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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Terror, by Arthur Machen</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Terror<br />
+  A Mystery</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Arthur Machen</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 20, 2011 [eBook #35617]<br />
+[Most recently updated: December 16, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Dave Haren and Marc D’Hooghe</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TERROR ***</div>
+
+<h1>THE TERROR</h1>
+
+<h4><i>A MYSTERY</i></h4>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">BY ARTHUR MACHEN</h2>
+
+<h4>AUTHOR OF "THE BOWMEN"</h4>
+
+<h5>NEW YORK</h5>
+
+<h5>ROBERT M. MCBRIDE &amp; COMPANY</h5>
+
+<h5>UNION SQUARE, NORTH</h5>
+
+<h5>1917</h5>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. The Coming of the Terror</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. Death in the Village</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. The Doctor’s Theory</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. The Spread of the Terror</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. The Incident of the Unknown Tree</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. Mr. Remnant’s Z Ray</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. The Case of the Hidden Germans</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. What Mr. Merritt Found</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. The Light on the Water</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. The Child and the Moth</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. At Treff Loyne Farm</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. The Letter of Wrath</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. The Last Words of Mr. Secretan</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. The End of the Terror</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I.<br/>
+The Coming of the Terror</h2>
+
+<p>
+After two years we are turning once more to the morning’s news with a sense of
+appetite and glad expectation. There were thrills at the beginning of the war;
+the thrill of horror and of a doom that seemed at once incredible and certain;
+this was when Namur fell and the German host swelled like a flood over the
+French fields, and drew very near to the walls of Paris. Then we felt the
+thrill of exultation when the good news came that the awful tide had been
+turned back, that Paris and the world were safe; for awhile at all events.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then for days we hoped for more news as good as this or better. Has Von Kluck
+been surrounded? Not to-day, but perhaps he will be surrounded to-morrow. But
+the days became weeks, the weeks drew out to months; the battle in the West
+seemed frozen. Now and again things were done that seemed hopeful, with promise
+of events still better. But Neuve Chapelle and Loos dwindled into
+disappointments as their tale was told fully; the lines in the West remained,
+for all practical purposes of victory, immobile. Nothing seemed to happen;
+there was nothing to read save the record of operations that were clearly
+trifling and insignificant. People speculated as to the reason of this
+inaction; the hopeful said that Joffre had a plan, that he was “nibbling,”
+others declared that we were short of munitions, others again that the new
+levies were not yet ripe for battle. So the months went by, and almost two
+years of war had been completed before the motionless English line began to
+stir and quiver as if it awoke from a long sleep, and began to roll onward,
+overwhelming the enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The secret of the long inaction of the British Armies has been well kept. On
+the one hand it was rigorously protected by the censorship, which severe, and
+sometimes severe to the point of absurdity&mdash;“the captains and the ...
+depart,” for instance&mdash;became in this particular matter ferocious. As soon
+as the real significance of that which was happening, or beginning to happen,
+was perceived by the authorities, an underlined circular was issued to the
+newspaper proprietors of Great Britain and Ireland. It warned each proprietor
+that he might impart the contents of this circular to one other person only,
+such person being the responsible editor of his paper, who was to keep the
+communication secret under the severest penalties. The circular forbade any
+mention of certain events that had taken place, that might take place; it
+forbade any kind of allusion to these events or any hint of their existence, or
+of the possibility of their existence, not only in the Press, but in any form
+whatever. The subject was not to be alluded to in conversation, it was not to
+be hinted at, however obscurely, in letters; the very existence of the
+circular, its subject apart, was to be a dead secret.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These measures were successful. A wealthy newspaper proprietor of the North,
+warmed a little at the end of the Throwsters’ Feast (which was held as usual,
+it will be remembered), ventured to say to the man next to him: “How awful it
+would be, wouldn’t it, if....” His words were repeated, as proof, one regrets
+to say, that it was time for “old Arnold” to “pull himself together”; and he
+was fined a thousand pounds. Then, there was the case of an obscure weekly
+paper published in the county town of an agricultural district in Wales. The
+<i>Meiros Observer</i> (we will call it) was issued from a stationer’s back
+premises, and filled its four pages with accounts of local flower shows, fancy
+fairs at vicarages, reports of parish councils, and rare bathing fatalities. It
+also issued a visitors’ list, which has been known to contain six names.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This enlightened organ printed a paragraph, which nobody noticed, which was
+very like paragraphs that small country newspapers have long been in the habit
+of printing, which could hardly give so much as a hint to any one&mdash;to any
+one, that is, who was not fully instructed in the secret. As a matter of fact,
+this piece of intelligence got into the paper because the proprietor, who was
+also the editor, incautiously left the last processes of this particular issue
+to the staff, who was the Lord-High-Everything-Else of the establishment; and
+the staff put in a bit of gossip he had heard in the market to fill up two
+inches on the back page. But the result was that the <i>Meiros Observer</i>
+ceased to appear, owing to “untoward circumstances” as the proprietor said; and
+he would say no more. No more, that is, by way of explanation, but a great deal
+more by way of execration of “damned, prying busybodies.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Now a censorship that is sufficiently minute and utterly remorseless can do
+amazing things in the way of hiding ... what it wants to hide. Before the war,
+one would have thought otherwise; one would have said that, censor or no
+censor, the fact of the murder at X or the fact of the bank robbery at Y would
+certainly become known; if not through the Press, at all events through rumor
+and the passage of the news from mouth to mouth. And this would be
+true&mdash;of England three hundred years ago, and of savage tribelands of
+to-day. But we have grown of late to such a reverence for the printed word and
+such a reliance on it, that the old faculty of disseminating news by word of
+mouth has become atrophied. Forbid the Press to mention the fact that Jones has
+been murdered, and it is marvelous how few people will hear of it, and of those
+who hear how few will credit the story that they have heard. You meet a man in
+the train who remarks that he has been told something about a murder in
+Southwark; there is all the difference in the world between the impression you
+receive from such a chance communication and that given by half a dozen lines
+of print with name, and street and date and all the facts of the case. People
+in trains repeat all sorts of tales, many of them false; newspapers do not
+print accounts of murders that have not been committed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then another consideration that has made for secrecy. I may have seemed to say
+that the old office of rumor no longer exists; I shall be reminded of the
+strange legend of “the Russians” and the mythology of the “Angels of Mons.” But
+let me point out, in the first place, that both these absurdities depended on
+the papers for their wide dissemination. If there had been no newspapers or
+magazines Russians and Angels would have made but a brief, vague appearance of
+the most shadowy kind&mdash;a few would have heard of them, fewer still would
+have believed in them, they would have been gossiped about for a bare week or
+two, and so they would have vanished away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, then, again, the very fact of these vain rumors and fantastic tales having
+been so widely believed for a time was fatal to the credit of any stray
+mutterings that may have got abroad. People had been taken in twice; they had
+seen how grave persons, men of credit, had preached and lectured about the
+shining forms that had saved the British Army at Mons, or had testified to the
+trains, packed with gray-coated Muscovites, rushing through the land at dead of
+night: and now there was a hint of something more amazing than either of the
+discredited legends. But this time there was no word of confirmation to be
+found in daily paper, or weekly review, or parish magazine, and so the few that
+heard either laughed, or, being serious, went home and jotted down notes for
+essays on “War-time Psychology: Collective Delusions.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+I followed neither of these courses. For before the secret circular had been
+issued my curiosity had somehow been aroused by certain paragraphs concerning a
+“Fatal Accident to Well-known Airman.” The propeller of the airplane had been
+shattered, apparently by a collision with a flight of pigeons; the blades had
+been broken and the machine had fallen like lead to the earth. And soon after I
+had seen this account, I heard of some very odd circumstances relating to an
+explosion in a great munition factory in the Midlands. I thought I saw the
+possibility of a connection between two very different events.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+It has been pointed out to me by friends who have been good enough to read this
+record, that certain phrases I have used may give the impression that I ascribe
+all the delays of the war on the Western front to the extraordinary
+circumstances which occasioned the issue of the Secret Circular. Of course this
+is not the case, there were many reasons for the immobility of our lines from
+October 1914 to July 1916. These causes have been evident enough and have been
+openly discussed and deplored. But behind them was something of infinitely
+greater moment. We lacked men, but men were pouring into the new army; we were
+short of shells, but when the shortage was proclaimed the nation set itself to
+mend this matter with all its energy. We could undertake to supply the defects
+of our army both in men and munitions&mdash;<i>if</i> the new and incredible
+danger could be overcome. It has been overcome; rather, perhaps, it has ceased
+to exist; and the secret may now be told.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have said my attention was attracted by an account of the death of a
+well-known airman. I have not the habit of preserving cuttings, I am sorry to
+say, so that I cannot be precise as to the date of this event. To the best of
+my belief it was either towards the end of May or the beginning of June 1915.
+The newspaper paragraph announcing the death of Flight-Lieutenant
+Western-Reynolds was brief enough; accidents, and fatal accidents, to the men
+who are storming the air for us are, unfortunately, by no means so rare as to
+demand an elaborated notice. But the manner in which Western-Reynolds met his
+death struck me as extraordinary, inasmuch as it revealed a new danger in the
+element that we have lately conquered. He was brought down, as I said, by a
+flight of birds; of pigeons, as appeared by what was found on the bloodstained
+and shattered blades of the propeller. An eye-witness of the accident, a
+fellow-officer, described how Western-Reynolds set out from the aerodrome on a
+fine afternoon, there being hardly any wind. He was going to France; he had
+made the journey to and fro half a dozen times or more, and felt perfectly
+secure and at ease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“‘Wester’ rose to a great height at once, and we could scarcely see the
+machine. I was turning to go when one of the fellows called out, ‘I say! What’s
+this?’ He pointed up, and we saw what looked like a black cloud coming from the
+south at a tremendous rate. I saw at once it wasn’t a cloud; it came with a
+swirl and a rush quite different from any cloud I’ve ever seen. But for a
+second I couldn’t make out exactly what it was. It altered its shape and turned
+into a great crescent, and wheeled and veered about as if it was looking for
+something. The man who had called out had got his glasses, and was staring for
+all he was worth. Then he shouted that it was a tremendous flight of birds,
+‘thousands of them.’ They went on wheeling and beating about high up in the
+air, and we were watching them, thinking it was interesting, but not supposing
+that they would make any difference to ‘Wester,’ who was just about out of
+sight. His machine was just a speck. Then the two arms of the crescent drew in
+as quick as lightning, and these thousands of birds shot in a solid mass right
+up there across the sky, and flew away somewhere about nor’-nor’-by-west. Then
+Henley, the man with the glasses, called out, ‘He’s down!’ and started running,
+and I went after him. We got a car and as we were going along Henley told me
+that he’d seen the machine drop dead, as if it came out of that cloud of birds.
+He thought then that they must have mucked up the propeller somehow. That
+turned out to be the case. We found the propeller blades all broken and covered
+with blood and pigeon feathers, and carcasses of the birds had got wedged in
+between the blades, and were sticking to them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was the story that the young airman told one evening in a small company.
+He did not speak “in confidence,” so I have no hesitation in reproducing what
+he said. Naturally, I did not take a verbatim note of his conversation, but I
+have something of a knack of remembering talk that interests me, and I think my
+reproduction is very near to the tale that I heard. And let it be noted that
+the flying man told his story without any sense or indication of a sense that
+the incredible, or all but the incredible, had happened. So far as he knew, he
+said, it was the first accident of the kind. Airmen in France had been bothered
+once or twice by birds&mdash;he thought they were eagles&mdash;flying viciously
+at them, but poor old “Wester” had been the first man to come up against a
+flight of some thousands of pigeons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And perhaps I shall be the next,” he added, “but why look for trouble? Anyhow,
+I’m going to see <i>Toodle-oo</i> to-morrow afternoon.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Well, I heard the story, as one hears all the varied marvels and terrors of the
+air; as one heard some years ago of “air pockets,” strange gulfs or voids in
+the atmosphere into which airmen fell with great peril; or as one heard of the
+experience of the airman who flew over the Cumberland mountains in the burning
+summer of 1911, and as he swam far above the heights was suddenly and
+vehemently blown upwards, the hot air from the rocks striking his plane as if
+it had been a blast from a furnace chimney. We have just begun to navigate a
+strange region; we must expect to encounter strange adventures, strange perils.
+And here a new chapter in the chronicles of these perils and adventures had
+been opened by the death of Western-Reynolds; and no doubt invention and
+contrivance would presently hit on some way of countering the new danger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was, I think, about a week or ten days after the airman’s death that my
+business called me to a northern town, the name of which, perhaps, had better
+remain unknown. My mission was to inquire into certain charges of extravagance
+which had been laid against the working people, that is, the munition workers
+of this especial town. It was said that the men who used to earn £2 10s. a week
+were now getting from seven to eight pounds, that “bits of girls” were being
+paid two pounds instead of seven or eight shillings, and that, in consequence,
+there was an orgy of foolish extravagance. The girls, I was told, were eating
+chocolates at four, five, and six shillings a pound, the women were ordering
+thirty-pound pianos which they couldn’t play, and the men bought gold chains at
+ten and twenty guineas apiece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I dived into the town in question and found, as usual, that there was a mixture
+of truth and exaggeration in the stories that I had heard. Gramophones, for
+example: they cannot be called in strictness necessaries, but they were
+undoubtedly finding a ready sale, even in the more expensive brands. And I
+thought that there were a great many very spick and span perambulators to be
+seen on the pavement; smart perambulators, painted in tender shades of color
+and expensively fitted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And how can you be surprised if people will have a bit of a fling?” a worker
+said to me. “We’re seeing money for the first time in our lives, and it’s
+bright. And we work hard for it, and we risk our lives to get it. You’ve heard
+of explosion yonder?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He mentioned certain works on the outskirts of the town. Of course, neither the
+name of the works nor of the town had been printed; there had been a brief
+notice of “Explosion at Munition Works in the Northern District: Many
+Fatalities.” The working man told me about it, and added some dreadful details.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They wouldn’t let their folks see bodies; screwed them up in coffins as they
+found them in shop. The gas had done it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Turned their faces black, you mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nay. They were all as if they had been bitten to pieces.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was a strange gas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I asked the man in the northern town all sorts of questions about the
+extraordinary explosion of which he had spoken to me. But he had very little
+more to say. As I have noted already, secrets that may not be printed are often
+deeply kept; last summer there were very few people outside high official
+circles who knew anything about the “Tanks,” of which we have all been talking
+lately, though these strange instruments of war were being exercised and tested
+in a park not far from London. So the man who told me of the explosion in the
+munition factory was most likely genuine in his profession that he knew nothing
+more of the disaster. I found out that he was a smelter employed at a furnace
+on the other side of the town to the ruined factory; he didn’t know even what
+they had been making there; some very dangerous high explosive, he supposed.
+His information was really nothing more than a bit of gruesome gossip, which he
+had heard probably at third or fourth or fifth hand. The horrible detail of
+faces “as if they had been bitten to pieces” had made its violent impression on
+him, that was all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I gave him up and took a tram to the district of the disaster; a sort of
+industrial suburb, five miles from the center of the town. When I asked for the
+factory, I was told that it was no good my going to it as there was nobody
+there. But I found it; a raw and hideous shed with a walled yard about it, and
+a shut gate. I looked for signs of destruction, but there was nothing. The roof
+was quite undamaged; and again it struck me that this had been a strange
+accident. There had been an explosion of sufficient violence to kill workpeople
+in the building, but the building itself showed no wounds or scars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man came out of the gate and locked it behind him. I began to ask him some
+sort of question, or rather, I began to “open” for a question with “A terrible
+business here, they tell me,” or some such phrase of convention. I got no
+farther. The man asked me if I saw a policeman walking down the street. I said
+I did, and I was given the choice of getting about my business forthwith or of
+being instantly given in charge as a spy. “Th’ast better be gone and quick
+about it,” was, I think, his final advice, and I took it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, I had come literally up against a brick wall. Thinking the problem over,
+I could only suppose that the smelter or his informant had twisted the phrases
+of the story. The smelter had said the dead men’s faces were “bitten to
+pieces”; this might be an unconscious perversion of “eaten away.” That phrase
+might describe well enough the effect of strong acids, and, for all I knew of
+the processes of munition-making, such acids might be used and might explode
+with horrible results in some perilous stage of their admixture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a day or two later that the accident to the airman, Western-Reynolds,
+came into my mind. For one of those instants which are far shorter than any
+measure of time there flashed out the possibility of a link between the two
+disasters. But here was a wild impossibility, and I drove it away. And yet I
+think that the thought, mad as it seemed, never left me; it was the secret
+light that at last guided me through a somber grove of enigmas.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+It was about this time, so far as the date can be fixed, that a whole district,
+one might say a whole county, was visited by a series of extraordinary and
+terrible calamities, which were the more terrible inasmuch as they continued
+for some time to be inscrutable mysteries. It is, indeed, doubtful whether
+these awful events do not still remain mysteries to many of those concerned;
+for before the inhabitants of this part of the country had time to join one
+link of evidence to another the circular was issued, and thenceforth no one
+knew how to distinguish undoubted fact from wild and extravagant surmise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The district in question is in the far west of Wales; I shall call it, for
+convenience, Meirion. In it there is one seaside town of some repute with
+holiday-makers for five or six weeks in the summer, and dotted about the county
+there are three or four small old towns that seem drooping in a slow decay,
+sleepy and gray with age and forgetfulness. They remind me of what I have read
+of towns in the west of Ireland. Grass grows between the uneven stones of the
+pavements, the signs above the shop windows decline, half the letters of these
+signs are missing, here and there a house has been pulled down, or has been
+allowed to slide into ruin, and wild greenery springs up through the fallen
+stones, and there is silence in all the streets. And, it is to be noted, these
+are not places that were once magnificent. The Celts have never had the art of
+building, and so far as I can see, such towns as Towy and Merthyr Tegveth and
+Meiros must have been always much as they are now, clusters of poorish,
+meanly-built houses, ill-kept and down at heel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And these few towns are thinly scattered over a wild country where north is
+divided from south by a wilder mountain range. One of these places is sixteen
+miles from any station; the others are doubtfully and deviously connected by
+single-line railways served by rare trains that pause and stagger and hesitate
+on their slow journey up mountain passes, or stop for half an hour or more at
+lonely sheds called stations, situated in the midst of desolate marshes. A few
+years ago I traveled with an Irishman on one of these queer lines, and he
+looked to right and saw the bog with its yellow and blue grasses and stagnant
+pools, and he looked to left and saw a ragged hillside, set with gray stone
+walls. “I can hardly believe,” he said, “that I’m not still in the wilds of
+Ireland.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, then, one sees a wild and divided and scattered region a land of outland
+hills and secret and hidden valleys. I know white farms on this coast which
+must be separate by two hours of hard, rough walking from any other habitation,
+which are invisible from any other house. And inland, again, the farms are
+often ringed about by thick groves of ash, planted by men of old days to
+shelter their roof-trees from rude winds of the mountain and stormy winds of
+the sea; so that these places, too, are hidden away, to be surmised only by the
+wood smoke that rises from the green surrounding leaves. A Londoner must see
+them to believe in them; and even then he can scarcely credit their utter
+isolation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such, then in the main is Meirion, and on this land in the early summer of last
+year terror descended&mdash;a terror without shape, such as no man there had
+ever known.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It began with the tale of a little child who wandered out into the lanes to
+pick flowers one sunny afternoon, and never came back to the cottage on the
+hill.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II.<br/>
+Death in the Village</h2>
+
+<p>
+The child who was lost came from a lonely cottage that stands on the slope of a
+steep hillside called the Allt, or the height. The land about it is wild and
+ragged; here the growth of gorse and bracken, here a marshy hollow of reeds and
+rushes, marking the course of the stream from some hidden well, here thickets
+of dense and tangled undergrowth, the outposts of the wood. Down through this
+broken and uneven ground a path leads to the lane at the bottom of the valley;
+then the land rises again and swells up to the cliffs over the sea, about a
+quarter of a mile away. The little girl, Gertrude Morgan, asked her mother if
+she might go down to the lane and pick the purple flowers&mdash;these were
+orchids&mdash;that grew there, and her mother gave her leave, telling her she
+must be sure to be back by tea-time, as there was apple-tart for tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She never came back. It was supposed that she must have crossed the road and
+gone to the cliff’s edge, possibly in order to pick the sea-pinks that were
+then in full blossom. She must have slipped, they said, and fallen into the
+sea, two hundred feet below. And, it may be said at once, that there was no
+doubt some truth in this conjecture, though it stopped very far short of the
+whole truth. The child’s body must have been carried out by the tide, for it
+was never found.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The conjecture of a false step or of a fatal slide on the slippery turf that
+slopes down to the rocks was accepted as being the only explanation possible.
+People thought the accident a strange one because, as a rule, country children
+living by the cliffs and the sea become wary at an early age, and Gertrude
+Morgan was almost ten years old. Still, as the neighbors said, “that’s how it
+must have happened, and it’s a great pity, to be sure.” But this would not do
+when in a week’s time a strong young laborer failed to come to his cottage
+after the day’s work. His body was found on the rocks six or seven miles from
+the cliffs where the child was supposed to have fallen; he was going home by a
+path that he had used every night of his life for eight or nine years, that he
+used of dark nights in perfect security, knowing every inch of it. The police
+asked if he drank, but he was a teetotaler; if he were subject to fits, but he
+wasn’t. And he was not murdered for his wealth, since agricultural laborers are
+not wealthy. It was only possible again to talk of slippery turf and a false
+step; but people began to be frightened. Then a woman was found with her neck
+broken at the bottom of a disused quarry near Llanfihangel, in the middle of
+the county. The “false step” theory was eliminated here, for the quarry was
+guarded with a natural hedge of gorse bushes. One would have to struggle and
+fight through sharp thorns to destruction in such a place as this; and indeed
+the gorse bushes were broken as if some one had rushed furiously through them,
+just above the place where the woman’s body was found. And this was strange:
+there was a dead sheep lying beside her in the pit, as if the woman and the
+sheep together had been chased over the brim of the quarry. But chased by whom,
+or by what? And then there was a new form of terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was in the region of the marshes under the mountain. A man and his son, a
+lad of fourteen or fifteen, set out early one morning to work and never reached
+the farm where they were bound. Their way skirted the marsh, but it was broad,
+firm and well metalled, and it had been raised about two feet above the bog.
+But when search was made in the evening of the same day Phillips and his son
+were found dead in the marsh, covered with black slime and pondweed. And they
+lay some ten yards from the path, which, it would seem, they must have left
+deliberately. It was useless of course, to look for tracks in the black ooze,
+for if one threw a big stone into it a few seconds removed all marks of the
+disturbance. The men who found the two bodies beat about the verges and
+purlieus of the marsh in hope of finding some trace of the murderers; they went
+to and fro over the rising ground where the black cattle were grazing, they
+searched the alder thickets by the brook; but they discovered nothing.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Most horrible of all these horrors, perhaps, was the affair of the Highway, a
+lonely and unfrequented by-road that winds for many miles on high and lonely
+land. Here, a mile from any other dwelling, stands a cottage on the edge of a
+dark wood. It was inhabited by a laborer named Williams, his wife, and their
+three children. One hot summer’s evening, a man who had been doing a day’s
+gardening at a rectory three or four miles away, passed the cottage, and
+stopped for a few minutes to chat with Williams, the laborer, who was pottering
+about his garden, while the children were playing on the path by the door. The
+two talked of their neighbors and of the potatoes till Mrs. Williams appeared
+at the doorway and said supper was ready, and Williams turned to go into the
+house. This was about eight o’clock, and in the ordinary course the family
+would have their supper and be in bed by nine, or by half-past nine at latest.
+At ten o’clock that night the local doctor was driving home along the Highway.
+His horse shied violently and then stopped dead just opposite the gate to the
+cottage. The doctor got down, frightened at what he saw; and there on the
+roadway lay Williams, his wife, and the three children, stone dead, all of
+them. Their skulls were battered in as if by some heavy iron instrument; their
+faces were beaten into a pulp.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III.<br/>
+The Doctor’s Theory</h2>
+
+<p>
+It is not easy to make any picture of the horror that lay dark on the hearts of
+the people of Meirion. It was no longer possible to believe or to pretend to
+believe that these men and women and children had met their deaths through
+strange accidents. The little girl and the young laborer might have slipped and
+fallen over the cliffs, but the woman who lay dead with the dead sheep at the
+bottom of the quarry, the two men who had been lured into the ooze of the
+marsh, the family who were found murdered on the Highway before their own
+cottage door; in these cases there could be no room for the supposition of
+accident. It seemed as if it were impossible to frame any conjecture or outline
+of a conjecture that would account for these hideous and, as it seemed, utterly
+purposeless crimes. For a time people said that there must be a madman at
+large, a sort of country variant of Jack the Ripper, some horrible pervert who
+was possessed by the passion of death, who prowled darkling about that lonely
+land, hiding in woods and in wild places, always watching and seeking for the
+victims of his desire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, Dr. Lewis, who found poor Williams, his wife and children miserably
+slaughtered on the Highway, was convinced at first that the presence of a
+concealed madman in the countryside offered the only possible solution to the
+difficulty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I felt sure,” he said to me afterwards, “that the Williams’s had been killed
+by a homicidal maniac. It was the nature of the poor creatures’ injuries that
+convinced me that this was the case. Some years ago&mdash;thirty-seven or
+thirty-eight years ago as a matter of fact&mdash;I had something to do with a
+case which on the face of it had a strong likeness to the Highway murder. At
+that time I had a practice at Usk, in Monmouthshire. A whole family living in a
+cottage by the roadside were murdered one evening; it was called, I think, the
+Llangibby murder; the cottage was near the village of that name. The murderer
+was caught in Newport; he was a Spanish sailor, named Garcia, and it appeared
+that he had killed father, mother, and the three children for the sake of the
+brass works of an old Dutch clock, which were found on him when he was
+arrested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Garcia had been serving a month’s imprisonment in Usk Jail for some small
+theft, and on his release he set out to walk to Newport, nine or ten miles
+away; no doubt to get another ship. He passed the cottage and saw the man
+working in his garden. Garcia stabbed him with his sailor’s knife. The wife
+rushed out; he stabbed her. Then he went into the cottage and stabbed the three
+children, tried to set the place on fire, and made off with the clockworks.
+That looked like the deed of a madman, but Garcia wasn’t mad&mdash;they hanged
+him, I may say&mdash;he was merely a man of a very low type, a degenerate who
+hadn’t the slightest value for human life. I am not sure, but I think he came
+from one of the Spanish islands, where the people are said to be degenerates,
+very likely from too much inter-breeding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But my point is that Garcia stabbed to kill and did kill, with one blow in
+each case. There was no senseless hacking and slashing. Now those poor people
+on the Highway had their heads smashed to pieces by what must have been a storm
+of blows. Any one of them would have been fatal, but the murderer must have
+gone on raining blows with his iron hammer on people who were already stone
+dead. And <i>that</i> sort of thing is the work of a madman, and nothing but a
+madman. That’s how I argued the matter out to myself just after the event.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was utterly wrong, monstrously wrong. But who could have suspected the
+truth?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus Dr. Lewis, and I quote him, or the substance of him, as representative of
+most of the educated opinion of the district at the beginnings of the terror.
+People seized on this theory largely because it offered at least the comfort of
+an explanation, and any explanation, even the poorest, is better than an
+intolerable and terrible mystery. Besides, Dr. Lewis’s theory was plausible; it
+explained the lack of purpose that seemed to characterize the murders. And
+yet&mdash;there were difficulties even from the first. It was hardly possible
+that a strange madman should be able to keep hidden in a countryside where any
+stranger is instantly noted and noticed; sooner or later he would be seen as he
+prowled along the lanes or across the wild places. Indeed, a drunken, cheerful,
+and altogether harmless tramp was arrested by a farmer and his man in the fact
+and act of sleeping off beer under a hedge; but the vagrant was able to prove
+complete and undoubted alibis, and was soon allowed to go on his wandering way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then another theory, or rather a variant of Dr. Lewis’s theory, was started.
+This was to the effect that the person responsible for the outrages was,
+indeed, a madman; but a madman only at intervals. It was one of the members of
+the Porth Club, a certain Mr. Remnant, who was supposed to have originated this
+more subtle explanation. Mr. Remnant was a middle-aged man, who, having nothing
+particular to do, read a great many books by way of conquering the hours. He
+talked to the club&mdash;doctors, retired colonels, parsons,
+lawyers&mdash;about “personality,” quoted various psychological textbooks in
+support of his contention that personality was sometimes fluid and unstable,
+went back to “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” as good evidence of this proposition,
+and laid stress on Dr. Jekyll’s speculation that the human soul, so far from
+being one and indivisible, might possibly turn out to be a mere polity, a
+state in which dwelt many strange and incongruous citizens, whose characters
+were not merely unknown but altogether unsurmised by that form of consciousness
+which so rashly assumed that it was not only the president of the republic but
+also its sole citizen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The long and the short of it is,” Mr. Remnant concluded, “that any one of us
+may be the murderer, though he hasn’t the faintest notion of the fact. Take
+Llewelyn there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Payne Llewelyn was an elderly lawyer, a rural Tulkinghorn. He was the
+hereditary solicitor to the Morgans of Pentwyn. This does not sound anything
+tremendous to the Saxons of London; but the style is far more than noble to the
+Celts of West Wales; it is immemorial; Teilo Sant was of the collaterals of the
+first known chief of the race. And Mr. Payne Llewelyn did his best to look like
+the legal adviser of this ancient house. He was weighty, he was cautious, he
+was sound, he was secure. I have compared him to Mr. Tulkinghorn of Lincoln’s
+Inn Fields; but Mr. Llewelyn would most certainly never have dreamed of
+employing his leisure in peering into the cupboards where the family skeletons
+were hidden. Supposing such cupboards to have existed, Mr. Payne Llewelyn would
+have risked large out-of-pocket expenses to furnish them with double, triple,
+impregnable locks. He was a new man, an <i>advena</i>, certainly; for he was
+partly of the Conquest, being descended on one side from Sir Payne Turberville;
+but he meant to stand by the old stock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take Llewelyn now,” said Mr. Remnant. “Look here, Llewelyn, can you produce
+evidence to show where you were on the night those people were murdered on the
+Highway? I thought not.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Llewelyn, an elderly man, as I have said, hesitated before speaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I thought not,” Remnant went on. “Now I say that it is perfectly possible that
+Llewelyn may be dealing death throughout Meirion, although in his present
+personality he may not have the faintest suspicion that there is another
+Llewelyn within him, a Llewelyn who follows murder as a fine art.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Mr. Payne Llewelyn did not at all relish Mr. Remnant’s suggestion that he might
+well be a secret murderer, ravening for blood, remorseless as a wild beast. He
+thought the phrase about his following murder as a fine art was both
+nonsensical and in the worst taste, and his opinion was not changed when
+Remnant pointed out that it was used by De Quincey in the title of one of his
+most famous essays.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you had allowed me to speak,” he said with some coldness of manner, “I
+would have told you that on Tuesday last, the night on which those unfortunate
+people were murdered on the Highway I was staying at the Angel Hotel, Cardiff.
+I had business in Cardiff, and I was detained till Wednesday afternoon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having given this satisfactory alibi, Mr. Payne Llewelyn left the club, and did
+not go near it for the rest of the week.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Remnant explained to those who stayed in the smoking room that, of course, he
+had merely used Mr. Llewelyn as a concrete example of his theory, which, he
+persisted, had the support of a considerable body of evidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There are several cases of double personality on record,” he declared. “And I
+say again that it is quite possible that these murders may have been committed
+by one of us in his secondary personality. Why, I may be the murderer in my
+Remnant B. state, though Remnant A. knows nothing whatever about it, and is
+perfectly convinced that he could not kill a fowl, much less a whole family.
+Isn’t it so, Lewis?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis said it was so, in theory, but he thought not in fact.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Most of the cases of double or multiple personality that have been
+investigated,” he said, “have been in connection with the very dubious
+experiments of hypnotism, or the still more dubious experiments of
+spiritualism. All that sort of thing, in my opinion, is like tinkering with the
+works of a clock&mdash;amateur tinkering, I mean. You fumble about with the
+wheels and cogs and bits of mechanism that you don’t really know anything
+about; and then you find your clock going backwards or striking 240 at
+tea-time. And I believe it’s just the same thing with these psychical research
+experiments; the secondary personality is very likely the result of the
+tinkering and fumbling with a very delicate apparatus that we know nothing
+about. Mind, I can’t say that it’s impossible for one of us to be the Highway
+murderer in his B. state, as Remnant puts it. But I think it’s extremely
+improbable. Probability is the guide of life, you know, Remnant,” said Dr.
+Lewis, smiling at that gentleman, as if to say that he also had done a little
+reading in his day. “And it follows, therefore, that improbability is also the
+guide of life. When you get a very high degree of probability, that is, you are
+justified in taking it as a certainty; and on the other hand, if a supposition
+is highly improbable, you are justified in treating it as an impossible one.
+That is, in nine hundred and ninety-nine cases out of a thousand.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How about the thousandth case?” said Remnant. “Supposing these extraordinary
+crimes constitute the thousandth case?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor smiled and shrugged his shoulders, being tired of the subject. But
+for some little time highly respectable members of Porth society would look
+suspiciously at one another wondering whether, after all, there mightn’t be
+“something in it.” However, both Mr. Remnant’s somewhat crazy theory and Dr.
+Lewis’s plausible theory became untenable when two more victims of an awful and
+mysterious death were offered up in sacrifice, for a man was found dead in the
+Llanfihangel quarry, where the woman had been discovered. And on the same day a
+girl of fifteen was found broken on the jagged rocks under the cliffs near
+Porth. Now, it appeared that these two deaths must have occurred at about the
+same time, within an hour of one another, certainly; and the distance between
+the quarry and the cliffs by Black Rock is certainly twenty miles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A motor could do it,” one man said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was pointed out that there was no high road between the two places;
+indeed, it might be said that there was no road at all between them. There was
+a network of deep, narrow, and tortuous lanes that wandered into one another at
+all manner of queer angles for, say, seventeen miles; this in the middle, as it
+were, between Black Rock and the quarry at Llanfihangel. But to get to the high
+land of the cliffs one had to take a path that went through two miles of
+fields; and the quarry lay a mile away from the nearest by-road in the midst of
+gorse and bracken and broken land. And, finally, there was no track of
+motor-car or motor-bicycle in the lanes which must have been followed to pass
+from one place to the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What about an airplane, then?” said the man of the motor-car theory. Well,
+there was certainly an aerodrome not far from one of the two places of death;
+but somehow, nobody believed that the Flying Corps harbored a homicidal maniac.
+It seemed clear, therefore, that there must be more than one person concerned
+in the terror of Meirion. And Dr. Lewis himself abandoned his own theory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As I said to Remnant at the Club,” he remarked, “improbability is the guide of
+life. I can’t believe that there are a pack of madmen or even two madmen at
+large in the country. I give it up.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now a fresh circumstance or set of circumstances became manifest to
+confound judgment and to awaken new and wild surmises. For at about this time
+people realized that none of the dreadful events that were happening all about
+them was so much as mentioned in the Press. I have already spoken of the fate
+of the <i>Meiros Observer.</i> This paper was suppressed by the authorities
+because it had inserted a brief paragraph about some person who had been “found
+dead under mysterious circumstances”; I think that paragraph referred to the
+first death of Llanfihangel quarry. Thenceforth, horror followed on horror, but
+no word was printed in any of the local journals. The curious went to the
+newspaper offices&mdash;there were two left in the county&mdash;but found
+nothing save a firm refusal to discuss the matter. And the Cardiff papers were
+drawn and found blank; and the London Press was apparently ignorant of the fact
+that crimes that had no parallel were terrorizing a whole countryside.
+Everybody wondered what could have happened, what was happening; and then it
+was whispered that the coroner would allow no inquiry to be made as to these
+deaths of darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In consequence of instructions received from the Home Office,” one coroner was
+understood to have said, “I have to tell the jury that their business will be
+to hear the medical evidence and to bring in a verdict immediately in
+accordance with that evidence. I shall disallow all questions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One jury protested. The foreman refused to bring in any verdict at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very good,” said the coroner. “Then I beg to inform you, Mr. Foreman and
+gentlemen of the jury, that under the Defense of the Realm Act, I have power to
+supersede your functions, and to enter a verdict according to the evidence
+which has been laid before the Court as if it had been the verdict of you all.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman and jury collapsed and accepted what they could not avoid. But the
+rumors that got abroad of all this, added to the known fact that the terror was
+ignored in the Press, no doubt by official command, increased the panic that
+was now arising, and gave it a new direction. Clearly, people reasoned, these
+Government restrictions and prohibitions could only refer to the war, to some
+great danger in connection with the war. And that being so, it followed that
+the outrages which must be kept so secret were the work of the enemy, that is
+of concealed German agents.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br/>
+The Spread of the Terror</h2>
+
+<p>
+It is time, I think, for me to make one point clear. I began this history with
+certain references to an extraordinary accident to an airman whose machine fell
+to the ground after collision with a huge flock of pigeons; and then to an
+explosion in a northern munition factory, an explosion, as I noted, of a very
+singular kind. Then I deserted the neighborhood of London, and the northern
+district, and dwelt on a mysterious and terrible series of events which
+occurred in the summer of 1915 in a Welsh county, which I have named, for
+convenience, Meirion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, let it be understood at once that all this detail that I have given about
+the occurrences in Meirion does not imply that the county in the far west was
+alone or especially afflicted by the terror that was over the land. They tell
+me that in the villages about Dartmoor the stout Devonshire hearts sank as
+men’s hearts used to sink in the time of plague and pestilence. There was
+horror, too, about the Norfolk Broads, and far up by Perth no one would venture
+on the path that leads by Scone to the wooded heights above the Tay. And in the
+industrial districts: I met a man by chance one day in an odd London corner who
+spoke with horror of what a friend had told him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“‘Ask no questions, Ned,’ he says to me, ‘but I tell yow a’ was in Bairnigan
+t’other day, and a’ met a pal who’d seen three hundred coffins going out of a
+works not far from there.’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then the ship that hovered outside the mouth of the Thames with all sails
+set and beat to and fro in the wind, and never answered any hail, and showed no
+light! The forts shot at her and brought down one of the masts, but she went
+suddenly about with a change of wind under what sail still stood, and then
+veered down Channel, and drove ashore at last on the sandbanks and pinewoods of
+Arcachon, and not a man alive on her, but only rattling heaps of bones! That
+last voyage of the <i>Semiramis</i> would be something horribly worth telling;
+but I only heard it at a distance as a yarn, and only believed it because it
+squared with other things that I knew for certain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, then, is my point; I have written of the terror as it fell on Meirion,
+simply because I have had opportunities of getting close there to what really
+happened. Third or fourth or fifth hand in the other places; but round about
+Porth and Merthyr Tegveth I have spoken with people who have seen the tracks of
+the terror with their own eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, I have said that the people of that far western county realized, not only
+that death was abroad in their quiet lanes and on their peaceful hills, but
+that for some reason it was to be kept all secret. Newspapers might not print
+any news of it, the very juries summoned to investigate it were allowed to
+investigate nothing. And so they concluded that this veil of secrecy must
+somehow be connected with the war; and from this position it was not a long way
+to a further inference: that the murderers of innocent men and women and
+children were either Germans or agents of Germany. It would be just like the
+Huns, everybody agreed, to think out such a devilish scheme as this; and they
+always thought out their schemes beforehand. They hoped to seize Paris in a few
+weeks, but when they were beaten on the Marne they had their trenches on the
+Aisne ready to fall back on: it had all been prepared years before the war. And
+so, no doubt, they had devised this terrible plan against England in case they
+could not beat us in open fight: there were people ready, very likely, all over
+the country, who were prepared to murder and destroy everywhere as soon as they
+got the word. In this way the Germans intended to sow terror throughout England
+and fill our hearts with panic and dismay, hoping so to weaken their enemy at
+home that he would lose all heart over the war abroad. It was the Zeppelin
+notion, in another form; they were committing these horrible and mysterious
+outrages thinking that we should be frightened out of our wits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It all seemed plausible enough; Germany had by this time perpetrated so many
+horrors and had so excelled in devilish ingenuities that no abomination seemed
+too abominable to be probable, or too ingeniously wicked to be beyond the
+tortuous malice of the Hun. But then came the questions as to who the agents of
+this terrible design were, as to where they lived, as to how they contrived to
+move unseen from field to field, from lane to lane. All sorts of fantastic
+attempts were made to answer these questions; but it was felt that they
+remained unanswered. Some suggested that the murderers landed from submarines,
+or flew from hiding places on the West Coast of Ireland, coming and going by
+night; but there were seen to be flagrant impossibilities in both these
+suggestions. Everybody agreed that the evil work was no doubt the work of
+Germany; but nobody could begin to guess how it was done. Somebody at the Club
+asked Remnant for his theory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My theory,” said that ingenious person, “is that human progress is simply a
+long march from one inconceivable to another. Look at that airship of ours that
+came over Porth yesterday: ten years ago that would have been an inconceivable
+sight. Take the steam engine, stake printing, take the theory of gravitation:
+they were all inconceivable till somebody thought of them. So it is, no doubt,
+with this infernal dodgery that we’re talking about: the Huns have found it
+out, and we haven’t; and there you are. We can’t conceive how these poor people
+have been murdered, because the method’s inconceivable to us.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The club listened with some awe to this high argument. After Remnant had gone,
+one member said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wonderful man, that.” “Yes,” said Dr. Lewis. “He was asked whether he knew
+something. And his reply really amounted to ‘No, I don’t.’ But I have never
+heard it better put.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+It was, I suppose, at about this time when the people were puzzling their heads
+as to the secret methods used by the Germans or their agents to accomplish
+their crimes that a very singular circumstance became known to a few of the
+Porth people. It related to the murder of the Williams family on the Highway in
+front of their cottage door. I do not know that I have made it plain that the
+old Roman road called the Highway follows the course of a long, steep hill that
+goes steadily westward till it slants down and droops towards the sea. On
+either side of the road the ground falls away, here into deep shadowy woods,
+here to high pastures, now and again into a field of corn, but for the most
+part into the wild and broken land that is characteristic of Arfon. The fields
+are long and narrow, stretching up the steep hillside; they fall into sudden
+dips and hollows, a well springs up in the midst of one and a grove of ash and
+thorn bends over it, shading it; and beneath it the ground is thick with reeds
+and rushes. And then may come on either side of such a field territories
+glistening with the deep growth of bracken, and rough with gorse and rugged
+with thickets of blackthorn, green lichen hanging strangely from the branches;
+such are the lands on either side of the Highway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now on the lower slopes of it, beneath the Williams’s cottage, some three or
+four fields down the hill, there is a military camp. The place has been used as
+a camp for many years, and lately the site has been extended and huts have been
+erected. But a considerable number of the men were under canvas here in the
+summer of 1915.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the night of the Highway murder this camp, as it appeared afterwards, was
+the scene of the extraordinary panic of the horses.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+A good many men in the camp were asleep in their tents soon after 9:30, when
+the Last Post was sounded. They woke up in panic. There was a thundering sound
+on the steep hillside above them, and down upon the tents came half a dozen
+horses, mad with fright, trampling the canvas, trampling the men, bruising
+dozens of them and killing two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Everything was in wild confusion, men groaning and screaming in the darkness,
+struggling with the canvas and the twisted ropes, shouting out, some of them,
+raw lads enough, that the Germans had landed, others wiping the blood from
+their eyes, a few, roused suddenly from heavy sleep, hitting out at one
+another, officers coming up at the double roaring out orders to the sergeants,
+a party of soldiers who were just returning to camp from the village seized
+with fright at what they could scarcely see or distinguish, at the wildness of
+the shouting and cursing and groaning that they could not understand, bolting
+out of the camp again and racing for their lives back to the village:
+everything in the maddest confusion of wild disorder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some of the men had seen the horses galloping down the hill as if terror itself
+was driving them. They scattered off into the darkness, and somehow or another
+found their way back in the night to their pasture above the camp. They were
+grazing there peacefully in the morning, and the only sign of the panic of the
+night before was the mud they had scattered all over themselves as they pelted
+through a patch of wet ground. The farmer said they were as quiet a lot as any
+in Meirion; he could make nothing of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed,” he said, “I believe they must have seen the devil himself to be in
+such a fright as that: save the people!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now all this was kept as quiet as might be at the time when it happened; it
+became known to the men of the Porth Club in the days when they were discussing
+the difficult question of the German outrages, as the murders were commonly
+called. And this wild stampede of the farm horses was held by some to be
+evidence of the extraordinary and unheard of character of the dreadful agency
+that was at work. One of the members of the club had been told by an officer
+who was in the camp at the time of the panic that the horses that came charging
+down were in a perfect fury of fright, that he had never seen horses in such a
+state, and so there was endless speculation as to the nature of the sight or
+the sound that had driven half a dozen quiet beasts into raging madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, in the middle of this talk, two or three other incidents, quite as odd
+and incomprehensible, came to be known, borne on chance trickles of gossip that
+came into the towns from outland farms, or were carried by cottagers tramping
+into Porth on market day with a fowl or two and eggs and garden stuff; scraps
+and fragments of talk gathered by servants from the country folk and
+repeated&mdash;to their mistresses. And in such ways it came out that up at
+Plas Newydd there had been a terrible business over swarming the bees; they had
+turned as wild as wasps and much more savage. They had come about the people
+who were taking the swarms like a cloud. They settled on one man’s face so that
+you could not see the flesh for the bees crawling all over it, and they had
+stung him so badly that the doctor did not know whether he would get over it,
+and they had chased a girl who had come out to see the swarming, and settled on
+her and stung her to death. Then they had gone off to a brake below the farm
+and got into a hollow tree there, and it was not safe to go near it, for they
+would come out at you by day or by night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And much the same thing had happened, it seemed, at three or four farms and
+cottages where bees were kept. And there were stories, hardly so clear or so
+credible, of sheep dogs, mild and trusted beasts, turning as savage as wolves
+and injuring the farm boys in a horrible manner&mdash;in one case it was said
+with fatal results. It was certainly true that old Mrs. Owen’s favorite
+Brahma-Dorking cock had gone mad; she came into Porth one Saturday morning with
+her face and her neck all bound up and plastered. She had gone out to her bit
+of a field to feed the poultry the night before, and the bird had flown at her
+and attacked her most savagely, inflicting some very nasty wounds before she
+could beat it off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was a stake handy, lucky for me,” she said, “and I did beat him and beat
+him till the life was out of him. But what is come to the world, whatever?”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Now Remnant, the man of theories, was also a man of extreme leisure. It was
+understood that he had succeeded to ample means when he was quite a young man,
+and after tasting the savors of the law, as it were, for half a dozen terms at
+the board of the Middle Temple, he had decided that it would be senseless to
+bother himself with passing examinations for a profession which he had not the
+faintest intention of practising. So he turned a deaf ear to the call of
+“Manger” ringing through the Temple Courts, and set himself out to potter
+amiably through the world. He had pottered all over Europe, he had looked at
+Africa, and had even put his head in at the door of the East, on a trip which
+included the Greek isles and Constantinople. Now getting into the middle
+fifties, he had settled at Porth for the sake, as he said, of the Gulf Stream
+and the fuchsia hedges, and pottered over his books and his theories and the
+local gossip. He was no more brutal than the general public, which revels in
+the details of mysterious crime; but it must be said that the terror, black
+though it was, was a boon to him. He peered and investigated and poked about
+with the relish of a man to whose life a new zest has been added. He listened
+attentively to the strange tales of bees and dogs and poultry that came into
+Porth with the country baskets of butter, rabbits, and green peas; and he
+evolved at last a most extraordinary theory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Full of this discovery, as he thought it, he went one night to see Dr. Lewis
+and take his view of the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want to talk to you,” said Remnant to the doctor, “about what I have called
+provisionally, the Z Ray.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V.<br/>
+The Incident of the Unknown Tree</h2>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis, smiling indulgently, and quite prepared for some monstrous piece of
+theorizing, led Remnant into the room that overlooked the terraced garden and
+the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor’s house, though it was only a ten minutes’ walk from the center of
+the town, seemed remote from all other habitations. The drive to it from the
+road came through a deep grove of trees and a dense shrubbery, trees were about
+the house on either side, mingling with neighboring groves, and below, the
+garden fell down, terrace by green terrace, to wild growth, a twisted path
+amongst red rocks, and at last to the yellow sand of a little cove. The room to
+which the doctor took Remnant looked over these terraces and across the water
+to the dim boundaries of the bay. It had French windows that were thrown wide
+open, and the two men sat in the soft light of the lamp&mdash;this was before
+the days of severe lighting regulations in the Far West&mdash;and enjoyed the
+sweet odors and the sweet vision of the summer evening. Then Remnant began:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose, Lewis, you’ve heard these extraordinary stories of bees and dogs
+and things that have been going about lately?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly I have heard them. I was called in at Plas Newydd, and treated
+Thomas Trevor, who’s only just out of danger, by the way. I certified for the
+poor child, Mary Trevor. She was dying when I got to the place. There was no
+doubt she was stung to death by bees, and I believe there were other very
+similar cases at Llantarnam and Morwen; none fatal, I think. What about them?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well: then there are the stories of good-tempered old sheepdogs turning wicked
+and ‘savaging’ children?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite so. I haven’t seen any of these cases professionally; but I believe the
+stories are accurate enough.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And the old woman assaulted by her own poultry?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s perfectly true. Her daughter put some stuff of their own concoction on
+her face and neck, and then she came to me. The wounds seemed going all right,
+so I told her to continue the treatment, whatever it might be.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very good,” said Mr. Remnant. He spoke now with an italic impressiveness.
+“<i>Don’t you see the link between all this and the horrible things that have
+been happening about here for the last month?</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis stared at Remnant in amazement. He lifted his red eyebrows and lowered
+them in a kind of scowl. His speech showed traces of his native accent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Great burning!” he exclaimed. “What on earth are you getting at now? It is
+madness. Do you mean to tell me that you think there is some connection between
+a swarm or two of bees that have turned nasty, a cross dog, and a wicked old
+barn-door cock and these poor people that have been pitched over the cliffs and
+hammered to death on the road? There’s no sense in it, you know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am strongly inclined to believe that there is a great deal of sense in it,”
+replied Remnant, with extreme calmness. “Look here, Lewis, I saw you grinning
+the other day at the club when I was telling the fellows that in my opinion all
+these outrages had been committed, certainly by the Germans, but by some method
+of which we have no conception. But what I meant to say when I talked about
+inconceivables was just this: that the Williams’s and the rest of them have
+been killed in some way that’s not in theory at all, not in our theory, at all
+events, some way we’ve not contemplated, not thought of for an instant. Do you
+see my point?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, in a sort of way. You mean there’s an absolute originality in the
+method? I suppose that is so. But what next?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Remnant seemed to hesitate, partly from a sense of the portentous nature of
+what he was about to say, partly from a sort of half-unwillingness to part with
+so profound a secret.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” he said, “you will allow that we have two sets of phenomena of a very
+extraordinary kind occurring at the same time. Don’t you think that it’s only
+reasonable to connect the two sets with one another.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So the philosopher of Tenterden steeple and the Goodwin Sands thought,
+certainly,” said Lewis. “But what is the connection? Those poor folks on the
+Highway weren’t stung by bees or worried by a dog. And horses don’t throw
+people over cliffs or stifle them in marshes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No; I never meant to suggest anything so absurd. It is evident to me that in
+all these cases of animals turning suddenly savage the cause has been terror,
+panic, fear. The horses that went charging into the camp were mad with fright,
+we know. And I say that in the other instances we have been discussing the
+cause was the same. The creatures were exposed to an infection of fear, and a
+frightened beast or bird or insect uses its weapons, whatever they may be. If,
+for example, there had been anybody with those horses when they took their
+panic they would have lashed out at him with their heels.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I dare say that that is so. Well.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well; my belief is that the Germans have made an extraordinary discovery. I
+have called it the Z Ray. You know that the ether is merely an hypothesis; we
+have to suppose that it’s there to account for the passage of the Marconi
+current from one place to another. Now, suppose that there is a psychic ether
+as well as a material ether, suppose that it is possible to direct irresistible
+impulses across this medium, suppose that these impulses are towards murder or
+suicide; then I think that you have an explanation of the terrible series of
+events that have been happening in Meirion for the last few weeks. And it is
+quite clear to my mind that the horses and the other creatures have been
+exposed to this Z Ray, and that it has produced on them the effect of terror,
+with ferocity as the result of terror. Now what do you say to that? Telepathy,
+you know, is well established; so is hypnotic suggestion. You have only to look
+in the ‘Encyclopædia Britannica’ to see that, and suggestion is so strong in
+some cases as to be an irresistible imperative. Now don’t you feel that putting
+telepathy and suggestion together, as it were, you have more than the elements
+of what I call the Z Ray? I feel myself that I have more to go on in making my
+hypothesis than the inventor of the steam engine had in making his hypothesis
+when he saw the lid of the kettle bobbing up and down. What do you say?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis made no answer. He was watching the growth of a new, unknown tree in
+his garden.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+The doctor made no answer to Remnant’s question. For one thing, Remnant was
+profuse in his eloquence&mdash;he has been rigidly condensed in this
+history&mdash;and Lewis was tired of the sound of his voice. For another thing,
+he found the Z Ray theory almost too extravagant to be bearable, wild enough to
+tear patience to tatters. And then as the tedious argument continued Lewis
+became conscious that there was something strange about the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a dark summer night. The moon was old and faint, above the Dragon’s Head
+across the bay, and the air was very still. It was so still that Lewis had
+noted that not a leaf stirred on the very tip of a high tree that stood out
+against the sky; and yet he knew that he was listening to some sound that he
+could not determine or define. It was not the wind in the leaves, it was not
+the gentle wash of the water of the sea against the rocks; that latter sound he
+could distinguish quite easily. But there was something else. It was scarcely a
+sound; it was as if the air itself trembled and fluttered, as the air trembles
+in a church when they open the great pedal pipes of the organ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor listened intently. It was not an illusion, the sound was not in his
+own head, as he had suspected for a moment; but for the life of him he could
+not make out whence it came or what it was. He gazed down into the night over
+the terraces of his garden, now sweet with the scent of the flowers of the
+night; tried to peer over the tree-tops across the sea towards the Dragon’s
+Head. It struck him suddenly that this strange fluttering vibration of the air
+might be the noise of a distant aeroplane or airship; there was not the usual
+droning hum, but this sound might be caused by a new type of engine. A new type
+of engine? Possibly it was an enemy airship; their range, it had been said, was
+getting longer; and Lewis was just going to call Remnant’s attention to the
+sound, to its possible cause, and to the possible danger that might be hovering
+over them, when he saw something that caught his breath and his heart with wild
+amazement and a touch of terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been staring upward into the sky, and, about to speak to Remnant, he had
+let his eyes drop for an instant. He looked down towards the trees in the
+garden, and saw with utter astonishment that one had changed its shape in the
+few hours that had passed since the setting of the sun. There was a thick grove
+of ilexes bordering the lowest terrace, and above them rose one tall pine,
+spreading its head of sparse, dark branches dark against the sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Lewis glanced down over the terraces he saw that the tall pine tree was no
+longer there. In its place there rose above the ilexes what might have been a
+greater ilex; there was the blackness of a dense growth of foliage rising like
+a broad and far-spreading and rounded cloud over the lesser trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, then was a sight wholly incredible, impossible. It is doubtful whether
+the process of the human mind in such a case has ever been analyzed and
+registered; it is doubtful whether it ever can be registered. It is hardly fair
+to bring in the mathematician, since he deals with absolute truth (so far as
+mortality can conceive absolute truth); but how would a mathematician feel if
+he were suddenly confronted with a two-sided triangle? I suppose he would
+instantly become a raging madman; and Lewis, staring wide-eyed and wild-eyed at
+a dark and spreading tree which his own experience informed him was not there,
+felt for an instant that shock which should affront us all when we first
+realize the intolerable antinomy of Achilles and the Tortoise. Common sense
+tells us that Achilles will flash past the tortoise almost with the speed of
+the lightning; the inflexible truth of mathematics assures us that till the
+earth boils and the heavens cease to endure the Tortoise must still be in
+advance; and thereupon we should, in common decency, go mad. We do not go mad,
+because, by special grace, we are certified that, in the final court of
+appeal, all science is a lie, even the highest science of all; and so we simply
+grin at Achilles and the Tortoise, as we grin at Darwin, deride Huxley, and
+laugh at Herbert Spencer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis did not grin. He glared into the dimness of the night, at the great
+spreading tree that he knew could not be there. And as he gazed he saw that
+what at first appeared the dense blackness of foliage was fretted and starred
+with wonderful appearances of lights and colors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Afterwards he said to me: “I remember thinking to myself: ‘Look here, I am not
+delirious; my temperature is perfectly normal. I am not drunk; I only had a
+pint of Graves with my dinner, over three hours ago. I have not eaten any
+poisonous fungus; I have not taken <i>Anhelonium Lewinii</i> experimentally.
+So, now then! What is happening?’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The night had gloomed over; clouds obscured the faint moon and the misty stars.
+Lewis rose, with some kind of warning and inhibiting gesture to Remnant, who,
+he was conscious was gaping at him in astonishment. He walked to the open
+French window, and took a pace forward on to the path outside, and looked, very
+intently, at the dark shape of the tree, down below the sloping garden, above
+the washing of the waves. He shaded the light of the lamp behind him by holding
+his hands on each side of his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mass of the tree&mdash;the tree that couldn’t be there&mdash;stood out
+against the sky, but not so clearly, now that the clouds had rolled up. Its
+edges, the limits of its leafage, were not so distinct. Lewis thought that he
+could detect some sort of quivering movement in it; though the air was at a
+dead calm. It was a night on which one might hold up a lighted match and watch
+it burn without any wavering or inclination of the flame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You know,” said Lewis, “how a bit of burnt paper will sometimes hang over the
+coals before it goes up the chimney, and little worms of fire will shoot
+through it. It was like that, if you should be standing some distance away.
+Just threads and hairs of yellow light I saw, and specks and sparks of fire,
+and then a twinkling of a ruby no bigger than a pin point, and a green
+wandering in the black, as if an emerald were crawling, and then little veins
+of deep blue. ‘Woe is me!’ I said to myself in Welsh, ‘What is all this color
+and burning?’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And, then, at that very moment there came a thundering rap at the door of the
+room inside, and there was my man telling me that I was wanted directly up at
+the Garth, as old Mr. Trevor Williams had been taken very bad. I knew his heart
+was not worth much, so I had to go off directly, and leave Remnant to make what
+he could of it all.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br/>
+Mr. Remnant’s Z Ray </h2>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis was kept some time at the Garth. It was past twelve when he got back
+to his house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went quickly to the room that overlooked the garden and the sea and threw
+open the French window and peered into the darkness. There, dim indeed against
+the dim sky but unmistakable, was the tall pine with its sparse branches, high
+above the dense growth of the ilex trees. The strange boughs which had amazed
+him had vanished; there was no appearance now of colors or of fires.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He drew his chair up to the open window and sat there gazing and wondering far
+into the night, till brightness came upon the sea and sky, and the forms of the
+trees in the garden grew clear and evident. He went up to his bed at last
+filled with a great perplexity, still asking questions to which there was no
+answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor did not say anything about the strange tree to Remnant. When they
+next met, Lewis said that he had thought there was a man hiding amongst the
+bushes&mdash;this in explanation of that warning gesture he had used, and of
+his going out into the garden and staring into the night. He concealed the
+truth because he dreaded the Remnant doctrine that would undoubtedly be
+produced; indeed, he hoped that he had heard the last of the theory of the Z
+Ray. But Remnant firmly reopened this subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We were interrupted just as I was putting my case to you,” he said. “And to
+sum it all up, it amounts to this: that the Huns have made one of the great
+leaps of science. They are sending ‘suggestions’ (which amount to irresistible
+commands) over here, and the persons affected are seized with suicidal or
+homicidal mania. The people who were killed by falling over the cliffs or into
+the quarry probably committed suicide; and so with the man and boy who were
+found in the bog. As to the Highway case, you remember that Thomas Evans said
+that he stopped and talked to Williams on the night of the murder. In my
+opinion Evans was the murderer. He came under the influence of the Ray, became
+a homicidal maniac in an instant, snatched Williams’s spade from his hand and
+killed him and the others.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The bodies were found by me on the road.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is possible that the first impact of the Ray produces violent nervous
+excitement, which would manifest itself externally. Williams might have called
+to his wife to come and see what was the matter with Evans. The children would
+naturally follow their mother. It seems to me simple. And as for the
+animals&mdash;the horses, dogs, and so forth, they as I say, were no doubt
+panic stricken by the Ray, and hence driven to frenzy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why should Evans have murdered Williams instead of Williams murdering Evans?
+Why should the impact of the Ray affect one and not the other?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why does one man react violently to a certain drug, while it makes no
+impression on another man? Why is A able to drink a bottle of whisky and remain
+sober, while B is turned into something very like a lunatic after he has drunk
+three glasses?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is a question of idiosyncrasy,” said the doctor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is idiosyncrasy Greek for ‘I don’t know’?” asked Remnant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not at all,” said Lewis, smiling blandly. “I mean that in some diatheses
+whisky&mdash;as you have mentioned whisky&mdash;appears not to be pathogenic,
+or at all events not immediately pathogenic. In other cases, as you very justly
+observed, there seems to be a very marked cachexia associated with the
+exhibition of the spirit in question, even in comparatively small doses.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under this cloud of professional verbiage Lewis escaped from the Club and from
+Remnant. He did not want to hear any more about that Dreadful Ray, because he
+felt sure that the Ray was all nonsense. But asking himself why he felt this
+certitude in the matter he had to confess that he didn’t know. An aeroplane, he
+reflected, was all nonsense before it was made; and he remembered talking in
+the early nineties to a friend of his about the newly discovered X Rays. The
+friend laughed incredulously, evidently didn’t believe a word of it, till Lewis
+told him that there was an article on the subject in the current number of the
+<i>Saturday Review</i>; whereupon the unbeliever said, “Oh, is that so? Oh,
+really. I <i>see</i>,” and was converted on the X Ray faith on the spot. Lewis,
+remembering this talk, marveled at the strange processes of the human mind, its
+illogical and yet all-compelling <i>ergos</i>, and wondered whether he himself
+was only waiting for an article on the Z Ray in the <i>Saturday Review</i> to
+become a devout believer in the doctrine of Remnant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he wondered with far more fervor as to the extraordinary thing he had seen
+in his own garden with his own eyes. The tree that changed all its shape for an
+hour or two of the night, the growth of strange boughs, the apparition of
+secret fires among them, the sparkling of emerald and ruby lights: how could
+one fail to be afraid with great amazement at the thought of such a mystery?
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis’s thoughts were distracted from the incredible adventure of the tree
+by the visit of his sister and her husband. Mr. and Mrs. Merritt lived in a
+well-known manufacturing town of the Midlands, which was now, of course, a
+center of munition work. On the day of their arrival at Porth, Mrs. Merritt,
+who was tired after the long, hot journey, went to bed early, and Merritt and
+Lewis went into the room by the garden for their talk and tobacco. They spoke
+of the year that had passed since their last meeting, of the weary dragging of
+the war, of friends that had perished in it, of the hopelessness of an early
+ending of all this misery. Lewis said nothing of the terror that was on the
+land. One does not greet a tired man who is come to a quiet, sunny place for
+relief from black smoke and work and worry with a tale of horror. Indeed, the
+doctor saw that his brother-in-law looked far from well. And he seemed “jumpy”;
+there was an occasional twitch of his mouth that Lewis did not like at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” said the doctor, after an interval of silence and port wine, “I am glad
+to see you here again. Porth always suits you. I don’t think you’re looking
+quite up to your usual form. But three weeks of Meirion air will do wonders.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, I hope it will,” said the other. “I am not up to the mark. Things are
+not going well at Midlingham.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Business is all right, isn’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. Business is all right. But there are other things that are all wrong. We
+are living under a reign of terror. It comes to that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What on earth do you mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, I suppose I may tell you what I know. It’s not much. I didn’t dare write
+it. But do you know that at every one of the munition works in Midlingham and
+all about it there’s a guard of soldiers with drawn bayonets and loaded rifles
+day and night? Men with bombs, too. And machine-guns at the big factories.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“German spies?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t want Lewis guns to fight spies with. Nor bombs. Nor a platoon of
+men. I woke up last night. It was the machine-gun at Benington’s Army Motor
+Works. Firing like fury. And then bang! bang! bang! That was the hand bombs.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But what against?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nobody knows.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nobody knows what is happening,” Merritt repeated, and he went on to describe
+the bewilderment and terror that hung like a cloud over the great industrial
+city in the Midlands, how the feeling of concealment, of some intolerable
+secret danger that must not be named, was worst of all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A young fellow I know,” he said, “was on short leave the other day from the
+front, and he spent it with his people at Belmont&mdash;that’s about four miles
+out of Midlingham, you know. ‘Thank God,’ he said to me, ‘I am going back
+to-morrow. It’s no good saying that the Wipers salient is nice, because it
+isn’t. But it’s a damned sight better than this. At the front you know what
+you’re up against anyhow.’ At Midlingham everybody has the feeling that we’re
+up against something awful and we don’t know what; it’s that that makes people
+inclined to whisper. There’s terror in the air.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merritt made a sort of picture of the great town cowering in its fear of an
+unknown danger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“People are afraid to go about alone at nights in the outskirts. They make up
+parties at the stations to go home together if it’s anything like dark, or if
+there are any lonely bits on their way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But why? I don’t understand. What are they afraid of?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, I told you about my being awakened up the other night with the
+machine-guns at the motor works rattling away, and the bombs exploding and
+making the most terrible noise. That sort of thing alarms one, you know. It’s
+only natural.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed, it must be very terrifying. You mean, then, there is a general
+nervousness about, a vague sort of apprehension that makes people inclined to
+herd together?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s that, and there’s more. People have gone out that have never come
+back. There were a couple of men in the train to Holme, arguing about the
+quickest way to get to Northend, a sort of outlying part of Holme where they
+both lived. They argued all the way out of Midlingham, one saying that the high
+road was the quickest though it was the longest way. ‘It’s the quickest going
+because it’s the cleanest going,’ he said.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The other chap fancied a short cut across the fields, by the canal. ‘It’s half
+the distance,’ he kept on. ‘Yes, if you don’t lose your way,’ said the other.
+Well, it appears they put an even half-crown on it, and each was to try his own
+way when they got out of the train. It was arranged that they were to meet at
+the ‘Wagon’ in Northend. ‘I shall be at the “Wagon” first,’ said the man who
+believed in the short cut, and with that he climbed over the stile and made off
+across the fields. It wasn’t late enough to be really dark, and a lot of them
+thought he might win the stakes. But he never turned up at the Wagon&mdash;or
+anywhere else for the matter of that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What happened to him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He was found lying on his back in the middle of a field&mdash;some way from
+the path. He was dead. The doctors said he’d been suffocated. Nobody knows how.
+Then there have been other cases. We whisper about them at Midlingham, but
+we’re afraid to speak out.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis was ruminating all this profoundly. Terror in Meirion and terror far away
+in the heart of England; but at Midlingham, so far as he could gather from
+these stories of soldiers on guard, of crackling machine-guns, it was a case of
+an organized attack on the munitioning of the army. He felt that he did not
+know enough to warrant his deciding that the terror of Meirion and of
+Stratfordshire were one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Merritt began again:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s a queer story going about, when the door’s shut and the curtain’s
+drawn, that is, as to a place right out in the country over the other side of
+Midlingham; on the opposite side to Dunwich. They’ve built one of the new
+factories out there, a great red brick town of sheds they tell me it is, with a
+tremendous chimney. It’s not been finished more than a month or six weeks. They
+plumped it down right in the middle of the fields, by the line, and they’re
+building huts for the workers as fast as they can but up to the present the men
+are billeted all about, up and down the line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“About two hundred yards from this place there’s an old footpath, leading from
+the station and the main road up to a small hamlet on the hillside. Part of the
+way this path goes by a pretty large wood, most of it thick undergrowth. I
+should think there must be twenty acres of wood, more or less. As it happens, I
+used this path once long ago; and I can tell you it’s a black place of nights.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A man had to go this way one night. He got along all right till he came to the
+wood. And then he said his heart dropped out of his body. It was awful to hear
+the noises in that wood. Thousands of men were in it, he swears that. It was
+full of rustling, and pattering of feet trying to go dainty, and the crack of
+dead boughs lying on the ground as some one trod on them, and swishing of the
+grass, and some sort of chattering speech going on, that sounded, so he said,
+as if the dead sat in their bones and talked! He ran for his life, anyhow;
+across fields, over hedges, through brooks. He must have run, by his tale, ten
+miles out of his way before he got home to his wife, and beat at the door, and
+broke in, and bolted it behind him.”.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is something rather alarming about any wood at night,” said Dr. Lewis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merritt shrugged his shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“People say that the Germans have landed, and that they are hiding in
+underground places all over the country.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br/>
+The Case of the Hidden Germans</h2>
+
+<p>
+Lewis gasped for a moment, silent in contemplation of the magnificence of
+rumor. The Germans already landed, hiding underground, striking by night,
+secretly, terribly, at the power of England! Here was a conception which made
+the myth of “The Russians” a paltry fable; before which the Legend of Mons was
+an ineffectual thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was monstrous. And yet&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked steadily at Merritt; a square-headed, black-haired, solid sort of
+man. He had symptoms of nerves about him for the moment, certainly, but one
+could not wonder at that, whether the tales he told were true, or whether he
+merely believed them to be true. Lewis had known his brother-in-law for twenty
+years or more, and had always found him a sure man in his own small world. “But
+then,” said the doctor to himself, “those men, if they once get out of the ring
+of that little world of theirs, they are lost. Those are the men that believed
+in Madame Blavatsky.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” he said, “what do you think yourself? The Germans landed and hiding
+somewhere about the country: there’s something extravagant in the notion, isn’t
+there?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know what to think. You can’t get over the facts. There are the
+soldiers with their rifles and their guns at the works all over Stratfordshire,
+and those guns go off. I told you I’d heard them. Then who are the soldiers
+shooting at? That’s what we ask ourselves at Midlingham.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite so; I quite understand. It’s an extraordinary state of things.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s more than extraordinary; it’s an awful state of things. It’s terror in
+the dark, and there’s nothing worse than that. As that young fellow I was
+telling you about said, ‘At the front you do know what you’re up against.’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And people really believe that a number of Germans have somehow got over to
+England and have hid themselves underground?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“People say they’ve got a new kind of poison-gas. Some think that they dig
+underground places and make the gas there, and lead it by secret pipes into the
+shops; others say that they throw gas bombs into the factories. It must be
+worse than anything they’ve used in France, from what the authorities say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The authorities? Do <i>they</i> admit that there are Germans in hiding about
+Midlingham?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No. They call it ‘explosions.’ But we know it isn’t explosions. We know in the
+Midlands what an explosion sounds like and looks like. And we know that the
+people killed in these ‘explosions’ are put into their coffins in the works.
+Their own relations are not allowed to see them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And so you believe in the German theory?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I do, it’s because one must believe in something. Some say they’ve seen the
+gas. I heard that a man living in Dunwich saw it one night like a black cloud
+with sparks of fire in it floating over the tops of the trees by Dunwich
+Common.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light of an ineffable amazement came into Lewis’s eyes. The night of
+Remnant’s visit, the trembling vibration of the air, the dark tree that had
+grown in his garden since the setting of the sun, the strange leafage that was
+starred with burning, with emerald and ruby fires, and all vanished away when
+he returned from his visit to the Garth; and such a leafage had appeared as a
+burning cloud far in the heart of England: what intolerable mystery, what
+tremendous doom was signified in this? But one thing was clear and certain:
+that the terror of Meirion was also the terror of the Midlands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis made up his mind most firmly that if possible all this should be kept
+from his brother-in-law. Merritt had come to Porth as to a city of refuge from
+the horrors of Midlingham; if it could be managed he should be spared the
+knowledge that the cloud of terror had gone before him and hung black over the
+western land. Lewis passed the port and said in an even voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very strange, indeed; a black cloud with sparks of fire?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can’t answer for it, you know; it’s only a rumor.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just so; and you think or you’re inclined to think that this and all the rest
+you’ve told me is to be put down to the hidden Germans?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As I say; because one must think something.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I quite see your point. No doubt, if it’s true, it’s the most awful blow that
+has ever been dealt at any nation in the whole history of man. The enemy
+established in our vitals! But is it possible, after all? How could it have
+been worked?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merritt told Lewis how it had been worked, or rather, how people said it had
+been worked. The idea, he said, was that this was a part, and a most important
+part, of the great German plot to destroy England and the British Empire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scheme had been prepared years ago, some thought soon after the
+Franco-Prussian War. Moltke had seen that the invasion of England (in the
+ordinary sense of the term invasion) presented very great difficulties. The
+matter was constantly in discussion in the inner military and high political
+circles, and the general trend of opinion in these quarters was that at the
+best, the invasion of England would involve Germany in the gravest
+difficulties, and leave France in the position of the <i>tertius gaudens</i>.
+This was the state of affairs when a very high Prussian personage was
+approached by the Swedish professor, Huvelius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus Merritt, and here I would say in parenthesis that this Huvelius was by all
+accounts an extraordinary man. Considered personally and apart from his
+writings he would appear to have been a most amiable individual. He was richer
+than the generality of Swedes, certainly far richer than the average university
+professor in Sweden. But his shabby, green frock-coat, and his battered, furry
+hat were notorious in the university town where he lived. No one laughed,
+because it was well known that Professor Huvelius spent every penny of his
+private means and a large portion of his official stipend on works of kindness
+and charity. He hid his head in a garret, some one said, in order that others
+might be able to swell on the first floor. It was told of him that he
+restricted himself to a diet of dry bread and coffee for a month in order that
+a poor woman of the streets, dying of consumption, might enjoy luxuries in
+hospital.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And this was the man who wrote the treatise “De Facinore Humano”; to prove the
+infinite corruption of the human race.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oddly enough, Professor Huvelius wrote the most cynical book in the
+world&mdash;Hobbes preaches rosy sentimentalism in comparison&mdash;with the
+very highest motives. He held that a very large part of human misery,
+misadventure, and sorrow was due to the false convention that the heart of man
+was naturally and in the main well disposed and kindly, if not exactly
+righteous. “Murderers, thieves, assassins, violators, and all the host of the
+abominable,” he says in one passage, “are created by the false pretense and
+foolish credence of human virtue. A lion in a cage is a fierce beast, indeed;
+but what will he be if we declare him to be a lamb and open the doors of his
+den? Who will be guilty of the deaths of the men, women and children whom he
+will surely devour, save those who unlocked the cage?” And he goes on to show
+that kings and the rulers of the peoples could decrease the sum of human misery
+to a vast extent by acting on the doctrine of human wickedness. “War,” he
+declares, “which is one of the worst of evils, will always continue to exist.
+But a wise king will desire a brief war rather than a lengthy one, a short evil
+rather than a long evil. And this not from the benignity of his heart towards
+his enemies, for we have seen that the human heart is naturally malignant, but
+because he desires to conquer, and to conquer easily, without a great
+expenditure of men or of treasure, knowing that if he can accomplish this feat
+his people will love him and his crown will be secure. So he will wage brief
+victorious wars, and not only spare his own nation, but the nation of the
+enemy, since in a short war the loss is less on both sides than in a long war.
+And so from evil will come good.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And how, asks Huvelius, are such wars to be waged? The wise prince, he replies,
+will begin by assuming the enemy to be infinitely corruptible and infinitely
+stupid, since stupidity and corruption are the chief characteristics of man. So
+the prince will make himself friends in the very councils of his enemy, and
+also amongst the populace, bribing the wealthy by proffering to them the
+opportunity of still greater wealth, and winning the poor by swelling words.
+“For, contrary to the common opinion, it is the wealthy who are greedy of
+wealth; while the populace are to be gained by talking to them about liberty,
+their unknown god. And so much are they enchanted by the words liberty,
+freedom, and such like, that the wise can go to the poor, rob them of what
+little they have, dismiss them with a hearty kick, and win their hearts and
+their votes for ever, if only they will assure them that the treatment which
+they have received is called liberty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guided by these principles, says Huvelius, the wise prince will entrench
+himself in the country that he desires to conquer; “nay, with but little
+trouble, he may actually and literally throw his garrisons into the heart of
+the enemy country before war has begun.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+This is a long and tiresome parenthesis; but it is necessary as explaining the
+long tale which Merritt told his brother-in-law, he having received it from
+some magnate of the Midlands, who had traveled in Germany. It is probable that
+the story was suggested in the first place by the passage from Huvelius which I
+have just quoted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merritt knew nothing of the real Huvelius, who was all but a saint; he thought
+of the Swedish professor as a monster of iniquity, “worse,” as he said, “than
+Neech”&mdash;meaning, no doubt, Nietzsche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he told the story of how Huvelius had sold his plan to the Germans; a plan
+for filling England with German soldiers. Land was to be bought in certain
+suitable and well-considered places, Englishmen were to be bought as the
+apparent owners of such land, and secret excavations were to be made, till the
+country was literally undermined. A subterranean Germany, in fact, was to be
+dug under selected districts of England; there were to be great caverns,
+underground cities, well drained, well ventilated, supplied with water, and in
+these places vast stores both of food and of munitions were to be accumulated,
+year after year, till “the Day” dawned. And then, warned in time, the secret
+garrison would leave shops, hotels, offices, villas, and vanish underground,
+ready to begin their work of bleeding England at the heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s what Henson told me,” said Merritt at the end of his long story.
+“Henson, head of the Buckley Iron and Steel Syndicate. He has been a lot in
+Germany.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” said Lewis, “of course, it may be so. If it is so, it is terrible
+beyond words.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, he found something horribly plausible in the story. It was an
+extraordinary plan, of course; an unheard of scheme; but it did not seem
+impossible. It was the Trojan Horse on a gigantic scale; indeed, he reflected,
+the story of the horse with the warriors concealed within it which was dragged
+into the heart of Troy by the deluded Trojans themselves might be taken as a
+prophetic parable of what had happened to England&mdash;if Henson’s theory were
+well founded. And this theory certainly squared with what one had heard of
+German preparations in Belgium and in France: emplacements for guns ready for
+the invader, German manufactories which were really German forts on Belgian
+soil, the caverns by the Aisne made ready for the cannon; indeed, Lewis thought
+he remembered something about suspicious concrete tennis-courts on the heights
+commanding London. But a German army hidden under English ground! It was a
+thought to chill the stoutest heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it seemed from that wonder of the burning tree, that the enemy mysteriously
+and terribly present at Midlingham, was present also in Meirion. Lewis,
+thinking of the country as he knew it, of its wild and desolate hillsides, its
+deep woods, its wastes and solitary places, could not but confess that no more
+fit region could be found for the deadly enterprise of secret men. Yet, he
+thought again, there was but little harm to be done in Meirion to the armies of
+England or to their munitionment. They were working for panic terror? Possibly
+that might be so; but the camp under the Highway? That should be their first
+object, and no harm had been done there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis did not know that since the panic of the horses men had died terribly in
+that camp; that it was now a fortified place, with a deep, broad trench, a
+thick tangle of savage barbed wire about it, and a machine-gun planted at each
+corner.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br/>
+What Mr. Merritt Found</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Merritt began to pick up his health and spirits a good deal. For the first
+morning or two of his stay at the doctor’s he contented himself with a very
+comfortable deck chair close to the house, where he sat under the shade of an
+old mulberry tree beside his wife and watched the bright sunshine on the green
+lawns, on the creamy crests of the waves, on the headlands of that glorious
+coast, purple even from afar with the imperial glow of the heather, on the
+white farmhouses gleaming in the sunlight, high over the sea, far from any
+turmoil, from any troubling of men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun was hot, but the wind breathed all the while gently, incessantly, from
+the east, and Merritt, who had come to this quiet place, not only from dismay,
+but from the stifling and oily airs of the smoky Midland town, said that that
+east wind, pure and clear and like well water from the rock, was new life to
+him. He ate a capital dinner, at the end of his first day at Porth and took
+rosy views. As to what they had been talking about the night before, he said to
+Lewis, no doubt there must be trouble of some sort, and perhaps bad trouble;
+still, Kitchener would soon put it all right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So things went on very well. Merritt began to stroll about the garden, which
+was full of the comfortable spaces, groves, and surprises that only country
+gardens know. To the right of one of the terraces he found an arbor or
+summer-house covered with white roses, and he was as pleased as if he had
+discovered the Pole. He spent a whole day there, smoking and lounging and
+reading a rubbishy sensational story, and declared that the Devonshire roses
+had taken many years off his age. Then on the other side of the garden there
+was a filbert grove that he had never explored on any of his former visits; and
+again there was a find. Deep in the shadow of the filberts was a bubbling well,
+issuing from rocks, and all manner of green, dewy ferns growing about it and
+above it, and an angelica springing beside it. Merritt knelt on his knees, and
+hollowed his hand and drank the well water. He said (over his port) that night
+that if all water were like the water of the filbert well the world would turn
+to teetotalism. It takes a townsman to relish the manifold and exquisite joys
+of the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not till he began to venture abroad that Merritt found that something
+was lacking of the old rich peace that used to dwell in Meirion. He had a
+favorite walk which he never neglected, year after year. This walk led along
+the cliffs towards Meiros, and then one could turn inland and return to Porth
+by deep winding lanes that went over the Allt. So Merritt set out early one
+morning and got as far as a sentry-box at the foot of the path that led up to
+the cliff. There was a sentry pacing up and down in front of the box, and he
+called on Merritt to produce his pass, or to turn back to the main road.
+Merritt was a good deal put out, and asked the doctor about this strict guard.
+And the doctor was surprised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t know they had put their bar up there,” he said. “I suppose it’s wise.
+We are certainly in the far West here; still, the Germans might slip round and
+raid us and do a lot of damage just because Meirion is the last place we should
+expect them to go for.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But there are no fortifications, surely, on the cliff?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, no; I never heard of anything of the kind there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, what’s the point of forbidding the public to go on the cliff, then? I
+can quite understand putting a sentry on the top to keep a look-out for the
+enemy. What I don’t understand is a sentry at the bottom who can’t keep a
+look-out for anything, as he can’t see the sea. And why warn the public off the
+cliffs? I couldn’t facilitate a German landing by standing on Pengareg, even if
+I wanted to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is curious,” the doctor agreed. “Some military reasons, I suppose.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He let the matter drop, perhaps because the matter did not affect him. People
+who live in the country all the year round, country doctors certainly, are
+little given to desultory walking in search of the picturesque.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis had no suspicion that sentries whose object was equally obscure were
+being dotted all over the country. There was a sentry, for example, by the
+quarry at Llanfihangel, where the dead woman and the dead sheep had been found
+some weeks before. The path by the quarry was used a good deal, and its closing
+would have inconvenienced the people of the neighborhood very considerably. But
+the sentry had his box by the side of the track and had his orders to keep
+everybody strictly to the path, as if the quarry were a secret fort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not known till a month or two ago that one of these sentries was himself
+a victim of the terror. The men on duty at this place were given certain very
+strict orders, which from the nature of the case, must have seemed to them
+unreasonable. For old soldiers, orders are orders; but here was a young bank
+clerk, scarcely in training for a couple of months, who had not begun to
+appreciate the necessity of hard, literal obedience to an order which seemed to
+him meaningless. He found himself on a remote and lonely hillside, he had not
+the faintest notion that his every movement was watched; and he disobeyed a
+certain instruction that had been given him. The post was found deserted by the
+relief; the sentry’s dead body was found at the bottom of the quarry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This by the way; but Mr. Merritt discovered again and again that things
+happened to hamper his walks and his wanderings. Two or three miles from Porth
+there is a great marsh made by the Afon river before it falls into the sea, and
+here Merritt had been accustomed to botanize mildly. He had learned pretty
+accurately the causeways of solid ground that lead through the sea of swamp and
+ooze and soft yielding soil, and he set out one hot afternoon determined to
+make a thorough exploration of the marsh, and this time to find that rare Bog
+Bean, that he felt sure, must grow somewhere in its wide extent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He got into the by-road that skirts the marsh, and to the gate which he had
+always used for entrance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was the scene as he had known it always, the rich growth of reeds and
+flags and rushes, the mild black cattle grazing on the “islands” of firm turf,
+the scented procession of the meadowsweet, the royal glory of the loosestrife,
+flaming pennons, crimson and golden, of the giant dock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But they were bringing out a dead man’s body through the gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A laboring man was holding open the gate on the marsh. Merritt, horrified,
+spoke to him and asked who it was, and how it had happened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They do say he was a visitor at Porth. Somehow he has been drowned in the
+marsh, whatever.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But it’s perfectly safe. I’ve been all over it a dozen times.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, indeed, we did always think so. If you did slip by accident, like, and
+fall into the water, it was not so deep; it was easy enough to climb out again.
+And this gentleman was quite young, to look at him, poor man; and he has come
+to Meirion for his pleasure and holiday and found his death in it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did he do it on purpose? Is it suicide?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They say he had no reasons to do that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here the sergeant of police in charge of the party interposed, according to
+orders, which he himself did not understand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A terrible thing, sir, to be sure, and a sad pity; and I am sure this is not
+the sort of sight you have come to see down in Meirion this beautiful summer.
+So don’t you think, sir, that it would be more pleasant like, if you would
+leave us to this sad business of ours? I have heard many gentlemen staying in
+Porth say that there is nothing to beat the view from the hill over there, not
+in the whole of Wales.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every one is polite in Meirion, but somehow Merritt understood that, in
+English, this speech meant “move on.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Merritt moved back to Porth&mdash;he was not in the humor for any idle,
+pleasurable strolling after so dreadful a meeting with death. He made some
+inquiries in the town about the dead man, but nothing seemed known of him. It
+was said that he had been on his honeymoon, that he had been staying at the
+Porth Castle Hotel; but the people of the hotel declared that they had never
+heard of such a person. Merritt got the local paper at the end of the week;
+there was not a word in it of any fatal accident in the marsh. He met the
+sergeant of police in the street. That officer touched his helmet with the
+utmost politeness and a “hope you are enjoying yourself, sir; indeed you do
+look a lot better already”; but as to the poor man who was found drowned or
+stifled in the marsh, he knew nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day Merritt made up his mind to go to the marsh to see whether he
+could find anything to account for so strange a death. What he found was a man
+with an armlet standing by the gate. The armlet had the letters “C.W.” on it,
+which are understood to mean Coast Watcher. The Watcher said he had strict
+instructions to keep everybody away from the marsh. Why? He didn’t know, but
+some said that the river was changing its course since the new railway
+embankment was built, and the marsh had become dangerous to people who didn’t
+know it thoroughly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed, sir,” he added, “it is part of my orders not to set foot on the other
+side of that gate myself, not for one scrag-end of a minute.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merritt glanced over the gate incredulously. The marsh looked as it had always
+looked; there was plenty of sound, hard ground to walk on; he could see the
+track that he used to follow as firm as ever. He did not believe in the story
+of the changing course of the river, and Lewis said he had never heard of
+anything of the kind. But Merritt had put the question in the middle of general
+conversation; he had not led up to it from any discussion of the death in the
+marsh, and so the doctor was taken unawares. If he had known of the connection
+in Merritt’s mind between the alleged changing of the Afon’s course and the
+tragical event in the marsh, no doubt he would have confirmed the official
+explanation. He was, above all things, anxious to prevent his sister and her
+husband from finding out that the invisible hand of terror that ruled at
+Midlingham was ruling also in Meirion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis himself had little doubt that the man who was found dead in the marsh had
+been struck down by the secret agency, whatever it was, that had already
+accomplished so much of evil; but it was a chief part of the terror that no one
+knew for certain that this or that particular event was to be ascribed to it.
+People do occasionally fall over cliffs through their own carelessness, and as
+the case of Garcia, the Spanish sailor, showed, cottagers and their wives and
+children are now and then the victims of savage and purposeless violence. Lewis
+had never wandered about the marsh himself; but Remnant had pottered round it
+and about it, and declared that the man who met his death there&mdash;his name
+was never known, in Porth at all events&mdash;must either have committed
+suicide by deliberately lying prone in the ooze and stifling himself, or else
+must have been held down in it. There were no details available, so it was
+clear that the authorities had classified this death with the others; still,
+the man might have committed suicide, or he might have had a sudden seizure and
+fallen in the slimy water face-downwards. And so on: it was possible to believe
+that case A <i>or</i> B <i>or</i> C was in the category of ordinary accidents
+or ordinary crimes. But it was not possible to believe that A <i>and</i> B
+<i>and</i> C were all in that category. And thus it was to the end, and thus it
+is now. We know that the terror reigned, and how it reigned, but there were
+many dreadful events ascribed to its rule about which there must always be room
+for doubt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For example, there was the case of the <i>Mary Ann</i>, the rowing-boat which
+came to grief in so strange a manner, almost under Merritt’s eyes. In my
+opinion he was quite wrong in associating the sorry fate of the boat and her
+occupants with a system of signaling by flashlights which he detected or
+thought that he detected, on the afternoon in which the <i>Mary Ann</i> was
+capsized. I believe his signaling theory to be all nonsense, in spite of the
+naturalized German governess who was lodging with her employers in the
+suspected house. But, on the other hand, there is no doubt in my own mind that
+the boat was overturned and those in it drowned by the work of the terror.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX.<br/>
+The Light on the Water</h2>
+
+<p>
+Let it be noted carefully that so far Merritt had not the slightest suspicion
+that the terror of Midlingham was quick over Meirion. Lewis had watched and
+shepherded him carefully. He had let out no suspicion of what had happened in
+Meirion, and before taking his brother-in-law to the club he had passed round a
+hint among the members. He did not tell the truth about Midlingham&mdash;and
+here again is a point of interest, that as the terror deepened the general
+public cooperated voluntarily, and, one would say, almost subconsciously, with
+the authorities in concealing what they knew from one another&mdash;but he gave
+out a desirable portion of the truth: that his brother-in-law was “nervy,” not
+by any means up to the mark, and that it was therefore desirable that he should
+be spared the knowledge of the intolerable and tragic mysteries which were
+being enacted all about them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He knows about that poor fellow who was found in the marsh,” said Lewis, “and
+he has a kind of vague suspicion that there is something out of the common
+about the case; but no more than that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A clear case of suggested, or rather commanded suicide,” said Remnant. “I
+regard it as a strong confirmation of my theory.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps so,” said the doctor, dreading lest he might have to hear about the Z
+Ray all over again. “But please don’t let anything out to him; I want him to
+get built up thoroughly before he goes back to Midlingham.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, on the other hand, Merritt was as still as death about the doings of the
+Midlands; he hated to think of them, much more to speak of them; and thus, as I
+say, he and the men at the Porth Club kept their secrets from one another; and
+thus, from the beginning to the end of the terror, the links were not drawn
+together. In many cases, no doubt, A and B met every day and talked familiarly,
+it may be confidentially, on other matters of all sorts, each having in his
+possession half of the truth, which he concealed from the other. So the two
+halves were never put together to make a whole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merritt, as the doctor guessed, had a kind of uneasy feeling&mdash;it scarcely
+amounted to a suspicion&mdash;as to the business of the marsh; chiefly because
+he thought the official talk about the railway embankment and the course of the
+river rank nonsense. But finding that nothing more happened, he let the matter
+drop from his mind, and settled himself down to enjoy his holiday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He found to his delight that there were no sentries or watchers to hinder him
+from the approach to Larnac Bay, a delicious cove, a place where the ashgrove
+and the green meadow and the glistening bracken sloped gently down to red rocks
+and firm yellow sands. Merritt remembered a rock that formed a comfortable
+seat, and here he established himself of a golden afternoon, and gazed at the
+blue of the sea and the crimson bastions and bays of the coast as it bent
+inward to Sarnau and swept out again southward to the odd-shaped promontory
+called the Dragon’s Head. Merritt gazed on, amused by the antics of the
+porpoises who were tumbling and splashing and gamboling a little way out at
+sea, charmed by the pure and radiant air that was so different from the oily
+smoke that often stood for heaven at Midlingham, and charmed, too, by the white
+farmhouses dotted here and there on the heights of the curving coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he noticed a little row-boat at about two hundred yards from the shore.
+There were two or three people aboard, he could not quite make out how many,
+and they seemed to be doing something with a line; they were no doubt fishing,
+and Merritt (who disliked fish) wondered how people could spoil such an
+afternoon, such a sea, such pellucid and radiant air by trying to catch white,
+flabby, offensive, evil-smelling creatures that would be excessively nasty when
+cooked. He puzzled over this problem and turned away from it to the
+contemplation of the crimson headlands. And then he says that he noticed that
+signaling was going on. Flashing lights of intense brilliance, he declares,
+were coming from one of those farms on the heights of the coast; it was as if
+white fire was spouting from it. Merritt was certain, as the light appeared and
+disappeared, that some message was being sent, and he regretted that he knew
+nothing of heliography. Three short flashes, a long and very brilliant flash,
+then two short flashes. Merritt fumbled in his pocket for pencil and paper so
+that he might record these signals, and, bringing his eyes down to the sea
+level, he became aware, with amazement and horror, that the boat had
+disappeared. All that he could see was some vague, dark object far to westward,
+running out with the tide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it is certain, unfortunately, that the <i>Mary Ann</i> was capsized and
+that two schoolboys and the sailor in charge were drowned. The bones of the
+boat were found amongst the rocks far along the coast, and the three bodies
+were also washed ashore. The sailor could not swim at all, the boys only a
+little, and it needs an exceptionally fine swimmer to fight against the outward
+suck of the tide as it rushes past Pengareg Point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I have no belief whatever in Merritt’s theory. He held (and still holds,
+for all I know), that the flashes of light which he saw coming from Penyrhaul,
+the farmhouse on the height, had some connection with the disaster to the
+<i>Mary Ann</i>. When it was ascertained that a family were spending their
+summer at the farm, and that the governess was a German, though a long
+naturalized German, Merritt could not see that there was anything left to argue
+about, though there might be many details to discover. But, in my opinion, all
+this was a mere mare’s nest; the flashes of brilliant light were caused, no
+doubt, by the sun lighting up one window of the farmhouse after the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still, Merritt was convinced from the very first, even before the damning
+circumstance of the German governess was brought to light; and on the evening
+of the disaster, as Lewis and he sat together after dinner, he was endeavoring
+to put what he called the common sense of the matter to the doctor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you hear a shot,” said Merritt, “and you see a man fall, you know pretty
+well what killed him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a flutter of wild wings in the room. A great moth beat to and fro and
+dashed itself madly against the ceiling, the walls, the glass bookcase. Then a
+sputtering sound, a momentary dimming of the lamp. The moth had succeeded in
+its mysterious quest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can you tell me,” said Lewis as if he were answering Merritt, “why moths rush
+into the flame?”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Lewis had put his question as to the strange habits of the common moth to
+Merritt with the deliberate intent of closing the debate on death by
+heliograph. The query was suggested, of course, by the incident of the moth in
+the lamp, and Lewis thought that he had said, “Oh, shut up!” in a somewhat
+elegant manner. And, in fact Merritt looked dignified, remained silent, and
+helped himself to port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was the end that the doctor had desired. He had no doubt in his own mind
+that the affair of the <i>Mary Ann</i> was but one more item in the long
+account of horrors that grew larger almost with every day; and he was in no
+humor to listen to wild and futile theories as to the manner in which the
+disaster had been accomplished. Here was a proof that the terror that was upon
+them was mighty not only on the land but on the waters; for Lewis could not see
+that the boat could have been attacked by any ordinary means of destruction.
+From Merritt’s story, it must have been in shallow water. The shore of Larnac
+Bay shelves very gradually, and the Admiralty charts showed the depth of water
+two hundred yards out to be only two fathoms; this would be too shallow for a
+submarine. And it could not have been shelled, and it could not have been
+torpedoed; there was no explosion. The disaster might have been due to
+carelessness; boys, he considered, will play the fool anywhere, even in a boat;
+but he did not think so; the sailor would have stopped them. And, it may be
+mentioned, that the two boys were as a matter of fact extremely steady,
+sensible young fellows, not in the least likely to play foolish tricks of any
+kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis was immersed in these reflections, having successfully silenced his
+brother-in-law; he was trying in vain to find some clue to the horrible enigma.
+The Midlingham theory of a concealed German force, hiding in places under the
+earth, was extravagant enough, and yet it seemed the only solution that
+approached plausibility; but then again even a subterranean German host would
+hardly account for this wreckage of a boat, floating on a calm sea. And then
+what of the tree with the burning in it that had appeared in the garden there a
+few weeks ago, and the cloud with a burning in it that had shown over the trees
+of the Midland village?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I think I have, already written something of the probable emotions of the
+mathematician confronted suddenly with an undoubted two-sided triangle. I said,
+if I remember, that he would be forced, in decency, to go mad; and I believe
+that Lewis was very near to this point. He felt himself confronted with an
+intolerable problem that most instantly demanded solution, and yet, with the
+same breath, as it were, denied the possibility of there being any solution.
+People were being killed in an inscrutable manner by some inscrutable means,
+day after day, and one asked “why” and “how”; and there seemed no answer. In
+the Midlands, where every kind of munitionment was manufactured, the
+explanation of German agency was plausible; and even if the subterranean notion
+was to be rejected as savoring altogether too much of the fairytale, or rather
+of the sensational romance, yet it was possible that the backbone of the theory
+was true; the Germans might have planted their agents in some way or another in
+the midst of our factories. But here in Meirion, what serious effect could be
+produced by the casual and indiscriminate slaughter of a couple of schoolboys
+in a boat, of a harmless holiday-maker in a marsh? The creation of an
+atmosphere of terror and dismay? It was possible, of course, but it hardly
+seemed tolerable, in spite of the enormities of Louvain and of the
+<i>Lusitania</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Into these meditations, and into the still dignified silence of Merritt broke
+the rap on the door of Lewis’s man, and those words which harass the ease of
+the country doctor when he tries to take any ease: “You’re wanted in the
+surgery, if you please, sir.” Lewis bustled out, and appeared no more that
+night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor had been summoned to a little hamlet on the outskirts of Porth,
+separated from it by half a mile or three-quarters of road. One dignifies,
+indeed, this settlement without a name in calling it a hamlet; it was a mere
+row of four cottages, built about a hundred years ago for the accommodation of
+the workers in a quarry long since disused. In one of these cottages the doctor
+found a father and mother weeping and crying out to “doctor bach, doctor bach,”
+and two frightened children, and one little body, still and dead. It was the
+youngest of the three, little Johnnie, and he was dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor found that the child had been asphyxiated. He felt the clothes; they
+were dry; it was not a case of drowning. He looked at the neck; there was no
+mark of strangling. He asked the father how it had happened, and father and
+mother, weeping most lamentably, declared they had no knowledge of how their
+child had been killed: “unless it was the People that had done it.” The Celtic
+fairies are still malignant. Lewis asked what had happened that evening; where
+had the child been?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was he with his brother and sister? Don’t they know anything about it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reduced into some sort of order from its original piteous confusion, this is
+the story that the doctor gathered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All three children had been well and happy through the day. They had walked in
+with the mother, Mrs. Roberts, to Porth on a marketing expedition in the
+afternoon; they had returned to the cottage, had had their tea, and afterwards
+played about on the road in front of the house. John Roberts had come home
+somewhat late from his work, and it was after dusk when the family sat down to
+supper. Supper over, the three children went out again to play with other
+children from the cottage next door, Mrs. Roberts telling them that they might
+have half an hour before going to bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two mothers came to the cottage gates at the same moment and called out to
+their children to come along and be quick about it. The two small families had
+been playing on the strip of turf across the road, just by the stile into the
+fields. The children ran across the road; all of them except Johnnie Roberts.
+His brother Willie said that just as their mother called them he heard Johnnie
+cry out:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, what is that beautiful shiny thing over the stile?”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X.<br/>
+The Child and the Moth</h2>
+
+<p>
+The little Roberts’s ran across the road, up the path, and into the lighted
+room. Then they noticed that Johnnie had not followed them. Mrs. Roberts was
+doing something in the back kitchen, and Mr. Roberts had gone out to the shed
+to bring in some sticks for the next morning’s fire. Mrs. Roberts heard the
+children run in and went on with her work. The children whispered to one
+another that Johnnie would “catch it” when their mother came out of the back
+room and found him missing; but they expected he would run in through the open
+door any minute. But six or seven, perhaps ten, minutes passed, and there was
+no Johnnie. Then the father and mother came into the kitchen together, and saw
+that their little boy was not there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They thought it was some small piece of mischief&mdash;that the two other
+children had hidden the boy somewhere in the room: in the big cupboard perhaps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What have you done with him then?” said Mrs. Roberts. “Come out, you little
+rascal, directly in a minute.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no little rascal to come out, and Margaret Roberts, the girl, said
+that Johnnie had not come across the road with them: he must be still playing
+all by himself by the hedge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What did you let him stay like that for?” said Mrs. Roberts. “Can’t I trust
+you for two minutes together? Indeed to goodness, you are all of you more
+trouble than you are worth.” She went to the open door:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Johnnie! Come you in directly, or you will be sorry for it. Johnnie!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The poor woman called at the door. She went out to the gate and called there:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come you, little Johnnie. Come you, bachgen, there’s a good boy. I do see you
+hiding there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought he must be hiding in the shadow of the hedge, and that he would
+come running and laughing&mdash;“he was always such a happy little
+fellow”&mdash;to her across the road. But no little merry figure danced out of
+the gloom of the still, dark night; it was all silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was then, as the mother’s heart began to chill, though she still called
+cheerfully to the missing child, that the elder boy told how Johnnie had said
+there was something beautiful by the stile: “and perhaps he did climb over, and
+he is running now about the meadow, and has lost his way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The father got his lantern then, and the whole family went crying and calling
+about the meadow, promising cakes and sweets and a fine toy to poor Johnnie if
+he would come to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They found the little body, under the ashgrove in the middle of the field. He
+was quite still and dead, so still that a great moth had settled on his
+forehead, fluttering away when they lifted him up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis heard this story. There was nothing to be done; little to be said to
+these most unhappy people.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take care of the two that you have left to you,” said the doctor as he went
+away. “Don’t let them out of your sight if you can help it. It is dreadful
+times that we are living in.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is curious to record, that all through these dreadful times the simple
+little “season” went through its accustomed course at Porth. The war and its
+consequences had somewhat thinned the numbers of the summer visitors; still a
+very fair contingent of them occupied the hotels and boarding-houses and
+lodging-houses and bathed from the old-fashioned machines on one beach, or from
+the new-fashioned tents on the other, and sauntered in the sun, or lay
+stretched out in the shade under the trees that grow down almost to the water’s
+edge. Porth never tolerated Ethiopians or shows of any kind on its sands, but
+“The Rockets” did very well during that summer in their garden entertainment,
+given in the castle grounds, and the fit-up companies that came to the Assembly
+Rooms are said to have paid their bills to a woman and to a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Porth depends very largely on its midland and northern custom, custom of a
+prosperous, well-established sort. People who think Llandudno overcrowded and
+Colwyn Bay too raw and red and new, come year after year to the placid old town
+in the southwest and delight in its peace; and as I say, they enjoyed
+themselves much as usual there in the summer of 1915. Now and then they became
+conscious, as Mr. Merritt became conscious, that they could not wander about
+quite in the old way; but they accepted sentries and coast-watchers and people
+who politely pointed out the advantages of seeing the view from this point
+rather than from that as very necessary consequences of the dreadful war that
+was being waged; nay, as a Manchester man said, after having been turned back
+from his favorite walk to Castell Coch, it was gratifying to think that they
+were so well looked after.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So far as I can see,” he added, “there’s nothing to prevent a submarine from
+standing out there by Ynys Sant and landing half a dozen men in a collapsible
+boat in any of these little coves. And pretty fools we should look, shouldn’t
+we, with our throats cut on the sands; or carried back to Germany in the
+submarine?” He tipped the coast-watcher half-a-crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right, lad,” he said, “you give us the tip.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now here was a strange thing. The north-countryman had his thoughts on elusive
+submarines and German raiders; the watcher had simply received instructions to
+keep people off the Castell Coch fields, without reason assigned. And there can
+be no doubt that the authorities themselves, while they marked out the fields
+as in the “terror zone,” gave their orders in the dark and were themselves
+profoundly in the dark as to the manner of the slaughter that had been done
+there; for if they had understood what had happened, they would have understood
+also that their restrictions were useless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Manchester man was warned off his walk about ten days after Johnnie
+Roberts’s death. The Watcher had been placed at his post because, the night
+before, a young farmer had been found by his wife lying in the grass close to
+the Castle, with no scar on him, nor any mark of violence, but stone dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wife of the dead man, Joseph Cradock, finding her husband lying motionless
+on the dewy turf, went white and stricken up the path to the village and got
+two men who bore the body to the farm. Lewis was sent for, and knew, at once
+when he saw the dead man that he had perished in the way that the little
+Roberts boy had perished&mdash;whatever that awful way might be. Cradock had
+been asphyxiated; and here again there was no mark of a grip on the throat. It
+might have been a piece of work by Burke and Hare, the doctor reflected; a
+pitch plaster might have been clapped over the man’s mouth and nostrils and
+held there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then a thought struck him; his brother-in-law had talked of a new kind of
+poison gas that was said to be used against the munition workers in the
+Midlands: was it possible that the deaths of the man and the boy were due to
+some such instrument? He applied his tests but could find no trace of any gas
+having been employed. Carbonic acid gas? A man could not be killed with that in
+the open air; to be fatal that required a confined space, such a position as
+the bottom of a huge vat or of a well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not know how Cradock had been killed; he confessed it to himself. He had
+been suffocated; that was all he could say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed that the man had gone out at about half-past nine to look after some
+beasts. The field in which they were was about five minutes’ walk from the
+house. He told his wife he would be back in a quarter of an hour or twenty
+minutes. He did not return, and when he had been gone for three-quarters of an
+hour Mrs. Cradock went out to look for him. She went into the field where the
+beasts were, and everything seemed all right, but there was no trace of
+Cradock. She called out; there was no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the meadow in which the cattle were pastured is high ground; a hedge
+divides it from the fields which fall gently down to the castle and the sea.
+Mrs. Cradock hardly seemed able to say why, having failed to find her husband
+among his beasts, she turned to the path which led to Castell Coch. She said at
+first that she had thought that one of the oxen might have broken through the
+hedge and strayed, and that Cradock had perhaps gone after it. And then,
+correcting herself, she said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was that; and then there was something else that I could not make out at
+all. It seemed to me that the hedge did look different from usual. To be sure,
+things do look different at night, and there was a bit of sea mist about, but
+somehow it did look odd to me, and I said to myself, ‘have I lost my way,
+then?’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She declared that the shape of the trees in the hedge appeared to have changed,
+and besides, it had a look “as if it was lighted up, somehow,” and so she went
+on towards the stile to see what all this could be, and when she came near
+everything was as usual. She looked over the stile and called and hoped to see
+her husband coming towards her or to hear his voice; but there was no answer,
+and glancing down the path she saw, or thought she saw, some sort of brightness
+on the ground, “a dim sort of light like a bunch of glow-worms in a hedge-bank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And so I climbed over the stile and went down the path, and the light seemed
+to melt away; and there was my poor husband lying on his back, saying not a
+word to me when I spoke to him and touched him.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+So for Lewis the terror blackened and became altogether intolerable, and
+others, he perceived, felt as he did. He did not know, he never asked whether
+the men at the club had heard of these deaths of the child and the young
+farmer; but no one spoke of them. Indeed, the change was evident; at the
+beginning of the terror men spoke of nothing else; now it had become all too
+awful for ingenious chatter or labored and grotesque theories. And Lewis had
+received a letter from his brother-in-law at Midlingham; it contained the
+sentence, “I am afraid Fanny’s health has not greatly benefited by her visit to
+Porth; there are still several symptoms I don’t at all like.” And this told
+him, in a phraseology that the doctor and Merritt had agreed upon, that the
+terror remained heavy in the Midland town.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+It was soon after the death of Cradock that people began to tell strange tales
+of a sound that was to be heard of nights about the hills and valleys to the
+northward of Porth. A man who had missed the last train from Meiros and had
+been forced to tramp the ten miles between Meiros and Porth seems to have been
+the first to hear it. He said he had got to the top of the hill by Tredonoc,
+somewhere between half-past ten and eleven, when he first noticed an odd noise
+that he could not make out at all; it was like a shout, a long, drawn-out,
+dismal wail coming from a great way off, faint with distance. He stopped to
+listen, thinking at first that it might be owls hooting in the woods; but it
+was different, he said, from that: it was a long cry, and then there was
+silence and then it began over again. He could make nothing of it, and feeling
+frightened, he did not quite know of what, he walked on briskly and was glad to
+see the lights of Porth station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He told his wife of this dismal sound that night, and she told the neighbors,
+and most of them thought that it was “all fancy”&mdash;or drink, or the owls
+after all. But the night after, two or three people, who had been to some small
+merrymaking in a cottage just off the Meiros road, heard the sound as they were
+going home, soon after ten. They, too, described it as a long, wailing cry,
+indescribably dismal in the stillness of the autumn night; “like the ghost of a
+voice,” said one; “as if it came up from the bottom of the earth,” said
+another.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI.<br/>
+At Treff Loyne Farm</h2>
+
+<p>
+Let it be remembered, again and again, that, all the while that the terror
+lasted, there was no common stock of information as to the dreadful things that
+were being done. The press had not said one word upon it, there was no
+criterion by which the mass of the people could separate fact from mere vague
+rumor, no test by which ordinary misadventure or disaster could be
+distinguished from the achievements of the secret and awful force that was at
+work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so with every event of the passing day. A harmless commercial traveler
+might show himself in the course of his business in the tumbledown main street
+of Meiros and find himself regarded with looks of fear and suspicion as a
+possible worker of murder, while it is likely enough that the true agents of
+the terror went quite unnoticed. And since the real nature of all this mystery
+of death was unknown, it followed easily that the signs and warnings and omens
+of it were all the more unknown. Here was horror, there was horror; but there
+was no links to join one horror with another; no common basis of knowledge from
+which the connection between this horror and that horror might be inferred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So there was no one who suspected at all that this dismal and hollow sound that
+was now heard of nights in the region to the north of Porth, had any relation
+at all to the case of the little girl who went out one afternoon to pick purple
+flowers and never returned, or to the case of the man whose body was taken out
+of the peaty slime of the marsh, or to the case of Cradock, dead in his fields,
+with a strange glimmering of light about his body, as his wife reported. And it
+is a question as to how far the rumor of this melancholy, nocturnal summons got
+abroad at all. Lewis heard of it, as a country doctor hears of most things,
+driving up and down the lanes, but he heard of it without much interest, with
+no sense that it was in any sort of relation to the terror. Remnant had been
+given the story of the hollow and echoing voice of the darkness in a colored
+and picturesque form; he employed a Tredonoc man to work in his garden once a
+week. The gardener had not heard the summons himself, but he knew a man who had
+done so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thomas Jenkins, Pentoppin, he did put his head out late last night to see what
+the weather was like, as he was cutting a field of corn the next day, and he
+did tell me that when he was with the Methodists in Cardigan he did never hear
+no singing eloquence in the chapels that was like to it. He did declare it was
+like a wailing of Judgment Day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Remnant considered the matter, and was inclined to think that the sound must be
+caused by a subterranean inlet of the sea; there might be, he supposed, an
+imperfect or half-opened or tortuous blow-hole in the Tredonoc woods, and the
+noise of the tide, surging up below, might very well produce that effect of a
+hollow wailing, far away. But neither he nor any one else paid much attention
+to the matter; save the few who heard the call at dead of night, as it echoed
+awfully over the black hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sound had been heard for three or perhaps four nights, when the people
+coming out of Tredonoc church after morning service on Sunday noticed that
+there was a big yellow sheepdog in the churchyard. The dog, it appeared, had
+been waiting for the congregation; for it at once attached itself to them, at
+first to the whole body, and then to a group of half a dozen who took the
+turning to the right. Two of these presently went off over the fields to their
+respective houses, and four strolled on in the leisurely Sunday-morning manner
+of the country, and these the dog followed, keeping to heel all the time. The
+men were talking hay, corn and markets and paid no attention to the animal, and
+so they strolled along the autumn lane till they came to a gate in the hedge,
+whence a roughly made farm road went through the fields, and dipped down into
+the woods and to Treff Loyne farm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the dog became like a possessed creature. He barked furiously. He ran up
+to one of the men and looked up at him, “as if he were begging for his life,”
+as the man said, and then rushed to the gate and stood by it, wagging his tail
+and barking at intervals. The men stared and laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Whose dog will that be?” said one of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It will be Thomas Griffith’s, Treff Loyne,” said another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, then, why doesn’t he go home? Go home then!” He went through the gesture
+of picking up a stone from the road and throwing it at the dog. “Go home, then!
+Over the gate with you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the dog never stirred. He barked and whined and ran up to the men and then
+back to the gate. At last he came to one of them, and crawled and abased
+himself on the ground and then took hold of the man’s coat and tried to pull
+him in the direction of the gate. The farmer shook the dog off, and the four
+went on their way; and the dog stood in the road and watched them and then put
+up its head and uttered a long and dismal howl that was despair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The four farmers thought nothing of it; sheepdogs in the country are dogs to
+look after sheep, and their whims and fancies are not studied. But the yellow
+dog&mdash;he was a kind of degenerate collie&mdash;haunted the Tredonoc lanes
+from that day. He came to a cottage door one night and scratched at it, and
+when it was opened lay down, and then, barking, ran to the garden gate and
+waited, entreating, as it seemed, the cottager to follow him. They drove him
+away and again he gave that long howl of anguish. It was almost as bad, they
+said, as the noise that they had heard a few nights before. And then it
+occurred to somebody, so far as I can make out with no particular reference to
+the odd conduct of the Treff Loyne sheepdog, that Thomas Griffith had not been
+seen for some time past. He had missed market day at Porth, he had not been at
+Tredonoc church, where he was a pretty regular attendant on Sunday; and then,
+as heads were put together, it appeared that nobody had seen any of the
+Griffith family for days and days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now in a town, even in a small town, this process of putting heads together is
+a pretty quick business. In the country, especially in a countryside of wild
+lands and scattered and lonely farms and cottages, the affair takes time.
+Harvest was going on, everybody was busy in his own fields, and after the long
+day’s hard work neither the farmer nor his men felt inclined to stroll about in
+search of news or gossip. A harvester at the day’s end is ready for supper and
+sleep and for nothing else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so it was late in that week when it was discovered that Thomas Griffith and
+all his house had vanished from this world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have often been reproached for my curiosity over questions which are
+apparently of slight importance, or of no importance at all. I love to inquire,
+for instance, into the question of the visibility of a lighted candle at a
+distance. Suppose, that is, a candle lighted on a still, dark night in the
+country; what is the greatest distance at which you can see that there is a
+light at all? And then as to the human voice; what is its carrying distance,
+under good conditions, as a mere sound, apart from any matter of making out
+words that may be uttered?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They are trivial questions, no doubt, but they have always interested me, and
+the latter point has its application to the strange business of Treff Loyne.
+That melancholy and hollow sound, that wailing summons that appalled the hearts
+of those who heard it was, indeed, a human voice, produced in a very
+exceptional manner; and it seems to have been heard at points varying from a
+mile and a half to two miles from the farm. I do not know whether this is
+anything extraordinary; I do not know whether the peculiar method of production
+was calculated to increase or to diminish the carrying power of the sound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again and again I have laid emphasis in this story of the terror on the strange
+isolation of many of the farms and cottages in Meirion. I have done so in the
+effort to convince the townsman of something that he has never known. To the
+Londoner a house a quarter of a mile from the outlying suburban lamp, with no
+other dwelling within two hundred yards, is a lonely house, a place to fit with
+ghosts and mysteries and terrors. How can he understand then, the true
+loneliness of the white farmhouses of Meirion, dotted here and there, for the
+most part not even on the little lanes and deep winding byways, but set in the
+very heart of the fields, or alone on huge bastioned headlands facing the sea,
+and whether on the high verge of the sea or on the hills or in the hollows of
+the inner country, hidden from the sight of men, far from the sound of any
+common call. There is Penyrhaul, for example, the farm from which the foolish
+Merritt thought he saw signals of light being made: from seaward it is of
+course, widely visible; but from landward, owing partly to the curving and
+indented configuration of the bay, I doubt whether any other habitation views
+it from a nearer distance than three miles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And of all these hidden and remote places, I doubt if any is so deeply buried
+as Treff Loyne. I have little or no Welsh, I am sorry to say, but I suppose
+that the name is corrupted from Trellwyn, or Tref-y-llwyn, “the place in the
+grove,” and, indeed, it lies in the very heart of dark, overhanging woods. A
+deep, narrow valley runs down from the high lands of the Allt, through these
+woods, through steep hillsides of bracken and gorse, right down to the great
+marsh, whence Merritt saw the dead man being carried. The valley lies away from
+any road, even from that by-road, little better than a bridlepath, where the
+four farmers, returning from church were perplexed by the strange antics of the
+sheepdog. One cannot say that the valley is overlooked, even from a distance,
+for so narrow is it that the ashgroves that rim it on either side seem to meet
+and shut it in. I, at all events, have never found any high place from which
+Treff Loyne is visible; though, looking down from the Allt, I have seen blue
+wood-smoke rising from its hidden chimneys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was the place, then, to which one September afternoon a party went up to
+discover what had happened to Griffith and his family. There were half a dozen
+farmers, a couple of policemen, and four soldiers, carrying their arms; those
+last had been lent by the officer commanding at the camp. Lewis, too, was of
+the party; he had heard by chance that no one knew what had become of Griffith
+and his family; and he was anxious about a young fellow, a painter, of his
+acquaintance, who had been lodging at Treff Loyne all the summer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They all met by the gate of Tredonoc churchyard, and tramped solemnly along the
+narrow lane; all of them, I think, with some vague discomfort of mind, with a
+certain shadowy fear, as of men who do not quite know what they may encounter.
+Lewis heard the corporal and the three soldiers arguing over their orders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Captain says to me,” muttered the corporal, “‘Don’t hesitate to shoot if
+there’s any trouble.’ ‘Shoot what, sir,’ I says. ‘The trouble,’ says he, and
+that’s all I could get out of him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men grumbled in reply; Lewis thought he heard some obscure reference to
+rat-poison, and wondered what they were talking about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They came to the gate in the hedge, where the farm road led down to Treff
+Loyne. They followed this track, roughly made, with grass growing up between
+its loosely laid stones, down by the hedge from field to wood, till at last
+they came to the sudden walls of the valley, and the sheltering groves of the
+ash trees. Here the way curved down the steep hillside, and bent southward, and
+followed henceforward the hidden hollow of the valley, under the shadow of the
+trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here was the farm enclosure; the outlying walls of the yard and the barns and
+sheds and outhouses. One of the farmers threw open the gate and walked into the
+yard, and forthwith began bellowing at the top of his voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thomas Griffith! Thomas Griffith! Where be you, Thomas Griffith?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rest followed him. The corporal snapped out an order over his shoulder, and
+there was a rattling metallic noise as the men fixed their bayonets and became
+in an instant dreadful dealers out of death, in place of harmless fellows with
+a feeling for beer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thomas Griffith!” again bellowed the farmer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no answer to this summons. But they found poor Griffith lying on his
+face at the edge of the pond in the middle of the yard. There was a ghastly
+wound in his side, as if a sharp stake had been driven into his body.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII.<br/>
+The Letter of Wrath</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was a still September afternoon. No wind stirred in the hanging woods that
+were dark all about the ancient house of Treff Loyne; the only sound in the dim
+air was the lowing of the cattle; they had wandered, it seemed, from the fields
+and had come in by the gate of the farmyard and stood there melancholy, as if
+they mourned for their dead master. And the horses; four great, heavy,
+patient-looking beasts they were there too, and in the lower field the sheep
+were standing, as if they waited to be fed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You would think they all knew there was something wrong,” one of the soldiers
+muttered to another. A pale sun showed for a moment and glittered on their
+bayonets. They were standing about the body of poor, dead Griffith, with a
+certain grimness growing on their faces and hardening there. Their corporal
+snapped something at them again; they were quite ready. Lewis knelt down by the
+dead man and looked closely at the great gaping wound in his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s been dead a long time,” he said. “A week, two weeks, perhaps. He was
+killed by some sharp pointed weapon. How about the family? How many are there
+of them? I never attended them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was Griffith, and his wife, and his son Thomas and Mary Griffith, his
+daughter. And I do think there was a gentleman lodging with them this summer.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was from one of the farmers. They all looked at one another, this party of
+rescue, who knew nothing of the danger that had smitten this house of quiet
+people, nothing of the peril which had brought them to this pass of a farmyard
+with a dead man in it, and his beasts standing patiently about him, as if they
+waited for the farmer to rise up and give them their food. Then the party
+turned to the house. It was an old, sixteenth century building, with the
+singular round, “Flemish” chimney that is characteristic of Meirion. The walls
+were snowy with whitewash, the windows were deeply set and stone mullioned, and
+a solid, stone-tiled porch sheltered the doorway from any winds that might
+penetrate to the hollow of that hidden valley. The windows were shut tight.
+There was no sign of any life or movement about the place. The party of men
+looked at one another, and the churchwarden amongst the farmers, the sergeant
+of police, Lewis, and the corporal drew together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it to goodness, doctor?” said the churchwarden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can tell you nothing at all&mdash;except that that poor man there has been
+pierced to the heart,” said Lewis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you think they are inside and they will shoot us?” said another farmer. He
+had no notion of what he meant by “they,” and no one of them knew better than
+he. They did not know what the danger was, or where it might strike them, or
+whether it was from without or from within. They stared at the murdered man,
+and gazed dismally at one another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come!” said Lewis, “we must do something. We must get into the house and see
+what is wrong.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, but suppose they are at us while we are getting in,” said the sergeant.
+“Where shall we be then, Doctor Lewis?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The corporal put one of his men by the gate at the top of the farmyard, another
+at the gate by the bottom of the farmyard, and told them to challenge and
+shoot. The doctor and the rest opened the little gate of the front garden and
+went up to the porch and stood listening by the door. It was all dead silence.
+Lewis took an ash stick from one of the farmers and beat heavily three times on
+the old, black, oaken door studded with antique nails.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He struck three thundering blows, and then they all waited. There was no answer
+from within. He beat again, and still silence. He shouted to the people within,
+but there was no answer. They all turned and looked at one another, that party
+of quest and rescue who knew not what they sought, what enemy they were to
+encounter. There was an iron ring on the door. Lewis turned it but the door
+stood fast; it was evidently barred and bolted. The sergeant of police called
+out to open, but again there was no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They consulted together. There was nothing for it but to blow the door open,
+and some one of them called in a loud voice to anybody that might be within to
+stand away from the door, or they would be killed. And at this very moment the
+yellow sheepdog came bounding up the yard from the woods and licked their hands
+and fawned on them and barked joyfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed now,” said one of the farmers; “he did know that there was something
+amiss. A pity it was, Thomas Williams, that we did not follow him when he
+implored us last Sunday.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The corporal motioned the rest of the party back, and they stood looking
+fearfully about them at the entrance to the porch. The corporal disengaged his
+bayonet and shot into the keyhole, calling out once more before he fired. He
+shot and shot again; so heavy and firm was the ancient door, so stout its bolts
+and fastenings. At last he had to fire at the massive hinges, and then they all
+pushed together and the door lurched open and fell forward. The corporal raised
+his left hand and stepped back a few paces. He hailed his two men at the top
+and bottom of the farmyard. They were all right, they said. And so the party
+climbed and struggled over the fallen door into the passage, and into the
+kitchen of the farmhouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Young Griffith was lying dead before the hearth, before a dead fire of white
+wood ashes. They went on towards the “parlor,” and in the doorway of the room
+was the body of the artist, Secretan, as if he had fallen in trying to get to
+the kitchen. Upstairs the two women, Mrs. Griffith and her daughter, a girl of
+eighteen, were lying together on the bed in the big bedroom, clasped in each
+others’ arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went about the house, searched the pantries, the back kitchen and the
+cellars; there was no life in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look!” said Dr. Lewis, when they came back to the big kitchen, “look! It is as
+if they had been besieged. Do you see that piece of bacon, half gnawed
+through?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they found these pieces of bacon, cut from the sides on the kitchen wall,
+here and there about the house. There was no bread in the place, no milk, no
+water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And,” said one of the farmers, “they had the best water here in all Meirion.
+The well is down there in the wood; it is most famous water. The old people did
+use to call it Ffynnon Teilo; it was Saint Teilo’s Well, they did say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They must have died of thirst,” said Lewis. “They have been dead for days and
+days.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The group of men stood in the big kitchen and stared at one another, a dreadful
+perplexity in their eyes. The dead were all about them, within the house and
+without it; and it was in vain to ask why they had died thus. The old man had
+been killed with the piercing thrust of some sharp weapon; the rest had
+perished, it seemed probable, of thirst; but what possible enemy was this that
+besieged the farm and shut in its inhabitants? There was no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sergeant of police spoke of getting a cart and taking the bodies into
+Porth, and Dr. Lewis went into the parlor that Secretan had used as a
+sitting-room, intending to gather any possessions or effects of the dead artist
+that he might find there. Half a dozen portfolios were piled up in one corner,
+there were some books on a side table, a fishing-rod and basket behind the
+door&mdash;that seemed all. No doubt there would be clothes and such matters
+upstairs, and Lewis was about to rejoin the rest of the party in the kitchen,
+when he looked down at some scattered papers lying with the books on the side
+table. On one of the sheets he read to his astonishment the words: “Dr. James
+Lewis, Porth.” This was written in a staggering trembling scrawl, and examining
+the other leaves he saw that they were covered with writing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The table stood in a dark corner of the room, and Lewis gathered up the sheets
+of paper and took them to the window-ledge and began to read, amazed at certain
+phrases that had caught his eye. But the manuscript was in disorder; as if the
+dead man who had written it had not been equal to the task of gathering the
+leaves into their proper sequence; it was some time before the doctor had each
+page in its place. This was the statement that he read, with ever-growing
+wonder, while a couple of the farmers were harnessing one of the horses in the
+yard to a cart, and the others were bringing down the dead women.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+“I do not think that I can last much longer. We shared out the last drops of
+water a long time ago. I do not know how many days ago. We fall asleep and
+dream and walk about the house in our dreams, and I am often not sure whether I
+am awake or still dreaming, and so the days and nights are confused in my mind.
+I awoke not long ago, at least I suppose I awoke and found I was lying in the
+passage. I had a confused feeling that I had had an awful dream which seemed
+horribly real, and I thought for a moment what a relief it was to know that it
+wasn’t true, whatever it might have been. I made up my mind to have a good long
+walk to freshen myself up, and then I looked round and found that I had been
+lying on the stones of the passage; and it all came back to me. There was no
+walk for me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have not seen Mrs. Griffith or her daughter for a long while. They said they
+were going upstairs to have a rest. I heard them moving about the room at
+first, now I can hear nothing. Young Griffith is lying in the kitchen, before
+the hearth. He was talking to himself about the harvest and the weather when I
+last went into the kitchen. He didn’t seem to know I was there, as he went
+gabbling on in a low voice very fast, and then he began to call the dog, Tiger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There seems no hope for any of us. We are in the dream of death....”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here the manuscript became unintelligible for half a dozen lines. Secretan had
+written the words “dream of death” three or four times over. He had begun a
+fresh word and had scratched it out and then followed strange, unmeaning
+characters, the script, as Lewis thought, of a terrible language. And then the
+writing became clear, clearer than it was at the beginning of the manuscript,
+and the sentences flowed more easily, as if the cloud on Secretan’s mind had
+lifted for a while. There was a fresh start, as it were, and the writer began
+again, in ordinary letter-form:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“DEAR LEWIS,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hope you will excuse all this confusion and wandering. I intended to begin a
+proper letter to you, and now I find all that stuff that you have been
+reading&mdash;if this ever gets into your hands. I have not the energy even to
+tear it up. If you read it you will know to what a sad pass I had come when it
+was written. It looks like delirium or a bad dream, and even now, though my
+mind seems to have cleared up a good deal, I have to hold myself in tightly to
+be sure that the experiences of the last days in this awful place are true,
+real things, not a long nightmare from which I shall wake up presently and find
+myself in my rooms at Chelsea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have said of what I am writing, ‘if it ever gets into your hands,’ and I am
+not at all sure that it ever will. If what is happening here is happening
+everywhere else, then I suppose, the world is coming to an end. I cannot
+understand it, even now I can hardly believe it. I know that I dream such wild
+dreams and walk in such mad fancies that I have to look out and look about me
+to make sure that I am not still dreaming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you remember that talk we had about two months ago when I dined with you?
+We got on, somehow or other, to space and time, and I think we agreed that as
+soon as one tried to reason about space and time one was landed in a maze of
+contradictions. You said something to the effect that it was very curious but
+this was just like a dream. ‘A man will sometimes wake himself from his crazy
+dream,’ you said, ‘by realizing that he is thinking nonsense.’ And we both
+wondered whether these contradictions that one can’t avoid if one begins to
+think of time and space may not really be proofs that the whole of life is a
+dream, and the moon and the stars bits of nightmare. I have often thought over
+that lately. I kick at the walls as Dr. Johnson kicked at the stone, to make
+sure that the things about me are there. And then that other question gets into
+my mind&mdash;is the world really coming to an end, the world as we have always
+known it; and what on earth will this new world be like? I can’t imagine it;
+it’s a story like Noah’s Ark and the Flood. People used to talk about the end
+of the world and fire, but no one ever thought of anything like this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And then there’s another thing that bothers me. Now and then I wonder whether
+we are not all mad together in this house. In spite of what I see and know, or,
+perhaps, I should say, because what I see and know is so impossible, I wonder
+whether we are not all suffering from a delusion. Perhaps we are our own
+gaolers, and we are really free to go out and live. Perhaps what we think we
+see is not there at all. I believe I have heard of whole families going mad
+together, and I may have come under the influence of the house, having lived in
+it for the last four months. I know there have been people who have been kept
+alive by their keepers forcing food down their throats, because they are quite
+sure that their throats are closed, so that they feel they are unable to
+swallow a morsel. I wonder now and then whether we are all like this in Treff
+Loyne; yet in my heart I feel sure that it is not so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Still, I do not want to leave a madman’s letter behind me, and so I will not
+tell you the full story of what I have seen, or believe I have seen. If I am a
+sane man you will be able to fill in the blanks for yourself from your own
+knowledge. If I am mad, burn the letter and say nothing about it. Or
+perhaps&mdash;and indeed, I am not quite sure&mdash;I may wake up and hear Mary
+Griffith calling to me in her cheerful sing-song that breakfast will be ready
+‘directly, in a minute,’ and I shall enjoy it and walk over to Porth and tell
+you the queerest, most horrible dream that a man ever had, and ask what I had
+better take.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think that it was on a Tuesday that we first noticed that there was
+something queer about, only at the time we didn’t know that there was anything
+really queer in what we noticed. I had been out since nine o’clock in the
+morning trying to paint the marsh, and I found it a very tough job. I came home
+about five or six o’clock and found the family at Treff Loyne laughing at old
+Tiger, the sheepdog. He was making short runs from the farmyard to the door of
+the house, barking, with quick, short yelps. Mrs. Griffith and Miss Griffith
+were standing by the porch, and the dog would go to them, look in their faces,
+and then run up the farmyard to the gate, and then look back with that eager
+yelping bark, as if he were waiting for the women to follow him. Then, again
+and again, he ran up to them and tugged at their skirts as if he would pull
+them by main force away from the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then the men came home from the fields and he repeated this performance. The
+dog was running all up and down the farmyard, in and out of the barn and sheds
+yelping, barking; and always with that eager run to the person he addressed,
+and running away directly, and looking back as, if to see whether we were
+following him. When the house door was shut and they all sat down to supper, he
+would give them no peace, till at last they turned him out of doors. And then
+he sat in the porch and scratched at the door with his claws, barking all the
+while. When the daughter brought in my meal, she said: ‘We can’t think what is
+come to old Tiger, and indeed, he has always been a good dog, too.’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The dog barked and yelped and whined and scratched at the door all through the
+evening. They let him in once, but he seemed to have become quite frantic. He
+ran up to one member of the family after another; his eyes were bloodshot and
+his mouth was foaming, and he tore at their clothes till they drove him out
+again into the darkness. Then he broke into a long, lamentable howl of anguish,
+and we heard no more of him.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>CHAPTER XIII.<br/>
+The Last Words of Mr. Secretan</h2>
+
+<p>
+“I slept ill that night. I awoke again and again from uneasy dreams, and I
+seemed in my sleep to hear strange calls and noises and a sound of murmurs and
+beatings on the door. There were deep, hollow voices, too, that echoed in my
+sleep, and when I woke I could hear the autumn wind, mournful, on the hills
+above us. I started up once with a dreadful scream in my ears; but then the
+house was all still, and I fell again into uneasy sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was soon after dawn when I finally roused myself. The people in the house
+were talking to each other in high voices, arguing about something that I did
+not understand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“‘It is those damned gipsies, I tell you,’ said old Griffith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“‘What would they do a thing like that for?’ asked Mrs. Griffith. ‘If it was
+stealing now&mdash;’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“‘It is more likely that John Jenkins has done it out of spite,’ said the son.
+‘He said that he would remember you when we did catch him poaching.’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They seemed puzzled and angry, so far as I could make out, but not at all
+frightened. I got up and began to dress. I don’t think I looked out of the
+window. The glass on my dressing-table is high and broad, and the window is
+small; one would have to poke one’s head round the glass to see anything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The voices were still arguing downstairs. I heard the old man say, ‘Well,
+here’s for a beginning anyhow,’ and then the door slammed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A minute later the old man shouted, I think, to his son. Then there was a
+great noise which I will not describe more particularly, and a dreadful
+screaming and crying inside the house and a sound of rushing feet. They all
+cried out at once to each other. I heard the daughter crying, ‘it is no good,
+mother, he is dead, indeed they have killed him,’ and Mrs. Griffith screaming
+to the girl to let her go. And then one of them rushed out of the kitchen and
+shot the great bolts of oak across the door, just as something beat against it
+with a thundering crash.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ran downstairs. I found them all in wild confusion, in an agony of grief and
+horror and amazement. They were like people who had seen something so awful
+that they had gone mad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I went to the window looking out on the farmyard. I won’t tell you all that I
+saw. But I saw poor old Griffith lying by the pond, with the blood pouring out
+of his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wanted to go out to him and bring him in. But they told me that he must be
+stone dead, and such things also that it was quite plain that any one who went
+out of the house would not live more than a moment. We could not believe it,
+even as we gazed at the body of the dead man; but it was there. I used to
+wonder sometimes what one would feel like if one saw an apple drop from the
+tree and shoot up into the air and disappear. I think I know now how one would
+feel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Even then we couldn’t believe that it would last. We were not seriously afraid
+for ourselves. We spoke of getting out in an hour or two, before dinner anyhow.
+It couldn’t last, because it was impossible. Indeed, at twelve o’clock young
+Griffith said he would go down to the well by the back way and draw another
+pail of water. I went to the door and stood by it. He had not gone a dozen
+yards before they were on him. He ran for his life, and we had all we could do
+to bar the door in time. And then I began to get frightened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Still we could not believe in it. Somebody would come along shouting in an
+hour or two and it would all melt away and vanish. There could not be any real
+danger. There was plenty of bacon in the house, and half the weekly baking of
+loaves and some beer in the cellar and a pound or so of tea, and a whole
+pitcher of water that had been drawn from the well the night before. We could
+do all right for the day and in the morning it would have all gone away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But day followed day and it was still there. I knew Treff Loyne was a lonely
+place&mdash;that was why I had gone there, to have a long rest from all the
+jangle and rattle and turmoil of London, that makes a man alive and kills him
+too. I went to Treff Loyne because it was buried in the narrow valley under the
+ash trees, far away from any track. There was not so much as a footpath that
+was near it; no one ever came that way. Young Griffith had told me that it was
+a mile and a half to the nearest house, and the thought of the silent peace and
+retirement of the farm used to be a delight to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And now this thought came back without delight, with terror. Griffith thought
+that a shout might be heard on a still night up away on the Allt, ‘if a man was
+listening for it,’ he added, doubtfully. My voice was clearer and stronger than
+his, and on the second night I said I would go up to my bedroom and call for
+help through the open window. I waited till it was all dark and still, and
+looked out through the window before opening it. And then I saw over the ridge
+of the long barn across the yard what looked like a tree, though I knew there
+was no tree there. It was a dark mass against the sky, with wide-spread boughs,
+a tree of thick, dense growth. I wondered what this could be, and I threw open
+the window, not only because I was going to call for help, but because I wanted
+to see more clearly what the dark growth over the barn really was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I saw in the depth of the dark of it points of fire, and colors in light, all
+glowing and moving, and the air trembled. I stared out into the night, and the
+dark tree lifted over the roof of the barn and rose up in the air and floated
+towards me. I did not move till at the last moment when it was close to the
+house; and then I saw what it was and banged the window down only just in time.
+I had to fight, and I saw the tree that was like a burning cloud rise up in the
+night and sink again and settle over the barn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I told them downstairs of this. They sat with white faces, and Mrs. Griffith
+said that ancient devils were let loose and had come out of the trees and out
+of the old hills because of the wickedness that was on the earth. She began to
+murmur something to herself, something that sounded to me like broken-down
+Latin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I went up to my room again an hour later, but the dark tree swelled over the
+barn. Another day went by, and at dusk I looked out, but the eyes of fire were
+watching me. I dared not open the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And then I thought of another plan. There was the great old fireplace, with
+the round Flemish chimney going high above the house. If I stood beneath it and
+shouted I thought perhaps the sound might be carried better than if I called
+out of the window; for all I knew the round chimney might act as a sort of
+megaphone. Night after night, then, I stood in the hearth and called for help
+from nine o’clock to eleven. I thought of the lonely place, deep in the valley
+of the ashtrees, of the lonely hills and lands about it. I thought of the
+little cottages far away and hoped that my voice might reach to those within
+them. I thought of the winding lane high on the Allt, and of the few men that
+came there of nights; but I hoped that my cry might come to one of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But we had drunk up the beer, and we would only let ourselves have water by
+little drops, and on the fourth night my throat was dry, and I began to feel
+strange and weak; I knew that all the voice I had in my lungs would hardly
+reach the length of the field by the farm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was then we began to dream of wells and fountains, and water coming very
+cold, in little drops, out of rocky places in the middle of a cool wood. We had
+given up all meals; now and then one would cut a lump from the sides of bacon
+on the kitchen wall and chew a bit of it, but the saltness was like fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was a great shower of rain one night. The girl said we might open a
+window and hold out bowls and basins and catch the rain. I spoke of the cloud
+with burning eyes. She said ‘we will go to the window in the dairy at the back,
+and one of us can get some water at all events.’ She stood up with her basin on
+the stone slab in the dairy and looked out and heard the plashing of the rain,
+falling very fast. And she unfastened the catch of the window and had just
+opened it gently with one hand, for about an inch, and had her basin in the
+other hand. ‘And then,’ said she, ‘there was something that began to tremble
+and shudder and shake as it did when we went to the Choral Festival at St.
+Teilo’s, and the organ played, and there was the cloud and the burning close
+before me.’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And then we began to dream, as I say. I woke up in my sitting-room one hot
+afternoon when the sun was shining, and I had been looking and searching in my
+dream all through the house, and I had gone down to the old cellar that wasn’t
+used, the cellar with the pillars and the vaulted room, with an iron pike in my
+hand. Something said to me that there was water there, and in my dream I went
+to a heavy stone by the middle pillar and raised it up, and there beneath was a
+bubbling well of cold, clear water, and I had just hollowed my hand to drink it
+when I woke. I went into the kitchen and told young Griffith. I said I was sure
+there was water there. He shook his head, but he took up the great kitchen
+poker and we went down to the old cellar. I showed him the stone by the pillar,
+and he raised it up. But there was no well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you know, I reminded myself of many people whom I have met in life? I would
+not be convinced. I was sure that, after all, there was a well there. They had
+a butcher’s cleaver in the kitchen and I took it down to the old cellar and
+hacked at the ground with it. The others didn’t interfere with me. We were
+getting past that. We hardly ever spoke to one another. Each one would be
+wandering about the house, upstairs and downstairs, each one of us, I suppose,
+bent on his own foolish plan and mad design, but we hardly ever spoke. Years
+ago, I was an actor for a bit, and I remember how it was on first nights; the
+actors treading softly up and down the wings, by their entrance, their lips
+moving and muttering over the words of their parts, but without a word for one
+another. So it was with us. I came upon young Griffith one evening evidently
+trying to make a subterranean passage under one of the walls of the house. I
+knew he was mad, as he knew I was mad when he saw me digging for a well in the
+cellar; but neither said anything to the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now we are past all this. We are too weak. We dream when we are awake and when
+we dream we think we wake. Night and day come and go and we mistake one for
+another; I hear Griffith murmuring to himself about the stars when the sun is
+high at noonday, and at midnight I have found myself thinking that I walked in
+bright sunlit meadows beside cold, rushing streams that flowed from high rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then at the dawn figures in black robes, carrying lighted tapers in their
+hands pass slowly about and about; and I hear great rolling organ music that
+sounds as if some tremendous rite were to begin, and voices crying in an
+ancient song shrill from the depths of the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Only a little while ago I heard a voice which sounded as if it were at my very
+ears, but rang and echoed and resounded as if it were rolling and reverberated
+from the vault of some cathedral, chanting in terrible modulations. I heard the
+words quite clearly.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+“<i>Incipit liber iræ Domini Dei nostri.</i> (Here beginneth The Book of the
+Wrath of the Lord our God.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And then the voice sang the word <i>Aleph,</i> prolonging it, it seemed
+through ages, and a light was extinguished as it began the chapter:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>In that day, saith the Lord, there shall be a cloud over the land, and in
+the cloud a burning and a shape of fire, and out of the cloud shall issue forth
+my messengers; they shall run all together, they shall not turn aside; this
+shall be a day of exceeding bitterness, without salvation. And on every high
+hill, saith the Lord of Hosts, I will set my sentinels, and my armies shall
+encamp in the place of every valley; in the house that is amongst rushes I will
+execute judgment, and in vain shall they fly for refuge to the munitions of the
+rocks. In the groves of the woods, in the places where the leaves are as a tent
+above them, they shall find the sword of the slayer; and they that put their
+trust in walled cities shall be confounded. Woe unto the armed man, woe unto
+him that taketh pleasure in the strength of his artillery, for a little thing
+shall smite him, and by one that hath no might shall he be brought down into
+the dust. That which is low shall be set on high; I will make the lamb and the
+young sheep to be as the lion from the swellings of Jordan; they shall not
+spare, saith the Lord, and the doves shall be as eagles on the hill Engedi;
+none shall be found that may abide the onset of their battle.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Even now I can hear the voice rolling far away, as if it came from the altar
+of a great church and I stood at the door. There are lights very far away in
+the hollow of a vast darkness, and one by one they are put out. I hear a voice
+chanting again with that endless modulation that climbs and aspires to the
+stars, and shines there, and rushes down to the dark depths of the earth, again
+to ascend; the word is <i>Zain.</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here the manuscript lapsed again, and finally into utter, lamentable confusion.
+There were scrawled lines wavering across the page on which Secretan seemed to
+have been trying to note the unearthly music that swelled in his dying ears. As
+the scrapes and scratches of ink showed, he had tried hard to begin a new
+sentence. The pen had dropped at last out of his hand upon the paper, leaving a
+blot and a smear upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lewis heard the tramp of feet along the passage; they were carrying out the
+dead to the cart.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>CHAPTER XIV.<br/>
+The End of the Terror</h2>
+
+<p>
+Dr. Lewis maintained that we should never begin to understand the real
+significance of life until we began to study just those aspects of it which we
+now dismiss and overlook as utterly inexplicable, and therefore, unimportant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were discussing a few months ago the awful shadow of the terror which at
+length had passed away from the land. I had formed my opinion, partly from
+observation, partly from certain facts which had been communicated to me, and
+the passwords having been exchanged, I found that Lewis had come by very
+different ways to the same end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And yet,” he said, “it is not a true end, or rather, it is like all the ends
+of human inquiry, it leads one to a great mystery. We must confess that what
+has happened might have happened at any time in the history of the world. It
+did not happen till a year ago as a matter of fact, and therefore we made up
+our minds that it never could happen; or, one would better say, it was outside
+the range even of imagination. But this is our way. Most people are quite sure
+that the Black Death&mdash;otherwise the Plague&mdash;will never invade Europe
+again. They have made up their complacent minds that it was due to dirt and bad
+drainage. As a matter of fact the Plague had nothing to do with dirt or with
+drains; and there is nothing to prevent its ravaging England to-morrow. But if
+you tell people so, they won’t believe you. They won’t believe in anything that
+isn’t there at the particular moment when you are talking to them. As with the
+Plague, so with the Terror. We could not believe that such a thing could ever
+happen. Remnant said, truly enough, that whatever it was, it was outside
+theory, outside our theory. Flatland cannot believe in the cube or the sphere.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I agreed with all this. I added that sometimes the world was incapable of
+seeing, much less believing, that which was before its own eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look,” I said, “at any eighteenth century print of a Gothic cathedral. You
+will find that the trained artistic eye even could not behold in any true sense
+the building that was before it. I have seen an old print of Peterborough
+Cathedral that looks as if the artist had drawn it from a clumsy model,
+constructed of bent wire and children’s bricks.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly; because Gothic was outside the æsthetic theory (and therefore
+vision) of the time. You can’t believe what you don’t see: rather, you can’t
+see what you don’t believe. It was so during the time of the Terror. All this
+bears out what Coleridge said as to the necessity of having the idea before the
+facts could be of any service to one. Of course, he was right; mere facts,
+without the correlating idea, are nothing and lead to no conclusion. We had
+plenty of facts, but we could make nothing of them. I went home at the tail of
+that dreadful procession from Treff Loyne in a state of mind very near to
+madness. I heard one of the soldiers saying to the other: ‘There’s no rat
+that’ll spike a man to the heart, Bill.’ I don’t know why, but I felt that if I
+heard any more of such talk as that I should go crazy; it seemed to me that the
+anchors of reason were parting. I left the party and took the short cut across
+the fields into Porth. I looked up Davies in the High Street and arranged with
+him that he should take on any cases I might have that evening, and then I went
+home and gave my man his instructions to send people on. And then I shut myself
+up to think it all out&mdash;if I could.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must not suppose that my experiences of that afternoon had afforded me the
+slightest illumination. Indeed, if it had not been that I had seen poor old
+Griffith’s body lying pierced in his own farmyard, I think I should have been
+inclined to accept one of Secretan’s hints, and to believe that the whole
+family had fallen a victim to a collective delusion or hallucination, and had
+shut themselves up and died of thirst through sheer madness. I think there have
+been such cases. It’s the insanity of inhibition, the belief that you can’t do
+something which you are really perfectly capable of doing. But; I had seen the
+body of the murdered man and the wound that had killed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did the manuscript left by Secretan give me no hint? Well, it seemed to me to
+make confusion worse confounded. You have seen it; you know that in certain
+places it is evidently mere delirium, the wanderings of a dying mind. How was I
+to separate the facts from the phantasms&mdash;lacking the key to the whole
+enigma. Delirium is often a sort of cloud-castle, a sort of magnified and
+distorted shadow of actualities, but it is a very difficult thing, almost an
+impossible thing, to reconstruct the real house from the distortion of it,
+thrown on the clouds of the patient’s brain. You see, Secretan in writing that
+extraordinary document almost insisted on the fact that he was not in his
+proper sense; that for days he had been part asleep, part awake, part
+delirious. How was one to judge his statement, to separate delirium from fact?
+In one thing he stood confirmed; you remember he speaks of calling for help up
+the old chimney of Treff Loyne; that did seem to fit in with the tales of a
+hollow, moaning cry that had been heard upon the Allt: so far one could take
+him as a recorder of actual experiences. And I looked in the old cellars of the
+farm and found a frantic sort of rabbit-hole dug by one of the pillars; again
+he was confirmed. But what was one to make of that story of the chanting voice,
+and the letters of the Hebrew alphabet, and the chapter out of some unknown
+Minor Prophet? When one has the key it is easy enough to sort out the facts, or
+the hints of facts from the delusions; but I hadn’t the key on that September
+evening. I was forgetting the ‘tree’ with lights and fires in it; that, I
+think, impressed me more than anything with the feeling that Secretan’s story
+was, in the main, a true story. I had seen a like appearance down there in my
+own garden; but what was it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, I was saying that, paradoxically, it is only by the inexplicable things
+that life can be explained. We are apt to say, you know, ‘a very odd
+coincidence’ and pass the matter by, as if there were no more to be said, or as
+if that were the end of it. Well, I believe that the only real path lies
+through the blind alleys.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How do you mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, this is an instance of what I mean. I told you about Merritt, my
+brother-in-law, and the capsizing of that boat, the <i>Mary Ann</i>. He had
+seen, he said, signal lights flashing from one of the farms on the coast, and
+he was quite certain that the two things were intimately connected as cause and
+effect. I thought it all nonsense, and I was wondering how I was going to shut
+him up when a big moth flew into the room through that window, fluttered about,
+and succeeded in burning itself alive in the lamp. That gave me my cue; I asked
+Merritt if he knew why moths made for lamps or something of the kind; I thought
+it would be a hint to him that I was sick of his flashlights and his half-baked
+theories. So it was&mdash;he looked sulky and held his tongue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But a few minutes later I was called out by a man who had found his little boy
+dead in a field near his cottage about an hour before. The child was so still,
+they said, that a great moth had settled on his forehead and only fluttered
+away when they lifted up the body. It was absolutely illogical; but it was this
+odd ‘coincidence’ of the moth in my lamp and the moth on the dead boy’s
+forehead that first set me on the track. I can’t say that it guided me in any
+real sense; it was more like a great flare of red paint on a wall; it rang up
+my attention, if I may say so; it was a sort of shock like a bang on the big
+drum. No doubt Merritt was talking great nonsense that evening so far as his
+particular instance went; the flashes of light from the farm had nothing to do
+with the wreck of the boat. But his general principle was sound; when you hear
+a gun go off and see a man fall it is idle to talk of ‘a mere coincidence.’ I
+think a very interesting book might be written on this question: I would call
+it ‘A Grammar of Coincidence.’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But as you will remember, from having read my notes on the matter, I was
+called in about ten days later to see a man named Cradock, who had been found
+in a field near his farm quite dead. This also was at night. His wife found
+him, and there were some very queer things in her story. She said that the
+hedge of the field looked as if it were changed; she began to be afraid that
+she had lost her way and got into the wrong field. Then she said the hedge was
+lighted up as if there were a lot of glow-worms in it, and when she peered over
+the stile there seemed to be some kind of glimmering upon the ground, and then
+the glimmering melted away, and she found her husband’s body near where this
+light had been. Now this man Cradock had been suffocated just as the little boy
+Roberts had been suffocated, and as that man in the Midlands who took a short
+cut one night had been suffocated. Then I remembered that poor Johnnie Roberts
+had called out about ‘something shiny’ over the stile just before he played
+truant. Then, on my part, I had to contribute the very remarkable sight I
+witnessed here, as I looked down over the garden; the appearance as of a
+spreading tree where I knew there was no such tree, and then the shining and
+burning of lights and moving colors. Like the poor child and Mrs. Cradock, I
+had seen something shiny, just as some man in Stratfordshire had seen a dark
+cloud with points of fire in it floating over the trees. And Mrs. Cradock
+thought that the shape of the trees in the hedge had changed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My mind almost uttered the word that was wanted; but you see the difficulties.
+This set of circumstances could not, so far as I could see, have any relation
+with the other circumstances of the Terror. How could I connect all this with
+the bombs and machine-guns of the Midlands, with the armed men who kept watch
+about the munition shops by day and night. Then there was the long list of
+people here who had fallen over the cliffs or into the quarry; there were the
+cases of the men stifled in the slime of the marshes; there was the affair of
+the family murdered in front of their cottage on the Highway; there was the
+capsized <i>Mary Ann</i>. I could not see any thread that could bring all these
+incidents together; they seemed to me to be hopelessly disconnected. I could
+not make out any relation between the agency that beat out the brains of the
+Williams’s and the agency that overturned the boat. I don’t know, but I think
+it’s very likely if nothing more had happened that I should have put the whole
+thing down as an unaccountable series of crimes and accidents which chanced to
+occur in Meirion in the summer of 1915. Well, of course, that would have been
+an impossible standpoint in view of certain incidents in Merritt’s story.
+Still, if one is confronted by the insoluble, one lets it go at last. If the
+mystery is inexplicable, one pretends that there isn’t any mystery. That is the
+justification for what is called free thinking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then came that extraordinary business of Treff Loyne. I couldn’t put that on
+one side. I couldn’t pretend that nothing strange or out of the way had
+happened. There was no getting over it or getting round it. I had seen with my
+eyes that there was a mystery, and a most horrible mystery. I have forgotten my
+logic, but one might say that Treff Loyne demonstrated the existence of a
+mystery in the figure of Death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I took it all home, as I have told you, and sat down for the evening before
+it. It appalled me, not only by its horror, but here again by the discrepancy
+between its terms. Old Griffith, so far as I could judge, had been killed by
+the thrust of a pike or perhaps of a sharpened stake: how could one relate this
+to the burning tree that had floated over the ridge of the barn. It was as if I
+said to you: ‘here is a man drowned, and here is a man burned alive: show that
+each death was caused by the same agency!’ And the moment that I left this
+particular case of Treff Loyne, and tried to get some light on it from other
+instances of the Terror, I would think of the man in the midlands who heard the
+feet of a thousand men rustling in the wood, and their voices as if dead men
+sat up in their bones and talked. And then I would say to myself, ‘and how
+about that boat overturned in a calm sea?’ There seemed no end to it, no hope
+of any solution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was, I believe, a sudden leap of the mind that liberated me from the
+tangle. It was quite beyond logic. I went back to that evening when Merritt was
+boring me with his flashlights, to the moth in the candle, and to the moth on
+the forehead of poor Johnnie Roberts. There was no sense in it; but I suddenly
+determined that the child and Joseph Cradock the farmer, and that unnamed
+Stratfordshire man, all found at night, all asphyxiated, had been choked by
+vast swarms of moths. I don’t pretend even now that this is demonstrated, but
+I’m sure it’s true.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now suppose you encounter a swarm of these creatures in the dark. Suppose the
+smaller ones fly up your nostrils. You will gasp for breath and open your
+mouth. Then, suppose some hundreds of them fly into your mouth, into your
+gullet, into your windpipe, what will happen to you? You will be dead in a very
+short time, choked, asphyxiated.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But the moths would be dead too. They would be found in the bodies.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The moths? Do you know that it is extremely difficult to kill a moth with
+cyanide of potassium? Take a frog, kill it, open its stomach. There you will
+find its dinner of moths and small beetles, and the ‘dinner’ will shake itself
+and walk off cheerily, to resume an entirely active existence. No; that is no
+difficulty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, now I came to this. I was shutting out all the other cases. I was
+confining myself to those that came under the one formula. I got to the
+assumption or conclusion, whichever you like, that certain people had been
+asphyxiated by the action of moths. I had accounted for that extraordinary
+appearance of burning or colored lights that I had witnessed myself, when I saw
+the growth of that strange tree in my garden. That was clearly the cloud with
+points of fire in it that the Stratfordshire man took for a new and terrible
+kind of poison gas, that was the shiny something that poor little Johnnie
+Roberts had seen over the stile, that was the glimmering light that had led
+Mrs. Cradock to her husband’s dead body, that was the assemblage of terrible
+eyes that had watched over Treff Loyne by night. Once on the right track I
+understood all this, for coming into this room in the dark, I have been amazed
+by the wonderful burning and the strange fiery colors of the eyes of a single
+moth, as it crept up the pane of glass, outside. Imagine the effect of myriads
+of such eyes, of the movement of these lights and fires in a vast swarm of
+moths, each insect being in constant motion while it kept its place in the
+mass: I felt that all this was clear and certain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then the next step. Of course, we know nothing really about moths; rather, we
+know nothing of moth reality. For all I know there may be hundreds of books
+which treat of moth and nothing but moth. But these are scientific books, and
+science only deals with surfaces; it has nothing to do with realities&mdash;it
+is impertinent if it attempts to do with realities. To take a very minor
+matter; we don’t even know why the moth desires the flame. But we do know what
+the moth does not do; it does not gather itself into swarms with the object of
+destroying human life. But here, by the hypothesis, were cases in which the
+moth had done this very thing; the moth race had entered, it seemed, into a
+malignant conspiracy against the human race. It was quite impossible, no
+doubt&mdash;that is to say, it had never happened before&mdash;but I could see
+no escape from this conclusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“These insects, then, were definitely hostile to man; and then I stopped, for I
+could not see the next step, obvious though it seems to me now. I believe that
+the soldiers’ scraps of talk on the way to Treff Loyne and back flung the next
+plank over the gulf. They had spoken of ‘rat poison,’ of no rat being able to
+spike a man through the heart; and then, suddenly, I saw my way clear. If the
+moths were infected with hatred of men, and possessed the design and the power
+of combining against him; why not suppose this hatred, this design, this power
+shared by other non-human creatures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The secret of the Terror might be condensed into a sentence: the animals had
+revolted against men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, the puzzle became easy enough; one had only to classify. Take the cases
+of the people who met their deaths by falling over cliffs or over the edge of
+quarries. We think of sheep as timid creatures, who always ran away. But
+suppose sheep that don’t run away; and, after all, in reason why should they
+run away? Quarry or no quarry, cliff or no cliff; what would happen to you if a
+hundred sheep ran after you instead of running from you? There would be no help
+for it; they would have you down and beat you to death or stifle you. Then
+suppose man, woman, or child near a cliff’s edge or a quarry-side, and a sudden
+rush of sheep. Clearly there is no help; there is nothing for it but to go
+over. There can be no doubt that that is what happened in all these cases.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And again; you know the country and you know how a herd of cattle will
+sometimes pursue people through the fields in a solemn, stolid sort of way.
+They behave as if they wanted to close in on you. Townspeople sometimes get
+frightened and scream and run; you or I would take no notice, or at the utmost,
+wave our sticks at the herd, which will stop dead or lumber off. But suppose
+they don’t lumber off. The mildest old cow, remember, is stronger than any man.
+What can one man or half a dozen men do against half a hundred of these beasts
+no longer restrained by that mysterious inhibition, which has made for ages the
+strong the humble slaves of the weak? But if you are botanizing in the marsh,
+like that poor fellow who was staying at Porth, and forty or fifty young cattle
+gradually close round you, and refuse to move when you shout and wave your
+stick, but get closer and closer instead, and get you into the slime. Again,
+where is your help? If you haven’t got an automatic pistol, you must go down
+and stay down, while the beasts lie quietly on you for five minutes. It was a
+quicker death for poor Griffith of Treff Loyne&mdash;one of his own beasts
+gored him to death with one sharp thrust of its horn into his heart. And from
+that morning those within the house were closely besieged by their own cattle
+and horses and sheep; and when those unhappy people within opened a window to
+call for help or to catch a few drops of rain water to relieve their burning
+thirst, the cloud waited for them with its myriad eyes of fire. Can you wonder
+that Secretan’s statement reads in places like mania? You perceive the horrible
+position of those people in Treff Loyne; not only did they see death advancing
+on them, but advancing with incredible steps, as if one were to die not only in
+nightmare but by nightmare. But no one in his wildest, most fiery dreams had
+ever imagined such a fate. I am not astonished that Secretan at one moment
+suspected the evidence of his own senses, at another surmised that the world’s
+end had come.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And how about the Williams’s who were murdered on the Highway near here?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The horses were the murderers; the horses that afterwards stampeded the camp
+below. By some means which is still obscure to me they lured that family into
+the road and beat their brains out; their shod hoofs were the instruments of
+execution. And, as for the <i>Mary Ann</i>, the boat that was capsized, I have
+no doubt that it was overturned by a sudden rush of the porpoises that were
+gamboling about in the water of Larnac Bay. A porpoise is a heavy
+beast&mdash;half a dozen of them could easily upset a light rowing-boat. The
+munition works? Their enemy was rats. I believe that it has been calculated
+that in ‘greater London’ the number of rats is about equal to the number of
+human beings, that is, there are about seven millions of them. The proportion
+would be about the same in all the great centers of population; and the rat,
+moreover, is, on occasion, migratory in its habits. You can understand now that
+story of the <i>Semiramis</i>, beating about the mouth of the Thames, and at
+last cast away by Arcachon, her only crew dry heaps of bones. The rat is an
+expert boarder of ships. And so one can understand the tale told by the
+frightened man who took the path by the wood that led up from the new munition
+works. He thought he heard a thousand men treading softly through the wood and
+chattering to one another in some horrible tongue; what he did hear was the
+marshaling of an army of rats&mdash;their array before the battle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And conceive the terror of such an attack. Even one rat in a fury is said to
+be an ugly customer to meet; conceive then, the irruption of these terrible,
+swarming myriads, rushing upon the helpless, unprepared, astonished workers in
+the munition shops.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+There can be no doubt, I think, that Dr. Lewis was entirely justified in these
+extraordinary conclusions. As I say, I had arrived at pretty much the same end,
+by different ways; but this rather as to the general situation, while Lewis had
+made his own particular study of those circumstances of the Terror that were
+within his immediate purview, as a physician in large practice in the southern
+part of Meirion. Of some of the cases which he reviewed he had, no doubt, no
+immediate or first-hand knowledge; but he judged these instances by their
+similarity to the facts which had come under his personal notice. He spoke of
+the affairs of the quarry at Llanfihangel on the analogy of the people who were
+found dead at the bottom of the cliffs near Porth, and he was no doubt
+justified in doing so. He told me that, thinking the whole matter over, he was
+hardly more astonished by the Terror in itself than by the strange way in which
+he had arrived at his conclusions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You know,” he said, “those certain evidences of animal malevolence which we
+knew of, the bees that stung the child to death, the trusted sheepdog’s turning
+savage, and so forth. Well, I got no light whatever from all this; it suggested
+nothing to me&mdash;simply because I had not got that ‘idea’ which Coleridge
+rightly holds necessary in all inquiry; facts <i>qua</i> facts, as we said,
+mean nothing and come to nothing. You do not believe, therefore you cannot see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And then, when the truth at last appeared it was through the whimsical
+‘coincidence,’ as we call such signs, of the moth in my lamp and the moth on
+the dead child’s forehead. This, I think, is very extraordinary.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And there seems to have been one beast that remained faithful; the dog at
+Treff Loyne. That is strange.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That remains a mystery.”
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+It would not be wise, even now, to describe too closely the terrible scenes
+that were to be seen in the munition areas of the north and the midlands during
+the black months of the Terror. Out of the factories issued at black midnight
+the shrouded dead in their coffins, and their very kinsfolk did not know how
+they had come by their deaths. All the towns were full of houses of mourning,
+were full of dark and terrible rumors; incredible, as the incredible reality.
+There were things done and suffered that perhaps never will be brought to
+light, memories and secret traditions of these things will be whispered in
+families, delivered from father to son, growing wilder with the passage of the
+years, but never growing wilder than the truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is enough to say that the cause of the Allies was for awhile in deadly
+peril. The men at the front called in their extremity for guns and shells. No
+one told them what was happening in the places where these munitions were made.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first the position was nothing less than desperate; men in high places were
+almost ready to cry “mercy” to the enemy. But, after the first panic, measures
+were taken such as those described by Merritt in his account of the matter. The
+workers were armed with special weapons, guards were mounted, machine-guns were
+placed in position, bombs and liquid flame were ready against the obscene
+hordes of the enemy, and the “burning clouds” found a fire fiercer than their
+own. Many deaths occurred amongst the airmen; but they, too, were given special
+guns, arms that scattered shot broadcast, and so drove away the dark flights
+that threatened the airplanes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, then, in the winter of 1915-16, the Terror ended suddenly as it had begun.
+Once more a sheep was a frightened beast that ran instinctively from a little
+child; the cattle were again solemn, stupid creatures, void of harm; the spirit
+and the convention of malignant design passed out of the hearts of all the
+animals. The chains that they had cast off for awhile were thrown again about
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, finally, there comes the inevitable “why?” Why did the beasts who had been
+humbly and patiently subject to man, or affrighted by his presence, suddenly
+know their strength and learn how to league together, and declare bitter war
+against their ancient master?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a most difficult and obscure question. I give what explanation I have to
+give with very great diffidence, and an eminent disposition to be corrected, if
+a clearer light can be found.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some friends of mine, for whose judgment I have very great respect, are
+inclined to think that there was a certain contagion of hate. They hold that
+the fury of the whole world at war, the great passion of death that seems
+driving all humanity to destruction, infected at last these lower creatures,
+and in place of their native instinct of submission, gave them rage and wrath
+and ravening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This may be the explanation. I cannot say that it is not so, because I do not
+profess to understand the working of the universe. But I confess that the
+theory strikes me as fanciful. There may be a contagion of hate as there is a
+contagion of smallpox; I do not know, but I hardly believe it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In my opinion, and it is only an opinion, the source of the great revolt of the
+beasts is to be sought in a much subtler region of inquiry. I believe that the
+subjects revolted because the king abdicated. Man has dominated the beasts
+throughout the ages, the spiritual has reigned over the rational through the
+peculiar quality and grace of spirituality that men possess, that makes a man
+to be that which he is. And when he maintained this power and grace, I think it
+is pretty clear that between him and the animals there was a certain treaty and
+alliance. There was supremacy on the one hand, and submission on the other; but
+at the same time there was between the two that cordiality which exists between
+lords and subjects in a well-organized state. I know a socialist who maintains
+that Chaucer’s “Canterbury Tales” give a picture of true democracy. I do not
+know about that, but I see that knight and miller were able to get on quite
+pleasantly together, just because the knight knew that he was a knight and the
+miller knew that he was a miller. If the knight had had conscientious
+objections to his knightly grade, while the miller saw no reason why he should
+not be a knight, I am sure that their intercourse would have been difficult,
+unpleasant, and perhaps murderous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So with man. I believe in the strength and truth of tradition. A learned man
+said to me a few weeks ago: “When I have to choose between the evidence of
+tradition and the evidence of a document, I always believe the evidence of
+tradition. Documents may be falsified, and often are falsified; tradition is
+never falsified.” This is true; and, therefore, I think, one may put trust in
+the vast body of folklore which asserts that there was once a worthy and
+friendly alliance between man and the beasts. Our popular tale of Dick
+Whittington and his Cat no doubt represents the adaptation of a very ancient
+legend to a comparatively modern personage, but we may go back into the ages
+and find the popular tradition asserting that not only are the animals the
+subjects, but also the friends of man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All that was in virtue of that singular spiritual element in man which the
+rational animals do not possess. Spiritual does not mean respectable, it does
+not even mean moral, it does not mean “good” in the ordinary acceptation of the
+word. It signifies the royal prerogative of man, differentiating him from the
+beasts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For long ages he has been putting off this royal robe, he has been wiping the
+balm of consecration from his own breast. He has declared, again and again,
+that he is not spiritual, but rational, that is, the equal of the beasts over
+whom he was once sovereign. He has vowed that he is not Orpheus but Caliban.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the beasts also have within them something which corresponds to the
+spiritual quality in men&mdash;we are content to call it instinct. They
+perceived that the throne was vacant&mdash;not even friendship was possible
+between them and the self-deposed monarch. If he were not king he was a sham,
+an imposter, a thing to be destroyed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hence, I think, the Terror. They have risen once&mdash;they may rise again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+THE END
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
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