Penny Dreadful Multipack Vol. 1 (Illustrated. Annotated. 'Wagner The Wehr-Wolf,' 'Varney The Vampire,' 'The Mysteries of London Vol. 1' + Bonus Features) (Penny Dreadful Multipacks) (288 page)

CHAPTER CXII

VIOLA

 

THE Resurrection Man and the stock-broker pursued their way in
silence to the very entrance of the alley leading to the side door of the
dwelling of the former.
    There they halted, the Resurrection Man observing that they
must wait for Mr. Chichester.
    Tomlinson took advantage of the interval to implore the
Resurrection Man not to communicate to Chichester the secret relating to
Michael Martin.
    "Do not be afraid," was the answer: "I am as
close as Newgate-door when people conduct themselves as they ought to do. One
individual for whom I do business never knows what I am engaged in for another
- unless his own bad behaviour forces me to blab. So make yourself quite easy
upon that score."
    Chichester now made his appearance; and the Resurrection Man
led the way up the alley.
    Having opened the door of the house, he admitted his two
companions into the back-room on the ground-floor, and then struck a light.
    The appearance of the place was precisely the same as when
we described it on the first occasion of the Rattlesnake's visit to that
department of the building.
    Tomlinson shuddered as he cast his eyes around the naked and
gloomy walls.
    "Holloa!" ejaculated Chichester, taking up the
mask, which lay on the table, in his hands: "I suppose that this —"
    "Hush!" said the Resurrection Man, glancing
towards Tomlinson, as much as to desire Chichester not to allow the
stock-broker to know more of the secrets connected with the treatment of the
prisoner, than was possible; for Tidkins, who possessed a profound knowledge of
human nature, was well aware that certain compunctious feelings still floated
in the mind of Tomlinson, and that he was, after all, but a very coward in the
ways of crime.
    Chichester covered the mask with the cloak, while the
stock-broker was engaged in scanning the appearance of the chamber.
    When Tomlinson had completed his survey, and while he was
still wondering where the means of communication with the apartment of the
alleged lunatic could be, he happened to turn in the direction of the
chimney-piece, when to his surprise he perceived the hearth-stone raised, and
the Resurrection Man half down the subterranean staircase which that strangely
contrived trap-door had disclosed to view.
    Tomlinson shuddered - and hesitated whether he should
proceed further in the matter; but his scruples vanished when he heard the
voice of the Resurrection Man desiring - or rather commanding him - to follow
him down that flight of stone steps.
    Guided by Tidkins, who carried the candle, which was fixed
in one of the large tin shades before described, Tomlinson descended the
stairs, end found himself in a vaulted passage, about twenty feet long, and
four broad. There were four strong doors, studded with thick iron nails, on
each side.
    "You see, this house was built for a lunatic asylum
many - many years ago, when treatment wasn't quite so humane as it is
now," whispered the Resurrection Man to Tomlinson; "but it hadn't
been used as such for the last thirty year. till the other day."
    "And did you hire the establishment for the
 
purpose of restoring it to its
original uses?" demanded Tomlinson, shuddering, as he glanced around on
the damp walls on which the strong light of the candle fell.
    "Not I, indeed," answered Tidkins, abruptly.
    Chichester had now descended into the subterranean passage.
    "This is the cell," said the Resurrection Man;
and, approaching one of the doors, he placed a key in the lock.
    During the few seconds that intervened until the door was
thrown open, Tomlinson experienced a perfect age of mental agony. He felt as if
he were about to perpetrate some hideous crime - a murder of the blackest dye.
The perspiration poured off his forehead: he trembled from head to foot; his
brain felt oppressed; there was a weight upon the pit of his stomach; his eye
balls throbbed.
    Yes - he was a very coward in guilt!
    The door flew open.
    The Resurrection Man entered first, and advanced into the
middle of a small arched cell - a stone tomb, built to immure the living!
    A decent bed, a table, a chair, a wash-hand-stand, and a
lamp, which was lighted, together with a few other necessaries, composed the
furniture of that dungeon.
    And stretched upon the bed, with her clothes on, lay the
victim of this cruel persecution.
    The glare of the Resurrection Man's candle fell upon a pale,
but not unpleasing countenance: the long chesnut hair spread, dishevelled, over
the arm that supported the head.
    The sleep of that lady was deep but uneasy - such a slumber
as might be supposed to fall upon the eyes of the criminal the night before his
execution.
    Her bosom heaved convulsively; and from her lips escaped a
stifled sob as the three men entered the cell.
    Chichester was about to place his hand upon her shoulder in
order to arouse her, when she opened her eyes, and started up to a sitting
posture on the bed.
    "Villains!" she exclaimed: "would you murder
me?"
    "No such thing, my dear," said Chichester.
"We have merely come to terminate this unpleasant business in the way
proposed by Mr. Tidkins."
    "The wretch!" cried Viola, casting a glance of
doubt and uncertainty at both Tomlinson and the Resurrection Man.
    "Ah! I dare say I am, ma'am, in your estimation,"
said Tidkins, cooly. "Oh! you needn't look at me in that way, ma'am. I
will acknowledge that I am your keeper in this establishment; and that it's me
who has been good enough to bring you food every night."
    "The wretch!" again cried the unhappy lady, while
a profound shudder seemed to convulse her whole frame as she surveyed the
Resurrection Man from head to foot. " It is you, then," she
continued, leaping from time bed, and confronting the miscreant, "it is
you who have dared to practise upon my fears in a manner the most diabolical -
the most cowardly ; - you who have chosen the solemn hour of midnight for your
visits, and who have come in a guise calculated to fill my mind with the most
horrible imaginings!"
    "Remember our agreement, ma'am," said Tidkins,
sternly. "You pledged yourself to forget the past upon certain conditions:
we are here to fulfil these conditions. Do you mean to keep your word? or must
we leave you to your solitude ?"
    "Who is this gentleman?" demanded Viola, casting a
penetrating glance upon Tomlinson.
    "The stock-broker, my dear," answered Chichester:
"the person who will receive your signature to a certain little paper
—"
    "Then, sir," interrupted the lady, addressing
herself to James Tomlinson, "as you exercise an honourable profession,
prove yourself an honourable man in this respect. You see before you a
powerless female, who was weak enough to bestow her hand upon a villain - a
villain that has immured her, by the aid of another villain of even a deeper
dye than himself, in this horrible vault! Perhaps they have told you that I am
mad, sir; but do I speak like one whose reason has abandoned her? or would you
receive the signature of a person who knew not what she signed? Oh! no, sir -
you cannot believe that I am in mental darkness! you must perceive the full
extent of the villany that has been practised against me, for the purpose of
plundering me of that property which I received from my former husband! Oh! if
you be a man possessing one spark of honour - as I must suppose that you are
—"
    "Come - a truce to all this," said Mr. Chichester.
"The gentleman to whom you are addressing yourself knows the whole affair,
and will act
 
with
 
and
 
for
 
me."
    "Is this true, sir?" asked the unhappy lady,
casting a glance of mingled terror and supplication upon the stock-broker, and
clasping her hands together: "can this be true? Is it possible that a
person exercising an honourable profession can league with wretches of their
stamp?"  - and she pointed disdainfully towards the Resurrection Man
and Chichester. "Oh! no, it cannot be! At least, hear me! I married that
man —"
    "Don't I tell you that Mr. Tomlinson knows all,"
cried Chichester, impatiently. "We did not come to debate upon the past,
but to settle for the future."
    "You have come, then, to plunder a weak, helpless,
persecuted female," continued Viola. "But do you know, sir, the
terrible means that have been adopted to wring from me a consent to part with
half the property which was bequeathed to me by a man that loved me - a man who
toiled for years and years to amass the fortune that must now be devoted to the
extravagances of a spendthrift? Would you believe to what an extent the
cruelty, the cowardice of that man," - and she pointed to Tidkins,-
"has been carried to terrify me into compliance with the demands of his
employer? Sir, for three weeks and three days have I been a prisoner in this
dungeon; and every night - without fail - has that miscreant visited me in a
disguise which, in such a place, and at such an hour, would make the stoutest
heart palpitate with horror, - a disguise of such a nature that this is the
first time that I have seen his face; for on the fatal evening when I was
seized and brought to this dungeon, every thing was involved in utter obscurity
; - and then, when the door opened again, and a light gleamed in upon me, - O
God! it was carried by a person dressed in a dark cloak and a white mask - like
a being of another world!"
    "Surely you did not go to such extremes as this?"
exclaimed Tomlinson, turning sharply round upon the Resurrection Man.
    "Whatever I did, or did not, is nothing to the present
business," replied Tidkins, brutally." If anything is going to be
done, let it be done at once; if not, the lady will remain here till she
 
chooses to consent to the terms
proposed to her."
    Tomlinson glanced, with a look of deep sympathy, towards the
lady, who stood in an attitude of supplication and despair before him. Her
dishevelled hair hung loosely over her shoulders: her countenance, though not
beautiful, was naturally interesting, and was now rendered more so by its
extreme pallor and by the expression of profound melancholy which it wore; and
her mild blue eyes ware raised towards him as if to implore his aid - his
compassion.
    "Now, what is to be done?" demanded Chichester.
    "It is for this gentleman to decide," said the
lady, still gazing upon Tomlinson's countenance. " You may well suppose
that I am desirous to recover the liberty which has thus been infamously
violated ; - but if you, sir, possess one germ of generous feeling - one spark
of honour - one gleam of humanity in your soul, do not - do not lend yourself
to this infamy! Command those men to restore me to freedom - they cannot refuse
to obey you! Oh! sir - hear me - do not avert your head: hear me - hear me, I
implore you!"
    "This is quite enough of folly for one time,"
ejaculated the Resurrection Man: "I have been an idiot myself to listen to
it so long. Mr. Tomlinson, are you prepared to receive the signature of this
lady to the deed that will transfer to her husband a certain portion of her
property?" - then, approaching his lips to the stock-broker's ear, he
murmured in a low whisper, "Hesitate - and I denounce your late clerk
within an hour!"
    These words operated like magic upon the weak-minded and
timid James Tomlinson. He no longer beheld the supplicating woman before him:
he only saw his own danger.
    Accordingly, he advanced towards the table, drew forth a
document from his pocket, and said, in a cold tone, "I am ready to receive
that lady's signature."
    The Resurrection Man produced an ink -bottle and pens (with
which he had purposely provided himself beforehand) from his pocket; and placed
them upon the table.
    Tomlinson seated himself in the chair, and proceeded to fill
up the paper.
    "In whose favour is the transfer to be made?" he
demanded.
    "Then, sir, you are determined to league with my
oppressors?" said Viola, in a tone expressive of concentrated feelings of
indignation and despair.
    "Madam, I am unfortunately compelled —"
    "Say no more, sir," interrupted the lady, with a
contemptuous curl of the lip. "If you came hither a villain, I must be mad
indeed to hope to make you an honest man by any reasoning of mine."
    "Madam, you wrong me, by heavens!" ejaculated
Tomlinson, throwing down the pen.
    But at the same moment his wrist was seized with a grasp of
iron, and a well-known voice whispered in his ear, "Hesitate another
moment, and I denounce you and your cashier together!"
    Tomlinson became docile as a child, resumed the pen, and
said, " In whose favour is this transfer to be made?"
    "In that of Mr. Arthur Chichester," answered
Viola, firmly.
    "What is the amount to be so transferred?"
    "Eight thousand pounds, being part of a sum now
standing in my name in the Three-and-a-Half per cents.," replied the
injured woman, still with an outward composure, which was not, however, the
redaction of her inward feelings.
    Tomlinson filled up the paper according to the instructions
which he received.
    Then, addressing himself to Viola, but without turning his
eyes towards her, he said, "You are aware, madam, that this document is
ante-dated by two months?"
    "I am, sir."
    "Nothing now remains, then, madam, save for you to sign
it."
    Viola advanced slowly towards the table, took up the pen,
and seemed to be about to affix her signature to the deed, when - as if
suddenly recollecting herself - she turned towards the stock-broker, and
exclaimed, "What guarantee have I that my freedom is to follow this
concession on my part?"
    "To-morrow evening, at dusk, you shall be conveyed
home," exclaimed Chichester, seeing that Tomlinson gave no answer.
    "And why not this evening - now - the moment that
document is signed?"
    " Because I should prefer laying my hand on the money
first," was the reply.
    "Mr. Tomlinson," cried the lady, " I have
more confidence in you than in either of these men: I am willing even to
believe that some circumstance, unknown to me, compels you unwillingly to
become their instrument on this occasion."
    "By heavens, you speak the truth, madam!"
ejaculated Tomlinson, warmly.
    "I believe you. Now, sir, promise me on your most
solemn word of honour - by every thing you consider sacred - that to-morrow
evening at nine o'clock I shall be released from this dungeon."
    "I promise - I swear that you shall be conveyed home
to-morrow evening at nine o'clock," answered Tomlinson. " But, in return,
madam, will you pledge yourself as solemnly that your lips shall ever remain
closed with regard to this proceeding?"
    "Oh! yes - I do - I do," answered the poor
creature, clasping her hands together - for she could even feel grateful to the
man who, while leagued with others against her, yet pledged himself to her
release from that horrible cell.
    "Secresy on all sides is one of the conditions of the
present arrangement," said Chichester.
    "And if the lady breaks that condition," added the
Resurrection Man, "she would repent it; for let her be surrounded by
friends - let her be protected by a regiment of soldiers - let her take refuge
in the Queen's palace, I would still find means to tear her away, and bring her
back to this dungeon."
    Tomlinson and the lady both cast a glance of mingled horror
and surprise at the formidable individual who thus spoke so confidently of his
power and resolution.
    There was a moment's pause.
    Viola then took up the pen, and, with a firm hand, affixed her
signature to the document.
    "I am now at your mercy," she said, in a tone
rather of supplication than of menace or mistrust.
    "You need not be afraid that we shall deceive you, my
dear," observed Chichester, with a smile.
    A reply rose to the lips of his injured wife; but she
suppressed it - though with difficulty. She was no doubt afraid to irritate the
man in whose power she still found herself, by giving utterance to her
thoughts.
    "No - there's nothing to be afraid of," said the
Resurrection Man. "The lady has fulfilled her part of the bargain, and we
will perform ours. As for her keeping this little business dark, I feel
confident about that; she would not like to stand the chance, of coming here
again: and, as for making a

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