A Bottomless Grave
My name is John Brenwalter. My father, a drunkard,
had a patent for an invention for making coffee-berries out of
clay; but he was an honest man and would not himself engage in the
manufacture. He was, therefore, only moderately wealthy, his
royalties from his really valuable invention bringing him hardly
enough to pay his expenses of litigation with rogues guilty of
infringement. So I lacked many advantages enjoyed by the children
of unscrupulous and dishonorable parents, and had it not been for a
noble and devoted mother, who neglected all my brothers and sisters
and personally supervised my education, should have grown up in
ignorance and been compelled to teach school. To be the favorite
child of a good woman is better than gold.
When I was nineteen years of age my father had the
misfortune to die. He had always had perfect health, and his death,
which occurred at the dinner table without a moment’s warning,
surprised no one more than himself. He had that very morning been
notified that a patent had been granted him for a device to burst
open safes by hydraulic pressure, without noise. The Commissioner
of Patents had pronounced it the most ingenious, effective and
generally meritorious invention that had ever been submitted to
him, and my father had naturally looked forward to an old age of
prosperity and honor. His sudden death was, therefore, a deep
disappointment to him; but my mother, whose piety and resignation
to the will of Heaven were conspicuous virtues of her character,
was apparently less affected. At the close of the meal, when my
poor father’s body had been removed from the floor, she called us
all into an adjoining room and addressed us as follows:
“My children, the uncommon occurrence that you have
just witnessed is one of the most disagreeable incidents in a good
man’s life, and one in which I take little pleasure, I assure you.
I beg you to believe that I had no hand in bringing it about. Of
course,” she added, after a pause, during which her eyes were cast
down in deep thought, “of course it is better that he is
dead.”
She uttered this with so evident a sense of its
obviousness as a self-evident truth that none of us had the courage
to brave her surprise by asking an explanation. My mother’s air of
surprise when any of us went wrong in any way was very terrible to
us. One day, when in a fit of peevish temper, I had taken the
liberty to cut off the baby’s ear, her simple words, “John, you
surprise me!” appeared to me so sharp a reproof that after a
sleepless night I went to her in tears, and throwing myself at her
feet, exclaimed: “Mother, forgive me for surprising you.” So now we
all—including the one-eared baby—felt that it would keep matters
smoother to accept without question the statement that it was
better, somehow, for our dear father to be dead. My mother
continued:
“I must tell you, my children, that in a case of
sudden and mysterious death the law requires the Coroner to come
and cut the body into pieces and submit them to a number of men
who, having inspected them, pronounce the person dead. For this the
Coroner gets a large sum of money. I wish to avoid that painful
formality in this instance; it is one which never had the approval
of—of the remains. John”—here my mother turned her angel face to
me—“you are an educated lad, and very discreet. You have now an
opportunity to show your gratitude for all the sacrifices that your
education has entailed upon the rest of us. John, go and remove the
Coroner.”
Inexpressibly delighted by this proof of my
mother’s confidence, and by the chance to distinguish myself by an
act that squared with my natural disposition, I knelt before her,
carried her hand to my lips and bathed it with tears of
sensibility. Before five o’clock that afternoon I had removed the
Coroner.
I was immediately arrested and thrown into jail,
where I passed a most uncomfortable night, being unable to sleep
because of the profanity of my fellow-prisoners, two clergymen,
whose theological training had given them a fertility of impious
ideas and a command of blasphemous language altogether
unparalleled. But along toward morning the jailer, who, sleeping in
an adjoining room, had been equally disturbed, entered the cell and
with a fearful oath warned the reverend gentlemen that if he heard
any more swearing their sacred calling would not prevent him from
turning them into the street. After that they moderated their
objectionable conversation, substituting an accordion, and I slept
the peaceful and refreshing sleep of youth and innocence.
The next morning I was taken before the Superior
Judge, sitting as a committing magistrate, and put upon my
preliminary examination. I pleaded not guilty, adding that the man
whom I had murdered was a notorious Democrat. (My good mother was a
Republican, and from early childhood I had been carefully
instructed by her in the principles of honest government and the
necessity of suppressing factional opposition.) The Judge, elected
by a Republican ballot-box with a sliding bottom,62 was
visibly impressed by the cogency of my plea and offered me a
cigarette.
“May it please your Honor,” began the District
Attorney, “I do not deem it necessary to submit any evidence in
this case. Under the law of the land you sit here as a committing
magistrate. It is therefore your duty to commit. Testimony and
argument alike would imply a doubt that your Honor means to perform
your sworn duty. That is my case.”
My counsel, a brother of the deceased Coroner, rose
and said: “May it please the Court, my learned friend on the other
side has so well and eloquently stated the law governing in this
case that it only remains for me to inquire to what extent it has
been already complied with. It is true, your Honor is a committing
magistrate, and as such it is your duty to commit—what? That is a
matter which the law has wisely and justly left to your own
discretion, and wisely you have discharged already every obligation
that the law imposes. Since I have known your Honor you have done
nothing but commit. You have committed embracery,63
theft, arson, perjury, adultery, murder—every crime in the calendar
and every excess known to the sensual and depraved, including my
learned friend, the District Attorney. You have done your whole
duty as a committing magistrate, and as there is no evidence
against this worthy young man, my client, I move that he be
discharged.”
An impressive silence ensued. The Judge arose, put
on the black cap and in a voice trembling with emotion sentenced me
to life and liberty. Then turning to my counsel he said, coldly but
significantly:
“I will see you later.”
The next morning the lawyer who had so
conscientiously defended me against a charge of murdering his own
brother—with whom he had a quarrel about some land—had disappeared
and his fate is to this day unknown.
In the meantime my poor father’s body had been
secretly buried at midnight in the back yard of his late residence,
with his late boots on and the contents of his late stomach
unanalyzed. “He was opposed to display,” said my dear mother, as
she finished tamping down the earth above him and assisted the
children to litter the place with straw; “his instincts were all
domestic and he loved a quiet life.”
My mother’s application for letters of
administration stated that she had good reason to believe that the
deceased was dead, for he had not come home to his meals for
several days; but the Judge of the Crowbait Court—as she ever
afterward contemptuously called it—decided that the proof of death
was insufficient, and put the estate into the hands of the Public
Administrator, who was his son-in-law. It was found that the
liabilities were exactly balanced by the assets; there was left
only the patent for the device for bursting open safes without
noise, by hydraulic pressure and this had passed into the ownership
of the Probate Judge and the Public Adminis traitor—as my dear
mother preferred to spell it. Thus, within a few brief months a
worthy and respectable family was reduced from prosperity to crime;
necessity compelled us to go to work.
In the selection of occupations we were governed by
a variety of considerations, such as personal fitness, inclination,
and so forth. My mother opened a select private school for
instruction in the art of changing the spots upon leopard-skin
rugs; my eldest brother, George Henry, who had a turn for music,
became a bugler in a neighboring asylum for deaf mutes; my sister,
Mary Maria, took orders for Professor Pumpernickel’s Essence of
Latchkeys for flavoring mineral springs, and I set up as an
adjuster and gilder of crossbeams for gibbets.64 The
other children, too young for labor, continued to steal small
articles exposed in front of shops, as they had been taught.
In our intervals of leisure we decoyed travelers
into our house and buried the bodies in a cellar.
In one part of this cellar we kept wines, liquors
and provisions. From the rapidity of their disappearance we
acquired the superstitious belief that the spirits of the persons
buried there came at dead of night and held a festival. It was at
least certain that frequently of a morning we would discover
fragments of pickled meats, canned goods and such débris, littering
the place, although it had been securely locked and barred against
human intrusion. It was proposed to remove the provisions and store
them elsewhere, but our dear mother, always generous and
hospitable, said it was better to endure the loss than risk
exposure: if the ghosts were denied this trifling gratification
they might set on foot an investigation, which would overthrow our
scheme of the division of labor, by diverting the energies of the
whole family into the single industry pursued by me—we might all
decorate the crossbeams of gibbets. We accepted her decision with
filial submission, due to our reverence for her wordly wisdom and
the purity of her character.
One night while we were all in the cellar—none
dared to enter it alone—engaged in bestowing upon the Mayor of an
adjoining town the solemn offices of Christian burial, my mother
and the younger children, holding a candle each, while George Henry
and I labored with a spade and pick, my sister Mary Maria uttered a
shriek and covered her eyes with her hands. We were all dreadfully
startled and the Mayor’s obsequies were instantly suspended, while
with pale faces and in trembling tones we begged her to say what
had alarmed her. The younger children were so agitated that they
held their candles unsteadily, and the waving shadows of our
figures danced with uncouth and grotesque movements on the walls
and flung themselves into the most uncanny attitudes. The face of
the dead man, now gleaming ghastly in the light, and now
extinguished by some floating shadow, appeared at each emergence to
have taken on a new and more forbidding expression, a maligner
menace. Frightened even more than ourselves by the girl’s scream,
rats raced in multitudes about the place, squeaking shrilly, or
starred the black opacity of some distant corner with steadfast
eyes, mere points of green light, matching the faint
phosphorescence of decay that filled the half-dug grave and seemed
the visible manifestation of that faint odor of mortality which
tainted the unwholesome air. The children now sobbed and clung
about the limbs of their elders, dropping their candles, and we
were near being left in total darkness, except for that sinister
light, which slowly welled upward from the disturbed earth and
overflowed the edges of the grave like a fountain.
Meanwhile my sister, crouching in the earth that
had been thrown out of the excavation, had removed her hands from
her face and was staring with expanded eyes into an obscure space
between two wine-casks.
“There it is!—there it is!” she shrieked, pointing;
“God in heaven! can’t you see it?”
And there indeed it was!—a human figure, dimly
discernible in the gloom—a figure that wavered from side to side as
if about to fall, clutching at the wine-casks for support, had
stepped unsteadily forward and for one moment stood revealed in the
light of our remaining candles; then it surged heavily and fell
prone upon the earth. In that moment we had all recognized the
figure, the face and bearing of our father—dead these ten months
and buried by our own hands!—our father indubitably risen and
ghastly drunk!
On the incidents of our precipitate flight from the
horrible place—on the extinction of all human sentiment in that
tumultuous, mad scramble up the damp and mouldy stairs—slipping,
falling, pulling one another down and clambering over one another’s
back—the lights extinguished, babes trampled beneath the feet of
their strong brothers and hurled backward to death by a mother’s
arm!—on all this I do not dare to dwell. My mother, my eldest
brother and sister and I escaped; the others remained below, to
perish of their wounds, or of their terror—some, perhaps, by flame.
For within an hour we four, hastily gathering together what money
and jewels we had and what clothing we could carry, fired the
dwelling and fled by its light into the hills. We did not even
pause to collect the insurance, and my dear mother said on her
death-bed, years afterward in a distant land, that this was the
only sin of omission that lay upon her conscience. Her confessor, a
holy man, assured her that under the circumstances Heaven would
pardon the neglect.
About ten years after our removal from the scenes
of my childhood I, then a prosperous forger, returned in disguise
to the spot with a view to obtaining, if possible, some treasure
belonging to us, which had been buried in the cellar. I may say
that I was unsuccessful: the discovery of many human bones in the
ruins had set the authorities digging for more. They had found the
treasure and had kept it for their honesty. The house had not been
rebuilt; the whole suburb was, in fact, a desolation. So many
unearthly sights and sounds had been reported thereabout that
nobody would live there. As there was none to question nor molest,
I resolved to gratify my filial piety by gazing once more upon the
face of my beloved father, if indeed our eyes had deceived us and
he was still in his grave. I remembered, too, that he had always
worn an enormous diamond ring, and never having seen it nor heard
of it since his death, I had reason to think he might have been
buried in it. Procuring a spade, I soon located the grave in what
had been the back yard and began digging. When I had got down about
four feet the whole bottom fell out of the grave and I was
precipitated into a large drain, falling through a long hole in its
crumbling arch. There was no body, nor any vestige of one.
Unable to get out of the excavation, I crept
through the drain, and having with some difficulty removed a mass
of charred rubbish and blackened masonry that choked it, emerged
into what had been that fateful cellar.
All was clear. My father, whatever had caused him
to be “taken bad” at his meal (and I think my sainted mother could
have thrown some light upon that matter) had indubitably been
buried alive. The grave having been accidentally dug above the
forgotten drain, and down almost to the crown of its arch, and no
coffin having been used, his struggles on reviving had broken the
rotten masonry and he had fallen through, escaping finally into the
cellar. Feeling that he was not welcome in his own house, yet
having no other, he had lived in subterranean seclusion, a witness
to our thrift and a pensioner on our providence. It was he who had
eaten our food; it was he who had drunk our wine—he was no better
than a thief! In a moment of intoxication, and feeling, no doubt,
that need of companionship which is the one sympathetic link
between a drunken man and his race, he had left his place of
concealment at a strangely inopportune time, entailing the most
deplorable consequences upon those nearest and dearest to him—a
blunder that had almost the dignity of crime.