Authors: John R. Maxim
Tags: #Horror, #General, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Memory, #Thrillers, #Fiction, #Time Travel
“
You will take that back, sir.” Roosevelt took a step
toward him.
“
And the affairs of Beckwith and Company?”
Teddy agreed that it was so.
“
He never comes here.”
“
Who never comes here? Field?”
“
It is nothing.”
Teddy narrowed his eyes. “What in heaven's name is it between you and Cyrus Field? I know Tilden tried to ask
you this, but why can you not just leave the man alone?”
Immortality. The word formed from nowhere in Teddy Roosevelt's mind. Ask about Cyrus Field and you learn
about orchids. Talk about orchids and you soon begin to
find, as others have observed, that Jay Gould sees his very
soul in them. His soul as he wishes it could be. It is said
that there is a certain fine madness in every man. Gould's
own madness, and certainly his obsession, seemed to be his orchids. But where was the tie with a sick old man named
Cyrus Field? He must come to me, Gould had said to Til
den. He must come to me and I will raise him up. Re
demption? Redemption was the word Tilden used as they bathed him at the jail in Ardsley. Teddy had barely listened
at the time, putting it down as the raving of a fevered brain.
But perhaps Tilden had seen a great truth in his two weeks
of darkness. Perhaps he saw that in a frightened dying cor
ner of his own fevered brain, Jay Gould believed the raising
up of Cyrus Field, a builder, a giver, a better man by
leagues, would bring about his own redemption.
If there was an answer to that question, Jay Gould could not bring himself to give it. The haunted look was again in
Jay Gould's eyes. If he turns me away, they seemed to be
saying, then what is left for me? Teddy had no way of
knowing what thought, that or another, was in this man's
mind at that moment. But he thought he knew nonetheless. And he knew a madness, more desperate than fine, brought
on by a lifetime of denied humanity, was there.
“
Good day, sir,” Gould whispered.
“
Good day,” Teddy answered. He turned and strode to
ward the library door.
“
I'm bound . ..” Gould swallowed a cough. “I'm bound to say that your interest in this matter baffles me.”
Teddy stopped. “Tilden is my friend.”
“
Your friend, indeed. Is he a true friend? One who
would never play you false?”
Roosevelt opened the door without bothering to answer.
“
Ask him this, then. Ask your true friend to look you
in the eye and tell you plainly that he did not murder his
wife.”
Eighteen
“
Yes,” the man in the homburg whispered. “Yes, I
know you, don't I?” A measure of the old man's fear fell
away as he peered closely at the face of Harry Sturdevant. Harry saw relief in his eyes as well. And, he thought, per
haps a hint of disappointment.
“
I'm Harry Sturdevant, Tillie. It's been a few years.”
He pulled the glove from his hand and offered it, hoping
to lure the other man within grasp of the large bored rifle
he carried. But the old man scurried three steps backward.
On the last, his heel found a shard of ice Harry had chopped
from the driveway and he slipped, falling heavily on his
hip.
“
Stay back,” he croaked as Sturdevant reached toward
him. The man who bore Tilden Beckwith's name struggled
to his knees, the Weatherby's bore waving in Sturdevant’ s
general direction. Sturdevant straightened and relaxed. A
look of sudden horror returned to the old man's face. Fran
tically, he patted one hand against the pocket of his coat,
then reached inside and pulled free a bottle of Glenlivet
Scotch, whole and unbroken. He waggled it at Sturdevant.
The horror vanished. He looked pleased with himself.
“
This is for him,” he said. “It's his brand, you know.”
“
For
him,”
Sturdevant repeated blankly.
“
Yes,” Sturdevant answered, staring. “Yes, I remem
ber.” He turned and glanced up toward the house. A
shadow moved behind the living-room curtains. When he
turned again he saw the hollow-eyed old man squinting past
him through dim late-afternoon light and the falling snow.
“
He's in there, isn't he?” The voice fell again to a whis
per. “He's come back.”
'Tillie—”
”
I saw you with him, you know. I saw you yesterday at
the Plaza. You were having drinks and talking, and I bet
his drink was Glenlivet. You were so much older than he
was. When you knew him before, you were younger. Now
you're older. But he didn't change at all.”
Sturdevant shook his head. “Tillie, that was not—” He
stopped himself. There didn't seem to be much use in ex
plaining the truth of it. If this man had been following Jon
athan, which was the way it sounded, he must have known
perfectly well that Jonathan had a name and that name was
Corbin. Another thought struck him. “Tillie, have you had
other people following us? Did you have someone waiting
for us outside my house this morning?”
“
Not me. That wasn't my doing.”
”
I see.”
“
It was always Ella. I would say, Don't do this, or, I
don't want to do that, and she would just slap me and go
and do it anyway.”
“
What sort of things would she do, Tillie?”
“
Lots of things. Is he in there?”
“
No. He's gone out. And you are not going to walk into
that house with a loaded gun.”
“
What, Tillie? What wasn't your fault?”
“
Ella hit him. He struck Father and Ella hit him with
her cane. And then they told me to go away, to go to Florida, and they sent Bigelow to Chicago after the others. But
he came back for Bigelow and now he's back for Ella.”
Sturdevant suddenly felt cold. Deathly cold. The storm
reached beneath his coat as if it had fingers. “Ella,” he
repeated softly. “Ella killed him.” He did not phrase it as
a question.
The old man nodded distantly. He stared into a space beyond Sturdevant’s shoulder as if watching a scene that was being played there. “He came back for my father too,
you know. He was waiting for him when he died. Right
there at the bed. Father saw him. Ella tried to tell him it
was only the minister. He didn't even hear her. He started
screaming and crying and trying to crawl up the headboard
and then suddenly he just sort of melted there. They
couldn't close his eyes, did you know that? They had to
use thread or they wouldn't stay shut.”
“
Ohhh!” The old man backed away, tears spilling on
his cheeks.
“
Are you okay?” He heard her voice again. Sturdevant raised a hand in reply, but he did not take his eyes from
Tilden Beckwith II or from the trembling finger that was
tightening over the rifle's trigger. He knew without turning
what this wreck of a man was seeing. He was seeing an
other dead person made newly young. He was looking at Gwen Leamas standing framed in the doorway of a Vic
torian house and wearing a long, white Victorian gown. But
he was seeing Charlotte Corbin, a graceful old woman who was murdered in Chicago forty years before. He was seeing Margaret Barrie.