The Mystery of a Hansom Cab eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about The Mystery of a Hansom Cab.

The Mystery of a Hansom Cab eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about The Mystery of a Hansom Cab.
women, I refer you to Balzac’s remark anent the same.  Perhaps Musette got weary of St. John’s Wood and champagne suppers, and longed for the purer air of her native land.  Ah! you open your eyes at this latter statement—­you are surprised—­no, on second thoughts you are not, because she told you herself that she was a native of Sydney, and had gone home in 1858, after a triumphant career of acting in Melbourne.  And why did she leave the applauding Melbourne public and the flesh-pots of Egypt?  You know this also.  She ran away with a rich young squatter, with more money than morals, who happened to be in Melbourne at the time.  She seems to have had a weakness for running away.  But why she chose Whyte to go with this time puzzles me.  He was not rich, not particularly good-looking, had no position, and a bad temper.  How do I know all these traits of Mr. Whyte’s character, morally and socially?  Easily enough; my omniscient friend found them all out.  Mr. Oliver Whyte was the son of a London tailor, and his father being well off, retired into a private life, and ultimately went the way of all flesh.  His son, finding himself with a capital income, and a pretty taste for amusement, cut the shop of his late lamented parent, found out that his family had come over with the Conqueror—­Glanville de Whyte helped to sew the Bayeux tapestry, I suppose—­and graduated at the Frivolity Theatre as a masher.  In common with the other gilded youth of the day, he worshipped at the gas-lit shrine of Musette, and the goddess, pleased with his incense, left her other admirers in the lurch, and ran off with fortunate Mr. Whyte.  So far as this goes there is nothing to show why the murder was committed.  Men do not perpetrate crimes for the sake of light o’ loves like Musette, unless, indeed, some wretched youth embezzles money to buy jewellery for his divinity.  The career of Musette, in London, was simply that of a clever member of the demi-monde, and, as far as I can learn, no one was so much in love with her as to commit a crime for her sake.  So far so good; the motive of the crime must be found in Australia.  Whyte had spent nearly all his money in England, and, consequently, Musette and her lover arrived in Sydney with comparatively very little cash.  However, with an Epicurean-like philosophy, they enjoyed themselves on what little they had, and then came to Melbourne, where they stayed at a second-rate hotel.  Musette, I may tell you, had one special vice, a common one—­drink.  She loved champagne, and drank a good deal of it.  Consequently, on arriving at Melbourne, and finding that a new generation had arisen, which knew not Joseph—­I mean Musette—­she drowned her sorrows in the flowing bowl, and went out after a quarrel with Mr. Whyte, to view Melbourne by night—­a familiar scene to her, no doubt.  What took her to Little Bourke Street I don’t know.  Perhaps she got lost—­perhaps it had been a favourite walk of hers in the old days; at all events she was found dead drunk in that unsavoury
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The Mystery of a Hansom Cab from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.