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The Black Mask

By E. W. Hornung.

Table of Contents Titlepage Imprint No Sinecure I II III A Jubilee Present The Fate of Faustina The Last Laugh To Catch a Thief I II III An Old Flame I II The Wrong House The Knees of the Gods I II III IV Colophon Uncopyright Imprint

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No Sinecure I

I am still uncertain which surprised me more, the telegram calling my attention to the advertisement, or the advertisement itself. The telegram is before me as I write. It would appear to have been handed in at Vere Street at eight oโ€™clock in the morning of May 11, 1897, and received before half-past at Holloway B.O. And in that drab region it duly found me, unwashen but at work before the day grew hot and my attic insupportable.

โ€œSee Mr. Maturinโ€™s advertisement Daily Mail might suit you earnestly beg try will speak if necessary โธปโ€

I transcribe the thing as I see it before me, all in one breath that took away mine; but I leave out the initials at the end, which completed the surprise. They stood very obviously for the knighted specialist whose consulting-room is within a cab-whistle of Vere Street, and who once called me kinsman for his sins. More recently he had called me other names. I was a disgrace, qualified by an adjective which seemed to me another. I had made my bed, and I could go and lie and die in it. If I ever again had the insolence to show my nose in that house, I should go out quicker than I came in. All this, and more, my least distant relative could tell a poor devil to his face; could ring for his man, and give him his brutal instructions on the spot; and then relent to the tune of this telegram! I have no phrase for my amazement. I literally could not believe my eyes. Yet their evidence was more and more conclusive: a very epistle could not have been more characteristic of its sender. Meanly elliptical, ludicrously precise, saving halfpence at the expense of sense, yet paying like a man for โ€œMr.โ€ Maturin, that was my distinguished relative from his bald patch to his corns. Nor was all the rest unlike him, upon second thoughts. He had a reputation for charity; he was going to live up to it after all. Either that, or it was the sudden impulse of which the most calculating are capable at times; the morning papers with the early cup of tea, this advertisement seen by chance, and the rest upon the spur of a guilty conscience.

Well, I must see it for myself, and the sooner the better, though work pressed. I was writing a series of articles upon prison life, and had my nib into the whole System; a literary and philanthropical daily was parading my โ€œcharges,โ€ the graver ones with the more gusto; and the terms, if unhandsome for creative work, were temporary wealth to me. It so happened that my first check had just arrived by the eight oโ€™clock post; and my position should be appreciated when I say that I had to cash it to obtain a Daily Mail.

Of the advertisement itself, what is to be said? It should speak for itself if I could find it, but I cannot, and only remember that it was a โ€œmale nurse and constant attendantโ€ that was โ€œwanted for an elderly gentleman in feeble health.โ€ A male nurse! An absurd tag was appended, offering โ€œliberal salary to University or public-school manโ€; and of a sudden I saw that I should get this thing if I applied for it. What other โ€œUniversity or public-school manโ€ would dream of doing so? Was any other in such straits as I? And then my relenting relative; he not only promised to speak for me, but was the very man to do so. Could any recommendation compete with his in the matter of a male nurse? And need the duties of such be necessarily loathsome and repellent? Certainly the surroundings would be better than those of my common lodging-house and own particular garret; and the food; and every other condition of life that I could think of on my way back to that unsavory asylum. So I dived into a pawnbrokerโ€™s shop, where I was a stranger only upon my present errand, and within the hour was airing a decent if antiquated suit, but little corrupted by the pawnbrokerโ€™s moth, and a new straw hat, on the top of a tram.

The address given in the advertisement was that of a flat at Earlโ€™s Court, which cost me a cross-country journey, finishing with the District Railway and a seven minutesโ€™ walk. It was now past midday, and the tarry wood-pavement was good to smell as I strode up the Earlโ€™s Court Road. It was great to

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