The Mystery of a Hansom Cab, Fergus Hume [best motivational books of all time .TXT] 📗
- Author: Fergus Hume
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At last, to Calton’s relief, for he felt somewhat bewildered by the darkness and narrowness of the lanes through which he had been taken, the detective stopped before a door, which he opened, and stepping inside, beckoned to the barrister to follow. Calton did so, and found himself in a low, dark, ill-smelling passage. At the end a faint light glimmered. Kilsip caught his companion by the arm and guided him carefully along the passage. There was much need of this caution, for Calton could feel that the rotten boards were full of holes, into which one or the other of his feet kept slipping from time to time, while he could hear the rats squeaking and scampering away on all sides. Just as they got to the end of this tunnel, for it could be called nothing else, the light suddenly went out, and they were left in complete darkness.
“Light that,” cried the detective in a peremptory tone of voice. “What do you mean by dowsing the glim?”
Thieves’ argot was, evidently, well understood here, for there was a shuffle in the dark, a muttered voice, and someone lit a candle. Calton saw that the light was held by an elfish-looking child. Tangled masses of black hair hung over her scowling white face. As she crouched down on the floor against the damp wall she looked up defiantly yet fearfully at the detective.
“Where’s Mother Guttersnipe?” asked Kilsip, touching her with his foot.
She seemed to resent the indignity, and rose quickly to her feet.
“Upstairs,” she replied, jerking her head in the direction of the right wall.
Following her direction, Calton—his eyes now somewhat accustomed to the gloom—could discern a gaping black chasm, which he presumed was the stair alluded to.
“Yer won’t get much out of ‘er tonight; she’s a-going to start ‘er booze, she is.”
“Never mind what she’s doing or about to do,” said Kilsip, sharply, “take me to her at once.”
The girl looked him sullenly up and down, then she led the way into the black chasm and up the stairs. They were so shaky as to make Calton fear they might give way. As they toiled slowly up the broken steps he held tightly to his companion’s arm. At last they stopped at a door through the cracks of which a faint glimmer of light was to be seen. Here the girl gave a shrill whistle, and the door opened. Still preceded by their elfish guide, Calton and the detective stepped through the doorway. A curious scene was before them. A small square room, with a low roof, from which the paper mildewed and torn hung in shreds; on the left hand, at the far end, was a kind of low stretcher, upon which a woman, almost naked, lay, amid a heap of greasy clothes. She appeared to be ill, for she kept tossing her head from side to side restlessly, and every now and then sang snatches of song in a cracked voice. In the centre of the room was a rough deal table, upon which stood a guttering tallow candle, which but faintly illuminated the scene, and a half empty rectangular bottle of Schnapps, with a broken cup beside it. In front of these signs of festivity sat an old woman with a pack of cards spread out before her, and from which she had evidently been telling the fortune of a villainous-looking young man who had opened the door, and who stood looking at the detective with no very friendly expression of countenance. He wore a greasy brown velvet coat, much patched, and a black wide-awake hat, pulled down over his eyes. From his expression—so scowling and vindictive was it—the barrister judged his ultimate destiny to lie between Pentridge and the gallows.
As they entered, the fortune-teller raised her head, and, shading her eyes with one skinny hand, looked curiously at the new comers. Calton thought he had never seen such a repulsive-looking old crone; and, in truth, her ugliness was, in its very grotesqueness well worthy the pencil of a Dore. Her face was seamed and lined with innumerable wrinkles, clearly defined by the dirt which was in them; bushy grey eyebrows, drawn frowningly over two piercing black eyes, whose light was undimmed by age; a hook nose, like the beak of a bird of prey, and a thin-lipped mouth devoid of teeth. Her hair was very luxurious and almost white, and was tied up in a great bunch by a greasy bit of black ribbon. As to her chin, Calton, when he saw it wagging to and fro, involuntarily quoted Macbeth’s lines—
“Ye should be women, And yet your beards forbid me to interpret That ye are so.”
She was no bad representative of the weird sisters.
As they entered she eyed them viciously, demanding,
“What the blazes they wanted.”
“Want your booze,” cried the child, with an elfish laugh, as she shook back her tangled hair.
“Get out, you whelp,” croaked the old hag, shaking one skinny fist at her, “or I’ll tear yer ‘eart out.”
“Yes, she can go.” said Kilsip, nodding to the girl, “and you can clear, too,” he added, sharply, turning to the young man, who stood still holding the door open.
At first he seemed inclined to dispute the detective’s order, but ultimately obeyed him, muttering, as he went out, something about “the blooming cheek of showin’ swells cove’s cribs.” The child followed him out, her exit being accelerated by Mother Guttersnipe, who, with a rapidity only attained by long practice, seized the shoe from one of her feet, and flung it at the head of the rapidly retreating girl.
“Wait till I ketches yer, Lizer,” she shrieked, with a volley of oaths, “I’ll break yer ‘ead for ye!”
Lizer responded with a shrill laugh of disdain, and vanished through the shaky door, which she closed after her.
When she had disappeared Mother Guttersnipe took a drink from the broken cup, and, gathering all her greasy cards together in a business-like way, looked insinuatingly at Calton, with a suggestive leer.
“It’s the future ye want unveiled, dearie?” she croaked, rapidly shuffling the cards; “an’ old mother ‘ull tell—”
“No she won’t,” interrupted the detective, sharply. “I’ve come on business.”
The old woman started at this, and looked keenly at him from under her bushy eyebrows.
“What ‘av the boys been up to now?” she asked, harshly. “There ain’t no swag ‘ere this time.”
Just then the sick woman, who had been restlessly tossing on the bed, commenced singing a snatch of the quaint old ballad of “Barbara Allen”—
“Oh, mither, mither, mak’ my bed, An’ mak’ it saft an’ narrow; Since my true love died for me to-day I’ll die for him to-morrow.”
“Shut up, cuss you!” yelled Mother Guttersnipe, viciously, “or I’ll knock yer bloomin’ ‘ead orf,” and she seized the square bottle as if to carry out her threat; but, altering her mind, she poured some of its contents into the cup, and drank it off with avidity.
“The woman seems ill,” said Calton, casting a shuddering glance at the stretcher.
“So she are,” growled Mother Guttersnipe, angrily. “She ought to be in Yarrer Bend, she ought, instead of stoppin’ ‘ere an’ singin’ them beastly things, which makes my blood run cold. Just ‘ear ‘er,” she said, viciously, as the sick woman broke out once more—
“Oh, little did my mither think, When first she cradled me, I’d die sa far away fra home, Upon the gallows tree.”
“Yah!” said the old woman, hastily, drinking some more gin out of the cup. “She’s allays a-talkin’ of dyin’ an’ gallers, as if they were nice things to jawr about.”
“Who was that woman who died here three or four weeks ago?” asked Kilsip, sharply.
“‘Ow should I know?” retorted Mother Guttersnipe, sullenly. “I didn’t kill ‘er, did I? It were the brandy she drank; she was allays drinkin’, cuss her.”
“Do you remember the night she died?”
“No, I don’t,” answered the beldame, frankly. “I were drunk—blind, bloomin’, blazin’ drunk—s’elp me.”
“You’re always drunk,” said Kilsip.
“What if I am?” snarled the woman, seizing her bottle. “You don’t pay fur it. Yes, I’m drunk. I’m allays drunk. I was drunk last night, an’ the night before, an’ I’m a-goin’ to git drunk tonight”—with an impressive look at the bottle—“an’ to-morrow night, an’ I’ll keep it up till I’m rottin’ in the grave.”
Calton shuddered, so full of hatred and suppressed malignity was her voice, but the detective merely shrugged his shoulders.
“More fool you,” he said, briefly. “Come now, on the night the ‘Queen,’ as you call her, died, there was a gentleman came to see her?”
“So she said,” retorted Mother Guttersnipe; “but, lor, I dunno anythin’, I were drunk.”
“Who said—the ‘Queen?’”
“No, my gran’darter, Sal. The ‘Queen,’ sent ‘er to fetch the toff to see ‘er cut ‘er lucky. Wanted ‘im to look at ‘is work, I s’pose, cuss ‘im; and Sal prigged some paper from my box,” she shrieked, indignantly; “prigged it w’en I were too drunk to stop ‘er?”
The detective glanced at Calton, who nodded to him with a gratified expression on his face. They were right as to the paper having been stolen from the Villa at Toorak.
“You did not see the gentleman who came?” said Kilsip, turning again to the old hag.
“Not I, cuss you,” she retorted, politely. “‘E came about ‘arf-past one in the morning, an’ you don’t expects we can stop up all night, do ye?”
“Halfpast one o’clock,” repeated Calton, quickly. “The very time. Is this true?”
“Wish I may die if it ain’t,” said Mother Guttersnipe, graciously. “My gran’darter Sal kin tell ye.”
“Where is she?” asked Kilsip, sharply.
At this the old woman threw back her head, and howled dismay.
“She’s ‘ooked it,” she wailed, drumming on the ground with her feet. “Gon’ an’ left ‘er pore old gran’ an’ joined the Army, cuss ‘em, a-comin’ round an’ a-spilin’ business.”
Here the woman on the bed broke out again—
“Since the flowers o’ the forest are a’ wed awa.”
“‘Old yer jawr,” yelled Mother Guttersnipe, rising, and making a dart at the bed. “I’ll choke the life out ye, s’elp me. D’y want me to murder ye, singin’ ‘em funeral things?”
Meanwhile the detective was talking rapidly to Mr. Calton.
“The only person who can prove Mr. Fitzgerald was here between one and two o’clock,” he said, quickly, “is Sal Rawlins, as everyone else seems to have been drunk or asleep. As she has joined the Salvation Army, I’ll go to the barracks the first thing in the morning and look for her.”
“I hope you’ll find her,” answered Calton, drawing a long breath. “A man’s life hangs
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