the window? Mistress! Mistress! is there nothing I can do to help you?"
   These wild words poured from his lips in the solitude of his little
   bedchamber. In the agony that he suffered, as the sense of Mrs. Wagner's
   danger now forced itself on him, he rolled on the floor, and struck
   himself with his clenched fists. And, again and again, he cried out to
   her, "Mistress! Mistress! is there nothing I can do to help you?"
   The strap that secured his keys became loosened, as his frantic movements
   beat the leather bag, now on one side, and now on the other, upon the
   floor. The jingling of the keys rang in his ears. For a moment, he lay
   quite still. Then, he sat up on the floor. He tried to think calmly.
   There was no candle in the room. The nearest light came from a lamp on
   the landing below. He got up, and went softly down the stairs. Alone on
   the landing, he held up the bag and looked at it. "There's something in
   my mind, trying to speak to me," he said to himself. "Perhaps, I shall
   find it in here?"
   He knelt down under the light, and shook out the keys on the landing.
   One by one he ranged them in a row, with a single exception. The key of
   the desk happened to be the first that he took up. He kissed it--it was
   _her_ key--and put it back in the bag. Placing the others before him, the
   duplicate key was the last in the line. The inscription caught his eye.
   He held it to the light and read "Pink-Room Cupboard."
   The lost recollection now came back to him in intelligible form. The
   "remedy" that Madame Fontaine had locked up--the precious "remedy" made
   by the wonderful master who knew everything--was at his disposal. He had
   only to open the cupboard, and to have it in his own possession.
   He threw the other keys back into the bag. They rattled as he ran down
   the lower flight of stairs. Opposite to the offices, he stopped and
   buckled them tight with the strap. No noise! Nothing to alarm Mrs.
   Housekeeper! He ascended the stairs in the other wing of the house, and
   paused again when he approached Madame Fontaine's room. By this time, he
   was in the perilous fever of excitement, which was still well remembered
   among the authorities of Bedlam. Suppose the widow happened to be in her
   room? Suppose she refused to let him have the "remedy"?
   He looked at the outstretched fingers of his right hand. "I am strong
   enough to throttle a woman," he said, "and I'll do it."
   He opened the door without knocking, without stopping to listen outside.
   Not a creature was in the room.
   In another moment the fatal dose of "Alexander's Wine," which he
   innocently believed to be a beneficent remedy, was in his possession.
   As he put it into the breast-pocket of his coat, the wooden chest caught
   his eye. He reached it down and tried the lid. The lid opened in his
   hand, and disclosed the compartments and the bottles placed in them. One
   of the bottles rose higher by an inch or two than any of the others. He
   drew that one out first to look at it, and discovered--the "blue-glass
   bottle."
   From that moment all idea of trying the effect on Mrs. Wagner of the
   treacherous "remedy" in his pocket vanished from his mind. He had secured
   the inestimable treasure, known to him by his own experience. Here was
   the heavenly bottle that had poured life down his throat, when he lay
   dying at Wurzburg! This was the true and only doctor who had saved Mr.
   Keller's life, when the poor helpless fools about his bed had given him
   up for lost! The Mistress, the dear Mistress, was as good as cured
   already. Not a drop more of her precious blood should be shed by the
   miscreant, who had opened his knife and wounded her. Oh, of all the
   colors in the world, there's no color like blue! Of all the friends in
   the world, there never was such a good friend as this! He kissed and
   hugged the bottle as if it had been a living thing. He jumped up and
   danced about the room with it in his arms. Ha! what music there was in
   the inner gurgling and splashing of the shaken liquid, which told him
   that there was still some left for the Mistress! The striking of the
   clock on the mantelpiece sobered him at the height of his ecstasy. It
   told him that time was passing. Minute by minute, Death might be getting
   nearer and nearer to her; and there he was, with Life in his possession,
   wasting the time, far from her bedside.
   On his way to the door, he stopped. His eyes turned slowly towards the
   inner part of the room. They rested on the open cupboard--and then they
   looked at the wooden chest, left on the floor.
   Suppose the housekeeper should return, and see the key in the cupboard,
   and the chest with one of the bottles missing?
   His only counselor at that critical moment was his cunning; stimulated
   into action by the closely related motive powers of his inbred vanity,
   and his devotion to the benefactress whom he loved.
   The chance of being discovered by Madame Fontaine never entered into his
   calculations. He cared nothing whether she discovered him or not--he had
   got the bottle, and woe to her if she tried to take it away from him!
   What he really dreaded was, that the housekeeper might deprive him of the
   glory of saving Mrs. Wagner's life, if she found out what had happened.
   She might follow him to the bedside; she might claim the blue-glass
   bottle as her property; she might say, "I saved Mr. Keller; and now I
   have saved Mrs. Wagner. This little man is only the servant who gave the
   dose, which any other hand might have poured out in his place."
   Until these considerations occurred to him, his purpose had been to
   announce his wonderful discovery publicly at Mrs. Wagner's bedside. This
   intention he now abandoned, without hesitation. He saw a far more
   inviting prospect before him. What a glorious position for him it would
   be, if he watched his opportunity of administering the life-giving liquid
   privately--if he waited till everybody was astonished at the speedy
   recovery of the suffering woman--and then stood up before them all, and
   proclaimed himself as the man who had restored her to health!
   He replaced the chest, and locked the cupboard; taking the key away with
   him. Returning to the door, he listened intently to make sure that nobody
   was outside, and kept the blue-glass bottle hidden under his coat when he
   ventured at last to leave the room. He reached the other wing of the
   house, and ascended the second flight of stairs, without interruption of
   any kind. Safe again in his own room, he watched through the half-opened
   door.
   Before long, Doctor Dormann and the surgeon appeared, followed by Mr.
   Keller. The three went downstairs together. On the way, the Doctor
   mentioned that he had secured a nurse for the night.
   Still keeping the bottle concealed, Jack knocked softly at the door, and
   entered Mrs. Wagner's room.
   He first looked at the bed. She lay still and helpless, noticing nothing;
   to all appearance, poor soul, a dying woman. The servant was engaged in
   warming something over the fire. She shook her head gloomily, when Jack
   inquired if any favorable change had place in his absence. He sat down,
 &n 
					     					 			bsp; vainly trying to discover how he might find the safe opportunity of which
   he was in search.
   The slow minutes followed each other. After a little while the
   woman-servant looked at the clock. "It's time Mrs. Wagner had her
   medicine," she remarked, still occupied with her employment at the fire.
   Jack saw his opportunity in those words. "Please let me give the
   medicine," he said.
   "Bring it here," she answered; "I mustn't trust anybody to measure it
   out.
   "Surely I can give it to her, now it's ready?" Jack persisted.
   The woman handed the glass to him. "I can't very well leave what I am
   about," she said. "Mind you are careful not to spill any of it. She's as
   patient as a lamb, poor creature. If she can only swallow it, she won't
   give you any trouble."
   Jack carried the glass round to the farther side of the bed, so as to
   keep the curtains as a screen between himself and the fire-place. He
   softly dropped out the contents of the glass on the carpet, and filled it
   again from the bottle concealed under his coat. Waiting a moment after
   that, he looked towards the door. What if the housekeeper came in, and
   saw the blue-glass bottle? He snatched it up--an empty bottle now--and
   put it in the side-pocket of his coat, and arranged his handkerchief so
   as to hide that part of it which the pocket was not deep enough to
   conceal. "Now!" he thought to himself, "now I may venture!" He gently put
   his arm round Mrs. Wagner, and raised her on the pillow.
   "Your medicine, dear Mistress," he whispered. "You will take it from poor
   Jack, won't you?"
   The sense of hearing still remained. Her vacant eyes turned towards him
   by slow degrees. No outward expression answered to her thought; she could
   show him that she submitted, and she could do no more.
   He dashed away the tears that blinded him. Supported by the firm belief
   that he was saving her life, he took the glass from the bedside-table and
   put it to her lips.
   With painful efforts, with many intervals of struggling breath, she
   swallowed the contents of the glass, by a few drops at a time. He held it
   up under the shadowed lamplight, and saw that it was empty.
   As he laid her head back on the pillows, he ventured to touch her cold
   cheek with his lips. "Has she taken it?" the woman asked. He was just
   able to answer "Yes"--just able to look once more at the dear face on the
   pillow. The tumult of contending emotions, against which he had struggled
   thus far, overpowered his utmost resistance. He ran to hide the
   hysterical passion in him, forcing its way to relief in sobs and cries,
   on the landing outside.
   In the calmer moments that followed, the fear still haunted him that
   Madame Fontaine might discover the empty compartment in the
   medicine-chest--might search every room in the house for the lost
   bottle--and might find it empty. Even if he broke it, and threw the
   fragments into the dusthole, the fragments might be remarked for their
   beautiful blue color, and the discovery might follow. Where could he hide
   it?
   While he was still trying to answer that question, the hours of business
   came to an end, and the clerks were leaving the offices below. He heard
   them talking about the hard frost as they went out. One of them said
   there were blocks of ice floating down the river already. The river! It
   was within a few minutes' walk of the house. Why not throw the bottle
   into the river?
   He waited until there was perfect silence below, and then stole
   downstairs. As he opened the door, a strange man met him, ascending the
   house-steps, with a little traveling bag in his hand.
   "Is this Mr. Keller's?" asked the strange man.
   He was a jolly-looking old fellow with twinkling black eyes and a big red
   nose. His breath was redolent of the smell of wine, and his thick lips
   expanded into a broad grin, when he looked at Jack.
   "My name's Schwartz," he said; "and here in this bag are my sister's
   things for the night."
   "Who is your sister?" Jack inquired.
   Schwartz laughed. "Quite right, little man, how should you know who she
   is? My sister's the nurse. She's hired by Doctor Dormann, and she'll be
   here in an hour's time. I say! that's a pretty bottle you're hiding there
   under your coat. Is there any wine in it?"
   Jack began to tremble. He had been discovered by a stranger. Even the
   river might not be deep enough to keep his secret now!
   "The cold has got into my inside," proceeded the jolly old man. "Be a
   good little fellow--and give us a drop!"
   "I haven't got any wine in it," Jack answered.
   Schwartz laid his forefinger confidentially along the side of his big red
   nose. "I understand," he said, "you were just going out to get some. He
   put his sister's bag on one of the chairs in the hall, and took Jack's
   arm in the friendliest manner. "Suppose you come along with me?" he
   suggested. "I am the man to help you to the best tap of wine in
   Frankfort. Bless your heart! you needn't feel ashamed of being in my
   company. My sister's a most respectable woman. And what do you think I
   am? I'm one of the city officers. Ho! ho! just think of that! I'm not
   joking, mind. The regular Night Watchman at the Deadhouse is ill in bed,
   and they're obliged to find somebody to take his place till he gets well
   again. I'm the Somebody. They tried two other men--but the Deadhouse gave
   them the horrors. My respectable sister spoke for me, you know. "The
   regular watchman will be well in a week," she says; "try him for a week."
   And they tried me. I'm not proud, though I am a city officer. Come
   along--and let me carry the bottle."
   "The bottle" again! And, just as this intrusive person spoke of it,
   Joseph's voice was audible below, and Joseph's footsteps gave notice that
   he was ascending the kitchen stairs. In the utter bewilderment of the
   moment, Jack ran out, with the one idea of escaping the terrible
   possibilities of discovery in the hall. He heard the door closed behind
   him--then heavy boots thumping the pavement at a quick trot. Before he
   had got twenty yards from the house, the vinous breath of Schwartz puffed
   over his shoulder, and the arm of the deputy-night-watchman took
   possession of him again.
   "Not too fast--I'm nimble on my legs for a man of my age--but not too
   fast," said his new friend. "You're just the sort of little man I like.
   My sister will tell you I take sudden fancies to people of your
   complexion. My sister's a most respectable woman. What's your
   name?--Jack? A capital name! Short, with a smack in it like the crack of
   a whip. _Do_ give me the bottle!" He took it this time, without waiting
   to have it given to him. "There! might drop it, you know," he said. "It's
   safe in my friendly hands. Where are you going to? You don't deal, I
   hope, at the public-house up that way? A word in your ear--the infernal
   scoundrel waters his wine. Here's the turning where the honest publican
   lives. I have the truest affection for him. I have the truest affection
   for you. Would you like to see the Deadhouse, some night? It's against
    
					     					 			the rules; but that don't matter. The cemetery overseer is a deal too
   fond of his bed to turn out these cold nights and look after the
   watchman. It's just the right place for me. There's nothing to do but to
   drink, when you have got the liquor; and to sleep, when you haven't. The
   Dead who come our way, my little friend, have one great merit. We are
   supposed to help them, if they're perverse enough to come to life again
   before they're buried. There they lie in our house, with one end of the
   line tied to their fingers, and the other end at the spring of the
   alarm-bell. And they have never rung the bell yet--never once, bless
   their hearts, since the Deadhouse was built! Come and see me in the
   course of the week, and we'll drink a health to our quiet neighbors."
   They arrived at the door of the public-house.
   "You've got some money about you, I suppose?" said Schwartz.
   Madame Fontaine's generosity, when she gave Jack the money to buy a pair
   of gloves, had left a small surplus in his pocket. He made a last effort
   to escape from the deputy-watchman. "There's the money, he said. "Give me
   back the bottle, and go and drink by yourself."
   Schwartz took him by the shoulder, and surveyed him from head to foot by
   the light of the public-house lamp. "Drink by myself?" he repeated. "Am I
   a jolly fellow, or am I not? Yes, or No?"
   "Yes," said Jack, trying hard to release himself.
   Schwartz tightened his hold. "Did you ever hear of a jolly fellow, who
   left his friend at the public-house door?" he asked.
   "If you please, sir, I don't drink," Jack pleaded.
   Schwartz burst into a great roar of laughter, and kicked open the door of
   the public-house. "That's the best joke I ever heard in my life," he
   said. "We've got money enough to fill the bottle, and to have a glass
   a-piece besides. Come along!"
   He dragged Jack into the house. The bottle was filled; the glasses were
   filled. "My sister's health! Long life and prosperity to my respectable
   sister! You can't refuse to drink the toast." With those words, he put
   the fatal glass into his companion's hand.
   Jack tasted the wine. It was cool; it was good. Perhaps it was not so
   strong as Mr. Keller's wine? He tried it again--and emptied the glass.
   An hour later, there was a ring at the door of Mr. Keller's house.
   Joseph opened the door, and discovered a red-nosed old man, holding up
   another man who seemed to be three parts asleep, and who was quite unable
   to stand on his legs without assistance. The light of the hall lamp fell
   on this helpless creature's face, and revealed--Jack.
   "Put him to bed," said the red-nosed stranger. "And, look here, take
   charge of the bottle for him, or he'll break it. Somehow, the wine has
   all leaked out. Where's my sister's bag?"
   "Do you mean the nurse?"
   "Of course I do! I defy the world to produce the nurse's equal. Has she
   come?"
   Joseph held up his hand with a gesture of grave reproof.
   "Not so loud," he said. "The nurse has come too late."
   "Has the lady got well again?"
   "The lady is dead."
   CHAPTER XV
   Doctor Dormann had behaved very strangely.
   He was the first person who made the terrible discovery of the death.
   When he came to the house, on his evening visit to his patient, Mr.
   Keller was in the room. Half an hour before, Mrs. Wagner had spoken to
   him. Seeing a slight movement of her lips, he had bent over her, and had
   just succeeded in hearing her few last words, "Be kind to Jack." Her
   eyelids dropped wearily, after the struggle to speak. Mr. Keller and the
   servant in attendance both supposed that she had fallen asleep. The
   doctor's examination was not only prolonged beyond all customary limits