited with me together
with the executed will; though when you have read it, I shall request you to
leave that letter with me for the present.
‘By the way,
it may interest you to learn,’ Mr. Turner added, as he went to a safe built
into the wall and unlocked its iron door, ‘that we have been hunting for you
for a year or more. We even sent a man to South Africa, and he tracked you to a
spot in some mountains somewhere north of Delagoa Bay, where it was reported
that you, with your brother Thomas and two friends, were digging for gold. He
reached the spot on the night of the ninth of May last year.’ ‘The
very day that I left it,’ broke in Leonard. ‘And
found the site of your camp and three graves. At first our representative
thought that you were all dead, but afterwards he fell in with a native who
appears to have deserted from your service, and who told him that one of the
brothers was dying when he left the camp, but one was still in good health,
though he did not know where he had gone.’ ‘My
brother Thomas died on the first of May — this day year,’ said Leonard. ‘After
that all trace of you was lost, but I still kept on advertising, for missing
people have a wonderful way or turning up to claim fortunes, and you see the
result. Here is the letter, Sir Leonard.’ Leonard
took the document and looked at it, while strange feelings crowded into his
mind. This was the first letter that he had ever received from Jane Beach, also
it was the last that he ever could receive. ‘Before
I open this, Mr. Turner,’ he said, ‘for my own satisfaction I may as well ask
you to compare the handwriting of the address with another specimen of it that
chances to be in my possession’; and producing the worn prayer-book from his
pocket — Jane’s parting gift — he opened it at the fly-leaf, and pointed out
the inscription to the lawyer, placing the envelope beside it. Mr.
Turner took a reading-glass and examined first one writing and then the other. ‘These
words appear to have been written by the same hand,’ he said presently. ‘Lady
Cohen’s writing was peculiar, and it is difficult to be mistaken on the point,
though I am no expert. To free you from responsibility, with your consent I
myself will open this letter,’ and he slit the envelope at the top with an
ivory paper-knife, and, drawing out its contents, he handed them to Leonard.
They ran thus: ‘My
dearest Leonard, — For so I, who am no longer a wife, may call you without
shame, seeing that you are in truth the dearest to my heart, whether you be
still living, or dead like my husband and my child. ‘The
will which I am to sign to-morrow, will prove to you if you are yet alive, as I
believe to be the case, how deep is my anxiety that you should re-enter into
possession of the ancestral home of which fortune has deprived you. It is with
the greatest pleasure that I make you this bequest, and I can do so with a
clear conscience, for my late husband has left everything at my absolute
disposal — being himself without near relations — in the sad event which has
occurred, of the death of his daughter, our only child. ‘May you
live long to enjoy the lands and fortune which I am enabled thus to return to
your family, and may your children and their descendants sit at Outram for many
a generation to come. And now
I will talk no more of this matter, for I have an explanation to make and a
pardon to ask. It may
well be, Leonard, that when your eyes fall upon these lines, you will have
forgotten me — most deservedly — and have found some other woman to love you.
No, as I set this down I feel that it is not true; you will never forget me
altogether, Leonard — your first love — and no other woman will ever be quite
the same to you as I have been; or, at least, so I believe in my foolishness
and vanity. You
will ask what explanation is possible after the way in which I have treated you,
and the outrage that I have done to my own love. Such as it is, however, I
offer it to you. I was
driven into this marriage, Leonard, by my late father, who could be very cruel
when he chose. To admit this is, as I know, a proof of weakness. So be it, I
have never concealed from myself that I am weak. Yet, believe me, I struggled
while I could; I wrote to you even, but they intercepted my letter; and I told
all the truth to Mr. Cohen, but he was self-willed and passionate, and would
take no heed of my pleading. So I married him, Leonard, and was fairly happy
with him, for he was kindness itself to me, but from that hour I began to die. And now
more than six years have passed since the night of our parting in the snow, and
the end is at hand, for I am really dying. It has pleased God to take my little
daughter, and this last shock proved more than I can bear, and so I go to join
her and to wait with her till such time as I shall once more see your
unforgotten face. ‘This
is all that I have to say, dear Leonard. ‘Pardon
me, and I am selfish enough ,to add — do not forget me. JANE.
‘P. S.
— Why is it that an affection like ours, which has never borne fruit even,
should in the end prove stronger than any other earthly tie? Heaven knows and
Heaven alone, how passionately I loved and love my dead child; and yet, now
that my own hour is at hand, it is of you that I think the most, you who are
neither child nor husband. I suppose that I shall understand ere long, but O
Leonard, Leonard, Leonard, if, as I believe, my nature is immortal, I swear
that such love as mine for you, however much it be dishonoured and betrayed, is
still the most immortal part of it! — J.’ Leonard
put down the letter on the table, and again he covered his face with his hand
to hide his emotion, for his feelings overcame him as a sense of the depth and
purity of this dead woman’s undying love sank into his heart. ‘May I
read that letter, Leonard?’ asked Juanna in a quiet voice. ‘Yes, I
suppose so, dear, if you like,’ he answered, feeling dully that it was better
to make a clean breast of the matter at once, and thus to prevent future
misunderstandings. Juanna
took the letter and perused it twice, by which time she knew it as well as she
did the Lord’s Prayer, nor did she ever forget a single word of it. Then she
handed it back to the lawyer, saying nothing. ‘I
understand,’ said Mr. Turner, breaking in on a silence which he felt to be
painful, ‘that you will be able to produce the necessary proofs of identity
within the next few days, and then we can get the will proved in the usual
form. Meanwhile, you must want money, which I will take the risk of advancing
you,’ and he wrote a cheque for a hundred pounds and gave it to Leonard. Half an
hour later Leonard and Juanna were alone in a room at their hotel, but as yet
scarcely a word had passed between them since they left the lawyer’s office. Don’t
you see, Leonard,’ his wife said almost fiercely, ‘it is most amusing, you made
a mistake. Your brother’s dying prophecy was like a Delphic oracle, it could be
taken two ways, and, of course, you adopted the wrong interpretation. You left
Grave Mountain a day too soon. It was by Jane Beach’s help that you were to
recover Outram, not by mine,’ and she laughed sadly. ‘Don’t
talk, like that, dear,’ said Leonard in a sad voice, ‘it pains me.’ ‘How
else am I to talk after reading that letter?’ she answered, ‘for what woman can
hold her own against a dead rival? Now also I must be indebted to her bounty
all my days. Oh! if I had not lost the jewels — if only I had not lost the
jewels!’ History
does not relate how Leonard dealt with this unexpected and yet natural
situation. A week
had passed and Leonard, with Juanna at his side, found himself once more in the
great hall at Outram, where, on a bygone night, many years ago, he and his dead
brother had sworn their oath. All was the same, for in this hall nothing had
been changed — Jane had seen to that. There chained to its stand was the Bible,
upon which they had registered their vow; there were the pictures of his
ancestors gazing down calmly upon him, as though they cared little for the
story of his struggles and of his strange triumph over fortune ‘by the help of
a woman.’ There was the painted window, with its blazoned coats of arms and its
proud mottoes — ‘For Heart, Home and Honour,’
and ‘Per ardea ad astra.’ He had
won the heart and home, and he had kept his honour and his oath. He had endured
the toils and dangers, and the crown of stars was his. And
yet, was Leonard altogether happy as he stood looking on these familiar things?
Perhaps not quite, for yonder in the churchyard there was a grave, and within
the church a monument in white marble, that was wonderfully like one who had
loved him and whom he had loved, though time and trouble had written a strange
difference on her face. Also, he had failed: he had kept his oath indeed and
fought on till the end was won, but himself he had not won it. What now was his
had once belonged to his successful rival, who doubtless little dreamed of the
payment that would be exacted from him by the decree of fate. And was
Juanna happy? She knew well that Leonard loved her truly; but oh! it was cruel
that she who had shared the struggles should be deprived of her reward — that
it should be left to another, who if not false had at least been weak, to give
to her husband that which she had striven so hard to win — that which she had
won — and lost. And harder still was it that in this ancient place which would
henceforth be her home, by day and by night she must feel the presence of the
shadow of a woman, a woman sweet and pale, who, as she believed, stood between
her and that which she desired above all things — the complete and absolute
possession of her husband’s heart. Doubtless
she over-rated the trouble; men and women do not spend their lives in brooding
upon the memories of their first loves — if they did, this would be a
melancholy world. But to Juanna it was real enough, and remained so for some
years. And if a thing is true to the heart, it avails little that reason should
give it the lie. In
short, now in the hour of their full prosperity, Leonard and Juanna were making
acquaintance with the fact that fortune never gives with both hands, as the
French say, but loves to rob with the one while she bestows with the other. To
few is it allowed to be completely miserable, to none to be completely happy.
Their good luck had been so overwhelming in many ways, that it would have
partaken of the unnatural, and might well have excited their fears for the
future, had its completeness been unmarred by these drawbacks which, such as
they were, probably they learned to disremember as the years passed over them
bringing them new trials and added blessings. Perhaps
a peep into the future will tell us the rest of the story of Leonard and Juanna
Outram better and more truly than any further chronicling of events. Ten
years or so have gone by and Sir Leonard, now a member of Parliament and the
Lord-Lieutenant of his county, comes out of church on the first Sunday in May
accompanied by his wife, the stateliest matron in the countryside, and some
three or four children, boys and girls together, as healthy as they are
handsome. After a glance at a certain grave that lies near to the chancel door,
they walk homewards across the budding park in the sweet spring afternoon,
till, a hundred yards or more from the door of Outram Hall, they pause at the
gates of a dwelling known as “The Kraal,” shaped like a bee-hive, fashioned of
straw and sticks, and built by the hands of Otter alone. Basking
in the sunshine in front of this hut sits the dwarf himself, cutting
broom-sticks with a knife out of the straightest of a bundle of ash saplings
that lie beside him. He is dressed in a queer mixture of native and European
costume, but otherwise time has wrought no change in him. ‘Greeting,
Baas,’ he says as Leonard comes up. ‘Is Baas Wallace here yet?’ ‘No, he
will be down in time for dinner. Mind that you are there to wait, Otter.’ ‘I
shall not be late, Baas, on this day of all days.’ ‘Otter,’
cries a little maid, ‘you should not make broomsticks on Sunday, it is very
wrong.’ The
dwarf grins by way of answer, then speaks to Leonard in a tongue that none but
he can understand. ‘What
did I tell you many years ago, Baas?’ he says. ‘Did I not tell you that by this
way or by that, you should win the wealth, and that the great kraal across the
water should be yours again, and that the children of strangers should wander
there no more? See, It has come true,’ and he points to the happy group of youngsters.
‘Wow!
I, Otter, who am a fool in most things, have proved to be the best of prophets.
Yet I will rest content and prophesy no more, lest I should lose my name for
wisdom.’ A few
hours later and dinner is over in the larger hall. All the servants have gone
except Otter, who dressed in a white smock stands behind his master’s chair.
There is no company present save Mr. Wallace, who has just returned from
another African expedition, and sits smiling and observant, his eye-glass fixed
in his eye as of yore. Juanna is arrayed in full evening dress, however, and a
great star ruby blazes upon her breast. ‘Why
have you got the red stone on to-night, Mother?’ asks her eldest son Thomas,
who with his two sisters has come down to dessert. ‘Hush,
dear,’ she answers, as Otter advances to that stand on which the Bible is
chained, holding a glass filled with port in his hand. ‘Deliverer
and Shepherdess,’ he says, speaking in Sisutu, ‘on this day eleven years gone
Baas Tom died out yonder; I, who drink wine but once a year, drink to the
memory of Baas Tom, and to our happy meeting with him in the gold House of the
Great-Great’; and swallowing the port with a single gulp Otter throws the glass
behind him, shattering it on the floor. ‘Amen,’
says Leonard. ‘Now, love, your toast.’ ‘I
drink to the memory of Francisco who died to save me,’ says Juanna in a low
voice. ‘Amen,’
repeats her husband. For a
moment there is silence, for Leonard gives no toast; then the boy Thomas lifts
his glass and cries: ‘And I
drink to Olfan, the king of the People of the Mist, and to Otter, who killed
the Snake-god, and whom I love the best of all of them. Mother, may Otter get
the spear and the rope and tell us the story of how he dragged you and Father
up the ice-bridge?’ THE
END.
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