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Authors: Elizabeth Gaskell

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So they left the eating gentlemen with their mouths and their plates quite full, and the scent of the fox overpowering that of the hasty rashers of ham; and they carefully inspected all the ground-floor rooms. Then Mr Dudgeon said, –

‘If you are not tired, Mr Higgins – it is rather my hobby, so you must pull me up if you are – we will go upstairs, and I will show you my sanctum.'

Mr Dudgeon's sanctum was the centre room, over the porch, which formed a balcony, and which was carefully filled with choice flowers in pots. Inside, there were all kinds of elegant contrivances for hiding the real strength of all the boxes and chests required by the particular nature of Mr Dudgeon's business; for although his office was in Barford, he kept (as he informed Mr Higgins) what was the most valuable here, as being safer than an office which was locked up and left every night. But, as Mr Higgins reminded him with a sly poke in the side, when next they met, his own house was not over secure. A fortnight after the gentlemen of the Barford hunt lunched there, Mr Dudgeon's strong box, – in his sanctum upstairs, with the mysterious spring-bolt to the window invented by himself, and the secret of which was only known to the inventor and a few of his most intimate friends, to whom he had proudly shown it; – this strong-box, containing the collected Christmas rents of half-a-dozen landlords, (there was then no bank nearer than Derby,) was rifled; and the secretly rich Mr Dudgeon had to stop his agent in his purchases of paintings by Flemish artists, because the money was required to make good the missing rents.

The Dogberries and Verges
19
of those days were quite incapable of
obtaining any clue to the robber or robbers; and though one or two vagrants were taken up and brought before Mr Dunover and Mr Higgins, the magistrates who usually attended in the court-room at Barford, there was no evidence brought against them, and after a couple of nights' durance in the lock-ups they were set at liberty. But it became a standing joke with Mr Higgins to ask Mr Dudgeon, from time to time, whether he could recommend him a place of safety for his valuables; or, if he had made any more inventions lately for securing houses from robbers.

About two years after this time – about seven years after Mr Higgins had been married – one Tuesday evening, Mr Davis was sitting reading the news in the coffee-room of the George Inn. He belonged to a club of gentlemen who met there occasionally to play at whist, to read what few newspapers and magazines were published in those days, to chat about the market at Derby, and prices all over the country. This Tuesday night it was a black frost, and few people were in the room. Mr Davis was anxious to finish an article in the
Gentleman's Magazine:
20
indeed, he was making extracts from it, intending to answer it, and yet unable with his small income to purchase a copy. So he stayed late; it was past nine, and at ten o'clock the room was closed. But while he wrote, Mr Higgins came in. He was pale and haggard with cold. Mr Davis, who had had for some time sole possession of the fire, moved politely on one side, and handed to the new comer the sole London newspaper which the room afforded. Mr Higgins accepted it, and made some remark on the intense coldness of the weather; but Mr Davis was too full of his article, and intended reply, to fall into conversation readily. Mr Higgins hitched his chair nearer to the fire, and put his feet on the fender, giving an audible shudder. He put the newspaper on one end of the table near him, and sat gazing into the red embers of the fire, crouching down over them as if his very marrow were chilled. At length he said, –

‘There is no account of the murder at Bath in that paper?' Mr Davis, who had finished taking his notes, and was preparing to go, stopped short, and asked, –

‘Has there been a murder at Bath? No! I have not seen anything of it – who was murdered?'

‘Oh! it was a shocking, terrible murder!' said Mr Higgins, not raising his look from the fire, but gazing on with his eyes dilated till the whites were seen all round them. ‘A terrible, terrible murder! I wonder what will become of the murderer? I can fancy the red glowing centre of that fire – look and see how infinitely distant it seems, and how the distance magnifies it into something awful and unquenchable.'

‘My dear sir, you are feverish; how you shake and shiver!' said Mr Davis, thinking, privately, that his companion had symptoms of fever, and that he was wandering in his mind.

‘Oh, no!' said Mr Higgins. ‘I am not feverish. It is the night which is so cold.' And for a time he talked with Mr Davis about the article in the
Gentleman's Magazine
, for he was rather a reader himself, and could take more interest in Mr Davis's pursuits than most of the people at Barford. At length it drew near to ten, and Mr Davis rose up to go home to his lodgings.

‘No, Davis, don't go. I want you here. We will have a bottle of port together, and that will put Saunders into good humour. I want to tell you about this murder,' he continued, dropping his voice, and speaking hoarse and low. ‘She was an old woman, and he killed her, sitting reading her Bible by her own fireside!' He looked at Mr Davis with a strange, searching gaze, as if trying to find some sympathy in the horror which the idea presented to him.

‘Whom do you mean, my dear sir? What is this murder you are so full of? No one has been murdered here.'

‘No, you fool! I tell you it was in Bath!' said Mr Higgins, with sudden passion; and then calming himself to most velvet-smoothness of manner, he laid his hand on Mr Davis's knee, there, as they sat by the fire, and gently detaining him, began the narration of the crime he was so full of; but his voice and manner were constrained to a stony quietude: he never looked in Mr Davis's face; once or twice, as Mr Davis remembered afterwards, his grip tightened like a compressing vice.

‘She lived in a small house in a quiet, old-fashioned street, she and her maid. People said she was a good old woman; but, for all that, she hoarded and hoarded, and never gave to the poor. Mr Davis, it is wicked not to give to the poor – wicked – wicked, is it not? I always id="page_45" give to the poor, for once I read in the Bible that “Charity covereth a multitude of sins.”
21
The wicked old woman never gave, but hoarded her money, and saved and saved. Some one heard of it; I say she threw a temptation in his way, and God will punish her for it. And this man – or it might be a woman, who knows? – and this person – heard also that she went to church in the mornings and her maid in the afternoons; and so, while the maid was at church, and the street and the house quite still, and the darkness of a winter afternoon coming on, she was nodding over her Bible – and that, mark you! is a sin, and one that God will avenge sooner or later, – and a step came, in the dusk, up the stair, and that person I told you of stood in the room. At first, he – no! At first, it is supposed – for, you understand, all this is mere guess-work – it is supposed that he asked her civilly enough to give him her money, or to tell him where it was; but the old miser defied him, and would not ask for mercy and give up her keys, even when he threatened her, but looked him in the face as if he had been a baby. – Oh, God! Mr Davis, I once dreamt, when I was a little, innocent boy, that I should commit a crime like this, and I wakened up crying; and my mother comforted me – that is the reason I tremble so now – that and the cold, for it is very, very cold!'

‘But did he murder the old lady?' asked Mr Davis, ‘I beg your pardon, sir, but I am interested by your story.'

‘Yes; he cut her throat; and there she lies yet, in her quiet little parlour, with her face upturned and all ghastly white, in the middle of a pool of blood. Mr Davis, this wine is no better than water; I must have some brandy!'

Mr Davis was horror-struck by the story, which seemed to have fascinated him as much as it had done his companion.

‘Have they got any clue to the murderer?' said he. Mr Higgins drank down half a tumbler of raw brandy before he answered.

‘No! no clue whatever. They will never be able to discover him; and I should not wonder, Mr Davis – I should not wonder if he repented after all, and did bitter penance for his crime; and if so – will there be mercy for him at the last day?'

‘God knows!' said Mr Davis, with solemnity. ‘It is an awful story,' continued he, rousing himself; ‘I hardly like to leave this warm, light id="page_46" room and go out into the darkness after hearing it. But it must be done' – buttoning on his great coat – ‘I can only say, I hope and trust they will find out the murderer and hang him. If you'll take my advice, Mr Higgins, you'll have your bed warmed, and drink a treacle posset
22
just the last thing; and, if you'll allow me, I'll send you my answer to Philologus
23
before it goes up to old Urban.'

The next morning, Mr Davis went to call on Miss Pratt, who was not very well, and, by way of being agreeable and entertaining, he related to her all he had heard the night before about the murder at Bath; and really he made a very pretty connected story out of it, and interested Miss Pratt very much in the fate of the old lady – partly because of a similarity in their situations; for she also privately hoarded money, and had but one servant, and stopped at home alone on Sunday afternoons to allow her servant to go to church.

‘And when did all this happen?' she asked.

‘I don't know if Mr Higgins named the day; and yet I think it must have been on this very last Sunday.'

‘And to-day is Wednesday. Ill news travels fast.'

‘Yes, Mr Higgins thought it might have been in the London newspaper.'

‘That it could never be. Where did Mr Higgins learn all about it?'

‘I don't know; I did not ask. I think he only came home yesterday: he had been south to collect his rents, somebody said.'

Miss Pratt grunted. She used to vent her dislike and suspicions of Mr Higgins in a grunt whenever his name was mentioned.

‘Well, I shan't see you for some days. Godfrey Merton asked me to go and stay with him and his sister; and I think it will do me good. Besides,' added she, ‘these winter evenings – and these murderers at large in the country – I don't quite like living with only Peggy to call to in case of need.'

Miss Pratt went to stay with her cousin, Mr Merton. He was an active magistrate, and enjoyed his reputation as such. One day he came in, having just received his letters.

‘Bad account of the morals of your little town here, Jessy!' said he, touching one of his letters. ‘You've either a murderer among you, or some friend of a murderer. Here's a poor old lady at Bath had her id="page_47" throat cut last Sunday week; and I've a letter from the Home Office, asking to lend them “my very efficient aid”, as they are pleased to call it, towards finding out the culprit. It seems he must have been thirsty, and of a comfortable jolly turn; for before going to his horrid work he tapped a barrel of ginger wine the old lady had set by to work; and he wrapped the spigot round with a piece of a letter taken out of his pocket,
24
as may be supposed: and this piece of a letter was found afterwards; there are only these letters on the outside,
“ns, Esq., -arford, -egworth”
, which some one has ingeniously made out to mean Barford, near Kegworth. On the other side, there is some allusion to a racehorse, I conjecture, though the name is singular enough – “Church-and-King-and-down-with-the-Rump”.'
25

Miss Pratt caught at this name immediately. It had hurt her feelings as a Dissenter only a few months ago, and she remembered it well.

‘Mr Nat Hearn has, or had (as I am speaking in the witness-box, as it were, I must take care of my tenses), a horse with that ridiculous name.'

‘Mr Nat Hearn,' repeated Mr Merton, making a note of the intelligence; then he recurred to his letter from the Home Office again.

‘There is also a piece of a small key, broken in the futile attempt to open a desk – well, well. Nothing more of consequence. The letter is what we must rely upon.'

‘Mr Davis said that Mr Higgins told him –' Miss Pratt began.

‘Higgins!' exclaimed Mr Merton,
‘ns
. Is it Higgins, the blustering fellow that ran away with Nat Hearn's sister?'

‘Yes!' said Miss Pratt. ‘But though he has never been a favourite of mine –'

‘ns
,' repeated Mr Merton. ‘It is too horrible to think of; a member of the hunt – kind old Squire Hearn's son-in-law! Who else have you in Barford with names that end in
ns?'

‘There's Jackson, and Higginson, and Blenkinsop, and Davis and Jones. Cousin! one thing strikes me – how did Mr Higgins know all about it to tell Mr Davis on Tuesday what had happened on Sunday afternoon?'

There is no need to add much more. Those curious in lives of the highwaymen may find the name of Higgins as conspicuous among id="page_48" those annals as that of Claude Duval.
26
Kate Hearn's husband collected his rents on the highway, like many another ‘gentleman' of the day; but, having been unlucky in one or two of his adventures, and hearing exaggerated accounts of the hoarded wealth of the old lady at Bath, he was led on from robbery to murder, and was hung for his crime at Derby, in 1775.

He had not been an unkind husband; and his poor wife took lodgings in Derby to be near him in his last moments – his awful last moments. Her old father went with her everywhere, but into her husband's cell; and wrungher heart by constantly accusing himself of having promoted her marriage with a man of whom he knew so little. He abdicated his squireship in favour of his son Nathaniel. Nat was prosperous, and the helpless silly father could be of no use to him; but to his widowed daughter, the foolish, fond old man was all in all – her knight, her protector, her companion, her most faithful loving companion. Only, he ever declined assuming the office of her counsellor; shaking his head sadly, and saying,

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