<h2><SPAN name="chap50"></SPAN> CHAPTER L.<br/> THE PURSUIT AND ESCAPE</h2>
<p>Near to that part of the Thames on which the church at Rotherhithe abuts, where
the buildings on the banks are dirtiest and the vessels on the river blackest
with the dust of colliers and the smoke of close-built low-roofed houses, there
exists the filthiest, the strangest, the most extraordinary of the many
localities that are hidden in London, wholly unknown, even by name, to the
great mass of its inhabitants.</p>
<p>To reach this place, the visitor has to penetrate through a maze of close,
narrow, and muddy streets, thronged by the roughest and poorest of waterside
people, and devoted to the traffic they may be supposed to occasion. The
cheapest and least delicate provisions are heaped in the shops; the coarsest
and commonest articles of wearing apparel dangle at the salesman’s door,
and stream from the house-parapet and windows. Jostling with unemployed
labourers of the lowest class, ballast-heavers, coal-whippers, brazen women,
ragged children, and the raff and refuse of the river, he makes his way with
difficulty along, assailed by offensive sights and smells from the narrow
alleys which branch off on the right and left, and deafened by the clash of
ponderous waggons that bear great piles of merchandise from the stacks of
warehouses that rise from every corner. Arriving, at length, in streets remoter
and less-frequented than those through which he has passed, he walks beneath
tottering house-fronts projecting over the pavement, dismantled walls that seem
to totter as he passes, chimneys half crushed half hesitating to fall, windows
guarded by rusty iron bars that time and dirt have almost eaten away, every
imaginable sign of desolation and neglect.</p>
<p>In such a neighborhood, beyond Dockhead in the Borough of Southwark, stands
Jacob’s Island, surrounded by a muddy ditch, six or eight feet deep and
fifteen or twenty wide when the tide is in, once called Mill Pond, but known in
the days of this story as Folly Ditch. It is a creek or inlet from the Thames,
and can always be filled at high water by opening the sluices at the Lead Mills
from which it took its old name. At such times, a stranger, looking from one of
the wooden bridges thrown across it at Mill Lane, will see the inhabitants of
the houses on either side lowering from their back doors and windows, buckets,
pails, domestic utensils of all kinds, in which to haul the water up; and when
his eye is turned from these operations to the houses themselves, his utmost
astonishment will be excited by the scene before him. Crazy wooden galleries
common to the backs of half a dozen houses, with holes from which to look upon
the slime beneath; windows, broken and patched, with poles thrust out, on which
to dry the linen that is never there; rooms so small, so filthy, so confined,
that the air would seem too tainted even for the dirt and squalor which they
shelter; wooden chambers thrusting themselves out above the mud, and
threatening to fall into it—as some have done; dirt-besmeared walls and
decaying foundations; every repulsive lineament of poverty, every loathsome
indication of filth, rot, and garbage; all these ornament the banks of Folly
Ditch.</p>
<p>In Jacob’s Island, the warehouses are roofless and empty; the walls are
crumbling down; the windows are windows no more; the doors are falling into the
streets; the chimneys are blackened, but they yield no smoke. Thirty or forty
years ago, before losses and chancery suits came upon it, it was a thriving
place; but now it is a desolate island indeed. The houses have no owners; they
are broken open, and entered upon by those who have the courage; and there they
live, and there they die. They must have powerful motives for a secret
residence, or be reduced to a destitute condition indeed, who seek a refuge in
Jacob’s Island.</p>
<p>In an upper room of one of these houses—a detached house of fair size,
ruinous in other respects, but strongly defended at door and window: of which
house the back commanded the ditch in manner already described—there were
assembled three men, who, regarding each other every now and then with looks
expressive of perplexity and expectation, sat for some time in profound and
gloomy silence. One of these was Toby Crackit, another Mr. Chitling, and the
third a robber of fifty years, whose nose had been almost beaten in, in some
old scuffle, and whose face bore a frightful scar which might probably be
traced to the same occasion. This man was a returned transport, and his name
was Kags.</p>
<p>“I wish,” said Toby turning to Mr. Chitling, “that you had
picked out some other crib when the two old ones got too warm, and had not come
here, my fine feller.”</p>
<p>“Why didn’t you, blunder-head!” said Kags.</p>
<p>“Well, I thought you’d have been a little more glad to see me than
this,” replied Mr. Chitling, with a melancholy air.</p>
<p>“Why, look’e, young gentleman,” said Toby, “when a man
keeps himself so very ex-clusive as I have done, and by that means has a snug
house over his head with nobody a prying and smelling about it, it’s
rather a startling thing to have the honour of a wisit from a young gentleman
(however respectable and pleasant a person he may be to play cards with at
conweniency) circumstanced as you are.”</p>
<p>“Especially, when the exclusive young man has got a friend stopping with
him, that’s arrived sooner than was expected from foreign parts, and is
too modest to want to be presented to the Judges on his return,” added
Mr. Kags.</p>
<p>There was a short silence, after which Toby Crackit, seeming to abandon as
hopeless any further effort to maintain his usual devil-may-care swagger,
turned to Chitling and said,</p>
<p>“When was Fagin took then?”</p>
<p>“Just at dinner-time—two o’clock this afternoon. Charley and
I made our lucky up the wash-us chimney, and Bolter got into the empty
water-butt, head downwards; but his legs were so precious long that they stuck
out at the top, and so they took him too.”</p>
<p>“And Bet?”</p>
<p>“Poor Bet! She went to see the Body, to speak to who it was,”
replied Chitling, his countenance falling more and more, “and went off
mad, screaming and raving, and beating her head against the boards; so they put
a strait-weskut on her and took her to the hospital—and there she
is.”</p>
<p>“Wot’s come of young Bates?” demanded Kags.</p>
<p>“He hung about, not to come over here afore dark, but he’ll be here
soon,” replied Chitling. “There’s nowhere else to go to now,
for the people at the Cripples are all in custody, and the bar of the
ken—I went up there and see it with my own eyes—is filled with
traps.”</p>
<p>“This is a smash,” observed Toby, biting his lips.
“There’s more than one will go with this.”</p>
<p>“The sessions are on,” said Kags: “if they get the inquest
over, and Bolter turns King’s evidence: as of course he will, from what
he’s said already: they can prove Fagin an accessory before the fact, and
get the trial on on Friday, and he’ll swing in six days from this, by
G—!”</p>
<p>“You should have heard the people groan,” said Chitling; “the
officers fought like devils, or they’d have torn him away. He was down
once, but they made a ring round him, and fought their way along. You should
have seen how he looked about him, all muddy and bleeding, and clung to them as
if they were his dearest friends. I can see ’em now, not able to stand
upright with the pressing of the mob, and draggin him along amongst ’em;
I can see the people jumping up, one behind another, and snarling with their
teeth and making at him; I can see the blood upon his hair and beard, and hear
the cries with which the women worked themselves into the centre of the crowd
at the street corner, and swore they’d tear his heart out!”</p>
<p>The horror-stricken witness of this scene pressed his hands upon his ears, and
with his eyes closed got up and paced violently to and fro, like one
distracted.</p>
<p>While he was thus engaged, and the two men sat by in silence with their eyes
fixed upon the floor, a pattering noise was heard upon the stairs, and
Sikes’s dog bounded into the room. They ran to the window, downstairs,
and into the street. The dog had jumped in at an open window; he made no
attempt to follow them, nor was his master to be seen.</p>
<p>“What’s the meaning of this?” said Toby when they had
returned. “He can’t be coming here. I—I—hope
not.”</p>
<p>“If he was coming here, he’d have come with the dog,” said
Kags, stooping down to examine the animal, who lay panting on the floor.
“Here! Give us some water for him; he has run himself faint.”</p>
<p>“He’s drunk it all up, every drop,” said Chitling after
watching the dog some time in silence. “Covered with
mud—lame—half blind—he must have come a long way.”</p>
<p>“Where can he have come from!” exclaimed Toby. “He’s
been to the other kens of course, and finding them filled with strangers come
on here, where he’s been many a time and often. But where can he have
come from first, and how comes he here alone without the other!”</p>
<p>“He”—(none of them called the murderer by his old
name)—“He can’t have made away with himself. What do you
think?” said Chitling.</p>
<p>Toby shook his head.</p>
<p>“If he had,” said Kags, “the dog ’ud want to lead us
away to where he did it. No. I think he’s got out of the country, and
left the dog behind. He must have given him the slip somehow, or he
wouldn’t be so easy.”</p>
<p>This solution, appearing the most probable one, was adopted as the right; the
dog, creeping under a chair, coiled himself up to sleep, without more notice
from anybody.</p>
<p>It being now dark, the shutter was closed, and a candle lighted and placed upon
the table. The terrible events of the last two days had made a deep impression
on all three, increased by the danger and uncertainty of their own position.
They drew their chairs closer together, starting at every sound. They spoke
little, and that in whispers, and were as silent and awe-stricken as if the
remains of the murdered woman lay in the next room.</p>
<p>They had sat thus, some time, when suddenly was heard a hurried knocking at the
door below.</p>
<p>“Young Bates,” said Kags, looking angrily round, to check the fear
he felt himself.</p>
<p>The knocking came again. No, it wasn’t he. He never knocked like that.</p>
<p>Crackit went to the window, and shaking all over, drew in his head. There was
no need to tell them who it was; his pale face was enough. The dog too was on
the alert in an instant, and ran whining to the door.</p>
<p>“We must let him in,” he said, taking up the candle.</p>
<p>“Isn’t there any help for it?” asked the other man in a
hoarse voice.</p>
<p>“None. He <i>must</i> come in.”</p>
<p>“Don’t leave us in the dark,” said Kags, taking down a candle
from the chimney-piece, and lighting it, with such a trembling hand that the
knocking was twice repeated before he had finished.</p>
<p>Crackit went down to the door, and returned followed by a man with the lower
part of his face buried in a handkerchief, and another tied over his head under
his hat. He drew them slowly off. Blanched face, sunken eyes, hollow cheeks,
beard of three days’ growth, wasted flesh, short thick breath; it was the
very ghost of Sikes.</p>
<p>He laid his hand upon a chair which stood in the middle of the room, but
shuddering as he was about to drop into it, and seeming to glance over his
shoulder, dragged it back close to the wall—as close as it would
go—and ground it against it—and sat down.</p>
<p>Not a word had been exchanged. He looked from one to another in silence. If an
eye were furtively raised and met his, it was instantly averted. When his
hollow voice broke silence, they all three started. They seemed never to have
heard its tones before.</p>
<p>“How came that dog here?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Alone. Three hours ago.”</p>
<p>“To-night’s paper says that Fagin’s took. Is it true, or a
lie?”</p>
<p>“True.”</p>
<p>They were silent again.</p>
<p>“Damn you all!” said Sikes, passing his hand across his forehead.
“Have you nothing to say to me?”</p>
<p>There was an uneasy movement among them, but nobody spoke.</p>
<p>“You that keep this house,” said Sikes, turning his face to
Crackit, “do you mean to sell me, or to let me lie here till this hunt is
over?”</p>
<p>“You may stop here, if you think it safe,” returned the person
addressed, after some hesitation.</p>
<p>Sikes carried his eyes slowly up the wall behind him: rather trying to turn his
head than actually doing it: and said, “Is—it—the
body—is it buried?”</p>
<p>They shook their heads.</p>
<p>“Why isn’t it!” he retorted with the same glance behind him.
“Wot do they keep such ugly things above the ground
for?—Who’s that knocking?”</p>
<p>Crackit intimated, by a motion of his hand as he left the room, that there was
nothing to fear; and directly came back with Charley Bates behind him. Sikes
sat opposite the door, so that the moment the boy entered the room he
encountered his figure.</p>
<p>“Toby,” said the boy falling back, as Sikes turned his eyes towards
him, “why didn’t you tell me this, downstairs?”</p>
<p>There had been something so tremendous in the shrinking off of the three, that
the wretched man was willing to propitiate even this lad. Accordingly he
nodded, and made as though he would shake hands with him.</p>
<p>“Let me go into some other room,” said the boy, retreating still
farther.</p>
<p>“Charley!” said Sikes, stepping forward. “Don’t
you—don’t you know me?”</p>
<p>“Don’t come nearer me,” answered the boy, still retreating,
and looking, with horror in his eyes, upon the murderer’s face.
“You monster!”</p>
<p>The man stopped half-way, and they looked at each other; but Sikes’s eyes
sunk gradually to the ground.</p>
<p>“Witness you three,” cried the boy shaking his clenched fist, and
becoming more and more excited as he spoke. “Witness you
three—I’m not afraid of him—if they come here after him,
I’ll give him up; I will. I tell you out at once. He may kill me for it
if he likes, or if he dares, but if I am here I’ll give him up. I’d
give him up if he was to be boiled alive. Murder! Help! If there’s the
pluck of a man among you three, you’ll help me. Murder! Help! Down with
him!”</p>
<p>Pouring out these cries, and accompanying them with violent gesticulation, the
boy actually threw himself, single-handed, upon the strong man, and in the
intensity of his energy and the suddenness of his surprise, brought him heavily
to the ground.</p>
<p>The three spectators seemed quite stupefied. They offered no interference, and
the boy and man rolled on the ground together; the former, heedless of the
blows that showered upon him, wrenching his hands tighter and tighter in the
garments about the murderer’s breast, and never ceasing to call for help
with all his might.</p>
<p>The contest, however, was too unequal to last long. Sikes had him down, and his
knee was on his throat, when Crackit pulled him back with a look of alarm, and
pointed to the window. There were lights gleaming below, voices in loud and
earnest conversation, the tramp of hurried footsteps—endless they seemed
in number—crossing the nearest wooden bridge. One man on horseback seemed
to be among the crowd; for there was the noise of hoofs rattling on the uneven
pavement. The gleam of lights increased; the footsteps came more thickly and
noisily on. Then, came a loud knocking at the door, and then a hoarse murmur
from such a multitude of angry voices as would have made the boldest quail.</p>
<p>“Help!” shrieked the boy in a voice that rent the air.
“He’s here! Break down the door!”</p>
<p>“In the King’s name,” cried the voices without; and the
hoarse cry arose again, but louder.</p>
<p>“Break down the door!” screamed the boy. “I tell you
they’ll never open it. Run straight to the room where the light is. Break
down the door!”</p>
<p>Strokes, thick and heavy, rattled upon the door and lower window-shutters as he
ceased to speak, and a loud huzzah burst from the crowd; giving the listener,
for the first time, some adequate idea of its immense extent.</p>
<p>“Open the door of some place where I can lock this screeching
Hell-babe,” cried Sikes fiercely; running to and fro, and dragging the
boy, now, as easily as if he were an empty sack. “That door.
Quick!” He flung him in, bolted it, and turned the key. “Is the
downstairs door fast?”</p>
<p>“Double-locked and chained,” replied Crackit, who, with the other
two men, still remained quite helpless and bewildered.</p>
<p>“The panels—are they strong?”</p>
<p>“Lined with sheet-iron.”</p>
<p>“And the windows too?”</p>
<p>“Yes, and the windows.”</p>
<p>“Damn you!” cried the desperate ruffian, throwing up the sash and
menacing the crowd. “Do your worst! I’ll cheat you yet!”</p>
<p>Of all the terrific yells that ever fell on mortal ears, none could exceed the
cry of the infuriated throng. Some shouted to those who were nearest to set the
house on fire; others roared to the officers to shoot him dead. Among them all,
none showed such fury as the man on horseback, who, throwing himself out of the
saddle, and bursting through the crowd as if he were parting water, cried,
beneath the window, in a voice that rose above all others, “Twenty
guineas to the man who brings a ladder!”</p>
<p>The nearest voices took up the cry, and hundreds echoed it. Some called for
ladders, some for sledge-hammers; some ran with torches to and fro as if to
seek them, and still came back and roared again; some spent their breath in
impotent curses and execrations; some pressed forward with the ecstasy of
madmen, and thus impeded the progress of those below; some among the boldest
attempted to climb up by the water-spout and crevices in the wall; and all
waved to and fro, in the darkness beneath, like a field of corn moved by an
angry wind: and joined from time to time in one loud furious roar.</p>
<p>“The tide,” cried the murderer, as he staggered back into the room,
and shut the faces out, “the tide was in as I came up. Give me a rope, a
long rope. They’re all in front. I may drop into the Folly Ditch, and
clear off that way. Give me a rope, or I shall do three more murders and kill
myself.”</p>
<p>The panic-stricken men pointed to where such articles were kept; the murderer,
hastily selecting the longest and strongest cord, hurried up to the house-top.</p>
<p>All the windows in the rear of the house had been long ago bricked up, except
one small trap in the room where the boy was locked, and that was too small
even for the passage of his body. But, from this aperture, he had never ceased
to call on those without, to guard the back; and thus, when the murderer
emerged at last on the house-top by the door in the roof, a loud shout
proclaimed the fact to those in front, who immediately began to pour round,
pressing upon each other in an unbroken stream.</p>
<p>He planted a board, which he had carried up with him for the purpose, so firmly
against the door that it must be matter of great difficulty to open it from the
inside; and creeping over the tiles, looked over the low parapet.</p>
<p>The water was out, and the ditch a bed of mud.</p>
<p>The crowd had been hushed during these few moments, watching his motions and
doubtful of his purpose, but the instant they perceived it and knew it was
defeated, they raised a cry of triumphant execration to which all their
previous shouting had been whispers. Again and again it rose. Those who were at
too great a distance to know its meaning, took up the sound; it echoed and
re-echoed; it seemed as though the whole city had poured its population out to
curse him.</p>
<p>On pressed the people from the front—on, on, on, in a strong struggling
current of angry faces, with here and there a glaring torch to lighten them up,
and show them out in all their wrath and passion. The houses on the opposite
side of the ditch had been entered by the mob; sashes were thrown up, or torn
bodily out; there were tiers and tiers of faces in every window; cluster upon
cluster of people clinging to every house-top. Each little bridge (and there
were three in sight) bent beneath the weight of the crowd upon it. Still the
current poured on to find some nook or hole from which to vent their shouts,
and only for an instant see the wretch.</p>
<p>“They have him now,” cried a man on the nearest bridge.
“Hurrah!”</p>
<p>The crowd grew light with uncovered heads; and again the shout uprose.</p>
<p>“I will give fifty pounds,” cried an old gentleman from the same
quarter, “to the man who takes him alive. I will remain here, till he
come to ask me for it.”</p>
<p>There was another roar. At this moment the word was passed among the crowd that
the door was forced at last, and that he who had first called for the ladder
had mounted into the room. The stream abruptly turned, as this intelligence ran
from mouth to mouth; and the people at the windows, seeing those upon the
bridges pouring back, quitted their stations, and running into the street,
joined the concourse that now thronged pell-mell to the spot they had left:
each man crushing and striving with his neighbor, and all panting with
impatience to get near the door, and look upon the criminal as the officers
brought him out. The cries and shrieks of those who were pressed almost to
suffocation, or trampled down and trodden under foot in the confusion, were
dreadful; the narrow ways were completely blocked up; and at this time, between
the rush of some to regain the space in front of the house, and the unavailing
struggles of others to extricate themselves from the mass, the immediate
attention was distracted from the murderer, although the universal eagerness
for his capture was, if possible, increased.</p>
<p>The man had shrunk down, thoroughly quelled by the ferocity of the crowd, and
the impossibility of escape; but seeing this sudden change with no less
rapidity than it had occurred, he sprang upon his feet, determined to make one
last effort for his life by dropping into the ditch, and, at the risk of being
stifled, endeavouring to creep away in the darkness and confusion.</p>
<p>Roused into new strength and energy, and stimulated by the noise within the
house which announced that an entrance had really been effected, he set his
foot against the stack of chimneys, fastened one end of the rope tightly and
firmly round it, and with the other made a strong running noose by the aid of
his hands and teeth almost in a second. He could let himself down by the cord
to within a less distance of the ground than his own height, and had his knife
ready in his hand to cut it then and drop.</p>
<p>At the very instant when he brought the loop over his head previous to slipping
it beneath his arm-pits, and when the old gentleman before-mentioned (who had
clung so tight to the railing of the bridge as to resist the force of the
crowd, and retain his position) earnestly warned those about him that the man
was about to lower himself down—at that very instant the murderer,
looking behind him on the roof, threw his arms above his head, and uttered a
yell of terror.</p>
<p>“The eyes again!” he cried in an unearthly screech.</p>
<p>Staggering as if struck by lightning, he lost his balance and tumbled over the
parapet. The noose was on his neck. It ran up with his weight, tight as a
bow-string, and swift as the arrow it speeds. He fell for five-and-thirty feet.
There was a sudden jerk, a terrific convulsion of the limbs; and there he hung,
with the open knife clenched in his stiffening hand.</p>
<p>The old chimney quivered with the shock, but stood it bravely. The murderer
swung lifeless against the wall; and the boy, thrusting aside the dangling body
which obscured his view, called to the people to come and take him out, for
God’s sake.</p>
<p>A dog, which had lain concealed till now, ran backwards and forwards on the
parapet with a dismal howl, and collecting himself for a spring, jumped for the
dead man’s shoulders. Missing his aim, he fell into the ditch, turning
completely over as he went; and striking his head against a stone, dashed out
his brains.</p>
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